Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 February 1952 — Page 6

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FasHKion Find—

~ The Doll Silhouet ls Possible

By BETTY LOCHER

? Times Fashion Editor

. JF You VE been sighing over fashion ads of the doll silhouet and wonder-

ing about the models, “how do they get that way, " here's the answer,

First andfToremost it is good posture. It really is" not how much you weigh as where you put it, Stand before a mirror and draw yourself up tall. Hold your breath deep in your chest for a minute and see how it flattens the diaphragm, the bust and throws back your shoulders. Now try to bfeathe naturally, keeping this posture, Is your waistline smaller? A prop or two will help as well, Even the most perfect figure can do with a little molding here and there. ” ” »

ONE OF THE best figure molders seen to date is Warner’'s new Merry Widow corSelette that answers several “underpinning” problems at once. It was inspired by MGM's forthcoming film, “The Merry Widow" starring Lana Turner. First of all, it gives you a coveted wee waist. At the same time it rounds out the hipline and uplifts the bust. Best of all, this figure magic is performed without tight shoulder straps. "8 A WISP OF FRENCH lace and nylon with delicate feather boning, and youre endowed with charms you never knew You'had. Strategic lacings down the back make {it adjustable. Garters are detachable. You may buy it at Ayres’, sizes 32 to 38, B cup only, Jn

Blackwood on Bridge—

raises §

UNDERNEATH IT ALL—"Merry Widow" corselet gives you the new “doll” silhouet:

white, The price is $18.50 with lacings., Without lacings it is $12.50. ~ Miss Sophie LaBue, designer for Warner's, is in the corset

department at Ayres’ this week.

She will be available today and

tomorrow for consultation on special figure problems. | In addition to the corselet shown she has with her a large selection of girdles. and corsets from junior sizes to women’s sizes for every type of figure.

Word 'Always' Seldom om Applies i in Bridge.

ERE is another situa- ; tion where Mr. Champion’s “teaching” cost him ~. plenty. He has been telling Mr. Muzzy that where you have two suits to be set up at a

no trump contract, the suit to go after first is always the longer one. “Always” is too strong a

it iid talking to Mr. Muzzy, for the sake of em-~ [Phasis. Mr. Muzzy Actually, the word “always” should never be used in connection with any bridge situation. Oops, there I go doing it myself. What I mean, of course, is’ ALMOST never,

» » »

. IN TODAY'S deal, Mr, Dale opened the six of spades. Mr, Muzzy was elated as this gave him three sure spade tricks. He played low from dummy and killed Mrs. Keen's queen with the ace. Laboriously counting his winners, he found that he had just eight, three spades, four diamonds and the ace of clubs. Where was the ninth trick com- , Ing~from? Well, Mr. Champion nad sad to go after the longer t

first. There were seven

clubs in the two hands and only . six hearts. So at trick two Mr. Muzzy led a club and finessed dummy’s 10.

"North “dealer Neither side vulnerable

NORTH Mr. Champion : S—K 8 H—J 72 D~KQJ9 C—A 10 4 WEST EAST Mr. Dale Mrs. Keen S109 76 2 S—Q 54 H—A Q 3 H—-9 854 D—-8 764 D—10 2 C=} C—KJ96 ; SOUR Sars mw & Mr, Muz yy. .

» se St

C—-8758 The bidding: ” North East South West 10 Pass ZNT Pass

3 NT An Pass

Mrs. Keen ‘won with the jack and returned a spade. Dummy's king won and Mr. Miizzy came

St. Patrick's Day Fete Tomorrow

Tomorrow the New Neighbors League will hold a St. Patrick's Day luncheon at the Antlers Hotel. New duced session. Bridge and canasta will be played during the afternoon. Hostesses will include Mesdames Raymond Holmes, J. Alden Brown, Charles “E, Smiley, Howard D. Deardorff, Clayton C. Copenhaver, L. J. Johnson and Norman F. Byswinger. :

members will be introfollowing the business

=

to his hand with the ace of diamonds and finessed the queen of clubs. When this lost, his last spade stopper was knocked out and he had no further chance for three tricks.

” » ” BEAT yourself at the

“YOU second trick,” snarled Mr. Champion. “Why not start on hearts instead of clubs?” “But you told me— " began Mr. Muzzy.

“No matter what I told you,” Mr. Champion interrupted, ‘it

redoesn’t™ apply” here. Dale had.

the danger sult, ..Spadgs. .H

a

= clubs, Sut “only in hearts. Holding king, Jack and 10 of hearts, nothidg could prevent you from winning a heart trick and, with two more spade stoppers, you had plenty of time.” “There you go using absolutes again, .Champion,” smiled Mr. Dale. “Don’t say ‘nothing’ could prevent him. Something did. Muzzy himself.”

I-Tops to Meet

The I-Tops, the Indianapolis PBX Club, will meet for dinner at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the YMCA.” New officers of the group, which includes 100 mem-

bers, are Mrs, Mary Swaim, president; Mrs, Ann Endicott, secretary, and Mrs. Nellie Carey, treasurer,

Sorority to Meet

Mrs. Stanley Herman; -5327 W. Carlton Way, will be hostess. at 7:30 p. m. for the Gamma Delta Chapter, Kappa Delta Phi Sorority “white elephant” sale today. Mrs. Marion Walker will assist the hostess.

Times “hoto by Dean Timmerman,

SOCIAL HOUR Monthly meetings of the Kirshbaum Community Center Nursery School ts is followed by a social hour. Hostess after last night's discussion program and playlet, : by four of the mothers, was Mrs. Whitney Greenberg (seated). Mrs. ; and. Mrs. Ralph T. Levin wait their turn. There are three nursery school tots three five yes ole. Already there is a Waiting list for the fell term, -

Wkkiise Pidblle a ppes-

© small,

© will

nr HE IN DIANAPOLLS TIMES

= Woman Detective —— Proves Nemesis of

N.Y. Dope Peddlers

By ELIZABETH TOOMEY

United Press Staff Correspondent

EW YORK, Feb. 27--Kathryn Barry poked into a pile of rubbish in a shabby bedroom recently and uncovered half a milion dollars worth of heroin, She arrested one man that night and two the next

day. It was, a police captain said admiringly, an average - any man on the narcotics squad would be proud of. Kitty, one of 13 women on the 100-member squad, shrugged off the arrests as routine, but her blue eyes sparkled when

she mentioned the heroin. ~ ~ "

“YOU DON'T FIND 60 ounces of heroin very often,” she sald. “It makes you feel

vou're really doing some good. That cuts off the supply for thousands of users.” The 5’ 2" first grade detective outranks the three men on her team, so she's the boss. She doesn't look like a fearless lady detective. That's why she's so valuable to the narcotics squad. With a scarf tied over her head and a shopping bag over one arm she fits into the scene as a neighborhood housewife. Her brown hair is peppered with gray and her figure is inclined to plumpness. a ~ » “WHEN WERE watching somebody who goes into fancy night spots, I wear evening clothes,” she said. Then her .8un goes into a dainty black satin evening bag. At other times she carries it in a holster under her left arm. When she and her partner, Joe Whitely, uncovered the 60ounce cache of heroin, she was dressed in the tailored suit that's her usual business outfit. “We had been working on the case for weeks,” she said. “The man operated from - a friendship “and social club on the Upper East Side. Usually I "would go up on the roof ‘and my partner would stay. across the street. We watched everybody who came in. I would listen to sed what floor of the building they went to.” - = ” THEY FOUND THE man who operated the club employed a young Army deserter to do the

Christamore Announces Cast

NOTE—~A brown-haired girl of five-feet-two has one of the toughest jobs known to the police world. She’s assigned to the New York City Narcotics Squad. In extensive conversations with a United Press reporter she disclosed some of the hazards and the rewards that go hand in hand in a narcotics crackdown. This is the first of three dispatches,

actual selling. The Army picked up-the- deserter, and Kitty closed in on the club headquarters. “There was a. door from .the back of the club into a hallway that led to an upstairs apartment,” she said, speaking in a soft, 1 ow voice. “I started searching the apartment bedroom, since we knew the sup~ plies had to be somewhere in the building. Behind the bureau in a corner under a lot of rubbish and Christmas decorations, I.found the heroin in paper bags.” In the seven years she’s been a member of the narcotic squad Kitty has learned to search every place-——from a refrigerator to a girl's falsies. » " » “I'VE FOUND narcotics hidden in a clothes pin bag and in a specially built. compartment under the kitchen linoleum;” she said. The compartment was filled with large Mason jars of marijuana. Natural feminine comes in handy in searching. But Kitty also has needed: less feminine qualities—Ilike being good at ju jitsu — to ‘subdue tough ‘customers. “Only once did I ever have to shoot - anybody,” she said quietly. “I shot a man in the leg when he pulled. a knife.” Now that laws have been passed providing stiffer penalties for selling narcotics, the former bookkeeper admitted “the work. is getting a. little more dangerous. You can't expect them to come willingly.”

For March 6-7 Production

ON STAGE Mar. 6 and 7 in the Murat Theater will be almost 150 local persons whose talent will turn Christamore Aid Society's Follies of 1952 into one of Indianapolis’ most gala productions.

The curtain will go up at 8:30 p. m, both days on several former < professional «entertainers and many . more who will be

debuts. “ Included in the Nie at are Mesdames W. B. Adams, F. G. Anderson, Jay Boyer, Frances Blair, Marylou Bronnenberg, W. Z. Burns, Wayne Burns Jr, F. W. ‘Baron, A. C. Boyd, Edward Brown, F. P. Clay Jr, E. A. Claffey, W. N. Colbath, Augustus Coburn, R. F. Daggett Jr. and Tarkington Danner.

" ~ = ROBERT EVANS, W. B. EIder, John Evans, R. P. Fortune, Guy Foster, R. C. Fatout, W. Stanley Garner, John Gamble, Robert Garrett, John Greist, J. D. Gould Jr., Bernyce Hasse, W. R. Higgins Jr., Henry Hohlt, Sylvester Johnson Jr. and E. I. Kabel. Mesdames George Kennedy, John Kinghan, Kenneth Kinnear, James M. Leffel, F, 1: Layden, B. 8. Moxley, B. 8. Mitchell, 8. B. Moxley, B. H. Miller Jr., J. A. Miner Jr., 8. D. Miller II, Harry Weaver Jr., W. H. McMurtrie, Sue Mayer, M. J. McKee Jr., H. .R, Mallory, Lowell Parker, R. T. Reid, L. G. Rossebo, Charles Ray and Phil Reissler, Mesdames J. M. Spalding, William Schroeder, Sam .Sherwood, Ralph Triller, King Traub, Gordon Thompson, Ethel Wyatt, . Taylor Wilson, J. J. Weldon and William A. Wildhack. Misses Mary - Jean Wa .dJeane Woodard, Heberton Weiss, AfBerta Wells, Smith, Ann Spalding, Arden Sneed, Anne Resor, Beverly Potts, Natalie Moore, Barbara McCown, Marjorie Kroeger, Ann Kennedy, Carolyn Hauser, Gloria Gustafson, Macy Glendening, Georgianne Davis Carolyn Crom, Ann Cole, Dede Gobert and Polly Ahendroth,

~ ~ = MEN IN THE CAST are Elias C. Atkins III, Jay Boyer, Neal P. Benson, George W, Boemler, Doug Campbeld, Allen Clowes, Gordon Crawford, Frank Church, R. F, Daggett, Burford Danner, R. B. Evans Jr,, John Evans, John Gamble, Ed Green, J. D. Gould Jr. and Charles Houston. Walter Henry, Henry Hohit,

Court Plans Annual Event

SSIGNMENTS . of the Marion County Juvenile Court's Citizens Advisory Council for the. court's annual meeting were an-

nounced teday by Mrs, William A. Dyer Jr. arrangements com-

mittee chairman.

The meeting has been scheduled for 8° p.m. Mar. 10 in the World War Memorial. Speakers be Q(ov. Schricker and - Congressman Charles B. Brownson, both members of the . Advisbry Council. On the arrangements com-

. Mmittee are Mesdames Louis Nie,

Thomas Beasley Jr. Douglas Muir ‘and Richard Gaus, Dr. Grover Hartman, Richard H. Englehart and Jooinas Ford.

" WORK DONE BY boys and girls: detained at the Juvenile Center will be. - displayed at the

PL a

mal.

Suzy

« Include mothers of the engaged

W. R. Wiggins Jr., Don Hale,

son, feorge

Hibbard James: Kenneth. Kin-, el 4

near, Chick

Kennedy, Gene Kilinski, George,

“T.aBfer, Scott’ Moxley, Blaine Miller, ' Charles * M2CGter *Robert Murray, John Madden and Jerry Nedd. Robert Perine, Hal Purdy, Pete Richardson, Vernon Roth, Robbie Robinson, George Rice, Jack Ross, Charles Stover, William Schroeder, Sam Sherwood, William Smith, Walt Salmon, Gordon Thompson and George Vrell. Ed Weist, Jack Weldon, Chet Weber, Taylor: Wilson, Bill Wildhack, Dick Zimmer, Dr. James Leffel and Dr. William Keller,

Set Shower

curiosity

PRE. MEETING CONFAB—Mesdames Louis Marks, Leonard Solomon and Jack A. Goodman, Clarence Q. Berger and Mrs. Charles Brenner (left to right) talk over the agenda of the member- ~ ship meeting and the tea held yesterday in Mrs. Goodman's home. Mesdames Marks, Goodman, Solomon and Brenner are recording secretary, outgoing president, corresponding secretary and treasurer of the Indianapolis Chapter, National Women's Committee of Brandeis University. Mr, Berger, executive assistant to the president of Brandeis, spoke.

Group

By JEAN Ip Ll ; OURTEEN life members were announced at the membership tea yesterday of the Indianapolis Chap-

ter, Women's Committee of Brandeis University. The session was in the home of Mrs. Jack Goodman, 301 W. Kessler Blvd. The members include Mesdames Allan Kahn, Goodman, Alexander S.. Wolf, . Victor M. Goldberg, Philip Adler Jr. Harry J. Herff, A. L. Borinstein, Percy Simmons, Charles F. Efroymson, L. L. Goodman, Joseph M. Bloch, Abe Goodman, Hattie B. Feinberg and Joseph Rothbard. Mrs. Myron Feinberg is chairman of the life membership committee of the chapter,

Dr

_ Princeton Professor. To Radress

Clarence Berger, executive assistant to the Brandeis president, reviewed the: first four years of the university's growth. Graduating its initial class this June, it has expanded from 107 to 650 students 13 to

.T2 faculty members and eight

to 18 buildings.

Plans are in the making for a number of graduate and professional schools. The first one is the creative arts school to be directed by Leonard Bernstein. There also. will be a graduate school of arts and sciences, Mr. Berger announced the first annual creative arts festi_val scheduled before commencement. will forms in art today. He also said a new course will be open to seniors planned to combat cynicism of the modern

AH=Gro up”

R. ERWIN PANOFSY, professor in the School of Humanistic Studies, the Intfitute for .Advanced Study at Princeton, N. J., will address members of the Indianapolis Art Association and their guests at 8:30

p. m. Friday in the Herron Art Museum. One of the great interpreters of iconology, he will recount in lighter vein some of his experiences ‘in the field of art

under the title, “Text and Pic-

to Honor

Miss Beverly Toothman

RS. HAROLD L. HUNT, 6110 East 10th St, will entertain at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow with a shower in honor of Miss BeverlywToothman who will be married to Richard V. Winings on Mar. 9.

The wedding will take place in -the Wallace Street Presbyterian Church.

The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond D. Toothman, 1026 Hawthorne Lane. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Winings, 952 N. Ritter Ave. it * = nm ATTENDANTS AT the wedding will' be ~Mrs. Vera Toothman, matron of’ honor, ands Misses Priscilla Bender, Patricia Parrish ahd Joane Gottberg, bridesmaids. Fred Matzke will be best man and ushers will Toothman, Jesse Oakley-and Kenneth Cannaday.

yy 8 on GUESTS AT THE shower will

Sorority to Meet

Verae Sorores Chapter of Verus Cordis Sorority will meet at 7:30 p. m, teday in the home of Mrs. John A. Coyle, Mann Rd.

annual event. Advisory. Council members have been instrumental in securing scrap material for the center's arts and crafts program. Miss Mary Lou. Hill is arts and crafts director at the center, Assisting her is the Advisory Council center committee including Mrs, Cora D’Arcy, ‘chairman; Mesdames Dyer, W, -C. Hunter, B. C. McCammon, Brady Downey and Scott Bange: and B. C. DeVore. -. Aarold R. Woodard heads the reception committee for the annual meeting. Mrs. Meredith Nicholson Jr,, Mrs. Elias C. Ate kins, Robert Stith, Joseph Barr,

Roscoe Conkle and Emory R.

Baxter. are assisting. Appointed by Mrs. Dyer to ‘the publicity committee are Mrs. Walter Leckrone, “Mrs, t Wyatt, David - Chambers - Jr. and John Atks simire, ox 5

4 ali .

be Richard |

couple, Mesdames- Robert L. Stockment, H. L. McCrory, Ingram Farley, Robert Heath, Ben Curry, Jack Curry, Richard Toothman, C. R. Wiese, Paul Blodgett, E. 8. Gilchrist, June Bostic, W. H. Woodruff, William Vote, E. H. Hunt and Robert Robbins.

Also Misses Sandra McCrory, Pat Farley, Jeanne Curry, Patsy Parrish, Priscilla Bender, Jo Gottberg, Mary Ann Reinhard and Lolita DelLawter.

» Fooplebito be Best!

OS ?

‘B. Griffith

The Co Be Fur Most

tures; Traffic Accidents the Roads of Tradition.” A native of Hanover, he has been associated with the Universities of Berlin, Freiburg and Hamburg, as well

on

as lecturer and visiting pro- IE

fessor at various universities in the United States.

» # s g HE IS AUTHOR of “The Life of Albrecht Durer” and “The Medieval Manuscript, the Codex Huygens.” In charge of the reception following the lecture for members only will be Mrs, ‘Noble Dean, activities committee chairman.

Assisting will be Mesdames |

J. Perry Meek, John E. D. Pea-

cock, G. H. A. Clowes, Garvin |

Seminars and symposia §& cover modern expression

Munich, |

Lists 14 Life Members

college student and to teach them to apply the theories they learn in . university courses,

aw daar Ticket Go . BOSTON NEW YORK

B New York Central's

More Room than any other travel! Smart refreshment lounge.

|

M. Brown, Herman Kothe, Ed- |§

win M. McNally, Thomas D. Stevenson and Samuel B. Sutphin.

Mesdames Edward B. Tag-

gart, John G. Rauch, Booth Tarkington, Robert H. Tyndall, Russell J. Ryan, Fisk Landers, Robert Efroymson,

Thomson. Mesdames Harry V. Anton Scherrer, Donald M. Mattison, Wilbur D. Peat alld Albert M: Coles, Misses Blanche Stillson, Anna Hasselman, Helen R. Osborne and ‘Margaret Simonds.

, °

The

[finishing Jouch” bh. -

MOUNTAIN GROWN, So Extra Rich in Flavoi You Are Urged To TRY USING “4 LESS

: than with lesser flavored brands -

Avdiloble in Regular, Drip or Fine Grind “vuoi Both 1-lb, and 2.16, Cone

Theodore, | | and Alexander |

Wade,

Finer Meals, Tool Freshly cooked, serv. ed at a real table.

Marchiess Privacy — in your Pullman hotel-room-on-wheels!

_ Above All, Sleep on Central’s smooth Water Level Route!

Arrive, Weather Or No! " Enjoy travel certain. ty.that no skyway or highway. can match! (Fine: coaches, too.)

Reservations: Plaza 7591

‘New York

The Ware Reve fi

a

educated,

T'S NO LO

or not.. 'T herself. Mrs. J. |

friends becaus ceeded in havir for four years test yesterday. While a grou having tea in t George Dickin guests asked what her succe “It isn't my Mrs. Blackwell She simply dc changing afte trouble of teac her ways.”

= WOULD YC wife to your wife to your ho Riggs has four which such a ist without fc hold duties. Have a part) guest leaves, g lax. The next the women pre: evening to com and waffles. Let them ha of coffee to for then break the You may lose when you ask clean the hot leave, (And p« turn again.) But in the cs it worked so has been adopt as part of a so won't be any | in this group.

" THE CANDY chewing gum di hasketball ent day will be char dogs and ham] And better y

‘We, the W

Bachel

For a

MARRIA minded | West where 1

So here’; out for a w young men, go The East is girls who have gone to the big cities to take jobs. They're ambi» tious, often they are well Re.

telligent, and

; certainly ney.

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“dent, else of

would never have dared to leave the old home town to tition of a big They may

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