Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 174, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 November 1934 — Page 14
PAGE 14
Ball erina Guided by Rigid Code Mon te Carlo Dancer Has Little Time Away from Work. BY BEATRICE BURGAN Tines Women's F*e Editor XITE were told today about the * ’ baLerina* rite of her ballet slipper. We hadn’t thought Anything was more important for the dancers than hurrying into the proper coetun.c: and irkins up their faces to emphasize the most attractive features.
The ball eri na s who will dance here Monday right in Colonel W. ,de Basil's Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo, have been trained in Paris at the schools of the four great prima ballerinas of the erstwhile Imperial Ballet of St. Petersburg, and they go through the strict routine of “Theater Str e e t,"
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Miss Burgan
the ballet school which produced Nijinsky and Pavlowa. The little Russian girl gives twice as much attention to putting on her ballet slippers as the actress devotes to her make- -:p. First she smooths over her foot the silk tights, the classic “maillot.’’ Then a thin film of cotton is spread across the toes, for every crack in the stage floor is a hazard l .he cotton is thicker on mat inee ys. Then the slipper is put on. a.id *e dancer poises on her toe to make sure everything is right. Next a tiny drop of ftshglue is put on the heel to hold the slipper fast in place, for as the dancer later poises statuesque on her toes, there must be no possibility of the slipper slip ' .g out of place. At last the satin ribbons are fastened around the ankle, and the feet are ready to go flying on tiptoe through the routines of the dances. Travel With Mothers The young ballerinas to entertain us next week are "jeunes filles bisn elevees” as the French call their carefully nurtured young women. They travel with their mothers, for they are all under twenty. School never ends for them. Every morning when there is not a rehearsal, a train to catch, or a matinee, they gather for their dancing lesson. They rise at virtual dawn for exercises before breakfast; then comes a brief rest for coffee and rolls, before going to the theater for a rigorous morning rehearsal or lesson.
Fined for Tardiness When the afternoons are free, the young dancers with youthful curios-< ity go shopping, sight-seeing or walking through the streets of the strange American cities they visit. In. £he evening the ballerinas, even to the four prima ballerinas, must be in their dressing rooms on time. If they aren’t, they will find their names posted on the bulletin board for fines. After the performance, the dancers must rest a half hour or so, before leaving the theater. Great care is taken that they do not catch cold. After the performances the young girls may join a supper with friends for a little gayety before retiring. Fashions in ballerinas, like styles in everything else, change. Those who recall performances of the Ballet Russe in 1916 and 1917 remember voluptious beauties in voluminous draperies and yards of stage pearls, but today the dancers are youthful and slim.
MISS COUCH WED IN CHURCH RITE
The Rev. Richard M. Millard officiated at the marriage of Miss Elizabeth couch, daughter of Mrs. Mary Couch, and Marshall H. Kendall, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Kendall, in a ceremony Wednesday at the Broadway M. E. church. Mrs. Earl Miller, aunt of the bride, sang. Miss Orpha Nuzum, maid-of-honor, wore yellow crepe and brown velvet and carried gold bronze chrysanthemums. Arthur S. Kendall was best man. The bride wore blue crepe with brown accessories and carried Johanna Hill roses. She was given in marriage by her grandfather, Watson F. Stahl. Robert Powell, Fred Atkinson, Willard Stienecker and John Oberlies were ushers. The couple left on a wedding trip after a reception and will be at home at 2505 College avenue. The bride was graduated from the Methodist hospital nurses’ training school and attended Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music. Mr. Kendall attended the University of Kansas, Butler university and attends Benjamin Harrison law school. He is a members of Delta Phi Theta and Sigma Delta Kappa fraternities.
Daily Recipe MUFFINS 2 cups pastry flour S teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon corn syrup 2 tablespoons melted shortening 2 eggs 1 cu v milk 1-2 cup crushed pineapple 8 ft flour, measure and sift with baking powder, sugar and salt. Add shortening, syrup, eggs and milk. Stir until well mixed. Add pineapple. Mix lightly. Pour into well oiled muffin tins. Bake in hot oven 425 degrees about twenty minutes.
Active in Junior League Art Exhibit
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Left to Right—Miss Ruth Sheerin, Miss Helen S heerin and Mrs. John James Cooper.
Cataloging artists’ name is one of the details connected with the third annual down town exhibit of painting to be held by the Junior League of Indianapolis at L. S. Ayres & Cos. store. The exhibit will open Monday and will continue until Dec. 15. Miss Ruth Sheerin, Miss Helen Sheerin and Mrs. John James Cooper met this week to file the lists and discuss the progress of the exhibit.
Miss Brann and John Goedeker Wed at Church A wedding breakfast at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Braun followed the ceremony read yesterday for their daughter, Miss Marie Braun, and John H. Goedeker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ignatius Goedeker, at St. Catherine of Sienna church. Preceeding the ceremony, which was read by the Rev. James M. Downey, Miss Kathryn Buding, organist, played a group of bridal airs and Mrs. Maur.ce Carroll sang “Ave Maria,” “Or This Day,” and “Ah, Whence to Me the Bliss.’’ Tlie bride chose white transparent velvet with a tul’e veil caught at the sides with orange blossoms, and she carried a prayer book. Her maid of honor was Miss Florence Obergfell, who appeared in royal blue velvet with a silver turban and carried yellow chrysanthemums. Miss Irene Kress, bridesmaid, wore burgundy velvet with similar turban and carried bronze chrysanthemums. Charles Wuensch, nephew of the bride, was ring bearer, and Leo Goedeker, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Joseph Braun and Lawrence Goedecker were ushers.
Gives Simple Elegance BY ELLEN WORTH
SIMPLE elegance is displayed in this and a great many other models displayed in our daily pattern showing and also in our fall and winter fashion.magazine. The Fashion Magazine is 10 cents a copy. All our patterns are 15 cents each. Every pattern is guaranteed perfect in fit.
Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me pattern No. 459 Nanu ..e......... Street City State Size
To obtair, a pattern of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Ellen Worth. The Indianapolis Times, 214 West Maryland street, Indianapolis, with 15 cents in coin. You can have a very smart wardrobe at little expense of time and effort—our attractive fall and winter book of fashions is just bulging with ideas that you calf turn into chic, wearable clothes. Send for your copy today. Price 10 cents. * *
A Womans Viewpoint BY MRS. WALTER FERGUSON
ONE of the worst sins mothers commit against their daughters is to implant in them a fear of being talked about. Nobody ever amounted to two pins without being the subject of petty gossip and malicious lies. You often will hear it said, nevertheless, that neighborhood tattle has a lot to do with keeping us in the path of virtue. That iray once have been partly true but it is true no longer, perhaps because the neighbors these days do not behave any too well themselves. Fear of any kind is a poor foundation on which to build a house of morals. There is only one reason for behaving with dignity and decency—the preservation of your self-respect, which depends on your inner integrity and not on what the neighbors say. I do believe in pride of family. It usually precedes personal pride in the child’s mind. So when you point out to son or daughter some eminent grandparent, and a record which runs for generations back without too many blots, you have given them something to hang onto. I imagine multitudes of young people have been prevented from rushing off to Jis-
. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
aster by the check rein of a fine family history. But if you ask them to begin their lives with wondering what this, that, or the other person may be saying about them; if you tell them they must always behave so that no whisper of gossip, no hint of scandal can touch them, you’re asking the impossible, and very probably nipping whatever originality may be budding within them. You are going to be talked about, since such is the common lot of morals, and you can be reasonably sure that everything said will not be complimentary. The strong person is the one who is impervious to gossip, who goes her own way unruffled by the whispering brigades. In this respect women seem too inconsistent. I never saw one who didn’t enjoy a dish of gossip, bordered with sprigs of malice, no matter how well it was disguised by the sauce of friendship. When we so love to talk about other people, why resent having other people talk about us?
CLASSMATES WILL BE GUESTS
Eleanor Winslow,- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walker Winslow, will entertain several of her Tudor Hall classmates at luncheon tomorrow. Covers will be laid for Jane Ropkey, Sylvia and Helen Griffith, Harriet Patterson and Barbara Noel. Travel Club to Meet Mrs. Edward Reick, 5241 Ruckle street, will be hostess for a meeting of the Violet Demeree Travel Club tomorrow afternoon. Kate Dyer will review “Grandmother Brown; One Hundred Years.”
Miss Delores Vestal and George A. McCoy Wed
Mr. and Mrs. George A. McCoy will be at home at 349 Limestone street, Bloomfield, after they return from their wedding trip on Jan. 1. Before her marriage Thanksgiving day Mrs. McCoy was Miss Delores Vestal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George K. Vestal. At a reception following the ceremony read at the Irvington M. E. church by the Rev. Guy O. Carpenter, several guests attended from out-of-town, among them being Mrs. Alice Vestal and Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Robertson, Mansfield, O.: the Rev. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Gates, Logans port; Miss Adah Sum pie, Knightstown; Mr. and Mrs. Emory Mantz and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wants, Newcastle; Mr. and Mrs. Ancil Williams, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis E. Williams, Mrs. Ruth Weaver, Robert Weaver and Edward Weaver, Cambridge City; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Pierce, Hagerstown; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Miller, Kendallville; Mr. and Mrs. O. P. McCoy, Olive, Charles and James McCoy and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wilkerson, Bloomfield; Mr. and Mrs. Jean de Forest Gerig, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Meredith, Mr. and Mrs. William Davidson, Mr. and Mrs. George Young, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Young, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Waite, George McClellan, Mrs. Bertha Ellis and Mrs. Charles Eagle, Washington; Mr. and Mrs. Oscar McCoy, Harriett Scantland, Keck Meyers, Goldie Osborn, Katherine Wells, Max Adkins, Kletys Hubbell, Helen Green and Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Sloan, Worthington, and Mr. and Mrs. Austin McCellan, Bedford.
A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Greengage plums, broiled liverwurst, celery and radishes, crisp toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon — vPotato and parsley soup with grated cheese, graham bread and butter sandwiches, tomato and green pepper salad, lemonade, cookies. Dinner — Baked stuffed beets, creamed new potatoes, green beans with grated egg yolk garnish, peach shortcake, milk, coffee.
Irvington’s Artists to Show Work Annual Event Scheduled for Dec. 9 to 16 at Carr’s Hall. Oils, pastels, water colors, etchings, bas-reliefs and sculptures done by Irvington artists, again will be on view in Irvington under the auspices oi the Irvington Union of Clubs. The exhibit is scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 9 to continue through Dec. 16 in Carr’s hall. Wilbur D. Peat, director of the John Herron Art Institute, will give the opening address Sunday and William Forsyth will speak on the closing day of the exhibit. Simon P. Baus will paint a portrait of an Irvington resident, a feature of previous years. Members of various Irvington clubs will be hostesses during the exhibit. The eleven Irvington artists comprising the annual greup exhibiting include William Forsyth, Miss Constance Forsyth, Miss Dorothy Morlan, Fredeiick Policy, Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Whee.'er, Mr. Baus, Robert Craig, Robert Selby, Charles Yeager and Miss Helen Hibben. Other artists exhibit by invitation only and the two guest artists whose work will be included are Miss Martha Lee Frost and Paul Baus. The comnrttee on arrangements includes Mrs. Clarence Forsyth and Miss Katherine Layman, co-chair-men; Dr. and Mrs. S. J. Carr, Mrs. Walter S. King, Miss Lucille Morehouse, Mr. and Mrs. Forsyth, Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs. Baus, Mr. and Mrs. Polley, Miss Hibben, Miss Hazen Hibben, Miss Dorothy Morlan, Miss Forsyth, Robert Selby, Charles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. C>aig, Dr. and Mrs. Stanley Cain, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ward, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Arnholter, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. Tom S. Elrod, Mr. and Mrs. Egbert Hildreth, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Jose, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. C. W. McCarty, James Butler, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. McNutt, and Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Wickes.
Miss Carter and Jesse Johnson Married Today A fireplace banked with ferns and chrysanthemums and lighted with cathedral tapers was the background for the marriage yesterday of Miss Nadine Louise Carter and Jesse W. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent K. Johnson, at the home of the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Carter. Before the ceremony, read by the Rev. F. J. Simpson, Mrs. Frank Burris, accompanied by Mrs. Simpson, sang “I Love You Truly” and “Because” and played “Liebestraum” during the ceremony. The bride, attended by Mrs. J. Richard Carter, was given in marriage by her father and wore a peacock blue gown with black accessories. She carried an arm bouquet of Johanna Hill roses. Mrs. Carter’s gown was of fuschia, worn with black accessories, and her flowers were Talisman roses. Ralph Stepp, was best man, and the bride’s brothers, Richard, James and Marion Carter, were ushers. Following a reception, the couple left for a wedding trip south. Out-of-town guests for the ceremony were Mrs. William Reed, Portland; Mrs. Ira Thompson, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Vorris, Franklin; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wright, Waldron; Mrs. Mary Carter and son Paul, Mooresville, and Mrs. Ida Rinker, Brooklyn, Ind.
Miss Rebecca Shields, organist, played a program of bridal airs as the guests assembled, and Miss Mildred Askren sang “Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life,” and “Because.” The ceremony was read as the organist played “To a Wild Rose.” Smilax and palms, lighted with candelabra, banked the altar and smilax-entwined single candelabra marked the center aisle. The bride was attended by her sister, Miss Delma Vestal, who wore black velvet designed with a slight t.-Hin and cowl neck, and trimmed with gold metal cloth bows at the cuffs. She wore a black velvet ha; with tulle brim and carried gold and bronze chrysanthemums. Mrs. Vestal wore hunters green satin with lavender chrysanthemum corsage. Jack McKittrick. Washington, was best man, and ushers were Charles F. Rohm, and Elma McKeighan, both of Indianapolis; John Fisher, Worthington, and Howard Stellnar, South Bend. The bride was given in marriage by her father. She wore ivory bridal satin fashioned with a court train, cowl neckline and full sleeves falling into a deep cuff from the elbow to the wrist. Her tulle veil fell from a Juliette caflband she carried white chrysanthemums. MISS WISH MIRE BECOMES BRIDE Marriage of Miss Sarah Frances Wishmire, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Wishmire, to John B. Leatherman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wiljiam Leatherman, Thomtown. took place last night at the home of the bride’s parents. The Re*. Frank Messersmith, pastor of Garden City Christian church, officiated. Mrs. Helen Yeoman played bridal airs. The bride, wearing a white creep gown and a tulle veil falling from a cap. carried white chrysanthemums. She was attended by Miss Martha Miller, whose gown was of Alice blue satin, worn with a bouquet of bronze 'hrysanthemums. Don Brunow was best man. Meeting Scheduled Mother Theodore Circle, Daughters of Isabelle, will hold a regular business meeting at 8 Tuesday at the Catholic Community Center. Supper will be served preceding meeting.
DELEGATE
- “MMb Miss Alice Perrine As official delegate from the Butler alumnae unit of Trianon. Miss Alice Perrine, president, is attending the national convention which opened today at Miami university, Oxford, O. The convention will continue through Sunday.
Manners and Morals BE JANE JORDAN
If you are knee-deep in trouble with your love life, write to Jane Jordan for suggestions. Your letters will be an swered in this column. Perhaps other readers will write to you, too! Dear JAhe Jordan—l am going with a girl who has all the good qualities I would look for in choosing a wife and have fallen very completely in love. Our marriage is im-
possible for several years, as the importance of an education has been impressed upon me. Sometimes I have an overwhelming desire for he/. She and I have discussed the subject without. coming to a satisfactory conclusion. She won’t or can’t change her mind and feel the same as I do.
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Jane Jordan
It may be that the idea of such a thing is repulsive to her, or perhaps she doesn’t love me enough. Maybe she loves me too much. If this continues, it may be the cause of our estrangement, a thing which I least desire at present and will do anything in my power to avoid. I am afraid you may say these are mere base desires, lusts of the flesh, and that such thoughts should not be allowed to enter a decent mind. Or you may say that a girl can not sacrifice her honor even for one she loves. I realize the logic of both but I can not force myself to believe it enough to overcome my desire to do the things I should, I suppose, wait for. Please help me. PERPLEXED.
Answer —I do not consider your desires either base or unnatural. If you did not feel as you do I should despair of your normality. There are some things in life that you simply have to put up with, and this is one of them. The girl can't help her training. She has been brought up by standards which have been challenged by many indignant young people. Nevertheless, only a small portion of the populace has changed its views. The majority hold fast to the old ideas of chastity before marriage. You can’t force the girl, nor can she force herself, to throw over he/ seditions. If she got into any difficulties you couldn’t protect her. You want an adult relationship without the adult responsibility that goes with it. You can’t have it without getting into more trouble than you have now. Your trouble is not individual but universal. The gap between puberty and mating is a problem which has not been successfully solved. Some young men seek relief from girls who they would not marry on a bet. Others beat down their sweetheart’s resistance only to find that they suffer an emotional revulsion against her. A few live together secretly and marry with no obvious ill effects. Some outgnw each other and come to look jpon their relationship with distaste. From the letters I receive, I notice that the boy usually tires first and either leaves the girl crushed and disillusioned, or forces himself to marry her after love has flown. On the whole it is better for you not to involve yourself with so virtuous a girl. Her painful reactions would cancel your pleasure. If you’re not the type who can accept a substitute for what you want, you’ll simply have to submerge your troublesome energies in work. u n a Dear Jane Jordan—You would do well not to quote such a character as Floyd Dell, for if that man has all his buttons he talks like a degenerate. Whoever heard of such a thing as a man petting in order to become interested in a woman whom he desires to marry? No man does such a thing. If his intentions are serious he should have too much respect for her to even entertain such an idea, and if otherwise, then his mind leads in another direction entirely. If any woman wants to be regarded as cheap and even vulgar then she should allow a man to paw all over her, for she has no resprtt for herself, so she can not expect a man to have any. Stop this filthy talk for it is nothing else and I certainly don't blame “Disgusted” for again making the remark she did. JOSEPH B. ADLER. Answer—l have used only the last paragraph from your letter for the benefit of “perplexed.” By the way, I am holding seven new letters for “Disgusted” fr<m Thelma Fox, XXX, Thelma Mildred Sutton, Another Regular Reader, Dr. R. M., CKS and Busy Lady. I will leave them for her at any place she may designate so she can judge their authenticity for herself.
RIVIERA CLUB WILL HOLD HOME-COMING
Home-coming dance for sons and daughters of members of the Riviera Club will be held tonight as a Thanksgiving celebration. The committee in charge includes Mesdames George' H. Rossebo. W. L. Bridges, F. H. Rosebrock, Forest E. Deupree, Raymond D. Jackson, O. E. Smith, Russell Lites and Emmett Judson. Lou Partelle and his orchestra will play. The club will entertain children of members at a party Friday afternoon, Dec. 7, at the clubhouse.
Artistic Effects Achieved With Cakes, Chocolate and Ice by Pastry Cook Charles Wagner, Member of Claypool Staff, Served Apprenticeship in His Native Switzerland. BY HELEN LINDSAY AN artist who uses cakes and confections instead of canvas; cake colorings and melted chocolate instead of paints, and huge blocks of. ice or delicately spun sugar confections for sculptured figure* 'L Indianapolis. He is Charles Wagner, youthful pastry chef at the Cf.-y----pool. Mr. Wagner, a native Swiss, served an apprenticeship when only 16 in his native country to learn the art of making pastries and confections. His first position was in a hotel at St. Moritz, Switzerland, where he first saw the kind of decorative work in which he now is expert.
Later he worked in the Hotel de France and the Hotel Bristol in Vienna, in the Eden hotel, Berlin, and the Hotel Continental. Paris, where he made liquor candies, which he says “Americans liked very much.” Following his service in this hotel, Mr. Wagner worked for a year and a half as pastry chef on the Isle de France, and later came to the United States, where he was employed at the Hotel Roosevelt, New York, and the William Penn, Pittsburgh. He has made replicas of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, the William Penn, mery of the large ocean liners, and scenes of the Nativity for Christmas decorations. These Christmas figures were half-life size, and were displayed during the Christmas season in the William Penn lobby. There were figures of the wise men grouped about the manger, and all were made from
confections which he colored in life-like fashion with the aid of cake and candy coloring and melted chocolate. He has never had a real art lesson, other than those which the average child has in grade school. Two years ago he watched the feeling of the American people for President Franklin D. Roosefelt increase. He realized the President’s popular appeal, and made up his mind that he would like to reproduce his face in his own fashion. Just recently he was able to satisfy that desire, when he was commissioned to prepare table decorations for a Democratic dinner given in the Claypool. it Brush Used As In Painting ON an easel made entirely of spun sugar candy, highly colored, and a cake mixture, he painted a life-like picture of the President, using confection colorings and melted chocolate, and working with a brush, as an artist would. The likeness is a good one, the President being shown in naval costume, and at the wheel of a ship. The decoration, which was used as the centerpiece of the banquet table, had in the rear, as if hovering over the President, a huge eagle, constructed entirely of candy. On each side of the President's likeness was a large Democratic rooster, which Mr. Wagner carved with a chisel from blocks of ice. Around the easel were flowers made of candy, with tiny r ieu ic lights concealed in their petals, to be illuminated for the banquet. 0 a u * tt a a Chocolate Covered Leaves Are Popular THAT Mr. Wagner enjoys his work, and that he has artistic decoration on his mind all the time, is evident even in the canisters in the pastry kitchep where he works. Each of the large cans shows the result of his individual decorative ideas. The can holding cocoanut has a design showing growing cocoanut trees on it. Others have been decorated in the same descriptive way. “You see, if my helpers can’t they can look at the pictures,” he jokes. One of the most recent confections which Mr. Wagner has introduced, and which are finding favor in the Claypool Sandwich Grill, are chocolate covered leaves. They 2re thin flat cakes made of almond paste, and iced with a layer of bitter chocolate. The cakes are shaped like maple leaves, and the tracings of the veins on them are seen in the chocolate covering.
Contract Bridge
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY Secretary American Bridge League BRIDGE is usually referred to as an American pastime, but I might say that it is becoming the pastime of the world. Some fifteen or twenty European countries have national bridge organizations that, like the American Bridge League, are associated with the International Bridge League. The American team, selected by open competition recently, consists of David Bumstein, Oswald Jacoby, Richard T. Frey and Howard Schenken. It won a $1,500 trophy presented by Nate Spingold, New York, and will leave shortly for the world match at Budapest. To Nate Spingold, bridge is purely a pastime. He enjoys the game and is always on the alert for that elusive slam contract. Here’s a hand showing his aggressive type of bidding and it also demonstrates how well he can play the cards. Mr. Spingold's diamond bid is purely constructive, and with the diamond bid North was justified in jumping to three spades. When South showed a five-card club suit, North’s natural response was six clubs. n WEST’S opening lead was the! queen of diamonds which Mr. Spingold in the South won with the king. A small heart was led and ruffed in dummy with the deuce of clubs. A small club was returned on which South played the king and West j showed out. Mr. Spingold saw he still had a chance to make the contract and went to work. He led the ace of hearts and discarded a small spade from dummy. Then, he played a small heart and ruffed in dummy. Now the ace of spades was cashed and a diamond discarded, after j
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GREAT BEHiafcM PERMANENT ™ A WAVES ♦ * | Ko Appotntmrnt I 'W' v j Nemrary J\J' HPIf’.AI. OH I x. V / CEootKixote I / Fresh Trimj shampoo, hHc ° |U * Finger Wave tlona ___ —, • OU Wn* I KrrpOan 081 , 11. 00 W.'4 Pads |I * ,#r * i n [Ur. Uzi Splrndld for Gray, Dyed, BlmrM Hfjr ROYAL BEAUTY SHOE' 4M BecmrvrH *JU. SW#
NOV. 30, 1934
Mrs. Lindsay
which a small spade was ruffed with the four of clubs. As West’s opening lead of the queen of diamonds marked him with the jack, Mr. Spingold led a diamond and finessed dummy’s ten, which held. A smal spade was led and ruffed with the i.’x oi clubs, a heart played and ruffed with the jack of clubs. This left East with the queen, ten, and five of clubs, while Mr. Spingold held the ace and nine of clubs and the nine of diamonds. So, Mr. Spingold led a spade from the dummy and East was helpless. If he ruffed with the five of clubs, South would over-ruff with the nine, cash the ace of clubs, and grant a diamond loser. If east ruffed with the ten or queen, South would discard the nine of diamonds and hold a tenace in trump. An unusual and interesting coup. (Copyright. 1934, NEA Service. Inc.) Card Party Arranged Auxiliary to Englewood chapter, Order of Eastern Star, will entertain with a card party Saturday at the Dearborn. Miss Ruth Manson is chairman, and will be assisted by Mrs. Ida Oaks and Mrs. Eva Thornton.
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