Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 December 1943 — Page 19

SPORT COATS

29% TAKE MONTHS TO PAY

CREDIT TERMS MOSKINS

CLOTHING COMPANY

131 W. Wash. St.

side. To have large ambitions, to expect the most of ourselves, to attempt even the seemingly impossible and achieve it—is not this the mark of admirable perB| sonality?

Pay As Little As

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"See Our

phoistered ottomans. attractive selections d In Ou

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ny

: ern Nasidom, how diverse have been the cultures into which hu- ..

man individuals have been born!

~ Nothing runs deeper in human

nature than the desire to-be appreciated, and in, whatever cultural setting a man grows up, he normally tries to succeed according to its characteristic standards. Despite the fact that a culture powerfully helps to make a pers son what he is, he may find, as millions. do, that channeling his life down the river-bed where the main appreciations of his current civilization run, involves the denial of everything that he natively was meant to be and do. Such tension, so caused, is one of man’s

“major tragedies:

No individual elt scvepturice alone can solve so vast a problem in its public aspects, but multitudes of individuals, recognizing the nature of the difficulty and seeing clearly what is happening to them, might solve their own problems. - ‘Especially in free countries, with many diversities of choice. and with various groups whose appreciations may: be

J isought; this problem commonly:

arises in a form that the wise individual can handle,

Tchalkowsky was a lawyer be-

~ fore he became a musician; Gau- * guin was a banker a decade ‘before he became an artist; Herschel

played the organ In <a small church and gave lessons to amafeur pianists before he became a great scientist,

Unfitted for Job

One consulting psychologist even found a ranchman, who had been born a ranchman, who sup-

" posed he always must be a ranch-

man, ‘and who was trying. to be a |

for it, but who wantéd above all else to paint pictures Daring to accept himself when he was past 40, he actually did paint pictures that were exhibited in leading: galleries. If one is going to be A real person, self-discovery and self-acceptance are primary, Alec Templeton entertains mil-

‘Hons over the radio with his mu-

sic and amuses them with his whimsicalities. He is stone blind. The first natural response to such crippling disadvantage is an im-

of the unattainable, and from the contrast between them and the actualities commonly spring resentment, cynicism, self-pity, inertia, ~The human story, however, has nothing finer to ‘present than handicapped men and women who, accepting themselves, have fHustrated what Dr. Alfred Adler called “the human being’s power to turn a minus into a plus.” Always, behind such personal tri umph Hes an act of self-accept. ance. ’ Only so, for example, could Dr. Edward Livingston Truden, di*ven City by tuberculosis, ever have written: “The struggle with tuberculosis has brought me experientes and left me recollections which I never could have known otherwise, and which I would not exthange for the wealth of the Indies!”

a ————— ce ————— i. BOMBS VS. GASOLINE WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.~It takes

{nearly three pounds of gasolirie to deliver one pound of bombs to the objective, ; 5

oy

CANNED GOODS Green stamps A, B and © in Book

14 expire Dec. 20. Green D, Eand F

are good through Jan. 20. 3

SUGAR Stamp 29 in Book 4 is good for

[five pounds through Jan. 18, 1044.

Applications may be made for

eaniing sugar unt Pap. 0; 194.

SHOES

stamp in Book 3 good

tice.

GASOLINE Stamp A-9 good for 3 gallons until

midnight Jan. 21. Old B and C stamps are still good for 2 gallons until used, State and license number must be written on the face of each coupon immediately upon receipt of book. B-2 and C-2 books

now contain fewer coupons but

cach coupons will be good for §

gallons. No increase in amount of gasoline allowed is involved.

FUEL OIL Period 1 coupons for the new sea-

son-are-good now for -10 gallons peri{-

unit in all sones through Jan. 8, 1944, and should be used with definite value coupons for filling tanks. All change-making coupons and reserve coupons are now good,

TIRES

inspection due: A's by 1944; B's by Feb. 29,

Next March 31,

whichever is first. sr

i.

PALESTINE MEMORIAL PLANNED FOR HERO

NEW YORK, Dec, 3 (U.. P),— Gen. Sir Bernard L. Montgomery has agreed to act as honorary

Stamp 13 in Book 1 good for one| | pair until further notice. No. 1

“airplane” for 1 pair today until further no-

rat Ee a Gifts

Soar Despite OPA Rulings

By ANN STEVICK

WASHINGTON, Dec. 3.~Imported ftems such as jewelry snd handbags are reported selling at fabulous prices to Christ mas x areas. Price restrictions have been set on imports, but office of price administration experts feel that regulations may

prices have been disapproved, ; : es» hy ® 8 0»

Try This for Sizing

GREAT supplies of a new- type starch made from glutinous corn are reported on their way for textile sizing in 1944. Tests have shown that the new starch is equal to the tapioca starch which it replaces in sizing, finishing, and printing characteristics. It will take more than starch: to hold up the textile supply, however, if threatened severe shortages actually develop,

Sign of Progress

NOW that informal rationing of some children's garments by dealers is in effect, it is consoling to see some preliminary steps toward getting low-cost goods back on shelves. Manufacturers and retailers are being polled to find exactly what is being made and sold. Results will be tied in with consumer answers to the recent survey of their most essential needs. . The whole thing should add up to a good basis for a plan to get most vital goods back on shelves at reasonably low prices.

. » . . o . » Odds and Ends ~~ MANUFACTURERS are already worrying over the day when style curbs disappear and people refuse to buy old stocks of goods because they want good old prewar pleats in trousers or fullness in skirts. , . . OPA points out that stamps D, E, and F in war ration book IV still have the old point values, There will probably be no change in stamp values until tokens go into effect, when all stamps will be worth 10 points,

1944, and commercial vehicles, every six months or every . 5000 les,

TWO_HOUSIERS WIN |

USE POTATOES FOR “GAS”

CONTEST IN. ARMY

| cohol,

LONDON, Dec. 3.—Over-40 per vent of -Crerminy's potats crop will]: {be used this year to make power al-

WARM

COLORFUL

- There are: other Gift gestions

the

)

Striped Rayon Satin Trimmed

(COMFORTABLE

PRACTICAL

- Tailored to Fit

sss

many from

which to make - your selection in

MEN'S SHOP

Third Floor,

we,

Sug-

ERE ERE ERE

CAMP GRANT, Ili, Dec. 3 (U.P).

ETE

—An army officer and 14 enlisted men were promised promotions yesterday for contributing the best of 40,000 ideas in a contest to save the

chairman of an American committee to establish a Palestine memorial to Brigadier Frederick H. Kisch, chief

6th service command ‘time, money, material and manpower, At least 100,000 additional sug-

unfitted

hs

engineer of the British 8th army, Prof. Albert Einstein, chairman of the committee, has announced, It is proposed to establis Kisch ‘Memorial laboratories 1 and industrial engin: Hebrew Institute of Teroiogy in Haifa of which Kisch was a trustee for many years. Kisch, who headed a group of Jewish engineers from Palestine which organized the forti-

was killed in the height of the Tunisian campaign last April, |

fication and transportation systems of the 8th army across North Africa,

gestions from army and war department personnel remain to be judged, with prizes ranging from war bonds for .civilians to promotions for army men, - No details of the prize-winning

ideas were announced... “The contest |

was conducted on a “say what you please” basis and enlisted men were urged to make any suggestions which | they thought would Snprove- command operations. Winners included:

Pvt. Virgil Chandler, Russiaville,

Ind, and Pvt. Harold . Brody, J

Benjamin Harrison; Ind,

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