Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 December 1947 — Page 17
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for 8.
WHAT HAPPENED the other night at Ball Residénce of the Indiana University Medical: Center is a good illustration that a man does come in handy sometimes, 3d ¥ He.may have to play “half dead” to.be of any use byt. his presence is appreciated - Forty-three
- members of the Séptember pursing class can't be
wrong. So you women who think you're so selfsufficient just calm down. a bit ” r Two other members of the. stronger sex helped to make the evening a success. The future nurses were being tested in artificial respiration maneuvers and Capt. Lee Fulmer and Lt. Glenn Wills of the City Fire Department were present to see how the girls were making out. Of course,- all the” preliminary work had been done by Mary Peacock, director of the School of Nursing and Jean Sigler, certified Red Cross instructor in first aid. »
Mr. Inside Becomes a ‘Victim’ I HATE to keep harping about the importance of men but it took two veteran firemen to put the okay on one of the more important first aid measures, : Try to visualize the entire floor of the gymnasium in Ball Residence covered with girls who wanted to start taking their tests. Each girl would serve as a victim and then take her turn as a manipulator. Everyone had a partner except Barbara Schurdell. That's where I came in. Hardly had I stepped through the ‘doors when “shouts of “Victim” split the air, “Let's get him" and “Let's get started” also tickled my eardrums. Never in my life had I met such spontaneous enthusiasm from a group of sharp, young ladies. Lt. Wills: revived me and asked if I would be Miss Schurdell’s victim. Miss Peacock explained hastily that all T had to do was lie on the floor while Miss Schurdell went through the motions of applying artificial respiration. A guy would be a fool to refuse. Swallowing hard. I said I'd be happy to be of an assistance to further science. Miss Peacock called to the class to get ready for the tests. Miss Schurdell instructed me to lie on my back, perfectly relaxed. “Play dead,” she added. On a signal from Miss Peacock the girls went Into action. Miss Schurdell flipped my arms, rolled me over on my stomach and began squeezing the small of my back. : “Count,” I was told. While my ribs were being molded to the gym floor something uncomfortable was taking place in my throat. I knew it couldn't have been my ribs. Not 80 soon. It finally dawned on me that my Windsor knot ‘was the trouble. It was right under my Adam's apple. The two together made quite a pile and with each application ofthe artificial respiratory action I was gagged. A protest out of the side of my mouth only brought a reminder from Miss Schurdell that I was
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SECOND SECTION ~~: +. ws MONDAY, DECEMBER 22, 1947 . =. -PAGEN
Meredith Nicholson Death Ends
2
olden Era Of Ho sier Literature A : > 7 . ; . t i i y ol 4 y ! ‘ ” » po on £ : ® | Was Newspaperman, Novelist, Bui pg on Essayist, Diplomat During Career . = a. The passing of Meredith Nicholson in his 81st year took ET Ri \ from Indiana one of its last great men of letters and a landmark of the Golden Age of Hoosier literature. He was a contemporary of James Whitcomb Riley,
'Booth Tarkington, humorist - George Ade and cartoonist“writer John T. McCutcheon. Mr. McCutcheon is now the
PRACTICE TODAY—But tomorrow artificial respiration thay be on the level. Indiana University nurse trainees (left to right and breathing) a ch lib Patricia Hunnell and Phyllis Schmalz work on ‘sole survivor. recognition In American literature "victims" Lotna Newton and Janet Webb. Started as Printer’s Devil jot $0 ig on the Fopuiay 3 is te, 1 thought, but it won't be . s novels as on the spirit of fundanas. oo Tu Fading. ™ Mr. Nicholson entered the mental democracy which is maniAfter the first trial run Capt. Fulmer and Lt. literary field through the fest in his more serious novels and Wills took down the statistics while I took off my back door—he quit school and be- ®SSays. tie. The second time aroun@ I doy't want my. ... a printer's devil at the age of | Confident of Nation’s Destiny Adam's apple turned into applesauce. Appreciative of the whims and For 120 seconds on the next test Miss Schurdell| vials weakness of democracy as practicaisqueezed air in and out of my lungs. In front of He took pride in being a “self- ,. oo i0q to our institutions and us were Mary Ann Bailey, Eloise Soldner, Mary Jo made” man and often pointed outigocjety, he was forever confident of Smith, Jane Kreighbaum, Patricia Hunnell, Lorna that he/had little schooling. Al-|its vitality in moulding the procNewton, Nina Lou Rogers, Phyllis Dwayne, Phyllis \\ on he said he knew nothing of esses and ‘destinies of the. nation. Schmalz and Janet Webb. With due respect to| aster of, A powerfully bullt man with &
these girls, from what'I could see, I think our team |Srammar, he became 2 Mm |square, determined jaw, iron gray
was doing the best. ‘ |Latin and French, as well as Eg" pair and humorous hazel eyes, Mr.
lish. (Nicholson: always retained the out A Man Saves the Day His rise to literary prominence spoken manner which made him a THE CLIMAX of the evening came when the ne with the sale of a poem to & vivid character to the end. “victim” was to be covered with a blanket while New York newspaper for $3, when He held his own through the artificial respiration was being applied. This IS ne was 18. He subsequently sold & your in the famous group of Indie a dandy routine to get into. short fiction story to a Chicago
'15 in Crawfordsville, |
: a ana writers which included such in- hY Miss Smith and Miss Kreighbaum stood close with j,ewspaper for $10. From then ON gividualists Mr oe hi : ( \ blankets in a fan a Miss Schurdell was the he spent his, life writing more than| ie and Mr. Tarkington. Mr. 1 Re . Q operator. I was on the floor, flat on my face. 30 books. Nichoison once” said. he ‘considered : ' 0 $e , , : Artifitial respiration gulag fult Blas, my Somach Took More Pride in His Essays [sports writers the —only literary LAST NICHOLSON PICTURE — This picture of Meredith Nicholson (right) was Ns ed Hwa completely. covered. still] Although he was best known for talent comparable to this group of taken by an Indianapolis Times photographer last summer to iutrate a series -of slipped under. y covered, still| , . : ah ve le - getting the treatment, Miss Smith and Miss Kreigh-| his fiction, he said he felt “anyone authors, ian articles on-Dr. Carleton B. McCulloch, personal physician to Indiana's literary greats. baum proceeded to drag me slowly across the floor can write a novel” and took more | dst of Books Photo shows the two distinguished men talking over old times, on the porch swing
toward an imaginary ambulance. Miss Schurdell|pyrige in his serious essays than his| A lst 6f fis better knowh books r. Nicholson's residence. It was the last photograph taken of the famous Hoosier continued to apply the respiration. The “victim” ,0 is as follows: “The Hoosiers,” a at Mr. Nicholson's ence. p grap
was indeed warm on that trip. historical book; “The Main ' author, : .
The_tests ended. I expected to be at the head| His: writings won the attention chance 1903; “Zelda Dameron,” juss a as
i 'of President Woodrow Wilson, Who| 1904: “Poems.” 1008: “The t of Neb. Her maternal grandfather was of the class with Miss Schurdell. Lt. Wills pushed ; : Par Tomas Davis, long prominent as
“ " “ . ‘offered to nominate him minister pric, Men,” 1007: “Rosalind at ; te back Lavage) he said, “but average to me Portugal in 1913. He declined| peg eM Be ulin. ot pier Meine Th Monn SPIE Syon ” because he did not believe Lisbon | ro : TE nlons I knew it. Takes a man to save the day | Jug at Kildare,” 1908; “The Lords ge (would be a desirable place to rear ,¢ yign Decision,” 1909; “Siege of death in 1931, Mr. Nicholson mar- : ried Mrs. Dorothy Wolfe Lannon,
Dream Bathtubs
WASHINGTON, Dec. 22—The Department of Justice these many months has been taking a good long look at America’s greatest exponent of cleanliness— the bathtub industry. I know why now—and it isn’t because the Federal Government frowns on bathing. It's because . . . but let me tell you about the bathless firm of Othman & Othman, the involuntary building contractors: We bought a beaten-up house in the country about. three months ago and my bride rounded up a crew of $22-per-day artisans for a quick job of replacing ceilings, gutters, pipes and wiring. The whole works is on the verge of completion, except for the two bathrooms—one for her and, one for me—of
—— his" family. {the Seven Suitors,” 1910; “A Hoos- } | He later accepted an appoint- jer Chronicle,” 1912; “The Pro4 a widow from Marion. Like her By Frederick C Othman | ment from President Roosevelt in| vincial American,” a selection of & husband the second Mrs. Nicholson >. |1933, serving as U. 8. ambassador | essays published in 1913; “Otherwise | was interested in writing. (to Paraguay and shortly after- phyllis” 1013; “The Poet,” 1914; | Ancestors From England The ancestors of the noted In-
\ ward as ambassador to Venezuela. “The Proof of the Pudding.” 1016; one of the biggest plumbing supply hauses in theprom 1938 to 1041 he served as “Tne Madness of May,” 1017; “A diana author came to the American colonies prior to the revolution
vig She es Bedale by dream, baths (her yy g Minister to Nicaragua. Be ae Oo AY i gg | Valley of Democracy "a volume of ; o from England. They first settled ., in North Carolina, moving thence
She chose one, in .moonglow blue I believe, but, An Able Diplomat id i i. essays widely commented upon ap- » i the man said it was for display purposes only. She, His handling of foreign affairs pearing ‘in’ 1918, and “The Lady to Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois. § Mr. Nicholson's grandfather, '3
could have it in white period. And how much would in Paraguay when that country was ni TEAR it cost her? That was a simple question, plainly put o¢ war with Bolivia and his aid to His last book, a collection of esJames Nicholson, and his father, Edward Willis Nicholson, were boim
but she hasn't received an answer yet. The factory ; > . man (you listening, Justice Department?) said he \ICAragua as it changed from a says, entitled “Old Familiar Faces. in Kéntucky. As a young man his father moved
could quote no prices. He said she'd have to ask her dictatorship to a democracy won Was Published in JA, He becane plumber. He said plumbers set their own prices. a great friend of Mr. Riley and Mr. gg Sig to Montgomery county, where he was a farmer. Before the Civil
Tarkington and until his death was . J ne ofthe most active persons in Mrs. 0. Has Forlorn Hope | Nearly 45 years ago, Mr. Nich- perpetuating the Riley tradition. SHE DID ask her plumber, but about all she could! olson began to devote his time éx-| “Who's Who” lists 28 of his books, war he was a member of the Mont-
him recognition as one of the na-
which she thought she’d be so proud. get out of him was that he'd be reasonable. He said he|clusively to writing. His first pub-|and one play. T gomery. guard, which. became the ¢ Mine has no floor; hers no walls. As for the beau- couldn't tell yet what the price would be. And bY jjc work, “Short. Flights,” a book Born in Crawfordsville on Dec, 8, nucleus of the 11th Indiana infantiful basins as advertised in 11 gleaming colors (in- the way, he added, how long was she ‘prepared to| of poems, was published in 1891.|1866, Mr. Nicholson was the son of try, commanded by Lew Wallace. cluding suntan) in the magazines, we are taking Wait? He wasn't exactly certain when the stuff would One of his” best known books, a Montgomery county farmer. The At the beginning of the war he sponge baths. All we've got are some copper pipes AaITive. | “House of a Thousand Candles,” family moved here when he was § enlisted in the artillery and rose snaking along the bare rafters. And, of course, some Mrs. O., who fortunately is not easily discouraged, was published in 1905 and sold a'and he attended local schools, from private to captain in the 22d buckets. then thought she’d buy her own plumbing fixtures. half-million copies. | Gets Master of Arts Indiana battery. The plumber said he couldn't put in the fixtures Siwy fem ysl geder Re, or fon 3 Ielave nN since 1941, the battered grey felt| In 1897 Wabash college conferred It was said that Edward Nicholson until the tile man was finished. The two leading tile gh fied out (aud aie checked this carefully) ope: hat which Mr. Nicholson had cher- upon him the degree of Master of fired the gun that opened the batcontractors in town said they couldn't get around 0 tUC (0 , an rb Se pot otal it|ished for more than 25 years has Arts and in 1901 made him a Doc- tle of Shiloh.. He was with Gen. to us until next summer, maybe. A third took a look, Ne No y Io will touch it. Nook: up onl | been a familiar sight around theltor of Letters. He also received de- Sherman’ in the Atlantic campaign figured on the back of an old envelope, and said he yo fi tt Z 1 dif he h 5 Sgte ? | City. He thought Indiapa the great- grees /from Indiana and Butler uni- and the march to the sea. would tile both baths complete (here's where you're @ fistures he sells and if he hash any lo sell, ° est place in the world and often] versities, Father Came Here In 1872 . qt like we did> 16 : client merely goes bathless. Like Othman & Othman.| Lc... to it as “the gallus. | : on’ - upposed to gasp, like we di r $1350, It's a good One tay. of Hope bus shone upon us. A kindly d one-gallus,| While a youth, he worked in drug After the war, Mr, Nicholson's fa thing we haq rio tub,.or we cheerfully would have citizen inf the bathroom accessory business in Buffalo tried meat democracy.” stores and printing offices, took up ther engaged in business in Crawdrowned him. N.Y. read about ouf problems and wrote that one Civic Service an Obsession stenography. and at the age of 19 fordsville until he oves \o Indian- -_ thing, at least, he could supply us at a reasonable’ After returning here from diplo- began the study of law in the of- apolis in 1872. In 1888 he went to Dream ths Dazzled Her price. He said he'd ship us the medicine cabinets at matic circles. the famed author fices of Dye & Fishback and Wil- Washington to work for the treasWE NOW ARE cogitating imitation tiles made of the contractor's cost, because obviously we are eon- y lam Wallace. ury department. A member of the aluminum, enameled steel, plastics, glass, and homoeg- tractors. Wigle ediionals and clumns 1OF! Ny... pa became a newspaperm Grand Army of the Republic and - enized chewing gum. wf We appreciate this and intend to do business with '°¢3} Newspapers and relaxed in the and for a year he was on the sta the Military Order of the Loyal The plumber phoned meantime and said maybe him, but the question I still must propound to the Quiet gf the home he loved. |of The Indianapolis Sentinel and Legion, he died in Washington, Aug. Mrs. O. had better select her fixtures so he could or- anti-trust division of the Justice Department is this:| Community service was .an ob-| from 1886 to 1897 Was a member of 18, 1004. v der 'em, just in case. She went to the showroom of ~~ How can you take a bath in a medicine cabinet? session with Mr. Nicholson. He felt,the editorial staff of The Indian- Edward Nicholson married Miss om nn that Americans have a definite re,,8Polis News. Emily Meredith, who was born in : p— only to the communi, Mi, Nhl nest rnd sick Gomer Wires ste 2 . and his pet peeve was “a person| ; , for three gra , - The Big Push S On By Erskine Johnson whe, ay Jo the A of | years he was auditor and treasurer dith, a native of the West Indies , ; education and financial security (°f ® coal mining corporation in and of Welch parentage, was an EE eee | declines to help the community| Colorado. American soldier in .the-Revolu-HOLLYWOOD, ‘ Dec. 22—The ‘last-minute rush the role of a young debutante in the 1928 Broadway problems.” He always considered Offered Foreign Post tionary war and spent his ‘last this year to qualify pictures for the 1947 Academy hit, “Love, Honor and Betray,” her father was played | himself an “insulting Democrat.” | The renowned author and diplomat years in Pennsylvania. awards—a film must be screened at least once during - by a young character actor—name of Clark Gable. His political service to Indian- was a member of the National In- Her father, Samuel = Caldwell '47 in the Los Angeles area—is bordering on the ' Henry Fonda's. description of a bore: “One who|2Polis included membership in the stitute of Arts: and Letters, Phi Meredith, was editor and publisher ridiculous. Fourteen top. pictures will open in Los stays at a party longer in five minutes than most|Clty Council from 1928 to 1930| Gamma Delta fraternity and Wa- of one of Centerville's early paAngeles between Christmas and New Year's Day— people stay in an hour.” during the administration of Mayor bash chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. He THE STATESMAN-—In 1933 Mr. Nicholson terminated his Pers: He was a California Fortyseven of them on Christmas Day. The celluloid log Ava Gardner and Peter Lawford were a new two-'L. Ert Slack. He was defeated aslalso belonged by inheritance to the lit A to ‘devols his time to his country as a diplomat Niner and on returning to Indiana Jam is the result of setting the Oscar derby back from some at Giro's. a candidate for state senator in Military Order of the Loyal Legion 1. BE a P ssid oy R osevel , 0. 1852 estaniishied his Nome 3m 1a June to March. ’ Jules Goldstone, Director Clarence Brown's 1922 and was a member of the and the Society of the Sons of the This picture wes laken a. he accepted President Roosevelt's ap- gianapolis. : I wonder what goes with Jack Carson, anyway. agent, called long distance to the Waldorf Tow- Democratic State Central Commii- Revolution. He was an Episcopalian, pointment as ambassador fo Paraguay. , Mr. Nicholson's mother, during He had Doris Day to the USC-Notre Dame football ers in New York to wish Brown and his bride tuck | tee from 1930 to 1932. Mr. Nicholson participated in poli-|of Amétican political life. During minister to Portugal. part of the Civil war, was a nurse Y
game and, the next night, was dining with his ex— Kay 8t. Germaine--at the Chanteclair.
Cognac Brings Love and Hate
MICHAEL CURTIZ and George Tobias had a sensational word battle a while ago which resulted in a no-talk policy between them. George finally bought a bottle of cognac and put it on Mike's desk with a note: “I hate you.” Back came a gift from Curtiz to George with a note: “I lave you with the same hate.” Vera Ralston finally lost most of her Czechoslovakian accent. Now she has to develop a perfect French accent for “I, Jane Doe.” Charlotte Greenwood’s Memories, which started out to be a modest mag .article, has reached 80,000 words. .". /Melvyn Douglas has turned screen-writer =scripting “You -Were Away,” which he plans to produce independently. Joan Crawford is starring in a one-minute short on meat conservation for the government. ‘Ham? If you get up early enough Sundays you can catch Gary Cooper and Paulette Goddard gojfing at Brentwood—with their respective spouses’ okay. Looking backward. When Glenda Farrell played
on their marriage. Here's the conversation: “Clar-| Many of Mr. Nicholson's admirers tics as an independent Democrat.|the Wilson administration, he was’ In 186 Mr. Nicholson married among the wounded soldiers in ence: Brown?” “Yes.” “Congratulations—and how's base their hope for his permanent He spoke and wrote on many phases|offered but declined the post of Miss Eugenie C. Kountze of Omaha, Southern hespitals. the honeymoon?” “Well, e—ah—I think—." “This|—— ’ 24-0 y 5» 48 R . : #4 : IS Clarence Brown, isn't it?” “Yes, this is elf * yy » : Couldn't Stand Abuse; { Brown.” “Are you SURE this is Clarence Brown?"| m an oun L 4 A ¥ | WwW 4] b MN h | Is | as rricie ririen icnoison Father, 79, Kills Son, 51
“Sir, of course it is. This is Clarence Brown, Con- ' HEMOTITE, Mo., Dec. 21 (UP)—
es Sr In Crashed Plane Published in Indianapolis Times Column |." cd win vio ws
Mexican Star Rolls in Dough: “couldn't stand being abused anys
THE SCREEN'S biggest money-maker is not Cros- | by, Hope, Garson or Gable, but a comparatively un-| known Mexican star named Pedro Armendariz. You'll} be seeing him in his first two Hollywood movies, “The | Fugitive,” and “War Party.” | TERRE HAUTE, Dec. 2 (UP)— | Civil Aeronautics Administration
“Discussion of life and conduct| pealed to both philosophers and | or safely prescribed for the aver- " shot his son during an should not be restricted to members| poets Wandéring into the field of = 8ge American. Prejudices are eas- More: 8 Ot his son during ar« Death of 4 Traced of the male sex,” Meredith Nichol-| po ily acquired in nearly every field gument today, then walked to a . To Low Gas Supply son wrote in what was undoubtedly . | of activity; markedly in our po- neighbor's house to give himself up. his final contribution to Hoosier faiths bewilder by SIgnposis | jitieal, social and economic life. | Bryan Moss Jefferson County literature. pointing intp many directions, Discussion of life and conduct | pe wa gv
theology, representations of all
; : ; : . psheriff, said Thomas J. Green had o He sets 330.000 Sich for élght or-10 pictures 3 Year | uy), sag today that an-empty| The article, captioned “An Essay whit Whitman, a genius of de- should Rol bg Festric Ved le Mem= | dmitted killing his son, Lester M. f exicd. Out of this he has to pay only 5 per cent . |by Indiana's Dean of Letters,” was he _ | bers of the male sex, The judg- | ie q gas tank forced the pilot of a small lightful contraditions, who sound : Green, 51, today. v1 for taxes and 5 per cent to the union. He has no bin pl tte |written for The Indianapolis Times | ment of a woman is formed from | ] . " ————————— agent. To have that much left after taxes in this $a i. Plans 0 atiemp) i CMETBENCY | jitorial page column, “In Tune| ®d What he called his "barbaric | y,rerences and assumptions that:| country, he would have to earn three or four million |/#nding which : ” hol pes. With the Times,” Sept, 27. yawp" over the roofs of the world, |p, pe 1argely instinctive but not WORD-A-DAY dollars. on a SHOW sboyere Oli here during The essay follows: in certain moods wished that he | “uo ciated for that reason Burl Ives mastered Gregory Ratofl’s dialect, and is the wee en ’ a a. could turn and live with the ani | mp0 American woman's activities By BACH having quite a time fooling Ratoff's friends on the The victims were identified #5) jo AN abundant literature the | mals—they are so placid and self~ | ou. broadened vastly with: her phone. When Gregory learned of it, he told his|Steve Student Jr, Goaldalé, Pa. 0 way of life has been dis- | contained. brilliant manifestations in - the | friends not to believe anybody “unless I tell you Charles J. Fasgler Jr. Penfield, Pa. 04 How many of the human | Alexander Pope, if not reckoned | colleges and universities. Science
it's me.” - ! Raymond Peter Zielinski, Reading, race have seized upon solutions of | ‘among the greater songsters, ut- | and the arts hive enrolled Amer=
. " - Wy . Yule Music Schedule at Circle oJ oth Sinem se 0 lie rls pi
courtesy
P.M. Music Co.
12:05—Community Centers Chil-|
) , Wil: gas tank was empty. The plane and the intellectual English and | safely into the field of the inan- & fren a : Mys. Clyda Clarkgdirector, { Pred W. Martin, director. did not catch fire, he said. | Americans of that period would | swerable. Our American Whitman person or, if derfled that, is there | : | K30—WISH Radio Broadcast, 5.00—8t. Joan of Arc Girls Glee| The CAA control tower at Hulman| think of the rush in which we | in his “Song of Myself” demand- | # compensating blessing in that |
12:15—Manual High School Spanish Speedway
Choral Club, Miss Elizabeth Miss Melva Shull, director. rector. crash scene, reported it’ had been| thing to strain the imagination. ment but what does eternity indi- | crudely designate as charm? Nelson, director. | 7:45—Speettway Christian Churgii| 5:15Ogden Girls’ Choir, Mrs. Rus- in touch with the pilot for an hour| A difficult thing about modern | cate?” Old Walt, took EV IToge | Tt is well to have in mind, when ma Choir, broadcast, Mrs. Helen | sell Barton, director, before the crash. A pilot had mes-| life is that it continues to go on | of poetic license to launch an in- | perplexed by some problem, the 13:30--WIRE . Radio’ Broaficast, Martin Robinson, director, * | ¢.49 5. roughs Concert Choir,[588ed the field that he wanted to| to modernize itself. Ideas come | answerable question. | writing of Jopathan Swift, who Ipalco Chorus, John M.| | 7 Jane Johnson Burroughs, di- land at Terre Haute because of 10g! fluttering upon us from some- bo ® hw left this pithy saying to posterity White, director. Hef Tomorrow | rector. |and a low gasoline supply. | where as the days go by. If they | MAN HAS, no matter how hon- | in his “Battle of the Books"—“the
5:00—Warren Central High School P. M.
Madrigal 8 , Miss Kath-|12:05—Happy Hoboes and Sad Carl Kiefer, director. circle -around Columbus, O. and| enough to be incorporated in the | number of difficulties to over- | sweetness and light.” These words . leen Hergt, ctor. | "* 8Sacks, Fred Koehrn, director. 7:15—Nativity Singers, Mrs. Doro-|authorities believed that was fts, cultural life of the nation this | come. Ancestry and the atmos. | are susceptible of endless inter- | §:15—Warren Centra} High School|12:30-WIRE Radio Broadcast, thy Cross, director, |destination. The plane had ‘aken will make itself known. | there’ of the home into which he | pretations, all calculated to cheer, " Girle’ Glee Club, Miss Heryt, Mother Singers of Indian. 7:30—Pearson Band, ~ William off from St. Louis and had been re- 0 | is.born are not to be overlooked. | comfort and enlighten the poor apolis Council of PTA, Mrs. “ " Breedlove, director, ported. overdue at Indianapolis. Time 18 a subject that has ap- A true way of life is ngt easily | struggling human'race. :
B.
Today w= | 5:30—Wired Music through the Barbara Pelland, director. |°¥d Ellis, a farmer, into whose ang see it whole”? ItPwas Arnold | Time, which drops the heaviest | to the length of their skirts.
7:00—Ma Rue of the White Shrine,| 1:05—Mothers Chorus, School 91,
MORDACIOUS|
~ —- vv (mor-da’shus) sou ACRID; ¥SHARD , SARCASTIC; BITING , CUTTING
or Th
Pa. and William. Paul Student, 26,
i p , true line when he wrote | {ca's daughters proudly. In this | Kansas City, Mo. the problems that dally “beset | tered a tr ca's daug I
those who: try to see life steadily, | that the proper study of man- | period of general “readjustment kind is man. Another bard has | one must permit American women sentence, that “we see life steadily | sald with considerable truth that | to express their opinions, even as
field the plane crashed. who back in his day (he died in | things that weight, his pack, will | * 8-8 CAA Technician M. E. Walker 1888) spoke of “this strange dis- | carry diamonds'long. A poet of | ARE YOUNG women in better at the Terre Haute airport said the ease of modern life.” What ‘he | opulent imagination, may venture |. 10k to be endowea with beauty of
of . the Meeker 12:55—Fletcher Bank Notes, Fred ! W. Martin, director.
i | High School Choir, Club, Jo Ann Krieger," di-ifield, two miles northwest of the| of the present are living is some- | ed: “The clock indicates the mo- A combination of qualities we |
| 7:00--8t. Patrick's CYO Choir,| A flight map in the plane had a are good, wholesome or beautiful % est his self-examination, a great | two noblest things, which, are
. 4 : ¢ 2 ’ ; / ra a : 3 os A : » n. uw
. . : : ® § (tJ a , v : 3 ee |
