Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 September 1944 — Page 10
| MY “PATC: TEST” PROVES YOU CAN HAVE A SMOOTHER
LOVELIER SKIN — Zone”
by Lad) Ct
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i Does the 4 Things |
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. Then look in your mirror—and
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Returning Neforar Found: -
Quick in Readijusting Selves!
Times Special WASHINGTON, Sept. 14—From various sharply. angled civilian | conjeghures about the returning |servicemen, one would be tempted {to believe that the country will be {overrun after the war with a col{lection of kill-crazy characters who {would bash in a mother-in-law’s ‘head at the slightest provacation. | The returned serviceman- is picturéd as a moody, jittery, embit- | tered, coarsened man, unable to ad{just himself to the humdrum of (making a living. If he has been (long away in foreign lands, he is | sometimes seen by worried wives-as la fancy philanderer who never will be able to sink into housebroken { domesticity. There will be men who, cal|loused by killing, will reach for a {gun reflexively. There will be alco- | holics, shattered-nerve cases, loafers, | bums, drifters, thieves, ne'er-do- | wells. There will be men who never lagain will be able to settle into | monogamous domesticity. Lads who | never said “darn” will interlard {their talk with rugged Anglo-Saxon- | isms, and mild kids who never {tussled in school will knock the |ears off the first guy to rile them. But these men will be a minority | group, possibly no larger than a {similar group under peactime conditions.
Many Cases Observed
One naval transport officer who has been bringing men back from {overseas for some time now has had {a liberal chance to observe their |reactions. He says no man is quite the same when he comes back. {There is the usual quota of dis- | ciplinary cases, mental cases, combat fatigue cases. Some men are greatly embittered. But by and large; the guy you sent out is going to be pretty much the same boy you remember, after he’s had a chance to adjust himself. American youngsters, according ito this officer, have a great talent {for regarding even their most fantastic experience as a rather bizarre dream. It does not stick with them. “I have talked to kids just after they'd finished killing Japs,” the officer said, “and they were totally unable to attach any significance to it. It was something apart from reality—some peculiar game they were playing. Reality, for them, was baseball and hot dogs and {football games and pretty girls.
Sweating Out Period
“Dirt and lice and blood and Japs yelling ‘American, you die!’ was a {sort of strange interlude , , . a |period to be sweated out until that {nebulous day when everybody could get up and go home, | “No matter what the refrigerator land motor company advertisements say Americans are fighting for— everything from blueberry pie to {the right ‘to root for the Brooklyn Dodgers—that's a lot of hooey. | American kids are fighting because they were pulled into or jumped ‘into the army, taught discipline, and are obeying it by killing other { people. “They are fighting because (1) they don’t want to die, (2) they are hopped up with battle hysteria, (3)
| | | | i
REMINDER TO GROCERS Paper is scorce| You can help by saving ofl empty shipping containers for reuse by suppliers who salvage empties” : or turn them in for ‘waste paper.
they don't like it where they are and want to get the hell out of there and go home as quickly as possible. They do not spend all their time reviling Hitler and Hirohito, declaiming -democracy, and pitying themselves gs a potential lost generation. Strange Thing Happens
“A strange thing happens to a returned veteran when he first hits the American beach. For a while he is nervous, feels uncouth, hampered and strange. He will rage at restrictions and inconveniences, fume at civilians, and for a little while he will feel like a hero. “He will curse louder and dirtier, and chances are he will drink more heavily and get drunk ‘more .raucously. Maybe he will brag some, and he will undoubtedly embroider his experiences. “But one mcrning he wakes, up, and feels as if he never went away. He is bored with telling of his experiences, tired of being feted, a little sick of whisky and high-lifing. All he wants to do is settle down to the kind of job he had before. “Guadalcanal or Salerno or Ta=rawa become dim, almost 'nonexistent in his mind. He finds it hard to believe that he, ex-Pvt,| John Smith, has even been away from S. Dakota. Japs are some-| thing played by Chinese actors in| war films, and all Germans are! Erich von Stroheim once more. He| is-bored with the whole business: “That's been my. experience with the veterans, As far as I can see, our biggest post-war problem will be in controlling the 10 million bores who will all want to tell their favorite war experiences, until their] poor wives and kids feel like taking a stick of stove-wood to the old man. American Legion conventions’ will break up a lot more furniture than the occasional soldier with a
at least that’s my idea.”
bad mental wartime hangover, Or|
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TASTES JUST LIKE
HOMEMADE
REAL DELICIOUS FLAVOR, SEASONED SO SUBTLY! JUST THE RIGHT AMOUNT OF TENDER EGC NOODLES, TOO/
MADE BY THE MAKERS OF CH
“FURNACE” MONTHS ARE JUST AHEAD
TU youn bin To
” \ ] Taste the Difference in Ory Soup thats EXTRA-RICH!
ONDERFULLY rich flavor, plus exactly the right =
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Va a" 2 2% 22%"
Vd
TASTE STOX/
COMPARE IT WITH ANY OTHER BRAND. THEN SEE HOW MUCH EXTRA-RICH REALLY MEANS.STOXIS COMPLETE. NEEDS NO BUTTER, JUST ADD WATER
4 GRAND
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