Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1952 — Page 5

3, 1952

ned

en's

niversity will give Saturday 1040 W,

unior and 1dianapolis interested

have been ' mothers. t, program ng a panel ties in the nd -departbe led by Bloomingfrqm Indical Center,

Blooming-

ssie Kauf- :

Iisses Jane 4nd Jéan olis, forge, Broad respective rt, Southta Boxell, ey Clarke,

iss Martha’

vansville, jetetic's in 1t the de3,. and. Miss or student the guests n the Med-

b members pupils in clude Mrs, ridge; Miss Vashington; Howe; Miss Broad RipJohnston, , M. Mace,

8. J. Lloyd at the tea, clude Mrs, man; Mesrie, 1. H. lis Pressler rtha Trout, is publicity

ans, assist~ come from

te |

ium instead ool will be p. m. FriAssembly the IrvingSe Orchestra > “Shoeless last until

Myles Koch, committee, d by Janet herd, Alice evie, Don nan, Nancy ouis Hoynes, . Nuttall. will be dec1 laces and with comnames on favors will 3t.

ls

Clouser, asadmissions , Baltimore, chnical and Schools and Friday.

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TUESDAY, JAN. 8, 1052

0 rmal’ :

‘In

By JEAN SPICKLEMIRE

Times ‘Homes Editor

CHICAGO, Jan. 8 — In-

formal, that’s neither mod-

ern nor traditional; is the leading . lady of ‘furniture fashions at this Winter Home purnishings Market. More “than one-half of the lines being shown here fall into this category. It's 4d trend that's® joading to a new modern of tomorrow, style that will bridge the gap between traditional and Ynodern yet will be different {rom contemporary. : result of the switch to casual living, it satisfies the desire for light woods instead of dark, nieces that do many things yet take very little space to perform. Yet all the while it looks picture pretty, eliminating the angular lines of modérn and substituting curves. a m8 =n EVEN SOFA BEDS and metal dinet furniture have the feeling. Among the former there are examples of French Provincial and ranch, all styled for the unpretentious living of 1952, To tie in with this mood, pine and cherry are the most popular woods used in the market. Frultwoods, too, come in for their share of #ttention. One company used a tweed finish on oak; another collection i8 inspired by the farmhouse type of French Provincial pieces. .Even dark woods have a lighter tone. One company calls

“itg-newtraditionel- finish--eop~-

per; it has a luminescent quality to bear out its name. : 2 8 8 THERE WILL BE no shortages of material so far as wood furniture is concerned. Take: springs, for example. Even though production has been restricted 50 per cent, the demand has been satisfied. Foam rubber, say the experts, is responsible for this happy situation. According to C. W. Theleen, sales manager of General Electric, there may be spot shortages and delivery delays, but Mrs. Consumer will have little trouble buying what she wants appliance-wise this year. EJ un n RANGES AND WATER heaters, hampered by shortages of copper .and nickel,- will be the most difficult to come by. Because streamlined kitchens and laundries are increasingly pop-

fs JANUARY

LIVING | ROOM SUITES

CHAIRS RUGS

WE A PU

GOING STEADY —Popular cherry teams

-~

Leads Furniture S

he

we

with

tyles

ERE

solid black walnut to make this dining room

table by Tomlinson. The piece has leaves which drop to expose beautiful swirt design, walnut band. The chairs have foam rubbér seats and cane backs, match the walnut trim of the table. Shown in the Merchandise Mart during the current International Home Furnishings Market through Jan. 18, the unit is part of a new open stock bedroom and dining room grouping. :

ular, aufomatic washers, clothes dryers, dishwashers and gar®hage disposers will be in short Ses. Refrigerators and food freezers will be more plentiful. Do not look for radically new appliances to appear. This involves extensive retooling and that's not in the books at this time. ” = 2 ONE MAJOR COMPANY, however, has restyled its freezer model. The cabinet has been reduced a full foot to key it to the smaller home of today.

TV rhanufacturers are becoming more fashion conscious. They're using raffia, for example, to give the sets more style, adding doors to mask them so they won't look so functional. The consensus agrees traditional sets remain most popular, topping modern to a surprising degree. Ernest Marx, general manager of DuMont Laboratories, forecasts a dual set demand in most homes during the

-

This is part of our huge i

OPEN

WEDNESDAY until 9 P.M.

Mon. & Sat.

played.

Emrich's RUG DEPARTMENT has a wide variety of sizes and prices in Wiltons and Axminsters.

$79.50 9x12 Tan and Gray leaf and scroll pat-

tern Axminster .eeeeeereiiiiraareces $113.00 9x12 Green self tone leaf pattern

Axminster

$134.95 9x12 Old Rose or Apple Green swirl attern WiIlon ...ceoiesssnsicecrrnvssnneety $200.95 12x13'6 Corinthian Rose or tone-on-tone Green leaf pattern simulated embossed

Agminster .....ooeucaenees - $172.95 12x15 18th Cegtury ground Axminster .......... 27" Candy in, ydo eovovmennesreneses

. 27" Billiard Green Evertwi

$10.95 lin.oyd. Now «overcurensnnninennees

BEST TERMS hy FREE - TAXI

fo dnd from

0 In city mes : \ Nt Ewiehe. ... Since 1881 REE. 2

PARKING THE

Sfripe stair carpet, Velvet. Now ~ . i

NOME OF

calbaws

$69.50 $76.00 $106.00

ess sss ss anes enn

$179.50 $154.95 $3.95 $7.95 - LL 6304

ses een tess

Floral on Beige

st Wilton. Was

ami arn

year. The smaller tubed mod-

«

Living Room Department, in our Factory Building, where scores of Suites are dis-

SAVE 1

els will be .released to the nursery, so Junior can.see Hop-

along. o o o

HE ANTICIPATED no short-

‘age ‘in video during 1952 and

looks forward to new export markets. Cuba, Mexico, South America, France and England all are TV conscious, he pointed out. Even Siam has made inquiries concerning TV trade relations. ” n un

THE MOBILE CHEST, masterminded. by Heritage Henredon, is a new idea. There's storage for silver, linens, and dishes in it. It may be used

as a ‘bar or as a buffet, yet it's a trolley that will; slide anywhere. As if that's not

enough, the top opens to serve as a readymade buffet or dining table.

This same house is showing a lamp table with sliding sections to hold magazines, typewriters, plants and remote control equipment for the radio-

bottles’

phonograph or TV set. A book table also by HH has panels which form doors to cabinet space for prints, maps, trays and extra large books. Zenith of luxury is a bed with a foam rubber cushion attached to its headboard. Designed by Harold Schwartz of Romweber, the pad is detachable as are the night tables, also a part of the headboard. ” ” 4

THAT OLD BUGABOO, the

telephone directory, is neatly concealed by ‘Edward Wormley of Dunbar. He hides it in a

"telephone table bench behind a

door that opens to become a foam rubber seat. Formica is worked info everything from the tops of tables to the wide arm of modern sofas and the work surfaces of dining room storage units. Height of space-saving efficiency is a modérn buffet into which fit four little seats. It's just the ticket for a TV room or one-room apartment.

THE INDIANAPOLIS #RIES

* ’ oF

3

The Mature Parent—

EE Children Pay Price”

A

Vd For Our Indecisions

. By MUKIEL LAWRENCE INDA’S mother Has been. cross and out of sorts ever cellent but expensive nursery school has opened in g#€r neighborhood. ni

since an

Aroufid two o'clock in the afternoon, when her restless

child asks if it isn't time for het friend Ruthie to be coming “home from . nursery school, her mother

reacts irritably. She -says:

“For heaven's sake, stop mooning around this ‘house! No, it's not time yet. 30 and play— and stop looking as though you'd lost your last friend on earth! You had your chance to go to nursery. school with Kate —but you didn’t like the way it cooked carrots. Don’t blame me because you're lonely.” This isn’t the real truth. The real truth is that Linda's father didn’t think the nursery school experience was worth the $400 he preferred to pay down on a new car. The real truth is that Linda's mother was uncertain that it was worth $400 herself. ou ” n SHE SENT her little daughter to nursery school, not because she ‘believed in its value, but because all the other mothers in her neighborhood were sending their children. So, without a real case. for nursery

Mrs.

Lawrence

school to present to her husband, |

she was relieved when Linda objected to carrots. It gave her

0% to 335%

LIVING ROOM SUITES

$298.00 MODERN CURVED SOFA AND CHAIR, 2- cushion style, figured red

and more!

197%

Mafelasse cover .........;ivvinnnan,

$249.50 MODERN 80" SOFA AND CHAIR, 2:cushion style, choice of Gray or Wine

1 79°

high-pile frieze cover .........cvvs..e

$249.50 FRENCH PERIOD SOFA, 70" long, solid carved Mahogany trim, channel back and arms. Rich Turquoise Brocatelle cover $198.00 LAWSON PERIOD SOFA, in Green or Brown leaf pattern Matelasse with matching fringe on base ..............

219+ 1 hg-00

$168.00 MODERN SECTIONAL SOFA, 86"

long in 2 sections. Shaped back. Low lea Malelasso over ...caerivssetvnsnnees

curved arms. Floral

1 37°

pattern Gray

FINE CHAIRS

$98.00 COMFORT CHAIR, high button back, mahégany finish trim. Persimmon Matelasse cover...

$35.00 ARMLESS OCCASIONAL CHAIRS, with curved back and large seat. Frieze or Tapestry covers..................

$126.00 FRENCH PERIOD CHAIR, solid carved mahogany trim. Turquoise or Gray Brocatelle......

$50.50 $29.50 $109.00

. $99.50 RECLINING CHAIR and OTTOMAN. zAdjustable back. : Walhut wood trim. Cushion top ottoman. Floral leof pattern $49.50

Biege Tapestry cover........... aa $69.50 BASE ROCKER, green -Boltaflex cover. Mahogany finish

wood. trim...

serves h ars sere se nse

Sars ms ana amraraan Tareas

— LAMPS — Elegant large lamps in wide selection. Were $12.25 fo. $60.50. ‘Now ..$5.95 to $5380.

1200 SOUTH OF WASHINGTON $1 300 WEST OF MERIDIAN ST

"324 W. MORRIS ST. |

"-. FREE™ - DELIVERY ANYWHERE ~~ INDIANA

$5700.

PY

ail ir A He

the only milk with practically all the vitamins and minerals you need!

This, we feel, is the most important advance in milk since the discovery of pasteurization! Gail Borden Signature Quality Milk is pure whole milk, homogenized for perfect flavor . . . and fortified with almost all of the vitamins and minerals you need for health. Did you know that investigations show many Americans suffer from vitamin and mineral deficiencies—even when they are spending more than average for their food? Gail Borden Signature Quality Milk will help you guard against this, by providing supplementary quantities of these protective food elements.

an excuse to take Linda out of the school and avoid arguments with her husband. If Linda's mother had really believed in the value of a nursery school experience, she would have “taken ‘her child's distaste for the carrots quite differently. We often take our doubts of our decisions out on ¢hildren, Against our we: let young ‘Bill persuade us to buy him*an elaborate football outfit.

Or we make Alice pay-a price |

for the music lessons we can't afford. Our fear that we have made an unwise decision drives us to make a horror of music to Alice. There's nothing to be guilty or anxious about if we can't

afford expensive advantages for our children. The strain and struggle to

keep up with the Jones’ children deprives our own young ones of the basic advantages of self-confidence and peace mind.

Washing Wall Tip Home furnishing specialists recommend. washing a wall at the bottom and then proceed upward. This prevents streaking which occurs when water runs down over a soiled sur-

of

betters judgment, ©

our |

® 7

* Shake,

*

PAGE 5

Will Study Child Welfare . ATIONAL and Indiana American Legion Auxiliary”

leaders deft with Legionnaires today for their annual Middlewestern: Child Welfare Conference Friday and Sat.

urday in. Des Moines. Department auxiliary leaders in the group headed by Randel national Legion child welfare director, avere william Brown, Bloomington,

president; Miss Minnie Doane,

Carmel, child welfare chairmin: Mrs. Robert .Haoey, New 3 p ! Haven, child welfare commit-

tee member; Mrs. Thelma Ransdale, Lafay®tte; Girls’ State chairman? and .- Mrs. Leona Noel, Crown Point, rehabilitation chairman. ' Child welfare leaders of the Legion, auxiliary; 40 & 8. and 8 & 40 from 12 midwest states will .be mobilized for a state

. by state and city by city legis-

Mrs,

-

> 3 b lative drive. Objectives will be prison’ bars for all dope peddlers and _quarantining of all drug addicts until they are cured. Dr. .A. H. Wittman, Philadelphia, Legion national child welfare . chairman, will fead a discussion of effects of the current world crises on midwest children. : :

6500 auxiliaries in the 12-state area.

There are approximately Legion posts and 5000

Clean Pearls

Clean your pearls occasione

ally with mild soap and water, and a small soft brush.

js sat od adopts aa Ie

hs [abl died

assimilation.

JTS

“Years of research are behind this better tasting, more healthful milk

Science now makes it possible to add to the natural values of important minerals and vitamins in milk. These valuable added nutrients are made available to the body through milk's easy digestibility and high Gail Borden Milk is the result of years of scientific research!

KE

| VITAMIN A L— 10DINE | VITAMIN 8, = — IRON VITAMIN 8; od] PHOSPHORUS NIACIN L___ catcwm VITAMIN € LL vitamin 0

U.S. MINIMUM DAILY ADULY REQUIREMENTS®

-»-

The chart at the left shows the

JANUARY SALE-

3814 N. ILLINOIS ST.

.2

; 75 I

mE QWALTY

A

LETT NEY

Light out — Flavor

percentage of the minimum daily adylt vitamin and mineral requirements according to U. S. Food and Drug Administration, which are supplied by regular milk and by Gail Borden Milk.

and Vitamins in!

This more nutritious mitk stays that way, because the new. amber bottle. protects the light-sensitive vitamins and preserves the natural fine flavor of Gail Borden Sig-

| VITAMIN A J] LL. 100INE VITAMIN 8, "ON VITAMIN 8) we) PHOSPHORUS NIACIN ee) catcibm VITAMIN € VITAMIN ©

*According to U.S. Food ond Drug Administration.

** According to National Dairy Council.

ASK YOUR DOCTOR

Should your doctor question the adequacy of the vitamin or.min= eral content of your diet, ask him

about Gail Borden Milk

8 Q

1 Quart gives you daily requirements ‘of most needed vitamins and minerals

As shown by the chart above, Gail Borden Signature Quality “Milk brings to you — in one single quart — the minimum daily, requirements of vitamins and minerals, with the exception of vitamin C.* It is a milk so fine that to it, and it alone, we give the name of the founder of our company, Gail Borden!

‘ *Vitamin Cin adeguate amounts is easily obtained from citrus 15. ; ‘fruits, tomatoes, and other fruits and vegetables. -

nature Quality Milk.

TBC

So much: better, it's the biggest 1c worth in town! Gail Borden Signature Quality Milk

costs just lc per quart more than’ homogenized milk . You can help pro. tect everyone in your family for just lc each pér day!” That's why it's the biggest penny's worth in town.

Call Blackstone 2405 for home de- + livery . . . or ask ask for it by name . al your neighborhood store.

‘has Gail Borden Milk,