Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1949 — Page 3
CA dR aL NE ol EO BN Cp aR A RR
a di Bh i bi ATE Ads y * ! ay ; ee ; Shen halite & ; TIP Nols Linge ial on WAL lp NL ING Ci a g PR ES Ese mG Cn ET . Cl 3 ro
rita Re gr i]
wr : - ates ’ 2 ’a
HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES . = —— PAGE 3. -§
Jenner Voted isin CoP Women Eqmily Rifuals Important In Welding Domestic Life, Doctors’ Studies Show ~~ 3 ‘Second Worst ; ne * Irv be NL. » 3o ‘ttie] SE he family would miss the oc-| I was in my last year in high ing in, we planned our expendi- until after 1 o'clock. Six years , | | Jnéadquarters, 3448% B. Washo gether 3nd Increasing ta happiness. ‘This is the conclusion of Drs. Thursday. evening. |Job to help out. The first Saturday Every Saturday night; we meet inof us ever let anything interfere |
| . 5 1 » i ! t Te Irvington Woman's ‘Re- PHILADELPHIA, Pa. : 30 wr rituals—those little casion. school n the depression came, tures for the week ahead. Thus ago, I was married, but my hus{publican Club will meet at 7:30 acts that the whole family get together and take part in every day,| In another family, a ritual is{Our*family was hard hit by it. I began a practice which has con- band and I have kept our weekly’ ; |p. mf. Tuesday in the Republican every week or once a year—are important in holding the family to- made of the washing df hair on|succeeded. in - getting a summer tinued at our house ever since. date with Mother and Dad. ‘None : Taft Named Best’ ington St. The tollo tticers James H. 8. Bossard and Eleanor 8. Boll, of the William T. Carter| One father makes a geremony|l worked, Daddy and I came the kitchen of our home at 10 with these Saturday night Senator bh Writers lwill be +3 . Foundation, University of Pennsylvania, from a study of 400 cases. [of taking home a package of home at about the same time (10|0’clock. Eggs are fried, and ‘cof- togethers. . They surely have bey installed. Not every family has its own private ceremonies, they found, but gifts of candy, fruit, and so on to o'clock) in the evening. I remem- fee or cocoa is served. Then we come a ritual in the life of our °
|. FRIDAY, SEPT. 2, 1049 se es
3
wr ASHIN aTon" Burgst Mrs. Mark White, president;|those that do sometimes observe them very faithfully and they are the family each Saturday. {ber that I fried some eggs and talk—about our work, experiences families.” Yadiana ‘Btoators am: Sp-Bth Mrs. Stanley Bryson, vice pres-|Of 8 great variety. | come* more atid ‘more elaborate] Some make a ritual of listening made some coffee for us that/of the past week, the family in-| Family rituals increase in num-
among th Sued) : e “worst” in a poll--of| #7 211 Washinton” correspondents ~taken-by ‘Magaziné and’ published - in the October issue
5
. accordifig’ to advance copies re-|
ceived in Senators’ offices today. ater-repel-
es. Head ge, desert
both best. “&nd worst, with Sen. John Bricker (R. 0.) No. 1 on the worst list and Sen. Robert A. ant (R."0.) top man on the best
Sen. William E. Jenner (R. Ind.) rated second on the worst list and the magazine ran this text under his picture . . . : “William E. Jenner lost the ‘Worst Senator’ title by a bare _ four votes, but his electors mede “up In invective what they lacked in numbers. Where correspond-| ents were inclined to give Bricker € the doubt;
erin ————
tnner the - ‘worst element of) negativism among the Republicans.’ Arthur Sylvester of the! Newark News dubs him ‘court
Capehart did not.
Suit. Charges False Arrest
Ave. today filed a $75,000 damage suit against the William H, Block Co., in Superior Court 3. 1 Mr, Smitha, represented by Attorney Russell J. Dean, was dismissed in Municipal Court 4 Wednesday when arraigned- on! charges of the theft of a $309) television radio set from the Block Co. He had been accused in an affidavit of A. G. Young, manager of the William H. Block Co. store on Fountain Square. WHen arraigned Wednesday, his counsel asked that the radio be brought into court as evidence and it required four men to carry it into the courtroom. Municipal Judge Alex M. Clark dismissed the case for lack of evidence when it was proved Mr.
Ohio, however, led the list of’
Alleging false arrest, Everett] P. Smitha, 43, of 1006 Churchman/ -
Ident; Mrs. Tyler Oglesby, recording secretary,
Py
| muss STORE OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 TILL 5
NOTE
Smitha could not have carried the x * ' 7 set alohe and was arrested when The Strauss Charge’ 2 # seen walking in an alley near the Servi re of : store. It was testified that’ the ; ire re 5 : ; television set also was found in 2 kinds—
the alley,
Man, 56, Rescues Girl
From Drowning, Dies LONG BEACH, Ind. Sept. 2 (UP)—August G. Ott, 56, a ietired meat packer rescued a young friend -of his daughter's. from Lake Michigan, then dropped dead of a heart attack. : Mr. Ott, his daughter Jean, 17, and her house guest, “Lucille Winkler, 19, Chicago, were on an after-dinner walk last night when Miss Winkler decided to go for a swim. Caught by high tides and an undertow, she called for help. Mr. Ott waded out into the water,
helped hér to shore and then|
collapsed. The Ott family, residents of Oak Park, Ill, were vacationing in Long Beach.
Lifer to Attend First
Playing of His Cantata NASHVILLE, Tenn. Sept. 2 (UP) — Life-termer . Frank “M. Grandstaff today had the Governor’'s permission ‘to get out of
Big Spring, Tex., centennial Oct. 2, to hear for the first time the cantata he wrote in prison, erin OY. G0TdOn. Browning agreed
Er ———— i —
tend. Big Spring citizens promised they would “see that he gets back.”
. 3 ns a Bl an Pp
his work, composed without a musical instrument for ‘help, after the Texas town he used to visit as a plano salesman.
Preacher Leaves. Jail After. ‘Glorious Time’
prison long enough to attend the|
The 47-year-old convict named |
yesterday to let Grandstaff at-|
The Reguler 30-day Account—in accord with conventional
practice—
JUNIOR CHARGE -ACCOUNT—
that provides a removable ceiling— and moderate weekly payments— It's perfect to handle one of these 1 $50 suits!
No carrying charges— Department of Credits— SEVENTH FLOOR
In one family there is’'a reading of the poem, “The Night Before
{to certain programs
- on the radio night. While wi , W | , for family expendi- ber, variety, richness and willing with the ing years. Lights are|each week. ig! e we ate, we talked come, our plan for {: y expe { y.
and Mrs. David Christmas,” every year on Christ-| extinguished and candles lighted. | One interesting ritual is report- then we put our weekly wages on ily importance. . “mas Eve. The ceremony has be-i Refreshments are served. No-one. ed-thus: —- ithe table E
2-TROUSER SUIT
|about our experiences at work, tures, and other matters of fam- co-operation by individual num- - |bers as one moves upward in the
and, with. mother com-|.. Often these family sessions last social scale, it was found.
$
THE USUAL STORE HOURS HAVE BEEN RESUMED DAILY MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 9:30 TILL §
. »
house politician.’ Words" like : a i Dict: - Wienta Mike 44 SINGLE REGULARS peatedly—and Jenner runs away * : BREASTED LONGS with a second place.” i SHORTS nior Sen. Homer E. Cdpehart : . C 0 (R. Ind.) tied for 9th place on the i. : ' i. DOUBLE FORTLYS d worst list with Sen, Harry. F. vi " BREASTED - Byrd (D. Va.), but Sen. Byrd re- YOUNG dd ceived a vote for best and Sen. |... - |
—+ MEN'S
OF COSTLY WORSTEDS INCLUDING CLEARFACES AND. SHARKSKIS FEATURED AT
WITH TWO TROUSERS
USUALLY (nearly always) our announcements are written when the merchandise arrives— :
. THIS. ADVERTISEMENT. WAS WRITTEN A YEAR AGO
. —based on the idea that could not be revoked!
WE WERE DETERMINED to launch at the outset of Fall— "the famous 50 for 1950" —A two-trouser suit so fine, so superior—that it would not only carry on the “notable tradition of the Strayss $50 Suits of years ago—but become famous in its own right— overnight! ER
’
Smoothie . : : HOBART, Okla., Sept. 2 (UP) ow —A lay Pentecostal ‘preacher THE FIRM INTENT was for not merely a good suit— complained of soreness in his 1 ] : legs today but felt no other after- but it had to be so far removed from general levels : effects ofa fast he started in the in. textures, in fit, in tailor work, in style, $ Kiowa County jail nine days ago. « un aT . «i ring , ! Ernest Wesley Cain, 45, was| in "expression''—so completely outstanding that it : released from..the jail yesterday P_ - neo he Jan ¥severday| would be evident at a glance—and would prove 2 pax $10 3 month tor Raitt] itself in long and deeply satisfying service— _Year-o aughter’'s support. e . also gave the child $20. . Crew He'broke his fast by eating an| THE ADVERTISEMENT was NOT subject to change—
(white only) egg, two -alices of bread and but- ¥ ter and a “little gravy.” He said he had a “glorious time| Jaz 1 ; : i in jail,” because “I never let it| $= bother me.”
| = {| 4 Shotgun Bandits
| Get $25,000 Payroll
BREMEN, Ga., Sept. 2 (UP)—| Four men, armed ‘with shotguns, 1 held up a messenger today and, } took the $25,000. weekly payroll j of the Sewell Manufacturing Co. { plant, here. i The messenger, Bill Galman, . was intercepted as he was returning from the Bremen Bank in a company truck, The robbers fled in the direc tion of the nearby Alabama state line.
Studebaker Corp. Gives $5000 for Dairy Show
A" contribution of $5000 from Studebaker Corp. in South Bend to the International Dairy Exposition, to be held Oct. 8-15 at the Indiana State Fair Grounds, . was announced today. by Gov. * Schricker. 4 The Governor stated that many of the larger corporate Interests throughout the country are sup-
anent size 'hite, pink,
er, maroon
porting the exposition. A total
“
iin "of $145,000 has been raised to : date. Meaning
Fok
x = Xe J | & ’ * \ Ey RS : AN
PLEASE NOTE. *~
The remarkable value—in the $50 group—has had a strong influence— on the higher range —the 2-trouser feature group of ‘suits at-
5950
With 2-Trousers
All that remained therefore was to find the suits—and they just couldn't be found—they just couldn't be made—to our standards to sell at Fifty Dollars.
. So we simply fixed an arbitrary price of $50 on these : suits—to make them in fact as well as in name— E "The Famous Fifty for 1950" —a‘value unique in the clothing field.
NOTE PLEASE: .
CONSERVATIVE SUITS, not the lifeless “staples” but smart — touched with tomorrow — pleated or plain slacks.
YOUNG MEN'S SUITS — including the one-button Double-Breaster — long rofl: lapels — and single breasted— 2 and 3 button.
NEW COLORINGS — the darker shades— and those with. a bite of white. “p
(We seem to recall—at this point—a brave little title used in earlier School days, in elocution classes—"I'll find a way or make one")
There are something like 500 suits—and we |
have no hesitancy at all in saying that a man who gets one of these suits will have cause to J congratulate himself! Ready right now) | ; . This is a SUITABLE TIME! ~
STRALS
A 5 : od NT on i } . : > MT : - is —— 3 > fic ! / - { t “rr Spin - : 5 ¢ oa v Hy 1
bn Sor
og
COMPANY ie, TH MANS STORE
