Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1945 — Page 20
~ Will Honor Miss Dorothy Burget
MISS PATSY SHARICK and Miss Patricia Aspinall will entertain next Wednesday with a miscellaneous shower for Miss Dorothy Jeanne Burget of Evansville. . Miss Burget will become the bride of Malcolm E. Boone, U.S. N. R,, Aug. 18 in McKee chapel of Tabernacle Pres-
_byterian church. % Mrs, J. E. Aspinall and Mrs. P. A. Sharick will assist their daughter's and the party will be in the Sharick home, The guests will be Mrs. E. V, Burget, Evansville, and Mrs. J. M. Boone, Youngstown, O., mothers of the engaged couple; Mrs, Maynard” Siebert. Terre Haute, and Miss Isabelle Burnside, Shelbyville. Other guests will be Mesdames Paul Burget, Ross Stevens, Margaret Billings, Jack Brunner, Ethel Wright and Randall Bass, Misses Gloria Attkisson, Lorna Dahlstrand, Marilyn Behymer, Virginia Murray, Kathryn Moore, Jane Burrin, Virginia Mitchell, Kathryn Hill, Patricia Belton, Jane Sumner, Maxine Demlow, Virginia Stafford, Robin Simler, Margaret Rankin, Gloria Virt and Margaret Sullivan. :
. Miss Barnes to Be Guest A PERSONAL SHOWER to be given Tuesday «by Mrs. Clayton Collier and Miss Rachel Varley will honor Miss Jean Barnes. Miss Barnes and John Lambert Lee will be married Aug. 18 in the Broadway Methodist church. Guests at the party, which will be in Miss Varley's home, will be Mrs. H. C. Barnes, mother of the ' bride-to-be: Mrs. Kenneth Spiegel, Detroit; Mesdames F. W. Schlansker, Howard Bolling and J. E. Montgomery, : Also, Mesdames Olive Speer, Helen Ulrich, Jack Ottinger, Warren Fitch, P. R. Kennedy, K. R. Lam, Richard Rock and Dale J. Taylor, Misses Sue Manring, Rosalie Snow and Betty Steinbruegge. Miss Barnes will be honored at a miscellaneous shower next Wednesday night, to be given by Mrs. Ulrich and Miss Betty Wilkerson in Miss Wilkerson's home. Among the guests will be Mesdames Barnes, Rock, Schlansker, Spiegel, Richard Commons, Riley Owings, Lawrence McClanahan, John R. Miller Jr, W. H. Caffee Jr, Charles Cravens and Robert Wilkerson, Misses Dorothy Thomas, Margaret Dalton, Jean Applegate and Ann Fitzpatrick.
Rush Party Will Be Saturday A SWIMMING PARTY will be held Saturday at the Highland Golf and Country ciub by the Indianapolis alumnae of the Indiana university chapter, Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Guests will be girls e tering the university this fall, After the party, there will be a picnic at the home of Mrs. Thomas W. Ayton. Mrs. Paul G. Pitz and Miss Patricia Myers are co-chairmen of the event. They will be ‘assisted by Mesdames Marshall F.. Crabill, Loren Fink, Carroll E. Sipe, William Rohr, Edward A. Rucinski and William Ferguson, Misses Marjorie White, Esther Yancey, Dolly Lambourne, Alice Ann Capron, Ila Belle Barnes and Sue Van Talge. Special guests will be Miss Rachel Veit, Union City, active chapter president; Miss Rosemary Kryder, Ft. Wayne, state rush chairman; Miss Anna Harris, Opalka, Fla., and Miss Carol Heepke and Miss Natalie Borreson of the University of Cincinnati chapter. » dS s 8 2 o The Alpha Gamma Delta sorority will honor girls entering DePauw university this fall at a tea Sunday afternoon. The event will be from 3 to 5 o'clock in the home of Mrs. J. P. Lahr. Members of the committee in charge are Miss Martha Payne, chairman; Misses Melville Weesner, Kay Westphal, Virginia Benham, Betty Lou Mercer and Elizabeth Jennings. Out-of-town members who will attend are Misses Nancy Hall, Doris Irvine and Jane Rinehart, Louisville; Miss Martha Land, Mishawaka; Miss Dorothy Walsman, Batesville, and Miss Ellenjane McGurty, Anderson.
~
Woman's Viewpoint— Stepmothers Get Some Praise From Mrs. Ferguson
By MRS. WALTER FERGUSON Scripps-Howard Staff Writer PRESIDENT TRUMAN stands today in the position of unwelcome
New York Dress Institute photos
Anthony Blotta (lower left), and an fluence in his fall and winter collection,
fastening. frogs and buttons,
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2
"THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __ AMERICAN DESIGNERS: No. 4 | Anthony Blotta: Trend Setter
Future Bride To Be Feted At Shower
Miss Alice M. Murphy Will Be Honor Guest
A pre-nuptial party and two recent weddings appear in the bridal news,
Miss Alice M. Murphy will be honored Sunday afternoon at a miscellaneous shower to be given by Miss Lois Clements and Miss Rita Landers. The party will be in Miss Clements’ home, 5802 University ave. The honor guest will become the bride of Lt. Robert Wurtz, U. S. N.R., at 9 a. m. Aug. 18 in Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic church. The party guests will be Mrs. Alice F. Murphy and Mrs. Leo Wurtz, mothers of the engaged couple; Mesdames Jack Murphy, Ray Baumgart, Stasia Gillespie, Mary Sanders and Harry Rumrill, Also, Mesdames Ralph Zimmer, Winifred Landers and James R. Clements, Misses Bernice Williams, Bernice Waters, Mary O’Brien and Nina Rose Clements and Ensign Mary Rita Murphy, = " 8 A ceremony Sunday in the Memorial Presbyterian church united Miss Helen Marie Kendall and Rudolph Martin Crandall. Dr. Ralph L. O'Dell officiated. N\ The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Monroe Kendall,
k | Petersburg, Ind. After Sunday, the
example of the Tartar inThe two-piece tunic dress
® o Ld
Designer's Interest in Art Cut Short His Studies F or the Priesthood
By LOUISE
FLETCHER
Times Woman's Editor
SAY “CLASSIC TAILORING” to the French-room buyers in many
of “Anthony Blotta.”
®
the country's stores and chances are
theyll shoot back with
Season in and season out, the backbone of this New York de-
signer’s collections
Stamp Center Officers Are Listed
is the custom-made
suit and classic tailored frock. That's because, at 19, he began his apprenticeship with a coat manufacturing company where he learned the rudiments of his work . . sketching, cutting- and hand tailoring. His career as a designer is a far’ cry. from the one his parents
| picked out for him when he was
Mrs. Donovan Turk is the new | a boy in San Donapo, Italy. Dechairman of the war stamp corsage ciding to train him for the priest-
The center is sponsored by the women's division,
production center.
stepmother to those Americans who worshiped the late President Indiana war finance committee.
Roosevelt. And that position can be very uncomfortable.
Other new officers are Mrs. Albert P. Cordes and Mrs. Harry Cool-
Anyone who tries to fill the place of someone greatly loved has a hard er, recording and financial sécre-
{ ad praise of Mr. Truman, who was thrust into! a much]
job. Yet the average stepmother is expected to do exactly that. ‘think of her kind as I such a difficult spot, u larger stage. ousy all youngsters suffer when! From the days of the Brothersithey see another woman sitting in| Grimm, who wrote fairy tales al" departed mother’s chair.
which the wicked stepmother vied| There is no more poignant sorrow | with the wicked witch as chief vil-|for the young, and it is worse be-| lain, second wives have borne pub-|cause it cannot be understood. To lic suspicion as well as family criti-|them the newcomer seems a! cism. They have to be twice as good |ysyrper., { as real mothers to get half as much | yy 5 ¥ credit. UNLESS THE father is patient’ 8 = = and tender and the second wife ANYONE WHO has had children sympathetic and understanding, the | knows it is no easy task to bring!situation becomes intolerable. up one’s own. Imagine then what| The public attitude has a great it must be to act as substitute, and deal to do with the way stepmothers do the right thing by some “bther are accepted. The propaganda | person’s children. built up against them through cenYet for love of husbands and | turies should be destroyed. homes, many women have tackled] We've made some headway in the! the responsibility. Some failed, |immediate past. But there is still as was to be expected. But far more a long way to go before these famhave succeeded gloriously. {ily martyrs are appreciated. We're They have won the love of chil-/always lauding mother. Don't you dren whose hearts were set against think a good stepmother deserves: them because of the torturing jeal-| even more praise?
-
taries; Mrs. Sue Sherman, treasurer, and Mrs. Dorothy Johnson, auditor. Members of the board of directors are Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren, Whiting; Mrs. I. Irving Newman, Mrs. Louis R. Markun and Miss Sally Butler, and a representative from- each organization participating in the project. Mrs. M. B. Dunn was reappointed director of the center. Regular .volunteer workers are Mesdames Lesta Blankenship, Herbert LL. Cobb, R.
|H. Kaley, Alvina Arnholter, Meyer |
S. Efroymson and Ann Rahn. Also; Mesdames J, H. Kurner, Albert P.. Cordes, A. T. Doane, Carl Schiesz, and Harry Cooler and Miss Daisy Reagan. :
Save the ‘Bubbles’
Dry suds are an excellent outlet
! for odds and ends of soap that are
too small for regular use at the sink or tub. These should always be saved and used in soap jelly or other ways so that not a single soap bubble is wasted.
N€ 6 EEE ¥é €
Lad ve
Selecting A Diamond
| hood, they sent him off to a theo-
logical seminary. There the brothers who were his teachers soon discovered the young Anthony had more interest in art than in his religious studies and they persuaded his family to let their pupil -choose another vocation. s 8 -8 HE WAS STILL in his teens when he left his family's winegrowing estate to come to America with a companion. Only a few years of formal schooling preceded his apprenticeship with the coat firm. His own business was started in { 1919, and it has been marked by a | series of trend-setting Blotta ine novations. It was Blotta who, in | 1933, started the vogue for using | rows of tiny bone buttons on tailored clothes, He is credited with re-introduc-ing cottons and. linens to American women's wardrobes by bringing out, in 1836, the classic linen dress, In 1938 he did the plaid jacketplain skirt duo which is now an | American classic. Since then he has brought the custom-made, man-tailored suit to ready-to-wear departments where it was theretofore unobtainable. n o » THIS YEAR his fall and winter collection adds to the Blotta clase sics a series of designs incorpoe- | rating the barbaric splendor of Eastern Europe's historic costumes | —Mongol, Magyar, Persian and Tartar, They are lavishly decorated with | gold and jewel embroidery and | are done in Slavic and oriental color combinations, : Up until the war started, Mr. | Blotta made four trips a year to Europe. He's a bachelor and a dyed-in-the-wool sports fan who shows up at as many major sports events as his husy schedule permits.
TOMORROW: .Jo Copeland. Initiation Planned
sorority,
The Phi chapter, Delta Chi Sigma will hold initiation at 8
couple: will be at home at 5935 Ralston dr. n n ” Miss Joann Kelly and George E.
| Golding Jr. were married at 7 p. m
Linen Hanky Used For Lingerie Accent ‘For that crisp white lingerie accent to make a simple black .dress both smarter and more becoming, why nat cut up a white Irish linen handkerchief into a narrow collar, turnback cuffs-or a triangular jabot. The embroidered designs and fin-
{ished edges of the handkerchief reduce the handwork. you ntust do|with cold water before washing in
to practically nothing at all.
THURSDAY, AUG. 9, 1945
\Match the Fabric Ejtra scraps of cloth, washed [ators with a garment, will remain |a perfect match for later patching jor alterations,
{
i { Cog y v ‘Unsticking’ the Egg Dishes used for mixing uncooked eggs or combinations of food with { uncooked "eggs should be rinsed
| hot water.
Nu Art photo. Miss Catherine Keating became the bride ‘of Robert J. Dangler, | petty officer 2-¢, U. §. N. R,, on | June 23.. Parents of the couple are | Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Keating and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Dangler.
Red Cross To Distribute
Canning Hints
Information on nutrition and can-| ning problems will be’ distributed this month by the mobile units of the Indianapolis chapter, American Red Cross. The units will include exhibits of | pressure cookers, water baths and’
| Tuesday in St. Paul's Methodist various types of small canning | church. The vows were read by the |equipment. Literature for all types)
{ Rev. Ernést E. Nugent.
| The bride is the daughter of available. : of black wohl has broad shoulders, deep armholes and oriental side | joseph B. Kelly, 1124 Broadway,| The schedule for the units fo
The surplice neckline fastens with huge gold and jewel
and Mr. Golding's parents are Mr. E. Riverside dr. the bridegroom; and Charles E. Gar-
ringer Jr. were the couple's attend-
wedding trip.
D. of I. to Sponsor Benefit Ball Game
Daughters of Isabella, will sponsor a benefit baseball game Sept. 5 between Indianapolis and Columbus. The game will be at 8:30 p.m. at Victory fleld. Mrs. Robert V. Fessler is the general chairman, and the co-chairman is Miss Delia Lynch.
Meeting Planned
Nature Club to Meet
Cook will be the speaker.
A meeting will be held at 1:30 p.m. Monday by the Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War. The session will be in Pt. Friendly.
and Mrs. George E. Golding, 2915 Mm.
|
The Mother Theodore circle!
of food preservation also will be | lows: Monday and Tuesday, 11 a. to 4 p. m., Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. on S. State st.; next
Miss Mildred Golding, sister of | Wednesday and Thursday, 11 a, m.|
to 4 p. m. Lockefleld Gardens. | Aug. 20 and 21,11 a. m. to 4 p. m.!
ants. After a dinner in the Gold-|the Fair store, and Aug. 27 and 28, ing home, the couple left for a ll a. m. to 5 p. m, Colonial Furni- |
ture Co. 5 o » | The canteen corps of the volunteer special services division, Red Cross, will open a class for beginners at 7 p. m. next Wednesday. The class will be in the Red Cross chapter house, and Mrs. lester Hunt will be the instructor. | The course requires 20 hours of | instruction and classes will be held two nights a week. Upon comple-| tion of the training, the canteen aids will be assigned to Stout Field, Billings General hospital and the chapter house,
The Whittler Here's an idea for the mother of
Instead of having him clutter the {floor with useless wood shavings,
A meeting and supper will be held {give him your accumulation of dried | by the Nature Study club at 6 p.m. slivers and scraps of soap and let | | Sunday in Ellenberger park. James him whittle them into thin flakes|
a small boy who likes to whittle. !
to $7.95
Were $12.95 to $14.95
6
Spring
Were $25 Up to $39.95
PLAY SUITS
SHORTS
* Summer DRESSES
Were $5.98
Better DRESSES.
All-Wool
‘14 -*18
SLACK SUITS
Were $5.98 to $12.85
200 SUMMER HATS
Were $2.98 to $8.95
COTTON SKIRTS 2 8].50 , $2.50
Were $2.98 to $5.98
Were $5.98 to $12.95
‘3
Were $16.95 to $19.95
~Morrisons, Third Floor
COATS
~Morrisons, Fourth Foor
3
51
$3 to $12
51
SHORT SETS
20
{for use.in the washtub or dishpan. |]
Were $1.98 to $3.98
Were $2.98 to $8.95
MORRISONS
WEST WASHINGTON
$2.%
~—Morrisons, Street Floor
A
FOURTH FLOOR
AROTT'S
HOLLYOOD FASHIONS
Characterizing
the California mood in foot-
wear. Exclusive models that cater to young ideas in shoes of. quality and «mart design
« + « Just the
"fip-toe' glory to set off your
new fall outfit. Time now to make that im. portant fall selection.
p.m, today in the home of Miss Marjorie Craig, 3821 E. Washington st. Mesdames Robert Sheets, Jacob [Kitt and George Hargitt will be ) | initiated.
REDUC
IN THE RIGHT PLACES
By modern scientifie treatments, No starvation diets, exhaustive exercises, weakening baths or drugs. Not te be confused with “Baths” or “Gym.”
Hips Lost Quickly
Often 1 ‘Inch per week. Will not show in the face or neck,
Information Free For Women Exclusively
THE TARR SYSTEM
Of Health and Figure Perfection !
_ 511 Roosevelt Bldg. | rN
; oR ci
Is Not A Guessing Game
For your own safequard, it is a purchase that requires careful thought. If you can depend upon the knowledge and integrity of your Jeweler you will feel that you have selected wisely. Each piece in our collection is typical of the values we have taken pride in offering for 105 years.
Diamond Solitaires Priced From $35 Up
Registered Jeweler — American Gem Society
Wi
Sophisticated black and town-brown in "soft as a shadow! suede or done with emphasis in shining patent. Here is quality and design you associate with high price, but Hollywood . Fashion will pleasantly startle you at just 4.85.
wv
