Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 January 1950 — Page 10

I It Happened Lost Night—

Soo ‘All Wrong’ Bad

TV fee oe r © If You Have, Here's a Little DROP coco nN : Song That'll Cheer You Up

By Earl Wilson NEW YORK, Jan. 25— Yesterday I had one of those

41008 of Petiatia Nose Drops bad days. IX, pe a Bose: You Le I started the day wrong by oversleeping and from then wo PENETRO NOSE DROPS lon, all day, I was as frustrated as a fly in a flagon of Flit.

The composer, Harold - -—

For pal wad evscomtort. oi piets | Rome, must have had one of A Eg those bad days before he re) er wm 00. 4 Ind.

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‘wrote “Cry Baby.” It's sung by Laurel Shelby, Le-| nore Lonergan and Rae Abruzzo) (and copyrighted by Rome and] Chappell & Co., Inc.). The theme is . . . well, see for) yourself: “DON'T MIND THE BLUE] | SKIES, they'll all turn to gray; |A storm will soon drive the sun-| shine away. | {You miss the only train home by | just half a minute, You try on last year’s dress, you . can’t get In it. Miss Lonergan

| " = = |“YOU give a cocktall party—no| pion uncle throw up.

turn to black.

come back. ” J w

| then you lose the key. | your friends agree. —what an awful cad! your ‘panties——and you had! v nr

DON'T mind the black skies they'll all turn to showers

off the flowers. is here freeze your ear,

» »

{out he didn't get paid for it. “Why do you do 1t?" she sald. “For the honor,” he said.

A

————— Ye ——— So W————— - ih ——————— rem—

(Usay its Every Ounce

his story about a hungry man who

{something to eat, “Do you mind eating yesterday's soup?” she said. | "No." {| “Then,” she said, “come tomorrow.” :

, “Where are you from?"

"R| c— Nc x J/] and the answer was ‘“Picadily.” a TEN tik ho reto picked. a dilly night.” . ., Jane sell gave

3 is . Dees = = Adamis—who wormed with : f her in Boston-—a Bible. . . . New Jersey, says Harold Hoffman, has the smallest bathing suits and

«+ « D'you know there's a Philadelphia, Italy? It's spelled “Filadeifia,” is in Calabria, and is the birthplace of well-known 7th Ave. barber Frank Garzaniti. . . . Songwriter Harold Barlow is glad that everybody's quit talking about the brink of disaster and started talking about the .disaster of Brink, + + «+ We're reliably informed that a California gal says “You may kiss me” and a Texas gal says ‘You all may kiss me.”

The Midnight "Earl

HE

BLS

for the Stromboli picture will {probably show Ingrid Bergman's {skirt blowing high in the wind, |revealing her, er, briefs. There's /such a scene in the film. . . . No {money in cafes?” Monte Proser [may sell out his interest im the Copacabana for §75000.... Horace McMahon tells me about a B'way ticket broker who has a

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Ever Had One of Those

Fe —————— 1 kept remembering a song I'd heard in the new revue, \n RHEUMATIC P AINS “Alive and Kicking” (which has a lot of laughs in it).

You bake a cake that makes your in New Orleans is really big time,

| “YOU LOCK the car up tight and

You say you're looking awful and

a N. Y. club president who was much hated by the members. Be-| {hind his back, they called him, | |"“That louse,” “That heel,” etc.| {His wife, learning of this, asked {him why he held office, pointing

. » » I LOVE new comedian Sammy X Levenson at the Capitol, especially reading the Reader's Digest series ment Co.

biggest mosquitoes in the world. |

Days?

Earl's Pearls

| Mickey Shaughnessy says at {the Copacabana there's fio need |to look for those B os ton bandits in Miami, Who'd so foolish as {to go to Florida {with only a mil{lion bucks? Eddie. Condon proposes Danny Kaye for ambas- Mr. Shaughnessy sador to Russia jon account of he's such a great {double talker.

|$42-a-day room waiting for him {in Miami but won't go till it snows here. That would make it worth [the money. . . . Greta Garbo in {her shopping tours now carries a |gaily colored parasol. . . . When {Fred Allen returns to N. Y, he's | pretty sure to start toying with some television show ideas. His favorites are Dave Garroway and |Kukla, Fran and Ollie. . . . Owen {Brennan's Vieux Carre restaurant

" |died yesterday in Methodist Hos-

Services for Mortimer C. Furscott, 42 E. 32d St., board chair-| man of Kahn Tailoring Co. who

pital, will. be at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Cremation will follow. He was 71. Mr. Furscott had been in declining health a number of years. Despite {ll health, he has insisted on going to his office until he entered the hospital two weeks ago as an anemia patient. He also was president of the h Woolen Co. Cleveland, and Edwards, Inc, Washington, D. C. He was born in Charleston, 8. C., and spent his early youth in Denver, Colo. He attended St. John's Military Academy there. Upon graduation from the Bryant and Stratton Business College in Chicago, he began work at the National Cooperage Co., in Peoria, 111. He later became a reporter on the St. Louis PostDispatch. ‘ \ In 1902 he was named adver-| [tising manager of Ralston Purina | Co., 8t. Louis. In 1905 he founded | the Shoemark Co., and served as| its: president until 1916. He then

is

it's running a junket of Holly-

| one shows up. Dofi't mind the gray skies, they'll woodians in for the Mardi Gras. : so . .

~ r [The lousy weather will always Wish I'd Said That

THE perfect girl has a narrow waist and a broad mind—Henry Sylvern.

Today's Best Laugh

{ That blind date from New Haven, A MAN denied admission to a

ichurch because of prejudice was

That time you thought you'd lost |nét told the real reason by the

church officials who instead advised him to go ask God about it. , He did, said Sam Levenson, now at the Capital, and returned to

And stormy weather will knock tell the church officials. God

sald not to worry about it. He

Try to remember when summer said he'd been trying to get into

your church for years and

Winds of December will soon couldn't.

& . . (Colon G1 — sad things in life are free!” Bar Buzz te re .

Ld

Cohen, the current pride of Leon & Eddie's, was made a life member of the Grand Street Boys Association. , . . Dancer Pearl Primus, just back from a year in the African jungles, {is bedded with reoccurrence of malaria. . . Warner's bid for the Academy

A d , ABE ELLIS is scheduled for a oi A 1} rea d |. HARRY HERSHFIELD tells of |, Yorker profile. . . . Myron v

Awarg is “The Hasty Heart.” .../25 years, Mr. Smith was a me- |

Comic Paul Gray got so nervous

on the dangers of tobacco, he]

asked a Brooklyn woman for Smoked three packs of cigarets. Lucy F. Smith; a son, William

. + « That's Earl, brother. {

Mardi Gras Parade Abandons Using Mules

NEW ORLEANS, Jan. 25 (UP)

|The old white-hatted mules,

r r GROUCHO MARX asked a con- won't be around the Mardi Gras

parades this year, Spokesmen for the parades of Momus, Hermes, eus, Rex

mules to pull their foats—sild they'll use tractors this year. The spokesman sald “greater efficiency of mechanization” and a constant decrease in the number of City Sanitation Department mules accounted for the change.

NLRB Orders Election ‘In. Muncie Factory

| WASHINGTON, Jan. 25 (UP) tA collective bargaining election before Feb. 19 has been ordered at Gay Games, In¢., Muncie, Ind, by the National Labor Relations Board. The NLRB gaid the CIO United Paperworkers Union and . the Muncie Novelty Printing Press-

| GOOD RUMOR MAN: Posters men and Assistants "Association 2"d Mrs. George Boyle, and two

would be on the ballot ‘with employees having an option of vot-! ing for no union. Butler Dean to Attend Education Conference | Dr. J. Hartt Walsh, dean of Butler University's College of Education, will attend a regional |education conference Friday and Saturday in Chicago. | Representatives from teacher education institutions from Indi-| jana, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio and| {Wisconsin will attend the meet-| [Ings sponsored by the National {Commission on Teacher Educa-| {tion and Professional Standards.

2-Day Radio Parley Slated at DePauw

| . TH State Service | GREENCASTLE, Jan. 25 - {Panel and group discussions on {FM broadcasting will be held Fri{day and Saturday at DePauw |University, The conferences will be directed by Dr. Herold T. Ross {of the DePauw speech department. The two days of activity will in-| {clude Inspection of the university {radio station, a banquet, reports {and a broadcast from the campus.

and Comus—which usually used.

moved to Indianapolis to pur{chase an interest in the Kahn Co. | President Since 1933 He was named treasurer of the firm shortly afterwards and became its president in 1933. | Mr. Fursott was a director of the Civic Theater of Indianapolis land was a former director of {the Indianapolis Community Fund. Other organizations in which he was a member included the Citizens Historical Association, |}| Columbia C 1 ub, Professional]! Men's Forum and Broadmoor || Country Club, He was a member of the Indianapolis Hebrew Con|gregation. | Survivors include his wife, Mrs. Claribel K. Fursott, and a daughter, Miss Mary L. Fursott. -

‘Earl Robert Smith

| Rites for Earl Robert Smith, 115 Kansas St., will be held-at 2 |p. m. Friday in the home of a | sister, Mrs. Hilda Petrosky, 1151 | Fletcher Ave. Burial will be in Floral Park Cemetery. { Mr. Smith, a native of Peru, {Ind., died yesterday in his home after an illness of five months. He was 46. | A resident of Indianapolis for

chanic with the South Side Equip-

He Is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Grant Smith; three daughters, Miss Ardith A. Smith, Mrs. Elelyn B. Vaught and Miss Hildd A. Smith; a sister, Mrs. Petrosky; tthree brothers, Ralph and An-i drew Smith, Indianapolis, and a stepson, Alfred P. Jones: his! father, Grant Smith, and five}! Siandehiidren, all of Indianap-! iy

Vernon Smiith, Savannah, Ca WISE Mail and Phon

Harry E, Summers

Services for Harry E. Sum-|

mers, 7177 Edgewater Place, will |

be held at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in Union: Chapel Church’ Burial will be in the thurch cemetery. Mr. Summers, who was 75, dled yesterday in his home after an! iliness of two years.. A life-long resident of Indianapolis, he op-| erated a plumbing business for, 30 years and was a member of Modern Woodmen of America, | Newasa Tribe of Red Men and the Union Chapel Methodist Church. Surviving are a son, Rebert H. Summers; a brother; Ernest Summers; three sisters, Mrs. Chester Spencer, Miss Grace Summers

grandchildren.

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