Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 December 1939 — Page 9

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Big Green All Set for Blue STATES BATTLE OVER RICH DAIRY PRODUCT TRADE

Red, Purple and Green Milk '* SERVE SEAN ee Have Figured in Feuds |¥ “Ses&s a NR a

Talks Today to Bible Club—The| Moose Initiate 75—Seventy-five : 9 Between Markets. Bo Bt et |e Juss Lit day had been in. | ames C. Petrillo, head of the Chi , cago Federation of Musicians,

| tive secretary of the Indianapolis | : | Church Federation, is to speak at, ducted into Indianapolis Lodge 17, .j3imeq a major victory today in a

(the Y. M. C. A. Bible Investigation Loyal Order of Moose. Ceremonies | om naion tc ban ihe name of his {Club at its meeting at the “Y" at were held last night at Moose Tem- | rival. John L. Lewis of the C. I. O '6 p. m. today. He will discuss “The ple, 135 N. Delaware St. Mark R.|¢.om hod a | Bible and Personal Living.” Gray, publisher of the Indianapolis | O™ RIL slage productions appears

er . , fait So . « | Ing in the city. By RUTH FINNEY Liederkranz Plans Party — Tye COmMmercial, Was iniatory speaker. He was successful last night in

. i ; : au . | the Martinsville-Bloomington game State WASHINGTON, Dec. 27.—Nobody | Indianapolis Liederkranz will hold| post to Hear Jeffrey—George R.| eliminating mention of Mr. Lewis

last Friday night. Martinsville, 88 poerner. Katterhenry and Mont- | wants to drink red milk. is New Year's parly Saturday| j.gvee former U. S. district attor-|{rom “The Man Who Came to. Din-

; J 3 3 ] - Eo . | evening at the Liederkranz Hall, » ; , you can guess, won this one by a gomery are the three high scoring Se . § i 3 | That's why Rhode Island poured | 1417 he Washington St. Karl Kief-| ney and a candidate for the Repub- | 100 Bplay BY George S. Rautman 40-39 score boys for Evansville, while Prusz, BE ; | an 0s hari, was his secon

red coloring matter into Vermont er's orchestra will provide music for |lican nomination for governor, will | yj ; : aha : . N 8 , | victory in as many days. Mr. Bennett, after referring to gusott, Harke, Oesthreicher and : BBY AF : ) rh tpt iria | ‘ cll sSusolt, ’ S {milk a year or so ago. It was -|a dance. Adolph Widmer, presi- . , rig’ ; the early visit of Santa Claus to the Galloway round out the squad. ] g S pro-| p be the guest speaker at an initiation| The shows and Lewis’ followers

PAGE 9

PETRILLO WINS NO-LEWIS MOVE

3 Chicago Musicians’ Chief | Says C. I. 0. Head Will Get No Drama Mention.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1989

Orr THE ACKBOARD

By TOM OCHILTREE

& *

- : » CHICAGO, Dec. 27 (U. P).— BAITING OF basketball officials is an old and time- §¥ oa

honored custom in this State, but it seldom is done with the § artistry which Grady Bennett of the Bloomington Telephone { brought to his work. His printed complaint centers around the whisle blowing of Clyde Castle and Bud]

Editor's Note: In the third of a series of articles on the growing problem of interstate trade barriers. Miss Finney tells of the feuds involving milk, | margarine and eggs.

; ; Sv ie ioe Other two victims were Cornell (Ta) | Pointer of Evansville during | a fiece and Southwestern (Mo.

~ TIP INS: Frankie Clemons, who used to perform for Anderson High | School, is sparking the Toledo University team this season, , . . Times change. Last season Hammond was the hot bed of prep basketball in|

|its district. Fan interest Were Now | _—— 1} s jow ebb that the schoo ; s Photo. ona to spandon the holiday tourna- | Practicing to be sure that their technique on free throws is correct, “Per , we think the officials ment which it inaugurated last| these Tech basketball players will oppose Shortridge at the East Side f Pu a aha Martinsville vear . . After Rex Fllis was| gym tonight. Left to right are Charles Berling, Frank Walker, Lowell Te ie as SE as they were shifted from center to forward in Boggy, Jack Stoelting and Harry Hagans. the Notre Dame lineup he hit 11°

: ; : i jary i ; | dent, will be in charge of the festivi- | ting of Wayne Post 64, Ameri-|didn’t seem to mind. Managers of tesis itv, points out that 21m : sti it. Those tecting the home diary industry. Fas | meeting ! st 64, . anag Hvsonei fous were called against Fish huribgodag iy least for Vermont protested, but someone ‘1°S. |can Legion, at 8 p. m. today at the the shows were busy dusting off S. : : ; Ss < p iri illar is S § .| publicity than usual in newspaper ' tinsville. Bloomington ® ; mont statute books, requiring that | Willard Thomas is post commander, | publicity ey yy Sorighcd as compared | Sl oleomargarine coming into the state | | stories about the bans. | 3 ; h EAS ; SS | Purple milk and green margarin ,» Marion County chief deputy | been foes since the C. I. O. break S t- ~ g e 3 3 It wasn't so much that the twi | figured in another interstate trade ' : | prosecutor, will address the weekly | with the A. F. of L. It was Mr. | war. | luncheon meeting of the Indian-| Petrillo who gave A. F. of L. Presi- | Regulate Margarine | | apolis Motor Transportation Club dent William Green a musician's | {at Fox's Steak House tomorrow |card when Mr. Lewis deprived

40 Farm Men to Meet With | noon. | Green of his card as a coal miner.

Li to H T Col. R Mr. Petrillo decided Monday that . ons to Hear Turner—Col. Ros- Mr. Lewis w + Abbott; Map Will Be Ir. Lewis was getting too much Made by Spring.

terers saw Bloomington fouls which weren't there but that they didn't see Martinsville violations which were obviously there” contended Mr. Bennett, and here is a quote from him which even a few baseball fans might want to put in their memory books:

Bloomington and only nine charged |yjght now. found an old law, once on the Ver-| | post home, 6566 W. Washington St.|R. O. signs. Both were getting more p ink ‘ats ak—James A. - . 3 - i with 12 for Martinsville. ‘had to be colored pink. Watson to Speak—James A. Wat-| Mr. Petrillo and Mr. Lewis have

The dairy industry was one of the! | first to demand protective legisla(tion, and since in its upper brackets it is one of the richest and most powerful industries in the country. it has had conspicuous successes, so | conspicuous that free trade in dairy | products is practically unknown to-

i coe Turner, head of the Central publicity on Chicago stages. He Aeronautical Corp., will speak on|banned a Lewis skit from George “Aviation” at noon today at the| White's “Scandals,” with a threat

Lions Club weekly meeting in the| that if the management refused to Claypool Hotel. The dinner will be | comply, the A. F. of L. union mu-

Plans for the first county-wide

blind — which means completely,

honest.” |points against Southern California.

| He likes the corners better than that pivot spot.

= =

ALTHOUGH IT will not prevent them from plaving their basketball | schedules this winter, the I. H. S| A. A. has handed out a few short talks to both Elkhart and Bluffton. Elkhart has heen placed on probation until June 1, 1940, for using two players in a clinic football game sponsored by a Ft. Wayne newspaper last Aug. 28. The boys completed their athletic eligibility last spring, the association found, and therefore were ineligible for this clinic game The association placed Buffton on probation until Sept. 1, 1940, for| plaving a pre-season football game, The ruling was based on the contention that the Bluffton varsity competed against a team of graduates while in training at Lake Webster Aug. 30. Bluffton school officials aren't taking any chances now, anyway. They have ruled that no one but students may be in the gymnasium or on the athietic field

= = BOB HAIR, of the Lambda Chi house at Greencastle, writes that some of the boys from Illinois high schools now attending DePauw can’t be convinced on this subject of Hoosier superiority, His letter says, in part: “I would like to know how you | think Indiana high school basketball compares with Illinois high school basketball. “As you know, DePauw this year has nearly as many students from Illinois as it has from Indiana.

ball in high school, but none will concede that Indiana is better than Illinois as a player-producing state or vice versa. “Being from Winamac myself,

from, and being a cousin of Let

Many of the fellows played basket- |

where the runners-up in 33 came

Pinmen to Fete F oxx Waits Jess Pritchett For Reveng

Dinner for Veteran Bowler Scheduled Tomorrow.

Vols’ Ace Anxious to Show | Trojans He Can Play.

| { | Jess Pritchett, veteran in local bowling circles, is to be honored by | his friends and fellow pinmen at a| PASADENA, Cal, Dec. 27 (U. P.) dinner-dance at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow | — Revenge is sweet—and Bob Foxx

. of Tennessee has a sweet tooth, in the Riley Room of the Claypool = wo vears ago this 180-pound. Hotel, 3

| swivel-hipped boy from Knoxville Final plans for the affair were came to the University of Southern made last night at a meeting of California as a freshman. With him

A : he brought a reputation as a whackcommittees appointed from the In- ing good football prospect, a fast,

dianapolis men’s and women's bowl- 4,4 hitting, long-kicking tailback. ing organizations. He enrolled in the university and

_ Speakers at the banquet are 10 go, five days went to classes at the include Mayor Reginald H. Sullivan, | pos Angeles school. But none of the

By HENRY M'LEMORE

United Press Staff Correspondent

day. The upper brackets were most | interested in fighting margarine. | The dairy farmers, restricted to low | prices by the few big companies at| | the top, worried about milk shipped | in from other states. Every state now has legislation of | some Kind on its book about margarine, ranging from mild labeling | requirements to drastic tax laws. | | Thirty states levy excise taxes or li-| jcense fees or both. Wisconsin] charges 15 cents a pound on all] margarine sold, given away, deliv- | ered or used in the state, Manufacturers pay a $1000-a-year fee, whole- | |salers $500. Hotels and restaurants] that serve margarine pay $25 a year. | There is even a $1 tax on users. Oleomargarine is made of cotton-| {seed oil, animal oil or coconut oil, and could be sold for such less than butter. {

| Sections Have Preference

| The South would like to see its cottonseed oil used this way, and most Southern states in retaliation | (have established legal or voluntary embargoes on Wisconsin beer, cheese |

survey to determine the best uses for various Marion County farm soils will be made tomorrow. More than 40 men representing different sections of the county and interested in various types of agriculture will meet with Marion County Agriculture Agent Horace E. Abbott, who is directing the study. Men attending will include dairymen, grain farmers, swine breeders, poultrymen, green house and outside

vegetable growers, land owners, tenant farmers and cattlemen. After | a general discussion of the physical structure and typography of Marion County soil the men will make preliminary plans for a county-wide map to be completed by next spring. Each of the men will be aided in his section by other farmers so that eventually between 300 and 400 Marion County people will be employed on the survey. Maps are to be made in Marion, Hancock, Hamilton and Madison Counties. | Vocational agriculture teachers) who will aid Mr. Abbott include] William Adamson, Decatur Central; | R. F. Sproat, Ben Davis; P. E. An-

the service club's annual father and son gathering.

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UP IN the Calumet the fans are contending that Horace Mann has the finest trio of sophomore players to grace that district in several vears. These sophs on whom Coach Keith Crown is banking to keep Horace Mann in the front ranks for the next two seasons are Dan Mellinger, Dick Olson and Bob Matthews,

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KANSAS CITY, Mo, Dec. 27 (U. P.) —Fastern and Southern football coaches said today that the " J » » ’ > | Rose Boxl game New Year's Day Fehrenbach, Hoosier A, ( between Tennessee and Southern | Russell Fifer. Community EH was too “tough” to | WOT Hartman Cie pick. Greaver, Penn tecreat on Not one of 30 coaches, including | Fart Dann, THY ...ooonvenenen | Notre Dame's Elmer Layden, Wis- | — | consin’s Harry Stuhldreher and | Princeton's Ted Weyman, would Lou Berger Bought | hazard a guess on the Bowl game |

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Bill Murphy, Community .... Oscar Buses, City shh slARRRRLLLS | MeCartney, Capital City Smith, Pritchett Recreation | Clemen, Sahara Grotte : .h | Callahan, Fountain Square Recreation | Harold Walton, City Lins D. England, Pirtchett Recreation ....

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i ‘ward and co-cap- George J. Marott, Neil C, King, Les all ¢ e hi | fn . k : rant deal ot Koelling and Miss Lucy Court, all gH er? re gg Shier Jr ; _|derson, Franklin Township; W. L.| ¢ 1am or - cage teams. But lof Indianapolis, and Elmer Baum-|,. th : > loa ri, oO ASp TOWNS Un mars Mowrey, Warten Central; Kenneth ¢ OF ALL the holiday tourna- respect for Hoosier cage HE oo Rota Anilw Ree SEOTet ar enough in a football suit to get a garine made of animal oils. I'he Cohee, Southport, and A. C. Hoffments the one that most appeals to when Chicago boys rub it 1 aboul or e Ld ¢ o ob AR Dots little more attention than that, /Midwest frowns on margarine made man, Tech High School. vour conductor is the event to be Bradley Tech and Dar Hutchins treasurer of the American Bowling packed his bags, caught a midnight of anything else. They retaliate a ———— ——_., held in the Elwood gym Saturday. swamping Indiana last year and Congress. King, A. B. C. first vice train, and started rolling back to against each other. ‘DEMOCRAT OUSTER This will bring together “giant kil- about Loyola of Chicago thumping president, will act as toastmaster. |gnoxville The technique for protecting milk i ler’ teams from four comparative- Purdue this fall, why what can y | : He Made a Date from outside competition has been, VOTE SET TONIGHT lv small high schools. In addition say in retaliation?” : Last night's roll of honor pinmen: |... j.ter he was entolied in different. —— | to the host Panthers, Burris of | Apparently the writer is referring Bil Dugdale, Lily LLebRiRbLLiRLL Lats in Tennessee and hE getting the at=| Each state has milk inspection] WABASH, Ind. Dec. 27.—A Demo- | Muncie, Alexandria and Tipton will to DePaul instead of Loyola, simcee pn Bisesi, Pritchett Recreatio 662 tention he deserved from the Tens laws—proper and necessary for safe-| cratic factional fight that has been perform the former school was the one Red Stuart, ROY ation " . Sey hbusee coathes. The? welcomed him guarding the health of its citizens.| brewing in Wabash County for two p tk the measure of the ity. : 3 4 : : S. : But these laws have s0 worded | v ¥ : ih , wnien | vook ar metal ent $13 with open arms because they knew Dut these laws have been so worded years will be brought to a climax Boilermakers. y Joe Rea, CIty . Es #11! that in Foxx thev had a 60-minute © SO administered in most states|tonight when precinct committee- | Actually, I tun Rik Rb pow, Laminertial gtr a plaver with class. \t 1at they discriminate against men will vote on a motion to oust | he 1 teams of t Pe at re The | BY Raaseh, Indiana Recreation .... 639 Foxx left California in a hurry, Products from outside. ._ |Kenneth King as county chairman. | 1 Se1100), temms of the FO Ri a. hi ME Ri ag HI gf oy : + 83 but before he left he told the foot-| For instance, the Connecticut Factional lines have developed be- | {last time I sax De OTs ne | Julins Johnson, Community .......... 635 ball team at the University of Milk Commission does not examine tween younger members of the party,| school play I Na a a RS Ralph Arbough, City : #33 Southern California that he would dairies outside its own limited milk- | and older leaders. Mr. King repre-| indeed, and the team ue : y daniel Lozan, Pritchett Recreation ... 6 be back shed, and doesn’t admit milk from| sents the younger faction. system of keeping the back gUArd vVenesia, Pritchett Recreation GE ue: to . : . dairies it hasn't inspected a Sa under his own basket. I under- Weaver, Britchett ARee 6 I'll be seeing you fellows, and ‘ NEW DIOCESE CREATED : : L. Kahr, Hoosier A. C, 2 | 1) spel y i 1.” om » OE " ! |stand now, though, that Illinois Man Power, City This 1 way TIL De Seeile Jou in fe Rue Bowl. | Prices Are Dictated WASHINGTON. Dec. 27 (U. P.) —| | av i PB ain Sguar ati . ihe s¢ Ye ) nge S— | : : { = ® | squads have gotten away from this Bron, Fountain Square Recreation. Se Cols ike Tons U E C oe New York, Pennsylvania, New| Pope Pius XII has ordered creation | : . elv. Paul Moore, City NL . ' 4 5 CUR SHE 5 RIE » Jersey, Georgia, all make it prac-|/of a new Roman Catholic diocese, IN ANY advance doping of the latel : am bode: i oe 5 Coeniessises B19 sOPTY oy di iv e a chance.” versely, eorzla, 2 | a. : State College Confers aE dont] If Fiala Wathen Plagen ie mi SHORE MH oy he in re fe ie tically impossible for milk to enter comprising parts of Arizona and | v 3 ) ough for Southern Califor- ott, Parkway Ne, 2 IR iY hoe AJ AZ x , n> a > Ne | y o§ ; forget Evansville College's net team, | €ood enough fo ugh for Webb, Continental Baking #18 promise. He is back with the Ten-| {rom beyond their own small milk-| New Mexico, the Most Rev. Amleto which thus far has been hotter than (Nia teams theyre good enough Carr, Gyre CC 61% ossee team for the Rose Bow sheds. | Cicognani, Apostolic Delegate to the) ha > ol : 3 . Carl Mindach, I. A, C. Classie 616 SS ¢ , rub i w " i 4 ; a trumpet player at a Georgia re- Me | Lim A Pritchett Recreation 813 game against Southern California. ! Eichten Stiles Jie apr RoRide! Uinted States, announced last hight. ! / Si ? \ > : . , » ne vival rwett, Woasier A. C aii and of all the Volunteers he is the the right to fix the price at which The Purple Aces have wr four a x Tey § : milk shall be bought from farmers. | Rt ames dead Yi Ren a ereial . al one most anxious to hear the shrill a es Eta aut rrg. high orice A d | Riraight games, averaging 58% Rachre, Penh Recreation siz of the kick-off whistle. He wants to The farmers want a Nigh pi oe Xe 1 points a contest. Their point totals Larry Rradiey, City pi get that ball under his arm and But as soon as it is, Shey ay Fonte rom 43 pans Doran Larry Paver. Parkway No. 2 613 show Howard Jones and his helpers around to make it Wg e sor] 72 against Louisville University. The | Nord ohrhiage, ity el what a mistake they made two years competing milk to enter from anRi N "ig ' §09 | ARO {other milkshed. As the whole thing | 609 | They May Regret It works out, the price to the con-| hod cs i : sumer remains high, few dairy] 606 | Foxx is liable to make them have farmers make enough to prosper, oy regrets of the Mrs. Otis type before and low-income families have to| 0) | Lhe, game is over, too, because he turn to powdered milk or do with-| ths is the most valuable man on the gyt. |

03 Tennessee team, Cafego has gotten| 1t's almost as hard with eggs. Wy- | voy More publicity as a back, and!oming requires that every “foreign” | . 01 Molinski and Sufiridge have more egg—any egg, that is, from Colorado | 0% newspaper clippings to show, but!or rdaho—must be so branded. {Foxx was voied the most valuable, A pumber of states provide that | {man on the team by his teammates. |g egg is “strictly” fresh if it has] y and the Southern newspaper Writers, erossed a state line, no matter how | By Brooklyn Clud who saw the Vols all year, named |¢joce that line may be to the mar-| him on their all-Southern team. ket. Coach Neyland will tell you that Foxx is the finest defensive back he ever coached. And that he is| the greatest man on a reverse in football. Foxx is a great ball-hawk [Few men in football can match his record for pass interceptions and] opponent's fumbles recovered. And| can he work that reverse! Frank | Thomas, Alabama coach, told me

DAMAGE FINISHED Special “Evening” Delivery

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Galoshes are Reinforced at All Points of Wear!

| outcome. They paused here en route to the National Collegiate | Athletic Association meeting in

| NEW YORK, Dec. 27 (U. P).— Los Angeles,

Lou Berger, 28, former American League infielder, was listed as “infield insurance” on the roster of the Brooklyn Dodgers today. The Dodgers purchased Berger last night from the Boston Red + {Sox for the waiver price of $7500. i 'He has played every position in the 3 infield in his five-year major league career. A right-handed hitter, he y batted 300 in 20 games last season

SHERWIN WILLIAMS

Fas a Paint tor Tess urpose, COSTSs ES! Because it Lasts Longer,

FREEDOM TO LEARN fl] VRS. N/ = vTaL Non Too fl BAR A 4

‘his team never had to worry about| MADISON, Wis, Dec. 27 (U. P).| sr the Tennessee reverse. | —Freedom to learn is the essence of | “It was just another play until| Americanism, President Roosevelt Suggests Rose and Foxx got in the backfield.” Thomas| today told the fifth annual conven3 ye » |said, “but once he became part of tion of the American Student Union, | Sugar Victors I lay it, it became the finest scoring play an organization which the Dies 3 ere {in Southern football.” Committee characterized as Ja VONNEGUT'S NEW ORLEANS, Dec. 27 (U. P) | He's Phi Beta Timber Updos YOU) Tor COMMUNIST Ie |—A suggestion that winners of tue) Foxx isn't ee} The Sort¥enition opened 3 oupy, Ww ‘Sugar and Rose Bowls play a bene- oxx isn't just a football player, session on the University o 8 e

. for Fi ) stn. Cither. He is the best student on consin campus, bringing college and Make L A K S me i Riana, WS nage ie the squad, and one of the best in high school delegates from all parts ON ANYTHING | sportsman,

the entire university, He is a cinch |of the United States, | SACKS BROS “Finland is a sports loving na- *

for Phi Beta Kappa, and will finish| Joseph P. Lash, A. 8. U. national tion, he wrote former President hn Core: Course in three and "battle Impended within the. ASD Herbert Hoover, head of the Qrive zp, gyegs js that Foxx will be the over condemning Russia for aggres- | OUTFITTERS TO MEN, WOMEN and CHILDREN

for Finnish relief funds. “Deprived |. ictanding man on the field next

; | si F d. Such an issue was! through disastrous circumstances of | Monday. With Cafego out sion in Finlan i THE MODERN CREDIT STORE

ths 4 and | expected by its sponsors to force a the Olympics, it seems fitting that “Raq News” is a cinch to retire these Sin : The) ° x $ Ne | st & nat symethe sportsmen of America should test of Communist strenyth or sym ndiana Theater 129 Ww. Wash. s Opposite Us

: first time a real block is put on! » with ization, have the opportunity of helping 1 pathy wiv in the organization the boy to know that he is the type 5 vo a large amount of money, | VE HAVANA, Cuba, Dec. 27 (U. P)) —| |of the running, and more than his| dread secret police during the “I want shouldn't have treated me so cooly,” | his car was detained.

Next—Bootleggers' rennaissance. |

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Foxx told me. “I aim to enjoy that i ———————————" game in the Rose Bowl a lot.” SOLDIERS WEAR MINK

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