Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1947 — Page 14
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ee . “Betty Lol Bowen to Be Honored be i & ? i . In the next two weeks two brides-to-be will be feted with teas in honor of their approaching marriages, Many - parties already have been given for them. Mrs, James C. Gipe and her daughter, Mrs. Erwin G. Krahn, will be hostesses for a tea tomorrow in honor of Miss Betty Lou Bowen. The party will be from 3 to 6
p. m. in the Gipe home. Miss Bowen will be wed to Dr, James F. Gipe Saturday moming. * The ceremony will be read at 10:30 o'clock in the home of the bride's parents, Mr, and Mrs. George A. Bowen, Wanamaker. Dr, Jean Milner of the Second Presbyterian church will perform the rite, Assisting Mrs, Gipe and Mrs. Krahn at the tea will be Mesdames H. N. Rogers, Byron La Follette, Chester Beaman and Earl Martin | and Miss Lucetta: Ohr, The bride-to-be's parents will give a wedding breakfast at the Columbia club following the ceremony. The attendants and close friends of the couple have been invited, mm Miss Bowen and Dr, Gipe were honored with a dinner at the Co-
Wy Day—
lumbia club Saturday night given by Mrs. Bert Weedon, ~Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Bowen, Capt. and Mrs. Erwin Baker, Battle Creek, Mich.; Miss JoAnn Bowen and Robert H, Weedon, Last night the future bride's aunt, Mrs, T. J. Lowden, gave & dinner in her home, “Hickory Hill,” in Brown county for the couple and their families, {
‘Money Alone May Not
Save Europe By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE PARK, ¥. Y, July 7.~| viding into New York early Fri- . : ay morning on a very slow train, | Miss Betty Gene Biggar i “had ample opportunity to read. To Be Honored July 16 y ’ t - ae yids o Su. Molo stgpe Mrs. M. E, Clark will give an Innt 4! uae | formal tea in her -home the aftér- |
unisters in Paris. 1 had already | pee i {f Miss dow . " 's speech | Noon of July 16 In honor © ead Secreiary -Marinall's | Betty Gene Biggar. Miss Biggar
» Sov hh sof ov. te the Soviet cnarges © will be married to Robert Ritzingmp 5 . 1 must say, after reading Mr er Hare Saturday, July 19.
{olotov's statement, that I was| Also to be honored at the event
United States, or the committe set- Beach, Fla.,, the mother and sis- : p, might demand, were utterly | fer of the prospective bridegroom. Ee oolish. When you are lending your | They will arrive Friday and stay noney, even to a private individual, until several days after the wedou like to know the exact condi-| ding. Mrs. Clark is Mrs; Hare's tions which exist, and you wish to mother. nave at least a suggestion of the Assisting at the tea will be vay in which the money will be| friends of the bride-to-be. They wed. If you apprové of the plan,| include Misses Sara Ann Elliot, ou take the risk. Betty Gardner and Katherine von. Batchelor, LENDING money is a risk, and it| Mrs.’ Rufus Murphy honored ——would .show very little interest on | Miss Biggar June 13 with a party.
nquiries into the situation and the mein uture plans, This is especially ' i mportant where it seems probable Th eatment Given hat money alone will not fully For Scratches meet the situation, and that we| gevere injuries should be treated night be asked in addition 10|promptly by a doctor, but scratches rovide skilled technicians andignd small cuts may be treated vorkers on varfousevels. That does ately” at home with simple preot mean that wk want to control | cautions. he internal situation In other! According to Dr. Benjamin Spock countries. They are free to refuse in his “Common Sense Book of + loan. If they take it, It 1s|Baby and Child Care” the best easonable that they give a certain {treatment for scratches and small umount of information, cuts is to “wash them with soap Mr. Molotov knows as well a8 and pure water on a plece of sterile inyone else that we have no desire |absorbent cotton.” Or keep a bottle w control the economic plans of [of hydrogen peroxide for the washany nation or to take away their!ing and finsing. sovereignty, We have never tried| Dr. Spock says an antiseptic 1s to infiltrate in Russia and set up a {jess important than careful washparty sgainst the government. The |ing, Sovies Soveramitnt might well pay that they would not permit t, 1 but they are always rather annoyed Yacation Ce gage when we complain about the politi-| AT) 8 are cal sciivities iy many Suntries= Don't start your vacation with activities which they must a ime |d08-eared luggage. Wipe leather . have Sunmanced 4 some time. |,iaces carefully to remove dust and I REALIZE that it must be .very|S7ime. hard for them not to think that| Then if there are badly scarred in this country, as a government [Places touch them up with a paste and as a majority, people are op- [Shoe polish to maich. Frabnc posed to the Russian pation luggage should Be brushed and spots We feel.” nevertheless, that all|C eaned with a good liquid cleaner,
other ‘people in the world<shiould be : gs free to make their own choice, If No Peel, No Scrape a very great nation like Russia I8| “wpe or chowder recipes offen 50 very strict In its control at home | qi for such seasonings as celery,! when it gains political and miliary | garlie or onfon. These and other! influence, it may be strict in other | gavory are avaifable in salt form. countries. For that reason we want | «ee. oo nations, large and small, to act freely and to make their choice without fearing the influence of well-organized minority groups within their borders. : ; ~ Thé Marshall plan Is a bona fide offgz- ta help Europe get back on "its feet. Mr. Molotov, in refusing to join the rest of Europe, is creating the very thing he says be fears, which is division instead of) = co-operation.
Lingerie Touches For Tabletloths
Originators of table linen fashions are using lingerie touches and other dressmaker tricks to give a crisp summery look to lovely new table
our part if we did not make some | in her home in Cincinnati, h
{than they are in the averse home. |
DELEGATE TO’ GIRLS' NATION — Miss Jesslyn. Ruth Ball,
te
one of the Indiana representatives to Girls’ Nation, is shown with
Richard Harris; governor of Boys’
State, dhe night she was elected
govarncr of Girls State at Bloomington, The mythical govern. mental units are sponsored by the American Legion and. its auxiliary.
Jesslyn Ruth Ball Selected ich saddened. The exa es| Wi e Mrs ert Hare and her . . ety much saddened. The examples) LI HL Deals Rwre, cen’ | TO Attend ‘Girls Nation’ In Washington, August 9-14
Hayward-Barcus unit, American
Miss Ball, a junior member of
as Indiana representative to Girls 9-14. :
was elected outstanding girl in
‘by the Indiana Department, American Legion auxiliary, also will go to Washington. The “nation” will be held on the campus of American university. Sponsored by the national Legion auxiliary organization, it is being presented for the first time, yr ? Delegates will be two girls from the 44 different states which participate in the Girls state program, The delegates will visit various shrines around Washington when they arrive. Following organization day, there will be visits to the U. 8. Supreme court, the White house and the Us. fgnate and Hcuse, where the girls will hear talks by congressmen, Following this “boning up” the girls will engage in a mythical nation’s governmental activities,
Canned Meats Enter Into Hearty Salads
~ There's -an- array of-canned meats to include in new and delightful main-dish salads. Consider pert
smooth canned meat pastes mixed with dressing and served in mounds on salad greens, or stuffed into hard-cooked eggs. Luncheon meat lends itself to many salad servings such as cubing
the medi with cooked or raw vege-| tahles, drenching with a favorite ’ dressing, for a zesty main-dish salad. |
Vienna sausages sliced into. salads,|
» n ~
Legion auxiliary, will honor Miss
Jesslyn Ruth Ball with a tea from 8 to 9:30 p. m. Wednesday at the 40 and 8 Chateau, 421 N. Pennsylvania st.
the unit, was elected governor. of
Girls state held in Bloomington last month, Now she has been selected
Nation to be in Washington, Aug.
Miss Judy Avel, Franklin, who Summer Duds Show this “state,” sponsored annually {Stains More Easily
Bummer introduces shades and
ments show blemishes more easily than dark ones. They are more
exposed to accidents, too.
It isn't likely, for instance, that you will get a grass stain on a dress in December or that a picnic hot dog will drip grease on your slacks in January, Most summertime spots and stains are of food origin. If your first home methods of removal aren't successful — don't try others. Let your cleaner handle them from then on inasmuch as light colors and materials will not stand being experimented with, You may either set the stain for good or damage the fibers.
Qs |The Bridal Scene—
Bride-to-Be
‘Sweeney chapel of Putier
‘ ling Butler university, has selected
colors, And lighter-colored gar-|
rah gn ie
£
Attendants *
A ‘betrothal and a wedding an-
scene. Miss Elsie Marie McCormick will become the bride of Herman H. Shipman at 7:30 o'clock Sunday night, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. McCormick, 943 N. Belle Vieu pl, have announced. © Mrs. Nell Shipman, 1221 Sheffield’ ave, is the mother of the prospective bridegroom. The ceremony will be read in versity by the Rev. Edward E. Russell, pastor of the Eighth Christian church. The bride-to-be, who is attend-
Miss Elizabeth Nelson for her maid of honor. Her bridesmaids will include - Misses Ilene Sohn, Peggy Spaulding and Jean Balley. , Miss Patricia Wiley will be the junior. bridesmaid, and Marlene Molar and Roberta Sutner will be the flower girls. Tanya Stodgill will be the ring bearer,
Mr. Trudeau Marries Miss Kathryn McCarty Mathew McCarty, 540 N. Gray st, has announced the marriage of his daughter, Miss Kathryn McCarty, to Floyd 8. Trudeau, Chicago. The marriage was performed In Chicago Thursday in the rectory of the Holy Name cathedral. Mr. and Mrs. John Carmody, Chicago, attended the couple. The couple left for a trip to Wis~ consin, After July 15, they will live in Homewood, Ill.
§
Miss Hawks Is Married At Church
The Second Moravian Episcopal church was the setting for the marriage of Miss Mary Elizabeth Hawks and “Robert Meeénach at 8:30 p. m. Thursday. The Rey, Stanley R. Woltjen officiated. = Miss Jean Elliott was the bride's only attendant. She wore a pink georgette frock. James Borard was the best man, and Joseph Arndt and Dean Evans were the ushers. The bride was dressed in a white slipper satin gown styled with a net overskirt. Her fingertip veil fell from a tiara of seed pearl orange blossoms. She carried white carnations in a fan arrangement. A reception following the ceremony was held in the church parlors. After a trip to Schafer lake, the couple will live with the bridegroom's parents, Capt. and Mrs Leroy Meenach, 3272 Schofield ave. The bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. William E. Hawks, 3132 E.
30th st.
Give Dust Cloths Frequent Tubbing
Health experts urge that dust] cloths be cleansed more frequently |
The easiest way to do this is to toss | them inte the washer after the final load has been cleansed. They will perform better service than ever and will. not be the germ
clean.
By KAY SHERWOOD NEA Stat Writer « NEW YORK, - July 7.-Cutting bamboo by the dark of the moon in Trinidad or supervising construction
cloths, teacloths and dolly sets made! of pastel linens, Organdy insets, bands of sheer Swiss embroidery and lace edgings! —either in white or dyed to match | the linen-share honors with con-| B,chanan was Miss Roselyn trasting appliques and facings. | Haunss The beauty of this type of decora- ine | \ . . tion is that anyone who is at all apt Ju he 14, 2 er F arent a o My with the needle can make her own| Nd Mrs. Fred W, Haunss, 5017 dolly set or teacloth of Irish linen E. New York st, and he is the | by the yard—now available in stores! son of Mr. and Mrs, Glen agaln—at a fraction of the ready- | Buchannan, 4701 E. Washington made cost {
P. H. Ho photo
WEDDING READ—Mrs, Jack |
before her - marriage |
|
1 |
| career started when she volunteered
‘on an airline terminal in Mexico is all in ‘a day's work for petite Pamela Drake. As designer with the Latin Ameri can division of Pan American \.« 1d
Airways, she’s the first woman in .
her fleld and she flies from country to country to work as nonchalantly as most girls board a hus for the office. It's. Pamela's job, as assistant to the division trafic manager, to make accommodations more efficient for the increasing number of air-travel ' passengers to Latin America. This covers everything from mapping plans for a streamlined terminal to converting old buildings into comfortable guest houses. THe dynamic American-born designer is currently working on 40 such projects throughout Latin
1 America. It's not at all unusual for
her to work in a different country each day. $ Three sets of luggage in three years have succumbed to the. swift pace she sets and she drops into her apartment in Mexico City only for an occasional change of Wardrobe, “But I wouldn't tfade my job with anyone,” she says Volunteered Ideas For Terminal
of work, Pam's whirlwind designing her ideas for decorating Pan-Amer-
Designer Has Sou
Householder photo.
BRIDE—Mrs. Robert E. Trit-
tips” was Miss Wanda Witte before her marriage -June. 8 Her parents are Mr. and Mrs, Theodore W. Witte, 4903 N. Central ave., and his parents
spreaders they are when not kept| are Mr, and Mrs, H. G. Trit-
tipo, Lawrence,
_ Mr. Shipman to Wed| ~ Miss Elsie McCormick]
nouncement highlight today's bridal
Littrell, 1036 N. Belle Vieu pl.
Bridal Dinner To Be Given
RECENT BRIDE—Mrs, Dorsey Littrell was Miss Orpha Jester before her marriage June 15 in the Eighth Christian church. Me is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Nungester, 101 N. Belmont ave., and the bridegroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Dale
photo. Nun-
wir TB lacks
ibbean cruise. They live at the Marott hotel.
senses
Third Floor '
By Eldridges Mr. ‘and Mrs. Gail H. Eldridge, 5746 Central ave, will give the bridal dinner for their daughter, Miss Margaret Jeannd Eldridge, and her fiance, Charles Phillip Rafferty. The couple will be married Saturday. : The dinner will be given in the Highland Golf and Country club at T o'clock Priday night after the wedding rehearsal. Guests at the dinner will include Mr, and Mrs.-Rex N. Rafferty, parents of the prospective bridegroom; Miss Betty Jane Thompson, the maid of honor, and Miss Betty Erwin, Mitchell; Miss Betty Jane Johnston, Flossmore, Ill, Miss Lilian Fletcher and Miss Marilyn Hooley, bridesmaids.
Also attending will be Thomas Rafferty, best man, and James Cooley, Robert Klein and Stewart Tompkins, ushers. Dr. Gail E, Eldridge, a brother of the future bride who will also be an usher, and Mrs. Eldridge also have been invited.
Sorority Chapter Elects Officers
Mrs. Robert Highland was elected president of Gamma ehapter Omega Nu Tau sorority. at a recent meeting. Miss Kay Smith was named vice president, and Miss Lena Kinman is the new representative. Other officers elected were “Mrs. Robert McKay, secretary; Mrs. Walter Worrell, treasurer; Mrs. George Bauman, chaplain, and Miss Ruth Furgason, society editor,
Make a Bag to Match Your Linen Dress
The new linens now being sold by the yard are being eagerly bought up by home dressmakers. It’s a good idea to get a little more than the pattern calls for and make a matching bag. An underarm style is- very, easy and especially smart when trimmed with a press-on embroidered initial
PFritch-Hale photo WED—Mrs, Robert C. Ott was Miss Ethel Haynes before her marriage June 14. Her mother. is Mrs. Margaret Anderson, Bloomington, Ill, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Ott, Columbus, Ind.
th Am erica As Office
The use of color is her most effec-
tive decorating tool, she says. Med-|
fum blues and greens are her favorites for interiors to give a cool, comfortable effect that offsets tropical heat.
Chief problem is utilizing local labor and adapting materials at hand for the job. “I. teach local carpenters to put furniture together and train girls to. stitch upholstery. I work right with them, sewing or sawing. It's a thrill to know I'm teaching them a new industry,” she
5 says.
WLR oF aaa
MISS DRAKE: Dynamic designer
Crucial test of her ability that set the pattern for following assign ments was redesigning passenger facilities at the terminal building in Merida, atan, When she finished, a plane could unload pas.
Superstition Rules The Natives Case In point is the guest house at Trinidad. To get bamboo for furniture, she yielded to native superstition which dictated that it had to be cut by the dark of the moon. “It was eerie,” she recalls. “We stood around a flickering fe in the middle of the night passing the logs, as ‘they were cut, across ‘the
flames to kill the ‘bugs,’ so the na-!
tives believed. “Later, I had thepamboo saturated with chemicals to make sure the ‘bugs’ were dead. But the furniture was beautiful and the workmen were 80 proud of it, they signed the pieces they made.” " Lack of springs for chairs and couches was overcome by made from surplus canvas. Silky fibers were plucked from bean pods to stuff the cushions. , Pam has found that her femi-
| ninity—she’s five feet tall, has brown
hair, blue eyes and an engaging
or monogram.
ong
0 .
SPECIAL SELLING!
«ie
Boys" Knitted
POLO SHIRTS , Sizes 4 to 16. Originally 79¢ fo T.19 59%c |
+ STRIPES, PLAIN COLORS, sand WHITES. }
For the little Fellows!
TOM SAWYER WASH SUITS
Button-on styles, sizes 3 fo 8. Regular 2.00, 2.50 values.
Now 3 for 4.00
a . —
Clean
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| LL 3505
| \\ ns \
For That Stylish Look of NEW, Let Swiss
| and Press io Your Summer Garments
| %39 Years Experience
« -
— Fa F
Make *
Entran
And Pro Is Really
By LOUIS Times W JULY 4, just us, has alway: which ‘starts tl fashions. The | pening this yea ‘The other da) they were Ifti suits from the they'd been shij pretty enough t. the dog days w the double. They also wer the fashion pec about that lor Two of the ear at right) hav skirts,
Both of the veloped in str « » +» » Forstmani stance, and ea manipulation achieve smart e The rose-and also features a and emphasize effect by a row up to high ri collar.’ The second s number with a topping a skirt waisted jersey and blue. The three-qu out the trio has to contrast witl of the skirt.
Some Ways
Longer Hem Speaking of problem of how garments alre: seem a puzzler, Some tallors head when as! hemline. They down, all rig frequently * will line. This come pressings of the sometimes fron ment’s edge. Don't worry
Try: some opf
thought up by New York. If it's a plain for which grea! trot down to and buy some half grosgrain the frock exac Get enough the skirt and c: side of the he down petticoat The same tr wash dresses, of eyelet embr coat effect. L frocks are bei: coat ruffles. Another ide for a two-piec to buy some m make '& skirt depth to lower
Porcelain Unsightly b: discoloration leaky faucets moved or redu of powdered c
All
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