Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 February 1950 — Page 29
"B : - TE ———_, = i . - 5 - > y gos = nn — ; e pan y er di oy i ; i 8 Ty : : | Boo 1k Women's i 4 | Th 1 di: + | | li Ti = | Clubs....30, 33 Fashion .... so; Cops [}- |= ome 1R€ 1nalanapoiis 1iimes rd ria cudminainl y Section Three = : : : Society. .34, 40 Toes ioe Ml 3 en S 1§ . SUNDAY; FEBRUARY 12, 1950 : ociety '
ney y Spot; -
ournament last o come through
Gen. Geo. Marshall ‘Heads Roster of
ydicap of 194 te y. d gt of the top
ovRNAENT * ee ; oe | eaders 4 wea | Visiting Celebrities «2458 (489) 2947 = 3418 (451) —3067 : [13040 (ast) —zseT Mrs. Houghton, New Head of Federation Gheigalt Of Women's Clubs, Addresses Group vile By KATY ATKINS n Sg us | : OUR TOWN has. had an unusual number of distinco. fa de, Total | guished visitors this week. Of course, the very biggest Ha. 11m (la —1313 rf VIP was Gen. George C. Marshall, here Thursday for the
jer. a i met local chapter of the American Red Cross, but among the
acrinn 0-18 others were interesting and varied personalities. Mrs. Hiram Houghton, incoming president of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs, flew here Tuesday from Jamaica where she had been staying with Lord and Lady Huggins at King's House, official residence of the governor. While there she saw a customary mass marriage and watched Lady Huggins present the wedding rings she buys for these occasions. Mrs. Houghton, of Red Oak, Iowa, spoke at the Woman's Department. Club at a federa---tion day meeting. It was interesting to learn that 30,000 Japanese and 10,000 Korean women are applying for membership because they want to learn how to take. part in: their gov-
C. A. Fitzpatrick doa spade work in his front yard during
3448 N. DeQuincy St. Grading the property is another of the the final stages of the house # and his wife built themselves in
"Fitz" staples aluminum foil to the coiling joists in the kitchen, “tasks “Fitz will do himself. : ’ ;
This insures proper insulation.
rd
ernment.
Mrs. Houghton will make a charming
[ich,, last night 5 representative of the 111; million ‘women of Alleys, 3096 to Mrs. Atkins the federation. While here she found time for game, % a visit with her good friend, Mrs. Frederick
3 rolled for the
Or the
olio fund. The will bowl the today at 1:30 ania’s alleys, tht's match was bowler, Marian 4, 229 and 259, 12. Second was he Yaver's with otals were 233,
““Hoosier, in New York.
Betty Cleary of Chicago, who went to Smith with Susy
Mayberry and Sylvia -Pea~ .
cock and is now assistant editor of “Mademoiselle” in the western derritory, was here several days. A chic blond,
ventable and that treatment,
despite the current hue and
cry, is available, though of course not as widely as necessary. :
Puppies in Spotlight DR. AND MRS. G. H. A.
: she wore a bright red accor- ; 8 i dion-pleated rd "and an Clowes, Allen Clowes, Mr, and ond $S $ armload of bracelets, both of Mrs. Ed Gallahue and the ond Spot = which fascinated Susy’s small Harry Reid family were much . 11 (UP)—The £ daughter, interested in the picture and
afs gained sole nd, place in the
League. tonight
Montreal Can-
itle > 44
ph in 20 games. ht of 18, Howe (43)
ahrback 1 of cKinsey.{ | uyer.f 0 9
and Telend, ’ : were put to work,” the couple says. “My father white ceiling and rose carpet—wall to wall— nurse. red straw hat that had a full high costs and supply shortages wouldn't de- Twenty-nine feet at the deepest spot, the : 60-43 Movies seem popular this veil tied fn back not only en- ter them because they would do the job them- house is white siding, with mae Reiped us hang the brackets oF (Be fecesied Already ake fhe ssitigg homey. Tie sams k. I saw a very fine docu- hanced the red of the decora- selves. ind “ t prized ssi ” Th - ight ures, gave me a lift with ail the elec- carpet stretches through the dining room and €é opening whis- wee heer i windows, ‘our most pr possession. e ga trical installations,” declares “Fitz.” “His hallway, accents the former's papered walls » High Sch mentary film at Dr. and Mrs. tions, but struck a cheering That's pretty much what happened—with rage is attached, was built along with the { od] Philip Reed's Tuesday night. spring note on a gloomy day. 4 40 per cent total saving. But it took longer . moral support throughout the whole project and walst-high stark white wainscoting. Send Adams, 60 np - Ha y be Mrs. Ma: rh Pe a g: 8 basement last year. was invaluable.” The kitchen with its gay red touches and at. the Rockets’ - Tith t ppens ry The speaker was Mrs. Mary an either of them had expected and the Reason. it took $0.long.to get theses. two... ...And his brother-in-law drove him to Michi-. _ formica. tops has “bless and burn” mems. . . ..
score was lopas hard fought 1g. Mell Egderuard, was ejectie in the third ng. The Rockad at halftime. Broad Ripple Rocket scoring leven field goals ws. Ken Dillon e visitors with
BB. (Adams) (43) pf
fs 1t . ' Charles Fitzpatrick grimaced. He did all of blended the pai 4 “ " ilion.f 6 2 ende e paints to catch the exact hues make. He wants to “build up the lot,” curving iller.t 18.1 Counter-S py— in The Fitzpatrick yaneh style Homs is built the job himself with his brother-in-law help- they had in mind. In the bath the walls are the driveway around the front of the house in oore.g 2.94 2 It belonged to J P a ormerly a farm. ing to pour the cement. pink to match the fixtures. Here too are one a circle, sdertons 0 1 1 ; : p . na pelo ean’s gran athes: Frank Tat- _ “Fitz” also installed the gutters, stapled . of the joys of a self-planned home—functional Thoroughly enjoying their “dream come rtf g 3008 New Car Ke Co es Th the name now, Tatman Manor. aluminum foil to the ceiling joists tor insula- built-ins. Deep shelves and drawers will hold true,” Charles and Jean Fitzpatrick enthusis A raARt 4.0.4 cone Ne Ra WE Wr peril NN Pn =. h etod 3 sentimental tie as well AS. the. locas. ....tion, and laid the linoleum... wc ERANY-of the Fitzpatricks' storage needs! sev gatioally admit At-was-so-much-fun- they'd do wc eer 5.03 ; ! tion led them to buy the lot. It's a deep one Jean mixed mortar, painted the window - » Jean's bedroom eolor scheme includes it all over again. Ni FL 1950 Automobile In a Personal Vein—
Broad Rippie % Martin, Wins ne-point: deficit period, Sacred
on, 49 to 33; n ‘a basketbail
it at Baored: rf
ayed on even taking a 13-12 d quarter, art began hits the end of the | a 24 to 17 ad~ ermission. Dalhe scoring for
Shows Film of Alaska BUD BRANHAM, Speraies a hunting and fishing lodge in Alaska, showed
“beautiful colored movies at
the University Club Tuesday night. Among -the people on hand were the Robert Scotts, the Walter. Hisers, the Charles Greathouses, Alexander Taggarts Jr. and the three Appel families,
Lutie wore a very cute soft
eorduroy dress in a salmon shade with raglan sleeves, full skirt and gold belt. She
and Alan are off tomorrow =
for a brief stay In Florida with a group of other young people. Betty and Ruckelshaus left Thursday
for Aiken where they will
be joined today by very young Miss Bettina and her
“ “Day” it is sponsored by Nor- 3
ways Sanatorium in co-opera-tion with the Indiana Mental Hygiene Association and the Indiana Council for Mental
* Health. Filmed at Norways
‘with its actors drawn from friends and personnel, it successfully dissolves the mys-
_“terjous fear and horror so
many lay people have of such hospitals. It also points out that emotional and mental «illness is curable, often pre-
who... porch to coo. over a
the following discussion, Most of us ended on the back two. months old English “bull puppy. His name is Yanksey,
“ini honor of the Yanks and be<
cause he is sure to yank on his leash as he grows older. Another puppy has a new home. Friends of the John Geupels gave them a tiny West Highland white at a * party Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Boozer had for them recently. -
Mrs. Sumner Speaks _ A RED satin heart and red candle holders struck the
Valentine note at the "luncheon meeting of the Indian-
.apolis Branch of the State
Assembly ‘Woman's Club at the Marott Hotel on Wednesday. Mrs. Jap Jones’ bright
dent of the Indiana Girls School. She stressed the fact that everything is done and expressed to make ‘t like a school or college and not a house of correction. The grounds are referred to as the campus, the girls do not wear uniforms and the Campus Council is composed of representatives of each cottage and members of the staff.
‘By LOUISE FLETCHER, Times ‘Woman's Editor ONCE UPON A TIME there was a presidential candidate—we forget which flavor—who predicted two cars in every garage . . . if the voters would be kind
enough to give him a job. The day has come.
garage.
senger space.
Now there can be two cars in every The second one is a little too small to accommodate wg rpEssenger “but; “after ally the candidate “didn’t promise--pas« :
The car in question measures one and 4 three-quarters inches
‘and is really the “handle” of an ignition key for your No.
© 1 automobile.
‘An ignition - key blank, which can be cut fo order, slides out beneath the chassis of the small model two-door
Margaret Sumner, superinten- °
Jean Fitzpatrick paints the frames of the < case-
ment windows,
By JEAN TABBERT
“TWO YEARS AGO last November Charles =
and Jean Fitzpatrick started to build a house: Like many young couples it was their fondest dream. Unlike so many others, they decided
stumbling blocks any normal building always
incurs had to be met without the skilled knowledge a contractor could dispense. Building always has been Charles Fitzpatrick's hobby. “He's torn our car down several times,” his wife relates. But mechanicalminded ¢‘Fitz” likes a problem that temporarily defeats him. He enjoys solving it, That's the wav it was with the house. “He
~~ “néver wanted to give up,” Jean recalls. “Even
when water stood six-feet deep in the basement and I was ready to call it a bad gamble, “Fitz's” enthusiasm was only dampened. He'd eventually work out the tangle and we'd g0 on from there,”
Fit p * father drills holes in an anal iron to "hang recessed light fixtures in the new house.
with space at the back for a cement terrace and in the front a spacious yard. Juit now the
“house is relieved by a single ive ‘evergreen,
the tiny Christmas tree they set out after the holidays.
sections up? “Fitz” had to alter the pre-pack-aged plans to make the garage higher, raise the ceilings in the house proper. Because the original drawings left too little space for the
"latter is the tedious kind of
"Fitz" and Joan, cozy in a finished corner pol the hows. they bull, chock plans to see p alls in order, The project took over two 0 years.
frames and scraped the paint spots off. The b that fakes loads of time but is vital foF bright, shining panes.
“When they came to - visit, our families
gan to buy knotty pine paneling. They brought it back in a trailer at a much lower price than
- they'd have pald for it here.
bath fixtures and made the kitchen and din-
ing room too small, “Fitz” parts, too. He enlarged the bath, eliminated the utility room to enlarge the dining room and kitchen. Instead he installed a basement beneath .the house—a move that was almost more than he could handle. “Laying the cement blocks here was our biggest hurdle; it slowed us down terribly,”
changed these
Plastering, technical electrical devices, plumbing and heating equipment were handled by professional men, But the Fitzpatricks did all "“e painting and hanging of doors, worked c.t the color schemes themselves. - Chief difficulty of the latter were the bedroom and bath. The couple had agreed on all the other colors, couldn't make up their minds on the aforementioned two, The solution: “Filta” picked the colors for the bath, Jean chose the bedroom shades. As In the other rooms the pair especially
ories.
os by Bob Wallace, Times Blatt Photographer
Bion walls, white woodwork and yellow, ‘green and rose flowered draperies. Only throw
s will cover the ranch plank flooring. - ° raperies for the living room are a moot point just yet, but the emerald green walls,
frigerator when the built-ins were set in. “We held our breaths to see whether the two units
would fit in their allotted spots,” Jean says.
“They just barely made it.”
Spaces were left for the stove and re-
Best part of building a house are the in-
dividual touches that can be included. In the Fitzpatricks' case these are the pantry opening off the kitchen for storage, the built-in book= shelves in the living room which make use of wasted space over the basement stairway and ° the all-knotty pine room with cedar closet “Fitz” is using as study and work room. Plans are on tap now for limed oak furniture throughout the house which “Fitz” will
Five Thousand Women Through State Aid Indianapolis Sympliony Behind the Scenes
By MARJORIE TURK BEHIND the 86 men _ in the Indianapolis Sym“phony Orchestra are is + 5000 women: eens These women are the members of the Women’s Commit tee of the Indiana State Symphony Society. The Indianapolis group, which has 900 members, “has the full responsibility for the season’
Mrs. John Alexander, mainte nance fund; Mrs, Joseph Barr,
tense Rauh Burpee, social. Now the commitiée is in
started Monday, goes through Feb. 27. The theme 1s “Buy-A=-Share in Your Orchestra.” While the symphony comes closer to sustaining {itself than any other similar ine stitution, it does not operate on a profit basis, Hence, the
the midst of its maintenance “fund drive. ‘The drive, which ~~
onic
“funior group, and ‘Mrs. Hore
| 13 points. ticket sale, arranges all the H sedan (with wheels that spin). i by plea for popular support. as (33) te tt The latter, gold or silver entertainment for the main- The junior group, which is ain, 0 plated, is a replica of today's tenence campaign, sponsors still in a patch-work stage, elec | 1 motorcars and can be found money making projects and helps out in all efforts of the psons’ -§ 1 n Block’s costume jewelry manages the children’s con- parents organization. ior. 0 department. © * certs. : It is $3 and there is no When Fabien Sevitzky Team Captains ; —l jewelry tax involved. came to Indianapolis 13 years Junior team captains for T 15.3 15 to take over the local the maintenance drive are lids bond Scentimental oochesira. he asked that a Mesdames Thomas C. Capefiiane, Wikod: 3 ; : women's committee be hart, John H. Daily and Silas fu 3 : HATTIE CARNEGIE is formed. C. Kivett Jr. ns 2 in favor of the return The Maestro asked Mri. Ba king with Mis Cape : % : " Frederic M, Ayres Sr. to head n rolYServies 2 of sentimentally perfumed the Ee al ere ney, Horace M. Powell Jr, bb. 11 — Edin- ‘ iTlet d As a jewelry TD A a Frederic Lloyd and Wilok a 50 to 45 a billet doux. Je - W omen fwd would like liam C. Murphy. Members of in Township's 2 designer, her latest con- Ti orchestra. 3 : Mrs. Daily's team are Mese 3 1 § -. 3 ith Same as 1 ceit is the De Early Organizers : Mesdames William C. Murphy, Thomas C. Capehart, Frederic Lloyd and W. T. Finney . . . symphony volunteers. James Samet ss wood he third peri- I = alg Jens and about two nd ong hose lo Spear anyone. The entire $1 col- R. B. Stewart, Lafayette, Fotheringham, secretary, and concerts, arranges all the dis- : Collins, a hermah Sinton rs fore het am gold- o were Mesdames P.. R. Mal- lected by the local committee North, West, ‘and Mrs. John Mrs. Latham, treasurer. _ tribution of tickets and pro- T in ay An Helen center, Phil © : and a half inches long. lory, Charles Latham, Jack S0es directly for the support o,, ., warion, North East. It's practically a full time . gram notes, collects the mon- 4, ” : It is another ball-point con- of the orchestra. In the out- . job for some of the volun- ey, and manages the contests y.
th scorer with
ranklin Twp, (45)
EBA
trivance, with a difference.
The ink is perfumed with one
holy year pin being worn this year as-a symbol by communicants in many countries.
Goodman and Bylvester Johnson.
From this nucleus the
state groups 50 cents goes into the symphony while the other 50 cents is left for local
The central controlling
.. body is the State Council
" The council has meetings in
teers. for the workers are public
Added to'the agenda
for young artists.
Chairmen Listed
Assisting Mrs. Kivett are Mrs. Robert D. Morgan and Mrs.-John W. Houghton,
fg (4 pf § of the famous Carnegie . ; relations, handled by Mrs." i ok. t 4:1 8 i: + committee grew -into a com- - - the spring and fall. Mrs. ’ y . In addition to these duties, Besides their purely busiipenters 3113 3 scents. write, $4.50 plus tax. arr ed at $1. 1x yg » plicated hierarchy of state Projets 3n4. symphony Fro Easley RY Blackwood is the Jean Black, and the biennial the committee answers every ness operations the committee Culloush.g | 1 i Scentwr tume jewelry Peace, designed by Prof.” boards, regional boards and . state council chairman. publication. of “Current call from the symphony office has one. big social good-time.. cont : in . Block's post with an * Askel Theilmann of the Dan- state-and local officers. Executive Officers Officers of the executive Notes,” with Mrs. Bliss B. for . volunteer -help, Mrs, event each year. = . oa : i i aepartiment, wy ¢ perfume - ish School of Arts in Copen- The state units, there are The units are neld together board are Miss Josephine Wells as editor. Thomas D. Stevenson heads The party is in the spring .. ; f additional vial of pe 18, work on the season ticket Mrs. Black uns the broad- that group. toward the close of Symphony
- and a small funnel. Refills
hagen, The gold-metal cross, with. . carries
campaign, bring children to
by four regional committees.
Mrs. Albert Fields, Bedford,
Madden, president; Mesdames
Blackwood, Johnson and
cast “Symphony Echoes”
Other ‘chairmen .of portfo-
season. This year’s reception and
F : : : n, ai of the ios tax. ink: are So Vatican . permission, the concerts and sponsor is regional director for the “ Booth Tarkington, vice pres- which is ‘heard Sunday after - Hos*are Mrs. James F. Car- will’ be in March honor si © sents BARK. ew the Papal coat of arms. Her- _ musical activities. South West Board. Others . idents; Mesdames Goodman, - noon from 3:30 to 4 o'clock. roll. membership; Mrs.-Rob- , Dr. and Mrs. Sevitzky and the Lariat" Grit > he ‘Bi department aldié symbols on this include Dues ifthe committes are’ _ are Mrs. Anthony Brooks, In- ~*~ Ayres and Latham, honorary . -—Mrs. David Williams, - who 2 ert M. Lingle, season tickets; orchestra members and their | rionihe in al : or : Be ving the y official a the dove and a olive branch, $1 per year and it is open'to * dianapolis, South East; Mrs. vice presidents; Mrs. George is In eharge of the children’s Miss Alma Patton, lectures; wives. 2 - . a 3 ! : ? a i : ; Sp > : - . : & A Ji iy « a 3 ; \ : wid Re Tht Gan - jn x ; : = y : : en ASE w $ La iwi See ui 5 EY : Lig
