Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 200, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1935 — Page 11

OCT. 30.193'

Error Made by Resorting to Doubling Play Described on Basis of System Used by Four Aces. Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. F.. M’KFNNEY Secretarv Amrrlran Rritlie la-hzu* Here is another of a series of articles treating the lead-directing double convention employed by the Four Aces and described n their new book, “The Four Aces’ System of Contract Bridge.” In my previous article I explained that, if the player not on lead were to double a slam contract, it would direct partner to lead the first suit bid by dummy. When employing this convention it rr.u: t be rem^mToday’s Contract Problem This is another problem that deals with the leaddirecting double convention as used in the Four Aces’ system of bidding. South hid one heart; West, three spades: North, four diamonds, and the final contract was seven diamonds. Should West double, and if so, why? A K 3 VQ 7 2 ♦AKJ 9 6 4 + A7 * * Q o J 10 | N *■>B 6 5 W Void w eJ'”" ♦ 73 Sx 10 8 6 3 * Q 9 4 2 Dealer A Void VAKB643 ♦ Q 10 5 2 K J 5 Solution in next issue. 23 bered tnat the double of a slam bid alway calls for a specific lead. Let us take up today’s hand. During the court of the bidding North has bid diamonds. The contract has finally reached six clubs. Let us examine East’s holding. He has a sure club trick in his hand and the ace of hearts. Should he double the small slam contract? No, he should not, because if he doubles, according to the rules employed in this convention, he would be directing his partner to lead a diamond and the opening lead of a diamond might be just what would allow the opponents to make the contract, which, of course, is the case in today’s hand. If West were to open a diamond, declarer would be able to discard his lasing hearts on the diamond suit. Therefore, a double in this case, instead of defeating the contract, would permit it to be made. A 6 4 V 2 ♦ A KQ 9 6 2 AKB 6 5 AQ97SA J 10 8 2 V J 1 0 9 , _ VAS S 4 3 W . A S 5 4 ♦ JlO7 S AQJIo A Void Dealer AA K 2 VK Q 5 ♦ 3 AA97 4 3 2 South West North East 1 A Pass 1 A Pass 2 A Pass 4 A Pass 6 A Pass Pass Pafcs 23 1 So East must give up the additional 50 or 100 points that the double might bring. It so happens, in this particular hand, if East does not double, West naturally opens the jack of hearts, and of course the contract is automatically defeated. iCopyright. 1935. NEA Service. Inc.t Kathryn Rauch to Be Honored at Bridal Fetes Several parties are to be given by Indianapolis hostesses in compliment to a bride-to-be, Miss Kathryn Rauch, Anderson. The engagement of Miss Rauch to Max Gant Jackson, also of Anderson, son of Mrs. Edward A. Cooper, Greenfield, has been announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Rauch, Anderson. Mrs. William D. Hart is to entertain Sunday with a crystal shower and tea at the home of her sister, Mrs. C. D. Hunter, 5515 Allisonvillerd, for Miss Rauch. Mrs. Donald Davis, Indianapolis, and Miss Marilyn Armstrong, Anderson, are to give a party at the home of Mrs. Davis at a later date. The marriage is to be solemnized in Anderson Saturday afternoon, Nov. 9, the Rev. W. H. Bransford, pastor ot the First M. E. Church there, reading the ceremony. Miss Rauch is to be attended by her sister, Mrs. Walter H. Harrison, Dayton. 0., as her matron of honor, and Mr. Jackson is to have his brother, Lorenzo Jackson, Marion, 6., as his best man.

Daily Recipe EGG SOUFFLE 2 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons flour 1 cup milk 1 cup cre< m 4 eggs 1 teaspoon salt Few grains pepper i 'elt butter and stir in flour. Adu milk and cream gradually, stirring constantly. Cook and stir until mixture boils and is thick and smooth. Add yolks of eggs beaten until thick and lemon colored. Remove from fire, add salt and pepper and fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff and dry. Turn into a buttered casserole or baking dish and bake 40 minutes in a moderate oven, 350 degrees. Serve from baking dish.

White Furniture Among, Decorative Features of Modern Nurse ty

',•!/ -j wall paper, one I , , „ * j White mahogany furniture )&n~ASSlir6(l ultramarine with , yf (actually blond in tone) is used TN T and the other, 1 I ersons IN ever White with red \ h'" , * -\> The walls are a pale yellow, cxdots, are cut out y IbH broken thc " in ' ' Applymg Second

Self-Assured Persons Never Are ‘Stranded’ BY JANE JORDAN Dear Jane Jordan—Sometimes I wonder why I have no friends. I know a girl whom I love very much. Every one else loves her too. I often wish and pray I could be like her. She has so many girl and boy friends. She is friendly toward me, but does not want to run around with me. Neither does any one else. I’d love to have friends. I have

one boy friend who says he loves me, but I don’t want to cater to just one fellow. I would like to have other friends as well. Evening after evening I sit at home with nothing to do. The only time I go any place is when this one fellow takes me out. Sometimes I get

Jane Jordan

terribly bored with him. He is awfully nice, but I yearn for a different friend once in a while. I'd love to win the friendship of this girl I said I like. I want her to like, me and enjoy being with me as much as I like to be with her. I can’t understand myself at all. I know it isn’t other people’s fault that they don’t liks me. I realize it is all mine, but honestly I don't know what to do about it. I hope you can figure me out and tell me what is wrong with me. LONESOME. Answer—Most people have a gnawing suspicion that they are not quite as good as others and this fear cuts deeply into their self-assurance. You have such an overdose of it that it paralyses your ability to make the friendly gestures and advances that so easily win others. You aren’t sold on yourself. Lonely people are selfabsorbed people. Interest yourself in the outer world. Adopt a hobby. Succeed at something to build up your own self-respect. At present I believe that you are more interested in cultivating girl friends than boy friends. This indicates that you feel more at ease with women than with men. You doubt your ability to succeed with either sex, but of the two you are less self-conscious with women. This also is something which you will have to combat in yourself if you are to live with things as they are. I wonder if your boy friend really is boring or if you simply are unable to identify yourself with masculine interests. Since he is your only friend try to tear your attention loose from your own ego and its reactions and see what this boy really is like. In going about with him perhaps you will meet others more to your liking, and the same is true" of him. Don't retire from circulation simply because every one you meet is not a kindred spirit. Your job is to adapt yourself to a variety of personalities. As it is you expect others to adapt themselves to you. X? SS U Dear Jane Jordan—My problem is not about myself, but about my mother and father. My father is a good worker and does not mistreat his three children, of which I am the oldest. He is a young man of 36 and my mother is three years older. He is a funny man about the ether sex. He runs around and stays out late at night. Sometimes he does not get in until 3 in the morning. My mother is getting disgusted, I know. Please tell me what to do to help both of them. ALICE. Answer—Same one has said that there are no problem children. only problem parents. You must face the facts that your parents constitute a problem which you can not solve. You are not responsible for their happiness and you must not think otherwise. Their difficulties are beyond your power to understand or to adjust. The kindest thing you can do is to let them alone and remain as neutral as possible in your attitude. It is unfair and cruel for parents to burden children with their differences. Parents who expect children to side with one or the other have hardly graduated from the nursery themselves. Persuade your mother and father not to talk to you about their troubles. Try hard to lose yourself in the activities of girls and boys your own age. You can't escape the home atmosphere completely, I know, but you can fine* some refuge with other young people if you set out to do so. MISS PAVEY WEDS IX ANDERSON RITE The marriage of Miss Helen Louise Pavey to Kennard W Davidson. son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Davidson Sr., is announced. The ceremony was read Sunday in Anderson. Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Davidson Jr., attended the couple. Mr. and Mrs. Davidson are to make their home at 3658 Ken-wood-av.

Two kinds of wall paper, one ultramarine with white pin dots and the other, white with red dots, are cut out to look like a curtain in this model nursery designed by Ilonka Karasz at Saks Fifth Avenue, New York. The furniture is maple in a modernized spool design, and made by Amodcc. White lurniture trimmed with yeliow, blue, green and red knobs is used in this second of the Karasz rooms at Saks. Each drawer is painted inside the same color as the knob, so the child learns to place his things where they belong. The chair seats and backs are yellow varnished rope, and the rungs are blue.

Hoosier Club to Entertain With Halloween Fete Halloween is to be observed by members and guests of the Hoosier Athletic Club tomorrow night with a dance in the club's main ballroom. In keeping with the Halloween theme, spotlights are to be focused upon dark corners where skeletons, ghoscs and witches are to be placed. Following dancing, eneertainment is to be held in the club rathskeller room. Music is to te played by Louis Partello’s orchestra. Among the members who have made table reservations are Dr. and Mrs. Paul Kernel and Messrs and Mesdames Frank Huse, Otto Roos, William Ersting, H. Marshall, Leon Rmythe, E. B. Smith. Erban Renner, Robert Barnes, Robert Wallace, John Bowers, Robert Allison, Paul Kennedy, Glen Goehe, J. A. Lyons, Robert and Leroy Potter. Paul Barry, Allen Carey, M. J. Wheatley, Harold Arnholter, and Messrs. Edwin Schere, Earl Dressback, Robert and Leroy Potter, James Welch and John Nicholson. Gym classes on Thursday are to be held in costume. Apparatus and other routine work will be postponed for the day and the classes will participate in an entertainment program consisting of relay races, games, and other Halloween stunts. Robert Yoke, club physical director, is to be in charge. Gymnasium classwork is popular among members of the club according to announcement of Robert L. Yoke, physical instructor. In addition to apparatus in the gymnasium, members have access to an equipment room, punching bags, weights, bars, trapezes and tumbling mattresses. Basketball and volley ball are the principal sports in whiclj the classes engage. Following class periods individual captains are appointed and teams play in tournaments. Business men enjoy handball, Mr. Yoke explains. Classes are held at separate perriods for men, women, boys and girls twice during the week. Following the classes, the club swimming pool is available for use. Mr. Yoke was all round apparatus champion of Indiana while in high school and was graduated from the Normal College of the American Gymnastic Union. He has been at the H A. C. for three years. HEALTH PROJECTS TO BE STRESSED Orange County Federation of Clubs is to stress health projects for the year, including the project to obtain a tuberculosis hospital for southern Indiana and to suoport the Third District project of cancer control. The federation is to hold one council meeting and one general meeting this year. Mrs. Eva Grigsby, West Baden Springs, is president; Mrs. Frank Braxtan, vice president; Mrs. Lorene Chastian, secretary-treasurer, and Miss Ella Colclasure, Paoli, press. Sorority Party Set A Halloween party is to be given tonight by Miss Evelyn Thiesing and Mrs. Joseph Brown at the home of the former for members of Alpha Chapter, Delta Tau Omega Sorority. Guests are to include Misses Marian Newmier, Katherine Brauer, Clara Kremer. Helen Green. Cecile Spicklemire, Ruth Eakin. Dorothy Eakin and Mesdames Nathan Blackmore, Albert Reisener. Earl Dorsett, Eugene Bums, Vernon Hinchman, Robert Hummel and Walter Hilliker.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Smart Model Done in Black Silk

j, 425

Parties Arranged to Honor Miss Hockensmith and Fiance

Next week Miss Mary Martha Hockensmith, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Charles A. Hockensmith, and her fiance, Victor P. Hertz, are to attend several parties in their honor. Their marriage is to take place at 10 Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 28. in SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral. Dr. and Mrs. James H Taylor are to entertain at a dinner for them on Tuesday night at the Proplaeum. On Thursday night, Nov. 7, Mr. and Mrs. William J.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Sliced peaches or stewed dried peaches, ready-to-serve cereal, baked eggs with .-cress, graham ar.d raisin muffins, milk, coffee. Luncheon — Oyster curry in rice border, toasted muffins, Chinese cabbage and sweet pepper salad, filled cup cakes, milk, tea. Dinner — Chieken and vegetables en casserole, head lettuce and cheese ball salad with quince honey sandwiches, peanut brittle ice cream, milk, coffee.

QUALITY HOSIERY • PERFECT FIT 59c, TWO FOR $1.15 NISLEY “ *• ”***■ .

BY ELLEN WORTH While colors are very much in the fashion picture this season, black always remains a favorite with smart women. Today’s model was carried out in one of those attractive new silks with surface interest, that makes it look like woolen. It is black, with becoming neck accented by white satin jabot. Satin-back crepe, woolen with gleaming metal glint in its weave, angora woolen, etc., are other suggestions for its development. Style No. 425 is designed for sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46 and 48 inches bust. Size 36 requires 4 5 2 yards of 39-inch material with % yard of 39-inch contrasting. Let the new fall and winter fashion magazine assist you in assembling your family’s fall clothes. There are designs for every type and every occasion. And of course one of our perfect-fitting patterns is obtainable for every design illustrated. Price, 10 cents. Enclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 423. Name Street City State Size To obtain a pattern of this model, tear out the coupon and mail it to Ellen Worth, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Marylandst, Indianapolis, with 15 cents in coins.

I Freaney are to honor them at a dinner. Misses Mary Vance Trent, Esther Hoover and Mary Katharine Mangus are to be hostesses at a bridge party for Miss Hockensmith at Miss Mangus’ home on Monday night. On Saturday afternoon, Nov. 9, Misses Susan McGaughey, Marjorie Krull and Josephine Symms are to give a bridge party for the bride-to-be. JUDGE GECKLER AND MRS. HUGGINS WED Announcement has been made of the marriage of Mrs. Martha Huggins to Judge John F. Geckler of the Marion County Juvenile Court. The Rev. Joseph D. McDonald, Martinsville, cousin of the bride, read the ceremony. Judge Geckler has occupied the Juvenile Court bench five years. He is serving his second term. Mrs. Geckler is a member of the Indiana Woman’s Republican Club, the Woman's Department Club and Roberts Park M. E. Church. Judge and Mrs. Geckler are to make their home at 1621 Church-man-av.

%' Shampoo. et s(k Marian s.a,er 3 [a ffSDCAUTV 0 OALONo 3 Bo rloor Odd Fellowi Blda.

White mahogany furniture (actually blond in tone) is used in this room for a growing girl. The walls are a pale yellow, except for that broken by the window, which is painted apple green.

Remove Coat of Make-Up Before Applying Second BY ALICIA HART The woman who wants to be attractive at all times remembers to remove old make-up before she puts on another layer. She keeps a small bottle of liquid cleanser in the drawer of her desk and carries another in her handbag. When her nose gets shiny and lipstick looks faded, she uses the liquid to remove stale cosmetics. Then she starts at the beginning and, when finished, her face is dewy and fresh. She remembers, also, that simple little beauty routines, practiced daily, are more beneficial in the long run than pretentious ones, done only now and then. For instance, five minutes of nightly brushing will be infinitely more valuable to the health of your hair than one long brushing and a 20-minute scalp massage only once a month. A chin that is slapped several times each night and rinsed with ice water will stay firm and young longer than one which never is touched except on occasional visits to the beauty shop. Cuticle which is oiled or creamed three nights a week will be softer and have fewer rough edges than cuticle that never is touched by oil except at the professional manicure table. An all-purpase cream saves time as well as strain on the budget. Get one that cleans and softens your complexion and use it night and morning. If your pores are a trifle large, perhaps an all-purpose cream that acts as a pore tightener will be just the thing.

SATURDAY, NOV. 2 A NEW CHEVROLET The only complete low-priced car beyond any other thrifty^car WILL BE OX DISPLAY AT ALL CHEVROLET DEALERS

Psychology Co-operates With Art in Producing Room for Modern Child Six Interiors Form New York Exhibit of What Is Right Environment From Babyhood to Next Stage of Life. BY EMILY GFNAUER It may be putting the cart (the go-cart, in this case) before the horse to say that babies are back because the new nurseries are so utterly enchanting. For doubtless tne nurseries were designed to answer the demands of those chic young women about town to whom it has lately occurred that a baby in arms can be a most becoming accessory. But the new rooms are bound as well to boost vital statistics. Too many wistful-eyed young things have been seen cooing over the latest of the nursery displays (those designed by Ilonka Karasz at Saks Fifth Avenue, New York.) for the birth rate to remain the same. The exhibit consists of six interiors—four nurseries, one junior room and a playroom—designed by Miss Karasz around all the latest approved principles of child psychology. Experts look at them and talk about ‘‘resnonse fixations.” environment and influence,” “key associations’’ and “euthenics." and listening to this learned palaver we felt as though a guarantee of the baby’s intellectual and spiritual superiority should go

with each set of furniture sold. Charm of Importance Miss Karasz assures us, though the rooms make it obvious, that while concerned primarily with the problems of child psychology and the child's physical well-being, she has considered charm of great importance and individuality a requisite. Miss Karasz is an artist. With the. result that while the interiors are thoroughly sound, they also are attractive and smart without being restlessly or obviously faddish. Until now nursery furniture on the market has been either functional modern, with emphasis on the practical and scientific aspects of child training and sa'ety, and easy operation (like washable surfaces and such) or else infested with banal bo-peeps and tiresome jack-rabbits. Reflect Traditional Lines This furniture (designed by Miss Karasz and manufactured by Amodec) is a combination of both. The rooms are modern without being uncomfortably mechanical. Yet in many cases they reflect the traditional lines of nursery decor. There are pinks and blues, for example, but they are pinks and blues with character—the pink the delectable new “dusty” shade, and the blue the color of robins’ eggs. There are yellows bright as buttercups or pale as

Flapper Fanny Says: REG. U. S. PAT. OFF

A giant intellect may be full of freak ideas.

PAGE 11

; autumn moonlight. There are reds, browns, grays and silver. Shown at the top of the page is a maple room in which the furniture is of a modernized spool design. The color scheme of the room is carried out in ultramarine, red and white. Mostly the wall paper is white with, pin-point red polka dots. Cut out to look like curtains and tied back with perky bows of tangerine paper is another paper in ultramarine , with white dots. On the ultramarine floor is a red rug. The whole thing sounds mad. It is as lovely actually , as it is original. Next on this page is shown a | modern room for the child as she grows older. The furniture is extremely simple in design, of the blond wood known as white mahogl any. It is designed to be used sep- ' arately or arranged together to con- ! serve space. The chest and desk ara ; larger units, with the latter also I useful as a dressing table. Vistas of Magic Woods The walls are painted a delicate pale yellow, except for that encompassing the window, which is apple j green. Over the chest is hung a decorative mural, painted by Miss Karasz, a vista of magic woods and gentle deer, in shades of tan. green I and brown. For a little baby is the nursery j shown at the bottom, in which the white enamel furniture is designed in simple forms furnished with knobs lof yellow, blue, green and red Each i drawer is colored inside the same as : the knob, not only because the col- ! ors are attractive, but because it helps the child to get organized, to allocate certain objects to the bluo i drawer, and certain others to the j red one, for instance. The crib has chromium bars and the chairs yellow, varnished rope seats and blue rungs. Paradise for Little Girl One of the loveliest rooms of all is not shown in the illustration because its delicate colors made it almost impossible to photograph definitely. It would be a paradise for a little girl. The walls are lined with a washable off-white paper sprinkled with little silver stars. At the windows are hung curtains of quilted peach chintz, under a scalloped ! quilted blue chintz valance. Glass ! curtains are sheer peach gauze. The little white bed is canopied with the blue quilted valance, and at each corner are curtains of the peach gauze, looped back w’ith tiny white porcelain angels to match those who kneel, over each bedpost, around the top of the bed.