Indianapolis Times, Volume 48, Number 32, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 April 1936 — Page 16

PAGE 16

Play Fans to Attend in Parties

Arrangements Made For Civic Opening Tomorrow Hosts and hostesses have chosen their party guests for the opening of "Accent on Youth” at the Civic Theater playhouse tomorrow night. Mrs. Jack Harding is to attend with Mrs. Rosamond Van Camp Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Miner and Caleb N. Lodge. Mrs. Ralph Hamill, Chicago is to see her daughter, Mrs. John McEwen, appear in the play and is tv) be with Mr. McEwen. Mrs. Herbert T. Wagner is to come with Miss Mignon Wagner, Mrs. S. F. Wagner and Mrs. Eunice Naylor. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Green's guests are to be Messrs, and Mesdames H. C. Fledderjohn Jr., S. V. Abramson and R. Blayne McCurry. Mr. and Mrs. Vern C. Vanderbilt are to attend with Miss Betty Vanderbilt and Vern C. Vanderbilt Jr. With Miss Florence Guild are to be Mrs. Jeanne Bose, Misses Frances Potter, Zila. Robbins, Nell Coates, Ruth Stone, Hannah Keenan and Geraldine Kindig. M t . and Mrs. Donald Carter are to attend with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gausepohl. Mr. and Mrs. John B. Washburn, Mr. and Mrs. Max Recker and Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Warrender are 10 form a party. Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Gordner are to entertain Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Meade, Mr. and Mrs. Vance Smith, Dr. John Aspy and John Emison. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. McKee, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams and Mr. and Walter Hess are to be together at the show. Mr. and Mrs. Edson Wood Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Todd are to attend. Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Rhodehamel have invited Messrs, and Mesdames H. J. Beiry, Frederick Crumme, Walter Foltz, B. F. Leib, William C. Kingdon Hulburt Smith and Dr and Mrs. J. W. Ricketts. Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Adams are to go with Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mattison. Fr:*.nk Springer, Dr. and Mrs. I. J. Kwitny, Misses Margaret Shipp, Edna Fisher, Helen Loper, Betty Scott, Margaret Stayton, Mrs. Jesse Fletcher, Messrs, and Mesdames Horace Nordyke, Evans Woollen Jr., Paul Richey, Clifford Courtney and Marvin E. Curie also are forming parties. ~aE7s7to Meet Irvington Chapter 364, Order Eastern Star, will meet at 8 Monday night in the Irvington Masonic Temple to .confer degrees, and to celebrate the twenty-seventh birthday of the chapter. Card Party Is Held St. Vincent’s Hospital senior class entertained with a card party last night at the nurses’ home auditorium. Assistants were Misses Barbara Hasey, Beatrice Bennett and Mildred Alexander.

ANTICIPATING THE BID

Today’s Contract Problem You are the dealer. What would you bid, holding hand No 1? Would you bid the same with hand No. 2? HAND NO. 1 HAND NO. 2 AAKJ9 4 A K J 9 VQJ9B7 VKQJ9B ♦9 ♦ 9 *Q92 A A 9 2 Solution In next Issue it) Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. M’KENNEY American Bridge League Secretary TODAY’S hand Illustrates the extent to which common sense should dictate the logical course in bidding. Suppose you dealt yourself this hand. What would you bid? AAK 8 7 VK 6 2 ♦ 765 A A 5 2 10 Unthinking players would quickly open one spade, because the hand contains a biddable spade suit and 3’* honor tricks, more than enough high card strength for an opening bid. But an opening bid, in addition to the necessary strength requirements, must also contain a potential rebid. Let us consider what would happen if you opened today’s hand with one spade. You must anticipate that your partner's re-

GOOD TO EAT BY LOLA WYMAN

LEFT-OVER DAY SINCE many people nave fish on Friday, it should be appropriate to discuss left-over fish recipes. By that I mean that little cup of tuna fish or salmon you can’t decide how it can best be used. FISH CHOWDER FOR 2 1 slice of salt pork. 1 onion. 1 potato. 1 pint milk. *s cup flaked fish. Cut the perk into cubes and fry until well browned. Cut the onion into thin slices and brown in pot, then add the milk and the raw potato cut into small pieces (about 1 cupful). When potatoes are cooked, which should take about 15 minutes, add the fish in large flakes and chopped parsley. Serve with saltines. This makes a wholesome lunch or supper dish. CREAMED FISH A white sauce with parsley makes left-over fish very presentable and tasty. Flake the flso. Add to sauce and serve on toast, In patty shells or popovers. Be sure to season the sauce with paprika and pepper. Anything creamed is rather heavy, ao with this serve a clear soup, a green salad and fruit for dessert. STANDARD SOUFFLE 3 eggs, separated. 1 cup left-over fish.

LATEST FASHIONS FROM LOCAL SHOPS

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sponse most likely will be in your weakest suit, diamonds. If you open one spade and your partner responds with two diamonds—which, incidentally, is now a oneround forcing bid—what can you rebid? You can not rebid _pades (only a four-card suit), you have no other suit to name, and your hand is not strong enough to carry the bidding to two no trump. You would be trapped. Therefore, this hand can not be opened with one spade. But, since the hand as a whole is substantially stronger than a minimum opening bid, you are likewise not justified in passing with so much strength. In such a dilemma you should open the bidding with one club; and then, no matter what suit your partner names in response, you have created a spade rebid and, at the same time, you have kept the bidding at the one level. If your partner responds with one no trump or two clubs, you can pass. Opening the bidding in a three-card minor suit in such a situation is not dangerous. There is little likebhood that the bidding will be driven to game in the minor suit, for minor suits often are approach suits toward a possible no trump contract; and game in a minor suit generally should not be contracted for, until a possible three no trump contract has been found undesirable. If your partner does insist upon the club ‘.uit, his hand undoubtedly will contain an independently biddable club suit, in which event your club holding will be

Finch of salt-pepper. 3 tablespoons butter. 3 tablespoons flour. 1 cup milk. Melt the butter, add the flour and gradually the hot milk. Remove from fire and add the egg yolk and fish and any left-over vegetables (making in all 1 cup). Let cool. Then fold in the beaten egg whites. Pour into a buttered mold. Set in pan of hot water tuid bake in a moderate (350) oven 30 to 45 minutes.

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Successor to Mrs. Bennett Is Announced

Mrs. Dorothy H. Mealey of St. Louis, Mo., has been appointed director of the City Hospital occupational therapy department, Mrs. Jackson K. Landers, president of St. Margaret’s Hospital Guild has announced. This department is maintained by the guild with the co-operation of the Indianapolis Foundation. Mrs. Mealey fills the vacancy left by the death of Mrs. Grace Bennett. Since December, 1934, Miss Virginia Watwood has been acting director. Has Varied Experience Mrs. Mealey has been superintendent of occupational therapy at City Hospital in St. Louis; director of occupational therapy for the Missouri Association of Occupational Therapy home service department, and superintendent of occupational therapy at the Davidson County Tuberculosis Hospital in Nashville, Tenn. She is a graduate of the St. Louis School of Occupational Therapy and has had experience in Army hospitals in Chillicothe, 0., and Atlanta, Ga. She also has worked with tuberculosis patients in public health service in Alexandria, La. At Veterans Hospital 35, St. Louis, her experience covered medical, surgical, orthopedic, mental and tubercular cases. sufficient to constitute adequate trump support. Today’s hand is an example of vrhat good players do. to avoid passing a hand substantially stronger than a minimum opening bid, where the naming of the only suit in the hand will leave the bidder unprepared to rebid. The same theory is applied in similar situations when responding or when rebidding. You must always try to anticipate what your partner's next bid may be and with what you can respond to it. If you do not do this, you may be trapped for a rebid. This is the second important element of the principle of preparedness; that is, the creation of a rebid in a hand that apparently has none but is too strong in the other requirements to permit a pass. (Copyright. 1936. by NEA Service, Inc.)

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS Times Fashion Editor YOU will laugh at April showers if you sprinkle dark days with bright rain fashions like these. Such dashing young lines and cheery colons will give you the semblance of a spring flower in the midst of a downpour!

Learn to Read Is Spring Tonic of One Woman BY ALICIA HART A spring tonic which stimulates you mentally and physically, putting a shining quality into your eyes and making your smile infectious, doesn’t necessarily have to be a medicine or a diet. It may be a fine book that sets your mind at work in anew and fascinating fashion. Or a vacation. Or anew friend. Late last spring I saw a woman who looked as if she had been sleeping soundly and taking outdoor exercise with a vengeance. Her skin was blooming. Her steps were light. She seemed fairly to dance when she walked. She appeared about ten years younger than she had earlier in the winter. When asked about the change she simply said, “Well, you see, I’ve just learned to read.” Just learned to read! Yet here was a woman who had graduated from a fine college years before and who had held many good positions. She meant, of course, that she had just learned to enjoy, understand and retain printed words. Her taste in literature has changed radically since then. She enjoys history, biography and the daily newspapers. Naturally her conversation is more stimulating, and her eyes have continued to shine and sparkle. She was a nice person before. Now she is an utterly charming one. There are others who lift themselves out of late winter doldrums into a true Easter frame of mind by taking up some outdoor sport. A weekly game of tennis or a round of golf do a great deal for drooping spirits and sallow skin. A three-day liquid diet, followed by weeks of sensible eating, will remove extra poundage which often depresses.

lam a Pink

That most' talked of shade for spring, carrot color, has been fashionably incorporated in this dotted ensemble of rubber-backed cotton print. Brown background with carrot and white dots. Amusing wooden buttons made to look like tiny logs. No grappling with belt buckles in the rain, for this clever coat has an ingenious self belt that pulls together and ties with the greatest of ease. •a a a THE jaunty beret keeps the wearer’s head high and dry. The snub-nosed umbrella so spottily gay, is more likely to turn up after a party because it is so unusual that you’ll have a hard time losing it after it is once identified as yours. It and similar snappy styles are to be found in local shops—so you’d better fly downtown the fastest way before a cloudburst catches ydu unawares and unprepared. \ Formula for Polish Here is a reliable formula for making your own furniture polish (you will need an extra supply for housecleaning.) Mix equal parts of turpentine and boiled linseed oil. Apply with a soft cloth using even strokes and rub against the grain of the wood. Then rub with the grain until the oil is absorbed and a satiny gloss has been obtained.

••• vr<3 FAIR GROUNDS Bigger—More Beautiful Than Ever! Open 1:00 to 10:30 P. M. Daily and Sunday Admission Adults 40c After 5 P. M. 25c Before 5 P. M. Children—lsc Any Time

Outlines Training of Youth F. 0. Belzer, Scout Chief, Speaks to District Club Group. More thought is given to youth training today than ever before, but this does not mean that the past was barren of such training, F. O. Belzer, Boy Scout executive, told Seventh District Federation of Clubs members today at a meeting at the Claypool. ‘‘ln the Bible we find references to youth training, and history shows us that the Athenian youth was trained to citizenship from his early boyhood,” Mr. Belzer said. “Youth training must be figured in world progress. The modern trend is toward giving youth a greater share in solving its own problems. Outstanding agencies in this are the home and church, coupled with character building and social welfare agencies.” Annual federation reports were given following Mr. Belzer’s talk. New officers, elected in October, took office.

Easterner Is Elected to Be D. of U. Chief Mrs. Theodore R. Ramage, Springfield, Mass., is the newly elected president-general of the national society Daughters of the Union, which is to close its congress at the Claypool today. Mrs. George Shannon, Terre Haute, was elected second vice-president-general, and Mrs. Henry Smith, Long Island, N. Y., was named chaplain-general. Miss Mildred Murray, Columbus, Ind., was nominating committee chairman. Dr. William G. Spencer, Franklin College president, spoke at the banquet last night, of which Mrs. William Schlosser W'as arrangements chairman. Wall Paper Cleaning If you “spot” any grease spots on papered walls, blot them out in this manner. Cover the spot with a clean, white blotter and press with a hot iron. This idea really works, so try it!

' M Jelkious s iM f B R y ' IP* ICE CREAM The way you like it best! In anew sealed t mgmf container, with controlled quality and rjKMBg trolled freshness! These safeguards profeet its goodness from plant to your homel certain delicate \ Ih

MY DAY By Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt

TXfILLIAMSBURG, Va., Thursday—A friend sent me tha * * following extract from her scrap book the other day: “The cardinal flaunts his crimson wing in the languid sunshine and sings out his throbbing heart to a pulsing world. “The urge of bursting life behind the bud renews in us

the knowledge that we are but parts of a never changing plan, and despite the trials that beset a burdened humanity the world goes on with the eternal music of the spheres, and even in our chaos we know that all is well. “We can not say that the morning fulfills our every wish, or that by simple effort we can reach out and touch the stars, but we do know that there is a healing in the winds, and that in the great arch of the sky there !s the eternal shelter of the infinite. “So, despite despairs and losses, man as well as nature is clothed with new ideals, new hopes and

§4t--3.-: : i ii'mS

Mrs. Roosevelt

renewed faiths, and we cast away the sere leaves of disillusion to put on the ever vernal truths that, through the ages past, have been good for men to live by, and so go forward into anew springtime of life.” It seems to me that this is particularly appropriate for many of us to remember at Eastertime. It seems so hard at times to forget the past, to determine to think of the present and the future, and not to waste one’s energy in regrets. We must learn our lesson from nature and begin again with every spring. We got away from Washington this morning at 11 and drove down along the Rappahannock River to Gloucester Point, took the ferry to Yorktown and reached Williamsburg about 4:30. We stopped for a picnic lunch, picking out a spot near a creek, a bit of lawn and some trees by a brick house which had burned down. A breeze was blowing and it was just a heavenly “one of those days” which make you glad just to be alive. (Copyright, 1936, by United Feature Syndicate, Inc.)

D. A. R. SOCIETY IS ENTERTAINED Mrs. Victor Winterrowd, 3848 Winthrop-av, entertained the Wheel and Distaff Society, Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution at her home today. Assisting her were Mrs. J. Francis Madden, Mrs. Hughes Patten and Mrs. Frederick A. Albershardt. Mrs. Laura New spoke on “China and Glass of the Colonial Period.” MODERN DUTCH OVEN TO BE USED Miss Joyce G. Buth, home economics director, is to demonstrate a Dutch oven gas range at the Ban-ner-Whitehill store from April 27 to May 2. Demonstrations are to begin at 1:30. The oven to be demonstrated has

APRIL 17,1936

BRIDGE TALK

Guests at the opening luncheon and keno and bridge party at Highland Golf and Country Club are to hear Mrs. Kay Coffin speak on “Bridge,” next Wednesday. The committee includes Mrs. Raymond C. Fox, chairman, and Mesdames Benjamin Perk, L. J. Eby, C. J. Renard, Michael J. Duffecy Jr., Frank A. Madden, C. A. Behringer, John A. Welch, Allen J. Calloway, Charles J. Pettinger, Charles M. Hammond, and How-ard R. Williams.

been developed in Indiana, by the Globe-American Corp. It is a variation of the old-fashioned oven used in American colonial days. Miss Ruth is to cook full meals during her demonstrations.