Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1947 — Page 18
ZF
Will Brighten
Home Sewing "Hand-Painted Prints = Have Many Uses NEW YORK, July 1 (U.P.).—The
fay, hand-painted, hand-screened and hand-blocked. fabrics which
have livened costumes-by some of |’
the nation's top dress designers will be on sale by -the yard. for home dressmakers and 4ecorators within the next few weeks, it is announced here ~The cotton and rayon fabrics,
designed. and manufactured inj!
Philadelphia by June Groff, painter daughter of a Pennsylvhnia-Dutch farm family, will sell for approximately $2 to $4 a yard in widths ranging from 30 to 50- inches,
| Miss Groff expects the fabrics will
find. their greatest use in drapery, upholstery and in informal and play clothes. They have been used by dress manufacturers, however, for more formal costumes. And a home needlewoman with imagination may fool Miss Groff, - at nn» ga ALL OF. THE prints have a bold frechand look to them. The new-| est looking have geometric appearances, They feature a wide range of interesting color combinations]
op
: PAGE (ERE New Fabrics
DRESSING:ROOM CHAT—Pausing for a brief conversation after the Cincinnati summer opera's opening performance of "Lohengrin" Sunday night are [left to right] Mrs. Richard M. Fair banks and Mrs. William A. Diven- Jr. of Indianapolis; Rose Bampton, who sang the role of Elsa, and Mr, Diven, heard again in the Cincinnati opera's Indianapolis night offering of 'll Trovatore ' at 8:15 p. m. Saturday.
Miss Bampton will be
in pleasing to look at but nontepresentative design, Others have taken their patterns from birds, butterfiles, flowers and the heavens. There is a handsome group of] brush stroked plaids—red and dark green, blue and brown, orange and gray—which should be equally adaptable to young school clothes and sofa covers. Pastel backgrounds are plaided with narrow black lines and the resulting squares - decorated with black line butterflies in one pretty print. Another—which might be evening dress or bedroom curtains ~-depicts a firmament of birds and stars on a night blue ground. The designs are all Miss Groff's, They are produced through hand processes by Miss Groff and her busband in their own factory.
Salad Trimmings
When roses bloom, don't forget they may bloom in your salad bowl, too, mn the form of radish roses. Add perky raw carrot sticks, celery curls, -green pepper rings for fur ther flower-bright effects in summer saladry: ered
Outdoor Dining For your outdoor dinner table use two table-length strips of linen dish] toweling instead .of a cloth. The new patterns are gay and bright— plaids and stripes and prints—and
go well with California type pottery.
FR Harris Skinless Frankfurter are prepared in spotless, sunlight sausage kitchens under the personal super. .vision of Valter, whose 4 exclusive recipes were brought from Switzerland famous the world over for fine Aavored sausages.
vy
Select meat morsels, mildly seasoned ond testily blended for tender eating
At fine food stores
® Puliman Cases ® Men's 2-Suifer Cases
anywhere in the world.
Forging perfect copies of the signatures of Henry Kaiser, of Henry Morgenthau and of Deems Taylor, president of ASCAP, is all part of a day's work for Doris. Currently she's copying signatures of the members
of the atomic energy commission, But this 20-year-old Rochester girl 1s in no danger of running afoul of the law. Her forged signatures are used on the Todd Protectograph Check Signers, an. electrically operated device which signs checks al the breathtaking speed of 15,000 per hour. > Business and government executives use these time-savers for payrolls. Doris—no relative of John Hancock whose name Is synonymous with signatures—became a legalized forger because so many signatures received from Todd clients are written in inks that don't reproduce well photographically. 8he studies the signatures, which come from Todd clients all over the world, then copies them. Her copy is enlarged and Imperfections corrected. Photo-engraved plates are then made in actual size,
Background Designs Interest Her
for the Bank of China written in
& ® e HB a & {the warning that means we should
VALTER SAYS...TRY
HARRIS
“Aristocrat”
ANKFURTERS
Overnight Cases
Priced from
Charge Account . , Trap fn Small Weekly Amounts,
‘Famous Signatures— But It's All Strictly Legal
NEA Berviee >
By 4 ROCHESTER, N. Y.. July 1.—Doris Hancock has forged the check Lsignatures of so many bigwigs that she could be an autograph stand-in
Chinese characters. That called for all her skill as an artist:
The importance of the names she copies doesn’t impress Doris too much. What intrigues her more are the background designs upon which the signatures are. superimposed These are all individual and give her a chance to display her artistic originality. : Bignatures of the officials of a hosiery mill, for instance, are set against a background of beautiful silken-sheathed legs which spell out the mill name. For the U. 8. engineers, Doris designed a pennant background using the stars and stripes of the American flag. Behind the name of M. A. Fish, dry cleaner, are rows and rows of swimming fish. During the recent crisis in Georgla involving Governors Arnall and Talmadge, Doris did a rush job on the signature of the state auditor, B. E. Thrasher, “Never a dull moment,” says the youthful forger.
The Moth Season Is Upon Us
The weather man has sounded
be on the lookout for moths. When the temperature soars, mamma clothes moth seems to know that your winter woolens and furs are ready and waiting for her. One sure way to protect your things is by cleaning them well, brushing thoroughly and then putting them away in a cedar chest or closet. The rich aroma of cedar, so pleasant to human nostrils, has a para-
Just stay sound asleep and die of starvation,
ens nice and clean, too. The modern ones are thoroughly dustproof, the lid being tightly sealed.
teacher here,
at DEE'S
MITE
Values
PF - that long-planned vacation
Thrilling SPECIALS for the 4th! © Matched Cases
minute of it,” she says,
——
|dress design“ contest conducted by
lyzing effect on clothes moths. They]:
A chest will keep your fine wool-}|:
Teacher for 50 Years| BROWNINGTON, ‘Vt. — Miss El-|. sie Bkinner is completing her 50th} © consecutive year as a grade school]: “I've enjoyed every|:
Serta
en -
Huntingburg Girl Receives One Prize. \ PHILADELPHIA, July 1—An
of Huntingburg, is one of 10 honorable mention winners in a teen-age
the-J. B, Lippincott Co. of this city. The nation-wide contest was held in ‘connection with Mariska Karasz's book, “Design and’ Bew.” The honorable mention winners also received wutographed copies of the
' Sixteen-year-oid ‘ Joanne Sattler of Boonville, N. Y., won the first prize, a $100 savings bond. Her winning design will be featured in the October issue of -Cal All Girls, Second prize, a $50 savings bond, goes to 17-year-old Eleanor Jo Martin, San Bernardino, Cal.
ners were Virginia Pynenburg, Merrimack, N. H.; Maxine Armstrong, Ludlow, Vt; Oriece Whittaker, Reeds Perry, N. H.; Norma Pettijohn, Aberdeen, Wash.; Olive Murphy,” Reeds Ferry, N. H.; Edith Crouchley, Ridgefield, Conn.. Jac-
queline Pols, Chicago; Barbara Hujber, Titusville, N, J., and Joanne Oakleaf, Lyons, N. Y. v
Three hundred fifteen eligible designs were submitted from 39 states, by girls agdd 13 to 17. Points stressed in making the awards were originality, sketch cléar- for construction, suitability for age, making within scope of “teen-ager and neainess of presentation.
Miss Burnside, Dr. Vollrath Are Married
Times State Service SHELBYVILLE, Ind, July 1.—
Dr, and Mrs. Victor J. Vollrath will be at home at 4848 Central ave., Indianapolis, on their return from a wedding -trip-following their marriage here Baturday. The ceremony was read in the garden’ of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Burnside. “The bride is the former Miss Isabelle Gordon Burnside. The Rev. N. 1. 8choolfleld officiated.
The other honorable mention win- |-f]
wn s
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___ 12 Teen-Agers |Get Awards {In Contest
By SUE BURNETT ° 8pooth two-timer for precious sunfilled hours—an exciting sunback frock, girdled with a4 wide purchased belt, and a “cover-up bolero to turn it into a handsome
street costume. Neatest trick of the season! : Pattern 8178 1s for sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 and 20. Size 14, dress, 2% yards of 35 or 39-inch; bolero, 1% yards. For this pattern, send 25 cents, in coins, your name, address, size desired, and the pattern number to Sue Burnett, The Indianapolis Times: Pattern Service, 214 W. Maryland st., Indianapolis 9. Ready now—the new summer Fashion. Fifty-two pages of style, color, fashion news for. every woman who sews. Send 25 cents for your copy today. :
Linen in Collection
‘Attending the bride were" Miss{siich
Mgrilyn. Behymer, Indianapolis, and "Miss Prances Thralls and Miss
was his brother's best man. A reception in the garden followed the wedding. Mrs. John Lindhjem Minton Jr., Indianapolis, assisted.
Indianapolis. Colored Linens
Rp
°
sandy applique, or pink with white, makes tremendously attractive tablecloths which are setting a new fashion for colored linens on the
Martha Hilligoss. Richard Vollrath
and Mrs. Stephan A.|
Blue Irish linen with pink or- A
The bridegroom is the son of|in Mr. and Mrs. Charles. A. Vollrath, |e
bride's wedding cake table.
BRIDE-TO-BE— Mr. and Mrs.
Southport, announce that their daughter, Phyllis Joan, will be married to Robert Lewis Stansbury
Sunday. The future bridegroom ‘is the son of Lewis Stansbury, 1343 Grant ave
+ Vicuum-packed
[Anna Simmons \Is the Bride
oN
oi ; 7
Of T. L. Davis
5 £ £ 5 § 3
in every three in the United States today is a woman.
TUES
-| Brighten the Corner
"You can make the space near a...
®ve SN
*
Yt
Korean Freedom
the United Nations meetings, has earned the title of the “Joan of Are of Korea,” as the result of being a
when’ her leadership and thspira-
| tion helped to bring about the liberation of ‘her land from Japanese
‘|B. Anthony, Lucretis Mott ang -| others who hold a place of glory
among the famous feminists of America, for to her goes the credit of being the primary achieving feminine liberation in a land wheré women were denied any right whatsoever through many
bedroom window brighter and more useful by using a cedar chest, covered with a bright pad or pillows, as a window seat. :
|Racing Enthusiast
LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Susan W, Shirley of this city witnessed the running of every Kentucky
Derby racing classic for 53 years.
Paris Designer Uses ||
jon Jolie’s Light, Lovely
Nylon Girdle
Earle O. Cramer,||
Telephone RI ley 7411
~
Safety First for Small Feet—QOur
Closed All Day Friday and Saturday. July 4th and Sth
Third Floor
sistance!
Girls’
to 8, 5.95... Other Buster Brown Shoes,
I
& I 4
/ ef
Buster Brown
Shoes
5.95
Boys and girls all ages like to hop-skip-jump or dance into summer in Buster Browns! leather construction (Live Fpot Last) gives growing feet right control . . . and outstanding wear and tear re-
Their top-quality
A. Strap Pump of twinkling patent leather. Sizes 1214 to 8, 5.95.
'B. Saddle Oxford—Children’s sizes 1214 to 3, 5.95. os
i.
" C Loafer — Childs and ' Growing Loafer. Brown. Sizes 1214
3.45 to 7.95
Hey Kids, Listen to “Sm ii in Ea McConnell and His
Buster Brown rday at 10:30
DAY, JULY 1, 1847
NEW YORK—Miss Louiss Yim, one of Korea's representatives ‘at
key member of the underground,
influence in
OT
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