Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1952 — Page 4

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Our Lovely Lady of Tomorrow...

ica

2 Showers Planned. for

Bride-to-Be

wu ~

“MONDAY, AUG. 4, 1952

List Benefit Game Guests

Box holders and their guests have been announced for the annual benefit baseball game tomorrow night ~ at Victory Field, ‘sponsored by the Daughters of Isabella for St.

Kennedy will be Mrs. Margaret Boris and Messrs. and Mesdames J. M. Ryan, John Berry and William ‘Kennedy Jr. Mr. and Mrs. Hershel Burney will have a box and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fessler will be hosts to Miss Margaret Madden

ISS GLORIA HAFF- ‘Fliasbetivs Nursery. Bulling and Miss Ethel Melle. . a A ] NER will be honor Mrs. go ¥. Leash, Jove i nt, wi ave as her ests » Ve led Soft Look guest at two miscellaneous io LT Paul a ates Gov, Oats HE FIRS showers before her mar- and Mrs. Henry F. Schricker, £) cago, Ill, riage Aug. 23 to Harry Newby, Mayor Alex M. Clark, the Rt. RIG HT. back for,ano son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rev. M=gr. August Fussenegger, . Mrs Ma

Predominates Fall Showings in Paris

By ROSETTE

HARGROVE

Times Special Writer

“New Look" has gently

faded

the Rev. Victor Goosens,. the

YOU ARE having a tea for

Rewpy: Tio Waldermere Ave, wp... Thomas Fields, Judge an out of town guest. ter of Mr. and 1} n the Zion Evangelical Church. Joseph Hoffmann, Lawrence "WRONG: Ask the guest of 7502 N. Meridi The bride-to-be is the daughter Turner Jr, Mrs. H. F. Kett, ponor to pour. husband, havi

of Mr. and Mrs, Carl Haffner, 3846 W. Washington St. Mrs. William Weghorst, 2930 Guilford Ave., will entertain for

the prospective bride Wednes- |

Mrs. F. M. Brown and Misses Catherine Fletcher, Mary Hick-

ey, Bess Sullivan and Alice

Lipps. In the box with Mrs. Ellen

Ans

RIGHT: Ask .some other friend to pour so that: the guest of honor can talk to the guests who have come to meet her.

i ———

England, Fra Switzerland for They got home

” THERE'S BI of flower and g ing going on i these last few

PARIS. Aug. 4--The old into the “soft look” or almost the

by the collections now being unveiled ip the

day evening. Guests will include |

mothers of the betrothed couple WwW e S p ec i a | 12 e

and Mesdames Richard Grimes,

" judging Paris fall

“sexy look, With paints

easels, a group

in Gifts for the

couturier showings. Waistlines, bustlines and hiplines are still acknowledged, but are veiled in suggestive drapery or accented with suggestive emphasis. This is particularly true in the designs of (Castillo for the House of Lanvin, which still caters to the garriage trade. His gilhouet follows. the cooing dove line, with rounded bosom, back-dipping waistline, emphatized back pouff effects or dovetail fullness built over half crin oline, " ~ o HIS SKIRTS are definitely longer about 12 inches from the floor, and<he has.a contrasting ‘clarinet’ silhouet, an un fitted sheath ending in a flounce, After-dark clothes re call the era of Gloria Swanson in her heyday, with accent on the sinuous, beltless waist and plunging décoltete: fi v And for daytime, there are suits which reveal fur-banded pants under semicircular.skirts, u n on PIERRE BALMAIN'S line —gtreszes a “Pretty Lady" theme —-the normal but controlled contour of a woman's hody. Daytime suits have slender, uncluttered skirts, easy fitting jackets, longer, supple basques, slim sleeves and touches of fur on cuff and collar. Again jersey reigns supreme for round-the-clock wear, Balmain's dresses of this fluid fahric are distinguished by subtle topches of oblique drapery below a trim waistline, repeated across the shoulder line. The fitted bra bodice veiled in lace or net appears atop dinnerdance frocks of net or lace sometimes spangled, with short but very full skirts. n Ld ~ BUT AMONG his ball gowns, frothy fullness and swirling hems share the spotlight with voluptuous, sinous sheaths which fit the mannequins like the proverbial paper on the wall. Shades of Chanel, Vionnet

and Poiret hovered over the collection of Maggy Rouff, which revives the fashions that made these revered names famous.

Unfitted chemise dresses, sweater tops with cowl drapery or high collars, straight coats with high standing enormous fur collars and deep cuffs, all recalled another and past generation.

n " n LOOSE-FITTING jackets with half helts way below the tummy and fur-lined circular “capes stirred. memories; too

And =o did the spiral and tiered skirts of the afternoon frocks

executed in black velvet; gléam-

ing satins and, inevitably, jersey. In other words, Mme. Rouff espouses the 1925 look. She

“bathing cap’ hide the ears

stresses it with bonnets which And reiterates it evening gowns which stop .at midcalf and Include draped-—taffetn-—sheaths trailing scarf ends.

in several

with

Committee Set to Meet

Volunteer of the season ticket sale campaign of the Women's (Committee of the Indignapolis Symphony Orches1. tomor-

chairmen

tra will meet at 10 a. nr row in the home of Mrs. Marvin E. Curle, 48 Meridian Pl. The season ticket sale campaign will be conducted Sept, 14 through Oct. 11. Chalrmen include Mesdames Richard Oberreich, Gi. I. Remy. Robert Kahn, I.. Herbert Buerkle, © Burke Nicholas, George Lennox, Kasley Blackwood, H. M. Cottingham, Herbert Sudranski, William Clark, O. E. Hammond, ( H. Tyler, Willlam Gibbs, R. K. Buckner, Earl Dickinson, John Storer Jr. and Howard Blankertz. Others are Mesdamves Harry Cooper Jr., Herschel Burney, Marion Priest, George Paton, Willlam Jennings, Elmer Gerwe, Michael Andre, Frank Scholl, Edward Hughes and Margaret Zipp, Migs Josephine Madden and Miss Marjorie Kroeger.

Washing Machine Won't Hurt Nylon

A few minutes of machine washing with warm water, plus a thorough rinsing, is actually better for a nylon garment than hand washing. For white nylon which has turned gray, the editors suggest Dbluing, chlorine bleach, or one of the new powdered bleaches recommended for nylon. In, hard walter packaged conditioner be used with soap in washing nylon. When a synthetic detergent is used the fabric should be rinsed thoroughly to avoid leaving any trace of soil which causes the fabric to become gray.

areas, a should

An lllusion To make windows appear wider and to allow more light into the room, use extension rods on walls and hang drapes beyond the window margin.

mummy-

‘LLIN PARKS, 3,, holds her

Times photo by John R. Spicklemire

Siamese kittens in an attempt to get them to listen

quietly to a story. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ‘Robert O. Parks, 2920 Guil-

ford Ave.

The Mature Parent—

and has a sister, Catherine Ann, 7,

Chores Need Not Cause Gloom

By MURIEL LAWRENCE T WAS a hot summer evening and, after dinner, Mr. Parker wanted to read his

newspaper in peace. So he

obeyed. He listened to the angry batging about of plates, pots and pans from the kitchen and demanded of his wife, “What's got into that girl? Does she think she's too good to wash dishes any more?”” His wife looked at him thoughtfully. Then she said, “Maybe that's it.” She stuck her needle in the arm of her chair and rose. Out in the kitchen, she quickly took a dishtowel from its rack. As she began to wipe the silver

her child had washed, she said, “After tonight, I will do the dishes two nights a week. You can You can prepare your own menu and do your own ordering on the budget I will

make dinner,

give you.” ” n »

- : ® KATHY PARKER ‘was ‘the proudest littie girl on the block the next night when she served her No, Mrs. first dinner. And it was a honey of a dinner too,

despite an occasional

potatoes,

lump

It's alright to remind children of chores, but nagging, we take a new look at the children and the chores: We won't be the first parents to discover that

when reminding becomes

was annoyed when 13-year-old Kathy had to be told to get at her dishwashing five times. He was even more annoyed when she

Mrs. Lawrence

keeping.

we have been limiting their abilities by confining ’ them to dull routines and denying them a whack at the more exciting, creative jobs of home-

Dull things have to be done, too, of course.

But why

tasks’ That

realities limited is an important plunges straight at the possibility that we ourselves are more living than of its satisfactions. If this is the case, then we will indeed feel a grim responsibility to get Kathy ready for the treadmill by keeping her chores dull and monotonous. But if we take dullness in our stride, then we prepare Kathy for the realities of life by planning for spontaneous and creative jobs as well ad the dull ones, chocolate cake and an eggbeater as well as the dishcloth and Setergent &

do we consider preparation for life's

to preparation for its dullest question because it

conscious of the dullness of

We give her a recipe for

OVER AND over again we get into trouble

over the chore problem when we ourselves are

oppressed by routines.

whole world

secret discontent over our own Homes are not penal institutions for us or for our children, but co-operative adventures into the most imporant realities in the sharing, interdependence and love. It is the momentum these give us that carries

us over the dull tasks so that they do no seem

the mashed

hateful and oppressive, as parts, never the whole of life's reality. Parker was a wise mother. Her plan for rotating the dull chore of dishwashing with the exciting one of dinner-making is the

but are readily accepted

soundest preparation for life's realities. She is

alone. wholesome, confident.

should

You Can Serve This To Your Golf Pals

Win praises from your golfloving friends with clever “Hole in One” desserts. To make them, combine cake crumbs with chopped pecans, spread on a cookie sheet, and toast 10 minutes in a moderate oven. Remove from the oven and

chill. Roll scoops of ice cream’

in the crumbs. For each serving,

place a

frosted ice cream ball in the center of a baker's Mary Ann (ake Shell to represent’ the lucky cup with the golf ball resting in it, and cover with your favorite sauce. The frosted ice cream balls must be used immediately after making, or stored in.the refrigerator freezing compartment.

not expecting life to offer her child dull routines Her expectations for Kathy are more more

self-respecting, and more

Save That Child

To protect your youngster, who often must be in the kitchen while you are working there, fence off a play space away from the stove,

Pictures and stories about people you know in Indiana's smartest woman's section—in your Sunday Times.

John Weghorst, Otto Klingstein and Robert W, Smith.

Mesdames Wallace Roberts,"

Kenneth Roepke, George 0O’'Malia, Charles Gordon, Jack Franchetto, Howard McDonald, Donald Allen, Hardy Hicks, William Weeks, Edward Kincaid, "Clarence Holland, Barbara Tribby, Margaret Clark and Lela Fowley. Misses Helen Akard, Jeanette

Reed, Julia, Velona, Carol Gus-

tin, Jane Martin, Adele Ginnsz, Edna Bremerman and Barbara Phegley. Mrs. Otto Klingstein, 5814 Rockville Dr., will entertain with a shower the evening of Aug. 13. She will be assisted by her mother, Mrs, Harry Schuh.

Garden Club Meets Friday

Mrs. Emsley Sley Johnson, 5780 Broadway, will entertain the North. End Garden Club at 2 p.m. Friday. Robert B. Johnson, of the office of the assistant superintendent of Indianapolis public schools, will talk on “Yards, Parks, and Yards Beautiful.”

Mesdames George B. Elliott

and Bert Johnson will assist |

the hostess.

New

Sterling Silver or Plated Silver and Fine Jewelry

Baby cups—iuice cups—porringers—bowls—baby feeding spoons—baby forks and spoons—junior fork and spoon sets—bib fasteners—napkin rings—rattles and many others to choose from.

Gold necklaces und Bracelets for the baby girl—or start a pearl necklace for her—adding to it on each gift occasion.

Charles Mayer and Company

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ing from childr been sitting grounds using ings as canva: It's a colorfu Sunday afternc » A DIGESTIV fitting after a And that’s wh Jack Niehaus Guests include asts who had a fet reception fo Highland Coun night candleli served on the six couples pre:

> o AFTER YEA tempts to get a

. fair-complexion

Parker, Speeds her way. Miss Parker, turned from sojourn in Mis is sporting the ness--everyone the summer, B of experimenti result. It must be t

” PATIENCE 1 the Walter Jac}

" carin Lane hon

A swimming has been in th and the recer made the owne anxious for th tion.

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NEW Y( man to be a c rently sad s

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Ernest Seu watched Diam drink champs lady's slipper, s mortified over themselves, h courtesies once due. Mr. Seute n anniversary as erable Lucho: last week by tic called the little women have ular 'swashbucl “Watch thes whistle for a cz own food in a then light not but their gen cigarets,” he they used to cr ity, they're no dred-yard dash » THINGS WI subtly that yo the restaurant out of line. N that there's nc full generation never even kne life was more g For exampl doubted there ¥ der 50 today the tradition c for men. The tion all view | insult to the si “The idea place where a 1 scheme on .h sweetheart or lucky he was t Mr. Seute plained. “He c places nowada right there wi sions.”

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