Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 July 1948 — Page 24
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New Hats Call For False Chignons These Will Fit Into . Horseshoe Cutouts ! By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, July 1—The women who've cut off their hair for fashion will be out next fall buying buns for their bare necks, Sally Victor predicted today. It's the hats that'll make ’em do it. > Mrs. Victor doesn’t think the short hairdo is going out of fashfon. She's crazy about her own. But some of those hats she's made require a tailpiece. The hair falsies, she demon-| strated on her models, are the perfect solution. They're better than hair that grows there because they're more manageable. And you can always take them off to wear another kind of hat. The Victor hats that need the hair behind are mostly neatly shaped, forward looking structures, bloused like berets and framed around the face like bonnets, A few of them carry their own rear balance with a cluster of ostrich feathers. But most of them have a tiny horseshoe cutout to frame a bun. More than half of the hats look
fine on short hair with no additions.
Fabric Interest Ahead Of Trimmings There's a tiny, high riding cloche, for instance, with a brief brim, that comes in daytime to dancing models. For town it may be white felt with a deep bumper band of charcoal suede above the brim and a narrow twist of cocoa veiling in between. For evening it comes in shining hatter's plush— like the stuff of a man’s top hat ~pink embroidered with pink crystal and pearls, or white with frosted silver. ‘Prize beret of the collection is a “roulette” series—"Big Chips,” “Little. Chips” and “Baby Chips” as the size may be. It's really two berets, stacked off. center. and adaptable to one or two-color treatment. One to dream on was navy felt with mink. Another was charcoal and white, And it's a grand suit hat in all gray. There's more fabric interest trimmifg in the Victor collection. The hatter’'s plush is used .frequently. In a bright blue-green, it's aptly named “Gaslight.” In soft, shining beige it makes a squared off, slightly undercut beret that sits straight on the head behind the hairline and looks like a perfect day-long hat, ns i ease bee
Mrs. Otto K. Jensen
‘Heads Sorority.
Mrs, Otto K. Jensen, 6015 Park Ave, was elected national president of Delta Deita Delta Sorority at the organization's convention in Banff, Aerts, Canada, this week. Mrs. Jensen is a past president of the Tri Delt Alliance, past district president of the Midwestern area of Delta Delta Delta and for the last four years held the national office. of cpllegiate secretary. She also is a Jost resigent of the . Tudor Hall Parents’ Associa~
hb Deb Club Entertains
Members of the 8ki Hi Sub Deb Club recently entertained their mothers at a tea in the home of Miss Mildred Forsha, 6433 W, Minnesota St. Attending were Mesdames Ira Fuller, Harold Entwistle, Robert Davis, Merle Hood, Charles Forsha and Frank Campbell and Misses Rosemary Fuller, Eileen Entwistle, Lucille Davis, Janet Hood, Carol Ann Campbell and Forsha. Club officers are Miss Davis, president; Miss Forsha, vice president; Miss Hood, secretary, and Miss Entwistle, #reasurer, Mrs. Campbell is the sponsor.
Cha. yet
WEDDING RECEPTION—M:r. and Mrs. Donald D. Pritchard cut the first piece of. their wedding cake following their marriage yesterday morning. Mrs. Pritchard was Miss Margo Sheerin and the reception was at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Doherty Sheerin, 4750 Central Ave., after the ceremony in St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church. Mr. Pritchard is the son of Harry T. Pritchard, 3060 N. Meridian St.. and Mrs. Florentine Pritchard of Chicago. After their wedding trip, the couple will be at home at. 8 E. 37th St. (Shen-Courtney photo.)
Fr. Beechem Officiates At Wedding Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church was the scene at 11 o'clock this morning of Miss Virgle Mae Ritzi's marriage to John F. Whitehead. The Rev. Fr. Joseph Beechem read the doublering ceremony. The bride is the daughter ‘of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Ritzi, 5434 Julian Ave,, and Mr, Whitehead's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter Whitehead, 1750 W. 57th St. : Entering . with her father, the bride wore a white linen suit with white accessories and a white straw cloche trimmed with pink. She carried an arm bouquet of pink and white roses, stephanotis and ivy. A pastel green linen suit and white .accessori’s were worn by Miss June Ritzi, her sister's maid of honor, She carried spring ry, Bruce Frazer was the best man and ushers “were Robert Barker, cousin of the bridegroom, and William Kumkoski of Anderson. Following a wedding dinner at Citaldl’s, the couple left on a trip
The bride attended Indiana University and the bridegroom atianded Butler and Indiana Uni-
To Study in East Miss Edna Frances Phinney of the School 16 music department has left for New York where she will take a six-weeks’ course in voice and harp at the Juilliard School of Music. Before returning home she will attend the Daugh-
A FAVORITE WITH BRIDES
So classic, so lovely, it has been cher ished for generations. Chantilly never grows old, but gets more beautiful each time it is used.
PLACE SETTING
Teaspoon, luncheon knife, luncheon fork, individual salad fork, cream soup spoon, and butter spreader.
: 20 WEST WASHINGTON — ‘e INDIAINAPOLIS
ters of Isabella convention in Boston.
My Day—
I mentioned this statement in a column because, it ‘seems to ‘me, in this Suge Wwe must juphoild the , “freedom of in~" dividuals to attend any meetings that are not subversive meetings. ThoughIam opposed to Mr. Wallace, the rights of a third party in ; this country o have always ‘been protected. The right to speak against any ideas held by people in or out of office must remain one of the inalienable rights of every citizen, since it 18 only through hearing different points of view
for the nation. The Sheriffs’ Association was so outraged at the suggestion that some of its members were not upholding these rights that it immediately started to investigate. It not only answered me, but it answered one of the Washington newspapers, which had also printed the accusation made by members of the third party.
n » o THE SHERIFFS group received a report from the sheriff of Logan County, West Virginia, stating that he had never prevented any meeting. He had disapproved of what was being said but had protected the speakers. He also stated that the names given as deputy sheriffs who had intimi-
@ 6-PIECE -
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ss tyiisyer
dated people were not the names of any deputy sheriffs under him. I have known Logan County for a long while. In days gone by, it was a bad place for organized labor, and I would not be surprised to find that the average sheriff in that county thought. along the lines that would be acceptable to the mine | owners of the county. But I would also expect that they would stick very strictly to the letter of the law. Therefore, I think that the Wallace people possibly allowed themselves to be taken in by people who claimed authority that they did not have.
. - . THE LAST few days we have been having real summer weather here. After the cold spring, it seems unusually hot and the dampness adds to the | heat, I think, | Though Monday began as a | nice day we had a ylolent | thunderstorm in the afternoon | and everything in the woods, when 1 walked my dogs Tuesday morning, was dripping and puddles stood deep on the roads. We picnicked by the pool | Tuesday, so that everyone could stay as cool as possible up to | the moment lunch was ready. I
“The Right to Speak Out Must Remain inalienable’
By ELEANOR ROOSEVELT HYDE PARK, N. Y,, July 1—I must say I admire the rapidity with which the National Sheriffs’ Association looks into and tries to clear up any accusation against members of its group. I had been told by some members of Henry Wallace's third party that attendance at Wallace meetings had been interfered with by officers of the law, and that people had been intimidated.
thought even the dogs could be trusted not to run away, but suddenly there was a wild yap--ping and down along the brook they went. Hours later I got a telephone message to come and get them. They had treed a cat in somebody's yard, two miles down the road. How does one train Scotties to stay at home, or at least not to go beyond the radius of their own woods?
)
: Slimming
that our citizens can make up their mindé as to what is best |
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Margo Sheerin, Donald Pritchard Wed
1Miss Anne Steinmetz, 115 E. 40th
{the future bride's mothér and
The Bridal Scene— Two Parties Will Honor Miss Costello
Charlotte A. Minta Engaged to Wed
Four brides-to-be will be' busy this month with dinners and parties in their honor before their weddings in July or August. Miss Jeanne Scott will entertain with a buffet supper at 6 p. m. Sunday in her home, 6680 N. Pennsylvania St., for Miss Agnes Costello. Miss Costello, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Costello, 4123 N. Capitol Ave., will be married to Robert G. Akin July 70 in the St. Joan of Arc Catholic Church, Preceding the supper Sunday,
St., will be hostess for a 11:30 o'clock brunch for Miss Costello. Attending the parties will be
Mrs. E. Park Akin, mother of the prospective bridegroom; Misses Mary Swift, Muriel Burns, Rosemary| Donelly, Betty Matthews and Sally Connor and Mesdames Thomas Kibler, Thomas Fox, Robert Bosart, Norman Williams, William Bergan, Jack Harris, John Courtney, John Draper and Victor Mueller. » ” ” Mrs. Robert L. Fowler, 1030 N. Riley Ave., entertained yesterday with a luncheon-bridge announcing the coming marriage of her sister, Miss Charlotte Anne Minta, to John Ernest Mattingly. The ceremony will be read Aug. 7 in the Blessed Sacrament Chapel of 88. Peter and Paul Cathedral. . Miss Minta, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Minta, 3025 Guilford Ave. has chosen Miss Mary Louise McManus as her ‘attendant. The prospective bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Mattingly, Loogootee, will have John Cahill as his best man. ® . ” Miss Eleanor L. Johnson and Charles W. Carmichael will be honor guests tomorrow at a bridal dinner to be given by the bride-to-be’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Howard V. Johnson, Mooresville. The dinner will precede the ceremony which will be read in the Johnson home at 8:30 p. m. Guests will include Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Johnson; Newman Johnson and Miss Jennifer Johnson, both of Houston, Tex.; George Schad, Reading, Pa.; George Matsek, Pittsburgh; Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Forbes of Terre Haute, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swaim and Mrs. May McMurtry, all of Marshall; Warren Carmichael, Brazil, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Pickering, Wiuchester. " "r - A surprise miscellaneous shewer was given last night for Miss Frances Hinkley whose marriage to Thomas W. Sturges will take place Saturday in Friedens Evangelical and Reformed Church. Hostesses for the party, given in the home of Mrs, Harold Ruschaupt, 3322 College Ave, were Mrs. Richard Stump, Mrs. Paul Wilson and Miss Marguerite Selfe. Guests included Mrs. Homer Hinkley, mother of the bride-to-be; Mesdames Vera Roush, Mary Emerson, Margaret LeNoir, Erna Miller, Betty Record, Lucile Whitehill, Orinda Pence, Anna Bobinger, Mary Meyers, Virginia Williams, Lillian Green, MecRyan Faye, Teresa Niebrand, Dorothy Asmus, Alice Sanders, Bess Nesse, Elizabeth Wooden, Marian Frand, Patty Derre, Ivola Davis, Patricia Ennis and Joan Howell. Others were Misses Fredia
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‘How Does She Put Up With Him?’
By RUTH MILLETT NEA Staff Writer WHAT QUALITIES in a husband make other women say in all sincerity, “I don’t see how his wife puts up with him?” Well, here are some of the husband-types who bring forth that remark: The husband who knows it all "and gives his wife a verbal slap in the face every time she ventures to express an opinion he doesn’t recognize as his own. The husband who can’t re- Ruth Millett sist the temptation to make a pass at every attractive woman who comes along. The husband who is stingy in money matters, so that his wife can never buy anything without wondering what he will say about it.
usually
” » E J THE HUSBAND who insists that all family life revolve around his goings and comings and his comfort. The husband who is a showoff and gets his loudest laughs at his wife's expense. The husband who takes no responsibility but pushes everything off on his wife. The husband who is a Mama's boy and is forever letting Mama interfere in his life.
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Miss Ahlgren Is Engaged
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Miss Adrienne Ahlgren, , WHITING, Inf., July 1—Miss Adrienne Ahlgren’s engagement to Charles Haeuser is announced by her parents, Mr. and
groom's parents are Mr, and Mrs. Hugo Charles Haeuser, Mil-
Miss Ahlgren, a graduate of Monticello Preparatory School and this year's class of Wellesley College, will enter Simmons College in Boston this fall to study for her master’s degree in psychiatric social work. Active in campus affairs, she served as chairman of the Senior Prom, social chairman of Cazenove Hall, member of the Shakespeare Society and was elected a life alumnae
Mr. Haeuser, a student in the School of Architecture at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, aléo has studied at the University of Illinois and in Biarritz, France. He is affiliated with Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity and is a former MIT crew member. During the war he served in the Army for three years and saw
: THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1048 Bridge Lesson—
Bidding Hints At Opponents’
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B. A. McDonald And Miss Pell Exchange Vows
Times State Service BRAZIL, Ind., July 1—Mr. and Mrs. B. A. McDonald will be at home at 2606 E. Washington St., Indianapolis, following their marriage at 7 p. m. yesterday in the Ebenezer Evangelical United Brethren Church here. The bride, the former Miss Virgie Pell, 5857 Lowell Ave., Indianapolis, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Pell of Carbon. Mr. McDonald is the son of Mrs. Dora McDonald, 1854 Sugar Grove Ave., Indianapolis. Miss Rachel Caudill, Portland, Tenn., maid of honor, was dressed in pink chiffon. The bride chose a white chiffon gown and a fingertip illusion veil, She carried a bouquet of red roses. The bridegroom's brother, 8. C. McDonald of Indianapolis, ‘was the best man.
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PTA Co-operates With Traffic Cops
MUSKEGON, Mich.—Muskegon mothers are helping out the police traffic department. r They have been authorized to halt and start traffic for the benefit of children on the way to school. A Parent-Teacher group is co-operating with the police on the experiment.
Classmates Are Guests
Miss Betty Louise Thompson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irwin L. Thompson, 3125 N. Illinois St., entertained last night with a garden supper for her classmates at Willlam Woods College, Fulton, Mo. The honor guest was Miss
Dee Powers, St. Louis, who is visiting Miss Anne Richardt, also a guest, Other guests were Misses Patty Hartley, Betty Jane Williams, Carita Sadler and Zoe Fuller and
Distribution
Lesson Hand Comes From the Loser -
WILLIAM E. MCKENNEY my America’s Card Authority TODAY'S LESSON hand is the result of a discussion rd I had with Ivan Half, of Pitts-
monds. North bid six hearts and South went to seven hearts, The opening lead of the eight of diamonds was won by -declarer with the jack, as Half did not put up the king. Now declarer’s only problem was the heart suit. Should he play them to split two-two, or if he played them to split threeone, which hand should hold the three.and which the one? » = "
THE ODDS favored the hearts breaking three-one, not two-two. As Half said, his bid of five diamonds indicated that he could not have more than a singleton heart. Therefore, declarer’s correct play was to lead the ace of hearts, then the 10 of hearts, and take the finesse if West refused to cover. Half’'s five diamond bid, as often happens in a hand of this type, did more to help the opponents than for his own side. With that bid, declarer should have no trouble in figuring out the correct distribution of the hearts.
Two Young Women And a Typewriter
SYDNEY—Two Syndey young women have only $200 between them but they hope it'll last long enough for them to find a job in Great Britain. Miss Beverly Purkiss and Miss Marjorie Bush, equipped with one semi-portable typewriter, left for the British Isles to 1 for stenograplier jobs on “an job outside of coal mines.” From there they will “keep traveling as far
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ght! pry throug prowned coconu cookies as pretty good to eat. And ti included in the ing ne nut-tossty fia
fron. av most inexpe can make these The recipe uses a mix method for ble jents. The m cut to two minutes to 12 or 15 minute tional methods. tn so on ] pow! is needed. 3 ticing boon a time. Serve with an in-season fruit, rries, strawl ple, cherrie: which are coming
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GUMDROP C 1 ¢. sifted enriches tsp. baking pow tsp. soda tsp. salt ¢. shortening ¢. granulated s ¢. brown sugar egg thep. water tsp. vanilla 4% ec rolled oats, ¢. gumdrops, cu grated coconut. Have the shorte: temperature. Sift flour, baking powd salt into a large bc
shorten sugars and rine. at for about two min Fold in the roll gumdrops. Shape roll in coconut, if ¢ on a greased bakir moderate oven (35 for 12 to 15 minut Makes three a dozen cookies.
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