Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 April 1951 — Page 7
tablished 12 Years
pen Every ly 8 AM.
10 P.M.
‘ ings at the party will be Ronald |
ly ty!
IN NET
tear!
quaree. Has bullt-in staticntrols. abinet,
PLAN
YOU
A
2,
LIFT
id of paled ys on bat-
* taken to a hospital here in se-
5
«bes produced more then 80 million
| ESOTERICA
FRIDAY, APR. 13, 1951
Hoosier Marks
An Unforgettable Friday the 13th
13th Year of Marriage
oN
By PHIL BERK Friday the 13th holds no terrors for Jack Ross Browning, 4044 N. Kitley Road, unless he happens to forget that it's his 13th wedding anniversary. - Since today 1s also his 32 birthday, Mr. Browning's family is
planning a surprise party, high-
lighted by a combination birth: day-wedding anniversary cak with ‘13 wedges marked in the icing, a candle burning on each ° wedge—but it wont be 13 layers high—only four. Mr. Browning, an employee in the automatic toll dialing department of Indiana Bell Telephone Co., is the son of Mr. and Mrs
Roland H. Browning, 2224 N. 3
Spencer Ave. 3 The third generation of Brown- 4
Lee, 12, and Jacqueline, 4. The Brownings, Jack and Clara, haven't been beset by misfortune, despite their legendarly unlucky anniversary date. In fact they insisted upon flouting superstition to combine the anniversaries.
Refused to Change Date
: THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Wage Board Peace Aldrich to Head
Language Unit Reported Near | Dr. Clide E. Aldrich has been al {appointed head of Butler Univer-/ Unit's Authority {sity’'s newly created department
. lik oa of modern for-| Last Big Question | eign languages By United Press
in the College of | WASHINGTON, Apr. 13—Labor Liberal Arts and and management were reported | Sciences, Pres - nearing agreement today on a new, ident M. O. Ross wage stabilization board which. announced towould unlock pay raises now be- day. ing held up for many workers. The new deIndustry sources said consider- partment, which able negotiation still remains to will begin func-| ‘ decide what authority the board tioning Sept. 1, . {should have. But White House| results from tne aids said Defense Mobilizer combination of Charles E. Wilson hoped that a
Dr. Aldrich the departments new wage panel might be ready Of romance languages and Gerto begin functioning. after next man. Tuesday. . | Dr. Aldrich will continue as diAn all-day meeting yesterday rector of the graduate division of of President Truman's Mobiliza- the university in addition to his tion Advisory Board, of which New assignment. He has taught, Mr, Wilson is chairman, produced in the romance language departreports of “substantial progress” ment since becoming a member toward rebuilding the wage board./0f the faculty in 1924, The panel collapsed when labor PN quit two months ago in protest Concern Increases Over against the decision of industry! . and public representatives to per- Vandenber it Condition
mit wage increases of only 10 Per! GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Apr
cent above Jan. 15, 1950, levels. | Presidential Press Secretary 13 (UP)—Sen. Arthur H, Vanden-
Joseph “Short said after yester- berg’s condition is “becoming a day's meeting that progress had matter of increasing concern,” his
NO JITTERS—The Brownings aren't afraid of Friday the 3th. Yeday is their 13th wedding anniversary and his birthday. Children Ronald Lee and Jacqueline will help celebrate.
Mrs. Browning's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. R. P. Woolf, 2305 Adams Man Says Bootblack Shined Him for $68
8t., celebrated their wedding ‘anniversary yesterday. Mrs, Woolf once suggested that the Brownings choose another wedding date.
Not that she was superstitious— who said he had been polished to supply of beer and some gambling| “ . but she had run into that num-|the tune of $68. George Meaney replied no com
ber 13 before.
It began Sept. 13, 1907—not 8 Senate Ave., told police he dropped erage law. Friday—at a family dinner ati... 0 parfor of Edward
Collins, also 50, ot 861 Blake st. 1extile Strike Spreads
the home of her parents, Andrew and Mary Swango, in Adams.
Mrs. Swango, who would run for a shine and wal offered al around the block ‘to avoid a drink. |(UP)~The southern textile strike Tuesday.
black cat's crossing her path,
parlor operator last night on the Finn, he charged. complaint of a shine customer Police investigating found a tion over industrial disputes.
and awakened a short time later textile workers union members|of discussion during the board's
. was servi steaming platters of her piping elicious fried chick- with a headache and without his'walked out of three Georgia mills. previous two meetings.
{been made toward ironing out the| 4 imain issue stalling establishment] 1°Ct°T reported in a surprise bul-| Police polished off a bootblack money. The drink was a Mickey of a new wage board. That issue 'etin early today. |is the limit of the board's jurisdic-! Dr. A. B. Smith said the Repub- | lican foreign affairs leader had
AFL Secretary - Treasurer shown recent signs of improve-|
| | {
equipment. - Collins was chargediment” when asked whether labor Ment but “the fact that he does Cleo L. Harris, 50, of 450 N. with a violation of the 1935 bev-'had backed down from its posi- not continuously maintain this Hon on pe Jeplites Suestion. |improvement is becoming a mat-| e mobilization board, com-| ’ "@® posed of four representatives each ter of increasing concern, lof industry, labor, agriculture and| The Michigan Senator suffered GREENSBORO, N. C., Apr. 13/the public, will meet again next|a relapse two months ago from a The wage panel issue/series of lung and spine opera-
He took two shots of liquor— spread into a sixth state today as/has been almost the sole subject|tions which began in Oct. 1949. He has been absent from his
duties for 18 months.
en when looking at the table, she screamed, “I'm not eating dinner here today. There are 13 plates on the table!” Later in the day the family started to walk to Andrew Swango's stone quarry nearby. But again Mrs. Swango counted an! ominous 13 members in the group—and she promptly headed for home, saying, ‘Something will happen before the week's out!” The next day, Mrs. Wool{—the former Mildred Swango-— was returning from school. Sitting on the edge of the wagon instead of in the bottom where it was safe, she turned to wave goodbye to a friend, when the wagon started! suddenly, throwing her to the ground. : Ribs Broken The right rear wheel passed, over her body, breaking some ribs and causing her to spend] the next six weeks in bed. She) cried when told that her double, slate was broken, but the satchel! full of schoolbooks which she'd been clutching to her chest had prevented more serious injury. Mrs. Swango always blamed the accident on the 13 plates, on the table and the 13 persons on the quarry tour on Sept. 13. But Mrs. Woolf says the much maligned number couldn't have caused her mishap. “What's tobe, will be.” she maintains.
Sullivan Crash
Kills 1, Injures 2 SULLIVAN, Apr. 13 (UP)—Lee Olgus Walfield, 56, Linton, was killed and two persons were injured when their car overturned on Ind. 54, east of here. Robert McFadden, 31, Linton, and Hazel Moore, Oaktown, were,
Kade weathered : Brown
“Travel Size at fraction of previous lowest price
Evoberica is that famous cream for Seding those weathered browm spots thet make hands look old. Fades other surface blemishes in a wey we ordinary eream or lotion con. More then a million women have peid up to $4.00 for Esoterica in the pest 18 months. Now you een enjoy it for as litte as 78c. New travel sive will ‘show how you keep face, hands, neck clear and ivory-white as they can possibly be. Esoterica looks and feels like fine vanishing type cream—but hes added elesring action. Perfected by a laboratory that has studied problem skins for 30 years and
packages of pure, fine cosmetics. I you went clesrer, youngerlooking shin QUICKLY —free of these blemlehes — got Esoterica today at your. favorite toiletry counter or beauty salon. New revel size 7Sc—other sires
to $4.00.
For Sale at All
"WE OUTFIT THE MEN FOR SPRING . . . . J /
With All-Weather Jackets, Dazzling New Shirts and Ties So Brilliant, They, Too, Will Shine in the Rain!
LET APRIL SHOWERS COME YOUR WAYI WHAT MAN CARES WHO HAS A . . .
Gabardine” Jacket
Ideal Water Repellent Sports 95 Ouick 98 i Jackets At An Ideal Price! thercktelief from company f : dazzling i$ fine, sor gp N tive veryday esigns! RA . You demand dependable performance from your cor your sporps lifer" your [oof lifer with | —why not with a sports jacket! Choose this one green, maize, or leeve styles! e For Be for its dependability rain or shine, for its easy- ey. or Scarlet! § Black i 2 action onytime! BROWN, GREEN, BLUE, GREY! .. es smal Be
Sizes small, medium, lorge.
*Rayon
PEP UP YOUR SUITS WITH
EYE-CATCHING TIES
69°
3 for 2.00
A Tie for Every Taste! A Price To Fit Every Man's Billfold . « »
ls that a nw suit? No, it's my old one with a spanking . fresh new tie! See their brilliancy, see their patterns « «lu panels, stripes, neat and bold figures, solids!
Styled to raise your rating around town!
Men's Furnishings, Downstairs
i +
OPEN MONDAY THRO
Rx
UGH SATURDAY, 9:30 T0 5:00
SEE
SPECIAL SALE! JR. BOYS’ SPRING '51 :
UITS and TOPCOATS
Mostly Sizes : 4108... Afew 10 Up To Size 12! Tomorrow . . Choice :
Shop Early! Not Every Size and Color in Every Style! This sensational group includes: matching rayon gabardine suits, slack suits with tartan plaid sport coats, casual sport suits . + » rayon gabardine and all-wool covert top- / coats . . . spring's best styles at your best price! Shop early for choice selection!
BOYS’ CORNER, DOWNSTAIRS
STUDENTS REGULAR SPECIAL PURCHASE! 39.95 and $45 BETTER . . . WOOL SUITS
GABARDINE* SLACKS »
For 49 = 10 hay? 3 .
Broken Sizes and Colors!
2975
Worsteds, flannel and a few sabardines' Regulars and longs,
single and double - breasted styles! ’ # WASHABLE rayon gabardines, zipper fly models! Full cut! ° Brown, blue and CLEARANCE! green. y ‘Rayon
BOYS’ REGULAR 16.95
10 19.95 CLOTHING BOYS 2.50, 2.69
wll? PONS RTS Washable long sleeve faguasd, 213 fom of 1s ing rns. paces and fasly for TEE So hres 8 to 30 in 1% 5 boys, sizes 13 to 37. Not every ox style in every size! the group ... 3 —
2," CLEARANCE IN THE GIRLS” SHOP
Si
hn omo re +
vee
* TEENS’ 20,95 to 39.95 SUITS REDUCED . . . :
19-95 % 24-95
Eye-taking new spring styles in red, navy or tan! All-wool gabardines and other rich fabrics! Sizes 9 to 15.
STYLE SHOWN, was 20.95, now 24.95
% GIRLS’, SUB-TEENS’ 13.95 to 22.95 COATS, TOPPERS
9.00 ,, 16.95
Includes the swankiest new all-wool flannels, all-wool coverts and rayon gabardines, Sizes 7 to 14 and 10 to 14.
TEENS’ REG. 29.95 WRAP COATS
Luxurious all-wool 95 fleeces and all-wool . strea cloths! Costin
GIRLS’ SHOP, DOWNSTAIRS
CLEARANCE IN THE TOTS’ SHOP
LITTLE GIRLS’, BOYS' 10.95 fo 19.95 COATS
77 " 1 2°
This season's wonderful SPRING COAT styles for tots! Soft all-wool fabrics in solid pastels, navy and checks. Removable lace trim collars on many styles! Sizes 1 to 64, but not in every style,
LITTLE GIRLS’ 5.95 fo 7.95 SPRING SUITS
$3 and 5 SEE THESE ; OUTSTANDING Catchy little costumes to make your VALUES IN THE. SE Lae TE Tors sor ih Mi on Blin DOWNSTAIRS
sizes In every style! TOMORROW!
Cami
. a SR i
- od Na oe
7 2 q
