Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1946 — Page 16
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"Of Ceremony
Miss Helen Louise Shumaker will become the bride of George T. Tindall Jr, in an 8:30 o'clock ceremony |
will officiate.
bride, will be bridesmaids. Robert will be his brother's best man and the usher will be Roland
gown of pearl white | is in medieval period with an off-shoulder neckline and a train. Her four-tiered finger-tip-length veil of imported maline will be attached to a small medieval seed-pearl trimmed
\ bridegroom is attending the university School of Medi‘cine where he is a member of Nu sigma Nu medical fraternity.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs, T. R. Ratcliff, 6171 Carrollton ave, will be hosts at an informal reception from 7 to 10
at home in West Lafayette where Ratcliff will be an assistant inat Purdue university,
oa - » nu Mr. and Mrs, George J. Smith, New Orleans, and their daughter, Candace, are spending the holidays with their parents, Mr. and Mrs, Walter G. Stayton and Mr, and Mrs, William P. Hiner. After New Year's day, they will go to New York for two weeks before returning to New Orleans,
» ” o Mr. and Mrs, Leo P. Welch, 4310 Broadway, will entertain with an open house from 2 to 5 p. m. Sunday for their children, Kathyleen, Thomas, John, Robert and James Welch and Mrs, Leo F, Welch Jr, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph T. Clifford and Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Chrapla. There are no invitations,
s » - Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Wayne Murphy, 31156 Guilford ave, are in New York attending the American Historical association meeting at the Pennsylvania hotel. They will ait in Wa before return-
. Rage M¥s. Chris J. Karle, 3115
alt 1;
when Mama, in need of some new duds, will pick up Junior's chemistry set and go to work instead of going shopping. Whether a 5» or not it does, the fact remains that more and more fabrics are coming out of test tubes.
the du Pont Co. gave a growing list of fabric wonders that are on their way. One is a woven nylon for shoes—faille and gab-
‘ave. are spending several
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ih sy 5 Sal a. ¢ 3 ; * \ WM * INR A LOOK INTO THE FUTURE—Among things slated to come out of the chemists’ test tubes is all-nylon lace. With that in prospect for negligees, the woman who seeks a luxufious robe may have daintiness combined with serviceability." In this advance model, made of a du Pont development fabric in delicate pink, the nylon lace is fragile-appearing yet remarkably strong. It holds its shape and resists tearing and soiling. The fabric can be washed repeatedly and dries quickly.
By LOUISE FLETCHER ardine for daytime wear and satin | ment. (The velvet already has Times Woman's Editor ~ for evening. been used experimentally. in a MAYBE THE DAY will come Playshoes will be made of wool- | lastex bathing suit.) Nylon lace is like spun nylon which was used | another promise for the future. for the jungle boots of American And fhere’s a nylon staple yarn soldiers during the war. coming up to lend its strength and stability in combination with fibers. With wool it is expected to be used in washable sweaters which won't have tq be blocked when they're laundered. With cotton, it will make cool, lighter sheets. And in rugs, it is expected to provide greater wear resistance.
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LITERALLY on hand some of these days will be knitted nylon fabric gloves—long wearing and quick-drying. Nylon velvet will be used for lingerie—padding on girdle and brah closings which will dry as quickly as the rest of the gar-
A recent report by chemists of
‘Daring Names On Perfume Attract Men’
NEW YORK, Dec. 26 (U, P.)— The passionate perfume titles are said to be on their way out, but gentlemen still like them. The name is the thing for most male perfume purchasers, according to the ladies who sell it to them. And even the solidest citizens appear to prefer the ones with labels suggesting unbridled
Society—
Bridal Dinner Tomorrow Will Honor Isabel Remy and William A. Norfon
MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM HENDERSON REMY will entertain tomorrow with a 6:30 p. m. dinner in the Columbia club honoring their daughter, Isabel Ellen, and her fiance, William Arthur Norton. Mr. Norton, son of Mrs. Caroline B. Norton and Ray-
mond C. Norton, and Miss Remy will exchange marriage |amour. vows at 3:30 p. m. Saturday in the Central Avenue Tore Suites’ to Degin Methodist church. The bride-to-be’s grandfather, Bishop ih a Be ous
Edwin Holt Hughes, Washington, will officiate, assisted by Dr. F. Marion Smith, pastor of the ¢hurch. Guests at the bridal dinner with the couple and the prospective bridegroom's parents will be Judge Charles F. Remy and Bishop Hughes, grandparents of the bride-to-be; Mrs, Walter 8. Harban, Chevy Chase, Md., Miss Remy’s aunt; Dr. and Mrs. Smith; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Purviance, Huntington; Mr. and Mrs. John David Welch, Mr. and Mrs. William C. Bayles; Misses Jean Swalim, Marjery Hall and Marguerite Sipes; Joseph Ward Dorrell Jr, George Browne, Robert Marschke and Leroy Compton of Acton and Jenny Browne, Marfon, and David Hughes.
and—of course—“Scandal.” Throw in a dash of “Intoxication” and a soupcon of “Witchery” and you have a full selling circle. It may embarrass the suburban matron, but her husband seems to like her to smell of “Menace.” If he’s proud of his wealth and has nothing to lose, he may pick the one billed as recreating “its wearer into the one woman he has | wanted for his very own, and for all his life” It's called “20 Carats.” For "the literal minded, to be {sure, there are fragrances plainly {labeled “Rose,” “Lilac,” or “Gar|denia.” Most of them smell as [the labels would indicate—which is more than can be said for some of {those more whimsically named. | For example, there's “Macabre” |—bottled in a jeweled dagger, too |—but it smells all right, just the | same, The fashion for frantic perfume {names seems to have started some years back with “My Sin,” “Shocking,” and a little French odor 'called “Virgin,” which is no longer |selling in this country, partly, it is Suggested, because most male buyers hesitated to ask for it. More recent perfumes are going |in for old-fashioned romance with a touch of music in their names. {There are “Muse” and “Song” | “Stradivari” and “Tzigane,” both the latter packaged in fiddle cases,
Shower Tomorrow
MR. AND MRS, Willlam K. Rowland of Hagerstown and their son, Larry, are spending the holidays with Mrs. Rowland’s parents, Dr. and Mrs. William R, Bolen. Mrs” Bolen and Mrs. Rowland will entertain tomorrow afternoon with a bridal shower for Miss Betty Lou Nolen. Miss Nolen, home for Christmas vacation from Tuscaloosa, Ala. will be married in April to Thomas E. Holloway Jr., Collinsville, Ill. Guests tomorrow will include Mrs. Harry F. Nolen, mother of the bride-to-be;. Mesdames Bert Servaas, A. W. Lockhart, Joseph Swango, Marshall Raber, Bruce T. Childs, A. E. Murphy, Robert
ANAPOLIS TIMES _ My Day— =
* would be late.
Grandchildren On Visit at Hyde Park
Guests Find House ‘Like Holland’
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE PARK, Dec. 26—On a recent morning, bright and early, I started calling the railroad about the train coming in from St. Louis only to learn that it On ‘subsequent calls I was told it would be later than originally expected. At any rate, I went up to Grand Central station and, gazing up at the board with the listings of the incoming trains, I bumped into another woman, When I looked at her to apologize, I found she was an acquaintance waiting for her mother to arrive on the same train on which my grandchildren were expected. Finally, the train came in, and there they were, all of them looking well and happy. Of course, I was happy to see them, We went home and then with my niece, Miss Amy Roosevelt, who happened to be spending a night or two at my apartment, the older children went off for a look-see at the shops, and some last-minute Christmas shopping. As soon as the little New York boy got home from school, the younger children started off for Hyde Park by car. It had already begun to snow and as the rest of us went up on the train, the children kept looking out of the window hoping that there would be deep snow before they reached the country. I was silently hoping just the opposite, thinking of the children driving up and what hour they would arrive. We reached home from the train and had supper before the car with the younger children arrived! They changed into a car with chains on it before they started to climb to the hilltop cottage which is their home.
” ” - THE NEXT DAY it rained, but the snow was deep enough so that the children could use their sleds and play in the snow. I took a long walk in the woods and watched my Scottie, who resents very much being a city dog, smell the rabbit trails and run off as far as he could. He couldn't go too far off the beaten track, however, because his short legs bogged down in the deep snow! Four gentlemen came up to spend part of a day with us. Two of them are young Hollanders who are now studying at Fordham university and who both were with the resistance . movement throughout the war. The third, an Australian flier whom I last saw in Cairns in 1943, is in
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uA H. Ho photo, BRIDE-TO-BE — The engagement of Miss ‘Faye Shapiro to Henry Salzman is announced b her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Shapiro, 1328 Union st. The prospective, bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Sarah Salzman, 3111 Broadway. The wedding date is Jan. 12,
he ro
: = Hola oto, JANUARY RITE—Jan, 10 is the date set for the marriage of Mrs. Norma Williamson Sumwalt to William E. Shaw Jr. She is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Horace Williamson, 1133 E. 35th st, and Mr. Shaw's parents are of 817 N, Oxford st. :
Teen Talk—
For 75 Clubs in
Leader club. ,
county will continue their monthly meetings after the whirl of vacation fun is over. About 30 boys 4nd the same number of girls meet once a month at the Purdue-Marott center and talk over plans for the 4-H clubs all over Marion county. A This group is made up of representatives from all the township groups and the junior leaders assist the adult leaders of their individual clubs. They have their own officers and activities. Howard Mills of Decatur Central high school is president; Ruth Gardner, Lawrence Central high school, vice president; Mary Margaret Rodebaugh, Pike Township school, secretary, and Nelson Jay, Decatur Central, treasurer, ” ” n BESIDES A demonstration and usually a speaker, there is a business meeting and recreation at the group gatherings. Movies, dancing and quizzes are part of their recreational activities and each month their newspaper, The Clover Clarion, comes out. Most of the
4-H Junior Leaders Set Activities
‘Clover Clarion’ Tells the News
By BOBBIE SCHAEFFFR BASKETBALL GAMES in the county schools, vacation from classes and sundry other activities in which teen-agers become involved, cancelled out plans for a holiday party for the Marion County 4-H Junior
But the representatives from approximately 75 4-H clubs in the
Marion County;
junior leaders went to the 4-H Round-Up at Turkey Run state park last summer and there is an annual spring picnic on the club's agenda.
” ANN GOOLD is editor-in-chief of The Clover Clarion. A senior at Warren Central high school, Ann is second-page editor of The Warren Owl. She has been editor of the
April. Working on the Clarion with Ann are Ginny Nimen, Pike township; Jackie Hanneman, Perry; Ruth Gardner, Lawrence Central; Mildred Pressley, Lawrence Central, and Dorothy Murphy, Decatur Central. They have special assistants and write features for the monthly publication which is mimeographed at the Purdue-Marott center. Despite Ann's active journalistic life, she hopes to be a dietitian
Nekoi ebm RR tot Rig AA
4-H paper since its beginning last art
THURSDAY, DEC. %, 1046 :
‘Best-Dressed’ Title Goes . To Hollywood
Wife of Producer Heads List of Ten
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Dec, 26.—Mrs. How~ ard Hawks, wife of the Hollywood producer, topped the New York Dress institute's list of best-dressed women today, one step ahead of the Duchess of Windsor. bi Reaching the top from runner-up status last year, Mrs. Hawks ranked well ahead of five New York social registerites, a millionairess, a fellow Californian and an ex-congress-'woman, The Duchess lost her jewelry but it didn’t stop her rise from fifth place last year to second in this year's poll of fashion editors, stylists and socialites, Mrs. Luce 10th Mrs. Cushing Mortimer, one of Boston's three famous Cushing sis ters and a socialite fashion editor, dropped to third place after head= ing the list last year. § Former Connecticut representa tive Clare Boothe Luce held her last year’s number 10 position, Listed last year but dropped im this year’s tabulation “were Mrs, Lawrence Tibbett, Mrs. Geol Schlee (Valentina), Mrs. Harry Hope kins, Rosalind Russell and Mrs. The Others . Fourth to ninth places on the 10woman list went to the following? Mrs. Byron Foy, the former THel-
Mrs, Millicent Rogers, thrice-di= vorced daughter of oil multi-million aire Henry Huddleson Rogers, third last year. . Mrs. Harrison Williams, a peren= nial who missed last year. . Mrs, William Rhinelander Stew
Mrs. William Paley, wife of Col« umbia Broadcasting system's presi dent, formerly of Santa Barbara, Cal. Listed as runners-up were Valen« tina, Mrs, Gilbert Adrian (Janet Gaynor) and British actress Leo jr Corbett.
‘Mrs. Beem Hostess
The Ladies auxiliary, Order of Railway Conductors of America 103,
and wants to study at Purdue. She has charge of the page make-up on the Clarion and has some plans to jake it “bigger and better” this | year.
will hold its annual Christmas party ' tomorrow at the home of Mrs. Anna | Beem, Rockville rd. A covered dish | luncheon and a gift’ exchange are | planned.
America on business, and the
the displaced persons camps.
took the others over to the big house and the library. At last one can go through on bad days at least with a certain amount, of quiet, and, while I regretted the gray and rainy day, I realized that my guests would see far more than if they came in beautiful weather. The Dutch boys kept saying it reminded them of Holland, and I think they enjoyed being out in the country even though none of them was dressed for rugged, country weather and could not enjoy a walk in the rain!
{and a quiet scent called “Sleeping.” For the lover who wants her to smell out his proposal, there's a {happy sequence: ‘‘Requete,’’
Anderson, Frank IL. Cooper, C. L. Foerst and Dan Babcock. Others will be Mesdames Carl Shafer, Irwin B. McComb, LeRoy Ford, Willlam T. Butler, Merrill Pyle, Lewis Vogler, Marfon Bundy, Robert Beachman, R. D. McDaniel and T. O. Tucker, Misses Pamela Nolen, Joanne Childs, Lela Jo Servaas and Jane Foerst also will be at the party. The out-of-town guests will” be Mrs. Verhon R. Boman, Chicago, and Mrs. Randell Pack, Crawfordsville.
St. Roch’s C. Y. O. To Sponsor Ball ‘
The St. Roch's senior Catholic Youth organization will sponsor a
swer, “Mais Oui.” | The perfumes mentioned sell for {An average of about $18 an ounce; {smaller quantities of some are available.
er ————
How to Anchor Sliding: Garter
By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer
NEAT FROCK—Carla Jean Stout would feel well-groomed wherever she might wear her two-piece striped dress with
button front. Carla is a senior at Shortridge high school and a member of the "21," Shorty, A. R. R. O. and Skid-ette clubs. (Ayres'.)
pulls out of the back of a girl's stocking and cancels her girdle’s support just where she needs it most is a familiar problem,
| RSVP,” and, hopefully, her an-,
THE SLIPPING garter which
| |
| |
|
reston Sweet photo.
P BRIDE-TO-BE — Miss Bernina Lou Rish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.- LaMoine Rish of Detroit, is the bride-to-be of G. Lawrence Schaefer Jr., son of Mr,
and Mrs, Schaefer, 717 N. Grant ave. The wedding date has not been set.
other, Mr, Weir, has been with | both the Red Cross and UNRRA | in Europe and came to talk to me | about what work might be done | by the churches for those now in |
The children joined us at lunch and after lunch: went on with | their snow enterprises while I |
OLD-FASHIONED RYE DESIGN
$8.00 DOZEN
Christmas Party Booked by Poets
The Indiana Poetry society willl hold its Christmas party at 1:30 p. m. Saturday in the home of the!
formal holiday ball tomorrow night. | Dancing will begin at 9 o'clock in the Lake Shore Co , untry club Mrs, Estrid Dane has Miss Frances Denk, vice president £ in England b Ch bab of the organization, is serving as| aifie nga y Surfug Wy
If there are any garter-knobs made that will hold their grip when gained (a woman bends or heaves herself out of a low-slung sofa, I haven't yet met one.
Cures Deformities
Fort Lauderdale, Fla,
chairman for the dance. {deformities through a series of ex- But there's a way to make the
NT ercises in which the child's own slippery buttons stay put, even un-
SAVE ON BEAUTY SERVICE © PERMANENTS ® SHAMPOOS
Personal Supervision and Modern Equipment
International Beauty School **
muscle pull is the principal factor.) der the strain of jack-knife bends. |With the cure of her own child | Here's the trick, passed on by an inventive reader who thought it up for herself.
® FACIALS eMANICURES {by Neumann-Neurode, pre-war Ger- © FINGER WAVES | man specialist, she became his | student and began welfare work in ner own country,
” » » HER METHOD is to glue a tiny strip of adhesive tape across the back and over the sides of thé
E. Wash, MA-7181
Ships to Fashions
Mazie Krebs, Chicago, is the only girl in the world who designs ships, and the two largest'steamers sailing the Mississippi the finished results of her designing tendencies.|
garter's knob. The adhesive strip adds enough
ap ok word se inade- its grip on the wayward knob,
express your sentiments.
| cializing in fashion stration, . | from a low-slung sofa.
2439 Park ave.
reinforcement and rough surface trymen the pouring of coffee sym~ under the garter's hook to tighten| bolizes haspitality,
That grip, doctored up this way, She also drafts \deas for toys, tex- says our helpful reader, will hold o Asn, | tiles and museums. In addition she no matter how much.bendig you is head of her own company, spe- do or how many ascents you make Paris, is the youngest orator on the French political ‘
society president, Carl Leon Eddy, Mrs. Betty Madison will sing, aid] | Mrs. Jessie E. Edwards will talk | {on “Cinristmas in China.” Original {poems will be read by members. | The program also will include the
singing of carols and an exchange {of gifts.
| - . ‘ Symbol of Hospitality Miss Emily Bisharat of TransJordan came to the United States (to plead for her country’s admit- | tance to the United Nations organization. She brought along a native coffee set, for to her and her coun-
Political Orator Mille. Pierrette Thothas, 19, of
scene,
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THE TEM .Bavors is a fe cious combina make a main | The recipe w 4
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B Sliced banan cereal with Soft-cooked eg Buttered toast o¥ Vegetable choy
Watercress or
sandwiches « Qanned Queer
*Sweet potato casserole Buttered broc Grapefruit nu Rye bread ant Remainder of Etewed aprico Milk to’ dri child; 2 e. for
1 T
] Sliced oranges Cooked cere:
cream Raisin bread I
'Yichyssoi:
crackers Pried beef sandwiches Fresh apples
Tomato juice Jelly omelet Almond-filled
(New French onion Roast beef wi *Caulifiower sauce Tossed vegeta Cloverleaf rol Banbury tarts
Oream of mu. Cucumber sar Fresh pears a Milk to dri ¢hild; 1 e. for
i ky ] Grapefruit hs Cornmeal gri ter and sin ] Cold sliced 1 with lettuce TR ——————
Seer pret Styl neck wea fade Size and 3.10
