Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1952 — Page 6
EE AN Shs A i
4
70
T ISN'T too late for Indianapolis Country Club mem-
bers to go beaching in September.
In true eastern
style, they. will have a Cape Cod dinner Sept. 3 Lobsters will be flown in from the East Coast and
baked on sea weeds in the shells. The club will be transformed into a seaside dwelling with fish nets and shells. The 27th of the month will call attention to all football lettermen. On that evening, the ¢lub will hold a “homecoming dance” with members wearing their college-day sweaters and helmets and other football regalfa making up the decora~ tions. a - = PAUL H. DRAIZAR, Miami, Fla., is visiting his mother, Mrs. Abraham F. Draizar, 2410 N. Delaware St. He came to Indianapolis to attend the wedding of his sister Sunday, Mrs. Harry L. Sacks, the former Bess L. Draizar. While - here, he also will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. 8id-,
ney Sakowitz, 6171 Norwaldg
B. Stein, 3172 Fall Creek Pk N. Dr. =” » - THE closing of the R Club outdoor pool marks an end to the passing. out -of balloons by Dr. John R. Brayton, 3178 E. Fall Creek Pkwy. N. Dr.—an end for this season. Every night, Dr. Brayton visited the pool with hands and pockets filled with balloons. Standing on the water's edge, he'd throw the toys out to the swimmers who gathered around on sight of the man, « n » = AFTER spending a few hours ifn a Tennessee jail, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Dickerson, St. Augustine, Fla., arrived in the home of their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Jackson, Speedway. : Last night, when the Jacksons entertained for the newlymarried couple, the story about their jail sentence came: out. Friends of the Dickersons hag changed the plates on their car after the wedding ceremony giving them a set of out-dated ones. The couple was lucky
"enough to get as far as Ten-
nessee before anyone noticed the prank. v » Ld ” WHEN the heel came off the shoe of one of the dancing
We, the Women—
guests in La Rue's Club, her escort suggested she take the heel off her other shoe and continue dancing. The victim was Miss Susan Metcalf, Tipton, and her advice to women finding themselves in similar dchditions is, “Don’t try it. It won't work.” ” » »’ MR. AND MRS. MARC WRIGHT, Cold Spring Rd., returned today after spending the past two months in Europe. Before coming home, they stopped in New York to visit Mrs. Wright's brother-in-law and sister, Dr.’ and Mrs. David Kimball. ~ » = IF YOU walk into the living room of the Ed Kileys’ west urban Indianapolis home, may think you're looking chameleon. he Kileys returned from a onth’'s stay in Florida and when sitting in their living room, seem to blend in with the cinnamgon-colored walls. Yesterday, they greeted their friends at a barbecue pienic in their back yard.
Garden Club
Lists Winners
Awards have been announced for the annual flower show of the Green Thumb Garden Club. Those winning blue ribbons in the arrangement and invitational classes were Mesdames Herman Bischof, Paul Boardman, William Dismore, F. M. Griffey, H, L. Hasbrook; T. M. Hindman Jr, Harold Hunt, R. G. Justice, Ray Thorn, C. D.
Vawter and George Wear. Blue ribbons in horticulture
were given Mesdames Herman
Bischof, E. L. Bohn, William Dismore, F. M. Griffey, Harold Henninger, R. G. Justice, C. J. Sherman, Ray Thorn, Charles Van Buskirk, C. D. Vawter and George Wear. Other awards were given Mesdames Clayton Adams, Walter Alfka, John Brian and R. C. Rees.
Bangs Are a Trade Mark
Of Mamie Eisenhower
By RUTH MILLETT T ISN'T hard for the American public to recognize a
picture of Mamie Eisenhower. Why? Well, because she has made it easy by cling ing for 30 years to her own touch of individuality, her
own trade mark-—bangs, Whether they were in style
or out, Mrs. Eisenhower went right on wear- : ing bangs until those bangs have become a partof her personality. | There's a tip there for other women. Not to wear bangs, of course, but to find their own ways of making themselves easy to remember.
Few women are beautiful enough to be remembered for
their beauty. Few have faces so exceptional or arresting that they make a vivid impression. The great majority of women
Adlai's Sister
By ELIZABETH TOOMEY United Press Staff Correspondent
NEW YORK, Sept. 2-» Elizabeth S. Ives is
Ruth Millett
Mrs.
“well-equipped to give fa-
mous Washington hostesses
stiff competition if her brother is elected President. Friendly and gregarious, Gov, Adlai Stevenson's sister admits she loves to give parties. All kinds of parties, she’ says, from the intimate gathering of friends that ner brother
prefers to ‘“protocolar functions” which she thoroughly enjoys.
“We're both socially minded —we like People,” Mrs. Ives said in an interview before she returned to her home in Bloomington, Ill. “Adlai loves music in the house »nd a few ntimate friends around him. He doesn't care so much for the protocolor functions, but I ‘ke those too. It. is part of official atmosphere.”
= a ~ MRS. IVES, affectionately nicknamed “Buffie” by her brother who is two ‘rears her
jubior, has had plenty of experience as a hostess. Her husband, Ernest, spent 30 years in the foreign service before he retired, and they lived and entertained frequently in ‘such places as Constantinople, South Africa, Scandinavia and Denmark. They ' were dividing their time between the Stevenson family home in Bloomington and their farm in South Pines, N. C., when Mr, Stevenson became Governor of Illinois. “When 1 found . that there was a use for me at the Mansion, we stayed there more and more,” she explained. “Adlai seems to appreciate my being around.”
PRESUMABLY the soft
“spoken, biuetyed ba will
"need to do something to make
themselves stand out .a little above the crowd.
» “ » BUT FEW of them do any such thing. If poodle cuts are the rage of the moment they rush in droves to get poodle cuts. Then they all have a poodle look and soon weary of it, only to rush out and imitate
- the next “new look” that comes
along.
Instead of striving for individuality, they are only working hard to look like every other woman. It is much smarter for a Woman to choose some particular style and make it her own, until it becomes her trade mark, than’ to keep changing her looks so that, like a chameleon, she always blends.
fill the same hostess role in the White House, ‘if the Democrats win in November, though she says, “it seems so presump-
tive to talk about the White House.” The role 6f White House hostess, she added, “would be
a fascinating experience and a great honor.”
The’ Governor and his sister bear a strong resemblance to each other, They beth- have long faces and slightly prominent blue eyes that twinkle readily with a friendly smile. They always have been close companions, “We are a strangely united family, all of us,” Mrs. Ives said. “Maybe that’s old fashioned. The joke has always been that we adopted mother's church and father’s politics.” Their mother, brought up a Quaker, became a Unitarian after she married and brought up her “children in’ that church.
As Gov, Stevenson's duties have increased, so have his sister's. - 8 we
“IT WAS AMAZING to me to need a secretary,” .she exclaimed. “After the convention, I suddenly found old friends and relatives writing letters—the kind of letters you want to answer carefully.”
She is poised and talkative in small groups, but inclined to be shy if she's called on to speak before a crowd. She prefers sim-
ple clothes, usually in navy blue
or black, with an occasional splash of red, and shows typi-
cally feminine uncertainty over |
her hats.
“I've had expensive hats that were failures,” she said with a sigh. “My husband thinks all women should wear sailors. But I keep changing my mind. Maybe if I'd do something différent
with my hair I could go without ]
a hat more.” ‘Her naturally. eyrly orown
Calling Cart Visits Apartments
By GAY PAULEY United Press Staff C
NEW YORK, Sept. 2A
small
gost Manhattan apartment 1
ilding has gone
town in a big way. The cause of it all is a tall, slim brunet named Sylvia Munroe. You've heard of «Welcome Wagon,” the get-acquainted service sponsored by merchants for new residents of towns across the nation. - Mrs. Munroe operates her own big city version under the name, “The Calling Cart.” On the day a tenant moves into the new building on Manhattan’s ultra-fashionable upper East Side, Sylvia comes calling with the cart filled with gifts from neighborhood merchants. " ” . THE MANAGEMENT admitted that Mrs. Munroe’s “Calling
Cart” has changed the whole
- called.
atmosphere of the “swanky building. Big city dwellers have a habit of not knowing their neighbors. By the time Miss Munroe has paid a call, they're, chatting about the shops she has recommended. Sylvia Munroe, the wife of ag airlines executive, was no businesswomen at the start. She wanted to be an actress. Instead, -she took the simple concept of neighborliness and turned it into a thriving operation. : » "” »n “EVERYBODY told me it wouldn’t work,” said the youthful businesswoman. “They said New Yorkers are a cold lot and want to be left alone. «& “When I knocked on the first door I really didn't know whether it would be slammed in my face. You'd be surprised at the wonderful reception I actually got. Most peoplé stop right in the middle of moving and ask me in for a cup of tea or coffee.”
» ® = =»
“MOST PEOPLE feel lost on moving day . . . and they're glad when someone takes an interest.” The merchants hope to lure new customers with the gifts but the enterprise tikes on a Seighborly quality because Mrs. unpoe brings such immediate Ma s as light bulbs and extension cords. .
Other gifts—total value $60 | a bunch | of flowers, to be sent at a fu- | a free automobile |
—include a bath mat,
ture date, overhaul, and a parcel canned goods.
of
| “THERE ARE other services |
not listed,” said the attractive brunet with a chuckle.
fying nervous dogs. Pets get terribly upset on moving day.” Mrs. Munroe, a native of New York, got her start in business when she and her husband were tenants in a housing project. “We were lost the first few days we lived there,” she re“We didn’t know the shops . . . and we were sure we'd hate the neighborhood.”
Luncheon Planned For Martha Baker
Miss Sandy Allen, will entertain with a luncheon today in the Indianapolis - Athletic Club in honor of Miss Martha Baker who will leave Sept. 9 for St. Catherine's school for young ladies, Davenport, Jowa.
Guests will be Misses Betty |
Speropoulos, Mary Jo Welsh, Linda MacDouball, Carolyn Ashenbaucher, Janice Waterman and Judy Johns.
Shows Her Hostess Ability
hair, which §he washes and scts herself, is pulled back into a soft bun dt her neck. Since the Ives’ only son, Tim~ othy, 24, is a jet pilot stationed at Bryan Air Force base in Texas, it would be. easy for them to accompany Gov. Stévenson to Washington if he were elected. The prospect obvi-
ously is exciting: to the Gover- | nor's sister, but concern for her | her enthnsi- |
brother tempers asm.
“lI don't see-how anyone lov-
ing a person would really want |
him to be President,” she «aid. “What a responsibility for any man. But once your destiny leads you to that door,
it.
“I think my brother wou'd make a great President. We always felt that Adlai was absolutely different, even as a young boy. He was very just and very good. And so far,” she
added, “he seems to be holding
up remarkably well under the strain.”
Cash-and-Carry DISCOUNT $340 East Washington St 3602 West Sixteenth St. 2619 Shelby St
* An Extra Service at No Extra Cost
Minor garment repairs INCLUDED without extra cost on ALL cleaning. Send fall clothes this week.
For Pi t Piek-U Devers oe eo AU and
. Telephone | BL-2493"
small -
“I'm going to be a specialist in paci-
you | would be a coward not to take |
| {
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Legion Auxiliary to Install |
[FOLLOWING a dinner Monday new officers of the
Robison-Ragsdale Unit, will be installed. . The auxiliary will meet room of the Central Christian Church for a joint dinner with . the post and junior groups. Special guests will be the junior baseball team, .Charlie Preston Monroe and Charles William Crow, boy’s state . representatives sponsored by the post. . A report of the recent department convention in Bloomington will be given by Mrs. Carl E. Gates, retiring president, at the business session. A display of the department awards on unit and junior history reports will be shown. New officers are Mrs. John
American Legion Auxiliary
at 6:30 p. m. in the dining
B. Long, president; Mesdames Jett Williams, A. L. Moudy and Ellis Walters, first through third vice presidents, Mrs. Theo R. O’Banyel and Mrs. ESther Young, . recording’ and - corxesponding secretaries; « Mrs. Verner Farmer, historian; Mrs. "GC." K. McDowell, chaplain; Mrs. John Morrison, and Mesdames Fred Wolf, Gates and Marshall Raber, executive committee!
Keep up with fashions
Times.
with | Betty: Locher in your Sunday
8:30
t
Wednesday,
200 p. m.
Wasson’s will be
(pen Thursday 12 Noon ‘til
p. I.
Fall Store Hours Tuesday,
Friday,
Saturday 9:30 a. m. to
TUESDAY, SEPT. 2, 1952
Telephone AT lantic 8311
.
S.0.S.
School Opening Sale!
SIZES 4 to 8! « +. preferred by the boys or girls and
Back-to-School favorite
their mothers because they're warm, Also
rayon and nylon or rayon satin jackets
serviceable and priced right.
available af this low, low price.
Sizes 10 to 18. 9.90
Lo
4
SPECIAL! wm yo Western Jeans Gord Slacks
SIZES 3 10 7. Choose SANFORIZED with 5 big” 179 798 ¢ 2 for 3.50
CALEY ere soci
blue, brown or green checks.
brown, navy or green corpockets. Bar-tacked and duroy slacks or zip-front riveted. Sizes 4 to 12, ( 1 ° SALE! Short Sleeve Sport Shirts SAVE 33!/3% to 50%. Our entire stock of 0 short sleeve sport shirts reduced. Sizes 8 to we | 2 «1% |
overalls. Overalls also in 20. Perfect for back to school!
Wasson's Boys’ Department, Fifth Floor
ii
ng
| {
IAP Pa
pr,
Wasson's Girls' Department, Fifth Floor
It's Eyelet Embroidered! Girls' Cotton Lingerie
Exquisitely Detailed . . . Carefully Made
198 « 98
wis” WASSON'S YOUTH CENTER on the Fifth Floor-has the most imaginative, most charmingly styled collection of children's lingerie , . « all carefully worked from really superlative fabrics . . . exquisitely detailed. Ses our entire collection soon.
. Just § from Many Styles:
“SWIRL SLIP" cotton with hem ruffles of starched organdy. White only in 4 to
2. 2.98
2. "MISS GROWN UP SLIP" for chubbettes in cotton with shirr-back and snip thread midriff. - White only, sizes 8!/; to 1414,
3. SANFORIZED LAWN SLIP with eyelet embroidered top and hem ruffles. White ‘only, sizes 10 to 16. © 298
4 BUILT UP SHOULDER SLIP with eyelet embroidery trim. White only, sizes 4 to 8.
5. WHITE COTTON half slip with 23s lace flounce and blue ribbon beading.
Sizes 10 to 16. 2.98 CAMISOLE TOP, sizes 10 to 16. - 1,98 HP. Wasson & Company [J Charge | Mail Order Dept, (44) Check I Indianapolis 9, Ind. C.O.D.
Please send me the following girls' cotton slips: Quantity | Style | | . Size | | i | |
“ens sev sara sree CreAtpresseiisianieeaa,
bs
Price
Name. Address i er turaranranes
City Sarre dssrrsrrvisnaay State tesrsesiinnne we = Please odd 15¢ out-of-state shipping charges.
£
£
——_ wR
Sivan
3
Miss STEPPIL what look for. ] is Miss daughter o John Watk A career Watkins’ gi three years sity to he on her fat! per and she third year Building at Fair, “Mrs. Ka fax, is a f Miss ‘Watk she asked n ago if I wor ,ing the Fa agreed upoi The next Watkins ca in the offic “I really and just d told to do,” For the has od] Holloway's capacity sh full season. from Aug.
AS FOI Miss Watk the office 8 p.m. “We live building,” s that gives do nothing tire time. limited,” sh
YW! THE C:
eight tector.” & Sept. 17.
women ar series, with class, Members Bar Assoc the series | rum period sion, The prog following t« origin and Sept, 24—8 law; Oct. 1. to familiesOct. 8—the the relatio vidual to tl 15—Crimir. dure; Oct. : ing to the charitable, general wel 29—The la vation of on Nov. 5—Th internation:
lan
» Crida
Mr. and parents of Morris, Ww! Loran 8. place Satu members © Friday nigh Marott Hot Included will be M Frankfort; Ewing, ar Olean, N. Thomas | Point, Mic Frank E. C Mrs. Hickn Mr. and | tertain wit Marott Ho guests and bridal part
Speaker By Cour
8ix speak year were Indianapoli: at its meet Auditorium,
They are American | cinnati; Mj son, travele elist from J. Humber Pauw Uniw vice preside dent educa diana Unis drews, dire Pitman-Moc Weld, lectu
The T
By SU A smartl the mothe: during the loose jacke skirt is cl needed adit Pattern . performated 14, 16, 18, skirt, 1% jacket, 3% Ready for Fashion for ter. This with ideas | sewing for pattern pr book. ;
: SUE The Ind 372 W
Chi No. 8742 Fashion 8 Name .eeee
Stree t ie City
State sees
