Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 January 1952 — Page 6
NEW YORK, Jan. 15— Leftover lace curtains or carefully altered lafe bridal
gowns can be put to gbod use in a woman's wardrobe this spring. : Made over into a dress, or long, tailored or flouncy lace will be right in fashion More laces than have been seen in ‘many a season have been shown by designers in the last 10 days of spring and summer
short
the
fashion previews for visiting fashion editors. Lace patterns, like chantilly and alencon, haven't changed
much for a couple of centuries ~bhut there's a strictly modern touch to the way they're included in new fashions. u n ”
NETTIE ROSENSTEIN has designed simple afternoon dresses in both navy. lace and white lace, with flared skirts, cap sleeves and young, round necklines. She also used black chantilly lace over pink taffeta in a black ballerina-length evening dress and white alencon lace sewn on white organdy in hori zontal -stripes as the skirt of an ankle length summer formal ~ Some designers have added ‘embroidery or jewels to lace. Miss Rosenstein’s most sophisticated lace evering dress is.-white..chantilly lace; -handpainted and hand-embroidered over black net. She also combines navy lace with navy pleated net in a strapless for- " mal with a ful], tiered skirt. " ” n
MILMONT USED alencon lace in navy blue in a tailored, untrimmed afternoon dress. The same designer created glamorous spring and summer" separates from lace too sweater-ribbed tops of lace over net or chiffon to wear with lace or taffeta skirts. Ceil Chapman, the designer known for her elaborately draped cocktail and evening dresses, sfill sticks by her simple bodices and draped, puffed skirts —with lace joining taffeta, tulle, silk gauze, summer satin and organdy as her favorite fabrics. Miss Chapman has used colored venise lace over white organdy for bhouffant summer formals. u n =
HERE ARE SOME of the
* other hew ideas for next season's clothes: Jackets—fronr the briefest arm covering to a blousey, buttoned cardigan, jackets
over dresses are definitely here to stay for a season at least. The little Spencer jacket, but-
Blackwood on Bridge—
A RA Te
CROPPED JACKET — Nettie Rosenstein adds a blue wool tweed jacket to a dress of gray and yellow silk twill for an after-
noon ensemble.
toning snugly just below the bustline; is one newcomer. Boleros that match or contrast are more familiar. The newest jacket is still the one that fits 80 snugly and smoothly that it looks part of the dress.
Silk coats -—— beautiful brocades, silk taffetas, and new
fabrics
combining silk = and
worsted and chiffon and wool make fabulous spring dress-up
coats. zan, suits,
Monte-Sano and Prudesigners of coats and make cape coats from ribbed chiffon’ wools, actually wool designs on a chiffon background.
It Is Winning Tactics to Open Light
TONE of the text-books give more than a passing nod to the situation where your opponents have a part score. I don't know why this i=, because it seems to me the lucky stiffs always DO have a nice fat par-
tial and therefore a knowl-
edge of what to do in this situation assumes real practical im - portance.
My’'mail indicates many players hold to the idea that you need. more to open the bidding when your opponents have a part score than when they do not,
Mr. Masters
As Duan bh abl ~ mise
A
Practical Genuine Leather
CHARGA-PLATE
KEY RINGS Only $2.0
REAL MOROCCO
Made especially for us to hold your keys and ChargaPlate. Case approximately 3x12 inches. Colors
Just the opposite is true. It ig winning tactics to open lighter, at least when you are dealer or second hand.
5 u ~
WITH AN advanced partial, your opponents can go out with a bid of one no trump or a bid of two in any suit. Now, if you and your partner have any reasonable chance of contesting the bidding, the time to start. is now. Get in there first with opening bld-—before your op ponents have had time to get together and find out that they can double you. Sometimes you will find partner with nothing. In that case you can get out of the bidding fast. Let them play the hand and fill out their game. There is nothing you can do about it,
an
§, =-Red—Green..- NOVELTY Brown and Blue. CENTER, . FOR YOURSELF! MAIN’ FOR GIFTS! FLOOR Mtr sss EE Ee ee | cares MAYER & COMPANY 29 West Washington: Street, 1 | Indianapolis, Indiana i. L . - . - | | please Sond 30 a isaciecaiirnirsnihoinravaansiierinay | YF Addrons coniceiorsasnsivsssariiriancinininiveinnes ceiieei, I | € Cierra renin, Sr ssi itr tiers aienes | | -- CHARGA-PLATE KEY RINGS of $2.00 EACH I | Colors [7] Red [7] Green [7] Brown 1] Blue » = [1 Cash or Check [] Charge [J C. O.D. I
a sa si sot go os nt se, ot St oo to ro i it
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0 29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET
At other times you find your partner with enough in high cards or distribution to
make a real fight out of it. The point. is, you want to start looking for a sensible sacrifice spot at a time when the risk - of doing so is at a minimum.
In today's deal, for example,
if Mr. Masters had passed as dealer, Miss. Brash would have opened with one heart. which Mr. Abel would have raised to two Then Mr. Masters would have had to come in at the three level—or stay out of the auec-
tion entirely. His side would never have found the admirable sacrifice at five diamonds which was set only one trick. A very cheap save when ‘the opponents were cold for four
hearts.
South dealer. East-West vulnerable E-W 60 partial.
NORTH Mr. Dale S—982 H—932 D—AJT786 C—=K 105 EAST Mr. Abel S—Q J 103 H—K 1054 D—852 C—4 2 SOUTH Mr. Masters S—A 5 H—-"7 D—K10943 C—QJ868 The bidding: SOUTH WEST NORTH EAST
WEST Miss Brash S—K 7 6 4 H—AQJ38 D—Q C—A97
iD Dbl. 2D Pass 3b 3 H Pass Pass fC Pass Pass 4 H Pass Pass 5D Pass Pass Phi. All Pass
| |
Prospam Set
For Gls
| ‘by
Bridge and dancing classes will be on the entertainment menu of the Indianapolis Servfcemen’s Center soon.
The new bridge class, taught Mrs. Easley R. Blackwood, wife of the originator of the famous Blackwood system and writer of the daily column for The Indianapolis Times, will begin Jan. 24. The. classes will be weekly from 8:30 to. 9:30 p. m., at the center 111 N. Capt. tol Ave.
Mrs. William_ Byram Gates,
| well-known dancing instructor,
: saaee,
will start her classes Jan. 22. They also will be in the center from 8.to 9 p. mm. "Assisting Mrs. Gates will be Mesdames = Kenneth’ Kinnear, Harry Hendritkson and Eugene Brown, The uniform is admit
% ohd
Lise > Te ye - 3
Cd is mat RANAIALAN AL LV aadiS® L Lil airs
BELTED GREATCOAT — Vincent Monte-Sano makes a Downy fitted coat of wheat-colored fleece with three-quarter
sleeves.
We, the Women—
Equally graceful without a belt.
Young Man: Pay Heed
To a-Girl's Disposition
By RUTH MILLETT COLLEGE boy home for the holidays was telling his
wise and. realistic mother about the wondarful girl
he was dating.
With great pride he mentioned her beauty, her brains,
‘YW’ Branch
and the honors she had ‘won on the campus. His mother listened carefully and then told him: “All of those things are fine, son. But if you are thinking of marrying the girl there's something more important than any of them. “Has she got a good disposition?”
Ruth Millett That is, of course, a far more
important question than most young men realize. For no matter how beautiful a girl is, how talented or how intelligent, if she doesn't havé a good disposition she'll not be able to make a man happy for long. ou o n A WOMAN may have a great talent for home-making, but if she lacks a good disposition the Home will never be a happy place. Pay heed to a girl's disposition, young man, before you let yourself get too serious about her. For if you marry the girl, you're stuck with her disposition.
even
" » »
IF HER disposition 1s sunny and cheerful it is, perhaps, the greatest asset your .wife will bring to marriage. If it is full of discontent; envy and unhappiness it will work against your own happiness. It is wonderful for a girl to have brains and beauty, but not nearly so wonderful, if you plan to live with her for the rest of your life, as for her to. have a really happy disposition,
Miss Davis To Wed
Times Special CUYAHOGA FALLS O, Jan. 15—Mr. and Mrs. Royal E. Davis, this city, announce th® approaching marriage, Mar. 29, of their daughter, Nancy Em, to James Lee Morton, USAF, son of Mrs, Elizabeth + F. Morton, Lebanon, Ind., and the late Dr. Dale Morton. The ceremony will take place in the First Methodist Church here, Miss Davis, a member of Alpha Chi Omega Sorority, was graduated from DePauw University. Her fiance, also a graduate of DePauw, is attending Officers’ Candidate School, T,ackland Air Force Base, Texas.
Horizon Club ° Sets Meeting
Training for counselors will be discussed by members of the All-City Horizon Club at the 5:30 p. m. meeting Thursday in the Central Branch, YWCA. Miss Oranda Bangsberg. executive director of the Indianapolis Camp Fire Girls, fhe discussion A pitch-in supper, games and music are included on the pro-
© gram. General arrangements
lare being handled hy Horizon
Clubbers from THR
theran Onisten, 4 2 os
will lead" Sal Ll Li © Celery root (knob celery or.
- celeriac) wooked and’ diced or raw and finely diced, team with
Program Set For Winter
HE winter season has.
begun at the Phylis Wheatley YWCA branch. Registration now is open for activities, Miss Betty Guess, health education director, has announced. Late registration will be accepted only through the first two weeks of classes. Terms for classes have been set 10 weeks. They begin Monday. The department is offering activities for all age groups, including: plunge periods and Saturday recreation features for youngsters six years old and over. Fqual activities have been included for teen-agers and adults. 2 5 n MONDAYS THERE will be an afternoon skating period for juniors and practice time
for the girl's basketball team.
Monday nights there will be adult skating. Adult swimming instruction and the modern dance workshop. for all ages will be on Tuesday. Junior swimming instructions and a beginner's skate class will be held on Wednesday afternoon, followed by two hours of young adult recreation every second and fourth Wednesday. Recreation night swimming, table tennis, minton, volleyball and un on u THERE ALSO will be a junior swim on Thursday afternoons and high school Y-teens will follow with a coed.plunge. Friday the gym ig open for
includes badcards.
youth groups of the various churches. “Chick and chubby time” is open to boys and girls be-
tween the ages of six and 14 on Saturday mornings.
Club Plans
Dance
Parents of the Indianapolis Athletic Club's swimming team members are planning a Swimmers’ Swing Saturday night at the club. The dance will be held in connection with the regular Saturday evening dancing program featuring Louie Lowe's music from 9:30 p. m. to 12:30 a. m, During the evening a Prin-cess-of-the-Pool will be elected. She will be formally introduced at the 28th anniversary ladies’ luncheon-bridge party set for 1 p. m. Jan. 23. Mr, and Mrs. Robert Schafer are chairmen for the event. Assisting them are Messrs, ‘and Mesdames Bruce Savage, James Roberts, Guy Morrison and Ben Turner and Dr. and Mrs. Miles Barton.
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I Sculp ture—An Ideal iobby
By Hp E DUGAS EW YORK, Jan. 15 The . housewife who's looking for a hobby that will provide - quick release for her emotions, help. her to
. overcome inhibitions. and give
ture,
! I | {
her creative and persorial satisfaction can find it-—in sculp-
She’ll have to make almost no initial investmeént. To begin, she'll need only a bread-board, some modeling clay and fwo or three inexpensive tools that will enable her to get into corners. But her most important tools will be her hands, particularly the thumbs. This advice comes from a woman who's a nofed sculptor. Her name is Berta Margoulies and her works are in museums and government buildings throughout the country. But in the beginning of her
career, she worked on a kitchen ’
AN EXPERT'S OPINION — Berta Margoulies: . objects . . . is a pleasure.
Molding
_cooked potatoes, raw apple and a’ few walnut meats for a wondertu “whole meal’ salad,
Re al A »
. «
She 17 To THE
table using ten pounds of clay home sculpture, she says, is ° “they don’t want to give them St that she kept moist in a scrub modeling clay or plasticene, a up. School pail. ‘clay that does not have to be “As they learn, however, they be 2:8 %. kept moist. discover that they can recap mi TODAY, SHE holds a Gug- Plasticene is responsive and ture and even improve upon «Shortric genheim Féllowship and an: since it's impossible to spoil it, their original work. It's only Thursdz American Academy of Arts and it's economical, too. It allows when you've done something of The e Sciences award. Her newest you to add or take away from which vou're really proud that : will ope work is one showing a woman your model in order to correct You can think of casting.” tl rr ner in in a protective pose with two mistakes. Casting sculpture isn’t as iy &. During children. ® .% ‘ns ficult as it seems, she explains, the dinr It's to be cast in bronze and WHILE YOU can -work at. You can “cook” clay figures in exhibit presented in October, 1952, with your hobby by yourself, Miss Your own Syed, ii 8 ring “ancient in tele 2 y by : ant for a se, 3 3100) Sings hong lo in Margoulies thinks it's more Say beautiful shades ar Yionors. in the Carol a stimulating to join a group. If yanging from a pale pink to a presider Award for traffic safety. one does not exist, organize it deep A Ted. want to 45 Mrs. C “There is real pleasure in yourself. ut if you don | Valenci: molding objects gir your Youll have more fun and the “home cooking most commu- Corning hands,” Miss Margoulies says. group work will teach you nities have kilns at the “Y, io Gable, & “If you're nof, convinced, just short-cuts and give you a place in an art museum or Yecreation Wilde, watch kids making mud ples or to swap problems. Many Center. ; . Cal, building sand castles. churches, schools and settle- 4 9 = : “Sculpture, because it fulfills ment houses are glad to pro- “THERF'S ONE basic thing EAR a natural creative urge, is Vide space for such groups. for the amateur to remember in for the Widery used 16 St tnerapen te EP A PS RE SR ITTOrS = Dea me... CaSLIDE. A -Miss, Margoulies em= and Me fect in veterans’ hospitals.” so attached to the objects they phasizes, “and that's simplicity Mars, | Best choice of material for make,” Miss ‘Margoulies says, in design. a ' Schlegel TE I —— : Thm. ai liam C. Carroll Klein ai Messr nard E Corday, Stuart A. AW Arthur Wade, I Bartley, A. Davi Messr Kingsbu macher, Charles : berg, H. eric G. Ray. MESI McConn nough, ! B. Moel Meyer, 1 Orr W Morg: Josephir Hall ( Mildred Mary 1 Ballweg Steeg ar Misse: Dorot Trittipo, Welshar Reeta C L. 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