Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 May 1948 — Page 13
ne
re Fp
CIE SUA EAT AN RA TR A TAT
“SECOND'SECTION + ~~ TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1048 Cr ad "PAGE 13
‘SHEET MUSIC versus bar bells and Vaughn “Let me hear you sing something.” the band. | Monroe versus Fabien Sevitzky. The two gentle. leader called.
There are people wh I. men have me confused to the point where I may lke Vaust, Ra0Die i. Sain und. r=
give up singing. : “R s . i : Tp ib i i : Se ee mcm i ne = oo HOW Any Boy Can Be Governor © “Carmen.” Mr. Seyitzky, slightly nonplussed, “You have a voice,” said Mr. Monroe when I on
I learn to read music before I try ‘to finished.
suggested 4 ging ‘with “The Stars Under the Stars” this “That's what I tr summer... Seems like an awful. lot of work just he wouldn't believe er. Ye Mr. Sevisky
‘ ; RR. ncn - man ot : rg gps to sing. 0 PL i You know, V pi ou. N hell pheno mee erp oa an 5S SL nalana--- oitical rrimer to improve my voice also has its disadvantages. hard he almost had in his eyes. : ; ; 3 ? : ' >
e That would be real work. Besides, Mr, Monroe “How about a duet? I . ! Chit guaras ee that with bar bells a man can ' Vaughn looked at his watch and said he was A Simple Guide { : ] : 4 little pressed for time. Then he said two! 4 Sa. dg, you mind if I clean up o bit while baritones wouldn't sound too weil in a duet. | For Candidates | we talk? rSyRaKY said I was a tenor.” . By RICHARD LEWIS | s ‘ “No, I think you're a baritone,” Vaughn said | Is He Tenor—or Baritone? reflectively. I think he meant it. bi AS A. result of my re
" ’ i | _.. J. HAD NO objections. I knew. he was going... hue you are putting your tie on let's run searches around the Claypool! to have dinner with some loca rough llerina."™ 1 argued. i fo have SIRE Ith Jumus 1 friends before his ~y EU. eautiful. To give you an idea how|HoOtel, I have compiled some, While “he puttered in the washroom of the 500d it was, Charlie Schlegel, Murat stage notes for the guidance of) Murat dressing room, I recounted all that TW PASCr, opened the door and peeked in. BoY,|..ndidates seeking the office! po, we were loaded A seeking .'he oe] happened to ime at the “Carmen” tryouts. Mr. “°°, ok Monroe seemed sympathetic, . «Baritone, eh? of Governor of Indiana. y Yep, just a baritone,” answered Vaughn. (CORRECTION: Great State of! There were a couple of questions I wanted | Indiana. Never call it plain IndiSeared WP oa why does a man sing better ana. That's instruction number I.) “He couldn't explain that one but he agreed | governor Ir he Rn with me that a bathtub and a shower does | People The way to do it is to rent something to the voice. ‘Good enough. | n i Por! My second question concerned the golden ID ihe ATR . hang out, liquid commonly referred to as beer. 'take off for Pu prod 80 your “Beer doesn’t improve your voice,” Vaughn peaqquarters can't find yo y seid, “It merely makes you want to sing. Many oC you. opera people shun stimulants like poison. Really,| IT'S ALSO good if you can keep it doesn't do much for the voice.” your telephone busy so no one I'm half inclined to believe him. He has such can get in on the line. This makes an honest face. The bandleader is also a Big an impression, especially on the bloke. I'd hate to have to put him out of a|swit is switchboard girl who probably | ‘Joint Jo singing too loud. Not that he would |a voter, | do a thing like that. It's just to give you an your- 1 “idea what -a rugged fellow he is." : ae Lincoln. ake: a “What do you recommend for me? What your name is on it so visiting should I do to Improve my voice?" {political writers know. which is| ‘Parted—No Mention of Contract po Cl AT THIS POINT} became confused. Vaughn| Democrats may vary this pro-|. motioned fer me to follow him on the stage. Bar cedure by turning Lincoln to the bells. He carries the iron muscle builders every. Wall and hanging one of Presi where he goes. ‘He claims they keep them in dent Truman. » shape. Something. must keep. him. in shape... If... gry sable With whoni “I were sure bar belli Would 6 a8 TUCK TOF yo a oii People WIth Who me, I'd get. some in a minute. |you now pioposs os get frien ol “If you can’t read music, the next best thINE | fering of count Rlegates, a scab is to work out five to ten minutes a day on bar|, 8 > in ite! bells. See? Righty pounds in an overhead Sw citizens who will underwrite “press.” the financing of your campaign) po , N ” with no strings, it says here. | ir oat got to do with singing? 1 (NOTE: Don’t sign any.) " “Keeps you in good physical condition, which This primer "x how ny boy, is-essential to singing,” Vaughn explained. {Sea Faves Hor . ote a ; The only thing I could do with the bar bells "Ve cafdidates Who 80 Eraciously) ; : : : was roll them aiong the four, That maneuver | Llc, A Ey wy THE RIGHT ANSWER—Miss Janet Getty gives the right answer to a caller at gubernatorial headquarters RECOMMENDS BAR’ BE Noun Vor. Sr Toop y . t Claypool. OP | in the Claypool Hotel. Busy telephones impress convention delegates and keep hangers-on at a distance. ECOM : : LLS Bn So, we parted company. There wasn't one eT | “Wouldn't : roe, after singing a duet with "Mr. Inside," sug- ’ a : THE BOYS who want to be ouldn’t this state be in a ; . a menti t e's. t. 4 . I eR et a Be una guide. nyu fo mpm his vce al he A ap RR over ar: Sacked Lp Thr eto Rope If Ts wart "Fabien Sevitaly hinted at music lessons. contracts. : Nos ike wheatakies Opposite TE «le HIRIF Goat BUYS ula Need 18
a
ad
yL POISE
i
ss |vator shaft. - Each - is convinced: be... governor? .Shucks. Nobody } " " ——— he is the next governor, but|drafted me. I haven't even felt . : - i i ._... _ hedges about admitting anything.|a breeze on my neck. I just want Leo the Writer =. By Robert C. Ruark|, femoction mi=pet uly iio” X ~ y . anything !f you can avoid it;) | Mr. Helmke will support what- - Their campaign headquarters ever platform the GOP conven-|$ NEW YORK. May 18-81 I'h 1 bee — t Suh down the line from 825, 725, /tion adopts. 3 rg I , May 15—Since 1 have long been on the part of Mr Durocher. Others just stand. 525. to. 323... Binh cstaaeresoacll mle atc an admirer of Leo Durocher, the baseball player, there re wave bats, fs C- | Room 435 is nov.yet taken. Jt. NEXT. In Room 525. we have. oy Tr —manager; radio actor, movie actor, Hollywood so- Apart from occasional departure from rigid is open £5 anyone who can follow Hobart Creighton. a big breede | " : cialite, pool shark, race-track fan, courtroom de- fact, in the -construction of his story line, Mr. instructions. of White Leghorns up by Warsaw. fendant and ladies’ man—1I could scarcely wait fo Durocher lacks the meticulous reportorial quali-}| « x =» For 16 years, he was in the legisget my hands on a copy of his new book, which fications for a good straight prose man. He leaves) WHY. DOES any boy want to lature, ‘ os 22 is out this week. ‘ out tremendous detail, which if a sinful thing to do |be governor of (the Great State Why do T want to be goverRE : I wanted to get a” glapce: at the newest in a book marked “Inside Story.” 1 saw no men-|0f) Indiana? mor?” he sald. “Well, T don't Durocher, the biographer of “The Dodgers and tion of his enduring friendship with George Raft,| Let's look around. know. Yes, I do. It's an advanceMe” which has a sybhead entitled “The Inside the cinema hard guy—or to many of the Holly-| In Room 825 we have Alvan V. ment. Natural ambition, call it.| Story.” Was there no end to this man's talents? wood characters who used to pack the clubhouse. Burch, State Auditor. According I want to render a service.” Was there no field of artistic endeavor in which Book Has ‘Me ’ T to his publicity, he began life roll-| Mr. Creighton will support he was not a constant threat, from artistic may- * ssage, oo ing logs and working in an ax whatever platform the GOP con-|’ hem to musical composition? Bo a THERE WAS LITTLE or nothing said of the actory. . vention adopts. There have been mutters that a man named Case of Mr. Durocher versus John Christian,|” He stands for home rule, lower| NEXT. Room 425. (?)
Harold Parrott actually wrote the intimate mem- another loudmouth. Mr. Christian was suing be-/taxes, higher salaries and the _ __ a =» ww php 4 Durocher the Dodgers. “But it cause he claimed he had been severely beaten by direct primary. NEXT. In Room 325, we have
doesn't say so in the book. So we assume that Mr. Durocher and henchmen, for the sin of riding| “I want to be Governor." ‘he Harry McClain of Shelbyville, the * Mr. Dre scratched out every single word him- the Dodgers too loud. He claimed to have been. igid me, “in: order to render a lone Democrat in Candidates Row. | self. Judging purely on artistic merit, I would Plackjacked, but as I remember, Leo sald Christian service to the Great State of Mr. McClain, an insurance man, Is, ‘ say that The Lip has a fluent pen, ag well as a fell and hoited himself on a water-trough. | Indiana.” not the Harry McClain who hunts! 5. flapping face. - What I really wanted to hear about was the| Mr Burch. the latest arrival to monsters in Brown County. Oh, perhaps there is a tendency to endow some inside of a civil settlement of several thousand to|¢ne Claypool, is assisted in his| The candidate once served as of his characters with nicknames. beginning wjth Mr. Christian, when the criminal court judge found | campaigr by four accordion play- City clerk of Shelbyville. He is the same letter, such as the Constant Clouter from 10 guiltless. Didnt get it, though. ers and the largest headquarters’ Dard to find. Chattahoochee, but you cannot fault him over- Mr. Durocher’s character delineation, however, ny of the candidates. No use sitting in this room, mrss fey -fOT-t hat He as —been—exposed -to-sports-—is-excelleat. 1. -that-the-auther- himself: nt pp rerere— ye SR AGT “T HR WON URE IE ANY] ; . writers since tenderest infancy. was a lovable, boyish type whose exuberance occa-| NEXT FLOOR down, in Room where. A candidate has to get Leo has a lean, they're-off-and-running prose Saionally got him into trouble, but who was 725, is the headquarters: of ‘Wil- out and hustle up votes.” style, and a great brevity, especially when dealing worshipped by most of his men. He built a fine liam E. Jenner, U. 8. Senator. | Mr. McClain will - support any|} .with unpleasant topics concerning Leo. villain, all black, of his old boss, Larry MacPhail,| Because-Mr. Jenner is busy in'platform the Demoératic Party! 4 12. a9 while clothing his new boss, Branch Rickey, in Washington, I asked Lisle Wal- adopts at its convention. Hels a Born Novelist robes of purest white. Among other things, Mr. lace, president of the Jenner-for-| “I want to be governor,” he| YOU MIGHT SAY that Mr. Durocher was not ‘Rickey is limned as a paragon of generosity— Governor Club, why Bill Jenner said, “in order to serve the people | so well tailored for biography as for fiction. He which was not the way I heard it. {wanted to be governor. - of this (great) state (of Indiana).| shows -definite promise of becoming a novelist of There is even a message in the book, just as, “Mr. Jenner,” said Mr. Wallace, I mean it.” | the tough sc¢hool—which is just as well, because in all the good novels. Mr. Durocher's message is “is running for governor in order LL" = = . ! they hint that this current literary production is’ that the great American pastime is a rather rowdy, to rendsr a service to ‘he (great)! DOWN: on the main floor, I
|
meet
“apt to boost Mr. Dirocher out of the great Ameéri- ~¢ommercial, slick-dealing, vicious, dog-eat-dog state of Indiana.” TARKEd & BelTh6p™ WHAT He thought! can pastime for-ali time. —It's mice to know he sport, when all the time I thought it was a char-| He referred me to a printed of the whole thing. Co has other arrows to his_guiver, and will always acter-builder—as vital to the nation's health as statement which was made in an-| 'Ther?'s no difference between) be able to make a living with his pen, ’ wheaties. .~.|swer. to some. remark by Frank, em.’ said he. “First day in. they,
One of the reasons I say he is a born novelist = ~".I'am afraid that I cannot rate “The Dodgers McHale, a Democrat, on why the(8ive you a haif-buck tip. After is the long line of embittered characters who are and Me” very highly as a factual memoir, but Senator wanted to be governor. that, it's a dime. They're all the waiting patiently for the right to call Léo a liar. for a first book it is not bad. And the author| It pointed out that it should he Same.” At least bne man, & sportswriter named Tim shows great promise as a spinner of romantic obvious to anybody who can! | |
Cohane, has threatened suit over what seems to be Action. He has the imagination and the skill, and count that one advantage of being New Camera Contains | a defini tic trifling with hisfory all he needs now is a good subject. ‘ i = te instance of. poetic trifling . 4 jec governor , compared. to senator oy... Darkroom .. un darkroom on the inside was re-|
| — A —— moe.| WAS 8 $3000 a year raise in pay. WAA.Foldi . NEXT. In Room 625. one finds vealed today. It can turn out
“WASHINGTON, May 18 — Jess Larson, the ~ Mr. Larson also has for sale a few ramrods Walter Helmke, if he's there. He finished film “four seconds after] Oklahoma lawyer—who worked his way up from left over from the civil war and. a consignment is a-former city attorney of Ft eXPOSUPe wm 1 Army colonel to Administrator of War Assets— of horse-drawn’ hearses from the Spanish-Amer- Wayne. nm he'd The SH Wad designed for : - ! reports that his job as the keeper of the biggest ican war. The demand for these is what you' “I want to be goveronor,” he doctors to enable them to get im- C . # store in the Bieter of the world 18 nearly bk might call light. ‘ said, “well, because I want to be mediate information when elec- | . b ONE Ji DIME- laypool Bellhop George Ford shows what the boys mean Most of the billions of dollars worth. of stuff Most of his human skeletons, mules, flying governor. Is there’ something trocardiographs of the human| 8DOUT candidates tipping. Canaidates pattern of tipping; they say; is 50 cents the left over from the war, including a consignment machines, busted jeeps, silver finger bowls (Tor [wrong with that? "heart are made. first time, a dime ever affer. . . 3 9 faim teeth Tor Russian lend-lease, has been oles, flea powder and other _— ST EE — — ramps - a y nisin sold. And Mr. Larson thinks his outfit—which items worth $21 billion he has sold. He has only | 4 N d t S | i #till employs 25,000 people—ought to be abolished about $6 billion worth left. And a lot of this is in Janitor Honored arvey ame Oo erve | nsta | S Hodge to Head u. S. and the rest of the job turned over to the Federal the form of real estate.
| th \ Forces in Trieste orks Administration. i . { . | ¥ + St k P B | ; . | TRIESTE _ He has a few small problems left, of course. Some Mistakes Were Made At Howe i h n ea , ri e ro e Gro Gen. William 1 Ade ia). pach as the Philadelphia warehouse loaded for THE BIG, bluff Mr. Larson reported to Con- ! Times Washington Bureau labor committee will start hear- ISer place Maj. Gen. Bryant E. Moore e last five years with a consignment of hundreds gress that the WAA had made some mistakes, all WASHINGTON, May 18 /ings here next week on proposed as commander of American forces
of thous ¥ : . which usu of female E, oiered da right. And he admitted ‘em frankly. For a while | E. C. Summitt Sr. Freshman Rep. Ralph Harvey (R. Tart-Hartley amendments. First | Order of Rainbow rn pt. Unite Slaten The garments, unfortunately, have lst their snap there were %o many administrators with so many | Cited for Service Ind.) received a fat plum assign-| THEEA8 WOE be Robert Denham. Nomes Miss Sumner today. have and what to do with ‘em is beyond Jess. changes in policy that nobody in WAA knew up | El ment today which under ordinary “' chief counsel, ! 3 Th , ’ ’ {¢- Elmer C. Summitt Sr. janitor tances should h el H i | Miss Betty L. Bumper will bel e¢ announcement said Gen. He's also got a couple of large buildings at from down. That's when the Chicago office dis-| circumstances shou ave gon e says Mr. Denham will sup-/, 004 as worthy advil ¢ Moore would become chief of the Norfolk, Va., loaded with hundreds of tons of Covered $4 million in the cash box that nobody at Howe High School, was re- i, Rep. Gerald W. Landis (R. port his amendments to eliminate the Indianapolis y svi 9 Army's Public Information Divi-case-hardened rivets for battleships. Nobody knew who had paid for what. Seemed that the [cently recognized by school offi-/Ind.), ranking majority member \,
1 BB electio t Assembly No. sion, wants ‘em, because battleship builders don't use records had been chewed up in the electric fan. [clals for his faithful service, In of the House Labor Committee. [ep aaiaane aster 4 won oc ora of pode
Tg et EY A A 1 Po
Mr. Jenner stands for what-| CHICAGO, May 18 (UPT—A1 motion picture. camera with a|
vk wT — a 3 By Frederick. C.. Othman: i" GOP platform A Completes and fully: Cgutomatie’
riv ; , the P . Ek # seam, TOT: THEY WEIETUREITDOMS BE TIE py nd his head blown off when he stumbled (M8 10 Years at Howe, he has) CTC tie to|ceteen management and labor. Rainbow for Gen. Whitehead in U.S. * Y ' while carrying a case of WAA bolts an . : to Chi [tet 8 says tha pro- . . 1, fere Gown Rin ret wen eye ~ sake neh Somebody had made a slight mistake In ne label. | day ° os ofl aact wn gg tig looeon-of the law has put NLRB] Faw nthe for Series of Con ees in 'em, to make ‘em tough, that they won't melt Was all. It should have said: Dynamite, Indianapolis house strike. (0200 election cases behind in/lodge hall. TOKYO,*May 18 (UP) — Lt. In any ordinary blast furnace, = And somewhere in the world, Mr, Larson hopes, he! Named by Hoffman [thelr work. | Miss Jane Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead, com- ] y oe: ; 's |B since 1928, he| Haviland, Gran manding general of Far East Al P bl . is a consignment of pajama tops for ladies, He's | ined the public] He was appointed by Chairman H———————— 5 ) ’ roblem of the Pigeons got the pants, thousands upon thousands. But | joined the put Coffman (hy Mich) or the Conn em |Hope of the In- Forces, now’ is in Washington THEN THERE'S the problem of the elderly they aren't much use without the coats. As 1937. The follow- mittee on Executive Expenditures ‘ diana Gund at Ko for a series of conferences, it was Pigeons, These were left over from the first world for all the highbinders who bought stuff from the | Ing year he came of which Mr. Harvey is a mem-| sembly, wi disclosed today.
installing officer. Gen. -. to newly opened ber, Mr. Hoffman is a member | $2 for your ideas we print. Write Jerry {She win be as- day. rtatead Yet are Rh
Howe Highof the House Lahor Committee, Langell ¢/0 The Indianapolis Times sisted by Miss Miss Sumner he will remain in the United: School. which ordinarily would run such EE ——| DONN8._ Herr, marshal; Mrs, Lil- States. It was assumed here he Mr. Bummitt a show. -_ ‘ian Herr, chaplain, and) Mrs. [is conferring about increased air LaVerne Bumner, musician. |forces. ’
For 25 years the Army carefully preserved government as juhk and resold it by the piece as! h cord of its surplus pigeons and gratefully first-class merchandise, bad ‘cess to.'em. Some | fned Same over to the WAA, It did not, un- of 'em still may go to jail, the administrator hopes, Privately. preserve the birds. He is, I think, a solid citizen. And aftep all ; ey don't exist, except on paper—and how to ' the pleces I've written about the incredible bum- oo” Bet rid of that, when you work for the govern- bles the’ WAA has made, I am the fellow t~ say Mr. Summitt "°° born in a, The purpose of the hearings, as
ud , log cabin near b , “ ment, {ig something only the bravest attempt, : so in print. It's simple justice. Vincennes and, after being rat Sermanoed A BATT ol
om ene — wwe uated from a one-room. school work stoppage has demonstrated!
i Ty = house, went to. work in his fa-/the peed of revision of the Taft-| T i 277 Test Your Skill 292 vey ore |, Harker ae? ol e Ulz as er es our I Served in World War I That law takes its name from! i In 1915 he ‘struck out for him-|the chairmen of the labor com- | a A A A dhe {self to homestead 320 acres in a/mittees in the House and Senate. What religious movement was founded by Dr. p > what, way does a chantey differ from other western state. A few years later | Following hearings in Chicago i : SA 'olk songs’ : {be enlisted and saw action in'on Thursd hak Buchman? ‘ : in a Shantey the rhythm luo much more World War I. . MN RArvey is a ria a He _was founder of a religious movement Importance t words, fype of song | Helives with his wife, Mildred, On the return trip here and ad- srring ; 6 Buchmanism, ‘or more. populamy as 08 originally sung by sailors In rhythm with (at 37 8. Euclid Fink His. son, dress a state convention of postal! Eth should or. the Oxford Gi he yo OPUATY AS their work, each type of work having its own Eimer Jr. is an employee of Eli supervisors on Saturday, he said. mrer a4 ) Me Vem henry Ig dD 1 ober pesaute that — Ue: ud GIop Movement nn asamp LQ Mee A. | Mr Lantis announced that the He a a te
{ ( : » a % oT] 7 ala FE ; he y.: aL yes ma can sds LL LIANE 08 i
the re
Other officers to be installed are the
Misses Edith M. Jensen; worthy sasociate Stork Wins Battle
adviser; Bondra Bilsky, charity; Martha 4 sherman, Mope; Martha Davis, run; Over Rent Inciease Sand: Dinas. Aras Juste Tove” war | NEW YORK, May 18 (UP)— Shapiain; ton wn WAnSA| Municipal Judge . Christopher ©, ture; ‘Ruthellen Hoftmeyer, immortality; McGrath ruled yesterday that the Ruth Ann Rose, fdelity; Lois Pickard, f0deral office of housing had no ‘patriotism; Norma Huffman, service; Bar-| Fight 40 grant a landlord a rent bars Davis, eonfidentinl observer: Marilyn| increase because a baby had been ° | Fox, Suter henrver Wilina May, Srusleian: born to a tenant. on er, Ro AN: Phy; “No agency of the government 1 penalize parents for have
’
