Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 August 1952 — Page 5
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MONDAY, AUG. 4. 1952
HE FIRST TIME Dr. and Mrs. James Majarakis, Chi-
cago, Ill, saw Paris, they decided they'd have to go back for,another visit. And they did last week. Mrs’ Majarakis, the former Dorothy James, daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. James,
7502 N. Meridian *St., and her husband, have been touring England, France, Italy and
Switzerland for the last month. They got home a few days ago.
” » » THERE'S BEEN quite a bit of flower and green transplanting going on in Holliday Park! these last few Sundays. With paints, brushes and easels, a group of artists ranging from children to adults have been sitting on the park grounds using their surround- © ings as canvas inspiration. It's a colorful way to spend a Sunday afternoon. ~ vy » A DIGESTIVE party is quite. fitting after a buffet dinner. And that’s what Mr. and Mrs. Jack Niehaus had yesterday. Guests included golf enthusiasts who had attended the buffet reception for Jane Nelson at Highland Country Club. A midnight candlelight buffet was served on the terrace for the six couples present.
t o = . AFTER YEARS of futile attempts to get a deep tan, blonde Betty Parker, Speedway, finally got her way. Miss Parker, who recently returned from a few weeks sojourn in Miami Beach, Fla. is sporting the type of brown-ness-everyone-dreams-about-in the summer, But it took years of experimenting to get “this result. It must be the Florida sun.
» ” ” \ PATIENCE 1S a must around the Walter Jackson's 3821 Glen-
" carin Lane home these days.
A swimming pool in the yard has been in the making lately and the recent hot weather made the owners all the more anxious for the pool's completion.
It'll only be a matter of days now before the pool will be ready for its christening.
” . ~ A WEEK END without a single party ‘to go to can be rather dull. And such a week end seemed to be in store for the Ed Norrises, 3710 N- Meridian St., and Bill Richardsons these last two days. Only Mrs. Richardson couldn't see a thing like. that happen so she planned a nohosts party for Saturday night. It was really simple to call a few couples on the phone and give them her plans. Evervone just. met in one of the clubs for dinner, to start a social evening.
” ” ” A GARDEN PARTY has a certain amount of drama attached to it but Saturday night's garden event in the Athenaeum went to the limit, dramatically speaking. Thespian club members entertained guests with a skit in the midst of the evening's social, thereby combining theater and play.
on ” ” WHEN ROBERT TIDWELL, R. R. 2, gave his daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gull, a shiny new convertible for their wedding anniversary recently, they were greatly disappointed. The Gulls had been counting on a trip to Europe for the last year. Consequently, the car was sold along with. a few other personal belongings and enough money was raised for the longed-for vacation. What the Gulls don’t know now is that when they return in two weeks, they'll have another of those shiny new cars parked in front of their house — compliments of Mr. Tidwell again. It's a round-about way to do things.
Cavalier Is Man of the Past
By JAY BREEN
United Press Staff Correspondent 4 NEW YORK, Aug. 4—It’s virtually impossible for a man to be a cavalier with his lady these days and the currently sad state of gallantry has one of Manhattan's oldest waiters just about ready to take his last order.
Ernest Seute, who once watched Diamond Jim Brady drink champagne {from a lady's slipper, said he was plain mortified over the way women, themselves, have abolished courtesies once considered their due. Mr. Seute marked his 40th anniversary as a waiter at venerable Luchow’s Restaurant last week by ticking off what he called the little ways in which women have “grown to be regular 'swashbucklers.” “Watch them help a man whistle for a cab, or order their own food in a restaurant and then light not only their. own but their gentleman friends’ cigarets,” he said. “Where they used to creep up on equality, they're now doing a hun-dred-yard dash.” ” ” » THINGS WENT to seed so subtly that younger waiters in the restaurant notice nothing out of line. Mr. Seute added that there's now “at least one full generation of women who never even knew of a time when life was more gallant.” For example, he said he doubted there was a woman under 50 today who understood the tradition of a bar strictly for men. The younger generation all view it as a standing insult to the skirts they wear. “The idea was to have a place where a man could go and scheme on how to win his sweetheart or contemplate how lucky he was that he had her.” Mr. Seute indignantly explained. “He can’t do it many places nowadays because she's
right there with him. No illusions.” 4's =» LUCHOW'S he pointed out, was one of the few remaining old-time restaurants which had stood against opening its men’s bar to the ladies, but proprietor Leonard Jan Mitchell confessed he was weakening under the steady barrage of complaints. Mr. Seute gave notice he'll
hang up his starched shirt for the last time on the day a set of painted finger nails raps on
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that particular slice of oak. “I was working on the night in 1917 when they first allowed a. woman to smoke a cigaret here,” he said. “I predicted most of this right then and there.” And for those women who insist the changes have been all for the better and haven't hurt romance one whit, Mr. Seute offered some devastating statistics. . “When I first came here, there was always one man at every table occupied by a woman,” he said, “often you'd find a pretty girl with two and three men wining and dining her. Now it’s not at all unusual to see two and three women at a table unescorted. I'm sorry but I think they brought it on themselves.”
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The Younger Set—
Nursery Set Tries Corduroy Joos
ba i
By BETTY LOCHER Times Fashion Editor
RETTY enough for company and practical enough for play, cotton corduroy fashions for the nursery set are now being featured by local department stores for fall. In brilliant Robin Hood colors, solids as well as flower, plaid and striped prints, they will appeal to mothers as well as youngsters. The little girl photographed above is ready for play, rain or shine, in her red corduroy skirt pleated in front with elasticized sides and a belted back. The skirt is $2.98 in gold or American beauty as well, sizes 3 to 6x. With it she wears a white broadcloth blouse piped with plaid for $1.98.
# “ » HER LITTLE PLAYMATE is smartly dressed in a red plaid corduroy jacket with brass buttons and a matching cap. The jacket is $5.98, hat $1.98 and slacks $2.98. The slacks may be had in plaid or plain red, blue or green. They are sturdily constructed with reinforced knees. There's a little vest with the set, too that is $1.98. All the corduroys are pre-shrunk and washable. They are available in Block's Children's Department, Third Floor. Each store has different co-
ordinated sets of corduroy fashions. In Ayres’ ' Fourth Floor Children’s Department
you will find brother and sister sets in tweed patterned corduroys with matching plain colors. The tweed comes in a mixture of oxford gray, red and white, Solid colors match the colors in the tweed. For sister there are both plain and tweed skirts, little weskits with gold metal fob chains hung with charms and cardigan-jackets: u n » FOR LITTLE BOYS there are plain or tweed . blazers, -pork vests and slacks. A shirt,” made especially for the ensemble; has button - down shirt tabs, long sleeves and a corduroy tie. Also in Ayres’ you will find a charming scoop neck jumper for a little girl of navy or green
: and Mrs. Horvat Sr.,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —_
Times photos by William A. Oates Jr
LOOKING FOR A RAINBOW —Kaarta Woolling and. Stephen Horvat Jr. model. rainbow corduroys from Block's Third Floor
Children’s Department.
Kaatra’s skirt is
red to blend with
Stephen's red plaid jacket. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Woolling, 6162 N. Meridian St. Stephen is the son of Mr.
257 S. Emerson, Ave. Their clothes are from
Block's Toddler Department, Third Floor.
calico print piped with white. It is $6.98. Wasson's toddler department, fifth floor, soon will be featuring reversible skirts that are corduroy on one side, printed calico on the other, with matching calico blouses. New corduroys featured in Good House-
keeping will be carried in Was-
son's, too, t There will be a charming corduroy quilted coachman’s coat dress trimmed with poiished cotton. Flower-printed
corduroy skirts, weskits, slacks and jackets soon will be avallable, too.
New Fall Hats Have ‘Mystery Look’
By ELIZABETH TOOMEY
United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Aug 4— Every woman can have a look of mystery this fall. Hats get the credit, or
the blame, depending on how intriguing men will it. Peeking around deep brims that shade feminine eyes, conceal profiles and generally cover heads so thoroughly, it's going to be hard to tell a hlonde from a brunet. There is a difference between the new cloche that's sweeping the millinery business and the head-hugging hats of The Twenties. Crowns are shallower and brims are deeper. Some of the fall hats fit snugly over the crown of the head, with straight, stiff little brims that. jut out to the hairline. Others have cone-shaped - or stubby stove pipe crowns with arched brims or soft, floppy brims that dip at either side. “This is the turning point for hats,” predicted designer Fred of John Frederics. = » 2 “THERE WILL BE much more hat,” said Laddie North-
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ridge, who adds three-dimen-sional trimming as well as extra brim to his fall hats. What's high fashion will be budget fashion too, since the cloche is the favorite ‘in all price ranges. One of the hats in John Frederics special charmer group that sells for under $15 is a youthful cloche with a white angora crown and a stitched grey wool brim. More sophisticated, and more expensive, are his soft angora wool cloches with brims that dip softly around the face. Angora wools and fuzzy beaver felts take the place of fancy trim on many of the new hats. = ” ~
THE PROFILE cloche dips up slightly at one side. One pale green felt profile cloche in the John Frederics collection is trimmed with a paisley print band that extends to make a scarf or a snug bow under the chin.
Turbans are having a revival too. They pull down snugly to the hair line, often with soft
they Il
“gale
jersey draped around a felt crown. A textured, three-dimensional effect occurs in daytime hats as well as glittering after-five headgear. For daytime it's achieved with angora stitched felts, pressed patterns in felt
brims and chiffon insets in furry felts. In the evening, chunky colored stones and heavily-sewn sequins add the third dimension. Laddie Northridge sewed mul-ti-colored sequins on hidden wires for an evening hat in a raised flower design. He scattered pearls over a dove-colored fur felt cloche and used a heavily-jeweled band on a white cashmere cloche. Designers tried in past seasons to encourge women to wear hats by making them small, head hugging and inconspicious. Now they're reversing their logic. The new theory is that women ho wear these big, textured hats will get so much attention the bareheaded girl will feel neglected.
. No. 8836
Q
"The Times Pattern Service
By SUE BURNETT Dress the small members of the family in matching togs— easy to sew and fun, too. Sister's dress has a drawstring nickline, colorful trim; sunsuit for brother opens out flat to launder, Pattern 8836 is a sew-rite perforated pattern in sizes 6 months, 1, 2, 3, 4 years, Size 1, dress, 1! yards of 39-inch; sunsuit, 1'y yards, Send: today for your copy of Basic Fashion '52. It shows you how to make your wardrobe do double duty with economical, time-saving styles. Gift pattern printed “inside.
SUE BURNETT The Indianapolis Times 372 W. Quincy St. Chicago 6, Ill. Price 25¢ Fashion Book Price 25¢
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Chicago Show
Presents
A Sequin-Wearing Swatter
By United Press
CHICAGO, Aug. 4—The flyswatter has gone
"glamorous.
With a piece of wool, some gold braid and glistening sequins Mrs. Romeo Mura, Libertyville, Ill, converted the
lowly swatter, The designer, who has used
sequins to dress up house slippers and eye glasses for more than three years, added
her sparkling flyswatter to the
almost 1000 items in the Mer-
chandise Mart's annual gift show. Real kerosene lamps tiny
enough to be used as cigaret lighters, were on display. One designer called a novel cigaret box ‘the: frustrated turtle,” a turtle lying on its back. n ” .
THE GENERAL TREND of gift show pieces. was toward attractive and multi-service, space saving items such as stacking tables, tea carts and snack and appetizer servers.
A rooster-shaped tea cart carried red napkins neatly ar-
/
ranged in the comb. Another | beverage wagon, called a “bar-
horse,” has a removable hobby |
horse head and tail made of straw to convert the wire and wood. server into a conversation rptecé at partytime. A portable desk-chest of lightweight wood was designed especially for children, students and invalids because it can be
held on the lap while writing or |
sketching. The box-shdped | chest contains drawing and | writing equipment and the
slanted slate top has slits to hold a roll of paper.
Wrought iron was used exten- h
sively from salad bowl exteriors to waste baskets, Newest of the imports came from Greece. Buyers said the modern patterns of the Grecian ceramics, in birch shades on white actually were ancient, legendary Greek designs now shown on dinner plates, vases and carafes. Other imports included figurines from Italy and deep cobalt blue glass from Sweden. Japan, China, IndoChina and England also were represented.
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Try Various Breads
When it's sandwich making time look carefully over the counters of your favorite grocery store or bakery. In addi» tion to the popular enriched white and whole wheat breads, purchase a fruit bread or nut bread for variety. Make use of the handy ham-
burger and long buns. Use them as containers for egg salads, fish salads or juicy
vegetable fillings.
& | ompan,
PAGE 5 Bridge Talk— Local Players
Finish Second
Times Special
CINCINNATI, O., Aug. 4— Willlam T. Macdonald and Noble G. Morgan, Indianapolis, finished second in their section of the Congress Bicycle Pairs event in the summer nationals of the American: Contract Bridge League playing here in the Sheraton Gibson Hotel. One hundred and thirty-four pairs competed in the competition. Miss Marge Quinn and John Chappelear finished first in their section in the Doris Fuller Pairs.
Schedule Card Party
Members of the South Side Service Club will have a miscellaneous card party at 1:30 p.m. Aug. 12 in the Food Craft Shop. Mrs. Bertha Ott will be chairman.
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