Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 August 1945 — Page 15
FRIDAY, AUG. 31, 1945 __ AMERICAN DESIGNERS:
Fashions for Outdoor Life Will Unite - Miss Teeter ] ow FLETCRER Couple Will Be Wed = OUTDOOR LIFE has a ' -
great advocate in Joset Walker, New York designer. In the collections she creates for the David M. Goodstein firm, she devotes her attention to costumes for an open air existence— tweeds, rayons and cottons, play clothes and town and country suits. They are all suited to what she calls the “American country club life.” In the 13 yéars Mrs. Walker has been head designer for Goodstein, she has chalked up a long list of fashion “firsts.” She was one of the first designers to use black
oy
No. 20
Church Vows
Jean Ruschaupt and E. F. New to Be Wed
The Roberts Park Methodist church will be the scene at 7:30 o'clock this evening for the marriage of Miss Jean Evelyn Ruschaupt and Edward F. New II. The Rev. Sumner L. Martin will read the VOWS. The bride's pirents are Mr. and Mrs, Carl B. Harper, 3365 Park ave., and Mr. New is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Edward F. New, 6422 Park ave The bride's grandfather, Charles F. Ruschaupt, will give her in marriage. Her candlelight satin gown is fashioned with a fitted princess basque with tiny buttons from the romance neckline to the waist. The long fitted sleeves taper to points
THE. INDIANAPOLIS me Announcements Are. Made of Recent Marriages
over her wrists and the gathered]
TT TT SR i
i A RETR IIE PE Ce A
PAGE
Paul Lowe Jr
x
~ Lambert-McIntosh Ceremony Is Read =
Appearing in the bridal notes are {the announcements of a wedding {this evening and a recent mars | riage. Miss Rosemary Teeter and Pau |Lowe Jr. will exchange vows thi$ |evening in the home of her pare cents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Teetef, 3344 Forest Manor ave. The Re {R. W._ Clark will officiate at 8: | o'clock. | The couple's attendants will be {Miss Evetyn Culmann and James |Lowe, Martha Ann Teeter will serve {as ringbearer | After a reception in the Teeter { home, the couple will leave for Cin{cinnati. They will be at home in Inidianapolis. The bridegroom is the
|son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lowe, Sobicns Samy. any skirt forms a full train. {1517 Linden st. e introduce e Guatemalan ; | Bride’s Veil | Fr os shirt dress, the beach dress and | : coat of hand-painted cotton, and Her full-length, candlelight illu- Announcement is made of the
the cotton sunback dress worn with a rebozo (Mexican scarf to those north of the Rio). The Mexican influence in her collections asserted itself after she made a trip there in 1937. A
sion veil will cascade from a tiara of crystal and gold beads. She will carry white roses and gardenias centered with an orchid. Miss Maxine Arnold will be the maid of honor, and the bridesmaids
1. Lt. and Mrs. Bruce Warren are at home in Cherry Point, N. C., following their marriage July
| marriage of Miss Martha Louise {McIntosh and Pfc. John Lambert, {A. A. F, by her mother, Mrs. Cal{vin Fletcher McIntosh of Spencer | The wedding took place Aug. Ié in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Eari Howard Welcome in Downey, Cal
more recent trek to Guatemala will inclnde Mrs. Charles Haworth, . adi took pl in ney brought that country’s colorful Plainfield: Miss Dorothy Pearson B She we ns . 0 CY Re 's | Mrs. Welcome was the bride's only : TA and Miss Martha Coffin. ariinglen, wher wh attendant, and Clinton H. Boyes
cottons into the lineup with the Mexican fabrics and designs. » » » MRS. WALKER says that she liked clothes from the time she can remember—and -then adds that studying clothes was easier than studying for a Ph.D. She was born in France, but eame to this country while very young, so yourlg that she feels she's always been an American.
‘ She attended Columbia univer-
sity and was graduated in 1928 from the Parsons school of de-
© gign.
In her {first three post-gradua-tion years she had three different Jobs. One year was spent ‘with the house of Davidow. In the second she designed for the theatri-
New York Dress Institute photos.
Miss Arnold will be in a cosmos blue taffeta dress styled with a romance neckline, three-quarter-length sleeves and a gathered skirt accented with a bow bustle. Bridesmaids’ Dresses
The bridesmaids have chosen frocks of colonial rose taffeta. They are made with square necklines, bracelet-length sleeves and bouffant skirts. All of the attendants will have cascade bouquets of asters, roses, gladioli and chrysanthemums and will wear matching flower half-hats, Richard Clay will serve as best man and the ushers will be Wendell Yeager and William Landis. Following the ceremony a recep{tion will be held in the Columbia
grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. James Peterson, live. The bride was Miss Phyllis Peterson. Lt. Warren, son of Otis Warren of Crawfordsville, serves in the marine air corps. (P. H. Ho photo).
2. A ceremony on Sunday united Miss Wilma Miley and Lt. Clifford B. Lewis. The service was in the West Park Christian church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. Clyde F. Miley and Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Lewis, Trail City, S. D. The couple is at home in Los Angeles, Cal, where the bridegroom is stationed. (P. H. Ho photo).
3. Before her marriage Sunday, Mrs. Walter Wilson was Miss Betty McClelland, The couple ex-
Qo
was best man. Following a reception in the home, the couple left for Las Vegas, Nev. Mrs. Lambert attended Indiana university and is a member of Al{pha Omicron Pi and Kappa Kapp# | Kappa sororities. The bridegroom | son of Frank Lambert of Los An{geles, Cal, is stationed in Santa | Ana, Cal. i
| Sorority Sets Installation
Officers will be installed Tuesday
| by the Gamma chapter of Omega
irs. Cotter Hostess Beauties Hints
Joset Walker (upper right) is the head designer for the firm of | : David M. Goodstein. Her fall and winter collection features rounded hus hi Feo a Wg shoulders, soft underarm fullness and back swish in the skirts. A ig ie be =} ome al i - 1 . St., . typical frock is the diagonally-handled country plaid woolen shown The bridegroom attended Buller
above. university, is a graduate of Stetson | university in Deland, Fla., and will |enter the Indiana university School lof Law. He is a Sigma Nu fraternity member.
{Nu Tau sorority. The event will be held in the Hotel Lincoln. The service will be preceded by a { dinner at 6:30 p. m. The arrange{ments committee members are Mesdames Wilford Furgason, Bernard Smith and John Hollingsworth and Miss Bette Ulrich. : Mrs. Lee Oldfield will install the
cal department of the Saks-Fifth Avenue store. She spent less than a year with the RKO studios in Hollywood “because I couldn't stay away from New York.” ’ »
» BLACK-HAIRED,
changed vows in the Wallace Street Presbyterian church. The | bride's parents are Mr. and Mrs. F. N. McClelland, and Mr. Wilson is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Wilson. (Ramos-Porter photo).
The Beta chapter of Theta Nu Chi! sorority will meet at 8 p. m. WednesIday with Mrs. John Cotter, 5850 |E. Washington st.
Good Posture _ Suggestions
By ALICIA HART
whom she designs and sews. One of the daughters promises to follow in her mother's designing
she does in any but American clothes,” she explains. She likes to design
» black-eyed
“clothes
and vivacious, she speaks with just footsteps that men like . . . very feminine.” NEA Staff Writer i : te following officers: Mrs. Laurence a touch of French accent. In win- Mrs. Walker feels that American There is a touch of Gallic wit in Meta > 00 TURE also tak resi M O 1d, ter she lives on Park ave, but clothes styled for the American her description of her own ward- fa GOOD POS also takes in Bowen, president; Mrs, Oldfie
your lying-down positions which, if} {vice president; Miss Hazel Knight, Miss Betty Ann Miss Gladys
summers are spent farming in Frenchtown, N. J. She has a 14-year-old son, and two daughters, 19 and 20, for
woman suit her better than those originated in France. “It's hard for the American woman to drive a car and do all the other things
robe: “I wear everything that doesn't sell in my own collection.”
{Nine Sorority ‘Heads Named
Times Special
faulty, may explain why you get up representative; feeling anything but rested. {| Rosener, secretary; Of course you aren't expected to E- Schuh, treasurer. lie awake nights checking up on| Miss Mable DayWitt, chaplain;
Civen
MONDAY: Emily Wilkens.
¥
Auxiliary Unit To Install
Mrs, Cleo McLean will preside
‘Sept. 12 when the Hayward-Barcus
unit 55, American Legion auxiliary,
. meets at 8 p. m. in the War Memo-
rial building. New officers will be installed by Mrs. William R. Bolen. They are Mrs. Horace Boyd, president; Mrs. Elmer McCormick and Mrs. Harry W. Snyder, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. Oscar Waltz and Mrs. Russell Lovelace, recording and corresponding secretaries, Mrs. D, O. Brooks, treasurer; Mrs. Edna Barcus, historian; Mrs. Wendell Reed, chaplain, and Mrs, Fred Hulgen, sergeant-at-arms. The group's state convention delegates include Mesdames McLean, Snyder and Boyd. The alternates are Mesdames Ralph Klare, McCormick and Paul Catterson,
ociety—
A NUMBER OF RESERVATIONS for the Labor day dinner-dance tomotro, Highland Golf and Country club. A Lt. Col. and Mrs. M. G. Herzfeld,. Dr. and Mrs. C. D. Williams, Dr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Lord, Messrs. and Mesdames Harry Reid Jr., M. D. Coons, William Harding, Lyle Hyland and Milton S. Martin. Mr, and Mrs, William R. Krafft are chairmen for the event and their co-chairmen are Mr. and Mrs. Louis E. Randle. Dinner will be served from 6:30 to 8:30 o'clock, and Ralph Lillard's orchestra will play for dancing. » » Members of the Indiana Artists’ club will have an outing in Brown county on Saturday, Sept. 8. The group will visit the studio of Dale Bessire, club president, and in the afternoon Brown county painters will be hosts for studio visits. The afternoon also will include sketching, riding and hiking in Brown county state park. At 5 p. m. there will be an informal supper in the park's lower shelter house. The Nashville gallery will be open to the club
ve been made evening atthe include those of
» » » »
GREENCASTLE, Ind, Aug. 31— Presidents of campus sororities have been named here at DePauw university. They include Miss Mary E. Gossner, Detroit, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Miss Joan Denham, Evanston, Ill, Kappa Alpha Theta. Also, Miss Marjorie Craven, Dayton, O., Alpha Phi; Miss Doris Irvine, Louisville, Alpha Gamma Delta; Miss Margaret Santner, Dayton, Delta Delta Delta; Miss Lenore Johnson, Chicago, Alpha Omicron Pi; Miss Carolyn Crandall, Scars. dale, N. Y., Alpha Chi Omega; Miss Martha Honan, Lebanon, Pi Beta Phi, and Miss Dorothy Jean Holmes Danville, Ill, Delta Zeta.
|
Luncheon Is Planned
By Newcomers Club
A luncheon and card party will be held at 11 a. m. Wednesday in Ayres’ auditorium by the Newcomers club. Mrs. L. W. Huston will be the hostess. Assistant hostesses will be Mesdames W. A. Hays, F. J. Drain,
Miss Marian Ellaby, society editor;
gardener encouraged.
The recipe today is for braised |
Swiss chard.
un ” ” MONDAY MENUS Breakfast Seedless grapes. Scrambled eggs.
Gye toast. Luncheon
‘ILamb loaf and tomato sandwiches. |
Potato chips. Raspberry sherbet.
Dinner
}
Broiled sweet breads. Corn on the cob. Braised Swiss chard. Head lettuce with 1000 Island dressing. Apple pie with streusel topping. Milk to drink: Four c. for each
i ; . t U. C. L. A. Students during the evening. John B. O'Sullivan, J. J. Cowan and SI? toy sath adult. Ration Ue Us 1a . | Del LeRoy Sandburg. Reservations may|Po >" : J 18it1 ; elta Gamma’s Arrange Tea be made with Mrs. Lewis Skinn 94 Are Visiting Here : er. < One . A TEA ON SEPT. 8 will open the season's activities of the Braised Swiss chard: ne A
Mrs. Jeanne Steiner Toelle is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. ¥, Steiner, 910 E. 40th st, Mrs.
Toelle has as her guest, Miss Ruth Stone of Boston, The girls are roommates at the
* University of California in Los An-
geles. On Monday they will leave for the East coast where they will visit Miss Stone's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Stone. Following visits to friends in the East, Miss Stone and Mrs. Toelle will return to school in November,
‘Amica Club Plans
Luncheon Meeting ATS 4otiean % Mrs. Ann rma, Sud Miss May The Alpha chapter, unit 2, Nu|vent leaves from matting. Serve woods. . . these are the shoes The Amica club will give a lunch-| and Miss Helen Baker are delegate and alternate, respectively, to the Phi Mu sorority, will meet at 6:30| with lemon wedges. Four servings. that protect. They go.along on all eon Wednesday for its new presi-| Panhellenic council. p. m, Monday in the Security Trust ® 8 = the extravagant adventures of dent, Mrs, D. W, Stewart. The event The committee chairmen for the year are Mrs. Boyer, ways and |Puilding. MAKE THE MOST of your gar- south | d Ki in will be at 1 p. m. in the Hotel Wash-| means; Mrs. Ralph H. Thompson, programs; Mrs. J. C. DeHority, youth , . . run, leap ana Sxip
ington’s Bamboo room. The program committee members will be hostesses, and the speakers will include Mrs, Robert Flutro and Mrs. W. R. Burcham.
~r
Indianapolis Alumnae association of Delta Gamma sorority. The tea will be at 2 p. m. in the home of Mrs. Ralph W, Showalter. The alumnae of out-of-state schools will be hostesses and new Indianapolis alumnae will be honored. Mrs. Showalter will discuss “Our South American Neighbors” and will use illustrations. The tea committee chairmen are Mrs. Boyce <R. Williams and Mrs. Paul W. Byerly. Their assistants include . Mesdames C. B. Durham, Grover B. Turner, Victor H. Peterson, Frederick G. Schatz, Robert M. Serr, T. C. Tussig, Herman E. Rinne and Dan A. Kaufman. Reservations may be made with Mrs. Miles Reeder or Mrs. John Hirks,
Group Names New Officers
THE SORORITY'S NEW OFFICERS are Mrs. Nathan T, Washburn Jr., president; Mrs. Ralph W. Husted, vice president; Mrs. W. R. Waggoner and Mrs. Casey Fredericks, recording and corresponding secretaries; Miss Margaret Ensley and Mys. Victor Boyer, treasurer
philanthropic; Mrs. Paul Beard, needlework guild round-up; Mrs Barrett" M. Woodsmall, Indianapolis Symphony orchestra; Mrs. George O. Browne, yearbook; Mrs. Edwin A. Schultz, founders’ day; Mrs. Gail Faridge, hospitality, and Mrs. Alfred H. Guyot, mems= bership.
1. T.-S. C. Will Meet
Mrs. William Neptune will address members of the Alexandrian chapter, International Travel-study club, on Wednesday. The group will meet at 1:30 p. m. at the Children’s museum.
Mrs. Otto Hostess
Members of the Ernie Pyle cHapter, International Travel-Study club, will meet at 8 p. m, Thursday. The hostess will be Mrs. William Otto, 3420 Carrollton ave.
Sorority Session
Swiss chard, 4 tbsps. butter or margarine, 1 small onion minced, 2% tsps. salt, ‘% tsp. sugar, lemon. Wash chard well and strip from midrib. Melt 2 tbsps. butter in skillet, add onion and chopped midribs of chard. Saute for 2 mins. add| about 1% c. of water and cover tight-| ly. Cook quickly for 20 mins. or un-| til midribs are tender. In the mean-| time cook the green leaves in a jarge quantity.of water with 2 tsps. of the salt for 10 mints, Stir occa-| sionally to prevent matting of the, leaves. Drain this well and add it to] the cooked midribs. Season with the remaining salt, butter and sugar. Toss in skillet with fork to pre-
chard | in their proper positions.
Meta Times,
Given. The 214 W. Maryland st.
a 3-cent for your copy.
den. Meta Given has a limited sup- mattress remade. ply of booklets on “The Secrets of [put a piece of plywood or wall | Home Food Canning.” Just address board between mattress and the ‘Wednesday by the Children's SunIndianapolis springs.
In-|
(good alignment that keeps Kinks SWISS CHARD IS ONE VEGETABLE that will always keep the out of your spine and vital organs!
When the weather is damp and cool, seems to keep right on with its business of growing while other vegetables require less moisture and more heat to grow lush.
When the weather gets so hot and dry that many other vegetables curl up, wilt and finally die, chard continues to shoot up tender leaves. ! tdies at hand. One is to have your
Miss Ruth Purgason, sergeant-at-|arms, and Mrs. Hollingsworth, hisBut you can insure ideal posture torian. Miss Margaret Schuck and
conditions by making sure that your | Miss Lena Kinman are philanbed doesn't sag.
{thropic chairmen and the cheer {chairman is Mrs. Purgason.
Meeting Date Set
A business meeting will be held
= ” » IF IT DOES, there are two reme- |
The other is to
shine Club, Inc. The meeting will This will eliminate sag in bed and be at 1:307p. m. in Ayres’ audito-
dianapolis 9. Inclose 5 cents, plus sag in posture, yet you will still | rium. The directors’ board will meet
self-addressed envelope have the springiness in a mattress at 11:30 a. m. with Mrs, William B.
| that invites tired muscles to relax.! Peake presiding.
it companigps for fun and ic |
PARROT SHOE$
Off to school or down the lane... over the hills and through the
the wildest way and keep those young feet growing, strong and straight.
BOYS and CIRLS DEPT.
: : fig § | All children’s shoes are not alike . . . Te : White Cross Guild but you ean’t see the differences when THIRD FLOOR To Give Your Hostess Units Will Meet, : : i | they're new. Important construction A number of units of the White < and materials are hidden inside! So ¥ Cross guild will meet next week at Real Comfort choose a Brand you can trust . . . one Gaily the service center. They will in- ss||== that's been giving youngsters proper : Colored ors Ar in oivon WHEREVER Hy - fit and rugged wear for years. : Te Cl A am Uni. -= That's what Poll-Parrott Shoes give! Cookie Jor versity Paik YO U A h E They fit correctly, wear long and keep Wednesday =- Children's Cheer. | : bh their shape long after others wear out West Washington and St. Mark: + + + these shoes are built right inside. Decorated Thursday—Broad Ripple and Music, A With Peasant and Friday—Sun Rae and Clermont In your cottage at the lake or your own $198 to $ 450 Figures Community, ’ home —a "WARM MORNING" Heater
| "n 81/4" Tall ‘Meetings Planned The Riley Hospital Cheer guild chapters have scheduled meetings for next week at the hospital, The “Holiday” unit will sew Monday, and on Tuesday the “Thanksgiving” i group will meet. “Paths of Love” chapter will sew Wednesday and “The Conqueror” division will work
warms every nook and corner. Fire only ONCE every 24 hours. Get set for winter comfort. Order your "WARM MORNING" Heater today. Phone TAlbot 2451.
POLA ICE AND
pod wn
and ‘ Phone Orders Carefully Filled!
. Shown on Our Fascinating Second “Floor
Thursday. On Friday, the “Little FUEL co » : Orphant Annies unit will meet. : ’ § * Charles Mayer & Company |||Visit in Te nk ioe nemwwesian wink og |
29 Wont Washington Stroot
12x
RL CAR SE ld
