Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1942 — Page 17

THURSDAY, JAN. § 1 Shoes Will Be Simpler In Design

Fancy Trimmings Will Be Secarcer

Zr ELLIOTT ARNOLD

Times Special Writer NEW YORK, Jan. 8—Grace Powell is a honey-haired, creamskinned girl who would rather shake your foot than your hand. She knows women’s shoes. She

942

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can read more meaning into a wom-| ©

an’s shoe than a head-tapper can

discover in the mountain ranges on| ,

your scalp. The curve of an instep, |

the height of a heel, the fuzz that| J covers the toes—all these ring little! §

bells in this woman's frightening mind. Miss Powell, who is 28 and looks like a softer version of Bette Davis, is a shoe designer, one of the tops in the business, whose tricky archhuggers are on display in almost every shop on Fifth Ave. Her profession is making the shoes but her| hobby is reading the characters of] the dames who buy them, and she can read. | Keeps Eyes on Ground { |

I walk along the streets with my eves on the ground,” Miss Powell] said. “Honestly, I keep bumping into people wherever I go. I can’t] get my eves up from the shoes I see. | It seems I eat shoes and live shoes and breathe shoes. I can almost tell them all. I can tell th an who is pampered | She will have a| ith little ruffles and She is the well pro-

r aj | tected type. “Then there is the aggressive] woman. I know what she'll look like | before I raise my eyes above the ankles. She will go in for the} strong, bold designs. The hard in-| shoes that reflect her|

“Then there are the sexy shoes.| se are worn by the girls who| are afraid to let a man find out| at they have in their heads. v want to keep his attention] 1 the shoes all the time. They're] shoes with the reds and the] ovant designs and the spike}

Brown-Boyden Photo. Mrs. Charles DeVault was Miss Ruth Rich, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Rich, before her marriage Nov. 20. Mr. and Mrs. DeVault are at home at 327 Prospect St.

Daughters of Union Sponsor Recital

Miss Patti Stewart. soprano, and Miss Helen Farrell, concert pianist, both of the Arthur Jordan Conservatory faculty, will appear with Lioyd Mallet, tenor, New York. on the program which is being sponsored by the Governor Oliver Perry Morton Chapter, National Society Daughters of the Union. The program will be given in Ayres’ auditorium next Thursday at 2 p. m. Mrs. W. I. Hoag, general chairman of the event, has announced that

the proceeds will be used for the purchase of a national defense bond.

| The group also will make a contri-

metimes you see a woman made her face hard. She resses you with her masculine lities. Then you look at her fee You may see sometimes that she has soft, tricky little shoes.

It’s All Illusion

“Well, change your mind about that woman. There's nothing hard and stony about her. She's longing for some of the feminine softnesses that are the right of every woman.” Miss Powell launched into a brief i on of how the war and s and defense would strike 1 vamp. off, she said, most daytime

bution to Lincoln Memorial University. Colored travel pictures will be shown by Cecil Bryne, and Mrs. Louis E. Kruger, regent, will open the program with a welcoming address. Mr. Mallet will be accompanied by Mrs. Marie Kyle. Mrs. Roy Adams, Cincinnati, will accompany Miss Stewart. Members of the committee in charge of the recital are Mrs. Rosha Smith and Mrs. George E. Dunn,

|co-chairmen of the program ar|rangements; Mrs. Moses Turner land Miss Carrie M. Hoag, tickets: (Mrs. Robert Waterbury and Mrs.

¢ |charge.

94 at the Riverside Skating Rink

Otherwise you may be dooming your

Camp F ire Girls To Attend Cooking Class

Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls will have an advanced cooking class at the Citizen's Gas & Coke Utility auditorium Saturday at 10:30 a. m. Miss Matian Schleicher, the company’s home economist, will be in

Two new sewing classes at the Singer Sewing Machine Co., 120 W. Washington St., will be begun soon by the Camp Fire Girls. The first will be started on Jan. 24 at 10:30 a. m., the other on Jan. 31 at 9 a. m. The Horizon Club will meet this evening in Hollenbeck Hall of the Y. W.C. A. at 5:30 p. m. A business meeting will follow the group's “pitch-in” dinner. The Shutan group, which is comprised of all presidents and scribes of local Camp Fire groups, will meet in the East Room of the World War Memorial building Saturday from 10 a. m. to 11 a. m. Camp Fire Girls and Blue Birds will hold a joint skating party Jan.

from 9 a. m. to noon. A new First Aid Class will be started at the Camp Fire office on Jan. 24 at 10 a. m., under the direction of Miss Patricia McGuire. Reservations may be made at the office.

Treat Child With Squint Or Cross Eyes

By JANE STAFFORD Science Service Writer IF YOUR CHILD has a squint or cross eyes or one eye turns out (wall eye), take him to the doctor as soon as you notice the condition, so that it can be corrected at once.

child to the lonely life of an unloved person who is feared and hated. The dire effects on a child's future of uncorrected squint or cross eye or wall eye from the standpoint of its damage on his personality was stressed by Dr. James Watson White of New York City at the meeting of the American College of Surgeons. “Children are heartless,” Dr. White declared, “and the taunts of playmates calling a child cockeyed and numerous other names may change their disposition and in fact, their whole lives.” » 2 2

THE CHILD with uncorrected de-

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

PAGE 17

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10es will be much simpler in de- | Homer C. Hills, door; Mrs. J. C./fect of this type may develop an ) A eT lower peels | Reynolds and Mrs. Karl Kayser, inferiority complex or defense comEe RE gi to cover | distribution of programs; Mesdames plex at an early age. The squint en's shoes — the fine suedes | aura Fox, Bloomfield Moore, Mar- | or cross-eyed condition might not doeskifs, reptile skins. and even | Saret Dodd and Miss Lula Pavey, |call forth ridicule once the child nlastics—is now unavailable for nu- |ospitality committee. and his associates have grown up, us obvious reasons, and high-| Selections which Mr. Mallet will {but if he has developed a disagreecalf is coming along. [sing include the following: “Do Not [able personality as a result of childF chi-chi evening wear, how-|Go, My Love” (Hageman), “I Heard hood experience, he may never be ever, the trend will be even more|a Forest Praying” (DeRose), “Life” {able to make friends. Dr. White to the utter feminine—the trend| (Curran), “The Holy City” (Adams), |cited as example of this a descrip-

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in the evening they always look iL “ oe i ¥ Jo : 4 2 . “« ir tegs and they dont want Miss Ferrell will play “Humor-

1k thevre going out with |esque” (Tchaikowsky), “The Night-top-sergeant,” Miss Powell|ingale” (Aladieff-Liszt) and “Ho“A woman must be far more | pak” (Moufkorgsky-Rachmaninoff). minine than ever when she goes| Miss Stewart will sing “Aghus ut with these boys.” Dei” (Bizet), “Corals” (Bryceson Miss Powell comes by her trade Treharne), “OC Lovely Night” (Lanhonestly She is the granddaughter gon Ronald), “Song of Songs” . . Ye ay Jamel tance | (Mora) and “Without Your Love” nann, who used to turn o ancy | ari p boots for Franz Josef and his crew wal in Austria before the World War.

Besides making shoes for exclu- Women in Defense

sive trade, she also is one of the

anthropic manner,” a “domineering muteness” and a way of shaking hands that made people feel he would rather impress them than please them. Mothers are usually the first to notice that something is wrong with 3 child's eyes. This may be, Dr. White points out, because she sees him under varying conditions of health, excitement or temper, any of which may make a squint more evident. She should not let months ana years go by in the hope that the

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chief designers for one of the lare-| WOT vi J est mail order houses in the aly ork Interviewed should take him to the doctor for try. She is very efficient, business-| Station WIRE is inaugurating a examination and treatment. If like, and chain smokes. She crossed series of broadcasts featuring the medical treatment by glasses and her legs while airing her views and (defense activities of women and in- muscle exercises do not produce deGiscioseq her own shoes. They were terviews with women actively en- [sired results soon, an operation to soft and pink and frou-frou. gaged in Red Cross and Civilian correct the trouble should be made, Defense service. The broadcasts Dr. White said, at an early age.

Mrs. Jules Zinter wilt be given Tuesday and Thursday mornings at 9:30 a. m.

Guest Speaker The first of the series was given BEA UTY ne Normandy Bhant recently. Mrs. R. F. Grosskopf, WI T wh oe president of the Seventh District dhe rave -Study ub pederation of Clubs, was interwill hear a talk by Mrs. Jules Zin-|vjewed on the part Indianapolis ei Be agk at yuk ter at its meeting tomorrow in ti y ake Ub Sos, most for yeu=shd eras i: ] '¢|clubwomen are taking in Civilian goes it gracefully. That's especially Re Dy eafumn at 12:30 p. Mm. pefense and Red Cross work. so this year, when fashion every- - Zinter will speak on “Hon- _———————— where emphasizes taste and the suitduras Aas ability of things to wear, to such an Hostesses for the day will be Mrs. Mh S. Keene Hostess extent that Style is Fashion. Fritz Ehling and Mrs. J. J. Meyers.| Mrs. T. Victor Keene, 3200 N. New| Usually, there's a difference. Fash-

: St. will be hostess to the Paul |ion changes constantly and emRY hy ee P phasizes change. Style is the basic,

Sorority Meets BORE DENS Eun aolary lasting rightness and enhancementkd . tomorrow at 12:30 p. m. The Mes-| 000 0¢ things. But now Fashion's Alpha Chapter, Omega Phi Tau dames Fred Gifford, Frank Gasti- basic theme is: These new times are Sorority. met last night in the Spink | neau and R. J. Masters will be as- busy times, therefore let fashion put Arms Hotel. . sisting hostesses. purpose first for a change. This is noticeable in makeup now. Manufacturers offer a whole new set of colors to go with new hues in clothes. There’s nut brown to go with the much-emphasized browns and warm reds in clothes, and there’s also a chestnut-toned nail polish for the sate clothes and also for green. For purple clothes, cosmetics again stress the purple undertone. And for black and blue dresses, there are new clear reds.

#2 = SE : ALL THESE have a special tise- 8 be % Co and fulness for the woman of 30—for at > TE IW A pe 3 that age a woman is ready to apply cosmetics with a generous hand, and very often she needs them to keep looking as vivacious as she feels. But keep that makeup hand steady, as well as generous, with cos= metics! Your powder base should be smooth, your cream rouge blended so that there's no visible edge. If you're self-conscious about your chin or jaw or any feature, you can minimize it with powder of a darker hue. Cultivate the natural arch of your eyebrows, and sweep your lashes lightly with mascara. And apply your lipstick carefully especially if you extend the natural line. For that p , by the way, a brush is much better than your

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