Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 March 1937 — Page 8
PAGE 8
Erring Mate | Accessories Accent Smartness
Problem to ‘Brown Eyes’
Try to Find Reason for Husband’s Escapades, Jane Advises.
Put your problems in a letter to Jane Jordan and read your answers in this column daily. '
PEAR JANE JORDAN—I have been married four years to a man whom I love very much. He is a nice, clean person and the nicest talking man I have ever been around. But here is our trouble: He got into the habit of staying away from home two or three days and spending all or most of his money, leaving me without anything to eat. He would say, “I can’t pay you this week. Come back next.” I forgave him five or six times and he promised that he would not do it any more. Then it would not be long until h& would do the same thing without any reason. The last time he did it was about six weeks ago. We lost our furniture which was nearly paid for, and I sued for a divorce. Today he found out where I was staying and begged for me to take him back. He said that he learned his lesson. All he has to offer now is his love. I am seven years older than he is. I am 34 and he is 27. I have been married twice before and I know what horrible mistakes one can make. My first was the marriage of two children, We have a son 17 years old. The second man was a drunkard, I am just in a place where I can’t even think for myself. I like a home and love my husband dearly; so please let me know real soon as I have to give him an answer. Please don’t forget me. BROWN EYES. ANSWER—I would like to be able to answer you with a definite yes or no, but I am not that wise, Most of us yearn for a superior being to lift the burden of a difficult decision from our shoulders and tell us exactly what the outcome of our actions will be. I believe that your wish to go back to your husband is
strong if only you knew some way to |
prevent a repetition of his irresponsible behavior. Of course it isn’t true that there is no reason behind what he does. There is a reason for every behavior pattern which repeats itself over and over again, but it isn’t always easy to find out what it is. To understand the impulse to shed one's responsibilities at intervals would require a painstaking search into the man’s childhood. When was the first time he did such a thing and why did he do it? Find out if there was not an occasion back in his boyhood when he left home to escape something he did not like. Did he return and receive the forgiveness of his mother? { There is a chance that such a thing |
{ {
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Mildred Chance Attending Child
Training Parley
Miss Mildred Chance has gone to San Antonio, Tex., to attend the national convention of the Association for Childhood Education. She is the representative of the Indianapolis branch of the association.
Miss Chance will present an invitation from Indianapolis for the 1938 national convention. Representatives from the Indianapolis Free Kindergarten Society who are attending the convention include: Mesdames Helen S. Surprise, Elizabeth K. Soland, Helen K. Speer, Mildred G. Levey and Misses Rubie F. Stapp, Ellenor J, Parker and Grace L. Brown, society superintendent. ‘
Today’s Pattern
Today’s Contract Problem
North has bid six hearts, over West's call of five spades. No other suit has been bid by either side. When West doubles, should East lead a spade, a trump, or one of the unbid suits? WEST A98762 v2 975 Hh K86 All vulnerable.
Solution in next issue. 23
Solution to Previous Problem By WILLIAM E. M’KENNEY American Bridge League Secretary A RATHER interesting variety of the “suicide” squeeze is illustrated in today's hand, which was played by Lee Hazen, of New York, sitting North, with Mrs. Hazen as his partner. The “suicide” squeeze is the play by which one defending player is squeezed on a trick taken by the other. | The bidding is a trifle optimistic, [ but not entirely unreasonable. | The opening lead of the queen of
Women Continue
By United Press WASHINGTON, March 30.—The National Woman's Party today announced that it would continue an intensive campaign for an equal rights amendment to the Constitution because the Supreme Court's decision on minimum wages permitted men to “scab” on women in the labor market. After citing the New York State law decision last June, the statement said that the Court, “like a Dr. Jekyl and Mr. Hyde,” says that “it
| protects women to arbitrarily fix
APPLIES SUICIDE’ SQUEEZE
Rights Cam paign
AKQ42 4
72 83 N Ww S Dealer 8 5 9 SKITS Duplicate—None vul. West North East Pass 14 Pass
[2+ Pass SN.T. Pass !]14 N.T. Pass 6N.T. Pass
| Opening lead—¥ Q.
E
2 8
South 1
23
| hearts was won with the king. The | ace of clubs was led and then a small club, which dropped the queen and won in dummy with the king. Three rounds of clubs were played. West discarded two diamonds. Declarer threw one heart and one | diamond. | hearts and one spade.
! Mrs. | reception chairman for the After{math Club's 42d anniversary guest | party to be held at 2 p. m. Thurs|day in the William H. Block Co. | Auditorium. | Mrs. Demarchus C. Brown is to | talk on “Peggy Shippen, Benedict | Arnold's Wife.” vocalist, is to sing a group of songs, | accompanied by Miss Mae Engle.
|is in charge of the tea. |ants are Mesdames Seymour Stew|art, Leland Johnson, Marion Wooley, Edwin Rosener, Norman Kleifgen, Frank Dillon and | Misses Rosalind Pugh, Mary Laugh- ' | bein, Marion Laut and Helen Jean Willcuts.
Aftermath Club To Hear Talk on
‘Peggy Shippen’
Bertha Wright Mitchell is
Miss Lucille Chaffe,
Mrs. Charles Lawrence Price Jr. Her assist-
James Esterline,
East parted with = Club Meetings
Now three rounds of spades were | | cashed, followed by the ace of hearts. At this point, East held the jack of hearts and the king and queen of diamonds. In the dummy were the ace and nine of diamonds and the six of hearts. | Declarer now led the four of
| |
| spades, and East was squeezed. To {discard a heart would establish the !six in dummy and to play a dia- ' mond also would be fatal.
The hand is an apt illustration of the power of a long suit and the fatal effects of repeated discards. Apparently East and West had defense in three out of four suits, but this defense could not withstand | the killing play of the fourth round of spades.
(Copyright, 1937, NEA Service. Inc.)
sity School 66 Sewing Room.
Phoebe Clift, hostess. Lewis, book review. Election.
Chapter House. gram. Wilbur D. Peat, John Herron
TOMORROW
American Association of UniverWomen Creative Arts Class.
Club. Mrs. Mrs. M. C. “The Picturesque Ireland,”
Weman's Advance
Woman's Department Club Gar-
den Department. Ayres’ Auditorium. Mrs. W. D. Hamer, chairman. Garden party.
THURSDAY Ladies Federal Club. Mrs. William
M. Norris, hostess.
1908 Club. Mrs. C. O. Warnock,
hostess.
Caroline Scott Harrison, D. A. R. Colonial art pro-
of Spring Costumes Versatility
Usual Trait In Childhood
Acquired During Growth.
By OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON
Children are naturally versatile. This being the case, why is it that at the age of 25 or 30, they run on tracks and are interested in doing only very special things? One answer is that they are prepared for specialties, of course. The boy has concentrated on being an engineer or doctor, the girl on being a’ secretary, librarian or beauty culturist. But it is not all the answer. The truth is that they are not willing to switch tracks, if fate so decrees. A girl has a career all planned, has studied and fitted herself generally for a business life. She marries and finds herself washing dishes and mopping floors. Loss of Emotional Versatility
In a few months she has mastered the art of housewifery and can cook and mend as well as she can do short-hand. But at heart she rebels. She has lost “emotional versatility,” or the power to swing from one of life’s duties to another. The same with the boy. He prepares for, say, electrical engineering. But his father dies and leaves him a shoe store to run. He takes the store over, and spends the rest of his life fretting about what might have happened and didn’t. He builds up a dream world, based on disappointment, and lives in it while he starves his real life. Back to childhood, we must go to discover why people, especially men, get the fixed idea of one job, and are utterly unable to adjust themselves to the thought of anything else. What does the boy's life consist of usually? Home, school, sports and study. He is seldom asked to step out of his groove. One day is like another. Girls have more chance to diversify if they help at home, but our girls’ lives run pretty much in grooves also.| Parents discourage small children from helping at a time they wish to. Initiative is strangled at a psychological age. If children were allowed plenty of latitude in trying out work in-
Delta Delta Delta
Art Museum director, illustrated lecture. Mrs. Kenneth Dix Coffin, musical program. Tea. Mrs. Hugh MecGibeny, hostess chairman. Mrs.
terests, and even maneuverdd into them, they would be more adjustable to the unexpected turns of fate later. (Copyright,
Aids Announced For D.A.R.Bridge
Miss Alice Angerer is general chairman of a bridge party and tea to be held by the Wheel and Distaff of the D. A. R. at 2 p. m,, April 8, in the Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter House, 824 N. Pennsylvania St. Mrs. W. O. Weber, ways and means chairman, and Miss Angerer, will be assisted by Mesdames William F. Sandmann, Joseph P. Merriam, Noble W. Hiatt, George Caleb Wright, Paul S. Ragan, J. Francis Madden, George P. Peavey, Robert E. Kelly, Lawrence Duckworth, F. A. Albershardt, S. L. Mouser, Carl W. Piel, Max Barney, Herbert E. Wilson, Donald R. Mote, Kenneth Dix Coffin, J. Edwin Aspinall,
1937. NEA Service, Inc.)
Specialty Minds Generally |.
Dance Chairman
Frances Gerdts is ticket chairman of a dance to be sponsored by the Tri Mu Sorority tomorrow in the Hoosier Athletic Club.
Mind Your Manners
Test your knowledge of correct social usages by answering the following questions, then checking against the authoritative answers obelow: 1. Is it necessary at large dinners to wait until all of the guests have been served before beginning to eat? 2. At formal dinners, is food served by the head of the table? 3. At the completion of a course, how should the knife and fork be placed? 4. Who gives the signal for rising from the dinner table? 5. Which arm does a man offer a woman when he takes her in to a formal dinner. What would you do if— At a large dinner or banquet you are seated next to someone whom you do not know— (a) Eat the meal in silence unless someone near you introduces you? (b) Say, “I am Mrs. Noyes”? (c) Start a conversation without an introduction?
” Answers
Steven
un un
1. No, only until those near have been served. 2. No, it is offered by the servant at the left of each person who then helps himself. 3. Parallel across the plate with their handles to the right. 4. The hostess. 5. His right.
Best “What Would You Do” solution—(b).
(Copyright, 1937. NEA Service. Inc.)
Frans Hals to Be Lecture Theme
Mrs. Demarchus Brown is to give a lecture on “Frans Hals” at 8:15 p.m.
tomorrow at the John Herron Art Museum. The event is sponsored by the Institute membership and activities committees. Mrs. A. Dickinson Smith and Mrs. Guy H. Shadinger are cochairmen.
TUESDAY, MARCH 30, 1937
Tasty Salads Give Spring Meals Zest
Just the Thing to Tone Up Appetites; Good For Beauty, too.
By MRS. GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Service Staff Writer The spring appetite and the ade vice of beauty experts suggest luncheon salads. Just what the doctor ordered. Buf don't hold that against them—they taste good enough to be delightfully indigestible. Macedoine Salad (4 to 6 Servings)
Two cups cooked cauliflower buds, 1 cup cooked carrot cubes, 1 cup cooked green peas, cup cooked baby lima beans, 6 stuffed olives. Arrange the separate vegetables in small deep dishes and marinate in French dressing. Place dishes covered in refrigerator while standing in the French dressing. Have lettuce cleaned and chilled. For each serving, arrange a crisp bed of lettuce leaves on salad plate, then pile up with marinated vegetables and sprinkle with finely sliced stuffed olives. Serve with more French dressing in a separate bowl. This salad with crisp rolls and a pot of tea makes a refreshing luncheon, Pineapple-Cabbage Salad 4 to 6 servings) One-half head firm young cabe bage, 112 cups diced fresh pine= apple, 1 green pepper, shredded into long paper-thin strips, 1 white onion, minced, 6 green lettuce leaves, shredded. Shred the cabbage into thin strips. Combine all the vegetables and lettuce and pineapple. Mix with mayonnaise and cream dressing. Try this with wholewheat muf«fins and slices of cold ham. If you like mayonnaise well enough to make it yourself, try this simple recipe. Mayonnaise
One teaspoon prepared mustard, v2 teaspoon salt, 1x teaspoon pepper, !s teaspoon paprika, 1 egg, 21% ta= blespoons best quality vinegar or lemon juice, 2 cups olive oil or salad oil. Use a large bowl. Mix the dry ingredients—salt, pepper, paprika, and the mustard last. Add egg and beat | well, using rotary egg beater. Now | begin adding the oil very slowly, only by teaspoons at first. Use at this stage of the making only 142 cup of oil, continuing to beat steadily. Next add 1 tablespoon vinegar and beat in well, then add more oil, beating steadily, and more vinegar until all of both oil and vinegar have been used up.
New Mothers’ Chorus Elects Five Officers
Mrs. L. J. Langer is president of a newly organized unit of the Federation of Mothers’ Choruses. Other officers include Mrs. Irvin Yeagy, vice president; Mrs. A. E. Sullivan, secretary and treasurer; Mrs. Adele Schnell, membership chairman, and Mrs. Warren Pippin, publicity. The unit was formed at a recent federation executive board meeting,
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happened and that the forgiveness | | their wages while leaving men free
Vaughn Cornish and O. H. Hersh-
of the mother was so gratifying that he seeks for the same benign feeling over and over again, but does not know how to get it without repeating the oifense. This is only a guess, of course, but not so far-fetched as you would think. Your task is to find out why your husband gives up at the job of being a man of 27 to recapture some feeling of the past. When you know what he hopes to gain by such irresponsibile sallies, perhaps you can help him get his satisfaction in some other way. I doubt very much if he has learned his lesson yet, though I do not say he will never learn it, particularly if he has some intelligent help from you or somebody else. I realize that this will be a brand new point of view to you. Most oi us have no idea that our adult acts are determined by something that happened in the past. Nor can we see why digging back to the place where we made the original mistake helps in charting a new course. It simply is easier to gain control over something that is known than to be at
the mercy of an impulse which is unknown to us. JANE JORDAN.
Sunnyside Director To Address Women
Dr. Russel S. Henry, Sunnyside Sanatorium Board of Director’s member, is to speak on “Tuberculosis,” at a Florence Nightingale Club, Inc. meeting at 2 p. m. Friday in the Indiana National Bank Directors’ room. Hostesses are to be Mesdames L. T. Wright, Brewer Clay and Paul F. Catterson.
Return After Wedding Dr. and Mrs. John Janson are at nome at 2319 E. Washington St. Mrs. Janson formerly was Mrs. Marie
8948
\ \ A
OOMY comfort is found in the dress (No. 8948) for larger figThe skirt has the new molded
ures. hipline and swing. The straight jacket is dart fitted. Make it in cloque crepe with collar and jabot in a bright tri-colored print, or paisley print. Thin wool or cotton fabrics are also good. Patterns are sized 36 to 52. Size 38 requires 63% yards for the ensemble, and 6% yards for the dress with short sleeves. With Iong sleeves, the dress alone requires 4'2 yards of 35 or 39inch fabric, plus 2; yard contrasting. To secure a pattern and STEP-BY-STEP SEWING INSTRUCTIONS inclose 15 cents in coin together with the above pattern number and your size, your name and address, and mail to Pattern Editor, The Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis. The SPRING AND SUMMER PATTERN BOOK, with a complete selection of late dress designs, now is ready. It’s 15 cents when purchased separately. Or, if you want to order it with the pattern above, send in just an additional 10 cents.
UNITED RUG
8 The couple’s wedding took place March 14.
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| to undercut them in the labor mar-
ket and ‘scab’ on them.” The statement said that every argument advanced for wage regulation for women applied equally well to male workers. It said the Court had established the “unsound doctrine” of discrimination and assumed “that the liberty of women is not as precious as the liberty of men.”
Officers are to be elected by the Delta ‘Delta Delta Sorority Alliance at a dinner meeting tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. J. Jerome Littell, Spring Mill Road. Mrs. Littell will be assisted by Misses Charlotte Cashon, Marjorie Piersoll and Louise Fitch, and Mesdames Frederick Barrows, Hobart Burgan and Francis Forsyth.
Merle N.
Co. Auditorium. Guest Day. review.
A. Walker, vice chairman. Aftermath Club. William H. Block Book
Octagon Bridge Club. Mrs. Wal-
ter Sutton, 2944 Highland Place, hostess:
FRIDAY Culture Club. Mrs. J. W. Costin,
hostess. Mrs. Clyde Titus, “Present Day Music.”
man and Misses Mary Ann Tall and Myrle Barker.
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