Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1949 — Page 15
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| WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 149 ___.
* Consider People “As Well as Cards +; By BEASLEY BLACKWOOD 13:WELL, THIS is test day, How good a Humanicarian have you! become? In answering the questions which follow you will have to consider not only the cards wou’ hold but the people with whom you are playing. . "The answers are right at the bottom of the column so cover up that part until you have figured out your own solutions,
1, You are South, playing ‘against a couple of pretty good ‘players. ‘Partner has bid one ‘heart, second hand has passed ‘and. you held: r 96 P-J1064 D-AT42 C—K 8. w What do you bid if your partper is: a. Miss Brash; b. Mr. Champion; ¢. Mr. Muzzy; d. Mr, Meek. -
£2. You are South and your ‘partner is Mr. Dale.. You are vulnerable and opponents are not. “The bidding has gone:
‘West North East South + Pass 1H 38 * You hold: S~AQ8H-942D—-A T4383 C10 6 4. . What do you bid if East is: a. Mr. Masters; b. Miss Brash; s. Bir. Meek. 3. “You are South, not vulner-| gble. You open with one dia-
mond, West passes, partner bids
two clubs and East passes. You hold:
or H 42 D—-AK, B-AdS | you have a little patience,
64 C-I82 .
What do you bid if your part-|
ner is: a. Mr. Murry; b. Mr. Champion; ¢. Mr. Meek.
Here Are Answers To Today's Quiz 1.
slam. (b) Bid two diamonds planning to help hearts on the next round.
(¢) Try two no trump. Aj
slight overbid but worth it if
you can get to pldy the hand! Goes Quite Fur In Hollywood
yourself. (d) Three hearts is perfectly safe. No chance of Mr. Meek + getting too high.
. (a) I would try three no trump. Mr, Masters is trying to talk me out of something. I probably can't set him over a trick or two and there should be a fair chance for the no trump game.
»
DOUBLE! Miss Brash may be. out there with practically/!n Southern California. He said)
nothing. You have a good part- today that the Hollywood folk
(a) Better bid just 2 hearts. It’s an underbid but you can| count on Miss Brash to bid| again on the barest kind of a hand. Any other bid from you might end up in an unmakable|
4
- By i : . YOUVE A SPOT of landscaping to do. But those goodlooking: (and high-priced) shrubs in the nursery catalogues are unfortunately blooming at the same time as your income tax blanks. Well, don't be discouraged. Clever gardeners long ago learned that plants, like prophets, are never really appreciated behind their own iron curtain. And plenty of native-born Hoosier plant materials grace
flossy out-of-state nursery cat-
alogues. The farther from Indiana, the higher the price, too. S80 I welcomed the chance to’ talk to “James E. Cook, 2335 E. Garfield Drive. “He knows just every kind of native plant,” so some ‘of his friends told me. And from him I gathered these pointers. be? “Our native flowering dogwood, cornus florida, is rated. rumber one landscape material on many counts” says Mr. Cook. “It's well-proportioned, symmetrical. The leaves are interestingly ribbed in summer, brilliantly colored in fall, Its attractive flowers give way to showy winter berries. And it will adapt itself to sun or shade and almost any kind of soil, . » . “RED BUD, cercis canadensis, is excellent for the heartshaped leaves as well as the rosy pink flowers that outline its pleasantly irregular silhouette in early spring. “Many hawthorns are native. One, crataegus cordata, has clusters of brilliant red fruits. All * American hawthorns come true from seed that's one way to raise them, if
without robbing the woods and roadsides. ‘ “The native flowering crab has pink fragrant blossoms.
| Though the fruit is greenish | and hard, it's fragrant, too,
'
and makes good jelly. The wahoo or burning bush, is one of the several native euonymous relatives. It's so rare it shouldn't be plundered. Strawberry bush, another native euonymous, is showy, too. “The despised . elderberry bush will attract birds to your yard. Dr. Deam recommends planting native hazelnuts. The American highbush cranberry is native to northern counties.
There's a native holly. It's flex verticillata—drops its leaves in
THESE ARE only a ‘sample of native Hoosier plants, already used to Indiana summer sun and icy winter rains. ly, Mr. Cook is strictly against this business of yanking them
farmer's woods or field, only to dry their roots out while you tote your plunder home in the
Native shrubs, nursery grown,
Plants native in Indiana are worth a place in your cultivated landscapes. This photo was taken in the yard of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bidgood, 1065 Riverby Lane. have one distinct advantage. |
They haven't had a chance to get set in their ways. For the |
nurseryman transplants, just to “develop good root systems. Left to their own sweet way they may develop like the sassafras. “That's about the hardest thing there is to transplant successfully,” says Mr. Cook. “For it naturally has little root system—just an underground stem.” Mr. Cook brings his interest in native plants to his
own backyard where he has a |
“jungle garden.”
ed [Stuffed Fish Dandy Dish
brought to the table beautifully!
{lowing about one-half pound per
bacon or brushed with butter, oil, |during the baking.
' |fish carefully to heated large plat-|
Teeners Learn Zab Care Return Eyed frog Ae To In Londen 7 .
Designers Set Caps For Dollars : By GERALDINE HILL United Press S(aff Correspondent LONDQN, Jan. 26-London’s jeading fashion designers bung itheir spring ciothes today on a squared shoulder and a reducing . |diet waistline. . | The “Big Ten” of the London. couture, opening six days of spring showings, have set their {caps for the world's fashion dol. {lars with a “return to classicisin” {which most of them figure is the {likeliest successor to the “Dior {look” and the “tube look" which have swelled the Paris exe . |changes for the past . several | years, 3 | Norman Hartnell, dressmaker to the-Queen and Princess Eliza« . | beth, is leery of the shoulder par- . |ding, but otherwise, Mr. Hartnell sald; “I see a woman walking - walking away from me with her skirts fluttering at the back, all i interest pushed to the back.” He's i {already pinned some rudders on his royal customers,
For Dinner Fat Ones Best; Lard the ean © By META GIVEN BAKED, stuffed whole fish
browned, colorfully garnished, its flavor pointed up with an accompanying sauce-—who could ask for a more attractive main course for a guest or family meal?
For baking, use whole fish weighing from 3 to 5 pounds, al-
|
person. the more available, fish suitable for baking are bluefish, cod, lake trout, red snapper, carp and whitefish. Usually fat| * fish are considered best, but leaner, fish can be larded with strips of
or fat and basted once. .or twice, Bake uncovered in a hot oven, 400 degrees Farenheit, allowing 12) to 15 minutes per pound. Lift] fish from baking pan and transfer
ter. Garnish as desired, with
) jof tomato. s - Then serve with melted butter in A sauce such as today's recipe
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, Jan. 26—Al Teitel-
baum is a man who can sell furs
ner in Mr. Dale. Keep theimake his business Interesting.
rubber going. You may get Miss Brash for several more
nice sets before it's over. (¢) Pass. Mr. Meek probably - can make three spades in his .own hand. When he gets that high all by himself he's got a rock-crusher.
3. (a) Two no trump. _ Pretty
self? tb) In spite of the four card suit I recommend bidding two diamonds. Any other bid would mislead Mr, Champion as -to the general strength of your hand. This bid announces a minimum and if partner can't
bid again you Will have no ic. a1" California sunshine and V{
game,
Mr, Teitelbaum is the man who made a mink lined bathtub. He didn't have to invent it—it just turned up in a movie script and| {he came through with the article. The same imagination called for| a mink telephone. And Mr. Teitel-|
baum has done a neat little busi-
ness on the side on that. He's de-| strong bidding for this hand livered 30 at $250 a throw. One| but why not grasp the oppor- was non-profit, a model he had tunity to play the hand your- to have made up for his own office be
to satisfy the people who just wanted to see it. " " » MR. TEITELBAUM is a big. quiet man who appears to be much more interested in turning out a useful fur coat suited to that
the high styl: ideas of the flicker
(¢) Bid two no trump—not 10|¢61 who think nothing of throwget the play this time but to ing out $50,000 for a new one urge Mr. Meek toward game. , ary year or so. But he'll play Two no trump should be safe j),n0 any day with the zany ideas
and if Mr. Meek sées fit to bid
three, I'll give you 10 to One 45 yp their horseplay in ermine. | He does a booming Christmas
it's a lay-down.
Send your questions on bridge to Easley Blackwood, The In-
Women Termed
Stronger Sex NEW YORK-—According to Dr.
George Lawton, consulting psy<|
are the stronger of the. sexes. their men live lpnger, and even
and give men their seats.”
Teen Problems—
men an dianapolis Times, Indianapolis 8. sets for the ladies. They sell for i |$40 to $400 depending on the fur. {But Mr. Teitelbaum never has {found out what [think of that kind of gag. {could I ask?” he asks.
of the movie jokers who like to
didn't sell,
Let's Be Kind to Deaf Folk
By JEAN NATURALLY, WE'RE especially kind to the unfortunate.
The blind and the crippled stir,
our sympathy and our most considerate good manners. It's unfortunate, though, that deafened people seldom get the . same care and kindness. All too often, they're the forgotten people, Unless a deaf person wears a hearing instrument, it's difficult to recognize his affliction. His lack of comprehension and his pitiable attempt to conceal his failing frequently make him appear stupid. And that make us impatient and rude. ™
ADMITTEDLY, it's tiresome to repeat a phrase or a sen-
WE CAN CONVERT YOUR OLD TREADLE MACHINE
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tence. It's dreary to have to correct a misapprehension or retell a bon-mot, especially for you teeners who talk as you run and whose minds are quick and flippant.
» » » SOMETIMES, however, the fault is with the speaker. Mumbling or rapid speech is difficult for a deafened”person to understand. High voices are bad, too. The first hearing loss often
comes in the higher tone-regis-
ter, you see. ' Deaf victims, are usually sensitive. They're afraid, kids, afraid of the rudeness and ruthlessness of others. So be kind to them. Speak distinctly, repeat patiently and make a special effort to include the deaf in your conversation. It's just common decency, after all,
J.B SH
‘Times Pattern Service
By MRS. ANNE CABOT Here are fourteen colorful business in fur-lined shorts for; fruit and flower motifs you'll
d fur-lined bra and pantie] enjoy embroidering. Finger-tip i wels, luncheon sets, dinet curtains and lingerie take on new
simple embroidery and applique. "How| i
the recipients
ron transfers for 14 Betty Hutton's baby never told| measuring from 2 to 6 inches, chologist and specialist in prob- him how she liked the ermine bib embroidery stitch ‘illustrations, lems of older peoples, women she got for a birthday present, though. And any day now he's| He sald, “They should help expecting an order for a duplicate of that bathtub. It's the only get up in buses and trolley cars movie madness he ever made that
material requirements and finishing directions. To order, use the coupon be-
ANNE €ABOT The Indianapolis Times 214 W, Maryland St. . Indianapolis 9, Ind.
Visiting Nurse NEW YORK—Lillian Wald es- cy
{tablished the world's first visiting nurse service in New York City.
=
\
By SUE BURNETY For the tiniest family mem- | bers—an adotable little broth- |
er and sister pair that you can put together in no time, and with a minimum of fabric. Use bright scraps for the flower applique. Pattern 8424 is a sew-rite perforated pattern for sizes 6 months, 1, 2 and 3 years. Size 1, dress, 113 vards of 39-inch; romper, 7s yard. Send today for your copy of the latest Fashion--the spring | and summer issue is filled with | smart new styles, special features. Free pattern printed in the book
below,
To order pattern or our Fashion Book, use the coupon
lemon or lime deges, radish roses, sa ! : : h i parsley, cucumber slices with " ia N [Ghangeabls Clothes blanket stitched edges (run the SE hy : a Seen for Spring tines of a fork lengthwise down { 7 , ithe cutumber) or with thick slices i 30g : { Hardy Amies, who has sel his
sights on a $100,000 export business to the United States and
“ee rod 3, © 3 | Canada, said: “There's going to . ia
for ce. 8 Mu be a return to the classic—to tai.
lored suits, more shoulder pad-
. x» ’ FRIDAY'S MENUS
Breakfast ,..Benafer phon. (ding, more tweed for suits and or css" and ri am Sule Grob and Delores Guley bathe Cheists Pasirion in EE . Sighter nes o a Ir w ie loan : H if 3 | | Broad Ripple High School's Home Nursing course. |B impiness. full aki th tricks,
Luncheon Canned chicken gumbo ° | Watercress sandwiches Pineapple chunks
By JEAN MANEY Baby care, child psychology, (and—always—the small waist.” FAR NORTH SIDERS. can Personal health and hygiene, | .apolyneux, who numbers the | be sure of having experienced Care of the sick and the causes |.pegt.dressed” Duchess of Kent
| | | Butter and jam |
haut, 5 Dinner baby sitters when they hire and symptoms of disease are. yng Princess Margaret among his Baked stuffed white fish with ‘egg sauce, teen-agers from Broad Ripple inclided in the course. The customers, figures that changeParsieyed potatoes High School. sub debs study nutrition for |apje colored chiffons, organdies
TeRm pea . ORve brand onion send The senior girls at Broad nine weeks and home nursing and satins will be among the big Warm apple crip. | Ripple, enrolled in the Home for another nine. news in spring and summer fash- | gohilk to drink: One quart for each child:| Nursing course, study nutrition Miss Barbara Tingley is pre- |ions,
{one pint for each adult, in addition to] and home nursing. They are paring her students for homes Most of the designers, like
{that used in the day's menus an | equally adept at bathing and children of their own. In [their American brothers, are cut-
EGG SAUCE squirming babies as they are the meantime, however, the ting skirts a trifle shorter this 3 Joab. Yutler or margarine | at reasoning with a stubborn mamas in the commbtnity are |season. {2 tbsps. flour 2-year-old who refuses to go taking advantage of the | po ore expected to be % small, i 8,5. mill { to bed. trained, capable baby sitters. |pyu) gkirts will have & narrower {7a tap. look and narrow ones will pre.
{1s tsp. paprika . Men ANG “Women— [38 to. Pantie is and dominate in suits which, accord
2 nard-cooked equ. chorea | Men Like That Feminine Look |, mee sexes tan in sev
coarsly. Melt butter, blend in flour and, By ERNEST E. BLAU hls ul Yeats. 108 soit shoulda Jig add milk gradually. Stir constant-| LEEK SIRENS and slick | was said, but padding is the thing
{ly. over direct heat until sauce [boils and thickens. Season with |salt, paprika and lemon juice, then| gently fold in eggs. Heat thor-| Probably nowhere near as big
{oughly but without actually boil-| as most people believe. yy’ Cusp Goll ing. Serve with any baked or When you think of the | > | : ES boiled fish | money that girls lay out for -W AFFL those flawlessly waved per , ] FS Brid ¢ Pla ers manents and those tailored | J : py made with OU { 8 y {| clothes — of the time they | : i la » spend in oh - so - carefully fate ’ ¥ i In To Honors shaping that thick, red - i cupids’ bow which comes off
. on the drinking glasses and Leo Roet, New York; Mrs. C. C. gives Ri a sort of marsh-
os: Tots. votre. Ar ‘ta ~ it's a pity s afe were the a s |rst-place winners In the 13th an- hace WARE i. the dont now an easier way (pual Indiana State Bridge Tour-| "wy, ‘men and influence [nament neld last week end in| onde jhe Hota Lineal. | Most men tend to back en oy urd | away a little from a ‘girl training as a boxer in London's IF. W. Gilchrist and Mrs. A. G.| With a too-glazed look; they Mayfair Gym under a former |Hendricks and Miss Mabel Sat-| don't like to feel she's plaster (commando instructor, Mickey [terly and Mrs. 8. R. Richardson,| COated and crackable. They |Wood. When fully janet, she respectively. Winners of the! like to see some of that don’t- [hopes to form a boxing clu or| |men’s. pairs were Edson T. Wood | care-if-I-do-look which comes [Women only.
|Jr. and George P. Ryan, second, from a wind-blown bair,
| ” : and Chester Barger and Allan! rounded corners, a softish » ; | Smith, third. feminine curve or two. = . Other divisions and winners: . ONLY MIYCHMENS BRINGS YOU | Mixed pair-—Mrs. Jean Morris and Pl : nan 3 : | Peter Leventritt, New York, first; Sorority an Mrs. J. E. Morris and Byron Cohen, Detroit, second; Mrs. raf S Kirby and Paul D. Elliot, third, | Open pair—H. W. Wicker, Lit-| or upper tle Rock, Ark., and Robert Creed, | Hinsdale, Ill, first; - Walter J. " Pray and Dr. Nafe, second; Mrs. ma Nu Sorerity, will meet at 8 Harry Mason Smith and Herman p.m. today in. the YWCA. | W. Lackm#n, both of Cincinnati! Mrs. Frank McBride, 1817 E. tied with F. R. Buck and Law- Vermont St., will be hostess to rence W, Welch, third. the members of Alpha Chapter; | Team of -four: Mrs. Jean On Omega Chi Sorority, at 8 Morris, Edson T. Wood Jr., Al g'clock tonight. Ta {vin Landy, Cleveland, and Mr. The members will plan a supRoet, first; M. A. Lightman, per meeting for Sunday night.| Memphis, Tenn.; Robert A. Ap-|Mrs Tony Garzalini will be the pleyard, New York; C. 8. Hob- phostess. { litt and Herbert Beyer, both of| | Detroit, second, and Miss Mary! Alpha Chapter, Sigma Phi Sor-| Crawford, Mrs. Joseph E. Brower, ority, will meet tonight in the 38th | Dr. Lyman Pearson and Ralph 8t, Branch, Indiana National | Ittenbach, third. . 'Bank, ?
chicks have their follow
for a classic suit, ing among the men—but it's i
I"
| | | | |
Alpha. Chapter, Ganima Gam- |
Gibson Valentines For Friends Sweethearts and Relatives NOW ON DISPLAY AT
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SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W, Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind.
«++++ No, 8424 Price 25¢
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