Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 July 1950 — Page 5
er-Baker photos.
his bride in a n the Centen142 Jefferson and Mrs. Rusoom's parents.
rett
hurchill ;
hristian Church :30 o’clock yes f Miss Dorothy e to inston
n Fisher offici« e Rev. Enos E, f the Traders urch. The bride Mrs. and Mrs, Jefferson Ave. Russell Church Drive, are tha ts.
tt, Thorntown, honor; Phyllis maid; Judy Dile ridesmaid, and e flowergirl. n, orchid, pink a over taffeta, yhite lace over heart shaped two-tiered fine 1. 8he carried stephanotis on
8 the best man re Roy Hayden ger. The recep= rch. The couple ter a short trip The bride is al 1 Music College m attended Ine where he was ilon Fraternity,
| MONDAY, sur sue.
Revoliion
of heir Own
Five of Tham Will Make Designs Available For an Average Price of $80
‘By PAUL G Times Foreign Correspondent _ PARIS, July uly 14 may be the anniversary of | the French revolu
for modern woman an even greater one is booked for July 15. : that post-Bastille Day, couturiers of this citadel of tashion| will J hl ase Brit tos will be possible. for milad ‘slender
“come true. purse, Think of it. “For a mere $60, maybe $100, you'll be able to
pick from a pretty wide choice of the most superb collections
heretofore decreed only for the world's feminine elite. Five dressmakers, banded together as the “Couturiers Associes,” wil] display the genius of their imagination and handiwork at 52 Rue de la Boetie in Paris. There will be 25 different designs, - five from each of as—many first-class style creators. “You won't be able to get a Dior or a Schiapareltf., They ary join the rebels. But there'll be -motifs by Jacques Fath, favorite! of Hollywood, and Jean Desses, ! dressmaker to the Duchess Se £ | b ! —Kent--and Queen Frederika of Greece, There'll be also nes ervice u Robert Piguet and Carven. 0 Cc an v e v e Cater to Tourists This new era for la femme of| National Meeting the lower brackets comes from : ! a combination of a couple of’ Begins Sunday * post-war developments, The Women's Overseas Service| First of all, enormous death League Will Hold a final convenduties and other taxes have tion workshop at 7:30 p. m. played havoc with great fortunes, Thursday in Cropsey Auditerium. Even those who still posses sizable Plans will be completed for the wealth think -twice before they 30th national convention of the _decorate their women in $200 league which will open Sunday. | "afternoon dresses, of $500 suits, The climax of the convention] or evening dresses priced $800 Will be a 8:30 p. m. banquet July, and up with even the sky no 12 in Hotel Lincoln, Dr. Fred L.| limit. Boper; regional director of the! Then the couturiers themselves World Health Organization and are under such heavy tax and director of the Pan American social security loads, they find it Sanitary Bureau, will speak. hard to keep their workshops’ His subject will be “Interna-| going for. the 400 alone. {tional Health as a Problem of the: Thus the “Paris Five,” more United States.” socially minded than their rivals, Ralph Gregg, national judge have decided to cater to the mid-| ladvocate of the American Legion, dle-class Frenchwoman and her and Thomas Hasbrook, president tourist sister from America and|Of the Blinded Veterans Associa-| elsewhere. tion, also will speak, D for $80 Morning Meeting ream tor : The Rev. C. G. Minton, Vete:| Dead set against this initiative; of course, i8 the Chambre 8Byndl- the invocation and Mrs. Helen cale of Couturiers, many of whose Douglas Mankin, Atlanta, Ga. members consider this mass will be toastmaster. Public health markdown dangerous to their officials have been invited to hear time-honored reputation. Dr. Soper’s speech. Christian Dior, who-sells 80 per; Mrs. William A. Doeppers is cent of his creations to foreign-| chairman of the panquet assisted ers, will have nothing to do with by Mrs. Mary R. Noble and Misses | it. Neither will Mme. Schiaparelli. Mary Jane Anderson, Jeanne She, in fact, insists her business Jackson, Jacque Lacker and Mary, is as good as pre-war. No longer Ferguson. does she have wealthy German| On Tuesday service reports win and Spanish customers, to be sure,(Pe given. Mrs, Milton Allen, Den-| but’ she claims she sells more! Ver, national service chairman, modéls to buyers than ever be-|Will preside at the morning sesfore. x Hou In the incon. 1 wland Allen, personnel direcpas ghefiea mer whl be. able| OF of Ayres, will speak at the 16 get away with a dream crea-| Luesday luncheon in the Lincoln. His subject will be “A Point of tion for an average of $80 apiece. | View » The Rev. Walter Laetsch If she has that much left Dyer] pastor of the Garfield Park Bap. after doing the high spots. .’ itist Church will give the Year But no doubt it'll be Worth) { tion. it for many a girl to get back home with a first-class Paris Annual Check model, complete with tag. At the futensen the league's Copyright, 19 Indianapolis Times fourth annual check for the InKad "the "Chicaua Daily News, Ine. ternational Children's Emergen- . cy Fund will be presented to the Speaks Pieces United Nations. Miss Jacqui¢’ Sue TOPEKA, Xas. — Mrs. Eliza- Loffland will provide the music. beth J. Foster, 92-year-old resi-| Mrs. W., N. Knowles is in dent of the Methodist Home for charge of arrangements for the the Aged here, recited poetry at/luncheon. She'is being assisted by a vesper service recently. She Miss Clare Brook, Springfield, spoke her pleces which she had Ill.; Miss Gertrude Green, Little ‘memorized through the years, | Rock, Ark.; Mry. Glen Riggs end without a halt or a bobble |Miss Pauline Tate,
PLEASE! CAN'T | HAVE A BATH? THE GERMS FROM THAT LAST COLD, NEARLY A QUART OF - DUST. DRIED PERSPI~ RATION AND BROKEN “QUILLS HAVE MADE NE UNSANITARY=AND | © DON'T WANT ANYTHING “LESS THAN A STERILLOW SATHI
Get me to the
PROGRESS LANDRY = =
As Soon- as You Can
We Remove AT LEAST ONE QUART OF oust
] a - the Aor, Pillow
Our farous STERILLO process positive- {feathers in ly sterilizes feathers in a live:steam bath at 315 degrees Fahrenheit—completely removes all dirt and germs. Downy
fluffiness is restoféd to feathers. The
® We furn
~
res
£0 E Maret Ohio: af Ilinos {6th af Penn. 1118 N. Minos 24h Tie
Pro
Sod Us Your Dry Gian,
maa Wa
rans’ Hospital chaplain, will give| :
: the Soft ute) LAUNDRY
Movie star Doris Day has discovered the freshening. effect of sponging her forehead with co-logne-dampened cotton squares on hot days. These processed pads, which absorb moisture without
| matting, may also be sprayed with foilet water and inserted in cuffs (left) or pockets {right) to serve as inexpensive sachets.
By DORIS DAY DURING THE SUMMER, I keep my exotic per fumes tor eve-
ning wear alone.
And even then, I use them lightly.
For daytime use in hot weather, I like cologne or toilet water.
The light floral scents are best.
In my profession, 1 must look
and feel well-groomed at the studio and on personal appearances, so the gcent I wear becomes part of the “face” present to the
public. When I am under heavy studio lights for hours, even my hair wilts, a few minutes’-break, I make quick trip to my dressing room to freshen up. I use cotton squares dampened with cologne to touch up my neck, hairline and even the part in my hair. This routine has an instantly | refreshing effect. After each shampoo, in the summertime, I use a few drops
80, whenever I JAYS,
of cologne in the rinse water to keep my hair fresh longer. The alcohol tends to remove oily traces. - For summer evenings, I put one or two drops of my expensive perfume on small cotton
squares and fasten them with a
sparkling pin to the pocket .of my dress or pin them to the hem of my evening slip. Thus, the perfume doesn't actually touch my skin. Perfume used
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
fume, mgs Outlined
tand Tabasco; mix well Stuff pep-
this way lasts longer. The same trick can be ap-
plied to cologne. I apply my |
cologne to the small cotton squares and slip them into the cuff of a tailored summer suit. They go into the bands in my summer hats, too, and give the final touch to each costume I wear, I've worked out my own methods of applying cologne
and ‘perfume because I don't | think it's efficient just to dab | them carelessly on ear lobes |
and throat. I find that scents which are applied with care linger much longer. And any form of perfume is just as important as make-up in making a woman look and feel attractive.
Traveling Exhibit of Italian Handcrafts May |
ROME, July 3—~Three American men are kindling a fire under the laggard tastes of American women. If .t spreads, the fire will change the inside appearance of 10 million American homes. The three men are Meyri¢ Rogers of the Chicago Art Institute, Charles Nagel 'of the Brooklyn Museum and Walter D. Teague, a New York architect-designer.
In Italian handcrafts, the three men say, there 1s a latent renaissance of the 20th century, waiting to transform the Amerifan home. If the three whleash the Renajssance, it will ‘mean an American home rich in handmade things, in y¥nusually worked brass, in. bright blue and yellow jars and vases and in rich hemps and worsteds— all Italian. : “We have 10 million quality buyers; sald Mr. Rogers here after ‘their 2000-mile tour of
Italy, arranged by the Marshall
Plan authorities. “They will buy Italy's things of character as soon as they get to see them.” ‘
3-Year Tour
The 10 million will get their
view in a traveling exhibit called “Italy at Work,” which will tour the United States for three years beginning next fall. The three experts chose - the new handcraft.
individual
T"tweeds to De Féspected for then
While other Marshall Plan
pleas to “buy European” are being made on the chill arguments of balance of trade -and the so-called “dollar gap,” all three experts made clear that their efithusiasm was stirred | by Italy's undiscovered quality | goods, not its hunger for dollars. Why commercial buyers failed to find these fabrics and metal work before, Mr. Rogers explained dryly,
was because ‘they're too timid.” |
Leather Dull’
“A buyer doesn’t want to take hae or get off the beaten |together two cups sifted enriched;
“It's her job |
track,” he said. it she wanders and misses.”
The deadly dullness of Italy's [OUrth cup sugar. Cut or rub in leather work, a disappointment jone-fourth cup shortening until to the three men, was explained 'MiXture is crumbly. Beat one egg
to. them in. . Florence .by the. | craftsmen there as due to the lack of {imagination of - the American buyer. “Your people
want only the same old red
leather and the same old gold borders, so we don’t change,” “they were told. In silver, too, their search ‘was almost unrewarded. The new Italian silverware, except that made by the house of Infzi in Milan, is largely Victorian, floral and tasteless. But in Didonato, a Rome textile -house, they found tweeds were being made for shipment | to Scotland, there to be stamped and shipped to the United | States. (Israel, incidentally, is also making now “genuine
concluded, for Italy's original selves; not-as pseudo-Scotch. = Tour Itinerary
and neglécted in the American market are the Italian hemp
holstery, cheap and washable. The inlaid marble prepared by Richard Blow, a Briton run“ning 8 Italian shop in Flor-
=f 0h0t, they. found -especially re
I Pachabie
- Wo wmean to Hy to breaks the tyranny of standard departHent store taste,” said Mr.
Beotch tweed.”) It is time, they
products, used to enliven up-.
Especially beautiful, practical |
{variety of. ifingers, or squares to make the
‘Transform’ Appearance of American Homes
By GEORGE WELLER, Times Foreign Correspondent
will show in San Francisco, Portland, Minneapolis, Houston,
8t. Louis, Toledo, Buifalo, Pit- | tsburgh, Baltimore and Provi: |
dence,
wives §7 chines of die-cast aluminum,
which use High pressure. steam |
instead of hot water.
News. Inc.
cago Dally
Copyright, Las %y Thé Indianapolis mes and i
Pineapple Scones ‘Are Delicious
Once you try scones as bread) American |4¢ breakfast or luncheon, you'll] {want to make them often. Glazed| {pineapple fingers are a deluxe
version that provide all the im-|
flour, To make these fruit breads, sif
flour, three teaspoons {powder, one teaspoon salt and one
and add one-fourth cup pineapple
[juice. Add to flour mixture. Add lone cup drained crushed pine-
apple.
Stir only until flour is wel
) For Peppers tls Given
| character, {
ij ery, 1%. cups cooked rice, 14 tea-|
| lengthwise, Remove seeds but not (stems. Plage in boiling salted ‘water and “boil 5 to 8 minutes ‘or until almost tender.
All three men bought their | Italian coffee ma- |
portant food values of enriched |
baking|
go Well ro” Lon
Tiny Dress - New Recipe |
Easy on the Budget, ‘Combine With Meat |
By GAYNOR MADDOX = | - EVERYONE likes stuffed green fneluding. the family} Try this recipe—it has
SAUSAGE STUFFED 'PEPPEKS| # Four large green peppers, 4 : | pound sausage meat, 1 tablespoon | | grated onion, % cup chopped cel- | 3
| spoon Tabasco, one, ounce can | tomato sauce. / Wash peppers;
cut in half
Drain. Place sausage meat in skillet: land cook until brown and meat, {separates into particles. Drain off drippings. Add onion and celery. Cook about 5 minutes or until |vegetables are tender. Add rice
ipers. Place in 11x6x2-inch bak{ing dish. Spoon tomato sauce over peppers. —Pour-a small amount of water! | (about % cup) in bottom of dish {80 peppers do not stick. Bake in | moderate oven (375 degrees F.) {25 minutes. Serves eight, - J "
By SUE BURNETT An adorable little dress and pantie. combination for tiny girls has scallops to make an exciting finish for skirt-and top and to edge the easy to sew panties, Use a candy striped fabric going this way and that.
Tuesday's Menu
BREAKFAST: Orange juice, buckwheat griddle cakes, crisp bacon, butter or
fortified margarine, sirup, Pattern 8615 1s a sew - Fite | coffee, milk. | perforated pattern for sizés 2, LUNCHEON: Toasted
| 3, 4, 5 and 6 years. Size 3, dress, 1% yards of 35 or 39inch; panties, 5% yard. Send now for the spring and summer Fashion; 48 pages of new styles, fabric news, special
cheese and bacon sandwiches, cole slaw, oatmeal cookies," fruited milkshake, iced tea. DINNER: Sausage’ stuffed peppers, country Tried potatoes, corn on cob, enriched
| features; free pattern printed | bread, butter or fortified inside the book. | ~ margarine, scallions, rad- | ishes, chocolate cream pie, 4 ; SUE BURNETT
coffee, milk.
The Indianapolis Times 214 W, Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind. No. 8615 Price 25¢ Size... Fashion Book Price 25¢
|
Name
Seri tstsrnsstanansnannnan
By MARGUERITE SMITH Times Garden Editor |
~~We have a young apple tree
PRBS LNsasasnssr Nan s RRs aRB ENS
CE
A —If you examine the tree close- sate seesenivsnae ly you are likely to find on the undersides of distorted leaves, 'Pienic Planned great colonies of tiny insects, ! t plant lice. Ants follow the plant’ By YWCA Group -| lice (aphids) for the honeydew | Y Central Branch, YWCA/| they can get from the insects, But it is the lice, not the ants, po io 3 bus ori fr 3 ei t| that are hurting your tree Nic-| 3 M. Sunday to Spring Mill State otine sulfate (sold under a va- Park. The group will return at riety of trade names) will con-|5:30 p. m. Swimming and boating | trol them, or you can use the will be available, The trip is open
general purpose fruit tree dust fto. all men and women, 18 years (or spray) to control this and ° and over.
other fruit tree pests and dis-| The trip is part of the summer eases. (Any readers who want! tfun.house-programs- ~by
self-addressed postcard to the mittee. Miss Alice Harding is the garden column.) ‘chairman. l
moistened. Using two forks, drop 2d
batter on greased baking sheet,
shaping it into bars about four and one-half inches long and one inch wide. Press sides smooth. Bake in hot oven (425 degrees F.) {15 minutes. Frost at once with a leonfectioner’s sugar icing flavored
{with lemon ex! extract,
Sandwich Meals Are Quickly Fixed
Enriched bread from your fa
vorite bakeshop. makes shor
!stored in the refrigerator,
‘They can be spread between] slices of buttered -enriched bread {just before time to serve, Cut in shapes — triangles,
|sandwich platter interesting.
1
Garnish with radish roses, fresh
work of preparing and serving summer meals. Sandwich meals : “are HIgH Th TIAVOF and IRformar] {hospitality A--variety of -fillings|——— jmay be made beforehand" and
t
{green onions, carrot sticks and’ = :
“retuffed olives
‘Shake Hose Clean
Launder your hose without a
each fick are cleaned sep-
arately—then they ate blown back into your separately washed ticking:
ish NEW featherproof ticks
at small cost—if you say.
Just Telephone ‘MA. 2431 and Progress Roonan will
>
Too
The ‘exhibit reaches Chicago next March; after opening at the Brooklyn Museum. Then it
SnAg Of tear. Shake them clean] {in a container filled with warm
and gentle suds. A covered pin {jar makes a “good shaker.
t
(AR
Ir
, Rep = Ren, The
Name
Gay Designs for Towels
By MRS. ANNE CABOT Ma and Pa and the Little Red Hen make the gayest designs . for towels. Capture their busy life around the farm in cross and outline
stitches with bright colors. This |
set will-keep your kitchen cheerful all year around. Pattern 5327 includes hot fron transfer for each design shown,
material requirements, color chart, stitch: illustration and finishing directions. ‘ANNE CABOT
Indianapolis Times 530 S. Wells St. Chicago 7, Ill. No. 5327
Bassas rarERRsaninne
Price 20c
Chr aRssuBadssannEsNesRanR bers £ 3 y ak at g Btreet Saab Ess IRR IEIRRRIIIR.
Mebane nsssrannai sedans
Problem E, Husband Tries: fo Save |
Davis, film star, has announced that he will fight his wife's impending
‘marriage together. She is act-
important. than
a joint NponsBiny and a Teal partnership.
dealer's name, send stamped, | {the young adult. program com-
CLOSED ALL DAY TUESDAY, JULY 4
Home from Divorce _By RUTH MILLETT
“Besides, try to hold our ing on impulse.”
There's a modern awitéh to
an old problem--the husband,
instead of the wife, getting set = * | to make a fight to save a home = = from being broken up.
A hus band,
ciding that he child is ‘mors.
We can expect to see this switch more often as mote and more women gain financial
| independence and feel they
1 have a right to walk out on
a marriage. If it doesn't live
[up to their expectations:
"PERHAPS. it will turn out
| to be a good thing. For wome
en have carried the FeaponSInIl. ity for holding marriages together far too long. We've grown used to the idea that it fs the woman's sole sibility to put up a fight when a marriage seems headed for the rocks; that if the woman doesn’t decide that the are more important than any ‘thing, and that a marriage is worth fighting. to save—then there is no hope for thé mar. riage at all. But if husbands ac= cept some responsibility for holding ‘a marriage together through bad times, maybe marriage will come to be more of
After all, why shouldn't ¢ a man fight just as hard to keep his marriage from br
; up as a woman will fight to hold
a home together -- esp
especially | When children are involved?
And when a wife 18 économically independent, it may be the Rushing who has to put up the i
iQ that has a lot of ants on it. 1a. — { The leaves are curling on it! Cit now. What can we do to control] C1tY ++erererersaciiiininiianas Ia them? N. Riley Ave. 3
A divoreds is being married for the second time. : Wrong: She plans an elab-
orate wedding with a great
many guests, Right: She makes simplicity he Neyuote for Ue wedding,
Some of and some out na not.
Beh er a w
no. effort to keep Ron-aichalle -
drinks on hand for the friends who prefer them. Beas ‘careful “to pros e for the taste of your none
drinking friends as for those 2
who do drink.
instead of a wife, de.
respon-:
ae
§
ie
