Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 February 1950 — Page 2

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2 es THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES —— oo oe MONDAY, VEE200S Rk - mony

% oe i Ballet Skaters in New Costumes for Ice-O-Rama Extravaganza gv | New Plant Booms Business L 5 Leth

: . ; Continned age One) |durin , Page One) |during the day while her husband Fror of — | ( From p wih of takes over in the evening hours. i : yn “S$ vision to chart the: gro Mrs. Beulah Warren also sees @’ n ? » > Indianapolis eastward. { lot of eve hours. The J ; : FX r oN p : » e"] Small business is not alone in 2 '0 > ¢ Saing ahop =e NV wn. ; . . A this thinking. Friday, the Indi- 310F OF 8 beGEy 8 op CO raer. ; / f i ' lanapolis Power and Light Co. iDess 's t0e B re Fire { { Already she is servicing an av.

Is Loneliness

v : = rer Smpleted 5 Bo : st age of seven to eight customers - j TV | i Drinker What H {Inthe relatively near future a's da¥, but works by appointment A Sou AA Brings rinker a e [substation will be erected to sare And right on the corner of the infant son i ‘for anticipated increased electric 's Te ce Sta ee MI and Needs Mosi—Undersianding ona. Nr ey (Second of 8 Series) . Meanwhile, Mr. Winings sald), recently a Butler University ©. ‘landlord, S (Second of a Series) |plans are definite for expansion oo. i... Again, in his case, the : story fran S By CARL HENN 2 : of the corner, PI : ass is throwing | trade his way pas Salghlers, -blow -in-the-bottle alcoholic is the world’s] Expansion Plans [taster than visioned. nd Stella A full-blown, dyed-i ? | “As occasion demands, and I The area still is an economic In his cr : loneliest man or woman, think it will be In a year to a wilderness, and proprietors are 6-month-olc 4 Nobody knows this better than the members of Alco- {year and a half, 1 will build sothe| trading sinon Solias yi dollar ia ot bets : iL! {six more - storerooms,” he said on the shelves, ey are , he wi holics Anonymous, all of whom have been through the mill. Si more: storervomis. "he Said [on Ihe SBOIVE ori Thom bee Bald he we Too well they know of internal forces and tensions \ation with ample space for home community which should boom noise.” which lead them to drink as an escape mechanism, which] [iging a1 gH owners a Ti nl Veh With in turn only make worse the Aha on iBie wagon. In. helping. vo : : i ry us orfyinal conditions, which in others achieve sobriety he -main-| lies lived in the immediate vicin=' [CF atten ~~ apartment 8 : inlino (tains it in himself ity. ‘a number considered ade-|F100(S reare Pent turn lead to heavier drinking. '*g=-* YI ral hve 1a asked Jy. iis chuaeres ae h lade! uipke. The alcoholic 1s lonely, AAS {, tae the 12 ster which con-| then building has spurted ant, SOULE ern Areas : Mr. Stmg ‘say. because he feels nobody ine stitute the AA "program. They 7d PALS Si wr i : houses are going up throughout CEHICAGO, Feb. 20 (UP) — son from t derstands Dim or Pd ink are: i | Pr : hon 5, = : 3 = a Ga Sommtunity at record Hage, |Floodwaters crept higher and street, i ONY. We admilier .we arr pow. These ballet skaters are an example of the elaborate presentation the public will see Thursday at 8:15 p. m. in The Times Ice-O- | Mr. and Mrs. Eugene "wider in the lower Mississippi Meanwhi and the lives of others, he may erjegg over aleohol—that our ae LoVe : . : ny . £4 : bury, restaurant operators, al-| . inepire pity. or.sympathy, or char-||j es has become unmanageable. ‘Rama at the Fairgrounds Coliseum. Here they are dressed in their new costumes for the fourth annual show . . . a production replete Ny. WA Rg transient ype wig oauy, ut Fister: ot = gaugnters ity, or disgust, but never, he feels, TWO: Came to Velieve that a with glamorous numbers. {trade from by-pass motorists. The north arther i en understanding. power greater than ourselves: es ww 8 s 8 = f rm rn - Ea {seating capacity of 52 is being . } | Wo Roce Alcoholics Anonymous has could restore us to sanity. gme Union Launches Housing Venture |considered for expansion .to 100 The Red, Black and Ouachita control. “oe mushroomed from a slow begin-. . THREE: Made -a decision w fo 1 R by | T WwW 4 . ve ; ; y y . with drive-in service. [Rivers in Louisiana rose slowly : Two of 1 ning in Akron, O. 15 years ago turn our will and. our lives over) ina e earsa ’ omorro | CHICAGO, Feb. 20 (UP)—The| row houses costing about $9200 a) "Phe grocery of Paul T. Walter toward predicted crests, Brig. BN oo apartment

‘and Robert Robinson is beginning Gen: Raymond Hufft, state dis-

~bulge at the seams. Trade has ster—relief co-ordinator, sald the — shown a steady increase and situation was “critical” at Marks.

to at least 150,000 members allito the care of God as we under- B 9 v-Th ur . v Nia L.d |CIO Packinghouse Workers have unit with down payments ranging over the .world today because stand Him. For Show S [announced a $10 million real between $500 and $1000. Monthly

there is someone who under-| FOUR: Made a searching and

- {estate venture te build 1000 payments will be $75 or less, Mr. 'ville, Jonesville and Ferriday stands the alcoholic. {fearless moral inventory of our-| : res : . lans are for growth into a baby Ville, JO , La, Undersgand One Another iselves, y | 500 In Production to Go Through homes for lower middle income, Helstein said. _super-market. - op “A levee break anywhere in - Bh FIVE: Admitted to God, to our- - . 2 Chicago families, | The hardware store operated by those regions could hurt and hurt oy Juggreianas oa selves and to another human be- Last Practice for Benefit Program ia “It's our answer to the ques hig Movements Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Grimes isjbadly,” he said. lead a hopeless drunk back from ing the exact nature of our By ART WRIGHT . |tion, can private enterprise build!’ {looking forward to a booming, More than 9000 lowland resi- » Shlivie h th family, the doc-| Wrongs. i fce-0-R I be h for the ‘lower middle class in-| By United Press {spring- trade. The young eouple dents’ were homeless in Louisiana or itm ‘manister or priest] SIX: Were entirely ready tol The final rehearsal for The Times for'0 Rama Will be held come brackets” said - Union| Mer, Xuk, Attia; Gu, Eigasecs always had wanted a business ofland an estimated 20000 were DE ns P have God remove all these defects tomorrow afternoon at the Fairgrounds Coliseum. | Provident Raiph-Helstein. “Dsturgls, Bremerhaven! Americaw cruise: their own and felt this location still refugees from the St. Fran- - | "Ww ry y ’ ’ razii 1 L . - In essence, the AA's tactics are Of character. | Some 500 skaters in the benefit production to raise money for We decided we can’t walt for piiaiio. Tala Manca. Puetro Barrios; the golden opportunity. cis and other streams in Arkan-

a SEVEN: Humbly asked Him to {the slow machinery of the real Veendam. cruise Until they get their feet on the sas. simplicity itself. To the aleoholle ive pir Shorteomnge, —————the-Infantile-Paralysis Fund will go through the entire show, then estate lobby-to-house the nation pyar York, Depyrisres— Mormackite. | ground financially, however; Mr.| In Kentucky, Tennessee, Ohio

Para, a, African Moon. |

he says: Urey " ! " J ) i ov 4 | } : - res ight Thursday. =~ eines jon a drop-in-the-bucket basis,” Capetown; American Fiyer. Bremen: Ex- Grimes still follows his trade as a'and Indiana, rivers were . “1-want to" tet you about my-| EIGHT: Made a list of all per- rest for the hig n 'Mr. Hel : cambion, Marseille; Exford, Tangier: self.” isons we had harmed, and.became| The public will see the show at 8:15 p. m. Thursday. No visitors r. Helstein said. n bins, Bremerhaven: LaGuardis. machinist at the Naval Ordnanceland most refugees had returned

| Henry Gi | The nomes will be gas-heated § [itt Giantenamo ~ 0% On H.plant. Mrs. Grimes tends store/to their homes.

tes Willing to make amends to them| ST An wil bo permitted at tomorrows not an extremely sordid one, to NINF: Made direct amends to rehearsal, the last time all the 2 man ‘who has come 10 believe Such people wherever pagsible, ex- acts will perform together prior | himself the lowest of the low. The CePt When to do so would injure to show night. AA demonstrates his sadly com- them or others, | Tomorrow's rehearsal brings to TEN: Continued to take person- an end six weeks of strenuous,

| d f the physical] Slots Kiowle tee Phys’sa lai inventory and when we were practice’ under the direction of

thers, inability WTOng, promptly admitted it. [Mary McClean, a headliner in| } # : Shame of Lacing o A 4 ELEVEN: Sought through past Ice-O-Ramas and am ad- : 4 ; - % . =u was there” he says. *1 came Prayer and meditation to improve vanced Coliseum skater. 2 , : 0 FR anklin 441 1 / : ? {our conscious contact with God as| Good Seats Available : : . : : : : od

back. 1 can help you bring your-| self back. All you have to have 1s’ nderstoed Him, paving onl; Late ticket-buyers still may pura sincere desire to stop drinking). the ee, to carry that out chase good reserved seats for and the guts. to admit that you're| TWELVE: Having had a spirit- most locations in the Coliseum. an alcoholic.” ual experience as the result of Tickets will be os alt Sally Doesn't Always Work | these steps, we tried to carry this through Inwday to Times! - ; AL It doesn’t always’work. There message to alcoholics and prac- ‘. 214 W. Maryland St. The, : 3 - : : : rh are men and women who will tice these principles in all our af-| 0, ining tickets will go on sale] staunchly maintain they can stop fairs. 'at the Coliseum box office at 7] drinking whenever they please, The strongly spiritual side off, m, thursday. The doors will But in a great number of cases N° AX program hs ope to OPen at 7:30 p. m. it does work, as AA’s membership “0S alcoho ics wi 18 Price. are: Box and ‘Parquet.

admit the existence of any High-| re: grows The reusing i 108 Sf WA cote st Nerul ana SED

3 a 7 {Side Mezzanine, 85 cents; East Ones the giconolie bas sii Rejleve She gY0ub would never Ravel FES Mezzanine, 60 cents, Prices!

|existed without Him, and they are ll £9 Alopt. jis AA bacomes Ris vot ashamed to say 80. {include tax. All seats are indi-| ; vidually reserved, including the

D _| Neither are many of the AA's 10 met one Ae one of 18 ashamed to tell of their member-| East End Mezzanine.

{ ship. i Proceeds will be turned over by Sou ean, tiey storie of “1 don't see why somebody The Times to the Polio fund. Soon he begins to hope he ean Shouldn't know a man’s an AA,” Fourth Annual Show § g0 dry and stay dry. He is taken ON® sald. “After all, everybody! mpirsday’'s show will be the on calls to gther alcoholics ang knew it when he was a drunk.”|, nh annual Times Ice-O-Rama. begins the gvork which, more Tomorrow: AAD Sound OY of the headliners of past!

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Whiz through work hours in your Ti

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~ “Chore-Charmer” Cotton Dress

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by Jacqueline Shaw

¥ th any otBer influence, keeps ness. . shows will perform again J% Ad (i ——— - . ere at i Li am [dition to ‘many new skaters. - "REMODELING SALE | "CLEVELAND, o. Fen. 20 (up) Children and adults of ail ages Save $100 on SPINETS John Carroll University decided With all the glamour of a pro-| : ; today to use its own methods to : Ice-O- F ST keep its 2300 students warm fessional production, the Ice With only enough coal to last|Rama will present the skaters In : |through tomorrow, the school colorful - costumes under brilliant, . C sent a crew of men into mearby|sPotlights. A 15-plece profes, Rey. US. Pot. OF. {fel ds to cut logs sional orchestra will provide the J ; w = ) 7 oo % ‘ . " “ sm oo |accompaniment. Students of the’ : » a . ava - . 7 ) : . . [Stagecrart and Makeup classes of Cos y Fr : 2 : a . on : . {Arsenal Technical High Schooljl La \ 7 : 4 : e ® Sun Lif NI [ dS have “constructed the elaborate 1 ET aah 2 / in regular and half sizes |stage setting under the super-| 53 iS. : of p : ‘ i ; |viston- of C. 8. Stewart,” the £8 Ps ¥ 2 a. . » ’ {school's director, and his assist- : 1 ’ { ant John F. Minatel. ~ I — VI I S 0 0 ICY 0 ers | The show will last two hours. | LC . . : 1949 was a good year for Sun Life. Organization in strong | DONISh Liner ; f or : * sition with nearly 509, of entire assets invested in Takes Fire at Sea nited States. Total benefits paid last year $114 million. | ’ plu iced shalt. Avy COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Feb. With $18 million—a substan- | The Sun Life's own business [oy (UUP)—Fire broke out before tial increase over 1949—allot- | has more than kept pace with | 3,wn today on the 3900-ton Dan- J] F ted far poticyholders'-dividends this -iner ease, -today's-total-in {8h Passenger ner Crown Prince; SE RE ) 3 - {-to-be-paid-during-the current | foree—of-$4:187—millions—eom-| iar bit disaster was averted | iin - year, the Bun Life Assurance paring with only $53 millions {when all 15 passengers were Company .of Canada enters its | in force at the beginning of |transferred safely to another 80th year of public service with | the century, During these 50 |jiner. a promising outlook for 1950. | years, too, Sun Life policy pro- | = Shipping officials said 40 of the The Sus Lite has been active in visions and privileges have | rew members left the ship with riod dhe. Linited. States. for over hall |. heen. broadened, available. ope Lihe-passengere-iut-4hnt the sexi srs emetic ee in - - | a century and today maintains | ‘tions increased, and many new maining 20 stayed aboard to fight i branch office and agency serv- benefits introduced. Even be- {the fire. . IF ice in 40 states from coast to. | foré 1900 the Company was the 1 Reports from the scene said coast. During the year just first to introduce the “uncondi- | the blaze broke out in. an -aft past, the total amount of life tional” policy, following later | compartment and spread quickly wk insurance which policyholders with the popular Sun Life non- | amidships while the vessel was 11} } ee d-purchased from the Sun Life | medical: insurance plan. The |miles off the Swedish coast en} = § ae i exceeded $372 millions, contin- | Company also issued the first |rowte to Copenhagen from Oslo, | = uing the unbroken record of | Group Pension policy written ||Norway. ! selling more new lifé insurance anywhere in North America, | -~ —r-vvrre per annum than any other | an epech-making event in the f Canadian life company. Insur- | history of life {nsurance. 100 Mental Patients ance in force with the Sun Life One of the outstanding fea- Flee Hospital Fire od now amounts to $4,187,000,000, | tyres of Sun Life operations || REEDSBURG, Wis, Feb. 20 . an all-time high. Total income | quring 1949 was the pro- | (UP)—Fire drove more than 100 of the Company in 1949 was nounced increase in the Com- {mental patients from their quar-||’ $238,000,000. pany's Group business.” Hun- [ters at the Sauk County Hospital The 79th AnnualReport of | dreds of thousands of office; |/In sub-freezing cold for the second! the Sun Life of Canada just | factory’ and other employees in | time in four weeks. | issued indicates the Company's | business and industry through- || Attendants guided the men pa-| : faith in the United States | out North America are today | tients out of the structure with-| where more than 48% of its | protected by the generous |out incident and no one was in-| . assets are invested and where | terms of Sun Life Group insur- | jured. Officials estimated the dam-| Here' ’ . $1,690,000,000 or 40% of its | ance and annuity plans. The |/age at $10,000. eres f ‘total business is in force. Bene- | Company's experience and || The blaze yesterday started in nl and comfortable cotton to keep fits paid to Sun Life policy- | service in this particular field ||a second floor electrical switch £ v i ; + k ‘ holders and beneficiaries since | is unsurpassed. Today," the | and damaged the attic and roof.| ' ou. singing at your tasks ... . pre ri the Company's first policy was | Importance of Group insurance || A similar fire originated in the Y gma 4 ; Se pretty geome} ¢ issued” in 1871 have now is recognized with the encour- [same spot Jan. 29. ; . Jo 3 eo ies reached §2,240,000,000, Jast | agement and maintenance of | o ig print n 80-square percale with concealed zipper year alone over $114,000,000 | good relations between man- ' Zi A was paid out in benefits, agement and labor, and the ' | * . pt “bol HH rs a re front and two dainty pockets; ric-rac trimmed. at the Head Office of the Com- | the individual employee. eta ; : pany, the President, Arthur B, The Sun Life story for 1949, : : Brown, wine or blue; sizes 16 + | Wood, reviewed the remark- | Including the President's ad- : HE : ) b ' 8.16 to Y“ ond 14/2 fo able progress of life insurance | dress as delivered at the An- | with the purchase of an i 8 oy “ny : 5 : : over the last 50 years. In 1900, | nual Meeting, is contaihed in | | : i 241/. * —- ’ with a population of 76 mil- | the Report to Policyholders | ALEKANDER SMITH 3 11 1 MON : lions, the United States had | now on ‘the press. Copies may | a © a i : | x : life {insurance in force of some | be obtained on request from [vg OF carpet...@ - : BR M ’ : $7 billions, or about $90 per | any of the branch, group or SHOP TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY 3 A res’ Pini fore Sho Fou oor capita. Today the population | mortgage offices of the Com- HOME-DECORATING PLAN 9.00 0 5 ; y 8 : Pr ” rth Fi re has almost doubled but life in- | pany, or from R. J. Simpson, | i a : Tr : oT haan : . surance in force has risen to | Branch Manager, 129 E. Mar- [verted out just Jor you by . ' 2 ¥ $215 billions, or $1430 per head. | ket Street, Indianapolis. | (LARA DUDLEY 2 - ASSOCIATES—INDIANAPOLIS BRANCH | : : ! — » » Pee iw m— A. R.' (BERT) COFFIN “VICTOR DEITCH |Your color scheme consultont i: : - RICHARD DEITCH . + JAY C. KAHN ft 2 SKA LS Yee 1 -. . » £2 E. 8. LARRISON : -JOE HOYLE |. SHOP AT YOUR LEISURE = | x iw . ER. J, SIMPSON E. C. COCKING | 8 : 5 2 Branch Manager : . Branch Secretary | RAINIER FURNITURE 0. r= sy > . = °| 130 E, Market St. Bldg. - Indianapolis 4, Ind, Phone MA. 7571 (4214 COLLEGE AVE - . HU, 1376; i # - : ri : Sr " FBEK PARKING IN REAS 4 : ; =e N * pos pr ir . me, : ’ ’ A —. SW . : or " i \ \ { 7 % ¢ ; p As Ls > \ X : et SrA 4 ib fA : : A EY Na x \ ON A a ox Wl ~ Sas e x Se vi a 2 a in i, SE ; % ; ah J iy Seis : - A \ % he Sry ie 2 Lu a a > 7 ay x bi oN x = 2 Q NR Fite Xi % ch RA Sy Ab HE) ba \ ; ok A i x = ¢ Zn ; SR w =X, S \ A “ %3 i A y. \ %