Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1946 — Page 11

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RUM IN ll Inside Indianapolis Dry Land Sailor|

‘Nl ' REMINISCENT of some of those old Keystone. ER: cop comedies was an episode in the Marion county's . . 1 sheriff's office Friday... . A jail matron, conducting I. ; \ a grade school class through the building, came to . . the police radio desk. .. . She asked the dispatcher covery. Tried ! to send out a call to demonstrate this remarkable

facility. . . . Obligingly, the dispatcher intoned, “Call8 Thus Far. 3 ing Car 80, Calling Car 80-—Call your office please.” Special 3 + + « With that, the driver of Car 80 standing within ch 11.—Discovery gf hearing distance of the dispatcher, blustered: “Here kills cancer cells 3 I am ...My car's parked outside.” ..., The kids as rgvealed here got a bang out of it. . . . Several of them frowned at sity of ‘Minnesota misspelling in a sign above the sheriff's gun rack

which read: “Unload shotguns and rifles before placeing in rack.” ... The city police emergency the medical pro- squad has a new set of 4'rubber panties.” . . , They're cure for one of waterproof overalls for use in drowning and flood killers, was Yo. qo crises. . . . City police property room custodians are by Dr. Robert G. d either Sour-humored or starchy these days... . One f bacteriology and | squad car recently confiscated a crate of grapefruit ¥ and a crate of potatoes from the intersection of Wade and Boyd, where they'd fallen from a truck. +++ Beard-growing competition for Butler university's

a step in an age-

on his way to At. --he--will narrate # ceting€ next week § Society of Imhe American As- | cer Research. in that while the y established that in mice is a virus cation of the re cancer is a long Ars was his most § e. »

E THEME | TE SESSION

,, March 11 (U. | y leaders from an , region will meet iesday and Thursextensive ‘‘growto meet critical 1eeds. gional director of y administration, peting will set up vhich small farms, veterans, can induction to feed foreign countries ans. e program “the ssignment handed all-out food proered after Pearl

ounced that Dilnational FSA ad1 meet with the sentatives of the 3 help from the t.

—————————

Ensign Ray Suttles . . . He'd like to see the sea.

Ping P WASHINGTON, March 11.—If there's a shortage of ping pong balls in the United States this summer, blame it on the atom bomb. Chances are they've been shipped to Bikini atoll where army air force B-29s are to drop an atomic bomb on 28 American, Japanese and German Wwarships May 15. Ping pong balls—200 dozen of them as a starter ~—are one of many items which fret Brig. Gen. David # Blakelock, logistics chief for the expegiment. As housekeeper for the 35,000 Americans who plan to spend most of the summer in the Marshall islands working on the atom bomb trial, he wants to keep folks reasonably happy. The general has ordered volleyball and softball equipment, but Bikini isn’t big and centerfield may

pe ' ; be under water when the tide's in. But ping pong, ”

he reasons, doesn't take much room.

40,000 Cases of Beer FOR THE Bikini Enlisted Men's club, Gen. Blakelock has ordered 40,000 cases of beer as the initial stock. Orders for the club include eight cash registers,

Aviation

p ' NEW YORK, March 11.--Great Britain's part in % the rdce for air supremacy is well underway with more than 30 civil aircraft now in production or under development. Some of these will compete directly. with similar types of America aircraft, but on the basis of speed alone, will fall far short of what America has now or coming up. While the United States is bending its efforts to develop even faster commercial aircraft powered with

nee jet propulsion, British factories report no jetpropelled civil aircraft as yet. dP First on the British list is the eight-engined, 80passenger Brabazon I, which will be among the 3 7 largest landplanes in the world when test flown in the

spring of 1947. This huge plane, manufactured by The Bristol Aeroplane Co. Ltd; is being built for the London-

New York trans-Atlantic service and probably will 3 start competing with the fast Constellations of the 2 American Overseas Airways, TWA and -Pan Amerii can Airways sometime in the late summer of 1947. Slower Than Constellation B } THE BRABAZON I is a 250,000 pound (110 ton) he plane. It's cruising speed, however, is given as 250 RN miles per hour, as against the Constellation cruising Ny, * speed of over 300 miles per hour. It will carry two Ny, tons of mall in addition to the 80 passengers and AY crew. It has a span of 230 feet and length of 177

%, feet, making it larger than the XB;19A which was hp used throughout the latter part of the war by army air forces as an experimental ship. : Its engines are of Bristol Centaurus air-cooled radial type of 2500 horsepower each. Thus the huge plane will be propelled by 20,000 horsepower. Because of the tremendous size of the plane, its retractable landing gear comprises one three-wheel “leg” under each wing, a third under the center section and a dual nose wheel. Nine four-engined commercial planes are on the list. Among them is the Handley Page Bristol Her-

My Day

NEW YORK (Sunday). —The food situation in Europe presents a somewhat varied picture. Denmark is one country which is well off today, as far as food is concerned, and which can export food to other countries, Sweden is also probably fairly well off. Belgium did not suffer as much destruction and is coming back fast, as is Czechoslovakia for the same reason. In the other countries of Europe, including Russia, the people's diet. is very low, I have just, received a very comprehensive statement on the situation in Great Britain. I think it will be enlightening to all-of us, since Great Britain, in spite of war restrictions, has been able to help others. For instance, she takes several hundred Dutch children every month and keeps them for a three-month period, sending them back in much better health and with a, complete new outfit of clothing! One story about these children will illustrate the kind of thing which it is so hard for us here to realize, ‘The woman in_charge of outfitting the chil- , i da dren was surprised to find that they took shoes two sizes bigger than would be normal for the size of théir. clothes. . Their shoes also wore out -twice as fast as shoes worn by British children,

Children’s Feet Without Bones

SHE BROUGHT an orthopaedic surgeon and an . X-ray machine to the camp and found what two . oy previous health examinations has not disclosed— namely, that the children's feet were without bones, containing just gristle. Their feet therefore spread and dragged as they walked. This in turn made them shuffle along and wear their shoes out. Given sick wil extra calcium and better food, the ‘bone deficiency wpe Ee was largely remedied before the children's return to Ete Holland, le ¥

. Well I can’t thank you enough. You don't know

“4 : | : 5 cag a) hiss a

v3 : r " - ; :

junior prom will get under way soon. . . , The stu=

he Indianapolis

dent with the longest beaver by March 30 gets a free ticket. : Sg

Heel and Toe Enthusiast

INDIANAPOLIS’ g : ; 1 eR J is repering to emend pracuicaty aii summer afoot. 31 URDY LANDMARKS OF HOOSIER «++ When Sam isn't racing around his delicatessen * : on" N. Meridian st, he'll be hoofing it around the

ciation and while there will wander around in circles and tangents for an average of 25 miles a day. ... The hikers,” who will stay at a hotel together, start out early in the morning and never stop picking ‘em up and putting 'em_ down till sunset. . . . They even eat on the run. ... Later, around July 4, Sam will take a 400-mile cross-country hike with another group, probably over the highways of New York state. | . .. Sam is one of the few restaurateurs in town who always keep rattlesnake meat on the menu. .., Talk of looking for a -needle in a haystack. ,... Mourene Skelton—¢cousin-of -Hoosler Red Skelton) lost-a-small | white button between Ohio-and Illinois sts.’and The Times building and then launched a sidewalk hunting expedition trying to recover it. ... March 22 is| the date of Scout Troop 50's colossal all-time reunion, | ... State Scout leaders and every alumnus of the South side troop, including many ex-servicemen, have | been invited to the jamboree at the Columbia club.

Longs for Salt Water ENSIGN Raymond Suttles of 245 E. Minnesota st., is all at sea because he hasn't been at sea since | joining the navy four and a half years ago.... Nearest. he's been to a WAVE was when he bumped | into one at the University of Southern California | where he acquired a degree in naval science. . .. “My only experience with salt water,” says Ensign Suttles, was aboard a nickle ferry between San Diego | and North Island.” ... After receiving boot training | at Great Lakes, he was assigned to the naval proving | grounds at Dahlgren, Va., thence. to the San Diego! naval air station, Occidental college and U. 8. C,, in| not too rapid succession. ... He knows just about | By WILLIAM EGGERT [ The “half” bridge is that single everything about the sea but how not to get seasick, yNDIANA'S COVERED bridges may [Span construction that. reaches but. now he's headed for the Newport, R. I., officers’ | sag and tremble buf their serv. {across the Indiana-Ohio boundary indoctrination school and—he hopes—salt water. . ..!jces have not been forgotten. {at West College "Corner in Union Bob Baker, ex-soldier, now a civilian clerk at Camp | : { county. Atterbury, is the proud papa of a bab irl, Sandr . Elizabeth, born bi Ein Wie Pop. 0 ae placed afi» main highways by mod- | oe. tring, England. . . . He was a political writer for The ern, Sturdy sree] aru) concrete strue-| AT ONE time Indiana had hunTimes in the early thirties. ... The Times now has a Yures, these, nos lgie langmarks-- dreds of these bridges. The firs} “volunteer” correspondent in Belfast, Ireland. ... He's and Indiana hes 193% of them-— | were built in 1831, one of which Paddy McMeehan and he writes: “I see by some let- are being preserved hecause the was the ‘Washington st. bridge built

. : . 3 : Covered Timber Bridge committee ters I've received you printed an article in your b 3 } ndinns storical So v by William Wernweg and Walter papers about my wanting pen pals from ypur city. of the Indiana Historical Society 3

‘has stimulated thie desires of thou- Blake at a cost of $18,000. what it means to me. If you ever want anything Sands of Hoosiers to keep them| It was a vital part of the national from North Ireland write me and Tl do my best | [FOm becoming just a heritage of road from Cumberland, Md, to St.

: - v re : country with various hiking associations of which |” ‘AF : ». 9 . Nb ou he's a member. . . . On June 21, he goes to Welles- : > ; , ) Are Watching borough, Pa. with the International Walkers’ asso- ~ { ’ es oil : ins 5

When the “Ellers Bridge” was built in 1869 it cost $11,802. It still stands over White river, two and one-half mlies west of Fishers in Hamilton county. It was named after Joseph Eller, the original owner of the land grant.

! And although they have been re-

SECOND SECTION MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1946 . | "PAGEBM

PIONEER DAYS—

Spanning the west fork of Whit

ville, is “Potter's Bridge,” built about 1840 and rebuilt in 1938 at the |. ihe soft coal producers overexpense of Hamilton county when farmers protested the state's planned |, 4 wed federal steps to end the

abandonment. The bridge stands

| A covered bridge still in use near Indianapolis is “Potter's bridge,” two miles north of Noblesville near Road 13, It was built in 1840 and | rebuilt in 1038 at the expense of | Hamilton county when farmers protested vigorously the state's plan {to raze it. °

n ou » | ‘ The knctty stays and supports {for these wooden spans are more {than a half-century old. Most of {them were built by Joseph J. |Danieis of Rockville, who erected {60 between 1851 and 1905. In|

| i southern Indiana a family = of

to get it or anything else you think I could do for the past. | Louis, and withstood traffic, such as |bridge-building Kennedys erected you,” Call it obstinate resistance, if you |it was, for 50 years. Most of this | many from 1870 until 1918. | ‘ike, or just fidelity to pioneer [time it was the only means of cross-| It's the hope of the covered {blood, but covered bridges will re- ing White river. It was razed in bridge. coiamittee to keep abreast

By Jim G. Lucas mein a pars.ol Indiana. {1902.

200,000 paper plates; 200,000 wooden spoons; four | Chosen Head of typewriters; 2 steel safes, and 24 icepicks. . i

Gen. Blakelock figures a week's meny will run: | WwW 231,000 lbs. fresh meat: 518,000 lbs. fresh vegetables; J omen at Butler 154,000 lbs. flour; 224,000 lbs. fresh fruit; 24,500 lbs. | MISS MARTH | A BALES, - coffee; 52600 quarts of milk; 21,000 lbs. butter; 24,500 BALES, quis:

dozen eggs; 77,000 lbs. sugar; 490,000 candy bars, and a ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bales 210,000 packages of cigarets. : ’ of Winchester, has been elected He'll ‘install 10 distilling units capable of making War Was Surprise, Asserts president of the Association of 83 gallons of fresh water hourly from seawater. | Women Stu- ; | Nuernberg Defendant. Seabees on the Way | g Serie 8) hve “ TWO CARGO ships—the Polette and the Ottawa | By HELEN KIRKPATRICK Miss Bales, ‘a —sailed from San Francisco recently wit = Times Foreign Correspondent btu : bees under Cmdr. K. C. Todt 8 wh Colon NUERNBERG, Germany, March | Sum formerly on Bikini by 500 Seabees from Guam and 200 from | 11—The war came as a surprise serve) us I>

Pear] Harbor. They. will begin the erection of 11 to all the Naz leaders on trial) Fam shalrie T5-foot steel towers for scientific equipment here, according to Field Marshal} Of the organise

. i tion and is a Two troop transports, the Henrico and the Bay- Gen. E. M. Erhard Milch, chief of |

field, will sail March 20 with moorings for target NC German air forces, Hep? of We ships, which will begin to arrive in April. | Under tne penetrating Cross ex- Okurian Hie The four ships will remain at Bikini to “rescue” amination of Justice Robert H.| Crary society,

i , skeleton crews off {he target ships just before the | Jackson, Milch—one of Germany's | Chimes Ruy Miss Bales bomb drops. {early convert to naziism—testified| Spurs, class >

[that Germany was not prepared honorary; the Y. W.C A. chapter for war in 1639, at Butler, and Kappa Kappa

ranking military leaders and an | Gamma sorority. By Max B. Cook | Talking like a chapter out of | Other new officers of the or-

[Joseph Goebbels’ “book, Milch| ganization are Miss Betty Keough,

cules 100. It carries 34 passengers and has a gross painted Hermann Goering and | Indianapolis, vice president; Miss |

weight of 75,000 pounds. It cruises at 194 to 281 miles himself as simple men, interested | Marianne Bushmann, Indianapoper hour, with a top overall speed of 337. It is a long only in civil aviation, | lis, secretary, and Miss Joy Mudd, range freight and passenger transport. i Says He Foresaw Defeat Indianapolis, treasurer. All Another is the 60 passenger Tudor II of A. V, Roe Only the British and Russians women students.at the university & Co..Ltd, with a gross weight of 76,000 pounds, had military air forces when the | hold membership in the group. powered by four Rolls-Royce 90, 12 cylinder liquid-|W%ar started. None of them knew | er————————— cooled in-line Vee engines of 1610 horsepower. Cruis- ‘hat war was impending. Milch| ing speed is from 219 to 275 miles per hour and it has 0imself told Hitler that am attack MANUAL T0 SELECT an overall top speed of 310 miles per hour. {on Russia would lead to Germany's |

|defeat, he said, but 'Goering did ¥ : y that Low In Passenger Capacity not dare speak out to the fuehrer. FIVE TRACK QUEENS oo: wartime authority have

| Milch represents himself as .the

{of other states. New England states

ON MONON PLEA

|Railroad Asks Discontinuance of 6 State Trains.

day opened a series of hearings on the Monon railroad’s petition for {permanent discontinuance of six passenger trains in Indiana. Today's hearing was limited to

|

Other hearings on the questions jwill be held later at Paoli. Rensse|laer, Hammond and Indianapolis. The petition of the railroad involves two night trains between Chi{cago and Indianapolis, two others {between Chicago and Louisville, and

{a spur line from Orleans to French. (Lick. All three runs involve a train |daily in each diredtion and were {discontinued in December, 1944 on lorders of the office of defense trans- | portation. On December 11 the P. 8. C. {cited ‘the railroad to show cause | why the six trains should not be | restored to service now the ex-

THE 24 PASSENGER Tudor I with four Rolls- man who ‘told Hitler unpleasant| The highlight of coming events| Claiming that a trial in Novem-

Royce Merlin 100 engines and a cruising pseed of 242]{rths, including the British dis-|at Manual Training high schoo to 300 miles per hour, approaches, in specifications, |jike for Col. Joachim Von Ribbensome of the four-engined planes now under manu- trop. facture in the United States, although its- passenger| But the unpleasant truths of the carrying capacity is far below theirs. |

track queens on March 22.

Nazi regime: were not known to| Alternate queens will present

| will be the election of the five!

| ber, 1944, had shown the trains {operating ‘at less than 357% of ca- | pacity, the line counter-petitioned {for permission to discontinue the services permanently,

The list includes: The Handley Page Hermes, a Mijlch, nor “4 '#ii¥~of the defend- ribbons to the winners in each of One Private Citizen

long range 34 passenger plane, also for.freight trans- ants except the Gestapo and the the track team's five home engage- ) ments which begin April 5 when concern carrying 11 passengers and crew of four; the| Milch admits investigating the | the school plays host to Southport

port use; the Halifax Civil Transport from the sanie gg

Marathon M. 60 by Miles Aircraft, carrying 20 pass-|pachau concentration camp in 1935, high school.

engers; the A. V. Roe York I with 24 passengers and put found there only criminals and Candidates for the title are Rose-

crew of five; A. V. Roe's Lancastrian, 68,000 pound, | jews who had violated economic | Mary Englert, Jean Maschmeyer long range mail, freight and passenger transport, and laws. Rosalyn Hengicks, Carol Durnil two commercial flying boats, the 130,000 pound Shet-| pachau Treatment “Excellent” Short Brothers. lau and later of foreign workers in bara Kidwell, Vivian Gutzwiller . Included in 12 of the twin-engined jobs are two|Germany were excellent, he says. | Dorothy Ewbank, Agnes Andrews with speeds only approaching what is promised by| The Germans “maintain perfect Marilyn Morical, Mary Ann White the Martin 202 and 303 and other upcoming Américan [composure throughout the cross ex- Norma Jean Chaney, Rosina Hays twin<éngined planes. They are Airspeed Limited's amination until Justice Jackson |DArlene Chambers, Janet Weaver

Hazel Estle, Carol Breithaupt, Carland, and 56,000 pound Sandringham, both from! The food and treatment in Dach- |©line Breithaupt, Betty Davis, Bar-

‘ Closely tied in with the contro- | versy over the inactive runs is the Monon's recently approved reorganjzation and plans for installation of $5,500,000 worth of Diesel equipment on existing freight and passenger runs. Plans for modernizing and streamlining ‘present service would be jeopardized, company officials '| contend, by restoration of the six

‘| legedly has lost money for many | years. | -Appearances entered at today's

Ambassador, a high-wing monoplane powered: with|gets up. Then, it is evident that |EDYS Stuck, Janet Petry, Joan ,re|iminary session were those of

two Bristol Centaurus radial engines of 2500 horse-|they are uneasy and fear his rapid- Preston and Adelia Grider. power each, carrying up to 40 passengers and weigh- fire questions. ing 45,000 pounds, with cruising speed up to 285 miles| Goering's defense to date is pa- TECH NAMES LIBRARIANS

Russell P. Harker, Franklin, re-

{Glenn R, Sienker, public counsellor

per hour, and the Vickers Armstrong Viking (VCI) a thetic. Unless the reichsmarshal, New sfudent librarians at Tech for the commission, Appearances

twin-engined low-wing monoplane feeder service air-|who will appear in person tomorrow, | high school are Cecilia Brand

| were also entered by R. C. Gilbert,

liner of 34,000 pounds and cruising up to 270 miles per is unusually brilliant, his case would | Thelma Fouts, Jear Hall, Betty Joan legislative representative for the

hour.

{seem to be hopeless. | Hall, Patsy Hanlon, Barbara Hiott, | Brotherhood: of Railroad Trainmen,

| Copyright. 1946, by The -Indianapelis Times! Lois Horning, Lela -Lepley, Peggy and representatives of the firemen, |

| and The Chicago Daily News, Inc. 2 | Rathert, Delores Reid, Norma Rice,

fe By Eleanor Roosevelt | Olga. Robas, Elizabeth Ann Stal

Now, what do British food" restrictions mean? |

Here is what in February one adult person received | school.

engineers and conductors brother1 hoods.

and Rosemary Strauser. Miss Louise | Only private citizens to enter the Cook, president of the organization, | Mann * is head lbrarian at the|ecase so far was R. ‘C. Jenkins, will appoint committees to be ap-~

|Orleans.

HEARINGS OPEN Moore Again In | mm onseins et

The public service commission to-|

the filing of appearances and the commission set March 28 for the] {first hearing of evidence. The March | {28 hearing will be held at Bedford. |

'| trains .on which the company al-|

gional counsel for Monon, and |

———e|_abor Other Unions

wr

|<U. M.W. Parley

- By RAYMOND LAHR . WASHINGTON, March 11 (U. P.).—The wage policy committee of [the United Mine Workers (A. F. of L.) assembled here today to frame new soft coal contract . demands which may affect the whole pattern |of future industry-labor relations. Government sources sald that if the U. M. W. strikes three weeks . |hence to support its demands, the | walkout would bring the limping "| reconversion industrial machine to la virtual standstill in two weeks, with effects as damaging as the recent steel shutdown. | Contract negotiations between the |U., M. W. and the bituminous in- | dustry begin here tomorrow. The major U. M. W, demands were said to include a 10 cents a ton royalty, | higher wage rates, shorter work week and bargaining rights for supervisory employees. ! # » »

Fe"

ARERR}

ITE TEE TT | THE IMMINENT clash between e River, one mile north of Nobles- |, ow president John L. Lewis

near Road 13. '111-day-old General Motors strike. 'ecretary of Labor Lewis B, Schwel|lenbach 1s expected to decide today | whether he will call the parties here |in a fresh attempt to work out a | settiemet, !

plan .to preserve their bridges, puilt ‘during early American settlement days. Oregon has an estimated 300 covered bridges and tie abuncant supply of timber makes it feasible for the state to continue building taem ” n n Of Indiana's bridges, one ‘is an aqueduct, two are on private prop-

} W. demands of greatest interest to industry generally are |those for a royalty and unionization of supervisory employees, The bargaining on these issues also will erty. two are preserved as relics, one | Pe watched closely by members o is in use in a public park, one is CONRIess interested in the enacts state institutional property, two are; EOL of strong anti-strike legison highways within state park areas | lation. and the remaining 185 are in use on| Leaders of other industries gave

oads sts a | coal operators strong support a public roads and state highways. | in fighting the royalty

Parke county with 41 embraces|Year 880 the largest number of covered demand, which wea beg seo. bridges. Other ranking counties are | 000,000 yearly into he Uy, 1 Putnam, 24; Rush, 12, and Frank. | ireasury on the basis of curren lin, 11, annual coal production of 600,000,000 - [tons

= » » THE OPERATORS objected be-

1 {voice in. the administration of the Primary Race fund which Mr. Lewis asked for RALPH F. MOORE, Marion | hosiptalization, accident and illness county auditor, today announced [compensation and welfare, | his candidacy for ‘re-election, | The U. M. W. chief has fortified subject to the Republican primary. [his position this year with detailed “If 1 am nominated and re- |information on the experiences of | elected as Marion county audi- ‘union members and will press the i tor, I will serve demand in the interest of the many the public in |elderly coal miners. Informed the same efi- sources say there are 25,000 miners cient and cour- |over 66 years old. Federal figures teous manner | show the average age of miners to that has marked |be more than 45 years. the operation of | Similarly, the U. M. W. arguthe office dur-. ment for unionization of supervisory ing the time I [employes is buttressed this year by have held that |a national labor relations board depublic ‘post,” he |cision granting the U, M. W. barsaid. He is com- [gaining rights for a large group of ; sleting his first [the estimated 60,000 supervisory { __ Mr.Moore i A to workers in the coal mines. | his election as afiditor in 1942, he | a. 2 8 served on the city council for four | HERE AGAIN American industry | years. He also is 17th - ward generally has aligned itself behind | G.O.P. chairman: * He formerly |the coal producers in opposition to | operated the Ralph F. Moore [the demand. Coal Co. : | One industry source said negoMr. Moore is a member of the | tiations over these two issues would Masonic lodge, Raper commandry, (be most significant because other | the Shrine, Royal” Order of Jest- |organizations will make similar de- | ers, Inner Shrine, Columbia club, {mands if Lewis gains any important | Lincoln Mutual Benéfit associa- | concessions. | tion, Bookbinders union and the The wage conference was re- { Athenaeum. quested by Mr. Lewis under the | terms of the current contract.

{ i { | 3 t

|B

| After 15 days of negotiations, either LOCAL STUDENTS | party may terminate the contract ! 'effective five days later ‘ U: M. W. tradition is “no contract IN DEPAUW PLAY no work” and Mr. Lewis has noti-

| fied the government under the war { The departments of music and (labor disputes act that he may or- | speech of DePauw university will|der a work interruption on expira- | present Gilbert and Sullivan’s|tion of the 30-day cooling off pe- | “Pirates of Penzance” Thursday,|riod, April 2. Friday and Saturday evenings in|

the school's Little Theater. | Leading roles in the cast will be We, the Women

| alternated, with Miss Charlene ope |Clore and Miss Jo Ellen Burroughs Warns British of Indianapolis singing the fem-

‘1d inine lead and Richard Harrell, Brides to Be

| Roanoke, and William Hayes,

| Harvey, Ill, singing the leading More Tactful

male roles. Miss Clore is the daughter of a By RUTH MILLETT

'and Mrs. Lester R:. Clore, 3231 Col- 3 lege ave, and Miss Burroughs is| LOOK, you foreign war -brides:

|the daughter of Mrs, Jane Bur- I you want American women to |roughs Adams, Indianapolis voice Weicome you with open arms, be |teacher, 402 N. Meridian st. careful about the ‘way you word ce ——————— ten “your “first impressions.” | PLAN MUSICAL SHOW Consider the case of the British | “The March of Music, Inc, will|bride recently photographed and in=meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at the terviewed by a New York news|Y. M. C. A. to cofnplete plans for Paper She made a couple of mistheir forthcoming musical comedy, | takes. Of American women's hats. {“Uncle Angel” The libretto of the | the more honest than tactful Brit[musical was written by Bette Dick, |isher exclaimed: “They sald in our tlocal amateur playwright, Walter R. orientation course -aboard ship that [American women are the smartest

{in the world. Then how can they

{proved by menibers, | wear, those things?”

for one week on her ration card: Bacon—3 oz.; butter | —2 oz. one week and 4 oz. the next, alternating with | similar ‘amounts of margarine; cheese—3 oz. per week; cooking fats—2 oz.; eggs (fresh)—1 per month; eggs (dried)—none since the ending of lend-lease: meat—23 cents worth per week; milk (fresh)—2 pts. per week; milk (dried)-—8 oz. per week; preserves—1 lb, per month; tea—2'% oz. (over 70 years old, 3 0z.): candy—% lb. per month; fresh fish—very inadequate supply.

Children Get Extra Food ONE PERSON alone might buy the following with the month's supply of 24 points: 12 lb. sultanas .(4|points); 1 1b, tin of sirup (8 points); 14 1b. sweet

biscuits (2 points); 1 packet cereal (2 points); 1 tin meat and vegetables (6 points),

Extra food for children: From 6 months to 2 years 0ld—3 eggs per week. From 2 to 5 years old—lucky if they get eggs. especially in a town. Unger 5 years old—1 pint of milk per day and 1 egg per week, when available, From 5 to 17 years—l pint of milk per day. : : Welfare foods—cod liver oil and orange juice are available for children under 5 for supplementary diet purposes. Adolescents in factories get cocoa. Any housewife will realize that while this Mst gives a fairly well-balanced diet, it does not provide much variety. : . I cannot say that I was ever really. hungry in| England, but I did, not find it a very interesting diet. One becomes very foofl conscious, tog, and one talks and thinks more about food though of.e enjoys it less.

By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. A PSYCHONEUROTIC is a per son who cannot, face certain diffi culties in evervany living withou

behavior at times, the diagnosis o our reactions are disabling.

Chief mental complaints of psy

sleeplessness, or feelings of guilt. Physical complaints include head

some part of the body.

choneurotics are anxiety, prffound nnd may not be noticeably queer. exhaustion, fears, indecision, worry, |'They are not cowards, They ar

sponse to some situation, but psychoneurotics develop “them with |from an organic cause.

greater intensity or with less cause. an : ; vi #8 a # : IN psychoneurotics there is alfor them to go to an adult for Besides, in no time at all toh | ABOUT half the patients who tendency-for distress to shift from |Eokceion instead of facihg he

Consult physicians are suffering one organ to the other; Yrequently

THE DOCTOR SAYS: Painis Can Have Emotional Causes is dynarhite. American women have

Psychoneurotic Distress Is Real mm es foi ws

with some form of psychoneurosis. .|1t is estimated that the majority - [of medical discharges for neuropsyt!chiatric causes from the services

developing mental and physical were for psychoneuroses. disturbances which make him ill] All of us know neurotics who Although most of us show neurotic suffer with indecision, are -afraid of |

{| failure, and find it difficult to get

neurotic illness is not made unless along with people, and yet, who

are normal in other respects, .| Psychoneurotics are not insane,

nften high strung, intelligent, ambi .Itious, restless, and conscientious

aches, stomach pains, dizzy spells, persons who occupy important | diarrhea, sweating, trembling, pal- places in the affairs of the world. pitation, vomiting, or paralysis in

Stomach distress of a psychoneurotic is just as real as the pain

Any one of these complaints may of an ulcer, except “that in the develop in a normal person in re. former it results from an emotion-| Unfortunately, as little children, A al disturbance and in’ the latter many psychoneurotics did not have| So foreign brides had better be

= » » » THAT KIND of spoken reaction

[to put up with cracks like that about their headgear from their

{ing from you. The same bride made another error in diplomacy. Said she when shown a model kitchen: “I think lis wonderful, but will 1 not beThe lengthy list of complaints of come terribly lazy with dishwashs psychoneurotics has sometimes been | and things to work fof me?” referred tu as” an “organ recital.” | After all. it's going to be hard Profound fatigue and aches and | enough for Mrs. America to sell her pains without obvious Cause, | man on the idea of buying her counting cracks in the sidewalk;| a) the latest household gadgets, touching, every. tree or post may | without having anyone put in his seem just as absurd to the psycho- mind the idea that such helps will

the ‘patient in relating his symptoms will refer to a notebook to refresh his memory.

¢ Deurolics as It does 10 normal)make his little woman lazy. ud

|persons, but psychoneurotics find . nu

‘these feelings more difficult to Plenty of men who ‘wouldn's sonal “ |dream of having anything but the | Fear may be overcome by going pest labor-saving equipment on {pack to the same situation and|their farms or in their offices and learning to meet the problem In|ghops are hard to sell on the idea the proper way. that the dishwashing for a family of six ought to be done electrically. - oroper direction, for when the go- | cautious about their comments on ling became tough it was teo easy | American’ women “and -their ways. ir | too, will be wearing silly hats problema, i, “for electric dishww

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