Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1951 — Page 13
| woven m overalls . Green, » and red on plaid. ous pock-
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| 69
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. 8 picture of his
| NEW YORK, June 27--When Gen. and Mrs, Douglas visited in Joe E, Brown at the National Theater to see “Courtin’ | Time"”—1 hung around and heard Joe tell the audience of the time he visited the General in Japan. ; uy h There the General's aide asked Joe to pose the General. Joe .was eager to do it, but asked why. “Well,” explained Gen. MacArthur, “it was my son Arthur's idea. He said he wanted daddy withea
\ Barton Society bustup! Young millionaire Alexis Thompson and his Beautiful Wife, the former
celebrity.”
Jean Sinclair, of Canton, O. have split, Mr. Thompson confirmed it to this reporter. Mrs. Thompson left a few days ago and hasn't been ‘back home. eS > &
THREE ESCAPED Russians were supposed to appear on “We, the People” the other night. After the dress rehearsal they disappeared and didn’t return to do the show. Turned out they thought the rehearsal was the real show, and that their job was done. So they went home or someplace—anyway they didn’t make the show, Ferenc Molnar sent a manuscript to Simon & Schuster editor Maria Leiper. With fear and trembling, she asked if he'd consider making a couple of changes. “I'm a professional,” he said, proudly. “Only an amateur gets mad if asked to change his copy.” The present silly story is about a girl who
was rather casual about her love-making. When : her boy friend said, “When I kiss you, your lips
burn like fire,” she said, “Maybe I ought to take my cigaret out of my mouth.”
ob Bb
SINGER ABBE LANE and Xavier Cugat, her boss and fiance, were in Lindy’s after their Waldorf show and I asked them about rumors they had been quarreling. Abbe showed me some new diampnd earrings ehe’d just got from Coogie—so I guess they probably had been! : Another Joe E. Brown story: His late agent, Ivan Kahn, objected, when a big studio wanted Joe to work for nothing in an all-star picture involving the whole studio. “We might give him a present—say a Cadillac,” said the studio head. “A Cadillac!” shouted Kahn. “What would my commission be on a deal ‘like that — a bicycle?”
Americana By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, June 27—Every time I dip a claw into the hardware drawer in the kitchen, in a sincere search for the can opener, I get the feeling that Salvador Dali must be designing kitchen utensils. x There are bear traps and medieval instruments of torture; wheels and racks . and rakes and miniature discharrows. If you get the hand | out witheut having lost three fingers you are lucky. And somehow I never can find the \\ little gizmo with the hook on it _ for punching holes in beer cans.
Things are going to get worse, because the chancellor of the exchequer has just been down to the “gadget fair” and has come home loaded. By
loaded I mean laden with implements. Weapons. Contrivances, A casual onlooker wouldn’t know whether she is planning a trunk murder or the baking of a cake. We now have a pre-chilled rolling pin, for instance. It is for rolling out dough and keeping the dough eold without putting it in the icebox, though why any woman in her right mind should be allowed to indulge in this solicitude for dough I cannot say. The way I feel about dough—flour paste, not money—if the icebox is good enough for ice cubes it is good enough for dough. * >
THERE 18 ALSO a master key for opening sardine cans. This is ridiculous. Houdini, in his best days, was never able to get into a sardine
- can. without cutting his thumb, spraining his wrist
and wrecking the key. The only: way to open a can of sardines is to take a hatchet and chop on ft. It is rough on the sardines, but a defunct sardine doesn’t care whether he is chewed or chopped. In our happy little hutch we now have a grapefruit torturer. It looks like something the primitive Chinese would use on a victim, but ifs function is the scalloping of grapefruit rinds. I hate grapefruit, for a start. but even if I didn’t I would be just as happy if the edges remained un-landscaped. Anybody who feels good enough in the morning to seek esthetic escape in a grapefruit should be forced to buy a gadget
Outside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola
Happened Last Night
Si
Arthur Mae Arthur Puts Dad ‘On Spot’
Courtney displays what the well-dressed swimmer PF STE B'WAY BULLETINS: Hasn't Ex-Deputy Fire Comm! Harvey Rosen been made a Special adviser at Yonkers Raceway? . .. Danny is doubly jubilant—his NBC-TV option was picked up and he signed with ‘Warner's for “I Wish 1 Had a Girl? ,'. . Cara Williams, on the Riviera making a film, writes that she and the Aly Kahn are inseparable . . , Baby Lake left the Latin 14 after five years to be with her fiance, acrobat Ben Christiani; in Florida. ;
+ »
| |
LIA DE LEO, the young Itglian actress who |
tells everybody she's in love with Robert Tavlor, is coming here from Rome to do “personal appearances”—agented by the Chicago entrepreneur, “Rasputin. Bert Wheeler is honor guest of “The Poor Souls” (new club founded by Jackie Gleason) at Toots Shor's , . . Milton Berle has found that in
“Seventeen,” his hit musical comedy about In- | diana, there is one Indiana-born principal: Alonzo |
Bosan, Genesis.”
65-year-old Negro who plays He steals and stops the show! > * »
WHO'S NEWS: Joey Adams, who'll vacation in Europe, has been asked to play the Embassy Club in London July 12 , . . Romo Vincent and Beverly Hudson head the next Copa show July 12 to 26 . . . Noel Coward's interested in doing a TV show here .
“Mr. |
. «+ Kitty Kallen, a hit at the |
Cocoanut Grove on the Coast, was re-signed for |
next year . The Bruce (comic) Howards, Chuck (p.a.) Dreyfusses and Vic (singer) Ameses are all expecting. > © EARL'S PEARLS . .. Eileen Barton says she asked an editor what he'd give her for a poem she wrote, and he answered, “Ten yards start.” r > > TODAY'S BEST EAVESDROP: (By Lester Lanin) “He ‘claims he always travels by plane, but when he fakes me anywhere, it's by subway.” &» < WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Sometimes a pinch of salt can be improved by dropping it into a glass of beer.”—Charles Jones. Capitol comic Georgie Kaye deduced some B'wayites are great engineers—they've figured how to “roll a square” , .. That's Earl, brother.
Finds ‘Bear Traps’ In Kitchen Drawer
called a "wit whip,” which is alleged to “make tasty carrot cakes,” and to eat the product. The old ‘girl came in clutching something which looked like a hypodermic for horses. She denied any intended invasion of the veterinary field, however. This big glass tube with the bulb on it is for basting meat. You fill the hypo with basting juice and then squirt it on the meat . ,. except, of course, on Tuesdays. * & » OH, WE HAVE a butter-cutter for making cute little pats out of that priceless commodity. Then we have a butter-paddle for making decorative dents in same. Next year, if they whittle down the taxes a little, I figure to hire a Dutch diamond cutter to replace all the machinery.
And there iz a pie wheel trimmer and a tea infuser and a squirt-gun for simonizing a caketop (one layer only) and, of course, some scissors to slice the salad. It is now considered very coarse to dismember the lettuce with a knife, just as it is thought to bé corny to slice eggs with anything but a special egg-slicer. We are going to put all these things into the drawer, along with the machine for making little balls out of melons and the canape cutter and the cake-breaker, the fumeless onion-chopper, the rotary mincer, the combination cheese-slicers and knife-whetters and the Little Dandy eggtimer. ¢ & THERE WILL BE a period of time when I look for the corkscrew and come up with a mousetrap which also degreases dirty skillets, and then I will go back to the simple technique of biting the necks off. bottles and opening cans with my fingernails. : : The only thing that worries me is a possible secret merger of all these things. I dread the prospect of coming home one day to find that these testaments to man's ingenuity will have welded into one horrible, Frankensteinesque robot and will be busy mincing, chopping, rolling, paring, grating, trimming, cutting, paddling, basting, scooping, snipping, infusing and scalloping all human Ife within reach. And. perhance, laying the master .out cold with a specially pre-chilled rolling pin. f
Art of Paris Is Put "On Pan’
k E |
Continued From Page One
Paris and not see those two famous works of art.
It was relatively simple to
find them. Every Frenchman |
understands Venus de Milo and Mona Lisa. the name and hear a tirade with gestures of direction. In about an hour I was in front of Venus de Milo. Now that I know where Venus is, starting from
I would mention.
my hotel, I could be on location |
in four minutes. i Art lovers will tear their hair and probably say I'm a boor. XY call them as I see them. Venus de Milo, to me, was a hunk of stone that somebody threw out the window in an alley and somebody else picked it up and got a charge out of it. Somewhere along the: line
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ol
Venus de Milo got a reputa-
tion for being extra special. The man who shrugged his shoulders was an oaf., The man who blew his top was an expert, Over
the centuries, people began to | swallow the propaganda and to- |
day you're still an oaf if you shrug your shoulders. toons. Now you know. rr ” ~ I FOUND Mona Lisa the mystic smile.” McCoy. Fine painting. of small to be
“with
so famous.
Cracked with age, too. Again | I blame this |
sparks didn't fly, on Norman Rockwell. You know, he paints the cleverest SEP covers. Spinning at the prospect of having: the 'uck to run across an old Norman Rockwell cover, I took chapeau in hand and trotted along the Seine.
Fishermen lined the banks of | this OI’ Man River of La Belle |
France. 1 didn't see a fish landed during the 10 seconds that I watched, The guide book told me that somewhere in the vicinity was Sainte-Chapelle, “a gem of Gothic art; this lovely shrine of stone and precious stainedglass was built by St. Louis to contain the Crown of Thorns.” Sure enough, not more than a mile away, ‘there it. was. Anal this Hoosier boy wants to sav the stained glass of SainteChapelle is something to see. I took a picture, Then I removed the lens cover and took another, One ought to come out,
: ” » ” NOTRE DAME CATHEDRAL was next, about 10 minutes walking time. It was built between 1163 and 1240, and is one of the oldest Gothic cathedrals in France. How the French built a structure like that in 1163 or even 1240, is beyond me. It's immense, dark and cold on the inside. No pews. Just tiny stone floor. It started to rain when 1 left Notre-Dame. I hurried for »
I hap- | pen to like Virgil Partch's ear- |
The real | Sort |
‘chairs and ©
getting drenched to the skin. Just before I was drenched to the skin, I found one. Charmi Ing place. { Paris was bright | and shining when 1 finally said | goodbye to the cafe owner, his wife, children, an aunt and a newspaper vendor who wandered in. With the aid of my trusty guide book, and a taxi (I cheated a little), I soon found myself on the Avenue | Champs Elysees. It was just the same as the pictures I have seen; of American troops
War I and World War II.
rested for a moment and read where it was begun in 1806 and completed between 1825 and 1836. The Arc commemorates the victories of France. Someday, perhaps, nations will build peace instead of monuments to short-lasting victories. The Palais de Chaillot, home | of the Musee de I'Homme and the Musee des Monuments Francais, is one of those buildings that make you .whip out
up of a Frenchman's head as he walked in front of me. The rains came again and if the Eiffel Tower looks like a water fountain it won't be my fault. | Ah, Cafe.
Police Probing Slaying
the camera. I got a fine front | view of the place and a close- |
» Indiana
*
By WILLIAM
Did OK as Ailing Dad's Deputy—
H. STONEMAN
LONDON, June 27 (CDN)--Britain's royal house recently has had two reasons for self-congratulation. First, persistent rumors that King George VI “is really a very sick man” with only 1 short time to live have been scotehed by the official announcement that he and Queen Elizabeth are going to make a five-month trip
to Australia and New Zea-
land, beginning hext January. or Bar This does not mean the King is not 1)l. The disease which required an operation on his legs in March, 1949, may prove fatal within a few years. But the fact that he is making the long and trying trip means that his doctors discount any immediate danger.®
- ~ ~ IN THE SECOND place, Princess Elizabeth really looks as though she is going to make an outstanding queen. It has been clear for a long time that she is going to be a
| good woman, well educated and
tanta inn eesti
|
|
| |
intelligent. Now it seems apparent Britain's future Queen Elizabeth II will fulfill three other important
King George VI «s.He's a sick man.
Rep. Judd Says—
requirements of a modern British monarch, To judge by recent performances wnen she has deputized for the King on four different occasions and appeared in pubHe practically every day, she will be highly decorative, selfassured and rugged enough to take it as it comes. Elizabeth, now 25 and the mother of two bouncing chil. dren, acted on the King's be. half for the first time May 25 when she presented new colors to the 3d Battalion of the Grenadier Guards. The following day she presented the King's color to the RAF. On June 5 she read the King's speech of welcome at a royal banquet given in honor of King Haakon of Norway and on June 7 she took the salute at the trooping the color, The first two were minor occasions and went practically unnoticed; the second two were dramatic and significant. One cach of them Elizabeth was doing something that only a sovereign or a future sovereign could do. What was more, she did them with zest. = » = HER SPEECH to Haakon, broadcast to the world, was the first speech she had made as a ruler's deputy. Although she spoke as a dutiful daughter, reading something written for her father, she talked as though she herself was welcoming another ruler. . Some toney Britishers seemed to think that her voice was “raspy” and high-pitched, but nobody could deny that it carried authority and had character. . Elizabeth's appearance on
By REP. WALTER JUDD ~ Written for Scrigps-Howard Newspapers
WASHINGTON, June 26—The United States is involved in a major war in Asia because we have consistent-
ly let ourselves be deluded of our enemy.
as to the aims and purposes
The No. 1 myth of our age was our believing in World War II that because we were fighting Hitler and Russia
fighting Hitler, it that Russia
was must follow
. was a democratic nation | very mucna like ourselves.
The Soviet Union is not a
| peace-loving democracy. It did | not and does not believe in the
| There | there
same kind of society as we do. was no evidence and ir no evidence that ‘it ever intended to co-operate in building the sort of world of
| justice, freedom and peace for
| which we
| {
the shelter of a cafe before
and gay |
of Ch y | supposedly smart, enlightened mies in north China. If Asia said, Hows worry a ne Re a years they wii ig the and sophisticated Americans the Chinese had been a real abdut them taking the Yalta. deeeded control of Man- A ouE
¢ | théir country’s foreign policy
des | | “agrarian marching ‘along it, after World |
At the Arc de Triomphe, I |
| {
{ |
| | i
|
‘Round Up Lottery Tickets
Ohne of the largest hauls in lot- ¢*ouch in a corner for an hour.” {tery tickets was the by-product! of intensified police ‘activity reslaying of Patrolman Clarence G. Snorden admitted today that he wore a ;.14 her escort,
sulting from the
ing at 233 W. 14th St.
~
Pearsey confiscated 1998 books of | ‘baseball tickets while seeking a. man for questioning in the slay-
Earlier, vice squadmen seized, 197 baseball and three policy,
books in a raid on a poolroom at| In Dillon, 8. C. triplets were easil 726 N. Senate Ave. . -
oufl TR terday was Miss Lorarine last night. (Marine camouflage suit to hide qc... an tennis Braves fan, Sam Santaniello, was! of vocal gym- bel 26, with prosti1 | ¥ y * Betty Hutton y { Inspector Ralph Bader, Capt. !n bushes while window peeping ,i\. garon Gott [fit to be tied when he couldn't! s nastics. tion.and disorderly conduct. John Sullivan and Sgt. Pau) during the past year. ! : a jv 4 Iy conduct.
born to-a farm worker's Wife who ability of doctors to cure her five-' “There's no Tadio, ete, the yt hand todan : do ; . § : ¥ . ” ’
have fought two world wars. Our second miscalculation was the myth that the Communists in Asia, or at least in China were different. They were suppoded to be simply agrarian reformers. This belief didn’t just happen; it was skillfully organized and put over because it was useful to the Kremlin.
WHEN HISTORY is written, it will seem fantastic that the
WEDNESDAY, JUNE
their thinking and it was the chant of most of our opinionforming agencies. However potent the “agrarian reformer” lie was, it alone did not trick us into withdrawing support from the Free Chinese. For that we needed a justification in self-interest. This was supplied when it was alleged that the Free Chinese were not fighting the Japanese as hard
as the Chinese Communists were. Less than. 10 cent of
the Japanese casualties at the hands of the Chinese were inflicted by the Chinese Reds. As late as 1944 the Chinese Reds allowed the Japanese to pass through their territory to drive 1100 miles south to kill thousands of loyal Chinese. For seven years Yenan, the Red capital, lay within 100 miles of Japanese ar-
»
Lilibet Shows Makings Of Real
ROYAL FAMILY-—Princess Elizabeth is shown in Clarence
EH
House with her husband and two children, Prince Charles and
Princess Anne.
horse guards parade to take the salute at the trooping the color two days later was a
brilliant and moving performance, unforgettable to anybody who realized its significance. The diminutive figure of Elizabeth, coming tc salute as thousands of oversized guardsmen in scarlet uniforms marched by. was the figure of a future Queen receiving the tribute of her subjects. Confront2d by her dismaying destiny Elizabeth’ reacted by looking calmly at the spectacle and chatting and laughing with her Uncle, the Duke of Gloucester,
vant, another excuse was invented to justify our withdrawing support from the Free Chinese, This was that the Reds were doing more for the common people of China.
THE ORIGINAL social revolution in China was being carried on by Chiang Kai-shek ‘and his associates, mostly American - trained. Eight years of fighting the Japanese and the Chinese Communists with the merest trickle of American aid, halted that revolution. But we Americans were told
that the Chinese Reds had taken it up. It was true that while the Reds were earrying on a policy &f withholding food from the cities, the country people ate better. But the apparent rural prosperity lasted only until the starved-out cities fell. The Chinese Reds now take a larger part of the farmer's crop than his old landlord ever did. And the peasants now lack even their former liberty. While the process of starving out the cities was going on, we Americans were told that the Communists would never take the cities becsnse they knew they couldn’t organize them, A top American official in
ELIZABETH, while not a beauty, is very “nice looking." She has good features, fine strong teeth, a rosebud complexion that the camera misses completely, fine golden brown hair and a slim waist, Although she has had two children she has kept her figure. The fact that she is small about 5 feet 4 inches in her shoes—makes her look cute in uniform and “petite” in ordinary clothes. She has begun to dress more simply, which helps a lot. Any young females who envy Elizabeth her job will get over it quickly after looking over the following list of functions
apologists in our own country for communism. This was that
China was too big to be one
country. Divide her along the Yangtze River and maybe the Free Chinese could handle the problems of the south. This lulled us into doing nothing just long enough for the Reds to seize the whole of China. ® - » NOW THAT the Chinese mainland is Comm t-occu-pied except for scatte areas, we are given another myth. This is that if we build up Mao Tze-tung, the Red dictator, he will turn against Russia and come over to our side. But Mao has been saying for 29 years that China must be tied solely and completely to Russia. Still, we are told that if we give Mao more territory—Formosa, for example—he will desert the winning side in Asia and join us losers. The phrase used is that he will become “another Tito.” Anybody who knows anything about Chinese history knows that there is only one Tito in China. That is Chiang Kai-shek who deserted the Russians in 1927, became a Christian and fought for China's independence when we and the
British were selling munitions -
to Japan. He continued to fight
opening of Festival ‘May 4—tour of feati
| patron).
dren (she is president).
fh
also Boy's Brigade monies and
of south coast visiting five different towns. May :
22-charity ball. May 23.-annual reception of Linen Drapers Co. (she ls * May 24 presides at ann meeting of National Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Chil-
ts colors to 3d
_talion, Grenadier Guards. May
26 presents colors to RAF.’ May 27 — Remembrance Day. service of Grenadier Guards Veterans Association (she's colonel of regiment). : May 28 -- visits Glasgow, opens exhibition of industrial power. May 29--vigits Perth, opens arts festival, May 31 goes to Derby with the Queen, May 31--attends fashion recep. tion. June 1—attends the Oaks, racing classic for fillies. June 2—attends annual conference of Life Saving Institution, plus a garden party in did of university women's camps. June 5—arrival of King Haakon and palace dinner. a : June 6—opens antique dealers fair. June 7 the color. June 8—visits : and Worcester Sg i Birmingham. June 11-opens Congress of Federation of British Chambers of Commerce, then attends regimental tea party. June 12-186—Ascot races,
Pessimism Defeated Our Asia Policy
tually the Chinese will ab-
x
i!
plete ce of history and of communism. The Reds have never tried to convert a majors ity of any people. They have never claimed more than 3 per cent of the Russians, 6 per cent of the Poles, 8 per cent of the Czechs, When they find their ranks getting too large, they hold a purge. All they ever want if a hard disciplined core to control all the rest. - » ” AGAIN, since when have the Communists solved anys body's economic problems? They haven't solved Russia's; after , 30 vears they have no answer for the misery of their own masses except renewed . selfsacrifice to a dream of world conquest. Economic problehns can be solved only in an atmos phere of freedom, as the his tory of the U. 8. shows. But every tyranny that comes along uses economics as a weapon, One more myth remains — that.the ancient Chinese will swallow up their conquerors. But this takes time. It took the Chinese 100 years to over. come the Mongols, 267 years to overcome the Marnchus. Pers haps in a couple of hundred
May 8-11—six different cere= “N,
| eong ir
2
ss sop SHI
ican
Line A
Work Clothes
last week while peeking through Cramm, ‘a window. He said he : the suit “to g0 night prowling.” the matches, The
Three's a Crowd
say they will is as logical as telling a patient he will get over cancer because he recovered from the measles. But. what will happen to us, our children and our country in . the meantime? . 5
NEXT: The vested interests of failure.
cities.” The fact was that long ago the Chinese Reds had decided that they should take the country first as a means of getting the cities,
threat, the Japanese would have wiped them out. The fact was that Japan appreciated the help of the Chinese Reds against the Free Chinese. When Japan's surrender made When the Communists were .the argument of who was kill- gaining north China. we were ing the most Japanese irrele- givexm another myth by the
1
ld be beguiled into basing churia to Russia.
You will hear it said that America need not. fear com.munism in China use the Reds will not able to convert the people to their sway of thinking, will fail to solve China's economic problems, and even-
toward Asia on an assumption which was contradicted by all the evidence. Our State Department policy makers are now ashamed of the reformer” phrase. But it played a decisive role in
About People—
>
Man's Superman Ideas For Son Spur Woman.To Divorce
A Chicago mother, Mrs. Jose- previously gave birth to three year-ililness, She now weighs 90 garage man replied after taking! Pvt. Jay G. Niemeyer, 22, of phine DeFranza, 36, won a divorce sets of twins and three other pounds. a look under the dash board. | Grand Rapids, Mich., cut himszelf and custody of her 8-year-old son, childrea. Ww Ba k I Someone had stolen it, leaving on a used razor blade while cleanyesterday, because her husband The new arrivals at the home ants c n only he dashboard control panel ing up the barracks. was trying‘to turn the boy into of Lattle Mae Johnson were From Sacramento, Cal. comes and speaker cover in its place. He suggested soldiers dispose an intellectual superman. named in the order of their ap- the report of a 16-year-old Korean wt 0 t Trouble of old razor -bladés by dropping The big problem was the pearance, Joe Louis Johnson, Ez- War Silver Star winrer who wants! o {them through a slit in the wall, father's method, not his aim. Mrs. zard Charles Johnson and Flea- to get back in the service. ' In Hollywood, bouncy screen into a container and won an AtDeFranza® charged her husband nor Roosevelt Johnson. | Joe Harrison Hill, who was dis- star Betty Hutton rested her terbury Hospital suggestion citawith assigning the boy problems’ charged for being under age said jeather-lined throat at her home tion and the $5 which went with like how much is 435,621,789 times Babs Is Sick both his parents are dead so he today following it. 1,234,567. | Di tore. Belz Bath wants back in uniform when he| an operation for ————— As a reward for the right AN- oo tton Wor i ner Ea Decomes 17 on Jiy 31. swer, son Dominick, got a dish of! & To get the required consent ” i ihotel today from . he'll have to get a legal guardian) raw meat as “brain food” she a dizzy spell at 1 g Bal gu said, and when he couldn't eat it ¥ Ihe {named by a court to sign for him.
for herl oo. the second time within a
id the Wimbledo L. D, Huntley, a Sacramento loud, mile-amin-my husband forted Nim 10)we.pis’ Matcha scoutmaster, has agreed to help ute singing un. Month He sabe th Hendricse | yesterday. the former Infantryman get into derwent SUrgery|, se of ill fame at 518 N. Ala-
the Air Force next month.
It Wasn't There } In New London, Conn., Boston
0 have her vo-
“I don’t think
I can get down
A 36-year-old factory worker in, stairs.”
bama St. o Also arrested for the secon time in the police vice squad raid
she
fried Von after
get one of their games on his car The singer is temporarily un-| {Re ie 8 on aaa | able to speak and carrios A slate! Fo ‘becoming ll Alpe pore Hutton He twisted the dials and clicked O° Which she writes messages to's ; Faftars Hy the buttons without any Juck, |friends who drop in. | baron held her arm tightly and “I'm going on a long trip today goo Fin “led her to a car. {and I want to hear the Braves ™" y. A Camp Atterbury
"| "Friends said Miss Hutton tires game. Fix the radio,” he told a| A and has lost faith in the garage mechanic a few days later. learned the hard way
Stanley L. Adams was arrested the raid
He will be sentenced July 10.
solder who
-
