Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1946 — Page 12

__-.. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __-

Othman Visits Montmartre—

pet

* Genuine “SURE-

‘We've heard it said that there are no Vatgsin Kuaters these ** days, but we don’t believe it. We are continuously hunting for bargains . . . GOOD VALUES . . . to pass on to you. We think we have some in this ad.and we invite your

» DRESS IT the Old... PROTECT the New!

FIT”

SLIP COVERS

- Bargain No. 1— + + « « Knitted Long Wearing

Good-Looking Fabrics—T Bottoms, (just as pictured

WINE. NOTE: We have them to

ailored above)

"COLORS . . . GREEN, BLUE and

fit:

Standard style sofa and club chair,

wing chairs, “T" cushion club ch

airs.

- 2 PIECES for : DAVENPORT and CHAIR

0dd Chair, uly $4.75

(Phone or Mail Your Order If You Can't Come In)

Bargain No. 3—

Bargai

in No. 2— Floral Cretonne

4-Pe. Studio Couch

COVERY

for Couches With 3-Pillow Backs

Corded and Boxed Corners, Pleated Bottoms

(BLUE or WINE)

$§93 * Complete

Floral Cretonne Sofa Bed Covers A 195 ®

For sofa beds with Jguare or round upholstered arms—solid one-piece

backs—green, blue, rose + pleat

ted bottoms.

NOTE:

Write:

: “Call LI ncoln 1588 231 W, Wash. St.

will receive our prompt and careful attention. We accept Cc

| Your phone and mail orders 0.D. orders, too,

—Make a Lovely Room Lovelier!

Here are Chenille, Combination Chenille and

Shag and CHARM TRED Shag

¢ CHARM TRED

SHAG

18x34 .... 0000... $298. se BEEIE iets enna nino ins

DEBT eae ena annyeni i <: BAX36 .....vnavne.. $4.25... DMx48 ,............ $06.95... « aIx4B ...................... Sixdb. ur. ............ Eee 34x54 | eve. 3995 Sexe ........... a an 29-inch Round ...... $4.98 . .. 36-inch Round .. .....

and BOUCLE’ RUGS . . .

Bargain Prices *2% . *16**

eo CHENILLE ¢ COMBINATION BOUCLE' RUGS CHENILLE & SHAG “ey BR ernie a uaa . Nr dian : tia $5.98 . ra Ck SEER ike .. $1.98 re Be ee . . $8.50 Freie ane wi eae EA . re $4.75 a Te LE ey . a a ed $7.50 ‘ve hr er ee 38.715 . RAYS. iin ‘e's ai, $7. 1

‘wu Your Selection of. Colors eludgn: White, Beige, Green, Blue, Rose, Wine, Gold.

NOTE: We have a few “TIME-SAVER” Pressure Cookers

. we'll take orders until our Wmited stock is exhausted ....... ‘aan

lly,

* Crisp New Cottage Sels

(Mustrated af

ht) Strawberry flock a p-inch tai

lored top, tiebacks, full size sash! We'll take your phone or C. O. D Order—Call LI, 1588,

$48

SPECIAL!! Heavy Chenille Bath Sets ..... Ensen risen vr hiS 3x4 Imported Numdah RUgS ........... sys + 4x6 Imported Nimdah RUBE. ..cuvinnssinrivi 6.95

NEW DRAPERIES cheer up your rooms and you oo! 90" Rayon, tailored with tie backs, $1 5 *

wine, blue or rose

Sig FLORAL, with tie backs, beau- ., Wfully made; blue, rose, beige...

=

AND HERE are the most beautiful bedspreads we've had In a long time . . , BOSEMARY + «+ Iringed, for full bed only; green, white, rose, $ ue on ana amis aa NR Hasso vugnsasmsnnrnsisssnnsssns each

down payment and $5.00 per month on the balance,

231 W, WASHINGTON ST. i i Diert Opposite Statehouse

10.50

« government regulations require

x ATR

| Alfaro, gave with a fanfare. The

PARIS, May 2.—I'd better warn.

sandwich in the Cafe- Royale. | My first stop was the Bal Tabarin ~a night club celebrated above all | others for its beauties without ‘their shirts, Eleven hundred people sat at. tiny tables removing bubbles from their champagne. Ask for a glass of anything else at. the. Bal and you start a riot. a I a THE CHEF D'Orchestre, Jean lights went down. The dance floor slid on tracks under the bandstand. And these things “happened: Ladies wearing hats, shoes and talcum powder rose up from a hole in the ground. Sliding panels slid —and more ladies popped out. Portable cantilever bridges came from the ceiling, bearing additional ladies aloft, With a whirring of gears, machinery began moving goose-pimply

{ Pigalle, known to all G. 1.5 as pig | the rain.

{ lure folks inside 50 nightclubs, eab-

Fights. | seats, a hot band and ~ couple of

females all over the place, They didn't look happy. de ” ~ OUT I WENT into the Place Cobblestones

alley. glistened In

On every hand doormen tried to

arets, bars and restaurants jammed together on the hillside. I sueccumbed to the Club Royale man, who spoké English as well as I did. He promised a big evening within. He was not fooling. His was a smallish place upstairs with pink It -had mirrored walls, soft

dozen Frenchmen siuring the bubbles from their champagne. Bo came a lady entertainer in a blue gown, silver slippers and long black gloves. I think there must

Terrible Waste of Bubbles|

By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent

you before you read further that the

Mademoiselles of Montmartre twirl wooden pinwheels in their goblets to? get the bubbles out of their champagne, then they drink it. : ‘This is a waste of bubbles, which come high on the Place Pigalle, but you get the idea: I'm trying to lead you gently into a night of supercharged oo la la, Supercharged is correet. I had to pay $7 for a ham

her spper, maybe. Her dress came off. I never ‘Saw her like in St. Louis. She looked cold, ~ ; oC. I HAD my $7 sandwich, washed it down with my $13 champagne, and felt like Old Joe Sucker him-

self, Only the place was full of

Frenchmen peeling off francs like petals from artichokes. I wasn't lonesome, just broke. This business of spending money as if it were confetti seems to be part of the French inflation you

read about occasiofially ‘on. the fl-

nancial pages. It is a sad thing: While I Xuow| little. about international finance, I do know about $4 for a bowl of soup. And the shock you get. when you toss away a cigaret butt and. a pedestrian “behind you darts into the gutter to recover it. :

Calls Hollywood

Universal Disaster

LONDON, May 2 (U—PJ)«Sir Thomas Beecham, who returned this week on thé Queen Mary, expressed the following views of the United States in an interview with the Daily Mail: “Hollywood is 'a universal disaster compared to which Hitler, Himmler and Mussolini were trivial and fleeting incidents. Films are ruined by their con-: tinued distortion’ of American life. “All the arts in America are a gigantic racket, run by unserupulous: men for unhealthy women.

“The United States is far more

have heen something wrong with

lis Wom Indian Shi & and

frer CIty. In cy \ new sent SPAN, has P

° Rinsing and

Sate mars voy U.S. Pat. Off.

maxe SPic and Span voux

—~

imperialistic than Britain.”

Vy

i

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~ No Rinsing! iping!

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What's more, SPIC and SPAN leaves a protective coat that seals out dust and dirt and makes the next cleaning easier, Safe for, paint, Safe for hands. You'll use SPIC and SPAN every day for cleaning woodwork, floors, bathroom tile, linoleum, refrigerator—everything like that, Get a package or two now!

brighter . . . easier . . , because you don’t ~~

>

QUAL 3343 W. II " e Comple class. gr , ® Fresh a ® Ice Cre vored fr out. 5 Open Dai Inc. Sund “For You

' Bill hcsa———

QUARTS

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