Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 June 1951 — Page 6

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Organizations—

Picnic Supper, Card

Party and

i News of a picnic supper, a card party and a monthly meeting are on the organization agenda announced today. The Indianapolis Alumnae Association, Zeta Tau Alpha

Sorority, will honor the sorority’s 1951 Indiana college and | university graduates at the final meeting of the season to-

morrow.

Monthly

It will be a 8 o'clock picnic sup-|

per in the home of Mrs. Gerald H, Jordan, Dale Perry and Frank Prange. {

Foltz, 4600 E. Tist St. Following supper the guests will

be initiated into the alumnae... 1951.52 include Mrs, Hadley,|

New officers of the association,

chapter. Honor initiate will bel, . iqent: Mrs, J. C. Lane and| Mrs. Russell Machael who also... james ¥, Nau, recording]

was honor initiate at the Epsilon Province workshop and conven- ,,..

tion earlier this spring.

secretaries; | treasurer,

corresponding Robert Weller,

for the evening, will be Mesdames yx Panhellenic delegate, and Horace Hadley, Russell Hood, J.\n;.g Charles Smuck, alternate. |

Camp Deligh Opening to Attract 103

Season to Get Under Way Saturday

One hundred and three campers are scheduled to arrive at Camp Delight between 2 and 4 p. m. Saturday. This is the opening session for Camp Delight’'s 1951

geason. It is the camp of the Indianapolis a Red Feather agency of the, Community Chest, Counselors are holding a precamp training meeting today.

Indiana State Conservation De-| partment, will instruct the stafr on nature hikes and “orienteering,” nature exploring with the use of a special compass. Friday Miss Violet Tennant, University division of social work, will discuss “You Are a Group Leader” with the counselors, {

Members of Staff

* whe administrative staff are

rector; Miss Jane Stratman, busi-| néss manager, and Miss Sally| Palmer, program director. Miss Bangsberg and Miss Palmer are members of the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls staff, | Others include Miss Nell Wal-| ker, Greenfield, waterfront di-| rector; Miss Joan Lingman,| Bloomington, director, and Miss| Carol Smith and David Endres,| assistants, horseback riding, and | Miss Jean Butch, Logansport, | office clerk, | Miss Ruth Babcock, director, and Miss E. Ann Sullivan, Twelve| Points, assistant, CIT Unit; Miss Marion Fatout, director, and Miss Suzette Brown, assistant, KIWI Unit, and Miss June Eileen Dunn, | Greensburg, director, and Miss Marilyn Miller, Logansport, Misses Ann Robinson, Janice Orr) and Diane DeArmond, assistants, Junior Hi Unit,

Others Listed

Miss Joy Weevie, director, and Misses Donna Greig, Virginia Douglas and Alice King, assist-| ants, YOCAFIGI Unit; Miss Car-| olyn Kellum, counselor, and Miss) Mary Ellen Higburg, assistant, Juniors, and Miss Marjorie North, | Portland, directer, and Miss Bernardine Hauvert, Greensburg, assistant, Blue Bird Unit. Miss Marilyn J. Rissler, New, Albany, Miss Cordelia Rateliff,| Tipton, and Miss Connie DeWolf, | for counselors, and Mrs. Har-| ld Brown, director; Miss Vir-| Jinia Arnett, Bloomington, and Harold Brown; assistants, food! staff.

us “pack wp

ending home.

tional.

{used | Billings Hospital, |

president Tomorrow Nelson Dangremond, Douglas, sponsor.

|A

Members of the South Side

Mrs, J. A. Towsley, historian and] Assisting Mrs. Foltz, chairman Themis correspondent; Mrs. R. C.|

Service Club will hold a pillow-| icase card party at 1:30 p. m, Tues|day in the Food Craft Shop.

General chairman is Mrs, Mar-|

garet Kissling.

Proceeds of the party will be to entertain veterans in

The June meeling of the Eng-

{lish Avenue Boys Club Mothers Club will be at 1:15 p. m. Tuesday in the clubhouse, 1400 English Ave.

Plans will be made to visit the

{boys camp near Noblesville next imonth,

Six persons were pledged to the

| {Eta Epsilon Chapter, Alpha Iota Sorority, ih a ceremony last night in the Athenaeum.

The pledges are Misses Doro-

Camp Fire Girls, Ferguson, Joyce Harding, Betty] Deweigh and Billie ton.

Throckmor-

Mrs, Lois Weaver is sorority and Miss

==DISHING 7 DI

By MARGUERITE SMITH Times Garden Editor

year—our first,

Rebecca

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JUNIOR LEAGUERS-TO-BE — Provisional members of the Indianapolis Junior League were guests esterday at the league's annual picnic, held at Rhoad: . End Farm. Five of the provisionals are pictured (left to right) Miss Huldah P. Pfaff, Mrs. Louis S. Stephanoff,

Blackwood on Bridge—

Thousands of Points Lost by Wrong Partner Making Four No Trump Bid ¢

i | WHEN BOTH YOU AND YOUR {partner have good hands and are moving along toward slam, do|

trump? {ahead and make las you sense the possibility of] slam? Thousands of points are lost {by reason of the “wrong” part-S—J 865 4 {ner bidding the four no trump./H—72 |You can avold these losses if you D—]0 8652 {know how. Let's see what Mr. C—6

: : |you ever think about which one thy Deck; Wilma Breedlade, Jean |, you should bid the four no Or do you just barge,

that bid as soon

Champion has to say on the sub-| ject. Against the six club contract; ; Mr. Dale opened the five of spades.|

South dealer | six club spot.”

Both sides vulnerable

Miss Barbara Jungclaus, Miss Polly A. Abendroth and Mrs. Silas Kivett Jr. The dog is Queenie. Others of the recently announced provisional members are Mesdames Edward G. Dunn, John Geupel, Glenn W. Irwin, John R. Jewett, Philo B. Lange, Frederick H. Lesh,

“See what I mean?” asked Mr.

NORTH Champion, exasperatedly, “You Mr. Abel used the four no trump, got the S—K information you wanted and then H—A J 1068 didn’t know what to do with it. D—A 7 Look how clear the whole picture C—A 8 7 5 4 {would have been if you simply bid WEST EAST {four clubs over my three club bid Mr. Dale Mrs. Keen |-— and let ME bid the four no S—~10973 [trump. You would have shown me | H—-Q 985 {three aces. Your reply to my five] D—9 4 38 {no trump bid would have shown) C—9 2 me one king. SOUTH Ch . loi | Mr. Champion ampion Exp ains | S—A Q 2 “WITH THAT information,”| HX 4 ' Mr. Champion continued, “a small) D—K QJ |child would have bid seven no|

Mr. Champion won on the board with the king. He then spread the thand, claiming 13 tricks,

{

What's Hurry? ai “WHAT WAS your hurry in Miss Oranda C. Bangsberg, /Q-—~We bought some roses thisbidding this hand, Abel?” the What care to great man snarled. “That's the _

i

i

C-K QJ 10 8 The bidding: { SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST

1C Pass 2H Pass 30 Pass 4 NT Pass 5D Pass 6 C All Pass

trump on my hand. { “Here’s something for you to! remember. It is almost always) {better for the partner with the] ilsecond round controls kings] king - queen combinations

singletons) to bid the four no,

give them so we'll have nice trouble with you guys. You fall all|was sure we had & small or a trump rather than the partner

flowers? How should we cut? Beginner.

ing

{trump as soon as you smell alreason to delay asking you for

a week with a -triple purpose preparation. That is one that

controls leaf .eating insects

sucking insects and disease. (Be, sure it is a triple control. I! lately talked to a beginner who, had been religiously using a

supposed triple - threat which really controlled blackspot. He why his roses didn’t bloom

spray only wondered then

Bugs were eating the huds.)| 2. Water the rose bushes in dry|

weather, the leaves wet.

But never, never get Let the water]

flow onto the ground. 3. Use a|

mulch around your plants,

Ground corncobs are tops for)

rose mulch, 4, long stemmed roses for tal

If you want]

l i

bouquets, cut the stems as long)

as you can get them.

If you

are just cutting off dead flow-| ers, snip them off with very short stems. A general rule to! remember — if you cut long] stems all the time you will get| larger but fewer roses. If you let the bush grow bigger, you will have more buds but smaller|

flowers.

Send all questions on gardening to Marguerite Smith, The Indianapolis Times, apolis 9. Queries must include names and addresses to be answered.

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or spraying your roses once ding, did’ you?

long a stem over yourself bidding four noigrand slam and I didn't see any with the larger number of aces.”

Mr. Champion was right. Try to

Some rose rules for beginners slam. After your jump takeout aces. I didn’t bid five no trump to maneuver the bidding so that] 1. Get into the habit of dust-/ You didn’t think I'd drop the bid- ask for Kings because if you only partner has a chance to bid the! had one and showed it with a six four no trump — unless you are “No,” replied Mr. Abel, “but I diamond bid, then we'd be pastirich in second round controls.

Nervou !

Beauty After 40— Reduce Without Becoming s and Fatigued

By EDYTH THORNTON McLEOD “A LEAN HORSE for a long race,” said Donald

Cooley at luncheon the other day, and he knows. As author of that popular book, “Eat and Get Slim,” he had may be a year-round city dweller

some interesting things to say about foods and fads-—Tligures and facts, “Kat and Get Slim” is one of the most interesting books ever written on the subject of dieting and I believe that it is because the author makes sénse. Don Cooley has bits of sly humor sprinkled throughout his discussion of foods and diets, which makes it easier to take. He believes that you should regulate your eating habits and he says, emphatically, that no spasmodic dieting will work,

w ~ » MR. COOLEY says that diet has much to do with your zest, your beauty, your glamoyr and, definitely, your sex appeal. To quote from his book, “Kat and Get Slim,” he has this to say, “Nothing makes fat except food. fhe unfailing law of reducing is to eat fewer food calories each day than you burn up A calory is simply measurement of the heat energy of foods, hence a yardstick of their fattening qualities, “Getting slim is more than a matter of losing weight. More

|

than cutting down on calories,

It's a matter of your calories |

bringing with them the vital minerals, vitamins, proteins and other essentials that, have unwittingly been starved of them, will go far to restore the sparkle to your eyes, banish that tired feeling, and rout the nervousness and irritability that sometimes come from unwise eating. :

My Day—

| Was Especially Fortunate To Receive Honorary Degree

By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT EW YORK, June 20-—On Saturday, I attended the

commencement exercises at Bard College, about 20

miles north of Hyde' Park. man of the National Citizens Committee for the Public Schools, -gave a

most interesting talk to the graduates. He explained to them why it is that our Pubdlie schools are of deep concern to each and every one of us, and how the citizens produced by th os @ schools may affect the

future of the oy The address given James H. Case

nation.

by

Roy Edward Larson, chair-

Jr. was brief and to the point, He very frankly told the students they could do more harm than any generation in the past, and perhaps more good,

I was particularly fortunate to receive an honorary degree on the same occasion that two of my Hyde Park neighbors, Theodore Lannet Mack and Thomas Morgan, were graduated.

WE DROVE home after the ceremonies and had a short visit from. an Austrian inventor and some young ’ friends in the diplomatic service who had just returned

~ With thelr two children from

Japan,

-

1

ASR A A Ma

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it you

|

eo o Livin U {named chairman. g P Other officers Charles D. Vawter and Mrs. Le-| roy Miller, first.and secdnd vice presidents; Mrs, Willlam E, Osborne, secretary, and Mrs. Lyman R. Pearson, treasurer.

To Loveliness

Grooming Tricks

For Summer | Times Special

| NEW YORK, June 20 — She c .. ndmothers' Club

'a week during the summer, al woman gets dressed up for moon-

froth and delicate beauty.

|

{dream princess idea presents a {problem to be solved: How do you

‘Designing Woman

and | —————

tee {[YWCA were elected at the June {committee meeting yesterday.

[cussed,

lor a rural belle, but at least once| 10 Meet Friday

ers’ Club, Charter 24, will meet 1 at 11:30 a. m. Friday with the ght and romance—in organdy (up's president, Mrs. Jane Artist, 4

[4250 E. 34th St., for a covered

With summer's natural “Jet- dish down” in exacting grooming, the Meeting.

serve as hostesses.

ON

—By Elizabeth Hillyer.

YOCABULARY—Three words for home decorators’ vocabularies: Breakfront (upper right)

is bookcase or cabinet with projecting center section. Highboy (upper left) is tall chest appearing to be in two sections. Credenza (below) is low cabinet like a sideboard except it is | solid to the floor.

YW Committee

Lists Officers

Officers of the Central Commit-|

| on Administration of the|

Mrs. Gonard A. Felland was

include Mrs.

Next year's program was dis-

The Indianapolis Grandmoth-

luncheon and a business

June birthday members will

(live up to such loveliness? Cell {Chapman, whose name is almost | #ynonymous with. floating, romantic evening dresses, gives us some tips. - Be sure your makeup isn’t too! istark and sophisticated for the mood of your dress. The new paleface makeup is especially good for {Summer—and do remember to {switch to lighter lipstick than

{you've been wearing during the

iwinter months,

| Brushed Look

Too stiffly set hair can spoil {the illusion of feminine loveliness, {See that curls have a soft, brushed |

| look. You might try the new in-|

{between hairdo —it's soft and pretty, not too sleek,

Or, if you wear a chignon, work {for an “every-hair-In-place” look. | | A word of advice on jewelry:| Earrings are fine, and so are; necklaces and chunky bracelets. | | But don’t make the mistake of loading yourself down with too much jewelry, | No Straps, Please . | | Above all, make sure that your! {underclothes are exactly matched [to the bare or sheer areas of your

{summer evening dress. A strap

| showing above (or through) your

[neckline can destroy the “dream | princess” illusion. Strapless bras

are a wonderful solution, and they're actually cooler. But some jt the new summer evening dresses are so carefully con- | structed with boned bodices that

Dark stockings are, of course, absolutely taboo for summer evenings when you ‘want x light footed look to match the lighthearted mood of your dress. If you wear delicate strip sandals, be sure to have sandalfoot stockings that match their bareness, Even if you stick to the conventional pump (dyed a pastel shade to match your dress), sandalfoot stockings are a psychological way or putting “wings on your heels.”

no bras underneath is necessary.) -

Eugene F. Ratliff and Samuel F. Sherwood, Misses Elizabeth C. Copper, Carolyn Crom, Joan Frenzel, |it might. Nancy Glendening, Ann M. Huesmann, Florence Mary | Jameson, Ann Parry and Mary Elizabeth Welch.

{Harold Hartley . . , is in The | Times every day , . « and every popby than they did in their | Sunday. : Y

at the price you pay for beef today a quart of milk

is worth 39 ¢

® Milk prices—and those of other : , dairy products—have remained lower than meats and other foods. Compared with current beef prices, each dollar you spend for milk is worth $1.84, Compared | with the prices of all foods, milk Le worth 29¢ a quart.” More and more housewives are’ learning this secret—fo stretch food money, serve more milk.

From Retsil Food Price Index

i Biggest Part IR LVR

Biggest Bargain, Too!

______ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, 1951 mm The Doctor Says— :

Gain In Aged Groups Pose New Problem

By EDWIN P, JORDAN, M.D, IT WAS CALLED to my attention recently that there are about 31 million men and women in the United States betweén 45 and 64 years of age. With the standards of health as high as they are now most of us will reach the classical retirement age of 65. § Many will doubtless keep right on doing what they were before put many will be faced with the loss of their customary occupae tions. Never before in our history have we as a nation looked forward to {having so many or § ch a large |proportion of elderly people. It raises new problems for us, both individually and collectively. The lhealth of the elderly is certainly lone of these.

‘Keep Working

| Just passing the age of 65 or lany other particular year mark, does not mean that one has seen |the last of good health and zest Ifor life. : Whatever the reason, keeping |the mind and body well occupied" loften seems to affect the health |favorably. It is”common experilence to know some active person who stops work suddenly, has nothing to do and whose health |deteriorates speedily. We all think this would not happen to us but

Times photo by Dean Timmerman,

Indeed it seems also that those {who have developed active hobbies {and keep working at them keep health and interest longer after giving up their main jobs than anvone else. Sometimes they actually accomplish more in some

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ali

WEDN] Eat Well

Stret Use And

By GA) WHEN one pound feed six, 3 know-how. can be noo combine 1 amount of b

BEEF Cl

One poun tablespoons two tablespo half teaspo teaspoon pep noodles, cog can tomato shredded ch Pan-fry ol skillet, Add brown thoro seasonings, a three-quar Top with Bake in a degrees F.) Serves six. i

LIVEF

One-half p teaspoon m cup finely ck spoon , salt, breadcrumbs flour, one eg ounces nood bouillon. Cook liver minutes. Gri with marj crumbs, flou Boil noodl minutes. Sh: inch balls. Cover. Cool hot for fou

PANNED H

Four table shredded c chopped cool vinegar. Melt fat i the cabbage . ly. Cook un ~five to 10 casionally Season to t: and vinegar.

Kitch

By MRS Pattern 5 transfers material 1 illustrations rections.

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