Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1949 — Page 13

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3.1040 : 3 Y 4 . * : dg : ; » ° ee EY hv a Section Two e Indianapolis Times a rn ciation is bo Re : : : E \ Fashions. ... 15 Food....... 21 } gir 38 Twelve Pages ps rt he Clibe. 5. 1 teem i | = : bo a lo SUNDAY, MAY 8, 1949 i 4 or : Kentucky Derby Fans Crowd French Lick Springs Hotel Counter-Spy— 4 ee 1 JOTI int-dized Overalls = == | New Home Are Padded for ent - apply : hi a === | New Homes, Clothes bid a 25 | “And Babies Mark REE BR Scooting Comtort a = n 2 I€S ar ; The Barnyard Motif Crops Up in Prints ned foreach | ° Th S . S As Well as in Straw Hats for the Girls 4 By LOUISE FLETCHER, Times Woman's Editor ’ 3] ! e pring cene THE MAMAS OF VERY SMALL FRY don't need 1 Adams Family Announce Birth tg: the whoop-de-do of National Cotton Week (this , - Dr.. Mrs ly Move ge Bi h of Twins week) to sell them on the virtues of cotton garments 3 am . Phiinbdona ome for their offspring. They already cherish it for its i 3 sturdy practicality. And ... most important of all WITH SPRING THREATENING to slide into f : or the youngest set after scooting expeditions. . . they summer last week, there was the feeling of a new sea- - like it for the way it takes to dunking in soap and water. son around town and with it new clothes, new houses, It's cotton in some spanking new infantswess they have a i : Vf To Wasson's for the 1 to 3 group. ese Aare over new babies. Among the last are the Reily Adams’ twin re made i the Brig daughters who have recently left the hospital. The two gle Products Co. The pintdelightful mites, Martha and Mary, are sized overalls have a touch of ; the fifth generation of their ‘mother's imey th 20d te hich ments at the points whic family to have those names. Everyone take the greatest beating as £ is pleased because there are Marthas and vy Fi ani re stent : Marys on both sides of the family. feet, On the seat, the padding : i Dr. and Mrs, Philip Reed have just moved takes the shape of .a pussyp ‘ into their new house at 4131 N, Meridian St., cat head, Over the knees are which was occupied for many years by the the padded outlines of whole Fred C. Gardner family. I met Mrs. Reed the tabbies. Chest |& other day. She was very smart in a Glen plaid The overalls, wearing the 8 a suit with a pale blue blouse and matching trade-mark name of Fanny > Mrs. Atking Pand on her brown hat, but pretty harassed ; Photos by Ruth Ann Hamilton, Times Stafl Photographer.. Paton, inh in ph Behe x . Friends of the Ro the SOmbined gg : Dinner parties and golf vied with the Kentucky Derby for Mayor Glen R. Henderson, Connersville, and Mrs. Hender- white) ol : CT | back to live. They have bought Patty Acheson's house in popularity as guests from all over the United States packed the son arrived at the hotel before going to Louisville for the races They have a little pocket on i | Brendonwood and will move when Bob arrives from the East. French Lick Springs Hotel during the week-end of turfdom's at Churchill Downs yesterday. (Among the Indianapolis per the bib top and the crisa- = 1 - Meanwhile; Ann Amelia is staying with her mother, Mrs, Or- most colorful event. Capt. and Mrs, Eddie Rickenbacker, New sons registered at French Lick Springs Hotel for Derby week- cross shoulder straps, with awe land Church. York, headed the Aide at : dinner par given by Eastern Air end were Mesdames A. J. Bavaliny Sue Burks and Abs Wim grow . 2 bik flows Juels, : oe Lines officials in the hotel's Blue Room Friday evening, Mr. and Mrs. O. A, Chillson and Mr. and Mrs, Harry Sidrow, . ves { Flying Visit to Houston yea chor them to an elasticized ement .. MRS. RUTH MURPHY, of the Winter Apartment, paid a are more of the growing ; |] flying visit to Houston last week for the christening of her Yoon ticle. In the legs.) The youngest grandchild, the daughter of Ruth and Bob Hannon. pris size a the garments— ay Mrs. C, Harvey Bradley spent a week-end with her daughter $1.60,

well checks or in the season's i favored polka dots . . . in an seps See Steeplechase assortment of colors to match Wald ED NORVELL was here Up With your Sotien -iogs: fr briefly last week but unfor- They're only $5.05 and come : tunately couldn't persuade his in a couple of styles. There's pore attractive wife, Betty, to leave the Jue Bsttopped seller her garden in Darien, Conn. skeiche which may be where they have lived since worn with its brim turned leaving Indianapolis. 4 down all around or up (as in Mrs. Norvell's sister, Mrs, ? : the small sketch). The second William E. Munk, and Mr. Harold Stolkin, Indi lis, selects # f Resting aft ft f golf are M k style ia a round-crowned om arold Stolkin, Indianapolis, selects a carnation corsage for _ Resting after an afternoon of golf are Mrs. Don Ferraro, New York, and Mrs, Edward J. Barrett, Munk Tum Tob. Mrs. Stolkin from the blossom cart before dinner. Chicago, wife of Illinois’ Secretary of State. They were members of the Stolkin party. Sloghe wits Wider orm, . more for the Maryland Hunt ; ' them: Club race. That is an inter- Another Sky-piece for summer's playtime hours Is the Knox bicycle cap in Ayres’ r needs esting spectacle with hundreds b of people watching from a second floor hat bar. This has a bill (and a button up on top) to b hillside. They make it an “all Just ike a boy’s cap. But there the resemblance ends. It comes uy y y e it an “a , day in the open” affair to in a range of vivid and feminine colors and its construction a thrilling’ steeplechase varies from that of a boy's cup. Of spun rayon with lnen-like with gentlemen jockeys that texture, it's cut with a deeper line to fit down over feminine : Home lasts about 10 minutes ’ hairdos and the back of the thing is ever-so-slightly curved to gs = = ’ follow the feminine hairline. This one Is $3.88, [J ya =» : Last nignt was not Jo say Perfect to add a gay note to shopping chores—or to flowers pare i 50 Tahy_Deop en reaping activities in the garden-—are some new straw baskets avilie or ® Dehy. nr. which have just arrived at Ayres’. The summer baskets are an do s. OE wa Ler imported from Italy and we suspect they'll be pressed into Wr wn rho an NTs service for a variety of uses—as knitting or beach bags, for ; Dryer oy Xe iment ot rea y instance. Big carryalls, like the one sketched, sometimes have SE A xy ° a ik rafMa-embroidered motifs. There also are rectangular versions. Mr. and op. Otto Frenzel 4 Some arf natural-colored straw; others are in deep shades of and or ond Tora vl - A red, blug or green. Some have linings, checked or plain. All Gritfi th went . liam . of them are priced at $3.98. In addition there's a small over . ll Phat ent ie shoulder case model at $1.98 which wears rafia embroidery, too, . standing. But the roster of ; s Por Boers 100 Jong 1 Watches as Graduation Gifts read. HERE WE ARE, BACK TO GRADUATION presents Motors East again. Traditional graduation gift is a watch... | C. PERRY LESH left by whether the giftee is male or female. For the boys | motor the end of the week wi i h 've - ae Ot The week th-diplomas in hand, we found a super watch at daughters In Chatham, N. ¥.. i Charles Mayer's. It's Movado’'s new Anti-Dust wrist. where they have been visit- jh 4 watch, exclusive with Mayer's, It has a stainless steel § her family. iv jo double case to act as a double seal against the fine particles Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon R. & ; i of dust which can clog the movement of a watch if they gain Sayles hy st = igor if nah. gle UE RY i. ‘ ¢ ay entry, It has a 17-jewel movement and is $49.50, tax included, Grille, “ 1 GiRA ly # / hn a yy For the miss who's being graduated, there are wrifte 4 Modralls and their children. 4 : vit . , Cortl All of them will probably Chatting in the hotel garden after luncheon are Mrs. Karl. F. Johnson, Edmund C. Walsh Ill... Mrs. John A. Stelle, Brazil, offers a dipper of mineral water Jaicnes dy a1 DO a roo ute Sod be home before long as it is Mrs. Walsh and Mr. Johnson, They are all of Indianapolis. Other persons with the party of Mr. to Mrs. Russell Steele, McLeansboro, Ill. The women are daugh- tax. A yellow gold-filled Movado for her comes at $59.50, Some re hard to stay away from In- and Mrs. Johnson were Mr. and Mrs. F.. |. Kilcline and Dr. and Mrs. Paul W, Ferry. Mr, and Mrs, ters-indaw of John Stelle, Brazil, former Illinois governor and a attractive Hamilton wristwatches with diamond-set cases start diana in the spring. Kilcline and Dr. and Mrs. Ferry are of Kokomo. © past national commander of the American Legion.. - at $150, : \ . ‘ § ' 3 . ' y » 4 i i *

Barbara and her husband, Wythe Walker. The young people live in a penthouse in downtown Little Rock, which must be a thrill. A penthouse sounds so glamorous. The Walkers are coming for the races, the first trip back sirfee their marriage in February. Mrs. Robert A. Adams sailed last Wednesday ®n the Mauretania for a stay abroad and Mrs. Noble Dean has just re-

turned from Winter Park, Fla. On her way north she joined a group of Indianapolis women in Asheville for a tour sponsored by the Garden Club of America. Points of interest included Biltmore House there, a trip through the Smokies and a night in Knoxville, from where they went to Lookout Mountain and

Here the guests decided there could not be a rose left, so lavishly were they used in decoration. Special trains brought women from New York and Chicago while busses moved them on short trips. About 250 were on this trek.

I am told that the women's

Entertains Group

~ MRS. DEAN’S sister, Mrs. Bylvester Johnson, entertained the old and new

boards of the Women’s Committee of the Indiana State Symphony Society with a buffet luncheon on Wednes-

spent some time in Chattanooga. The tour ended in Nashville,

AAUW Planning Spring Tea

The annual spring tea of the Indianapolis Branch, American Association of University Women; will’ be held Saturday. The event will be

of the Indiana Historical Bureau, will speak on “Some First Hoosiers.”

Tea will be served in the West Room for members and their guests. The executive committee will be in the receiving line and board members will assist with the tea.

day. Mrs, Jack Goodman, retiring president, received an antique silver compote as an expression of appreciation. I happened to drop in before the meeting and saw the package, all done up in pink silver foil, tied with dark Hlue satin ribbon and flaunting a nosegay of tulips and lilies of the valley. Josepnine Madden is the’ new président and is sure to be as successful as her predecessors who, with Mrs. Goodman, are Mrs. Frederic M. Ayres Sr. and Mrs. Charles Latham. The Irvington Home Study Club met last Tuesday with Mrs. Raymond Stilzi Mrs. Walter Ward talked on Daniel Defoe. It was especially interesting as Mrs. Ward is of that famous gentleman's family.

Lunching in the hotel dining room are members of the Frank M. McHale party. They are Ticated) Mrs. William A. Kunkel Jr., Bluffton; Mrs. James O'Donnell, Detroit, and Mrs. McHale;

(stending] Mrs. Daniel Haggerty, Jamaica, N. Y., and Miss

Marie ton, Vt.

Donnell, a student at Bennington College, Benning.

» » . Maybe it's the barn-dance influence creeping into fashfons . . « but there's a barnyard print in some piayclothes for kids being shown at Wasson’s. Jt seems to be a flossy, modern California barnyurd, though, that inspired the print. Scattered sround the regulation red-painted barn are the blazing sun and orange trees of the West Coast, plus airplanes, roosters and other oddments. Little boys who wear sizes 8 to 614 may have their shirts in this print ($1.98) while girls wearing 7 to 14 may have it in flounced skirts ($3.98) and bra tops with rhumba ruffies rips pling around them ($2.98). :

Hand-Embroidery for the Baby

OTHERS AND FOND GRANDMOTHERS who are dismayed by the cost of hand-embroidered Infants’ clothes will ind something to cao. about in Block's needlework department, New arrivals there are some Paragon Needlecraft packages holding the prettiest

g Fesponse to She Whishle, Hows at 2 p. m. in John Herron line of baby clothes ince before the war. "The gar- ; aE BAmae. Art -Museum, .. © | : ments are all finished with the exception of the embroidery, Howard Peckham, director :

tor which they ars already stamped, and the lace required by some of the items. ‘Dresses as well as rompers came in blue or yellow broadcloth at $2.98 and there also are dresses in white or pink organdy at the same price. Bibs are 40 and 59 cents while gertrudes, in soft nainsook, are $1.59, . » . . » . ” Knitting and crocheting fans should be happy, tos, with some new items in this department. First are work baskets which have rigid wicker frames and printed cotton sides with elasticized tops. These come in 10, 12 and 14-inch sizes and cost from $1.08 to $3.98. Second is a plastic crochet-ball Holder with holes through which the thread feeds while it is kept spotiessly clean inside the holder. These, in red, ny blue or ivory, are 79 cents.

A Hat to Wear With Cottons

| NO PROBLEM AT ALL choosing & hat to go with town cottons: The same kind you'd pick to wear with wool or silk costumes is OK. But there always seems to be a dearth of simple hats to go with more simply styled daytime cottons. In Ayres’ millinery department, they've come up with an answer... a country hat for your cottons, These are Meg-designed affairs in natural barnyard straw, again! Their straw braid is a flat looking business rather like what we've cailed pineapple straw in the past. What makes them especially ap propriate for wear with cot-

tons is their crushed cotton bands—in plain colors, in