Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1949 — Page 13
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3
In Spring’ ng
“women should strive to achieve
Girls: Hope For ‘It Look
(Sigh) to
rubbing
Group this week, their hands at anticipated profits.|
The beautiful girl of 1950 will be a combination of Clara Bow, Gloria Swanson, and the preHays office Garbo, according to Helen Van Slyke, Good Looks Glamour Magazine.
We've already got the hairdos, Miss Van Slyke pointed out. We've already got the clothes. What's got to go now is the pretty pink makeup that's currently supposed
to make a woman look just a little|$
bit more so. “Practically to look natural,” said Miss Van Slyke. “The fashion-conscious woman wants the make-up that makes her look better than she really is.”
Sirenish Look
What Miss Van Slyke means, she went on to explain, is that
“the sirenish, come-hither look” or “the ‘live dangerously’ look of the it era.” To get this, you start with the skin. It should be well powdered, for a “white - showing - through look,” she explains.o This is achieved by putting on a very light foundation cream and powdering over it with darker powder, or vice versa. Not quite so pale as the flour-dusted Twenties, but nearly. * To acquire the kind of mouth that looks as if “it would be worn by a very smart, a very fashion - conscious woman,” the directions continue, one applies lipstick, but not naturally. The effect advocated it somewhere between the Clara Bow rosebud and the “sulky, luscious” Hollywood variety. Miss Van Slyke pointed this out on models. It includes squaring the lip line at the top and bottom and adding a slight Cupid’s bow in the middle. The end effect, she said, is another kind of “look”—"‘an expression of ‘I-know - where - I'm - going'.” To go with this a girl has got to wear her fingernails long, and lipstick colored, Miss Van Slyke said.
Have Chance Now Nice women in the 1920's just drooled at the gorgeous orbs of Gloria Swanson and didn’t dare wear eye make-up themselves, Miss Van Slyke said. Now they have their chance. She advocates mascara, eye pencil and eye shadow in shades of blue and green as well as the more usual black and brown. She didn’t forget the neck either* (or the soap manufacturers). It's hanging out of the hairdos, she said. Scrub well, powder like the face, and slap on a beauty spot, maybe. Perfumers were advised to get out their “naughtier” scents— “with an always salable overtone of s-e-x.” And even the masseurs get into the act. Legs have been covered up for a couple of years, Miss Van Slyke said. “Obviously they need care. ... They may also need
THURSDAY, OCT. 20, 1949
Popular Style 0
J
no woman wants NZJ)
By SUE BURNETT A popular style in every junfor wardrobe this season is the simple yet attractive blouse and skirt pair. The blouse illustrated is crisp, stays put and has a choice of sleeves. The skirt goes together in no time at all Pattern 8261 comes in sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 16 and 18, Size 12, skirt, 33% yards of 39-inch; 2 yards of 54-inch; blouse, 2% yards of 39-inch. - Send today for the new fall and winter Fashion; 64 pages of smart new styles, special features. Free pattern printed inside the book. To order pattern or our Fashion Book, use the coupon.
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind.
No. 8261
Fashion Book Price 25¢ Name .cececessscecscrccsnnnass tecssccscseseserassensnasasnnnns Street City State
. : : What's Right Situation: You are identifying yourself over the telephone to your husband’s sec- © retary. Wrong Way: Say, “This is Mary Jones. May I speak to my husband?” Right Way: Say, “This is Mrs. Jones. May I speak to Mr. Jones, please?” " # »
Situation: Someone who should recall your name, but evidently is struggling hard to do so, starts to introduce you to someone else. Wrong Way: Let him struggle.
Right Way: Quickly supply
renovating.”
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written, this age group, the au-
~
practical and art aspects of clothing for children in a comprehensive volume published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. y
Although many books and aradults and teen-agers, have been
thors explain, has been neglected in this field. While the book points out the contribution of proper clothing to the character development of the child, his self confidence and good cheer, it also correlates clothing needs of the child in relationship to the entire family. Included, too, are chapters on texture and design, trimmings, care and storage of clothing. Results of several recent studies on the subject are incorporated for the benefit of the readers. The book contains 619 attractive and helpful illustrations. It will serve as a dependable guide to mothers in selecting, making, and remodeling clothing for this age. And home economist extension leaders and teachers, designers and manufacturers of children’s wearing apparel: will find it valuable.
Party to Fete Bridal Couple
Dowds-Kadel Rite
To Be Tomorrow Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hood
|Delightful
ticles, on wearing apparel for
By MRS. ANNE CABOT This amusing little lamb’s antics will add gaiety to your tea towels and are also delightful embroideries for household linens, kitchen curtains and apron, for kiddie clothes and nursery furnishings. Pattern 5981 includes hot-iron transfers for six designs, each about 5 by 4 inches; color chart, stitch illustrations and full di-
Street Spesssessssnsssssnssnns City Secs csRssRENRRREREIRRNRRNS
State
S90 sINE SERINE NRRNEERIRINRNS
Sess sesssesssesRsRErRnee
Martin and Mr. and Mrs, Richard
at 10 a, m. tomorrow in honor of Miss Adeline Kadel and Colin Dowds. The couple will be married at 4:30 o'clock that afternoon. The party, which is to be given in the Vonnegut home, 601 E. 58th St., will also honor the bridal party .and out-of-town guests.
Guest List
Coming to the event are Mr. and Mrs. George W. Kadel, parents of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Samuel Dowds and Miss Elma Dowds, Bridgeport, Conn,, mother and sister of the prospective bridegroom; Murdo M. Dowds, Weymouth, Mass., brother of the bridegroom-to-be. Others include Mrs. William F. Piel III, Danville; Miss Mary Roberts and Mr. and Mrs. Fred B. Carlisle, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ball, Toledo; Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Pelles, Oak Park, IIL Also Joseph Reilly, Bridgeport, Conn.; Mesdames William E. Metzger Jr., Howard Griffith and George. Lawrence Ramey and John Cohee.
Daily Average Nearly 1100 fires occur in homes
daily, averaging about $600 loss per fire, according to estimates.
INDIANAPOLIS
C. Vonnegut will give a brunch The Doctor Says —
Drug Controls Disease
By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.D. YOU PROBABLY never heard
of myasthenia gravis, It's a very
rare condition whose cause is still unknown but its treatment, if not cure, has been enormously improved. There is a real medical miracle story in connection with the treatment. It begins with a rather typical description of the malady given by an anonymous patient recently in the British Lancet. Her cure was the “miracle” mentioned above. The patient was 18 years old in 1925. She first noticed seeing double and felt fatigued. After several months of this, while she was froning a dress she suddenly found that she could not hold up her head which kept dropping forward. Soon thereafter her knees started giving way underneath her at odd times. ” 2 »
IN FEBRUARY 1935, 10 years after the first symptoms began, the patient's fiance, who was a medical student, told her that he had something new for her to try. Her first thought, she said, was “Oh bother! Another injection and another false hope.” “I submitted to the injection,” she said, “and within a few minutes began to feel very strange. When I lifted my arms, exerting the effort to which I had become accustomed, they shot into the air. Every movement I attempted was grotesquely magnified until I had learned to make less exertion. “I had simply regained relatively normal strength — it was strange, wonderful, and at first very frightening.” The drug was neostigmine which the patient continued to take almost every day for the next 14 years. In the summer of 1937 the patient married her medical benefactor. It was a happy ending to our story.
DR. ANSWERS—
Question: What can cause a terrible trouble with: being off balance when walking? I usually seem to be all right but then I stagger. Answer: There are several possibilities. Perhaps the most probable one is something which is believed to be in the inner ear and goes under the name of Meniere's disease.
President
P. H. Ho photo.
Mrs. Betty Edwards, president
of the Alpha Chapter, Omega Phi Tau Sorority, is working on plans for the 's national convention to be. Saturday
October
J |forces in American fife.
PTA Month S I - A Pr » Organization's Effort Month by Mrs, John E.
-
parents and teachers are drawn into the sphere of its active Influence. The Governor stated PTA was qne of the most constructive
“We know the
will be to develop finer, stronger generations through education, spiritual training and develop-| ment of the power to live demo-| cratically,” he said. Members of the 86 schools of the Indianapolis PTA Council are
in PTA. Mrs. Richard Graves is council membership chairman. She is working in co-operation with local unit chairmen in the schools.
purpose of all Parent-Teacher endeavor)
striving for a record enrollment|
By ELIZABETH HILLYER DON'T GIVE up too easily. There may not be room for the nightstand you want in that small bedroom, but you can make a handy pinch hitter of a small shelf. A few inches in the corner is room enough for a shelf to hold a lamp and a book. Round the shelf corner so it
bers.
The city now has 16,881 memIndiana has 157,971 and the national membership totals 5,744,358.
won't hit out at you as you get in and out of bed.
o n » THE SHELF might take a twin below it for more items,
but up in the air as they are there is no crowding effect and the floor space is still free. Count on shelves. to solve many problems of limited space. Here are more ideas—low shelves to use the space usually wasted under window sills, two Jong shelves under a mirror in . the hall that isn’t deep enough for furniture, To had any luck at getting a shelves in the corner over the tub to hold extra bath accessories. a's 8
£
blood pressure) arteriosclerosis. Congenital malformation is a in which the heart|ditions of outstanding importance failed to develop during the pre-|are hypertension, where prolonged “Blue babies” arelhigh blood pressure of an unvictims of one kind of congenital known origin has affected the The con-/heart, and coronary arteriosclerogenital heart defect and rheu-|sis, a hardening of the nutrient matic heart disease coming in the|arteries supplying the heart.”
condition birth period.
heart malformation.
and Sunday in the Hotel Lincoln.
3
rections. H . Di Cl ’ M Vi . have had bad luck holding a To order, use the coupon. eart |seqse aims any ictims husband, at least knows she ANNE CABOT By JANE STAFFORD wake of rheumatic fever are the] “THE SCOPE of the heart| being confident of that a : . . . Beience Service Medical Writer two heart conditions found inproblem is one of ever-increasing| she can atford to play hard to The Indianapolis Times DOCTORS know of more than|children, Dr. C. J. Van Slyke, di-/magnitude, embracing a larger| get. 530 S. Wells St. 20 types of heart disease and each|rector of the U. S. National Heart|segment of our population with It's a role that is easy for the Chi 7 IL of them can kill its victim. Most Institute, points out in a reportieach year. The im-| divorcee, anyhow. She can alcago i, of the heart deaths, however, are|to the Journal of the Americaniportance of this problem should] ways be “disillusioned with No. 5081 Price 20¢ caused by five major types. These Pharmaceutical Association. be of concern to every thoughtful and through with it . are: Congenital malformation,| “Syphilitic heart disease, while|citizen.” for life.” Ever notice how often § ~ 1 rheumatic heart disease, syphiliticiappearing most often in middle] Symptoms which might be due| the newly-divorced movie star ; BME sscesecicisene snevsnsssnsinaart disease, hypertension (high age, is usually a late result ofito heart disease are: Palpitation,| states empha! :
and coronary syphilitic infection contracted in
early adult life,” he says. “The remaining two heart con-
Imagine Saving 11.95, Yes, 11.95, on
2-Ply All-Wool Worsted Gabardine
Shorties of breath, swelling of! e legs, chest pain, fa s dizziness, fainting, tn: headache, and difficulties in digestion. In many cases these symptoms are not caused by heart disease. However, if the symptoms persist, the individual needs medical attention regardless of the underlying cause.
4 2 i £ r
so why can't single attitude should be:
cing is a lot of self-confidence.
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IS 7777707
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Year-round Zip-ln ~~ ip-Out COATS
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WASSONS CONT SHOR,
