Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1951 — Page 5
26, 1051
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Times photo by John R. Spicklemire
DANCE HOSTESSES—Beth (left) ond Joan Foster try on the frocks they will receive in tonight at the Meridian Hills Country Club. Daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas S. Foster, 33 E. 73d St., the sisters will entertain with a square dance for their friends and holiday guests.
Bonds for Israel Luncheon To Be Jan. 9 at Marott Hotel
RS. LEWIS Levy has announced a luncheon meeting of the Bonds: for Israel campaign for Jan. 9: The guest speaker will be named at a later date. . It will be at 1 p. m. in the Marott Hotel. Mrs. Levy is women's division chairman for the drive. Serving on the committee are Mesdames Ben Ashkenasz, Maurice Atlas, Norman Abrams, Howard Aaron, Sam Abels, Archie Aronstam and Michael Abrams, ” ” ”. MESDAMES ISADOR BACK, Hyman Brosman, Arthur Bennet, Abe Borin, Harry Brodey, Clarence Budd, Jack Bunes, Julius Birk, H. A. Berger, Ruth Breeding and Joe Calderon. Mesdames Joseph Celender, David Cook, George Claymon, E. H. Cohan, Harry Cooler Jr,, Meyer Cohen, Leon Cohen, Betnard Cooper, Harry Cohen, Merrill Cohen, Hugh Gahn and Edward Dayan. Dr. Rosalie Cohen, Mesdames Robert Dorman, David DobroEmanuel Deitz, Max Dworkus, Charles Efroymson., Leon Engel, El Ettinger, . Henry Entin, Lester Engel, Louis Fink, Ben Fisher, Eugene Fishman, George Frank, Phil Fichman, William Frank and Manuel Freeman. ” » $ MESDAMES Eugene Friedman, Leon Frisch, J. Fox, Sol Friedland, Allison Falender, Amiel Gelb, Myro Glass, Al Gruen, Henry Glazer, Fritz Goldbach and Charles Gordon. Mesdames Paul Goldstein,
Street
State .....
ACCORDION 58Q50 |
Martin Garfield, David Granowsky, Robert Goldstein, I. Gold, J. A. Goodman, Alan Goldstein, Maurice Horwitz, David Hollander and Sam Hochman. Miss Emma Gelman, Mesdames Aaron Intrater, Joe Jackson Jr. Bessie Klezmer, Edward Kaufman, Ralph Kahn, Howard Kahn, David Klain, Max Klezmer, Jack Kammins, Edward Levin and Lou Levy.
» td # MESDAMES AL LEVINSON, Walter B. Lichtenstein, Manuel D. Leve, Harold Lewis, Manuel I. Leve, William Lipken, Ben Majerson, Abe Miller, Harry Marcus and Abe Max and Miss Ruth Medias. Mesdames Isador Nahmias, Ben Prince, Erwin Permer, Nathan Rice, Albert Reuben, Z.
Schreier, Robert Schwab, Nat Smith, Bernard Segal and Harry Stein, Mesdames Albert Shane, Sidney Shane, Max Sussman, Max Shalansky, Max Selig, Percy Simmons, Ben Shalansky, Philip Smith, William Schwartz, Manuel Segal, David Sawyer, Leo Shane and Bert Sicanoff. = » = y MESDAMES S. A. Silberman, Maurice Schwarzberg, Joe Solinsky, . Edwin Saxe, Joseph Tobak, Leo Talesnick, William Weinstein, Louis Wolf, Bella Wolfe, Myron Wolf, Belle Weinberg and Sam Wides. Mesdames Adrian Weissman, Louise Weissman, Meyer Wild, Sam. Yaver, Louise Young, Howard Younger, Oscar Zaft and Harry Zuckerberg.
Training Course Planned For Camp Fire Leaders
A winter basic training course for Camp Fire Girl
leaders, next year.
assistants and sponsors is being planned for
It will begin at 9:15 a. m. Jan. 12 in the Trinity
Lutheran Church School. This all-day session is designed to give an over-all picture of Camp Fire Girl activities to those attending. » ” ~ IN THE MORNING session ther ill be discussions of hisFa oe and philosophy of the Camp Fire Girls, Inc. and sharing responsibility and business procedures of the group. Those attending will bring
The Times Pattern Service
By SUE BURNETT ‘An adorable layet for a baby doll just like a real baby's — sacque, bonnet, wrapper, bunting, mittens and shoes. The tiny mother will spend hours dressing and undressing her pet dolly in these dainty items. Pattern 8529 is a sew-rite perforated pattern for dolls 18, 18, 20, 22 and 24 inches. Consult
- pattern for requirements.
Don't miss the fall and winter Fashion. It contains 48 pages of new styles, simple-to-make frocks for all ages; decorating tricks; gift patterns printed inside the book. Send today.
The Indianapolis Times
372 W. Quincy St. Chicago 6, IIL.
No. 8529 Price 30¢ | Name SORA NNI IRIN OIIRNIINYS
SRNR INNNINNNNNBRNONIRNOIIS
City. esses ssasismAnItRananennnie
80 BASS
INDIANA MUSIC CO, 115 E. OHIO
their own lunch ‘and coffee will be. served in the church. The afternoon session will he devoted to handcrafts done cafeteria style so that member attending will be able to try all crafts. Those to be demonstrated will be papier mache, metal work, puppets, spatter painting, paper craft, clay and finger painting. 8 7 » MISS BETTY JO SHUFFLEBOTHAM of the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls; Inc., staff will
leave early ‘next month for a , professional workers three-week |
training course at Lake Murray State Park, Ardmore, Okla. It will begin Jan. 6.
Pretty Salad Trimming
Want a pretty pink trimming on your plain Cover bottom of a plate with paprika, dip curly (erinkly) edge of crisp lettuce very lightly in paprika.
Mince Pies Galore
The colonial housewife often baked 40 or 50 mince pies in one day, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica.
OFFICE
SUPPLIES
SOCIAL STATIONERY GREETING CARDS DECORATIONS & FAVORS
LEATHER GOODS DRAFTING MATERIALS
STATIONERS
each .
lettuce salad? |
Bowes-Mee
Is Tonight
_ WEARING a gown of ©
ivory satin and lace, Miss Judith Ella Meek will
exchange wedding vows with Robert Malcolm Bowes II in an 8:30 o'clock ceremony to~ night in a Christmas setting. The Rev. Laman Bruner Jr, will read the double-ring service in St.Paul's Episcopal Church. Mr. and Mrs. J. Perry Meek, 3742 N. Pennsylvania St, and Mrs. Robert Malcolm ~Bowes, 5855 Carrollton Ave. and the late Mr, Bowes are the parents of the couple.
” » » THE BRIDE'S GOWN. is fashioned with a lace bodice highlighted by a sheer yoke. The long sleeves extend into bridal points, The bouffant satin skirt enhanced by a lace panel down the front falls into a train. * Attached to an illusion skull cap edged with satin will be a full-length veil of imported illusion. Her shower bduquet of white Cattleya orchids, white violets, valley lilies and stephanotis will be tied with satin streamers. : Miss Mary Landers, maid of honor, will wear red velveteen fashioned with a Dior neckline, short cuffed sleeves and tiny covered buttons down the front of the bodice. The full-gored skirt is. ballerina length,
= = td ¥ WEARING DRESSES of the same style in greén will be the bridesmaids, Miss Jeanne Tinder, Anderson; Miss Mary Alyce Jamison, Sullivan; Misses Martha McCord, Constance Cadick and Jean Stacy. Best man will Bradford. The ushers will Patrick Mullaly, Evansville: Charles R. Bowes, Sanford, Fla.; William Taggart Cline, John Perry Meek and Frank VanAntwerp Meek. Perry Robertson Meek will be ringbearer. Following a reception in the Woodstock Club the couple will leave for Chicago. For traveling the bride has chosen a wheat colored wool gabardine suit with black accessories. On their return they will continue their studies at Indiana University where they are both students.
o ” ” THE BRIDE WAS gradu-
be
ated from Tudor Hall School
and attended Pembroke College, Providence, R. I. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority. Mr. Bowes from Park School and attended DePauw University. He is affiliated with Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity.
Announce Engagement
ISS Reita Ann Ridenour’s engagement {fo Joseph +W. Morris will be
announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman L. Ridenour, 4927 N. Pennsylvania St., at an 8 p. m. reception today in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Morris, 5065 W. 11th St. No date has been set for the wedding.
» » n MISS RIDENOUR IS attending Stephens College and Mr, Morris is in Butler University. Classmates of the bride-to-be at Stephens who will be here for the announcement include Miss Susan Siddall, Cincinnati; Miss Loise Bell, Chicago; Miss Suzy Braves, Nashville, Tenn. and Miss Bettie Mann, Cookville, Tenn. They are house guests of the Ridenours.
Scratching Head
~ts Healthful
Scratching your head may mean a ‘‘puzzlement’—as the King of Siam says-—but it is a darn good beauty exercise, according to New York hair stylist Laura de Gez. In a world where scalps suffocate under hats and the comb is used more than the hairbrush, head-scratching stirs up circulation ‘and revitalizes scalp tissue, Miss de Gez says.
~_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
be Warren.
was graduated.
The Mature Parent—
By MURIEL LAWRENCE HERE'S a tear in ‘the’coat of the new school suit. We stare at it, throw down our dish towel and cry; “Didn't I tell you to change that suit before you Didn't 1 tell you that?”
We don’t expect an answer and give our son Instead we continue with
went out to play?
no chance to find one. mounting wrath, “Go upstairs to your room. When you're ready to say I'm sorry,’ you can come down. Such carelessness! No thought ever for what .it costs to keep you looking decent at school! No “thought + + " We pile dishes in the closet furiously—but as the afternoon wanes and no sound comes from upstairs, we begin to feel uneasy. By the time we're ready to set the table, our rage has subsided.
So we go to the foot of the stairs and call, better tell me you're sofry for disobeying!
ner's nearly ready . . ." * sb THE DOOR does not open. gravy a little nervously. thing ‘wrong about the tray. ~ has to eat. “I'm sorry”
A tray? What then? But you can't force a child to say if he doesn't want to.
~ . NEARLY treatment-of a
Mrs. Lawrences 1, mistaken... “You Din- “eachable child?
always our refusal child is due to our fear of losing face. Perhaps we ought to remember that empire; builders who were so concerned with losing fars that they couldn't retreat from bad decisions have lost the empires.
Some years ago, my work brought me into contact with a psychiatrist of distinguished reputation among his colleagues. One day, I had occasion fo read the case record of one of his child patients whom many clinics had failed to help. it, I came upon several pages recently dictated by the psychiatrist. versal of Treatment Procedure.” paragraph began:
"%
=—— Wedding Avoid Emotional Ultimatums
afford to pay every week from your allowance?” When wé and Jim have decided on an amount that seems just to us both, he should be asked to come down to his dinner, =u.
* Bb ob to reverse
Toward the end of
They were headed “Re-
The opening >
“MY JUDGMENT of this child's needs has
©
Did he finally succeed in reaching the un-
Of course he did.
Our refusals to alter treatment of a youngster can bring us great confusion and unhappi-
ness. We start the
There's someHe
prestige.
This is the dilemma in which we find ourselves
when we go in for emotional, matums.
When we do indulge our appetite for them, they are bound to involve us in exposed posiis no escape except
tions from -which there through humility. ¢ BN
IN THIS CASE, we have left ourselves no out that I can see but to go upstairs to, the closed “Jimmy, I had no right to demand you to tell me you are sorry for disobeying. Your feelings about what you did are your private affair. But I do think it is fair to require you to pay part of the re-weaving bill for your coat. How much do you think you can
door, open it and say,
Blackwood on Bridge—
thoughtless ulti-
profession.
THE REPUTATION psychiatrist is not widely known beyond his own He was one of the three or four people I have known in my life who was almost completely free of a need to justify himself.
If we are not worried about our child's opinion of us, but are interested in teaching him what he should learn, we should net find it hard at all to alter our unproductive treatment so that it serves our youngster instead of our personal
* +» of the distinguished
This disinterest in his reputation, in his personal prestige, freed his fine mind te serve many chil-
dren.
Ability to Look Ahead Is
Necessary to Win Game
OW many thousand times have you heard the remark: “Well, it was just a guess, partner, and I guessed
wrong?”
A lot of those “guesses” could have been turned into
certain winning plays. One mark of a fine player is the ability to Jlook ahead, to foresee that partner will have a tough decision to make later in the hand . . , and then to play in such a manner as to eliminate that
guess. Such .a sit- “ uation arose in today’s Mr. Dale
hand and Mr. Dale thoughtfully mate a suit preference signal to make things easy for his" partner, Mr. Champion. ” - » THE OPENING lead was the five of spades and Mr. Champion's queen was permitted to win the first trick. A spade was returned and again Mr. Abel ducked. Incidentally, if he "had won this trick and taken a club finesse, he probably would have made his contract.
In other words, after winning |
with the king of clubs, Mr. Champion, holding no more spades, might well have returned a diamond. The diamond return would have looked a little Mr. Abel had bid hearts. Abel could have run off nine tricks. "As it was, however, Mr. Dale won trick two with the jack of spades. It was clear at this point that Mr. Abel had the lone ace of spades left and would have to play it on the next lead of the suit. could have led the deuce of spades to clear the suit. But he did not do so. Carefully, he led the king!
n = » IT WAS an absolute certainty that the play of the king was not NECESSARY to drive out the ace. Therefore, the lead of this unnecessarily high card must he an attempt to convey | a message. Mr, Champion read it correctly. He took it to mean that if he got the lead, he should return the higher of the only two suits which he ceuld reasonably consider returning. In other words, Mr. Dale wanted a heart rather than a diamond lead. This expert defense paid off. | Mr. Abel won the third spade | with the ace and took the club |
Railroadmen's
Chit { CAuly
=r
more attractive since | Mr. |
Mr. Dale |
"North dealer,
Both sides vulnerable. NORTH Mr. Meek S—10 8 4 H—K Q D-H Q CA QJ 152 WEST EAST Mr. Dale Mr. Champion S—K J952 SQ 6 H—A 8 § H—H 8 4 2 D8 75 D9 6 4 32 C—6 4 C—K 8 SOUTH Mr. Abel S—A 73 HJ 10 7 3 D—A J 10 C—10 9 8 The bidding: NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST
10 Pass 1H Pass 2C Pass ITNT Pass S NT AH Pass
finesse. Mr. Champion won, led back a heart and Mr. Dale teok the ace and ran off two more spade tricks for a two'trieck set.
T=lock's
After-Christmas CLEARANCE
Brings You Savings of
,
1 A
After reading his dictation in that case record, IT not enly knew. why he was respected as a technician, but why he was revered 4s 2 human being. Watching him in operation’ did much to teach me what power lies in humility. Unless we reach for some of it, too, we won't be able to correct the positions inte which impulse and anger betray us,
Auxiliary Sets
A “Mardi Gras Ball” in the Woodstock Club will he held Feb. 2 by members of the Auxiliary to the Children’s Bureau of the Indianapolis Orphan Asylum,
Rily Moore and his Californians will play from 9 p. m to 1 a. m. following the annual charity dinner. Proceeds will be used for the scholarship project, : Mrs. Neal P. Benson Jr. is chairman of the dance. * * » »
INVITATION chairman Mrs. Robert M. Raber, will bé assistéd by Mesdames Robert D. Gruen, Robert R. Covert, William C, Power Jr., Hugh Shields, H. J. Baker Jr., Norman C. Kelly, C. Severin Buschmann Jr., Charles A. Gallup, W. Danfel Kibler Jr, Henry Todd,
Roll
AT A party you notice that a friend has a run in her stocking. © WRONG! Tell her about it. RIGHT: Don’t mention it. If it were something she could do something, about it would be kind to tell her. Since she can’t it is more considerate to appear not to notice it.
1/ /3
PAGE 5 ga Apples In Various Desserts A oe vata for tay mum. ber of delicious desserts. This new recipe for a spicy dish called apple kuchen is
worthy of adding to your col lection,
APPLE KUCHEN 1 c. milk, scalded 1; ec. sugar 1 ¢. margarine 2 tsp. salt i ¢. lukewarm walter 2 Pkgs. or cakes yeast 2 eggs 4 cps. sifted all-purpose flour 3 apples, sliced 4 © suger 1 tsp. olnnamon 1 egg yolk 3 theps, créam or top milk. Mix the sugar, margarine, and salt in the hot milk. Coel to a luke warm temperature. Dissolve the yeast in che lukewarm water, Combine the milk and yeast mixture and stir in the wellbeaten eggs. Add and stir in the flour using enough to make a stiff batter. This recipe will make two eight-inch square pans. Pour into greased pans, Cover with a clean towel Place in a warm place and let rise until doubléd in bulk. Arrange the peeled sliced apples over the top. Mix the sugar and cinnamon. Sprinkle over the apples. 2 Mix the egg yolk and cream together and drizzle areund the applés. Bake in a modéritaly
hot oven (400 degrees ¥.) for
25 to 30 minutes:
Annual Dance
Frederick W, _Ahrheeker and Alexander T, La ! Decorations will be under the direction. of Mrs. Thomas RK. Purky assisted by Mesdames
Arthur H. Northrup, Sumner McLane Sadler, William a Lange. Mrs. Alram Woodward is in charge of ar rangements. The committee for patress
and patronesses is headed by
Downey, Lewis George Buschmann, Wesley F. Merch and Hanly R. Blackburn, Gumdrop Tree Is Easy to Make
Take a gumdrop tree te a sick child. Make the trunk from pipe cleaners twisted together. Wrap other cleaners around trunk to form branches, Decorate with brightly celored gumdrops. If youn like,
tint cleaners green with féed coloring. Plant tres in a cup.
cake baked in swtard eup.
Rice Yields oil
milling rice, Jide an oll of high quality. It is the Ne ofl, except olive ofl, that will mix with aleshsl.
Rice bran, a by-product in
fi
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