Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1949 — Page 7

2 group of 'll have to represent. 8. We have ssory used ry it reprene flowers, ! 8 — China, ' the whole

how is open hat is now ent started th in 1929 | Dutch-set-an started city. ousands of o-operation ds, and re-

on of hos.

rks as well en the chile 1elp out the

en in Indias

d out to be

f the counught. i

omen co.

rs

rs who have AS co-operat-itler Univere d kindergare 1g program a yesterday, Butler's dee tary educas ge of Educa«

, Education Honor guests

ebaugh, city t; President

, Miss Anne r and Mrs,

the public

lege of Edue ers.

to Meet

randmothers a.m. Thurs“Scott, 1819

b

3 8. Linwood the Friday n Club at 8

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La

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tol

he

RRR AER RS

\

yes Muzzy

Off Sirido | by Lecture About Hold up Play

As Result, He Tries It at up

~ Time and Goes Set in

: “By EASLEY BLACKWOOD ; JT WISH you'd ‘stop: trying to warrove your Bridge, 5 Muzzy,” said Mr. Abel after today’s hand was played. “You would be much better off just playing your normal

game—and I use the word ‘normal’ loosely.” Mr. "Abel ‘was referring to the fact that, preceding this deal

Mr. Abel had spread his hand as For a moment I was afraid dummy’s jack to “force an honor” from He avoided that error but what he did was ! ith the discussion of the hold-up. play fresh in his mind, he decided this was the place to use it. Accordingly the four of hearts" was played from dummy, Mrs. Champicn played the queen and

long huddle.

Muzzy followed with the trey.

Mrs. Keen Has Ace Mr, Champion fired back the eight of hearts and Mr. Muzzy ducked again, playing the ter. Mrs. Keen won with the king and returned a third heart, clearing the suit. Now if Mr. Champion had the ace of clubs or if the hearts were split 4-4 between the East-West hands, the contract was safe. So Mr, Muzzy laid down the four of clubs and leaned forward excitedly - to see 0 had the ace. As you see Keen had it and she lost no time playing it. * Her two good hearts defeated the contract. Mr, Muzzy should have thought a little longer before playing to the first trick. His intermediate hearts (the jack and ten) gave him a certain second stopper in the suit, provided he played his ace on ‘Mr. Champion's queen at Trick 1. x You've got to know when as well as how to use the hold-up.

RSA, MAY 17, 1049

Thiown-

Contract

to explain the hold-up play

i

South dealer East-West vulnerable NORTH (Mr. Abel) ‘S-Q 843

T (Ms. Keen) (Mr. Champion) 8-109 8 SJ 18 H—-K 9752 H-QS886 DJ T8 D~-Q 10952 C—A 6 C—8 2 SOUTH (Mr. Muzzy)

C—Q 10 74 The bidding: E Pass Pass

108 Pass 1 28 Pass 3

SNT AllPass

cost you a sure trick in the suit in question.

Send. questions on bridge to Mr. Blackwood, The Indianap-

N C C

Never hold-up when the play wil will

olis Times, Indianapolis 9, Ind.

Counter-Spy—

Use Plastic Chair Seat Covers

* family.

If the Kids Eat With Family

By LOUISE FLETCHER, Times Woman's Editor

OMETIMES THE KIDS’

YEN to eat dinner with the

family precedes their ability to avoid spilling the © gravy...and then it's too bad for mama's dining chair

* upholstery. Well, let ’em eat with the family if they want "to; the upholstery can be protected with some plastic ‘seat covers they have at Sears Roebuck. The covers, called Topsys, are of clear, heavy plastic. (.004 gauge) and come in trimly tailored styles for three types of dining room

{chairs , , . period, dinette and

"modern. They have bias w=-gloth bindings on all ‘the seams, to prevent sticking, and hold them securely in place.

\

tape ties to go around chair legs

They don’t have to be laundered and ironed, either. Just wipe them clean with a damp cloth. At 40 and 59 cents apiece, they're low-cost insurance agsinst stains from food and bev- . erages in the hands of small fry.

Ex-Hoosier Is a Bra Designer ASK ANY WOMAN what's the most annoying habit 4 brassiere can acquire and she'll tell you it is the * tendency to “ride up” in back. Well, at Strauss’ they

In strapless as well as regular models, the Deala bras are ylon or rayon satin, nylon taffeta and nylon as cottons. with featherboning rather than wire. Sizes range from 30AA to 38C and start at $1.75 for the cottons.

made of Skinner's marquisette as w

have a bra designed to cure this tendency .. and it’s all the work of an exHoosier, Paul Deal, formerly of Terre Haute. He: is the designer of the Deala bras which are turned out in his modern factory in Miami, Fla. Mr. Deal explains his slogan, “It Fits,” by the fact that he became a bra designer only after four years of study with a doctor. The garment resulting from his study is cut in- interlocking V’s so that the left shoulder strap controls the right side of the bra and vice versa. He says the fact that the bras are Individually hand-cut and hand-basted before they are sewn enhances their fitting qualities,

The strapless models are done

VAULT STORAGE

FUR ons FR TRE

Let Swiss Lighten Your House Cleaning Work

Call 8wiss for— Oriental RUGS Domestic RUGS Draperies of EVERY KIND Dry-cleanable Curtains WOOLEN BLANKETS Furniture ‘8lip Covers

Mey

CLEANERS

|

Lenox china in the "Arrowhead pattern.

PTA Congress Hears Talks

ST. LOUIS, May 17 (UP)—The schoolteacher can't be a substitute for the family, a child expert sald today. Mrs. Sidonie Matsner Gruenberg, New York, director of the Child Study Association, said that teachers should supplement, rather than substitute, for the family. She is chairman of the Na-

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

(The Bride-to-Be Selects the Fine China for Her Future Dinner Table

tional Committee on Parent Education and spoke to the 52d annual convention of the National Con- : : cial, economic and environmental gress of Parents and Teachers changes of the present era. “Two Last hight, Eric Johnston, presi- children in the same family who dent of the Motion Picture Asso- are as much as 5 years apart ciation of America, told the con-|in age seem to be living in two vention that the depression of the|different worlds,” she said. thirties and two world wars had| Parents, Mrs. Gruenberg sald, brought on a breakup of the|should “know the world into which their children are growing He said that it was incorrect to|and to find new ways to do for make movies, radio, comic books each child what the large family and newspapers the “scapegoats” did for him in the past. for the problem. | Johnston said family life could Mrs. Gruenberg sald parents/be improved by slum clearance, are bewildered by the rapid so-|minimum subsistence wages, edu- = cation in “how to spend money correctly,” extended social welDishing the fare and family courts. Di vf “No nation is strong, spiritually, | morally or socially, without famBy MARGUERITE SMITH ily life,” Johnston said. “There Q-—We've just about given up try-/is no single cure for the problems ing to. fraise tomatoes in our|of family life, but we must strive backyard. They grow fine topsifor sound family organization in but have very few tomatoes. order to have more peace between Radishes also will grow just nations and within nations.” fine; then when wé pull them! The convention at the Hotel there's no radish for all the|Jefferson will close tomorrow good tops. We've used quite a night with installation of officers. little lime. Do you suppose we; More than 100 Hoosier deleought to use more? gates are scheduled to attend the A—I doubt that you need more Indiana luncheon tomorrow noon lime though you can always get/at the National Congress of Para soil test. Your problem is|ents and Teachers convention in obviously an overbalance of|8t. Louis, nitrogen (the leaf encourager)| Attending the sessions which with too little phosphate (the/opened Sunday are Mrs. Robert 1 “flower and fruit booster)—and|F. Shank, Indianapolis, and Mrs. too little potash (which makes/Joseph W. Walker, .Greenfield. good roots). They are serving on the platform This is in line with the county|committee. Mrs. Shank, a foragent's general findings that/mer state PTA president, is Reour soils are generally low inigion Four vice president of the potash and phosphates. The/national organization. Mrs. Walklime you've already used has|er is state president. simply helped to releasé more| State organization delegates nitrogen for more top growth./include the four newly elected ofA farm fertilizer that analyzesificers of the Indiana Congress: high in phosphorus and potash|Mrs. C. H. Boyer, Lafayette, Re(as 0-20-20) would help. gion 3; Mrs. L. R. Horrall, WashMore practical for a smalliington, Region 5, and Mrs. David backyard plot, is to use every|/P. Ashton, New Castle, Region 7, scrap of wood ashes to supply|all vice presidents, and Mrs. Basil potash and bone meal spring|Fischer, Indianapolis, treasurer, and fall over a period of years to build up phosphorus. For immediate effect a general garden fertilizer will help.

Smart Tricks

By MRS. ANNE CABOT

It's slipcover time again and | you can rejuvenate your win- | ter-weary living room easily | and inexpensively with this pattern. Pattern 5956 includes directions for making slipcovers, material requirements, measuring, fitting and sewing directions, color and fabric suggestions and trimming hints.

ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 530 8. Wells St.

Chicago 7, IL No. 59856 Price" 20c

1 Name SEBBINPININNNNINRINBIORROINS

FRR INN NNNNIR RRNA Breet ceccevesevessnscensassess

City BONN NNNNNNIINNNNNNSRINIINIS

State cessnseauriannnnsaannns

ONfIt 1 lf

EMERSON

Formerly

|

i Tips on

Eat Well for Less—

To Preserve: Picnic Food

‘Wax Paper Keeps Lunch Fresh

BY GAYNOR MADDOX Writer

chilling in the

Franciscan makes thess Palomar pieces.

By JEAN TABBERT THE COLOR of a bride-to-be’s china selection changes with the seasons. That's the observation of Mrs. Janet Hiatt, bridal gift consultant on Ayres’ firth floor. Now that spring and summer are around, green and yellow are the favorite shades; in cold weather there's a swing toward the higher colors of the spectrum. (This same peculiarity

holds true for customers who [i

buy wedding gifts, Mrs. Hiatt has noticed. Somehow blankets and table cigaret lighters are more eagerly sought after in

' the fall months than during

warm weather. Brides-to-be have strong likes and dislikes in china just as they have in matters of dress, according to Mrs. Hiatt. “You can tell a ‘blue’ girl the minute she walks in. The soft lines of her clothes, her personality both mark and betray her.” “Although prospective husbands often are brought in to give their opinion, the final sayso remains with the bride-to-be,” Mrs. Hiatt reveals. » # - WHAT'S the trend in china buying these days? There's a swing to modern design is Mrs. Hiatt’s view. It's based on the statistics she keeps “on the job.” “However, the breakdown still is 60 to 40 per cent in favor of traditional patterns” she states. :

While wreaths, flower motifs and such are way up in the pe-

riod type of design, the simpler styles which blend better with contemporary furnishings are more popular, For instance, the banded tableware, only recently available here, is much in demand. Two companies make these patterns. Flintridge does its designs in very dark bands,

for example a California teal,

that’s almost a forest green. ‘Franciscan’'s Palomar ware is the other line. It's made in light shades--sage green, grey, cameo, blue and yellow. These pieces have an outer and inner

Outstanding features include: Improved superheterodyne radio, Alnico dynamic speaker, built-in loop antenna, illuminated slide-rule dial . . . And the phonograph with automatic record changer for 10” and 12" records, self-starting motor, featherweight tone arm and long-life needle. Encased in beautiful mahogany cabinet, this splendid value can be yours for only

89.95

Pay Only *9 Down

And Only 7.15 a month for 12 months!

Wasson's Appliances, Monument Store

Klos

saucer are shown,

Temple White, another Lenox design.

gold band along with the wider flowers with a gold band; the colored one. Victorian design, more highly The table setting (top, above) colored bouquets without a uses the Palomar china, the band, and plain white that Walton pattern of Val St. Lam- plays up the simple fluted edge bert crystal and Towle's Silver with which the other two patFlutes flat silver. All are set terns also are made. on an imported eggshell Bel- Shown (above) are the dinglan rayon cloth that gives & ner and dessert plates, the linen effect with a satin cast. creamer, sugar and cup and saucer, Lenox is one of the oldest makers of traditional china and natwally has a number of such patterns. One of the newest is the “Arrowhead” design, decorated in gold, It's shown (top, left) in a table setting with Towle's “French Provincial” silver on a pastel embroidered linen tablescloth. All of these patterns are at Ayres’,

» . 4 FRANCISCAN'S Westwood pattern (below) has a cream body with a green stripe and a stylized green and yellow flower. The dinner plate, coffee pot, creamer, sugar and cup and

Lenox china makes the wellknown temple shape. It's done in the Cinderella pattern, pastel

Franciscan's Westwood china.

refrigera get your picnie foot and bevers {ages cold enough to be served ‘that way at the picnic,

[boxes with tight-fitting covers {and chill overnight. This works for prepared dishes, {salads, cakes and, of course, fruit, {Prechilied thirst-quenching soft {drinks liven every picnic. { And ‘don’t forget to take along the

¢ {bottle opener.)

Wrap individual soft drink bote

itles in newspapers the night bee : |fore and chill all night. Just bee

{fore leaving in the morning, line {the picnic hamper first with a newspaper, then with a pienie cloth and pack in the chilled food. » » DELICIOUS PICNIC SALAD (Serves 8) Three ¢, diced cooked potatoes, 2 ©, cooked mixed vegetables, 1 c. thinly-sliced celery, 2 thsps, {minced onion, 1% c. shredded {salted almonds, 14 ¢. thick sour cream, 14 ¢, mayonnaise, 2 thaps. vinegar, salt, pepper, lettuce. Mix potatoes with vegetables, celery, onion and almonds, taking care not to mash the potatoes. Mix the sour cream with mayons naise, vinegar and salt and pepe per to season.

Pour over the vegetable mixe

§ ture, toss lightly with a fork,

cover and chill thoroughly, overs night if possible. ~ Garnish with lettuce for serving. Pack the lettuce separately in a plastic bag that can be fastened securely, and put half a dozen ice cubes in the bag to keep the lettuce crisp and cold.

o a=» 1 WEDNESDAY'S MENU BREAKFAST: Sliced bas nanas and strawberries, shredded wheat, enriched toast, butter or fortified margarine, coffee, milk, LUNCHEON: Hot tomato bouillon with rice, crackers, delicious picnic salad, enriched hard rolls, butter or fortified margarine, cheese squares, oats meal cookies, tea, milk. DINNER! Braised liver, es. calloped potatoes, tron whole carrots with chopped ‘parsley, enriched rolls, butter or ed ne, sliced tomatdes, lemon meringue ple, coffee,

Elected Class Heed

of Mr, So, uh mon, b Indianapolis, hills en ected president of né#¥t. ¥éar's sophos more class at Sarah Lawrence College here, 8he was graduated {rom Shortridge High School las year.

——————————————— Mrs. Ralston Entertains Mrs. Samuel L. Ralston, Rals« ton Road, entertained with a luncheon today in her home, Guests were Mesdames Henry F, Schricker, Katherine Price Dunn, ' | Drexa Scudder Andrews and Mare garet Afiis,

Open Monday through Saturday, 9:30 A. M. te 5:00 P. M.

Telephone Riley 7411;

OUTSTANDING OFFER! PHONORADIO CONSOLES

119.95!

Ry

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