Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 July 1950 — Page 6
i Or a gal with crossed knees
Sk
e New Look = Dior's Salon
1950 Fall Silhouet Has Slim, Smooth Lines _. With Feminine Curves from Shoulder to Hips * NEW YORK, July 14—The guitar is coming up in
the world. Leaping from the land of cactus and adobe, it has landed smack in one af the flossiest New York ‘dress salons—without twanging a’ string.
+. Yesterday the fashion press found it at Christian Dior's. There guitar describes the latest Dior “look.” Papa of the “new look,” Dior this fall has created a slim-lined successor.
Slim ‘as it is; the line Is not straight. It follows feminine curves -
rounded shoulder and bust to small waist to curved hips.
from That's the. “guitar.”
Ww
Suit and dress skirts, 14 to 15.inches high, fit tightly—but slashes, wrapovers and portfolio pleats provide leg room,
Buit
are waist cihching but have stiffened curves over the Some of them are longer than last season's. p In slim dresses, hiplines are accented by folds or big pockets.
Evening dresses are slim with only ball gowns having full skirts
“Coats are full without flaring, and the collection includes full-skirted redingote types.
Hip-Length Jackets
Like Dior, Hattie Carnegie believes in showing off a trim waist. Her suits have hiplength jackets with clearly’ in~ dented waistlines and 1 skirts with slight flare at knees. : Dresses are slim-skirted, too, with extended folds over hipbones for a front curving effect, Some have one - sided panniers. : Coats, however, are full with big, wide collars, deep cuffs and huge pockets set aslant at sides and very low toward the back.
Some of the Carnegie suits might be called “The Case of the Missing Jewels.” By day Jeweled buttons are not visible. __By night they're pulled through “buttonholes in peplums and colto do their twinkling. The whole line, including
"Teen Problems—
Keep
By JOAN DO YOU know how to keep your feet on the ground? In these easy-going days, lounging and lolling are common habits and teen-agers’ feet decorate railings, chairs and tables. :
‘Well, your clod-hoppers may not hurt the rustic furniture of a fishing camp, the rough railing of a boat-dock or a weathered park bench. They're definitely injurious to Mom's new divan and her shining dining-room table, : In public places, feet belong on the floor in front of you not only to avoid damage but
. also to protect your fellow
mane. LS, : EVER SEE a lanky lad slumped in a bus or a movie with his feet in the aisle?
swinging a spiked heel? They're sure to trip someone eventually—with possible serious injury. Putting your feet on the seat of a bus or a train is poor public relations, too. It tags you & seat hog, in the first place. Then when you remove them to accommodate an insistent _passenger you leave the seat
nd siim
a traveler's
suits, has the season's new dressier look noted in all New York collections,
The Dressy Look Again Even so simple a style as the shirtwalst dress can be “richer” looking, it seems, Example is one by Brigance, which gets its luxury look in velvety corduroy. Young and feminine charm
— 4s Jane Derby's stock in de-
signing trade, It is particularly apparent in her filmy black dance dresses of net or tulle with big skirts shorter in front. These usually have sequins or Jewels or jet lurking under the top layer of fabric. Practically a Derby “signature” are tiny lace ruffles on yokes, pockets and sleeves of afternoon dresses -—— and she also puts such ruffles on wool jersey frocks, Her variations on the sheath silhouet are shadow lines such as Norfolk tucks, pleated ruchings, graduated horizontal
“tucks, cape collars, slanted hip
pockets and crossed suspenders of fur.
Feet on the Floor
dusty and grimy. Not nice for clothes—not at all. For your own sake, proper disposal of your pedal extremities is a must, A sprawling posture indicates a slovenly state of mind.
Nervous knee-hitching and toe-twitching shows a lack of poise and self-confidence. Folks will judge you by these habits —don't think they won't.
You go to a physician who
=
versation 1s dull and the eve- |
a course of
what it will cost. ; Wrong: Feel that you canmot ask in advance what the treatment will cost. Right: Say frankly that you would like to know what his fee for ths treatment will be.
. . - » . ~* You have gotten a group of persons together for an
ning dragging. . Wrong: Try to fill in the silent moments yourself and hope that they will all decide
2 %0 go home Eirly,
Right: Buggest playing a card game, or watching tele—wision, or dancing If it is a young crowd -— anything to
thing to do.
Presents Picnic Treats—
sion 8
~ treatment and you wonder
®
—
a | ix i {
this group of battiers [ease is
The Doctor Says— Terramycin Is New Drug
tack Infectious diseases is hard to keep up with Penicillin first, _ The history of this remarkable substance Sn which was origi- & nally from a mold, is too well known — to need repeat-
ng. Miltiions jor i Doibeilis tor pre: [awards are based on skill in the monia, meningitis, and a host of treatment and care of patients, other diseases, owe their lives to/CO-Opefativeness, spirit of unselthat substance, or at least have fish service, personality and probeen spared perhaps weeks or fessional appearance and manner.|
months of costly battling with. Winners, chosen from the fresh- | the grim reaper.
plete List : A complete list of committee chairmen named by Mrs. Patton include Mrs, Earl Foster, Oklahoma City, Okla, American Ine dians; Mrs. Lowell E. Burnells, Glouster, O., approved schools; Mrs. J. F. Maddox, Hobbs, N, Mex., Americanism; Mrs. 8. F, Scharnweber, Mitchell, 8. Dak. Caroline RE. Holt scholarship fund, and Mrs. Mark A. Smith, Macon, Ga., conservation. Mrs. Harry J. Smith, Parkersburg, W. Va., correct use of the ; Mrs, Willam H, Erwin, Bethlehem, Pa., credentials; Miss Margaret Goodwin, Beloit, Wis, DAR Good Citizenship Pilgrime age; Mrs. Will Ed Gupton, Nashville, Tenn, DAR Magazine; Mrs, Preston B. Wilkes Jr., Charlotte, N. Car., DAR citizenship manual; Mrs. George A. Kuhner, Mt. Vernon, N. Y,, DAR museum, and Mrs. Clyde Robbins, Tracy, Minn., DAR student loan fund.
More Named
Mrs. Edward F. Madden, Crest. wood, N. Y. Ellis Island; Mrs. Walter 8. Welch, Laurel, Miss, genealogical records; Mrs, Byron K. Worrall, Lincoln, . Neb,, girl homemakers; Mrs. Edwin A, Morse, Randolph,” Vt. insignia; Mrs. John N. Pharr, New Iberia,
E
winter. Made of navy satin matching the slim satin. and-chenille lace top, the skirt juts out on either side of the flat center Pat Bodice is embroidered with il-——sitk chenille. Flared skirt accents the trim waist Car-
peep from under the net . . . A versatile shirtwaist dress (center) by Brigance is of wide wale corduroy in putty with contrasting black cuffs and collar of corduroy . . . "Peacock skirt" (right) for a
Jane Derby's black patterned silk net cocktail dress (left) designed over a black silk sheath . . . bodice is shirred over nude-toned net centered with pink rosgrain ribbon tied in a small bow on one side.
Other bows, low on the underskirt front and back, _houet is introduced by Hattie Carnegie for fall and _ negie likes. Mors. Sherman By Watson: oder Awar d Dinner | Blackwood on Bridge— J : biolliday Pork Mrs James 7. Byer, 3. Felts In Lafayette Champion Yells at Dale for Minus Score; [Begins Series ~~ [mrs,Iiemembersnin, ana yes
. ! < Sunday at 3 p. m. sees the be-| YORE, Biotion lature ids Char-
Many Will Attend ~ [Demonstrates He Could Have Made It Eining of 8 special feature Stites s. manat depen Club Event “IF YOURE NOT GOING to play 'em any better than that,| With the lead at the twelfth|, , _ -° & series OfiMrs. Thomas Burchett, Ashland, { , ram talks, most of them illustrated Ky., press relations; Mrs. Leroy Mr. and Mrs. Oscar A. Ahlgren, don’t bid ’em,” yelled Mr. Champion as Mr. Dale went down one|trick coming from the board, Mr. FH A ta. M Whiting: Mr, ahd Mrs. Claude S. at his four-heart contract. Abel would be helpless, with colored pictures, on subjects. asey: = Tgue 2, L Bey pro. Steele, Knox, and Mr. and Mrs. “We could have beaten their brains out at one spade but, oh Yes, Mr. Champion's technique, that Will interest every gardener SI in. sane Dent o Cogley G. Cole Sr., Vevay, will go Io, you had to take the double out—and then end up taking a is a little better than Mr. Dale's 20d nature lover. Portland, bk Mrs. Henry - to ee iayette pS maFraw. hl Ba {Pian pera on te Bande d Mr.| South dealer. : on these difficult hdnds. But note| Sidney Esten, Holliday's natn- Jacobs, Scottsboro, Ala, radio ] e aw - ’ . > - » - hor oy OR, of the winning Dale, . “but as I understand It] Neither side vulnerable. this, Mr. Dale is a more consist- ralist, will start off this Sunday and television; Mrs. T. B. Throck:
New Antibiotic Is Developed
By EDWIN P, JORDAN, M. D. EVERYONE has become $0
used to new “wonder” drugs of| the antibiotic family which « For Awards
| lead a spade to the ace, return would have the jack-nine of
| |
{dianapolis
that it
them. pa came #2
|
i
obtained | f |
| Dr. Jordan |
Penicillin has been followed by
{other substances relatéd to molds Waymire, i? or to germs in the soil.
1 One of them, streptomycin, has
‘proved particularly useful in cer- Joan Helt, freshman, and Miss Wo tain germ infections of the urinary Ruth Jauise Jans, ssior; Methoi tract aralh yield to it better than e ; i and! ¥ do to penicillin Junior, St. Vincent's Hospital, and! {Miss Mary Ann Foyst, freshman, sister-in-law of Mrs. John T.
& 8 » THE MOST recent addition to
| Those people whose memories jv ung Dr. Paul Muller, 80 back to the terrible infections
of 15 or more years ago, and to Plays Santa Role
the lttle which vould be done for
sufferers from many infections at! that time, are the ones who fully|
}
+
against dis junior, Indiana 4! has ben yin. As ng cal Senter. i | comparatively | {small number of patients but the Dr: James W. Denny will be he were married
learly reports sre also favorable.
AFTER WINNING the fourth of clubs. Here everybody would| {trick with the queen of clubs, have two cards left. Mr. Abel!
Student Nurses en To Be Honored ; re ere vseni Recent] Wed
will be honored by the In-
‘hearts and Mr, Dale the queen-10.
Dr. Norris To Be Feted Marriage is Set
| For Tomorrow,
Dr. Mary Alice Norris, whose > 3 e to Lt Col Joe Free. ... |Surratt, Vienna, Ga., will take place tomorrow, wil be enter ‘tained by Mr. and Mrs. Walter {Hueh! in the Indianapolis Athiletic Club tonight. :
Invitations have been sent to Dr. and Mrs. Leslie Baker, Aurora; Dr. and Mrs. William Kurt and Mr, and Mrs: Robert Nash, Tipton; Mr, and Mrs. John C. Norris. Knightstown; Mr. and (Mrs. R. P. Frey, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Shields, and Miss Margaret Dunham.
The bridal dinner was held in {the Athletic Club last night. Sixteen guests were entertained. | :
Miss O'Dell
a spade and ruff it.
Junior Chamber of! Commerce at a luncheon Wednes-! day in the Hotel Washington Gold Room.
The student nurses muave béen: elected by their classmates. to recelve the Jaycee's third annual Student “Nurse Awards. These
man and junior classes in their hospitals, are Miss Anne Charlotte freshman,” and Miss Juanita Bevelheimer, junior, Indianapolis General Hospital; Miss
dist Hospital; Miss Irene Hojtel, freshman, and Miss Marie Dumas, Schafer photo. Mrs. Mildred irvine Janneck,
closes
and Miss Margaret
Aasterud.. |rvine, 402 Blue Ridge Road, University Medi- nd A Komp Galbraith son of ! rs. A ai ¢ Burney, ! luncheon & er. Program y ied June 4 in Mrs. To Be Honored chairmen are-Dr. Carl B. Sputh! Irvine's home. : roe a chu]
: will fete-Miss Molly O'Dell. Miss (Down Payment Made
{O'Dell will be married to John On Queen's Rug
{Richard Adams July 22 in !SBweeney Chapel, Butler Univer. To New York Kiddies . | TORONTO The ramous sity. | ot n epoint rug ma en : . . HARLEM, N. Y. Mrs, M ® Mary was purchased by the Cana- re Frank V. Osborn, 5736 Bunn, Santa Claus lady, was a at ha f the Imperial nnsylvania St, and her an chapters o op the daughter, Jane, will entertain the| Order of the Daughters {bride-to-be with a personal shower ment of $100,000:and have offered t 8 P- ™- tonight. dinner; Aa A lunchéon tomorrow ‘in the
Saturdays = alo pm.
i campaign. : i The rug, made by the 80-year- given by Mrs. James A. Stuart. = x i Queen Mother, represents 2. Mrs. Donald A. Baker, 3750 E. ;
Mende rough Friday, 930 0 5 pm. i
> | NORTH ent winner, with “Holliday Park and its morton, Des Moines, Ia. resoluof the first Prize, Class A. In the you Jowet, like the way I played| Mr. Champion Remember that good technique| Flowers” fllustrating with 0l- tions; Mrs, Samuel C. Skillern, a Let TurMmMEI Ye Son . “ARV S—AJ7T438 is only part of the game. In the Ored slides. Lewiston, Ida. transportation; test by the Federated Clubs of = Mr, Champion snorted. “Any-| i: . Tippecanoe County at 6:30 p.m. in body could make four hearts on H—K'}5 next few columns I want to show| Different speakers on a variety Donald B. Adams, New Rothe Purdue University Memorial it.” he sneered oo. D-lG4 {you why Mr. Dale wins more— of subjects Will carry the series/chelle, N. Y., building completion, Unlon buflding. The Greater La-| “You're wrong » said Mr. Dale.] C-K 75 why he seems to have what Mr./through the summer. Tt's open|/and Mrs, Benjamin R. Williams, fayette Chamber of Commerce iso couldn’t.” ’ ? i WEST EAST Champion calls such “goodito the public, free, at ‘Holliday Butler, Pa., erection of memorial giving the event. | : Miss Brash Mr. Abel breaks.” House. bell tower in Valley Forge. The “Build a Better Commu- Returns Heart S—-K 10865 8Q09 nity” contest was sponsored last! 1 AM sorry to report that Mr. H-4 Qs Hue) 942 year by the Kroger Co. In. co- Champion's analysis was better] C—8 6 2 C—31094 operation with the General Fed-|than Mr. Dale's play. Miss Brash SOUTH -leration of Women's Clubs, Na- opened the king of diamonds. ™ Dale tional winners were announced The defenders quickly took three a this spring at the GFWC annual {ricks in that suit and switched H—A Q10872 convention in Boston. The TIPPe- 1, a club which Mr. Dale won —A Q canoe Federation sponsored the wiv ihe queen. i D--10 8 2 BYCAmOry Yalley camp for the yi, then led the king of hearts The — Q3 Tivpacance -ounell of Girl Scouts, nq returned a heart to his ace. SOUTH TE NORTH EAST With th o will be M {After that he couldn't avoid los- 1H 18 Dbl Pass R e group Ta. ing a trick to Mr. Abel's jack of > i : . ay E. Wemyss, South Milwau-1y oo oe. 2 H Pas: 2 NT Pass Kes, Ne a i] As Mr. Champion pointed out, 3 Pass 4 H All Pass Scout commissioner for Milwhu-| MF Dale could have protected] Cash the ace of hearts, then ""Ikee County {himself against the bad trumpithe king. The unlucky trump i — — {break if he had played as fol-|split would show up at this point. IE; h S d {lows, “| Now ruff another spade in the i . ‘closed hand, cash the ace of | Ig t e ecte {Has Card Left clubs, then lead to dummy’s king
cup evaporats
three-q sugar, lady fin Soften gelal "dissolved. Adc chill until thic milk sweetenes into glass cus until set. Serv Serves four to APRICOT Two tablesp one-half cup half cup hot sugar, one-qu juice, one cup stewed aprico orated milk, or
Juice.
Pour evap freezing tray and chill unti around edges. Soften gelal for three mini and stir until | Add sugar, on: juice and pur until beginnin Scrape chills into chilled be egg beater un tablespoon ler tinue whipping Fold in chil and place in i
fingers and ap six to eight.
Sunday's BREAKF. nanas and | flakes, bac milk. DINNER: mashed pot sauteed mus cob, enriche rot sticks ar cot charlot milk. SUPPER: ded cabbag lettuce sal: dressing, re cuits, maca milk:
Homemake
Plans Luncl Mrs. Gary E 8t., will be ho! ton Homemak day. There will dish picnic lun Co-hostesses "Poer and Mrs. W. J. Koons, | duct a short 1
