Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1951 — Page 6
‘own hand,
PRIZE-WINNING LAMPS—Swivel model (left), and table
lamp (right), won first places in Museum of Modern Art compe-
tition.
Blackwood on Bridge—
ADJUSTABLE — This lamp can be hung from a shelf or pinned on the wall.
TEN TREND - SETTING lamps, which won for their dedigners $2,600 in"a Museum of Modern Art competition, will make their bow at Ayres’ the week of Apr. 8.
The eight table and two floor lamps, manufactured by the Heifetz Co., are light
appearance and unusually flexible in their control of light and multiplicity of use The floor lamp pictured can
he lifted, lowered or swiveled by means of the revolving metal ball. The prize-winning
table lamp is a two-piece affair,
the light source completely ‘separate the reflector. When the bulb is placed directly under the reflector, the lamp gives an even and diffused light; when it's moved to one
side, the light is concentrated. The adjustable lamp, which took a second place award, not only will hit different heights as a table lamp, but also will hang from a shelf or pin to a
Double Serves as Warning to Mr. Dale, Who Changes Plans and Makes a Sla
MR. DALE WAS rushing toward a slam in clubs which normally would have been a good, makeable contract.
But as the card
lie, he couldn’t even make five-odd against a diamond opening.
Mr. Heinsite would ruff, get back to his partner’s hand by
means of the ace of spades and ruff another diamond.
This gruesome result was averted because Mr. Heinsite doubled
Mr. Abel's five diamond response 4 @»
to the four no trump bid.
void suit.
Dale changed his plans. He was have opened a
grateful for the warning that the/a six club contract, without the adverse cards were stacked bad- double, then the double lost a lot
it seemed clear that!
AGAINST THE SIX no trump That double called for a dia- bid Mr. Champion laid down the
mond opening and since Mr. Dale ace and another spade and Mr. Mr. Champon had the ace of that suit In his pale was able to claim 12 tricks. S—A 962
the question is, did Mr. the double was predicated on a Heinsite err when he doubled the We can only When the double came in. Mr. speculate on the answer to that would diamond against
Now, five diamond bid?
one. If Mr. Champion
ly against him. However, he still of points.
wanted to be in a slam, so he|
put the hand in six no trump. True, his partner might
have both the king and queen of it would have been made with 1 NT
clubs. But the odds, on
bidding, favored the chance that Mr. Abel had at least the king of pion said: clubs and Mr. Dale was willing monds and drive them into the would to gamble on bringing in the en- only
tire -club suit without loss.
slam contract they
Teen Problems—
Tips About Petting Routine
By JOAN IT SEEMS to be a fact of teen life that most boys try a mild petting routine on a first date. But they usually expected
to be rebuffed. Yo, girls, if the boy makes thls customary pass and then
gives up gracefully, think nothing of it. Go out with him again if you wish, But if he makes another try on his second date, beware. Continual attempts show he cares nothing for your company and is interested only in making a conquest. When a first date makes a
determined effort to pet, he's not worth-bothering about. No by with sense or suavity
ft rces his attentions. ” ” 5 THE measure of his sophistication as well as of his good breeding shows in his willing-
ness to let the lady call the turn, Many teen boys and girls
seem to think that sophistication means free and easy loving. Actually nothing could be more untrue. Real men-of-the-world always considerate
are They never
. GIVES UP GRACEFULLY THINK NOTHING OF IT
impose on a lady or sulk or fret if they are rebuffed. And real women-of-the-world know the strategical value of dignity and reserve,
Plan Card Party
The St. Francis de' Sales Catholic Church Altar Society will sponsor a card party at 8 p. m, tomorrow in the parish hall. Mrs. Anna Dugan is chairman.
wall, either for direct or indirect lighting. Ss South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH Mr. Abel N—=38 H—A KJ 10 4 D—Q 9 3 C—K Q 6 3 WEST EAST
Mr. Heinsite S—J 107543
i] H—98732 D—KJ108634 D-—none C—3 C—9 4 SOUTH Mr. Dale S—K Q H—Q 6 D—A 72
C—A J 108872 The bidding:
On the other hand, if Mr. ' an \ ' S 3 J fA Champion had opened anything Ag ™ esy NUR EAST not else against a six club contract, . Pass 4 C py ald 1 ass Pass 35D Dbl the ease. s ON : 6 NT AlP: You can guess what Mr. Cham- iby 188 “Why double five dia- them get into six clubs I definitely
have opened a diamond
canlanyway.” {make?” he bawled. “If you'd let] I wonder.
Heads PTA |
|
Council Here
Mrs. A. C. Johnson Elected by Group
Mrs.
elected
Alvin C. president
Johnson of =the
was Indianapolis Parent-Teacher Council at the meeting yesterday Whrid War Memorial.
in
Sedam, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. George Hughes and Mrs. Thomas H. Clinton, recording and corresponding secretaries,
and Mrs. Dwight O. Carlstedt, treasurer. The new officers will be in-
stalled at the May meeting. The session included a sion the Indiana PTA state convention Apr. 18-19 the Murat Tample. Mrs. Owens Johnson, Marion County PTA Council president, and Mrs. Bert C. McCammon, retiring Council executive, will be chairmen of the reception for delegates the night of Apr, 18 in the Murat.
discus of in
Indianapolis
Have You Chosen Your
wedding
For over a century our Stationery Department has been guiding brides in the selection of their wedding stationery trousseau. You are invited to see our carefully selected, well-chosen stock of correct wedding stationery— reflecting good taste in
Calling Cards for the Bride
Nn arent) Wedding Invitations Wedding Announcements Informals
b ae
\tationery...
9 wut W
Mr. and Mrs. Cards Thank You Notes and Envelopes
snaton Steet :
indierapeol!
The councils are hostesses.
TABLE INGENUITY—Individuality will produce a distinctive table setting more surely than all the expensive appointments in the world. Make runners. from linen dish toweling as a change of pace from place mats. Fringe or hem the ends for napkins. ‘In the arrangement shown, the material exposes a narrow area in the center, provides a place for flowers. in the center. .Low, functional
in’
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Committees Listed For Sunnyside Guild Card Party at Murat
Benefit Affair to Be Held On Apr. 13;
Mrs. Walters, Mrs. Hiatt General Chairmen
Chairmen and committees have been named for the
Apr. 13 card party of the Sunyside Guild. It will be in
the Murat Temple.
General chairman are Mrs,
W. H. Watters and Mrs. Ralph
N. Hiatt. Mrs. Ralph T. Simon is in charge of publicity. -
Hostesses will be Mesdames
E. R. Grisell, C. E. Wood, M. J.
| Austin, AB Chapman; K. W. Schmidt, G. W.- Shaffer, William
Freund, Charles Seidensticker, W. J. Wemmer, W. T. Eisenlohr,
‘Gaylord Rust, G. G. Schmidt, A. C. Zaring, Wallace O. Lee, |
C. E. White, F. C, Krauss and Jesse Marshall.
Mrs. N. E. Boyer and Mrs,
Robert Zaizer will be in charge
of decorations, assisted by Mesdames R. O. Woods, Howard Linkert,
Irwin MeC'omb, J. . Other chairmen, and B, M. Mrs. W, l.. Shirley John A. Crawford, Mesdames T. E. Root, Albert Claffey, David Stone, W. H. Hanning and R. H. Sturm, table prizes.
Other Members
Mrs, E. B. Boyer and Mrs. J, W. Nunamaker, chairmen, Mesdames Robert Clarke, H. E. Riddell, J. F: Holmes, Charles Byfield and E. L. Burnett, card tallies. Mrs. Guy Morrison and Mrs. Richard Wall, chairmen, Mesdames Ralph Martin, J. W. Burke, Ethel Bromert, Mort Martin, O. A. Chillson, G. W. Kohstaedt, Charles Gardner, J. W. Bookwalter, Coral Wheeler, Shaffer and Charles Renard, table hostesses.
Mrs, W. E. Bodenhamer and Mrs. Charles Moreland, chairmen, Mesdames A. C. Fernandes, J. W. Williams, J. F. Roberts, Sidney Weinstein, Corwin Carter, A. L. Portteus, C. W. Richardson, Paul Merrell, E. A. Lawson, Attia Martin, LeRoy Martin, Zaring and A. J. Hueber, special prizes. Mrs. Rodney Curry and Mrs. Felix Spratt, chairmen, Mesdames E. W. Dyar, W. J. Guenther, John Bulger, R. H. Uhl, C. C. Hanning, Walter Nolte and Nordeau Heaps, cigarets. Mrs. H. E. Baumeister and Mrs. |Fred Melcher, chairmen, Mesdames J. V. Thompson, D. W. Brodie, W. F. Hanning, Jerome E. Holman Jr., K. W. Schmidt, William Fernandes, Francis Baur, Freund, R. W. Mumford and E. H. Cox, candy.
committees are Mrs. tickets. and Mrs. chairmen,
Forbes,
By MARGUERITE SMITH Times Garden Editor Q Please suggest some flowers
we might raise this summer from seed -- without a green thumb. New reader. |A—Zinnias and marigolds, by an means, and in variety. Try also moss roses (portulaca), alyssum, (especially the very dwarf white” and the deep purple), nasturtiums, four o’clocks, annual pinks and (chiefly for its fragrance) mignonette.
Q-—Please-suggest some vines for the end of a porch (east exposure). N. Capitol.
A-—Heavenly blue morning glories, moon vines, honeysuckle, will be Mrs. Louis Bruck.
silver lace vine—these are a|
few that will give you privacy award
for your porch plus ‘flowers.
Send gardening questions to Marguerite Smith, The Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis 9, Ind. .
i
YOU have accepted one invitation and then receive one for the same evening that appeals to you more,
RONG: ks some hil man, representative, hostess first arrangement Mn badge, and Troop 11, Mrs. F. C. RIGHT: Never call “Vil one Hindsely. leader, and Martha 5 set of plans because : some- Dean, fepresentutive. sewing BE : 4 y badge.
thing better turns up, if you want to keep your friends.
Norman are tea hour chairmen. : 8 Pouring will be Mrs. James L. : YOUR wife is telling an . Gavin and Mrs.~Alex L. Taggart.
anecdote to a group of friends and she makes a statement you think is wrong. WRONG: Interrupt her to say flatly that she is wrong. RIGHT: Either keep quiet or wait until she has finished
the story to make the correc- 5
tion, if it is really important enough to mention.
Caroline Scott Harrison Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, will be at 1:30 p. m. Thurs- make day in the chapter house.
Miss Ruth Armstrong, committee |chairman.
4 . — i the Also elected were Mrs. John C. ¥ i Cavosie and Mrs. Edward M. ™=% |
Troops Listed
Tinsely, leader, and Anita Sargent, representative, sewing badge | award; Troop Myers, leader, and Sandra Schu-
be in charge of the business session preceding the program.
i a | h
Return From South |
turned from a two-months vacation in Florida. |
- ——————
W. Ricketts, Thomas Riddell and G. F. Kleder. |
Austin and Mrs. W. B. Currie,
Mesdames T. W. Ledwith, Ethel S. Fry, R. B. Tuttle
WDC Books
Two Events |
Annual Luncheon, Talk Slated .
. Two future events are scheduled by the Woman's Department Club.
George Jo Mess will demonstrate landscape painting in oil at the annual art festival and spring luncheon at 12:30 p. m. Monday in the clubhouse.
The Ten O'Clock Art Study Group will meet with Mrs. Alvie T. Wallace, 3727 Watson Road, Wednesday. A discussion of cur- | rent art events will follow a talk on still life painting by Mrs. H. E. Blasingham.
Uses Charts
Mr. Mess will illustrate his luncheon talk With charts. He is a past president of the Indiana Artists Club. Artist members of the department will exhibit in the Mary "Q. Burnet Memorial room during April.
The committees includes Mesdames Ray B. Dorward, John E. Berns, Irving Blue, Harold C. Curtis, Edward D. Farmer, E. Tom Lawrence, Edward H. Niles, Henry L. Patrick, John E. Swaim, Percy A. Wood, Ralph W. Wright and Florence E. Wolcott.
Mesdames Hobart L. Wilson, G. M. Williams, Theodore F. Fleck, Glenn O. Friermood, M. R.| Garver, G. A. Heikes, Elza Hen-| son, Ray Holcomb, R. M. Wil-| lard, A. L. Leatherman and Edward G. Kayser. Mesdames Ernest R. Keller, Harry W. Krause, Robert B. Malloch, Jess E. Martin, William E. White, Frank S. Wells Sr., Harris P. Wetsell, Eli E.. Thompson, George E. Dunn, Scott - Deming, W. H. Craft. S. H. Clendenin and Charles A. Huff.
Honors Day Program Set
Event to Be Held In Chapter House
The Honors Day program of the
Guest speaker for the
The DAR Good Citizenship
Mrs. Esther B. Cavan-
nagh and Mrs. James L. Miller are committee chairmen. Three Girl - Scout Troops will
eceive Girl Home Makers awards rom Mrs. Eric J. Wadleigh and They are Troop 4, Mrs. F. W.
205, Mrs. Dewey
Mrs. M. B. Lairy and Mrs. O. B.
Mrs. Clyde E. Titus, regent, will
Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Huff, | : 210 Grandview Drive, have re-
stemware, the coin cut pattern by Libbey, and square pottery dinnerware by Franciscan continue | tie modern lines of the table. Crystal and pottery both are available locally.” A
. 2»
w
| first steps.
can dress up enriched bread in a until hurry to serve as accompaniment make fragrant cinnamon toast, used flowers to resolve one -doto prune whip or fruit sauces. excellent as dessert bread. Orange mestic relations problem which ast is rich-tasting; juice and rind may be mixed with came to his attention. He fined toasted granulated sugar and spread over the husband, then suspended the bread with butter, or margarine, buttered toast for another flaver-| fine on the condition that he buy program then sprinkling with brown sugar. ful topping.
Butterscotch to
will be presented to Judy : (Hanna, Shortridge High School student. {
| |
* future.
BENEFIT CHECK—Miss Margaret Weadick (left), director of the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp, watches Mrs. Carolyn F. Hargitt deposit $750 on the camp account. Mrs. Hargitt represents the Alpha Latreian Club which has aided the camp since 1929. The camp, sponsored by the Marion County Tuberculosis Association, enables over 100 frail children to spend two summer months at the camp to prepare them physically and mentally for a healthier
We, the Women—
It Is Foolish for Parents To Be Too Strict on 'Dates’
By RUTH MILLETT
AN unhappy 15-year-old wails: “All the girls I know have dates for the movies, school parties, etc. But my mother and father not only won't let me have a date
with a boy, even when they know him and know he is nice, but they won't let me talk on the telephone to a boy.
“The other day a boy in my class at school called me up. Mother answered the phone and she was so rude to him I was ashamed. She hung up without’ letting me speak to him. “I wish IL could quit school and not have to face the other kids.” That's a sad story, because the parents are probably trying to do right as they see it. The trouble is, they're treating their 15-year-old like a child, as though by being strict enough they can keep her safe. They are trying to put off all boy-girl relationships until the day they decide she is old enough to look after herself and they won't have to worry about her.
+, oe
FS) BUT that is a foolish mistake for parents to make. In being too strict and showing no understanding, they are making their daughter ashamed and rebellious, convincing her that they don't understand her, at all. How much more sensible if they would show their concern for their daughter, not by saying “No” to all dating, but by seeing to it that she dates only boys they approve of, by going only to places they know about, limiting her dates to, say, one a week, and insisting that she be in at a certain hour. Parents can’t just turn a 15-year-old loose, letting her do whatever she insists all the other kids are permitted to do. But they can, within the framework of their own rules, let her take the first boy-girl steps when the boys and girls her own age are taking them. When all of her friends are beginning to date is the time for a girl to start dating. When the time comes, parents should no more try to hold a girl back from boy-girl friendships than they would hold a baby back from learning to take his
Ruth Millett
Cinnamon, Sugar Toast Is Tempting, Tasteful
Pop it under the broiling unit Or|
If the cookie box is empty, you the mixture bubbles.
it by spreading
RSDAY, MAR. 29, 1951 Irvington Group Plans
‘Tootsie Trot"
Dance Scheduled Tomorrow Night
Jack Hume and Barbara Jones are chairmen for the Irvington Assembly dance tomorrow night. Called the “Tootsie Trot,” it will be in the Howe High School gymnasium. Committee members include {Marilyn Fuller, Connie Leen, Janet Graves, Nancy Nothern, Beverly Weevie, Dick Eubank, Bill Stafford, Jim Wampler, Rod Massey. George Gill, Jack Baker, Carol
Carmichael and Mack Laetsch.
| Chaperones will be Messrs. and [Mesdames Lloyd Jones, Harry |Weevie, John Hume, A Wayne |Eubank, James Baker and John |Dunigan.. | Messrs. and Mesdames Egbert |Hildreth, Gareth Hitchcock, {Frank Turley, George Mattson, |Kenneth Shirley, Osborne Dixon land L. H.. Theobold and Mrs, Myrtle Massey.
Initiated At DePauw
Local Students Are Listed
Times State Service GREENCASTLE, Mar. 29 — Eighteen Indianapolis students at DePauw University have been initiated into social sororities. They are Miss Mary Frances Landis, 5154 N. Capitol Ave., and Miss Janet Lahr, 4030 Forest Manor, Alpha Chi Omega; Miss Audrey Thomas, R.R. 13, Box 400, and Miss Janet Crowder, 3319 N, Meridian St., Alpha Omicron Pi, and Miss Patricia Warner, 837 N, Riley -Ave., and Miss Carol Dady, 2104 E. Kessler Blvd., Alpha Phi. Miss Shirley Ann Swanson, 526 Blue Ridge Road, and Miss Elaine Demos, 4997 Rockville Road, Delta Delta Delta, and Miss Marilyn Holtman, 5363 Kenwood Ave., Miss Mary Ann Hall, 656 E. 46th St. and Miss Helen Curry, 3931 N. Delaware St. Kappa Alpha Theta. Miss Betty Sue Ross, 2714 E. Northgate St., Miss Jane Leahy, 6920 College Ave., and Miss Ann Behrman, 5882 ‘Haverford Ave., Pi Beta Phi; Miss Mary Ann (Smith, 2712 WJ 30th St. Miss {Lucinda Rohm, 5335 Boulevard |Place, and Miss Dorothy Nelson, (315 E. 48th St, Kappa Kappa {Gamma, and Myss Barbara Bun{tain, 2326 Coyner Ave. Delta | Zeta. -
Attending Parley
Mrs. Ralph L. McKay, 353 N. |Bolton Ave., is in Chicago attending the convention of tha {Council of Guidance and Person{nel Associations in the Hotel Ste-
vents. She is chairman of the |Alpha Xi Delta Sorority’s national founders’ memorial
{scholarship loan.
Say It With Flowers
BATH, N. Y. — A judge here
'his wife a bouquet and apologize.
pr
an
Canton, O.
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Burit
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No Scouring
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SAVES SOAP OR DETERGENT
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Ea
THUR Brow
Add GOF Congr Admir
“Long af 1951 is for
known as t
became a p when libert “It is not
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tion. He querie world situa {ble—to wh fense Georg on Monday with Trums result of th bright inve “Could it Rosenberg’s cuts the dr next morith are demand 18-year-olds
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6167
By MRS
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