Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1946 — Page 20

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equally skyhigh—a turban embroid-

‘Home-Breaking’ Hat - Is Northridge Model

some pigeons constituting the genus Goura, native of New Guinea and adjacent islands. They have a remarkable erect crest of decomposed feathers.” A Swanky Pigeon

This swanky pigeon is to the hat world what sable is to furs. Male Goura birds, that is. ‘The female Goura, like the dowdy lady robin, has less spectacular plumage. Goura hats, if any, will be strictly black market after 1948. The Audubon society which ruled in the early part of this century that Paradise feathers could not be used for milady’s headgear delayed its prohibition of Goura feathers for two years so that feather dealers would not have to take a loss on those already in stock. Designer Northridge bought up the most expensive Goura feathers on the market for his creation.

Film Star Orders One

“Lots of these feathers are being used on inexpensive hats from $100 to $150,” he said proudly. “But I decided to make one super creation from Goura feathers while it Is still permitted. They're so beautiful because of their distinctive crests.” The Goura bird has not broken up any homes to date but it's expected to momentarily. Northridge has already sold three of these hats and expects to have several more customers. Husbands will soon be opening bills. One of the purchasers, he confided, is a Hollywood leading lady. If you're allergic to decomposed feathers, Northridge has another |

model to run your millinery bill |

ered in 14 karat gold threads.

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The engagement of Miss Judy Bagal and Byron E. Falender is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Bagal, 3140 N. Meridian st. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arch E. Falender, 4369 Central ave. The marriage ceremony is to be read Sept. | in the Columbia club. Mr. and Mrs. Bagal will entertain at an informal reception from 2 to 6 p. m, Sunday in their home. (P. H. Ho photo.)

Miss Frenzel and Charles Bookwalter Will Exchange Vows This Afternoon

THE VEIL WORN BY HER GREAT GRANDMOTHER, Mrs. George A. Dickson, and by her mother at their weddings will be worn this afternoon by Miss Eleanor Dickson Frenzel when she becomes the bride of Charles Andrew Bookwalter II. The ceremony uniting Mr. Bookwalter and the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto N. Frenzel of Carmel will be at 5:30 o'clock in All Saints Episcopal cathedral. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. John H.

Bookwalter. Dr. William Burrows, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal church, will read the vows before an altar upon which vases of tuberoses, white

gladioli and scarlet carnations will stand. The bride will wear a frock of tucked white batiste and lace and

| her veil will be of English thread lace. She is to carry a lace fan

covered with green orchids,

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- valley lilies and white spray | orchids. Her attendants will be : : dressed alike in white dotted When Little Folks Entertain | swiss frocks fashioned with very full’ ankle-length skirts, tight They Love Such as These | bodices and puffed sleeves. Their TOY | white straw garden hats are handed with emerald green ribTOASTER bon and their sandals are emerald green. Their flowers will SET be fans of English ivy leaves, $ | stephanotis and scarlet carna1 25 | tions with emerald green ® | streamers. COMPLETE | Miss Sallie Eaglesfield is to be with Serving Tray and { maid of honor while the bridesMetal Tray meas+ 4 Marmalade Dishes of | maids will be Miss Phyllis Ann ures 13"x7T%” Crystal. | Reed, New York; Mrs. John Toaster 5% x3%" . { Hubbard Holliday, Mrs. Lorne Base and 3%" tall TOY Creighiton Reynolds Jr. and Miss | Mary Gladding Johnson. LEMONADE | Father Is Attendant SERVER | MR. BOOKWALTER'S father will serve as his best man and SET the ushers will be William C. | Griffith Jr., Otto N. Frenzel III, | brother of the bride; Robert Doeppers, David Moxley, Elias $ | C. Atkins III, John Spalding, % | John Frenzel Miller and Mr. | Holliday. Complete | After a reception at the Fren-5-piece set | zels' Carmel farm on Spring Mill with serv- | rd, the couple will leave for a ing “rack. | Georgian bay cruise, the bride Pitcher is | traveling in a tailored white 4” high, | suit worn with dark green acglasses inl | cessories.. high. Made | of clear Couple's Schools tJ 3 on’ IN LATE September they will "metal. be at home in Pittsburgh where Mr. Bookwalter will be attend- | ing the Carnegie Institute of Shown On Our Mail Orders | Technology. He is a graduate of Famous Fourth: Floor Carefully Filled | Park school and attended Wa- : | bash college until his enlistment { in the army. He served as a Charles Mayer & Company | lieutenant in the artillery. The bride is a graduate ‘of . 29 West Washington Street Westover school, Middlebury, Conn., and was graduated last <4 | month from Vassar college. She

is a provisional member of the

Reducing

Indianapolis Junior league,

Mark Styles by

other dressier creations.

-_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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Profile Curves ~ Kohinoor Mink

Howard Greer

Hollywood Designer’s Collection Shown |

By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 25—Hollywood couturier Howard Greer told us - right out loud—"“It's a great year for sex.” . But his clothes speak more softly. With a long curving body une, a teasing collarbone and ankle peek-a-boo, a high-necked, long= sleeved modesty, his collection for 22 national store outlets insinuates rather than shouts, "1, It'll be a great year, we predict, for ladies—and men. Greer's collection, -shown in New York for the first time, has achieved in great measure a perfection of body line which is at once innocent and provocative His gowns are typified by a long, well-fitted torso line. Their most daring note is a profile curve mak-| jou ing a shallow 8 from oelow the bust to slightly below the natural waistline in back—and that's something.

I

A Line With Allure

Beauty of the lot, for our money, was a black marquiset evening dress with a modest square neckline, long dolman sleeves, a full gathered skirt below a snug hipline. : Its provocation was a narrow band of flesh backed net coming high to a narrow point below midneckline, curving down with the body to encircle the back. i The line has allure—and slimming and becoming to boot. It is repeated throughout the collection, with no more than a flattering seam in tidy black daytime

| coats demonstrate. mink scallops at the hemline an is a new nofe.

it's

|

Stars in Two New Fur Styles

Less-than-full-length coats are right up in the front ranks of the fur style parade, as these two It's a swagger length for the natural gray broadtail coat (left) with Kohinoor q about the wide envelope sleeves. The flanged shoulder treatment

The second style, made entirely of natural Kohinoor mink, is in 37.inch length. Fitted cuffs on the big sleeves and a softly draped Tuxedo front are fashion news, too. (Indiana Fur Co.)

THURSDAY, JULY 25, 1946 |

Is No Cause For Griping’

~ Families Must Learn } To Live in Harmony

By MRS, WALTER FERGUSON Soripps-Howard Staff Writer ‘A FRIEND who spends a lot o time at the veterans center, tell me that most of the gripes shy hears are about the housing short age, and that 40 per cent: of the gripers live with their own or the wife's family. Being’ a Sensible woman shi doesn't view the situation with alarm, but reminds them: tha they're lucky to have parents or in! laws to live with. She thinks it's up to America: families to learn to get along tof gether. .And I agree with her. So long as the housing shortagd lasts, it's common sense to doubld up. Many couples moving intq | cities have no relatives and shoulg be given priority on homes.' Ana large homes, with room enough for two families to be comfortable in, them, ought to be utilized to cas pacity these days. i ” n » ‘ CERTAINLY it is possible fol+ people to endure this doubling up if ‘they do a little planning abou’ it. Families should map out a design for living. It may not be de- # sirable for any of them but it car * be tolerable, if some intelligence were put into the efforts. ’ | How do people get along in of- I |fices? Simply, by respecting the) ‘rights of others and sticking strictly to the regulations. Thé same} | methods could be worked out in th home. A little courtesy all rounc | and some general plan which eact, member would be willing to follow; | I think a good deal of all family || {fussing is due to the way we've

| |

dresses, with simply the difference

| been conditioned. ,

|] |

between smooth fit and gathers in

Slim afternoon crepes are shown with a low-on-the-hip- double peplum which dips down both front and back for further curve accentuation. 3 The Double Drape

And Greer swings a mean double drape across the front of a couple of more blatant daytime gowns. A black crepe carries pink swatches across its bust and the front hip-| line.

way they absorb the peppy flavors

THE REASON FOR HEATING frankfurters for a .whole meal salad is to puff them up and make them porous and juicy. This

of the salad dressing.

Tomorrow there will be a recipe for frankfurter and vegetable

The pink, incidentally, is a delicate and beautiful salmon which

salad—a salad which can be made’ hastily and is a delicious vitamin]

Greer has named “potlatch pink” treat as well. for the barbecued salmon he ate at 5 8 3 a Lake Washington potlatch— MONDAY which is to salmon what a clam- | Bregkfast

bake 2 to Sama. hem-length back | Honeydew neo yt lime wedges | streamer from the high neck of a French 1oas) wit sirup black daytime dress which sports! Luncheon a conservatively modest trio of | *Frankfurter and vegetable salad | neckline slits at front. It's used to Toasted French bread | embroider names all over a sheer Chocolate peppermint brownies { black wool with a tied belt sport-| Dinner ing more “streamers. | And throughout the eollention| iad sEEatany like the gym teacher correcting your| ~ieamed peas and carrots posture—there's that line. Hold It,! Bread and butter

girls. Cantaloupe slice

Greer fashions are shown in In-| dianapolis by Wasson's, the ex-| clusive Indiana outlet for the Hollywood designer's line.

with raspberry on top | Milk to drink: Four c. for each’ child; 2 ¢. for each adult.

= n 2 | apn . TUESDAY Initiation Service Breakfast - 3 | Fresh apricots Booked Tonight Tres) api Epsilon chapter, Rho Delta soror- | Luncheon |

ity, will have formal initiation serv-|* Apple fritters with lemon sauce | ices tonight at the Riley hotel. Din- |Link sausages ner will be served at 7 p. m. with| Wheat bread and butter Miss Dorothy Thompson, pledge |Fruit cup with orange -ice topping chairman, in charge. Dinner New members are Mrs. Robert | . Hansel, Miss Evelyn Bryant and Pan fried pork steaks Miss Dorothy Mitchell. In charge | Creamed potatoes ! { Frenched green beans

of initiation will be Mrs. Robert . Bayne, president. | Beet ia onion. salad Milk to drink: Four ec. for each Bride | child; 2 c. for each adult. u n ” WEDNESDAY

Breakfast { Tomato juice Ready-to-serve cereal | and cream

with sugar

Luncheon

Asparagus and corn chowder | Rye toast | Pruit salad {| Almond cookies Dinner | *Chicken salad stuffed tomato | Potato chips Buttered peas Beet pickles Poppyseed rolls Watermelon Milk to drink: Three c child; 1 c. for each adult. | a .-8 ® | THURSDAY

Breakfast

for each

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‘Miss Mary E. Lowe To Be Honor Guest

A personal shower and buffet

P. H Ho photo Mr. and Mrs. John Popa, 5741 Central ave., announce the marriage of their daughter, Virginia, to George rin.

| Canned grapefruit juice |Coddled eggs {Apple coffee cake (bought) Luncheon *Cream of almond soup

Buttered spinach Cabbage and pineapple salad Orange’ marmalade bread pudding Milk to drink: Three c. for each child; 1 c. for each adult. ” ” »

FRIDAY Breakfast

Sliced bananas on prepared cereal.

Cinnamon toast Luncheon *Whole meal sandwich Honeydew melon with lime wedges Dinner Sirloin steak Fried onions Hashed brown potatoes

sherbet and blueberries sprinkled Lettuce and tomatoes with mayon-

naise Plum cobbler

Milk to drink: Four c. for each

child; 2 c. for each adult. : » = » SATURDAY Breakfast Blueberries with sugar and cream Doughnuts Luncheon

Shirred eggs rooms

Whipped raspberry gelatin Dinner *Lamb paprika

STRAUSS SAYS:

with "sauteed mush-

Results

Are all that count, providing health is improved as much as figure.

Approximately two courses of par-

tial treatments (so effective are these treatments that the complete freatment does not always have 40 be given) enabled a lady recently to

Take Off 153 Pounds and

14 Inches Off Waist 17 Inches Off Hips

You can see how easy it is for our average patron who only has say § or 10 pounds to lose and 3 or 4 inches through hips or waist.

® Start now and you can still have

your figure ready for bathing suits Jed summer styles We cah | reduce now with e and effort,

11 Roosevelt Building

THE TARR SYSTEM

Riley 1184

4

supper will be given for Miss Mary E. Lowe by her mother, Mrs. V. F. Lowe, 4814 College ave.’ Sunday afternoon. Miss Lowe's 21st birthday anniversary also will be cele-

Jr. The wedding was June 23 in the Romanian Orthodox church. The bridegroom's parents live at 4009 W, Washing.

| Pea and cheese salad | Toasted English muffins | cantaloupe Dinner

Creole liver

| Thomas Plerce at 9:30 a. m. Aug. {10 in the St. Joan of Arc Catholic church.

| Welfare Tea Planned

Beta Eta chapter, Beta Sigma Phi sorority, will have a “welfare tea" from 2 to 5 p. m. Sunday in the home of the sponsor, Mrs. George Schaffer, -351 N, Ritter ave. ‘The group will plan to make stuffed | dolls and animals for Christnias gifts. to hospitalized children,

Whiatmores on Trip { Dr. and "Mrs. Russell C. Whit|more, 31 8B. Denny st, have left {for an extended trip through Can-

is

S $12.50 Machine and M $15.00 Machine and M

‘Mrs. Charles Russel, 1704. Pros-

brated. Approximately 20 guests| ton st. Buttered parsley potatoes will attend. — | Miss Lowe will be married to

Manor Beauty Salon

Outstanding Hair Stylist and

MANOR BEAUTY SHOP, Inc.

proud to ‘introduce

MR. L. RAY

Coiffure Designer PECIAL |

achineless Permanent ... . $ 8.50 || achineless Permanent ;. . $10.00

|ada. - They will stay at Georgian | Bay, Canada. eee, H HIHTRIAI ° PHONE FOR 4 y All Types Beauty Club Meeting “APPOINTMENT 657 E 5th St Work, Pe Weer | The Delt-A-Dek club will meet || Lane at College Ave Guarakierd, | ‘at 7:30"p. m. today in“the home of : : —_—1 DY on \.1 home Managed by VIRGINIA STELLA | : | : 2

pect sb.

et's Baty

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f [Sliced orange and bing cherry salad [a sheer net fabric woven of sll

#® » ” . “NO HOUSE is large enough foi two women,” has been a popula propaganda line - for years. Ana | what nonsense it is. I also recal( | that it was used widely by thosel | who opposed women moving inte}

Given | the business world. “They'll teaxh : |out each other's hair,” it was said]

| And look at the business worlc Ji | now, if you please. ; Two families in one. house mighr not be a good permanent arranges ment. Certainly we hope that som: i day soon we shall have enoug! | homes so that each couple can have | one. But until then, an effort td} live agreeably with one's relative is more sensible than griping.

‘Dance Will Honor

‘Syrians Who Served A dinner dance at Southern Man sion at 7:30 p. m. Monday wil honor Syrian men who were ir service during the war. Sponsoring {the dance are three Syrian :lubs Binette L'Yome, St. George Pro} | gressives and Syrian So-Fra. H Fresh peach sundae Miss Evelyn Hider is chairman c¢ : Supper the event and Frank Edwards wil | Toasted lettuce, bacon and tomato be the toastmaster. Guest speaker sandwiches {will include Mayor Tyndall, Adj Raspberry Bavarian {Gen. Ben Watt, Elmer Sher Milk to drink: Three ¢. for each |wood of the American Legion, Dr child; 1 ¢. for each aduit. {John J. Haramy, the Rev. Basilou,

| tes | Saidawy of the Syrian Orthodo: ” ) pe Yoes oe Wishes Hatked with | church, and the Rt. Rev. Msgr. Ray, through ~~ in peas | mnod R. Noll of SS. Peter and Pau,

oo cathedral. New Fabric Used Miss Craig Hostess The season's loveliest evening!

The monthly social meeting o gowns are being made of nylonétte,| Phi chapter, Delta Chi Sigma soror* ity, will be held at 8 p. m. today nylon thread. Used over taffeta or.in the home of Miss Marjorie Craig moire, its sturdy wearing qualities|3821 E. Washington st. Mrs. Georg: | belie its gossamer appearance. |Hargitt will assist the hostess. °

Buttered boiled noodles Buttered cauliflower with its green | leaves : Molded vegetable gelatin salad Red cherry cobbler Milk to drink: Four c. for each child; 2 c¢. for each adult. . = » = SUNDAY Breakfast Honeydew melon with lime wedges *Blueberry buckle Scrambled eggs

Dinner Roast loin of pork Browned potatoes Asparagus with cheese sauce Applesauce Watercress, radish, green pepper salad

lettuce and

J

|

WARNER'S ‘ LE GANT SPORT SHORT PANTIE-GIRDLE—with Sta-Up-Top— comfortable’ and tummy restraining. Warner's have given them particular attention to keep them from riding up, binding the legs, or rolling over. Small, medium and large. } Nude only. Splendid garments dor 3 10.98 ]

~Niso Warners ABC Aphabet™ BRAS with careful cup-size 1 proportioning to assure comfortable and perfect fit. A, B and.C eupsizes in sizes 32 to 38. :

2.50 P.S. We have Warner's "Chafeze''—soft rayon

and. cotton shields for hot weather, 1.25.

*Reg. U. 8, Pat.

A

THE WOMEN'S SHOP, THIRD FLOOR

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‘Doubling Up | THURS

Christ Is Sce Of Ce

Miss Phyllis bride of Lafs

dress of pale style. Her ks ing starched tulle and sh

bride’s niece, ant. She wor and a matcl lace. The best Jackson Jr. A dinner Quaint Inn reception will hotel tonight. After a trip will be at h

Wagl Wedg

A wedding today will Lentz and Je will be read i D. J. Dunk pastor of t ¢hurch. The bride and Mrs, W Morris st., a J. Wagley, 4 parents of { Attending and Mrs. Lo After a we

will be at ho a ————