Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1948 — Page 7

e

ference nterbury

e the last few nt race. e Hanover -—are should decide

last night at

ing from a Terback Paul yards to End yr the marker, n place-kicked yo conversions, ssing Ace nge of punts, gain, this time s, to send the 13-0 half-time

1za Canterbury yards to score,” rouch’s 10-yard Bob Martin ttra point. ied to be the ntral line, later kick dnd Glen i in the ball on . ‘eston crashed uard for the

se, totaled 230 downs to Can3 Periods Dp 18 7 0—20 D 0 7 0-17

146-245-214 were ry League. Bill ore team in the -269 at Iaria’s.

went over the ight. Gertrude with a 636 for ; Shop quintet of 204-212-220, Williams Furrne Biers posted of 181-190 and

d, lines of 2245 in a practice Thursday after-

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37 I TURDAY, OCT, 53, 048

Thomas Ts vk a on Investigation Self-Centered Hybond

Of ‘ickhacks Keeps His Pay Check

IN OUR 16 YEARS QF MARRIAGE I've never seen Charges ‘Smear Plot! ‘my husband's pay checks. He counts out enough to pay the To Administration (bills and gives me a dollar if one is left. He buys plenty to By JAMES ¥. DONOVAN _ [eat because he likes to eat. My daughter and I pass the United Tress SIAR Coreeapondent Ineighborhood taverns and sée him sitting with women. He

WASHINGTON, Oct, 23—Rep. | J. Parnell Thomas charged today Says he is going to get a divorce when our daughter, 10, can

tata Tedetnl sand jury, inves- take care of herself-—he says he's ashamed of me. gation. of his activities is an ef-, At first we didn’t have enough money for both.of us to go out, Jord » She Tepmar administre: so I stayed home. My first two children died, and I've never been or He political | strong, but he won't give mie money for treatments, ecute Communist sples. proa-} I get tired sitting home but I never have money. If I did have Terming the investigation a I'd have to go out alone, .If I had my health I could go to work. 1 {had one lady friend my husband insulted. Now I don't have anyone

Yviclous smear technique,” th chairman of the Hog Jue, Ata to talk.to. He drinks and is abusive to us, and I've lost all feeling a divorce and ask for support?

jcan Activities Committee loosed for him. Should 1 get MRS. 3. M. M.. City

a bitter blast in a letter to Attor-| ney General Tom Clark. A divorce wouldn't give you the spunk and spark you need A ‘grand jury is investigating to meet life and find happiness. It would be admitting another charges that the New Jersey Re-| failure. You'd still be looking inte windows watching other peopublican received “kickbacks” in| ple enjoy themselves. Self-pity Is no good. Yours probably began salaries from employees in his by letting yourself enjoy being a martyr when the family hudget congressional office. was low. It has brought you scorn from your husband and yew <r Welcomes Inquiry from your friends. “ : You failed to broaden your lives as your asbind’s. salary he inet voretiable that you As! increased, but you still have “time to make him proud of you and of the United States charged with | proud of your home and attracted to it. He may be unenthusiastic our security, have seen fit to put|’ if you tell him you're changing and he may argue If you want to politics above the safety of our spend some money, but it's ‘worth trying. He'd have left you a pation,” Mr. Thomas said. | long time ago if he weren't hopeful that ‘the two of you could

He said he welcomed an inves-| Tecapture that love you once had.

tigation by the FBI and the! grand jury. But to launch one on Judy Garland'’s Age HOW OLD is Judy Garland?

the eve of an electoin “to detract from the embarrassment” which aa 9 the administration is suffering “18 | She was 26, June 19.

despicable and revolting” Mr. 35 yeor.Old Must Not Go in Hiding

Thomas wrote. He sald it was lamentable that! I'M ONLY 15 and none of the kids I run with know anything Mr. Clark should concern himself about love, especially myself. Please help me with my problem, even principally with efforts to defeat!if it doesn't seem serious te you. I think I love a boy who does not him politically and not with the love me and is always with another girl. It wouldn't be so bad if “insidious and treasonable activi- I didn't see him every day. My friend told him how I feel about ties” of Communists, him against my wishes, and now I'm afraid to face him. Should 14 He said he wrote President Tru- stop running with our friends to stay away from=him, or just ignore st. we at he AE ‘him? : . A BROKEN HEART. Ne § x STR mag a xoug exposure of subversives i he wl things went WF! RRR Sere United States. | you i you sulk. The boy will think this girl made up that story In his letter fo Mr. Clark, Mr. about your liking him if you notice a lot of boys. Don't worry Thomas charged the attorney | about falling in love. You always know when it happens to you, general and the Truman Admin-|. though you may not know why or how long it will last.~~¢

ra prosecute the Communist Sex Equality Can Make Misfits, Says John

. . . to prosecute the Communist fifth column in America.’ TO “CONCERNED JOAN” wanting a husband who'll enjoy her The purpose of this letter is caréer—You're. one of the victims of our new-found social equality to Serve notice upon I and of the sexes, a misfit in a system where many women are reluctant President Truman that \ 0 NOL, abandon their femininity and where most men are loath to surintend to be your po a render their masculine priority. It js common in a society in which goat heca\se C drips »| Women are well edueated. Who could expect such trained women Rte Le ra Ys /to be happy sweeping floors and changing Wiapers? He said President Truman! - Inherent in your problem is the ubiquitous, undemocratic and “made a vicious personal attack highly undesirable double .moral standard in which women are conon me” during a campaign speech sidered chattels and not. as thinking entities. in California. A key to the existing: male-female inequality is the fact that women are physically handicapped by their role of childbearing as United Youth Council —welt—as—socially—bedevilled by the public's clinging to outmoded mores. When social pressure groups, specifically religious sects, are Elects New Officers forcéd to recognize that it is the individual . woman's decision Geraldine Simmons will serve yhether to bear a child, drink, smoke, or cohabit, exactly as’it is as president of the United Youth gyery man’s decision, your problem will be made easier. You are Council during the coming Year. fonting the weight of thousands of years of patriarchal and puriNew, council officers were elected!tanic (not to mention unthinking) tradition. at the annual senate meeting this Don't be discouraged. Any desirable social change must be

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more than $300,000 to keep a major presidential candidate on the weeks.

weeks was chosen because that was the duration of the longest campaign swings made by President Truman and Gov. Thomas| E. Dewey.

campaign train is not borne entirely by the political party involved. Most of the spent by reporters, photographers and radio meén who pay their own Way.

Taking Gov. Dewey's last trip to the west coast as an example; there were 85 persons

Fig ly aio Campaign Trip Cost $300,000

Radio and Press

Expenses Top List’ By MERRIMAN SMITH United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Oct. 23—It costs

campaign road for tw

The comparative period of two

The cost of moving a major

money is

The cost breaks dawn this way: RAILROAD FARK: $906,000.

in the press-picture-radio party and 43 members of Gov. Dewey's staff, Their rail fare for better than 8,000 miles averaged about 00 each. FOOD: $17,900. Meals on ai road diners are expensive these days. Three meals a day plus a| late snack before bedtime runs about $10 a day or better, del pending on the appetite of the individual. TIPS: $4480. This goes to sleeping car porters, waiters, bellhops, messengers, red caps, car drivers.

move the candidate makes and every word he utters to the press; associations, newspapers and radio stations of the nation. ~ RADIO: $100,000 plus. This is Wherg the big bite on the political party cofhes. The networks won't carry the speeches of a major) candidate unless he pays for the time. A full network, with spe-| cial regional coverage, for minutes costs around $25,000. During the course of two weeks, | the candidate makes four or more. major radio appearances,

Mr. Truman has it a little better financially than Gov. Dewey. At least; he comes out with a little less cost to his national committee. The government owns the rail-| road ‘car in which the President) travels and he has to pay only for the space he occupies. Gov. Dewey has to rent an entire pri-| vate car.

|

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WRk In the Broadway Methodist fought for. I'm sure, with persistence, you will be successful in ! your gearch for a husband who will recognize and accept'you as his

Nie- . : 1 ther officers resident; Elinor political, economic, domestic and moral equal. ‘ SYMPATHETIC JOHN, City.

Anderson, - recording . secretary; ; Christina Baldwin, corresponding | 1 wonder if she'll like it when she is accepted, and will you? secretary; and James Wadsworth. | “treasurer. The Rev: Robert Funk.

and Miss Pauline Keller are ad-|

Aclvice-on-Tracing Missing Wife... visers. TO AL, who wants to get married but can’t learn if his wife Plans were announced for a nas a divorce—You could write to the county clerk in every county class in religious broadcasting to| in those states you think your wife might reside. Hiring a private begin Nov. 2 witlf John Rider, detective or writing police departments in those cities mght be public relations director of In-| easier. - MRS. MANNERS

frac Céntral College a8 “in-mf G4 8yid Mihners aiid Festers wT-the eohmm share your probs-{ structor. | lems and answer your questions. Write in care of The Times, 214 {| W. Maryland St. S | ee Fa air r Reception’ | MRS. MANNER'S COLUMN also appears in the 5-Cent WASHING TON, Oct. 23 SUNDAY TIMES. ~S8hortwave radio broadcasts will| come through fairly well over the| week-end, the National Bureau of Standards here reports. |

USED TIRES

{Why Not Try This? THE FAMILY SCRAPBOOK

By DR. ERNEST 6. OSBORNE

3

Love Unrequited, Girl Hurls Self | Into Path of Train |

ald Dreschel, 21, didn’t know how much Gladys Stein loved Bim un-| til it was too late. “Don't send me flowers just one camellia,’ she wrote in a note] penned on her favorite stationery. ‘But by then tne pretty .19-year-| old brunet choir singer was dead. Miss Stein arose before dawn. yesterday and walked to the rail-| road tracks near her home. She) waited until a freight train approached. Then she slipped out on the

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tracks and buried her face in her hands. Witnesses said she stood silhouetted in the glare of the locomotive’'s headlight until the train struck her, killing her instantly. »

MR. DRESCHEL said he and Miss Stein had kept company for several months but never had been formally engaged. Lately he had begun dating another girl. Thursday evening he took Miss Stein to choir practice. It was on the walk home that he told her of his new romance and that he wouldn't be seeing her much longer. “I asked her to go to the church banquet Friday-night but she said she'd be doing something else.”

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CHICAGO, Oct. 23 (UP)—Don- day at 6:15 p. m. in

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. JUDGE SAFETY FUNNIES—Picking the best Times Safety Funnies Contest entries of the week are (left to right) George P. Farkas, director ot safety for Indianapolis public schools; Todd Stoops, secretary-manager of the Hoosier Motor Club; Mrs. Clayton H. Rigg vice chairman of the home safety committee of the Indianapolis Safety Council, cosponsor of the confest; Lt. Harry Bailey, safety education director of the Indianapolis police department, and Robert W. Emerick, education

chairman for the Indianapolis Safety Council. The six winners will be announced in The Sunday Times with the second week's contest sketch. Snipped By a Yen—

"Chic' Dotty Kirsten ‘Dies’ on Schedule In Phony Curls and Saves Opera's Face

MGM Slips Up on ‘Butch’ Haircut for Soprano in Role of Vivacious Violeta

By VIRGINIA MaéPHERSON United Press Hollywood Correspondent HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 23-—8oprano Dorothy Kirsten's yen to be st set the stald old San Francisco Opera Company on its a Sa insta MN i : If the barber who snipped it off in the first place adn't dash A down with a pound of phony curls, opera would have been set back | 10 years. The beautiful blond prima don- rippled 38 inches to her snug na was scheduled to sing Violet- Waistline, it talked her into moanta in Verdi's “La Traviata.” |ing torch-songs and wiggling And every opera fan kriows Vi-/ rumbas, oletta didn't go in for these new-| But last nightethe prop departfangled bobs. She had long, flow-ment was fresh out of prima |ing locks--and they streamed/donna wigs. And the Kirsten {down ‘her bosom during the 15- curls were messing up barber minute dying scene. |Sydney Guilaroff's checkerboard The San Francisco opera is a {floor, < conservative: group. ' It just. So Guilaroff, whose clippers | . {couldn't take the idea of Violetta sheared the ‘glamour gal of the gasping her, last under whisker- Metropolitan, had to drop every!short curls, .. {thing and whisk across town with They said MGM was to blame|/two handfuls of fake curls and a ° for the whole crisis. That, |wisp of some other bond's bangs. Thuffed--the--opera lovers —is—what|— Miss Kirsten was—out-on— the {comes of letting a movie. studio/stage on cue, she dled on schedule - hire its sopranos for “cheesecake” (in somebeody-- else's cast-off eens. locks), and the mink-and-white - The studio not only snipped off |tie customers never knew the difthe famous Kirsten hair _that| ference.

Society to Hear

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Miss Kirsten

Teachers’ Coa Ends Here on Reassuring Note

Maurice Hindus, Correspondent and Auther, Scoffs at Rumers of Possible War With Russia

Miss Genevieve Brown of’ the {United Christian Missionary So-| jctety, who has just returned from! six months in the Orient, willl talk on her trip at the fellowship dinner Thurs-|

he C Christian Church f entral {tional theories picked up at. the annual meeting of the Indiana State Miss Brown, who visited China| [Teachers Association.

./And the Philippines, will speak on | The 92d annual convention closed here last night when teachers {“Some Impressions of the Ori- heard reassuring words from ‘Maurice Hindus, author and news-

ent.’ » ...paper, corfespondent, who raid at Tumors Russia wants war. Farrell Scoft will gite special] Russia wants war about like a {music at the dinner. Miss Ruth man with a broken leg wants a The dinner {broken back,” Mr. Hindus told will be sponsored jointly by the teachers -who filled Cadle TaberWoman's Couneil and the Mary (nacle for the last general session. J. Judson. Business and Profes-{- In the annual business session 'sional Women's Guild. Dr. W. A.|Yesterday teachers passed a reso{Shullenberger is the pastor. {lution ‘urging the 1949 legislature {to make the office of state super|intendent éf “schools appointive, {They also favored enactment of laws giving teachers greater se-| curity and equal benefits to men and women in the profession. |

Reports Auto Looted Elwood Shollenberger, Bethlehem, Pa., reported to police today that his automobile, parked last night in a lot at 230 N. Capitol | Ave. was broken into and cloth- OFFSET PRINTING OLD Ing valued at an estimated $573 Offset. printing was discovered! in Munich in 1709.

CLIP AND SAVE THIS

Schedule of 38th & Arlington Feeder Bus Line Starting Monday, Oct. 26, 1948 |

The route will extend from the present street car loop at the Btate Fairgrounds, east on 38th Street to Arlington Avenue, south on Arlington to East 10th Street. It will [| {| connect with the Illinois-Fairgrounds street car line and the (] Millersville, 21st and Arlington and Post Road bus lines and the East 10th trackless trolley line. Transfers will be available to and from these lines.

Daily Schedule—Monday Through Saturday

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