Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1951 — Page 15
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23, 1951 ——" | pace | ale. | I AND VET CO. ; Hl. 8993
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Outside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola -
WASHINGTON, May ‘25—Interviewing Margaret Truman is a pleasure. It will be a treat to sail on the America with her for England.
There was no trouble at all-to get into the east wing of the White House, where Miss Truman was holding the press conference. a“,
The guard at the gate had my name on the .sheet and said he recognized the name. "This groundwork was laid by a capable ScrippsHoward lady by the name of Marshall Coles. In Washington, if no one else can get it," Miss Coles can. - I was the only male reporter in the east wing. Fourteen ladies of the press looked down their noses at me. Almost made me blush. Miss Truman sat on theadesk in front of the room. The news hens and I sat on folding chairs. facing her. She was wearing a light .blue dress, string oi pearls and black, high-heeled ghoes. Smart. ~*~. by
24 Aigcny » e’ s « %
ONE OF the lady reporters had a question
“about how the interview ought to be conducted. *
Miss Truman said, “Whatever you want to dg is all right with me.” - i Then the ladies began firing questions. One of the first questions was about singing in Europe. Miss Truman said she wouldn't sing, not even on the last night of the ocean voyage. That's supposed to be the big party night. Miss Truman didn't know whether Princess Margaret or Princess Elizabeth would be at the dock in South Hampton to greet her. She plans to stay at American Embassies during the first part of her trip in England and on the Continent. Her itinerary will take her from England to France, Holland. Belgium, Luxembourg and Italy. og While in Italy she will have a private audience with Pope Pius XII. Miss Truman said anyone traveling in a ‘“semi-official” capacity, as she is, “would be rude” not to make arrangements for a visit with the head of the Catholic Church. One thing that interested me was that Miss Truman isn’t packed and hasn't even started. She plans, however. to take three bags and a hand kit. There won't he a going-away party and she expects only her mother to see her off in New York Saturday.
it Happened Last Night
By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, May 23—Joe Frisco, the comedians’ comedian, now 61, just came to NY from Hollywood, the first time in seven years, to appear on the Milton Berle show. He gets about $1500 for his performance. Talking about how little Berle will let him do on the show, Joe said, “You may not s-s-see me. All I do is g-go past in a j-jet plane with the c-c-c-curtain down.”
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GRACE HARTMAN, the great dancer, tells friends she’s going to Nevada this month to divorce Paul Hartman, husband of 29 yrs, ‘and hints she’ll wed Comedian Norman Abbott, young nephew of Bud Abbott. Greta Garbo agreed to do a movie comeback
for MGM providing John Gunther’ll do the scenario. The Capitol Theater takes off stage shows after July 1. A PLAYWRIGHT famous for plagiarizing
great musicals—rewriting them slightly, giving
them a new title _—had just seen.the opening of .
his latest burglary. A woman leaving the show said to her companion. “Wasn't that a terrible show?” “Look at her!” snorted the playwright. doesn’t like ‘The Student Prince'!” BERT WHEELER was discussing the fame of the George Jessel funeral eulogies. When the late wit, Willie«Collyer, was dying. he called his friend Walter Catlett. “Will you grant me one dying request®” asked Collyer. “Certainly,” said Catlett. “What is it?” “Don’t tell Jessel,” said Collyer. : At the funeral Frank Craven, paying the tribute, said: “Willie Collyer was a man who loved a laugh.” “Yes,” chimed in Catlett, “if he got it.” Mrs. Collyer said to Catlett, “That's right, Walter.”
“She
oe
THE MIDNIGHT EARL: Dagmar. a Chi stripteaser, is suing TV's Dagmar for $50,000 claiming usurpation of the name (price of fame) , , .
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, May 23-2There are a number of cliches about raising a man up the way he shall go and bending the twig, and such like, which is why I am happy to see that the University of Missouri has gone straight athletically. Missouri has announced an intention to pay its “amateur” athletes openly. The aim is altogether commendable. We flung high the hands in horror at the hasketball bribe scandals and we have noted a deplorable tendency toward double-dealing by this generation. The hypocrisy of the colleges, and of sports in general, I firmly believe to have been a heavy nail in the coffin of our national character.
Most of our major universities are in the bribe-and-corruption business, and have been since I can remember. The manly art of selfdefense is rotten from the top down. There are few nastier businesses than off-field baseball. Amateur tennis players are generally called
Jean Wallace,
Miss Truman Tops At Press Interview
+ I MANXGED to get a word in here and there, I discovered that Miss Truman doesn't plan to swim in the America’s pool. In'fact, she doesn't know how to swim. : “Would you like to learn?" I asked. “No, I don't think so,” she answered. That did away with any plans I had for talking to her on the trip. Something new has to be figured out. Remember that I'm traveling cabin class and that means I'll have to stay on B deck. Around the pool, where all passengers may frolic, I planned to get most of my dope. Miss Truman was askea if she thought an: about shipboard romance. She laughed and asked how that was possible witli Secret service agenis around and "that newspaperman.” She nodded in my direction. “
rr
1 tried to convince Miss Truman that my pas-. .
sage was booked without the knowledge that she would ‘be on board. : “A likely story’. she chuckled, swaying on the desk. w “Oh, ‘well, then maybe Ili "MM Truman added. 7
$8
believe you
LI
. foal pide 4 SHE HAS NO worries about experiencing any difficulties aboard the America. “I'm a good
sailor and I'll be on a good boat-—ship,”’ Miss"
Truman said, correcting herself quickly on the classification. The ladies asked the President's ahout her plans for traveling. to do much night-clubbing. her own hair and lingerie.
daughter She doesn’t expect She will take care of She wants to see as
much as she can. Her father told her what historic buildings to see for their “interesting architecture.” One of the last questions to be asked was: “Have you had any thoughts on the Great
Debate?” Miss Truman looked perplexed. between movies and television?” Miss Truman's secretary Joe Short, stepped in, The press interview was over. The daughter of the President of the United States. who was trying awfully hard to go abroad like any other American citizen, slid off the desk and graciously accepted the many wishes for a pleasant journey. Margaret Truman is a good gal.
"Do you mean
-
Joe Frisco's Back With Good Crack
Beautiful Ana Van de Rovaart of the Latin Quarter weds ex-dancer Frank Terry (now in TV) Fred Allen’'ll be godfather of Herb Shriner's dtr , . . Fred goes to Chicago to appear on Dave Garraway's show Barry Gray's crack: “There's nothing wrong with the movies, except movies” , . . The Bob Crosbys will soon be one ahead of the Bing Crosbys in chillun. GOOD RUMOR MAN: Jolly threesome lunching at the Savoy Plaza. Franchot Tone: his ex, and her rumored next, Cornel Wilde . . . Bill (Riviera) Miller announces Lena Horne confirmed a September engagement with his club by telegram. The Copacabana, which wants her then, refuses to believe it Barbara Hutton's better after that minor operation . . . Is columnist Frank Coniff go- i ing to become a brother-in-law | of Alfred Gwyinne Vanderbilt? WHO'S NEWS: Paris gossip is that Aly Khan wants to put up only $1.5 million in trust for Yasmin . . . Today's daily dou- £! ble: Robert Preston and Peggy ! Lee . . . Ralph Kiner will open a Pittsburgh restaurant Georgette Windsor and her new Mexican husband are expecting. Violeta Velero, the ex rumba band leader who became a singer of popular opera, made her debut at Carl Fischer Hall. She’s the wife of comedy writer Coleman Jacoby. :
Violeta Velero
o * ° o oe oe
TODAY'S BEST TALE: A politician asked a farmer, “How's the sentiment around here?" The farmer answered: “Not bad. There were six cars parked in my lane last night."—Oral Hygiene.
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WISH I'D SAID THAT: In “Flahooley" ‘the Bairds call the world of puppets ‘the Brotherwood of Man.” , ,. That's Earl, brother.
‘No Such Thing as Good. Clean Sport’
of tough-thewed young coal heavers with minds of pure muscle. In some instances professors were even forced to phony up their educational creed and issue lying reports in order to keep people eligible whose mentality was cuts lower than a hog's etiquet. In deifying the athlete we have built a false god, morally, for our young to worship. Athletics, as we know them today, are a manifestation” of force, with ‘the emphasis on result. Even table tennis can be vicious, and the most completely unsporting, vindictive game I know is croquet. The heroes of the young are more apt to be the mugs than the nice ones, because, as Leo Durocher once remarked, nice guys don't win. More dirty work goés on on a football field than in the average political hotel room deal— and, dirty as it is, it's a lot dirtier in the offices of the bland alumni and educators who run it.
~The Indianapolis Times
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“~=ACROSS
En CHAPTER: ELEVEN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 1951 !
THE CLOSER we came into contact with the sea
»
“On my Phi Delta honor it's true.” TF countered.
and what had its home there, the less strange it became and the more at home we oumselves felt. - And ve. leayned to respect the old primitive peoples
> i who lived i’ ¢lose conve®se with the Pacific and therefore
knew it from a quite different standpoint from our-own. True, w= have now estimat- —
. i. little farther north titan the ed its salt content and giv- 5int we seemed to be making
en tunnies and dolphins for so we laid the steering oar Latin names. They had not Over to starboard and trimmed done that. But. nevertheless, the square sail so that the bow
1 am afraid that the picture the «
primitive people¥ had of the sea was a truer one than oars. There were not many fixed marks out here at sea. Waves and fish, sun and stars, came and went. There was not supposed to be land of any sort in the 4300 sea miles that separated the South Sea Islands from Peru. We were therefore greatly surprised when we approached 100 degrees west and discovered that a reef was markéd on the Pacific chart right ahead of us on the course we were following. I* was marked as a small circle, and, as the chart had been issued the same year, we looked up the reference in “Sailing Directions for South America.” We read that “breakers were reported in 1906 and again in 1926 to exist about 600 miles southwestward of Galapagos Islands, in latitude 6 degrees 42 minutes S., longitude 99 degrees 43 minutes W. In 1927 a steamer passed one mile westward of this position but saw no indication of breakers, and in 1934 another passed ene mile southward and saw no evidence | of breakers. The motor vessel | ‘Cowrie,’ in 1935, obtained no | bottom at 160 fathoms in this position.” > .
= on = ACCORDING io the chart the place was clearly still regarded as a doubtful one for shipping, but, as a deep-rdraught vessel runs a greater risk. by going too near a shoal than we should wits: a raft, we decided to steer | straight for the point marked on the chart and see what we
i
Dr. G. L. Hartman
Heads Conference On Social Work
by the election of Dr. Grover L.
the 1951-'52 president of
Work. . The conference ’ lis a national? body and in lcludes represen‘tatives of many d e n 0 minations. Dr. Hartman, director of the social service department of the Indianapolis Church Federation, was elected at the recent annual meeting of the conference in Atlantic City. Dr. Hartman's #epartment the Church Federation is a Red Feather agency. As president ot the national conference. he will preside at its sessions this time next year in Chicago. He was conference program chairman in 1950 and vice president, this year. : The Church Conference of Social Work meets in conjunction |with the National Conference of {Social Work. It also strives for | among Protestant
Dr. Hartman
of
“found. ~The reef was marked a
pointed roughly north and we took seas and wind from the starboard side. Now it came about that a little more Pacific splashed into our sleeping bags than we were accustomed to, especially as at the time the weather began to freshen considerably. But we saw to our satisfaction that the Kon-Tiki could be maneuvered surely and steadily at a surprisingly wide angle into the wind, so long as the
wind was still on our quarter.
Otherwise the sail swung round, and we had the same mad circus business to get the raft under control: again. For two days and nights we drove the raft north-northwest. The seas ran high and became incalculable as the trade wind began to fluctuate between southeast and east, but we were lifted up and down over all the waves that rushed against us: We had a constant lookout at the masthead, and when we rode over the ridges the horizon widened considerably. ” n “2 THE CRESTS of the seas reached six feet above the level of the roof of the bamboo cabin and, if two vigorous seas rushed together, they rose still higher in combat and flung up a hissing watery tower which might burst down in unexpected directions. When night came, we barricaded the doorway with provision boxes, but it was a wet night's rest. We had hardly fallen asleep when the (first crash on the bamboo wall came and, while a thousand jets of
DiSalle Says He's Developing Allergy to Meat
test
the generally.” Church Conference. of Social
Rep. August H. Andresen Minn.)
shops. Mr. DiSalle said no.
dresen asked.
“I didn’t say I didn't like it,
(the portly official replied.
“Can’t you afford it?” Rep. An-
dresen persisted.
“I probably could afford it,” Mr. DiSalle said, ‘but there is somemeat that has disturbed me in the last few days.’
thing about
| 5Siar Finale
NEW “YORK, May 23 (UP) -— The newly-formed “Sustain MacArthur Committee” hired Carnegie Hall for a meeting last night. They paid $750 for the 2760-seat hall, another: $150 for the 40 employees on duty. Thirty-nine people attended.
WASHINGTON, May 23 (UP) Price Stabilizer Michael V. DiSalle, whose beef price rollback Indianapolis has been honored order has brought a storm of pro-
asked Mr. DiSalle if he
THE PACIFIC ON
tain through the bamboo wickerwork, a . foaming torrent
rushed in over the provisions.
and on to us. “Ring up the plumber,” I heard a sleepy voice remark, as we hunched ourselves up to give ‘the water roorh to. run put through the floor.. The plumber did not come, and we had a lot of bathwater in our beds that night. A big dolphin actually came on board unintentionally in Herman's watch Next day the seas were less confused, as the trade wind had decided that it would now blow for a time from due east. We relieved one another at the masthead, for now we might expect to reach the point we were making for late in the afternoon. We noticed more life than usual in the sea that day. Perhaps it was only because we kept a better lookout than usual. n » » DURING the forenoon we saw a big swordfish approaching the raft close tb the surface. The two shurp pointed fins which stuck up out of the water were six feet apart, and the sword looked almost as long as the body. The swordfish swept in a curve close by the man at the helm and dis-
appeared behind the wave crests. When we were having a
rather wet and salty midday meal, the carapace, head, and sprawling fins of a large sea turtle were lifted up by a hissing sea right in front of our noses. When that wave gav? place to two others, the turtle was gone as suddenly as it had appeared. This time too we saw the gleaming whitish-green of . dolphins’ “bellies tumbling about in the water below the armored reptile. The area was unusually rich in tiny flying fish an inch long, which sailed along in big shoals and often came on board. We also noted single skuas and were regularly visited by frigate birds, with forked tails like giant swallows, which cruised over the raft. Frigate birds are usually regarded as
Railways Crying Despite $23,298 Profit in April
Lamented W. Marshall president of Railways:
“The trend is in the right direc-| of a panel discussion of the istion. But the increased revenue sues raised by Gen. MacArthur. from the recent fare increase is| He covered the Korean War fro |disappointing. It is not what we/its start. :
thought it would be,” ‘Not in Immediate Future’
Asked if his statement meant «jr hat Railways was going to ask rr» Mr. |
for another Dale replied:
fare increase,
“I don’t know. Not in the im-
mediate future, anyway.”
In March, the transit company reported a net profit of $20,148.05
= HEVERDAH] A RAFT—
a sign ‘that land is near, and area surveyed and free from the optimism on board in- shallows of any kind, we set
creased. or sail and laid the oar over in nono. its usual place, so that wind and “PERHAPS there is a reef sea were again on our port
or a sandbank there all the same,” some of us thought. And the most optmistic said: “Suppose we find a little. green grassy island—one can. never know since.-so. few people have been here before. Then we'll have discovered a new land
quarter. . . And so we went on with the raft on her natural free coursé. The waves came and went as before between the open logs aft. We could now sleep and eat dry, even if the heaving seas around us took charge in
The city’s transit system today | decisive victory in Korea, acfrom cattlemen ‘and farm showed a net profit for the second
: : congressmen, said today he has consecutive month since Indianap‘Hartman of this city to serve as geyeloped “an allergy to meat|olis Railways boosted fares, but|Prize winning correspondent of company officials pulled out their The Indianapolis Times and Chi(R. crying towels anyway. In the utility's monthly report, was eating any of the $8 steaks filed this morning with the state {available in Washington butcher Public Service Commission, the |firm reported it made a net profit
“Don’t you eat meat?” Rep. An- Of $23,298.09 for April. Dale. Congress Hotel.
—Kon-Tiki Island.” earnest and raged for several
From noon onward Erik was days while the trade wind. more: and more diligent in vacillatéd from east to ‘southclimbing up on the kitchen box east.
The next great stage on our voyage was as invisible to the eye as the shoal which existed oniy on the map. It was the 45th day at sea; we had adutes west. We were one sea vanced from the 78th degree mile due east of the reef on of longitude to the 108th and the chart. The bamboo yard were exactly halfway to the was lowered and the sail rolled first islands ahead. Thera were up on deck. The wind was due over 2000 sea miles between us east and would take us slowly and South America to the east, right to the place. and it was the same distance When the sun went down on to Polynesia in the west.
swiftly into the sea, the full a moon in turn shone out in all THE NEAREST land in any its brilliance and lit up the reclion yas ‘ n ipagod surface of the sea, which un- Islands to east-nort eas Ea dulated in black and silver Taster Jsiang® ue a oy from horizon to horizon. Visibil- hs EA ity from the masthead was ,-." coon a ship, and ‘we good. We saw breaking seas never ‘did see one, } $ use we SVerywiiese in long Tow, but, were off the routes of all ordiRo regular suff Which. wen nary shipping traffic in the
and standing blinking through the sextant. At 6:20 p.m. he reported our position as latitude 6 degrees 42 minutes south by longitude 99 degrees 42 min-
indicate a reef or shoal. No Pacific one would turn in; all stood But we did not really feel looking out eagerly, and two ,... onormous distances, for
or three men were aloft at once. ¢ ~ ” ~
the horizon glided along with us unnoticed as we moved and AS WE drifted in over: the our own floating. world remained always the same—a center of the marked area, we _ > ~ circle lung up to the vault of sounded all the time. All the lead sinkers we had on board the sky with the raft itself as center, while the same stars
were fastened to the end of a nigh 54-thread silk rope more than Tile on over us t after
500 fathoms long, and, even if , 4s the rope hung rather aslant on TOMORROW-—A close brush account of the rafts leeway, at with disaster, when two of the any rate the lead hung at a en out in the little rubber depth of some 400 fathoms. dinghy taking photographs of the raft, drifted farther than
There was no bottom east of the place, or in the middle of they thought and almost didn’t get back. $
it, or west of it. We took one last look over the surface of the sea, and,
From the book. ‘‘Kon- —Across the when we had snared ouiseives. [iS 2 Air RE ME that we could safely call the oi™ finns Bradman: *
bune Syndicate.)
Korea Reporter
High Winds, Rain Sees No Decision,
Just Some ‘Deal’ Damage Property cucacaits™s — nef} Thee Counties
United Nations never will win a High winds whistled high over Indianapolis yesterday and pounced on Hancock and Henry Counties, = causing considerable property damage. Chief damage in Indianapolis, aside from a sudden deluge of .29 inches of rain and 48 mph gusts, was in. the home of Mrs. Harry Ritter, 2046 N. La Salle St. While Mrs. Ritter and her two children, Susie, 5, and Harry, 2, were sitting on their front porch, lightning struck the house, igniting the curtains and shades in the living room. A neighbor, Mrs. Walter Spiller, 2044 N. LaSalle St., quickly ripped down the “blazing draperies and stamped out the fire with her feet,
Lights Knocked Out
Only other damage was scorching of edges of a rug in the room.
Lightning also knocked out the
|
cording to Keyes Beech, Pulitzer
cago Daily News foreigntservice.
“The best we can get is some sort of deal,” he told delegates to a meeting of the Inland Daily Press Association meeting in the
Mr. Beech spoke as a member
He said that expanding the war in the Far East, as proposed by MacArthur, would be wise only e are ready for World War
“If we carry the war into] China, the Russians will come in,” he predicted. = “ n
MR. BEECH said that despite
after raising fares from 12 cents! the failure of Gen. MacArthur’s| traffic lights at 38th and Illinois
fo’ 15 cehtls or two: tokens for a| intelligence earlier in the war, he Sts, for several hours. The bolt
quarter.
In the two preceding months, vVinced “of his infallibility and
| (Gen. MacArthur) is still con- knocked out the control box. A tree was blown down at 4618
however, the company lost a total Would be willing to get us into a Graceland Ave.
lof $74,044.91 because of “adverse|thir 'winter conditions.” Thus, the firm shows a loss ex-| ceeding $30,000 for the first four opinion, and you won't find it in
ar world war to prove he 18| "‘opier storm damage came In
| b! | Hancock County where winds up This is purely my Jersonalito 70 mph were reported near | Greenfield. Several farm build.
Nor is it any less filthy by associatieh with the |cO-operation Golf Tourney Set months of the year. any of my stories,” he added.
bums. Amateur athletics broadly are ridden : i ; s and for the im- i eer eee [ings were damaged. With Politics and are. redolint of che ness, gamblers who have long since recognized the im- social Woners DS ari for Members of the Indianapolis . The storm finally dissipated in . : : : portance of winning, the people, and who have provement a oo Service proj- Real Estate Board hold their first $50,000 for Flood Relief Bronx Zoo Gets Henry County after passing three Bde keyed their grimy livelihood to greed. Chun rrela : ! "golf tournament of the year at WASHINGTON, May 23 (UP) | miles south of Knightstown, THERE IS LITERALLY no such thing as 5 e+ @ 5, the Indianapolis Country Club to- — President Truman has alle- New Baby Gorilla rts esos “good, clean sport” in the old Dick Merriwell SPORTS are great fun and are exciting. but morrow. Fred C. Tucker Jr. is cated $50,000 from his emergency y Good Reception Ahead
chairman and Leon Sullivan vice fund for flood relief in areas chairman of the tournament com- stricken by the flooded Minnesota
Prep Ballplayers
they have been largely spoiled for me through the
! NEW YORK, May 23 (UP)— years of association with the dirty end. They cer-
Mambo, a sad-faced baby gorilla, For Shortwave Fans
sense, yet our youth is raised to worship sports
Set)
league aspects of it. It is almost like sending a : o week is a d time t ick hild to th : Some of the best athletes I remember had — Eight members of the Terre L | 5 | : | t Makoko, who drowned in a zoo 4 2 g00Q UMe lo pied up 3 back « 0 the penitentiary to learn philosophy, more Ki-yi in them than an average stray cur Haute Wiley High School base- oca e er S a uie moat last week foreign stations on your radio. Long ago, we kicked over the cliche about it yon the chips were really scattered, and I do not ball team escaped serious injury : Shortwave radio broadcasts will matters not who won or lost, but how well, et ,... any startling characteristics of ‘decency Yesterday when a pickup truck in Observer on Potomac Tour The zoo purchased the scrawny, come through fairly well tomorcetera. The point today is winning, no holds Ho tna ill oy: In hey were riding hit a 16-pound. 18-month-0ld Mambo row and Thursday, and quite well honesty or generosity that could be directly traced Which they r g {from animal dealer H Tref- | 2, easy- Herren. to the playing field. ! tree and overturned, spilling five By DAN KIDNEY ticular attention, as It did all the [fien yestirday. + | Yr (Friday, Saturday and Sunday, ' y The colleges have shopped openly for talent And. so I greatly admire the University of Mis- Of the boys into the street. “Times Staff Writer other spelling champs from re TA Martini wh wakes] 25° forecasters at the National for years, and have paid some players more than souri for a little honesty of action in hiring the Police said Larry Shannon. 17. wASHINGTON, May 23—If throughout the country care of the nursery ih the! BULtaY of Standards predict, their full professors. They paid them under the players openly and for dough instead of deceit. told them one of the truck wheels ,;) or tha 51 spelling bee cham-| En route to Mt. Vernon by bus, bawling gorilla a nS oy put | Reception wi be Sisturbed by table and in dark corners, and created phony There is nothing morally wrong with paying |aPparently locked as he drove his i,q were as reticent as Gretch- stops were made to visit the Rob- him to bed. She was attend him | por Siena S an 1a Rg the Seat EEN! jobs for the muscle men. They promised every- a player for his services, but the way we have teammates to a practice field. He op Grosdidier, The Indianapolis ert E. Lee home, Arlington Na-/for at least a year, when he will | gate 3Y8 of TNeR\ Week, ‘hey thing from blondes to Buicks as bribes, and com- been skirting it for years has certainly not con- |WaS charged with operating. a mimes wnner, all would be quiet tional Cemetery and the tomb of be taken to Makoko's cage. : on peted bitterly with one another for the services tributed to the moral health of the nation. jmotor vehicle without a drivers ,),,o tne Potomac when they the Unknown Soldier. Also visited ems sae A ' license, police said. : return here from Mt. Vernon by were the historic shrines in Alex- Doubts Teen-Agers Go Socialist Labor — |. Only one of the bovs was taken y,q,¢ 1ate this afternoon. andria. Va., so closely connected er 8 . . Party to C \ to a hospital. Malcolm Marks, 17. mhirteen - year -old Gretchen's with the life of George Washing- On Thrill Pill Jags arty 1o Lonvene suffered head and shoulder in- ,)4er gister, Carol, was The Times ton. , DENVER. May -23 (UP) The annual state convention ust S S Juries when he was dumped from yi ner jast year. She was the Tonight is the ball game and NY Yih y & of the Socialist Labor Party of the rear of the truck. His injuries «jira of the-party” type. while tomorrow morning is free. To- Charges that Denver teenagers Indiana will be held in G . lag . ary next : . > were not believed Serious, Gretchen is more gravely gay. morrow afternoon the spellers are buying sleeping pills for Sunday. QV as Raber G. Ingersoll a minister's son? Q—Are kangaroo hides of commercial value? , That she doesn't miss any- will visit the U. 8. Naval «php jags” are “grossly exag- Charles Ginsberg, 2201 N. KeyA 8 well-known lecturer was the son of A—Yes. The hide is made into handsome Sam S Subway Owners thing, however, was shown by her Academy at Annapolis, Md. ; 4" | _'stone Ave. state secretary of a ( ongregationalist minister. He attracted pub- leather goods and ‘the hair coat into rugs or . . comments this morning after a Tomorrow night is boning up ap gerate ." police officials said to the party, sald the principal hicity as’ a lecturer against Christianity and was clothing. Named n $12,000 Suit visit to the National Art Gallery, those big words and early to bed. day. speaker ‘will be Joseph Pirinein, called “the great agnostic, . . on o> Owners of Sam's Subway, North where some of the greatest paint- For the Scripps-Howard sonsored | Wendell Vincent, regional chief Cleveland, who is scheduled to > Te” ! Q—Do_ owls and hawks have gizzards like Side restaurant, today were sued, Ings of the world are housed. 24th national spelling bee gets the U. 8. Food and Drug-Ad- discuss the “Phony Socialism” Q—What is peculiar about the 21st chapter quails and chickens? for $12,000 on breach of contract She gazed at the madonnas of under way at the National Press ministration here. said last week [Of Great Britain. : of the Book of Acts” A—Was, Birds have two stomachs, the second charges by Steeg Drug Co. ‘the early Italian school in com-|Club auditorium ‘at. 7:30 a. m. ’ ? HORI A—This ch : te : ! {plete admiration and termed|(Indianapolis Time) Frida y./that several of Denver's leading’ 8 chapter ends with a comma, the sub- one being called the gizzard. Sam Hochman and his two) “ a ‘Model Plane Fan Hurt Ject-matter remaining unbroken by the introduc- Wo sons, Harry and Saul, were them “perfect.” As an 8th grade There will be a big banquet foridrug stores were being investi-| NNINGS tion of the succeeding chapter. This is the only Q—Is “Dixiegop” a coined name? named defendants. (pupil at St. Patrick's Catholic the new national champion and gated in the sale of barbiturates ln Fall From Roof chapter in the B : . |School, Gretchen is used to seeing all the participants at the Willard ‘napter in the Bible that does not end with a A—Dixiegop, is a name coined from Dixiecrat The complaint charges that the replicas of such religio t. Here Hotel Frid ight {to youngsters. | A model airplane enthusiast Box style. period. plus GOP, designating Dixiecrats and certain Hochmans agreed to lease space oe he aE A ope Se Haay Js Loretta Gros-| “As far as I'm concerned, this|was injured yesterday as he at. hn We Republicans who oppose some of the details of for a new restaurant in a new, y : hole thing has bee oss] ; multicolor D th 1 Je the President's Fair Deal tall ls : 1350. W 1 | Joyed them immensely. |didier. 1502 Draper St., accom-|Whole ng has n grossly tempted to retrieve his craft from ; Q--Daes the earth travel sround the sun, or nts Fal Deal. especially civil rights. |Steeg Drug Store at 1350 W. 16th" ‘garijer there had been a trip panied her daughter, Carol, to the exaggerated.” said Capt. Verne|a rooftop in the 3400 block N. v stripes. She sua around the earth. : * NS St. last year. ‘then moved out tnrough the FBI. That she found bee here. This year Mrs. Norma McCoy, chief of the Police Morals Illinois St. e ~The earth moves around the sun. Q—Do any. foreigners hold membership in the after one month, - interesting in an entirely different Koster, who usually comes as Bureau. "| The “pilot,” Tommy Thomas, Nose U. 8. Jockey Club? Th firm was forced | ; ! n. width 3.50 Quan Oe TT Won UisL Engiivh Derby . re Pay the. tasisibitais shor ’ £urvs rm was ores 10 fis. way. The John Dillinger collec- escort, is with Gretchen. Mrs. r “I have heard that two pills in 12, of R. R. 13, struck the back 4 width 4.50 Awieor se ung ] : ET e mous English sports- sume debts on equipment bought tion of guns. clothes and other Koster is director of special a glass of beer gives you an awful of his head when he fell about . n. y No Bechiise. it 3s. race. Tob iar man e oa y opienet holding honorary, mem- to furnish the restauranj, the mementoes of the notorious Indi- events for the Indiagapolis Park jag—but that's a pretty expensive 1@ feet from the roof of ys N. i . , | e year-olds. bership e U.S. oe ey Club, # | Suit stated: ;ana bandit drew-Gretchen's par- Board. ny v way to get your kicks,” he said. | nois 8t. | . ” I~ * 3 * en ; . : . . 4 : . : £ E Ray rt ] - ' ! 3 - sy i i 5 a a iis pss ATI, . : wy =~ =a SE = in rr
and pattern its adult life on the early example of
sport, especially the professional and major
tainly do not build character or develop decency or improve the breed. I do not even think they enlarge a competitive spirit that isn’t already there.
Have Close Call
TERRE HAUTE, May 23 (UP)
mittee.
River.
frolicked in the Bronx Zoo nursery today-—the replacement for
By Science Service
WASHINGTON, May 23—This
