Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 May 1948 — Page 17
warning against But IT think ft ments -on “cone
wing, no-mowing rom seed. But. there is no such
grasses, . I think, , 8. Agricultural They are still at it will spreaq m more cheaply, as I think some It is on sale in ’s green the year
'ns brown earlier
atches of it al. 8 Milford, Conn,
ttle of 1t 1 ale
tell people not is year, as seed
\nswer?'
\bbott St.
into the service | soldier? ¥ en profession or —tend to elevate srkmanship and
1 a count of the ore for the young ght to plan—and ke his own selec. and have the ope , test? fighting man find eg mequire anc ape at? * both, accomplish anpower on mili-
a true American It would object to rican freedom be
e against attack?
tle.
n your stand for itorial on UMT tling It Down to a good start. If then let's really
f this country is ere should be an
re to the 18-year-gation? on
industry, and la. everybody Army ve total mobilizag- for everybody — ale; control over that we may be
itary might—not trial mobilization rnment—will not And it certainly ."
orts Events he baseball games
jo. not think that es should be sold es or any sporting
seball games and 1. Just a few days awl, and fight, at
ame or the midget ld. one takes one’s home. Too many 1es and the midget alcohol. It cree situation. » be served on the ion the State Fair they permit beer s Motor Speedway be.
1ys? N. New Jersey. employees’ work
employee working |
cess of 48 hours) er-hour, ployers give their why shouldn't all
is rule should be
y, and that agreend employee. ssed and enforced, ee should receive pxcess of 48 hours, lays. TRY -and-one-half.- So and holidays?
'S no fault of their these solid citi- | perhaps threat« je of their real another matter, » ~ © ER if the same (ing might help ess’ slowness in dequate housing
gressmen wera ntal and effusive ys,” too. But it her matter when weed of housing the boom-time real estate aswus it has seemed _ is more anxious Antee mortgages ciations than to construction of reach of a ser-
so» : , few members of round to reading e two sergeants. y will give. gome it to other past members of. the Who are less ut no better
could help stir g-awaited action, the embarrass. sergeants’ fami
Fa—————
§
t
ih dich a - ¥
i
Wife Expresses Fear Over Buying Home
Manners—
BILL AND I haven't lived together for more than six! months at any one time in our six years of marriage. He now wants to buy a house and furniture with money his aunt left him, but I want to wait and see how his job, to| begin after college graduation in June, works out. I wonder, though, if he would grow tired of our two noisy chil. dren he dearly loves now on our week-ends if we stayed in these three little rooms over his parents’ garage. | We eloped upon high school graduation and were hearly dis: owned, though our families are friendly and expected us to marry eventually. They recovered and I lived with Bill's parents while he was in the service and in college. MRS. W. 8, Bill has confidence in your marriage and faith in his future —and he needs your faith in him. Cramped quarters, with inlaws, are suitable for families. Your past separations may necessitate adjustments and they will be easier to make in a spacious home with spots for recreation and entertaining. Love | needs associations with friends. 2 Bill will work harder at his job with a deat out of your bank acount, and a knowledge of the expense of a house and |
furnishings. WE |
Woman Wants Lots of Room I'M A WOMAN, 28, unmarried and in the business world. | My feelings are about normal in everything except in being close to people and objects. I can't force myself to board a crowded bus. I must have! an end seat In a theater: I can't bowl a good game in-an-end| alley for I feel the wall is crowding me. Will you explain ad feelings and suggest how to overcome them? TROUBLED. You may need a psychiatrist or yoy may need less leisure | time for harboring eccentricities. - Let me know if the theater problem is serious. I like end seats too, but I always think it's because I feel less guilty for | chopping away at that popcorn I smuggle in.
‘Disgusted’ Is Tired of Dark Lanes
Dow of the ‘new look, which! +. Wok half ‘the fun out of life, pleted to use the facilities of OrWhen he had to get used to going ‘chard School for the regular But-| ‘ {ler University summer session, |
, @ WHERE CAN I find a man who has the énergy to Tift his head and hands other than in a pass? I'm 20 and have casual friends, but none measure up. They drag me to a movie, splurge at-eokes and. sometimes..go..dancing--then. to. the. inevitable dark. Jane. I don't want to go to the lane, but I don't want to sit home for the rest of my life. . I'd like to meet someone with personality and lots of fun, who likes sports. I'm tired of dragging vitamin pills around with me for tired males. Have you suggestions?. . DISGUSTED. Maybe you're administering the wrong kind of vitamins— and giving the wrong impression. Get the boys talking about sports and be enthusiastic. They'll ask you to join them. : There are times, though, when sports reviews just aren't appropriate. Remember that, when you find a boy who appeals to you for more than his knowledge of athletics.
Tells Girls to ‘Wise Up’ |
TO YOU GIRLS who can’t win your men—wise up and act nat-| ural, Fellows don’t like girls who “put on” and live in a make-belfeve | world and try to act like movie stars. - They want to know what kind of girls they're getting. | Living with girls putting on false fronts is quite a burden! for -men to undertake. : B. C.
I agree, B. C. A girl expects her husband to be the same |
romantic man she married—and the husband expects his wife
to be the type he chose.
Can't Decide Between Mr. ‘A’ and ‘B'
“ROWED MY HEAD to the Sunnyside patient-able-to see-some~
thing bright in the world. I've had more “downs” than “ups.” but still think I can make it because there are grand people in the world and enough good for all of us if we're patient, good-hearted and determined to see the good. - 3 I'm a widow with two children and a mother to support. I have two gentlemen. I've known Mr. “A.” three years. He's a widower with three small children. He travels. He provided well for his first family, but gave them little companionship. I wonder if he's just wanting a nursemaid. I fear, that the relatives and I would have him betwéen us about the children. 1 care for him, but not enough to hunt up trouble. I've known Mr. “B.” for years—a widower with no children, a good provider and kind to his wife and her relatives. He is a “home” man. He wanted my mother to persuade me to marry him. 1 respect him, but don’t'love him, yet I want a home and companionship. My children are fond of him. .
} HALF-HAPPY WIDOW. Mr. “A.” and you probably would disagree about the things you foresee, and many subjects you can’t foresee. Mr. “B.” actual1y is thé man you weed, but T-wish-he were alittle braver. Don’t expect the tremors of his first love, but hold out for a little remance, since it’s so important to you.
Asks Why Churches Are Empty
+ $F 1.00K-at-our-empty churches on and wonder
what mankind is seeking—not one hour in a week devoted to the|
RETAIL MERCHANT. It is odd that troubled people aren't even curious enough to try religion when medicine and every-day living fail to make them happy.
House Hunters Must Include Names, Addresses Will those of you asking about places to live and having places available, and those asking about jobs submit your names and addresses, if you only signed initials? 1 seldom find houses, «ht when-§-do-1-ean't-help you without Knowing whe you are, I'm paging M. G,, L. K. and “Home Family.” MRS. MANNERS.
Sisters Say They Hate Boys WE'RE SISTERS, -18 and 17, attractive, and only. slightly conceited. We hate boys and find their main objective is to neck or in some cases, they have bigger ideas. “We find it much more interesting to go with our own sex. Is this unusual”? : : : ETHEL AND-EDNK Your conceit may irritate the boys inte antagonizing you. I've heard girls—and women—say how much fun they've had together, as they race home to see if they've had any telephone calls from men. You aren't enjoying this spinsterhood too much + OF: York. wouldn't. worry about de... cocoon isn
soul.
REARS Bin SNA REE A
Let Mrs. Manners and readers of the column share your prob-
‘lems and answer your questions. Write in care of The Times, 214 .W, Maryland St. :
Actress Who Dyed Tresses Dark For Film Role Missed ‘Wolf Calls’
By VIRGINIA MacPHERSON, United Press Hollywood Correspondent | Adele Mara said today blonds have
HOLLYWOOD, May 12 more sex appeal than brunets, and she can prove it.
She's been both. And the wolf calls she didn't get as a brunet .
left her feeling like Whistler's mother.
The 22-year-old actress says she found out men do, too, look at harder if there's yellow hair on
a girl's face, top. . “This experiment wasn't my own idea,” she explained. “I had to dye my hair black for a part in Republic's ‘The Blue Lady.’ And what an experience!” The gents didn’t exactly look the other way when she sidled down the street. Blond or brunet, the Mara, curves are still there, { “But a whole week went hy and not a single man whistled at me,” fhe pouted. “No appraising side glances; no good-natured teasing. I don't mean they were rude. In|
fact, they were polite. ~ Too darn | polite,” ) i
Only they'll look
complain!” The late Jean Harlow started | with her platinum locks.
puts up a good argument for red From Shanghal.”
“and look a lot better doing it.”
: . curls. Book Grew Blank
little blank, too. “The darker my hair got, the INE to please, darker my social life,” Miss Mara [What aid. “Only one boy-friend stuck You?’ With me. And even he began livIng In the past. N "All he did was complain, Said ¢'d hardly recovered from the
i
In Orchard School
Out with a brunet.” ; ; Look, says Miss M., at the evi- June 14 to Aug. 5. dence on the blond side. Where!
could you find two more explo- by the College of Education-for pets : ; ively sexy ladies than the the elementary. laboratory And AS Block's Information Deak (Street Floor), r 1 ox Sm | demonjtration. IL All éon-| | wos OT : Lg Qe hp ~ “They went through the same férences and w pf the, Tr : Ordeal I did,” she added. “Lana college will also be held there. y
[Family Scrapbook
| By DR. ERNEST 6. OSBORNE
wot with ARINORAS. 1.
‘Most Men Do Prefer Blonds, Declares Temporary Brunet
darkened her hair for ‘Green| Dolphin Street’ and Betty went] slightly brown for ‘The Shocking Miss Pilgrim.' Did the fans ever
And Rita Hayworth, who ordinarily
heads, is the latest convert. She dipped her hair for “The Lady
“A blond ¢an do anything a] brunet can do,” Miss Mara says,
She patted her freshly dyed “I don't know what it is,” she Her date book began to look a sald. “Chemical reaction, maybe. - | But it's the gentlemen we're try-|.
And® you know| gentlemen prefer, don't
Butler to Open Session
Arrangements have been com-
The school will be used chiefy :
a =
ICA Re
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Stored Planes For Expansion
Plans to Build
Fleet to 14,500 By CHARLES LORODRY United Press Staff ‘ WASHINGTON, May 12—The| {Navy will expand its air arm to |a size it considers comparable to, | the 70-group Air Force despite {lack ‘of appropriations for buying] enough modern planes. | It will do so mainly by taking
A RT AY
Brothers, Sisters and - {out -of storage ail-but a few hun Playtime dred of its World War II planes, “Little birds in their nest spokesmen said today.
agree.” One wonders how many brothers and sisters have writhed or the Ale JE ALY cenitend Jit this ‘saying was thrust ate). Navy was quietly reaching its m. “And, of course, anyone a. .ision to expand fits present who has watched birds in the nest qoot of 10,900 active aircraft to knows that they don’t always iq x00 within a year. The joint agree, especially when there are cpisry of Staff have approved worms in the offing. But the such Navy strength. But the airpoint is that we parents are ..,¢t procurement bill which Con-| anxious that there be friendly,! gress has voted gives naval avia-| harmonious relationships among tion only about half the money.
our children. And surely no one that is uired for annual rewould deny that such a goal 18% placement BIANSS: !
good one. o If we insist, however, that our| Needs Replacements children always play together, Secretary John L. Sullivan says that the older ones welcome the ® 14.500-plane Navy air arm will younger ones into all their ac- Peed 3300 replacements annually. tivities, we may very well begin | With the $753 million voted that to build up antagonisms that service for the next fiscal yéar, often result in quarrelling. It is 11.535 pjlanes can be ordered for better to permit children to have delivery beginning -14 months {Te for other playmates of their from now. .-. . _ own age and own choosing. The, When its storage planes are little ones who always tag behind shortly used up, the Navy may their. bigger. brothers..and. sisters have to ask for twice as much rarely. have the sort of play ex- plane-buying money as it is getperience that is best for them ting this year, or go in for re: and the older children may very trenchment. well feel tied down by the re-! To reach its new strength in‘a sponsibilities of caring for.“small year, the Navy will take 2400 fry.” ; planes from storage and receive All this is not to say that 1200 new planes from prior years’ children of different ages should orders. It plans to have 24 groups never play together or that of fighter and attack planes asbrothers and sisters can't possibly signed to 12 carriers, compared enjoy one another's-company. It with 13 groups now assigned to is only to urge moderation, to 11 carriers. encourage outlets in play with| Has Four Jet Planes
other youngsters as well. Such a - Spokesmen said funds in the, a, To a — og run, appropriation will pay for 807 new fighters, 515 attack planes,
SORRY A Ey a 113 patrol and 20 transport planes can if they never have a rest 2nd 80 helicopters. "More “than from one anotier . half the combat types will be jet ' : propelled. © A survey, shows that
Dr. White to Speak there are four Navy jet fighters
{likely to:be ordered in limited At Commencement |quantities under the new approTTT ames: Wate Seevies
{priation. Eventually, spokesmen’ _Idaid, the Navy probably will settle H BEND, May 12--Dr.. nn two of these. — The fighters-are Helen C. White, professor of Eng- the McDonnell Banshee, Chance lish-at the University of Wiscon- Voight Pirate Grumman Panther sin and winner of the Notre Dame nd North American Fu { Laetare Medal in 1942, will give *"4 NO ye the address at the St. Mary's Two attack bombers, both with College commencement May 29, (fire power of destroyers, are in The Most Rev. Francis Noll,
{production now and may be orbishop of Ft. Wayne, will preach dered in larger quantities. They the baccalaureate sermon at a
are the Martin Mauler and Doughigh mass May 28, Sisier Made- las Skyraider. In the reconnaisleva, college president, will speak sance and patrol category are the at the annual honors convocation Lockheed Neptune, holder of the Thursday, May 27. Eighty-five world's distance record, and the
students are candidates for de- Martin Mercator, a two-jet, two-
Plans $1000 Scholarship
‘With Unclaimed Reward
Polish Immigrant Can't Find First Soldier | To-Enter Berlin; Decides to Aid GI's Son -
By ROBERT MUSEL, United Press Staff Correspondent | NEW YORK, May 12—David Kay, a man who never has gotten |over the wonders of democracy, said today that he probably would | {found a scholarship with the $1000 reward he offered for the first) American soldier to reach Berlin. { Mr. Kay posted his offer and another $1000 for the first Russian soldier to reach Berlin, in the closing days of the war three years 280. A few months ago he was =~ ——— oT x = advised that the Russians had . been unable to trace their rst Of the press he said. ‘I can say MER. THeY “suggested that ar. What 1 like and they print it, I Kay might want tq contribute in- &0t 8 letter today from someone. stead to the fund for rebuilding “NO likes my views so much he Stalingrad. wants me to be Secretary of “T-aid #0,” Mr. Kay said. “Now: Slate. the War Department advises me Mr. Kay is a genial, mustached «it is impossible to trace the first|man. Twenty-five years ago he: | American soldier. The Veterans Was & stlent screen cameraman in {of Foreign Wars made the sug: Heilywood for such old ime stars gestion that I found a scholarship as Clara Bow and Douglas Fair- S lfor the son of a dead veteran. It banks Sr. sounds like a fine idea to me.” “One day I made an irdustriall™ He gesturéd with a hand heavy film about mather of pearl” he Polish Tmmigrant “IT got the idea pearl shells Sg “I made the offer because I love could serve more uses than just {this country. I was a Polish im- shirt buttons.” {migrant kid, now I'm a million-| There's one job Mr. Kay wants aire. Where élse can that hap- tC finish, however, before “te goes pen? Where else can you speak to the West Coast to try his hand as freely as here and do the/in the movies. coh things you want to do?” | - “That's to get Dwight Eisen- gg. Every week Mr. Kay spends howér elected president,” he said. 5 $500 on a newspaper advertise-! “I'm an officer of the ‘drait ment—invariably an editorial pre-| Eisenhower’ movement and I do snting his views on national or rot believe he will refuse a draft international affairs. Ino matter what he says now.”
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