The White Falcon - 28.04.1945, Blaðsíða 5
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HOT AND COLD
You might not believe such things but Rosalie Hill
(left) and Pat Jonesy are tak ng a cold shower back home
at Miami Beach where temperatures are keeping thermo-
meters busy.
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Embarrasses WAC When He
Asks For Pants—His Own
Pfc. Clara Adams, Lock-
bourne, AAB, Columbus,
Ohio, who supervises the re-
pair and alteration of GI
clothing for the QM there
appreciates the expression,
“Was my face red?”
A member of the perman-
ent party, feeling the return
of his clothing was overdue,
hailed Pfc. Adams on a
crowded base street and bel-
lowed, “Hey, sis, when do
I get my pants hack?”
FRINGE
Humphrey Bogart has re-
ported to Warners for a
leading role in “The Two
Mrs. Carrolls,” in which he
co-stars with La Stanwyck
and Alexis Smith. Mayo, his
crockery-tossing frau, hasn’t
been heard from.
@
Clifton Webb, noted mus-
icomedy actor, and Law-
rence Tibbett, operatic bari-
tone, will join the experts in
Canada for a coming “In-
formation Please” broad-
cast. The program will help
spur Canada’s 10th War
Loan .... Quentin Reynolds
in the May issue of “This
Month” magazine tells of
exasperating and amusing
experiences with British
and American censors. One
She's Suing
Dale Belmont, New York
blues singer known to her
friends as “The Sweater,” has
sued a Broadway publishing
firm for using this picture
of her to promote sales for a
book called “The Complete
Guide to Bust Culture.”
censor refused to permit a
reporter to send a story
with the word sulphatio-
zole, claiming it was obvi-
ously a code word to the
correspondent’s paper in
New York.
0
“I Sustain The Wings,”
produced by the AAF in con-
junction with the NBC, will
tell the story of how a farm
boy’s knowledge of the be-
havior of farm animals help-
ed to locate the launching
site for rocket bombs in Eur-
ope. M/Sgt. Harry Bluestone
directs their corps hand ....
Actress Charine Allen and
announcer Ford Bond are
celebrating their 23rd year
of broadcasting. They’re
featured on “David Har-
um,” a soap opera.
0
Little Margaret O’Brien
has been gifted with a pewt-
er figurine from the island
of Guam. LI. Dennis Chavez,
-.on of the New Mexico sena-
tor, foiling the statuette in
lie ruins of Guam .... Tom-
ay Dorsey is busy denying
•umors to the effect that he
is breaking up his hand ....
4nd Guy Lombardo’s Royal
Canadians are touring theat-
ers in the East.
Did Lady Heady To Ignite
Y-E Day will find the Stat-
ue of Liberty burning
brighter than ever. Six 400-
watt high-intensity mercury
vapor lights which resemble
a living flame will he added
to the 100-watt and 250-watt
incandescent lamps in the
torchlight.
CHARLOTTE, N. C. — A
local landlady ran an ad in
the paper offering a room
to. rent to a man “who do-
esn’t drink.” The ad was
answered, by a truthful man
who, when questioned by
the landlady, admitted “I
get drunk every night,” then
walked sadly away.
DEDHAM, MASS.-Grounds
for divorce: Mrs. Laura
Grimm sent her husband out
to look for a job. He found
one all right—for her.
MILWAUKEE — A little
boy, his head wrapped in a
scarf, sat next to his mother
on a crowded bus. Suddenly
the scarf fell off, disclosing
the boy’s head encased in a
kitchen pot. “Well, all right,”
his mother said. “He’s stuck
and we’re on our way to a
blacksmith.”
NEW YORK—An unidenti-
fied man sauntered noncha-
lantly down Eighth Avenue,
slugging pedestrians right
and left. After he had felled
a dozen with his ham-like
fists, the police collared him.
“I’m just mean,” he ex-
plained.
OMAHA—Grounds for di-
vorce: A farmer who desides
near Omaha is seeking sepa-
ration from his wife because,
he says, she put glue in his
bed in order to keep him out
of it.
ALBUQUERQUE, N. II.—
The airline hostess passed out
chewing gum to the passeng-
ers. “Its for your ears,” she
explained. One nice old lady
took her literally, stuck the
gooey stuff into her ears,
smiled benignly all during
the flight to San Antonio.
Makes Mind Up Quickly
After thinking it over for
a number of years, Boston’s
Joe Pallotli has become an
American citizen at the age
of 93.
PRESIDENT’S FIRST SPEECH BRINGS 1
PRAISE—MRS. ROOSEVELT RESUMES
WRITING—STIMSON URGES MERGER
OF ARMY, NAVY AND AIR FOR
Visiting diplomats, Congressmen of both parties anil
newspapers have been unanimous in praising President
Truman’s first public address after assuming office in
which he reaffirmed at a joint session of Congress his
firm intention to carry on the late President Roosevelt’s
program for winning the war and the peace.
“It was wonderful,” commented Andrei Gromyko,
Soviet Ambassador to the U.S. Senate Majority Leader
Albin W. Barkley (D. — Ky.) said: “The address was
full of reassurance . .. . ”
Declaring that the “address was all it should have
been,” the NEW YORK TIMES said that Mr. Truman
had “risen to the occasion of a great moment of history
with a straightforward statement which carries deep
sincerity.”
Mrs. Roosevelt has resumed her newspaper column,
“My Day,” which had been suspended in the wake of
her husband’s death.
She wrote, in part: “Any man in public life is bound
.... to create certain enmities. But when he is gone his
main objectives stand out clearly, and may hope that
the spirit of unity may arouse the people and their
leaders to a complete understanding of those objectives
and a determination to achieve them.”
Army and Navy officers and enlisted men, who have
been prisoners of war, will receive special consideration
for promotions, the War and Navy Departments ann-
ounced recently in a joint statement.
The proposal for a post-war merger of the Army and
Navy into a single Department of National Defense has
received the personal endorsement of Secretary of War
Henry L. Stimson.
Sen. Lister Hill (D.-Ala.) has disclosed receipt of a
^letter from Stimson on the proposal which would em-
Jjbrace all the armed forces — Army, Navy and the Air
in a single Department.
Author of the legislation designed to set up such a
department, Hill intends to ask the Senate Military Af-
fairs Committee- to conduct hearings on his measure as
soon as possible.
The War Department has announced that it wouldn’t
complete 12 new tank plants scheduled to reach full
production by October because U.S. output now is con-
sidered sufficient to finish the European war and prov-
ide the necessary equipment for use against Japan.
Democratic and Republican leaders alike cracked the
whip recently on their brother Senators, scolding them
thoroughly for what they termed “chronic absenteeism”
and warning them they could he docked a day’s pay
unless they had good reason for not attending sessions.
IN STATE
Surrounded by an honor guard of enlisted men from
all branches of the Armed Forces, the casket of the late
President Roosevelt lies in honor in the East Room of the
White House, scene of many presidential gatherings while
he was chief executive. (ANS Photo). J