Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 August 1946 — Page 16

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Reservations Made for Buffet Dinner At Hillcrest Country Club Tonight

| A NUMBER OF RESERVATIONS have been made for the buffet dinner tonight at Hillcrest Country club, . The dinner will follow the 4 o'clock tournament marking

Ladies’ Guest day at the club. Mr. and Mrs. David Fitzgerald will have Mr. and Mrs. John Nelson as guests. Other reservations have been made by Messrs. and Mesdames Ralph Betz, Owen Mogg, H. A. Thompson, Robert O'Neel, Russ Duke, Kenneth Poster, Sears MacNeill, Bernard Lantz and Tom O'Hara. Also on the reservation list are Messrs, and Mesdames Vergil Campbell, Robert 8. McKee, J. Fletcher Brown, Kenneth Price, H. C. Grable, Chuck Grossman, Art Godbout, Herman Sands, Alex Clark, Jack Kirby and Mr, a Mrs. H. H. Tudor and ely daugier, Sally. . » u Miss Joean Harvngton will be feted at a bridal pT to be’ by Mrs. Robert L. Hunter on Friday night. The honor guest, cs omhter of Mrs, Margaret Harrington, will be married to Bugene F, Male» on Aug. 24 He is the son of Mrs. Amelia Maloy Butler. Guests will include mothers of the couple, Mesdames Raymond Oyler, william R. Rischer, Phillip Hunter, Kenneth Alexander, John Waters, Gordon Smith, Roger Bacon, William Gean, Winifred Zurchur, Lavaughn Rairdon Schwies, Thomas Schaedel, Willard Landefer, Charles Jessup, George Marsh, Courtland Beck, James Pringle, Burpett Algier and Henry Fox, Misses Katherine and Betty Maloy, Flossie Smith, Mildred Drees, Ginny Burnett, Dotty Saxton, Wilma , weg, Beulah Hunter and Virginia Aikman,

suower to Fete Miss Curtis A KITCHEN SHOWER will be given tomorrow aight by Mrs. Joseph | Espin and Miss Florence Wakeland in the latter's home for ne Curtis. Miss Curtis, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Curpho be married to Radcliffe Allen of Philadelphia on Saturday in the a Place Baptist church. . Guests will include Mesdames Curtis, Kermit Putman, Thomas awks, Lelia Buchanan. Arthur Kastin, Hartsel Wilhilte, William fowell, Pauline Wells, Russell Whann, Frank Hopper, Robert Bishop, Charles Wakeland and L. C. Trent, Misses Edna Curtis, Peggy and Alice O'Bryan, Peggy Norris, Mary Westal, Ruth Bubeck, Wilma Porter, Veva Suhre, Shirley Hacker, Jean Cook and Helen Rosenbaum. ‘ » » - o » ” « Miss Rosemary Cruzan, art teacher at the Calvin Fletcher junior Righ school, will arrive home this week after spending a vacation in Canada. Miss Esther McAllister of South Bend, who accompanied Miss Cruzan, will return with her for a visit,

May Wright Sewall Council To Hear Paul V. Brown

Speak on Public Parks Paul V. Brown, director of the the council, will preside, and department of parks and recrea-| Mrs. Lowell 8. Fisher, program

tion, will be guest speaker at the all-day meeting of the May Wright Sewall Council of Women in the Hotel Lincoln on Thursday. He will discuss “The Future of Public Parks.” - Miss Sally Butler, president of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women, will be a special guest. ‘Mrs. Laura E. Ray, president of

chairman, will present Mr. Brown. Reports will be made by the chairmen, and Mrs. Ray will report on her recent attendance at the International and ‘National Council of Women in New York. Miss Ruth Duckwall will present selections from “Bitter Sweet.” She will be accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Paul Duckwall.

.. Babes Alumnae Club Visit Parents Mrs. Russell M. Whitmore is the Miss Emily Smith and Thomas| newly elected president of the 8. Smith will arrive this week|Babes Alumnae club. Other new from Phoenix, Aris, and north-|officers are Mrs. Joseph B. Snoy, eastern Minnesota, respectively, for|secretary, and Mrs. Jon A. Glenn, a visit with their parents, Mr. and|treasurer. Mrs. Paul A. Brown was Mrs. Fred 8S. Smith, 5640 Guilford appointed chairman of the scrap ave. book committee.

School |

a

TRAVEL CLOCK |

The sure thing to add that finishing touch to your room, Eight-day, jeweled Swiss movement with:

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Mail Orders Carefully Filled!

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{drapes in the stores, and a fair { number of calf-length and uneven | hemlined dance frocks—but like as|

| line { madonna or cameo, but generally + believed to have originated well be- | fore the turn of the last five cen- | turies.

A teen-ager's dream wardrobe, designed by Emily Wilkens for wear next winter, includes this date dress (left). In emerald green faille, its tight basque jacket is double-breasted with small antique gold flower buttons, a bustle back ‘and lace jabot and cuffs. By LOUISE FLETCHER HER ONE departure from the Times Woman's Editer waistline comes with a petal EMILY WILKENS starts her skirted frock, the skirt folded into a low waistband. Another treatfall and winter fashion story iP ent for this skirt involves cuithe middle. Her new collection. {ino actual giant petal panels— shown last week in New York, a dirndl effect suggesting the plays up midriff interest by way four petals of a tulip. This is of high, built-up, concave and shown for both daytime and ever wrappy-looking waistlines. Ring, "8 & Some of them are further ac-

USED for suits, it is teamed cented by the use of contrasting With little basque jackets fastenfabric—velvet waistbands - with

ing right up to the throat with wool or taffeta, for instance.

gold buttons, and usually with fullish sleeves, Others are elasticized to look tight and wrapped.

hipline of +

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES F ashion Interest Centers on Waistlines i in T een-Age Designs

The 1946 edition of Emily Wilkens" bovine crepe dress in gay red (center) has a high neck tying in a bow at the back—and there are small bows on the full sleeves. Side gathers in the skirt pravide the rounded

his season.

An antique basque corset from the Metroplitan Museum collection inspired one Wilkens’ evening dress of shell pink and black striped taffeta. The corselet top is boned to fit a tiny waist and has a curved top filled in with black chiffon shirred over pale pink. A “snowflake” dress of white net flickering with sequins has a cameo neckline edged with net ruffies, and a wide, wide skirt.

» = » WIDE TUCKED bands edged with narrow black velvet ribbon stiffen the billowing skirt of a

cameo necklines or strapless tops. Ang always it rounds outward below a tiny waist to make a welldefined hipline, . » »” » NECKLINES, too, play starring roles in the Wilkens' collection. One is a high double turtle-neck

cut, fastened with a pair of gold buttons on a double-breasted coat, or a two-piece suit, or a coatdress. The cameo neckline hugs the bosom in shirred or moulded outline, sometimes shaped with bands of narrow velvet ribbon or edged with a drawstring.

The Wilkens' high-collared twoillustrates the new page boy tren shoulder line and two chunk collar and the other on the 1s i the back and the skirt is flared.

TUESDAY, AUG. 18,1048 | = McCarty, Mr. Fortner {Engaged

Parties Fete Three Brides-to-Be

Wedding and engagement ans nouncements share today's bridal news with announcements of parties

for brides-to-be. A “personal shower. tonight wil honor Miss Barbara Schaeffer, who will be married to Donald Broeking on Aug. 31, ‘The party will be given by Mrs. Eugene C. Edwards and Miss Phyllis Wilcox im the latter's home at 36 N. Webster ave, Guests will include Mesdames Paul T. Schaeffer, C. W. Broeking, william T. Macdonald, Donald W, Baumgardt, Ethel Burden, Robert Hocker, Lou Kinworthy, Richard Vollrath, Bernard Korbly, A. N, Cheney, Robert Shepard, Harold Wilcox and Herbert. Baumeister, Misses Delores Burden, Virginia Childers, Jane Thompson, Jane ». |8chutt, Jean Tabbert, Katherine (4 |Hopkins, J. Lou Small, Elizabetis Ott, Mary Ja Beazell, Mary Eliza« beth Bradway, Patricia Gabe and Betty Graves. » y »

Mr. and Mrs. Howard T. McCarty,

gagement of their daughter, Clars LaVerne, to Clarence Harvey Forte ner, son of Mrs. Violet Fortner, 180% Wade st. The wedding will be Aug, 18 in the Olive Branch Christian church. Attendants will be Miss Dorothy Mae Wells and Harry Lee Lowden. : “The prospective bride's aunt, Mrs, Clyde Warrenburg, will entertain with a miscellaneous shower tonight in her home at 2747 Shelby st. As« sistant hostesses will be two othes aunts, Mrs. Harry Glass and Mrs, Jacob Leffler.

" ® » Mr. and Mrs. Nathan R. Garland, 1220 N. Illinois st., announce the marriage. of their daughter, Jane True, to Capt. Benjamin J. Pulley of Coral Gables, Fla. The wedding was July 18 in the Ellinwoods Malate church in Manila, P, I. 5 # » The engagement of Miss Betty Jane Gardner and Robert C. Meise ter is announced by her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Willlam Gardner, 1826 Barth ave. He is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Clarence J. Meister, 1836 New st. The wedding will be Sate urday in the Garfield Park Evane gelical and Reformed church. A miscellaneous shower for 3§ guests was given last night for Miss Gardner by Mrs. Carl E. Baas and Mrs. W. T. Schuller in the latter's home at 1537 Leonard st.

opiee suit (right) with its flange old buttons, one on the The jacket fastens at

china blue chiffon party dress over a darker blue taffeta slip. Narrower bands of tiny French lingerie tucking decorate the bod~ ice and hemline of a pale gray chiffon with cameo neckline little puff sleeves and pale pink taffeta underslip. Black velvet reappears this season in the Wilkens’ collection, too. In the Elizabethan trend is a two-piece black velvet with a wide square neckline, a narrow gored bodice edged with a row of jet buttons, and. tiny puffed

sleeves. . ‘« 3 Wilkens’ designs are sold here Solving Junior 8 5 Bleek: Housing Problem

For evening it's used in stiff failles and taffetas. balanced by Middle Ages Win Fashion

Sweepstakes

“By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—The much-touted revival of 1920's fashions seems to have lost out in the dress manufacturers’ fall sweep-

NEW YORK, Aug. 13 (U. P)—I there's hardly a milliner in town who

of Coq DOF,

| “There's Gold in Them There’ Hats Which the Milliners Present ‘For Fall and Winter Wear

winter bonnet to carry you along with the be-jewelled crowd. From a scrap of Metropolitan Opera curtain to a feather worth “there's gold on them there” hats vying with the ruby velvets and emerald velours which have already put the season's hat

Use Cosmetics To ‘Reduce’ Size of Face

Just as an oversized room seems to dwindle when you fill it with more massive pieces of furniture, so does a large face appear smaller when you “fill” it with larger

t's an elegant season for hats, and won't put a touch of Midas on your

makers in the jewelers’ class. It isn’t just a dressy trend either —the gold will sparkle in winter sunshine as often as under party lights. It's part of the lustrous striving for luxury that marks the

stakes today to the romantic pregin (and pre-bathtub) Middle Ages. There are a few Irene Castle

season for the entire fashion world. A wonderful sailor of golden mesh braid is shown by Braagaard to top a winter suit with more than elegance. Sally Victor uses gold embroidery : studded with pearls under the brim Sieeves and Neocklines of a back-on-the-head black sailor. Sleeves are large and varied, a|And it's she who gilds an apricot | far cry from the favored slim or| wing spread across the front of a | none of the 20's, and such neck-| large sculptured felt in New York | lines as aren't boat-shaped-—or al-| (dirty) white. {most all the daytime ones—are | hugging the throat with a maiden- Gold With Fur {ly modesty the roaring decade| Florence Reichmap uses gold {threw out with its corsets. | with fur on a nutria beret banded | Even the helmet hat, which ap-|with gold and set with three jew- | peared as leader in the 20's revival | {eled medallions in coral, white and { last spring, has sprouted the ridge | gold. {and flange of the king's henchmen| Laddie Northridge goes in for 14- | to remove the connotation of pre-| carat embroidery, draping a black { bust America, velour beret with gold cord and Historical Hats big gold buttons.

There are other jeweled notes in Dozens of other hats have donned | 1,o fa) and winter millinery colChaucerian wimples in an escape- ||. tions. | the ccd or hear-no-evil mood. Pear] lacquer gives iridescence to Ba 38 Shak(spgteat beret, the line wings of the white birds Anita | Elizabethan luxury of fine fabric,| andre perches on a conical evening | the Victorian capelet, the Roman hat, toga scarf, are among the historical ’ influences in 1946 fashions which

not they're sewed on under a neckvariously named medieval,

Silver and Sparkle

"ALL TOGETHER NOW . .

Most women now. agree that ICE REFRIGERATION is really BEST! Their decision is backed by

Jaboratory tests which prove that ICE-kept foods

more appetizing in appearance but

RETAIN en VITAMIN CONTENT MUCH LONGER! All the gadgets in the world can't the results which ICE does naturally.

AR ICE AND

gd FUEL CO. — AVENUE SRN

1902 S. East St.

Zo Za ee,

¥ | Friday,

Great hunks of paste—cheaper

| missed the Middle Ages. But they're than diamonds, but you can use

| far from the splurging madness of | | the last post-war era, too. i Nobody, it looks like, ‘wants to | Sally Victor's most tailored street

| commemorate that this winter, creations.

| them—set in gold adorn many of |

features. You ean make features larger, of course, with make-up. Lipstick will enlarge the boundaries of yowr

Potholders

By MRS.

ANNE CABOT

! ———————————— John Frederics sprinkles rhineI stones over everything for a sparkly Cross Town Club nn | Mrs. Gus Bisesi, 55 Jenny lane,| Silver 1s beautifully combined will be hostess for the Friday Eve-|With beaver by Mme. Reine, who | ning Cross Town club at 8 p. m. | puts a silver iris on the fur to pick up its shimmering light streaks. Peg Fischer snipped the Met's curtain into leaf-like cut-outs, applied them to a net crown for a glamorous evening head-do.

PEAS

with "FRESH from the POD” FLAVOR

for this winter of 1946.

%% Phi Delta Pv B| Theta chapter, Phi Delta Pil § sorority, will have a formal initia-| dition dinner at T p. m. tomorrow) in Helen's dining room. Mrs. Robert Moore apd Mrs, Leon Sackett are in charge,

It's hard to be too extravagant |

The big five-petalled pansy meas-

"i

{ures 17 inches and is crocheted of odds and ends of violet, lavender or purple wool, The butterfly pot- | holder is made of a small amount of white wool and edged in any (sort of brightly colored wool you wild have in your work basket. Both neers are easily crocheted and make rather decorative and unusual gifts. To | instructions for the pansy and but- | terfly potholders™ (pattern 5256) send 16 cents in coin, your name, | address and the pattern number to

| Anne * Cabot, The Indianapolis Times, 530 S. Wells st, Chicago 1.

2

Dainty for

obtain complete crocheting

Just in time

AY YOUR DEALER'S

Card Party The Three Way Benefit club will sponsor a card party at 1:45 p. m. Friday in the auditorium of . the

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If a housing problem faces Junior when he arrives—no nursery —it can be solved by sectioning off a corner of his mom’s room and decorating it to identify it as baby's own. A screen used as a partition

mouth, and today nobody seems to notice the subterfuge.

Lashes coated with mascara, especially if you bear down more heavily at the corners, will make eyes look larger and more provocative. In filling the face with more “furnishings,” don’t overlook your eyebrows. Accented by crayon or a brushful of mascara, you can make brows look heavier and more suavely arched. But in extending length, mark from the outside. While we're talking about ways to dwarf the size of a face, remember that hats play a part. Have hats sizable, if not large. Nothing makes a face look its size as does a

turn the trick. To spruce up the corner, nurserye style, ready-pasted borders feature ing the antics of Donald Duck and other juvenile favorites can be used

coat Junior's walls, Playful decals, pasted on the foots board of erib, other pieces of furnis ture and lamp base, will holp to

hat that is too small for its wearer.' unify the nursery scheme.

07/74 da

»

Repeat Selling in Wasson’s Fabrie Department, Fourth Floor

1.550 Yards White

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Summer! Delightful for Fall

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to refresh your wardrobe for summer 4 4

to make adorable dresses for the children,

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Extra! 1,250 Yards Bellmanized PERMANENT FINISH ORGANDY eo oo oo 69° Yard

Wasson’s Fabrics, Fourh Floor

2314 Finley ave. announce the ene’

hind which erib and other pieces of § baby furniture can be grouped will 3

to decorate the screen and wainse :

| TUESDA Finding Of All

WHETHER i whether to be | At least sir freshmen and

C le | Meta ——— MUSHRO( (For Thur % o. butter 1% c. sliced fre % 1b) % c. finely dic ¥% c. flour ! 1c. milk 2 chicken flav

| 4 eggs, separa

i Melt butter in | rooms and cele { minutes. Push Side and blend Add the milk the bouillon cul over low heat until smooth ai Beat egg yolk: » ually add the c Cool slightly ar beaten egg wh greased six-cup rectly on rack (moderately slo Berve immedia chicken, cream Serves five,

MELON (For Fri Be sure to } and=1 cup gin melon balls fror 3% honey. dew sherbet glasses. paper, fasten wi refrigerate unt Pour the ice co balls in the s serving. Garni of mint, Serve

Are you one ¢ women who’ in used fats? and don’t g habit of sav

fats to help other peacet ing this terr fats all ove America’s ki import what we must de; what we sa

DONT L SHORTAGES ASK YOUR ASK YOURS SAVING | OF. USED F4 POSSIBLE

TURN |

GET 4% FOR lee———