Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 June 1952 — Page 21

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Inside Indianapoli Ww Ed > Ludianapelis

STHERBNis no iin : Inds ha usu! incidence of polio mn Dr. Andrew Oftutt, head of the communicable disease control division of the Indiana State Board of Health, was speaking. He added, “Up to

the present time, we have 17 reported cases of :

polio.”

We're going into a period, June 15 to Oct. 15, when. parents worry a great deal about the disease. It is hoped a report of an interview with Dr. Offutt will allay troublesome thoughts.

A former polio victim is not going to tell-you

to stop worrying. But worry with no planning, gction doesn't prevent or cure polio. My tussle took place”12 years ago last month and 14 montls went by before hospitals, clinics and body braces were behind me. A person does not forget such an experience. So @

TWO YEARS AGO Indlina experienced an epidemic. If wise heads hadn't stepped in boldly and confidently, we could have had a panic. Then we would have beén in a terrible mess. Fortunately we thought before we acted. There are persons who would advocate not

mentioning polio ‘at all because you never know,

how many excitable ‘interested parties will misInterpret+the information. On the other hand, there are responsible men who believe facts and figures are good for the soul. ‘That Indiana now has no “unusual incidence” of polio should be good news. BE

DR. OFFUTT has a map of the polio frequency in Indiana for the past three years. Three maps are mounted side by side and red and yellow pins represent polio cases by counties In the state. Yellow pins represent 25 cases and the red, one. The 1949 map is heavily colored. In the center of the frame is the 1950 history. A viewer can readily discern the change for the better and the 1951 map is sprinkled with red pins. You don't have to\ be bright to see the progress. - A current map of the United States, showing the incidence of polio, brings Texas and northern California to the forefront. The two states ‘are the “hot spots” now. Dr. Offutt quickly cautioned not to interpret the maps of Indiana as a‘pattern. Work is being done to see if polio incidence falls into a pattern, but no conclusions have been reached as yet. : * Sd BH A DIRECT result of the 1949 epidemic was establishment of the: Indiana Pollo Planning

wise

By Earl Wilson

NEW YORK, June 4—Herb Shriner, the country comedian (from Indiana), put it accurately on his TV show when he introduced wonderful Lily Pons. ; : “Back home,” he said, “we never heard any opera stars—we never had to.” : i ab > PITCHER BOB FELLER explained to me {in Toots Shor's how he learned to grip a ball. “By milkin’ cows,” he Said, “but unfort MILTON BERLE’'S handsome writer, Bobby Gordon, was telling Mary Beth Hughes how he happened to give up martinis. . He explained: “It was like this, One night after I'd had about 10, I came home and called my wife ‘Dear’.” z

Sb oD : IN A BOOK belonging to the late Lady Mendl, 1 found this bookplate: ‘Please return this book. Although my friends are all very poor mathematicians, they are a good bookkeepers.” . <> < AMERICAN SPEECH is full of superfluities and redundancies. One that we'll probably never give up is: “My boy is 3, going on 4" LE . TAFFY TUTTLE told one of the Broadway wolves: “You can't have your Kate and Edith, too.” > OS DUTCH REUTHER, the once-great Cincinnati Reds pitcher, was telling about the famous 1919 World's Series -against the Chicago. Black OX. | 5 “In that first game” he said, “I got two triples, a single and a“base on balls—a record _that's never been beaten. And then—I found out they were only foolin’.” : oa A GEORGIE JESSEL, speaking of a man delivering a speech that'd been ghost-written, said, “He spoke under an assumed mind.” . . . Orson Bean guesses the only thing running steady on

Broadway this summer will be the water over

the Bond sign. > 3 HARRY HERSHFIELD passes on Bob Wag‘ner Jr.'s story of a tourist asking a cop, “Where {es the Avenue of the Americas?” The cop angwered: “I think it’s some place over on 6th Ave.” oo o> & THE MIDNIGHT EARL . .. Carolina folks eouldn’t believe that model Canda Loden, 19,

whom we wrote about, could be Francot Tone's

Americana By Robert C. Ruark

NEW YORK, June 4—It was not so long ago

that a multiply-married girl named Merry Fahrney made a column-writing boy named Bill Roberts sore. She said she wasn't gonna take aboard the new groom ever again, and then she went and married up with No. 8 or No. 9 or however they count ’em after it gets habitual. Se Le IR nD) HN I

=

This annoyed Mr. Roberts, who ‘had hinted at the lady's age and had been blasphemed for lack of chivalry. So he did a caddish thing. He called the state of the lady's birth, and ascertained {hat she was born in 1910, which makes her a fast 42, instead of the age she said she was. This cut her more cruelly than an accusation of baldness.

Lo DURING my life among the ladies, I have never really understood this sensitivity to age that keeps the girls in such a dither. You can cop a gander at a lady's face, and tell her within two months of when she was born. This applies to girls who have replaced the divots of time with surgery, as well as to the maidens who have ~ let nature do its own greenskeeping. There is no mystery on the age of the female, and you ‘do not even have to check her teeth, as with cows and horses. You just look her in the eye and you can name her birthstone. But they will mostly lie to you about it, and they think it buys:them something special and I know what the special thing is. It is a yawn. > > = - ‘THE RARE ONE will tell you an approximate truth. Dietrich and Swanson have capitalized on their age, which is just as well, because «grandmothers look so silly when they claim 18 as a nominal antiquity. But I have heard girls who were 23 say flatly that they were 21, and I “have heard 75-year-olders swear they were only 72. What difference it might make is hard to track. - The coming of age is a wonderful phrase, and a wonderful achievement, and should be celebrated appropriately as an advance front" the callowness of youth toward a true appreciation of the time when you don’t have to run so hard and keep your fists cocked all the time. A’ few peoples appreciate it. ‘The Chinese ‘. make the matriarch the head girl around the house. “M'zee,” among some African tribes, ‘means “old man,” and is used as a title of respect. 1 know a 26-year-old white hunter who is called “M’zee,” which means he's awful good

st his business. z . i ~in this savage waste of placed’ a premium on spuri‘ous youth, which is as ersatz as the premium we on ”

ed Last Night

=r oto- Larging Daa ™o cry about the Giants." “= “Pre Paficho Segliras the's the tennis whiz) “are

Indiana’s on Guard For Polio Season

< + i o¥

POLIO SEASON—Parents have a large’ respon. sibility in the battle.

Committee, Representatives from organizations concerned in fighting poliomyelitis have ‘banded together under the chairmanship of Dr. L. E. Burney, State Health Commissioner, to co-ordinate planning and action among agencies to control the disease, : ~The committee, which is being emulated in various sections of the country, already has gone into action to prepare for any eventuality this summer, __ Parents have a large responsibility in the battle. Dr. Offutt, the father of two children, wishes with all his heart there was a cure or a vaccine available that would erase the menace of polio, He, as the next parent, is going to keep a sharp eye on hig children. Yes, he'll do some worrying, too. But, he also is going to watch for the symptoms that may be weathervanes of polio: A tired feeling, headache, nausea, upset stomach, pains or stiffness in the muscles, or a fever. * A BIG STEP in the victory over polio is immediate Test and treatment. Play safe. That doesn't mean a child should be placed in solitary confinement, : 3? Such things as fatigue, late hours, chilling from swimming too long in cold water, swimming in polluted waters lower the resistance. The next best course of action is to be calm. If a child develops polio, it is no more a fault of the parent than if the child were injured in a fire at a school which was inspected the day before.

« Herb Shriner Pulls - Gag on Lily Pons

new time-killer. They still fhink of her as “Bobby”--which to them stands for Bobbysoxer.

Ethel Merman (her Washington chore finished) attracted attention af. El Morocco with a big red hat and big Bob Six. She leaves soon for the divorce. . .-. Also. at, “Elmer's”: Golfer Frank Stranahan, back already from Scotland. Johnnie Ray sure keeps buygy for a guy honey‘mooning. Besides working at the Paramount, he went to the Apollo. to. visit Lionel Hampton, and

expecting a little racket”... Larry Blydon replaced Sidney. Armus. as comedy lead in “Wish You Were Here.” . 5 Rose Marie will stay on in “Top Banana'-— Gail Robbins being ill. . . , Forty-Eighth St. won't be “Ferrerty-Eight St.” much longer, what with “Stalag 17” going soon and “The. Shrike” and “The Chase” already gone. Jose Ferrer himself leaves soon for Europe to do a film. 7

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WISH I'D SAID THAT: “Many a man battles his way to the top and bottles his way to the bottom,”—Roger Price. : 5 Ld : EARL'S PEARLS . . . Jackie Miles told at the Town & Country about the educated bookie who wrote his bets in Latin: “The cops couldn’t touch him—everything looked like a prescription.” oo oo» &

JOAN BLONDELL has_a slick new admirer: Nicky Darvas, the wealthy Latin Quarter dancer. . «.« Some famous “guides” are ila aie : accused of running their own little racket — reselling tickets that've already been used. What a stew. Eleanor Holm will explode more explosions. . . . Bob Topping was with TV beauty hisa 8 Loring (at Nino's Continental). # . . +» Gertrude Lawrence is mak-

- . a3 Miss Lamar ing progress in her gallant fight. She has a new throat “wizard. . . . Danielle Lamar’s the French singer at the Latin Quarter. When Milton Berle’s new salary was revealed as $25,000 a week, a friend told Miltie, “Now you

can afford to get married.” ... The Lou Walters celebrated their 32d anniversary. . . . Hope Hampton; after changing her hairdo, répainted all her portraits herself—to make them conform. CS

WHEN ASKED whether they'd like a drink, most newspapermen answer with the “editorial bul.” , , « That's Earl, brother. .

Why All the Kidding About Your Birthday?

ought to be both fat and old if they played it straight. You got to stay young. You got.to stay thin. Why, for heaven's sakes, when the inclination is against it? 3 The men are just about as bad as tHe girls when it comes to:cheating on the birth date, after they brush into the middle 30s. This feols nobody, either. A 40-year-old man does not look 30, and a 50-year-old man does not look 40, He looks what he is, and all the hair pieces and false teeth and he-girdles in the world will not keep a man from looking what he is. ho : IF THE BOYS figure they are buying a touch of sex appeal with the lie about age, they are singing a sad song to themselves, for the girls gather round in the powder department and snicker their little heads off-—and all the while deluding each other about their own space in

time. An old goat is an old goat, and while He -

may be a charming old goat, old is what he is. I am approaching personal senility with something surpassing eagerness. I do not wish for life to’ begin at 40. I want it to slacken off some, and leave me a portion of peace. Wrinkles I want and White hair I desire. There will be some allowance for pouch and paunch. a This is ‘a sly thing of my own making. I want all the girls to say he doesn’t look a day Syer 30, when in reality I am barely pushing

~

Dishing the Dirt By Marguerite Smith

Q-I have eight clumps of peonies and a Tow

in full sun. I know they aren't buried too deep and they all get the same care, Four of the clumps are blooming fairly well and the other four started to bud, then blighted before the bloom stems got very high. Any advice so I can work on them this summer? Edith Gallivan, 1736 Spann Ave. . A-—This is a common trouble—if that's any consolation. It is truly a blight. Formerly the difficulty was always thought to be due to one of those tiny organisms, a fungus, that lived on the peany. But ‘just this spring a new thought

Read Marguerite Smith's Garden Column in The Sunday Times

came out on the subject. Some open-minded investigators decided the real cause is lack of phosphate and potash in the soil. (They didn't experiment far enough to decide which.) And that -the fungus follows up the soil deficiency rather than causing the blight directly, your peonies (all of them) a high. phosphate, high potash fertilizer. A bulb fertilizer will probably be the easiest for you.to get. Or use bone meal and wood ash ; around your plants. Then (thi » impostant),ve sure to clean up those dead

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The Indianapolis Times

SPIES, DUPES AND DIPLOMATS . . . No.

A

N U. S. Official

UNDER PRESSURE from congressional committees; a reluctant government h#s begun to make public

important documents that confound previous beliefs.

John Stewart Service, American career diplomat and

observer attached to Gen. Stilwell’'s command, informed the State Department Sept. 28, 1944, that Communist Chinese “orientation toward the Soviet Union seems to be a thing of the past.”

A - dispatch dated Feb. 14, 1945; signed by Mr. Service and John Payton Davies, U. 8. consul in Hankow, advised that “at present there exists in China a situation closely paralleling that which existed in ‘Yugoslavia prior to Prime Minister Churchill's declaration of support of Marshal Tito.” a = » ” AND, the réport states: “In spite of hero-worshiping publicity in the United States, Chiang Kai-shek is not China and by our present narrow policy of outspokenly supporting his dog - in-the-manger attitude we are needlessly cutting ourselves off from millions of useful allies; many of whom are already organized and in posi-

* tion to engage the enemy.

“These allies, let it be clear, are not confined to Communistcontrolled. areas of China, but are to-be«fycad everywhere in the country. . . portant gvoups favor the same program as that espoused by the 86-called Communists— agrarian reform, civil rights, the establishment of democratic institutions — but the Com-

~ munists are the only group at

present having the organization and strength openly to foster such revolutionary ideas. “Our objective is clear Support of :the Generalissimo is desirable insofar as there is

en

concrete evidence that he is and in its letter of transmittal

By WILLIAM LONGGOOD NEW YORK, June 4— A chance remark by a visiting 85-year-old Ohioan recently reached an ‘R. H.

Macy Co. vice president and

set him to brooding. Said the Ohioan: “People oughta get out and vote.”

. The Macy veep—a man of action—had the same sentiments. But how to get people to vote?

Then he had an idea. Why not idea?

use a merchandising Make the public so vote conscious they couldn’t escape thier

3 obligation.

On New Year's Day, our Macy man—clear of mind and

© eye—sat down at the piano in

his Summit, N.J,, home. When he went to bed that night he had given birth to a song dedicated to getting out the vote. = n #n

THE TITLE, appropriately enough, was “Vote, Vote, Vote.” When subsequently published by Broadcast Music, Inec., 580 Fifth Ave. the title page read, “Words and music by Tommy Johnston.” It was natural that Mr. Johnston, better known in merchandising circles as Thomas W. Johnston, should think of the plane to put across his idea. Twice before he has. written popular song hits for children— “Sonny the Bunny” and “Poppy the Puppy.” To add -to, Mr.. Johnston's glory, the American Heritage Foundation has approved his song and will plug its use as campaign time approaches. The

IDEA PAYS OFF—

Service Keeps Tabs On Celebrities

Other im- -

TR A 0 MR CX EN 0 Er CW

‘VOTE, VOTE, VOTE'— ~~ _

They'll Sing

willing and able to marshal the full strength of China against Japan. .. There should be an immediate adjustment of our position in order that flexibility of approach to our primary objective may be restored.” . ” = . CURIOUSLY enough, at the same hearing that these dispatches were read into the record, the following exchange took place between C. E. Rhetts, Mr. Service's counsel, dnd Mr. Service himself: ' Mr. Rhetts: “Did you ever indicate the Chinese Communist Party to be mere agrarian reformers?” “Mr. Service: “I never did + + + I never used ‘Communists’ in quotes, nor said ‘socalled Communists,'” » o » WHEN Mr. Service was assigned a® political observer— and in effect, political adviser —to Gen. Stilwell, he was working with a kindred spirit, yet one who did not react to subtle distinctions. + The now-famous

Report Nu. 40, written directly

for Gen. Stilwell, is a’completely unguarded statement of Mr. Service's views win, il Lg

It is a shocking document. Had it been about Russia, by a minor American diplomat in the war-beleaguered Soviet Union, he would have been recalled forthwith. . Report No. 40 merits extensive quotation. ia It is entitled, “The Need for Greater Realism in Our Rela“tions with Chiang Kai-shek,”

BTS A —————" ri

Paul Whiteman leads the way as Stirling Wheeler, composer Thomas W. Johnston and Robert

EHTS 65

CHIANG KAI. SHEK—"Written off." Mr. Service speaks of the

“frankness which I have assumed . . . regarding the stronger policy "which I think it is now time to adopt.” x AO AFTER a cynical preamble indicating his belief that the Nationalist government was worthless and washed up mili-. tarily, Mr. Service continued: “The Kuomintang and Chian, will stick to us because our victéry is certain’ and is their only hope for continued power, But our support of the Kuomintang will not stop its normally traitorous relations with the enemy and will only encourage it to continue sowing the seeds of future civil war by plotting with the present puppets for eventual consolidation of. the

occupied territorfes against the -

Communist-led forces of popular resistance’. .

ee To

ER NE TST PFN Mv

~~ WEDNESDAY, JUNE 4, 1052

‘Wrote Off Chiang’

“Any new government under any other than the present reactionary control will be more co-operative and better able to mobilize the country.”

- » d TO AID Chiang hurts the war effort, Mr. Service added, and loses us the. Ariendship of the Chines» Reds. His report went on: “We need not support E Kuomintang for international political reasons. . , ., On the contrary, artificial inflation of Chiang's status only add to his unreasonableness. . . . We need not support Chiang in the belief that he represents proAmerican or pro-democratic groups.” § v The Communists, Mr. Service urged, were both democratic’ and pro-American. “Finally, we feel no ties of gratitude to Chiang. He has fought to have us save him-—so that he can continue his conquest of his’ country. In the process, he has ‘worked us for all we were worth.’ “We seem to forget that Chiang is an Oriental (in contrast to Mao Tse-tung). . . . We cannot hope to deal -successfully with Chiang without being hardboiled. . . . We cannot hope to solve China's problems , :» without consideration of the opposition forces—Communist, provincial, liberal. CL eens . “WE SHOULD not be swayed

by .pleas of the danger of

China’ pse. This is an old trick fy Chiang’'s. There may be a colldpse of the Kuomintang government. . . . There may be a period of some confusion, but the eventual gains of the Kuomintang’s collapse = will more than make up ‘for this « + « « The crisis is the time to push—not relax.” es ~ This report No. 40 referred to the Nationalist government of China which for years had

~ the United States goyernment.

- . TOMORROW-—The Amerasia

PAGE oT

stood up against the Japanese, It referred to the armies which had fought and died in defense of their country, with almost no food, almost no hope, It was a plan which could - only turn China over to the Communist “agrarian reformsers” and Moscow, It was not written in 1945 when the war with Japan was over. Tt was written on t. 10, 19444 less than a month after thé Chinese Naiianalish, jes had launched a great offensive and: captured “Tengyueh, in Yunnan Province, the first large Chinese city to be liberated in seven. years", (The quotes above are from The World at War, 1939-1944, prepared by the Military Intelligence Divi-. sion, War Department. It isan Infantry Journal book.) ” . =" WHEN, IN 1945 Maj. Gen, Patrick J. Hurley testified before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee that Mr, Service and “the professional foreign service men” in China had sabotaged his efforts as ambassador to China, “he was referring specifically to Report No. 40. =~ = He elaborated on this charge by stating under ath that Mr, Service had undercut Hurleysupervised negotiations between Chiang and the Chinese Communists by telling Red leaders that. the ambassador was speaking for. himself not for

‘Mr, Service denied this in 1950, along with Mr. Hurley's further charge that the efforts of the anti-Chiang faction had been ‘to destroy the government of the Republic of China.” . eat plsteibuted "by United Feature Syndicate, Ine.)

TA AIR uX

You To The Polls This Year

for the forthcoming campaign with the cirains of "Vote, Vote, Vote."

American Broadcasting Co. also intends to make heavy use of it over the airways. ” ” o MR. JOHNSTON recalled today that he first tried “Vote, Vote, Vote,” on his family. His wife, Dorothy, and the three little Johnstons—Tommy, Jane and Bill—all liked it, but Jane, who is 13, wanted to know when her songwriting dad was going- to "get down to business and write a love song.

By MARY FRAZER Scripps-Howard Staff Writer’

NEW YORK, June 4—Sixteen years ago, Earl Blackwell—fresh out of Oglethorpe University—was a discouraged would-be Hollywood screen star. Tyrone Power and Robert Taylor, fellow students in

his studio acting classes, were

going places,

Earl was § nobody. Fifteen years ago, Fr] came to New York and rather promptly joined that select crowd composed of writers of flop Broadway plays. 80, he became a nobody who'd gone broke trying to be somebody. Today, Earl is New: York

- City’s “Mr. Celebrity” himself,

Rich and popular, he can quote you, name, rank, privates home number and pet name of nearly. every celebrity in the

- civilized world.

His current list of the world’s top 10 celebrities, for instance, is respected and never questioned, because the hundreds who know Earl know he compiled it the hard way; by studying files (which are insured for $1 million). For your information, and for free, here are the top 10: Winston Churchill, Joan Crawford, Bing Crosby, the Duchess Gen, Ike Eisenhower, Ernest Hemingway, Jawaharlal Nehru, Pablo Pjcassgo, Eleanor Roosevelt, Gloria Swanson. -

” » NEW YORK'S “Celebrity .

Service,” of which Earl is presi. dent, has ived more requests about these

“Top 10” than about any other | persons—although the gilt

edged, up-to-the-minute files are constantly consulted regarding many, many more. What is this “Celebrity Service,” that began in New York in 1938? Spread to Hollywood? A business entirely unique, and so successful that Earl this month is opening branches in London, Paris and Rome? To get the fantastic story, I tracked Earl into his favorite haunt, Bruno's Pen & Pencil,

» where he sat eating his favorite

food a thick steak... ..sm “First, let's defiffe a *‘celebrity’ the handsome, darkhaired young man said. (A bachelor whose name has been linked with that of Eva Gabor, Joan Crawford, Socialite Nancy Oakes and Joan Baruch, I was properly pleased by his friendly manner.)

2 » ” “A CELEBRITY is someone

who is recognized on sight, of

by the mention of a name. A true celebrity is never referred to as ‘the famous, or ‘the ‘noted’ No one would think of saying, ‘that’s Greta Garbo, the famous actress’ The name ‘Garbo’ alone establishes her.” 1 asked if, in° New York, a “celebrity” might not be also defined as someone who can the doormen at “21.” The

7

Then Mr. Johnston decided to try it out on some pals. He collected Sterling Wheeler, advertising director of the Pepsi-Cola Co., Mr. Wheeler's wife, Mary, and Robert Grimm, a freelance advertising man, whose grandfather, John E. Grimm of Dayton, O., was responsible for the whole thing by saying people ought to vote. They went to Mr. Grimm's apartment at 220 Madison Ave. But Mr, Grimm had no piano.

So Mr. Grimm got the superintendent to let them into the apartment of a friend who did have a piano. A few minutes latér the group was singing, “Vote. Vote. Vote.”

s s ” WHAT did they think of it? “Terrific,” said Mr. Wheeler.

“Excellent,” said Mr. Grimm. And what did they think of Mr. Johnston's singing? “Very poor,” said Mr. Wheeler. “Very poor indeed.”

"MR. CELEBRITY"—M-G.M director Charles Walters, Earl Blackwell and Ann Sothern at Bruno's Pen and Pencil.

seiged for autographs; and who has a sandwich named for him or her in Lindy's or Rubens. Earl smiled and said sometimes that was so. “Back in the fall of 1938 I was plenty broke, after my theater venture,” Earl went on. “One day at a cocktail party I met an old friend, Ted Strong. We were talking about tough times, when up came an ace

had an idea that put us in business.” - » ” THE IDEA was to set up a a shop that would furnish not oply the names of visiting celebrities of all sorts, and hotels where they were stopping, but which would - also give addresses and phone numbers of those who maintain permanent New York residences.

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‘Mystery.

we i RT SR aN

Photo by De Marsico.

Grimm (from left) set the key

A few days later ABC came into the picture when a relative of Mr. Grimm was having lunch with Edward J. Noble, chair. man of the board of ABC. Mr. Noble heard about the song and had Paul Whiteman, director of music for ABC make an are rangement. The tune had its premiere last Saturday night’ over ABC's “Dancing Party.” “It's a good number,” said Mr. Whiteman. “And not only good, but the sentiment’s right.”

-

at the Elysee. Walter Chrysler Jr. has a Park Avenue apart ment. They're not in the telephone book. And it’s often difficult, even for people who have important reasons, to find them, “We opened our office in December, 1038,” Earl continued, “with a prayer and two tele. phones. We started our busi. ness by consulting “Who's Who,’ going to the New York Public Library files; contacting pub-

licity agents, film studios, transportation lines and our newspapér friends. s ” »

“THE CELEBRITIES them. ° selves gave us hearty indorsee ment. As the months went on, we got every major film tomspany, radio stations, news. . = i nT Ar. scouts, artists’ agents, photographers, merchants, columnists and cafe owners as clients.” The cost for “belonging” to: Celebrity Service is based on a monthly fee. “Members” get a daily mimeographed listing of arriving and visiting celebrities and where they're stopping, and may phone in for special in-' formation. : Regular clients can, in fact, get volumes of information about. celebrities in whom they're interested, including, or

throug “dath on favoriie|