Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 August 1952 — Page 26
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SUNDAY, AUG. 10, 1952
PAGE 26
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d h Ch I A complete furniture center—for young ; in T HAS Ca rve t c a Ice people “going-to-housekeeping I ack § ce | BE THE SILVER CHALICE. homas B. Costain /bleday, $3.85, They WHEN Theron of Eich the adoption 50 that he might he able lyn and 1 seller .of ink and pens, sold his to reclaim his inheritance. And reception youngest son, Ambrose, to Ig- when he did rec im it the faith mony was natius, the rich dealer in oil, little of Jesus had become so much a Sorority did he dream this slight, shy hoy part of him that he settled the chrysar would crave the. chalice that accounts by taking all his fath- { mums, Ww would hold the cup used by Jesus er's slaves as his share of the es and ivy ' and his Disciples in the Last tate. He then promptly freed 2 char: Supper em, decoration o " , n n n { And little did he dream of the MANY other persons = enter | Mrs. K ordeal his son Would Hve Bough Basil's life a= he travels to the | berlin wo m those Houbloys Lites a " stant cities of that ancient time, | navy silk years after the lc iRion Interesting principal characters ganza dr Thomas B. L ostain Ww 0m _ are Deborra, his wife, who was a with, navy will remember for The B ack granddaughter of Joseph of Ari- cessories Rose” and ‘The Monevman,' has muthen: Helena. the sluttish sinve. | a navy done an excellent job in this novel who, nevertheless, =aved his life. { The mothe of Bipiteal times 3 novel whish The sufferings of the early | the bri is the Literary Guild selection for «yy yoiiane at the hands of the groom, August, nirs y » ’ | A pagan governments is well por- i r The hero of the story Is AMm- aved in the hook. J Gorman brose, renamed Basil after the po oop got the idea for | dyed to rich man who adopted him, "the hook when he first saw the ADDITION—Recently added to the French Impressionist | | shoes. was his skilled fingers that fash- .p.1106 which now can he seen + the John H Art M m is this painting by Al Among joned the chalice to hold. the, “wy.' cioisters. a religious mu- paintings in the ° n Herron Ar useu pP gq by were Mari) cup—and these in turn, became co. in tipper Manhattan fred Sisley titled "The Artist's House, Petite Place, Argenteuil. ig the Holy Grail so sought by men JOHN PAULUS. Sisley painted the picture about 1874 when he was the only Eng- Wommer o in. many ages. fit Bail Hvel To r————— lish-born’ member of the famed group of Parisian 19th Century . ; . and Mr. J or seven years dic asl ive art in their da . N 1 -P t as the son of the wealthy mer The Reds painters who revolutionized European ! Oy ew WO iece eC Iona COMPLETE aint al chant, giving little thought to : > Marilyn business or to anything except an . 1 . eae " . ~ " . / olis whe occasional dab at clay and the In Berlin . Throu h the Yea rs. | Room-flattering, arrangeable, inviting! '"Cushionized" for lasting | Sis yen 4 pleasures of life that had bee g hn . . . = 00 ? been art DA I 1 amar Boo THE BIG RAPE. am 2c Wal | comfort, coil spring seats and backs, modern styling, button-tufted i } ald B . . . . . . last his gather, This brought} field Buske For sides, jumbo welts. Serviceable deep-pile frieze upholstery, beautiabout not the great inherftanc ounqg, $3. e u on S . . . ENTHUS which waa due him, only James Wakefield Burke's THE ful colors. Each section 45 inches in length. LOWEST TERMS OR CHARGE ACCOUNT ate still be adopted son; pu! slavery ji '* BIG. RAPE is far more than a DUPONT—An Autobiography of an American Enterprise. Scribner's. > recent Sou adoption was challenges by al documentary novel of the rape wyupN a corporation in Amer- ” Indianapoli evil brother of the ie h mex pi of the city and. people of Berlin lca gets 10 be 150 years old, it is PRESIDENT "THOMAS JEF- Luau mes) The last of the five lega wi by the Russians. It fs a novel in truly an ancient organization:-Un- FERSON suggested the duPont ; the main nesses conveniently failed to re- which an American author man- like .in Europe and Asia, where Mills be located near Washing- | curry, lam member the adoption. Ages to think as Germans, Rus- 5 0a many such antiquarians, ton—but no suitable site could Dou a resser an 0 : sambals ¢ oR Ae non i vouth sians, Nazis and Communists, we in the United States get go0se- be found. The plant was built on | E3vories x 'W years 1e 0 , ; x e / : . : FO ) : thought amnd- still think. _ pimply when we see “old” things the site of what had been the i The clul
labored as the slave of Sosthene in the Street of the Silversmith’s. Then. one day he was bought out of slavery. His mission in life
first cotton mill in America—on land that covered 95 acres fronting the stream. This was bought for $6740.
Tis 18 a well-documented story of violence, but it cannot he dismissed as ‘just another unpleasantness better not read.”
of 100 years or more, Nevertheless, the continuing story. of an organization that has weathered a century and a half
eh
: {nto a Sou BOTH FOR 1 4400 | ee we { artificial
had been decided for him. The First, Lilo is an alluring hero- i8.a worthwhile story Up through the years the com- around the great merchant ‘of Jerusalem, ine whose misfortunes and con- That is true of this book a big pany grew and prospered—until LOWEST TERMS OR CHARGE ACCOUNT A live b Joseph of Arimathea, who had duct make a strange impression. . i1orrul carefully put together bi- today, when it has 150,000 own- the hall w fashioned a tomb for Christ, One leaves the hook with the ooranh of duPont, one of Amer. °F and almost 100,000 employees. . iw 2 y called upon him to make the hope J Burke will write a {ung great corporations. The color of this corporate his- FAWN WALNUT VENEERS on select cabinet ee chalice which would hold the cup. Sequel telling of Lilo’s life with prom cunpowder to nylons, du- tory printing is magnificent, as : For a pagan Greek this was a the Aniepioans, Pont TM gurpo an important fac. 2Te the many-old-time sketches hardwoods. Expertly constructed; center- MRS. N challenge. Skilled though his Second Burke's Germans make {or in the American way of life, 2nd drawings which were gath- i k-lined drawers. Newest picture- ith fingers were In the ancient skill S0M€ barbed comments about pounded by Eleuthers Irene Du red for the book.—J.P. guided, Da P , gg of sculpture, Basil's faith was not Americans and one wonders how pont who came here from France, — frame styling. Cast brass pulls. g
they will talk about the American occupation. Of strategic
yet strong enough to do the job, And, of course, to portray the figures of Christ's Disciples on the chalice, Basil would have tn see each one who still lived, ‘Thus he
the company has grown and pros- . i pered since the days when its first ;2 re bombing — “Civil- «tone buildings were erected on lans didn't have to run to the the banks of the Brandywine 3 cellars from the Russian bomb- Creek in Delaware. , apan started his long and weary trek. NS ae alvays had a target. That was in the summer of THE MOUNTAINS REMAIN. By He sought each one out. 15h who Je : Faerleans and Brit- 1202 and generations of men and pj oa CT, 01 Houghton, MifSetting them down in clay and nt hordes of planes to women have played their parts in flin, $3.50 : Th
; , drench the land indiscriminately - silver then became easy. Bul the, ,. yo ip 2i destruc on le development of the great cor-|' wy,o4") Gnu THE IMPERIAL
Post-War |
® DOUBLF DRESSER—54" wide; plate mirror, 44x32" ® PANEL BED—choice of full or twin size
Don
On
head of Jesus himself would not : poration since that time. Proud- ,, ; come to him-—that is, until one Snugnenng Germans whole- ot of all its accomplishments is WAY a Hove) about the Fain ITTLE night in a lonely rom, the face of, tm duPont of ite contribution to the , © wo 1 pamese ST n 5 flight the Master appeared. Basil hur- = nation’s physical needs and to the [050 F008 er Lar o Arm ess alrs rledly cast the countenance in More Blood Extender (support of its free traditions and |). Joo") Eility of ia YT : Ther: clay, unheeding the sharp knife v Institutions. ' eling sin that tell off the table and cut a, WAWRENCEBURG — Schenley| "1, 1800, “workmen” in Ameri- HRnama Tasakl, i . . deep gash on his leg. When the Laboratories, Inc. {8 gearing oan {ndustry were paid 65 cents, it 18 a real pleasure to resume salesgirls, Pg si facilities at its plant here to turn pe AUDg ; " that applause today. N 85 from an of task was ended, Basil had the p 2 a day: “upper workmen” got 90 Ii his Iat a v Y . face of Christ in clay and on the Out 300.000 pints a month of the cents; and “head workmen’ 0% 2 gst story, THE MOUN. E floor lay a pool of blood. synthetic hlood extender PVP- garned as much as $1.15. Yet, TAINS BEMALY, Tasaki tells of ach MISS A His mission. however, was a Macrose. The Federal Civil De- two years after that date the du- JO var papal how its people 5204 Pleas double one. Not only did he set fense Administration has already Pont company was founded with they ba S Sqsubation: ow | LOWEST TERMS OR Run Pkwy. out to see the Disciples of Jesus, purchased 1.2 million pints of the money that came from the fam- = yy Jusi af he e ye to CHARGE ACCOUNT Dr, can 2 he sought also to establish his fluid for emergency stockpiling. ily and from shares publicly sold 0 0" = 0 es who ge a 2 - at 10,000 francs each. Shares . fo . i ere bought hy many dis- Hides Which they are being forced | Wide, comfortable i Jog dione: tinguished Frenchmen, including The thie! character in th bool coil spring seats; : anon the Revolutionary war hero, La ~~ . h d b k . fi HANG fayette. and Rousseau, the noted |" 2 Geisha girl, Ku-ume, who shape acks; Tine whole coun hilose) her. o ' dares to fall in love with a noble- deep pile frieze up- Ig . 8 oF p Le = man. In the old Japan, such a HER FII thing would never even have been holstery; blond e BIT of ad Study thought of. of course. But this! hardwood. legs; to neoph} A ls New Japan, and even a Geisha . a istaff tra can fall in love. One - piece b a ck Sie is to T Of Narcotics The other couple in the book posts. Niesly tail the trip cat is a farmer and the well-born : » acco : A, able,” a In NARCOTICS. U. Piha girl who falls in love with him. ored. Six co ors: Mahon,” to experts on various Sb fb pine She is Michiye, and in the chang- you'll have § Trig ear ing tides of clvilization, this is a Brown Green Rose But the! about them, about control, t 1 ic age addiction, etc. Perhaps the S fMmma w Si 0d Japan would don't have book is most valuable because of el ed on Y 1 one sth Red Chartreuse Beige Shou te the myths it destroys. ini ey “No. Thus, ‘petty thievery, va- Sr hee four, I McMahon. grancy, disorderly conduct, and cal or is the text of Ta. ] tain place } various .minor offenses are the sails. book : : Rk and don’t transgressions of the drug -ad-’ . ; : ances there / dict.” “Addicts are incapable of o He aan, a remarkable job her sugges { making serious crime a profes- ON¢® #84 I; . . slon.” = “Professional criminals] S | P d Pp F «A BOAT hid = NS — mV ee have no use for the drug addict.” | S son Life Oo I on erosa ine urni ure vacationing “The average marijuana user] A passengers is not a hardened criminal. big family, HE'S HERE—If. you get a kick out of PEANUTS in The Sunday Is usually friendly and sociable Promotes Two : So far, Times comics, you'll be happy to learn the strip is now out in book rather than aggressive oh belt simple, bu f Charles W. Schulz is. the creator and. of course, Charlie JIEerent. A‘direct relationship he, pher, who orm. arle + Schulz is e r + © £ urse, ; a tween crimes of violence and ’ 18 Brown and Patty are hero and heroine. The publisher is Rinehart marijuana smoking has never : = fa: and the price is $1, been proven.” ie: . . o i em Carefully sanded . . . kiln dried , cautions tc | dove-tailed drawer construction. $ wort be | § Good quality, completely as- unless you | 8 sembled, smartly styled, one. ™ sturdily made to last A HAT 1 vy for years. A : Don't go wr | x wide selec- fete as A IN VALUE | Mr. Miller Mr. Main Vion of robe. Dres | The appointment of two Indian- + : hi ye a ) ; , : apolis men to home office posi- martching 8 ) : Finest m Quality tions has been announced by E. pieces. nites ~ Fi v BA Kirk McKinney, president of the your mind . Jefferson National Life Insurance ; st in Fas on Co. of “Indianapolis. Robert E. You. Tavs Main was promoted to agency di- ie dot ca ‘rector and Burl W. Miller was ap'pointed his assistant. LOWEST TERMS OR py eyes. you S IVTERED | Mr, Main joined the Jefferson CHARGE ACCOUNT Ga not aot. He 24 National organization as field > my tions” ~~ service director in 1948. In July, ‘ $i, vations: NFL 1951, he was promoted to assist- ii) I ant agency director and head of ed : ; ALL TF the field training and sales pro: vig 1a / tioned on sR a Ty ‘motion division. He was formerly ie 23 ; 9 Fecomen. ‘a special agent with the com- Hi : 12 J wy a rete! 3 pany's Indianapolis office. | Ea 43 ts -— bet. graduate or “Butter Univer fi—- ps een NY ko aR ibn eM x hep id .well-Knowr on. sity, where he majored in life in- via we Tevelers » EASY TERMS surance and served as vice presi- BOOKCASE HEADBOARDS: — Hf HL jem Little x 4 . dent of the Insurance Society. Mr. Twin size, 40%2x9, 36” high 14.85 a3 31s 3 He Only one diamond in hundreds meets (Main is a veteran of World War Full si "s51.20 "95" hidhes oes 19.85 "y ‘ad $00 4 Keepsake's exacting standards of quality. Evéry 1 an JL a0 oles in the U. S. ull size, 332x9, gh. ceee 19, vey! Keepsake ceater diamond is a PERFECT gem, . | Before his appointment last 4.DRAWER CHESTS: — siasie wor guaranteed in writing by the famous Keepsake {month, Mr. Miller had been regis- 25x14%4x36" high ....ce.0vv..s 19.85 BOOKCASES: — Se Certificate, See our Keepsake collection today, ar $i Fain Colese tn India| s2ct4rsnde bah II 280 age gh fos A adh i v «rk 4 " : ‘ Sesser ul y perience. in life, accident and |! 40'2x1612x36" high ........... 32.50 30x915x36" + high So : 14.85 whistles M heath insience sales and ater DOUBLE DRESSER BASE, 8 drovers, 19x19” cofner case =. ...... jess foundly st 3 Ra $125 300 00 Ni 10° years, and \ s with the Vet- 4812x16'2x36" high 47.50 45x92x36" high—open or with door. . 19.85 | hier faray ct ratio : ; . Vo! * se Wedding Ring 75.00 r grans Administration for two VANITY-DESK, 44x19x29'2" high 32.50 B49 xn ih I rr 8.85 | it it's for fears : 72x igh... cere 6.85 ial ; ’ . . . . rebuff it : EASY TERMS It veteran ot World War 5 ii uy 2950 PEDESTAL DESK, “4 drawers, 31x15307.. 2150 do at hon { AN 72x 1G «24.4» sees A . ; i jan army reserve unit. He wad DRE " wid . RECORD CABINET: NIGHT- STAND, AND TH ; ‘graduated from- Ripon College | SSING TABLE, 36” wide...... 7.85 16214527" high ..........:.... 8.8 > his ia s and holds a masters degree ‘in 4. BL 3-DRAWER COM yn + : £ . tary « we |education from Northwestern = DRAWER VANITY TA E 24.50 2 ov MODE, Yoxizxera? is . 128 y. ear. rs W (University, - " i your uggs ~ : y : : rods : - . » f
