Indianapolis Times, Volume 47, Number 217, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 November 1935 — Page 9

NOV. 19, 1935

2 ‘Masters’ sCreated at Tournament Hand That Helped to Win Championship Given in Detail. Today’s Contract Problem North Is playinr the contrast at. four heart*. When East’s opening; lead held the first trick, he rhifted to a diamond. How ran the contract ! be made? A K 1 O ', VAKQ7I ♦ K 1 AQB.I jAO. T o 3 ~ A* 4 VI" " V*2 ♦Q 10 6 w b ♦9S 53 2 t AJ 9 5 S AAlv 7 2 t Dealer AAS 7 3 VJ 6 3 ♦A J 7 JU 1 0 f, \ All vul. Opener—A K. Solution in next lsr-ue. jo Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W E. M’KENNEY Serrrtarv American Ftrldse !-earne rr'WO "masters" were created at A the rerent Detroit American Bridge League master point tournament, when L. H. Fremont and Herbert A. Beyers won the open pair championship. Here's one of the hands that hleperi them win the championship in Detroit. Against the five club contract, West opened with the king of hearts, which was won by declarer with the are. Now, ihere is only one entry card In dummy. Would you use it to try lo finesse the club? If so, you would lose your contract. A9S 7 6 5 VB6 5 4 ♦ K 5 AQfi HMI n AA Q J ¥KQ JlO w r ¥7 3 * 2 o b ♦Q7 C 4 ♦ J 1 ft 3 S 5 g A Void Dealer j i) 4 A K 2 ¥ A V♦ A 2 N AAJ9S7$ia Duplicate— All vul. SMltli West North Et 1 A 1 ¥ Pass 1 N. T. Pass 2 ¥ Pass Pass 4 * Pass 5 A Pass Opening lead—¥ K. 12 You have no assurance that you will find the king of clubs in the East hand; therefore, you may be wasting your entry card. Then, again, if the three outstanding trumps are all in the East hand, the one club finesse will do you no good. Beyers, who was playing the hand, decided his best percentage play was to surrender a club trick. He simply laid down the ace of clubs, hoping to dr p the king and, when it failed, he played a small club to the queen. East won this trick and returned a heart, which declarer ruffed. The remaining trumps were picked up and then a small diamond was led to dummy's king. Now a small spade was played and. of course, as the ace was in the East hand, declarer lost only ./one spade trick and one club trick. r By utilizing dummy's only entry card to the best advantage, declarer made his contract of five club.s. (Copyright, IMS. NEA Service. Inc.) MRS. I VILLIVER TO SI'EAK TO lI 'OMEN Mrs. Charles Williver is to speak before the Capital Avenue M. E. Church Calendar Club Thursday, in a series of talks sponsored by the Indianapolis League of Women Voters. The talks are a part of the league’s campaign for better trained personnel in government. Miss Evelyn Chambers is to talk on the same subject to the Irvington Fortnightly Club at 30 N. Bolton-st Friday. Speeches were made yesterday by Mrs. Lester Smith before the Capital Chapter. American War Mothers, and by Mrs. H. A. Shonley, before the Fortnightly Study Club at the Children's Museum. Meeting Changed Tlie Woman’s Contract Club of Indianapolis is to meet at 1:15 Thursday in the Indianapolis Athletic Club, instead of next week, as had been previously announced.

A Day’s Menu Breakfast — Grape juice, cereal, cream, creamed salt codfish, corn muffins, milk, coflee. Luncheon — Stuffed acorn squash, toasted muffins deft from breakfast!. banana spice upsidedown cake, milk tea. Dinner — Tomato bouillon. Salisbury steak, fruit fritters, xstatoes au gratin, head jettuce ruth Thousand Island dressing, pumpkin pie. milk, coffee.

Q STYLE AT LOWER PRICES Fashion PERMANENT *3Sweetheart design, gives you all the sparkling J teauty of a modem permanent: included :s C the shampoo, finger wave, neck trim and O Smart Set Permanent, with a free p; gift of handsome make-up mirror. #a L complete for only . wI.JJU ■ gj .No Appointments hieeeeeary -p v,.-,,’ *1 | TTaTrTlyeTni Permanents Eyebrow a£h 1 to Value .. .M H v: Cut. Both for j Ma...cu;e .Tsc Si N tint sa.so | shampoo. Finger 85c Beauty mart "'s*. 3 '" Free Tea Leaf . W. Market St. V ' v * Reading She A Cor. 111. St. LI. 0A27. . n B * rb *” . Sees Alt 1 No Appointment Needed 1,0 Appointment . All. Gray—l>>ed—Bleached Hair our Specialty Needed ATTENTION ■ are .ro-ooersOns War on Cancer. Aak us far diaaile. ■

Woolens With Contrasting Trimmings Appear

BY GERTRUDE BAILEY A LL wool and a yard wide is be--ginning to take fashions more Sheer U'ool ghtlv. Sheer woolen formals have * ‘ dressed lip ivitk and een catapulted into ballrooms by a \ lame Bcar f and B w high-fashion-conscious wear- ' rs. and now we find wool hobnob- rq r ' ' lrfni •' ing with lame, velvet, lace, taffeta newly clue in QVdy nd jpwels to justify its presence in ** or dark eieh colors he semi-formal mode. /or afternoon " " “ , \ occasions. j, ■—m —.—. „ .. be addressed at luncheon Thursd (11/ the Columbia Club by Franc / / / Biddle, Philadelphia attorney ai / / / chairman of the National Commi l' ' l Also serving on the local cor

BY GERTRUDE BAILEY A LL wool and a yard wide is be- *• ginning to take fashions more lightly. Sheer woolen formals have been catapulted into ballrooms by a few high-fashion-conscious wearers. and now we find wool hobnobbing with lame, velvet, lace, taffeta and jpwels to justify its presence in the semi-formal mode. a a a SPECIALTY shops are rating as successes the dressy afternoon woolens that have shirring detail and contrasting trimming of established luxury fabrics. These are not to be confused with the high shade woolens in expected daytime styles to brighten fur coats and football stadiums. Their leather belts and metal buttons identify their bright colors for sports costumes. For more formal occasions wool must be very fine and very sheer. It It may be black, or wine, or blue, or gray. The style sketched today is very elegant in gray wool with a lame scarf, matching woolen flower petals, and finely pleated accents pointing up the importance of the dressy wool mode. an n pOLLOWING Alix's afternoon -*■ dress of cartridge pleated jersey and three important woolen evening dresses and capes from Paris, many other formal interpretations of this fabric have appeared in New York. We have seen wool lace dinner dresses in street lengths, sheer black woolen dinner dresses with matching jewel-studded jackets, a blisteredeffect woolen afternoon dress with metal trimmed taffeta scarf for splendor, and soft treatments of jersey dramatized with jewelled plaques for belt buckles.

Simple Dress for School Wear

BY ELLEN WORTH School giris’ dresses of good taste must necessarily remain simple. Numberless smart effects can be achieved, however, by combining a patterned and plain tissue of the same general tone. Also pretty schemes can be arrived at by posing different plain colorings together. Fascinating in blue and gold plaid woolen with plain toning blue w'oolen is the model illustrated. Cotton-woolen mixtures in violet-

blue with navy contrast is another darling scheme. And cotton mixtures usually launder remarkably well. Style No. 464 is designed for sizes 6. 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 12 requires 3’x yards of 39-inch material with V 2 yard of 35-inch contrasting.

Inclosed find 15 cents for which send me Pattern No. 464. Name Street City state Size

To obtain a pattern of this model, tear out the coupon and man it to Ellen Worth, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Marylandst, Indianapolis, with 15 cents in stamps or coin. COUNCIL ARRANGES PRAYER MEETING Mrs. W. F. Rothenburger is to lead a prayer meeting of the Indianapolis Council of Federated Church Women, to be held at 10 Thursday in the Third Christian Church. The meeting is to be sponsored bv the council's spiritual life department. Mrs. Merle Sidener is to be hostess. and music is to be provided bv Mesdames A. W, and L. B. Lookabill. Mrs. R. R, Mitchell is council president. N

PROPERLY FITTED GLASSES Relieve Eyestrain and Headaches Every one should have their eyes examined to know exactly the condition of their eyes. Especially if you are troubled with headaches, nervousness or dizzy spells, these disorders are almost a certain sign that your eyes need attention. The cost is so small that it is not economy to neglect your eyes. DR. J. E. KERNEL -S? Ailed. TRACTION TERMINAL BLDG. Brnt: , n Ground Floor Market an i Illinois Sts.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Sheer wool dressed vp ivith a lame scarf and pleated detail is newly chic in gray or dark rich colors for afternoon occasions.

Pennsylvanian Will Speak to Welfare Group Indianapolis committee, Child Welfare League of America, headed by Miss Gertrude Taggart, is to be addressed at luncheon Thursday at the Columbia Club by Francis Biddle, Philadelphia attorney and chairman of the National Committee of the League. Also serving on the local committee are Mrs. Robert S. Sinclair, Mrs. Edgar H. Evans and Mrs. Charles A. Gerrard. National committee representatives from Indiana include Joseph A. Andrews, Lafayette; Mrs. Edmund B. Ball, Muncie; J. K. Lilly and Mrs. Evans, Indianapolis. The plight of a half-million needy, neglected and homeless children is being brought to the attention of the populace by a nation-wide mobilization organized by the League. The fact that during the depression, destitute and neglected children have been swept into the background in favor of emergency relief for families, is being emphasized by the League. Federal funds have not been available for the care of children away from home. The last United States census revealed 242,929 children in foster care and 66,950 children in foster boarding homes. At least half a million dependent, neglected and delinquent children need care outside their own homes and only through partnership of the federal, state and local governments and private agencies can the critical need be met, the committee contends. MOTHERS ARRANGE TEA, CARD PARTY Mrs. C. M. Stevens is to be in charge of a tea and card party to be given by the Indianapolis De Molav Mothers’ Club at the Ban-ner-Whitehill auditorium Thursday. The committee assisting her includes Mesdames Everett L. Jackson. door prizes; D. W. McClure, table prizes; H. G. Peterson, candy; C. T. Tuttle, score pads and pencils; Irene Ridge. Bertha Lindgren, F. S. Wood. Lena Stamphill. H. H. Fagin, Anna Schneider. Clyde J. Hull. L. R. Brinkman and H. R. Fessler. assist at tea table.

Wife Can Help Husband by Building Confidence, Jordan Tells ‘Heartsick’ Thorough Understanding of His Failure to Get Work May Help Develop Tolerant Attitude of Problem, She Says. Put vnur problems before .lane .lordan who will help too aeek a solution by her answers in this eolumn. Dear Jane Jordan—My husband and I have been married for more than five years. I was working when we married and he did not ask me to quit; so. as we needed many things and wanted furniture of cur

own, 1 continued working. A year later he was out of a job and hasn't worked since. I

in \W^m¥ “ , W L JR * and

have managed to keep things going all of these years, but I am sick at heart. I want to stay home and keep house and have babies like anybody else. Every man I know excepting my husband has been able to secure a job of some kind if only for a week

Jane Jordan

or two. I realize that my working keeps him from getting on government relief work, but it seems to me he should be able to get something once in a w'hile. In spite of myself, all the love and respect I had for him is about gone. I am sick of explaining to friends and relatives that he is still unemployed. I feel that if our positions were reversed we still could be happy. In all fairness to him he has been a good husband to me in many other ways. I know he is true to me. He does all the housework and helps with the cooking and laundry, but oh, if only he could get a ,iob! I know times are hard and jobs are scarce. He mopes about the house and sings the blues and complains of his health. He has been to several doctors and they can’t find anything wrong with him, except a light case of indigestion which i am sure is brought on by his brooding. If you can give me any suggestion about how to treat him or to go about getting him a job I’ll be thankful. HEARTSICK. Answer—Few things are more discouraging to a man than a wife who is more capable than he is. The tendency of a discouraged man married to a self-supporting woman is toward complete dependency. What has happened in your family is a complete reversal of the masculine and feminine

Bustle Accent Seen in New Evening Gowns This season important interest is manifested in evening gowns that introduce movement at the back, with the bustle idea accented. It appears in youthful evening fashions especially, but it is also observed in evening costumes for women, where it takes on a soft collapsed form, usually resulting from loops and panels and bows. In younger types the bustle has a very crisp look, and is sometimes formed cf bows and loops that are frequently lined to give an even greater air of crispness, the facing sometimes in a contrasting color. While the bustle line usually emanates from the waistline, it is also introduced occasionally below the waistline, developing from a shallow yoke. I' is interesting to observe that f appears very frequently in conjunction with Vshaped necklines, the V terminating at the waistline. Crisscross strap decolletages, T straps and vents are other features of dresses that approve the bustle fullness. Dresses with bustles are developed in fabrics with body, such as moire, taffeta and gros de Londres, but they are also fashioned of the more ianguorous fabrics, in chiffons and other sheers for example, also in satin and crepe. Perfect with black is Molyneux’s new apricot color which is called “Coq de Roche,” a rosy and flattering shade. It is effective in suede belts, handbags and hand-sewn slipon gloves.

Daily Recipe OYSTER CASINO 1 pint oysters 1-2 cup finely minced green pepper 1-2 cup finely minced bacon 1 tablespoon lemon juice Drain oysters and arrange on a greased oven-proof platter. Sprinkle with green pepper, minced bacon, lemon juice and pepper. Bake in a hot oven. 450 degrees F., about 10 minutes.

Try Tit(S Sauce to Make a Meal Perfect Srv* It with <ll meats, hot or cold. Use it in omelets, salads, shortcake, tarts, ice box cake. Whenever cranberry sauce is served, it makes other foods taste so much better. Ten-Minute Cranberry Sauc* 1 pound or quart (4 cups) cranberries 2 cups water 1 H to 2 cups sugar Method: Boil sugar and water together 5 minutes; add cranberries and boil without stirring (5 minutes is usually sufficient) until all the skins pop open. Remove from the fire when the popping stops, and allow the sauce to remain in vessel undisturbed until cool. Anew, beautifully colored recipe book will be mailed free. Send postal to Dtpt. N AMERICAN CRANBERRY EXCHANGE 90 Wik B>oadwy, Naw York City

| roles. Os course you're unhappy. It is easier for you than for your husband because your role, while not satisfying, involves no loss of self-respect. Your husband, on the other hand, suffers such doubt and despair as to his own worth that it registers when he applies for a job. Rebuffs only strengthen his inner conviction that he is too weak to succeed; so that now he will not even make the effort, but retires into illness instead. Perhaps if you lost your job or became ill, he would rise to the occasion and perhaps not. Some men need a woman to lean on in order to hold themselves erect. At any rate, in your place, I wouldn't risk giving up a remunerative job in order to arouse the aggression of a too-passive husband. The same result, if it is obtainable at all. can be won in some other way. A thorough understanding of your husband's failure, and your part in it. may make you more tolerant in your attitude. Instead of scorning him, as you undoubtedly do, you would do better to attack the problem from another angle. He has lost his belief in himself, and if you can help him get it back by reiterating your confidence in his capacity, it may revive his numbed nerve of effort. I do not believe that you or any one else can go out and get the man a job. That he must do for himself. Nor do I think that it will help any to let him feel too comfortable in his dependence. The only thing that will work at all is to give him the confidence to try. It is not an easy job to rebuild something that took four years to tear down, and I can't tell you exactly how to go about it. Try putting the emphasis on his good points and see what a more hopeful attitude will do for his morale. You may think you have done all this before, but haven't your discouraging remarks outweighed your encouragement up to date? Even when you forcibly have restrained your impatience you have felt it inside and this fact he knew full well. Business conditions are better even if your husband isn’t. He has a little less to buck now than formerly. Possibly this fact will help him break through his hopeless lethargy. A change of attitude on his part would be helpful.

Have You Seen the 976F Atwater ki:at? fa-! $ Ipfi By all means see it at the VICTOR before you buy any RADIO! ★ALL METAL TUBES i * f j★BEAUTIFUL CABINET ★WORLD-WIDE RECEPTION ! Pay Only SI.OO A Week! The 976F Atwater Kent pictured here is undoubtedly the world’s most remarkable radio value. Xo one ever questioned Atwater Kent’s ability to build fine radios. In the case of the 976F you have not only a super-fine radio but a perfectly beautiful piece of furniture. Yes, by ALL MEANS ... make a trip to the Victor and inspect this best of all Atwater Kent’s efforts. 231-237 West Washington Street Directly Opposite Statehouse

Flapper Fanny Says te u. s. pat. orr. n Getting to bed late is an occasion for alarm.

Large Pores on Face Due to Negligence BY ALICIA HART Does rouge enlarge the pores? No. it doesn’t, provided, of course, your face is cleaned thoroughly at least twice a day. If, when you go to bed. you leave dust and layers of makeup on your skin, before long your pores will be enlarged and your complexion will look rough and unattractive. But you needn't blame the bad condition on your rouge. Attribute it to your own negligence. If you like cream rouge (it generally is the easiest to apply and it stays on longer than dry varieties), smooth it on before you powder. If you have difficulty in blending it, brush your forefinger lightly across a bit of cold cream before you dip it in the rouge. Wait Five Minutes When you have finished, wait about five minutes before you powder. This gives your natural color a chance to get back to normal (it gets higher as you rub and pat on rouge), allowing you to judge accurately whether or not ycru need more rouge. You simply can’t put cream rouge on powdered skin. If you use a dry type, powder first. Be sure to choose a shade that matches your natural coloring and learn to apply it correctly. It should be kept well upward, following the cheek bones outward. Don't rouge chin, hollow in throat or your forehead. After all, you are trying to enhance your natural skin tones and to smear artificial color on spots where natural high color never appears defeats your purpose.

PAGE 9

V egetables Make Good Appetizers Canned or Fresh, They Are Equally Satisfactory, Dietician Says. BY MARY E. DAGUE Not long ago I was with a group of nutritionists who discussed the virtues of the vegetable kingdom, when it was agreed that many vegetables besides tomatoes make delightful appetizers for luncheon and dinner. Canned or fresh are equally good, for generally there is no waste or lass of vitamin content and mineral constituents if the juice as well as the solid vegetable is made full use of. Careful and zestful seasoning are essential in preparing appetizers. Lemon juice or vinegar, sugar, salt, sometimes a mere suspicion of spice, a drop of onion juice, just a hint of pepper—any or all of the condiments in the pantry can be added to almost any vegetable flavor with appetizing effect. But this is wasted if the final product is not thoroughly chilled and served. Cooking Waters Usable The water in which celery is ! cooked, cauliflower, brussels sp outs, brocolli, carrots, mushrooms all are ; usable either made alone or in combination. Tomato and sauerkraut. beet and tomato, bpet and cauliflower, carrot and mushroom—these are truly delicious combinations. A tiny sprig of parsley, two or three very tiny pearl onions, a slice of stuffed olive, a caper or two make attractive garnishes besides adding a bit of distinctive flavor to all vegetable juice cocktails. After the vegetable has been removed for serving, the vegetable stock can be seasoned and cooked a few minutes. This insures a delicately blended flavor for the finished cocktail. Os course, the same vegetable should not appear twice in the meal. Beet Juice Cocktail Two cups water, in which beets were cooked; 1 slice onion. 3 whole cloves, 6 peppercorns. 1-inch stick of cinnamon. 2 tablespoons lemon juice. 1 teaspoon sugar, few grains of salt. Add onion, clove, peppercorns, cinnamon, sugar and salt to beet juice and simmer 10 minutes. Strain and chill. Add lemon juice just before serving.

\ All Employees S 0 THE POWDER J ?' Perrnanems VHL N V Rinse. Shampoo e and set 50c ~ _ "g #Befur^&Loj 3”° Floor Odd Fellows Bld^