Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1949 — Page 33
13, 1049
3 CN
tors, dentists
d in the ac-" | Reserve are . i Medicine and scientific matedicine, with medical probeting.
AP AIAAPIITY
JEN
| Food"
WA OTS
13
"Ss THE Drinks — Ribs
ur Souces $--CHOPS ppetites >
173
rl es 1
SUNDAY, MAR. 13, 1949
frre a tre ry
| 1D! STA A A NAA ME po
Red Tape, Money 7 Necessary for Trips To Far Off Places By GALVY GORDON e world is yours” alluring airlines advertisements proclaim. weeks vacation" and you can travel to any part of our| globe.” gt
You can if you prepare at least a month in advance.
- There's that all-important mat-|
ter of the passport. : Indianapolis residents m a y
start passport machinery in mo-| (tion by buying a $9 money order
payable to the Secretary of State, Washington, D, C. Passport applicants should then go to the Federal Clerk's office
Processers || Spend Month |
$
aa io iret
in the Federal building accom-| ° panied by .an adult American),
citizen who can tesfify to having
known the applicant for, at least =
two years. =.
» » . A CLERK in the office will accept the $0 money order and ask for a §1 fee before giving the applicant a special passport f6¥m to complete. ~ Proof of United States citizenship—an old passport, birth certificate or naturalization papers —will be required in addition to two passport size photographs. Applicatidbn forms call for a specific personal description, the purpose of the trip, and if the trip is for pleasure, proof of aecommodations for the return trip to the U. 8. :
~ » ” PASSPORTS may bg called for generally in two weeks to a month at the clerk's office.” Although valid for four years, American pasSports must be renewed after two years. The renewal fee is $5.
With afew exceptions; visas|School of Nursing, St. Thomas’|X. Trask, 6017 Carrollton Ave.
must be obtained for each country the traveler plans to visit. Transit visas will be re-| quired for those lands he merely! plans to pass through. |
Dodie Trask... " res in ‘the ry ra Working Schedule Makes Theater Tradition Roufine | English Native Used to Late Rehearsals,
Sleeping "til Noon; Sh
By MARJORIE TURK
Knocking off after a late rehearsal for food and then sleeping tll noon is theater tradition. But that isn’t the way Miss Dodie
Trask is doing it. 8he’s been rehearsing nights Loves Mary,” which starts
from 11 p. m. to 7 a. m. Dodie, who's equally enthusias-| tic about nursing and acting, got used to long hours when she was| in training in the Nightingale
Hospital, London, during the war. She comes fre Bedford, England. » » » IN THE CIVIC production, which runs through Mar. 26,
Friday,-and rushing from {Methodist Hospital. She is on duty as a rfurse, in the delivery room,
lago because she wanted to travel
en * - 24 Narrow inlet vv 27 Great (ab.) _ HOMONYM * Fill in the blanks with ‘words’ that sound alike, but are spelled
differently: The = made itshome among he we rocks.
: WORD DIAMOND RODENTS form the center of our diamond. The second word is “a land parcel,” the third “bails,” the fifth “taut,” and the sixth an abbreviation for “a female saint.” R. .
£
e's in Civic Play
in the Civic Theater for “John there to the
and ended up in Indianapolis because she has relatives here.
s ” DODIE is ‘the niece of Charles
Mr. and Mrs. Verne A. Trask, 9000 Township Line Road, and
Mr. and Mrs. George B. Schley,!
4211 Knollitor Road, are her cousins.’
-. ACROSS
nl tsps RIA =p . 2 J p ; } f ¥ p vil um eo oe y PI , ‘ a
1 Beathsayer Bb Ireland 9 Solicitude 10 Waste allowance 3 1 pitive (ab.) "ile : ; ’ Pains oping . B Blemish : . 21 Goddess of discord Scramble “to hurry” and have 15 Street (ab.) 22 Lease “a footed vase.”
For Spring . And Easter!
Lb EA TR Ba
undreds -of The S
0
PUZZLE ANSWERS HARTY * NETIV : SAIVL
HAVIS HAVADS aHOM
—————— —————
BRINN RIE
martest
vii ent Ag Tw
TS ond SUITS
Local travel agencies or air-|Dodie plays the part of a Cockney
lines will indicate whether it is girl, Lilly Herbish. “However,” possible to apply in person at the Dodie declared, “the fact that foreign consular offices for a visa'I'm a Britisher doesn’t make the
She got intb the play by going ey rag * : i
down to the Civic and trying out. Dodie had no acting experience except in the amateur productions
or applicants may mail their passports and -applications for visa to the offices. # » . MOST OF the European countries are represented by consular agencies in Chicago. Visa-seek-ers will be required to fill out forms similar to those required in obtaining a passport. Some consular offices may require an outlime of the applicant’s political sympathies and affiliations. The Indianapolis world travel-er-to-be will also do well to make certain that he has had a smallpox vaccination within the last three years. All European travelers returning to the United Statés must have had a vaccination within this time limit or they are vaccinated in the port of reentry. Path vt Luggage: should be kept to a minimum and a list of the proposed contents of each case a month or two in advance will hélp the traveler. Matched sets of luggage frequently cause the tourist to exceed his weight and practical baggage limitations, » r ” AMERICAN EXPRESS checks, always safe and negotiable in all] major cities of the world, are| considered by most
seasoned | overseas tourists as the “only
" kets are always buttoned in way to carry money.” ' They are Jac furnished in & convenient leather. exactly the right place, and their
efte folder and are redeemable] in event of loss or theft. r Study of guide books, maps, foreign exchange rates and other travel information, will re-
accent any easier.” The actress came to the Methodist from the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., where she was the first foreign “nurse on the staff sihce the war. She immigrated to the States two years
Potomac Patter—-
which the nurses and doctors at St. Thomas’ put on. Acting and nursing aren’t all that fill her time. Besides dating and partying, which she fits into odd hours, Coliseum with the Gay Blades.
she skates at the|
‘Glory That Was Crease Lost on Britain's Envoys England's Sloppily Dressed Diplomats Take Back Seat to Sharply Clad Russ
‘By ANDREW TULLY, Scripps-Howard Staft Writer Aer WASHINGTON, Mar. 12—Some Hollywood pants presser could make a fortune as a consultant to the British diplomatic set. For a bunch that’s trying to preserve the Empah and the right to dress for dinner in the jungle they're sure a lot of sartorial sad sacks. It's not that the boys are doing their shopping at the Salvation { Army—they still wear the best Bond Street stuff. But some of them look as if they just can’t remem-
The ber to take it off when they go to bed. As a result you can usually |¥reida Hennock of New York and
i
was Commissioner!
pe! Bowery. With one of those long
spot ‘em a mile away by ‘their rumpled trousers and the pipes, tobacco pouches, old peace pacts) and stray chipmunks spilling out! of their jacket pockets. It doesn’t make sense, but the fashion parade is led right now by—of all people-—the The creases in their pants are as sharp as an OGPU dagger, their
neckties make Adolph Menjou ook like something out of the
Russian cigaréts at just the right angle you'd never take them for
B
ussians..,
the Federal Communications Commission, and she did more for the scenery than all 209 of the males, even if they did include Ohio's Silver Knight, Senator John W. Bricker. Incidentally, that handsome white hair of Senator Bricker's is getting awful thin on tep.
» » ” WHO WAS that bum Sir Galahad? At a party over at Perle Meszsta’s the other night Vice President Barkley lifted a gob-
Attractively Priced Af . ..
25
Gay budget-priced suits in colors crisp as a fresh nosegay . . . to wear for Easter Sunday and on into summer. Wool and rayon gabardine, Donegal tweeds, all-wool coverts ~—styled in the new 1949 manner—longer jackets, slim skirts. :
The coats in lighthearted
fashions to top your
a, : SENG - &
the nice, wholesome post-graduate ' let of cham-
. pagne and| -toasted his host-| ess as “the lovelest, most charming woman
pay the traveler many 8. | heasants they really are.. Foreign customs and strange|’ my. apove is not a personal places lose their power to be-.,mpniaint It is just a report on wilder after only a few evenings yp gt is worrying Washington of study. i” "newspaper society writers these A final tip—language guides gays eve r to invade 1 to millions] : WWW Mr. Barkley . : leaded by Ut Ary ts of thel YOU HAVE to make the most : . Bud conquer of Americans in all parts of fame while it lasts in this town. | Washington. : world during the war have proven of fam A >) ‘The white charger, their worth. If the Haveler Move talked ! to Rep. son. not find or borrow such a OK= ’ gu 8 ro Jet, he can purchase phrase books, | Chartie ~Hatlecle| A LOT OF PEOPLE heéreabotits
almost as good, in most book vi Oe ae] Who think they've seen Mrs. Tru- " stores. : i
majority leader, looking “at ‘Mrs. John Nicholas . . . $1. Million Fire Rages at Well
“spring prints. and suits. Shorty or full length. Full flaring. New 1949 collar and sleeve details.
Richard-
hd YE CE add
AEB a A |
Juniors” Misses’
and
En
Women's Sizes
: 5 New Spring Shades
TOAST KELLY Ae GREY | {bi (mB. J JT “RED : SKIPPE' . NAVY BEIGE AND
SPRING uded S$
for 2 one bes | Brown, She's the wife of the ren a “| ers Tdor—the other Nove Undersecretary of the! day and there ® 8.» If f Mexico No Single OUR AMBASSADOR to Lon- . nterru . don, Lewis Douglas, came down In Gu o , ME a that guy with an attack of hiccups the 1 , Mar. 12] who loo jother day, so he spent $20 teleOP The Rol Co. officials Mr. Halleck alome at the) phoning his doctor in New York tonight worked - desperately on White House Correspondents As- for advice. The doc obliged by plans to control a million-dollar sociation dinner was retiring De-|telling him about the old wives’ fire now raging in one of thet fense Secretary Nm ¥ orrestal. cure of blowing into a paper bag. wells two miles out in the . #0» Guir"of ‘Mexico from the mouth FORMER Atorey Gener] py cxc70.NORMALOY Dep. of the Mississippl River. turned Mohammedan. The reason|Guests at a party given by Mme. A spokesman for the firm sald| ts down on his knees and sa-| Viadimir Rybar guzzied chamthe flames from the burning well | gels Sow rd the Bast every Pagne gushing from fountain in had diminished somewhat, but] Rms | o fro afraid he's getting|the middle of the floor. Even the said they were still shooting high; morning is ; feommon man, or Stocking feet. — into the air. Last night flames d paunci. = |grade of congressman seemed to y be seen as far away as . . [like it. a Steak in Diplomacy | i ~The spokesman said -a--na-\— AMON -O ART ER, tie Fort. SENATE SECRETARY LES tionally known oil fire fighter, Worth publisher who usually BIFFLE'S sun tan was a mite from Houston, Tex., had arrived ‘doles out Stetson hats to the expensive, He spent a few days on the scene. worthy, came up with somethingiat Miami Beach to get rid of a 0 nd little more practical this week, cold and found that all of a TWO explosions touched Ooffiyy, gigeributed a flock of steaks|gydden the place was having a
the fire. They came while Joe 4, geveral dozen “personages of hig week and rooms were retailhigh official rank here. Amon, iting for $40-a-day—without grub.
engine, I heard a blast,” he said. “Flames started shooting into the engine - room. Then about two
seems, bought a prize steer at a fat stock show. The price was about $8 a pound on the hoof, which figures out at $15 a pound for the steaks, : Constituents of Sen. Francis J.
seconds later, I heard another, ... .r philadelphia are bom-
blast.” I
Burned severely, Mr. Dara-
gowski’s condition was described
{barding him with requests for a government document called “The Sex Life of a Frog.” Sen. Myers
at the
GREYHOUND [TRAVEL BUREAU
POWDER
A. Wool and Rayon Gabardine Coat—29.95 Cf egal Tweed Suit—29.95 ; - C. Weol and Rayon Gabardine Suit—29.95 D. Wool anid Rayon Gabardine Suit—29.95
E. All-Wool Covert Coat—29.95 2 : : hy "Carefully Designed to Make the Most of a Tiny Budget” \ A \ r ; [ 3 ; 2 ia BUDGET FASHIONS, Downstairs at WASSON'S
“
