fahnny Found Soda Pop
To tie Highly Potent Stuff
A story is being told about
swupte of moonshiners who
sat of the mountains of
k ride on a train for the first time,
lb them it was a great
WKX.
Before they got on the train
n some folks drinking soda
fcmg thirsty, they decided to
* maple of bottles of the beverage,
ffheo the train started, one
tmem pried the cap off the bottle
ami Started to drink the contents
•Bt as the train entered a tunnel.
'"’Hrnr is it, Johnny, how is it?”
JaQuired the other.
"So which Johnny replied:
’“Don't touch it! Don’t touch it!
WBs made me blind already!”
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5 GETTING UP NIGHTS
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THE DADE COUNTY TIMES, TRENTON. C,A.. THNP.SP ».Y, NOVEMBER 15. 19to
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
By VIRGINIA VALE
'T'HERE’S X a line of dialogue
in the script for Internation¬
al’s “The Stranger,” where Lor¬
etta Young confides to Orson
Welles that she’s a victim of
acrophobia. That word threw
everyone in the cast but Welles.
“It’s a fear of high places,” said
he. “I know because I used to
have it myself. I cured myself by
mountain climbing in the Alps;
picked out the sheerest drops I could
find and stared over the edge.” But
—for ‘‘The Stranger” they built the
highest set ever erected in Holly¬
wood, a 13-story church spire; Ed¬
ward G. Robinson, Loretta and
Welles do a dramatic scene part
way up it. And who was it who had
an attack of acrophobia? Why Or¬
son Welles!
-*-
Robert Benchley appears in Holly¬
wood Victory Caravan, the all-star
featurette sponsored by the war
activities committee, Hollywood div-
ROBERT BENCHLEY
ision, acting for the U. S. treasury
department, for the Victory Loan
drive. Benchley appears with a stel¬
lar cast of 20 other notables, in the
screen world.
/TN
Penny Singleton was sort of wor¬
ried about her role in “Young Wid¬
ow”; after seven years of playing
the comic-strip “Blondie” on the
screen—her contract with Columbia
Pictures calls for her to do three
Blondie” pictures a year*— she was
afraid she’d suddenly go cavorting
around the way she does as “Dag-
wood’s” spouse. There’s a screwball
comedienne in “Young Widow,” but
Marie Wilson plays her. Penny had
wanted to play a different role, and
Hunt Stromberg, who brought her to
the screen eight years ago in “After
the Thin Man,” gave her what she
wanted; she plays a perfectly nor¬
mal person, the wise, understanding
friend of the heroine, Jane Russell.
Boris Karloff has been estab¬
lishing a broadcasting record since
he left Hollywood following comple¬
tion of his role in RKO’s “Bedlam.”
Nine programs in sixteen days, in¬
cluding three appearances on “In¬
ner Sanctum” have kept him busy.
Sitting through a Jap-made movie
Is the last word in agony, ac¬
cording to Tom Neal, who plays the
title role in “First Yank into
Tokyo.” Neal, cast as an American
serviceman who undergoes facial
surgery, so that he can pretend to be
a Jap sergeant, for intelligence pur¬
poses, had to sit through “Kimona”
21 times, studying the performance
of the Japanese star of the picture.
Constance Moore, “Gloria Dean”
on “Hollywood Mystery Time,” has
a four-year-old daughter, Gina,
who’s pretty smart. Connie was tell¬
ing a friend she was “sans cook and
sans nurse.” Gina looked up and in¬
quired “Are they related to Sans
Claus?”
-*-
There’s a lot of kidding in the
script of the Burns and Allen show
about Georges singing voice. What
very few people know is that
Grade’s long-suffering spouse actual¬
ly began his theatrical career as one
of “The PeeWee Quartet,” at the
age of 12.
Howard Barlow has no piano in
his “Harvest of Stars” orchestra;
instead, beautiful Elaine Vito plays
the harp. Motion picture companies
have tried to tempt her to try her
luck on the screen, but she prefers
New York, where she plays in Tos¬
canini’s orchestra. She is also play¬
ing in Alex Stordahl’s, while Frank
Sinatra is broadcasting from New
York. So why bother with Hollywood?
ODDS AND ENDS—Danny Kaye, “Won -
der Man” star, is the first screen star to
perform for U. S. forces occupying the
Tokyo area—entertained 3,000 servicemen
in the Neiji Shrine stadium. . . . Seems
hard to imagine Ethel Barrymore as the
mother in “Little Women”; she’s tc play
that role in Selznick’s Technicolor version
of the story. . . . Gavin George makes his
first film appearance in several years in
“Notorious”; 10 years ago, in “Romance,”
he was Greta Garbo’s leading man. . . ,
Barry Fitzgerald and his stand-in held a
tuo-man chess tourney between scenes of
Paramount’s “The Stork Club”—they were
cheered on by Betty Hutton.
SERVICE
BUREAU
EDITOR'S NOTE: This newspaper,
through special arrangement with the
Washington Bureau of Western Newspaper
Union at 1616 Eye Street, N. W., Washing
ton, D. C., is able to bring readers this
weekly column on problems of the veteran
and serviceman and his family. Questions
may be addressed to the above Bureau
and they will be answered in a subsequent
column. No replies can be made direct
by mail, but only in the column which
will appear in this newspaper regularly.
Reconverting Insurance
The Veterans administration has
Just recently ruled that veterans of
World War II who have permitted
their National Service Life insur¬
ance to lapse and desire to reinstate
it, may do so by paying two pre¬
miums and submitting evidence that
he is in good health if the insurance
lapses within six months after he is
discharged.
If the veteran has been out of
service more than six months he
may reinstate the insurance at any
time within three months by show¬
ing his health is as good as when the
insurance lapsed and paying premi¬
ums for two months.
If the veteran is unable to keep
the full amount of insurance he car¬
ried while in service, he may re¬
instate and continue any part of it
in amounts from $1,000 to $10,000 in
multiples of $500 upon payment of
two monthly premiums. Congress
has recently extended the five-year
level premium policies issued on or
before December 31, 1945, and not
converted to permanent policies be¬
fore that date, for an additional
three years. Such policies issued
after that date have five years to
run. In either case, the policies, at
their expiration date, must be con¬
verted to one of the permanent plans
offered by the Veterans administra¬
tion: ordinary life, 20-payment life
or 30-payment life. If national serv¬
ice life insurance is allowed to lapse
after being converted into perma¬
nent form, the veteran must pay all
monthly premiums in arrears with
interest at 5 per cjnt, and prove his
good health. Converted national
service life insurance has a cash
value and may also be used for se¬
curity. The five-year term policy as
extended does not have a cash
value.
Questions and Answers
Q. My son was due home in August
and he has not arrived and we would
like to get some information about
where he is or why he has been de¬
layed. He is with the 1376-E.P.D. Co.
—Mother, Ava, Missouri.
A. The war department does not
recognize ‘‘1376-E.P.D.Co” and says
you must be in error as to the de¬
scription of his outfit. You might
write direct to Bureau enlisted per¬
sonnel, Adjutant General’s office,
War department, Washington, D. C.
Q. Will a soldier with a wife and
child, in service 2 years and over¬
seas 14 months, with 55 points, be
discharged in the near future?—V.P.,
Crossville, Ala.
A. Men with 60 points are eligi¬
ble for discharge November 1 and
the point total may be lowered after
December 1. Our guess is that your
! husband may be eligible for dis-
charge soon.
Q. Before induction into the army,
my husband was employed by the
U. S. Department of Justice. He
served in that position for six
months in 1942 and 43. Since he did
not serve his full probationary peri¬
od is he still eligible under the G.I.
Bill of Rights to return to the same
position?—Mrs. H.K., Los Angeles,
Calif.
A. Under the Selective Service act,
he is entitled to his old job back.
Q. My husband was killed in ac¬
tion. Am I eligible for medical care?
Is our daughter? If so, what is the
proper procedure?—Widow, Glouces¬
ter, Va.
A. The Veterans administration
says neither the widow nor mem¬
bers of the family are eligible for
medical care, unless the widow is
pregnant at the time of the veteran’s
death. The widow, however, is en¬
titled to a pension of $50 per month,
and the daughter $15 per month, if
under 18 years old, for life or until
the widow remarries. She is also
entitled to gratuity pay of six months
of the soldier’s pay, and insurance,
if she is the beneficiary in the sol¬
dier’s policy.
Q. My husband and I would very
much like to know how to get a jeep.
He is on his way home and a jeep
that will run on sand would be in¬
valuable in our business.—Mrs. W.I.
S., Peary, Va.
A. Suggest that you write to the
Department of Commerce, Region 3,
1126 21st street N. W., Washington,
D. C., or to the RFC Disposal agen¬
cy, Richmond Trust Bldg., 7th and
Main streets, Richmond, Va.
Q. My husband is to receive his
discharge in November and we are
expecting a baby in April. Are we
entitled to the infant maternity care?
If so where can we find out?—M.V.,
Lixviile, Mo.
A. The army says that where
pregnancy is in advanced stages,
wives of servicemen are entitled to
maternity care even after soldiers
receive their discharge. Suggest you
apply to your nearest local Red Cross
Chapter. There is an army medical
depot in St. Louis and O’Reilly Gen-
aral hospital at Springfield. There
may be closer medical service.
HlUOUSEHOLD
To wash galoshes put in washer
after washing is finished and wash
them about five minutes. Rinse
well and put to dry in a warm
but not hot place. They will be as
clean and nice as when new.
—•—
Keep cake fresh by fastening
slices of bread over the cut ends
with toothpicks. When the bread
has served its purpose it may be
used for toast or bread crumbs, or
any stale-bread dish.
—•—
If the butter is too hard, heat a
pan with hot water or otherwise,
pour water out and invert pan
over butter dish. This does the
trick and softens the butter
evenly.
—•—
Place a piece of gum camphor
inside the piano case when going
away from home. It will keep the
moths from getting inside the felt.
—•—
Pour a little paraffin over the
sliding groove in the drawer to
make it slide easier.
—•—
When storing empty fruit jars,
replace lids to 4ceep tops of jars
smooth and free from nicks.
Itfr ® 8
®fc f '**
SKID INSURANCE BR/Ng , fA)
get W IN LIKE
TTintone THIS!
FACTORY-METHOD
RECAPPING
Too T *KE
°?T T HlSt
J m 6.00 - 16
Other Sixes Proportionately Low
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tive ml food elements of the ^ I
ytmirnuumm hakes
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STUFFY NOSTRILS
When nostrils are clogged, and your nose feels
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