Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 August 1952 — Page 4
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— C———
Light-Less Hostess Misses
Party
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WEDGWOOD-—Bluye and white decorates Evans’ porcelain smoke set.
REFUELING ONCE A YEAR—Porcelain table lighter's entire bowl holds fluid. By Evans Case Co.
By OPAL CROCKETT > WHO likes a party when the hostess
hops all over the house? First you see her, then you don’t. She
streaks through the house, making guests uncomfortable when their comfort is her object. Frustrated and footsores she doesn't really come to the party she gives. When she finally lights she heaves a sigh of fatigue with no strength left to swing guests into good conversation. She tells about her ailments she picked up overworking to entertain you. o> \ THE PARTY'S A DUD. Guests twitch miserably, trying to make conversation and excuses to go home. The hostess is tired. You're tired. “She works SO hard,” is about all you can say for her, though the roast may have been a thing of beauty. She must have the “Joneses.” she told herself, She and the Joneses both wish she hadn't. Home, with shirt out and shoes off, would have been more fun. Ws» SOMETIMES the trouble is absence of the little things like home gccessories. Guests jump out of the way of the hostess flying to find the things they need or they try to help her, diving into drawers she didn't clean. Table lighters and roomy ashtrays within easy reach have a lot to do with the comfort guests expect. Hunting them sends a house in turmoil. ® & & TAKE A TV evening “for instance.” Everybody gets set and quiet for the prize fight. Smoking starts. Nobody has a match, Havoc reigns.
By MRS. ANNE CABOT By Here is a flattering hat ,
"once a year.
SUE BURNETT You. can turn out
€omes time to eat with the. hostess making dozens of trips to the kitchen for the snack that could be served practically from her chalr— coffee and all—without intérrupting the program. Manufacturers remember the arches of the hostess with. the latest household accessories. Some new ones made their debut at the Gift Show and China, Glass and Pottery Market last week in Chieago. Suggested as Christmas gifts, many will never make their way from the homes of the women who buy them, they're that trick. a Se EVANS CASE CO. introduces a line of porcelain table lighters and ashtrays decorated in enamel. Besides breaking from tooled silver and gold varieties, the lighters reproduce for the American market the artistry of Europe and the Orient. The entire bowl of one lighter is a fuel reservoir with refueling necessary only. about Melon-shaped moderns or gourd-shaped in traditional designs, these lighters are decorated in flamboyant colors or soft pastels, Ayres’ and Wasson's are on the list of dealers,
* - oo o or
BLOCK'S has a table lighter and pair of ashtrays with Japanese flowers in delicate pastels decorating them. They'ré made of Cloisonne, a baked porcelain, Indianapolis stores carry a variety of TV snack sets. A handsome one (in photo) by Ira Jones Co. is an eight-plece set with coffee pot standing on its own candle-warmer. A well to hold a mug has been put into the large size dinner plate. Charles Mayer's carries Jones lines. Block's has TV sets with coffee pots over candle-warmers, The coffee pot centers the Lazy Susan type set available in a variety of woods.
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __
g
SNACK SET—TV evening easy entertaining with Ira Jones Co. china.
We The Women—
I * . I * Sniping’ Mars Popularity By RUTH MILLETT VV OU probably know at least one couple like the Mor-
tons. pany.
You really like Joe Morton. You like his wife, Sue; too.
He's good com-
And yet, as much as you like them individually,
when together they often make
_vou feel uncomfortable; Why is
Paris Shows Harem Touch
PARIS, Aug. 5 (UP)-—Harem swirls of seductively draped chiffon keynoted Jean Desses’ ultra-feminine collection yesterday in the next-to-last .attempt byiFrench designers: to dictate the chic winter fashion silhouet. Standoffish Balanclaga ends the major fashion showings today. Shades of dry wine, burgundy, port and maderia in- , 8pired Desses to drape and gather luxurious yards of chif-
fon into cocktail and evening gowns. They sported trailing scarves in back and flaring panels in front. ‘ Crepe was. used extensively for afternoon . dresses, with shirred diamond detail to shape the waist and bust. The newlylong skirts, 11 inches from the floor, flowed from the hips in bias folds in front but hung straight in back. {
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it that either one is so much nicer to have around than seeing the two of them together? Because the Mortons, like 20 many married couples, have fallen into the habit &f sniping at each other whenever they have an audience, When Joe starts to tell a story, Sue 18 sure to interrupt it somewhere to make a cack that puts Joe in an unfavorable light — or say something that makes -her look like the martyred wife. If Sue expresses an idea Joe immediately takes the opposite view, which, of course, irritates
Ruth Millett
Sue. and usually ends in a heated argument. The Mortons don’t act like partners but like opponents. They may love each other but certainly don’t give the impression of liking each other,
” n on AND SO they make you uncomfortable. After spending an evehing with the two of them your opinion of both is lowered considerably. It would: be as easy for the Mortons to build each other up as to tear each other down. But they have fallen into the habit of belittling each other instead of trying to make each other look good. : You can’t do anything about the Mortons except use them as an example of how a married couple should not behave in company. Make sure that you and your husband never appear less attractive as a couple than you appear as individuals.
. floor-length white
The Bridal Scene—
Sisters to Say Vows
TWO SISTERS will mar-
ry the men they met at Hanover College. ~The brides-to-be are the
Misses Marilyn Jean and Carol Joan Megorden. They are the daughters of Mr. and Mrs, George C. Megorden, 3149 Central Ave.
Miss Carl Megorden will become the bride of Don E. Jarvis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence 8. Jarvis, Tipton, at 7:30 p. m. today in the Sutherland Presbyterian Church.
Miss Marilyn Megorden will be wed to William Higgins McGregory, son of Mr. and Mrs. William H. McGregory, Yonkers, N. Y., at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in South Presbyterian Church, Yonkers,
Carol and Don will be married at a double-ring ceremony to be performed by the Rev, A. C. Gillander.
THE BRIDE will wear a organdy gown with overskirt- of eyelet embroidery. Her net and pearl Juliet caps holds a fingertip illusion veil. 8he will carry a white Bible topped with a white orchid. Mrs. Richard Overdorf, Tipton, matron of honor, and the bridesmaids, Miss Jéan Prosser, Hagerstown; Miss Barbara Stuhlmacher, Crown Point, and Miss Marian Hsueh, Hanover, will wear floor-length strapless organdy gowns with net stoles in orchid, yellow, pink and blue. Sandra Kelly, flowergirl, will wear white organdy over green taffeta. Richard Overdorf, Tipton, will be best man. .
will follow
A RECEPTION the ceremony. The bride, a member of Alpha Delta Pi Sorority, is a senior in the Indiana University Training School for Nursing. Mr. Jarvis is in the Navy and stationed in New London, Conn.
Lewis Open House MR. AND MRS. DANIEL LEWIS, 3920 Drexel Ave. will hold open house from 4 to 6 p. m. Sunday in honor of their daughter Janet and her husband, Garry Williams, whose marriage was announced recently. Mrs. Ralph Lewis, 5223 N. Pennsylvania St, and her daughters, Beverly and Mrs, David Bixler, Bloomington, will entertain for Mrs. Williams Thursday evening. ? Guests will include Mesdames Daniel Lewis, Esther Williams,
TUESDAY, AUG. 5, 1052 ¢
This Week
Wilbur Patterson,.Paul Asmuse : sen, J. M. Campbell, E. P. Nicholson, and Lee Crouch, and Misses Eva Jane Lewis, Nancy Williams, Emma Hopkins, Mary
Bixler, Marcia Ries, Barbara Farmer, Judy Rinehart and Helen Eby.
Others will be Earl Stucky, Harold Ries, Ed Kelly, EA4 Newman, Morris Pearson, Louthan Van Meter, Henry Farmer, M. B. Fields, Brink Hopkins, . Lloyd Rinehart, James Marmion, Robert Eby, William Wood, Robert Rankins, a n . MISS BEVERLY GROB is planning a miscellaneous shower in: honor of the bride Sept. 6. Mr. and Mrs. Williams are at home, 313 E. Walnut St., Kokomo.
Bridal Shower MRS. OTTO KLINGSTEIN, 5814 Rockville Rd. has announced the guest list for the miscellaneous shower she and her mother, Mrs. Harry Schuh, are giving at 8 p. m. Aug. 13 in honor of Miss Gloria Haffner whose marriage to Harry Newby Jr. will take place Aug. 23. They will include Mrs. Carl Haffner, mother of the bride-to-be; Mrs. Harry Newby Sr, mother of the prospective bridegroom; Mesdames Russell Lovelace, Richard Grimes, John Garfield, Mary Faulkner, Paul Dodson, Hugo Klingstein, Robbert Grider, Donna Best, William Weghorst, William Schoettlin, Don “Massa, John Julian, Chester Faulkner, Dorothy Curtis, Ray Phegley, George Thomson, Paul Lowell and Louie Mason. Other guests will be Misses Carolyn Lovelace, Faye Spivey and Barbara Phegley.
Hollywood Cool to 2d Run of New Look
HOLLYWOOD, Aug. 5 (UP) — Hollywood film beauties today gave a cold
shoulder to a revival of the 1947 “New Look” of lowered hemlines by famed Paris fashfon designer Christian Dior. Word came from the world fashion center of Paris earlier that Dior, who hatched the original “New Look,” had proclaimed {ts return to the apparel scene. It could cause serious repercussions in that it means new
wardrobes for women and heavy bills for men. o ” n “IT ISN'T what a woman
wears,” sald Marilyn Monroe, petite and sexy film actress. “It is how she is’ and how she wears it. New look or old look, it- all amounts to ‘the same
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thing—how much looking you can attract.” Following Marilyn's opinion was a fusillade of similar responses from Hollywood's most alluring stars whose opinion of Dior’'s action also may have its effect. n EJ n DOROTHY LAMOUR: “A new look is like a new car. It all depends on what's under the hood.” Betty Grable: “No matter what the experts say, Southern California ‘has its own style. Here as least, women dress fdr comfort instead of high style.” Virginia Mayo: “I didn’t even wear the new 100k when it was really new.” Corrine Calvert: “Dior is one of our great designers, but I like: American clothes. Before I change my style, I'll have. to ask my husband.” Claire Trev-
or “I doubt if the American woman will pag® much attention to the new look.” Representing Hollywood's male opinion in the matter was
Steve Cochran who took a slam at the old master’s brainchild by saying, “The new look is for bowlegged girls.”
sto)
You telephone a girl and her mother, whom you know, answers the telephone. WRONG: Ask to speak to the girl without saying who you are. RIGHT: Say, “This is Jim Smith, Mrs. Brown. Could I speak to Margie, please?”
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o THE WYN won't have Luckily, the . case is an af But somet rulings and needed in th the defendant both dogs. It seems t secks, 885 W Place, own a bulldog. .-The Earl J. Wynn Woodruff Pla Pekingese. stance, powe smaller creat the two dog theit respectis can't’ resist n tacks on the Now, the s to such that ing the bulld Wynn house little Peke b It's true bi; in small pack:
ou DR. AND O'DONNELL, ter, Mrs. Tom age, Ky., sho hall this past their friends. On their w. O’Donnells, city, stopped Saturday to | few of their August barn Kentucky far four hours, make - person; nine homes h husk and a weren't in. It sounds O’Donnells ne
= IT MAY ! discover taler of an autom where Mrs. 3140 Washin; it. As Mrs. K ting into the clay figurines by masterfu questioning 1 ter, 3243 V owner of the covered the w her. And all t women have Mrs. Komine her friend's
a velvety appearance, and the
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MRS. ANNE CABOT
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