Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1945 — Page 15
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Correspondent J ONDON, Dec. 12, — Princess Elizabeth, very] swishy in a scarlet evening gown, wiggled a mean rhumba around a Mayfair nightclub dance floor until early this morning while the king|
The 19-year-old : chestnut-haired princess ‘who some day will rule
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DNESDAY, DECEMBER
ELIZABETH FROLICS AT NIGHT CLUB, KING AND QUEEN WAIT UP—
12,1945
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Princess
SHE ATE creamed chicken and sipped red wine. With her dessert she took*an orange squash. Capt. Cecil and Miss Quinn will be married at Westminster Abbey
| next Tuesday.
The band was playing the tango “Jealousy” when the princess first took the floor with her escort. But it was the rhumba she preferred and, despite her always dignified reserve and kid-gloved handling by
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Britain was seeing the town without parental supervision—her sec ond outing in. two weeks.
"| sports a cabaret. It was the same spot which the princess visited a little more than a week ago. Her
« « » The wreath just won't do.
praises of our new yon crepes, rayon combinations and ations. Sizes for
, the
script the dog's name was Marchbanks. But Mr. and Mrs. John Welch, owners of the dog, thought Blondie would act more alive and intelligent if her own name was used. So the script was changed to suit Blondie.
13 Jinwed Visitor MONDAY WAS an unlucky day for an out-of-town visitor to Indianapolis. Police Sgt. Oral McClain and Patrolman Dennis Mackey arrested the man on a
vagrancy charge when they said they saw him mooching from soldiers in the vicinity of Delaware and Washington sts. Personal property that the police took from him after his arrest included 13 pennies, 13 nickels and 13 dimes. , . . It seems that the everpresent Kilroy is even getting a little tiresome for some of the high schoolers, On an"E. Michigan streetcar seat a teen-ager had written: “I was here. Kilroy couldn't make it.” . . . The women workers at the Union Station servicemen’s canteen may turn painters any day now, At least they have one of the tools needed. M. Sgt. Richard Wilson of Indianapolis stopped in the canteen the other-day and gave each
volunteer worker on duty a Japanese paint brush.|.
He has several interesting souvenirs from. Japan. One-of them is a black wood carving which was the Japanese conception of a lion. - It was taken from a Shinto temple in Hure, Japan, a naval base. . . . Mrs, Richard T. James, wife of the state's lieutenant governor, says there's just one thing that her husband forgot to take ‘with him on his trip to London. And that was his raincoat. Lt. Gov. James is in London to see if he can get the United Nations Organization headquarters set up in Indiana. Of all places to be without a raincoat, it’s London, :
Her “date” was a mustachioed, bespectacled and blond youth named Charles Villiers, who served as a captain in the elite grenadier| § guards. A few hours earlier the king had decorated Villiers—pronounced Villers—with the military cross for valor. #
a » THE HERO guided the princess
piece of rare china. - Mr. Villiers had called at Buck-
cers, the princess’ lady in waiting and a girl friend were in which pushed its way crowded night spot in mid-evening.
s = =» ELIZABETH, wearing a long-
table was reserved in the name f John Wills,” apparently a pseudonym specially invented for the
*% | princess’ night-clubbing.
. . » A HAWK-EYED house detective watched the royal table to make certain that no photographers intruded on the princess’ privacy. Her scarlet evening gown was adorned with one white camellia and a double row of pearls. She had little makeup, only & touch of lipand no nail polish, of dancing Is
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sleeved scarlet gown with sequins, heard a Russian woman ( singer chant a. ditty that “Englishmen never make love by day.” At 12:45 a. m., when dancing ended, she stood rigidly with 500 of
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'Round the U. S.
MOUND BAYOU, Miss, Dec. 12.-Maybe somewhere else in the world people are ‘worried by such -war phenomena as labor unrest, living costs, the morals of youth a :
By Robert J. Casey
help ‘them adapt themselves to our no-doubt strange civilization? : : But that's somewhere else. X : “I've heard .a lot of talk about what other places the most thriving are doing to absorb the army,” said Mayor B. A.|King , has no more post- Green, who has been running the town since shortly ' after his graduation from Harvard law school. “But I haven't found out yet what it's all about. “It never occurred to me that we were going to have anything to worry about when V-J day came along. I always figured that a G. I. was just a good American boy in a soldier suit, “I'd have bet he'd be glad to be finished with It anc get back to the kind of life he lived before. the way it turned out. Three hun-
A recent photo of Princess Elizabeth,
OTHER revelers, stretching tradi- flowers on her table tional British reserve to its utmost, stolidly refused to make a stir about the “VIPS"—very important per sons, in the king's English, Nobody tried ‘to get an autograph. Elizabeth huddled among the dancers on the crowded floor withRoyce (out getting an extra inch of hiplimousine and sped back through |space from anybody. A red, white Green park to Buckingham palace. and blue ribbon and bouquet of' Gibbs opposite.
Now It’s a Jelly Bean Crisis— Taint F . | By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN “AND I could not get steel potato, salvador dali painting) in the dishUnited Press Staff Correspondent peelers at any price,” Barhydt said. “THERE WAS no more fuss about it than if they'd WASHINGTON, Dec. 12Now we've got the Truman administra-|“1 had to take this plastic ‘potato just run up to Memphis for the week-end. tion and the U. 8 senate worrying about the jelly bean crisis. 'Taint| peeler, which I have got to sell at “They're healthier, They're a little tougher : ; “125 cents. This would not be so bad, “just came home, took off their uniforms back to
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ick MacLeod, Miss Mollie Wyndham | Her parents are sald to feel that Quinn and her flance, Capt. Robert |the princess should be allowed Cecil, son of Lord Cranborne, The princess sat at a table be-
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BEVERLY HILLS, Cal, Dec. 12 (U. P.)~Oldtime auto racer Barney Oldfield, 67, “whose third wife announced he had divorced her after a “hectic” 20-year-marriage, said today he will rewed Mrs. Bessie Oldfield, who divorced him 31 Oldfield sald he and his reintended would take out their second marriage license today and would remarry “within a few days.” “We were always successful toAan gether, financially and every other ) way.” Oldfield said. orn . .The ‘CAA also publishes its own departmental steel potato peeler for 10| His third wife, Mrs. Hulda Rae . magazine telling the public what a swell job the : Then came OPA again, Braden Oldfield, revealed yesterday CAA is doing : : “Aha.” said Senator Wherry. © [that he divorced her Dec. 4 at Las
‘According to the atest Tews; 0 per cent of our t : {THE DOCTOR SAYS: Visual Corrections Depend on Ailment .
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Copyright, 1045, by Indi is Times TEN the Chicago. Daily News, Ine.
By Maj. Al Williams
Meanwhile the press agents and spokesmen of both organizations are running wide open, holding confer. ences, predicting the future and “promoting” avia-| tion into stagnation. :
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portation of returning G. L's. That's fine. The G. 1's are entitled to be returned to their homes as quickly as possible. . : But before the 70 per cent freeze order, airline reservations had to be made days, and sometimes weeks, ahead. There are only 433 airliners in the
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possession of our domestic airlines, and many of still are undergoing conversion from military
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. CLEAR vision is essential for suc-
»| cess in many occupations. Failure
in elderly people. As cataracts everitually mature, treatment is deferred until they are ripe. If the
THat's only 74 more than we had back in 1939. ~ Nation Just Waits : ‘THE AMERICAN public wants to buy private airplanes and can't get them. The American public is clamoring to travel by ajr-and can’t get accommodations. On top of the public now is restricted to 30 per cent of the available accommodations. There are thousands of army and navy transport
lens of the eye is removed for cataract, a spectacle lens is placed in front of the eye to take its place. «| If one eyeball is- farsighted and the other is nearly normal, it may be difficult to make the eyes focus together. As clear vision can be ob- n ) tained from one eye, an unmatched it moves back
pair will result In squint or cross-|are usually needed. aircraft stacked up in air parks all over the country. a : ni batches there are five and six ‘thousand BILL MAULDIN Thousands more are being destroyed dilly and ] NN V7] sold for junk. There are thousands of pilots and me- . <3
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viation. ; * « There are millions of pounds of air freight waiting tn trae by The future of American air transportation is not even sketched until we get thousands and thousands
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