Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 October 1948 — Page 25

2

a

p.OF career right ‘wool ated back... - s 10 to 16, TENOR

"7 598

Wash!

Wear!

tun |

KNIT

43 49%

rs Filled

_ out my "press pass. Roy froze in his traéks at the

to everyone present what I wanted.

T Cissy’s "Whaduh

“ahpded-by-the.econflict to come.

GIVE A My A MAN enough re rope and he may become y become _buy.the clothesline from me if I wanted to sell, another Roy Rogers, On the other hand, he may “I” just happened to.remember wé need it back not, either. ‘(Would anyone be interested in 3 home.” slightly used Clothesline?) . A “Let-him be, Dale,” "Roy admonished. I was My original idea Was to catch Roy in an oft’ surprised he didn’t say Maw. . moment when he could féally. show me something - © While Dale and the Purple Sage Boys’ warbled “about trick and fancy roping. I was. in no mood through a few stanzas of ‘a song she had written for horseplay or.his “trick rope.” .. on the way to Indianapolis, Roy informed me With“my roll of clothesline, 1 beat on Roy's that there are special ropes for special jobs, For door at the Marott Hotel. The hotel was my last instance,’ a manila rope is used for roping calves resort. : He's harder to track down than a dogle and a cotton trick rope is used for fancy twirling Wearing ballet slippers on U.: 8. 66, : and a clothesline is used to hang clothes on. The door opened with tha! help of a ruddy- “Show ‘im, Roy,” Foy Willing yelled as if he faced hombre whom I recognifed as Foy Willing, were in the center of Texas. I top dog of the Riders of the Purple. Sage. a ee bad Buddy Mefford, Rex Rossi and. Zim Jim “Howdy,” he key Jr. aren't here,” Roy lamented. * ey're| - ‘hind the CR Said and, begap to disappear be- oles who Rave the real dope on this stat, Bringing into play a tick a FulleriBrush Man’ I rE WE . "taught me, impromptu demonstration. As the cotton rape ug I'held the door open while T Whipped. twirled through the air in preparation for the Mmutterfly switch over, Sage Riders Al Sloey, Jey aught, Johnny Paul, Scotty Hafrell and Foy cut “The room FemTRaed He pi Fe time. At-first glance, The second glance proved : I What do we do if somebody calls the “police?” beyond a shadow of a doubt that the men were I asked Roy. The enthusiasm the boys showed -£owboys, not politicians, in spite of the fact that surpassed all my expectations when I. first entered. "there were several Andy’ Jacobs hats around. - "All the action is in the wrist" yelled Roy.

“SECOND, SECTION

Before

Compiled from th

sight of my credentials,

1 entered the room, being. careful. to: a.have muy back to the wall... BY poTiticat ©

A ih

its “dynamics 0 misery” blockade,

“by.

Arraign Red ‘Dynamics OF

West Opens. Propaganda Drive In Case of Berlin Blockade

"POWERS OF THE Western world this week grabbed | the propaganda offensive from the Kremlin by arraigning the.. Soviet, Union. before She United, Nation

- But before the arraignment all negations with the

e Wire Services

ns_for. pursuing:

wbriq op fe

‘refusing to lift’ th riin

Kremlin by the United King-) dom; France and the United |; States were broken off. 1 U. 8. Secretary of State George

“Watch how the wrist is turned on each switch.” Surprised ‘She’ Wasn' t ‘Maw’ Sitting there I could just see myself in a packed STILL keeping my back to the wall, I explained

*. Coliseum astride a stallion, riding; shooting, roping, punching cows and performing other feats of . daring that would fill my wallet with green stuff. Roy said the autograph would be easy but Surely there's room for two kings in the business.| ™° teaching me how to use a rope might prove diffi- The Texas Skip rope trick was similar to the C. Marshall first charged the Ruscult. His ‘steely-blue eyes rested squarely on my Batarny except that Roy hopped through the sians with having broken the bundle of lariat makings. rope and knocked over a.floof lamp. (It didn’t/United Nations Charter by ‘havDale Evens (Mrs. Roy Rogers) said shi would | break.) ing imposed the blockade ‘to

squéeze .the three Allies out of For Sale: One Clothesline

Berlin by threatening 2.5 million] Germans with starvation. . 1 DID both tricks, rather clumsily at first, and Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin ‘won the plaudits of the spectators. (The coffee .¢ (he United Kingdom made table I knocked over didn’t break.) |charges of bad faith against the “Two 'yéars of daily practice and you Il be Russians. He challenged Foreign ‘pretty good,” Roy shrieked in amazemeént at my|ainister Andre. Vishinsky of the dexterity. I might be exaggerating a bit here, but not enough to be called a liar.

Soviet Union to renounce the : Marxist-Leninist theory of “the “Now I'll show you.my favorite trick with the lariat,” the King said.

inevitable conflict” between the comimunistic ' and capitalistic Foy whispered an interesting hunk .of. infor- worlds. . mation about his boss. : Instead of answering, Mr. “Roy thinks a rope is only , good for. roping Vishinsky stamped from the As-

|

calves, just as ol' Judge Roy’ Bean used fo thinkisembly « chamber, obviously in va rope was only “good for hanging “people with." ranger: x Ls Yipeeee—we had fun in..that suite of rooms. s 8. 8

Too bad there wasn't enough room fo oot FOREIGN CMINISTER “HOB: Trigger in. Trigger would have made the party ERT SCHUMAN. of France then © complete. He would have been. invaluable while {charged the Berlin blockade was the calf-roping session was oing on. | actually “an act of force.” I didn’t ‘do too well with the calf- roping. I had But it was Henry-Paul Spaak, ‘to be the calf’ a part which I played rather’ well, Belgium's Foreign Minister, whose until the rope burned my neck, \denunciations of the Soviet's “Say, the next time you come up we'll move “dynamics of misery” were the the furniture out of the rooms," said Foy as I most “scathing. Point by- point “was leaving. {he cited instances .of communis“You know, the management might appreciate tic agitation, guided by Soviet _that,” I casually croaked through my aching wind- agents, which defeated the Westipe. lern world’s attempts to promote As I. sald once, anyone. want to Ay a used peace. clothesline? “The West “reared the Soviet; {he reminded the Soviet sdelega-

8

TWIRLING - HEMP—Roy Roger. "King of the Cowboys," is a pretty good hombre if ‘you .>.can-hssa-him. He can. do his. stuff _any_place, .Marott Hotel, Coliseum or the plains of Texas. ®

g it

FREE CR

"The beautifull countess, in this case, is none Saturday before, that the United ofher. than Cissy’s daughter, Countess Felicia States intended to wage. an Gizeycka, who is contesting her mother’s will. The atomic war against the Russians. Countess got sawed off with a comparative shill- Mr. Spaak said—poppycocR. ing—a mere $25,000 a year for life. * The countess,/ The United States has no imthrough her lawyers; demands a fresh investiga- perialistic . designs, he stated. tion of Mr. Porter's suicide. . {But could as much be said for Enter an ex-husband, in this case, Columnist tie Kremlin? Drew Pearson, formerly married to the Countess, He cited country after country

and in recent years, a bitter enemy of his ex- Which has fallen to fifth columns mother-in-law. y y f Reds. This, he declared, made

’ “Hitlers fifth columns look like“Mr Pearson-Allows.as How.

a bunch of Boy Scouts.” “The~Berlinr-~bleckade and. its. MR. PEARSON allowed as how Mr. Porter. ‘dynamics of misery” come bedidn’t jump, didn't slip, but might very well have fore the Security Council next been pushed. Mr. Pearson implied that people Monday. bent on. jumping to death rarely butt their way through screens. It turned out that in this hotel MEANWHILE, the Assembly's the screens weren't removable. |political committee began: debatThe Countess adds that her mother was under ing Mr. Vishinsky's demand that pressure when she made her will, and that Mr. the atom bomb be scrapped. The Porter had a “vital” paper in support of her committee’ was told by a spokestheory. |man for the British, Canadian We have, too, Mrs. Patterson's ‘housekeeper and American delegations that the named as the executrix of Mr. Porter's estate..United States alone, up to the No suave butler has yet appeared, but can be ex- present, was the only nation able pected to enter, stage left, at any moment. to wage an atomic war, We also include the flock of people who did “a not participate in the will—likely suspects, all, Austria in anything that bobs up. We have the people who might have shared the riches if they had VIENNA _is preparing for a stuck around the paper, but who were eliminated Soviet blockade in the event the when they left it. Russians succeed in squeezing the We even have a 21-year-old divinity student BIE These SUL of Berins nn in the scenario—it was to him Mr. Porter wrote Viesaen for o igh m os letters divulging his fear of “E. P.” X 10 nine. months

are being stored up, that being That is the situation at the moment.” “Will 2 the time reckoned _ it ‘will take

rum-fuddled printer run amok and scrag one of the lucky heirs? Will the. Countess bust the will? B utler | ates Graduate Test

Will Cissy" pierce the veil and write oné of her "Record Examination

smoking front-page editorials on the frailties of her friends? To Be Held Oct. 25-26 A graduate record examination

he wa rned)

ci

Ards.

- st, AX itself. HH

To Mr. Vishinsky’s charges— made before the Assembly “thie

“Tie ;

WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. a detective. story on the widy down here, and chucked it away as pretty dull. At least it is mighty pale alongside the real-life whodunit which is unfolding on the Potomac, ..I doubt if even E. Phillips Oppenheim would have used as many corny devices as now are appearing in “The Casg of the Dowager's Legacy,” or “The Seven Nervous Heirs.” When Mrs: Eleanor Patterson died, she .left a rowdy career beltind her. But it threatens to be Mrs. Patterson bequeathed her thriving newspaper, the Washing: ton Times-Herald, to seven employees. Although Cissy was always an amateur publisher, she ran a starving sheet into about an eight million buck property, making the seven bequests assay over a million- apiece. - Now this; goodness knows, is plot a- “plenty | for Dorothy Dishey or one of the other confectors of mystery books, for the future is pregnant with enough possibilities to cram a five-foot shelf. But nothing dull ever happened to Cissy, even after she was dead. Some two months after her death, two Jones employees were dead, too. One, Charles Porter, former treasurer, had been cut out of the will by reason of leaving the paper a year before his boss died.

Then Up Pops a Letter

POLICE considered the "possibilities that Mr. Porter either jumped, fell or was shoved through a window screen of a West Virginia hotel and concluded that he jumped. The other victim, an oldtime employee named Betty Hynes, was found dead with a bottle of sleeping pills nearby, and was suspected of suicide until an inquest reported “death from natural causes, Then, with all of them gone, up pops a letter from Mr. Porter, which said that E. P. {presumably Cissy), “was out to destroy me, and . . . I would ‘be called back (by Mrs. Patterson) for more slaughter.” We now see the arrival countess.

1.1 was reading

Nobody knows, but one thing is certain. Cissy, was a gal who always: craved plenty of action, and she's getting it, even if she isn't around. to enjoy it.

of the beautifml

/

By Frederick C. Othman

{ | |

A - ——— Big Money Boys — Ig I ey DOYy "Oct. 25-26, under the supervision —— of Dr. Ray C. Friesner, dean of WASHINGTON, Oct. 1—-What's worrying ‘me now after a day among the international financiers is whether Sir Stafford Cripps has to eat his dinner with a spoon. Or does his muesli thicken up enough when stirred so that he can attack it with a knife and fork? ' Ordinarily I do not enquire into the feeding habits of our visitors, but his fnajesty’'s embassy brought up Sir Stafford’s idea of a square medl” officially and in print. So my worries strictly are according to protocol. What color is muesli, anyhow? I know what's in it, thanks to the diplomats, but how does it taste? The British Chancellor of the Exchequer and Lady Crippg are in town for the annual meeting of the World Monetary Fund and the International Bank. They're being invited out to lunch every day and dinner every night and they are vegetarians.

Arrange Special Diet Chart

THE ‘THOUGHTFUL attaches got to worrying about whether Sir Stafford and his lady would get anything to’ eat in this town of rare roast beéf, country ham, and pork chops. So they got up a special diet chart and-dispatched coples to all of the chancellor's prospective hosts. Lunch is easy. Sif Stafford likes eggs, but prefers ‘them. scrambled. He'll settle for a vegetable plate and he'll take spaghetti cooked with fresh tomatoes. If there's to be any cheese on top, Sir Stafford wants to do the sprinkling himself. Dinner is what's likely to give his hostess a few bad “moments. x Muesli is. his favorite food and to make that his hostess should crumble up a shredded wheat

‘meal. And then crumble some nuts of her own Sciences and head of the botany choosing. On top of this she must grate two small department. apples, or one big one. Butler University "has been seThen she should sprinkle the whole business lected as a center for the giving with the juice of one half lemon, or, lacking that, of graduate record examinations douse Sir Stafford's muesli with a slug of tomato under the sponsorship of the Edujuice. With this he takes one’bottle of yoghourt, cational ‘Testing. Service. which is milk’ artificially curdled with Bulgarian| The examinations and proof of

like ice cream. That's as far as the émbassy went requisites for entrance into gradon how to make muesli. uate work in some colleges. The

' » . |examinations may also be taken May Mix It Himself

WHETHER THE hostess is supposed to stir in the yoghourt with the other ingredients, I do not know. It may be that Sir Stafford does this himself. Only way to find out for sure is to have him 3 out to dinner. "Lady Cripps does not go for muesli. dinner she takes wholewheat bread, butter, hone and a patent, cheese-like substance with which am not familiar.

the individuals. The examination will cover| eight profile tests including chem-|

cs, English, social studies, fine arts and literature, and one adFor Her yanced test in the major study of I the. applicant. | + Oct. 7 will be the deadline for

applications to take the examinaThe Crippses wash the main course down with Dr. Friesner announced to-

tea (China, not India) afd for dessert they like| fruit. Any king you happen to have in the house gay: The examination fee will be will be fine. Their dietary Fules ada finally that they are hroadminded abst what other people eat; if their Ball to fo Head Dive dinner partsers Want to gorge themselves on Eo. Cornell Fun corned beef and cabbage or liver &nd onions that I ‘Witiiara 5. Ball, Masicte sbi facugper has’ accepted’ the posithe tion of State Chairman for Indi-

is all right by them, ana of the Greater Cornell Fund

I'm going to try a dish:of muesli, myself, if I can-find some peanuts and a jug of yoghourt; the | campaign, Nicholas H, Noyes, In-|: fanapolis, national Special Gifts

other ingredients; I believe, are in the pantry. And that's all 1 can tell you about the meet of the big 4 Slanapolts announced today. The. drive goal is $12.5 million

money boys. for current needs of Cornell Uni-

versity, Ithaca, N. Y. ??? Test Your Skill ??? {OES Chapter to Meet The North Park Chapter No. How did the Marathon race get its name and 404, OES, will hold a “Brother's distance? Night” dinner at 6:30 p. m, TuesThe name derives from the celebrated ram (day in North Park Masonic made between Marathon and Athens by Pheldip- | | Temple, followed by a meeting. “pides to Inform the Athenians of the Greek vie- loEs PLANS INITIATION tory. The distance for this race has been set at The Brightwood Chapter No. 26 miles, 385 yards, somewhat longer than the 1399, OES, will meet at 8 p.m. distance covered. by the original Marathon Monday in Veritas Masonic Temrunner, “le, i . ple. Initiation will be held.

The Quiz Master

In writing’ AD and RC what), is the correct position of these abbreviations? ) In dates, AD precedes the year and BC follows the. year, as, hv 3 and 4 4000 BC, \ What da Sans do . with worn-gut paper money? It is sent to the Treasury Washington, D, C., and macera onlve: new bills to replace the old ones,

artment at re~

the Allies to build landing ‘strips

Soviet facilities,

control of all air corridors in and out of Berlin were flatly rejected by the Big Three. dors are the only big hole in the Berlin blockade, which was limited at the outset to the land.

foreseen an air lift,

buzz American food: transports, but.Gen. Lucius D. Clay, American. military commander,

buzzing to worry us.” ‘He again denied he planned fighter convoys for the food transports.

#8 tar-as hed dinme Newsy

ever, continued. to campaign in South France to become the nation's “strong man.’ that the president—meaning him —have the power to dissolve parliaments. and postpone elections; to prevent the toppling of French regimes,

". ® & Fourth: Republic, which was designed to keep the general out of| Yugoslavia power, cabinets can fall.one right Marshal Tito's parliament

after -the-other without. the peed of elections before 1951. ee — | tion, but not witlf the fear of]. blast, aimed at the United NaCs. esd,

fight the Soviet Union.”

an assassin in July, was back in action again, praising the Soviet

will be held in Butler University|

biscuit. On this she must sprinkle sorife raw oat- the College of Liberal Arts and}

yeast until it tomes up thick, sour, and. smooth thei® having been passed are pre-|

for the: personal satisfaction of | i

istry, physics, biology, mathemat-|20 or 30 years.’

n the Western zone for am air ift. The Allies at present use.

Germany od RUSSIAN demands for full GO-GETTERS—American C-54's are lined up on the Gatow Airport apron. at! Berlin after flying in loads of coal despite: Russian buzzing and anti-aircraft “prace; fice" fire. One of these big fellows or planes like it land in Berlin with supplies every ; minute, weather permitting. British, French and American air officials expect the lift to run the winter through. The light space in the left background. is "where the

field is being enlarged for the winter flights.

The air corri-

The Russians evidemtly had not

- { -

v

Red- fighter planes continued to Union as “the workers’ cham-

pion” and condemning the United States as a warmonger. The Red Italian line now is to charge the Marshall plan robs the| poor of food and clothing to feed and clothe Catholic Youth Action groups visiting the Vatjean by the thousands. The Marshall Plan say the Reds, is a gyp. Italy - itself, . however, appears content... Warksrs are. £04

ds) ing ‘crops, running “mills and eat:

ing 8 hetti - made of white : i, g - Spag Condemned in the afternoon, they in.

American (Marshall Plan) wheat. | Marshall plan aid to Italy was/Were dead before night.. One

lifted during the week past the $2 billion mark as ECA "Administrator Charles Hoffman earmarked some $700 million more

Pr it.

land to assume its presidency. “It is a sacred moment for me,” he sald. ‘But, old, ill and tired, he is ex|pected to step down for a younger man and assume the role of an elder Platesman, »

other ‘youth was sentenced tor life.

Britain THE BRITISH Cabinet proved the appointment of Marshal Lord

said: ‘It will take a. lot more than

+

Frante FRANCE was quiet all, week,

we

Hingety TWO HUNGARIAN ~ yoiiths| Britain

raze

Gen. Charles Dé Gaulle, how-

He insists

Under the constitution of the

passed a resolution--by acclaim. notifying the .world, and above all, Soviet’ Russia, that henceforth Yugoslavia was strictly . Ae LN SR RT SERIE Ay The resolution condemned the Soviet Union and the Kremlin's Cominform for their . campaign

French-Communists released” a

EU EH SUN TENN PER Sew ory

RINNE “The French people never wi)

‘s - »

Italy against the Marshal Plan. or iin TOGLIATTI, top . = =» Italian Communist, wounded by China

MILITARY BUNGLING by Chiang Kai-shek's national government has become evident since the capture of Tsinan, Shantung’'s provincial capital, by Gen. Chen Yi and his 200 Communists, It's fall left only a Sugertiold on one of China's richest provinces—the American naval base city at ~and- the: weakly. held port of Cheefoo. Chiang quit his ‘capital for the battlefront to hold a huddle with his generals and perhaps shake them up.

Japan American oecupation officials supported the demands of Japanes¢ mothers - and ousewives - that the Soviet Union repatriate some 500,000 Japanese, still held as war prisoners. Observers believe the Russians will be content if one out of every 10_ of them finally reaches his homeland a confirmed Communist,

a

AT LAST—After. a life devoted to founding a homeland for his people, Dr. Chiam Weiz-

ANGER— Politically confused and unstable France, while quiet. on the labor and political fronts, still has its protestants. Veterans © a Cha VEIZMANE: 33 are shown clashing with gendarmes at Paris while demonstrating . rived at Tel Av‘ from Switzer- against low incomes and high living costs,

By Earl Wise

He a4

» mand, 73, flew to Tel Aviv to Palestine take his oath as first president of Israel. He wept as he took

office.

It Happened Last Night

JIMMY DURANTE was slaughtering a piano at a penthouse) party here the other night and singing, “I goes intew duh Automat and I puts in a lead nickel. What da yuh t'ink comes out?” He answered it himself: ~ “THE MANAJUH!" Jimmy banged the keys hard and tossed his famous nose aloft and sang on.

“I goes on a-cruise,” he said.

for Elizabeth.”

Earl's Pearls - At Eddie Davis’. ol the day of Leon & Eddie's, comedian Allen King ' described a certain Broadway “A -

| tke me, and now nobody

ngs | it because they say it's the theater

“A girl ups to me and she says,| Durante. I put the dett knell | mice fellow. quickly after ‘Where can Ion it” very mice fel- ward. “It doesn’t main? Tsay tun] i eae J ne Sa look good hangtain? say tuh| UNLESS I'M vastly mistaken oof joe” “Eddie Davis |Ing around bers hes; a im 8 one of the nicest men j...v with a hammer and fate ote He said. .. ? ” miss.” She says| Though he came ‘back to New, ons out the Braille: (Clark Gable : made a pretty Pearl

* re “oo.

§

«

Thompson [sons regent weight default if were at the Copa but weren't able.

{Robinson gives Gavilan a return

y Jimmy’ s Expression match. Today's Smile

CURIOUSLY, the name, “Stop {the Music,” which was given to} the big radio giveaway show, ix] THE Bj NNETT CERFS were an expression Jimmy's long used.,on Jackie Eigen's radio program, Paul Smalls sent them a’ wire saying: “Heard

“I've been saying ‘Stop duh! and. afterward the

| |

CE

tuh me, ‘I don't|York for a few days after two A ; » care, dis is a! lyears dway, he was » the crowd The Midnight Earl common mistake at 21 lids plesha trip!" lat the ‘“‘Astuh” the favorite son. THE STREET: Comic Jackie one got a big hat When ha .. . [When he Picks-up a phone there, Miles is going into the beauty entered the lad ‘room his first remark to the operators salon business . Tommy Dix emerged blushing, . : Rene WE supgosed, is: d Edith Fellows are about falby. pro are. ng 38 hypo business sophisticates| | team up for vaudeville and cafe long-distance were all roaring] LD Yuh love me? dates. . . . Former Dead End Kid calls to anyone who registers for at these jokes That established. he asks them. jjynez Hall says he'll propose to the 6-week rifting process. Jimmy Durante of Jimmy's, al-| D'Yuh ‘want sump'n, some ict iariet Tanis Chandler . . . Ha-| N.¥’S DUE for another bookis: though-he's been doing. thém for TM OF cornflakes or sump'n’|yana.Madrid owner Angel Lopez, purge as soon as midtown [Tod Jury: $I ie Ton any who manages fighter Kid Ga- tives assigned to registering posts Sten, ilan, will forfeit $5000 bond due are ‘available, . . . Bill Holdem As Jimmy returns again to the yuzsz all 2. I'll see yuzz all ~ * air and starts ‘getting set for WN BA go on?’ I'l vey Gavilan because of Ray Robin- Henry Fonda and Lex another movié, it becomes es that the beloved Schnozzola, really sweet man with hardly an enemy, is one of our major | natiohal industries. He has more imitators than Al Jolson. In-| deed, Al Jolson imitates him. .

1 WAS sitting around Jinimy’s Ta “Stop duh music. (two people posing as you on the people stopped to sare Borradhy “soot” at the “Astuh” having! {The trumpet player's “only usin’ radio, but- don’t Worry about ”, ; ts yon od ¥

him give me “a intuview” when|one lip,’ for a long time. they were awra "

he explained to me, “I put the pn... uh 'm dett knell on a popular song." "ip Te

“Liké I kerned the word 1 ha Yor . Jimmy's in good health now, ‘Oombriaggo,’” he said. Ho. was fll for a While: As ho “I wrote duh music, Irving | tells it, “Faw Fawty Menight Caesar wrote duh “vords, snd | nights, I couldn't we were were tryin’ to make rye agndde pa fbn it a popular song. But when | he adds, “if I hadn't slept everybody sung it, dey did it days.”

Barnes to Address Medical Society to Open 101 st Year [Rehabil

Scientech Club Here | The Indianapolis Medical So- Meiks, J. K. Berman, Thomas B. To old Open t William. B.. Barks, projet di- ciety will begin its 101st year of Bauer, J. Lawson Clark a or rector of the Pittman-Robertson P: Mosul, a dley pped Children Wild “Life Program, will address | activity Tuesday with the opening ,' "8.3 members of the Scientech Club of fail and winter programs mn ‘Dr. W. D. Gatch, former dean|tion - at noon Monday in the Hotel the Athenaeum. The society williof Indiana University School . of Wednesday. Antlers. ‘meet each Tuesday until May, Medicine and the soclety’s new Them howe Hel will speak on “Wild Life, Speakers for this month's re Jresident, will assume Jan. of Program in Indiana.” gram includes Drs. Lyman T. 4, succeeding Dr, Bert Ki, ]

It was

‘Wish’ rd Said That

JULIE OSHINS: “The way to get a dollar meal th days is to ont a Solar. " :

What's Hot :

‘the opening of his show, “Time