Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 June 1952 — Page 11

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WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18, 1952

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Achieve Vacation Atmosphere From Latest Designs

By OPAL CROCKETT Times Staff Writer

CHICAGO, June 18—Vacation doesn't need to end

in two weeks.

Bring it home.

Maybe you can't make those far-away spots you dream abcat with the car to pay for or a baby coming.

Make your house light and outdoorsy and you'll get a lift. Here at the Furniture and Merchandise Marts furniture sits outdoors in the summer, then comes inside in the fall to chase away the doldrums on dingy days. The 1952 furnishings take away the drabness that spells gloom and boredom on the home scene.

» » = THE OUTSIDE and inside have been locking arms for some time but they've never been such buddies as they are this year. With use of rattan, cane, iron, straw, chrome, perfected plastics and new tubings for furniture bases and backs they're at home outside or inside. Materials are light. You can move big pieces yourself. No need to ruin your husband's disposition by asking him to lug. furniture when he comes home tired from the office. Your own mood can stay sweet, too, with this insideoutside furniture. It’s easy to clean. Gone are the days when the porch furniture was stacked outside, covered with old rugs, in the fall. It's part of the family now, year-round. : The canes, etc, are too pretty and comfortable to use one season only, Like in grandma's day, everybody makes for that cushfony cane-back chair.

» > . IN THE photograph Vogue Rattan Manufacturing Co., Los Angeles, shows Hawaiian and Samoan influence. Launalla matting decorates the buffet and chair-backs. The hostess can sit back and relax the dark nights on the porch when clumsy guests overturn glasses and forget cigarets. Most table-tops are stainproof, burg-proof and emp proof. Ficks Reed, Cincinnati, tops the table in its indoor-outdoor rattan dining group with a plasticized material that you're sure is cork. Lattice-like pedestals hold up the table and are copied in the chair backs. Ficks Reed

does a lot, too, in combining:

cane with wrought-iron,

2 =» » THERE’S CALIFORNIA all through the house. From Glenn on the West Coast comes a “fiying saucer” table, It's a three-

plece affair with each surface covered in a different color plastic. The pieces are mounted on an iron rod base. Morris of California steers the Golden State influence to the bedroom, introducing Paldao, an exotic wood of the Pacific, and a finish called Harvest Oak that’s honey-colored. This" group is just right for the ranch house. Cane heads bedroomward. Crawford Furniture Corp. covers with cane the headboardbackrest combination on a line of beds.

# ” » RIGHT FOR SMALL homes are the living and dining room pieces .by Furniture Guild of California. There's a leaf-split-ting dropleaf table loaded with storage space done in nutmeg birch. Raise one leaf and you have a card or dining table for two. With both leaves up the table measures 52 by 66 inches. The step-saving tea tables go inside and outside. Mount Air Chair Co. has one formed from an open bookcase with the mere adding of castors. Fulbright Industries use a lot of natural finishes combined with black lacquer, pretty inside or out. Fulbright also has a nap-beckoning chaise of solid red oak. It's “wrap-upholstered” with oak strips woven, basketfashion, to form the lounge.

o # » FROM DRAPERIES to rugs, 1952 home furnishings give the

feeling of vacation and light-

hearted living. Herman Miller's includes a drapery fabric that looks like match-stick bamboo. But is much softer, made from open-mesh jutes and cotton. The bright, man-made fibres, one-quarter of today’s rug production, along with straw rugs and a colorful basket-weave tile take you back to those vacation days when you pattered around in a wet bathing suit. The 1952 room to relax— porch by summer, living room or den by winter—is a vacation substitute round the calendar, Come home and kick off your shoes: You'll sigh, indoors or out, “This is the life,” forgetting the job every night, not just for two weeks a year.

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PROVISIONAL PICNIC—Indionapolis Junior Leaguers honored new provisional members yesterday at a picnic in the country

home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Rhoads Jr.,

Carmel, Rhoads End

Farm, The group included Mrs. Edward J. ‘Wolf, Miss Elizabeth

So You're Heading for a Wedding—

Add Some Garden Glamor to Your Wedding Day

This is the third of a series suggesting the details and planning for five types of summer weddings currently fashionable.

By JANET HUGHES For midsummer enchantment, there is nothing like a garden wedding.

The flowers, the trees, the sun itself—if you're lucky enough to choose a bright day —contribute an unforgettable magic of their own. Unlike the formal church ceremony, the outdoor wedding allows you to break some of the traditions. You use your imagination and create effects which your guests (and you) will remember forever, You may have your wedding at any hour you wish: Midafternoon, twilight or evening. If you live in one of America’s “hot cities,” an evening wedding can be like a picture out of Arabian Nights, # » " » THE AIR HAS cooled, the flowers give out their fragrance. You can achieve dramatic and

HAWAII AT HOME—VYacagtion-lands come to dinner, indoors or outdoors, with matting used as

4 SEASONS

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decorative theme.

For Delightful Summer Salads

MORE—MORE—MORE! Another shipment of these clever

sets for the practicing gourmet.

If you specialize in re-

freshing, crisp salads—have one of these sets for an added

delight,

The last shipment didnt go around—so order

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¥ For Yourself!

v For Birthday Gifts!

For Your Hostess!

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CHARLES MAYER & COMPANY, 1 29 West Washington Street,

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‘Miss Wood ' To Be Guest

Miss Gloria Jean Wood will be honor guest at a miscellaneous shower at 2 p. m. June 28 given by Mrs. John Britain Redwine and her mother, Mrs. Lem T. Glidden, 5606 Haverford Ave. Guests at the party will be Mrs. “Eugene Wood, Springfield, O.; Mesdames Edward Barrett, Arthur Hendricks, John Dempsey, Richard Stapleton, John Nusbaum, E. W. Little, Earl Little, BE. W. Little Sr. and Elmer Bredenstine, Miss Jean Smith, Hobart; Misses Ann Schutt, Katherine Nitchman, Joy Wilson and Mary Elizabeth Hite. Miss Wood will become the bride of Fred Hendricks July 5 in Christ Episcopal Church.

She is the daughter of Mr."

and Mrs. Eugene F. Wood, Springfield, O. - The prospective bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. A. G. Hendricks, 5630 Washington Blvd.

Lawrence Township GOP Women to Meet

The Lawrence Township Club of Republican Women will meet for a covered-dish luncheon at noon Friday in the home of Mrs. Ethel B. Dennis, Franklin Rd. : Mrs. John Siegesmund of the Minute Women’s organization will speak on ‘Women in PoliAssistant hostesses will be Mesdames William Hickey, Wilbur Bragdon and Cunningham.

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romantic effects with Chinese lanterns, hurricane lamps, candles. staked to the ground outlining the aisle down which you walk, and with floodlights or “baby spots” illuminating the scene. : Choose the prettiest spot in the garden for your improvised altar, one where growing flowers form a natural background. At one afternoon wedding I attended, a bed of magnificent lilies formed the altar’s background. At another, the ceremony was under a 200-year old sycamore tree. If it's in the daytime, be sure the ceremony is in a shady spot. According to the old saying “Happy is the bride the sun shines on,” but a midsummer sun broiling the bride and bridegroom andthe attendants is not a happy idea. You may, if you like, have the wedding ceremony in a country church and plan the reception outdoors, This will naturally limit the number of guests at the eeremony because most country churches are quite small. If you follow this plan, do have ropes of greens or flowers garlanding the pews. Have the altar banked with seasonal garden flowers. In short, bring the garden into the church. Use candles as your only illumination if the wedding is at twilight or in the evening. There is something superromantic about candlelight.

» » ” IF THE RECEPTION is held outdoors, a receiving line should be formed, as in a more formal affair. After the guests have been greeted, the newly married pair lead the way to the buffet. . There, after the. best man proposes a toast, they cut the cake. If you want to go to the expense of having a marquee set up, this is the ideal spot for your buffet table. You may improvise a marquee. by using green and white striped awning material suspended between four poles. Then your table decorations, and even the cloth might carry out this color scheme, Consider your background and the natural beauties. Then go ahead and dream up unusual effects which blend with the setting. Garland the table with greens or garden flowers, use a sheer pastel cloth or organdy or voile. - Serve cool refreshments—a white wine punch if you are not having champagne, tiny delicious sandwiches and an elaborate wedding cake. If you have a caterer he can provide small chairs so guests may be seated at the reception if you wish. Don’t forget there is something wonderfully romantic about soft music out-of-doors, so arrange for it even if you have to use a concealed phonograph. i

” ” . THE BRIDE dresses for her wedding in misty tulle, in drift of lace or sheer organdy. She may, if she likes, have a short train or wear a ballerina length dress. With any of these a short veil, caught with orange blossoms or a hat of tulle or flowers may be worn. Attendants should wear ankle or ballerina length dresses, too, in any color the bride may * choose. Have them carty nat-

OFFICE

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SOCIAL STATIONERY GREETING GARDS DECORATIONS & + FAVORS LEATHER GOODS | ORAFTING |

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Times photo by William A. Oates Jr

L. Wade, Mesdames Owen J. Neighbours, George Soltan, William Allerdice and Stewart E. Rush and Miss Anne H. Collett (back row, left to right); Mesdames John Thompson, Richard K. Fowler, Edward Wingenroth and: King R. Traub (seated, left to right).

ural-looking, unflorist-like bouquets. Be original in choosing the hats and flowers for attendants, A clip of flowers or ribbons with starched veiling or a cap of flowers with a tiny nose. vell are most attractive,

Insteal of a bouquet of flowers, they might carry tiny baskets of garden flowers if the wedding is in.the daytime, or tiny tulle muffs covered with flowers for a twilight or evening affair,

At a garden wedding tiny flowergirls are a delight. Dress them in replicas of the bridesmaids’ costumes, even to their hats. And if you live in a part of the country where ringbearers are fraditional, a small boy carrying the ring on a flowered covered pillow is a sentimental picture, t

TOMORROW: The Modern Bride Who Keeps Her Job After Marriage.

Times photo by Dean "Nmmerman

MAP CHECK—Four Indiana delegates to the 22 National 4-H Club Camp in Washington left yesterday for the event today through next Wednesday. Checking the road map are the quartet who won the trip through achievement and general leadership in 4-H work. They are Miss Sara Sue Phegley, Carlisle; Miss Virginia Murphy, Stanley Rd., Indianapolis; Ralph Kauffman, Atlanta,

and Dick Becker, Woodburn (left to right). versity sophomores except Ralph who farms.

All gre Purdue UniH. B. Taylor, state

4-H club leader, and Miss Mary Frances Smith, assistant, both of West Lafayette, accompanied the group. The Raleigh Hotel

will be headquarters. ment.”

Conference theme is “ Highlights include visits to the Senate, a cruise to Annap-

Know Your Govern-

olis and a party on the White House lawn. Attending will be two

boys and two girls from each state as well as young people fiom |

foreign countries.

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Don't you get hooked with | Boat Dealers unnecessary shopping prob- | Outboard Motors lems. Always use the YELLOW " PAGES of your Telephone | Resorts-Vacation

Directory as a quick, handy ¢ guide to products, services and repairs.

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CONSULTATION without Sarge, at any time

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