Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1950 — Page 17
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_ Inside Indianapolis
IS THIS college? Forsooth, is the Indiana University Adult Education Center a part of my alma mater in ? Where are the gay freshmen with their n ‘on their orn , gay i. pods gay Distractions of all types prevented me from conjuring answers for the above questions. In the first place there were too many serjous-looking people in the halls. Men were wearing suits and ties. The women (not girls) in sight didn’t have a sorority pin showing. The place was much too quiet for thinking on the university level. Of course, that's-my own personal opinion.
Don’t Look Like Students
STUDENTS STREAMED through the doors. I say students because there couldn't be that many professors teaching extension classes. Actually the people coming into the building didn’t look like the typical college student. A couple of men were talking about the latest “arrival.”
“I probably shouldn't come to class tonight
but we. should have a good discussion-on-the chap
ters we are ng-and I didn't want to miss it,” said the older of the two. : “It's bad business to miss a class,” agreed the other. A bulletin board attracted my attention. Certainly a man would see snappy announcements about the coming Sophomore Spring Cotillion or the Belta Pelta Phi Garter Snake Hop. Bulletin boards on the campus always brought out the best in precocious frat and art students. p One announcement reached out and grabbed me by the lapels of my coat: “Students who miss four successive class meetings and do not officially withdraw by the fourth absence will be withdrawn from the class and a grade of F (failed) entered on their records.”
I remember seeing announcements of the sort only on April Fool's Day. F for four successive class cuts? You couldn't be a BMOC (big man on campus) unless you had 22 cuts. And the big, _ really, big, BMOC never went to class. Often, just S| he was a big man, held walk past the “A g where he had a class. Professors appreciated this very much. Freshmen were sent after grades. The edges of the announcement were initialed and curt expressions of approval were boldly written. Someone hinted that the number of class cuts be two before the faculty takes drastic action. “This is an institution of higher learning where a good student doesn’t miss class meetings,” was written in ink. .. Probably - the-~most disconcerting thing toa man who has drunk deep of campus lore and plucked the harp of good fellowship was the absence of “I” men, those valiant warriors who
Here they really study.
; ~ WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 1950
Alcohol Filled Husband,
ith Bitter, Unreasoned Couple Began Drinking in School; NE Soon Found They Couldn't Escape
By CARL HENN : Last of a Series “I HATED everybody—my husband, my family, my friends and my neighbors.” The smiling, dark-haired mother of three seemed the most: a 3 cheerful person at the meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous un h i — A ‘ | said this, : Where's the ivy? . +. An-ol' man of the { . hs Ive. she Fofisted. “I hated everybody. I was full of ged poison from the soul out. Some-, ~ Ss frm Ramps walk fivough the downtown division and (times .I hated my husband so range program. We've turned our i !much I thought I'd choke.” lives over to Him. Now we have always had hordes of beautiful women at their. She was. speaking of her ex- Peace of mind and freedom from heels. #7" © _ -|perience as an alcoholic woman hale. t a Oh, how the halls and ivy-covered towers used married to an alcoholic man—! tobe SlOTY Sonterns the debilito resound with the screams of delight whenever | both obsessed with the compul- oo. o BD Entire Taimily over 3 a football hero (when I was on campus we had sion to drink, neither able to stop. in to ner AMG ot v at San ‘'em) flexed his muscles and made the words She was speaking of what she {pe grip of alcoholism prope “Property of IU Athletic Department” ripple on felt when -he saw what her “A t > his T-shirt. There was none of that at the exten-/drinking and ber husband's drink- and pw Ron Age girl 1 was heavy sion. ing was doing to her family. when 1 Wey ‘ a 1 Jound Neither could you hear the pulse-quickening Ye! they could not see how to. 0°, glawed ny me: sound of 40 or 50 voices raised in song off in.the Dalt drinking until both found ga. 0 Pot ordinarily would distance. Nowhere in the halls were there quar- Alcoholics Anonymous. “ . 3 r 4 ) 4 Two years ago the couple . loward the end of my high tets practicing for the big sing that ‘night at a joined AA. a fellowship of men School days I lost my excess popular Lraferity Those: In the spring, g00d an4 women whq share experience weight, but by then 1 was run- ' lity wasn’t a fraternity and hope with one another in an Ning With a crowd of young peoif it didn’t serenade nightly. Qf course, that was effort to solve their common prob- Plé Who drank. {uP enough money for penicillin years ago when a fraternity was a fraternity. lem. “I met my future husband in /When we got on a New Year's 2 - ] high school. We went on to busi- began to argue and fight, espe- and drinking all day. My health, jag and spent it all. No Hand-in-Handing ness college together, drank when clally aha money. A second child S3pensally my nerves, was affect- “I decided that was the end SE : : we went out. came along. > ed: couldn't sleep. I'd get the a a "w 1d : NOT ONCE did’ I see a boy and girl dash into “We married, had a child and “I kept an excellent house, took-shakes. I went to the doctor but thE We Somdurt Jive Sogetner any the building hand-in-hand, out of breath, laugh- got .on- well together for about 800d care of the children. It be- lied to him and wouldn't say % gured there was ing and with the sweet scent of the lilac bushes three years. ‘Grad /, W came too heavy a load. Instead drinking was causing it, ~ Jone ast chance for us. I told my : ree ) ually, we began t ) ; 8 It, husband the only alternative w in their hair. And everyone coming into the build drinking more than we should.” of easing up I became resentful “Then our second child. a girl for | y e was ing wore shoes. Regular street. shoes, yet. Shiny a a " land drank heavily. I Blamed all tied : + & girl, for both of us to join Alcoholics h . : oo : of pneumonia after three Anonymous, shoes, No saddle shoes. No football shoes with the “I WOULD drink at home, in MY troubles on my husband. He days illness. The doctor told “That w y cleats removed. : the kitchen. He would get home blamed his on me. we weren't to blame, but I k us hav 2 Was two years ago. We I walked and walked. From the building on E. \ ame, but 1 kept havent had a drink since. God Michigan St. to the one around the corner on eae
‘ later ;and later from .work. We' “I started hating everybody.'accusing-myself,.. ,. —wilting; we'l-never have another." “Delaware “StI the “latter 1 aiscoverea green DHAYAranhar 1 cies fi = blackboards . . . greenboards, I guess you woul Photographers Looking for call them now. How different from the campus.
an Asp ns
Hatred
Death of Baby Proved Shock
“It was a mutual loss that seemed to bring us closer. Besides that, all the people I thought I hated came to the funeral, and | I found I needed them, I ge- _§ solved to change. “¥ Even then, I didn't Know I ' . was an alcoholic, or that my husband was one. But I resolved to ask for help and peace of mind. I told myself that anything He asked in exchange would not be too great a price to pay. = " on : “WE HAD a baby boy, Right afterward my husband was called into service. I still drank, but only when I was happy. I didn't want to be sullen and hateful again, “When my husband came home we began to drink together again, Even so, I tried to keep my new mental attitude. Things were go ing along pretty well when the youngest child got rheumatic fever. We were trying to scrape
Eb
Photo by Lloyd B. Walton, Times Staff Photographer. Man and wife ... . alcoholics join AA together.
= " ” THE renouncing of alcohol, although it left them sober, did not instantly solve this family's problem. As the wife said: “It took. years of alcoholic living to put us as far apart as we got. It will take years to be completely together again, as we were when we first married. “But we've embarked on a long-
Chain Store Group Ao Peceie—
Bit Confusing
| ==
Set 14th Session moni Lists Speaker Student Crushes Hand;
By Robert C. Ruark Pro cov Calmly Directs Rescue
. 3-Day Meeting building. Opposite Sears, Roebuck at Vermont and Alabama Streets
| A. R. Kaiser to
NEW YORK, Apr. 19—This is a time of.
year when an old sports writer is just duty-bound to write about baseball, and I have been rassling "with the chore for a couple of weeks. I guess the only conclusion I can draw is I'm glad I don't cover it any more, even in spring training. Like everything else, baseball, once a wonderfully simple operation, has become so confused around the fringes that it seems to resemble the rest of the world, rather than a beautiful delusion that was perpetrated on sunny afternoons under a smiling” sun. Racial pressure has entered into it. It has had a fling at unionism. There are new rules about “bonus players.” It is full of court-house talk and legislation. It has been commercialized to the scuppers, in perversion of its original hit, run and pitch. From national pastime it seems to have developed into a variety show for a television sponsor. _ "And those night games. I guess that's the crux of my beef. They will play more night games than. ever before, this year, and I will see nene. Night ball has upped attendance tremendously, and has given baseball to great gobs of people who couldn't see.it before, except on week-ends, but I'm still mad 4t it.
Day Games Look Natural TTTTTLIKE TO remember my baseball-watching according to the way a hot-dog tasted in a seat over third base, with just a little breeze and the sun hot enough to pinken your nose but not enough to drench your shirt. I like to remember the bleacher crowds who shucked their shirts and sat around. in their skivvies. . Baseball in the daytime looks natural. You can tell the balls from the strikes, and when a ball is hit you can say pretty well whether it's safe or
AE
4 ed Night ball seems as unreal to me as polo in’ the parlor. Theigreat massed batteries of lights
“until midnight wi
Lg Day-ball was a.
complicated as a treason trial.
| To Open Sunday
1949 income $9700 gross. Better | than 7% ‘non investment, |
Story brick store and apartment Talk on Taxation | Chinese, Caught in Carding Machine,
shed a malevolent glare, like the brilliant clusters . Cok for. Tar th ant i . i. Bo of globes in an operating room. | Transformation of black and RITE, SPANK (COMPIAY Ine. The Indiana Chain Store Coun- Displays Great Oriental Stoicism The green grass. no longer looks like grass—it| White prints. into color photo- COTS BZ lil is going to get the lowdown on
A textile engineering class at Georgia Tech looks like the baize cover of a pool-table. Moths graphs through a comparatively | Turn now to the classi- |taxes. unexpected demonstration in oriental stolciem by a young Chinese
flutter over the field. A full moon still looks inexpensive proc- | fied ‘columns of today's | Next Friday this powerful group student. Sing-Wu Chu, 26, of Shanghai, ¢ J { ti | { , «0, , ca out of place at a ball game. less will be dem- Times for a selection of [made up of 50 executive and local ing machine. Although he was Bug aa ught his hand ina card3 | BUSINESS - INDUS- chain managers in Indiana will ere pain, Chu calmly super The players -largely hate night baseball, Up Qusiraisy Bt the TRIAL realestate Tor near Arthur R_ Kaiser, top tax vised the 40-minute rescue operation. He gave directions in broken a game to play and hustle annual con- ne Mini : a * English while his classmates explored ‘the rol 2 onto the train with an afternoon game next day| vention of the sale (classification 49a) {man of Sears, Roebuck & Co. poetors Tater . amputated. ome ollers crushing his hand. or maybe a twilight double-header wrecks their Indiana. Associ- finger and sewed three others and her mother. and then they
. .. including the property [Caitago, digestions, dispositions, and keeps them ragged ation of Photog- deseriped in te Want ad | He iI speak on “The Burden per op, reporting Chu's .undi-|*V'% MIM w leave. and tired. [raphers. tion was “fair.” | sn 8
above. The Times is now |of Taxation and the Outlook.” I have no statistics with me, but would venture] The three-day} 4 | 2 wu { Paul - Douglas,
the newspaper with the | REAL ESTATE ADS! . ,. that a mixture of day-and-night ball is tougher meeting will bringing you a good se- re Lin a tulle and. a will on the player than an August day-time series in(OP#n at 3:3 lection of homes for sale, piped bd dn TRE on’ the pi SRY ad an abandoned -vell last year have t 2 Ke himself a Spring training, now. seems to have become Pan Arron to oe an 3 in,
% : building lots, farms, busi3 € ness and industrial prop-
with an ; Pan-American stock car r {Jan Sterlin mechanized, and run like a concentration camp. : y i erties , , . daily and Sun- | : gh ace, 4 £ They have house-rules and bulletins tacked -on the adds est EY Gov. Mr. Womeldor!} day, {army Fanci ut San rie fd re
{Angeles have entered as a team, ried. : to start from Juarez, Mex., May 5.! Mr. Douglas Mr. Francis is a nephew of Lou Said the marMeyer, three-time winner of the riage will take Indianapolis Speedway 500-Mile Place “within Race. {the next three months.” He forSto merly was wed to Virginia Fiel Will ‘be city chairman of the Uni- actress, Miss on the oa,
chow-hall boards, and penalties far this and that.| The color photo process will be and automatic pitchers, and even a psychologist) 405. rined by Harry J. Womeldorf,
é » y to work the kinks out of the St. Louis Browns’ |i, siana representative of KEast- Nah g asterminds f C
head, so's they'll all hit homers and pitch no-'man Kodak Co.
hitters. . | Other speakers will include Ken Of M Ri | oney Ring |
Mr. Domhoff Mr. Kaiser
C. H. Dombhoff, vice president, and manager of Guarantee Tire
Mr. Douglas
. .« _e . : |Carson, Eastman Kodak Co.; E. Tried Unionization of Sport |A. Dieckmann, Ansco; Harold H.
" NT oi : i Defender Co.; THE ACCENT ON money-making exhibitions Woolwine, DuPont Def\ 3) r : is. go strong now that the players aren't allowed Be a eo alie Albany Treasury Agents [8 ues Co. 3 Sona) Dresiyent, versity of Chicago Alumni Foun- mer wife of Tommy W J sufficient time to work easily into shape. tie . ' : Thy 0 T il | fehl ! dation campaign for the alumni’s le or ommy varner Te yart Adams, Kokomo; Lewis L.. On Trail 3 Months. . apolis branch. manager. of. the. MLDABD, LOL INE AML Sp yute: parts her: sri seems t0.-the-performers..that -they--have played: fo, o = “of L.H. Deardorff & BUFF Kroger Co., is vice president. Wal- 1950" gift to thé university. The ¥ oN a half-a-season before they come North in April. ALO, N.Y, Apr. 19. (UP) (a, Greenough is managing direc- 1990 alumni gift is expected to npg 'R. . Magnuson, Seattle
Sons, Chicago, and Stephen C.l_g ) A ] Big baseball news has been in the law-courts| xo former Indianapolis ecret Service agents today re Team aan pi%0000 ox Wash, takes her cooking seriTE as ously, carrying her cook book
ever since a flock of players jumped to the Mexi-|haw.enanerman. - ported the capture of the two| pj .ctors of the council include cans just after the war. ‘They have tried to| Winners of the H. Lieber Co. ring which sarend smerfeIting Fred Arend, Bluffton, Morris Stumni bequests this year is a." ,1ong with her. Firemen unionize baseball and make racial issues out of it, awards in the association's an- bogus money Spreaq the nation fl Stores Co.; C. L. Blackman, 1 3100.000 Sand for Fholatanipe in found the book baking in a oven and just recently the New York legislatyre tried nual print exhibit will be an- Salvatore Salli 39 and Anthony VV" Woolworth Co.; Earl F. Horn, memory lh A » Murphy, 1595! nen they rushed to her smoketo enjoin the Brooklyn Dodgers from charging nounced. Contest judges were Al- on [McCrory Stores Corp.; John A. man given by his "8 Newspaper filled apartment yesterday / separate admission to games played in the same len Arnold, Birmingham, Mich.; Great Atlantic & ! a a 2 ®# * day, but not as double-headers. Mr. - Steele and J. R. Metcalf, (Pacific Tea Co.; John McCreary, .Mrs, Edith Barr Field, Moores-
. cafes by Treasury-agents who had . Jane Findlay, a member: ol They use the platoon system everyshere now, Harrisburg, Ill followe 3 | Bedford, J. C. Penney, Co.; ville, has no idea how her h : 3 's “ohn 3 y hi 2 A en o fol d 8 bel which began 3. Meckling, 8 £. Murphy y aha} er onot Princess Margaret's chin,
. The convention is e {liam s - 5 I Rr EN Ek 0 Fe YEP; CES ENN ES sola dl TS NIETO SEALE : = pF HOY Titel foaaY - but it used to be Walter. W. Neuman, Ft. Wayne, 1anta and oth y accepting a marriage proposal
Ww : 1 : . {from the’ Earl of Westmoreland . ' is president. Other officers are gecret Service supervisor f } f and, now it's getting 3 larry Foster, Indianapolis, and Naw York A. E. or tor Youths Confess o | Miss Douglas, daughter of U. 8.
” ~ ” Don Knight, 916 E.<36th St.
Ww fay again. While teaching in Hammond she took IU home study courses. in journalism and was elected to
Cteveland,
8, t er cities. -
I'm sorry i such a fine, simple sport, and
~ Ah, the Knees
~ D. Signor Stouffer, South Bend, $230,000 of the phony money ade 1 |Epsilon Sigma Omicron national | assador Lewis Douglas, was i vic presidents; Ray Stuart, Con- py “the ring had been rey made Looting Club [honor sorority, acquiring the pin mon Gas Co intically with the B 'F d : k C Oth , ‘nersville, secretary; Viola Craven. ang that banking officials had, A break-in” at Moose Country with guard and safety catches, C27! 1ast summer. y reaeric . man Indianapolis, treasurer; Ca rl peen alerted to be on the lookout Club, west of Glenns Valley, was While shopping in Martinsville she a2. } oo. . Lo. Morgan, Argos, director; Horace for many hundreds of thousands/discovered today after police missed the pin, advertising with-| President Gabriel Gonzalez Vis
WASHINGTON, Apr. 19—It is not often that I get to write a female fashion column for men, but, gents, it is a pleasure to report that knees in nylon are about to beautify the landscape again.
I have this artistic good news on the word of an expert, namely Miss Elizabeth McGee, the Memphis Cotton Maid, who flew to Paris with a super de luxe wardrobe of American-made dresses. She announced on her return that she didn’t exactly feel like a frump on the boulevards, but her skirts were far longer than those of the fashionable mademoiselles. All the knees in Paris were on view when a breeze: sprung up. except Miss
50
It's Blowing Our Way THE WIND is blowing our way and I guess the Memphians will get their first good look at a pair of pretty knees since the war, when Miss MecGee appears at their Cotton Carnival next month in a dress whipped up for her by one Pierre Bal: main, a Parisian couturiere. I'd also call him a benefactor to mankind. Pierre took a length of peach-colored satin (made of cotton, of course) and turned it inté an evening gown for Miss McGee. He cut it so low at the top that she was inclined to blush; at the bottom in front he whacked the skirt off at the knee, while in the rear he included a train.
This sounded awkward to me, but Miss McGee said it was spangled and beautiful, and what if it did. put her arm to sleep? She said that she tried out this dress at a night club and a Frenchman who could speak English asked her to dance. She didn't want to sweep the floor with that Tennessee cotton train, so she looped it over her arm, and whirled away. The weight nearly broke her arm. She had to call time out to rub it.
print and we can proceed to the princess business. in search of money.
London abput the maid not getting the name of
: |. Chase, New Albany, past pres- dollars more of the $10 and $20stopped a - “suspicious” car apd out results. She fou dela, of Chile received an hone - - Jo Sl or x | Sus > ( sults. nd the pin Mise ig noth r cel br. tod in Ke pol ident, and J. Herbert Elliott, In- pills believed to be in circulation. questioned its four youthful pas- in the tucks on an old dress while orary doctor of laws degree to.travels, W ore ano i rn iy a. wigs dianapolis, executive manager. Treasury officials said the bogus sengers. cleaning a closet 18 years later. | 92Y from Columbia University the name of Norman Hartnell, whose regu S bills bore the symbols of all 12! Patrolmen Robert Ott and War- (New York) as part of the
: tomers clude queens and princesses (well set n Woman Beaten by Man federal reserve districts from A ren White saw four youths in the Eleanor Park oi 2 lress gave festivities making his two-week reached to her ankles and Miss McGee and I Whe Enters H Twi to L. They sai’ this was an ex- old model car in 300 block of E. birth to a gir! at “good neighbor” visit to the U, wasted little time discussing it. nrers Nome 1WICe tremely rare and exnensive count- South St. shortly before dawn and Cedars of Leb- © Sit 8S. A crowd of 150 pickets shout
erfeiting procedure to lessen stoppéd them for quéstioning. i Searching the car they found 106 EE lal packages of cigarets and $15.15 in day. The baby
|cash. weighed 7
ing “down wifi the dictator” [flocked around the entrance to |Low Memorial Library before he arrived and remained to boo him when he left. fs site gn ga Ag TR Elder Statesman Bernard Baruch's niece, Mrs. Amalie Baruch ‘Banks, was establishing residence in Las Vegas, Nev., to day so she can divorce her huse band, Polan Banks, movie pros
She did say, however, that it included padded Miss Georgiene Billman, 118 hips, cotton padding. When she sits down, she Park Ave. told police today she does not sit on the pads: I asked her about this. had been beaten by a man who . Teds a ie i meen entered her home twire Tast nigne Prep Joumalists |, The boys then admitted break- p,unds, 9 ounces SS : ) To Meet Saturday ing into the country club. Sher- ° Mico parker is “Miss > Biltmiat “said she -wa¥ HodNEr high Sool journalists HES deputies who tater MVesti-" (1. wife of Bert |awakened at 11°p. m. when some- will gather at Butler University 82ted found a rear window in the gp iaqiob. movie # lone seized her arm. She screamed Saturday for the local school’s clubhouse had been broken and a producer. 3 a ‘and the man fled. 17th anniial Journalism Field Day. ¢i8aret machine and jimmied. They have one At about 3 a. m. she was awak- Registration and a “Doughnut The boys, three aged 17 and one o4por “child, Suened again by the same man who Dance” will precede an assembly 15. were held for juvenile court g5n" 9 shook her and -demanded her at 10 a. m. in the Atherton Center arraignment. Union ' Building. Dr. DeForest my ducer and novelist. O'Dell, head of Butler's journal- Otto- W. Cox to Speak driver, blamed women for two — Ce ism department, and Robert Chap- Otto W. Cox. Indiz I t fines levied against him for speed- Ben Davis 4-H Club man, editor of the Butler Col: 0 OK yy 8 at ng. S legian, will greet the guest writers. Re. 7 is Spea er at the ‘pq said his first arrest occurred ponsors PTA Session Representatives of the three j0°¢! 18 © e Sas ne Retailers when his" wife sent him to buy Members of Ben Davis High |local daily newspapers will judge the can a farion County in frozen.custard. Unable to find the School 4H Club were in char, articles in an “On-the-Spot” con- [1% Sh asum urners Hall at custard at two stands, he speeded of the Parent-Teacher's ae 5 test at 10:30 a. m. Winners wil 5:30 P-m. Thursday. {up to find a third. Five women he ation meeting last night : | Pe announced at a luncl.eon. Luke |was driving home from a party! Miss Jackie Hannemar nati Walton, radio station WISH, will BREWERTON. N {were responsible for his second ar- al cherry - pie na hw on ‘speak. Mrs. Naomi Whitesell, But- N, N. Y., Apr. 19 rest he said. They were “cackling!strated her technique mons ler journalism instructor, is field )—Fire trapped and burned to }jxe mad.” he said, so he ‘drove se Mique and pres N ; death three persons in their home sented a fresh baked pie to Mr. day chairman, today Whe Kitch |fast to get rid of them. Charles Vance principal hy ox Sy n a kitchen oil stove A sympathetic Common Coun- . Boys in the club gave a n {exploded cil committee laid aside the police board meeting fn which th Tnodel
chances of detection.
wid
Causey a Furore ; YOU MAY REMEMBER the news stories from
Princess Margaret when introduced to her and asked her to repeat it. Caused a small furore. “The trouble was,” said Miss McGee, “that over ” : there in London they call a princess ‘ma'am.’ _1/money. When he found she had , only $1 he knocked her down and did not know this. So. our ambassador's daughter kicked her into unconsciousness, had a party and when the. princess arrived she she said © said, ‘Ma'am, I'd like to present Miss McGee of : ’ ’ . She suffered bruises about the
Spartanburg, 8. C.' |face and head, but refused mediMa'am didn't mean much to me and this prin- cal attention. -
cess didn't look like her pictures. So I asked her Model Plane Movie
politely, please to repeat her name. She just laughed and laughed.” stopped blushing she went up to the princess ana Available for Clubs
About 20 minutes later when Miss McGee had said, “Ma’am (the maid learned fast), I want to, “Wings Over the World,” beg your pardon.” The princess laughed some color film on model airplanes has more and Miss McGee liked her fine. She said, and been made available to youth er rei———————— I quote, that Princess Margaret is one of the.cutest groups, civic clubs and similar Ey ths ot $795 Fur Coat Stolen
Miss Parker u
» n Karl Entinger, Milwaukee cab
3 TRAPPED IN FIRE, DIE
The Quiz Master
. |organizations by the Plymouth — eto ; : hy . dation that his operI'll say the same about the maid. I'd like to Motor Carp. From Ohio St. Sho ‘ yoommen [cussed farm problems. They were gaze upon her knees at the Cotton Carnival, my-| The 30-minute film records “enor "cpino = no op wil Seeds of Treason ators license be revoked. Virgil Shockley, William Boruss, self. i {scenes from the company’s Third reported stolen from the Marilyn Starts Sunda N ® = ti Ca Harry Jordan, Bill Ed | International Model Plane Con- ! 2 “Y s Card- Harry Schmink, David Razior, test, R. G. Ragia, district man-|FU% C0+ at 29 E, Ohio St, yes. y 1 inal Dougherty, s
Robert Jackson, Richard Hadley and Robert Vicks. Miss Harriet Wilkinson, home conomics department,
4 o terday afternoon after a woman] ??7? Test Your Skill PP? ager 3! Ine commas; oy writing customer had shown an interest _— - {Plymouth Motor Corp. 6334 in 3_fur purchasing.
® The first orderly, factual account of the shabbiest conspiracy in our
archbishop of Philadelphia,
How long have people dyed Easter eggs? . The custom of dyeing eggs at Easter can be traced back to very early times. Primitive people used plant juices to dye the eggs, frequently employing red to symbolize the blood of Christ,
» 4 2 Who coined the word googol? The word googol has no etymological origin. It was eoined ‘by Dr. Edward Kasner, American mathematician. A googol is the figure 1 followed by 100 zeros, ? he A . What Is the young of -a whale called? The young of a whale is called g call.
+
The woman had inspected sev|eral coats -when the clerk was icalled to the rear of the store. When the clerk returned, the customer was gone. Loss .of the coat was discov-
history . . . the inside of the Hiss-Chambers affair . starts exclusively in The Sunday Times . . . next Sunday. . ® “SEEDS OF TREASON"
Lynch Road, Detroit 5. ‘Dwight Cottingham, agriculture ear prayers to- department, prepared the pro-
The cardinal gram arrived in Rome Central States Turners
What British flag was flown on the Mayflower? siming——————————— The Union Jack, also known as the King’s DINNER TO HONOR RABB Colors, flew from the mainmast of the Mayflowes,| A testimonial dinner will be which brought the Pilgrims to Plymouth in 1620. given in honor of Judge Saul I
while the Cross of St. George was displayed from Ranh of Criminal Court 2 at the from London
k ered an hour later, - { uncovers the story of last night. the foremast of this vessel. Columbia Club tonight. The din- a heii: yours toga 1K He 1s on nis TO Meet Here Saturday * So ner is being sponsored by a group SCURAN JOR SU ME yosT ing Communist.” : Archbishop Holy Year Pil- The Central States District of : of friends. \ ' . JP) — “ y 0) : irr 2 Did a particular child inspire Lewis Carroll to ’ EE YORK, Apr : the @ “SEEDS OF TREASON Dougherty grimage. _the American Turners will hold
: pl y Schram, president of write Alice in Wonderland? MEETING POSTPONED . New York Stock Exchange, will Alice Liddell, daughter of the dean of Christ The Indianapolis Women’s, Dem- return: to his office here May 1, Church at Oxford, was the “ideal child friend,” as ocratic Club meeting scheduled following a long rest in Florida, Dodgson later described her, Who inspired him for 8 p. m. tomorrow has been it was learned today. He suffered to tell a particularly elaborate story about a girl postponed indefinitely, club offi-'a severe heart attack some’ named Alice. . > - cers said today. Y | months ago. |
A its 79th convention at the South Clifford J. Bean, Detroit, enjoyed Side Turners hall Saturday and his freedom from his wife and Sunday, , . mother-in-law. today, but he no, Delegates from longer had a home. He testified Evansville, Covington, Dayton, in his divorce suit that he ed Ft. Wayne, Cincinnati and In{his home over to his wife, or, dianapolis will attend
is exciting . . . it's factual . . . it's a MUST for every American. ‘SEEDS OF TREASON’ Starts Sunday IN THE SUNDAY TIMES
- . “2 ad : : P 3
ite kA A Ali BRAD a lB RR ASE Re
