Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 February 1951 — Page 18

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Inside Indianapoli S By Ed Sovola Lt AN INTERE department ip aye on ayia

conclusively (to me) that wom basically are

creatures of exaggeration, imagina - tination. gination and pro

How many miles does a model travel in’ one’

working day? Ask her and she'll eight miles. She will if she's feeling all ght, Te shes peeved, she'll say 100 miles. OW many times have you h say, after she's fiddled pil an Beard > vman town and there’s no dinner on the table, “I walked my legs off.” A ridiculous statement, designed to arouse sympathy, mainly because she couldn't quite see her way clear to face hubby with another new coat and hat. She gets sympathy. dB IF THE TRUTH were known, by walking her legs off, the lady nieans she walked from the house to the car, from a downtown parking lot to the nearest department store, walked to the elevator, possibly visited a dress and hat department and got the feeling that she should have married for money, then went to the tea room, waited a few minutes at the candy counter and gabbed for an hour with an acquaintance in the corset department. Madam is tired when she gets home. If she were totin’ a mink coat she wouldn't be tired. Tired, ha! If she had walked from Irvington to

Jebanon and back for the mink she wouldn't be red.

“® ELIZABETH CARLSON, Wm. H. Block Co. model, submitted to the pedometer test. She was

sure her work required walking miles. Frankly, I thought she was right.

A competent watchmaker checked ‘the pedo-

~~ Tramp, tramp . . . Model Elizabeth Carlson was surprised to learn she didn't walk two miles in one day.

It Happened Last Night

By Earl Wilson

NEW YORK, Feb. 15—It's been so cold in Times Square, declares Gentleman Georgie Solotaire, that the nude statues opposite the Astor got goose-pimples. fh “DAMN THOSE Americans!” growled a Soviet inventor. “They steal our inventions before we even think them up!” . eS

OSCAR LEVANT, who doesn’t like to be indebted to people, greeted a friend in Miami: “Do me a favor—don't d% me 3 favor.” VIVIAN (“Guys & Dolls”) BLAINE doesn’t have to worry about such things but she says: “Nobody loves a fat man nor a flat woman.” i rie ded : FASTIES: A B'way Secret's something only three columnists know (Irwin Kramer). . . . The DiMaggio brothers’ names are Dom and Dough (Phil Village Vanguard Leeds). . . . Jackie Gleason to a shapely gal: “You're hired, because to get into television you have to be somebody or have SOME body.” .

THE MIDNIGHT EARL: Mrs. Irving Berlin flew to Havana just to week-end with her genius husband. . . . The Ingrid Bergman-Roberto Rossellini marriage appears happy and very solid to Americans in Italy. The rumor she's having another baby is heard again— as it is regularly. . Big things ahead (professionally) for Jane Pickens. ... Hope (the Duchess of Park Ave.) Hampton is having a bpirthday the 19th but she’s not saying which. . . . Foreign consulates claim to have received detailed U.S. ration plans. .". . “Peep Show” posted a notice for Mar, 24. . . . Billy Eckstine’s manager, Milton Ebbins, suffered a $20,000 burglary at his Queens home. 3

Jane Pickens

> bb

ONLY ONE thing stops many couples from getting a divorce, says Herb Shriner at the Plaza. They never got married. oS 0b PRICE STABILIZER DIiSALLE—when mayor of Toledo—threw out the first ball at league opening... and was amazingly wild. During the game when the Toledo pitcher went bad, a leather-lunged fan bellowed, “Put DiSalle back in!”

Americana By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, Feb. 15—We were sitting around in the literary salons I occasionally frequent, munching plover tongues or toast and sipping champagne out of Tallulah Bankhead's old shoes and throwing knives at friends. The subject was “Darkness at Noon,” the new play from Arthur Koestler's o old book about perversion of idealism in the Russian Communist Party, which bred the wholesale slaughters of the '30 purges. Somebody is asking somebody if they read the book. “Yes,” the fellow said. “I read it when it came out in 1941. Didn’t pay much attention to it at the time. Want to read it again.”

“Why didn’t you pay much ==] \ = attention to it thep?” = SRE “Well,” the fefow said, “that was before 1

associated myself with destiny.” «So

THERE WAS a generally derisivé hoot. The destiny-boy got a little peeved. “Wait a minute,” he said. “I don’t mean that I, me, now have such delusions .of grandeur that I, me, is going to control or influence destiny, like Roosevelt or Stalin or Mussolini or Harry Truman. I mean that in the years before I never realized that I was going to have a personally important association with things that may shape the world differently.

“My point is today that everybody has a close

" mssociation with destiny, and is conscious of it,

and worries about it, where once upon a time he shrugged off politics and war and ‘the people across the seas because he felt none of those things had any direct bearing on him. Times,” the fellow said, “have changed.” } db @ : THE MAN has got himself a pretty good

. point, it seems to me. Mass sensitivity to what

used to be disregarded as “heavy” stuff has increased amazingly, and the lust for information burgeoneéd. If what you hear from the cab drivers and the farmers and the people in parlors and bars and on trains and planes is any indfcation, . i 5 od ” > 2

1 added Miss Carlson.

Pedometer ‘Proves

Milady Exaggerates

meter. He pronpunced it in excellent working: condition. Miss Carlson slipped it in.a side pocket at 9.30 a. m. The total mileage would be read at 5 p. m. : Td It was impossible for me to spend the entire day following Miss Carlson. I did walk with her from the models’ dressing room to the press shop on the second floor. ¢ One such trip and the model was screaming that the pedometer wasn't registering. She pulled it out of her pocket and shoved the pedometer at me. “You see, this thing doesn’t work.” a woman. : > $

IF YOU KNOW anything about a pedometer, you know it won't tick off mileage when you're holding it in your hand. It ticks when you walk. The moving parts move only when the walker moves. Miss Carlson wasn't entirely satisfied. I followed her to the door of the dressing room. She changed and went to the fabric department, She declined to walk up the stairs as long as the elevators were in operation. 2 0 @ UPON OUR RETURN to the scond floor, Miss Carlson admitted the pedometer was working. I cautioned her again to keep her lilly white mitts off the pedometer. The object was to perform her regular duties. Right. Also, Miss Carlson was to keep a running diary of her activities. I had to leave. Right. The following morning Miss Carlson handed me the pedometer, the mileage sheet. Flames flickered in her eyes. She ‘wasn't happy. “I know I walked farther than that pedometer shows,” she crackled. The pedometer read one and three-quarters of a mile. The sheet showed Miss Carlson made 11 costume changes. She made five trips to the press shop and the dressing room. Miss Carlson rode the elevator upstairs when she went to lunch and didn’t move around much after she had eaten, A modeling tour through the Tea Room, count ing the 12 or 13 spins, shoved the pedometer along less than a quarter of a mile.

Just like

Trying on clothes for a picture cut her aver-,

age down. A trip to the press shop for clothes

to be used in a show the next day put Miss |

Carlson on the mile and three-quarter mark. It was time to go home. It’s entirely possible that another quarter of a mile was lost while Miss Carlson checked to see if the pedometer was ticking. I'll grant her that two miles in high-heeled shoes can make the puppies feel hot. Especially if you've had them on for eight hours and longer. “I'll admit, I have had more strenuous days,” She probably has. But figures don’t lie. It would be fun to put a pedometer on a housewife. Any volunteers? And if I could rig up the pedometer someway to register how many times the average woman’s jaw travels up and down in a day, that would be fun, too. Ladies, we men still do the work.

Humorous Remarks From Here and There

WITH HIS WIFE, Sylvia, playing piano for him, Dampy Kaye made a sentimental return to Dario’s Martinique (where he started 11 years ago). With the help of Bob Merrill, Sam Levenson, Joey Adams and others, he raised more than $14,000 for the March of Dimes, bringing the Cafe Society total to around $50,000. "> ob

WHO REMEMBERS when smalltown merchants feared railroads would kill business—instead of people? LB WISH I'D SAID THAT: “A failure’s life story is an alibiography.”—Al Schacht. 2 > SS TODAY'S BEST DEFINITION: “Broadway Amnesia—the rare minute when an actor forgets himself.” > > 4 EARL’S PEARLS . . . Lisa Kirk purports to know a man so unpopular that even his barber wan't speak to him. > > b TRIBUTE: They said Eddy Duchin had everything but there's one thing he lacked—an enemy. I never met a finer man. His charm was his naturalness. He tried to teach me piano at his school. He laughingly gave me up, and advised me to start my son immediately. “He'll hate it no matter when you start—I hated it like mad!” he said. A short time ago when I saw him, he was going then, and probably knew it, but he laughed it off with a big Duchin shrug. As the chaplain said at his funeral, the only time he caused unhappiness was when he left. 9 TS oo»

TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Someone men-

tioned to Taffy Tuttle that an elephant never |

forgets. “So what,” shrugged Taffy. “And what can an elephant do for you, even if he remembers?” > > 0S

MUSIC PUBLISHER ROCCO VOCCO was in a billiard duel at the Lambs Club with one “Teddy Josephus.” Rocco, an expert, told the fellow he was pretty good and might become real good with some practice. Suddenly the fellow started ahead and stayed ahead . . . then there was a phone call for Willie Mosconi. “Do you mean Willie Mosconi, the champion, is here?” said Rocco. “Where?” “Here,” said “Teddy Josephus'—exposing the trick. ; oo oe De > BETTY REILLY proposes that Faye Emerson call her fan letters her “V-Mail” .., . That's Earl, Brother.

Cites Greater Thirst Than Ever for Facts

there is a thirst today for hard facts never before paralleled. It is reflected in the avidness with which people scan the front pages, listen to newscasts, read technical books, and gabble, gabble, ceaselessly on “heavy” subjects. 1 remember us as a largely frivolous folk, before the war, who dismissed the Washington news as mostly dull, who ignored the ordered degradation of the dollar, who feasted on the funnies and the sports page and waved the Cassandra editorials away. The Russians were a hairy people, far distant. The implications of the Spanish Civil War were awfully unclear to the majority. We were sports fans, Hollywood fans, Amos 'n’ Andy fans, and the “heavy” stuff was for heavy people, none of whom we knew very well. : e % 9%

THERE ARE few housewives today who cannot profanely discuss the farm lobby, every time the price of eggs and butter and meat lifts, They have become one with destiny, as their dollar drops and the price of baby booties rises. A youth with no space in his mind for much but girls and baseball scans his paper keenly and pins his ear to a radio for draft news, He has allied himself with destiny. The hairy bol-’ shevik has entered the home, today, because cousin John just got killed in Korea. We have recently ‘experienced government control in WW II-rationing, ceiling, rollback and freeze are household words, applicable to you and you and you. @. b&b

NEWS OF a government budget used to be dull stuff, as was the peacetime conflict between armed services. Not no more, Mac. That tilt in the budget means another bite off your pay check, large and small. Who wins the service scrap maybe means whether Mac dies or doesn't die. Outside a miniscule few, nobody fretted about physics, and “atom” meant “little.” The general. idea of atomic energy today, as symbolized by the bomb, rides’ the pillow ‘of every John and

. Jane in the nation,

Self-association with destin Everybody you know, today is conscious of it, for the simple Teach h everybody owns & plece of

i »

Pyramid ype Bosom Is on The Way Out

Change Most Radical Since Lana Turner

Put on Sweater

Fred Cole, Los Angeles swim suit designer, says “the pyramidtype bosom is definitely on the decline.” Mr. Cole demonstrated his point yesterday at Miami Beach, Fla. with an exhibition of 60 new suits for 1951. Sure enough, ‘each suit had the rounded bosom, which Mr. Cole called “the first radical change in bosoms since Lana Turner put on a sweater in 1938.”

Who'll Walk First?

Pretty Mrs. Joanne Russomano, a Denver polio victim, said today she's going to race her newborn son in learning to walk. Mrs. Russomano contracted polio three weeks after she and her husband, Frank, were married in. May, 1949, and spent four months in an iron lung. Her son, Steven, was born yesterday.

Oscar Winner Sued The wife of Broderick Crawford, 39-year-old screen actor and 1949 Academy Award winner,

is suing him for:

ae

© The Indianapolis 1

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1951

Economist Beverly Swinham., " ”

separate main-| tenance.

ine Crawford, 35, charged in a complaint filed Saturday in Los Angeles. She estimated her i. husband's earnings at not less Mr. Crawtord than $2000 a week and asked custody of their 3-year-old son, Christopher, and an expected child.

No ‘Two Beersh’ Detroit police used handwriting samples to convict Ronald S.| Malo of drunken driving yesterday. Officers produced handwriting specimens taken after his arrest and compared them with samples taken a few days later. All this because Malo’'s condition couldn't be told from his speech —he is a deaf mute. .

Dear Enemy The 1000th post-war wedding of an American soldier and a Japanese mational took place in the U. 8. Consulate General's office in Tokyo today. Sgt. Donald Kipker, 25, of Lima, O., married Masuko Sakurai, 25, who works for the American Civil Affairs team in Tokyo. They have known each other ithree years.

Wha’ Hoppen? Mario Cerni of Boston recently wrote Miss Jennefer Margaret Vance of Jacksonville, Fla., askIng her to return the rings he gave her when they became engaged five years ago. Miss Vance replied: “Come and get them.” Mr. Cerni went to Florida after them. When he started back to Boston this week, he and Miss Vance stopped off in |Lillington, N.C., long enough to get married.

Clarification

| ‘A poetry-writing resident of Vernon, Tex., who ran newspaper advertisements in an effort to find three former sweethearts wanted it understood today he’s not in a marrying mood. : Charles E. Cole, 73-year-old druggist, said he wanted to contact his old flames because I'm getting out a book of poetry and the pictures of all three are in the book. I'm not gonna’ marry any of ’em, I just want to give them a copy each.”

Musicale President and Mrs. Truman entertained the President’s nephew in Wash- . ington last night at a concert by Agi Jambor, Hungarian pian-} ist who escaped} from a Naz prison camp, The President's party at Truma Hallincluded

- ‘Now Here's the Way It

Recipe Contest Victors Get Prizes Total Attendance of 7500 Sets Mark; Homemakers Carry Away $5000 in Gifts

| The Times Recipe Contest winners were announced at the : { final session of The Times Cooking School ‘last night in the Murat, Mrs. Kather- Theater. Some 2000 homemakers attended the final evening.

Mrs. Dale Thomas, 947 Berwyn St., received a new 1951 Philco

cruelty electric range valued at $269.95.

Times Recipe Contest. The second grand prize, a Sunbeam Automatic Mixmnaster, was presented’ to Mrs, Harold C. Spangler, 721 E. 51st St. Mrs. Spangler, a winner in the second week of the contest, submitted a recipe for Orange Surprise Dessert.

Mrs. Edward J. Heine, 2729 N. Pennsylvania St, was the third grand prize winner with a recipe for Oven Barbecued Spareribs.! Her recipe was one of the four to, win in the second weekly contest, She won ‘a Sunbeam Coffeemaster, ».. fF A recipe for Easy Rolls submitted by Mrs. Paul Wray of Darlington won the fourth grand prize, a Sunbeam Radiant Control Toaster.

Contest judges wére Miss Marian Schleicher, home service director of Radio Equipment Co.; Miss Lila Sheimo, and Mrs. Adelaide Fellows, home economists for the Philco Co., and Mrs, Marie Daugherty, National Live Stock and Meat Board home economist. The three-day Times’ Cooking Schoel set new records in attendance. Last night's crowd swelled the total attendance to some 7500 homemakers. Besides learning the latest methods in cooking from Mrs. Marie Daugherty and her staff of the National Live Stock and Meat Board, the homemakers took home some $5000 in gifts. The eldest homemaker at last night's school was 85-year-old Mrs. Emma Kirland, 953 Prospect St. She received a prize. Top cooking school prize winner of the night was Mrs. Roy

Her winning grand prize recipe

was for Oatmeal Ovals, one of the winning recipes in the fourth

Bake in oven at 325 degrees F. for 25 to 30 minutes.

» " 8. ORANGE SURPRISE DESERT Sauce:

Mix sugar, cornstarch and salt. Add water and cook: over low heat, stirring until thickened and clear. Add orange juice, lemon juice and orange rind. Continue cooking very slowly, stirring frequently about 15 minutes, or until starch is cooked. The sauce is put in the bottom of an 8x8x2-inch pan. Batter: 14 c¢. shortening 14 c. sugar {1 egg 1 ¢. flour ii 2 tsps. baking powder 14 tsp. salt 15 ¢. milk 15 c¢. bran Blend shortening and sugar thoroughly. Add egg and beat well. Sift flour, baking powder and salt together. Add to shortening mixture alternately with milk. Stir in bran. Spread bater over sauce. Bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 40 to 45 minutes. Serve warm with bottom of the pan. orange slices.

uce in the arnish with

. |

® = OVEN BARBECUE SPARERIBS

Stewart, 1716 Orleans St, who! received a Philco range.

At yesterday morning’s session, Mrs. Fern Randel, 2720 N. Kess-| ler, Blvd., also was given a Phil-| co range. Mrs. Sarah R. Cummins, 2524 McClure Ave., Mars Hill, was the eldest homemaker in the audience. She is 84. Mrs. William Hess, 5717 Bonna Ave., who has been married 61 years, was the homemaker married the longest, and Mrs. Robert Bowser, 1512 N. Pennsylvania, who was married last Saturday, was the most re-| cent bride. All three of these women received gifts. Attending the morning session were home economics groups from Sacred Heart High School] and Washington High School. The school was sponsored by| Radio Equipment Co. and Philco! dealers of Marion County. The four grand prize winning] recipes follow: OATMEAL OVALS 12 c. white sugar 14 ¢. brown sugar

John ¢. Truman, Grandview, Mo., ; ; and three other Mr. Truman _ | guests: Mrs. Earl { | Stewart, of New York, a friend lof Mrs. Truman's, and the Pres-| iident’s Air Force aide, Brig. Gen. | Robert A. Landry, and his wife.

Tenor ll | *Italian tenor, Beniamino Gigli, was reported in “extremely satisfactory” condition at Salus Clinic, Rome, today following an operation on a leg infection.

No Blondes?

Sgt. Lyle Allen, Burbank, Cal, in Tokyo on a shopping trip for some of his pals in Korea, made up a list of the hard-to-get things the GIs want most. i Stationery, fountain pens, playling cards, regular and color camera film, pocket hand warmers, game boards, books and maga-| zines. . ’

Competition Construction superintendent Raymond J. Bemrose divorced his wife because, he said, her work interfered with his home life in Los Angeles. “My wife was operating a pet) shop, but a year ago she closed {it and brought home 15 dogs,” ‘he testified yesterday. “I stood for it for five months and then I had (to move out.”

| WOMAN, 70, HIT BY CAR Mrs, Pearl Janes, 70, of 45 N.| Bolton Ave. was in Methodist Hospital in fair condition this morning suffering a broken ankle after being struck by a car et

1 c. shortening 2 eggs 2 c. flour 1 tsp. soda 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. cinnamon 2 c. oats (regular, not quick) 1 c. pecans (halves) 1 c. raisins (ground) Cream sugars and shortening. Add eggs, raisins, dry ingredients. Add pecans and oats last. Dough must be stiff enough to press out with a fork, but add a few teaspoons, of water if necessary.

For Results, List Property With Licensed Broker

® There is no guesswork when you list your home with a licensed, reliable real estate broker. He will sell your home at the best possible price and with the least amount of effort to you.

® Prices are good today be-

cause of the increasing demand for homes. There

4 or 5 Ibs. spareribs Barbecue sauce: 1 lemon, sliced thin

5 L. sugar 14 ¢. lukewarm water 4 tbsps. cornstarch i ‘ "sugar % tsp. salt 14 ¢. shortening 2 c. boiling water 2 t. salt 3 tbsps orange juice 2 tbsp. sugar. 11% thsps lemon juice 1 c. scalded milk 1 thsp. granted orange rind 3% c. water

's Done’

0

Mrs, Dale Thomas (left), winner of first prize in The Times Recipe Contest, and Mrs, Harold C. Spangler (right), second place winner, "talk over" The Times Cooking School recipe book with Home

roasting for one to one and a half hours. Don’t cover pan at any time, ibut do baste and turn ribs oc|casionally. (Here's a tip: After ribs are brown, remove all the lemon slices {and onion because these will be burned and will spoil the flavor. Put the ribs into a clean pan and pour sauce over them, When they are done, they will be tender, juicy and covered with the won-

derful sauce.) - = ” EASY ROLLS

2 cakes compressed yeast

4 c. sifted all-purpose flour Crumble yeast into small bowl Add lukewarm water and one teaspoonful sugar and set in warm place until it becomes light and spongy (about 15 minutes). Combine shortening, salt and two tablespoonfuls of sugar in large bowl and add scalded milk and water. Stir until shortening is melted, then cool until lukewarm. Add yeast mixture. Add flour gradually, mixing thoroughly. Cover and let rise in

hg Siace for Ine r or until

(about one half-hour). Drop dough from spoon into greased muffin pans. Let rise in warm place until light (about 15 minutes). Bake in very hot oven (425 degrees F.) 20 minutes. Makes two dozen.

Massage Puts Life in Heart Of Little Girl

Jcost of new construction,

Lok

imes

New Building To House 16 Charities

Construction Due To Start in Month, Cost $1.3 Million

Construction of a $1.3 million’ downtown building to house local charity agencies is expected to

‘| start in about a month.

That's how long it will take federal officials to clear the project for approval, local officials estimated today. Construction contracts were approved yesterday by the William E. English Foundation, sponsor of the projecl. The building, which will house at least 16 local charity organizations, will be on the east side of Alabama St. between North and Walnut Sts. The U-shaped structure will be five stories of Georgian architecture in brick, with Indiana limestone trim. It will take about 18 months to complete. : The ¢harity building will not be affected by a new federal order announced last night holding down loans to 50 per cent of the Joseph J. Daniels, president of the Foundation, said a loan will not be needed. Start of construction may also hinge on allocation of materials, Mr. Daniels said. Immediate application is being made, $50,000 Yearly Saving Charity groups would save at least $50,000 a year by occupying the new building. ' Although occupancy will be rent-free, the agencies will share in operatin costs. . Funds for the project came from sale of the English Hotel on the Circle, as provided in William E. English’s will. . Agencies interested in occupying the building include: Community Chest, Marion County Health and Welfare Council, Red Cross, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Camp Fire Girls, Children’s Bureau of Indianapolis, Orphans’ Home, Heart Foun« dation, Family Service Association, Hearing Society, Legal Aid Society, Jewish Social Services, Marion County Cancer .Soclety, Marion County Chapter of National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, Marion County Tuber. culosis Association and Visiting Association.

A ep Cryo Co. Consulting e rs are Ammerman, Davis & Stout, Inc. All contracts were let to Indianapolis

gt rms. let rise again until very light Times ‘Bonzo Says’

Winners Listed

Awards in Contest Mary D’Brasseur, 427 N. Chester Ave. is the first place winner in The Times “Bonzo Says” cone test. : She will receive $50 and a gold

SWIFTLY and softly the skilled

geon massaged the heart of a little girl.

wrist watch tonight from Movie

hand of a General Hospital Sur- Star Diana Lynn at the world

premiere of “Bedtime for Bonzo” at the Circle Theater. Other prize winners include N,

1 large onion chopped fine

1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. celery seed 1% c. vinegar 1 c. catsup Few drops Tabasco sauce (if desired) 1 tsp. chili powder 1. ¢. brown sugar 3% c¢. Worcestershire sauce 2 c. water

Cut spareribs into pieces two or|was restored and the original op{three ribs wide. Place meaty side eration was completed.

up in shallow baking pan, salt and pepper lightly and on each

|piece put a thin slice of lemon.ica] director of, the hospital, said

Sprinkle generously with chopped, onion, saving some onion for sauce, Put into 450 degree F. oven, uncovered, to brown. Mix sauce ingredients and bring to a boil. Pour this sauce over ribs. Reduce heat

to 350 degrees F. and sobtinye

# u "

is also a good .demand for vacant lots, farms, income and business properties. ® Call one of the reliable real estate brokers who advertise in the classified pages of The Times. He will appraise your property free of charge and : a consultation entails no ) obligation.

|

Bolton Ave., and E. ) i" ie WE

~~

Mrs. Roy Stewart, 1716 Orl

range she won at last night's final session of The Times Cooking | a Kirland, 85 years old, of 953 Prospect St, whe won a prize for being the eldest homemaker ot,

School. With her is Mrs, Emm

&

vr : oa +

{Mitchell hung in the balance. | | Her heart had stopped beating {while she was undergoing an {emergency appendectomy. The | surgeon quickly made a two-inch |incision in her chest and started {her heart pulsating by hand. | For 30 heart-saving minutes the surgeon massaged the vital organ. At last reduced beating

DR. JOSEPH 8. BEAN, medi-

|cases of heart stoppage are not uncommon during serious operations. He said that her chances were “good.” Her condition, howlever, is critical. Cleair’s parents are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mitchell, of 146 W. 27th St.

om St., proudly shows the Phils”

The life of 2-year-old Clear, L. Kautsky, R. R. 14, second; Mrs.

Gerald DeWitt, 400414 W. Washington St., third, and Russell McClellan, 1028 N. Colorado St, fourth. a Second prize was $25 and a gold third, ; and fourth, $10.

fts of Rogers Jewelers. or other entrants will receive two passes each to the Circle Theater. Theater passes are being given by the theater. Pass winners ine clude Mrs. Wilbur A. Elliott, 1541 Spruce St.; Mrs. Doris Singer, RR 11; Harold H. Thomas, 2935 E. 35th St;.; Hallie M. Striebeck, 330 N. Dearborn St; Maxine Steinbuch, 337 8S. Butler Ave.; Verda M. Cochran, Anderson; Winfield Firman, 339 W. Hampton Drive; Mrs. George W, Kramer, 5140 Broadway; Mrs. 8, A. Tomlinson, 3360 N. Meridian St.: Robert G. Turpin, 1508 E, Naomi St. . Bonzo, Diana Lynn and Jesse White will appear on the Circle theater stage this afternoon and this evening. “ Four top prize winners will be. guests of The Times at the stage show at 8:30 p. m. Awards will be presented at that time. Pass winners will receive their awards

.|by mail.

‘Secret Service Was My Job’ to

Begin in The Times

® One of the country’s top undercover operatives re- . veals his most exciting ‘adventures in an exclu sive new Times series. ® “Secret Service Was My Job” is the thrililng, factual story of Frank A. Seckler’'s experiences in his lifetime of Federal crime detecting. ® Mr. Seckler, one of the few agents to be given the Gallatin Award for distinguished service, tells of his role as a “De“oit murderer”; the capure, escape and recapture of the notorious Count Lustig; and many other exciting experiences. : ® “Secret Service Was My Job,” Mr. Seckler’s story as told to Wendy and Everett Martin, begins Sunday in The Sunday Timés and will appear.

or

J

daily in The Timgs next. week. Cn 5