Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 October 1950 — Page 19
ES
411) lled
|
i i 5 lin itgl | sige SEER
kids sped through each book they chose. The lon-
gevity or durability of the books wa: - of theirs, Ta ne
One boy read aloud to a girl. She in turn read
aloud to him. Everything went along peacefully until looked smugly down her
Miss Bright
ose and said, “I can read better than
over, jerked the book from the girl's hands and flung it to the floor. Without a word, Humphrey -—X mean Little Boy Blue—returned to. his reading.
Situation Well in Hand NOW COMES the unbelievable part of the
story. The girl picked up her book, wiped it on
the front of her dress, saw to it that the book was tightly closed, and her mouth, too, and sat down next to her I-won’t-stand-for-any-foolishness friend. He glanced up, saw the situation was well in hand and kept on reading. Adam’s rib sat quietly, big, blue eyés blinking at her master.
Books were being balanced on tousled heads.
brought him out of the spin before he broke a.
wing Primary grade teachers will certainly have a special place set aside for them in the peaceful
. blue yonder. I've listened to young mothers cry
that one or two or three children were about to drive her crazy. How about a primary teacher with 40 and 50? A dozen roses to all teachers today. Librarian Mrs. Rose Kane and Miss Bess Garten began to have customérs at the desk. The books that were chosen stayed pretty close to the subjects of farms and dairy products. Mrs, Milhous had instructed them to read about cows prior to visiting the International Dairy Exposition at the Fairgrounds. There didn’t seem to be any rhyme or reason for some of the selections. A boy would have two small books, both green. Another would have two ~large, thin books, identical size. A girl had four books, all different colors. When she had to leave two at the desk, the youngster almost cried before
" choosing the colors that would be left behind.
Content didn’t matter " Andrejs Ozolins, young Latvian immigrant, his knowledge of English limited to only a féw words,
Robeson ‘Hanged’
NEW YORK, Oct. 4—It is rather pleasing to reflect that Mr. Paul Robeson, the Negro press agent for the Communist Party, has finally been hanged high as Haman, ideologically, by a fine gentleman of his own race. This would be Dr. Ralph Bunche, who was recently awarded the Nobel peace prize, thereby upsetting Mr. Robeson’s entire propaganda career and nullifying his future value to the Kremlin. Although he is a Phi Beta Kappa, recent owner of a huge house, dwells in an exclusive white community, former All-American, brilliant singer, honored actor and a wealthy man, Mr. Robeson early nominated himself as spokesman for the American Negro, especially for the benefit of the Kremlin.
No Delight to NAACP LE
NEVERTHELESS, Robeson educated his son
] 2 Woollpartially Jewish wife of penury because of her racial antecedents on the white side. He enjoined her to “be all nigger and give me the two bucks”—a remark that would be outrageously unforgivable on any lips today—he has persisted in speaking for his race in America. This has never greatly delighted the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, as my friend Walter ‘White might tell you. Robeson's presentation of his race's plight’ in America has been roughly divided between lynching and mass persecution. He has never dwelt on the fact that the greatest mass depression of the Negro exists in Harlem, a black ghetto run by his friend and political ally, Vito Marcantonio, a Goebblish little man who shrieks almost epileptically at Conimunist rallies. And who runs virtual slave galleys, airborne, from Puerto Rico, to keep his votes high. The Nobel peace prize is, I believe, the highest international honor to be bestowed on either man or organization. Dr. Bunche, the grandson of a black slave, just won it, thereby heaping great honor on his nation, which was more than proud
ge.
n le Boy Blue fet the information and challenge. sink in fof a moment and then. reached '
being bayed his one, by the
© First library cards . . . Librarians Mrs. Rose Kane (left) and Miss Bess Garten start the young WASHINGTON, Ind, Oct. 4— ones on 4 long and pleasant {Wrney (they » Alex Campbell, Democratic nomi-
stared in amazement at the treasures lining the nee for U. 8. Senator, denounced walls. He clutched his two books tightly, eyes ihe Indiana Republican leadership sparkling. I tried Polish and Russian on him but for what he described as a “camhe didn’t understand. ou of smears, fears, hate and Mrs. Mulhous says he is an extremely bright distrust,” in a speech here last boy and it shouldn’t be long before he is speaking night. - Sats English. Andrejs is in the front line when it comes The Democratic candidate reto spelling and arithmetic. |terred to GOP campaign speeches ‘ » {linking Secretary of State Charles Greatest Joy of Childhood’ Fleming, Democrat, with a petiTHE SCENE in the Riley Children’s Room tion to put the Communist party took me back 20 and 25 years. In my estimation," the state ballot in 1946. one of the greatest joys of childhood is the love! ‘Republican irresponsibility to of books and use of a library. I still remember use any means to smear those the incomparable hours of high adventure and/Who oppose them has reached a lofty purpose spen' in my tree house with books/new low in the past few weeks,” like “Swiss Family Robinson” and “Rubinsonjhe said. “The Republican leaderCrusoe.” And, I must confess, “Little Women” ship in Indiana has taken the made my wolfish little heart beat faster, ~~ |Gnal step in playing the CommiuIf a bachelor had anything to say about chil-|nist game of ruthless destruction dren's pleasure reading material, he sure as heck/ind defamation.” would play down the comic books and put em- Rake Up Muck phasis on tested and wholesome classics for] Mr, Campbell said Republicans stirring up young imaginations. went all the way back to 1946 Librarians Kane and Garten displayed enorm-to “rake up muck” with which to
ous amounts of patience in handling each young-|smear Mr. Fleming. ster’s selection. There was the usual amount of “They accented at face value a| shoving and pushing and chattering. [tocument filed by Communists as| A conversation between two boys indicated thea petition that they be permitted trend of the times. Made me feel very old and sortito appear on the ballot,” he said. of took the glitter off “Swiss Family Robinson.”| ‘I will never understand why Re-, This boy of eight was telling about a wresgler,/publicans who profess. to know | “Grappling Hooks” something or other, his fa-as well as you and I that Com-| vorite. He said he knows all the tricks of wrest- munists are not to be trusted, ling because he’s been watching television. He in- always are willing to believe vited his companion to a demonstration of tricks./sverything Communist that can, His offer was accepted. Mother is going to be sur-/pe ‘used against good American prised when Junior gets home with two Hbrary|itizens.” books and a skinned nose, bruised tummy, dis-| Myr Campbell said the name of located shoulder. [Mr. Fleming was not signed to Kids are getting too smart. Worries me. {the Communist petition by Mr. |Fleming. | “It doesn’t make much differ-|
By Robert C. Ruark ence who forged the signature or
|why,” he said. “What is impor- - {tant is that the signature was of his work in the settlement of the Israeli-Arab) accepted by a Republican-con-war. trolled Election Board in 1946 I do not see how anything Mr. Robeson might ;ng py the whole Republican] say in future concerning the plight of the Negro ngrty today without any attempt in America can have a great deal of weight, even i, determine its validity.” | in a Russian mind, which is capable of reversing tne tryth is, he said, the Re-| the pull of gravity und may possibly deny the exist- publican administration took th e ence of the Nobel prize. ". Communists’ word that the peti-| Dr. Bunche is a Negro, a few short generations tions were legal. | away from slavery and before that, the jungle. “They (GOP) used one of these | He demonstrates, on the record, that a man of his petitions to put the Communist] color does not have to affix himself to the Comma ps rty on the ballot and the other | nist Party to gain success in his own homeland 1s Svidence to ‘smear Crarie and an honored man on his own time and effort. Fleming. Mr. Gampbell Se. otc] Dr. Bunche demonstrates strikingly that an! Y g is g American, no matter What Ht ot fis existence hind the thin veil of ridicule and makes a liar of Robeson and all the other racegersamers Who portray the Negro as Elim. ctl across the or can any- ow wildest stretch, accuse the proud and Party for what they really honored Dr. Bunche .of that favorite epithet Democratic candidate said “Uncle Tomism” because of his association with the and
of Indiana are beginning to see
.
accomplishments am his fellow citizens. The Daily Worker, a organ that/telling the people for many years occasionally honors me with a bitter denunciationithat we have for for my antipathy to Mr. Robeson, accuses me of dictatorship, Communism, fomenting race hatred every time I take a cuff pression and ruin. at the backslid Emperor Jones. : 3 post-war depression,” he said. Reaction Awaited 5 “Let's face it. There wasn't any
IT WILL BE curious indeed to note that rag's qepression. Now the GOP is disreaction to this one, in which I seem to stand four- appointed but they try to hide
square in favor of the Negro race as fellow Amer- their disappointment by develop-! evil and preserve the American home.
icans and pronounce my pride in being a country-jine newer ways to promote man of Dr. Ralph Bunche, a Negro. It is odd in-|, aars hate and distrust.” deed that a “fomenter of race hatred” is filled with
pride over the exploits of the Negro soldiers in Korea—men who, Mr. Robeson once ringingiy pro- Bo 4 Runs Into claimed, would not fight for their country if the s y Communists came to call. _ All this I think while continuing to regard Paul . Robeson, ‘Negro, as a nauseously treasonous dis- Str Hit al grace to a land that gave him fame and fortune, b
plus the freedom of speech to denounce it for its
kindness. | 2 Others Injured
Some Plumbing
Two city traffic victims, in|jured in’ separate accidents, were
In Car-Taxi Crash By Frederick C. Othman
LONDON, Oct. 4—1 have come to the reluctant conclusion that we Americans brag too much about our modern bathrooms. The British do it better. With the plumbing they are artists. Let me tell you about my bath in the Savoy Hotel, with its pink marble floor, its air conditioning, and its double, glazed, soundproof windows to keep traffic noises from disturbing my thoughts. : . .
Touch the Right Button
THERE T WAS taking a swim in a bathtub nearly nine feet long (I measured it) and contemplating all the sliver knobs along the wall Respectively, they were marked hot, maid, cold and valet. In this bathroom, as on the dash of an automobile, it was important to touch the right button. At my left was an arrangement of gilver-col-ored pipes; through these ran the hot water before it got to me. Over the pipes were draped my towels, being heated so as not to chill my carcass. While. I was admiring all this, a bell tinkled at my right. So help me, it was the telephone. A cream-colored one installed in a niche over the tub. Gad! IT had a soapy conversation with an old friend over at the United Press office and then having dried myself with a steam-heated Turkish towel IT took up the Business of the tub-side telephone with the management. A Miss Diana Gibson of ‘the hotel staff said she was delighted that I liked this arrangement, but that it actually had been installed in self-de-fense. Too many guests, she said, had been ruining the carpets when the phone rang with their soapy feet. In a few more years, she added, the proprietors figured the bath phones would pay
. = _ The Quiz Master Has Congress voted on the measure to return a a CONT has already voted
the return of the banners, most of them captured in the war of 1847, as proof of the present friend-
= re ee For how long has the rhubarb plant been culti- .
vated = _ Since prehistoric times. One cannot be sure of its _home. Some say it originated in Europe, others say it is a native of Western Asia ® ¢ ¢ =
What is the dat America’s first dollar?
e of To hares dollar bears the. date 1776, but .
for themselves in rugs saved from damp destruc-| Four-year-old Frederick Lloyd tion. yo - Being so ciean from the de luxest bath of my Hospital after an automobile of Herbert Morrison, the lord president of the g Arlington Ave.
council. His position in the British government is, His mother, Mrs. Willard Sis-
me personally as beéing a kind of subdued Harold street and was hit by a car driven should bring successful husbands {by Joseph: Steen, 30, of 5034 Oak and wives together.
L. Ickes. He puffed at his pipe, made some exceedingly St. funny wisecracks about running a nation and then| Alexander McClelland, 27, of
don’t already know.
ting close. They cannot hide De-| of reinforcements, but it sounds
sarcasm much longer. The people what that will do to the picture.
the Republican| gyer there. I don't see how those are J
had resorted to’ promot-| —— . ling “fear, hate and distrust” by
“ Against Evils of Divorce
“The Republicans predicted a]
did initial work for a nationwide family conference Methodists will hold. He gave advice on how to aid in preserving family life to the the need for stricter legislation,”
t in the Cadle Tabernacle for the climax of the conference which began Monday: night. 7
cessful riages, give rec{reported in grave condition today. ognition to cou-’
|Sissom was taken to St. Francis/making a go of marriages.” life, I celebrated by attending a press conference struck hifn near his home, 520 Bishop Werner told his breth-
} family a —1like too many of our bigwigs back in Wash-{1135 E. Market St., was in serious|counsel newly married and newly And meaning of our life. ington—insisted that he was talking off the rec-condition in Methodist Hospitaliengaged persons more than they ord. He didn’t have much to say, really, that you'following a car-taxi accident at now are doing. {20th and Dearborn Sts. in which Mr. Morrison held forth at No. 11 Downing two others were slightly injured. compatibility
polis
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1950 -
e In
-
an
Hoosier Flier Returns From Korea War [About People— =
Woman Proves
She Has a Lion In Garage
They Laughed at First, But Grow Serious | When They Find It
They laughed when Mrs. TT. Hannah, Vancouver, B. €., sat
lice there was a lion rearing somewhere: in her neighborhood. Mrs, Hannah had the last laugh. Skeptical police found a {full-grown lion in a.nearby garage. The garage L:longed to an ianimal keeper who said the liom had been left behind by a circus. i » " . |Wimmin | Returns from yesterday's mus inicipal election in Madison, Miss. {showed the town of 1000 popula [tion elected Mrs. G. L. Crawford \mayor, Mrs. Mabel Hoy; city |clerk, and five other matrons to {the city council. | Only victorious male in the elece {tion was Town Marshal 8. E. Hoy. {| But in Philadelphia a “secret {witness” thought less of women {in public .office and made their {traditional inability to “keep = {secret” a court issue, Clarence J. |Malehorn, partner in a wire coms imunication service, refused to |give testimony before a grand {jury even after the judge assured {him the proceedings were secret (and could not incriminate him. Capt.: Woodrow A. Abbott, just in from the Korean War, hugs his wife, Lois, and his son, | “They've got 23 jurors up there
Woodie Jr., after his arrival at Weir Cook Airport. Mrs. Abbott came from their home at Bain. [and a lot of them are ladies,” the bridge, Ind., to meet him. | witness shot back. “Some of them
s = a x us. } ___'may, talk about my testimony Red Forces Can't Take Much More, Atterbury Chief
" outside.” Jet Pilot, Declares of Communists
“They (Korean Reds) can’t take it much longer, all that we're giving them now,” says Capt. Woodrow Abbott of Bainbridge Ind. He arrived here yesterday, after flying an F-80 jst fighter over Korea for two and a half months. “I haven't seen any air opposition over there yet. There was a little flak and small arms fire sometimes, but nothing you could
call real opposition,” he said. “It's really not been too bad “I'M BACK here for 30 days to see my father (William T.
Big Family
GRANDMA MOSES, 90-year-
. . | old primitive painter, was named Rips Rent Gouging =r: ! of the Nation” oF by the Lions . Clubs of northeastern New
York and Ver-
Urges Tightening Of Control Laws
By MARION CRANEY mont. “I have
Times Stal Weiter 11 of my own CAMP ATTERBURY, Oct. 4— grandchildren,
for us (Air Force), but it's
pretty rough on the ground b , boys. . ) Abbott . of Bainbridge). He's As weapons in defense of proposed 15 great-grand- | “NO, I'VE NEVER landed in Pretty sick. It took only 38 new rent controls in central In piidren and now Korea. I'm based in Japan. hours by air transport from |diana, several cases of rent goug-|
Tokyo to San Francisco, but I (ing were revealed here today. 1. duking =» ¥ had trouble with my schedule Col. James A. Murphey, camp| gp.’ quipped “1 getting in here, I got sick in San |commander, today disclosed a Te- hope they don’t Grandma Moses Francisco, and they had to put [port citing cases in towns neigh-|
me in a hospital in El Paso [boring the camp, particularly in{ #xpect. Christmas presents.” (Tex.) over night,” Capt. Ab- sa 9
{Morgantown and Franklin, where, bott said. |exorbitant rents are being exact-| Screen actress Peggy Cummins He looked tired and worried ed
from his long plane ride, and kept twitching around to look at his wife, Lois, and their 13-month-old son, Woodie Jr. | “I'm hoping for some miracle, ' so he doesn’t have to go back |Is needed in towns still under con-|
When we first started strafing them, we ‘would catch whole gangs of them, but lately they're getting smart. You only see one or two of them at a time, and they clear out fast when they see us coming. “No, I don't know anything about that 100-mile-long column
\mended rent controls in towns eed grower. within a 50-mile radius. | i Local Cases Cited !wood or London. Letters showed new legislation * x »
bad, doesn’t it? ‘I don’t know Everybody's pretty optimistic
. Reds can take much more,” he
said.
holding her small son close. _|decontrolled communities.
The letters sala
|dition to utilities. Comparable in “Kitty Foyle.”
The two dwellings do not come star. under the present control because they were erected since ahead.”
February, 1947, Col. Murph plans to combat the divorce guid. y paey . . y : Clie’ Examinion Deep in the Heart of... Tweive-year-old Floyd Byrne
“These two examples there show pro milton Wrights, INI was |picked up by police yesterday in
Bishop Werner Urges Education Along
Lines of Making Family Life Successful
Methodists are making serious y
Bishop Hazen ,G. Werner, Columbus, O., head of the Ohio Area,
Superintendents’ Conference in session i # in pe ts Tw k_Church Cal, Murphey aid, rgantown. and Houston. Tex. - The boy told the Tonight, the Methodists and : ucate fof’ success and igo nklin, where controls have POlC® he pad yun away from
heir friends will gather at 7:30|PTO™ise that every boy has a0) een lifted.” I Le Ie rye, wipealy
gual. Zhange He earlier had indicated he hw dent of the Unit. would have available for Indiana = : od Btates, Why (Congressmen material defending Prisoner of Love that seins. SUN {proposed new legislation on strict-| In Detroit, police freed 17-year= ia desirable goal jer rent controls if such were in- 514 Gilbert Levi from a drugstore ia &! {troduced when both houses con- which had been locked up dure ,vene in November at Washington. ng the youth's two-hour tele “I am presenting this report of phone “chat” with his girl. “It facts." said Col. Murphey, “which wag just love talk,” said the includes concrete cases, in sup- youth, “I guess I forgot what |port of rent control . .. and in {ime it was.” - {defense of legislation enforcing s ww new control laws.” . “Information on rent gouging He Took the High Road in Indianapolis came after I for- MAX CONRAD took the sky
“Publicize suc-
mar- ; course is
ilnonsense. {takes more than
Bishop Kern
: Dr. Lee ren. “Marriage failures are widely ©f our time for the Church to mally requested it from the hous- road back from Europe and was something like that of our Veep and he struckisom, said the boy ran into the/talked about but the church remember is that all men need ing expediter there,” Col. Mur-/peaten home by his wife and nine
“The real issue
{Christ, all men may have His gift phey said. : |of- life, andocall men will know mtmeert—— they possess it when they have WOMAN DIES OF BURNS nessman, who flew the Atlantie {found it. To say this, is the glory MUNCIE, Oct. 4_ (UP)—Mrs. alone in a single-engine Piper Cora Fritz, 65, ‘died yesterday of Pacer, lost by a day. His family . burns suffered in a Monday fire arrived in New York yesterday ‘ | Stresses Prayer Need in which her brother, John Cham- and hubbie isn't due at Teterboro, All the addresses of the con- p.rq g7 suffocated. N. J., Airport until today. % ference seemed to recognize con- gr .
children who took a boat. The
“Organize more study groups on
life and let preachers
“We. have over-sold physical and under.- sold
St. next door to No. 10: these look something! Miss Phyllis Caldwell, 24, of spiritual affinity. Our young men [USion, the uncertainty and the Choice Seats— ,
like row houses in Baltimore and you'd never 908 N. Kealing Ave. a passenger studying in tne seminaries for:
suffering in today's. world. But
. ee 3 ; [x ; lin the taxi, was taken to Method-| each speaker, so far, has offered P | 28th D guess they were the heart of the British Empire, in {careers as Christian ministers a spiritual solution to the prob- ennsy yania % a Iv.
were it not for the small
front doors. |sister, Miss Betty Caldwell, 22, 'tutitre I must report that Mr. Morrison met the re-same address, was treated for mi-\marital problems.”
porters around a cherry table in the cabinet room, nor wounds. i which felt cold and clammy as an air-raid.sheiter.| ee ———
Fireless Fireplace (Entries. for Artists
AT EITHER END of this chaniber was a m . Exhibition Open nificent white marble fireplace, but there was no
Built a century. ago.’ : It is not for me to tell the British how to run their government, but I do believe things might
'Club, Inc. will be received in the! committee room on the eighth
ministers. Mr. Morrison looked a little goose- morrow and Friday. pimply. And how can you decide the affairs of a
him, but the answer was off the record. Probably
just as well. members only,
22? Test Your Skill 2???
Lillian Weyl.
{life conference attended by young|need of prayer in this generation. {couples from all ‘over the United/In his address, he harked back _ States this time next year in Chi-{to pioneer days when the preach- . | Entries for the 18th annual ex- cago. sign that a fire had been lit since the house Was ninition of the Indiana Artists Program for the conference.
Reip/ulnens io loday's men and altar. From it he gave the Holy r : {women is Bishop Gerald Kennedy Communion. go a little smoother if they took the chill off their floor of L. 8. Ayres & Co. to-ior Portland, Ore.: 5
The committee registering and our poor lives, we need to have the | great nation when your feet are cold? I asked gispersing entriés includes: Mrs./ harmony Sore by the clear converted Jays That Hey were Elma L. Steinmetz, Mrs. Glora note of God in Christ,” Bishop pp recal | : Dell Salmon, ang Gladys Sett,/Kennedy said. “Every man needs Pr Jee led, {flown to Philadelphia with hopes vision. Mrs. Harriet Jeffries and Miss/it at all times and under all4p.n, preaching,” he said. circumstances. : Exhibitors are limited to active tendency is to claim. too, much] Membership Te-|that is cheap and easy of attain-| are that artists must ment. ” i
brass plates by the ist Hospital in fair condition. Her should be trained to help their
parishioners with
lems, not a political or material : ° ® : thei # 8 S 2 one Men Will See’ Series
r. Umphrey Lee, president of . Television Sets to Bring Games to Barracks,
Family Life Parley {Southern . Methodist University, Hope They’ll Have Chance to Cheer Simmons
Methodists will hold a family earnestly stressed the crushing
(Another Story, Page 25) TT Times State, Serviee en CAMP ATTERBURY, Oct. 4 Whether the “wonder boy” of improvised the “whiz kids,” Pfc..Curt S8immons, pitches is secondary here. The important- thing at Camp Atterbury is—for the first time And the © ; in 35 years the Philadelphia Phillies are playing oa the World Se- “ : ¢ {. “An e Communion meant .~And the Pennsylvania men of the 28th Division are goin In all the jangled discords of so much to men and women in Pe ropes play— ge company television sets. ’ vs News that Pfc. Simmons was o Table,” whisked away yesterday and through the Phillies and the die “It's out of my hands” of taking part in the game added he commented. new sparks of hopes of GI's here Maj. Gen. Daniel B. Strickler, New World Order [for their underdog Phillies. madsen sniigunced “ .| Pfc. Simmons, a wire stringer RX ashen he, nightmare of Com othe 38h. beni Granted 10-day eave, of
—————— fret et ——
Bishop Werner heads the er spread his snowy handkerchief
on the seat of a split bottomed Another bishop with ideas ofichair to make an
“Praying 1s more important |
Our American]
% q What is the Chinese name for the Island of have been accepted in two difFormosa? Taiwan. The name Formosa was given to the } island in the 16th Century by Portuguese naviga- separate works of art.
{ferent major exhibitions having’ : H juries of admission, mith two YOUth Faces Second
Draft Evasion Charge
| o bsence with the approval of the tion of hope and hatred, has col- Vision Artillery, Headquarters 2 Army. (lapsed, a question Battery. was motored to Indian- Department of the An by A {will be: ‘WHat is left of the foun-|8POlis late yesterday by his com-| PFC = pois al case \dations upon which we can build PanY sr. - Thare he Fog nen - groin of the new world” Bishop William Doarded a commercial plane for Bp
tors. TS ' : accrued time without pay or ale ri A A Veterans Eligible A second charge of draft eva- Cc Martin declared. Bishop Mar- Newark, N. J, /iowances. ) . Is the famous Washington Eim in the District, sion today faced Stephen Wistaritin of Dallas, heads the Metho- Hasn't Practiced Arrangements were made viz of Columbia still alive? |For Medical Care Simon, 20, of Townson, Md. He dist Advance Committee. * ' Thpq like to pitch, but I'll have long distance phone between di-
The Washington Elm near the Senate wing of Veterans of the Spanish-Amer- was arrested yesterday by the ; the United States Capitol survived until 1948. Un-|jcan War, Boxer Rebellion and the FBI ir Richmond, Ind. which he|the degree of faithfulness toithe young southpaw hurier when return.
der It, the first President was said to have watched) py, yy00ine Insurrection are eligible claims as his legal . residence.
the construction of the Capitol.
for out-patient medical care,
How long have men milk? Milk is one of the oldest known foods.
; : i i :
the new regulations,
~
" An estimated 118,000 veterans for ‘refusal to register. The wi arm | HAdios 4nd bar Ree-| in America become eligible for full [present charge is for failing to th their bishops in groups ac-\from first base,” has left Sim-and wa opening game Z 9000 B. C.|medical and dental care in Vet- fill out selective service papers ;; o 5 my. tomorrow. ‘The con-| a how milk/erans Administration clinics under and failing to report for induc- vention will adjourn by areas at arfangements for him to pitchbeing readied to broadcast play tion. a 9h
“The answer will be found in to see how my arnt feels” said/vision and team officials for his Simmons traveled to’ which the Church maintains itsipe left. Duties in the division [Newark alone. : witness through the days ahead,” plus the absence of a man to] Here at camp, soldiers from He previously served 90 days he said. catch for the pitcher who has such|recruits to colonels, crowded The superintendents will meet a long, fast arm that he “throws around radios and TV sets to hear {cording to their areas beginning mons without practice. Simmons earlier had said ill'means
ers and other
day. ns of communication were
noon. - "lin the’ series would have to come|by play seeounts.
0
PAGE 19
{down to the telephone to tell poe
} will leave for London next week Col. Murphéy recently recom- 10 Wed ‘Derek Dunnett, wealthy : They'll honeymoon {in Europe and live either in Holly-
Today's white collar gir! doesn’t over there” Mrs. Abbott said, |trol. as well as new “teeth” for have to depend on sex appeal to : Ek {get ahead in the business world. . Lod ; . | ’ a= Ginger Rogers, who = M eth oO di st S M a C m . [[ianapolis where tenants must decade ago won an Oscar for her P a pagan {pay $125 rent each month, in ad-/movie portrayal of a working gal . “Kitty today is ‘houses in the same neighborhoods more ambitious than her sister rent for $45 and $55 respectively. before ‘the war,” said the screen “But she doesn’t have to law/use anything but ability to get
Minneapolis songwriter and busie
