Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 March 1950 — Page 25

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BOUG GILL. assistant band director, ‘might have heard a few sour<notes. I sure didn’t." This “bachelor was in a mellow, mood. What was the occasion? Don’t snicker. It was a regular practice session of ‘the Central Indiana Boy Scout Band. You can-hear-the-boys-go-it-any Sundsy-—Asa matter of fact, they'll be huffing, puffing, pounding today on the top floor of the fire department headquarters, 301 E.'New York St. Don’t get the impression I'm talkirig about a _ miracle outfit. It's made up of growing, healthy "boys. At times there are 50 in the room. The num__ber may dwindle to 35 or 20. Rehearsals are scheduled for 3 P m. At 3: 30 the door may burst open and a trombone player will dash in and take his place, looking a little guilty, a little sorry but blowing his horn before he sits down,

shake the Reel ~~"

4 : THERE'S ALWAYS more noise when Doug Gill is in charge. Doug's father, Harvey Gill, commands more order &s an older man is apt to do. Both, _however, can get the boys to shake the roof when ‘it comes time to play “Washington Post March” - or “Under the Double Eagie;” My thinking machine was: getting rude shocks of assorted musical blasts when I first arrived. 1 didn’t even know the session was going to end for me on a serious note. Tom Jett, Broad Ripple High School drum major, and Jack Yeager, were beating a drum cadence. Jasper Shadoan, who plays the saxo- . phone; was pounding on the bass drum. Jim Crum-

Blow, Joel. . LOW a Seriey afternoon, Joel Kern and 40 or 50 other Boy Scouts make the | sweetest music this side of fire headquarters.

mind and it was coming out, hot, rhythmic and a without muffing an uuumpah. ree HQYE- Commander” didn't sound bad

By. Ed Sovola

+o W ween $10 million and $20 million these days and tries to stir up a probe of the 192 F Street]

will do.

“ithe Tor ¢HnTcal use”

Iwhich they have shown some!

bo, alto saxophone, had “St. Louis Blues” on his sousaphone duties, glanced toward the tardy one

_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

Aris |Potomac Patter— ; —— —_ = a of ir Truman Unbends In Hoity-Toity. Beanery To Be Restric ted : Reports Have If That President a ol fov'ana ham ‘thin n, sidesishn rt ota wt ire : Supply to Be Used | ~ Eve Listens to Whispers Now io Then y "She speaks J In Research Only | the

OLAND D. RUSSELL, Seripps-Howard Staff Writer NAME of The Netherlands’ MEW Nar 4 Be |gallus-pants bloe in Congress spits on its hands some of |

a

for a spell, is Dirk U. Stikker.. "Though this’ may suggest that of he goes—around armed witha : und is prepared: shiv, fact is most of the time lendure a hotter summer in Wash he doesn’t even pack a pocket {ington than he exer experienced

‘That's the swank beaery which is so hoity-toity jt| Ynite, © oC -" |back home in Java. an issue emi i Vs mel cng St the Sastroamidjojos ~ their saddles, polished their boots ping at a hotel, With thn

to make Some 8. Congressmen the regular White House cor-land loaded their nags in trailers three children, but they're lokig Sore, {respondents tn such-a dither. - recently to assemble fora: Teal tone cna Join the F Street Club--if you nice fox hunt. can—and take a hand in molding . A pack of skinny, streamlined! national affairs, {hounds were “cast”’—which means {set loose—from Harewood Farm, Red Cirhel jowned by Secretary of State LT — TK CHesor, and with assort = THE standard red carpet Was {human and canine, the chase was| unrolled; with a brittle snap when lon. The 35 horsemen and women | the Dominican Embassy put on’ ‘of the Redland Hunt scampered| {over several estates of the Sandy! {Spring area and finally cornered, the fox; which had been nick! {named Reynard, up a dead tree. {One bold huntsman shinnied alo ily |and shook out Reynard from: hi porn i |, | When the kill was made, the. {/brush—Reynard's tail — w a's| {turned over to the proper official land the Redland Hunters preened |

{themselves on. their ninth kill of for a suitable house to make into {the season. They adjourned to an embassy. Then they'll import

lthe estate of Hound Master *® ? Thomas T. Mott and swapped chit- joarved ywod and Tain ture

i

WASHINGTON, Mar. 4—Don't. be surprised if ee aa

worth of anti-arthritis hormone Club here. compounds are to be produced this year, but practically all of it} is expected to be used for diseov-: ering what these new afid powerful drugs, ACTH and cortisone, |

Doctors will not be abi to prescribe these new treatments, except in a research situation, be- | cause the Food and Drug Adminitration is not expected to siree

But tite 3 main . gripe here{abouts is that the club is getting to be a place where Har {Truman unbends and lets you ~whisper in _his.ear. . For instance," the story is now that the President decided to raise our Irish ‘legation to an Embassy because {the Irish ‘gal who manages the| iclub suggested it during a dinner here

~ Not only are the supplies still limited, . but more needs to known. about their effects. on arthritis, rheumatic heart disease, some forms of cancer and mental | disease and some other iis; in

Miss ‘Mary Cummings, ‘who! comes from County Roscommon and who has never ceased to wave the tri-color of Ireland, is said o have made the point that if| {Afghanistan and Pakistan and] some others she could mention) had ambassadors here why not Ireland. Mr, Truman told her he would Nf 4 think about it and a few days W later it was announced that the;

\

promise. At present the two principal | 20 manufacturers of these hormone materials are alloting them with the advice of anonymous com/mittees of doctors: In the case of both Merck, pro|ducing cortisone, and Armour in {Chicago producing ACTH (adren{ocorticotrophic hormone), enough {to cover the “production cost of

A

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ala ML of rl —passage-or-two-was-really-lowde’ INNER innit Of — Department lls Lo Quality ; Disregarding an urge to run downstairs and: course, it'wasn’t perfect, either. You had to “allow| he se Tawa fol now being ur ministry in Ireland to Em-| ~ chat over cocktails. like. Am NSE. Always borrow a hose to restore some order, I watched for the fact that some of the boys were just start-| Tatged; ab i th 9 $7 & hassy status. : i Secretary Acheson, putting a» = Pays! growing American boys continue to act like grow- Ing out in music. Half had little experience in SF*™" WH =" FAKES L1e Hel ent; Next.time Mr. Truman was at|) laside the cares of an atomic WASHINGTON is all a-quiver ing American boys. Doug whistled for S8axophonist band work. But the musical bond kept them|2f 2 human C880. Necessarily -ex- {the club, Miss Cummings again] Seria world, dropped in to hear the de- over the prospective revival of the BUY $hadoan to come over to the desk. The youth hur- together. Brought them to a practice session on pensive. erts are worried about|Put the armon him and suggested|. |tails of the kill. Very exciting. | Art Club's Bal Boheme which is NOW Pied over. 3 Sunday 3riermoon. Mysie ma a desire to hold, o undesirable or prin mpi] that if the legation were raised, ® full-dress feception to. Suletrate 2 = = | going to lake prace Ape. 17 and . ‘You know what?” asked Doug, shouting over 40Wn a. spot in the band tothe best of their ability | ,.¢ isige effects” that are caused|the very man to send back .as/the anniversary of the island re- pjowest Family promises to be a whirling dervish \ND SAVE the din of 35 boys warming up their respective would have a majority of the boys: practicing at by these drugs under the most] | Ambassador was G org eo us/public’s independence. lof excitement. : musical instruments. home that night. careful use. Since the administra- George Garrett, the handsome| Nearly 1000 guests turned out| ‘Newest diplomatic family in; Costumes for the year 2100

_Shadoan. expecting a vital communique and Offer Real Fun acting as if he were on the threshold of Eagle Ie > “DON'T BE AFRAID to hit ‘em

Scoutdom, said, “No, what?” to Everett McFarland a McC: A . 4 o Ev cFarland and Don: McCameron play“Keep your hands off that bass drum!” - ing the bass drums. The boys weren’ The surprise on Shadoan’s face didn't last. : ys Weren't afraid, “Oh,” he said. “OK, Doug.”

Charles MecGlacken, concertmaster

No Dove DOWN an

58

will call doy th-—-samples—

playing of ‘the next number.

and a I've heard better music on Sunday. afternoons.

while John McCardle made his clarinet squeal. a batch of marches. hot bit of clarinet, designed with a thought to acoustics, sounded doing. -like-the inside of a juke box going full -blast-with— Thirty, 46-and 50 boys t all records playing at once, The assistant director whistled several times with all the steam he could develop. Waving his

fay o venings il IR. 1973

be “Our Commander” march. on top of it all—-fun—you've got something good. ~~ Bill Kern, the best trombone player in the I'll take the occasional sour note. band, hurried in when the number was about .days it will be sweet. half ‘over. His brother, Joel Kern, handling Oh, to be a Scout again,

' called Doug check, the doctors are also very. Doug jokingly winced several times during thelable to continue the drug, either!

former member of the U. S. Marine Band, paused But I don't know when I've had as much fun arise. in his work of passing out the music to listen watching musicians, yes, sir, musicians, blare out Made me realize what a experience of being ‘‘cured” tem- -- McGlacken threw: his arms up and shook to the tremendous job men like Harvey Gill and young; The assembly room, never men like Doug Gill and Charles McGlacken were! low him to undergo the cruelty of jed

—hard to make — the Central Indiana Council Boy Scout Band the! best possible is important to the welfare of the city. .Fifty boys have a ‘tremendous amount of! arms and whistling, Doug managed to quiet his energy and imagination. You channel it all into musicians. He announced the first number would music, co-operation, constructive participation and

One of these

and pumped the hands of Dr. Luis town is that of the first ambassa-| A, D. are going to be worn and - Francisco Thomen, the. ambas-idor to be sent to Washington| everybody: is being very sly sador, and Senora de Thomen. from the Republic of Indonesia.! about what they think will be

broker who has been Minister in "Dublin. “He's a quarter Irish. So a few days later the White House

[tion of the drugs must be con‘tinued to hold the disease in

announced Garrett would be the Surprisingily enough the Soviet; Ambassador Ali Sastroamidjojo worn, if anything; 150 years . |Buluctait 30 SiaH 1reaiment Jie Ambassador. {ambassador, Alex Panyushkin, wears regular suits, but his wife from now. : : It just happens that Mr. Gar. showed up and hung around for clings to Javanese. dresses which, President and Mrs. Truman

an hour, muttering gutturals and in turn cling to Her—-she can pack have been invited and four rooms trying -to look ‘inscrutable. Two as many as 25 different dresses of the Statler are going to be bars were awash with vintage into one small handbag. Her turned into “The Street of Tomorchampagnes and drinking whisky skirts are made of batik and her row,” “Stratosphere,” “Castle of and a buffet table stretched the jackets of kabajas, of cobweb Venus,” "(not a peep-show) and length of the ballroom offering silk. Mme. Sastroamidjojo has the Bal Boheme room. Such go- - hot _and -cold _viands, including only 100 of these costumes, but in ings-on haven't been held singe a eon pollo ~{chicken with’ TJava--a -fashion- minded" woman, before: the. WAL. 2

tt was ane of the founders of e F Street Club. It's also bruited about here that ‘the F Street Club was the place where Arthur Krock of the New York Times bent the President's ¥ one-night after dinner, result‘that Trterview ‘which -set:arroz —

because of the shortage of supply '¢ or the untoward effects that might |th Better not give the patient the

porarily than to be forced to al-|

‘a relapse Hg in

From Our FASHION

| Love and Ulcers

By Robert C. Ruark |

COAT Department

NEW -YORK, Mar. 4~This being a ‘medicai- ritabie to all, including their beloved. minded week, I find myself slightly fascinated by sleep they have bad dreams. Mostly they don’ a. Rostrum. the .devalopment .of.stomach. sleep. ulcers, an ailment which afflicts the go-getter even ‘as gout grabs the rich indulger. A doctor out in Pittsburgh says that love is elderly. the answer to the ulcer, when all the time I pernicious, since on oldster is obviously less phys thought the solution was to be found-in bland food,

Or favorably to loss of rest.

‘paper business. Or the advertising business. Nope, I'm SN come to think of it.

any other business which trafficks more.in nervous energy than talent. ...callow_moon-calf,

weary of plugging publicity seekers in the healing: it seems at the time. pyofession—allows that emotional hunger prompts pimples used. to become more prominent, and m the stomach to crave food, and thereby sets up a school grades less so, every time hyper-acid condition leading to an ulcer, The the wiles of a fresh frail.

patient is succumbing; in short; to a self- conscious Ss hakes peare Ha d the Answer

urge to be coddled, like an egg. He Must Be a Stranger fo Love LOVE is a tough proposition for any age o

heal an ulcer by probing away back into the sub- tabloids. ‘consciousness of the patient and retrieving the Romeo to Ingrid Bergman, I-can never recall

__bhoy 6ver the head with cupid, and presto, he's off security to the job at hand. : the skim-milkk and cracker course, and is reading Hypersacidity the man says? "If you want to up. on the best approach to a lobster thermidor. see real hyper-acidity, just take a cast at

romance-bitten veteran can assure you. Love in a pure form, is more unsettling to the

known désease, including botts of the brain, a for one. malady suffered by many soothsayers. I have observed several basket-cases of emotional warfare and “have found them, to a man, to be unsettled in the stomach, the brain, the sub- diseases, including heart palpitations. conscious, and a bore to any innocent bystanders not cure itself. even with a new remedy calle who happen to drift into ken of the cursed of marriage, and if you don’t believe me, peer briefl Venus. Lovers live off neat whisky and moon- at-the divorce statistics. ‘Many a man or mai beams. Their work, rd studies, suffer, They are would still prefer to nurse an ulcer.

“Feminine Diet

If they

A violent ce case ‘of Tove ‘has three ‘flerce phases— p when it strikes the young, the middle-aged, and the{’ Its effect on the elderly is possibly most|:

cally equipped to withstand a visitation of the fewer cigarets, and getting fired from the news- foolish fantods. Them old bones just don’t react

The| th gaped mouth and blank The man—I'd give you his name, except I am eyes, possibly oa more than the old gaffer. Or I recall my adolescent

I fell dead before

stratum, as this doctor might learn from re-

THIS medicine man allows that you can best perusing Shakespeare, or scanning the modern In all the reading I ever practiced, from

brand of love he unconsciously desires. Belt the case which stressed tranquility to dreams or

It is obvious that this witch-doctor is a stranger to seasoned bachelor who is trying to make up his| love, in its more virulent manifestations, as any mind about matrimony, late come to his attention. | A bride is supposed to be nervous, but she is cream| in a saucer alongside a bachelor who weighs the/ nervous system. and digestive processes than any relative value of bliss for two as opposed to peace

Understand. I am not knocking love; which is necessary to the perpetuation of the people, but I will not indorse it as a cure for any of the minor Love can-

By: Frederick C. oman

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Junior, Misses”

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and Women's Sizes

WASHINGTON, Mar. 4-—What this country

“tions.

in mirer of the female sex, a first-class idea. Secretary of Agricultire Charlie Brannan and Maybe they'd go back to the idea of wearing 1 __1 agree as tothe desirability of the well-rounded petticoats at once; our surplus cotton boys woul . end-result, but T'd like to see more Lillian Russells’ be overjoyed. for strictly artistic reason, whereas he wants to get rid of his potdtoes. He claims that if the beautiful sex wasn't wor- hard to persuade _rying all the time about the size wouldn't have to be dyeing millions of bushel potatoes blue with disodium salt and buryl 3 them. The Secretary dared not put it this bluntly

_ nan, ‘he’s worrying about what to do with t pork surplus.

mittee.

Feminine Diet at Fault : MRS. BRANNAN—beauty in the slim modern the ladies refuse to eat, di manner—was there looking at him and a fellow, So what he’s doing now even if he is a Cabinet member, can't be stirring’ to see whether he can persuade up trouble at home. 0 he Jaid re con on of potatoes has go own year: by Sump At fault, he said, is the feminine diet. out.. The ladies of Canada seem to have the sam 1 have seen pictures of Miss Russell; my father saw her once in person and he never forgot her. If eating more potatoes will clear up Secretary Brannan’s sorriest problem and also make the ladies look round in all the proper places, then what are we waiting for? "As J get it, Mr, Brannan really favors the fe- " male who resem temporary of Miss Russell and a lady of the same ladies superb curves, but she also made a practice of bands and pour on the gravy bathing in milk. The Secretary of Agriculture has a good many millions of pounds of dried milk stored in caves around the country, which he can even give away.

ES

those Canadian

border. Mere Drop in Potato Pot

ore

- _ brought up the subject.

The Quiz Master.

From what are. so-called eamel-hair brushes =

usually made? ‘They, are Jasstly 1 ‘made of hair trom the talls

To what inn does Longfellow refer in his “Tale of a Wayside Inn"?

- i, retreat of the poet. . 4 aia ste aE Yeas 3 LA wt phan of he och. oe. eae Sle How many years doe each Congrea serve? in ———— , BORE 2

ri Rn !

The idea of American lovelies weighing in at|; needs is more non- -angular women who edt their about 185 pounds has numerous other ramifica

~Being bigger they'd. take more cloth to

Once a lady gets used to eating a second helping "of potatoes with every meal it shouldn’t be her to take a couple or- three of its hips he pork chops at dinner. Even now, said Mr. Bran

But as I sgy, Mrs. Brannan, ‘who wore a white ‘ before the House Banking and Currency Com-" hat with white roses on it and a brown suit tha > indicated she went easy on the potatoes, kept a close eye on him. Poor old Charlie, who wants another $2 billion to buy up the fattening food dn’t press the subject. is heading for Ottawa

merely that the to boil their own potatoes, instead of shipping § “them here. He doesn’t know how this will turn

idea about hips. as their sisters this side of the

EVEN IF the Canadians refuse to put an em-| on potato shipments, he said, they'll only § us 10 million bushels this year. This is ai § bles Anna Held. She was a con- mere drop in the potato pot compared to what the, i could do if they'd only let out their waist

One other thing: I want no snarling letters from the female sex. If the ladies want to fight, ’t they can pick on the Secretary of Agriculture. He

7? Test Your Skill 22?

The Red Horse Inn, Sudbury, Mass. a favorite

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Full Length Coats! New. Toppers!

. COVERTS Fees : - TWEEDS CHECKS. |

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