Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 October 1946 — Page 21
tart join him
hastened te family
im at his consisted jalf of all nad mar ! that quite le of Mr, ed in Init also old and Louis
coiony in ~ N. Noble Vorth side’ propriated n't mean, Lheir pride Jupport of ed to tell: nn, an old 0 a violent in. Finally, ® out your been here “Just as 1 citizenship makes me
id possibly Any ceased lived in In- } 8 private our public Ie was too ary every
| every one ime. Show A who can
ture
be recomWhen the yyment bill,
er espoused He did get art of the m, favored |, with emnavigation nt reclamajevelopment sts still are
bill, shown 1iterests and looked upon terests. He jainst blind
e with the is not too anxious to y game.
1 convincing 8 politically. he Hershey, e would not And meant
raft” which presidential \n can turn al leader to tial nominawould bring
A ke ry nto Pullman nto the next 1d suggestive u a bed for
and up, and ossible. Howed & new car apartments s to find his indirect palm habby furni-
to the point ) servitors. b drivers. We popular show § you & favor he American e an involunot shoes, hot with the cus-
coin and acn of chislers, fishot of our
sober people, ; people—are | the conmen ing and bootote until such sturn to pleny the natural
tacts
ot at war, we 18 powers are opagands and 11 instruments. relgn-language rlands, Study s which serve ansitively they litical surfaces prica and elsere in criticism , of our own, eir own. nt attempts to wetion.- Almost nsitive to “the oups. That is , is outwardly
orn
nguage groups
Moscow -orient-
es political activi These groups 1 labor unions, ences on labor,
es are not in~ oughly enough
nor using them imate ways to
to exercise
i
. GENEVA, Switzerland, Oct. 11.—
is produced from water which comes
"and other luxuries are on the menus
- i
FRIDAY, OCT. 11, 1948
ie
a
SWISS p AR ADISE SHE'S ONLY BEEN AROUND A YEAR, BUT—.
MOSTLY VENEER
Are you bothered by people who | foe you into a corner ‘and shove
Baby, She Knows the AnGwers
By NEA Service
Its Good Thing Things Proove the latest pictures of junior or sis she hasnt time 10 listen,
Expensive.
Times Foreign Service ven without the mountain scenery,
witzerland would be a wonderful place.
e There are n8 juke boxes in thi¥|>
little paradige. There are no coms mercials on the radio. And the hotel bellhops, in their traditional green aprons, give polite and prompt - service without hanging around for tips. It's an expensive paradise, as you soon learn—but then you can’t have everything. Walking down the main drag you observe nylons in the windows— for $3.50 a pair. Standard brands of American whisky are on sale at $7 to $8 a bottle. And American cigarets sell for 37 cents a pack.
Clean and Rosy-Cheeked
You see the same cheese-cake ads for stockings here as at home. Swiss girls are 'rosy-cheeked and pretty. Trains are fast, clean and on time, with restaurant cars but no Pullmans since no distance is s0 great in little Switzerland as to require an overnight journey. Most of the trains are powered by electricity. City streets are immaculate even in industrial towns where,
in fenseless? Clip this out, brother, for Jo-Ann
put a weapon in your hands.
Jo-Ann starts out
your face while you're de-| “Hello,” says
clear!
The reason where Jo-Ann is 1 year old today.
i
with a good .
healthy slug of milk , . . flight with hair brush.
She has 13 other words in her Leib. has come to your rescue and |vocabulary, and is quite a character ask him if his junior has his first around ‘the household of Mr. and ($5 pay check so soon. How's that? That's Jo-Ann over at the right, |Mrs, Gilbert Leib of Queens, L. I,|Oops, sorry; didn't know you hag with the telephone.
hd . . and then“sets out on a ‘solo
>
[she holds the feceiver that way is| Besides what she's doing for the because she has so much to say|camera in these ‘pictures, Jo-Ann
can imitate the baby next door and
Jo-Ann, just as/a number of other things. She is
getting paid for medeling, already Show these to your friend and
some pictures of your own.
‘What's next? No helping in the audience, please , , ,
-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ne
Oh, yes. “Bowers,” she says. Flowers, that is.
again, electricity i® the principal Source of power. An abundance of electric power
wn from the mountains. Swiss theaters show American movies with subtitles in French and German. Night clubs play American dance tunes. At music shops you can buy American melodies on Swiss-made phonograph records But you are not forced to suffer | a steady diet of swing with your meals,
Silent Newsboys
Here lives a people who appre- | ciate quiet. Newsboys who bring | the newspapers into the best res- | taurants don't cry the headlines but silently hold up a big sheet of paper with headlines on it. | Steaks, eggs, . fresh fruit, butter of the restaurants—although expensive, { Food is still rationed. You have to give two to three coupons a meal. But it's no problem for the visiting tourist. He simply leaves | his passport with the hotel porter who takes it over to the police station and gets an ample quantity of coupons for him. Yes, this is a paradise in many ways—for a foreigner with’ plenty of money. But it is a deceptive paradise, too. One of the first things you learn is that life for the Swiss natives is much different from that enjoyed by the plush pocket tourist. |
Copyright, 1946. by The idahapolns I Times and The Chicago Dally News, Inc —————
INNER DANCE AT LAKE SHORE
The Fifty club will open its. fall and winter social season with a Hallowe’en dinner dance at Lake Shore Country club Oct. 31. A. D McCarrell, Edward G. Meyer and Courtland C. Cohee make the ar-| rangements.
Here are two pleasing
litHe hats of beaver finish
felt, smartly tailored after the manner of their more expensive sisters ‘os in that wonderful shade that's good with
anything . . . any time.
3.00 and 3.98
» °
WRITING CAREERS GROW FROM SCHOOL PLAYS—
Indiana Adds 2 New Authors
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hayes and son Gregory . . plays and short stories they've built a writing career.
lock: s
. from school
You'll Wear
WINTER WHITE
YEAROUNDERS
Hat Bar, Street Floor
STORE HOURS: MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 9:45 TO 5:15
By MARGUERITE SMITH MOVE OVER, Indiana authors. Make room for Marrijane and Joseph Hayes, otherwise Mr. and Mrs. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold J. Hayes, 5806 N, Oxford st. Marrijane's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Johnston, 5926 E. Oak st.
A number of Mr. Hayes’ short stories have appeared in the Woman's Home Companion and
Today's Woman. Another will come out in the December issue of the mpanion® with a novelette in a still later number. Collaborating, Mr. and Ars. Hayes write plays for schools and colleges. Howe, Shortridge and Tech have used their plays. Manual Training is doing one on Nov, 29. When they leave Indianapolis this week to return east, they will go to their newly purchased home in Connecticut. There Mr. Hayes will go to work on a novel that two publishing companies are bidding for. - = » { . HIS WRITING career really be- | gan at St, Meinrad’s. half there in
training for
he must write.
graduated in 1936, crystallized his interest in drama.
voured every play I could get from | the library. Miss Ryan—Clara Ryan | —who taught expression, helped me a lot,” he continued. A visit to New York after graduation intensified his interest in the theater. The next year, Marrijane enters— from the lead in the senior play at Tech. Joe saw the play—and Marrijane—and asked to be introduced. rN » =
WITH MARRIJANE'S graduation and a scholarship for Butler they were separated as Joe was going to I. U. extension. In February, 1938, the couple was married and went to Chicago where Joe did radio “acting” which he says was “valuable experience, but didn't provide much work.” Back in Indiana théy went to Bloomington where they attended classes in drama at the extension division on the campus. There later Joe taught “to pay our fees,” did 4 lot of radio work, had the lead in and directed “lots of plays.” o =n 5
“THE SUMMER of 1940 was the darndest summer I ever lived,” he went on, In Nashville, Ind, that year he was the first director of the Brown County Players.
“By working 20 out of 24 hours] we actually managed to put on plays. We had to build -our sets
out of raw lumber. Six of us did most of the work—and on top of it all I wrote a play.” “After that we decided to go to
French, the play publisher, gave me a try as reader. That was really a big break. But the job was time consuming—I even covered plays at night to see if they had possi-
bilities for publishing. So I didn’t have time to write. ” ” n “BUT I SAW checks coming
through for these school and college plays that were never intended for Broadway and I began to wonder if we couldn't do one. “I talked it over with Marrijane. We remembered what high school teachers in conference at I. U, said they wanted and weren't getting “We just put'all these ideas together. I dictated dialog and she took it down in shorthand.” ‘It took us just 10 evenings to do that first school play,” Joe went on. “I don't believe we could do it again.” ' o HERE Marrijane interrupted, ‘We
SCHOOLMEN'S CLUB WILL HEAR BISHOP
Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam, for-
mer DePauw university president, | will speak: at a dinner-meeting of | the Indiana Schoolmen's club to be held at 6:30 p. m. Oct. 23, in the | Claypool hotel. After-dinner singing will be led by Ralph Wright, - Bishop Oxnam headed (lie Green-
castle school from 1928 to 1936.
could,
only
now we never
have 10
uninterrupted evenings. So we take two weeks off each year and do a
school
From there on with ‘time 0 write | billet, they have had one success after|post,
play.”
another,
One
play was
done in television.
The same year also brought
offer from Hollywood.
“But I wouldn't take it — they tie you down to a seven-year con-
tract
“By
ries as well
and told to,”
included in One-Act plays of 1943. It was also [place is empty.
you write what Joe commented.
Best
an
Y
you're
that time I had decided I wanted to do novels and ghort sto-
as
Broadway
plays,”
he continued. The Hayes moved
back to Brown county
1044. Hayes June,
Charming appeared on 1945.
young
in October, Gregory
the scene in
“I still do some writing by my-
self,”
said Marrijane,
“but mine
goes slowly for Greg takes a lot
| of my
MR. HAYES rab voluminous! jumped from a pre-war total of A year and a | notes, some written, out, some just|76,000 to 120,000. the! jotted down, on ideas for stories. | priesthood served to convince him! themes, and characters.
time.” o
*
“Then 1|
s | either shift for themselves or go
© |den houses on estates taken over
Bf ‘LOVE NESTS' IRK HEIDELBERG
Police Unable to Break Up Clandestine Liaisons.
By RICHARD CLARK | United Press Staff Correspondent HEIDELBERG, Oct. 11, — Hundreds of pretty, pleasure-seeking frauleins are living in clandestine G. I “love nests” within this an- | cient university city and German police ean do nothing about {t, city officials said today. Army authorities said they could not verify the report, but one officer sald it was “quite possible,” “We are trying to break up these nests,” the army official said, “but no doubt there are some we haven't found.” Heidelberg authorities estimated
(that 5000 camp followers had swarmed into town since the end of the war,
Kept in Garden Houses “Of course,” one official said, “in {many cases their ‘sponsors’ tire of them in a few months and they
home. “But usually before that happens the soldiers establish them in gar-
{by the Americans—whepe our police cannot enter, “Sometimes they set the.girls up in rooms in bombed-out houses. “Only recently we found seven girls in a garden house where they had been living: for months. If one of their nightly parties hadn't been: too noisy, we might never have found them. “Right now we know that one unit has seven other girls living in an air raid shelter under their billet —and eating from their kitchen. Have Tip-Off System “Our police can't go in, except with MPs, In order to get to the they have to pass a guard
|
“A tip-off
system is {there—and when
they
arranged arrive the | “When they are under the protection: ‘of their American boy friends there -is nothing we can do about it.” An army offictal said many of the girls were Rhinelanders. “Some of them come from west of the Rhine,” he said. “They are easy to pick up—and they find jobs where they can meet boys.” Military government regulations prohibit the army from hiring former members of the Nazi party. ‘Too Bad’ for Nazis But the official sald many of the frauleins were “too bad” to achieve membership in the party, so are able to get jobs as “barmaids and such.” The population of Heidelberg has
| EOE EEE
Issuance of Flight TWN PARTY s SE!
Ratings Announced
The Roscoe Turner Aeronautical Corp. announced that it had issued| A lawn party at 6:30 Pp. m. toe flight ratings to the following per- {morrow will be sponsored by the sons this week: Delton Powell, Teens of Teens club. It will be 2016 Kenwood ave. and Joseph F.| held at the home of Miss Ellen Powell, 2401 8. California st., solo|Ward, 1337 Kelly st. ratings; Kenny Lee, Roscoe Turner| Progeeds will be, used to buy | Aeronautical Corp. private pilot rating. and Murray F. Inman, Hart ford City, instructor rating.
are being made for a teen-age {dance, under the club sponsorship,
T= lock: '
Boys' Shop, Third Floor
Tuffies Out of The West Blue Jeans are made of heavy LANE Coton Mills Denim. They are sanforized shrunk, copper riveted and double-stitched with orange ) thread. :
8-01.
Sanforized Shrunk + Sizes 6to 18
have registered with city officials,
run over them and use the one|but an equal number .of unregis-
Then two years at Tech, where he | that interests me at the moment.”
{tered frauleins are believed living
“We've had an exciting summer,” {in or near the city
Marrijane said, “I acted in school plays and de- us to-the
stories.
“Now we've got to get back and| { 2000 women are examined in the
“with editors taking |
| tions each month. Approximately
get the notes for that novel out of | groups, they said, and “practically”
New York. I didn't have a job,| but you can always get one—you won't starve to death. Samuel
| storage or Joe can't write it.”
no venereal disease has been found
T= lock: $
TOLEDO TOMBOY TRICYCLE WITH ALL STAMPED STEEL CONSTRUCTION
FOR 3 TIMES THE FUN AND 3 TIMES THE WEAR
It grows with your tom boy. The chrome plated
handlebars are adjustable, the comfortable spring-
action saddle with rubber cushion seat adjusts to
lengthening legs.
size, back wheels |10-in.
17.95
Toys,
In the Annex
Front wheel is ball-bearing, 16-in.
Very strongly built.
Five thousand out-of-town women |
Medical officials said food hand- | Stork club and wanting |lers were given physical examina-
2.03
BY TEENS OF TEENS
pins for the club. Arrangements
RARER »
2
