Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1951 — Page 3
19.195
4
Iton Ingle \gain
‘sees 19 — The Onconsolidation new today. 'rustee Vivian sored - the One school busses to a Walton ter-brakes ine § runs. e drivers told e time.
e got two of
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he went to °
gone and the r didn’t know them.” Mr, d the busses the Onward wheels misse wo from the
fight began Kratz’ predee schools cone pupils from Walton and
s protested ol, and many ir youths to nward school nd all pupils n.
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SATURDAY, MAY 19, 1951 _. In Hollywood— |
~ Peace Fails As Visit of
«
By ERSKINE JOHNSON HOLLYWOOD, May 19 — De- _, 8pite the expected ‘stork visit in July, the Broderick Crawfords are miles away from the rumored reconciliation. “A Mexican standoff” is the way Brod puts. Virginia Field and Willard Parker are signed to co-star in a TV film series tagged ‘‘Boss Lady” The series calls for 36 films a year, ‘each budgeted at $18 C00, for the next five years, Virginia: “and Willard plan to marry Oct. 9. ig : ‘Hedy Lamarr and an unidentified “mystery man” have been thé talk of Acapulco’s we-love-a-ro-mance set. . . ., William Gargan'’s wife is on the mend after major surgery. . Yvonne de Carlo isn’t happy over the snip-snip job done on her last Universal International picture, “Tomahawk.” Her big song number was scissored from the picture. ” a a PRODUCER David Diamond will follow up “I Was an American Spy” with “The Bright Side,” revolving around camp entertainment staged by service personnel. He'll give 50 per cent of the film's profits to the services. . . . Prediction: Margaret Sheridan is THE gal to watch in the 1951 movie glamour sweepstakes. She makes her film bow in “The Thing.” Sophie Tucker is scoffing at those “retirement” rumors. She's booked through 1952 on a doctor's timetable—four weeks of work and then three
gs NNN ENNIS R NNN ENRON NSS RENEE NE rRNA saeERnaas -
of rest. : Harry Essex, the writer, agreed to write script’ for “The Las
Vegas Story” when assured he wouldn't have to visit the gambling center for local color. “Writing in Hollywood,” he wailed, “I draw 6n my memory. In Las Vegas, I just draw on my bank
account.” . , . : :
= ” s JUNE HAVOC, headed for a Broadway play, took five cats
AN00ERERRNRNEERARENRRRRRRS
with her to New York, explaining: | Janet and I. After a few days we became a
solid team again. When I came back to the Racquet Club after
Hollywood is joining television's, the show, my crew met me and
boast that “old stars are better, they all said, ‘Why, boss, we | didn’t know you had it in you'.” | ”
NORMA SHEARER kicks off —Labor
“I auditioned 51 cat-sitters but| of rehearsing, none of them was right for the cats.”
than ever.” Leatrice Joy, who hasn't appeared on the screen for) 15 years, has a big role opposite
8 '=n
Frank Fay in “A WAC In His her film comeback plans with an
Life.” 's Fay's first film ap- appearance on the Screen Direc- i the WW LabliLzatio v 2! f pearance Iq eight years. [tors Playhouse on NBC. The date WIC ne age ablization that “the heart of the case” was| NEW YORK, May 19 (UP)— scholarship is all the free peoples of Europe, \w 7 8 'hasn’t been set. . . . Lionel Barry- Board ripped in the ceiling on that the packing house employees| A geistant Secretary of State provided for by he said, “by the immense Rus-
DATELINE: Hollywood
FRESHMAN MOTHER—Even with three sons, Jeanne Crain still has and ran a seven-mile gauntlet of anyway, I decided I might as well run for the enough of youth and glamor to take the role of a college freshman in “Take Care : of My Little Girl,” film slated for here soon, which takes a few well-aimed punches at college sororities and social life.
EEE ERROR TERT REE E EE TRENT EER R ERRORS R EINER RNR E TREN ORRRNERRRRARe Re Reseernessnasennnnnsrasd YON and Hoengsong in February.
9-Cent Wage Hike for Meat
Packers Rips
By United Press WASHINGTON, May 19 and management many industries got set today
IT'S 74 Yirtnday candles for more will play the role of Presi- Pay boosts.
Victor Moore, his absence from the “Lone Star.”
wistful plains
“After 53 years of work, I'm resting.’ — Ee —
The movie offers still come in Ain't Worth a Cent Today.” . . Dee makes
but the comedian says: “If they'll Frances give me a good picture, I'll always comeback be willing to work. I'm old Reno.” enough now to say no to any- television dramas. thing but good ones.”
who ex- dent Andrew Jackson in Gable's
in UIs
| 5 s 2 . © { RUTH ROMAN is boiling again 1950. JANET GAYNOR and Charles about a reissue which catches hen A. Johnston previously approved Farrell have given CBS the green with her improved acting talents an over-the-ceiling pay hike for! light dn another radio version of down. ... Universal International a million non-operating railroad one of their early movie hits. is releasing a 15-chapter serial, workers because it was a cost-of-Farrell, looking at the mountain “Queen of the Jungle,” in which living increase granted under an of letters from fans that arrived she played the lead of “Lothal, escalator clause signed before the
—lcomedy.—. New song: “A Nickel ing wage boost —of 9 cents an was concerned about workers H ® "F hour for 220,000 CIO and AFL whose unions failed to write even 28ainst their Communist masters. 31Y accredited
that film meat packing workers. simple reopening clauses in last | Risa “Reunion in It was the board's first ap- year's contracts. (ner of the China Institute, Mr, [versity the Miss Waltz . She's been starring in Proval of a contract providing Rusk voiced the strongest back- Ys Services Today
wage increases of more than
per cent over levels of Jan. 15, Economic Stabilizer Eric
after his “Seventh Heaven” broad- the Mystery Girl.” . .. Cy Howard Jan. 25 freeze.
cast with Janet, told me at his is about to" put the TV version of “My Friend Irma” into rehearsal. admitted the decision . +. Eve Arden will do ‘“Veice of the direction of a general policy.” There was every indication the
Palm Springs Racquet Club: ‘To me it was a matter of life
and death. We had to be good, 'the Turtle” in summer stock.
“looks
(UP)
try and climb through the hole Taylor told a news conference Backs Chiang Regime
The board's union and public tract a wage reopener for this! members overrode the six man- year rather than a cost-of-living| screen: | Mae West is writing another agement spokesmen late yester- escalator clause. 'stage show for herself—a musical day and approved a ceiling-plerc- He also indicated the board)
The board's majority opinion
~
* »
PAGE 3
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ; . 2d Divisi on Hoosier Profile : By Noble Reed office is the long range goal toward which they Sr A {strived for many years in hard work for one poOn Heroes | . Not so with Mrs, Alice’ L. Stratton, Beech {Grove housewife and mother of an 8-year-old By ROBERT W. GIBSON fdaughter, who won the Democratic nomination for WITH THE U. 8. 2d DIVISION, | If she wins: the November election, she will k 3 Korea, .May 19—Every man in be the only woman elected Mayor of an Indiana | J ) Four years ago Mrs. Stratton was elected decorated as a hero if ,this were clerk-treasurer of Beech Grove after she was | But this is no ordinary battje, Committee, [It 4s the epic stand of the 2d|
! S L on g TO MOST PUBLIC officials, their election to {litical party or another: * United Press Staff Correspondent Mayor of her city in the recent primary. city: the U. S. 2d Diyision would be an ordinary battle. « “drafted” to run for®office by the City Democratic “ & b
. | Division, with its attached Dutch| * HER POLITICAL career started 10 years ago, sand French battalions, against @ few weeks after she reached her 21st blethdgae io .+3/the endless manpower of the Chi-.. “I had no political. smbltions Whatever at iinese Communist-army. - ~ that time" she sald. “My sister-in-law (Mrs. J. J. 3" Right now heroes’ are as num- Stratton) asked me to help drive voters to the
- al
i/erous aroun dhere as the morning Polls on election day.” : t report figures. - She did such™a good job getting Democratic Got. 4 Chinese voters out to the polld in her precinct that party officials appointed her viceccommitteewoman, There was the doughboy who, “In this work I. became more interested in ,a/had one bayorfet against four government and politics, but never thought about > f Chinese. He yanked out a™gre- running for public office myself,” she said. £ nade, pulled the pin, and held 14} THEN, when Rr Soni present Demo f° long it seemed it would explode 4, jc Mayor of Beech Grove, ran for tHe mayorHi his hand. But he~knew what alty nomination in 1947, Mrs. Stratton was picked he was doing. At exactly the for the No. 2 position on the city ticket. {right moment he hurled it out. “I decided that since I was elected I would try He couldn't get four of them at to be the best clerk-treasurer the town ever had, the same time with his bayonet and have devoted my full time to the job,” she i |said. Riflemen pick off the advanc-| In fact, she spent so much time at her City {ing Chinese as calmly as if they Hall Job that she naturally assumed many of the {were shooting at targets on the Mayor's duties. training ranges back home. The “You must remember that City Hall salaries infantrymen are fighting behind here are so low ($1700 for mayor and $1500 for a steel curtain of artillery fire. . |clerk-treasurer) that no man can afford to spend The Chinese threw an entire all his time on the job,” she said. i division at one of the 2d's units| : * 2 sieast of Chunchon. The artillery] MRS. STRATTON explained that she could t/threw 2000 rounds of shells into afford to work full-time at City Hall since her
“
Mrs. Alice L.
g £ E ~ ir ® mn RB ® = 0 jal) @® 8 a
votes.
recent primary.
day, six days a business can be
t/eight minutes. It was estimated employee, makes the family livelihood. :|that no more than 150 escaped. | “Since Mayor Byland has to spend most of They're Veterans his time away from City Hall in private business The 2d Division men are vet- t0 Make a.living, I naturally took over much of erans. Some of its units met over- Nis duties,” she said. 3 $f whelming enemy odds at Kunu-ri When anyone wants anything done, they call 2 in northeast Korea last November Me. Since I'm doing most of the Mayor's work
where I've lived
i/fire through Kunu-ri Pass to es- JOD myself.” Z/cape. The 2d also bore the brunt
slof the Communist attack at . . . Wonju last January ana at chip- MisS Waltz Wins Churchill Asks Closer
Lt. Gen. James A. Van Fleet. $2000 Scholarship (Co-oparattion With Y. S | , ,
{8th Army commander, visited the| |2d Division command post Friday. ' Shirley Jo Waltz, George Wash-| (UP) — Britain's wartime prime
'He sald he was happy to see the ington High School senior, is minister Winston Churchill last
ogee Wage Ceiling or: were “silly enough to pick winner of a $2000 scholarship | night called for closer co-opera- weapons that could be used by
lon the infantrymen who trounced given United | tion with the U. 8. as the one
| ” panel would be extremely liberal them at Cipyong.
in future decisions in ’ D m Ai to Board Chairman George W. State epart ent id
by District - 30, Steelworkers of America. James Robb, director, an-j ounced that the
enslaving free Europe. “Without their help there would be no hope of preventing the conquest and subjugation of
sian Communist armies and those of their satellite states ...”
Mr. Churchill spoke at a mass rally of more than 4000 Scottish Hniofists-—r—r—t
Mrs. Emma Smith
chose to include in their 1950 con pean Rusk has expressed new the district weladministration support for Chi- fare and educaang Kai-shek’s Chinese National- tion fund on a
ist regime, and indirectly called four-year basis. 2 y It-can-be-used-in
kere ON th€ Chinese people to
Speaking last night at a din. college of uni- = ff
daughter of Joseph Waltz, an em{ing given to Chiang by the ad-| ? mma Smith, Tough Tax 2 {ministration since the Generalis- Ployee of Best Foods, Inc. and a a 3 Seed in OTTAWA, Ontario, May 19 [Sos Siriua) repudiation a the | Imetber of Local Union 1544, will \gg 4isonville, Ky. (UP)—Finance Minister Doug- iD SpaTimen S raper jenies Indiana University in Sep-| ng gmith died at her home, las Abbott has warned Cana- | : EIDeP,: | viel and 1410 N. Arsenal Ave. Wednesday. dians that it would be “most | : : |She was 58. unwise” to earn over $400000 COIS Parade in Berlin Kefauver Scores Apathy| Born in Madisonville, she had a year. BERLIN, May 19 (UP)—The| WASHINGTON, May 19 (UP)— been a resident here 25 years, She Mr. Abbott said in Parlia- United States paraded its rein-|gen mstes Ketauver (D, Tenn.) 23, 2 member of the East View ment yesterday that the in- forced troops today in the great-|. ” *’’/ Baptist Church, Madisonville. in come tax on the first dollar lest American display of military Plames public “apathy and in-| Surviving are a nephew, Robert over $400,000 is $1.08 and gets might in Germany since the oc- difference” today for the growth Trice and a niece, Mrs. Sarah larger from there on. |cupation began. {of crime in America. Pritchett, Indianapolis.
10
Dr. Martin
President
To Address
Hadassah Dr. Sumner L. Martin, :
chairman of the Indianapolis| Chapter, American Christian!
Gono
(li
Ri, —
Of Radcliffe Will Speak
We, the Women—
roent mpecien nia 121s nm If Wise, Single Woman
|
luncheon meeting of Hadassah| . . Weaniay in ve sonimor Coy Party With Married Set
Newly elected Hadassah offi-| eers will be installed at the bust-| ness meeting preceding the pro-| gram. Officers include Mrs. Max Klez-| mer, president; Mesdames Abra-| ham Max, William R. Frank and| Harry Brodey and Miss Nancy) Lichtenberg, vice presidents; Mrs. | Abe Kulwin and Mrs. Gus Rosen, | treasurer and assistant treasurer.
Assistants Named
Mrs. Aaron Glick, financial gecretary, will be assisted by Mrs. | Marvin Sablosky and Mrs. Fred F. Falender; Mrs. Morris Wein-| berg and Mrs. Leon Engle, cor-| responding secretary and assist-| a ant. Mrs. Norman Abrams and Mrs. Sherman Weinstein, recording] secretary and assistant, and Mes-| dames Victor Goldberg, David Lipp, Bernard Stroyman and Belle,
Ruth Millett
And this is always pleasing if the manages to say enough to make the listening seem from choice
By RUTH MILLETT
IT ISN'T always easy to be the one unmarried woman in a group of married couples.
came to visit a married college classmate for a week
and stayed a month, managed to have a wonderful time. In — fact, she had all the wives in her friend's crowd knocking themselves out to scare up eligible bachelors for her to meet.
But Lucy, who
Why did Lucy fit in So easily with a married crowd, when so many unmarried women find it a difficult thing to do? For one thing, she always managed to pay just a little more attention to the wives than to their husbands—a necessary precaution for any lone woman who finds herself in a crowd of married couples. . For example, she didn't high-hat the interests of the married women, even though they weren't her own interests. She listened to them and their problems, and asked enough questions to make them feel like experts. She did more listéning than talking, too. person is attractive and
Weinberg, directors. | —not from lack of having anything to say. In charge of arrangements for | SHE never looked bored, but always seemed to be enjoying
the luncheon will be Mrs, Barney
Blickman and Mrs. Milton Singer.! way.”
GFWC Supports UMT, Asks Bipartisan Unity shower Honors
leadership will refrain from it at Elaine Ingram
By United Press ter,
administrator. of the Eco-
herself, which is a characteristic of any guest who ‘pays her
HOUSTON, Tex., May: 19—The nomic Co-Operation Administra- any time.
General Federation of Sropens tion as speakers, Clubs today threw its support be- ; . hind Universal Military Training Truce Period for as long as there is a “definite
urged President Trumaa to seek bi-partisan co-operation in government. Those two points topped a lis of resolutions adopted by some 2000 delegates to the faderation’s| 60th annual convention at their power. closing session here yesterday. The women qualified their support of UMT, however, by askiug that it be “democratic” and iin versal in application and that J be pn by a panel of In Korea. both civilian and military per-|
sonnel, mostly civilian. (women to help
Mr. Foster said that America threat of national security” and gnoulg prepare to face an “in-
deteriorated “month = by - month’'| until “we are not receiving full revolving scholarship ‘support from even our own Allies/$100 each presented by Mrs. . ye’ |Quincy A. Myers, Perryville, Ind., Miss Hester Initiated Mrs. Mesta advised the club- for Epsilon Sigma Omicron Di-
“develop “the vision of the federation’s educa-
In their resolutions, the General. Federation urged leaders of both parties to join for national asked that a course in U. 8. history be required for definite period” of armed truce graduation from all high schoo but that the free world would be t 80 well mobilized in 18 to 24 months that in some places Rus- Public Affairs, sia would become a second-rate)
unity;
and
|as acts of treason.
Sen. Hickenlooper charged that . |U. 8./international relations nave| Scholarship Loans
The four-day convention closed Strength of the Western world.” tion department.
last night after an international She described how European Perle Women are helping: their coun-|was
Mesta, U. S. Minister to Luxem-|tries regain their pre-war status./consin -
forum dinner with Mrs.
bourg; Erwin D. Canham, edi-
tor; Sen.
and colleges; urged Congress to establish a National Academy of
that subversive acts be punished
GFWC accepted a gift of two
Dr. Wilbur K. Jordan, pres-| ident of Radcliffe College,
was to address parents and
prospective students at a meeting | this afternoon in Tudor Hall School. Among those invited are Mr. and Mrs. Norman Baxter and {their daughter, Mary Alice; Mr.| land Mrs. Ted O. Philpott and their | daughter, Valri; Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Wilkinson and their daugh-| ter, Claire; Messrs. and Mesdames | Samuel R. Harrell, Theodore Grif-| * fith, John Washburn, Robert! Clark, Herschel E, Davis and Otto | K. Jensen.
| Others Listed | | Others are Mr. and Mrs. Al-| fred Noling and their daughter, | Kathy; Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Leete and their daughter, Mari-| 5 gold; Mr. and Mrs. Evans Woolen | & Jr. and their daughter, Kithy;! % Mr. and Mrs. Grier M. Shotwell, and their daughter, Anne, and| 8 3 2 yo be he wo Mr. and Mrs. Har . . Ana thelr rey on. Feterson SPECTATORS—Watching the play at the Weathervane Cross-Country Championship Golf Dr. and Mrs. Floyd Boys and lournament in the Meridian Hills Country Club yesterday were (left to right) .Mesdames Morey
their daughter, Rachel, Urbana, Seldin, Yorda Kyger, and Charles Anderson. The play ends today. Il; Dr. and Mrs, Harry 1, Fore-ier 1 no man; Dr. and Mrs. Fletcher Blackwood on Bridge— {Hodges and their granddaughter, |
Fine in on ses Don't Overestimate Your Partner's Ability (Barbara, and Dr. and Mrs. J. K. o : Berman and their daughter, re] W hen You Lead Against No-Trump Bid
, are others to come.
BRIDGE humanics apply to the and easily made his contract. play as well as to the bidding., “What are we playing—Nullo?”| South dealer |Take the matter of opening leads, screamed Mr. Champion. “Why| North-South vulnerable (for example. Against the three would you return a diamond when| NORTH | Ino-trump contract in today’s hand you knew I didn't have anything! Mrs. Keen
Honoring Miss ‘Elaine Ingram Mr. Champion decided -to:-open-in-the suit? Return a club and SQ 7 and her approaching marriage to the 10 of diamonds. he'll never make it.” H—K J 8 | William C. Stone, June 9, Mrs. Now, with a fine partner this' «1 wag returning your lead,” D—-A 543 Paulene Woodward held a linen lead would have been read for peplied Mr. Muzzy. “What m C6542 rep zzy at more ; shower in her home” at 2501 N./just what it was, the top of noth-4qo you want?” WEST EAST 1s Talbot St. last night. ing. It would have done the de-| J wan some co-operation,” Mr. Mr. Champion Mr. Muzzy | Parents of the engaged couple fense no harm and it might have ’ SA 962. S—8 43 are Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Ingram, been a killer. Champlon Formed. How could H-6353 H—109 72 | 053 E. 53d St. and Mrs. Marle| The usual lead against a No- pws tors of them ronds. only p—10 7 D—Kose | requested gi... “3114 N. Capitol Ave. |trump contract is the fourth high-|" oO, : | C—AQ93 C—108 Mrs. John E. Bauer, 6101 N. est of the leader's longest and _' 1nat's what you get for mak-| SOUTH : |Olney St. will be hostess for a strongest suit. This is especially InN8 such a lousy lead,” said Mr. Mr. Dale |china and personal shower for true where the suit is of five cards Muzzy. | S—K J 105 Miss Ingram in her home Friday or more and the leader has one or Mr. Champion was right in say-| H—A Q 4 night. ’ more entries. {ing a club shift at trick two would D—Q J 82 | loans of have defeated the contract. But C—K J 1
| Decided on Play he had only himself to blame for The bidding: { HOLDING no suit of five or choosing the diamond opening. [SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST Times Special more cards, Mr. Champion decided, While it might have.been tech- 1 N T Pass 3 NT All Pass| DELAWARE, O., May 19—MIss iy 1,ioht be more advantageous to nically right, it was a lead that!
VALPARAISO, May 19 — Miss
Everybody knows Mr. Muzzy Nancy Koch, daughter of Mr. and
{from dummy and Mr. Muzzy won
An.education major, Miss Hes- with the king. ;
diamonds. Mr. Dale won, a club. That would have beaten Alpha Xi Epsilon Sorority at Val- Room of the Colonial Furniture: |wick Road. * |knocked out the ace of spades, the contract, too. : : paraiso University. . Co. : cag Hh Ys a LA : wig : 0 t
Mrs. Alice Stration ‘Unusual’ Polit ’
She wasn’t drafted by the City Democratig Committee this time. In fact, Chester Smith, City Democratic chaire man, ran against her and lost by less than 100
SHE EXPECTS, however, to have the entire party organization supporting her in the fall came paign against Allen Hunter, former Republican mayor, who won the GOP nomination in the
“If I'm elected mayor I'll be on the job every
zjone wave of 1000 Chinese within husband, Alonzo Stratton, Naval Ordnance plant She vigorously discounted any impressions that she had “higher ambitions” in politics. “I have no ambitions whatever beyond serving as mayor of Beech Grove. I am not interested in any government jobs outside of my home town,
Mrs, Stratton is president of the Business and Professional Women’s Club there and is chairman of the Auditing Committee of the Indiana Municipal League. .
| means of preventing Russia from |; encouraging that their use on
{Courter “Speedway Special”
. . : and Mrs. Arthur Herzberg, 147, ‘Betty Hester, freshman at Ohio|ja¢ Mr Dale lead clubs and spades he knew Mr. Muzzy did not under-| Sorority Pledges | LTS, Arliup AeTSverS Ss
The 1950-51 scholarship award Wesleyan University, was recently yp to him. So he opened the 10 of stand and did not know how to Times State Service given to Iota Chapter, Wis- initiated into Kappa Alpha Theta diamonds, the trey was played handle. Federation © of Women's Sorority. Mr. Canham said he doubted Clubs, by Mrs. W. D. Keenan, In-| tor of the Christian Science Moni-| that Russia would launch an all- dian Bourke Hickenlooper out war, but that no one could|chairm (R. Jowa), and William C. Fos-isay .confidently that Russian Friday or a’ :
lalways returns his pantner’'s lead. Mrs. E. J..Koch, 5744 E. Michigan will have a card party at 1:30 apolig, Ind., federation ESO ter is the daughter of Mr. and, He promptly led back the nine Mr. Champion should have opened St., is among the recent pledges of p. m. Wednesday in the Meridian an, at the ESO breakfast Mrs. George B, Hester, 7040 War- of
Stratton . . . No. | in Indiana. ¢ oo 9
week. That's the only way city run properly,” she said.
all my life.”
Korea A-Weapons
‘Matter of Time’
SEATTLE, Wash, May 18 (UP) — Development of atomie
ground and air forces in Korea
battlefields “is only a matter of time,” Gen. J. Lawton Collins said here yesterday.
Traffic Club Speedway
Luncheon Monday
Top personalities of the 1951 Speedway Race will meet at the
luncheon of the Indianapolis Trafic Club Monday in the Marott Hotel. : Plans will be discussed for transportation in Indianapolis on ° May 30.
Rubber Output Boosted |
MEXICO CITY, May 19 (UP) Mexico will boost rubber tire pro= duction 30 per cent this year to a total of 800,000 tires In 1951, Robert F. Labosse, ‘sales manager, of U. 8. Rubber Mexicana said the country would “become ine dependent” of United States tire shortages. :
Bridge Results—
Local Clubs Announce Winners
“Results of play are an« nounced by several local bridge clubs today. Winners
follow. Women's Contract Club, Thurs, afternoon: N & 8 (Possible score 286)—Mrs. M. L. Thompson, Mrs. E. J. Ittenbach, 199.5; Mrs. V. A, Newcomer, Mrs. M. L. Ent, 156.5; Mrs. Donald Graham, Mrs. Lida Rickhoff, 150; E & W (Possible 264)—Mrs. Arthur Pratt, Mrs. Cq C. Mathews, 175; Mrs. John Ry Kelley, Mrs. B. M. Angell, 165.5; Mrs. J. C. Stafford, Mrs. Waring Lynch, 161.
The annual summer guest party will be held at 11:30 a. m. May 24 in the Indianapolis Athletic Clube Bridge will follow the luncheon. The monthly masterpoint game of the Women’s Contract Club postponed from Feb. 1 was played Wednesday. Winners were: N & 8S (Possible 140)—Mrsy Kelley, Mrs: Ittenbach, 86; Mrs, William Eckhart, Mrs. F. Cq Lewis, 75.5; Mrs. F. A. Mulbargery Mrs. Ralph Ittenbach, 69.5; Mrs, M. L. Thompson, Mrs. Hal Ben=' ham, 64.5,
East and West
E & W (Possible 120)—Mrs. V R. Rupp, Mrs. Pratt, 67; Mrs. Re F. Pagho, Mrs. S. R. Richardsony 65.5; Mrs. C. S. Hummel, Mrs. Rickhoff, 63.5; Mrs. Kathleen Abbett, Mrs. Mary L. Barnett and Mrs. Lynch, Mrs. Howard Grayy 63 (tie). St. Joan of Arc, Wednesday, night; N & 8 (Possible 198) —Mrs. Ralph Ittenbach, Mrs. Charles Lefebre, 129; Mrs. M. B. Janseny Mrs. J. B. Becknell, 110; Mrs. Donald Graham, Mrs. Helena Schultz, 107; E & W (Possible 198)—Mrs. Edith Gay, Mrs. Abe bett, 112; Mrs. Fred Mitch, Mrsy John Lavelle, 110.5; Mrs. E. Cq Ball, Carl Bruce, 109, Marott Club, Tuesday night: NI & 8 (Possible 297)—Jeff Ever, hard, Dr. Fred Gifford, 181; Mrsy Frank Abbett, Mrs. M: L. Thomps= son, 164.5; Sid Kasle, Albert Sile verman, 155.5; E & W (Possible 270)—Mrs. Arch Falender, Mrs, William Epstein, 155; Mrs. E. J Ittenbach, V. R. Rupp’ 151; Mn
Party Planned
The Children’s Sunshine Club
