Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1950 — Page 3
dress slip. es. Broken to 7.95.
OES,
rms, 2 Off een. 298 piece. §5b5¢ ceeeess 890 » ..+.. B90 EE LEER 690
cereees 350 ce ...- Bbe
corner 1,00 Is “off:
cveeene 1.98 45¢ +... 22¢ ally 1.50, 750 ally 1.35, 650 th Floor
OB ——————
EDPERIES
soma with y 5.95 to
MESTICS,
les, 95 to 29.50 L TABLES,
ally 95 to 74.50
1558 cover,
cares - 74.50 SOFA, rose
50.. 135.00 RO
ose leather,
181.50
| colors inSpecially PETS,
ANTS q. yd.
5, less: than yard and
R SHOP,
ASE
for living om, R SHOP,
with 9-inch I
~~ COMMUNITY BUICK, INC.
Boon. they, Teun to thelr home| 2 OReF IePrseriative 7 tein whieh the market at y ent o and ay morning in|United States: as opposed tol garkness. the Third Chris-/Peacetime military conscription:| Defendan in favor of the Langer Billi {jon Anderson for -|Portation it Mitaratate Samer olis Fire merly lived here of all alco beverage adver-|amployees, and eight and for a num- tising and stop its broadcasting cjuding officials of the A
ber of yea rs/over the air; Cutters Union served ny Also to support of the heifer The company that on of the Speed-and CROP overseas relief pro-iin, pight of Jan. 6, with 40 way Christian/grams; the furthering of week-|, ;niovees and 200 customers in
§ Church Othe r|day religious education; to encour-\¢ne store, the Gamewell workers, | _." officers an-|age Shuieh folk 10 Sorento “at the instigation of union ornounced by the exercise ; izers,” climbed a pole and Rev. Anderson ference are: “step-up” assurances for displaced pulled a fuse to cut off electric Dr. H. L. Holland who was re- persons and look after the welfare ..,..ont in the store. s & = elected secretary-treasurer, and of those DP’s already here; to in- “Food Was Destroyed’ } the Rev. Dale Oldham, Anderson, dorse the plan to send Christlan| .w, Galyan company onarges Cr1OCH Lectures vice president. Dr. E. W. Stricker technicians to undeveloped areas; .s deprived of its profits of | served as nominating committee of the-earth, and also the cam-|,,. day and that perishable food chairman, paign for the Christian University|,, gjectric refrigerators was destroyed.
Bishop John H. Stamm of|0f Japan. ~HArFISbUrg, Pi. president of the —i-t—iPhe-two-Gamewel-system Federal Council x the Churches| “The Federal Council of thei; vees have been : discharged of Christ in America, stated quite Churches of Christ “in America gnce the Jan. 6 incident. At the clearly last night _ stands wholly committed against |yme lights were turned off at the the democratic ! 4 communism,” Bishop Stamm|g,ner market the owners charged and Christian | stated. “It does mot accept NOT|y; wag g plot between union orfoundation on ¥ ! |promote socialism,” he added. |ggnizers and sympathetic Gamewhich the coun- “The Federal Council is evan-/ wo; system employees to assist cil stands and works, It was not Ins §
purpose to come o Indianapolis | and get into a
controversy regarding the
Wisconsin Artist Visits School Here
By HENRY BUTLER
: [spirit and committed to the basic Gaiyan workers. nationally known artists
hris belief that Christ is to Shr ya pre-eminence in all perienced three major disillusion-| each month.
things. It seeks to bring the light ments—Iloss of faith in the reasonland spiritual a upon all ableness of man; In world de|the orders of men that men might mocracy; and in freedom. [find the way of God.” | “Two world wars have deepend |°f council which is | Bishop Stamm called the Fed- the hurt of this disillusionment,” ARNE of the major co- Bishop Stamm eral Council of Churches, “a fed- he continued. - “The urge through- awards. operating body of the Protestant (eration of churches” and said it/out our whole world today is for
important
t call by name the ene- agency on Ho a hot council who accuse &nd through which the churches church. For the church must be
/which choose to do so may co- an " — eg tive snethod Perate in those areas in which spirit of redemption is disclosed advanced students. of affirming council policies and/they find it possible to co-op- and made operative in the hearts beliefs. erate,” he explained. |and relationships of men. “The spiritual bond of unity of, “If the church is to release the the churches co-operating in and spirit, three things are necessary. But like sh She pihier gues! through this council is their es- “One—The church must have a spea. ors, w ® A aye Re be. sential oneness in Jesus Christ, spiritual vitality which makes her| Yolo 8 ee x RE wt of|their Divine Lord and Saviour. the birthplace of spiritually re-| Career. gan, . {The Deity and Saviourhood of born men. his alloted time to inspirational yj... Christ are the foundation!
remarks, to giving spiritual help. | t largest The .bishop talked to preachers, ones of the council. Other than perience and express the ges
Bishop's Subject
Hind You. on “The Spirit of Re-| confpssion.”
In his remarks on “The Spirit The state pastors are on record
{fellowship and service.
“T'wo—The church mult ex. TOSCANINI MAKES TOUR NEW YORK, Jan. 26 (UP)— | Lytton Co., Gary, Ind. before {that, the council has no doctrinal possible measure of co-operative Arturo Toscanini, who will be 83 Feb. 23. in March, will begin a six-week] “Three—The church must be coast-to-coast tour with his NBC workers want Local 1460 of the of Redemption,” Bishop Stamm|fully committed to the spiritual Symphony Orchestra on Apr. 14, AFL Retail Clerks International
Paris in Indianapolis . . . like a scene in a Parisian classroom view taken today in Herron Art School. Center of student attention is Aaron Bohrod, nationally famous artist, giving a demonstration of technique with casein paint.
“Ctart at Herron
Herron Art School today start- turned a verdict of guilty of mur-
| |gelical at heart, evangelistic nin" the union drive to organize ®d & BeW policy of bringing in der with malice and recommended OF the sentence yesterday. teaching and criticism one day
First in the series of guest gytskirts of Alice, Tex. in melfartists was Aaron Bohrod, artist gefense. [in residence at the University they would appeal. Wisconsin and many times
national commentator for radio station
Mr. Bohrod started a busy day July 29 following a broadcast in
and Orthodox churches, he said.|it not a “super church.” “It is an/a redemptive spirit. This places|With a demonstration of which he accused Smithwick of
a major responsibilit n the|. gouache,” a medium using case- operating a bawdy night club. ihe national level in Jo po Mg in instead of oil paints, for a]
agency through which the|group of fourth and fifth-year who prosecuted Smithwick, hasn't]
Later he was scheduled to de- office. vote time to criticizing student] BR work, prior to this evening's Order NLRB Election seminar, in which he will answer | | questions from Herron students At Gary Plant and alumni about an artist's]
| ———————————————————————— | | Slayer to Appeal | Life Sentence BELTON, Tex., Jan. 26 (UP)— {Sam Smithwick, former deputy sheriff -sentenced-to-life-imprison-{ment for the murder of Newscaster W, H. (Bill) Mason, ate breakfast today with a “clear conscience.”
A jury which had deliberated {three hours and 42 minutes re-
Smithwick, 62, had testified that he shot Mr. Mason on the
Tis attorneys announced Mr. Mason,.an outspoken news
|KBKI of Alice, was killed last
Dist. Atty. James K. Evetts, lost a case in his dozen years in|
| { | | {
WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (UP) | —The National Labor Relations {| Board ordered a collective bar- | gaining election at the Henry C.
It will determine whether the
_today as opposed to the appoint-| pointed out that during the past/order as revealed in and through/it was announced today. Indian-| Association to represent them in
ment of a personal representative 50 years,
apolis is not on his itinerary. .
collective bargaining matters.
humanity has ex-|Christ.” # .
ERE is a car —one of a whole parade of brilliant 1950 models— that realizes an ambition for Buick, as it very well may for you.
sportsters as sleek and commanding as the stunning, Buick-fashioned Riviera.
It has been eight long years since Buick We can now.
has been able to bring you a full and complete line and say, “Sir—suit yourself!”
We can now.
We have long offered you valve-in-head efficiency. For 1950 we have higher compressions and greater power in every engine—plus a new engine—the F-263—that brings thrilling new heights of liveliness and zip in the SUPER.
models.
Never before could we-give you a choice of four wheelbases, three engine sizes and five power ratings. We've always been strong for room. Now you have it—abundances of it— on cars cleverly trimmed in over-all length so as to slide easily into tight parking spots dnd swing deftly into your garage.
We can now.
Never before could we offer you an array of models that ranges from sim-
ple, practical utility-type coupes to
Features like these mean BUICK'S THE BUY
MIGHER-COMPRESSION Fireball volve-in-head power in three engines, five hp ratings (New F-263 engine in SUPER models.) * NEW-PATTERN STYLING, with bumper-guord grilles, taper through fenders, “double bubble” taillights * WIDE-ANGLE VISIBILITY, close-up road view both forward and back * TRAFFIC-HANDY SIZE, less overall length for easier parking and goraging, short turning radivs * EXTRA-WIDE SEATS crodied between the axles * SOFT BUICK RIDE, from allcoil springing, Sofety-Ride rims, low-pressure tires, ridesteadying torque. tube * DYNAFLOW DRIVE standard on all ROADMASIERS, optional of extra cost on SUPER and SPECIAL series * NINETEEN MODELS with Body by Fisher + WIDE CHOICE OF EQUIP. "MENT edding flexibility fo prices that bracket every price range above the lowest. | Pune In HENRY J. TAYLOR, ABC Nelwork, every Monday evening.
WHATEVER YOUR PRICE RANGE
Indianapolis 8, Indiana :
~ There's a Buick to Match it!
Indianapolis, Indiana
We've always sought to price our cars to serve as many people as possible. Now we're reaching more thap ever— with aSPECIAL that costs less per pound than some “Lowest-Price Three”
There's more—much more —but that gives you the idea:
You have a lot to choose from in the 1950 Buick line. So much so that we can truly say here's a car to gratify any taste, and prices to suit practically any purse.
Will you see your Buick dealer just to see if that isn’t so?
V2
Phone your BUICK dealer for a demonstration — Right Now| —
MONARCH BUICK C0, INC.
57 West 38th Street 1040 North Meridian Street ; - TA Ibot 2424 : Rlley 334°
vil
) 2
A
PALMERTON, Pa, Jan. 26 (UP)-—Church bells and factory whistles announced last night the settling of a 122-day strike of 2200 employees at the New Jersey Zine Co, of Pennsylvania plant here. “ Members of local 3317, United
Steelworkers (CIO) voted 847 to
24 to accept a new contract providing $100 monthly pensions, including social security payments, for men over 65 with 25 years service. When the vote was announced, the men ran out of the meeting hall shouting and danced in the
HARDEEVILLE, (UP)—Beaufort Suny may ’ to.go to court to get back.
comprising most of Beaufort's high and dry land, voted to secede. Too much water between them and the county seat, voters com-~ plained.
Unofficial totals showed that 58 to join Jasper County. Unless the courts rule that tide~ lands count as square-mile land, Beaufort just won't be. The minimum space for a county is 500 square miles, » » n
streets, Church bells throughout the borough started ringing and the whistles of the plant, the
|
{nearly 15 minutes.
{town’s chief industry, blew for|
The company and union an-| nounced in a joint statement that| ownership. You'll |some workers will return to work DREDS OF REAL ESTATE ADS
IN COLUMBIA, Brantley Harvey seemed pretty determined to |get a court showdown. | He is the Senator from Beaufort County. There's extra prestige in homefind HUN-
[today to prepare the plant foriin the classified columns of to-
{ment said.
v . + normal operations. Other em- day's Times. Tura to them now. studio on the left bank of the Seine is this | ployees will be called back as The Times is NOW the news- | “quickly as possibly,” the state- paper with the REAL ESTATE
| ADS!
STRAUSS
SAYS: TRADITION ou
WITH AT
ALLIGATOR
ALL-PROTECTIVE
Coat—for
ALLSORTSA
weather! Particularly and especially—
THE TRAVELWEIGHT
Alligator's coat of combed Pima "yarn — which has a silky feol— very good l&cking! W's windproof — with a double yoke to give the shoulders double protection! It is light in weight — it seems almost weightLESS! It is tightly woven in an interlock weave — then specially treated for water repellency— It is in a light natural shade that Alligator calls "Fog Buff"— The single-breasted style pictured above is
18.15
The Travelweight TRENCH COAT style is
20.75
CH OF TOMORROW
%
»
There ore other Alligator coats—including . the WATERPROOF at 10.50—The Wool and A Rayon blended GABARDINE at 27.50 and the GOLD
LABEL (all wool Gabardine) at 42.75
Men's Rainwear is on the Clothing Floor A
the SECOND
STRAUSS & C0, nc, THE
\
the Yemassee area voted 155 to.
i i
