Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 March 1951 — Page 13
nitarian, le
{C need no deist, the accom= the outstandis attainments humanities. In hampioned the red. Politically rocate Old Age senior citizens of $50.00.
rans are well
ted into law a issioner whose y war receives 'nment,
nd private life nention.in this pntire political . an or: woman
athy with the ickly, through at HADACOL, manity. When are buying a r who, by his w of a doubt that the poor
er.
be To orders additions
ded to try of bottles
rent. Now the world, nd I really DACOL is but recompraise the put HAD-
Lee Adele, , East St. have been over 14 ood never gree with one day folks were because of I tried it bottles I big imNow ‘I eat rant—sleep HADACOL atic relief. ible to acying aches sturbances, tened conf Vitamins
ns Bl, B2, y with the he Senator r LeBlanc d on what
size $3.50. IADACOL,
SEARS EEE R RR
EG
o
(FR
nside Indianapolis hy Eo Sovela J MAXINE MAYES is back in the condenser
division of P. R. Mallory. She worked there World War II,
Everything but the condensers has changed, n this war, Maxine has a husband at Pearl Harbor in the Navy. Her grandmother baby pits ‘with a 3l4-year-old son. Maxine seldom forgets there is a war going on, For four years, from 1942 to 1946, Maxine worked on the winding machine. The condensers, tiny things about the size of horse’ pills, were wound mechanically, : r job now consists of wiring two :thih’ wires, called pigtails, on each end .of a condenser. That's all she does. She solders the same kind of a wire on the same kind of a condenser in the same way. Other girls, in other locations, perform other operations. Eventually the condenser finds itself In a radio that may be in a bomber or a fighter plane. ‘A condenser Maxine soldered may come within five miles or 15 feet of Chief Gunners Mate James Mayes. , The war is much’ closer this time. e LB .
MAXINE MET Jim while he was on termina leave in 1946. Jim was a cousin of Maxine’'s girl friend. The two girls went to Tennessee for a short holiday. Maxine stayed at the home of her girl friend's mother.
Sailor Jim was introduced Things clicked and time slipped by. Jim Mayes wound up in Indianapolis. the Reserve. He got a job at Chevrolet. also. married Maxine, Mrs. Mayes turned all her attention to housework, The war was over. There were big plans for the future. Money wasn't top plentiful after bills were paid but a little each week wai added to. Maxine and Darrell were gomg to ve, © 2 When Jim signed as a Reserve, another war was slightly .impossible. The little extra cash helped. Last year Darrell became very sick. Treatment and doctor bills set the Mayes back. Put them in a hole. db » ONE DAY. Jim was. called. back jute. the. service. It was no surprise. He had ‘six years in the Navy. Jim knew what to expect and hated to leave his family. But when Uncle Sam says go, you go. . With Jim in the Navy again, Maxine's thoughts turned to the war effort, extra income, something to occupy her mind. Mallory was hiring again. Her grandmother could take care
4
to Maxine. Civilian He joined He
"of Darrell during.the day. She applied for a
job and got it. “I felt like I had to go back to work. I have more at stake in this one,” said Maxine. On an assembly line, after you have performed a task thousands and thousands of times, your hands work swiftly and practically subconsciously. The mind often wanders. Maxine thinks of her sailor husband a lot. - She thinks of some of the things she'l! write that night. « | Maxine writes her husband a letter each evening. She receives a letter once a week, usually on Monday. Some of Jim's letters she can quote word for word.
It Happe By Earl Wilson
' NEW YORK, Mar. 13—This is a little story about a -Guy and -a Doll “Manny Frank,” people. used to say, “is a
bore . . .” Manny was, too. Manny's a Broadway and
Hollywood agent.
Only he’s worse than most agents. So he was simply terrible, He was a bore on just one subject. Of a
beatitiful blonde blue-eyed actress, Vivian Blaine. “Hollywood doesn’t appreciate Viv,” Manny'd moan. He said it hundreds of times a day to anybody who'd listen. When they wouldn't listen, Manny gaid it to Manny. “Of course,” people said back, “the fact you're ma: ricd to her , , ." “Tou forget,” Manny'd rage, “I was her agent BEFORE I vas her husband!” People ali but stopped up their ears. They couldn't listen once more to Manny saying Viv wasn't appreciated in Hollywood, oe oR ONE DAY in Chicago he ordered 10,000 badges. About the size of a big grapefruit. Delicate, tiny little things. “I AM A VIVIAN BLAINE BOOSTER!” they roared. Manny wore one himself, he was a little crazy. “They thought I must be a mental case,” Manny says. “I was trying to build this girl into a personality bigger than 20th Century-Fox thought she could ever be.” Nd MANNY didn't care. He'd been casting director once at Republic. He'd discovered Robert Cummings and others. Still, guys in their 40s don’t go around wearing huge badges, usually. “But I figured, how'm I going to get anybody to wear one if .I don't myself?” People liked Vivian. They thought she was pretty. And sang pretty good in pictures, and at the Copacabana, and the Roxy. But they weren't out of their minds about her. And Manny was, db ONE NIGHT Manny and Viv went to the Copacabana and Manny had on one of the badges. “Whass the button?” said a drunk. Manny showed him. “Who the hell's Vivian Blaine?” the drunk said. Manny told him who she was. Very loudly, too. Oh, it was almost a fight. Strictly verbal, though.
FAN AND
People thought
Tone-Deaf Senator By Harman W. Nichols
WASHINGTON, Mar. 13-—Sen. Wayne Lyman ‘Morse wouldn't dare compete with a canary in 4 songfest—but he thinks that warbling is the finest thing that ever came into the American parlor. The Republican from Oregon stood up in the Senate the other day, gave his celebrated moustache a couple of turn-arounds and ugburdened himself. He admitted that he couldn't even come up with a decent note on Sweet Adeline. Yet he said in a nice oratory tenor that what he likes, next to his wife, his equally lovely daughters and a profitable stable of show horses fs a good song. The Senator was sounding off in off-key about the current contest to select a song for Washington, D. C. The contest is over and before many days the Simon Distributing Corp. whl announce the winner--with $2500 in prizes, come and take, according to the verses and music written. The idea was to get a catchy ditty for the capital-—something we've never had. Every other place has a tune but the poor, voteless people of Washington. Maryland has
“Maryland, My Maryland” and Texas has all
those eyes upon it. “On Wisconsin” and “California, Here I Come.” Some are official; others not. > > & THE SENATOR from Oregon spoke on behalf of a resolution asking for a song for Washington, It was offered by Sen. Olin D. Johnston, South Carolina Democrat, who likes nothing better than to knock heads with the boys in a spot of barbershop harmony. Morse picked up the baton. Addressing Veep Alben W. Barkley, who strikes a mean chord himself. the senator said: « “There is a ‘great personal feeling in my
3 3 gy a
thé house. fund. . The house where. Jim and
ned Last Night
“Jim and Maxine— Typical War Story TRA TE Le
Production line again . . . and Maxine Mayes’ husband is back on the firing line. :
Darrell finds it hard to understand why his daddy doesn’t come home anymore and why his, mother has to give him Daddy's hellos. "Every letter ends with a line-or two for Darrell. Tn : LAST WEEK Darreil’was amused more than usual. Daddy asked him to be a good boy ‘‘until” he comes home. When is he coming home? That's a tough question for Maxine. ; Sometimes while she's working Maxine begins to think how stupid war is, She gets as hot under the collar as her soldering iron. War is so wrong, so costly, so confusing. Despite her feelings, Maxine knew she could
“help tna small ‘way by going pack on the assém-
bly line and doing a job. She can’t tell you all about a condenser, what it does, where they put it. She can show you how to solder a pigtail wire on both ends of a condenser. Gene Lewis, foreman in the condenser division, will quickly tell you Maxine is one of the best workers in the department. Maxine gave me an idea. Think, Maxine went back to work so she can directly or indirectly help during the national emergency. Help win the war. I wonder what would happen if 60 million Americans who do the work to keep America running, would do their work better, faster, with fewer complaints, gear their energy to the task or rearming the free world. After it was rearmed, what would happen if 60 million Americans made it known that peace was what they wanted above all else , , . or else. We'd probably have peace, I'm thinking. And Maxine Mayes would have her Jim back and could save the money she spends on postage for ‘the house , . . topsy-turvy world.
A Bang-up Story Of a Guy and Doll
“Hollywood,” Manny lectured the drunk, “doesn't appreciate Viv."" : oad»
MANNY WENT on saying it. Finally he said it to the right guys. Cy Feuer and Ernie Martin. Producers of “Guys and Dolls.” They cast her as Adelaide. She's the dumb night-club entertainer in the show, She must be dumb. She's been engaged to a guy for 14 years. But Manny' almost didn't get the .part for Viv. : ; Because George 8. Kaufman, the director, didn’t want her. He was. in London when Martin and Feuer suggested her name. Kaufman said no. Over the phone he thought they'd said somebody else. So then he did want her. And she’s the season’s biggest hit. She's just divine singing “Take Back Your Mink,” “Marry the Man Today,” “A Bushel and a Peck,” “If T Were a Bell” and “I've Never Been in Love Before.” Hollywood now wants her back. vob
HER FAN MAIL'S shot up even though she’s not ‘out there. It had dwindled to 200 a month. Now, Manny says, it's 20,000 a month. That's what Manny says. He may be biased. What do I mean, MAY be? He is. Viv and Manny work together great. “I get an offer for her and 1 always say, ‘What do you think, Viv? : “She says, ‘Don't you think you can get a little more money, honey?” 80 Manny asks—and gets—more, and the producers say, “That husband of hers!” “I'm her husband,” Manny says, “after I get through being her manager.” With Vivian now such a big B'way hit, people, ‘being people, now always want to know how Viv is when they see him. They really mean it. They even listen. : Now they never say Manny is boring on the subject of Vivian, They say, “You're so right.” The other day somebody said to Manny, “You khow something, Hollywood never appreciated Vivian.” “Would you say that again?” said Manny. “I like to hear it.” > Sb WISH I'D SAID THAT: Tommy Dorsey refers to the seats-in a B'way beauty parlor as “bleach chairs.” TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Henry Slate— “Some guys are the life of the party until drinks are served. That's when they fall down.” That's Earl, brother.
Thinks Washington Should Have a Song
remarks because I happen to be one of those few who is denied the joy of singing. “Perhaps it is because of this handicap that I have learned, through listening to the singing of others, the great value of music as a tonic for the soul—as a cultural ‘halance for the home and the nation.” Morse then pulled the cork on his emotions: He said he wasn't talking particularly about marching songs, like the stirring marine ditty. “Perhaps in a similar emotion,” he said, ‘‘the honorable Andrew Fletcher said in 1703, “‘Give me the making of the songs of a nation and I care not who makes the laws.’ ”
SEN. MORSE has, on occasion, been embarrassed over his monotone, or tone-deafness. Once he appeared as a guest in Portland, Ore., and was invited to sit in with a church male chorus. The Senator, seeing a lot of votes and old friends in the pews down there, agreed. They had a fast rehearsal and Wayne opened his yap. It was a good thing he did. The choir master detected something unmelodic ih the tenor section and gave the Senator a whisper: “Move your lips but don’t let anything come out.” The Senator from Oregon lip-moved, but remained mute. Everything went fine. Fortunately, his fine houseful of daughters have not inherited Wayne's unmusical talents. Judith, 16, plays the fiddle in her high school orchestra.-Amy, 15, is hot on the piano and also plays the bull fiddle in the school orchestra. Nancy, 19, former Cherry Blossom Princess, can sing, but at the University of Oregon she’s better in the ballet. : Sen. Morse i& rightly proud of his brood. When it comes to yodeling, he wishes he could do half as well, > : ]
-,
\
~The Indianapolis Times
@
- .
CHAPTER THREE ‘By DR. EDGAR J. GOODSPEED
lodged there.
Jesus Makes Significant Journey And Fulfills an Old Prophecy “
THE JOURNEY through Trans-Jordan took perhaps six | weeks, and on arriving opposite Judea, Jesus' party doubtless | recrossed the Jordan by the Roman bridge near Jericho and
As pilgrims to the Jfestival they would be welcomed and provided tor, even if Jesus’ fame had not reached so far. But that
TUESDAY, MARCH 13, 1051
it had done so is evident from
for the last stag‘e of His Journey. :
Lenten season, as in every year since Jesus’ time, the thoughts of the Christian world turn to
on. earth, climaxed’ by the Resurrection we celebrate at Easter: time. ’ Coa A twely (nferpretation of that classic story has been written by Dr. Edgar J. Goodspeed,
thority. Fifty years ago, we drove from Jerusalem: to Jericho, by carriage, in three hours, but on foot, as most of the Passover
than twice that long.
s » sé
THEY SET out early in the morning, the little group of apostles followed by a number of women, among them Mary of
James and Joseph, Salome, and
| others, Mark says they used to |
accompany Jesus on His tours and wait on Him when He was in Galilee. Others of His Gali-
EDITOR'S NOTE: ‘In this |
the drama of Christ's last days
outstanding New Testament au- | mind that Jesus had evidently | taken measures | through Trans-Jordan, or while
Pilgrims traveled, it took more | | Entry
the story of the curing of a | entered the next village they blind beggar who sat by the | roadside, as Jesus left the city |
| in readiness for His use.
would find a colt that had never been ridden, tied. They were, to untie it and bring 1°
. back to Him. He went on.
‘And if anybody says to you
| ‘Why, are you doing that?’ say, | ‘The Master needs it, and will }§
send it back here directly.’ "”
o » n ZECHARIAH HAD long before predicted that the Messiah | would enter the city “humble; | and riding upon an ass, even | upon a colt the foal of an ass.” | ‘The prophet called upon Jerusa- | lem to welcome Him with ac- ! clamation. It was with this prophecy in
while coming
at. Jericho, to have this animal All
“this TE oT Ere Signieance Yor
lean followers had joined His |
general group, meaning to make the pilgrimage more or less in His society, joining His audience when He preached and trying to be near enough to hear what He hight have to say. As they approached the city and reached tie point where the road to Bethany branched
village called Bethphage, Jesus
| ahead telling them that as they
‘It's Just Not A Life Without
“In Vienna, Vogeler’s Two Sons
Pray to Saints for His Release
CHAPTER TWO By LUCILLE VOGELER VIENNA—My two sons don't remember events as having | happened one, two or three years ago. In their minds everything happened either before or ‘after their father was jailed by the
Hungarians as an American “spy.” They have been taking special care of the Christmas presents | they received that terrible December of 1949, so they can show
| them to their Daddy when he returns to us, even if they have | to wait the full 15 years to | which the Hungarian Com- | munists sentenced him. | Bobby—the eldest one, he’s | 10 now—had been saving his allowance to buy a wrist watch for months before his father
off toward the south, near a |
it means that in the Triumphal into Jerusalem Jesus definitely assumed the role of the Messiah, Where a man of the Western world would have stood up before an audience and said he
| was the Messiah, Jesus, in this Magdala, Mary the mother of |
highly Oriental fashion, even more unequivocally declared Himself to be He, by riding into the city exactly as the prophet
o » n IT WAS His way of focusing attention upon Himself and what He had to say to His | nation, in His and their great | crisis. He is not sifiply ful- | filling the prophecy; what is far more important, He is doing it’ intentionally and on purpose. What is most difficult in these last momentous days of His life is to look into the mind of Jesus
| and see His thoughts and pur- |
was arrested. He finally bought |
EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the |
| second installment of the ex- | clusive first person story by | Mrs. Robert Vogeler. Her hus- | band, an American business executive, was sentenced to 15 | years in prison as a spy by a Communist court in Budapest. it and was wearing it to surprise Bob when he was to re-
| turn from Budapest the after- |
noon of Friday, Nov. 18, 1949.
| 8° 8 8
WE WAITED up all night, | but Bob never made it. The | Hungarian Communist police
grabbed him before he reached | the border. We've never seen him since. Bobby has been keeping that | watch in perfect order for his | father to inspect. I gave each | of the boys a signet ring last Christmas, their second without | their father. I said they were | to consider the rings came from | their dad. They both say they | will wear the rings till he comes | home, even if they have to keep getting them made larger.
Rail Fans Help—
| American,”
sent two of His disciples on | poses, and here is one of the |
utmost importance, unmistaka-|
Daddy,” Bobby told me the other day. “There were so many things we were going to do with Dad.” “But that's not to say you're not a good mother,” /he added i , N. / quickly. \ The boys grew up fast after Bob was arrested. At first they
| city, coupled with the occasion, | p.0. oo brought straw from
| had foretold. | and the acclamations of His |
| gettable,
| “brought. Him the ass from the | ! | village street and threw their | the Lord's name!
| saddlecloth, He mounted it, and i. rode it into the city. :
were sure nothing would happen
to him. “They wouldn't dare do anything to my Daddy-—he’'s an they would say.
They believed he would be back
in Vienna as soon as the trial ended.
They were stunned when I
had to tell them the night in |
February, 1950, that Bob had
been sentenced to 15 years im- | prisonment.
® Billy, the youngest (he was 7
then) cried, “But I'll be an old | comes
man by ithe time he home." Then the shock hit him and we carried him upstairs where he sat in a big chair for two hours not speaking, just staring at the wall. : Bobby tried to brave it out. After the first few minutes, he squared his shoulders, thrust out his jaw just like his father, and said firmly, “We'll do something!” » n » * SINCE THEN, both have become extremely religious. After
“It's just not a life without | his sentencing, they prayed to
(Original woodcut owned by the John Herron Art Institute)
TRIUMPHAL ENTRY—This Albrecht Duerer woodcut shows
Jesus riding into Jerusalem.
bly revealed to us by His acts. | He meant His entry into the
followers, to be an announcement, unmistakable and unfor- | that He is indeed God's Messiah, the Commissioner of the kingdom of heaven. : So . when
His messengers |
coats over it like an improvised |
ir | THE PEOPLE caught the idea and made His entering it |
>
t
«
the conviction of her husband in Bob's favorite St. Anthony and to- the Austrians’ beloved St. Thaddeus. “A week has gorfe by, and they have done nothing,” the
boys protested bitterly a few
| days later. I had to explain one | | doesn’t deliver ultimatums to
Saints. oh On the whole, they have been better behaved than they were when Bob was here, They ap-
Mga
parently figure life is tough |
emp ee
| places brought branches and leaves 1p x
}
a triumph. They threw their coats on the roadway before
the fields to cover the muddy in the road. Others
scatter before Him. And be- | fore and behind: Him they | shouted their joyful acclamations: .
“Blessed be He who comes in
“Blessed be. the reign of our
| father David which is coming!” | | | where they were to spend the
The Jews bound for the Passover, as they neared Jerusalem, were used to singing favorite Psalms, and to take up this
PAGE 13
SON ib.
aN
ee
a
Ee He and Disciples
Inspect Temple
chant was a natural thing for .them as, their léng tramp near-" ing ite end, they began to see
| the towers and walls of the city
coming into view. - They weré
probably only half or three-
quarters of an hour from the city, when Jesus mounted; it.is only half an hour's walk from
Bethany to Jerusalem.
» . n SO JESUS came to Jerusa-
| lem. By What gate He entered | it, and found His-way through { its narrow crooked streets to
the temple, we cannot say. . The temple He 'visited has uttered disappeared; we can
‘only trace some of -its substruc-
tures under the pavement of the Haram area that forms the
great courtyard of the Mosque _
of Omar, standing over the bare rack aa which stood the high
“altar, the altar of burnt offering
of Herod's temple. This splendid piece of Greek architecture, with its dazzling marbles and noble proportions filled the ordinary Jewish heart with pride. JESUS LOOKED it all over; He could pass through the Court
of the Women and beyond that into the Court of the Men. of Israel. Beyond that lay the Court of the Priests, which He could not enter, and beyond that the curtain-covered holy place and sanctuary, the innermost shrine of the Jewish religion, The hour was late; it was a long walk from Jericho to Jerusalem, and the temple courts were beginning to be de~ serted. Jesus surveyed it all, no doubt planning what His course sh be when He re‘firned | praing. 5
Then He and left the temple and the city and crossing the bed af Kidron skirted the Mount of Olives, which rises two hundred feet
| above the city, and made their
way their to the security of Bethany, on its eastern slope,
nights. Tomorrow: Jerusalem,
The Crisis at
Daddy’
I found they had shot a hole right through the heart of the woman in Bob's treasured painting by Van Cuyler of “A Lady With a Rose.” I don’t know what he'll say when he finds out. But a few days later, the boys informed me the air rifle had been traded for a non-shooting cowboy pistol, so we’ll have no more of that.
” " » THE ‘BOYS go to a school operated by the American Army just across the park in front of our house. Billy is in the fourth grade, Bobby’s in the fifth. One day Bobby came home with a bloody nose. I figured
he had been fighting some other
boy over a girl. But the next day the father of one of the boys in the school came over to apologize for his son’s remarks about Bobby’s father. Seems the other boy had laughed at Bobby because he said, Bobby's father was “a jailbird.” Bobby hit him. Bobby tried to save my feelings by not telling me about it. But the school principal phoned the other boy's father, who was awfully embarrassed.
WAITING—Mrs. Lucile Vogeler and her two sons, Billy, 8, left, ahd Robert Jr., 10. The photo was taken in ker home after
Budapest.
enough for me anyway, they won't make it any worse. They bring flowers home evenings, because that's what Bob used to do. They write me little notes which they leave around the house. They illustrated one of these notes with a cartoon of a bomb dropping on the home of Hungarian Communist boss Matyas Rakosi.
But a few weeks ago they got an air rifle, and one day
Little Ferdinand RailroadFinally Operates in Black
Tiny Hoosier Line Has Been Running Without Profit for 40 Years
| By BERT GOLDRATH f - Times Special Writer FERDINAND, Ind., Mar. 13— The poor but proud little Ferdinand Railroad, which has been running in the red since its maiden trip 40 years ago, has at last puffed over to the black side of the ledger. The Ferdy Flyer made its initial run of 7.38 miles from Ferdinand to Huntingburg on Feb. 21, 1909. Then, as now, her rolling stock consisted of locomotive, tender and one gas lit combination
coach and baggage car.
For that auspicious event there window, in dire peril of being
was
hatted dignitaries, band.
The Ferdinand Railroad
a banner-festooned flatcar brushed off by scraping branches. on. which rode the town’s silkand a brass Half the town’s citizenry had raised $90,000 to make Ferdy 1000. The local flour mill, furni-
is aand was serious enterprise for the town of manager.
The Engine is a Baldwin 4-4-0, which means that, reading from bow to stern, she has four piiot wheels and four drivers. The one running now is No. 3. The first one developed a wheeze that in two years sent the road into roceivership, where it has been, off and on, until very recently. Engineer Schum has spent 21 of his 34 years with the companv at the throttle. Director Sylvester Schreiner, former station agent, came home from World War II promoted to general
ing as a {and mail clerk on each of the one
His duties include work-| conductor, baggageman Globe Wireless in San Francisco,
(which intercepted a message from
forecasting some long overdue improvements. To the citizens of Ferdinand, this 1g higger news than the birth of sextuplets,
Freighter Seeks Three Missing After Collision
HONOLULU, Mar. 13 (UP) The Danish freighter Laura Maersk. today sought three crewmen missing in a collision between the freighter and an unidentified tugboat off Negros Island in the Philippines. The accident was reported by
possible, after abandoning hope ture factory and lumber yard de- or two daily runs. President of|the Laura Maersk yesterday askthat either the Pennsylvania or pend on it ‘to pull their productsthe Ferdy is Charles F. Olinger, ing for “immediate help.”
the Southern would run through to the main line.
Ferdinand.
old spiderwebbed
of- the
which the
state, but which is now defunct
because of bus competition.
Big reason for the Ferdy's sud- is one of the best. den prosperity is Midwestern rail- danger road fans. On Sundays the fans amok. though; ashe chuffs along Now that the Ferdy is over the'a jagged coral
Twenty boys who owns about 40 per cent of] {she took aboard nine crewmen
and girls go to school each week- the stock. At one time the Ferdy was part day in Huntingburg, *commuting Mr. Schum is possibly the only from the tug but that three oth-
Rail fans, who are
critical, say the Ferdy's roadbed when it reaches Huntingburg, but
of the train
{and their cameras just from every at a steady 10 miles an Four,
/ A
The Layra Maersk later said
Indiana Railroad, on the Ferdy Flyer. All the milk engineer in the world who always ers were missing.” The ship ‘said whole can stops are made twice a day. faces due south when he is work- she was most ing. The Flyer doesn't turn around rent”
s “drifting with the curif the hope of finding. them. A few hours earlier, 45 per-
There is little backs up for the return_trip with sons abandoned the freighter Anrunning its four-man crew,
drea F. Luckenbach after she hit reef 100 miles
(hump financially, its directors are northwest ‘of Honolulu,
~
.
| took a
After that, Billy and Bobby whole stack of the White Books about Bob's trial to school, and told their classmates their parents should read them to find out the truth about
| their father.
Bobby was born in New York, and Billy in Chicago, but they haven't been there since February, 1946. They want to go back as soon as they can. “We never want to see Vienna again,” they have told me. “When Daddy gets back, we want to go home and move to a farm.” I promised them that when Bob got back, that's just what we'll do.
Tomorrow: The mysterious death of Capt. Karpe.
Bars Are Let Down For. Lions’ ‘Love Match
PORTLAND, Ore. Mar. 13 (UP)-—-Pasha and the princess were ready today to climax a
lion love match that was kindled by zoo keepers for more than a year.
~The lions, who share adjoining
cages, have .shown a liking for each other. So zoo keepers decided to give them a chance to get better acquainted. Pasha and the princess will be placed in the same cage tomorrow.
Read About New
‘Blood Booster’
PVP . . . amazing synthetjc substitute for blood plasma . . . PVP needs no refrigeration, can be stockpiled indefinitely and used om anyone regardless of blood type. Read about this new “hlood booster” that will reach the market this summer. The story is. in PARADE MAGAZINE Sunday. PARADE MAGAZINE comes only with THE SUNDAY
| «TIMES.
His disciples *
A A
sof then Cardia ntact Rac Couth cut sand
