Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 May 1946 — Page 13
ULE JAPAN
naries Will erpreters.
[essel and Mors. 0lis ~ expect to 0 take up work
ppointed to the service in the partment under it. They have rpreters, being uage as former n. e permitted to of grade school Dieter, from now, the mit children to ev. Mr. Hessel
» for the boys il -such a time heir parents. {essels also are 1 treasures they d since they do them back to )ersons are purcles—porcelains, ware, paintings, curios, at the 042 W. 31st st. ssel said he and id with the new
\m in Japan. 1 that they will s formerly.
RTER SHIP A thousand Ausa chartered vesworld tour this ultural practices
40.
5
. someone should organize a program right now to keep them in the habit. The project Mrs. Eden has in
*
Go or oT
Inside Indianapolis
PINTS Leap ™
MRS. E. J. EDEN, 901 N. Emerson ave., saved tin cans faithfully all through the war. Now she's wondering why a similar program can't be continued in’ ~ peacetime, to-obtain meney for wortlly causes; Mrs. Eden feels people have gotten used to saving cans and
mind is a collection conducted by members of Little. -Wlower parish, with the proceeds to go to a school fund. In that way, Mrs. Eden feels, the school could . get extra money’ and the collection would provide metal to be reclaimed for” shipping food overseas. The only thing that is stymying her is that she has no information as to where the cans could be shipped for reclamation. If anyone knows the procedure, Mrs.
Eden will try to ‘start the project. .
. + John Millis,
former United Press business representative here and later with Curtiss-Wright, has a new job. He is director of publicity for Kaiser-Frazier, Detroit, and has
offices in New York. . . .
The roof was the limit for
advertising “Sketch Book of '46,” yearly Technical high school stage presentation. They had large green letters advertising the production hung from the roof of the “guard house” facing Michigan st. The presen-
tation was given Friday night,
Latest OPA Story
WON'T. THOSE OPA anecdoles ever cease?
The
latest is about a woman who telephoned the legal department and asked if she was talking to the APO. When they got. her straightened out on her alphabet she said she was concerned with a housing problem. “Please send someone out right away,” she said, “my
landlord is trying to excavate me.” , .
, We heard a
local remark that rivals Marie Antoinette’s famous “Let them eat cake.” One of our agents heard some people worriedly discussing the bread shortage in front of a youth. After hearing so much of the gloomy talk, he broke in and earnestly said: “I don't see why everyone's worried about the bread shortage, I like
biscuits better anyway.” . .
. If you have any gov-
ernment or bank business better remember to trans= act it today. Those places will be closed for the pri-
maries tomorrow,
. . One of our agents tells us
about a particularly obliging taxi driver who helped out in a jam the other night. Caught downtown loaded with packages at the rush hour, our agent hailed a
Life In Far North By David M. Nichol
FT. ST. JOHN, British Columbia, May 6.—Life, as it ‘= reflected in the columns of the Alaska Highway News, seldom is dull or routine in this Peace river
community of 1000 persons.
Read back through a few issues and you fihd a curious assortment rangihg from adventure and tragedy to the wry. comments which are peculiarly the
paper's own.
Here also is a letter of thanks from a
subscriber in Chicksaw, Alabama, for a hint about
baking bread.
Unusual enough was an offer to lease a two-room house, completely furnished. It is recorded, also, that a pack of 15 or 20 wolves chased a deer directly through the little coal mine settlement of Hudson Hope, about “70 miles west, “on the last mail day.” More austere was the plight of 33 families at Moberly lake. With roads blocked by snow, the home of the community postmaster, his office, and the
school burned to the ground.
Worst loss was the community's stock of medical supplies. Before it could be replaced, the postmaster’s own 18-year-old son had to be flown here to hospital in a ski-equipped plane, and a 72-year-old resident,
unable to stand the trip, had, died.
4-Year-Old Goes for Help
AT MONTNEY, north of here, a young mother was confined prematurely to childbed. With her in her home were only her crippled mother-in-law and her
4-vear-old son,
Help was imperative,
The bov was bundled in his warm clothes. a note was pinned to his lapel, and the youngster was started
Science
IT MIGHT JUST as well be said bluntly that the start of world war II found the United States and its armed forces sound asleep insofar as the
subjects of rockets is concerned.
If this had not
been so, we might have had the V-1 and V-2 rockets
instead of the Germans.
The fact that this nation df a magnificent Jobin developing and utilizing rockets before the war ended, does not alter the fact that we were sound ‘asleep in this field at the start of the war. It is much easier to. praise the scientists an®@ the military men for the great job they did in developing rockets during world war II than to criticize the general lack of foresight that permitted the army and navy to enter world war II without a single
rocket in service use.
But there we face them and that army and navy but congress
agencies. charged “with planning of the United States.
is a valuable lesson in the facts concerns not merely the and those scientific the future defense
if
By 1935, the Germans were already making the
basic studies for the V-1 England and Russia developed
and V-2 rockets and
Both used
rockets.
them in the early days of the war.
British More Farsighted THE JOINT REPORT
of. scientific research
on rockets of and “development,
the the
office war
department and the navy department, states quite
frankly: “Were it not
for the fact that the British had
been more farsighted than we, had done experimental work with rockets before the war, and shared with us their knowledge and experience, the task of providing our fighting forces with rocket weapons would
My Day
HYDE PARK (Sunday).—The habit of saying grace is all to rarely part of our daily lives. And yet, in the face of starvation all over the world, every one of us in this country should say grace with our whole hearts each time we sit down to our easily acquired and ample meals. A pertinent cartoon by Herblock, illustrating this theme, appeared recently in the Washington Post.
The background shows a sea of starving children’s faces, and in the foreground sit three somewhat elderly people, completely comfortable, correct, virtuous
and conventional-looking.
The table before them is groaning with food, and
the caption reads:
“Shall we say grace?"
With the cartoon, sent to me from Washington, was a pagé out of the Congressional record, contain-
ing an article reprinted by Senator Wagner.
Entitled
“A Bill of Duties” and written by John Kirkland Clark—a distinguished member of the bar who had published ‘this article in the May, 1945 issue of the Bar Bulletin of the New York County Lawyers associ-
ation,
Its thesis is one that I think should be emphasized
over and-over-again,
In democracies: we are apt to
talk a’ great deal about our “rights,” but Mr. Clark points out every right has a corresponding duty. -
Stands Up for WPA Jobs
. 1 DO NOT agree with all he says about WPA jobs, because I have traveled too much in this country and seen too many schools, bridges, civic centers, roads and swimming pools built by the WPA not to
realize
Price Controls Off Ice Skates in Hawaii
Hawaii, who said that he had know that these price ceilings are | “never §een a pair of ice skates off,”.said Mr. Farrington.
* Times, Special WASHINGTON, May 6. — OPA
Administrator Porter has made the until he came to the maipland.”
announcement through formal chan-
nels that price ceilings on ice hockey | Honolulu Chamber of :Commerce, y which spends large sums annually of 70 degrees. If it should drop to
equipment, and bobsleds are now completely off in Hawaii. “This i= wonderful,” exclaimed Delegate Joseph R. Farrington of
@
much good and valuable work was accom-
OPA has not, ve
advertising Hawaii shine and flowers. “It is very com
»
. dividual thinking and living by your own standards.
' an
Fire Hose Jumpers
J = H 3 al < § wt y g LS a : «
SECOND SECTION
CHAPTER ONE’ THE GIRL sat in the corRE ner, regarding her cocktail ‘glass soberly, She was an attractive girl, with gold-
|
a ‘brown hair and hazel eyes,
9
Thomas Sporlock, veteran-of 32 years with the Indianapolis Street Railways demonstrates a fire ry : (now deeply shadowed. Colin
hese jumper. : cab and went to pick up another package. The driver | thought she was beautiful,
got outyand carried the package into the car for her, and catalogued her with his A Ries | Ssture she Jongul, Then ny route lo. her | writer's eye—a tall, slim girl, estination she mentione at she’s been unable to. bay. aibeals Gianiite : find steaks. He took her to a market, went in and in a dusty-pink ev ening dress, helped her pick up steaks, plus some bananas and (and large-sleeved white jacket soft drinks and then carried most of her packages ‘in!__. i wrath iat wri ’ the house for her. Pretty nice, huh, considering he |, =n Interesting girl with a only charged her what the meter read—75 cents, ean, intelligent face. She spoke, presently-“rather more Patform Protects Hose ; | to herself than to him. “The bride DID YOU ever hear of fire hose jumpers? Nope,|Was lovely ini white satin and rosethey have nothing. to do with the hosiery shortage.| Point lace—the defeated candidate, They're contraptions used by Indianapolis Railways to| With her customary impeccable get their trolleys through areas where fire hose lines | taste, wore a simple but smart are spread. When hose block a line, the company|80Wn of sackcloth trimmed with rushes out these contraptions which take the trolleys|ashes. = She carried an appropriate over the hose to prevent a traffic tie-up, A wooden bouquet of bleeding hearts—" platform is placed over hose for trackless trolleys to| gS n-.y drive over. Streetcar hose pumpers are more compli-|- SHE LOOKED at him, then, and cated. A huge metal track which has holes to fit over er eyes were bright with.unshed the hose is rushed to the fire scene on a special truck, '€ars. “Take me out of here, Then it's fitted over the hose and the streetcar drives Please, will you? I'll commence to over this instead of the regular track section. howl in. another minute.” “Of course,” Colin said quickly, and "wondered if she remembered ns name. When they were introduced. there had been despair and bewilderment and incomprehension across the snow to the nearest neighbor's home. half lin her eve Ann Tucker—little a mile away. The neighbor saw him before he arrived | Ann, he wanted to sav, though he
and rescued the boy from ‘thé soft drifts in.which | was tall as he, But that vision of he had almost floundered. |a hurt child persisted. Already > Yry v Colin was lost, though he didn't Puts Trap Around Carcass vet Know it—a man, is, when he
THE STORY'S end is less happy. The child for starts applying the adjective “little” whom help was summoned did not survive. to a girl who stands fully five feet . An example of pioneer enterprise may be found in eight inches in her sheerest chiffon the case of Chris Field’ a farmer in Baldohnel. He hose, and is.addicted to three-inch was hired to kill a neighbor's ailing horse, but the heels. snow was so deep Chris could. not haul away the| ” carcass. He set four traps around it. QUIETLY, without farewells to In five days he had netted $145.10. The take the rest of the party, they left the included two wolves, five fox and seven coyotes. An | roadhouse. eighth coyote was lost to one of the wolves which|Ann still was silent, and Colin! attacked the trapped animal only be caught itself. | found nothing to say. For per-| Courtesy has its drawbacks. One man broke his haps fifteen minutes. they drove collarbone when he fell while carrying his wife across | through the still beauty of the! a mud-filled road. I night, before he glanced at her. Two American settlers in the Peace river country, She was crying, with a quiet desnow naturalized Canadians, vowed they were delight-! peration that racked her body. ed to be “back” after visits to the States. “Oh, the devil,” Colin said under A brief but revealing item from Cecil Lake savs: his breath, and swung the car off “Ed Bergen is-home from the trap line and rode the road. He switched off the igniout of town with Slim and Pete and traded his dog tion, and without a word gathered for Slim’s sleigh but Slim backad out on the deal after her into an impersonal clasp. He the party.” was rather astonished at the diffiAnd for those who feel all this is remote and other« culty of keeping it impersonad, that worldly, there is a shattering, familiar line - arose immediately he touched her The hotels—all four of them—are filled! He felt momentarily Copyright. 1946. by The Indianapolis Times What did she think he was, anyThe Chicago Daily News, Inc, way? But he whippd out a clean
= - handkerchief and tucked it into her By David Dietz
hand, and said soothingly, “I know that into each life- seme rain must fall, “but don't vou think that's have been even more difficult and timé-consuming. nearly enough April showers?” “As it was, the job was hard enough and long enough, with every new project and improvement requiring an initial phase for the development of fundamental facts which a more complete program of peacetime military research would have in advance. .
Will We Be Caught Again?
® 2
and
By JACK GAVER United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, May 6—The chaps
“IT IS A TRIBUTE to the determination of Who operate radio networks don’t|Right now the situation is in a tinue.
the army and navy, to the imagination of Ameri- exactly run and hide when you can scientists, and to the productivity of Arerican bring up the subject of summerindustry that, starting under such a handicap, they time replacements for the big-time were able to produce the rockets which hunted down air shows. But it's obvious they
enemy subs in the Atlantic add Pacific, the bazooka Would be much happier if you which was first turned loose against the enemy in didn’t. North Africa, the aircraft rockets which spear- The way things stand now, radio
headed the Normandy break-through in July, 1944, is not going-to cherish fond memoand the barrage rockets which laid down a deadly ries of this summer, fire ahead of our forces invading North Africa, Most of the: high-ranking shows Sicily, Italy, Normandy and Southern France, and fake a 13-week vacation somewhere which -softened the Japanese beach defenses for in the four-month span from June our landing waves in virtually every Pacific action through. September, but it has from Arawe to Okinawa.” — been the practice of many of the I think it is fair to add that it will be no big-spending sponsors to hang onto tribute to our intelligence as a nation if we allow their time segments by paying for ourselves again to be caught in the kind of a Summer programs | situation that we were with respect to rockets. We But there won't much of might not. be so lucky next time, either in borrow. that this year, due largely to the ing information from. an ally or in developing new &loomy production outlook and the weapons at high speed. (food conservation. program; Congress has not yet passed legislation to : OER up a National Science foundation and it has not| THE RESULT 18 the networks vet established any policy for the conduct of the *T® having to work up a lot more type of scientific research necessary for national] ~ security. Is congress settling back to sleep?
be as
-
set
{
By Eleanor Roosevelt To Convene Here
| . l : : : . {| More than 500 fumeral directors! I entirely agree, however, with his thesis that all ’ assemble here
work, of whatever nature, should be done fo the limit| {rom Indiana will | of the abilities of the man who is performing the job.! May 14 and 15 in the Hotel Lin-| I do not believe any man who is not working to the | coln for their 66th annual state full extent of his ability can really get satisfaction!convention. out of his work. Charles B. Roth of Denver, Colo., author . and lec- © turer, will be offi-| i cial speaker both f. days, discussing] i public relations
Majority Becomes Minority | MR. CLARK points out reasons why the new or-| ganized masses are making some Of the same mistakes which organized business made in the past. I cannot quote here the whole of this interesting article,
: : and selling techbut there is one point which serves on one of the niques. United Nations commissions makes me want to bring Other speeches before everyone's eye. Mr, Clark writes: will be given by
“If we join a union of nations to see to it {hat peace is maintained throughout the world—to enforce the right to peaceful living of-nations—it will be necessary to discharge the duty implicit in the pledge, which is that we must accept a determina- Charles tion made not solely by ourselves as to when meas- a : ures for the enforcement of peace must be taken— state president; A. O. in which we must presumably join.” | Spriggs. of Springfield, O. and I think we even have a duty sometimes, when we Dan Lloyd W. Howe of pe Toe) gre citizens of a democracy, to express ourselves in P& College of Mortuary Science. opposttil to the policies which may for the moment Governor
Maurice Gardner, interior decorator with the-Wm. H Block Co.; Ralph McMullan of
I B. Roth
Kempton,
Gales wily address the! be the policies of the majority within our own country, OPening session. | For that is the only way in which people may bel Officers for the pe group, brought to think along new lines, and the majority Pesides Mr. McMullan/are Donald of today may become the minority of tomorrow, In|C. Ulrich, Dillsboro, first vice presiother words, each individual in a democracy has the dent; Verlan L. Poindexter, Washduty to live up to the standards which he believes| ington, second vice "president; J. are right. This may sometimes be a disagreeable Harold Fife, East Chicago, serduty. But when you believe in the right of equality 8eant-at-arms, and Harold E. Ro-
'A NEW TIMES SERIAL—
indignant, |
| |
mn
Vie
. « .
ANN PULLED a little away from him, and gulped, “I'm s-sorry,” her voice breaking on the final word.
They're said. to be soothing. There's a point, you know, where tears cease
to be sorrow and become hysterics.” on his profile, and he wished brief- |
She accepted a cigaret and a light, and she stopped crying. They
smoked together in silence for a few| nq Colin swung the car into the of
minutes, then Colin asked, not looking at her, “Okay?” “Okay,” she said. He started the car a while he spoke. 5
again. After
” n “ANN—YOU don't mind my calling you Ann, do you?—as I was just in town for the wedding, I'll be off in the morning. I was won-
dering—may I write to you? . I've
been pretty sure, ever since I got her jacket, and sank down in a That's where I live—it's
that first letter from you, that you'd | big chair. “Please sit down,” she I feel proprietary about it. Established in his car,’
be a nice correspondent.”
She was startled. “My letter to and I haven't the faintest idea|But that can come later.
you? Who are you?”
“Colin Drake.” |
He sounded a little apologetic. So she hadn't known. v 5
» n
“COLIN—DRAKE!” Ann gasped, | then began to laugh, a little hys- awful clarity, that you're my favor-| > : ite author, and I have a responsi-
terically,, “And I've been all evening! my gosh" “I'm sorry,” Colin said. “I would have told wou earlier—but, after all, we were introduced.” “And you really remembered me —1 mean, .you writing you that silly letter? How could you? You must hear from so many people—"
weeping in your arms Colin
Drake! Oh,
|
= n “MY FAN mai
dinarily by this time, the summer {lineups have been pretty weld ®t.
scrambled state. » -
N. B. Cs Sunday night “big
|three"—Jack Beuyny, Edgar Bergen
and Fred Allen—will be replaced by sponsored shows. Frank Morgan a comedy college sefies and
is not definite. Mr. Benny leaves the air the first of June and Mr Allen at -the end of that month. ” » ~
“INFORMATION PLEASE” be dropped by its current sponsor,
will
«June 26 and the program's future
is uncertain. Benny Goodman and
|
the summer, Fred Waring and his
band will replace Fibber McGee | {June
18. Herbert Marshail drama series takes over for Hope June 18 arid Sigmond Rom-
in
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. Spring hay fever (seasonal pollinosis) is due to .the pollen of trees, -especially the’ oak, elm, ash,] poplar, birch, and hickory. In the, early summer, the usual cause ‘is the pollen of grasses, plantain, and sorrel, while the pollen of ragweed is mainly responsible for the fall type. | Hay fever varies in character in the different sections of the country as the season advances in pollination, Hay fever sufferers should keep records of the days of their attacks, so that they may be checked for! sensitivity to the types of pollen | which are in the air on those days. | If “they react ] one oft the grasses, it is most likely) they are sensitive to that of every | grass, and the same thing is true | of ragweed. This is not true of! the trees, however, and all the| more important tree pollen must! be tested separately. &. o » { IF A SMALL amount ‘of pollen is applied to a scratch on the skin or injected underneath, a small itchy
Colin whipped out a clean handkerchief and
[Ann said, “I'd better go home, It His right arm still around ‘her, very late.” She gave him brief di-{ Yas Colin fished for his cigaret case with| rections on how to reach her house, | "ery young, watching him at the his left, and said, “Have a cigaret? and settled back in the corner of Wedding.
’ 1 isn't so heavy as
:
(to hour and from day to day.
to the polien of
The Heart fo Find BY Hazei Heidergott
MONDAY, MAY 6, 1946,
.
-
3
said soothingly, “I know that into each life some rain must fall, but don't you think that's nearly enough April showers.”
drove for the quiet
«They [through
a long while night, Finally 's
the seat, Colin that
A sidewise glance told her eyes were. steadily
{ly that it were a more classic one Presently Ann said, “This is it.”
driveway, and they stopped front of a big house, half screened
from the road by trees—a gracious, | 3 rather old house, inviting in the said. “I'need something to bright-| (en up the place. These aren't the!
silvery moonlight. u n »
ANN OPENED a side door with | her latchkey, and they entered a | big, softly lighted room. She touched a match to the fire {laid ready in the fireplace, took off
| said. “I'm suddenly in awe of you—
| what I can talk to you about.” Colin sat down and smiled a little, [Do I look so very formidable?” he inquired. "I'm just
remembering, - with
bility for entertaining you—and I'm neither bright nor beautiful, and you'll probably be very bored.” “I hardly think so,” he said. 5 n = NS IT WAS amazing how easily they talked together.
among the years new,
new * poor-—well, anyway,
hadn't lost the family fortune until | two years after everyone else ‘Went {broke in the stock market grash tall that,” Colin said rather dryly. |“Original of him, don't you think?"'
Skelton June 11 Kay Kyser's program A comedy series “McGarry and His Mouse” replace Eddie Cantor. Conrad Nagle and
|
|
work, Juhe 16-Sept. 1. After
Replacements for Jack Carson, Lionel Barrymore, Joan Davis, Fanny Bric certain, ~ = ” . DANNY_KAYE bows out for good at’ the end of May, as does the Andre Kostelanetz musical hour,
[summer fate of “Truth and Con-
sequences” is uncertain. “The Aldrich Family,” Jack Ha-
State Morticians |THE DOCTOR SAYS: Seasonal Pollinosis Explained
Test for Hay Fever Easily Made
Typical hay fever is seldom confused with anything else, even though symptoms vary from hour The usual complaints are itching, congestion of nose, sensitivity to light,
* HANNAH <
Vi
0)
among ‘men, then you must.accept the duty of in-|Zele, Anderson, advisory member.| nimple with a red reaction around|.
CUMBERLAND CHURCH TO PRESENT MUSICALE
| A musicale of organ music and 1 hope | the OPA acts as expeditiously in t heard from the other matters now "before it." Hawaii. has a mean temperature
sented at the St. John's Evangelical and Reformed church in Cum- | berland, May 12 af 8 p.m. | Appearing on the program ‘will be Mrs. John English,” organist .at the Broadway. Methodist. church, |
60 degrees at night, as it does sometimes in July. people in Honolulu begin to look for blankets,
hi
as a land of sun-
forting to me to
o>
girls’ glee club,
it indicates sensivity. Severe reactions may develop within a few -minutes after the pollen has been injected, indicat-| ing great sensitivity. “The reaction]
concért choir singing will be pre- usually fades in a few hours and |
completely. disappears in a day or 50. ” If persons, with hay fever are tested for. se wetivity fo all pollen | known to be in the air during the] entire season, they may react. to]
and the Warreri Central high school many more than actually are the
’ .
cause of their trouble
Tl
1@ ZY
wl
fied @
“You were doing -all right.
two | Her father|co was in bed and sleep was! proving elusive, that she began to!
“The Silver
fons will substitute for Ouie |
and, Frank Sinatra are un-
half- | “Duffy's Tavern” will be off his band will fill in the spot for|for 13 weeks starting June 21 and]
| If hay fever is complicated by
J} | seeing tour through the eastern
vid 1
Ann said. She didn't really mind, | except that it meant she just] worked in an architect's office, instead of being an architect herself —and her sister's family lived with them, which cit down expenses!
some more, “I love having Connie | "and Davey and Betsy with us, of
course—but it can't be much fun for them,” Ann said reflectively, HN = “HOW OLD are you, Ann?" Colin asked abrutly, offering up a silent prayer that she wasn't so young as he feared. “Twenty-three.” Fifteen years. He wondered if she classed him with her father, S80 he asked her, “Do you know how old I am?” : : She regarded him gravely. “I don't know. You can't be so awfully young-you've been famous for too many years to be very young. But you don't seem old —~middle thirties?” she guessed. “Flattering me-—both as to ‘age and to fame, I'm thirty-eight,” he
(said, and wondered how old Jock|
He had thought he looked Very. young and | beautiful, with his tall blond head {held high. “That's not ” “I DON'T think so myself, most the time,” he admitted. “If
she said. n
old,”
ini youll give me your address, Ann, homesickness to drop into the cen-
I'll be getting along—" “Write to me at. the office,” she
best times for achitects, you know. {Im lucky to have a job." | “The job is lucky «0 have you,” {Colin sald, making a note of the |address. “It's been grand meetling you, Ann. Port Drake isn't very far from Seattle, after all ‘not big, but It's a lovely place—I want you to see it. In the { meantime, you will answer my | letters?” { + B | “Of course!” Ann said. “Goodby, Mr, Drake" . {i “Colin—" de said. “Wiel]—goodby, Colin. Next time we meét, I promise not to dissolve in tears.” Ss “I'll never make you cry,” he said, i quite seriously. | When+_ Colin
°
had “gone,
to smoke a final cigaret,
(she said thoughtfully.
{think of Jock again. (To Be Coiltinued)
“Radio Headache: Summertime Substitutions
sustaining features than usual. Or- berg and orchestra replace Red ley and
“The ' Hit Parade” among standbys which will stay on
will con- {Tommy Riggs and “Betty Lou” will labeled [replace Ginny Simms and Wayne will [King and orchestra will substitute for the Durante-Moore show until Sept. 6. Meredith Willson and orchestra will hold the fort for Burns {and Harriet on the C. B. S. net- and Allen, 234 | Tommy Dorsey's band will replace|consecutive weeks on ‘C. B. S. the Mr. Benny and Mr. Allen respec- | sponsor is dropping the “Great Motively, but the Bergen replacement | ments in Music” program June 26.
" » » THE RUDY VALLEE and Abbott and Costello among those whose summer situation is uncertain, Ditto Hidegarde, Mutual's “Quick as a Flash” and A. B. C.s Woody Herman and “Detect and Collect.” The “Break the Bank” program -will take over for Alan Young on A. B. C, where the summer edition of “Hall of Fame” will be in the usual Sunday night slot. This’ is just hitting the high
shows are
the replacement is uncertain. “The spots. There are a lot of others in Life of Riley” will vacation and the!the uncertain
category that will {cause many more grey hairs in the {program departments before the first heat wave, *
| sneezing, and from. the nose.
watery discharge
» ” » | IN MOST patients attacks, start on the same day and end on the same day from year to year, as {pollination is little affected by "weather variations. Sufferers with spring hay fever (usually find it.impossible to escape the symptoms, no matter how far they travel. Relief may be obtained by breathing washed or filtered ‘air, or: by taking injections of the offending pollen before. and during the season. Drug treatment of hay fever ha not been successful, except for the partial relief of symptoms. But a new drug, benadryl, is said to bring jmore relief than other drugs which have been tried.
(Other forms of sensitivity (animal | dandruff, vegetable powders, house dust, foods, and drugs) these factors must be eliminated if complete relief is to be obtained.
MANILLA SENIORS TAKE EASTERN TRIP
The senior class of Manilla high school, accompanied by A. E. Fravel, principal, and a group of trustees and teachers, recently returned | from a 2080-mile, seven-day sight-
| United States. 5 | Some of the places visited by the students were Niagara Falls, Chinatown in New York, the statue of liberty, Empire State building, Radio City, the Boston ship yards, Mt. Verhon: and Arlington cemetery, "The group traveled 1600 miles by | train, 400. by sightseeing bus, and 80 by boat. ; rey
y.
SR
‘
very |
Ann | lingered in the, library long enough “1 didn't
Quite cheerfully xnow there were any men like that;” . remembered my Ann explained her family's position
It wasn't until much later, after]
are
2 setting.
Every Day Is Sundae For vig > . G.l.s in Paris By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent PARIS, May 6.—You think, like I used tor think, that ar American G. 1. woos a Parisien mademol - selle with cognac and a dish of (truffles? Haw! He does a better job of it, and quicker, with a.double chocolate malted. It's the doggonedest thing I ever saw—French cuties being hired into big evenings by American city slickers using pineapple marshmallow sundaes with cherries and whipped cream on top as bait.
Who among the lovelies of Panis wants bubbly water when she can
-
berry ice cream soda and two straws that signal with slupping noises her need for a refill? The champagne Charlies have not got a chance. :
» " ”
THE SCENE of this gooey de- . bauchery is a genuine American soda fountain known as the Sugar {Bowl and operated by the army jon the Rue du Havre. It is smack {dab against the department store { Printemps, where floor walkers | wear Prince Alberts and salesgirls {hope "against hope to be invited next door. | The Sugar Bowl, called also G. I. Heaven, is a conscious effort |by experts in the psychology of
| ter of Paris a piece of Wichita, {Kas., or perhaps Pittsburgh, Pa. It's all there—a row of gleaming (malted swizeroos, a red ‘tank that" | gushes cokes, jars of chopped nuts, |syrup pumps, and—behind piles of banana split dishes on the back {bara mural depicting the Statue qf Liberty. Miss Liberty looks pretty happy and well fed as if | she also had just consumed a three
flavor special with pecans and caramel syrup. ® - » ”
AN ICE CREAM soda costs 10 francs, or about eight cents. A malted for his girl sets back a { khaki-clad swain 17 francs. I or{dered up a chocolate ice cream soda <for myself, and the French wait- | ress, a pert trick with blue eyes and a fluffy apron, said: | “Hokay beeg boy, eets coming up.” She said she spoke no English. Whatever it was she did speak carried a Brooklyn accent. I hope this dispatch does not sound too spoofing, because it is remarkable how good that soda {tasted. I've only been without {sweets now for two weeks, and 1
{crave sugar like De Quincy craved opium. So the Sugar Bowl not only promotes romance and cements international relations in rich chocolate sauce, but it provides calories where calories most are needed. That isn't all. 2 . THE UPSTAIRS, reserved for hardened rounders, is a beer and ice cream parlor. I wish I were young again and had a zinc lined stomach. Then I could follow the custom and drink my beer with my ice cream, alternating sips and bites until the time came to order * more beer and ice cream. The Sugar Bowls fame has spread so far and the demand for {the gooey refreshments has become so wide that numerous enterprising | Frenchmen. have set up their own | soda parlors. The poor devils simply {have not got the knack or the ingredients. | Their ice cream is watery sherbet. They -use siphon bottles to make sodas. Their sweetening is saccharing, and their signs “American soda fountain” are’ downright libelous to an institution I never realized before was so important.
We, the Womeén
Here's a Note To Foreign Brides. —Yanks Change
BY RUTH MILLETT
AN AUSTRALIAN war bride who canceled her passage to the United
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|States at the last moment told
army officials she didn't think she would even recognize the husband in “America she hadn't seen in more than three years. Don't let that stop you, lady. A lot of foreign brides aren't going to recognize the men they married overseas when they get acquainted with them as civilian Americans. And it won't be the fault of the {husbands or of the brides, either, | » n » MANY A G. I. who painted a | pretty picture of a white cottage for his foreign bride is being forced to take her to live with his family or to confess they'll have to call one room home for a while Many a serviceman who made big plans with his bride for the “new. lifé} he was going to _Jead once he got out of uniform looked around a bit and then went back to the security of the despised old Job, f .. 8 8 THE DASHING young fellow “out there” is likely just. “Willie” at home, and the family he glorified in fond remembrance may look pretty ordinary to the girl who compares reality with his glowing descriptions, But what if she doesn't recognize the husband she married, abroad
*|when she gets acquainted with him
in | too bad. | If a foreign bride could get well enough acquainted in a few brief weeks or months with a G. L to want to marry him, surely sis shouldn't, take her too long to geb-
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get a genuine double dip straws «°°
