Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1950 — Page 33
. 24, 1950
Ford ] A) ch ndler
an Ford and hwindler were lock last night Methodist t B. Pierce of-
he bride's iliuled amazonica hids. n was in the le will be at at 3902 Park
e daughter of dolph T. Ford, d Dr. and Mrs. , 3460 N. Penne bridegroom's
uns
ounter 3. Perle Mesta, hourg, came to American sturope recently, led due to a transportation rean situation, e lunch countU. 8. - Legation.
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Capital Capers—
SUNDAY, SEPT. 24, 1050 .
Gen. Harry Vaughan is Scratched
From D. C.
Social List
The Book Used By Capital Party-Givers Will Be Issued To Hostesse? Next Sunday By ELISE MORROW WASHINGTON, Sept. 23—It looks like the beginning of the end of the Truman administration. Maj. Gen. Harry H. Vaughan will be purged from The Social List
of Washington next week.
Gen. Vaughan is President Truman's military aide, and most |
reliable source of embarrassment now that Louis Johnson has
evaporated. Although his in last summer's failed to get him kicked out of the House, it
Kigieed out of
Social
dom
Elise Morrow
White
List This is roughly equivalent to purged from the telephone ‘book. The Social aid to Washington hostesses, is ferent from the Social Register found in other cities, The List is a specialized Wa ton institution which covers all official-
A is, for gave Gen. Vaughan the axe The com-
what one has
behavior.” or
“deep freeze” episode has finally got him “the green book,” as the is known. being List, an
utterly indispensable
dif-
shing-
as well as the well-born committee, whose membership obvious reasons. kept secret,
mittee naturally doesn't say publicly to do to get stricken irom the green book, but “unseemly
“unfavorable notoriety”
would about cover it.
Evén here, though
Congressional immunity obtains:
all Sen-
ators and Representatives are listed, no matter how unseemly
or notorious. Another way to get the bounce is to move out of town. Henry Wallace and Alger Hiss were dropped for leaving Washington; “fortuitously just in time to miss being dropped for other reasons. Drew ‘Pearson, whose social life in the capital is punctuated with snubs from officials he has written about unfavorably, was dropped from the List several years ago, but seems to be bearing up under it all.
THE new edition of the green book, bereft of Gen. Vaughan, will be issued Oct. 1. It will also be bereft of Louis Johnson, who resigned tary of Defense just as the printers were closing the forms for the list of persons whose names begin with “J.” Had he waited a few more days, he would have been a typographical error for a whole year. As it was, publication of the book was delayed a day to get Gen. George C. Marshall into the cabinet section, in place of the departed Mr. Johnson. There was some last-minute fingernail-biting over Secretary of State Dean G. Acheson, too. When Johnson resigned, there were rumors that Acheson also would — his name begins with the letter “A” and that list had already gone to press, The Secretary of State was certain to be a typographical error had there been any truth to the rumors.
as Secre- .
No Trouble at All
SOCIAL life in the military set has picked up remarkably, primarily because of the Armed Forces expansion resulting from the Korean War. The Air Force Officers’ Wives Club, for example, has had such an increase of membership that it's hard put to find a place big enough for its parties.
involvement
Last year, the AFOWC had |
200 members in January, and 900 by December. Now it's ex-
panding to 1500. But the Army- |=
| wore a
Navy Country Club, which is |
the biggest country club in the
country, can serve lunch or tea |
to ne more than 600 at a time. “Really no problem at all, girls,” one aviator told his wife and her friends as they fretted over this problem. “We'll move the dirigible hangar Lakehurst to Washington.” The Officers’ Wives Club of the Corps of Engineers, at nearby Fort Belvoir, Va., had a
from |
western party the other eve- |
ning, with brass disguised as
cowboys, but the members of |
the Washington chapter of the
Daughters of the United States |
Army have topped that they've corralled Mrs. Truman for. a benefit luncheon ana fashion show at Fort McNair Oct. 2.
» ” ” MYRNA LOY, the film star, has taken a house in Washington’'s fashionable Georgetown section; she’s expected to be here several months while working for UNESCO, the United Nation's Educational, and Cultural Organization,
Scientific |
tail
bY
Photo reflex
Mrs. Frank Langsenkamp Jr.
The marriage of Mrs
Frank Langsenkamp Jr. terday. V. White officiated. Mrs. Hendricks, Mrs. Ella Krafft, Mr. and Mrs. Langsenkamp, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Coates and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Marsh were the attendants Mrs. Coates wore a beige satin cockdress with white accessories and a turquoise pillbox. Her corsage was of white gardenlas. Mrs. Marsh was dressed in a similar frock with which she two-toned velvet cap and brown, accessories.
In Manhattan—
was read at 10:30 a. m. in the Mendian Hills Country Club.
formerly of New Williams Creek. 5202 Woodside Drive.
home in 33 E. 55th St.
and vesDan
Eleanore Hendricks
Judge
York, is the daughter of The bridegroom is the son of
The bride's gown was navy blue lace. Her white plush hat accented the dress and navy accessories and a white orchid completed the ensemble. A reception of just the family and attendants followed the ceremony. The couple will take a trip later to The Greenbriar, White Sulphur Springs, South Carolina. They will be at
Heir Turns Down Fortune
In Brown Cardboard Box
By CHARLES VENTURA, Times Special Writer
NEW YORK, Sept.
23—Pull up a ciiche and help vourself
to a bromide while we play a tune on that old saw about truth
being stranger than fiction. The other day,
Robert Ingersoll Ingalls Jr.
socialite and
heir to an iron and shipping fortune, received $2,000,000 in currency via a brown cardboard box and special messenger.
If that isn't strange enough for you, the Junior Mr, Ingalls took one look at the two million in bills of large denomimations, tossed it right back into the pasteboard box and told the messenger to take it back from whence it came. You'd have to go back to 1947 to understand what the foregoing skit was all about. At that time, Bob and his then wife, the former Eleanor (Flickie) Flick, decided to go’ their separate ways over the very vocal protests of Bob's
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father, Robert Ingersoll Ingalls Sr.
Pater Takes Steps THE SENIOR Ingalls, still wroth over the divorce, became even more belligerent when young Bob married another young lady named Jane Severe Smith, several months after the severance. It's all a matter of court record down in Birmingham, Ala., where the family and fortune started, that pater took steps to show his displeasure. Robert was removed from “his position as president of ‘the Ingalls Iron Works, his place on the board of the Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. and deprived of his official standing in other Ingalls subsidiaries, Since that time, Senior and Junior have met only through their lawyers. Bob feeling - that his pater had tried to break his spirit over a matter that should have been his own affair, has carried on a bitter struggle to regain his lost place in the Ingalls industrial empire,
Peace Overture THE LEGAL battle seems to have developed Into a stalemate. The little brown box with the $2 million in cash was described as an out-of-court peace overture from father to son. Before we leave Bob, his beautiful wife, estranged father and the two million in cash, we might mention another ‘monetary mixup that concerns society's Theodore Stemmler and the State of Pennsylvania. Mr. Stemmler, who is a direct descgndant of the first white boy born on the island of Manhattan, has owned a toll bridge at Harrisburg, Pa., for many years. Recently, he decided the bridge needed a new floor. A few days after he spent $375,000 on the new floor, the state decided to take the bridge over.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Mr. Langsenkamp Jr. Weds
«
PAGE 33
Canasta— |
Laws Again
Highlight Game Advice
ONCE MORE. essary to devote a week's arti-
Discard Pile Often Must Wait Turn
By OSWALD JACOBY it appears nec-
| cles to answering Juestions on | the laws:
The subject this time is going
i. {or may not
| to be that of when a take
player may the discard | pie. | I recommend strongly that you |save these articles if you have lany trouble with this point. They will settle your problems Let's start with a positive “No, you can't.” If the plaver to your right is unkind enough to
discard a black trev or a wild card vou cannot take the dis card pile at that turn,
Requirements If he discards any other card you will be able to take the dis card pile if vou are able to ful--fill the proper requirements in accordance: with the laws of canasta. There are three different of requirements based on different situations. These situations are 1. Your side previously. 2. Your side has melded pre viously but the discard pile is frozen due to the fact that it includes one or more wild cards teither turned up by the dealer
sets three three
has not melded
or discarded by players) or red treys (turned up by the dealer) Remember a red three m.\ never
be discarded. { 3. Your side has melded previ-| ously and the pile is not frozen. | Misconceptions | NOW TO clear up some miscon- | ceptions about frozen discard] piles. As stated above the only] cards that freeze the discard pile! are red treys (turned by the deal- | er) or wild cards (turned by the (dealer or discarded). | These are the only cards. A dis-| ‘card of a card that matches a} closed canasta is just an ordinary ‘discard and definitely does not freeze the pile. A discard of a black trey forces the next player to draw from the; stock but once he makes his dis-| card the black trey is forgotten. | If your side has not melded pre- | viously the requirements for you, (to take the discard pile are exact-| ly the same whether or not is it | frozen. | | After your side has meided the |requirements are different.
Block's
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THIS DOESN'T seem quite
cricket to Mr. Stemmier's glamorous wife the former -Peggy Legget, who notices
the difference when she pavs the household bills at their -Park Ave. and Palm Beach residences. Peggy was figuring on her shapely fingers the other day and concluded that the state is paying Ted 6 per cent on his original. investment of $1,500,000. Where he used to net $145.000 annually on the bridge, he now collects $90,000,
In case you are thinking of for Peggy and. Ted, we might add’ that he has other sources of income, including a factory that makes guided missiles. Peg has a. fortune of her own, <x
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BLOCK'S Notions, Street Floor
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Amazing Memory Makes Jacoby An Expert
{Continued From Page 28)
books on poker, gin rubby and Oklahoma. Mr. Jacoby spends much of hig time lecturing on cards, and his travels have created a legend among card players that he never stands still. At a party, for example, a timid woman asked a mutual friend whether she ought to approach the famous expert with a question. “Qssie’ll be glad to answer your question, the friend said, “but by the time he finishes answering it he'll be in another room.”
Tennis Title
AT 47, MR. JACOBY also is an expert tennis plaver. He won a veteran's title in Dallas, Tex., where he now lives, His wife, Mary, was National
Public Parks champion when she was“20. They met on a tennis court and married =a week later. Both their sons James now ‘17, and Jon, 12
are good plavers All the Jacobys like cards Although his wife's favorite
T= lock: S
Julius €. Walk Shop,
game is poker, she mastered bridge well enough to place second with Jacoby in the National Mixed Team in 1934, after winning the Eastern
veloped that has universal appeal. Children love the game, Players of different abilities can play together: and all have fun. Stakes are’
Mixed T-am. unimportant, too -— you eam Canasta, Jacohy feels, |e play canasta without stakes here to stay, He thinks it and enjoy it.” takes more psychology and There's only one weakness common sense than bridge to canasta, Jocoby says, “and and has fewer rules. that's that people play toe Plaving tough canasta much of it.’ ; Jacoby says, “is very hard For any card game, Jacoby work. Every play is a prob- believes, the four traits that lem. In bridge, you're a dum- make a good player are He my once in a while and get to ability to: relax, but not in canasta.” ONE: Pay constant atten tions
Wins Challenge
WO: Vary your game te " LART YEAR he offered to TWO Jour 8
fit your opponents.
give $5000 to charity if any pair could beat him and his
THREE: Play objectively --with concern only for the
J 3 yr . anaes. Sam Fry. or and Band in question i Tr 1 ve JR: , r » Theodore Lightner took up FOUR: Fit your game 1
the challenge
It was the toughest game
your partner, in a partnership game.
of any sort 1 ever played” Tacoby says. “We won by Sticking Stopped 5600 points A sprinkling of powdered sugar What makes canasta "so on a cake plate will help prevent popular. he feels ig that “it's the cake's sticking when you try
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