Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1951 — Page 6
Barrett, Meyer, Manship and Needler. Members of the IU chapter attending will be Misses Joan Cunat, Sandra Heston, Lois Borcherding, Marianne Adams and Shaffer.
The Children’s Sunshine Club, Ine. will give a chicken dinner for the children at the Julia Jameson Nutrition Camp July 18. Special entertainment will be presented by Mrs, Norma Koster of the Indianapolis park board and Don Naegele, magician. Dinner chairman is Mrs. Alva, Cradick. Mrs. William Allen is chalimat for the card party for members afterward. Hostesses will be Mesdames Harry German, Christina Hinchman and Ure Frazer.
this week by the Ladies Society of the Indianapolis Saenger-Chor. Both will be in the hall, 521 E. 13th St. The first is scheduled for 1:30 p. m. Thursday and the second for 8:15 p. m. Saturday.
Plan Picnic, Band Concert
i Butler Event Co. Announced
Summer school students and _ faculty members of Butler University will be guests at 5:30 o’clock tomorrow night at a plenic and band concert in the James
north campus, "Miss Hattie Lundgren, Head of]
i= chairman of the women faculty’ meémbers supervising the picnic supper. Assisting Miss Lundgren will be Mrs, Juna L. Beal and Mrs. Virginta G. Brunson, Misses Emma Thornbrough, Ruth Patterson, Jean Hamilton, Ida Lobraico, Augusta Hild and Harriet L. Paddock. Charles A. Henzie, director of the Butler band, and James A. Sewrey, assistant director, will
The program will include marches, selections from musical comedies and light operas. Two additional’ summer band
July 25 and August 1. 1.
oR
are IGH a business it to sound
JR letter and want
informal. WRONG: Use the salutation “My dear Sir.”
RIGHT: Use the name: (My dear Sir is not incor rect—but it is the most formal galutation for a business | letter).
person's
v = ~ A YOUNG man sends you a corsage to wear to a dance, and because of the color the flgwers do not look well pinned to your dress. WRONG: Just leave them at home, and explain why you didn't wear them when you thank your date for them. RIGHT: Wear the flowers in your hair or pin them to your evening bag.
Two card parties will be held |
Irving Holcomb Gardens on the!
. the home ecoponied department,
have charge of the one hour band concert which will begin at 7 p. m.!
concerts have been scheduled for,
“My Dear Mr. Smith." |
rena a a
pink felt are set in at waistline. By LOUISE FLETCHER
Times Woman's Editor NEW YORK, July 10—8omewhere this week in some U. 8. newspaper, a fashion story may read “green satin bloomers are the newest note in street wear, especially when the ensemble is topped by a red fez.” If so, blame it on the fact that a tidal wave of convention - holding Shriners has crashed over New York. They say there are only a hundred thousand of them, that it just looks like more. A hundred thousand figures out to about 666 Shriners for each and every fashion writer here to cover the New York Dress Institute's Press Week. (There is one fashion writer
for a chance at a taxi.)
un ” Ld THE SHRINERS and their | Eastern Hemisphere garb ean.
Far East ~atmosphere which popped wp ‘yesterday as ‘Press Week opened. The styles were designed and made before they hit town. Credit probably should go instead to New York's current musical hit, “The King and 1.” This is the one based on “Anna and the King of Siam.” Tina Leser, on yesterday’s list of designers, showed a dress
Corvanbion
Aid Named
Miss Betty Wheeler has
{
Association and Mrs, Peirce, co-chairman, The appointments at the quarterly meeting this
were state week-end in
ner, Marion, state president.
The convention will be Sept. 9“Secrets of
11 in the Lincoln, Beauty” will be the theme. Delegates . elected to [tional convention Oct.
{ner, Mrs, Lenora Garr, Anderson Mrs. Bernice Taylor, La Porte Mrs,
[ie
Serve with Pickles
| For a late evening snack, toast » On the unTop with i Then into || {the broiler until cheese is melted with dill ji
[rye bread on one side. [toasted side heap tuna. |shredded nippy cheese,
land tuna hot, pickles.
ly I
Serve
who would gladly swap her 666 .
been appointed chairman for the 1951 lstate convention of the Indiana Hairdressers and Cosmetologists Florence
made delegates the Hotel Lincoln by Mrs. Mary Koer-
Ruth Taylor, Terre Haute, land Elmer Schweitzer, Crawfords-
[left by Claire McCardell of Townley .
anded in beige velveteen, with a matching heather-gray wool jersey skirt.
stake no credit for the trace of
the na- 4 21-23 in {Chicago include with Mrs. Koer-
with an abbreviated bodice called a thai top and copied from a native Siam style. (It was a daytime dress, she quipped-—not for black thai or white thai occasions.) a 8 4 MORE FAR EAST influence in her collection ‘came in handloomed silk lame from IndoChina; in imperial brocade from Japan; in brocaded taffeta from China, and in jewelry made of Tibetan beads and Siamese gambling chips. A globe-trotter herself, Tina has picked yp fabrics and ideas from other corners .of the earth, too, and turned them into a typically. American collection for all playtime hours. Night to morning. And vice versa. In the Capri collection, also seen yesterday, two silk taffeta dresses were called “King and I" styles. Here the Eastern influence was in full skirts with ‘a hint of harem drapery. at hemlines; :
tions seen yesterday played up | the full Skirt from Tipa Le-} ser ‘aA circles of | French. felt * the billowing, curved overskirts of Maurice Rentner’s after-5 costumes. In only one collection, that of Paul Parnes, was there marked dominance of the straight skirt. 2 o n v A FEW STRAIGHT skirts in
Hannah Troy's collection carried out er “pincer” silhouet
Practically all of the collec- |
FASHION GOES EAST—The East, the Orient, traces an influence in fall fashions. the suggestion of mandarin collar and coolie sleeves of a multi-striped fuzzy wool jersey coat-dress . . and it's there in Tina Leser's brief "Thai"
.
¥ i ¥ i
Zim
It's there in
“ e
TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1951
(Youngster 1 |After Ww Wetching Ra Tv uli 7
MURIEL LAWRENCE i
BUTCH 155 YEARS OLD.
petite for alcoholic stimulants in 5-year-olds. It's hard to figure why they think it's proper to encourage an appetite for excitement in Butch. Maybe they think it's all right because so many other parents think so, too, these days.
were unreal emotions to Butch,
his supper is served on a table before ‘the television set. Although his bedtime la is 7:30, he rarely Jets to sleep before 10 o'clock. released. : ; A “He's too excited to sleep,” say his parents. oon. 5 S3J0T His PIVE¥IEIA 50 WAR We BaTeR'
If Butch’s parents did their thinking for themselves instead of letting their friends do it for them, they would realize that the suspense, menace and violence that animate the people on his television screen are not theatrical emotions to Butch. /They are the real McCoy. That is why they absorb him so that he can’t leave the set to eat his supper in the dining room. If they
sleep the moment his head hit his pillow. The fact that he doesn’t is clear evidence that he is in a state of intoxication. We don’t have to reel and mumble to be drunk. We can
The Doctor Says—
impo Careful In Snake Country FEL THOSE WHO take their
vacations — or live — in poisonous snake country
be drunk With excitement, the pressiire of big feelings. Until we can express them, we cannot relax. If Butch could personally pummel the cattle rustlers who have aroused his fear and rage, his big feelings about them would be
Every night’
But Butch can’t. He has to take his rage and fear to bed with him, and they stay inside of Butch, waiting to attach rage and fear to any innocent object in his child’s world that he
doesn’t imderstand. 0 should keep some facts in IF HIS PARENTS don't want to be faced | mind. with the problem of a little boy who develops . In parts of the West and
unaccountable terrors and angers, they had better turn off his television set at 6 o'clock. They should prepare for the turning-off evening carefully. If Butch is given enough loving and imaginative companionship by his parents,
Southwest the principal hazard is from rattlesnakes; in a few other places there are the varieties such as
he won't mind losing the false satisfaction he ify SPP : finds in his exciting programs. He will fuss | _ large ratLa about their decision in the exact degree that his tlesnakes cause
parents show their own uncertainty. If we insist on allowing ow little sons and daughters an unrationed diet of menace and suspense in television programs, movies, or other forms of entertainment, we have the legal right to do so. ; But we should be prepared to pay the bill for our decision in bedtime scenes, silly fears of a flapping window blind, a shadow on the wall We should expect rages over toys that don’t go, the denial of a lollypop. The murders and violence of the gang fights and Wild West gun battles will not only haunt our youngsters; they will murder our own peace and joy in our parenthood.
more trouble on this continent than any other variety. The smart thing to do when in snake country is to avoid being bitten at all. In rattlesnake regions high leather boots or leather puttees are generally advisable since most bites are on the lower legs and the snake cannot bite through
Dr. Jordan
he would go to
Blackwood on Bridge—
bodice (right), Bands of light and dark
with little pinch pleats below the waist in front, and with a wrapover skirt kick pleats at side seams... to keep the pincer from putting | the squeeze on the knees.
Claire McCardell’s collection also had numerous full-skirted | styles, the fullness often result- | ing from a belted-in nightshirt type of frock.
But, as she pointed out, where |
the top of a costume is bulky, the skirt must be plumbline. So, when she shows a short, barrelsilhouet topper, it is over a slim skirt. And when she shows her new “oval armhole” (a deep dolman | effect sewn into the bodice with a curvthg seam), the skirt below is either straight or has strictly controlled fullness.
Attending School At Northampton
Miss Barbara ‘E. W e m mer, {daughter of Mrs. William E30 5260 N, Meridian St. pis] gk ins AAA Annie
{School of French at Northampton?
| |
{Penn Hall {will enter Penn Hall Junior Col-|
back forming |
H.|
king and eight of hearts.
This sounds fantastic but it actually happened in today's deal. If it needs a bit of explanation, here’s the way the play came up. Mr, Masters opened the king {of clubs which was ruffed on {the board with the deuce of hearts. | ir. Champion correctly decided H—K 8 the had no chance for 10 tricks un-| {less he could ruff all four of his| C—~A KQ73 C—108 5 2
losing clubs.
I Trumped With Ace
club. At this point the problem was
{how to get to the closed hand | return a trump. This would takeover Mr. |again. Mr. Champion decided it|the last trump off the board and and was bound to win’ the last was plain silly to ruff another leave Mr. Champion with a closing two tricks for the defeat of the eee Ld fAINONA low as Mr. Masters was club.
Defender Discards Club Ace to Win 2 Trump Tricks and Set 4-Heart Contract
MR. MASTERS discarded his ace of clubs to make sure he {would win tricks with both the
THEREFORE at trick two he| cashed the ace of diamonds, led a small diamond ahd ruffed it {with the four of hearts. He led a| second club and ruffed it, then| lcame to ‘his hand again with the {ace of spades and ruffed a third
leather.
s ” = IN SPITE of the fact that people have been bitten by poisonous snakes for centuries ~—and there are reported to be 30,000 deaths a year in the world from this cause—there is no completely satisfactory treatment. Also, there is a difference of opinion about the best method
So a diamond was led from dummy and trumped with the 'ACE of hearts. Mr. Champion was
South dealer Both sides vulnerable
NORTH (willing to lose a trick to the king Miss Brash of trumps—but not now. Sf PeAlnoNl! ticatiotat. of 2 3-19 : : » Partner Comes Throug h poisonous snake bites is not enD—A 10 6 4 2 THE LAST club was Qed and| tirely satisfactory and the reC—None . ruffed with dummy’s last trump.| sults uncertain. It is certainly WEST EAST |Next came the 10 of spades and| pest to take precautions against 4 [Masters was in with his queen. being bitten, Mr. Masters Mr. Abel He returned the king of spades $-KQJ9 bi i jie Mr. Abel rose to unexD—8 3 D—K QJ 97 pected heights as he often does
when Mr. Masters is his partner. | He ruffed the good spade and|
ISHING
SOUTH lled back a high diamond. At Mr. Champion {this point Mr. Champion was S—A 5 3 {down to H Q J 6. Mr. Masters’, H-A QJ 614 {last three cards were the ace of! C . D—5 lciubs and the king-eight of CJ 964 |hearts. SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST | Mr. Champion trumped the dia- : 1H Dbl. 4 H Pass {mond with the jack of hearts. By MARGUERITE SMITH Pass Dbl All Pass’ {Mr. Masters made the fine de- Times Garden Editor
cision not to overtrump. He sim-| 1Q— We want to try raising some almost certain to have the king of | ply threw away his ace of clubs.| “ perennials from seed for our {trumps, He could over-ruff ahd He then held king-eight of hearts border next: year, . especially Champion's queen-six.. ~~ Ste : delphinium, pansies and Shasta daisies. Shall we start the seed
|contract. | now or is it better to wait until
‘We, the Worngri= Try to Give People a Litt, Not Letdown, in Conversation"
IT'S NEVER ANY PLEASURE to see Mamie. In | mp,
School for Girls, Northampton,| Moss, po By RUTH The summer school, now in its 15th year, requires that French,
be spoken both inside and out-| : : | light-hearted acquaintance
a graduate of]
side the classrooms. Miss Wemmer,
Preparatory School,
‘lege in the fall.
The Times bom Service
i it Nb
{
dresses esssasststssnnnRans » .
By SUE BURNETT An eypertly designed jacket and skirt outfit for the mother-to-be js so youthful and pretty and comfortable to wear with slim skirt planned for needed adjustment. Pattern 8742 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 12, 14,
16, 18, 20; 40, 42. Size 14, jacket 3% yards of 39-inch; skirt, 17% yards. The spring and summa!
Fashion contains 48 pages of new styles; special features; fabric news; American Designer Originals; gift patterns printed inside the hook. Don't miss it.
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 214 W. Maryland St. Indianapolis 9; Ind.
No. 8742 ; SIBe. conn Fashion Book Price 25e¢
a
| |
Price 30¢ No. 5942
; A ff | Name . sesvsNesRt RRR EN |
Street SesssARIENSL TATRA AIRY
#5 | 24 |
59428
By MRS. ANNE | C ABOT You'll want to make several of these handy washcloth holders to pretty-up bath and guest towels. Crochet the basket in the popular pineapple |
motif afd make a edging to | | friends to the house only when
match, Pattern 59842 contains complete crocheting instructions, material requirements, illustrations and finishing di- | rections. Needlework fans—Anne Cabot's big album is here. Dozens of fascinating designs, gifts, decorations and specfal features
+ « » Plus four gift patterns and
directions.
|
| something that
stitch |
You can’t look anything but long-faced when you | are talking to her. It | wouldn't be appropriate. For Mamie wants to tell you { all her troubles. The chlidren | are. little | demons. Her
husband has always done
gets her started on how inconsiderate or extravagent, or whatever, men are. Mamie, herself, is usually dead-tired. Everything has been so hectic. And she almost always has a few sad stories about mutual acquaintances. You'd think from listening to
Ruth Millett
| her that she had things really
tough.
half an hour’s conversation Mamie can get even the most
later in the summer? A—Start your pansies now if you want to—fresh seed from the west coast is already on the local market. Delphinium seed will ‘not come in tntil later—
Rush Party 1 Arrang ed: |
Alpha . Event © | Set for Sunday
‘ust. And you will get much better germination of delphiniums if you wait for the fresh seed. Shasta daisies are not so | Chapter, Alpha Phi Sorority, will] temperamental so you should entertain with a rush party from| have luck with them even with 3 to 6 p. m. Sunday. | last year's seed. The longer I It will be in the home of Mrs. garden the more I am convinced P. O. Philpott, 5208 Grandview that an. early summer start Drive. Guests will be prospective | with perennial seed is better | coeds going to state colleges this | than a late start. Plants get
MILLETT
Indianapolis Alumnae
to wearing a gloomy look.
But the strange thing is— she doesn’t actually. She has a husband who gives her, if not everything she wants, at least
usually around the first of Aug~ -
everything he can afford, including her own "way in most things. She also has two healthy, | normal children. She has a nice home, equipped with a good | many luxuries. She has health and a fair share of good looks. She could have a lot of friends, for she makes friends easily. But she doesn’t hold them for long.
| fall. Miss Carolyn Dixon, alumnae | {rush chairman,
| arrangements. Assisting
| Indiana Universities. | Miss Jean Hartsock, Peoria, Ill. | DePauw, and Miss Georgia Fult, | Mishawaka, * Indiana University,
Actives living in Indianapolis
is in charge of | her | |are the rush chairmen from the {active chapters in DePauw and They are
| |
who are helping plan the party in-|
big enough to set into garden rows, get established before cold weather and so are more likely to come through the winter. However, you will®be wise to wait until your vacation is over (seedlings need constant care at first) and you can carry over quite small plants successfully if you have a cold frame.
clude Misses Kitty Cox, Susanna Bowers, Pat Warner and Carol
Send all questions on gardenDagy, all members of the DePauw
ing to Marguerite Smith, The
= n a" BECAUSE IT is never any pleasure to see Mamie, She can
iv Chapter, and Misses Anna Lge i always be counted on to give | £ : : y 8 Clemans, Patricia Locke, Bar- Indianapolis Times, Indian you a letdown instead of a lift. | apolis 9. Queries must include And few people are willing | ara Wildhock, Joy Wilson, Jane a :
names and addresses to be | answered.
| Helmus and Joan Gustin from
to make an effort to see a per- | the TU Chapter.
son they know is going to make them feel worse instead of better. Remember Mamie if your own troubles are your pet topic of conversation.
Families of 'Firefly' Cast
: Teen Problems—
Hints to Girls on Dating
By JOAN AN AFTERNOON at home is the best possible way to start dating. It gives a girl a chance to see her beau in the family setting. It gives her parents a chance to meet him. ' For a first home date, a girl's parents or an older sister or brother should be on hand to greet the guest. They shouldn't hang around the whole time—perish the
| thought. But they should give
their stamp approval to her
| hospitality.
THE GIRL "whe asks her
her family is absent lays herself open to a (free-and-easy interpretation of her hospitality. Kids will think the bars are
down and that anything goes. |
So, invite your boy over. Let dad and mother see what a fine fellow he is, Have some records on hand, a TV program scheduled or the croquet set up. You can't just sit around all after-
| noon.
ANNE CABOT The Indianapolis Times 372 W. Quincy St. Chicago 6, Il. Price 25¢
Cabot Album 205¢
NAME .ccssnscccsnsssssscnsenas AERA ANNRBNNRNANRR RRA RNARARRNR AR, Street sessrsssrsssesrsssnnnann.
City pestsusensuruisesereyerngn
” » ~ AND GIVE the hungry lad a snack of cookies and milk or coke. Informal entertaining is the best training in social manners.
The girl who learns to be a
| good hostess at 15 will always | know how to attract guests to | her door,
Take Spots Out
spot right away with tea spots, rub with
When someone spills chocolate, you ean eliminate the need for. on the tablecloth, get sites Deja carpet sweeper or broom by a soaked in milk. For coffee and
To Attend Tonight s Opening
A number of families of theYMiss Marie Nagley, Washington, |X members for “Firefly” will and Miss Blanche Neele. |be among the opening night au-| , MT. and Mrs. Thomas Neal and dience for the 8:30 p. m. per- daughter Jean; Miss Beatrice E.
Neal, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Neal HAVE SOME RECORDS | formance today. Mr. and M : ay iM | rs. Robert Davidson,
The 1912 Rudolph Friml mus-/ Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Cravens |ical hit is the third production and daughier Judy; Mr. and Mrs. of the 1951 Starlight Musicals arnier, Mr. and Mrs. John | Kello, Miss L lat the Indiana State Fairgrounds. | 55 Leigh Haymond and
Dell Johnson. | Miss Peggy Engle and Frank Mel-| Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Drybread, [ton will play the romantic leads/ Mrs. Robert Green, Mrs. Frank lin the production which plays I McMinn, Messrs. and Mesdames
Mauro Sferruzzi, E. F. Terry nightly through Sunday at the Keith Smith, H. J. LaRue, A. c.
| Fairgrounds. Catterton and George 8. Owings. | - Attending tonight will be Mr., Mrs. Sidney Brown, Gary; Mr. land Mrs, W. F. Heater and and Mrs. C. W. Clarke and son | daughter Jean; Mr. and Mrs. J.|Thomas, Mr, and Mrs. .W.sx K. |V. White, Mr. and Mrs. L. V, Christy and Mr. and Mrs, John Wilkinson, Mr. and Mrs, Charles W. Wilson, Cavanaugh and Joe Cavanaugh {and Miss Margaret Williams. | Mr. and Mrs. Marion Duvall, (Miss Kay Ephlin, Mr, and Mrs, {0. 0. Davies, Miss Sarah Henley, | {Miss Carolyn Deer, Mr. and Mrs. | William Soeurt and Mr. and Mrs. | William Robinson. i
[First Nighters American |
The USA Chapter, | Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dockins, | (War Mothers, will hold a special | yo jorghyrg: Messrs and Mes-
meeting at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow | dames Ernest Winternheimer, in the World War Memorial. |Marle Adams, George Murphy, Guest speaker will be Carroll John Jocks and B. O. Welch, | Reynolds of the Indianapolis | :
Chamber of Commerce who will talk on “Americanism.” Meeting Planned By Pilot Club | ~-By Elizabeth Hillyer.
Any mothers with sons in thé | service are invited to attend the meeting which is open to the| Pilot Club of Indianapolis will NAME, PLEASE—Drum table public. hold its July dinner-guest meet-| (upper left) is so-called because ing at 6:15 p. m. Thursday in the it's shaped like a | Hotel Washington Gold Room. pe drum, Pom.
Designing Woman
‘War Mothers Plan Special Meeting
Subs for Sweeper ~~ -
broke table (below) is small, recMrs. Phillip Lyon, guest Ker, will ip Lye Kaltentorn’s| 's| angular table with two rounded "| drop leaves and includes drawer.
using Jour vacuum cleaner at low] “Fifty Fabulous Years.” speed for light, once-over carpet There will be a short business A . The floor brush attach-| meeting after program. ] will ‘be Mrs. Bessie T.
Fv preside,
Console table (right) stands or a haltgieds,
hangs against a wal is lo vl :
TUESDA
Eat Well f
Can: Com Fami
DESPI1T family is av find easy ti those three in handy. Added t them into jif Junior me
painlessly in calling for m few worry - s for lonesome These minu the food fo further:
# PORK One three can chopped | chopped onic chopped cele! sliced mushro fat, one-third pork and bea spoon flour, « salt, one-half shire sauce, sprouts or co bage, soy sau Drain mes celery, mushr( broth. Cove! vegetables ar flour and two Add to vey seasonings, two to three gently, Seas and serve on son,
My Day— | Won
Know
EW Y( have ( by the Nor of the Chi forces in F It someho to have the 1st Chine: Army so car fully referr to as th leader of voluntece force. I cann help wonder: if, when o intelligence i terviews tho “v oly nteers they find ea individual st dier..consciou he is a “vol ‘When fin rangements will be a peri the military be gone thr whether real can start unt July.
» WE WAN peace that v
Howers Ir
By Plant B
Annual flo proved by p than any oth The fact tha grows each for quicker i possible perennials. You will e flowers this s if you grew t There is d thus helping |
wit
Juicy Har For best-ev use one-half pound of gro
plaswoods 1 ting, ridi
days and co
