Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 March 1951 — Page 23
2. 15, 1051
+ dream” .. « | wrap-around washab e
it. . crease-re-yon crepe in
yve.ty dot —all she had to live on!” king’s right hand, and some y Er have gone through life successfully with "Reser it's blow. blow; blow: As they left the temple that in 1941 to coming terribly true i oie and put of his . ] ’ : y : | afternoon, one of the disciples, the cloisters of Westminster, did _| left, which is what everybody : ge ER CERO RATS LY SE EY PHT ew | overwhelmed with the massive ‘rigt escape” destruction. And to « : WE Lt or “wants to know about the Task Te. ER on Be ol w LRA AA ed . | splendor of the great fabric, one great physicist it no longer |IEEESCESEN NEW. I es To JRE ean AT TE Judgment. . Te Ha ppened 1 ast Night Wit, Rumor, Humor sid. to jm. ' What wo seems impossible that the ex- (Original woodcut owned by the John Herron Art Institute.) Jesus made it perfectly plain - | “Look, Master! at wonder- losive 1 p ' h By na Wilson Taken on the Run | ful stones and buildings'” De Lon Tay BITTER” CUP—In Duerer's woodcut, Jesus prays on the eve aid unanswerable, Hs sald thas . i Jesus said to him, “Do you New York but the whole world, of his crucifixion. ; “Lord, when did we see youNEW YORK, Mar, 15—A Broadway wit saw “Well, Granny,” he said, “You can become our | see these great buildings? Not if the right chain reaction is hit > s - hungry or thirsty, or a stranger, one of the new musicals and commented: associate. You can tell by looking. We have to | one stone shall be left here upon upon. A sense of great immediacy So you must be ongghe watch, op in need of clothes, or sick, oF “It's the kind of a show you walk out whistling examine.” | another that shall not be torn We ourselves may be living Possessed Him. for you do not know when the ;, ison and did not wait upon avy the costumes.” * | down!” closer to actual apocalyptic "8 8 master of the house is coming— yu?" he would reply, “In so : * > & HIYA, Indianapolis: Saw Frank McKinney and | iE > rou ~ realization than people have “I TELL YOU,” He went on, In ine evening St midnight far as you fajled to do it fom. aspherry PRICE STABILIZER DISALLE was in Toots Charles E. Johnson, the president of the National | IY ONFT tie temple ns vet ven before In apoca- ‘these things will all happen op Rayos je OF easy one. oF Thess ) eable oat qua Sher's hete my pind OhDiaines to him about Liquor Corp. in Toots i! 8, where they were | on Valley 3nd went up on the world and of- human life as we Before Soudan Foam sone tinexpesredly and find You for me!" - gabbing with Toots. Jr e- ount o ves,- which faced know it. * y ] asleep! And wha am ng This way of putting our duties: or Just a min Mike said. Kinney's daughter, Claire, who | the temple hill across the little Peering into the future, Jesus ~ away, but My words will never you I mean for all—Be on the = to our fellow-men has never Sizes noug YON) MIY tow’ eitondé Ladywood Sthook | valley and towered above ‘t. envisaged strange shapes of Pass away, But about that day watch! since been equaled. And it sudown wife. In fact, President now attends j His four fishermen disciples, the things to come. Nation would Or hour no one knows, not even 8» denly dawns upon you, as it 12 to 20 rman got a great bargain is entering famous Marymount | | men He had called first from rise against nation, and king the angels in Heaven, nor the IN THOSE momentous hours must have dawned upon them, Fw p 2 . Zot me. He got a (ygjiege here, I heard . .. Also | their boats on the Sea of Gali- dom against kingdom. There Son, only the Father. You must =. a0 of Olives, as Jesus that the point of the story is38 to 44 a op ‘Stabilizer and a chair- bh Simiins and the { lee, must have been greatly would be earthquakes here and 100k out and be on the alert, for - not this colossal phantasma~.man of a C Advi met the Joseph S sat talking to His disciples, His ; i a Consumers’ Advisory d Fa letlore of Anderson | struck by His dire prediction, ‘there. There would be famines. you do not know when it will be ng pes, goria of the universal judgment - 3 Committee for the price of Dav ale | and they drew Him aside. These would be only the be- time; just as a man when he teaching in parables reached its of all mankind. Rather, the one: in Shor’s the same night TV | “Tell us,” they said, “when ginnings of the sufferings. But leaves home to go on a journey, climax in a series of three point is the moral demand that. 8.3.8 k stars Milton Berle and Ken | this is to happen and what the when they saw these things and puts his slaves in charge, stories. will inevitably be the basis of GLORIA SWANSON and ! h 2-button Yose Ferrer backstage at “20th Murray Were thee, Le | Sign will be when it is all just happening, they might know each with his duties, gives or- “The Kingdom of Heaven,” such a judgment. dan » he going to carried out.” that the Son of Man was at ders to the watchman to keep He began, “will be like ten Tomorrow: Gethsemane and Century,” don't talk . about B'WAY BULLETINS: Co- Frank McKinney . Mike Disalle {noir potential Academ Standing on he yerge of} Hand, watch. bridesmaids, who took their the Trial. y tone passed the crisis in a | i A - a Ferrer. 1s Lev only Oscar we talk about,” says EE vey > Chicago . . . Gus Lesnevich | errer, “is Levant.’ i | 4 one #44 cai Radi ow api poe 1 Want My Husband Back— oLIVIA DeHAVILLAND was beautiful in Quizzer Alvin Stokes is in New York quizzing “Romeo and Juliet”—and now About all B'way now knows is the name of SSON'S there is beginning a DeHavil- the “collector” in the police graft . . . William a 1 O'Dwyer urged the Kefauvers to set up an FBI- | ag Jegend: like agency to place spies within crime syndicates. | 4 ew years ago, Director He suggested Congress spend $25 million a year. a i a tiations were on with Robert Siodmak was doing a * DN Mrs. Vogeler Meets Acheson; Hungary, and So me to radio show with her in which ALL OVER: President Truman's drivers have | say nothing about the case for he called her “Olivia.” orders to slow down when he passes school kids He Asked Her fo Keep Silent three months, because publicity The advance script came | so he may wave at them . . . Some Hollywood would hurt the talks. S back from her marked “Miss bookies favor Judy (“Born Yesterday”) Holliday { — EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the fourth installment of the ex- ‘ I kept quiet until an Ameriiecot DeHavilland, please.” for the Oscar, thinking Swanson and Bette | clusive, first person series by the wife of the American I. T. & T. “can writer broke the story of — ’ Siodmak stubornly de- p Davis’ll split the drama lovers, Judy getting all | executive. He has not been heard from after more than a year, the negotiations from Washingclined to be so formal. In all i the comedy lovers . . . Even the actors are cheer- | since he began serving a fifteen year prison sentence. ton. At first I thought perhaps’ those places he called her “My O. DeHaviland ;,o josephine Baker's Strand performance. CHAPTER FOUR there had been a deliberate dear” and in the closing he said, “And thank : * $ * By LUCILE VOGELER “leak” which might disrupt the you, Olivia DeHavilland! WISH I'D SAID THAT: “One of these guys VIENNA, Austria—My husband, Robert A. Vogeler. gave me negotiations. Later I was told fer! * 4% © you don’t have to mind till he makes your nose ga silver key ring on New Year's 1949. On it was engraved, “Happy the negotiations had already JOAN ‘BENNETT—who has quite a bit-of Dieed"—Robert Benchley. 365 Days. broken down. obstetrical business—likes to tell how she found AR Gr I'm not superstitious, but 1 look at that key ring now, and s x « : ’ . TODAY'S BEST NONSENSE: “Thev should wonder. UT . out she was to become a grandmother. a BUT I hardly slept at all duri 1 : put Jane Russell's pictures on the bills, so you First, Bob'ss mother died in February. Then my sister died in ing those three months. I felt One day she phoned her doctor and said: won't mind kissing your money goodby.” Max A March. And Bob himself was ————— , - sure Bob would be home any Gai Ive got a patient for you. My Stamler. | arrested by the Hungarian arrange a barter. After all, night % F . “.. & 9 | Communists in November. He final approval of Bob's trial 1 . Don’t be silly,” the obstetrician said. But EARL’S PEARLS: They call 'em sneak pre- | was tried the following Febru- obvjously had been given in 1 planned to fly to Washing: ton and visit President Truman RAYON jana went over. views, says Margaret Whiting, because every | ary on’ fabricated charges of Moscow. in September, But 10 months shirred Later the doctor called back. sneak in town goes. | espionage, and sentenced to 15 Also that month, I wrote » of excitement and shock finall { i letter to Hungarian Commu- gwd sleeves. a | years imprisonment. g got me. I was sick -in bed for o bie = ET i Qe ry Rl SE several weeks es 4 to RFC Hearings Reveal ,... :, wil tics Br \ I'm better now. but I haven't Americana 9 after Bob's arrest. .our house Your politics are no affair A SEARCH FOR HELP—Mrs. Lucile Vogeler meets Secretary been able to break away during
98
dining
aie rw
° the -cute corporation; you got
fiow to’ whist Everyone should know how
‘ the loudest sound of approval,
“any keepin’ money, or I mis-
By Ed aide Indian
TODAY, if Jou pay: close attention, you'll learn 0
whistle.
The whistle I have in mind is a clear, sharp, loud blast. It's good for stopping busses, cabs, getting a friend's attention two blocks away, frightening dogs ‘or inducing Good Humor men to come run- NG ning. And at a movie or sports 2° \ -event, this whistle is absolutely C—
How many times have you missed a trolley or a cab be cause all you were eapable of doing was waving your hand or giving out with a puny effort that wouldn't attract a girl's attention n a get. office?
THE NEED for a general ‘educational effort came to a head yesterday morning. A woman rushed out
of a corner hotel just as the last of the passengers
boarded a trolley. The doors closed when she was 10 feet from the doors. Passengers jammed the doorway,
I happened to be passing at. the time and saw the worker's: dilemma. 8he undoubtedly considered herself too sophisticated to let go a blood¢urdling shriek. Her hand-waving was, useless.
driver instantly stopped. In another few seconds he would have been hurtling toward town. The relieved woman was gracious Sough to wave her hand in gratitude. * >
THERE HAVE been numerous: OPPOYIDEIRE
to put my ‘whistle to good use. Countless cabs under all types of conditions, in different sections of the country, have screeched to a halt. If it hadn't been for the trusty whistle, I might not
.be- where I am today. I'd still be hunting a cab
in Cleveland. Best whistle is the tooth-and-lip.
In the first place, you don't stick any fihgers
in your mouth.(The fingers-in-the-mouth whistle usually is adequate enough in volume and many
By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Mar. 15—As a practicing disciple of the Horatio Alger school of economic endeavor I find myself in a high state of shock at the testimony of the witnesses in the RFC hearings.
. Old-fashioned honesty suddenly seems to be the
Iousiest policy a man may adopt to make himsel! a: dollar. Seems that the gov- 8 ernment tax structure makes it impractical. Looks like you just got to
read my news. You got to rig
to fiddle with the gimmicks;
Learn to Whistle, : Ill Come In Handy
BUT MY argument against it is that you never know when you'll need the whistle and you can't
. have clean fingers all the time. On a fishing trip, |
for example, when your fingers have touched
worms, crawfish and minnows, it would take a |
strong man to start whistling. If he didn't know my method, that is. Another thing, my whistle is fast. The second after you think you need to- whistle, you're whistling. Only requisites are teeth, lips, tongue
and lungs. Almost everyone T've ever .seen had
- those things. Best of all, the whistle has authority, range and piercing qualities. It's like a policeman’s whistle without the trill. > So NOW, if you have a set of lungs, set of teeth, pair of lips and tongue, get ready. In 10 minutes you'll be whistling. Understand, this is not an amateur show whistle. You can’t imitate birds or whistle pretty. This is an emergency blast, working effort. ~ Protrude your lower jaw until the lower teeth are slightly in front of the uppers. The lower lip should be stretched tightly by this action and the mouth ought to be open not more than a quarter of an inch. Get your tongue ready, Place this important part of the whistle across the lower lip, It should not protrude out of the mouth. Curl it enough that the tongue touches the front teeth from
* Sb GO OVER the directions for puckering up again. It is most important that all parts of the whistle be placed correctly. After you've checked, blow some more. tongue slightly then the lower jaw. Experiment. n't learn to. blow into a trumpet
Harry ES y win a the oper attitude and interest, you
sho .not ready to stop cabs or streetcars yet. Have patience. Practice. Make the’ whistle as much a part of you as the flick of your eyelid. Try for speed. Vary the pitch. Practice under all sorts of conditions. Should you have any trouble, drop me a line with a full explanation of what you are doing. You may be the type who has to buy A
New Way te Get Rich
80 then, after a five-year lease to Standard, Ex-Rep. Casey's companions sell the ships for $2.8 million “nearly all profit,” according to testimony. Mr. Casey picks up over a quarter-million as his end, subject only to the capital gains tax of 25 per cent. Twenty-five per cent of $270,000 leaves a keepable residue of over $200,000, a nice touch. I presume his 30-odd associates did comparably well. Here then, kiddies, is the lecture for the day: You get yourself a war, and let the governmént build you some ships. Then you lease the ships you don’t own for a big figure. Then you buy the ships with money you borrow with
Change the rpositions of the,
getting results in five minutes. You're-
Christ Praises Poor Widow For Her Great Sacrifice CHAPTER FIVE
By DR. EDGAR J. GOODSPEED
IN THE Court of the Women, raised above the floor level of | the great Court of the Gentiles, was located the treasury with a | row of trumpet-shaped receptacles for gifts, and many people of | wealth were putting in the gifts they had brought to Jerusalem. It was a conspicuous act of piety, and such ostentation in
benevolence had offended Jesus, before,
those hypocritical givers who, | as it. were, had a trumpet | sounded before them, to call | attention to their giving—that | is, gave as conspicuously as
| gift of a poor woman who | shyly dropped two little copper coins into one of the receptacles. Jesus was near enough to see the smallness of her contribu-
.| tion, and felt the relative great: . ness. of her sacrifice. He called.
His disciples to Hiny and said | to them, ” ” " “I TELL you, this poor widow has put in more than all these | others who have been putting | money into the treasury! For they gave of what they had to | spare, but she in her want has | put in everything she possessed
and led Him to denounce
EDITOR'S NOTE: For a world beset by trouble and evil, the Easter season brings a message of strength and hope, The
world today. A timely interpretation of this classic story has been written by Dr. Edgar J. Goodspeed, an outstanding New Testament authority.
eternity “that “spring afternoon in Jerusalem, Jesus saw man kind's future immensely fore: shortened. We call it apocalptic But to us today Macaulay's fan: tasy of the New Zealander ages hence dreaming” among the ruins of St. Paul's no longer seems amusing or remote. a." a 3 WE KNOW how near it cameo
Predicts Temple To Be Destroyed,
lamps and went out to meet the bridegroom.” Everyone rementbers the inimitable story. Five were wise, and took extra ofl for the tiny lamps they carried, but five were foolish and did not. Everyone knows their sad story; they were shut out of the wedding banquet. Another is the parable of the talents, the story of a man who entrustéd large sums of money to his slaves. The first and second went immediately to
The windows in the trolley were steamed up and the back. The top of the tongue should press | , gine, drama of Christ's last days on ,ho one could see her. { Nghlly . Te cutting edges. Now blow. Blow What especially caught Jesus’ earth, climaxed by the Resurrec- ork soe nls Duin Ton again. Harder. : : : sc . One short blast of my whistle and the trolley & | attention, however, was the tion, is full of lessons for the i BY
inquired about what they had done, they reported handsome gains. "But the third man distrusted his master, and buried his money in the ground, to keep it sale until hie return. This cau~ ‘tious procedure displeased his master very much; it was po way to deal with the gifts of life.
» » » THE THIRD, in some ways the grandest of all the parables, is that of the Last Judgment. The point of it is, why some . were approved and put on the.
was guarded constantly. Our two boys were kept home from school. In those days I slept with an Austrian-made 32 caliber pistol under my pillow. I still carry it in my handbag {| wherever I go. ” n » AFTER I came out of the shock over the trial, I sent the kids back to school. I began trying to figure out some way of “getting Bob home. There was hopé in March | when the Russian spy Valentin | Gubitshev might have been traded for Bob. But instead,
of mine. I don't ask questions about your motives for imprisoning my husband. I just want him back because I Jove him that's all.” I figured Rakosi must be human, and that my letter might do some good. I took it to the American Legation in Vienna and asked them to deliver it. Months later, I found out the legation never had made an effort to deliver it. ” on EJ SECRETARY OF State Acheson was to be in London in May attending a Foreign
of State Dean Acheson at the American Embassy to ask for help
in the release of her husband.
I got to London May 9 and hustled off to my hotel room, surrounded by secret
service people, There was a great to-do about how hard it was to get appointments with Mr. Acheson because he was so busy. After a day of this, I picked up the hotel phone, called the American Embassy, asked for Mr. Acheson's secretary, got her, and asked for an appoint-
was
THAT NIGHT, the Hungarjan supreme coyrt announced it had rejected the appeals of my
husband and the other defendants. The two Hungarians who had been sentenced to death already had been executed by the time the court made its decision public. 1 was supposed to have only 10 minutes with Mr. Acheson the next morning. We actually talked for more than an hour.
the winter. I'll probably go over briefly in the spring, and take the boys along to visit their grandfather, Willy Vogeler, in Jackson Heights, N. Y In December, I wrote another letter to Rakosi asking him te make 1951 a wonderful year by releasing my husband, and I enclosed a note to Bob to say I still loved him and that the boys and I were all right. The day before New Year's Eve, the Hungarian Legation secretary sent the two letters back with a curt note saying they could not be delivered.
vou got to get gay with the the ships you don't own as collateral. Then the U. 8S. simply gave him a Ministers’ conference, so I de- ment. She said she would call He was most charming. He Both letters had been badly capital gains. Otherwise the vou rent the ships you have rented before you free ride home to Russia. 1 cided to go there and see him right back. promised to do all he could to crumpled and were dirty. They taxes eat you and you wind up bought the ships you don’t own with money | have been given to understand about my husband’s case. That A man phoned in five min- help me. looked as though someone had with what the wise boys call that ain't yours. But you make the accounts here, however, that the Rus- was the only time I have been utes, and asked If I could come I said I'd commit murder, if wrapped his lunch in them. “no.” receivable payable to a foreign registry so that | slans wanted Gubitshev badly, outside Vienna since Bob ‘was around the next morning a bit necessary, to get my husband Tomorrow: Life In Vienna
“private gain. .a lot of people made money out of the Maritime . Commission, because people always have.
If there ever was a sermon in stones, it is in the testimony of former Congressman Joe Casey before the Senate Banking Committee, concerning manipulation of the Merchant Marine for 1 It was a pretty open secret that
Mr. Casey's blueprint on how you do it may be old stuff, in business, but it's a sad commentary on the times. * 4 9 MR. CASEY admitted under questioning that
vou do not have to pay any tax tribute to the Uncle Sam. who built your ships from taxpayers’ money. & o THEN YOU SELL the ships for a fat chunk of profit after a five-year profitable, tax-free rental. And then you take the most benevolént form of profit taxation in capital gains, the only
way-—outside the dispensation granted the oil business-—that a man can hive up a buck for his
| and would have been willing to
About People—
arrested 15 months ago.
before nine. I had my date.
back. The Secretary said ‘nego-
after the trial.
Don’t Cheat On Your Income Tax, Psychiatrist Warns
| Dodgers May Pay Tenfold for Treatment Of Resulting Nervous Ills, Specialist Says
‘A widely-known Stamford. Conn., psychiatrist, warned today-=-
Philadelphia hosiery shop yesterday - kiss from the cashier to boot.
Mrs. Barbara Cohen, 20, said
by Maj. Lee Van Gossick,
of two. The Worthington. O.,
will receive two degrees tomorrow
31; for war, - and got a “half-hearted” year-old married man and father such matches. could wind up LOFH-—-“Left on
instead of frowning on because the girls
student Father's Hands.”
old age. This is the new road to riches, This is : she wasn’t even gaing to tell po- . he Peued Up. seat §2i0000 on ap jnvestigent the big skin game. on the income tax deadline—that cheating on returns might Pave |ice about the gunman's amorous after accumulating a five-year Evidence es “Here is a lL Pos a > 8 P To travel this road, of course, violates nothing the Way for a nervous preakdown. attempt, but they noticed her Point-hour average of 3.99 out of} y . cyaire 34, burlesque strip : } } legal. It depends on whom you know, what in- “For every $100 a man saves by fraud on his tax return,” said lipstick was smeared. a possible 4. The perfect 4-point, per billed as the “Hourglass
Two firms paid $10 million to the Maritime Commission for five tankers. Leased them, then to Standard Oil. Mr. Casey says he and the other stockholders only had to get up 100 grand to buy $10 million worth-of boats, because they were able to borrow $10 million from an insurance company because the ships were considered the security on the loan—the ships, and the fact that Mr. Casey had already received a charter from the ail company before he procured the yessels.
fluence you command, what strings you pull The tithes that are levied on the ordinary people are your capital investment. All you do 1s sucker your own government into providing the necessaries in order to allow you to make a big score and skip the penalty of heavy taxation, which falls to us unsmart guys this week. It is merely a shame that Mr. Jeff Peters, the old confidence man, is not around today to profit by the new techniques in the conversion of rags
Dr. Stanley R. Dean, “he may spend 100 sleepless nights and $1000 in mental and nervous health. I have seen it happen.” The 43-year-old specialist said Fora, alt ny - Yea give the dog two walks daily, and his large private practice normal- hired dog-sitters to take care of
{ly increases e f A har very years after “Bubbles” while she worked.
High-Flying Peeper | Taze Eikoff, a Madison, Wis.,
pilot, yesterday was stripped of his license for six months by
No Hard Feelings
Screen
star Elizabeth Taylor was squired to a swank night
wood home
Day for a Queen
Singing actress Doris Day, who missed being named queen by University of Mississippi st udents because a long - distance call to her Holly-
-decide whether or
or straight "A." achieved at Ohio State.
Another Try?
Heiress Barbara Hutton will fly ofrom Mexico City to New York tonight to “think things over” and
has never been
Girl.” knows how to prove a case to Oakland, Cal, police. Miss Claire contended that the comedian of the show, Bruce
i (Brooks, 45, objected to her smake gE ing backstage so violently that he threw her to the floor. asked for proof of the charge,
Police
Sure enough, there was a brujse,
{right where the sand would be
late In the hour.
od o> to riches. Jeff would have tossed away his green the Civil Aeronautics Board for spot in Palm souldn't get her a THE CHARTER fees were paid to one of the goods in great disgust, in order to batten on 10: puzzing a nudist colony at a Springs, Cal, re- tq the phone, Rot She wi} again ceriniramni companies which was not subject t6 United States the more modern methods of extracting gold | nheigh¥of 150 feet. | cently by her di- gaid today the attemp o di- Research t Elas- taxes, since it flew a Panamanian flag. from somebody else's turnip. vine i vorced husband. mixup has been vorce Prince Igor o Be Talked + fit. en A Dog s Life? hotel heir Con- straightened out. Troubetzkoy. She “Germ free life research” at 5 Says lllicit Love Drove G su cur, 8 ry Ne a ir ra eB roo Tope in I 25 ays ici ove ro ve rocer nsane [York ex-model, retained custody | ton Jr., accord- cured her crown » Se C e n Miss ‘Hutton 1 ro n bi ¢ oilghlip : Watkiy . tf “Bubbles,” her fastidious ing to friends, yesterday by Si. jluneheon pf te Tdianagolis Guts io ubbles, ou > } (mist club tomorrow at the Hotel
who added: “It doesn’t, look like a rec-|
DETROIT, Mich. Mar. 15 (UP) Sampson, 39, was gripped by “con- in a blue nightgown, was found
| ho » nesia the along a lonely road. The thought of prolonging an|verted hysteria” and am ORE 8 lonely TOAD. oF three
calling the Ox- Miss Day (ford, Miss, college youths to ex-
Perish the Thought |Severin. Don't let your daughters be
{grocery executive Billy Seaman,
with illicit love affair drove a swarthy night Mrs. Vivian Stanley, 37, children. has admitted havin g/by Proving in court how much plain that the first call had been i ’ i 1 LOFH, warns Miss Jessie Harris, hite. grocer to temporarily insanity, ac- was strangled with a man's belt. Sexual relations “at least rg she had spent on care and feeding | Miss Taylor sueiliation. Yel intercepted by an over-eager stu- 1.4" tho University of Tennes- Honor Student : je cording to a psychiatrist testify- ls Shvipeon previously il poll times with pi gn Brg Sot. sald she had moveq Whether it was a date or whether /dio telephone operator. sev howe economics college, Knox- pli Huet aver. 3120 XN, “ ed he remem nothin eir 25-year ville. Tenn. | . ne In the “blue nightgown mur-, ” time he struggled with Mrs. testified he had been trying to/from a “no-dogs-allowed” hotel to c ih - WE to meet” Papa Knows Best Miss Harris told the fathers of student at Pennsylvania State er Arial. Stanley until he awakened In an break off their relationship. buta less fussy place, had bought WASH an aress The all-time record in scholas- Knoxville's Rotary Club yester- College. An engineering: semior, Dr, George J. Winton testitied empty automobile. that Mrs. Stanley threatened to, ithe poodle hamburgers costing A warm-hearted bandit took tis achievement at Ohio State day they should encourage their he had an average of 2.73 last ASSON'S yesterday that Samuel B. (Buddy) | Mrs. Stanley's body, clad only tell his wife, : : ‘$1. 08 each, had paid belihope to $435 from the cash register of a University to date has been set daughters to marry men bound semester. rs » * » i x 8 . 1 . Site ( i i : 3 A ° 3 - 4
dT
