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Albuquerque Journal from Albuquerque, New Mexico • Page 18

Location:
Albuquerque, New Mexico
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

a a ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL January 15, Dow, Bigbie Marriage Read in Church Service Miss Nancy Ruth Dow became the bride of Leslie Ward Bigbie in a ceremony at Our Lady of the Annunciation Church, with the Rt. Rev. Msgr. George V. Rieffer officiating at the double -ring service.

The bride is the daughter of Mrs Edwin E. Lease, 3724 Piermont NE, Everett C. Dow of Albuquerque and Washington, D.C. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs.

Artie Payne of Amarillo. For her wedding, the bride chose a floor-length, A-line satin skimmer enhanced with re-embroidered alencon lace, styled with a chapel train attached at the shoulders. Her pearl trimmed veil was caught to a Camelot cap of matching lace. Miss Karen Murphy was maid of honor and Miss Kathy Dow, sister of the bride, bridesmaid. Junior bridesmaids were Miss Dedrie French and Miss Amy Wilson.

Daniel Bigbie was his brother's best man and ushers were Donald Lommori and Michael Blair. The couple will be at home at 1037 Louisiana SE. Bigbie is attending the University of New Mexico and is affiliated with Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. He is employed by Architectural Carpet Consultants. Transferees Unit Guests Transferee members will be guests of Nu chapter, Beta Sigma Phi, for a meeting Thursday at 7:45 p.m.

in the home of Mrs. Logan VanPool, 9716 Aztec NE. The business meeting will be conducted by Mrs. Pat Roche, president. Plans will be completed for a bowling party Jan.

25 at EuCan Bowl. Guest speaker for the evening, Mrs. James Ballog, president Albuquerque Corsage Club, will display materials and design corsages. Mr. and Mrs.

Edwin Busby were guests for a potluck dinner for Nu members and their husbands in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Sitch, 8801 Aspen NE. Chapter Is Featuring Two Cultural Programs Mrs. Leon Wiltse, 1016 Mesilla NE, will entertain Xi Beta Delta chapter Beta Sigma Phi, on Thursday at 8 p.m.

with Mrs. Robert Dudley, as co-hostess. The business meeting will be conducted by Mrs. Leon Ullrich, president, and two cultural programs are planned. WORKSHOP NOTED Yucca Extension Club meet Thursday at 9:30 a.m.

in the home of Mrs. Larry Daily, 1112 Alcazar NE. A workshop on "Unfinished Projects" will precede the noon luncheon and business meeting. Dear Abby Dad's Mixed Up Abigail Van Buren By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN not-so-lovely stria-gravida DEAR ABBY: What do you think of a father and plenty of them. But she will not be "cut who encourages his 10-year-old daughter to down." She has bore fruit, and to me hers is give him long, hard kisses on the lips? If she the most beautiful body on earth.

gives him a little peck on the cheek he pulls Sincerely, her back and says, "What kind of kiss do you call THAT?" An "M.D." in PASADENA, TEX. I will be honest and admit that he gets very DEAR DOCTOR: Please convey a message little affection from me. You see, Abby, I to your wife for me. Lady, you have a wondon't especially care for my husband. Ever derful husband! since I married him I have had to help him make a living and I am sick and tired of it.

DEAR ABBY: You don't often pull a boner, But I still don't think there is any for but when you do it's a lulu. You mentioned the his acting that way with his own daughter, do wives of a lot of men who had to get their you? hands dirty, among them were Thomas CONCERNED Edison, Charles Lindbergh, Walter P. DEAR CONCERNED: Your husband should Chrysler, and of all people THE WRIGHT NOT be kissing his daughter in the manner BROTHERS. Abby, for your information, both you describe, no matter how little affection he the WRIGHT BROTHERS were bachelors! for a him" clear out and take your daughter JACK H. in L.A.

gets from you. If you don't "especially care with you. If you remain, you are encouraging sick, sick situation. CONFIDENTIAL TO "SINGLE IN SAN ANTONIO:" I said (and I repeat) that DEAR ABBY: This is for the woman whose children should be disciplined by their parents husband had not come near her in two years when they are guests in another's home. But since she'd had a hysterectomy.

(She said if the parents sit by and say nothing when the he was the kind of man who went around their child walks on the sofa, THEN the host should property, cutting down all the imperfectly tell the child that floors are for walking on formed trees.) and sofas are for sitting on. And if that When I was a boy, I recall we had two apple doesn't make an impression, would trees. One was beautiful and perfectly formed, demonstrate that bottoms are for paddling but it bore no fruit. The other bore fruit and when children don't behave. showed it by its bent and broken limbs.

Dad eventually cut down the beautiful but Everybody has a problem. What's yours? worthless one. For a personal reply write to Abby, care of My wife bore me five beautiful children. the Albuquerque Journal, and enclose a Her breasts now droop and her belly shows stamped, -addressed envelope. "THE SWINGER" MINI-FALL Human Hair A complete wig wardrobe.

Wear it as a fall, a demi-wai, a soft cascade of curls. Attaches easily with its own comb. Wear this exciting new mini-fall for any occasion. Easy to wear. Choose from on array of colors.

Regular retail price 69.95. $2700 Comolete Styling Department four suncard INTERNATIONAL Wig BANKAMERICARO WELCOME HERE 6000 LOMAS N.E. 268-6055 (Across from Fair Plaza Shopping Center) OPEN DAILY AND SAT. 10-6 PM "Albuquerque's newest and finest wig salon" On London Scene Amies Clothes Are Sedate By NADEANE WALKER LONDON (A) Hardy in Amies, one of the queen's dressmakers, led off London's new spring and summer haute couture season Tuesday with a collection that was as a sedate as a slow waltz. Hemlines are about an inch above the knee, and the flared line is the silhouette of the season.

Waistlines are lower, suit jackets longer and daytime necklines modestly high, with small prim collars. Plaids, checks, two-tone combinations and some floral prints as big as cabbages are the favored materials, with some overchecked and printed twice. Top colors are combinations of brown, beige and black on white, shrill yellow with navy or black, sharp pink and tender green. APPARENTLY no change is good news in the trade at the moment, for Amies said his couture branch is showing a better economic position that ever before, and he accordingly showed a much bigger collection than last season. "Fortunately," he said, "there are still enough women who like and want the perfect fit of couture clothes." He mixed boutique with couture in the show, and the difference was hardly visible except in the price tags.

Although Amies called his theme "a long flared line," hems are actually no longer than in his last collection. FOR COCKTAIL time and evening, the designer showed a predeliction for really vast cullotes, mostly floor-length but some maxi, and burst into a frou-frou of ruffles outlining low necklines and Madly printed chiffons gave a gypsy air to several formals. A few had bicolored ostrich feather borders on stoles and 6 sleeves. Echoing some polkadot afternoon dresses, some evening numbers had delicate all-over jewelry embroidery spaced like polkadots. Tabbed patch pockets were Miss Sally Palmer Of Ray Mc Miss Sally Jane Palmer, a daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. a Paul B. Palmer, 4829 Trumbull SE, became the bride of Ray Mc Hanchett son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Mc Hanchett of Phoenix, in a ceremony at the Arizona LDS Temple, Mesa, Ariz.

Elder Leo Packer officiated at the double-ring service. The bride wore an A-line gown of taffeta trimmed with lace and styled with a detachable train. Mrs. John W. Stevens III was matron of honor and John W.

Stevens III, best man. A reception honoring the couple was held at Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Spruce Street, Albuquerque. After a trip to Tucson, the couple is at home in Provo, Utah. Mrs. Mc Hanchett is a sophomore at Brigham Young University, Provo, and Hanchett is a junior at BYU, majoring in marketing.

He is employed by Calavo. January 15, Bride Hanchett Jr. popular on day wear, placed in two-tier arrangement below the bust and on the hip, or just below the shoulders and at hip level. Many skirts took their flare from pleats, either a few big ones in front or tight all-around knife pleats that gave the impression of a furled umbrella. The three-piece suit made a solid comeback, with the blouse usually in a contrasting print, but there were still many dresses with matching jackets.

Mrs. Nixon Names Choice For Social Secretary WASHINGTON (UPI) Mrs. Richard Nixon Tuesday named Mrs. Lucy Alexander Winchester of Lexington, as White House social secretary. Mrs.

Winchester, a Nixon campaign worker who previously worked in the protocol office at the United Nations, is a member of an old Kentucky family. She is the daughter of Mrs. James H. Alexander of Lexington. A blonde divorcee with a thick southern accent, Mrs.

Winchester is the mother of a four-year-old daughter. Her job will be to plan the social functions at the White House, including entertainment for heads-of-state who visit the United States. She succeeds Mrs Tyler Abell, who has offered to "show her the ropes" on how she ran the office during the Johnson administration. Mrs. Winchester is a graduate of Finch Junior College in New York, which Tricia Nixon also attended, and the University of Kentucky.

An art major, she studied art history at the Villa Torre de Bellosguardo in Florence, Italy. Meanwhile, Gerry Van der Heuvel, press secretary to Mrs. Nixon, told a news conference that Mrs. Nixon will come to Washington from New York on Saturday in time to attend a distinguished ladies' reception at the National Gallery of Art. She will stay at a local hotel (Statler-Hilton) during part of inaugural weekend.

Members of the Nixon-Ryan-Eisenhower families will be visiting or staying at the White House after the inauguration Monday. The Nixons will hold a staff reception and tour of the White House on Tuesday morning followed by a similar event for some 500 friends on Tuesday night. Rio Valley CowBelles Planning Boys' Party A membership potluck supper is being sponsored by Rio Valley CowBelles Thursday at 6 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Albert Harrington, 12500 Sierra Madre NE.

Members will make plans for a Boys Ranch Valentine party. Information about the group may be obtained by contacting Mrs. Harrington. La Noche Gardeners To View Travel Slides La Noche Garden Club will meet Thursday at 8 p.m. in the home of Mr.

and Mrs. A. J. Clark 905 Warm Sands Trail SE, with Mrs. Clyde W.

Steinsiek as assistant hostess. Mr. and Mrs. Clark will show slides of their recent trip to Europe. A business meeting will follow the program.

You'll love MiNi ONE HOUR OR Try it TODAY! ON CENTRAL CADILLAC OLDSMOBILE 1601 Central NE All Three Albuquerque Penney Stores! enneus ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY Think ahead to spring and all the pretty clothes you want to make! 'BONARELA' CRISP LOOK OF LINEN RAYON POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS. IN FASCINATING AND COLORFUL PRINTS. TO MACHINE WASH, NEVER IRON! The doThe big look this spring. Cool, fresh and everything fabric that's the biggest thing in crease-resistant. Mini-prints, big splashy fashion this season.

It holds its shape, never prints, paisley plaids, in clean clear color. Just wrinkles, washes with no ironing and stands up the thing to liven your wardrobe. Machine to action. Exciting textures! Colors from pale washable in lukewarm water. to dark.

PRINTS 1.29 YD. WIDE YD. 4.99 'MILANO' SOLIDS, AND CHECKS FOR LIVELY SPRINGTIME WEAR! The fabric that has 'SARELLA' GREAT SPRING LOOK IN YOUR all the appeal in spiffy checks, plaids, and CLOTHES IN LATEST STYLES! The all to- solid colors to really pick up your wardrobe gether great look of lightness in springtime and show it off. Machine washable in lukefashion. Holds its shape and is easy to care warm water.

for. A wide range of the in colors for a new look for you. PRINTS 1.98vo. COLORS SOLID 1.79 YD. SOLID 45" wide 1.49 YD.

45" WIDE LIKE IT CHARGE IT! WINROCK HILAND DOWNTOWN Three Penney 'til 9 Friday, 'til 9 'til 9 Other Days, 10 'til 6 Other Days, 9:30 'til 5:30 Other Days. 9:30 'til 5:30 Mrs. Ray Mc Hanchett Jr. (John Stevens photo) Mrs. Leslie W.

Bighie (Dick Kent photo) PROGRAM NOTED Chapter AA, PEO, will meet today at 12:30 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Neil Weaver, 1317 Calle del Ranchero NE, with Mrs. Max Niese assisting hostess. Mrs.

Niese will give the founder's day program..

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About Albuquerque Journal Archive

Pages Available:
2,171,315
Years Available:
1882-2024