Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 January 1946 — Page 7

“JAN. 7 1946

, — THURSDAY!

rice Kay Gay Nineties Girly ATTRACTION inham Orchestra

~Jerome Courtland

T : nd Tell :

TH SIDE $ T1106 Prospect

MA-0173 “BACK TO BATAAN"

N BROADWAY”

n * in Technicolor LD 2208 GA. Shelby Uy

jen-—Edw. G. Robinson AVE TENDER GRAPES® pey—Wally Brown 'ARS ON PARADE” EE —

TONITE—6:45

M cCLURE

reat John L." |

rers—Dale Evans

in El Dorado

0th « « PARK FREE

—B:45 to 6-—30c nes—Joseph Cotten

e Letters” IR EO

JAN au K IR. h. 5000 INGTON SHOWING Epes dua, Bury & TH ELLBOY NGEROUS FE PARTNERS"

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MONDAY, ‘JAN. 1 1948 _

The BEST Mother the RESTED Mother

| YOURE TELLING ME

ENJOY snow white,

Absolutely clean, * downy-soft diapers. i sanitation in the Certainty of sterilhaition. Home ‘diaper shows 140,400 bacteria count ' in the fourth rinse. Owr washing shows Zero count, or Sterile, in the third suds.

DY-PER SERVICE 814 Dorman 8t. CH. 2125

HYDE PARK, N. Y, Jan. 7~I1f the United Nations Organization chooses Hyde Park, N. Y., as its permanent home, as now appears prob-

¥

And whatever arrangements for housing the city would have to be built), the heart of the UNO site

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Park Service in Charge The Roosevelt’ home and garden

Easiest Possible Credits Terms!

4+ BA HE BN

The

FURNITURE CO. 414 E. WASH. ST.

Between New Jersey & East—FR-0847

opened some time this spring. The real property containing the

33 acres, has already béen conveyed to the federal government accord ing to the terms of the late President's will. The personal property in the big

re 930 "Open “CH. E. 10th 6:45 5200 RINCESS & PIRATE" ~ NE BODY TOO MANY"

738 Barbara Stanwyok Noblé Dennis Morgan | IN CONNECTIC OOKED ON SUSPICIONS

JUNT E. Wash. st, at New Jersey Mi Ray Iond Massey | MY CO-PILOT" RROLL VANITIES” ——— \ 2442 FE. JAskingion MA-% pil—~Robt, Cummings

CAME ALON FELLO IN WoL LYWOOD"

I—5:45 to 6-800 : COTTEN ye Letters”

1ton~Lynn Merrick

From Brooklyn

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in Technicolor) LL IT TO A STAR" NNY—FOX NEWS

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ASHINGTON nes—Joseph Cotten E LETTERS"

Rheumatic Happy;

of trey oom the ti

pl 1 oh i over

Wud 3 hing, mnsint ch 01

A oh Sepandaite in the joy of the Jo7 of a phon Cap woth

ry SEE I te

tisfaction— pain to your alafaction—your hye

and get NORITO on this guarantee.

To Relieve Coughs Aching At the first sign of a cold — the Quin-

tuplets’ chests, throats and backs are

immediately rubbed with Musterole.

Musterole instantly starts to relieve |

coughs, sore throat and aching muscles of colds. It actually helps break up painful local congestion. breathin easier. Great for grown-ups, too!

Roosevelt house becomes government. property after Jan. 13. the deadline for the removal of whatever articles are desired by the Roosevelt family, (On the morning 1 was in the house, servants were removing Mrs. Roosevelt's washing machine.) Visitors at the Roosevelt home, when it is opened as a national shrine, will find the interior of the big old hotise almost intact. There are some vacant spots on the walls, where members of the family have creel | removed a picture or a print for {which there. was a personal at- | tachment, but these spots are few. Dates Back to 1840

| The house is of late Georgian deisign, in the best Hudson valley estate tradition. The central portion of the house,’ originally a frame

+ |strugftire built before 1840, is now

stucco. At either end is a wing built of field stone, and added in 1915. . You enter through a semi-circu-lar portico of Roman pillars. The house has about 20 rooms, and is two stories high. There is a built in elevator in one corner. Where the floor level changes at several

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points in the house, there are hooks in the stairs, where the ramp for President Roosevelt's wheel chair was fastened. The front door opens nto. # huge reception hall, large as the ordinary living room. This room is filled with bric-a-brae which would be a standing temptation to souvenir thieves. The park service faces its most difficult task in nalling down all the little articles in this hall before the place is opened to the public. Cartoons on Wall

On one wall of this reception hall are a number of revolutionary cartoons, lampooning the British, When King George VI of England was a guest at the house, he got many a chuckle from these cartoons. President Roosevelt's jaunty Panama hat was on a bench in the hall where he was accustomed to throw it whem he came inside. A member of the family is believed to hava plasad it theve whila ramaving personal effects from the house. The hallway opens directly into a small dining room which faces west toward the Hudson river, and into a “Dresden room” pretty well filled with a grand piano, upon which rest dozens of au portraits of the royal and important personages’ who have spent a night under these eaves. A corridor leads off the hall to the right into the north wing, where the kitchen, the servants’ quarters, and the President's office were located. The corridor to the left leads past a small sitting room, which was the favorite rookery of Mrs. Sara Delano Roosevelt, the President's. mother, and into a big lbrary, the No. 1 room of the house. Library in Wing The library stretches across the whole south wing, and has a marble firéplace at each end. It is Mned in stained oak. Over the east fireplace is a Gilbert Stuart portrait of Isaac Roosevelt, one of the late President's ancestors. At each side of this fireplace are the high-backed armchairs he occupied during his two terms as governor of New York. Upstairs is a series of bedrooms and ‘the “upstairs living room,” a small room from which a number of pictures have apparently been removed. The only intimate touch left on the wall of this room is a portrait of the late President, in his most jaunty mood, and inscribed: “For mama, from F. D. R.,. July, 1936.” The President's bedroom is In

floor. From it there is a magnificent view of the Hudson and the two bridges at Poughkeepsie, 10 miles south. The President's bed is a big with a high curving back. An qld-fash-ioned chair in the corner, with a red and white Indian blanket on the seat, was Fala’s bed. The furnishings in this room are simple. - President’s Birthplace

At the north end of the second

BN | floor 15 alittle room “witha brass { bed and nautical prints on the wall,

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- Change That

Budget Item of “RENT”

fo “PAYMENT ON OUR HOME”

Make Application Today

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“COLONIAL” Home Loans are available for approved real estate mortgage loans in Marion County . , . loan in convenient monthly payments, of includes both principal and interest.

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{which was Roosevelt's boyhood room. Another bedroom was his | birthplace. Along the west side of the second

HOWE SENIOR PLAY CAST IS SELECTED

Howe high school senior class officers today announced production committee members for the senior class play “Best Foot Forward,” to be presented Jan. 18 and 19 in the school gym. House managers are Mary Jane Hill, Bob Bakemeier, Patty Talley and David Holtsclaw. Other commie Justuge:

es, Josephine Bailey, Rex Kline, 3% co corTaeny and Phyllis Hallet; age crew Insley, Elliott Jose, Alan Gise and Denney; ticket takers and u Alchele, Dick Burkdall, Charles Chambers, Helen Boeschen, Gary Marjorie Bunnell, Mae Ellen Church, Don Hardy, Mary Jane Gird, Cyrus MoNutt, Keith Anderson, Paul Myers, Bob Perol. val, Carol Pritchett, Jack Thomas, Ted Skillman and Charles MoGlacken, Poster art will be effected by

Rosalyn Haine and Judy Torrence and stage prompters are Shirley Cox and Patricia Lamb. Ticket sales committees include: Bob O'Neel, Josephine Bar + Doroth: Cowell, Gary George, Darlo bara "McDonald, Roach ahd Emma ¥Y Senior elass officers are Car] Bd|wards, president; Ruby King, vice- | president; Elizabeth Schmidt, sec-

retary and Bob O'Neel, treasurer,

Josephine Justice has been selected as the “Good Citizen" award winner at Howe high school by the Indiana chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution,

Girls’ clubs at Howe met. last Thursday in practice sessions for the coming inter-club competitive sing. Each club will sing its club song and the selection “Night and Day.” The clubs presented a cabaret style New Years party during the holidays. The show featured Dick Cotton, Mavie LaRue, Phyllis Leffler and Ellen Barnes. Helen Aldrich, president of the Lanina club, welcomed the guests,

DUKE VISITS LONDON PARIS, Jan. 7 (U. P.) ~The Duke of - Windsor departed for London by airplane today for a visit of several days. His secretary refused to explain the pature of the business, which was described only as per-

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,

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

If ws Park Becomes Capital of UNO, Roosevelt Home to Be. Peace Shrine

country house, but if these walls could talk, historians no doubt

would want to from the curv.

The grave is covsred with o ban: ket of and heather, Delegations from foreign lands frequently place a wreath on it. A

the southwest corner of the second

LS. Ayres & (a,

Delano Roosevelt, 1882-1045" and beneath this, the unfinished in.

wreath of evergreen the day of my visit had a card attached which said: tices Algentine fsiends ot

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