Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 December 1946 — Page 14
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- +. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ry Tn oe mm
Tun : [TIMES SERIAL— : Insid |. U. Extension 5 a Lf re | Turns Social Call Me Liz - : By Rene Ryerson Mart | mens wi - > wi Red. there's bine Jlergondsnt, he sort of Mais ons bought on Aan night=long distaiite from Denver, |
Christmas wrea mT sone Sel : arth _tivix Council Adds Touch Thali fomnng: Mhulcide, bi
v,
her. front door ol a | ighth year a (He sutd tie and Red were “Keotne lor; aire will
eben
Father-Son Banquet
! he ARE |Colonial ” : about to’ sound an alarm when he re- ’ { Colonial. A . : . AND NOW th ick y loving Dutch sc turns. Russ becomes angry, tells Red he e quic thought | § - Tomorrow Night of Campus Life | doesn’t need a wet nurse. darted in like the treacherous snake ts Sigil i _— Barnes bell Jit ) 7 : - | ' —— 1 i Ny . & a 4d | . hd Southport high school Hi-Y mem- br: Indiana university extension i CHAPTER 117 > he Boden, SN ae Inarvied 10 Bs until Russel came home? She'd Smirye On 8 : ; sel, coat— write to him. She'd tell him that ; i . ‘bers will hold a father-son banquet vision here has gone social. . THAT SATURDAY morning m. She'd tell him tha go : The extension now, has 2200 stu- I could buy all the clothes I want, she'd changed her mind and that This Dall wir
which numbers
country in the She made a dozen starts that A Ryn of ]
ening and tore them up dissatise ’ | fied because they read too stilted ; Hiaiters home, or too impulsive, The one she finally Lo left behind wrote was short and direct and une He sent the (affected. She told him simply that | Ocker and her If he still wanted to marry her, she teacher at Shor would be happy to become his wife, "new friendship
¢ oli i i " i dents, more than”800,0f them vet. ore Sediously. for Elise; By 11 she 0% Tike Janice 2 : {she'd marry him. erans. Until recently it had ‘no W8S watching the clock and wish- ey looked at the gray suit after
outlet for social “expression, no lvg it was time to quit, Junels, 3ay Janice bought it, “and | ey campus and none of the typical| She seemed in the last few {ye i gous, | Eivolous pay that functions that make college days so vieeks to have lost any real interest|tjey went to the le y d It. Wii memorable. in her work. ‘It was just a job, NOW, land Janice spent Beme SPariment School heads were concerned by that had to be done. ‘There Was 10 fluffy. frothy sheer site ora
the lack of activities for the stu- longer any challenge or zest in it for | things,
er y n Sent Body. iation liad dodbled in Bey he pat seme at as Janice was marrying the man her : a size since the end of the war. In- men complicate one's life, hel ss y had expected her to murry, Schoolmaste;
and initiation services tomorrow ‘night in the auditorium, Initlates include Wendell Leédy, ‘Bill Dudley, Richard Miner, Bob " Bidlack, Marvin Christie. Joe Hurrle, Bill T. Smith, Joe Haviland, Hubert Moore, Rudy Sperger, Bill Price, Don Elliott, Jack White, Tom Swift, Bob Jaus, Richard Thiel, Dick Sponsel, Alvin Combs, Bill Gedig, Ray Bertram, Ernest Eaton and Jack; Whitacker. C. E. Liechty is Hi-Y sponsor,
G. A A and seniority members will hold a° combined Christmas party tomorrow night in the auditorium. Seniority members will have |
” SHE SIGNED the lett “yi 5 |& nice young attorney who was due! BURY Mrs. Ocker val creased educational facilities made thought. They upset things Shel, 85 Que 6," i i » ya : : : S. in a month t% b g Elise,” and sealed it and put it possible for students to obtain had expected, once Red was gONe navy and rett ® [oigased Tom the Rog pul an we People, hough
x | an to a well-ordered Mail stamp on it and, caught wit, ose of their college education fiom the laboratory, to settle back|jije as Janice Condon’s husband and a d v S2UR lth without ever attending a regular into her former routine quite hap-| the inheritor of his fathers a sudden urgency, she thought: “I'll
university. \pily . . . but she hadn't, | practice. ‘mail it now Something had to be done about | a EA A nn There was a mail box on the the lack of unity among the young! MENDEL CALLED her name and| ‘LIFE WORKED out so perfectly | corn St men and women, who live in scat- when she looked up he motioned to for some people, it seemed y | ome it le Caught up coat ay ’ P . ? er her pajamas an
tered sections of Indianapolis and the phone on his desk. That meant i i ; : YaTo faded with thie dull toute of thers wae a telepingne: call Tor bor | Suse stared unseeingly into space. making very little sound in her soft
charge of the invitations and : fe could work out nicely for h : Ym study without the fun that comes!/She went over quick] i y for her, | soled bedroom slippers she ran down decorations, The; Marjo; : . . . . . quickly. : BO AE ake ud arjorie LOCAL "PING" VS. BELGIAN "PING" —Fabien Sevitzky, center, Indianapolis |with campus life. |” Janice Condon wanted her to meet why © whe hee atl Tassel lithe stairs and ow, Whe ‘foi, geor Brewer. In charge of refreshments Spay director, examines a pair of locally-produced “antique cymbals.” With him Council Is Formed je? for lunien Sng the go SHOPPInE. He wanted her so badly; she had | the re i sre G. A. A. members Jean Cogill,| (left to right) are: Donald C. Moore, secretary of the Indianapolis’ Brass & Foundr Officials hit upon the jdea of hav- | Fis€ accepled eagerly. . At least it nearly broken his heart when she| She : ght y P y ing a student council for the ex- WOuld fill up the afternoon. refused him. She knew that. 2 opeied the leur, soy and
end Joann Huber, Wilma Walker, | . . . eae : i Tl Robes ud dary Elen, Co. George A. Danneker, president of Reliable Metal Spinning Co.: Kenneth Glass of tension, This council, a powerfull The tWo girls ate in the tea room| perhaps it was uttef nese hed the letter In and listened Green are in charge of the program. | the orchestra's percussion section, and Ivan W. Smith, president of the Indianapolis |student organization on most reg-{™ the fifth floor of the town's big- to feel that she couldn't marry him closed again hal Sang a8 the slot Students Elect Officers \ Brass & Aluminum Foundry Co. [ular campuses, was to be formed partment store. They had pecause she wasn’t wildly in love with a Sox oy ar as aglow for the purpose of arranging social © icken croquettes and green salad|with him. Perhaps that kind of and a vi } Jeet Rh & ph 1 he . - she
On the prograz wil be Bevery "a om y 40» ‘liable Metal Spinnigg Co. 1014 E. events for the student body. And the tiny tender rolls for whichijove didn't come until after mar- not k : Baird, Nancy Hendricks, Irma Jean . {Washington st. _ An election was held recently des es Youn Yas locally famous. riage anyway. The kind that caused | Hows of 3 long Hime, Belton Jima Swickard, and Nancy C b | P d d 4 | The locally-produced, locally-fin- and the following ‘students named Models paraded past their table yoy blood to race and to a , 8 ) ) , 3 § £ Tes : 3 > pound| NOW EVE g Pord. Mary Ellen Green will lead ym a 5 re uce ere ished cymbals have been pro- to office: Marian Dawson, presi- while they ate showing the latest and brought that breathless ecstasy | EVERYTHING was settind, ihe soup in singing Christmas . nounced by Townsend Cook and dent; Phil Muller, vice president: {things from the store's various de-'ty one's heart. The kind one read i thought, and she ran back to corols. { alled Su erior to Others Kenneth Glass of the Symphony Betty Jean Meier, secretary, and partments. Janice regarded a gray apout in stories. (the house and slipped quietly up — x |orchestra even superior to the im- Dolores Roberts, treasurer, suit speculatively. x ® =» the stairs and into her bed Stephen Osborne, Southport : ported instruments. Other members are: Charles Ir- "4 a ALL AT ONCE it seemed to Elise| A : : : : § LY COUL 801 t just about the i senior, has been elected president of | Times Story Leads Symphony Members in Serene eli win, Robert Nicewanger, Joan f REALLY COULD use anothet|ihat she had been a fool, a silly, night Russel Supe ine al Clark, Ben Gill, Tho { 9 ot oY incomprehensible littl : gi Ckea '. " Dry Cleaners Plan Robert Ehle, omas Davis and pink 1'd look well in gray?” | Sam confess thay Too Russel 304 Dsseroe, ig dg 3 tele. FRIENDL ¢* i Ln hich was shatter come
hanas a bell *
the shutent Susi Done or Quest of Instrument Formerly Made in Belgium Di ) f Fabri ik 14 Loo we) y , Vice presi- | . iscussion of Fabrics | Dehitely,”, Elise agreed, when he came 1} i ent. and Neirism Brewer. goers: Could Indianapolis outdo Belgium? ji on hl c : Student Paper Planned | “I'll try it on after we finish eat- grill 5 e home. Or better pletely Elise Varney's new-found treasurer. Other members are rep- That was the question in the minds of Indianapolis Symphony or- n open forum to “eliminate mis-| Since its formation, the council ing... ." | Impulsively she turned to Janice: Teeling of peace and security?
presentatives of the home rooms or chestra percussion men when they sought local industries capable of understandings relative to servic- has staged two highly successful For a fleeting moment Elise Was «janice, did Russel leave any for (To Be Conti oli ' § ) - ontinu
ter of her col
ciass officers. C. C. Leedy, principal, producing tiny “antique” cymbals, formerly made only in Belgium. able and ui-servicable fabrics cre-|dances. It ‘plans to hold more conscious of a twinge of very femi- warding address—do you know ——— i ——— in svonsors the school service organiza- After The Times’ Nov. 15 story of the little cymbals and their rarity, ,ieq during the war,” will be held | d20ces and other inexpensive and nine envy. It would be fun to be' here he is?” | A " tion. , the orchestra men began their quest in earnest, As often happened in by. the Indianapolis Retail Dry pleasurable events to give extension able. to buy anything one Itked—| jaiice was concentrating on aly PIES CORPS PLANS PARTY | alki Robirt Eovier Tatiana ued war materiel, it wasn't just one in- : - ol ’ ; " ‘re. Sar {students a taste 6f “good old col- just any suit or dress or hat that. gice between a flesh pink and an! The ladies’ Oriental Shrine Drum * labs. will nak ep BP nde dustry, but rather a combination of took to make the original castings io omorrow in the Murat Joge lite; i CRE ough one’s fancy. She had no- yoy white nightgown. She looked | 2nd Bugle Corps will hold their —— ' 8 on- QUSLy, ; 1 Mai | igh on e counc st is the ticed ‘a yellow tqpcoat on her way i TY iG oe} ; annual Christmas : vocation at 9:36 a. m,, Wednesday, industries that was needed to solve of the cymbals in bell metal Clyde Robinson of Gregg Clean- desire to create, unify ‘and organize up to the lunch room that very 50 In Sumiise Mn Dies UrelevEbl m. “shin Pan 5 WASHING] in the Southport auditorium. Mr. the problem. There remained the problem of ers and Art Demaree of the Dema- [activities that will interest and co- noon. , .. It was the sort of thing Se ’ her Ru ite 1 i TOW Restadrant in Cumberland eT. and ten minu Kryter will discuss “Implications of| The Indianapolis Brass & Alumi: machining and tuning the cymbals, ree Cleaners will handle the pro-|ordinate the widely diversified fac- she could wear superbly witn her Sng » tle ore ead. | Kitzenberger high priestess of ate understood no the Atomic Bomb.” num Foundry, 50 Shelby st., under- which was undertaken by the Re- gram. ulty and student body. |dark rich coloring. But it wasn't! “YES, I KNOW. He called last shrine will be guest of I1oTeR . 80-page docum : : . ; the flat staten ’ 5 equals RNI pl
Twenty othe They received took voluminot have suppresse ing. These tin they know wh write. Haw. Al That theor) immediately wi tax structure. have been con flat broke from Say you ow Tin Whistle Cc The tax collec! hurry. This le from the gove! income. So th wonder you're
The Chai "NO WONDI to discuss mett This gathering colored walls. ” . One showed a one a stormé some cows (Or The chairs we! Louis Shere rived with bot] them. He is
A “UNIVEF kind in Ameri Morehead City The enterp: education, is be Carolina, the 1} Carolina. depa ment, and the feller-endowed Plans for tl meeting of Je raphers held al The scienti ' the progress o oo North Carolina study ever.ma fishing resourc Time was f sea university. The new in tists and thee It will inch museum, and
H % commercial fis! . Called Idi TWENTY -S i Morehead City * ! as a navy ba North Caroling
velopment, . It for the new in Many fishe Carolina coast ' . . mouths, and | She's your Christmas star—tell her so, Santa—with one of these 0» Gop rick om
’ seaboard.
’ exquisite perfumes. Elizabeth Arden "Blue Grass" $20, For this fer
-
Lenthetic "Dark Brilliance" $15, D'Orsay "Intoxication" 18.50, Corday "Frenzy’' $18, Mary Chess "Song" $25, Weil '"Zibeline" $15, . Schiaparelli "Shocking" 13.50, Caron "Bellodgia™ 27.50, Millot "Crepe De Chine" MORE TH!
United States
$12, Guerlain "Mitsouko" $9, Nettie Rosenstein "Odalesque' $25, Lucien about their lof
pologist, Miss Mead
Le Long "Taglio" $28, Dana "Tabu" 22.50, Ciro "Danger". 12.50, Lilly Dache "Dashing" 8 cates oz tar
+ and their “sen $15, Houbigant "Transparence’ $15, Roger and Gallet “Innuendo” $18, Worth 4 the ap Sor . 1 2 ar ( i inventions and
‘Je Reviens' $15, Mary Dunhill “Escape” $10, Charbert "Fabulous" 12.75, Lancome "Fleches" $22. er responsibilit . - | : Women wil Prices Plus Tax. Wasson's Toiletries, Street Floor. | a a
home is less Ii
j ‘| Husband
TOO MAN can come to ir | , pers, sink dow o : ‘i . : | the spirit, 6f a : ; ? + ends when he
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