Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1947 — Page 7
Spoils Holes
er men shooting of the National
ansas- City, Kas,
from Northville,
\inst the other's
As an amateur, sistent, and he rounds of 70 to y one stroke. are were three, r from Chicago, star, Bud Ward, n, a 36-year-old
roke in the rear stars, including South African.
¢ Johnny Palme
arry. Todd, Dal«
min’ Sam Snead,
5 Plays 3 to play In the 60 scorers and lification rounds es and yesterday who Nad scores
Bixteen had 151
ie today. yood chance that } score for the | Guldahl at 281 1ashed today, aland fans were
nA after the first .
'n broke par, Has 146 se with 141 and of par after 36 -busters on the ing it yesterday, ts«said that any len could get hot sparkling rounds 1d the record. 1s were much le second round, and blamed a ost of the trou
in the running 1 of Evansville Morey, formerly , With 150.
Jand ofeat
points in their a-Hooslers. 2 cream of the spanking to "a 1 scrap between 0 fans,
t to the shower
Ibyville’s fancy | state champs, in the last half f rebound work vo periods. He of the Indiana two periods but decided that round better job 1 in advancing oted Keener the rd presented by of the Indian- } conclusion of
Il Along
along to a 60-33 three-quarter oosier boys still n their systems nutes. Several » with devastatich had three2 occasion even
' the Kentucky impson of Lawumulated 17. of
ie South fouled
to stop the three of them of action. Big
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time. 16 also cost & lot. : . “We spent $160,000 on ‘Lute Song’ before the .open-ing-night curtain went up, 4s as worth it,”
he *h » lly, which It was “Lute Song,” incidentally, put sn end 10 aRYing lige syRemAtO SPUIVAUD. dor OY.
SCANS MODEL STAGE—J. Charles Gilbert, Indianapolis centennial program manager,
~ experiments with Walter Russell's model setting
for "The New Moon." .
‘Tax to Breathe?
WASHINGTON, June 14—I wish business chief-
Sains would quit whimpering about their excise taxes; . they're giving congress ideas that are bound to result in every man looking like a Smith brother.
This underbrush on the chins of the American male won't matter much, I guess, because the necktie business will be all shot. The makers of match sticks, buttons, clocks, chaw-
S80 ALONG came Herman L. Brooks, a New York
‘Bumps’ Havoc
HOLLYWOOD, June 14—The metamorphosis of Gladys Bumps—who was built for laughs and to dis-
fng-rut story in a long time, ‘ Gladys, who became Tamara, is June Havoc, sister of Gypsy Rose Lee. Tamarh Baranoff is her character name as the sexy queen of the Shanghai black market in a new
But it really wasn’t so simple as that. June clicked on Broadway as the dancer-comedi-enne Gindys Bumps in the musical hit, “Pal Joey.” She came to Hollywood for the film version and got typed as a lah-de-dah dame with a pair of wellmoulded legs and a hunk of chewing gum in her month, From Gladys she was cast in other films as Flossie, as Trixie and as Cushions, LeFay. Cushions Le Fay, in the movie “No Time for Love,” was the final insult. June fled, screaming, back to New “York.
Newsmen Get Credit “I WANTED to act,” she said, “but all Hollywood wanted me to do was show my legs and chew gum. Besides I was getting old (she’s only 30 now). There's
-30 little time to get anywhere in Hollywood. In New
York; you've got forever.” 80 June went back to New York and started do-
ing stage plays—“Dream Girl,” a revival of “Sadie
Thompson,” “Dunningan’s Daughter,” and others.
We, the Women
FATHERS shouldn't try to be pals to their adolescent sons, says David W. Armstrong, executive director of the Boys Club of America. “Give your son sympathy and attention, but for heaven's sake don't try to enter into his activities,” he warns. Now will someone please come forward to tell women for heaven's sake not to try. to be sisters to their adolescent daughters?
Time to Feel Sorry WHEN YOU hear a woman brag, “Ginny and I are
"more Mke sisters than mother and daughter,” you can
start reeling sorry for Ginny. Mama loves to make that boast. And there are always a few flatterers around who will come back with @he right anwwer, “Well, you certainly ‘LOOK
Wemmer Victory Is Predicted by Hanrahan
Times Bareas
coun will rank with the best.”
Why Not Charge for Time Itself?
and Mrs. Gilbert, who have a son, 22 and a celebrated their
By Frederick C. Othman
the shaving brush and thie razor blade is to the man. “Why not,” he demanded, without realizing the impact of his words, “tax razor blades and shaving soap?” The mioney-raising congressmen jotted down that idea, too, while Mr. Knutson informed the cosmetics fellows they can't hope to get the tax on female lily-
cover the spot where the necktie used to be. It brings us to FP. J. Princg, who bristles when he sees a mechanical
BE DOESN'T like pilot lights on gas stoves, either. He is representative of the Universal Match Co. of St. Louis, and he claims that if the tax on match pads isn’t slashed soon, cigar stores’ll have to quit
thing that Americans still get free. After all, tch is no different from the pilot on a stove. It provides a light. So why tax it? I wouldn't be surprised if the lawmakers taxed pilot lights. And then there was Edward M. Greene Jr. a New York clockmaker. The tax on alarm clocks, he protested, is a tax on good behavior. It is a tax on getting to work on time. “Why,” said he, “it is a tax on time, itself. It is like taxing the air we breathe.” That one stopped the committeemen. They were interested, obviously, but how could they go about taxing fresh air? There's one solution, make man snap a breathing meter, like a gas mask, over his whiskers, and wear it 24 hours a day.
it
By Erskine Johnson
“My billing got bigger all the time,” she laughed, “but the plays kept closing.” But the critics liked her and finally hailed her as an actress of great promise. June gives the New York newspaper boys the credit for her escape from Gladys Bumps. “They not only helped me up the ladder of success, they held the ladder for-me.”
She Loves Her Life : THANKS to those Broadway plays, June returned to Hollywood recently to play Madame Baranoff in the George Raft movie. She's following up this role with the part of a secretary in “Gentleman's Agreement.” . June Havoé¢ was quite a problem to the publicity boys when she first landed in Hollywood. The R. K. O. publicity department called her into a staff meeting and told her to give out with her life story. June told them the story. How she toured in vaudeville with her mother and sister, Gypsy, when she was 3 years old. About her first marriage, at 13. How she ran away from her mother and became a professional dance marathon contestant. How she starved during the depression. : The boys listened, wide-eyed. But the next day a member of the publicity department took June aside and said: : “June—about that life story of yours. We're forgetting about it and writing you a new one. A nice, pleasant one.” June Havoc raised havoc. “You can’t change my life,” she screamed. “I've lived it and I love it.” June won. the argument. Her life story wasn't censored. 4
’ /
By Ruth Millett
like sisters.” - Mama's vanity feeds on that remark. 80 Mama continues to muscle ih on daughter’ life. She pals around with her so constantly that in gider ta got 314 of gaat, Ginny's friends often avoid
Put Up With Her THEY ONLY put up with Mama's company when they need her as a chauffeur or want to be able to say to their own mothers, “You needn’t worry about us because I'm sure Ginny's mother will be Along.” Certainly it is as hard on an adolescent girl to have a mother who is determined to be a sister to as it is for'a boy to have a father who thinks ought to be his pal.
8
Mr. Republicans in Marion county
*
| .SECOND SECTION :
VAR 3 ci Bo. (od [ fit t.
My
Li oR y i i 3 d ¥
We are free men, laughing and singing We are earners with work to do, We have children and they are playing, / Each morning is bright and new; We have homes and friendly firesides, We have food, and the chance to rise As high in the scale of effort . As the vision that shines in our eyes.
REFRAIN There's a blue sky over our shoulders, There are bright stars that shine overhead, There are bars around our bodies Of white and flaming red;
There is loyalty in that blue heaven,
There is union in those bright stars, There's protection in that banner Of white and crimson bars!
We have schools and the right of learning, The lessons that free men have taught, We have government by the people That Yorktown and Valley Forge bought;
We have beauty to south and northward,
And beauty from sea to sea; It’s our land of independence, And we want to keep it free!
SATURDAY, JUNE
leral Inves
here are bars around
REFRAIN - There's a blue sky over our shoulders, There are bright stars that shine overhead,
Of white and flaming red; There is loyalty in that blue heaven, There is union in those bright stars, There’s protection in that banner Of white and crimson bars!
our bodies
§ 2 o 8 (Robert Tome, 13, was playing near his Milwaukee home when he found an abandoned icebox— ] 28 inches in depth, 20 inches wide and 17 inches high. He climbed in to explore it. The door slammed shut and he was imprisoned for 22 hours. He describes his experience in the following dispatch.) -
Fight Planned On Eichel Order
The Democratic state committee planned a counter-attack today to combat efforts of Vanderburgh county chairman Charles J. Eichel to keep his political job. Mr. Eichel, slated to be ousted on charges of teaming up with the Republicans in the Evansville city primary last May 6, won the first round of his fight yesterday. Vanderburgh Superior Judge Robert Tracewell granted Mr. Eichel’s request for a court order temporarily restraining the state committee from holding a hearing on the ouster charges. Judge Tracewell set June 20 to hear the case. That is two days after a scheduled hearing by the state committee. State Chairman Pleas Greenlee declined to comment on the court action until he had received a copy But he was quoted
the state supreme court to dissolve the order so the hearing could be held as scheduled next Wednesday.
BISHOP DIES IN SLEEP
sleep at the chancellery yesterday after a two years’ illness. He was 60.
WORD-A-DAY
By BACH
Boy, 13, Tells His Own Story Of 22 Hours in Icebox
Trapped When Door Slammed, Planned
To ‘Blast’ Way Out With Firecracker
By ROBERT TOME MILWAUKEE, Wis., June 14—I just wanted to see what it looked like inside. Before I could, the door slammed shut. I yelled and pounded on the door. I needed air right away. I figured I'd hold my breath for a while. That didn’t do much good, so I yanked out the top of theoverflow pipe and breathed through the drain pipe. I could hear factory whistles and trains going by but nobody could
he] | Sailor's 30-Day,
‘|with the rgcent United crash and
3 »
gators
¥ wg
In Search for Cause o
Mystery Two Ships Converted From Army Service
“WASHINGTON, June 14 (U, P.)./ ~The third mysterious airline trag-
a civil aeronautics board still crashes that took 95 lives. The Pennsylvania Central Airlines plane wrecked in the Blue Ridge mountains, was a four-en-gined DC-4 manufactured by the Douglas Aircraft Co., Santa Monica, Cal. i
figured in the United crash at LaGuardia Field, New. York, May 29, killing 43, and the Eastern Airlines crash at Bainbridge, Md., May 30, killing 53. In Army Service: The P. C. A. and Eastern planes both had seen army se: vice before they were converted. Since the pilot mentioned no difficulty of any kind, authorities had no basis yet for even speculating on what trouble he encountered a few, minutes after he checked in routine by radio over Martinsburg, W. Va. The area is the same in which occurred the never-explained P. OC. A. crash of Aug. 31, 1940, which killed 25 persons, including Senator Ernest Lundeen of Minnesota. Also in the same general region was P. 0. A's Morgantown, W, Va., crash with 20 casualties on April 14, 1945, Open Public Hearings The latest DC-4 accident came while one group of civil aeronautics board investigators still wrestled
another prepared to open public hearings Monday morning on the Eastern Airlines disaster at Bainbridge Ae
The United crash, originally believed caused by a freak wind change, has become more instead of less a mystery as hearings progressed in New York. The Eastern tragedy may have been due to a failure or defect in the plane’s tail assembly.
Tain't So—Friday The 13th Is Lucky
hear ‘me yelling. I tried to bust the door open with my back but I couldn't do it. Then I just lay down and saved my strength. Went to Sleep I'guess I fell asleep for a while and when I woke up I could hear somebody pass by outside. I yelled and pounded. It didn't do no good. I had on a jacket, sweatershirt and undershirt and it was hot. I wanted to get the jacket and sweater off but there wasn't enough room. I was pretty much doubled up on my side. I ripped the left sleeve off the jacket and that made it a little better. | I had a giant salute firecracker and some matches in my pocket. I decided I'd try to blow a hole in the icebox if I didn’t get out after a’ while. I put the cracker down but I forgot about it. It got all damp and got ruined. After a while 1 started praying. I was chewing gum, but I took it out of my mouth while I was praying and lost it. I didn't have any food but I didn’t get very hungry. “Didn't Get Mad” 1 thought about my family and the two exams I was supposed fo take in school. Then I yelled some more. I didn't get mad at people for not hearing me, but I sure wished somebody did. Finally my dad found me. Just when I was giving up hope. When he opened the door I ‘jumped up and began kissing him. I couldn't stand very well because my knees were stiff and swollen. I didn't even say, hello to him. All I could think was “gee, am I glad to get out of that icebox.”
$12,000 Spree Costs Five Years
a five-year prison term as a re-
the U. 8. navy.
sult of 30-day spree during which he spent $12,000 which belonged to
Marcel Leroy McCumber, Hay-
—And Here's Proof
RENO, Nev, June 14 (U, P).— Carlo Penicara,'Denver, checked into a Reno hotel yesterday—Friday the 13th. He found part of a fifth of Scotch on the dresser with a note from the previous occupanj telling him to help himself, . The note was written on the of an old keno ticket. On a hunch,
club and replayed the 50-cent ticket.
NINE OF THE 10 Mumbers came up, an 1800 to one chance. The dealer gave Mr. Penicara $000.
rolled out of the slot along with two dimes and a quarter.
Musicians’ Union May Join Record Field
DETROIT, June 14 (U. P.) ~The A. PF. of L. American Federation of Musicians ended its 50th annual convention last t by authorizing its executive to put the union in the recording field in competition with major companies. The delegates to the convention approved a resolution empowering the board to decide whether the union would make and sell its own recordings. They also re-elected James C. Petrillo to his eighth term
New Tragedy | Adds to Plane
edy In two weeks today confronted. baffled by Memorial week-end -
[ This is the same type plane which Air lines’
Mr. Penicara went to a gambling|retary
&
EXPERT—Harvey Gluesenkam trees by cross grafting their own 8 persimmon.
Gardening— ; LL Ey £8 Cross-Grafting Branches Helps Brace Fruit Trees
Gluesenkamps Have Been Gardening 15 Years : And Now Raise All Their Own Food rt By MARGUERITE SMITH : DID YOU know hazlenuts blossom in the fall? cas That the seed of a good yellow peach is likely to prodhce & tree bearing tasty peaches while the seedling of a white be ? Poond Deraimplonis are (ist now Biossaaing? Ey That a fruit tree can be braced
Sue fo Block Wallace Speech
#ipjoncion Sought y ‘Anti-Réd Group
WASHINGTON, June 14 (U. P.). agree, “i » —Henry Wallace's plans to speak| pp
TOF For Tt Branches hr ch ! ¥ 2»
:
- |question: mulch into legal complications today. Keep ed our
The American Anti-Communist have enough mulch. I don’t...
cited as its authority the house unAmerican activities committee.
New Earth Shock
WESTON, Mass., June 14 (U. P).| povement, do —A strong aftershock to the earth- | whether quake recorded yesterday-—probably | stimulating.) in the vicinity of Sumatra, Dutch : ” East Indies—was recorded last night| “PVE BEEN in the same place, the Boston col-|and using lege seismological station
as president of the union.
today.
Carnival—By Dick Turner
. wa ( a-bet’) vers TO INSTIGATE; INCITE (A PERSON USUALLY TO SOMETHING BAD; TO AID OR ASSIST IN THE PERFORMANCE OF AN ACT, USUALLY OF A CRIMINAL NATURE
ward, Wis., also was fined $1000 by Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell |after he pleaded guilty to charges { of forging 10 payroll chécks from ithe ship on which he was_ stationed, docked on the west coast. McCumber admitted he spent the money in a wild, free-spending month with .his bride. He bought several new. automobiles, gave champagne parties, and flew in airliners, he said. His wife left
