Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1951 — Page 7
5
§
\ d AA i lis Junior t E. Metzhe is here 18 N. llli-
Y
rties are
at 2:30
ianapolig
furray Jr., James I. Cravens,
d Edward
srean’ will Mesdames Fouke and rs. J, Neill mes Richs B. Shursen.
ICH treat ames Wiland Charbaum and its of Mrs, Meslames onner and
will have 3 C. Lidier. Others p will be bier, Lynn O. Harris
Te
le
1
TUESDAY, NOV. 6, 1951
Organizations—
Luncheon, Meetings,
Party Set
A lunchean, several business meetings and a card party are scheduled for club activities this week. The New Neighbors League will hold a luncheon at the Hotel Antlers at noon Thursday. Mrs. Dorothy Demmy, president of the Cross Roads Toastmistress Club, will be guest gpeaker. Hostesses will be Mesdames
Forrest D. Arden; Frederick Rrockmeier, Robert I. WilHams, . Clayton C. Copenhaver,
William Sloan, Robert Robbins, Frederick Rottman and C. G. T.ahrman.
Republican Women
The Marion County Council of Republican Women will hold Aa businesg meeting at 2 p. m. Thursday ®t State_Republican Headquarters in the, tHaypool. There will be election of of-
ficers. Mrs. I. R, Yeagy is hostess chairman. Saenger-Chor The Ladies Society of the
Indianapolis Saenger-Chor will give a miscellaneous card party at 1:30 p. m. Thursday and at £:30 p. m. Saturday at the hall, 531 E. 13th St.
Sigma Delta Tau
Sigma Delta Tau Sorority .will have a business meeting at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Hotel Washington.
Anglo-India ITSC
Mrs. Ada M. Lory will address members of the AngloIndia Chapter of the International Travel-Study Club at. a meeting at-1 p. m.-Saturday at The Town House, 5694 N. Meridian St. Mrs, Carl V. Deitz will be hostess,
'Messiah’ Set Dec. 2
The 20th annual presentation of Handel's “Messiah” by the Irvington Community Chorus is scheduled for 3 p.m. Dec. 2 in the Irvington Methodist Church. It will be JEPIHICINA 3 by the Irvington Union 6f Clu ?
First rehearsal will be at 7:30 p. m. today in the church, and on each succeeding Tuesday in November. Mrs, Nick
Puckett is in charge of refreshments after rehearsal. Each year Mrs, Arthur Robfnson has the event and J. director of the Charles A. Harriz been named HoONOrary man. Mrs. Paxton is and Mrs. George FE. Gi retary of the chorus.
been I Russell Paxton Mrs, has
Chair-
chorus
‘founder
organist
Il is sec-
Win Bridge Tourney
Mrs. Wayne Warrick and Mrs. Joseph Brower were local winners in the Interstate Bridge Championship held this week-end in Cincinnati. They won the open pair event
held
Modern Minute Women—
Miner-Baker photo Mrs. Harmon O. Pritchard Jr. was the former Miss Barbara Jean Degner before her marriage at 7:30 p. m. last night at the Speedway Christian Church. Mrs. Pritchard Jr. is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Degner, 1615 N. Norfolk St. The bridegroom - is.the son of Mr. and Mrs. Pritchard, Crawfordsville Rd.
Urgent Need for Blood
Donors Is Stressed
By AGNES H.
OSTROM
Times Club Editer
RE PORTS direct from Korea and Japan confirm the fact military doctors sometimes haven't had all the
whole blood they
could have used.
In Washington military authorities have declined to
gay a shortage of whole blond caused any wounded to die unnecessarily, But they recognize the danRer sometimes exists, = = ” YOUR PINT OF gift blood iy be the safety pint he dif-
erence between danger and se-
curity. Your pint of gift blood may mean a man was assured life speedily—on the battle front where he first needed it. It may mean he was saved hours, days and weeks of pro-
longed suffering because an immediate transfusion was available when he first needed it. Make vour blood donation the
safety pint. A simple call to Red Cross Blood ( er, Lincoln 1441, will~ ~ do it. Or mail in ysur. donor piedge card to the Center, 1R W. Georgia St One gift pint of blood will save a life ® = » ADVANCE APPOINTMENTS for safety pints have been made by Miss Margaret Livington, Indianapolis Branch, American ‘Association of University Women Mrs Roger Overstreet Sr Indianapolis Service Men's Center: Allen W. Moorman dianapoiis Alumnae Chapter Kappa Alpha
Theta Sdrority, and Glenn H. McKenzie Jr, Indianapolis
Alumnae, Chi Omega Sorority.
Mrs. Max Miller and Mrs.Carl Bender, Indianapolis Deanery, National! Council of Catholic Women; Mrs. G. 1. Muench and Mrs. D. C, Gerlach, School 88 PTA; Mrs. Nat Smith and Herhert Backer, Indianapolis
Yes, 9 full qu of nutritious nonfat milk
Starlac is wonderful for
cooking and on cereals!
o£,
NOW! STARLAC 19 BACK AT YOUR GROCERS!
uarts
Starlac is milk with only the water and fat removed!
1. Just replace the water that has been taken out of * Starlac. Then mix and chill.
2. Starlac is wonderful on cereals, for cooking and other uses. You can whip Starlac, too.
3. Starlac gives you all the valuable B vitamins, proteins, calcium and other important minerals found in milk. Starlac gives you everything that “milk gives you—except for the fat and vitamin A. (Good news for calorie-counters! Starlac is made from skimmed milk — therefore it contains only half the calories of whole milk. )
National Council of Jewish Weamen, and Mr. and Mrs Von Gondwin, and Mr. and Mrs, Goodloe Owen, School 66 PTA.
Section,
r rv " MR. AND MRS. William V. Owens, J. H. Tunnah, Abe Baker and Garrett A. Rochford, School 45 PTA: Russell Lewis, School 28 PTA; Mrs. Loren Shimer. School 41 PTA. Mrs. Howard F. Neilsen and Mrs. Charles Berwick. School 69 PTA, and Mrs, Harry Watts, School 73 PTA. Mrs. Fred Surface, School 77 PTA; Mrs. Robert W. Gausmann, School 84 PTA: Martin Buckner, School 89 PTA; Mrs, Bertha Dippel, NCCW, St Catherine’'s- Church; Mrs, ‘L.- B. Clapham, NCCW, Holy Spirit Catholic School, and Miss Edith Hoff, NCCW, Little Flower Catholic Church.
New Pillow Is Adjustable
You ‘can now buy a pillow that will stay at any neight, right where you want it on the hack of chair or sofa. A band of fabric attached to the pillow has a weight at the end that acts as a counterbalance when dangled over the back of the chair or sofa. For reading in bed. you can adjust it to any height on the headboard. For traveling, the pillow clings to the back of the seat for dozing or can be used to pad the driving seat. The quilted taffeta pillow is wedgeshaped to support the head or
back.
ll i sh
ar
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES To Attend League
Workshop
The ‘League of Women Voters of Indiana will send representatives to a workshop Thursday at Barker Hall, Michigan City. Three discussion groups will
.be held at the state-wide meet-
ing. The state foreign policy group will discuss means to
further develop support and understanding for the United Nations. Mrs. A. H. Highland, Hammond, will lead this group. She will be assisted by Mrs. Rudolph Gottfried and Mrs. Ralph Fuch, both of Bloomington; Mrs. E. V. Dickerman, Crown Point; Mrs. Walton Wilson, Indianapolis, and Mrs, John Richardson, Kokomo. Mrs, L.- W. Bieker, Hammond, will be in charge of a workshop on Incal government. al survey being conducted by the local leagues in Indiana. A discussion on economic welfare will be lead by Mrs. Lawrence Dorsey.
Sorority. Unit
Meets Tomorrow
The Mu Alumnae Chapter of the Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow ‘in the home Mrs. Royer K. Brown, Carmel, Miss Nancy Osborne is chair-
man of the stunt to be given by.
recent graduates. Mrs. Joseph Taylor and Mrs. Chester Bockoski will make up the welcoming committee. .
You
JEWELL
for the Sout Dealers. Don't
things to show
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Blackwood on Bridge—
Signals Are Vital Part of Bridge Game
Signaling at bridge is a very important part of the game. And signals are often overlooked, misread, misunderstood, abused and generally kicked around for the loss of many thousands of points. I want to do for you a series of columns on signals, showing why signals are such a vital part of the game of every fine player, ° Today's hand illustrates one of the simplest signaling devices. As it happened, Mr. Meek tould have made an easy game at no trump. But at his four spade contract, he didn’t have a chance, » ” . MRS. REEN opened the king of hearts and noted her partner's play of the jack. This unfiecessarily high card encouraged her to continue the suit and she laid down the ace, On this trick Mr, Dale played the deuce. Mr. Dale's play of high, then low, indicated it would be to _his side’s advantage to have a third heart led. In other words he either had the queen or was out of the suit and could ruff. He did ruff the third lead of hearts and eventually won a trick with the King of clubs to defeat the contract. © This idea of signaling by playing high-low was first in-
of Whist.”
South dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH Mr. Abel S—~K 765 H—9 5 4 D—K J 8 C—A Q17 WEST EAST Mrs. Keen Mr. Dale 8-8 4 S10 3 H—~A K 108 7 HJ 2 D—9 43 D—10 7 6 2 C—10 4 2 C—K J 863 SOUTH Mr. Meek S—~A QJ92 H—Q 6 3 D—A Q 5 C9 5 The bidding:
SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST 18 Pass 38 Pass 1 S All Pass
troduced into whist, fore-runner of contract bridge, in 1834. Mr. Champion points out that today, some 117 years later, Mr. Muzzy still doesn’t recognize it. = ” »
WHEN THE device was new many players considered it equivalent to cheating. A Londoner named Pembroke was particularly indignant and wrote a book on the subject entitled “The Decline and Fall
Cavendish, in his book on whist, published in 1874, invented the name “echo” for this fiendish practice and in 1903 Elwell applied the high-low signal to bridge. Elwell was murdered soon after that and his death is still one of the unsolved mysteries of the century. There {a no evidence that’ his use of the echo had anything to do with it, Anyway, the complexity of signaling in recent years has become appalling. Let's trv to simplify the subject, starting tomorrow,
[Ia
YOU are greeting guests in your home, WRONG: Greet them without offering to shake hands. RIGHT: Offer your tand when you greet them. ” » ” YOUR child receives a written invitation {o a party. WRONG: Don’t bother seeing that it is .answered. RIGHT: If the child is old enough to write, have the child answer the invitation. If not, answer it for him.
Art gr In Exhibit
Mrs, Helen Woodward Woods, Indianapolis artist, will be in the Hoosier Art Salen Gallery from 2 to 4 p.m. Thursday. The Gallery is in the State Life Bldg.
Mrs. Woods is having an exhibition of portraits, landscapes and still-life subjects in both oil and water color. The exhibit will be open through Nov. 135.
The artists has been repre-
"sented in several collections at
Shortridge High School, Mark Honeywell School and others. She has studied with William Forsythe, Clifton Wheeler, Charles Hawthorne on Cape Cod, Eliot’O’Hara and Wayman Adams, Elizabethtown, N. J,
” nr ”
SHE received, the. Booth Tarkington prize at the Herron Art Institute, two Hoosier Art Salon prizes and Indiana Artists Club prizes,
She has painted a number of prominent men, including Dr. F. 8. C: Wicks, pastor emeritus of All Souls Unitarian Church, and Dr. Ferdinand Schaefer, first conductor of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.
School 82 Marks Korean Day
ars ay is Korean Day at School .oFamilies and teachers belonges to the school’s Parent-Teach-er Association will bring discarded clothing to be sent to a family in Korea. In charge of plans is Mrs. J. T. Kellv, world citizenship chairman. A committee of parents will asgist her with the packing and sorting.
Are Cordially Invited to Attend the
C. GANSER
Director of Home Economics for the Indiana district of Frigidaire will conduct the Cooking School
hside Frigidaire fail to come . .
she'll have many, many interesting
you!
FREE AD
MISSION
FRIGIDAIRE
Wednesday, Nov. 7, at 1:30 P. M.
at the FOUNTAIN SQUARE Theater
COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS!
No Admission Ticket is Needed. Just Come to the Fountain Square Theater Wednesday, Nov. 7th. Doors Will open at 12:30 and the Cooking School will Start at 1:30.
GRAND PRIZE
FRIGIDAIRE Electric RANGE
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GIFTS!
GIVEN AWAY ABSOLUTELY FREE
2nd —3rd—4th PRIZES
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12 Baskets Groceries from Krogers
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Sponsored by These Southside FRIGIDAIRE Dealers!
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And All the Food Cooked at the Cooking School!
® SEE how you can bake a cake and broil a steak in the same oven . . . both at the same time
® SEE new ideas in foods and meal planning . . . you'll like them all! @® SEE the technicolor movie "Talk of the Town"
\ ® SEE... and you may win one of the many special awards!
+ + + it's interesting!
® SEE and enjoy a Cooking School packed with pleasure and ideas!
Remember the Time . . . 1:30 P. M. WEDNESDAY FOUNTAIN SQUARE THEATRE
APPLIANCE & FURNITURE CO. _MA. 4393
A hl oi kh ig
