Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1952 — Page 6
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ow
PAGE 6.
i Find
i. PURE SILK SURAH—A coat dress sells for $17.95
Leslie Fay Designs Fit Typical American Figure
By
PETTY LOCHER .
Times Fashion Editor
F You are five-feet-five or less you have the typical
American figure. You have probably
you look like a school girl and half sizes are too mature But now your luck changed. Here's a real Fashion Find for the woman of five-feet-five or less. It is a Les) design, comes in sizes 12 to 20, and is equally smart in any of these sizes.
has
ie Fay
= ” ” THE WAISTLINE and length have been proportioned to this height and details of the dress will give the illusion of height Because of its simplicity, you can wear it now under your furs and will find it indispensable to a well-rounded summer wardrobe later. The dress is beautifully tailored of pure silk surah print, buttons down the front and has a graceful full skirt with three unpressed pleats on either side. a un s A DEEP ROUND YOKE sets off the neckline with folds of material draped into a soft V. A narrow self belt and short sleeves complete the picture. This dress is available in e0coa, green or aqua on a white background at $17.95 in Block's Budget Shop on the Second _ Floor.
Nov. England
found, » * . ~ - misses sizes are cut for the taller girl.
4
to. your dismay, that Junior sizes make
"IFC To Entertain State Board
The Seventh District, Indiana Federation of Clubs, will entertain members of the IFC state board at 3 p. m. Friday in Ayres’ Auditorium. Mrs. Theodore F. Fleck is Seventh District president and Mrs. Clauds IFC executive.
Sovola To Speak At Club Dinner
Id Sovola, The Indianapolis Times columnist, will be guest gpeaker tomorrow at the meeting of the Indianapolis PBX Club, the I-Tops. The dinner event will be at 6:30 p. m. in the Famous Door Hoosier Room.
Hostess Named
Mrs. George Hutchison, 6125 Gregory Drive, will be hostess at 8 p. m. today for the Nu Phi Delta Pi Sorority pledge _ service and business meeting.
Recipe Notes
New Shipment Just In!
< Only d
For Valentine
Now when you jot off a note to your friends — you send them one of these wonderful recipes for favorite oldfashioned New England dishes. So artistically handled you will love the quaint decoration adorning the edge — coffee pots — churns — fireplaces, etc.
Such recipes as Boston Baked Beans — Indian Pudding— Apple Pan Dowdy, etc. You'll try them yourself — and Your . friends will Yio) in your novel stationery.
Periest Gifs | {CHARLES MAYER & COMPANY a | 29 West Washington Street | ® Valentine Inglagapolis, Indiana ; ® Your . Bos j Please send tO... tits ean crevnsenens | ® Party | Address... vveeiceceveisvanssccrnnnnennne }. Prizes! | : al City. . MEAs cris ae vs State..seees I ® Someon®s | : ; Birthday! | New England Notes | . ® The Bridet | = [JCash. . [JCheek . 171C.0.D, !
Mail and Phone Orders Carefully Filled ~~ STATIONERY DEPARTMENT
dharke Mayer and Company
v.29 Week Werkisghen Street
S. Steele, Knox,
Bouquet-of-the-Month Club, Inc.
| major?
| |
5th Avenue. Horst Launches
Bouquet-of-
By ELHABETH TOOMEY
United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Jan. 30— Plenty of women have hinted to husbands and boy
friends that a few flowers unexpected re-
now and then, at moments, wonderful minders of devotion! But the girls will be happy to know that a man is about to launch a nation-wide plan which should help their cause, It's less subtle than their longtime looks in flower shop windows but the purpose is the same. “Most people just. think of flowers on special holidays,” explained Alfred Harris, a Manhattan florist for more than 30 years, who recently started the
are
” ” ”
“THEY ACT afraid to go into a florist shop in “between Mother's Day and Thanksgiving.” His club, entitles members to order cut flowers, flower arrangement or plants for onethird less than the usual. retail cost by paying a $2: yearly membership. Special flower arrangements are put on display in his shop off Park Avenue for members to choose from and to order, vase and all, if they like, The saving is made possible, Harris explained, by having
members order in advance so only flowers to he sold are kept in stock with no waste,
The Mature Parent—
four months here I think the plan is ready to be used by other
dealers, ists In
“After testing it for
so I'm lining up florother cities,” he said.
He will sell the right to use the
lub name, pilus complete de-
tails on carrying out the plan.
Members don’t have to huy a bouquet every month. Thay can buy as few or as many.as they
.chonse. Standard arrangements sell for $5, but if a fellow wants to go all out and send two dozen roses for Valentine's day, he gets the same member's discount.
the-Month
Club “I'm suggesting roses arranged in a low bowl and placed in a heart box for men to send on Valentine's Day,” said Harris. “Or if he wants a corsage, camellias are in season now and so are cymbidium orchids.” Although the scholarly-look-
ing florist doesn’t hand out ad- _
vice to members. except on request, -he could pass along a tip or two that'd come in harfdy during courtship. “For one thing, American men could learn something from the French about taking flowers in person instead -of having them delivered to a girl,” he said. . “It makes a more direct hit, But American men are too lazy. They want it delivered even if it's just across the street.” ” » ” MANY OF HIS present club members are women, like the member in Geneva, Switzerland, who: has flowers sent twice a month to her mother here. Every now and then there's a puzzling order too. One male member, the florist sald, stops by.the shop a couple of times each month, picks up one of the flower.arrangements on display, asks that it be charged to him and walks out with it without waiting for it to be wrapped. “Then there was a woman who ordered flowers sent to Rudolph Halley, the city council president,” Harris mused. ‘“‘She wanted them delivered right after he got back from his honeymoon.”
Hints on Cooking Steak For an Important Guest
By MURIEL LAWRENCE
T 3:30 P. M. Mr. Smith telephones his wife to tell her that he is bringing
home an important client to urgent and specific about guest likes steak cooked.
Over her 6-year-old’s protests,
snatches her from a game of bundles her into the car. At the Supermarket, as her mother is arguing with the butcher, Molly shoves a box of animal crackers into Mrs. Smith's stomach, demanding that it be purchased forthwith. . Mrs. Smith, burdened with groceries and speculations on varieties of salad dressing, says, “No, you've got crackers at home.” Half a block from the car, she suddenly discovers that Molly is absent from her side. Looking back down the stree rooted in apparent fascination display of office equipment.
# 8 =n “HURRY UP!” calls Mrs. Smith
time for nonsense.”
Molly does not appear to hear.
sorbed in chromium ashtrays
cabinets, Molly's whole bearing plainly proclaims, What are you going to do about
“I like it here. it?”
Molly is trying to delay her imother because she is aware that her mother does not wish to be Molly is therefore showing aggression
delayed. toward her mother. about it?
What can
Blackwood on Bridge—
Best Bet Is to
LAYING with Mr. Fusty,
the old fashioned bid-
der, your best bet is to use his “gfstem.” “When he
opens with a three bid, he tells you two things—that he has a
lot of cards in his bid suit and -
that the final contract will be in that suit. He may have a lot of .stuff on the side— and he may have nothing. How, then, do you bid when Mr. Fusty is your partner and opens with Mr. Dale three of a Well, if you have a fit in his suit and are willing to bet at all, you just raise his suit once. T If you get doubled, you are just down one more. than you would have been if you had passed. And you shouldn't be
| hurt too badly.
BUT NEVER MAKE the mis-
take of bidding another suit or |
PET mmm an =e mea
: ‘
Tomaso.
dinner. He is the way the
by force.
Mrs. Smith hopscotch and
courses is
choice.
Mrs. Lawrence
She can do several things. She can return to the window and enter into a discussion of its display with her little girl. Molly out of her attitude. _grocery order in her car, and then returns to Molly to propel her down the street to the car
Or she can reason
n = ” IT DOES NOT matter which of these action selected by Mrs. make any of them succeed or with which Mrs. Smith follows the action of her
Smith. What will
fail is the feeling
What Mrs. Smith does about Molly's aggressive conduct is of minor importance. does it is of paramount importance. Whether she chooses to discuss the chromium ashtrays, reason with Molly or propel her to the car by force, she must act with quietness, firmness and love, if she wishes her action to bring results. o Therefore, Mrs. Smith’s problem is not one of action at all, but a problem of feeling.
SPECIFICALLY pull clear of her reaction to Mr. Smith's fear of displeasing an important client.
How she
u = ” , what she needs to do is to
Unless-she can
overcome her own anxiety, anything she does Is apt to lack the firmness,
quietness and love it
needs to make it a successful action.
t, shé sees her with a window “I have nc ave no patra,” Stolid, ab-
and green file
her mother do close to him.
South dealer Nelthér side vulnerable
NORTH Mr. Dale S—KJ9 H—762 D—ADb5?2 . C—10983 WEST EAST Mr. Meek Mr. Champion » S—4 S—86 38 H—-KJ5 H—10943 D—QJ108 D—K976 C—AKJ534 C—=162 SOUTH Mr. Fusty S—AQ108752 H—AQ38 D—8 4 —C
The bidding: SOUTH WEST NORTH LAST 38S Pass 4 S All Pass
no trump. You're going to end up in HIS guit, so you may as well go to game there, directiy. Mr. Meek who was, of course, scared out of the bidding by the three , Spade opening, 1 led t the
In- Bernard Shaw's play,
Throughout the play, Caesar the leader is bulwark against anxiety in those around him, Although he is the most powerful figure in the world, he is never so burdened by the responsibilities of empire to forget the child queen’s need for support. needs of people in the mass that he cannot see the need of the friend beside him. He is never so occupied with mankind or the future that he has no time for the present or the living man
“Caesar and Cleo-
the
He is never so intent upon the
ts
Use Mr. Fusty's 'System’
King of clubs. It appears that Mr. Fusty has to lose a club,
Ea
Or she first places her |
Shaw defines. his ideas of leadership. |
a diamond and two hearts. But |
he didn’t. He lost just’ three |
tricks in all, as follows. "2B = MR. MEEK shifted to the queen of diamond at trick two and Mr. Fusty won with dummy’s ace. He led the ten of clubs and, instead of ruffing it, discarded his last diamond.
Mr. Meek won and fired an-
other diamond. Mr. Fusty ruffed in his hand, then led a small spade to dummy’s king. He ied dummy’s last diamond and ruffed it. Next, he dummy again with the jack of spades and returned the nine of clubs on which he parked the eight of hearts. Previously Mr. Meek had held safe out-cards. But this time he had none. Dummy’s eight of clubs was now good and the nine of spades was an entry. Desperately, Mr. Meek led a heart. This was no better and no ‘worse than any other lead as Mr. Fusty had his ten tricks.
| | |
»
Visit Indiana's Most Beautiful Ladies’ Specialty Shop’ BUN, Illinais. Street WB : Women's Apparel. Individually Yours : ie
~
entered .
BADGE INSTRUCTION—Sandra Thatcher (left) and Adra Heider, both of Girl Scout Troop 120, and Miss Iris Pena (center).
Girl Scout Badge Courses Set
GIRL SCOUTS in the city will have no trouble working off two badge awards next month. Two courses are ready-made
for them at the Children’s Museum.
On each Saturday morning in February there will be a class for the Western Hemisphere badge.
It will meet from 10 o'clock to noon. Instructor will be Miss Iris Pena, native of Lima, Peru, who is a part - time
museum staff member, On the same Saturday afternoons from 1:30 until 3:30 o'clock, John F. Carson of the museum staff will give the One World badge course. His assistant will be Miss Pena. Girl Scout courses have become a popular Saturday feature at the museum.
They are being given under the direction of Miss Rosemary Skaggs, curator of education. Miss Skaggs has charge of all after-school - activities as well as visiting school groups. Courses already offered have been for the conservation badge, rock and mineral badge, writer's badge, the bird finder’s badge and the architect badge. However, all courses are limited to 40 persons, Those signing up first will be admitted for free instruction.
He Needn't Be Rich to Buy Palladium
Times Special
NEW YORK, Jan, 30— Many a bride-to-be in 1952 may ' expect to receive a
precious white palladium or
two-tone palladium and gold engagement ring that contains as many as 18 sparkling diamonds and “looks like an heiress’ betrothal band,” a prominent designer here announced.
While the _ bridegroom who
Model 613 6 CUBIC FOOT Model 615 Model 813 8 CUBIC FOOT Model 815 Model 816 Model 917
"Model 1015
Make the mist o GOO! 60D gas © amzans we GAS + a coxs uniury
10 CUBIC FOOT, DE LUXE
———— — —— ——————— ——— ——— —— —— — — — — —————— —— — .
presents one of these dazzling creations may well feel like a millionaire, he need only have the income of a clerk. For his bankroll will be dented only to the tune of $100 to $150 which actually falls short of the average price paid last year for engagement rings. ” = n DESIGNER ARNOLD GOLBER, stylist of the famed Bristol rings, is responsible for this latest boon to young couples
1951 MODEL
was $249.50
°
was $369.50
was $449.50
9 CUBIC FOOT, (FAST FREEZE COMPARTMENT)
now $269.50
was $399.50
“»
planning marriage on a mini. mum budget. Using a modern version of the, classic princess-style ring, he has created 25 different designs in the all-precious metal palladium and in palladium and gold, which spotlight center diamonds ranging in size up to one-third of a carat. Between 14 and 16 tiny diamonds, set in a cluster arrange-
ment, surround the center gem.
Servel Gas Refrigerators at Savings of *30 to *130
now $199.50
was $259.50
6 CUBIC FOOT, DE LUXE’
was $299.50 now $229.50
———— ———————— —— — —— — S— —"—— ——— —— —— — {—— — — — —
was $299.50
8 GUBIC FOOT, DE LUXE
Sn SW —_— — —————— — — —— ——— ——— — ——— — ——
now $269.50
8 CUBIC FOOT, SUPER DE LUXE (FAST FREEZE COMPARTMENT)
now $209.50
now $229.50
now $239.50
now $359.50
&
”
These prices apply only to our present stock of 1951 Servel gas refrigerators — while they last. Sée them at 49 . Pennsylvania St.
sit i 000 ps et
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 30, 1952
:,
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Elect
" WEDNES
‘Movi
Post Of
- MRS: Ww; |
ican been cocted Association
Only state members of tt Mrs. Reedy’: duties will co territory of 1 sas, Illinois, Kansas, Mich Missouri, “Ohi Wisconsin.
uo THE AMF Committee wa Only one natic Year was hon all mother: country. In 1943 the tered. From tl 48 states, the ] bia, Alaska, H Rico selected mother. The Amer chosen from Basic aim of the establish: homes and | built on a fou with its five c dation stones:
8 ONE: DESI make a hom the strength | (3) Faith—be Knowledge—t! home, and ( expressed’ ins day-to-day roi Mar. 10 is nominations f Mother for 1 Mrs. Reed should be sen Qualificatio the - candidate mother as e character of children; (2) a strong reli integrity, and body those garded in mo cheerfulness, tion, kindnes and a homem
n FOUR that her life and cepts of the that she have and internat! ing and hav community service for p (8) that she t resent the m cans in all 1 tached to her can Mother. American tee of the G dation office Robert E. D Mrs. Harold Mrs. David ¢ chairmen; M cent Peale, ti Herman Kna of New York Mrs. Danie delphia, is pr sociation of
feck
Question: Inherited? Answer: I but can | mother to « nancy. It problem; ti Health Ser statistics s rate for c is not decre The Ame giene A 8S Broadway, ] a little pam ject for five the Carriag
VALE! CARD!
