Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 January 1948 — Page 11
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fork. No spoon. “Everyone uses a spoon,” would be the answer
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"An Insult to Spaghetti
tricky strands. . With only a fork and my left arm behind my pack, I'd be wiping the corners of my mouth long before the stickier to convention was halfway through. And mind you, I wasn’t trying to make it a contest.
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SPAGHETTI—Does it really make any dif-
NEW YORK, Jan. 14°-The voters of, as the poli. ficlans say, these broad lands are not going to recogpige Thomas BE Dewey this year, when he gets into the presidential potato race. \ If the Dewey you remember is the T. E D. of the last presidential choose-up, you got a surprise i The little man with the mustache has bounced right elong with his personality. The change his
from four - years back won't recognize the Hon. Thomas E. of today. I was sitting real close to him the other night st the New York World-Telegram’s annual coach-of-the-year dinner. It strikes me Thomas has been toiling mightily on his new look. Over the last four years some miraculous things “have happened $0 his voice. It always was rich and resonant, but it never sent you very far. That's © say he was no podium Sinatra. I stispect his New York neighbor, Farmer Lowell Thomas, had a hand in it. Mr. Dewey today sounds - lke a cross between Mr Thomas and Arthur Godfrey. “fe has picked up some lower register rumbles, de-
Ihered iv® gigele,»which come out positively sexy. There i8 humor in it and enormous assurance. 3
There is a lazy drawl, too. A sort of picasant offhiandednness- like that of another successful baritone, a Mr. Crosby. gon 1 ; a H'f Hiss aBaby Wow ornmasteasisms on AE * gritics. have. XE - which “msde him seem ill=at<ease while performing the routine political gymnastics we seem to demand of our candidates. Well, I think the new Mr. Dewey + will kiss a baby or milk a cow or play a piano, or even the skin-the-cat if necessary.
EE —————— ; st \ X nl : i * 3 \ Pictures currently . being received phone ber, ty [ nd Chowderhead Ve. By Frederick C. Othman Nl De Sudgad for the 200 Wotkly Rin col Sr ea eo ¥ as _ contest which énds at midnight Fri- opening, type lighting. aA ——————— i -
Subject to Plane Colors May Be Cause
_ WASHINGTON, Jan. 14—All those headlines about
President Truman's $39,668.000,000 budget don’t mean
much to. me. A million here, six. billion there and 17 ._million_someplace else until you can't see the forest . for the trees. wey © 80 I plunked down $5 from my own budget for a topy of this document and at this moment I am in the midst of the President's 1353-page explanation of where he intends to spend nearly 40 billion: bucks. Take. the capitol dome. It's getting shabby and- he wants to give it a $49,000 coat of paint. "HES got fo keep the snow swept off the front steps of the Supreme Court and he figures this'll cost $150 for the season. You see what I mean Some of the stuff in the budget even a fiscal chowderhead Uke me can understand. And talking about chowder:
Mr. Truman wants $1,509,000 to propagate fish,
$1812000 to investigate fish, and $757.000 to collect fish statistics. He needs $401,045000 to feed the -Army (eat hearty, fellows) ; under the law he'll spread othing on a soldier's bread except pure creamery r Next Jahuary (a President's got to look ahead) a few President's going to be ‘inaugurated: maybe it'll be a Republican; maybe Mr. T. But law and order Must be preserved at these ceremonies, some streetGr platforms need to be moved out of the way of the Parades, and some first-aid stations built to take tare of fainting lady politicos. Mr, Truman calculates the cost of all this at $37,100.
Gives You the Shivers
WHETHER HE'S the Presiderit next year or mot, Somebody'll be living at’ the White House and: this will ost the taxpayers $230,700, sweeping the new back porch meluded. Excluded sre the cops. It takes - blue-coats to guard the house at 1600 PennsylNia _Ave.; with salaries, uniforms and bullets for their pistols, they'll set us back $370,000. I spent quite a while cogitating the $625 million dent Truman wants for the Atomic Energy Com-
‘Way Down’
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 14—Exclusively Yours: Bev®ly Hills desigier Ilyna has come up with the “Esther Williams neckline” as a new fashion wrinkle. That's because, like Esther, the neckline plunges ‘way do husband, Steve
i
m Yankee” ; . Russell's next, for Columbia, will be a slapstick ; No Interest in Christopher's Voyage
REGINALD LE BORG has a Christopher
A the sauce down into the pile and if "gt the next table Weis “beginning round one with the
my. meatballs, Haven't choked-or- dribbled yet.
\[I The New Look ja
been gradual, but the folks who remembér him only ' HE TOOK a reasonably rough going-over from
rum.
story, “Caravel West,” which he's offering '
Loo ’ : gf : PERE NE
napolis Times
SECOND SECTION ___. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 14,1948 PAGE 11
“You Jose the flavor when you you heavenly eating," Mrs. De Biase would say, Heavenly eating. I've seen some examples. Spaghetti and sauce on the vest and chin and jaws snapping at the long, loose strands flapping in the breeze. Experts will say loose strands need not be if the spoon is handled right. You're supposed to
cut the elusive ends by pressing them against the plate with the spoon. But why use two
Might not be heavenly eating but it's awful good. To me spaghetti is spaghetti and it should be eaten with no more complications than there are already. If a snow shovel is your favorite utensil, by all means use a snow shovel. If you use my, second choice, knife and fork, cutting the whole pile into bits of half-inch pieces, that's your business. I'm not starting a nationwide campaign to eat spaghetti with snow shovels. And neither am I sympathetic with a bunch of clowns who are going to try to get the public to use ar oversized spoon. One thing I'm ‘making clear. If the Macaroni Institute ever does invade this fair city, I'm challenging their finest to a duel. To the last spaghetti strand. But up until hat time, leave me be with
By Robert C. Ruark |
He certainly seemed at home with. the sports folks’ at the dinner. He was cracking jokes right and left, chatting brightly with Harry Wismer, the radio announcer, kidding a managing editor—and unless my eyes deceived me, hinting broadly that he might have been a bit of a devil in his undergrad days.
He's Chopped That Mustache
the sports. folks; considerable kidding from Mayor O'Dwyer. He was cracking back with a geniality that I do not recall as characteristic of the serious, prim, sober \man who arranged his politics as neatly as his neckware, : . ! Physically, he is less reminiscent of the chorister| than he used to be. He has chopped a considerable! swathe out of his mustache, for instance. 4 The geniality and the casualness of his bearing is the thing that hit me hardest. He was positively
‘lounging, at the herd table. He was puffing elegantly
at a long cigaret holder, twinkling like crazy and! grinning big. Fl, . : I would say Thomas did himself no harm by linIng up, the other night With the athletes. He handed!
Fritz Crisler the coaching award over a nationwide path, 2956 Park Ave, In the current - week of The Times Amateur! program, which was short-waved all over the world. Photo Contest.
He anpeared as a hairy-ches!
guy before a room-! ful of the best coaches in the
man in his home state than the governor.
oe Goold type, fromet Riess, Su ork Ia Tomy. the Feber ToT er ace
charm. he won't hurt-himseif-any.- From a standpoint, of personality, there's nobody ahead of him at the
mike or on the platform except Ike Eisenhower: and by Mr. Ridpath, a newcomer to the| Entrants may submit any number Ike isn’t front-running enough to bother Thomas very Weekly contest. Mr. Ridpath will re- ot brints any week and compete any mach. , \_ [ceive $5 for his prize. The best pic- number of weeks. -On the back of
ture each week earns that amount ech picture should be written the
mission, but I guess he wrote that section mostly) in double-talk, on purpose. A Couple of things, though, he did mention; $6,069,000 for the transportation of things, mostly frightening, and $37,800 in ambulances” Tor “thé TOIks" Who “stumble” with “arma loads of these unmentjonable “things.” * Gives you the shivers, that section of the budget. The President, I suppose, is the only man who| can estimate what a burglar is likely to do a full |
fiscal year hence. . He, forecasts it'll cost the postotfice now have a new problem, accord-| proper color schemes. department $70,000 to catch the light-fingered onef ing to reports from London.’ In- | terior decorators are being paged. the new peacetime airliners : de-.
next _yeaf. - He also wants to spend $7,850,000 for postoffice|
stationery and if Me gets it maybe there’ll be some great deal to do with) airsickness,|Bound-proofing, floating cabins -to| | Brown and yellow, specifically, tend kill {to. make passengers airsick. | London Evening: News reports one food and cigaret odors, and ime| °“ : 4 x kA : THE ONE PIECE of ‘good news abOUL Spending British airline has Just compléted proved menus became vital mroj-{ -with-a-red-filter. Natural daylight provided the lighting. ; money is that it costs less to fake. Folding and redecorating plane interiors in blue ects. Even anti-glare windows were| _ . pn etn Fs om brn Pe mmiind
nb ! \ The President believes he'll save or gree ult of the Anding, installed. B h | R } dW tP 2 nearly $1,000,000 on hong is lm and Dearly! The. umber of airsick ow Boo, i domestic airlifies follow ac [4 ors a e ors ay, ent fo
dropped considerably as a 'result, through on the British finding,
ink in the inkwells, I hope.
One Piece of Good News’ -
clinking, both.
$2,000,000 on stamping out quarters and dimes. He says that next year he'll turn out only 800,000,~
000 coins from the money factories; this is because transport planes was more impor- brilliant or pastel blues or greens.
i7-Year-Old Family Album Photo Judged
ntry—and for your hours as a salesman, submitted a picture of his then year-old daughinformation, a winring coach is sometimes a bigger ter, Ann. The little girl is now 8 years old. The entry was in keeping | with the photo contest rules that; — FR ey
‘entered. The only restriction i5 iy : Rana, RRS
amateur,
icture Of The Week |
hE
RUNNER-UP—Ralph Barnhart, 809 S:Biltmore Ave., earned honorable mention with this Smokin’ Ma-gee." Exposure was |/50 second at f: || with one No. 2 photoflood light. tke .
BE WELTRHANE
Te WoT
A A
BEST-OF-THE-WEEK — Ann Ridpath was a yoor did whieh her daddy snapped
A
ALM
Ji
OST... AGAIN — Marion G. Parker, 5922
this photo of "Busybody," the best of the week in the current Times Amateur Photo bs: Contest. The entry came from the family album, for -Ann is now 8 years old. Rawls Ave., almost won laurels again but came up i with honorable mention: -
Exposure was 1750 second at f: 5.6. Humination was provided -by natural sunlight posure was 1/100 second
at noon, Robert Ridpath Digs in Old Photographs To Win With Camera Study of Daughter
By ART WRIGHT A picture from the family album won first prize from Robert Rid-| |
at f:8
: Mr. Ridpath, who snaps pictures as a hobby during his off-duty]
day; 3
that’ “tine
The best photos received by % A wa 2 j x A NR
: tinue-as-iong-as-suitable entries-are.
This week's honors is the first WON received. :
{photographer's name, address, tele-
Airsickness?
By MAX B. COOK tant’ than passenger comfort, not, Seripps-Howlrd Aviation Editer .. Imuch was done to- smother noise, NEW" YORK, Jan. 14—Airlines reduce vibration or . provide the
As soon as production began on
a deal to th te stcknes | Bound. proofing, Hosting Sava w| OUTDOOR: SPECIALIST —C. Molinalli, of Martinsville, came up with another kill vibration, new-type galleys,| honorable mention entry with “The Old Mill!" This amateur has specialized in outdoor 4 The improved ventilation to eliminate .. #4 has won in every award division. Exposure was 1/100 second at f: 11
During the war, when payload oniplane interiors soon may be done in
“he made nearly three times that many last year and has some left over. . ’ Mr. Truman asked Congress, please, for | to buy samples of you-guess-what for the alcoholic beverage control board. And he had some sorry news about the government's flier into the drinking liquor b@siness. v He said he feared that next year the Virgin
~ Islands Co. which was organized a decade ago by
Honest ‘Harold Ickes, will turn out more rum than it’ can sell. Wherever you go in America, the Presi. dent said, the liquor stores are over-stocked with “Gilutted” was his word. If the taxpayers don't drink more of the product, hot buttered or otherwise; they're going to lose $31,200 in rum unsold in fiscal 1049. And I think I'll try
some now. It is a patriotic: duty; it may even help my headache, (
1 » * $1000 Carnival—By Dick Turner | that they have more opportunity to dig themselves into financial holes.| Horace E. Abbott, Marion
Henpecked Husbands Tops » oitry Show
in installment buying and henpecked husbands rate best despite the fact
. : Those were the conclusions reached -today by s survey ‘made at the County agricultural agent, will com- ; : University of Chicago: . > |pete for honors at the 100th ane Pigures compiled from more than 20,000 cases in the files of a mail Nual. Boston Poultry Show Jan, order store were used to crown {20 to Jan. 24. ; married persons as tops in the field More than 10,000 entries in the of commercial credit, show will compete for more than s Single girls were rated as the next $55,000 in prize money. 4
best risks. Unmarried males ran Statue of FDR on | Champion birds of the show will i a poor third. “* be displayed In the A&P Food !
Trwtn- I Linn, a graduate so. D@AHh ANNiversary sures nai of fame, in specially clology student, conducted the sur- « nn decorated cages. : vey. He used the material for an] LONDON, Jan. <A giant me- | sestemmtmpmt———— article in the “American Journal f i - 4 [aria statue of Franklin D. Roose WORD- A-D AY By BACH - .
Britain to Unveil |
(of Sociology oak ord. velt will be unveiled in London's ing to Mr. Linn, used credit selling Nistoric Grosvenor Square April 132,
by mail for a trial period of six third anniversary of the late Presi- |
0 re yt : ’ hy ; : i ¥ J months to test the average per- dent's death. | Mi By Erskine Johnson 3)" sons’s honesty. The Pligrims Society, starchiest of | of : The firm sold everything from British old-line societies, is the ; 1 1 drugs to furniture on credit. It drew sponsor. Members of the society say As I'd ) ~ A In “K Largo” a la his good-luck piece in “The ¥ \ I the line ‘only on selling to unem- that Eleanor Roosevelt has accepted re-aid’ i-vist . } Maltese Falcon. . + + The Cagney brothers are after Y | ployed persons and customers under an invitation to the ceremonies. || ONE WHO MAS BEEN CONVICTED : Phil: Reed. for » picture & year. desl. . . . A local re. 2 : Se 21 years of age. | Sir William Dick, one of Britain's [MORE THAN ONCE OF CRIME, vival Of the 1997 Al Jolson Lit, wine vas Singer — (WE: 2) & Mr. Linn said three factors make Most noted artists and sculptors, [MSOEMEANOR OR DELINQUENCY] had Myra Loy giggling at herself on screen, ; one person a befter credit risk than Who has. done portraits of Princess A CONFIRMED CRIMINAL. She played a chorus girl in the film, { another: | Elizabeth, King George, Queen EN- v7; . > ONE: Character: A set of atti- #abeth and Winston Churchill, has P# Bogart Now Gets the Thumping E fudes which leads 10 payment of Almost completed the statue. Vp (me's GOT A M-G-M HAS writers working on the life story of bills through better economics plan-| A Debussy. . . . Humphrey Bogart probably is wondering ning, controlled buying, and moral Home Economist Heads about this movie hero stuff Eddie Robinson beats food J : | him up in “Key Largo” and Barton MacLean does . Oey. The Sapaciy, 1a the same to him in “Treasure of the Sierra Madre.” | - >A REE: Foo: Te pawn status, There was a time when Mr. Bogart did all the dish- : 25 attion 2 wT] ear of legal ing out. . il : Zio cording to tomy * PO Paid ac-ibeen amed Not tn the script: “Too many girls are running ? : i i — oi : around with false faces, trying to look like some movie 2 2 : : rN 7 DIE, 10 HURT IN WRECK ~ actress. It's a mistake and a shame."-~Joan Crawford. 00vR., 19% WY WEA SEavicr, wie. T50 Res. U. 8. Pav. om, — PARIS, Jan. 14 (UP)—Seven perBix years ago, Deanna Durbin made headlines with sons were Killed and-10 Sajured on a
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