Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 April 1952 — Page 11
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WEDNESDAY, APR. 2 1952
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Bunny Couple Will Help You With That Easter Party
VERYBODY loves a
party —and your.
friends are no exception. If you are planning a party around Easter-time, as many people do, why not call upon the Easter Bunny to help you make it a memorable occasion. Whether you entertain at a simple luncheon, buffet supper, as shown here, or formal dinner, ‘a clever centerpiece will give your party that vextra special” flavor. Nothing will begin a stir of compliments more quickly than this bunny couple strolling down a pathway bordered with crepe paper hvacinths.’ Who would ever guess that the fancy pair was so in-
. expensive and easy to make?
Construct each bunny in this manner: Pad tissue paper around a 12- inch-tall mailing tube, to form three balls—a large one for thé lower body, a medium one for the upper body and a smaller one for the head. Pad the head in front to shape a nose, » Ld Ls
CUT A PIECE of white crepe paper the full width of the fold and long enough to go around the padded body. Stretch this
piece snugly around the body’
and paste it at the seam. Tie spool wire tightly between each’ ball. Trim off the excess crepe at the top and bottom and paste down. Use an 18-inch long piece of wire for the arms. Attach it to the body with spool wire, tying it criss-cross over the chest. Pad the arms with tissue. Cover the entire head, body and arms—with cotton batting, by applying paste to the tissue and wire arms and pressing the cotton over them. Cut two legs from white mat stock. Cover the outside of the legs with cotton and paste in
rabbit,
EASTER BUNNY REVIEW —Hepzibah and Lancelot Bunny strut across the party table set upe
especially for your Easter party—a breakfast, luncheon or dinner—simplified here as a buffet.
place, using common pins to hold to the body until dry. » ~ » MAKE TWO EARS white mat stock, apply paste to ‘one side of each ear and smooth pink crepe over (it. Trim off the excess crepe. Cover the outside with cotton. Punch holes in the head with an ice pick. Coat the ends of the ears withy paste and force them into the holes in the head. Cover the pasting with cotton. Fashion the tail from a ball of cotton pasted and pinned in
Times Sewing Contest Registration Blank
HERE IS MY official registration for The 1952 Times’ National Sewing Contest, I will bring my contest garment, April 28,
to the Central Library, NAME..
ADDRESS
I plan to enter in the classifications marked below:
one or more.
tires isterssesssinsassrsesssnsiss PHONE
sess dr erat rset s nase nset nana
sessassrase
(Check
You are not obligated to remain in the classifica-
tions checked, if you would change your mind later.)
essere. Senior Standard Pattern Group, for contestants above 18 years of age. Every entry in this group must be made
from Standard Commercial pattern.
sult. ....on
(2) Tailored dress of wool,
(1) Wool coat or
linen or linen-
weave......es (3) Soft dress of silk, ‘rayon or dressy
cotion..vevess
essesso.High School Group, for clothing students in junior and
senior high schools, (1) Date or school dress......e. (2)
Coat or suit........
esssees. Glamour Group, no age limit. clothes, negligee ensembles and
s+s++00.0riginal Design Group, no age limit.
(1) Evening clothes, lounge ach wear,
Garment must be
an original design by entrant for adult or upper teen-age
wear.
assure Children’s Clothing Group, no age limit.
(1) Dress; coat or suit,
(1) Clothes must
be for children between the ages of 2 and 8. Mail blank NOW to: Sewing Contest, Indianapolis Times, 214
Ww. Mary land St.
STORE OPEN THURSDAY NIGHTS! Store Hours Thursday 12:00 to 830
..irom blue notarial seals. from:
NONE: COSTUME WONDER
place. Cut the eyes from white writing paper and their centers Outline the eyes with black water color. Construct each eyelash from a square of black passepartout slashed to a fine fringe. Paste this to. the back of the eye. Cut the nose from black passe-partout, : With a vest of yellow duplex paper, buttons made from small gold notarial seals, a white writing paper collar, a blue crepe paper tie, an American heauty crepe paper jacket and a blue mat stock hat trimmed in light blue crepe paper, Mr. Bunny is ready to join your Easter parade. PEANE n, » . » HIS ATTRACTIVE partner's outfit can include a ‘“dickie” of white crepe paper, a dark pink
crepe paper skirt, a light blue °
crepe paper jacket” trimmed
with a paper lace doily and blue ribbon, .and -a blue mat stock hat with a pink ribbon band. Of course, your children will fall in love with Lancelot and Hepzibah Bunny at first glance, but do something special-for the little ones in’ the household by decorating china eggs—the kind farmers use -or real ones in a fancy manner. For example, wrap an egg in pink crepe paper and use narrow yellow strips of crepe curled around a knitting needle for hair, a gummed heart for a mouth, light blue and white crepe paper for eyes and a paper lace dolly for a hat,
Or use TWo eggs——OnE “PHkte
on top of the .other near the narrow end-—wrapped in canary yellow crepe paper with a mat stock bill covered with amber crepe paper, eyes made of writing paper and black passe-par-tout.
YWCA 'Pigtail’ Dramatic
Group
to Sing Chorale
THE up Women's Christian Association's Pigtail Playtime Group (girls aged 9 to 14 years) will sing a choral version of “Eastertide” at 4 p. m, Sunday in the
Central Branch YWCA.
Tableaux on the stage by members of the pigtail dramat-
ics class will depict the seven,
scenes leading,to the crucifixionand resurrection of . Christ, Musie will be provided by the Pigtail Chorus, Members of the chorus are Gail Archer, Lynne Archer, Anita Bell, Mary Margaret Culley, Dianne Culley, Mary Ellen Davis, Linda Kay Dougherty, Judy. Finley, Sandra Finnerty, Easter Joe Keene, Margo Lucas, Linda Lee Maxwell Patty O'Neill, Karen Pfenning, Beverly Rhodes, Emilie Ristow, Harriett Rodibaugh, Kathy ‘Scheick, Karen Sedam, Anita
Smith, Carole Stretchberry, Rosalie Swain, Judy Tout,
, Mary
Tou Wetzel and Kathy McKibben. . ~ »
. MEMBERS OF THE dramattes class who will participate in the tableaux are Prudence Rowley, Nancy Hoffman, Sheilia Grissom, Judith Ann Clapp, Ann Rodibaugh, Jeraldine Baker, Sharon Gordon, Carmella Marcum, Judith Newton, Karen Winchester, Martha Couch and Sheila Gearns. The program is under the direction of Miss Margaret Miles, YWCA recreation assistant, assisted by Miss Lu Ellen Dearinger, teacher. of Pigtail dra-
matics and member of the Be- |
ville Avenue Y-Teen Club.
THE INDIAN APOLIS T TIMES :
There's Gold Early | Mafrix Reservations Are Listed -
In Hair Tint Business
By DOROTHEA M. BROOKS United Press Financial’ Writer
‘NEW. YORK, Apr. 2— There's. glamour in hair color—for the growing
number of women who use ft and for the businessmen whose profits reflect this use. Modern methods have made hair coloring. like the permanent wave, a safe, efficient home beauty treatment, and with the appearance of hair tints on COs ers has come a greatly increased popularity for “dyeing.” According to James F, Gray, president of Blensol, New Hyde Park, N. Y, annual volume of home hair coloring products alone climbed from $3 million in’ 1949 to $20 million in 1951. Where less than one woman in 15 used a hair color in 1849, today one in five has accepted hair tint along with her lipstick, nail polish and the other cosmetics for which American women spend nearly $1 billion annually, » ~ .
MR. GRAY, WHOSE Blensol color shampoo accounts for a good portion of the total sales tally, feels the figures will con~ tinue to climb as more and more women realize what can be .achjeved with inexpensive hair color in the privacy of the home. Blensol—founded in 1922 as one of the first manufacturers of hair dye—after three years in the home market, had volume just-under the million dollar mark last year. And the first quarter this year saw a 30 per cent increase over 1951:
hair os, Mol neéd not. mean garish color, completely out of tune with natural skin tones. Emphasis has been on naturalness. «x »
BLENSOL, ALONG with many other companies in the home hair coloring field, supervises selling of its product to see the woman who buys a bottle of home hair color gets the shade that will do the most to enhance her natural beauty —not make a «drastic overnight change. Hair color, Mr. Gray said, should be used to even streaky
hair, high-light drab hair or:
add natural color to gray hair —effects so subtle that the men need never even know. In fact, though it is hard to track down figures to prove it, the industry is sure it has a pretty good sale among the men themselves,
NUMBER of early reservations have been received for Theta Sigma
Phi’s Matrix Table Saturday in the Gold’ Room of the Hotel Antlers. Miss Kathleen McLaughlin, foreign correspondent of the New York Times; will be the guest speaker at the 1 p. m. luncheon sponsored by the journalistic group's Indianapolis Alumnae. 1 Out-of-town guests coming will include Mrs. Lyman D, Dunn, Chicago, national president; Mrs, Philip R. Long, Columbua; Mrs, June Moll Wilcox, Dayton, O.; Mrs. Oscar A.
. Hunt,
Ahlgren, Whiting. who will ‘be |
honored as Indiana Woman of the Year, Mrs. Russell A. Furr, New Augusta; Mrs, Jerry Snyder, Arcadia; Mrs Mary B. Kraft, Noblesville; Mrs, George H. F. Graham, Winamac; Miss Betty Lee Power, New Augusta; Miss Sharley E. DeMott and Miss Kathleen Meehan, Muncie; Miss Mabel McKee and Miss Ann Claire Williams, Terre Haute. . " » NEWSPAPER WOMEN who plan to attend are Mrs, “Art Richards, - Lebanon Reporter; Mrs. Ann Thompson Green, Columbus _ Evening Republican; Mrs. Marjorie M., Schlemmer, Wabash Plain-Dealer. and Mrs, Mary . Louise Miles McKay, Sheridan News, Mrs. V. R. Meyer, Pulaski County Democrat; Mesdames Florence Webster Lohg and Misses Alice Cole, Flo Jamieson and Bess Watson, Indianapolis News; Mrs. Courtland Shea and Miss Christy Castanias, Indian~ apolis Times; Miss Margaret E, DePrez, Shelbyville News, Miss Fran Eward and Miss Martha Elliott, Richmond Pal-ladium-Item: Miss Martha Mackie, Clinton Clintonian; Miss Betty Jean Weesner, Dan-
Mr, Gray SAYS traditional re- ville Republican; Miss Sarah 10 dyed. Ere ds Be .Lerre Haute Star; Miss “fs shown def Fe Gant, Columbus Evening
Republican; Miss Beryl
Mrs. O. H. Goodrich Heads ITSC Group
Mrs, 0. H. Goodrich has recéntly ‘been elected president of the Meridian Chapter, ITSC. Other newly elected officers are Mrs. J, Myrlin McGuire and Mrs. Edmond M. Wyatt, first and second vice presidents; Mrs, J. M. Bryant and Mrs. R. G. Manning, recording and corre. sponding secretaries; Mrs. William F. Arnold, treasurer; Mrs. Earl H. Myer, federation delegate, and Mrs. U. D. Crowe, auditor,
Holds Card Party
The F and J Benefit Club met
today in the Foodcraft build-
ing for a card party. Embroid.ered pillow cases were given as prizes,
pen lity noon “til 8:30 pm.
Ann |
It's Charles Mayer & Company for
Cautoul ww,
Bunny $§
Brownell, Gary Post- Tribune, and Miss Kathleen O'Banion, Tipton Tribune. . v ‘ - » . . OTHER reservations have been 'made by Mesdames Ella H. Hay, Viron- Moore, H. M. Powell, F. E. Spindell, Maxine Knowles; R...F. McGinnis, R. Wayne Evans, M, 0. Winterstein, Donovan Turk, Carter Eltzroth Jr, Harry J, Harman, E. 8. Hildreth and Nora Ashman, Also Mesdames Helen Boyd Higgins, Kate Gambold Dyer and V. A, Lallement, Misses
‘Madonna Hessler, Phyllis. Rat-
liff, Elizabeth C. Collins, Evelyn. Pitschke, - Mabel Leigh Amy Keene, Annabelle
iad
Simmons, Mira Bowles, Toate ette McElroy, Annis Lambert
And Mary Louise Eluere.
Invitations also have been issued to journalism departs - ments in the city and county high schools, Indiana, DePauw and Butler Universities and Franklin College as well, as alumnae chapters in Bloomington and Muncie,
Mrs. John -E. Kleinhenz, 5402 Shelby St, 1s reservations chairman, She will accept them through tonight. While she is in town Miss McLaughlin will be the house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Stephen ¥. Dolzall, 328 Berkley Road, Miss McLaughlin and Mrs. Dole zall are cousins,
ed
~ OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 8:30 P.M,
Toys
“to fill.
Daddy Long Legs $3.98 With Music $6.98
Vedas pr : - Little Angel Doll $6.95
Easter
All kinds and colors of soft, cuddly bunnies chicks — ducks ~ Plus Easter Baskets — Eggs Easter Dolls. Come see them—enjoy the colorful array of things that dreams are made of.
Stuffed Bunnies . , 1.50 wp Easter Baskels . , . . Sc up Grass for Baskels, 10c pkg.
g== _Litfle Toys fo Fill ‘ Baskels . ..... 5 wp
Mtiagtophed Egos te Fill $4.50 each:
Assorted Colors Lamb $3.25
Mail and Phone Orders Carefully Filled
Charles Mayer & Co.
29 WEST WASHINGTON STREET
It’s the gala shopping night of the week for the
It's a faille SUIT!
It's a faille and taffeta ti PETTICOAT COSTUME! Je
It's a taffeta DRESS!
It’s a taffeta JACKET DRESS!
to brighten your home from Was-
son’s most extensive assortments.
a | entire family! Plan now to meet downtown 8 right after work . . . enjoy a delicious dinner in Wasson’'s Restanrant* ‘ee then’ : \ | « shop for Easter costumes and things
Rayon faille jacket detailed with gp ] 7 . handbound button holes and full swinging Mother and Dad will enjoy-shopping together. ea skirt—dainty dotted rayon taffeta blouse Youngsters will thrill to an evening . : on’s and gently flaring skirt—mix'em and | of excitement downtown, : i) match'em to your heart's content. in : i — 2 gt $203.10 10 13, * WASSON'S. RESTAURANT OPENS AT 11 A. M. THURSDAY : Navy with White, Navy with Pink PLEASE USE MERIDIAN ENTRANCE. STORE OPENS AT NOON 17.95 pS = oy : or i Bok | : DRESSES— — | Sr : : SURE 4. : - FOURTH— 2 Gn oh Ae oR on pn Noid ie hE ai wg] 4 2 FLOOR— | : fi, os |
