Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1950 — Page 6
e
“sweet baby’
Kriech-Clark Hostess List Is Rite Read
Fr. John Wells Officiates
Artists Club Exhibition in Ayres
read at 9 a. m, Saturday. The Rév. Fr. John Wells in the 8t.C. Martin, F. E. Smith, Paul Philip Neri Catholic Church. Parents of the couple are Mr, Blasingham, artist in charge.
and Mrs, Bernard Clark, 3554 BE. Wednesday morning, Jacob Kriech, 67 E. Schiller St. gor, Robert White Blake, Harley
Geneva Clark, maid of honor, Rudolph Crandall, iMss Marian and Miss Bertha Kriech and Laut; Mrs. Earl O. Jeffries, artist Misses Mary and Regina Clark, in charge. bridesmaids. They wore matching Rotary Club taffeta frocks -in gold, fuchsia, Wednesday afternoon, Indiangreen and. blue. -apolis Council of Women: MesArm Bouquet {dames Eliza Henson, B. Lynn "The bride's candlelight satin Adams, Robert Straughn, Julius gown was accented with a lace vockener, Harold Hasbrook; Mrs. bertha. A tiara of orange blos- Colin Lett, artist in charge. soms held her fingertip veil. She Thursday morning, Women's carried an arm bouquet of white Rotary Club: Mesdames Wilson Daily, Cora D'Arcy and Robert
roses, The bridegroom those Robert Burnett, Misses Doris Holmes, Kriech, best man. and John Cerene Ohr, Rosalie De Moss; Mrs. Clark, Howard Ashmore and -lizabeth MacCollum, artist in
Charles Kriech, ushers. charge. re ‘ | Thursday pliernoon, Bisie Gary den Club o ndiana: Mesdames Annual Guest Tea Robert Jackson, Henry C. Prang, The annual guest tea of the Goethe Link, Walter P. Morton, Butler University's Mothoars Irvin Morris, B. F. Orr; Mrs. Couneil-will- be at 2 p. m. Friday Winnie Harvey, artist in charge. in Jordan Memorial Hall. Friday morning; Council of Par. Mra. Lot Green is chairman. 'ent Teachers Association; Mes-
It Came from . . .
Charles Mayer & Company
a
Most of Mother's and Grandmother's cherished possessions are from Charles Mayer and Company, Right from the engagement diamond—the table silver, china and glass—and a number of treasured gifts held senti-
¥ mentally dear.
Young folks today get a special thrill out of selectin their important purchases—and receiving their wedding gifts from Indiana's oldest Gift Store. ~~
To all there comes a feeling of deep pride and satis.. ~~ faction in saying "It came from Charles Mayer and
Company."
E hatles ayer and Z omfany
29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET INDIANAPOLIS 9, INDIANA
= +
ATHY ANN MINTON, going-on-five, likes to pla y grown-up. She mothers her doll and takes her for airings up and d ow n the street. Kathy has a ‘brother, David, 22, and a sister, Jama, 18. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Minton, 515 N. Central Court.—By MARJORIE TURK.
Tuesday morning. Psi Iota Sorority Vows uniting Miss Agnes Rita Fred Fosler, 1... V. Phillips, Martin Eastburn, W, W, McBeth; Mrs. Clark and Francis J. Kriech were Ruth Pratt Bobbs, artist in char
Hurt, Clayton Ridge; Mrs. Harry ye.
Matinee Michigan St., and Mr. and Mrs. Musical: Mesdames Frank W. Cre-|
Attending the bride were . Miss Eddington, Karl Stegmeier, and)
_ Times photo by John R. Spicklemire
Announced
For Artists Exhibition
Hostesses are announced for the last four days of the Indiana cents; G
' Auditorium.
‘ge.
charge.
Guild: Mesdames
| {Thomburg, D. A. Balley; nell, artist in charge. ) - i a -
Indianapolis 'Fig
By EARL WILSON
Times Broadway Columnist NEW YORK, Oct. 16—-A brunet model from Indianapolis is doing right well in New York. In fact, in a Lana Turner movie ad they're using her body in place of Lana's world-famous figure. She's Barbara Jean Patterson, and she mentionad that the redson Lana didn’t do her own posing was because of approaching motherhood and because she wasn't available for the sudden photographic job. Barbara's parents, the J. W, Pattersons, live at 3110 E. Michigan St. Mr. Patterson is head of the New York Central Rallroad's storekeepers. “They asked me,” Barbara said in the offices of the Society
put Lana's head on my body. “They posed me in a strapless | dress, then pasted a picture of L.ana's head ever my figure fo the ads.” Te ® " ” "SHE SHOWED me the ad for the picture,” “A Life of Her Own,” drew a line across the neck and said, “That's me from here down.” Coincidentally, in the Lana plays—a model. I remembered that another girl had poged for Hedy Lamarr's body for the ‘Samson and Delilah” ads, but for someone to substitute .for. the girl who started the Sweater Girl fad . . . that was really something. Barbara, known professionally as Barbara Dunne, is in the very exclusive $25-an-hour class as a fashion and photographic
movie
model, and in a recent week earned $400. She's appeared often in the Movietone News
fashion shots, : I ” » ” ON SOME of her modeling chores Barbara works with her French poodle, “Mister,” who's also registered at the socjety and earns $10 an hour. “Mister's an awful ham,” Barbara sald. “I've trained him to walk down the runway with me. When I stop he walks down to the end and sits up.’ “He has some . clothes designed like mine, too.. He has a black coat trimmed with Persian lamb, a white buckskin raincoat trimmed in red and a blue coat with red trim. Mr. John, the ‘famous hatmaker, made a hat for me to wear at one show and an identical one for Mister. It was quite a sight. “Every time we do.a show and the newspapermen come around, it’s Mister they write | about. Such a ham! iY | take him ’ y
with me
” } \ - >» ¥ i igi
of Models, “if I minded if they
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES PAGE6 MONDAY, OCT. 16, 1950
-
Under Contract By ROSETTE HARGROVE Times Foreign Correspondent | PARIS, Oct. 16—It took . a Texas gal to do it, but | Paris now has professional Texas-born Betty
| Metcalf, a top model in New | York for several years, together | with a 21-year-old French girl,
iden -was-born-at the
{ i cover girls.
Lorraine Dubonnet, have put the Parisian models on a sound financial and professional basis. Lorraine, granddaughter of the manufacturer of the famous aperitif, met Betty at a luncheon at fashion designer Jacques Fath’'s home, The model agency
table, but it took a year to get it in operation. It's called “As-
| sowation Model Ideal,” and the
14 girls working for them are
i ideal models.
Together with a staff photog-
{ rapher and a secretary, the 14
models make up the AMI staff. The girls, in common with American model agency procedure, can pose for every type of
| photograph wanted.
| singing student,
» ” Ld
MANY OF THEM have worked as clothes-models for Parisfan designers. Some were artists’ models. A few had no previous experience, among them members of French aristocracy, a a champion
| swimmer, and a dramatic stu-
dent. The last two are Spanish
| girls, “At least a score of girls come in every day,” says Mile. Dubonnet. “All shapes and
| |
eS
| }
|
rizes, too. Besides these, we are getting applications by mail from every part of France. A
Mothers Club
To Convene
State Convention
To Be in Severin The annual state convention of
the Indiana Department, Ameri-
can Gold Star Mothers, Inc., will be Thursday and Friday in the Severin Hotel. Mrs. Eleanor Boyd, Long Beach, Cal, national president, will be honor guest. Convention chairmen are Mrs. Alice Duncan and Mrs. Olena Loveland, Mrs. Helen Biddinger heads the hostess committee. Delegates will attend from the Indinapolis, Bedford, Evansville, Terre Haute, Mishawaka, Mich-
ligan City, Peru, Elkhart, Muncie,
|
Mesdames Wendell Reed, 1nd Mrs,
Tuesday afternoon, National Society of Arts and Letters: Mes- VY, thaplain. ceremony was performed by the dames Carl J, Weinhardt, Charles 4.60 Bert McCammon, Audrean.
Friday afternoon, White Cross Mrs. Belvi Coils, Osceola, serHarry W.|geant -at=arms; Krause, James A. Stuart, Eugene/Wangelin, musician; Mrs. Mary east. Thelma Hawthorne, Pnillips, president's aide, and Mrs. tian Missionary Alliance InstiMrs. Sybil H. Con-/Myrtle Noon, hospital co-ordina- tute, Nyack, N. Y.; Old Orchard, 'Me., and Miami Beach, Fla.’
for him.
Kokomo and South Bend.
—— State Officers
Mrs. Earl Yarling is state president. Other department officers are Mrs. Mary Smith, South Bend: Mrs. Hazel Thursby, Elkhart, and Mrs. Ethel Ward, Peru, vice presiMrs. Mary Prosch, Beech treasurer; Mrs. Duncan Ruth Young, Muncie, recording and corresponding secretaries, and Mrs, Lorena Crom-
rove,
oldie Wencustodian of
Others are Mrs, rick, South Bend,
T ! Bicket, A. M. Ross, Joe Woddell; pocords; Mrs. Lovelace, historian; Floyd Sidman, artist Iniyrs. Genevieve Redmon and Mrs.
Mae Albert; Peru, color bearers;
Mrs. Pauline
or.
Barbara {Patterson) Dunne
when I visit the folks in Indianapolis this week-end.” Ne i “MISTER’'S earning quite a bit of money now, and I wonder if I have to pay an income tax If I have to, I'm sure someone will tell me soon enough.”
Paris Discovers The
"Also a 'Cover Boy'
ures’ in Lana Turner Film Ads
she said, “and I was rather nervous. Adm. Badger was stand-/ ng at the head of the ladder as 1 came aboard.
‘Hello, flustered I answered, ‘I'm Dunne,’ and walked right past him. I found out later you just don't do
33
The ‘Cover
ny
CANDIDATE — "cover girl" to Paris, sizes up Stanford, Conn., girl who is stud work as model between ‘classes.
” - n woman of 50 wrote to ask whether she couldn't pose. And an old man with a bushy oeard sent in a couple of pictures, suggesting that there mignt be a job for him.” The agency, incidentally, does have a “cover boy” under conJacl. Betty Metcalf, who interviews all candidates, declared that the ultimate goal of AMI is to have no more than 20 girls, “but the Lops.” - - - THROUGH 2a connection with a New York model agency, she cventually hopes to establish an exchange of French - American
Blackwood on Bridge—
Betty Metcalf, Texas girl who brought the
qualifications of Edwina Hazard, ying French in Paris and hopes to
. = ” models. Already, several American girls have come over to pose for French magazines. They have two French girls now working in New York. “We operate exactly on the same lines as an American agency,” explained Betty. ''We charge a set fee—3000 francs an hour (a little under $10). The models work exclusively for us and give us 10 per cent of their earnings.” Three times a week Miss . Metcalf holds classes in the art of posing and modelling, “What so many people over here don’t understand,” stresses Betty, “is
that a girl may be a perfect
HA
Metcalf. (back
BIG BUSINESS—In a busy corner of their Paris model agency,
while her partner, Lore
raine Dubonnet [second from right) checks results with Models Jackie Stoloff (left) and Nicole Touchard.
» - » mannequin according to French standards but is not necessarily photographic, nor know the first word about posing. Most French women, however, have to learn how to relax.”
» ” .
“I ALSO teach them the tricks of the trade—to know their best profile, watch the lighting, never show the backs of their hands, always slant the hips but not the bust. Their knowledge of makeup is usually elementary.” What Betty also is trying to impress on potential cover-giris is that they must contrive to
Some Games Lost by Aggressive Opening: Others Blocked With Use of Safe Card
TO DEFEAT some contracts it is necessary to make a bold, Gomer ee
aggressive, gambling type of opening lead. best for the defense to let declarer “make up his own leads.”
Here, the opening leader's jo is, a card which is least likely to It is in this
that Mr. Meek shines. He is
latter situation; -
In other cases it is
b is to lead something safe-—that present declarer with a trick. Q J 9 and found the A 10 8 on his left and the king in declarer’s
“safe” by nature. He would never hand, He hasn't led from that
dream of opening a king from
‘king-deuce, hoping to get in al third round ruff. He hates to lead information,
combination since. Once a novice player, seeking asked Mr. Meek,
an ace on the theory that an ace “What do you think about open-
{should be used to capture an
opposing honor. H® won't lead from a king unless he has all four of them. Says it always costs him a trick. For the same reason he hates to lead from a queen. And a lead from a jack he considers the worst of all.
Novice Player HE AVOIDS trump leads. A real pessimist, he believes this always helps declarer to avoid a guess. He despises a lead from
when he leads a king from King- would have lost only two clubs the Headmistresses Association of | queen, the jack is always on his instead of three, thus making her the Midwest.
left and the ace on his right. Once he led the queen from
Eastern Trip
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Greenwald, 5730 7. 10th St., are on a trip They will visit the Chris-
|
“He put out his hand and said, I'm Badger. I was so
‘ing leads?” Mr. Meek's reply {brought down thé house. “I'm against them,” he said soberly.
{Good Outcome
| JUST ABOUT the only opening Mr. Meek can make without breaking out in a cold sweat is the top of three touching cards.
Neither side vulnerable,
” » » = look both glamorous and ine “terested—if mot inspired— whether they are posing for an ad for toothpaste, a refrigerator or any other utilitarian article. There are several of the AMI cover girls who are now earning between $400 and $500 a week. The higher fees charged by the agency for beauty and glamour have aroused some indignation on the part of business men and editors, whe hitherto only “paid half the price asked but they usually end up by signing on the dotted line.
High Scorers Are Named
| Lilly's Team Winner
In Contract League | Winners in local bridge games
NORTH held recently follow. Mrs: Keen Industrial Contract Bridge S—K 65 League, Fri. night, Section A: i | (Possible Score 24)—— Mrs. James D—A T6585 |Gwynn, Leander H. King, Mr. and C—743 ‘Mrs. Frank C. Olive of Lilly's; WEST EAST |Mr. and Mrs. Homer Riegner, Mr. Meek Mr, Abel [Noble Morgan, Miss Mable SatS—8 72 S—Q J 10 3 terly of Dyer’s, and Harry Single-H—-9 53 «HT 2 ton, Marvin Mulsen, Dr. George D—J 109 3 D—Q 8 2 |Goldman, Harold Erner of FoxC—A K 8 C~10 9 5 2 worthy Motors, ‘13 (three-way SOUTH tie). Miss Brash Section B: (Posible 24)—Miss S—A 94 Margaret Watson, Miss Annabell H—-AKJ106 Van Winkle, Mrs. D. A. Sweeney, D—K 4 Mrs. John Andrews of Standard cC—-QJ 8 Oil, 17; Warren Holmgren, A. C.
The bidding:
Davies, George Owings,
That is why he led the jack of SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST Forbes of Allison's, three; M. L.
diamonds instead of the king of clubs in today’s deal. As you see this lead turned out very well. Miss Brash lost a spade and three club tricks for down one.
contract with ease,
| i {
[i Cc
Telephone Riley 7411
Beautiful, Dutiful,
. Barbara spent part of last sum- that to admirals.” ! mer touring China and. Hong oh well, a girl who's been a
King.
the cruiser St. Paul out there,” Navy!
“I attended a lunéheon aboard 1
7
LARS : “stand-in for Lana Turner has a
ew privileges——especially in The
oH
5
Wonderful, Well-Made
1H Pass ZH Pass
4H _AlPams Attends Conference
McManus, Mrs. E. C. Ball, Mrs. Claude Lett, William Macdonald jof Paper Package's, and Mrs. {Mary Hilkenbach, Mrs. Margaret
Miss I. Hilda Stewart, principal Stalker, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Ker- | e \| If Mr. Meek had laid down even of Tudor Hall School, left Satur- sten of Wyandotte’s, 14 (threetwo touching honprs. He says one of his top clubs, Miss Brash day for the annual conference of way tie).
She will
from Pittsburgh tomorrow.
ae ee”
*
.
P
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The next meeting of the league
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Miss Nan Kessler Blvi Wednesday n College Alun apolis. A Eu be given by Indianapolis merce. The hostes Misses Dor Lewis, and 1
Ralph L. § “Public Util fore the Ai Women Acco is chief accor secretary of Water Co. 1 in the Spink
Early res nounced by t tal Auxiliary nic Wednesc Irving E. R will be hosts. Reservation by Dr. and M and Mrs. Sar and Mrs. Jam Mrs. Donal Mrs, Eldridge Mrs, Delmar Mrs, James Mrs. Damon Mrs. J. Fran] Sheldon L. Lawrence F. ] Mrs. Frederic Dr. and Mr berry, Dr. an Dr. and Mrs. Dr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Ger: Mrs. Jack ) Mrs. Earl V. Pearlie A. Sci Arthur ‘W, 8B Maurice D. }rs. Russell Dr. and Mrs.
The Ladie Alténheim wi at 7:30 p, m will be Mesda
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