Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 September 1945 — Page 21
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Inside Indianapolis.
THE REV. HERBERT HUFFMAN, pastor of the First Friends church, bad a chance to do a little hog calling while on his vacation in Winchester recently. He had learned the technique while working on farms in eastern Indiana. But he was shocked this time when he found the hogs running in ‘the opposite direction when he called them. They scattered across the. fiel? and down into a ravine safely out of sight, The next week the Rev, Mr. Huffman found a letter in his mail with the folowing letterhead: “The Great International Amalgamation of Hogcallers.” The letter read: “Dear Sir: We understand you are desirous of reviewing your previous education in hogcalling, acquired ih the state of Kansas, May we send you our illustrative booklet on our up-to-date hogealling course, ‘How to Oink in Ten Easy Lessons?’ Remember, it’s a different job calling a man to repentance . if you can't first call a hawg, Yours very truly, Abraham Acorn, First Vocalist.” The letter was postmarked from Indianapolis and the First Friends pastor is somewhat suspicious,
The Rev. Herbert Huffman . . . his hog calling drove them away.
relative there.
Cotton for Old Dobbin
J.” AN ICE CREAM vendor on Oliver ave. had cotton tucked under the leather halter of his pony yesterday. Dorothy Hinton, who. lives on River ave, saw the white-whiskered animal and came to the conclusion that flies must have bothered him when they sat on his nose. . , . A newsie at Capitol ave.-and Washington st. was wearing a heavy army overcoat about 9:30 a. m, yesterday. The thermometer registered 79
about that time. ,.. The Red Cab Co, officials are keeping their fingers crossed that some new autos are sent here right soon. About 75 or 80 of their cabs now are in the garage and they all need reconditioning or repainting. An order has been in for some time for 273 new cabs to replace the company’s entire fleet. Some of this order is expected by the end of the month, . + « Frank Robinson, 1850 Orleans st., has some dandy sweet corn in his victory garden. Already it’s 10 to 12 feet tall, he says, and is still growing. - He has a variety of other vegetables, too, including beans, parsnips, carrots turrips and onions. .., Hugh W. (Wally) Middlesworth, former Butler football coach and city recreation director, is home now taking it easy. He got out of the army a couple of weeks ago and one of the first things he did was go to Chicago to-see the All Star grid game, He hasn't decided just what he’s going to do yet. . . , The double feature at the State theater last night was “You're in the Army Now"—“You Can't Escape Forever,” /
Moving Day LT. PAUL JOLLIFF, a city fireman in civilian days, says there's one thing the army isn’t short of and that's pills. Paul claims he took 500 of them or at least iv seemed like that many, He went into France shortly before V-E day and was wounded, He was on the first boat taking Yanks from Europe to the Pacific. He's in Manila now... . One of the most loaded-down cars we've ever seen pulled up in front of The Times’ office yesterday. Some thought it was sharecroppers going home. Others said it was a family moving back east after the war plants in the west shut down. But both guesses were wrong. The five passengers, two of them little girls, were headed for Toledo, O., their home. A mattress, blankets, an oil stove and table tops covered the top of the car. In the back seat besides two of thé passengers were magazine racks and end tables and mirrors. On the floor stood an old sewing machine. In the front seat was the driver, his wife and daughter and a magazine rack filled with various odds and ends. And if the trunk of the car were 87 pounds of chicken in the form of 30 live hens or roosters. They stopped to feed them while in Indianapolis and hoped they'd uve till they got home, The “moving van” was a 1937 Buick, which was kept down to about 20-25 miles an hour with the heavy load. They already had two blowouts since they left Edwardsville, Ill, Tuesday. They were moving the
By Ernie Hill
most of his contemporaries. get away with a stack of blue chips when they left their countries. Enrique Penaranda of Bolivia, for instance, left so hurriedly almost two years ago that he took nothing along but his army pants. Fortunately, he had been commissioned an honorary general in the Venezuelan army during his heyday. He now lives on an army pension which the Venezuelans decided to send to him at Arequipa, Peru. Penaranda wasn't a dictator according to the full definition. Some of his colleagues, however, machine-
MERIDA, Mexico, Sept. 7..—~One-time dictators lead lonely lives in exile. Some spend years plotting coun-ter-revolution. Others just try to keep from getting bumped off by former enemies. Fulgencio Batista, now in voluntary exile after running Cuba for 12 years, has journeyed on to Mexico City after
in southern Mexico viewing the Mayan ruins at Chichen Itza. Surrounded by gunmen ready for enemies with a grudge against the generalissimo, Batista went
time later h out office. 10% months ago EF je Was - booted * ou
Now, he twaddles -his time away in Peru. = .
tion. When his party lost the election he immediately embarked upon a good will tour, Only now is his itinerary beginning to repeat itself. Batista, a group of friends and the dazzling young Martha Fernandez —whom he is going to or already has married—made
Tough Guy Makes Soap REFAEL FRANCO, one-time tough-guy president of Paraguay, makes soap fer a living. on his back porch in Montevideo, Uruguay, Franco, nicknamed “The Lame Lion,” also frequents Paraguayan night spots in Buenos Aires when Argentina lets. him in on
return from Chichen Itza, a visit.
Guards Go Ahead
FIRST THREE gunmen came in and sized up the crowd. One pulled a chair to the head of the patio steps and parked when Batista, looking younger and more fit than he did last October, made a triumphant exit to bed. One parked outside my door all night because I had asked the desk clerk twice when Batista planned to return to the hotel. Batista, the next morning, said he planned to return to Cuba in about a year. Until then—more travel, more precautions, more time killing. At that the erstwhile dictator is better off than
ousted last year after running his country for more than 10 years He has been leading a subdued life in New Orleans and traveling inconspicuously. Ubico, like Batista, doesn't have to make soap on his back porch. : - Carlos Arroyo del Rio, former president of Ecuador, watches days drift by and crises arise and pass in his country, from nearby Bogota, Colombia. He caught an airplane when Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra came out of exile and chased him across the border, Arroyo del Rio complains about Velasco Ibarra wearing his ties and driving his automobile. He also doesn’t like thé weather in Bogota.
By Max B. Cook
It weighs 27,000 pounds loaded and 17,000 pounds empty, as compared to 45,000 pounds loaded and 32.-
A * : t1 NEW YORK, Sept. 7—Up in Montreal, Canada, Clyde 'Pangborn, famed American flier, has been
“Hog Calling
furniture from Edwardsville following the death of al
Some of them failed to
gunned a group of unarmed tin miners and some
| was a radioman with the ferry com-
Jorge Ubico, former president of Guatemala, was]
e Indianapol
is
SECOND SECTION
India Proves An Aerial Photographer's Dream
A view of the Taj Mahal, east of Agra, taken from a DC3 by Cpl. Jack Childers, as he took seven leading Indian newspapermen on a tour over U, 8, bases in India.
Natives in
T least one, Indianapolis war wife can visualize where her husband was and what he saw every day—even when he was stationed in a country like India. And she's never been there either. This woman with the “second sight” is Mrs. Betty Childers, 1527 Prospect st., whose husband, Cpl. Jack Childers, sent-lier-dozens of-pho== T— tographs every month. He|tinue his program of two weeks A away and a week at home but the was an aerial photographer]
; 3 army intervened and he was trans on a B-25 based in Kaiachi, ferred to India in June of 1943.
|
» . » ” » India. He is now home on CPL. CHILDERS, who wears the furlough. Asiatic-Pacific ribbon with two bat-
Cpl. Childers also mailed home | tle stars, the presidential unit citajeweled compacts, odd coins, parts|tion, the American theater ribbon from Jap bombers and native bows | and who is a veteran of the African and arrows. campaign, was in India 28 months. ® ao While he didn't visit any ma-= MRS. CHILDERS said proudly harajas, he did stay with a few of = that several of her husband's pic-| India's wealthier citizens. The intures had appeared in Life mage: side of their palaces was a photog- . zine. |rapher’s dream, he said, and. the rndis fen’ : * The Childers were. martied in!breakfssts.jn bed were a BR Sh, ane a 3 les January, 1943, when Cpl. Childers bition. : glamour girl came to entertain the
troops. ‘Cpl. Childers took some In| pictures of ‘Paulette Goddard when
Cpl. Childers
» » A PHOTOGRAPHER'S" life
mand, They hoped he would
con-
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1945
Pictures Keep Home Front Informed
Ceylon, India, near a rest camp for
LLIN
aviation personnel.
A Grim Idol Sits Alone -
[she was in India. aR - » 2 .pher in East St. Louis, Mo., he will[ report to Cincinnati, O.,, for future
duty.
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Small Scar Just as Good
U.S. STOPS NAZI SABOTAGE RING
| By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M.D. has some immunity against cows THERE 18 only one effective way Pow; if nothing happens the vacto control smallpox and that is cine is probably at fault, In either . instance another attempt at vaccithrough successful vaceination.
, : nation should be made. The ideal time to vaccinate is be- "nn tween the ages of 6 and 12 months,
Leader of Reich Plot Had Blond Trouble,
By JOHN McDERMOTT
United Press Staff Correspondent ALTHOUGH there are
several
Quick-witted members of the
| counter-intelligence corps, helped by though.they havelers on the point of as harp steril
been vaccinated | needle.
Vaccination Only Smallpox Protection
FRANKFURT, Sept. 7 (U. P.).—| Even though the effect wears off methnas OF yaseiua ing Sains missed unless the physician is able through the years, | Smallpox, e Iollowing 1s pre-itp keep close tab on the.take durAatican SH) Inteliigsius agents. x vaccination can|ferred by many physicians: The |ing the first few days. completed the ine pot a Lay be repeated, skin should be thoroughly cleansed| Be certain to ask for a certificate mar underground sbotag, siagi During epi-|but strong antiseptics should befof vaccination as the scar may be eVeni before 1t had 4 chines to desim demics everyone avoided. A small amount of tested |so small that it will be difficult stroy one American installation should be vacci-{cowpox virus is placed on the skin |to locate. . nated, even|and carried into the outermost lay- on.
as Large One
small amount of clean gauze can be worn over the take at the height of the reaction, The physician should see the vaccination at. deast on the third and seventh days after innoculation. The immune reaction is often
ALL CHILDREN should be vacel-
. United States. ee iret fle Heme SECRETARY Schwellenbach |
ey * dealing with labor problems. PLIES Saran, nhntapiac] 5: . TAL 4 Atha
Fears Industrial Awaiting Parley
By FRED W. PERKINS Seripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Sept. 7—Press ident Truman will have to wait more than two months for his national labor-management cone ference to produce a prescription for industrial peace in the recone version period. Those two months may be important if the present clouds on the industrial horizon develop into gerious disutrbances. So many organizations of conflicting . interests have asked for authority to take part in the conference that if they are accommodated the meeting may develop into a long and fruitless debate. The date for opening the meet ing, which is expected to last sev= eral weeks, will be either Oct. 290 or Nov. 5, according to jbint an= houncement by Labor Secretary : Schwellenbach and Commerce Secretary Wallace. 4 It will depend on when a nums ber of CIO officials get back to this country from a meeting in Paris of the new World Trades Union federation, and a return call on Russian labor representatives who recently visited the
said he would like to have the conference earlier, and was aware of the possibility that during the three months industrial dis turbances’ may become critical. Some already are reported begine ning in the automobile industry, The delay might: (1) allow labor-management disputes to get out of hand; (2) permit the situation to scitie so that the cone ference could be surer of its decisions; (3) retard congressional action on several pending bills
Among these legislative matters he fos important 15 thé Hatéhe Ball-Burton bill. This bill has been opposed by ‘all branches of organized labor, and so far hag
had no administration support.
We, the Women—,
Husband Who ‘Bosses’ Cook | Eyed as Hero
By RUTH MILLETT IN CALIFORNIA a former film star divorced her producer husband, charging mental cruelty. As proof, she told the. Judge her husband's bickering frightened away the servants and she had to do her own house~ work,
Now that— *
WE
a
{a 19-year-old German blond, who { talked too much for her lover's good, | have captured 1200 pounds of dyna{mite and arrested over 40 saboteurs {including the ringleader,
before, Not all attempted vaccinations are successful as the virus
Dr. O'Brien
the skin over an area more 1
duce what is known as a healed may be too weak, sanitary dimple. A small vaceinas
nated against It is not necessary to puncture than 4th of an inch in diameter to pro-
have low
smallpox as they
start to school even though they may have been given tection during infancy. The states which require this wise provision smallpox
this pro-
rates. Only
any housewife will agree —is cruelty of an
testing and proving a new passenger and cargo airplane which may give some well-known {ypes of American planes a run for their money,
Latest word is that it has lived up to all specifications. Some of these specifications are high speed at low cost, high payload, short takeoff and landing requirements ~gafety. Success of he new plane will mark the comeback of one of America’s best-known aeronautical engineers, Vincent Burhelli, designer .and inventor of the Burnelli flying wing or “lifting fuselage” type of wing. The Canadian Car & Foundry Co. is the manufacturer.
The new plane is<known as the CBY. It is a 38passenger, highwing monoplane with all-wing lifting
fuselage and two tails.
Powered with two 1250 horse-.
power engines, it is said to take off in 1100 to 1200
Mt feet and land in 600 to 700 feet.
Carries 38 Passengers
WORD from Montreal says that Pangborn has been landing the plane in one cornef of an airport. It's cruising speed is rated at 210 tor 215 miles per
hour, its stalling speed 60 miles per hour. The square-shaped fuselage offers one-half total lift, the wing the other 50 per cent, thus the com-
bined fuselage aid wing offer 100 per cent lift.
On
the basis of announced performance, the CBY looks
like another 3-cent mile plane,
My Day
HYDE PARK, Thursday.--I happen to be one of the fortunate people of the world on whom any health insurance, carried by any company, would
have certainly paid dividends to ever,- 1 have enough friends and that one of the things which brings distress and completely unbalanced budgets into many homes is the illness which was -not expected. Most people who have even moderate incomes prepare for the advent of a baby ‘and lay the If Ahere
the family budget. It has meant , a great deal to many young wives en in the service to taken
company. Howghbors to know
not depend upon private funds alone.
|” The blond and her girl friend were
400 empty for one of America's largest two-engined |first picked up by the CIC Jor {OC Ihe putieht Thay have protection tion scar Is just as protective as a
transports. It has 2623 cubic feet capacity as com- | routine questioning. = Frightened, | pared to the other's 2755 cubic feet, but the other they revealed the fact that requires two 2100 horsepower engines to do almost | notorious gestapo officer, after fleethe same job. {Ing Cologne, was working as.a baker
I iq
i
The CBY has a wing span of only 86 feet, com- in Weimar and planning with other “P
seven states forbid the requirements of pre-school vaccination, and they have the most smallpox cases year in and year out. Deaths from smallpox In those who have been recently success-
{large one. You may be vaccinated If the skin at the point of in-|on the arm, thigh, or leg. 1beulation becomes sore, red and! ° x on tchy for a few days and then clears | A VACCINATION shield should
pared with the other plane's 107 feet: a length of | Germans to disrupt American com54 feet, 4.25 inches, as against the other's 76 feet, 4, munications and transportation. inches, and it is only 13 feet, 4 inches high as com-| The CIC already had its observers pared to the other plane's 21 feet 9 inches of height. | watching the baker, who appeared Floor area is 370 square feet and 38 passengers have | outwardly as a mild-mannered man standard accommodations. busy at his work. | . He was co-ordinator of the underAdded Safety Factor ground organization and kept a flow LANDING gear and all engine accessories are Of letters with coded instructions accessible in flight for repair, engineers say. {loving from village 19 village. If the word from Montreal-{§ correct, the CYB Face Death Penalties
will be able to take off and land with full load of | 8,000 pounds or 38 passengers on fields throughout the | Western Hemisphere, Engineers add that the lifting | wing type fuselage adds a safety factor that makes | impossible telescoping in a forced landing. Engines are sufficiently ahead of cockpit and fuselage that loss of a propeller would not endanger pilots Or | province, showed up on schedule but
passengers. {found American agents with hand- |
Burnelli's original “flying wing” has been in serv- | cuffs waiting to greet him : |
ice in Central America on the TACA airlines for |
the CIC—-she asked him to meet! her at the gang's hideout.
| He: later attempted suicide by several years. The British used Burnell “AYINg | slashing his A ap y wings” throughout the war for heavy transport, and | The CIC reported that all the
Gen. Charles de Gaulle used a Burnelli UB-20 83 | Germans involved in the .sabotage his personal plane. - The ‘Burnell four-engined, triple- | h1ot had been members of the Nazi tailed long-range air transport, the MB-4, has been | intelligence corps. Their instrucsuccessfully test flown and is being manufactured by | tions were to wait until a good mo- | the Canadian Car & Foundry Co. It has a ting ment presented itself and then to!
fuselage 14 feet in width and six feet high. destroy American installations
simultaneously over a vast area, In one incident, American agents {saw a prominent German chocolate {manufacturer ' handing a- fellow! | German asstick of dynamite, They
: | walked inside the candy factory and Secondly, no matter what we do, the training of found it erammed with dynamite
doctors and our schools of medicine must be properly | caps and explosives. financed and kept to the highest standards of effi-| All those who have been arrested clency. Young men who seem good material and are|face the death penalty under miliwilling to put in the time for this arduous training tary law, if they are convicted, should receive every assistance during their training! hi LOCAL SERGEANT
By Eleanor Roosevelt
years, regardless of what they themselves can .pay! toward their education. i Research and training are two things which are essen jon, tial to the health of the nation. They should, Sgt. Ronald; ‘Golay, son of Mr. “Tt seems to me the government might well guar-| And Mrs. Alva F. Golay, 948 Lesley antee that these two phases of the health of the| Ave. died yesterday at PL. Logan nation shall go forward unhampered and properly| Convalescent hospital, Denver, Colo., financed. of injuries. He was 27. ' The senate health bill, as proposed, puts fhuch, Set. Golay, former Cathedral responsibility on the states, But it does leave super-| igh school and Butler university vision In the hands of the surgeon general, and I|football star had been stationed at think the advisory committee gives the kind of safe-| Ft. Logan with the military police.
i 'LOCAL BRIEFS—
Butler Freshmen Will Meet
i day at the opening of the school’s 91st consecutive year. The enrollment | | The organization's leader, who wag| in the new university college program, designed to give students a well-| in love with the - blond, suspected | rounded cultural background, is expected to be increased by veteran | nothing when—at the suggestion of | registration,
classes The leader, a former commander | Registration and instruction in the| pupil to the greatest extent pos|of secret police in a large German | evening division will be held Sept. sible,” said Mr. Stinebaugh.
121 In Walnut Gardens;
DEAD OF INJURIES!
it is most likely: that the patient’ never be worn. If necessary, a
fully protected are practically unknown. If you have been vaccinated years ago and you develop the disease, the little protection which remains from your old vaccination will keep you from getting the disease in severe form ¥
* HANNAH
‘Monday at School Opening
Butler university freshmen will meet for conferences and tests Mon- |
STATUE UNVEILING TODAY TOONE
Upperclassmen will register Tuesday, freshmen Wednesday and |
will begin on - Thursday, —— "=r
17 through 21. 4 |
Final plans for the annual United | - The Cocker Spaniel club of Cen-|War and Community Fund cam- | ~~ paign were completed by members|
fral Indiana will have a wiener roast and meeting at Washington | of the special gifts division at a] rw Park Sunday at 4 p. m. to discuss meeting last night in the Indian | their cocker spaniel specialty show. apolis Athletic club. The dogs will be shown Friday, Oct The drive, which is to be held 19, in Tomlinson hall. An all breed from Oct. 8 through 23, is conducted |
by volunteer workers, J. G. Sinclair | is serving as general chairman. and | Volney M. Brown is chairman of the | special gifts division. |
dog show, sponsored by the Anderson Kennel club and the Hoosier | Kennel club, will be held Oct. 20 and
The schools of a democracy assume that “every student has a spark of genujus,” according to Vir-! : J { a Stinebaugh, superintendent of 1D News and radio reporters ‘and Indianapolis public schools. - | photographers he censored last | Mr. Stinebaugh discussed demo-|night gave Byron Price a rousing cratic education last night before sendoff on his special mission to the faculty and officers of Indiana Germany on behalf of President | Central college. His subject was| Truman. The former director of | “The Personal Factor in Personnel censorship was honor guest at a re- | Work.” . |ception given at the National Press|
|
NEWSMEN HONOR PRICE WASHINGTON, Sept. 7 (U, Pym |
extreme de-.? gree, : But the husbands who g
have had their home life run : te- suit one or ‘ more servants during the current shortage are bound to feel the Hollywood husband was someé= thing of a hero. For the average man, whose wife has held help through the last few years, has found that he couldn't call his soul his own in his own home. ” ” ” HE WAS hushed promptly by a terrified wife if he started to com= plain because the new maid had hidden his shirts again, or straightened up his desk. He didn’t dare complain about a meal—no matter how poorly it was cooked. Not only that, he was prompted to “Say something nice to Susie about the dinner,” and managed to do it even when the meat tasted like leather and the biscuits - were light as a brick. If he were to be an hour late to dinner, it was cooked at the regular time and served cold by the little woman. For after all, you can’ ask a maid to stay overtime—not these days. = n A AND HE knew good and well he had better not bring an unex “= pected guest home to share the evening meal—not ' because of = Mama's wrath, but because Susie wouldn't show up for work next day. So a husband who dared fo frighten servants ust look to the average husband whose wife has kept a maid through the war like a man of great courage. For ne has been more consid erate of Susie’s feelings than of his wife's, because his wife has made it clear that however he might talk to her, he had better °
“It is the responsibility of every club by Washington's 10 reporlanal | teacher 10 try to develop every|and photographic agencies.
talk nice to Susie,
DOTTIE DRIPPLE
—By Buford Tune
YOU'D NEVER WIN A PRIZE WITH A FUNNY LOOKING MUTT LIKE PEPPER //
HA-HA--TAFFY YOU MUST BE Rig ODING //
DADDY, LET'S
PUT PEPPER IN
i g : 5 3 E :
future. . Federal assistance should be available
Are
ning expenses, -but vestment for ‘buildings and
tal inves equipment. on
guard which should make sure that there will be no hampering of either research or education in the
¢ for the building of hospitals and clinics. This, of course, is esseritial, since many communities can meet the run-| & unable to make the first capi- 2
MN i oy
His parents. received a wire Tuesday from army officials that he was [in a critical condition “suffering injuries” in the hospital there. His mother flew to Denver Wednesday and was with him before he died. y was to return to Jin- | p. m. today. Reld-
$2
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