Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1951 — Page 43
AGE iffing
chops with a » lamb chops, cot, prune or ng. Let the 1 a slow oven e hour.
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1 Fashion Note:
PAGE
Cathedral Is Scene of
Wedding Janice Battreall Becomes Bride
The Rt. Rev. Raymond |
R. Noll read the vows uniting Miss Janice. Battreall
and Harry Penoff in marriage at 10 a. m. yesterday in SS. | “Peter and Paul Cathedral. | Mr. and Mrs. Russell A. Batt- | reall, 2501 N. Alabama St. are parents of the bride. The bride-. groom is the son of Steven H. Penoff of Granite City, Ill. Mrs. Jean J. Battreall was | -matron of. honor.® Wearing a | - sheall pink dress, she carried a | cascade bouquet of blue carnations. The bridesmaids in or- | chid, yellow and aqua taffeta, | were Mrs. John M->ck, Mrs. | Robert C. Wilson and Miss | Helen Gulde. Gene Nelson of Granite City attended the bridegroom as best man. His ushers were Harry | Nelson, Mr. Wilson and Mr. Battreall, all of Granite City. The bride's veil of imported | fllusion fell from a seed pearl tiara. Her white satin gown was fashioned with an imported lace yoke. Her bouquet | was of white orchids, roses and valley lilies. A family reception was held In the home of the bride's parents before the couple left for Mexico. The. bride attended Butler University. The bridegroom attended the University of Illinois.
strapped or strapless. Almost always it is a frock in whic
The Mature -Parent— :
Soft Fullness
Though the predominant skirt in the cotton dress collections is the slim one, there are enough full skirts to make not -a trend, but just a trend toward a ‘trend.’
Dresses from the collections of three American designers stress: the point. Sylvan Rich, in doing a bolero ensemble in French gray | linen, uses not the expected slim skirt but a full skirt falling into soft folds. The bolero, like the dress itself, has blue yarn saddle stitching as trim. The bolero hides a suntop.
A sleeveless brown broadcloth
By MURIEL LAWRENCE DO YOU REMEMBER the chapter in child guidance books warning that if we set Johnny's standards too high, he'll get so discouraged he won't try for any standards at all? If anyone in the American family has a right to be discouraged by standards that have been set too high, it’s not Johnnie; it’s his parents. - It’s doubtful if Myrna Loy and Mother Machree, together, could, combine : to offer the I's: Patience, = cheerfulness, serenity, control and allaround endurance demand- ¢ ed of this gen- |,
“I'm not the maternal pin-up girl of child guidance idealists, 80 I'm. not afraid of showing my children I am mad. When they step out of line, I think it’s my duty to put them back into it, just as the women at the supermarket will put me back in my place if 1 try to push them around. “I am Marian A., American,
dress by Betty Barclay has the eration of fa- free, any race, creed or color full skirt, this time given an in- thers and you like, and she is who I verted pleat that starts at the: mothers. | - intend to go on. being.” waistline. High, round neck and Why, then, Mrs. Lawrence Some day Mrs. A. will speak armholes are banded in white don’t we say: “Look, every- up. She will make her “little pique. : ‘Deep pockets, one. I am Marian A. I sew, Emancipation Proclam a-
: too, have pique trim. . - . \ Jerry Parnis, in doing a novelty striped pique, uses white with a' times I get tired. I'm npt the purple stripe. A one-piece dress hergine of a women's magazine feelings. She'll stop wondering with a pyramid decollete. it hassgerial on young family life, so if her children’s emotional shoulder cap sleeves. The skirt' I'm apt to get mad when I'm health will break down under is deceptively full, made soft by ‘tired, especially when the chil- a “Don't” instead of a “Do.” wide box pleats ‘that start at the dren track mud in on my just« WHOSE IDEA was it anywaistline. mopped linoleum. way—this 20th Century super-
| | MONDAY 12 noon 'til 9 p.m.
tion, and. .stop. outraging .her nervous system by imposing a 24-hour-a-day control upon her
‘~clean;—cook;-market-and-collect--the children. from school. Some-
WAIT ON YOURSELF
*(168) Would Usually Be $ 69 (152) Would Usually Be $ 88 (149) Would Usaally Be $ 99
g ouf us (141) Would Usually Be $115 sf "n° canted to by M8 AY \ast a0 qf alu o (135) Would Usually Be $129 ave 2. yhes® for (120) Would Usually Bo $148 onoVd a po ®® \ \ ak this sale’ : oiler ne Large sizes, half quest cor? sizes, sven Teeny ores quits Miss!
Shop in Zool Comfort!
The ‘Convertible’ Costume Comes
THE 'CONVERTIBLE' COSTUME—Playing a starring role in summer fashions is the convertible costume with its own jacket, or cape, or cape-stole, or bolero, or duster topping a sleeveless dinner dress or sundress. Often’ the frock beneath is a sheath styie,
h
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the wearer can go dining or dancing. anything from silk shantung or faille to cotton or linen. Pictured are two of the ''convertibles." Block's second floor Junior Shop. lines of the double-breasted bolero and of the skirt. The frock be-
Too High Standards Are Hard on Parents
deluxe Parent Robot, with its metallic hide guaranteed against denting by all juvenile bad temper, impertinence and slight? Relax parents. Nobody can quite figure out how we got
caught on this mass production belt in the first place.
But we do know one thing. If the general purpose was to make us ashamed of being indignant and outraged when our children insult us, we are going to be in trouble. The Shakespeare who said, “To thine own self be true,’ also said. let every eve negotiate for itself and trust no agent.” John Milton said it, too: “The just honoring of ourselves ig the fountainhead. from whence worthy enterprise issifes forth.” . Ponder their points of view when the ' standards of the Robot Parent make you uncertain whether God knew what He was doing when He made fathers and mothers human
1 beings.
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NOTIONS DEPT., STREET FLOOR
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THE INDIANAPOLIS
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As to fabric, it may be neath has a scooped neckline and is, of course, sleeveless. The Ellen Kaye style is $35. The convertible’ at right is a Frank Starr | design from Wasson's Fashion Shop. Of white waffle pique, it | has a flared-skirt frock with deeply scooped neckline both front | and back. The matching duster has deeply cuffed elbow sleeves. |
This is $59.95.
Date Special ]
At left is a beige linen from Navy piping accents the
Mother Will Look Pretty
By GAILE DUGAS x2 NEW YORK, May 5— The pret‘‘:tiest girl on the avenue on Mother's Day will be, of course, © mother. She'll wear fashions de- : signed especially for the trim, mature figure.
Pure silk shantung, a fabric| that’s well-loved this spring,| makes a dress with diagonal lines’ in a warm golden tan. A diagonal | closing begins at the neckline and, | with self buttons, continues to the hem. The collar is cut double.
The delicate colors of one pure! silk print would make it exactly) right for the mother with a fragile! look. In shades of iris and forget-! me-not blue, it has slim lines and a brief bolero jacket. Both jacket and neckline of the sheath dress under it are sprinkled with twin-| Kling blue sequins in various Pale blue, a lovely color for! ® the young matron whose hair is ¢ blonde, is used for a trim twoi: shades of blue. { “» piece dress. The belted jacket is
Study Club Sets Meeting
The annual May breakfast of the Irvington Mother Study Club § will be May 16 in the home of { Mrs. J. C. Siegesmund, 6161 E. Pleasant Run Pkwy. S. Drive. Honorary members will be host- = esses. «John Thomas, E. Thomas, will
son of Mrs. C an active member, entertain with an account of his recent travels abroad. New officers will be installed They Mrs. Robert Millar
are
vice president; Mrs. Harry Pirtle, Roy Koten, recording : and corresponding secretaries, and Mrs. Don Voss, treasurer. ;
For something new in drum- § sticks, mold ground meat mix- } ture on metal or wooden skewers §
to resemble chicken legs. Brown F¥ them in fat, add a little water then cover the pan tightly and { let the “legs” finish cooking. ¢
5 belt, 3 naps in the linen of the straight: ig skirt.
=~\ADAMS . . . First
| By SUE BURNETT Smart as can be for dates all summer is this handsome, slim- | | ming frock that's certain to command attention. Note the | clever buttoned shoulder 'treat- | ment, the pockets that accent ' | the smooth skirt. ’ 2 . { Pattern 8712 is a sew-rite per- | forated pattern for sizes 10,
12, 14, 16, 18, 20, Size 12, 4 [yards of 39-inch. { The spring and summer Mixes | mses | Fashion contains 48 pages of Her Day, May 13 Wap | new styles; special features; | a sis | fabric news; American Designer | Give Mother ivy Originals; gift patterns printed Ere. | Inside the book. Don’t miss it
RELAXATION
| —send today.
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W, Maryland St. Indianapolis 9, Ind. No. 8712 Price 30c
| Size Fashion Book Price 25¢
Name
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| A tiara held her veil,
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SUNDAY, MAY 6, 1951
Mr. Eichrodt Marries
Miss Krier
Vows Exchanged In Catholic Church Miss Margaret Agnes Krier and Fred G. Eichrodt Jr. were married yes-
terday. The. Rev. FT. Henry ld officiated: at the 11:30 ceremony in Christ the King Catholic Church. Parents of the couple are Mr, and Mrs. Paul E. Krier Sr, 6049 Indianola Ava, and Mr, and Mrs. Eichrodt, 6225 Haverford Ave. : er “THe bride chose: Mrs. -H. Ga Riley Jr. as matron of honor and «+ Miss Nancy Melchiors, Evansville, and Mrs. William J. Krier, Mrs. Mark Conway and Miss Barbara McNulty as bridesmaids.
Wore Yellow Frocks The bridesmaids wore yellow frocks in styles matching the nile green lace and marquiset dress of the honor attendant. Karen Ann Riley, junior bridesmald; Beth Ann and Lins da Jane Krier, flowergirls, and Kent and Keith Riley, ringbearers, also attended the cou~ le. : Attending the bridegroom were his father as best man, and Paul E. Krier Jr. Chicago, Willlam J. Krier, Harold G. Riley Jr. and Theodore Kaiser, ushers.
Tiara-Held Veil The bride's white slipper satin gown was accented with Chantilly lace sleeves and extended into a cathedral train. She carried a prayerbook topped with white orchids. Immediately following the ceremony, a reception was held in the Riviera Club, The bride chose a pink linen suit and navy accessories for traveling. After May 14, they will live at 3332 Central Ave.
Marionette
Show Booked
Members of the Indianapolis Junior League puppet theater and workshop - will present a marionette show tomorrow at a meeting of the Delta Beta Chapter, Psi Iota Xi Sorority. Mrs. William 8S. Beard, worke shop chairman, will be assisted by Mrs. Willis H. Tomlinson and Mrs. Robert T. Reid. The 7:30 p. m. meeting will be
in-the 38th-St. branch, Merchants
National Bank. Mrs. Robert Taylor is hostess chairman.
Spruce Trees Ailing Spruce trees enter the list of It's a canker dise First symptom is usually loss of needles from lower branches. "3
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