Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1950 — Page 23
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Inside Indianapolis = ” uy Ed Sovela
] YOU ever wonder how an unsuccessful \ feels after he hears the verdict? ) How do you suppose Rep. Andy Jacobs: when the moving political finger scratched on the
© wall the name of Charles Brownson?
Congressman and Mrs. Jacobs had heard the Republican victory toll half hour before I met * them in the front room of the Indiana Democratic Club. The tally was incomplete but Charles Brownson safely could count himself in as 11th District Congressman. a “~My meeting with Andy was premeditated. If he had won, I would have been talking to Charles Brownson. I wanted to chat with the loser to satisfy my infernal curiosity. How does a guy feel, act, speak after he has been defeated for a seat in Congress?
Mrs. Jacobs, sitting close to her husband, was smiling so pleasantly I got the impression Andy had just been elected chairman of the board: of United States Steel. There was a temptation to remind Mrs. Jacobs that Andy lost his bid for re- -election. Kiddingly, of course. Bo. Bb
1 gave Andy the usual pitch about a nice try ‘and tough luck. What else is there to say?
~ With Election
ANDY PUFFED on his pipe as if he were ona
sunny bank of some lazy river waiting for a big ol’ catfish to take his bait. And he had that unconcerned look that told you he wouldn't kick up a fuss if the cat swam by.. Andy was a relieved man. Mrs. Jacobs was a happy woman. “How do you feel, Andy?”
Mrs. Jacobs turned her full attention to her
husband. Andy stared straight ahead for a few seconds. A party worker expressed her regrets to the Congressman. Andy said “everything will be all right” and thanked her for her support. “How do I feel?” began Andy. “Aside from a normal human instinct of not wanting to be defeated, I'm perfectly happy with the results. “I still have a contract with the people until the first of the year exactly as if I had been reelected. I don’t feel any bitterness or ill will toward anvone,” continued Andy. He seemed to be looking beyond the walls of the room. I waited for him to speak some more, *I wish the people would give Chuck Brownson a chance.— He's a representative of everyone. He's an American. He ought to have a chance to get his feet on the ground before they take his hide oif. Chuck has my best wishes and sympathy as well.”
Mrs; Jacobs widened her smile. Two more persons came up and spoke to Andy. Just as if he had not been interrupted, Andy said. ‘The
people should be reasonable enough that when a man tells them the truth they ought to acdept it and not get mad. We're in one of the most dangerous eras the mind can conceive to protect ourselves and survive, “The people will have to make sacrifices. And the leader who tries to make them believe they can survive ‘without sacrifices is a false leader. The people must bear some responsibility for driving their leaders into kidding them they can survive.’ AGAIN he was interrupted. Again he. stood up and shook hands. Again there was that awkward seeond or two when neither party had much to say about the outcome of the election. “When I went to Congress, I made up my mind to- one thing. 1 was going to see whether a
0 oo -
It Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Nov. 9-Won't you come into my “‘barlor?” “Barlor” is 2 new word I just knocked off. It —-the barlor-—is a combination bar. parlor and television room that Joe America and Mrs. Amer-
fca have in their home nowadays. ‘My, the new gadgets you have to have to get drunk today! My beautiful wife, knowing thatI work in bars, wants me to feel at home in ‘case I ever get home. So she’s fixed up a comfy little barlor right here in our: house. The barlor is a staggering distance from my office. It has a circus tent ceiling to help.the guests see pink elephants. About those gadgets—today they have “bottoms up” tumblers that are rounded like a woman's curves and can’t be set down unless they're empty; so you have to drink them dry. The Bar Mart here -in N. Y. specializes in all this foolishness. There are wall ‘cards that show pictures of people with four eyes and two noses—they’ll save liquor because your gues st will think, “You've had one tbo many
somebody !- turn — this bed ory 2/
>
%Z
ha
‘system whereby
i 4
Rep. Aideg Jacobs . "| never want to question the decision of the people."
man could call them as he saw -them and get reelected without agonizing. 1 may have called a lot of them wrong but I called them as I saw them. “The ohly compensation a man gets out of public life is the personal satisfaction of doing what he thinks is right and having his respect when it's-at-over. Yes, I'm very Te relieved it's all over.” Andy proceeded to explain: why he was relieved. “You work 14 hours a day on this job, away from friends, Ninety-five per cent of the people give you hell. One. hundred per cent of the pressure groups are against you when you : don't do what they want you to do. “Obligations of the office cost you so much from vour own pocket vou have to fall back on your own resources. When it's all added from a personal viewpoint, the job isn't worth it."
0) 2 4, oo o> oe
ANDY GLANCED at his wife and something passed befween them that made them both more cheerful. Then he spoke again. “People have an uncanny way of solving their own problems. In the end you have the outstanding men who do the leading and you hope the rest follow the proper leadership. I never want to question the decision of the people. I don't question the decision in -my case. I'll be mighty happy to come home.” He thought he had better visit the Democratic State Headquarters. The. man who didn’t want to “agonize” a re-election, the big man with the unruly bow ties who didn’t even have an election card printed, put his hand under the arm of his wife and escorted her to the'elevator T liked what Rep. Andrew Jacobs said after he was beaten for re-election to the Congress of the United States.
Mr.. Mrs. America Now Build “Barlors’
Angeles sent me titled ''Rem-
just
So Clarence Bowman of Los in one he'd written months before, Jiniscenze in Rpse.” : “Crimson roses in a bowl Full hlown and yellow centered Remind me of “the parlor” We children seldom entered Except when there was eompany-—— Then Freddie played the. fiddle And everyone ate chocolate cake With chocolate in the middle. “Fluffy roses in a bowl ! Quaintly sad—then gay They make music in my heart Like Freddie used to play! That's the way it used to be, but now, barlors ~and “bottoms up” tumblers! Whither are we drifting? Don't tell me!
, ie . oe
THE MIDNIGHT EARL: Gen. Harry Vaughan's status with President Truman hasn't changed at all despite the reports. When Truman travels, Vaughan still goes along. and occupies the same suite. . . . Lt. BY Gov. Hanley might be getting lots of consolation and enthusiasm even from Democrats, where ! they are able to render it officially. Will Commissioner { Murphy revive the placement ;° one. can always Ll pat a given point :
oe
find a given ¢«
5 SOAP TERGENT
hwater— es shine
srer and yn MALENE - 10 grease : ’ n dishes! ] MALENE
—colors
bing! It Smpany,
Ives yov
—eific”? > Tors: a Ta
By Robert x:
. of stuff about prisons—shockers, explainers,
' the Ohio state peh.
Then-therd-arssometpplerisms bo inthe city? Edith Piaf visited. “(3irls ‘ that look sweet—enough to edt ex: with Roland Petit at the Ballet pect to.” : de Paris and told him she'd like 2 + a . ? to do a show.with him. next sea“LOVE AND F.GGS: are best when they are son.... Spanish speaking Puerto . Rican. patrons of several mid-
fresh.” “Wr hen a woman is really in love with a man he can make her do anything she wants to do!” There's also a wall ecard for sale that says: “ ‘Everything I like is s illegal, immoral or fattening'— Woleott.’ " “To think that all these are finding. their way into what was once the parlor but new; with the television set in there, and booze, too has got-to become a “‘barlor.” Is this good for the nation? Evidently not, or we wouldn't be doing it. Interviewing Ray Middleton, ot South Pa= recently. I was struck by the fact that he par-
said he started singing in his. grandmother's
lor in Iowa. . 1 said somebody should write a poem to Par
ES
COLUMBUS, 0. Nav. t 9—I have read A mess cusers—but one of the things that was never so clear to me before is the effect of economics on “fhe circumstances that put men in.a big jail like It is just.a touch horrifying | to watch the serried faces of the men who inhabit a big house, and to realize that about 80 per cent of the faces are a dismal mirror of their lowly status in the land of their birth. 1 do not mean, at all, to give belief te that old and disproven theory of Lombroso concerning the criminal stamp on 4 culprit's kisser. There ain't no such animal. A great many callous murderers own fine features, and the highest cultural level of this academy seems to be the property of the perverts, gio . LC TE os WHAT I DO MEAN is that when you look ‘at a few thousand faces, all shut away from society. is that you are largely seeing no comeliness of countenance. What you are seeing is the brutish trace of early poverty, early desperation, early deprivation of the few necessities of living that can turn a man into a criminal. “Our murderers,” the warden says, “are our
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‘higher moral sense than the thers, more intelligence. It's a funny commentary on crime that the murderers and the perverts are the elass of the institution.” ' When you look at the faces of the rank and file of convicted «criminals you see pimples and lop éars and sallow. skins, malformed features and bad physiques. You see bad teeth and receding chins and unhealthy hair. You see a lot of stupidity and & lot of blankness but very little “meanness or evil. . »
“+ you! SEE the insoluble “stamps of malnutri- - Slam, the graven marks of debased living SaLEg
Earl, brother. rei 2
ex- ,
town bars and cafeterias, have suddenly “learned” English. . . . Billie ‘Burke's due to become a grandmother. for the 4th time within a month-—daughter Patricia Stevenson's to blame. Jack Eigen's Guest
Patti Page
Room, stunningly designed and decorated by Terry Cohen, has been drawing customers like flies London reporters are in- the midst of a
scramble fo get an exchisive on George Bernard Shaw's will. The new Gogi's Larue will be decorated by Don Loper. . Singer Patfl Page. -has-béermrasiced-to-appear-omoneof-its—first €BS8color b’casts. Taffy Tuttle told Jack Pelaney’s PATTORE tof the gal wed so often that every time she gets a proposal it has that familiar Hog | to it. .. That's
ramp “of Por i On Prisoners’ Faces
=
back to childhood. Slum is written Vavse on the faces. of nearly all -»slum, a factory town, drunken father, a sloven mother, a lack of education, a lack of. sanitation. There are, of course, the unusual exceptions. There is the countystreasurer who took the county funds, the“ passion killer who slugged his lady love. 3 One of the dental technicians here is a lad who made the Brink protectors for several thousand in an. inspired stickup, and there are naturally the aberrational criminals. But they come precious few to the cell, I have spent some time in leper colonies and the symptoms are the same. Nobody ever caught. leprosy on purpose. .The stigmas of that disease are no less pronounced than the stigma of the bulk of people who reside in prisons today.” They are almost all. involuntary victims of unhappy accident. de BP
: I KNOW of a recent case of a man who stuck up a few filling stations and netted a fast $300 for his work. Somebody got scragged.in a stickup and he drew 80 years. His plea was a hungry wife. and baby. I believe it to be true, but a hungry wife and baby are no defense for the dumb desperation that leads a man to violence. Eighty years of jail is a rich Premium to pay on $300.
1-1
_ of-anothertad whose skill with ‘an airbrash puts him among the first rank of commercial artists, but I note that this baby is back in vile detainment again. He just likes ~ to burgle houses. Explain him you ¢annot. He may draw like an angel but the mark of early hunger is on his face. Goodness knows I make no moral here. Unless it's that few nice folks go-to jail. And the reason the people who go to jail aren't, nice, generally, as we count niceness,. is that they Hever had much opportunity tn explore the term. Niceness means a full stomach ‘and a firm family, ‘and these poor guys “have had small $Eperietice with either ; a »
~~ Andy Jacobs “Happy Results |
Marty Over
Eas
e Indianapolis Times
ele ~~ THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1950 pen
| About People—
British Peer Finds Mansion Repair Costly
Earl Peel Fined $25,000 For Failure To Get Permit
Earl Peel, wealthy English peer, gave up his post as King George's representative in Lancashire to-| day after the British government fined him nearly $75,000 for im-
1 ~ MacArthur lets | Tokyo Create |
Shadow Army By KEYES BEECH TOKYO, Nov. 9 (CDN)—Akirs
‘Yamagami, 28, is a young man with a future.
| | i | {
a 75,000-man police .reserve. It would take only the scratch of s
"proving his mansion without a building” permit. | Ris. —k Wangs The Earl, a descendant of Sir, military equivaRobert Peel, who modernized the] lent of captain, London police force and nick-! It wouldn't
named its members “Bobbies,” {take much more § was found guilty of violating ito change thé rebuilding regulations and ‘fined serve into the@§ 25,000 pounds awd costs. army which the {Japanese them-
‘Dream Comes True
selves consider it
S-vear-
Tiny Kathleen. Howell, to be. i old polio victim, could hardly be- Four months lieve her big, brown eves ‘today ago, Mr. Yama- B when her idol—Charley McCarthy gami was lead- Mr .
Mr. and Mrs. O. L. Brown . . . the wanderlust will be satisfied. They're off to Panama City.
Diego, rw x aw —
came to see her in a San
ing an obscure life as mayor of — his village on Awaji Island, on
Cal., hospital. 3 o : *! Japan's inland sea. “Are you real, -M He A t T Pl of ersons U The Korean War changed all Charlie? Are yeu on uf 2 ri anne that. | really real?” she ® Gen. Douglas MacArthur had . - «es ne eric | © Panama City, Canal Zone |p p his authorization to send Amerie’ puppet, flown to : ; . i I Id IC can troops in Japan to Korea, ge Dosim by Idea First Took Shape During War Il When But it was plain he was going to » ar Bergen . > ’ . have to strip the occupation force after he heard O. L. Brown Was Stationed in Southern Sector Four Pedestrians to nothing to meet the Korean -Kathee was crv- ER NER te . : ing for Charlie's By RENNETH PSH Among Injured aS cided to let Japan oc “Mr.” McC arthypicture Her A dream:vacation is becoming reality for Mr. and Mrs. O. L.. rive persons were hospitalized cupy itself. He wrote a A to father, Edward Brown, of 3949 N. Capitol Ave : for minor injuries today in Howell, said even Santa Claus They're leaving today on a three-month motor jaunt to Panama flurry of city traffic accidents. (Second of a series) comes in second to Charlie at ; Four pedestrians were in fair ay
City. Canal Zone, and other points south. Premier Shigiro Yoshida ‘authore
their house. condition in Methodist Hospital.
|izing the creation of a police re
What Kathee doesn't know is They will travel in an English-made Austin and a homemade They are: "to deal th BEL that her mother, Mrs. LaVerne miniature trailer which has most of the comforts of home. Mrz. Sarah Dunn. 84. of 1719 serve to deal with any home» i Howell, lies across the hospital The dream took shape during ——— ———————— — Nalgon St., struck by a car in the 8TOWn emergency resulting from
Brown Jungle country and comparatiy ely land. “Natives are
t:| {Communist activity, As a result Mr. Yamagami is
World War II when Mr.
hall from her, also ill with polio. was stationed in the Canal Zone uninhabited
When Kathee asked her father:
2600 block Shelby St. last nigh Chester Baker, 41, of 1117 Walde-|
“Will you and Mommy still want as an Air Corps flight éngineer. friendly.” Mr. Brown said. “They nyere Ave. hit by a car at Vir-/BOW commanding more than 3000 me if I can't walk?" her father On his off-duty hours he motor- have a deep respect for other peo- ginin Ave. and Delaware St.; Mrs. | {police reserve recruits at Camp said they would. cycled to outlying areas in the Ple’s property. Betty Hoffman, 29, and her Kurfhama, about 50 miles from No § Sh Zone and “hecame familiar with Plans Bit of Fishing daughter, Patty, 7, of 1902 E.|Tokyo. o hap, e the natives and their language. Mr. Brown is taking along nO 35th St., both struck by a car at Feels at Home Virgil Wilday, 20. was still Begin Preparations Hire arms. But he'll take his fish- 341, St. and Keystone Ave. Like most of his troops—po« blinking today as he was charged After ‘the war his idea of oe on, ies, galls ar Also in fair condition in Meth- licemen—Mr. Yamagami feels at 2° 8s ‘nic 18
odist- Hospital is Mrs. Ruby Berk- home in his job, .He was a caval« shire, 44, of 1323 N. Olney St.'ry leutenant in the Japanese She was a passenger in a car driv- ‘army in North China when the en by
in a Detroit court with snapping traveling with his wife to the the garter of Kay Wills in a Zone, together with their urge to movie house. see ‘remote sections and out of
Spanish for iittle house Mrs. Brown has studied Spanish 80 they feel they will be able to
His first shock came when Kay the way placés in America,” her husband, Carroll Ber- war ended. grabbed his arm, flipped him into started the wheels of preparation get along fairly well, shire. 46, which was involved in! Mr. Yamagami was selected the aisle and held him with a spinning The Browns, who are born a three-car accident at Rural St. for his job because of his “mills judo hold until aid ‘arrived. The Mr. Brown put hours of pains- lovers ‘of the open‘ road. have 3nq Brookside Pkwy. last night. tary and social background.™ second shock was learning she t labor : the aj taken motor cycle’ trips to Hit" by Fire Engine After getting a K 3 was a4 policewoman. To ree tang Sher Ww hs Minalue Florida and ave also, motored Miss Mary L. Holliday: 34, of 14eq) kit g wr was a fine of $25 for assault and Thev also “rehabilitated” a to Canada. 515 E. 42d St, was treated. at mia Jima to officers’ trai a battery, 1018S Attia. : On their trip to Panama C ity General Hospital after the car in genool. There he found u e jie Aun they will travel the Pan-Ameri- which she was riding was struck many o The * trailer only weighs 600 .,. Highway friends from war years.
Slight Error
as far as possible. py a speeding fire engine at 15th | He got his tra
pounds when loaded. Only thing Mr. Brown estimates they will Sy. und Capitol Ave. ining from-Amers
Fourteen-year-old Janet Walk-:lacking is a refrigeration sys- cover over 10,000 ican Army officers. When 1 asked mil ry i er's first attempt at cooking in tem. However, Mr. and Mrs. Ines, - fsnreney 1 Fe of 30. ot susan ‘what his training was like . +Monrovia, Cal, was judged a Brown are going .to depend on Tight Michigan Race adway, said:
{ bile, wad charged with faflure to
[failure by four. members of her canned goods and what they “I'm sorry 1 cannot talk about
|noshitalized fanlly. They dis- can purchase along the way. Is Still in Doubt jive right of Way loan SHEERENOY IL, It's classified.” covered too "late that she ac- ‘Comforts of Home’ DETROIT. Nov » : . : {- This startled me until T realized i : ! S » Nov. 9 (UP)—Mich-' Madison Ave: traffic was, cidentally baked the biscuits With pe trailer is so compactly con- igan’s tightest governorship elec- blocked for nearly two hours NOW much Japan has changed in
.rat poison instead of flour.
|structed with folding table. min- tion since 1908 remained in doubt at the Belt Railroad crossing the past four months. : Dead to Rights lature heating unit, air mattress. today as a handful of rural pre- early today atter a Diesel en- Seated in his office in his trim . storage space, and cushioned cincts remained to be counted. gine struck a tractor-trailer and 8reen officer's uniform Mr. Yama.
Peter Sigridson, 70, tried to vote seats, made-over the trailer wheel| Democratic incumbent G. Men- piled it up on the tracks. |gami discussed the difference bes |Tuesday at the polling place he housings, that two people sitting nen Williams, 39-year-old shaving, Truck driver MitcBell J. Ho-|tWeen the police reserve and the [had used for 20 years in Geneva, lin the trailer can reach every- soap heir, refused to concede vie- holek, 25, of VanDyke, Mich, [old Japanese army. 1, but was told he was not reg-| [thing with a minimum of effort. [tory to his rival, former Gov./ jumped clear of his vehicle before Tough on Officers istered. He refused to leave. {| The trailer was originally con-|/Harry F. Kelly. Williams con-|/the crash and was uninjured. Po- “pn thi After a two-hour search, offi- structed for a motorcycle. How- lgratulated Kelly on his campaign lice slated him for disobeying a oF pe ne thers cials found his registration card ever, because of the inadequate but said “in fairness to the more {railroad warning signal flasher, much democracy.” he smiled, in a filp marked “Deceased.” power. system in a cycle, Mr. {than 900,000 citizens who gave me eae Democracy 18 okay for the men | Then Mr. Sigridson had to prove Brown decided to use the Austin. their support, I think we should LILLIBET HAS A COLD — {but it's tough on the officers, {When an officer gives an order
| He's an inspector 1st class n i
the card had been misplaced be-" “The trip between Mexico and ‘await the official canvass.” LONDON, Nov. 9 «UP)— fore he could vote: Guatemala probably will be the Kelly, however, was jubilant Elizabeth has a cold, her house- N® expects to be obeyed. > : roughest.” Mr. Brown said. You and scheduled meetings = with hold disclosed today. She can-' we don’t want to give none The Hard Way can get through, weather permit- other Republican leaders to make celed a scheduled appearance at OMS too much authority because I Hiram. S. Johnson. a Tyler Tex NINE." plans for what he believed was Royal Air Force fighter command they're liable to abuse it. But we divorced his" wife “They will ¢ross vast areas of to be his ad ministration, must have diséipline.”
‘ex-leatherneck _headqua rters at Stanmore.
so he could re-enlist in the Marine Isamu Nagano, 34, who served Corps--then found out the rule A be 4 Ch 10 B as a sergeant in the Philippines, against enlistment of married r IS S 00seée eauties Eosely {agreed that disciple must be ime men had been revoked ‘ on proved. ’ id ol ‘If only to make for better
-
The tall Texan, 21, had to talk long and hard to his 19-year-old wife before she would consent to divorce -and remarriage, with the enlistment ceremony in between. Then came’ the information that it. wasn't necegsary anyhow,
Gen. Clark Looks
community living,” he said. | Yoshio Hanaoka, 31. a veteran jof the Burma campaign nooded [agreement. : One got the impression that it
Neat As A Pin = I ~toured the camp with an
were as neat as a pin, as neat, if not neater, than most. American military installations. 4 “It's not much like. the old. Fapanese army.” Hajor.
Ground. Force, Chigf | Mio ~Inspects—All Units ai
Times Bate Se 1 ~ CAMP ATTERBURY Nov. 9— Gen... Mark. Clark. chief af the. Army ground- forces, arrived here
‘they break inte. goose-step and
‘(they used to. |knock that off.”
We make them
this morning for a general inspection ‘of Camp Atterbury. As I left. a company of men The four star general, com- came double-timing “ down the. mander of American forces in {road in the rain after a scouting Italy during World War II, ar- land patrolling expedition. They rived at 9 a— m. by automobile {looked exactly like soldiers. from Ft. Harrison, where he i"
spent the night. The general arrived in Indianapolis last night. Gen.. Clark inspected all military units here during the morning. accompanied by top officers of the Fifth Army. His schedule for the afternoon included a tour of the range at the camp and inspection of arms. The general's ‘afternoon sched-
Holdups Interrupt 2 Midnight Chats
Butler Students Hit by Robbers
| ule also included an Inspection | of buildings and eauipment be- § ? Two Butler University students {fore presenting a. summary’ of were rudely interrupted during
goodnight chats with their dates
'his impressions at a meeting of last night.
top Fifth Army officers.
Capt. Pete Rogers, publi? in- Harold Nelson, 23, of 33 N. formation officer at the camp; Tremont St. was seated in his said Gen. Clark's visit was 4 parked car with his girl friend in | routine inspection. The ground a Standard Grocery lot at 38th {forces chief inspects all such and Illinois Sts. when a man
{camps periodically. | "Gen. Clark was to return’ to Ft. Harrison; at 5 p.m.
thrust a revolver through the car window. : -1- The bandit took Mr. Nelson's
= — ee Ava Gardner — ee Ginger-Rogers—— flirt 4 ‘wallet contain] ning | Quiet, Fiecior | | : ° Charles Manan. 21. of 1212 Of" ’ | NEW YORK, Nov. 9 (UP)—; Esther Williams, actress and cute. Divinely shaped arms and ver Ave, was parked with hig
WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 (UP)—Are you harried, irritable, réady to blow your top? { Maybe your trouble is noise.. Acoustics Engineer R. Al 2 i len Wilson told a Library of Congress meéting that racket slows the mind, ‘clouds the |, judgment. cuts output and «plays hob with a good | dis-
'The “Artists’ Group of America” swimmer — “Flawlessly formed legs.” : date in the rear of 3472 N, Illinois : named the following 10 mast jaws ahd thighs.” | Margaret Phelan, singer— In- St. when a bandit took his billfold
viting lipscand shoulders.” lat gun point. ‘beautiful women in America to- Mrs. Harrison Williams, New Mary Pickford, actress- -produc-| The billfold contained 55 moneys. day: York . E
society hostess—"Magnifi- or__“Everybody's favorite aunt Mr. Mahan said. His girl friend Elizibeth Taylor, movie actress’ Lent cheekbones and faultless type. Eye-catching neckline.”” also gave up her wallet, sture.’ ~“Her eyes and nose ‘are master- po Mrs. William O'Dwyer, former ing $3.50 and personal pieces of nature.” ;
Ginger Rogers, movie actress model and wife of the Ambassa- the intruder. Ava ® Gardner, movie actress— America. Fine, bald chin, grace- gent forehead.”
I
i
—“The most beautiful blonde in'dor to Mexico-—“Striking, intelly James Gribben, 47, Tllinois oa Red Ca
| position. , “Shy and. retiring facial char- ful hands.” | - Mrs. Alfred G. Vanderbilt, a told poli F- He said it can even drive’ ‘acteristics. Temptingly curyed Colleen Townsend, actress— Vanderbilt— “Lustrous hair you crazy, bosom and hip lines.” : And, hapely an, i
{Pelicate i fraghe, i my
i
American major. Barracks, Kitch en; latrines —and other facilities *
—atart-swinging their arms HRk8™
