Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 December 1951 — Page 23

se

Cc. 30,1051

Lists

al

EL Tre

3 meeting of istrict Ameruxiliary and testant Ves-

anuary at Cold spital are an-

embers of the | meet at 7:30 in the West ‘orld War MeMrs. Melvin president, will

will be Cone ¢

es B. Browne

EJ

'LE for vesper

1. each Sunday lows: Jan, 6— it; Jan, 13— :am . unit; Jan,

rge Patton Jr,

rvington unit. et from Howe 1 sing at the . Mrs, J. Clark usic chairman, in January by ner, Madden- » Mrs. Samuel George Patton Mrs. Arthur 1 unit,

lgren rip

Ahilgren, Whitresident of the on of Women's e Tuesday for reparatory to ‘America Fri-

nclude visits to en’s Clubs in ia, Peru, Chile, ay, Brazil, VenDutch West In-

will be one of including Mrs. hton, president n. She will rein. 29 to be met They will visit win J. Carlson, ister-in-law of Ft. Lauderdale. arlson, Indiana nding the winlorida. He was president of ufacturer’'s As-

nts on

ng Year 's. ‘Robert IJ. th St., will hold 1esday in honor Ing anniversary , Mr. and Mrs. tz, Springfield,

m 3 to 8 p.m. vitations.

®.

SUNDAY, DEC. 30,1051

Mrs. Norman William Thomas before her marriage was Miss “Jean Clara Lewis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William L. Lewis, 5125 N. New Jersey St. The ceremony was Dec. 22 in the Immaculate Heart of Mary Chapel with the Rev. Fr. Maurice Heilman, chaplain of Newman Club of Purdue University, officiating. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Otolski, South Bend. Both the bride and bridegroom are graduates of Purdue University, They will be at home after Tuesday in Urbana,

FordRiichey Ceremony Is Read in St. Paul's

AT a 4:30 p. m. double-ring ceremony yesterday in St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, Miss Janis Ritchey became the bride of Pfc. Jerold R. Ford. The Rev. William Bur-

rows officiated. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Ritchey, 666 E. 66th St., and Mrs. L. Roy Ford, 9598 Ford Rd. The bride's white satin gown had an inserted neckline of Dutchess lace and seed pearls. Her satin bouffant skirt, edged with nylon pleating, extended into a chapel train.

A PEARL TIARA held her fingertip illusion veil and she carried a cascade bouquet. of amazonica lilies, stephanotis and orchids. White lace and net ballerina gowns were worn by Mrs. H, N. Sauer, matron of honor,

This Week's Club Events

WEDNESDAY Alexandrian Chap., ITSC—1 p. m. Mrs. U. R. Lee, 930 W. 31st, hostess. Speaker, Mrs. Noble Reynolds. Chap. F, PEO—2 p. m, Mrs, Max Critchfield, 18 W. 34th, hostess; Mrs. E. D. Farmer and Mrs, Parker Pengilly, assistants. Program, Mrs. G. B. Lacy and Mrs. Paul W. Stewart. Chap. V, PEO—2 p. m. Mrs. Louise M. Richardson, 67 N. Ritter, hostess. Program, Mrs. Robert Finlayson. Zetathea—1:30 p. m. Mrs. Spencer M. Raymond, 134 Blue Ridge Rd., hostess; Miss Rbsa Wetter, assistant. “Christmas in the Holy Land,” Mrs. Aldo Bertorelli. THURSDAY

Golden Trails Chap. ITSC—6:30

p. m. Spink Arms Hotel. Speaker, Mrs. Fern Norris.

Will Rogers Chap, ITSC—T7:30

p. m. Mrs. Charles Hollowell, 2038 Moreland, hostess; Mrs. Henry Bonfeld, assistant. Speaker, Miss Amy Keene.

Sigma Alpha Iota Patroness —

11:30 a. m, Mrs. Gerald Foltz, 4600 KE, 71st, hostess. -

Stephens College Alumnae — 8

p. m. Mrs, Arthur Locke, 5445 Indianola, hostess; Mrs. Irvin Craig, assistant. Bridge; canasta.

Thursday Lyceum — 1 p. m. Mrs.

L. C. Messick, 150- E. 14th, hostess. “The Monk Who Lived Again,” Mrs. J. W. Brandt. FRIDAY

Daughters of the British Empire

—12:30 p. m. 38th St. branch, Indiana National Bank. Mesdames W. R. Williamson, Jolin Horton and E. R.: Robinson, hostesses. “Current Britain,” Miss = Isabel Drummond, and “white Elephants” Mrs, George Vale as emcee.

Indianapolis Woman's—2: :30 p. m.

Propylaeum. “IWC and College Corner,” ‘Mrs. Frederic Krull,

and “Accustomed As I Am,” Mrs. John D. Gould.

MORRISONS

Indiana’s Foremost

Apparel Shop 20 W. Washington St.

and Misses Barbara Sue Hanna, Nancy Callender and Dorothy Kennedy, bridesmaids. Jean Ann and Jane Ann Ford, twin nieces of the bridegroom, were flowergirls wearing white ruffled net dresses.

n = # ROBERT BAXTER WAS best man and ushers were Tom Perine, Robert Stith, Lee R. Ford Jr., William Russell Ritchey Jr. and Marsh Blackburn. > The couple left for Florida after the reception in the Ford home. Mr. Ford attended Purdue University and is a member of Kappa Sigma Fraternity.

Daugherty photo

Mrs. Robert Allen Wilson was Miss Mary Ghnene Harrah before her Dec. 15 wedding in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Harrah, 4934 W. 15th St. Pfc. Wilson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Brown Wilson, Dana.

Ray Davis To Be Speaker

Ray Davis of Goodwill Industries will give the afternoon program for the Jan. 8 meeting of the Indianapolis Branch, National Postal Transport Association Women’s Auxiliary. He will talk on “Bent But Not Broken” at the session in the Woman's Department Club. Mrs. Frank Tarplee and Mrs. Carl Pluess will be in charge of the 6:15 p. m. dinner. A social hour will follow.

—D0 YOU KNOW!—

Why we have grown to be the largest re-upholster-ing firm in the State?

It's quality work plus high dollar value!

| 363 MASSACHUSETTS AVE.

: Blackwdod on ' Bridge—

©

«HIE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.

3 -

'Bird-in-Hand" Caution Somelimes Best

OUTH must have had a premonition that this

“-hand was going to break

badly when he stopped at a small slam. As you ségs his pessimism» was well-founded. The hearts broke 5-1 whereas even a 4-2 break would have made the contract easy. A 3-3 club break also would have enabled South to win 12 tricks without difficulty. But the clubs were 4-2, In addition, there was a serious duplication of values in diamonds. North-South had all of the top diamond honors, but since there was only a doubleton in each hand, only two tricks were available in the suit. » n o WEST OPENED the five of clubs, East played the queen and declarer won with the king. He thopght a little before playing to the second trick. He had been cautious in the bidding. He now decided to extend that. caution to the play of the hand.

ul

dl { J)

' )

Sway gi ally

12 tricks.

_* North. dealer Both sides vulnérable

NORTH S—Q 963 H—-AKQS86 D—AJ C—8 2 WEST EAST Beef S—10 5 4 2 H—10 9752 HJ: D—10 7 2 D—-986543 CJ 975 c—Q 10 SOUTH ® S—AKJT H—4 8 D—K Q C—-AKG643 The bidding: : NORTH EAST SOUTH WEST 1H Pass 3C Pass 3H Pass. 3 § Pass Pass G6NT All Pass

1D

He could see that if “the hearts broke evenly he could win all 13 tricks. .But he was not playing for a grand slam. Instead, he wanted to play safely to insure the taking of At trick two, then,

LADIES PARADISE, QUEEN QUALITY, ACCENT SHOES . . RICE O'NEILL, DICKERSON, PARADISE FOOTWEAR. .

lone jack.

he led 4 heart and ducked in dummy, East winning with the

Ld » » « EAST RETURNED the ten of clubs which was won with the ace. Now South ran off four spade tricks and two diamond tricks, ending in his own hand. On the last diamond, which was the ninth trick, West was in a bad way. In fact, his position was hopeless. Before play-

ing to the ninth trick, he had left four hearts to the ten,

.nine and the jack of clubs.

He had to keep four hearts because dummy still had AK Q8 in the suit, ‘He therefore let go the club which setsup

.South’s remaining cards in that

suit. Note that if South had cashed two top hearts begin-

‘ning at trick two he would have

been set. The squeeze on West would not have operated because the transportation between the closed hand and dummy. would have been severed.

" Duchess of Windsor Again

race 2

Picked as the ‘Best PRT :

NEW YORK, Dec. 29— Néw York and Paris socialites still reign aS bestdressed women of the year with Hollywood and London ladies running- a close second. The New York Dress Institute’'s annual poll df 500 fashion designers, style authorities, editors and socialites have tallied up the votes for top honors in 1951. The Duchess of Windsor, who has led the voting for the past 10 years, again gets first billing. Second place goes to Mrs, William Paley, New York, and

third place to Mme. Louis Ar-

pels, Paris and New Yorx.

~ ” - ‘RUNNERS-UP IN order of their choice are Mrs. Byron oy, New York; Irene Dunne, Hollywood; Mrs. William Randolph Hearst Jr, New York and Washington; Marlene Dietrich, . Hollywood and New York;

SEMI-ANNUAL STORE-WIDE

SALE! 10% to 50% OFF

Street Floor—Ladies’ Dept.

. $9.95 to $12.95 VALUES.. . $12.95 to $18.95 VALUES....

Duchess of Kent, London, and Mrs. Alfr ed Gwynne Vanderbilt, New York.

Mrs. Douglas MacArthur, New York, takes eighth place. Following her in order are Mrs. George McGhee, Washington; Mrs. Henry Ford II, Detroit; Princess Margaret Rose, London, and Countess : Uberto Corti, Rome. Ten women identified the fashion business ranked high in the voting but were barred from the final list because of their “professional” standing, NYDI announced. » » Ld THEY ARE JANET Gaynor, wife of designer Adrian: Gene Tierney, wife of designer Oleg Cassini; Gloria Swanson, fashion designer as well as actress: Valentina, designer; Mrs. Adam Gimbel (Sophie-of-Saks-Fifth-Ave,), designer; Mme. Jacques Fath, wife of designer; Mrs.

John C. Wilson, affiliated with

(

$580 $g-80

MEN'S FINE DRESS AND BUSINESS OXFORDS, BROKEN SIZES . . . $10.95 to $14.95 VALUES. ........ $7-80

_ DISCONTINUED STYLES BOSTONIAN AND FREEMAN SHOES . . FINE BOSTONIAN AND FREEMAN OXFORDS. GOOD SIZE RUNS . FAMOUS WRIGHT ARCH PRESERVERS IN KID, CALF, GRAIN . .

CHILDREN'S HI AND LOW SHOES, TABLE DISPLAYED . MISSES, GROWNIG GIRLS AND CHILDREN'S DRESS SHOES .

FAMOUS LABEL NURSES OXFORDS FROM REGULAR STOCK . B. JANE MILLER HEALTHADE FOOTWEAR SPECIAL GROUP ,

LADIES DRESS PUMPS, STRAPS AND TIES . .

Men's Dept.—Second Floor

. $5.95 to $7.95 VALUES

Third Floor—Boys’ and Girls’ Dept.

Fourth Floor—Economy Dept.

. TABLE DISPLAYED . SPECIAL CLEARANCE OF LADIES GALOSHES. BROKEN SIZES .

MEN'S DRESS, WORK AND BUSINESS OXFORDS . .

» REGULAR VALUES UP TO $9.95

Downstairs—Budget Dept.

. $13.95 to $16.95 VALUES...

$9.80

.. $15.95 to $18.95 VALUES....... . $21.50 to $23.50 VALUES......

. . $6.50 to $8.95 VALUES.......

. $8.95 to $9.95 VALUES..... vesesss . $13.95 to $14.95 VALUES

.. UP TO $9.95 VALUES . REGULAR $8.50 VALUES.......

YES, HERE IT IS, INDIANA! ALMOST 75,000 PAIRS OF THE FINEST NATIONALLY KNOWN SHOES FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY IN THIS GREAT SALE. EVERY PAIR

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT IS REDUCED AT LEAST 10%, .

WITH MANY OTHERS

IN SPECIAL GROUPS REDUCED UP TO 50°, AND MORE. EVERY PAIR FROM

REGULAR STOCK . . HUMBUG. THE SALE IS IN FULL SWING.

Because of the tremendous crowds who attended the first few days of this bargain event we were unable to give our usual painstaking service. Now that the first big surge is past you can shop leisurely . there are bargains galore for everyone.

I8 E. WASHINGTON ST.

. NO SPECIAL PU

RCHIASES, NO OBSOLETE STYLES, NO

Shop Marott's convenient branch stores during this - important sale event. The same tremendous reductions prevail on fine footwear for every member

of the family. Marott's East Branch .

. 4128 E.

Tenth St. and Marott's new Shadeland Branch at 38th Street and Shadeland Ave.

ALL SALES FINAL, PLEASE

4128 E.

I0TH ST.

38TH ST. AND SHADELAND

9% bays Zo “BUY SHOES AT A SHOE STORE”

Washington

(

with _

Mainbocher; Mrs. Orson D. Munn (Carrie Munn), designer; Miss Margaret Case, Vogue society editor, and Mrs. Leon Mandel, wife of Chicago department store head. Newcomers to the list are British . royalists Duchess of Kent and Princess Margaret Rosé. Mrs. MacArthur 48 mentioned for the first time as is Mrs. McGhee. Irene Dunne and Marlene Dietrich have been frequent runners-up, but this is their first listing among final selectees. Countess Uberto Coril, young leader of Roman society, has captured a fashion crown for her country this year for the first time. -»

Meeting Slated The executive -board of the Lutheran Child Welfare Auxiljary will hold an 11:30 a. m. meeting Jan. 7 in the home of Mrs. Henry Brandt Jr, 1420 Loretta Drive.

°

> il] sl

il = nl