Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1936 — Page 14
OWN, COUNTRY CLUBS SET
ba Latest Fashions F rom Local Shops
~ Tennis, Golf, Swimming Events Scheduled to Be Climaxed by Dinner Dances and Fireworks
Arrangements Completed at Woodstock, In- ~~ dianapolis, Highland and Hillcrest for Day’s Entertainment.
IKE cannon crackers awaiting the match that will set them booming town and country clubs have their stages set for a roaring Fourth of Tennis tournaments, golf matches, swimming events, terrace dinners, elaborate fireworks and moonlight dances are on the program for
July. Saturday.
Tennis fans at Woodstock are getting in trim for the men’s tourna- - ment finals, to be played Saturday afternoon. A round robin tournament for mixed doubles has been planned for Sunday, with prizes to be awarded
. the winners. Fireworks are to be
terrace, with Larry Price and his orchestra providing music.
‘ While golf-minded men of Me_ridian Hills are competing in the flag tournament to be held there Saturday, other club members are planning tennis matches, horseback rides and aquatic sports. At 6:30 a buffet dinner is to be served on the lawn. Mr. and Mrs. Carl McCann, in charge of the fireworks, have ‘planned a spectacular display featuring a large American flag to be discharged from a huge shell, with parachute and candle search-light attached.
Golf Event Arranged
The Jillson Cup match, an annual Independence Day event since 1906, is to be the morning attraction for golfers at the Indianapolis Country Club. It is to be a scratch medal play of 36 holes, with the cup donated By William M. Jillson. Two-ball foursomes are scheduled on the afternoon program. A swimming contest with children’s prizes and exhibition diving will attract spectators to the pool during the afternoon. + Dinner is to be served on the terrace with fireworks to follow from 8:30 to 10. Tom McKittrick and his orchestra are to play for a dance in the outdoor pavilion on the country club grounds. Al] day Saturday and Sunday Highland golfers are to play a * round robin tournament with gross and net prizes as awards. F. P. Davis, winner of the club’s spring handicap and Henry Simons, last Saturday runner-up, are to be contestants. Dr. E. W. Gant is in charge of the tournament.
Other Events Scheduled
Ralph and Wayne Burns, who have just returned from the National Intercollegiate Tournament, played in Chicago last week, are to compete, as well as C. Severin Bushman and Fred Bastian, last year's state doubles champions. John A. Schumacher is committee chairman. A swimming meet, fireworks exhibition and dance are added attractions of the day. Larry Price and his orchestra are to be the music-makers. ~~ O At Hillcrest a/ golf flag tournament for men on the morning schedule. Women-are to have their chance on the co doubles in the afternoon. Following the fireworks the Al, Andy and Doc's orchestra is to play for a - dance. For members of town clubs who plan to dine within city limits the Indianapolis Athletic Club; has planned /an elaborate Fourth of July dinner offering an Indebendence Day menu. At the Columbia Club there is to be a dance in the air-cooled Cascade Room with music furnished ky the Harmodears.
LEF1I-OVER DAY
ERE it is Wednesday again and that means Left-Over Day. Today's left-over recipe deals: with what to do with left-over cake. In hot weather cake doesn't keep too well so here's a method of solving the problem,
FRENCH CREAM AND CAKE FOR 4 (Left-Over Sponge Cake)
1% cup flour. 14 cup sugar. 1 cup scalded milk. 1 egg. About 1 to 1l'z cups dry sponge cake. 1 . tablespoon whisky.
Moisten the flour and sugar with a little cold milk until a smooth paste is formed. Add to the scalded milk and cook * 15 minutes, stirring constantly. Beat the egg, add the mixture and return to the top of the aoubleboiler and cook about two minutes, no longer, or the egg will cuxdle. ‘When cool, flavor with rum, whisky, sherry wine or any liquor. Arrange dry cake (any kind of Jeft-over white cake may be used) . cut in short “fingers” around the inside of 4 sherbet glasses, pile in the center of each this French cream. Garnish the top of each glass with a dab of sweetened whipped cream. Of course, French cream is a kind of custard but smoother and with a somewhat different flavor.
CHAMBERS TO GO
rum, sherry, or
TO MIAMI BEACH , Marion
followed by a dinner-dance on th
J. Edgar Hoover Aid to Address
Women’s Council!
Mrs. J. H. Armington, Indianapolis Council of Women program committee chairman, announced today that J. W. Drane Lester, first assistant to J. Edgar Hoover, Federal Bureau of Investigation chief,
is to speak at the organization’s|:
president’s day luncheon Oct. 6. Other members of the program committee are Mrs. Lowell Fisher
and Mrs. John W. Thornburgh. Pasquale Montani, harpist, is to
play and Mrs. B. B. McDonald, new |: president, is to give her message to|: The |:
the council at the meeting. meeting’ place has not been selected.
EDWIN SCOTTS ARE AT HOME IN CITY
R JULY FOURT
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Scott are at|
home at 4911 Caroline-st. Mrs.
Scott, before her wedding at Christ| =
Episcopal Church last Wednesday,|
was Miss Virginia Mae Bailey.
maid and William Bailey best man. Out-of-town ‘guests included Mr. and Mrs. Julius Friedeman, St. Louis, Mo., and Mr. and Mrs. Seth Washburn and children, Max and
Miss Yvonne Jarvis was brides-
Maxine, Sedalia, Mo..
Lincoln.
1273 W. Ray-st, hostess.
EVENTS
SORORITIES Alpha ang Beta Chapters, Omega Kappa. 8 tonight. Joint meeting. Theta Chapter, Sigma Upsilon. 8 tonight. Lincoln. Beta Chapter, Alpha Beta Gamma. Tonight. Miss Isabelle Johnson, Co-Wa-Ma Club. 8 Fri. Lincoln. Monthly business meeting. : CARD PARTIES Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen.
8 tonight, 1002 E. Washington-st.
HIGHEST BID
BY SQUEEZE
Today’s Contract Problem
If you were South, and were playing this hand at seven spades, would you plan to draw trumps at once, crossruff, or look for another way
Good to Eat |
to develop the 13th trick?
Dealer MAQJIS v2 €4KQJ5 PdATI2
All vul. Opener—¥ K Solution in next issue.
Solution to Previous Contract Problem BY W. E. MKENNEY
American Bridge League Secretary ONTRACT duplicate bridge will have an unusual setting on July 10 and 11, when the third
annual Adirondack tournament will be held in Hollywood Hills Hotel at Old Forge, N. Y. the largest log building in the United States east of the Mississippi River. The program includes team-of-four and pair events. Players from the Adirondack region will meet some of the master players from New York and other cities. Today's hand is taken from one of the qualifying rounds held in Rochester, N. Y., and sent to me by Earl S. Cobey of that city. The bidding was not quite conventional, but the final contract was sound enough. In duplicate, no trump is always the preferred contract where the same number if tricks is available as in a suit, and neither hand has any partjcular ruffing value. When the opening lead of the queen of diamonds was made, South could count 12 tricks in top cards—three spades, four hearts, two diamonds, and three clubs. If either spades or clubs broke evenly, the thirteenth trick was in. South now took ‘three tricks in
24
clubs, and found that West still
J1084 3 1094 984 J2
Duplicate—None vul. West ‘North East Pass 2¢ Pass ‘Pass 3d Pass Pass 6N.T Pass Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead—¢ Q 24
had the suit stopped. He then tried the spade suit, only to find ‘again that Fast had a trick in spades. But South was stil safe. Four rounds of hearts were taken and West could not protect both diamonds and clubs, while East was
squeezed in spades and diamonds. (Copyright. 1936. NEA Service, Inc.)
SHOWER HELD FOR PROSPECTIVE BRIDE
Miss Sally Rossiter, whose marriage to Charles Schilling is to take place Friday in the rectory of SS. Peter and Paul Cathedral, was given a linen shower last night. Miss Martha Rodgers, 3815 N. Cap-itol-av, was hostess, assisted by her mother, Mrs. A. C. Rodgers. Guests were. Mesdames Harry Rossiter, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Charles Schilling Sr., Durwood Staley Jr., Carl Baker, william H. McKamey, Robert Griffith, Burt Gilkison, Howard McDonald, De-, vota Cobey, and Misses Katherine Hedrick, Dolores Greuller, Marjorie Schilling, Virginia Ruske, Dorothy Robinson, Harriet Closson; Rosemary Eller, Betty Trenck, Dorothy Bruce, Barbara Youngling, Evelyn Dickinson, Louise Clark, Fanchon Fattig, Mary Caldwell, Charlotte
McFadden and Mary Lee Leoubéer-
ger.
Hat Bands Match
The latest style conceit on men’s stiff straw hats is a hatband of flannel in colors to match or blend with flannel summer suits. ;
Self setting—quick—easy—. standard
complete Aa iele i andar poo, push-up set, rinse— all for only
Sess ess essa
| See—the Stars Are Wearing Our VACATION ~ PERMANENTS
BY MARJORIE BINFORD WOODS
OUND for a Western Vachon, boarding the train on which
Fashion Editor
Mrs. John Schumacher is seen here she left today for Chicago. Upon
arrival there she will change to the streamlined Zephyr which is to carry her on to Denver and points west.
Travel Club, Inc. Board Is to Meet
Revised constitution and by-laws of the International Travel-Study Club, Inc., are to be presented for board of directors approval at a meeting at 11 Monday at the Claypool. The board also is to decide the
date for the club’s federation meeting. The program for next year soon is to be announced, Mrs. H. P.
‘Willwerth, president, said today.
Mrs. Paul T. Hart, program chairman, is completing the speaker’s hureau list. Addresses are to be made before various chapters, each of which is to study the same country at the same time.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Knight, 3110 N. Pennsylvania-st, are in Washington, at the _Shoreham, where they arrived from Virginia Beach.
Honor Scholar
Shining trains such as these dashing new iron horses call for new travel wardrobes. They are air conditioned, clean as a pin, as comfortable as your own front porch and very sociable. No longer do you put on your oldest boucle suit and dowdiest felt hat to set forth grimly on a train trip expecting to look utterly bedraggled after the first station is passed. This thrilling mode of track travel today challenges you to look your best. Mrs. Schumacher met the challenge in a chic black costume suit of sheer fabric. The free swinging jacket worn over an exquisitely tailored one-piece dress is just the right costume for soing away. Short sleeves and a ‘uniqu bib of black and white checked taffeta with extending peplum give the dress ‘an out-of-the-ordinary look. Dozens of front line plea§s in the skirt give | it grace § and newness.
LIMMERING black patent is seen in the belt, trunk-like Koret bag and wide strap, squaretoed shoes. Florence Reichman must have designed the tilting black felt hat with an eye to travel when she stuck in the macaroni feather and sent it forth into this middle-western world. . New trains are canducive io loafing in comfortable clothes for lounge
mmm | Chairs revolve and’ backs let: down.
Miss Lois Claus (above), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Claus, has been awarded an honor scholarship to St.-Mary-of-the-Woods College. The Indianapolis. Alum-
nae Club made the presentation. Miss Claus is a St. John’s Academy graduate.
There are more ways to amuse yourself, too. . .buffets, radio lounges, club cars and sociability galore. All of which means that travel clothes need not be stiffly formal or dowdily utilitarian. Short sleeves, (but not complete sleevelessness) and light. colored washable frocks are in vogue in the new air-conditioned
and acetates have their bids in for train rides, and are informal enough to enjoy themselves. On a western trek, such as Mrs. Schumacher is taking, much of the space in the wardrobe ‘cases is taken up by jodhpurs, shoes, full riding equipment and sports togs. That's why a traveling dress, such as the
ment for it can be worn during the visit as an informal dinner dress for restaurant dining, as a semi-
jacket and is urbane and practical enough to fill in at any occasion where dark, cool clothes are in order.
PERMANENTS
One minute. The only one of its kind in the city.
ERS BRAND NEW SHOES
- REGULAR F&C QUALITY
| together
coaches. Cotton challis, crash linens |
one she is wearing, is a good invest--
formal afternoon frock, without the
Child Demands Sacrifice, Jane
Tells Girl, 19
Problem of Marriage With Widower Is Discussed.
Put your trials and tribulations In a letter to Jane Jordan, who will answer your questions in this column,
Dear Jane Jordan—I am a girl of 19 in love with a fellow of 25. He is a widower and has a child of 3 by his first marriage. The child is the dearest and sweetest little boy and I wouldn't think of doing anything injurious to his future happiness. Do you : think that after our marriage I would show a marked preference for our children and resent his origin? We've been going for a year, but during that time I've had other dates just : to be sure of. my = rT — love. I know now Jane Jordan that I can care for no one else. He has proved in more ways than one that he has an admirable character. I am about at my wits’ end in trying to decide whether I'd be making a fatal mistake by marrying him. xX,
Answer: It is not within my power to answer your question. The upbringing of a 3-year-old child is no small proposition for a 19-year-old girl. It is one thing to see the little fellow when he is all dressed up and in good humor, but quite another "to have the responsibility
{ for him day in and day out in sick-
ness and in health. The care of a small child is a strenuous occupation calling for patience and wisdom and, most difficult of all, the sacrifice of one’s personal freedom. Why don’t you take the child home with you for a visit several times and see how you react to the actual experience of caring for. him? Will you resent being hauled out of bed at night by his cries, at getting up at the crack of dawn, at staying home from parties, of meeting little emergencies, of putting up with the conStant intrusion of infantile wants and needs upon your own interests? I
until you've tried it over a period of time. You seem to have a well-developed bump of responsibility. At least you're not swept along in the roseate belief ‘that love neutralizes all the annoyances and conflicts which may arise during the care of another woman's child. If you keep yourself face to face with the realities of the situation, if youre practical enough to visualize all the difficulties which you're sure to encounter, it-will help you make the right decision. What you propose to do is a worthwhile thing, but it carries a price. Are you willing to pay it? » » ” % - Dear Jane Jordan—Four years ago when I was a junior in high school I started going with a boy who was then a college freshman. I went with him practically steady for two years and then left for col-
don’t know, and you won’t either
Help Wanted!
a Man Stork sent out an call today, and is - get plenty of assistance tomorrow. AlF White Cross Guilds. are to send members to guild headquarters in Methodist Hospital Nursing School to make baby gowns. Miss Anna M. White, White Cross Guild hostess, announced to all Guilds that there is an urgent need for infants’ gowns : and surgical dressings. Meridian Street Methodist Church is to meet at guild headquarters Friday.
»
lege. He drove over to see me sll. auring my freshman year. This last year I went to school farther away and we kept up a regular correspondence. We were not formally engaged, but had an old-fashioned “understanding.” He wrote to me constantly until a couple of weeks ago. Then ‘I heard he was married. Needless to say I was stunned and hurt. I still have his fraternity pin. Should I send it back? How shall T answer my friends who write to me? How does one forget? HEARTBROKEN. Answer—Time and a busy life will cause you to forget. If the pin is a valuable one, return it. Tell your friends the truth—that you knew nothing of his marriage until you heard it from others. It certainly was not courteous of him: to break off a long and close friendship without a word of explanation. It argues that he must have been under considerable emotional pressure of some sort unless he is just a cad.
ELIZABETH STOCK IS GIVEN SHOWER
Miss Elizabeth Stock, who is to be married in Lafayette July 18 to George. Hill, was entertained last night with a personal shower by Misses Marjorie Hinzman, Vera Doras and Irma Brooks. Gifts were given in a treasure hunt. Guests. included Mesdames Clara Obery and Eloise Bretheaur, and Misses Ethel Cutter, Helen | Horn, Evelyn Lohrman, Dora Lohrman, Alba Jasper and Helen Reidy.
FLAPPER FANNY SAYS:
G. U. S. PAT
Lodging in jail is free, but you
can’t get in without being charged.
Porch May Be |
as Interesting
as Living | Room |
Pictures, Hanging Baskets Aid in Changing Appearance.
The open air porch oftentimes is 2
the forgotten part of the home, per= haps because of the weather, which blows in a blizzard of snow one month and a torrent of rain the next. But for many months in the summer and fall, weather makes the porch attractive. Why not, then, make the porch. as attractive as the living room just inside the door? have an expanse of wall, broken occasionally by a window or door, "and usually painted a solid color. This makes for a drab appearance near at hand, although the effect from the street might be in the best architectural taste. Indoors pictures are placed om such a wall, breaking its unintere
esting surface. Pictures, of course,’
would not de for the porch, but wall’ and hanging baskets of colorful plants may ‘be used. - The porch is outdoors where plants are in their { real element, and where they will’ grow to greater proportions and
Most porciies. |
beauty with les§ attention than in- ¥
doors. Indoor Plants Suitable
Practically all plants which grow indoors are suitable for the porch.
Vines such as the Japanese ever= &= green are especially good because &
they drape the wall a
living, colorful screen. Pots
ageratum or marigold and many other common or uncommon plants
may be used in this way.
Provide a
If your porch has two heavy posts |
which mark the entrance from. the sidewalk, as so many have, two wall brackets of uniform size and design. They may contain two English Ivy plants, or other trailing plants. tice is one of warmth and welcome,
and it helps much to make the §
house seem a part of the growing landscape about it.
More Water Suggested
Little care is needed for plants of the porch. The fresh air keeps them healthier than indoors, but they need considerably more water. Look at them every morning, and twice a day on hot, windy days when evaporation is likely to be troublesome. Place the brackets on the wall at a height where the plants get part of the sun. This. means not too high, or in a dark corner. If fast growth is des feed them occasionally.
GARDEN SOCIETY
MEETS TOMORROW
The Emerson Grove Garden Club is to hold its regular meeting tomor=
install #%
The effect of such a prac= _
row at the Little Eagle Park. Plans |
for developing a drama group are to
be discussed and a member of the ;
fire department is to speak on “Pire Prevention and Beautifying Lawns.”
TO0m<XRWV »
HE SEVERIN SKYROOM is the kind of place you can go every night in the week , , . and never grow tired of dancing to the sweet music of Louie Lowe and his band. Pardon, 1 should say ‘his “Merry Men in the Moon” for they are sky high atop the Severin Hotel now. And they are attracting the .smartest crowds of the season. Your
i steady date or your guests from afar will be glad you know so well
your way about town. Take them dancing ’'neath the stars . . . (for dinner, too) . . . and they'll bless you for picking a place that establishes a new “high”:in coolness, smartness and all-around refreshment, if you know what I mean.
ITT
These “dining out” suggestions will take you merrily along in the social whirl. They're timely for Saturday and Sunday when you go about celebrating the 4th of July , , > and they're especially good for lifting just an ogdinary day into one of special importance. Try one and all of my tried and true rendezvous. Let me know what else you'd like to know and I'll do a further bit of scouting about. Call RI-5551 for
further information regarding locale, prices, hours and. what to wear. (Informality is general here and almost without exception).
Hoping you'll call soon,
———
All sorts of beverage sets are made to grace the modern table. “The Honeymoon” is terribly smart, having a crystal shaker and a pair of glasses mounted om one of those topsy-turvy serving racks. »
Grape limeade is lovely to look at and good for thirst: quenching at any hour in the day.
TERM INA RLU TOWER FOUNTAIN
UNI i) yy venient locations offer
you a variety of
“famous foods.” Menus are va with plenty of appetizing suggess tions for these mid-summer day Prices are moderate and still. resent the very best values in feo It’s so delightfully, healthfully coo and there is very little of the ciate ter and noise which so often i fere with relaxation and en} oy at meal time. 4
Famous Lainks PEASONT. “Ah It’s air-conditioned, too.
Are you going to the | tennial? And have you the charming sheer ense inspired for just this o ion? Wherever your vacati
. takes you, better ingest his serviceable uit,
Tomorrow 1 bring you late for shopping before the :
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