Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 April 1946 — Page 7

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IL 21, 1946: .

Bill Has rive |

200

oft-spoken oati- | 5 “a front-wheel a for the first time | apts to win the * jce at the Indi- I edway. i nder Mike Boyle ing groomed for | i ” Henning, mas-

say Robert 8. Smith, new presiGE, TRING wy Rett 5, swith, is & good’ mixer. One of the things he mixes best, they testify, is a mint julep.

i i if | i

fact that he himself is a mild soeial imbiber provides him with a personal motive for ‘cleaning up the local liquor trade.

“I like ‘a good drink every now and then so I

i hi

fesses. “Why, if we're not careful about these taverns, prohibition might return.” That is not to imply Mr. Smith isn't vitally cone ‘cerned with the public interest in his new post as

will be sincere, but not of the bluenose variety, An ex-baker, ex-chef, ex-soldier, Mr, Smith is an attorney with a flair for fishing, hunting and the out door life : Close acquaintances readily concede .his skill with the frying pan and rifle. But they belittle his practice of angling for trout with live worms instead of artificial flies. He and Mrs. Smith previously lived on White river above Broad Ripple, where they trained hunting

It is “just the dogs. Before the war this retreat was the scene front and keep of steak fries for friends and politicians. One of Mr, ng to Connor,

Smith's fondest habits was that of dishing up sumptuous breakfasts for pals, haggard by overnight hunt ing trips. One such breakfast a la Smith was recalled by a grateful former guest as containing the following tasty entrees: Orange juice, manhattan cocktafl, scrambled eggs, kippered herring, steak, hash brown potatoes,

The Process of Becoming a Republican MR. SMITH learned the culinary arts from his father, a baker, He came here in 1920 as pastry chef

shift from rear. | eel drive’ wilt be n the average 5 when he shifts lles, George left home early this Gasoline Alley. at the track to uild the car, Toinize each part to place and the

made in recent at the Lincoln hotel. In the late "20s he attended George will be Benjamin Harrison law school while working at Holrly. tegel's bakery at 30th and Central. Device i He deliberately decided to become a Republican device has been via this process: Checking the. statehouse files, he eo garage. It is a learned that prior to that time, Indianapolis Repubgear and wheel | licans had captured 65 per cent of all the city elec-

tions. Bob, a non-voting youth before that, joined the local G. O. P. In some respects the decision was unfortunate. Mr. Smith graduated. He embarked on a’ legalpolitical career, slanted Republican-wise. At that precise moment in history, Indianapolis went Demoocratic. For 12 long years Mr. Smith plodded along with the G. O. P.. while it remained a minority party here. In 1941 the county turned Republican. In 1942 the city flopped over into the Republican column. The big G. O. P. jackpot was rolling in," but Mr. Smith wasn't around. He was in the Army. Because he spoke Spanish he was assigned to a political intelligence unit in Panama. Later, as a military government officer, he proceeded to Europe, where he was promptly dropped into a hot spot— Bastogne,

Last Frontier

NORMAN WELLS, N. W. T,, Canada, April 27.— Here among the people of Norman Wells one feels strongly some of the spirit which slowly but certainly is opening the Canadian Northwest as one of the last frontiers on the continent. Just at the moment the settlement has suffered a setback with the end of oil production for war and the closing of the Canol project during the last year, but there is little discouragement. The relative handful of people who are making this new country have an almost religious faith in it. For 150 years, since Alexander Mackenzie sailed in an Indian war canoe to the Arctic ocean down the great river that bears his name, men have known there was oil in this vicinity. Mr. Mackenzie, in his diary, reported continual fires burning along the banks, but, with his crew on the verge of mutiny, had no time to investigate.

First Claims Staked

NOT UNTIL 1914 were the first claims staked. Not until 1920 was the first well blown in. Until 1942 there were only four producing wells and a small refinery! Men lived in tents in the summer, bat~ tling sand flies and mosquitoes and went “outside” — - they never say “south”—to Edmonton or to the Alberta fields in Turner valley from whence most of them came, for the winter. The coming of Canol in 1942 changed all that. A permanent settlement was hastily thrown up. Barracks were built for the single people who flocked to

the same tension ge and his teame ho will drive the 7, plan to start ing the dummy | ngthen wrist and iecessary for the grind. . is finished in the § 1937 and 10th in | ve times, plagued ng from a broken yurned out cone | ngs, he did not §

superstitious, Me abbit’s foot or a ly wants a good | ows he has this | r and his share 4 these he is con- | an better Floyd f 117.2 set for the |

aften | ets 1 gh school’s base- | Tech out of the |

sterday afternoon | on the East side |

Rockets managed ley capitalized on lly single runs in ourth innings. A cher Bill Kidney n Ray of Ripple | n’s flelding fea- |

k Franklin townruns in the sec- | the fifth frame to ctory over Sacred Davis hung up its h a 1-0 decision arl Stegemoller of | the Cardinals to

a —

ted the site. A row of neat homes went up for those who C eg were to bring families to this outpost. "Head A frame hotel of two stories was added. Everyone

ate in a single large mess hall. They still do. Where only ships and pontoon aircraft had landed previously, heavy cargo carriers came down on a sandy strip

seen elected presilon County Girls’ 3

, who resigned that rises behind the community, between the river ed McGee as Vice™ and the mountains. will sponsor girls’ . ial and independ- JE Scien Ce retary Harry KE, | 4 ay wi TESTS OF THE German V-2 rockets at White parks Sands, N. M,, in the next few weeks, are expected to LSS aid peacetime science as well as the arts of war, MENDE OHN While the principal concern of the war department re dd will be with the behavior and destructive possibilities niversal Mode! E, of these terrifying missiles, the tests are expected § deskly scien suute ” to yield valuable information about the physics of the upper atmosphere. The V-2 rockets, it will be “recalled, were used by $24.50 the Nazis against London. Each bomb carried a ton of explosives and traveled with a speed of 3400 miles Tow u per hour, Charlie London was first bombarded with the smaller and slower V-1 rocket and a successful defense was Sacks worked out against the V-1. This consisted in the use . 318 E. of radar to track the incoming rockets and shells Wash. S& equiped with radio proximity fuses to knock them

down.

Could Carry A-Bomb THE RADIO PROXIMITY fuse is itself a sort of first cousin to the radar. It is a miniature sending and receiving set in the nose of the shell, When the signal sent out from the shell strikes an airplane or

other target at close range, it is reflected back to the receiving set, which in turn detonates the shell. There was, however, no defense against the V-2 rockets other than the capture of the launching plate forms on the European coast. I talked with Dr. J. D. Cockcroft, famous British scientist whose pioneer experiments in atom-smashing helped pave the way for the atomic bomb. Dr. Cockcroft, who headed a British scientific mission to this

My Day

NEW YOR¥ _.rriday). — Last Tuesday evening, Miss Tho~ _.n and I drove from Hyde Park over to Millbrook, N. Y., where I spoke at a conference at Bennett Junior college. We enjoyed dining with Miss Carroll, the president of the college, and with her sister, the faculty ade viser, and three members of the student commitie: who were organizing the conference. They had chosen as their subject “Widening Our Horizons.” Very wisely, they are looking at these _ horizons from the point of view.of their own activities—Iliterary, artistic and academic—as well as from the point of view of national and international situations. After .my tdlk, there was only one question, which was about my impression of the Russian delegation at the London meeting of the United Nations. Then we went to the main student building, where I met many of the faculty and students. I was interested to find. that the college has girls from many different sections of the United States, a few from Puerto Rico, and some from South American countries, Wednesday morning, I came down to New York. After keeping a few ~appointments at my office; I took a plane from Newark for Loutsville, Ev where

)TOR OIL $1.29

N SUPPLY on and Ray Sts.

Inside Indianapolis

Genial, flient, handsome, Mr. Smith contends the 3 hate to see the business kicked around,” he cone |

“reform” appointee of the liquor board. His crusade .

JWR

Said Bob Smith (left) to Leon Jacquin in Bastogne . . . “You're the mayor.”

How to Be Mayor With One Vote

THAT WAS a Belgian crossroads town completely surrounded by the Germans shortly after the Americans fought their way in. The then Capt. Smith became military governor. His first act was to hunt up the chairman of the local ration board, an underground guerrilla named Leon Jacquin. Capt. Smith pointed a finger at Jacquin, declaring: “You're the mayor.” Mr. Jacquin is still mayor, having been recognized as such by the Belgian government. Wounded at Bastogne, Bob Smith was in on the conference at which Gen. Tony McAuliffe composed his famous “nuts to you” reply to a German surrender ultimatum. He has a carbon copy of the message. : Later, his 101st airborne division filtered into Germany and he received field promotions from captain_to lieutenant colonel in 11 weeks. Ultimately, he became military governor of Salzburg, Berchtesgaden and Mannheim. At Berchtesgaden, Hitler's mountain retreat, he was officially “charged” with protection of 'a multi-million dollar art treasure cached there by Herman Goering. Out of the army, he plunged again into politics and was named to the liquor board presidency by the county council. Now, he concedes, it was easier to rule Bastogne as military governor than it is to control Indianapolis’ uproarious tavern turmoil. : One of Mr. Smith's chummiest friends is Dr. Rogers Smith (no relation), prominent alienist and Indiana university psychiatrist. In the jargen of the professional phychologist, Mr. Smith characterizes his pal thusly: “A loquacious, ebullient, circumstantial, cyclothymic with the typical paranoaic coloring of the amateur politician.” In more simple words, it means Bob is a talkative, energetic, precise person given to the alternating moods of jubilance and depression, when he isn’t under the delusion that he’s politicking. (By Shirley Uhl)

By David M. Nichol

Imperial Oil Runs Show

IMPERIAL OIL, LTD., which runs the entire show, brought in a teacher, a doctor and two nurses. A post office was installed, A canteen with coffee snd cigarets.’ A recreation hall. Three blasts on the camp whistle still are the signal to the 200 residents that a movie will be shown 30 minutes later.

As the pressure increased, nisson shelters were added. The ubiquitous mounties set up a post. At the airstrip itself men still are living in the “cabooses,” or huts on sled runners, which are used with the winter tractor trains over the snow. Only 100 miles from the Arctic Circle, the winters are bitterly severe. “Breakup” in spring, and “freezeup” in the autumn are periods of battle with mud and lack of communication. As if to add to the strangeness of the picture, richly lime-colored northern lights were draping the sky to the south the other night as I walked from the hotel .to the radio station while almost directly north the red glow of sunset could still be seen. Men sign contracts to work for a year with four or five weeks “outside” at wages about 15 per cent above normal Canadian levels. The increase is nearly offset by the added costs. Air freight, all that there is for eight or nine months of each year, comes at $1 a pound The magnet of the northland brings a surprising number back for tour after tour. Some go two or three years without a break. One family has been in the vicinity since 1926. The dozen or s0 women who have joined their husbands here agree that living is “all fight,” but their interest in trips to the south is greater. “We like to get clothes and permanents,” one of them explained candidly, “and we can't do it here. The nearest beauty shop is 700 miles away. r

Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

By David Dietz

country during world war II, was in London when tive V-2 rockets began to arrive. He said that the rockets traveled high in the stratosphere» and dropped straight to the ground, thus giving no indication of the direction from which they came.

Radio Proximity Fuse HE TOLD ME that British scientists realized at that moment that in another war opened with a surprise attack with such rockets, it would be impossible to tell whether the bombs were coming from the north or the south, the east or the west. To appreciate the full gravity of such a situation it is only necessary to imagine each rocket carrying an atomic bomb. This is not beyond the range of possibility because an atomic bomb undoubtedly weighs less than the ton of explosives which the V-2 rocket carried. The war department disclosed in the Smythe report that the actual amounts of Uranium 235 or plutonium in an atomic bomb is between 2% and 220 pounds. The army ordnance department is now in possession of a number of V-2 rockets captured in the allied invasiop ‘of the continent. Twenty-five of these have bee ssembled for the New Mexico tests. Their explosive charges, of course, have been removed. Scientific’ instruments have been put in their place. The firing of these rockets is to begin on May 10, according to an announcement from the war department. High-rahking military personnel will be pres-' ent at the initial demonstration. These tests are of the utmost importance both from the standpoint of war and the peacetime uses | of rockets.

By Eleanor Roosevelt!

the women's action committee for lasting peace was holding “4 conference. I had no business going to Louisville at this time because I have been extremely busy at home, but one lets oneself be persuaded and, when the time comes, willy-nilly one must go. On arrival, I had very little time before I had to make my speech

The next day, Thirsday, I flew back to New|

York. In the evening, I joined Mr. and Mrs. Henry Morgenthau Jr, and some friends of theirs, who were guests at the annual African dance festival at Carnegie hall. I think it was done in a much more professional style this-year, with less waiting around and much closer following of the schedule. Today has been a succession of appointments, one following closely upon another, It will end this eve-

ning with my speaking at an institute which the,

United. States Student Assembly has arranged at the new School for Social Research. This organization sent a representative . to the

«world youth meeting in London and then on to Rus-!

sia, so I think they have a very keen sense of the situation. in Europe and are most anxious to pass

along to their student groups in the various colleges| |

a sense of real responsibility in thipking sthe problems of the future, WES uel

through

Ls

SECOND SECTION

By VICTOR PETERSON Times Staff Writer

ALEXANDRIA, April 27.

That is the question uppermost in the minds of the young folk here today.

Ambitious plans for their robust youth movement, centered in the Kid Kanteen, suffered a setback yesterday which easily could quench a desire for self-expression and group initiative. Word was received that an anticipated lease on six rooms a clubhouse would not be forthcoming. For some time the group, under the adult leadership of V. M. Evans, high school principal, had been

firm for space above the Kroger store at Harrison and Church sts. “It seemed like an open and shut affair,” Mr. Evans said. “Then out of a cledr sky we recived the word that the Kanteen could not lease the space. It is my belief that the lessors are fearful of liability risks, “I don't feel this is justified, for the Kanteen is considering taking out liability insurance,” he said. ” » »

THE KANTEEN is powered by fiery Joan Carnahan, high school senior, who wanes more than anything else to give her companions a clubhouse before she goes out of office. “We still want these rooms, They would be perfect for our purpose, and I am sure a good home would help the group immeasurably. “Gee, we had everything ready for mass production on our Kanteen as soon as the lease would be signed. Every one of the 100 members have been assigned to committees and they were set to follow each other on an assembly line basis to put the place in shape.

—Where do we go next? +

dickering with an Anderson realtor _

SATURDAY, APRIL " ve ALEXANDRIA TEEN-AGERS PLAN STRATEGY— -

Housing Cramps Kid Kanteen

Board of strategy . . . Teen-agers of Alexandria ponder what to do next as they receive word they cannot rent proposed quarters for their Kid Kanteen. Debating the next move are (left to right) Anne Bailey, Gene Farquer, Joan Carnahan, group president; James Kane and Elisabeth Glover,

“EVEN THEN it would take us about three weeks to renovate the quarters, but what a Kanteen we would have, We wouldn't have to

take a back seat for anyone in the country. One of the rooms even has a little stage where we could put the dance orchestras and have plays. “Now I don’t know what we will do. We have another spot in mind, but it won't give us the freedom we want. It's not that we are trying to get out from under the guidance of adults, for we have asked them to be with us now more than

“I guess it is just that we want

THE KANTEEN had its origin

to show our folks that we can|about five years ago, but during the

handle ourselves without being a! burden on any person. That is just the reason we plan to incorporate on a non-profit basis,” she said. “We can get by. Everybody In town has been wonderful. We know that we can get $1000 for our redecorating. Besides that we have $400 in the treasury and more money comes in all the time from memberships and contributions. We can be a going concern for the good of Alexandria youth if we get half

ever before.

a break.”

{war it languished. When Miss Carnahan took officé she brought with her a vitality that stems from her life in Philadelphia back in 1943, when she helped organize a teen group there. Instrumental in aiding her in the reorganization program are Joan DeaKyne, Richard Cartwright, James Montgomery, Elisabeth Glover, Rozella Weed, Ruth Wehsollek, Lynn Russell, Gene Farquer, Kathryn Schrott and Christine Johnson. Mrs. Della Johnson is group chaperone.

List Hoosier For Carnegie

Hero Award

PITTSBURGH, April 27 (U. PJ). —A Waldron, Ind, man today was honored with a Carnegie hero fund award for heroism in saving the lives of two children in a fire which caused his death. The Carnegie bronze medal was awarded posthumously yesterday to Ora Robert Pope, whose wife and family now reside at Rural Route 1, Waldron, Ind. He was one of 19 persons honored in the nation,

saved the lives of Janet and Lucille Jeffries, age 10 and 8, respectively, and also prevented possible injury or death to his own four young sons.

Fluid Explodes Mr. Pope, a 36-year-old truck maintenance supervisor, attempted to start a fire with a can of kerosene. The fluid exploded, starting a fire in his two-story residenee. Carnegie officials said heavy smoke and intense heat rose in a stairway that extended up to the room occupied by the girls, The two girls and Mr, Pope's four sons, who occupied another room on the second floor, ran to the stairway, but were afraid to come down through the thick smoke and stifling heat. Dies of Burns

. The children all ran to an open window, 15 feet above the ground. Mr. Pope, who had sustained second and third degree burns over most of his body, shouted to the children from the ground beneath the window. He Induced the girls, and then the boys, in turn, to drop from the window-sill? Mr. Pope caught all six and each time flesh sloughed from his hands, Mr. Pope died three days later from burns. None of the children was injured.

SEARCH FOR PLANE

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. April 27 (U. P.) —Searching parties struggled up rugged Black Forest mountain today to reach the wreckage of an unidentified plane’ that crashed into a mountain top and exploded during a snowfall. At the Williamsport airport it .was reported that a P-47 pursuit plane has been missing since 3 p. m. yesterday.

* HANNAH ¢

| |

| Said,

Mr, Pope's actions Nov. 14, 1945,

By MARGARET SMITH All over the city tulips are blazing into a regular flower show. Many gardeners have combined them effectively with early iris. In other

yards bright red ones show off in front of evergreens. Mr, and Mrs, Chas. C. Babcock, 7068 Broadway, have part of their many tulips contrasting with the pale. blue of mertensia virginica. Mrs, Babcock likes the combination, she said, not only because of the color but because the Virginia bluebells die down after the tulips are gone and leave no objectionable foliage. In another part of the yard she uses tulips with perennial hibiscus. Dying down to the ground in the fall it leaves an early spring bare spot. Tulips planted here, she pointed out, will have time to mature their foliage before the new hibiscus shoots grow tall enough to shut off the sun. The hibiscus will later spread out over the entire bed. The Babcocks have some of - the fringed Fantasy tulips whose ragged edges of the parrot tulip type are so different from the smooth cups of the Darwins and the Breeders. : Next year they plan to try out the much recommended deep planting of tulip bulbs. At 15 to 18 inches deep the bulbs have less tendency to divide, the flowers remain large year after year without transplanting, and there is the added advantage that you can work at will over the deep set bulbs without disturbing them.

Cuts Flowers Off Early

Mrs. Babcock mentioned the necessity of clipping the flowers off all the spring bulbs as they fade so that the plant's strength goes to store up food for next year’s bloom rather than into seed, For the same reason the leaves should be allowed to stay untouched until they turn completely brown, indicating maturity, Other pointers from the Babcocks’ yard—Mrs, Babcock has her clove pinks growing around the bird bath. ‘They thoroughly enjoy

raised entirely

the daily sprinkling they get there. An odd shrub she is starting from a cutting. is the devil's walking stick. Thorny of stem as befits that sainted gentleman, it is a sumac relative and not too hardy in our climate. A privet hedge at one side of the yard Mrs. Babcock started entirely from cuttings. She put 12 to 15inch long cuttings about half way in the ground in late fall, watered them with a chemical fertilizer solution. Two years from the following spring the young bushes were set to make the present nicely clipped hedge. Placing the bushes in a staggered row makes even distribution of foliage and a thicker hedge. Mr. Babcock, not to be outdone by his wife's green fingers, started

GARDENING: Tulip, Iris Combinafion Make Nice Showing

Contrasting Colors Prove Effective

Mrs. Charles C. Babouck, 7068 Brodvay “we the privet hedge was

from cuttings.

in similar fashion. From cuttings set two years ago last fall he now has a row of young trees abeut 10 feet tall. Asparagus that grows thick stalks in a deeply prepared, well manured seed bed, cast its seed last year into the flower border. Mrs, Babcock let it grow there for its finely cut foliage, and this spring transplanted the young seedlings into the regular bed. , Spinach they planted last August gave them an extra-early crop this spring. It didn't grow well before frost but lived over and this year has already produced one good picking. Mrs. Babcock uses it raw in salad. This fall they plan to repeat their accidental discovery. One of their oldest plants is an ordinary clover that produces four

a whole row of Lombardy poplars

leaf clovers in quantity,

(Parents, teachers, and children, too, are urged to send their school worries to Miss Tillie in care of the Times.)

DEAR MISS TILLIE—Our 5-year-old girl will be starting.to school in the fall. As parents of a rugged individualist, one that has plenty of ingenuity and enthusiasm, we find an occasional trip to the woodshed necessary. We understand that teachers are not allowed to touch children in this fashion. Have good old-fashioned “lickin’s” gone out of style in the schools? CONCERNED PARENT,

Dear Concerned Parent — Yes, “lickin’s” are “OUT, Not legally, however. Contrary to general belief, it is legal to administer corporal punishment in Indianapolis schools. But how we hate to stoop to it! Of course, if children have beén raised on “lickin’s” at home, it's a job to teach them to get along without them at school. But we usually manage to do it, and right well, too

Your little girl will be six by the

[time you send her to us. She will

be able then to understand the need for living peacefully with

‘others. If we must resort to beat{ings to teach peaceful living, we've

missed our calling, You make it | doubly hard for us, if you've made

MISS TILLIE'S NOTEBOOK

TO AN INTERESTED READER

. By Hilda Wesson

Old Fashioned 'Lickin's’ Out

of still more college -classes—in

You will find a list of the books |methods of teaching, in child study,

you asked about for high school chil- | dren with 6th grade reading ability, | at the Teachers’ Special Library. The books suggested are written in a simple style, yet they meet the reading interests of adults. Naw WOULD YOU HAVE BEEN WILLING To spend $2500 and four years of study tb get ready for a job that paid $1700 annually as a starter and increased your pay in agonizingly small sums for 15 years until it reached $3060? That's what teachers have faced, and Sometimes wondered why. Four years to earn a Bachelor's degree at college, and then an appointment to. teach. Then come five years hard at it; numerous supervisors checking regularly on your teaching of reading, writing, arithmetic, spelling, art, music, physical education, social studies, science. Checking on your schoolroom discipline, your executive skill, your creative ability, your co-operation within the school, your relation with parents and children, your adjustment to people and conditions, your physical fitness, your accuracy in making reports, your interest in the community, your personality, your appearance, even.

Five years of conferences,

[or in the latest treatment for speech

defects. And at fhe end of five years, what? . . Tenure — if you've gone

through the mill successfully—tenure, a guarantee that if you remain a good teacher, the job is yours for thirty years longer, or until you reach the ripe old age of 65. And the $3050 which you had begun to draw after your 15th year, stayed at that figure unless you spent a thousand dollars’ and two years’ time to add another college degree. But some relief is in the offing as to pay checks. Come October and beginners rate two thousand dollars and in 15 years creep up to thirteen hundred more. » . .

TODAY HARRY SAID I feel so safe on Wednesdays. Teachers have to go to meetings

BABY BURNED TO DEATH BUFFALO, N. Y., April 27 (U.P), —A 10-day-old baby was burned: to death last night when a . ort circuit set fire to a hospital incubator.

‘the child's mother, Mrs. Helen Salzer, was discharged from the Mil-

and no one gets kept after school.}

The blaze occurred 15 minutes after,

£fil Hid :

I think, was worth 40° cents, Even to the auditing department.

We, the Wome

Best-Dressed -Men's Wives Need No Pity

By RUTH MILLETT WHEN THE list of America’s 10 best-dressed men was published recently, maybe you thought smuge ly that it would be a pain in the neck to be married to a man who worried about his own necktie ine stead of admiring your: new hat, Well, don't feel sorry for the women married to best-dressed men. If they me Mrs. Ray Milland, they can e Svcd thing of it.

THE MILLANDS recently visited New York. The movie star took along three suits and a pair of slacks, considering them ample for keeping up his sartorial reputation, His wife, a New York fashion writer confides, arrived with three Adrian suits, an original Molyneux, a Valentina coat, a diamond necklace, and a choice assortment of hats by John-Frederics and Lilly Didche, plus other bits of feminine frippery.

» » » SHE CONFESSED that playing a supporting role to a best-dressed husband is quite a business. Since he took along a suitcase, she, as supporting player, required at least one trunk. All of which goes to prove that a smart woman can make a good thing out of almost any situation. So don't go feeling sorry for the wives of the country’s best-dressed men. oh Chances are that, far from being

“NYLONS BY JANUARY,

WABHINGTON, api bed a

“lickin's” a part of her daily diet. -

- +

bt eters mecttings tor {

lard Fillmore ® ospital Nurses res-| do