Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1946 — Page 15

RIL 24, 1946

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Inside Indianapolis

THREE SETS OF TWINS were born on three adJoining farms near Oaklandon within six weeks, we hear from Mr, and Mrs, Martin ‘Rafalco, R. R. 12, Box #54. Mr. and Mrs. Rafalco are proudly showing their friends their set of twins, whom they. named “Fibber” and “Mollie.” The twins are calves, incidentally. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Apple, Box 353, named their set of twin calves, “Amos” and “Andy.” The third set, named Jane and Judy, are just getting thelr land legs on the farm of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Stoner, at Box 352. The calves belonging to the Rafalcos and Stoners are all the offsprings of a registered Guernsey bull, owned by Chalmer Waddy and Mr. Stoner. . .. A recent list of top selling books in Indiana listed “A Star Is Born,” by Franz Werfel, the same title as a Janet Gaynor-Charles Farrell movie some years ago. Could be the list meant “Star of the Unborn” by Mr. Werfel,

Outfoxing a Red Fox

HOWARD SINGER, of 2615 Station st. outfoxed a little red fox the other day when he was out hunting. He was out on a farm near Sunnyside rd. when he sighted fox, shot same. Yesterday he was attracting quite a bit of attention downtown as he lugged it in to collect his $5 bounty. . . . If William Jenner, candidate for Republican nomination for senate, ever runs for anything in Texas he'll have at least one supporter. She's Sallie Sue Brockwell, three-and-one-half-year-old Texan whe was staying with her parents at the Claypool recently. Little Sallie burst into the Jenner campaign headquarters all in tears because she'd woke up and found her mother gone. The office workers comforted her while they located her mother who was searching frantically for her daughter after returning from breakfast and finding her gone. Sallie came back in again but in better spirits. She'd decided she liked the place and came in to stay awhile. . . . Maybe it's been going on but we noticed it for the first time yesterday. As a Perry township school bus stopped to let two small children off an older student got out and held a red flag against oncoming traffic until the two tots got safely on the other side.

Winter's Past at City Hall

TIMES REPORTER LARRY STILLERMAN had a hectic day yesterday. As he left the office for lunch he walked about half a block and ran into a erowd Just gathering in front of a S. Capitol ave. hotel. Rushing through police lines he found an accident had

Eager Beavers

AMERICA'S MOST industrious mammal — the beaver—has turned the tables on civilization. Driven almost to extinction in the United States in 1900, this flat-tailed fur-bearer with a pelt worth more than $50 has quietly pushed back into his old haunts, He has worked as far south as Texas and his total yearly value in raw fur alone is more than $3,000,000. There are some wild stories about beavers without basis in fact. Any beaver's exploits as woodeutter, builder and engineer are such that the simple truth is strange enough, Of all animals, the beaver alone has Jearned how to fell trees. He chops them down with four orangecolored, self-sharpening, chisel-shaped front teeth, He stands on his hind Negs when he goes to work, cuts chips with his teeth and splits them out of the tree much as a woodman’s ax. Trees fall the way they happen to lean. The experienced beaver can cut a tree as fast as & man with a dull hatchet. A three or four inch poplar will be felled in a single night and cut into sections besides.

Fat Bark and Use Branches

BEAVERS EAT the bark of poplars, cottonwoods and some hardwoods. They use the branches to make their lodges and dams. The dam is laid across running streams to back up water until it becomes three or four feet deep. This depth protects the beaver from enemies In summer, frosts in winter. But this dam-building often gets him into trouble and puts the trapper on his trail.

Aviation

THESE observations are prompted by a belief that some day there will be hundreds of thousands of private airplanes roaming our skies, We seldom appreciate the cost of new mechanical facilities until we stumble upon statistics. Then we gasp in amazement to learn that hundreds of thousands of people are physically incapacitated every year by the death-dealing convenienees of modern life. Whether we started wrong in thinking about machinery, or were impreperly indoctrinated at the outset, is immaterial. A real ihdictment, however, is

_ found within the casualness with which we accept

each new mechanical aid to daily life without exhibiting more curiosity as to what makes it run, how it must be managed or how to maintain it. The dangerous trend toward this careless acceptance of new mechanical devices dates back quite a few years. ' 1 clearly recall that as a youngster the advent of every new gadget brought forth the comment: “Well, that means less work—all you have to do is press this or that button and then watch the work being done.” e Little did any of us, or any of those whose job it is to condition the public mind, recognize that for every muscle load of which we were relieved, a comparably heavy ‘burden was being placed upon us mentally. As the physical work factor lessened, the demand for greater mental activity and for new

mental habits was increased.

Need Mental Alertness

YOU CAN'T just be careful around machinery and use it efficiently. You have to know the basic engineering reasons of how it works, why and what it is supposed to do. This means cultivation of a mental alertness based upon mechanical knowledge earned by careful study and made useful by intensive practice. We are still pioneers on the trail of mechanical frontiers. Unlike the frontiersman of other days— who interpreted every sound, vibration, sign and smell

My Day

HYDE PARK, (Tuesday) .~ Tn the last few days, two things have been brought to my attention. One is an effort to solicit contributions to aid the 80,000 orphaned and homeless children of Belgium. Chaplain Edouard Froidurf of the Belgian army and Louis Sheid, both of whom spent some. time in the Dachat concentration camp, are administering this program. The citizens of the United States are being asked to contribute to many things at the present time, but orphans in the war-torn countries especially appeal to our hearts. Also, we are a nation made up of people whose backgrounds tie them closely to many countries in Europe. It is possible to raise the funds which are asked of us through. the people who have a special interest because their parents or grandparents are in the country whose children are suffering.

Many Countries Need Aid

THESE 30,000 orphans will have to grow up under the care df the Belgian government, and we are asked to contribute $1,000,000 toward their support. I ho there will be found enough people in this country” to undertake this particular burden.

There are. several other countries in Eurdpe which "1 think are going to need our help for.a long period.

France has many people in the United Stites who will have a continuing interest in the needs of her children and in her own restoration as a cultural center for the world

“of aliéd nations and to the * for ald.”

~ Fox Catcher]

~The Indianapolis :

SECOND SECTION

By HARVEY HARRIS

enthusiasts. From now on until the leaves

time along with 10,000,000 fellow Americans throwing ringers and explaining away near misses, And this year's horseshoe sport promises to find the biggest public response ever, In city parks, farm fields, behind the local firehouse, and next to the barn, the steady clank, clank of iron meeting iron betokens the ar-

Howard Singer . , . He took to the woods.

occurred. Then, walking along Pennsylvania about

4 p. m, he heard a shot ring out. Again he made a

mad sprint, found a man had tried to break away

from a Center township justice of the peace office and

The police were beginning to wonder if he was following them or consulting a crystal ball. . . . The

came the storm doors yesterday. ... The new cafeteria at the Speedway will serve full lunches for the first time today. Up till now they have been dispensing only doughnuts, rolls and coffee. cidentally, no beer will be sold at the Speedway on Memorial day. Asstate law, passed by the last legislature, puts a taboo on beer selling on that day. It will be sold prior to the race, during quadifications, however.

By Jack Van Coevering

Montana issued 1602 permits to trap “nuisance” beavers this season. Trapping and moving such beavers is a regular conservation activity in: Michigan. New Jersey transplanted 183 beavers frorh localities where they were doing damage. After 44 years of protection there, beavers will be subjected to their first trapping season this year.

Slaps Tail to Warn of Danger MINNESOTA and Montana share honors for the highest annual beaver yield in the country: 10,000 or more pelts a year. Maine, Wisconsin, Wyoming and Michigan usually produce more than 5000 a year, Nebraska, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas and Utah, all trap more than 1000 beavers a year, > Contrary to many reports, a beaver does not use his flat, scaly tail as a trowel. He may cairy mud or sticks on it, but mostly he uses it for swimming or signalling.

resounding splash to warn other beavers.

| ols horseshoe season is May 5. Then

{will gather at Brookside park for | their first tournament of the year

{of philosophy. Catch a horseshoe had halted when one shot was fired in the ground.|pitcher just after he has lazily

|1obbed two perfect ringers and he'll

: {tell you that the most important cautious city’ hall has decided winter is over so off |

In-|

rival of spring. As a matter of fact, the official opening of the Indianap-

{nearly half a hundred city players

Horseshoe playing doesn't have many rules. But it does have a lot

| phygical aspects of the game are {the pitch and the follow through. Skill, timing, and good delivery {all go to make up the perfect form. ~ » " BUT JUST as important for the horseshoe player is the belief in the leisurely side of life. To the real horseshoe lover, tossing the | shoes is a sport of dignity with the proper amount of incidentals— talk, a cool drink and lazy smoke curling from a pipe. Naturally, the veteran horseshoe player is the man with a “right appreciation for chewing the fat.” {Since horseshoe playing involves

|some standing around and waiting %

| during plays, a man who can keep {up his end of the talk is the right | type. Discussions on pitching, general opinions on politics and baseball are the accepted standards for the good-companion, ° Indianapolis city parks have ap- | proximately 50 good courts. for | horseshoe pitching. There are prob-| | ably another 250 backyard courts | scattered throughout the county. The Indianapolis Horseshoe Pitchers] {association is the chief promoter! {of the ringer sport in this area. | | The Hoosier capital is regarded {as the “beehive of horseshoe pitch-| {ing activity in the Midwest,” Arlo]

of breaking traditions by making]

for 4000. Hoosier horseshoe-pitching |

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1946

crackle, they'll spend all their spare fi

Arlo Harris, president “of the Indianapolis Horseshoe Pitchers association, watehes with a critical eye as a third ringer tops two

{| others on the stake.

| ship matches in 1927 at the age, {of 15. Almost legendary now, the | [tale of how the pink-faced kid from | | Montpelier, Ind. tossed everything)

{but the kitchen sink at the old-| {timers in Miami, is a saga to warm | (the hearts of Hoosier players. It |gives the ald-timers something to| [talk over between pitches. | Evidence that Indianapolis 1s} | rapidly assuming a definite status) lin the horseshoe pitching world

| came this spring with the word that |

ithis city had been selected to play |

THOUSANDS OF HOOSIERS PRACTICE THROWING RINGERS—

Horseshoe Pitchers Warm-Up

AND NOW with the war over, and pitching shoes available again for the first time in years, local horseshoe players are preparing for the Sunday afternoon tourneys at Brookside park. There'll be the quiet talk, the discussion over simple as size and shape of shoes and whether the shoe is near enough to the stake to score a point. And while the scene is being re-

rules

shoe pitching sense goes—that is in|host to tHe world championship | no. 164 the "country over, the No. 1 tournament. There has been no big]

{ most states, They don't relax prop-

erly. a 8» JAMES RISK is an example of

When danger threatens,| Harris, president of the local group|the Indiana ability to defy the time the beaver slaps. his tail on the water with a!asserts, In fact, it has a tradition | and tried. Jim, who has been over- |

seas with a USO company teach-

Beavers make their home in stream banks, but!|Poy champion horseshoe pitchets.| ing soldiers the art of tossing ringmore often build a spectacular island lodge. Its| Youths are not seemly as horse-|ers went to the national champion-

entrance is under water, opening into a circular chamber about two feet high, six feet across.

Outstanding among the beaver's engineering feats

.is the artificial canal excavated for transporting

wood to the lodge, or to provide shortcuts. A typical beaver colony consists of two parents, yearlings born of the previous year, and kits of the current year, a possible total of 14. '

Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times and The Ohicago Daily News, Inc.

By Maj. Al Williams

along the trail—we seem to be content to throw a switch or press a button. Every gadget you touch or use—all the way from the electric razor to hair dryers and sun lamps— means danger to the unalert. Only a few thousandths thickness of metal separates us from the deadly fumes of the refrigerator. All these gadgets can and do harm us, unless we know how to use them and maintain a constant alertness to this knowledge.

Drivers Ignore Many Signs WITH 35,000 to 40,000 auto deaths, plus hundreds of thousands of casualties a vear, we definitely have demonstrated our mental unfitness to operate the motorcar. Yet we now dream of our motor death corps spreading its fenders and taking to the air. This means less physical labor and faster transportation. But what can we do about balancing the lessened labor factors with a vastly increased mental alertness? As an airman I marvel we don't kill a million or more motorcar drivers a year. These drivers ignore almost all the sensory signs along the trail that are so essential to continued life in the, air. Drivérs look at other motorcars, seldom studying the drivers, and yet the “cut” of the other driver’'s| jib—the manner in which he sits—the way he carries| his head—the shape of his shoulders his neck—the| precision with which he handles his car for the block or two he drives ahead of you—all present the driver with sufficient evidence as to what to expect from him and how to avoid trouble. Yet people look at other cars and generally ignore the persons who drive them, despite the fact it is not motorcars which kill people but the people who drive them. Oh, I guess we will make it all right in the air— some of us, at least. But no matter what mechanical marvel is placed at our disposal for air travel or for any other human use, there never will be a substitute for brains.

By Eleanor Roosevelt

Yugoslavia, whose fight against fascism was of great importance at a crucial time for the allies, perhaps is amongst those nations facing the greatest need at present for both food and medical care for her children and adult population.

Million Polish Orphans

I TOLD YOU recently about a visit I had had from the Polish minister of labor and social welfare, Jan Stanczyk. - He has since sent me a little more information on the condition of the children in that country, and I am quoting it here: “There are in Poland 1,100,000 orphans and semiorphans, and 2,400,000 children and youths up to 18 years of ‘age whose parents are in such poverty as to be unable to provide for them. These children and youths must be partially fed and totally clothed by a public welfare organization. . “Furthermore, there are about 2,100,000 adults who

have lost their health either in concentration camps, gt ucted to close windows, doors, are the passenger facilities?

while doing forced labor, or as a result of difficult conditions during the war and occupation. Among them are tens of thousands of invalids, wounded in fighting the Germans in our country and abroad. “Our population is reduced to poverty, and our country is destroyed to an incredible extent. Consequently, we are ‘unable to assure, solely by our own means, care and assistance for the masses of people

| barb seed

| |

i By MARGUERITE SMITH | MR. AND MRS, J. J. TYLER, | 1568 College ave. are experimental

gardeners, Mrs. Tyler is trying out a new use for Hot-Kaps. In their garden at 2009 E. 62d st., she started some | rose cuttings last summer. | “Whenever I got a rosebud that I

| liked, I stuck it in the ground under a glass jar with about three eyes { under the ground,” she said. “I was just playing around to see if they would grow, and out of 18 buds. | 16 rooted.” | This spring she removed the jars {and put plant protectors over the small stems which are now putting out new leaves. She will leave the {covers on until the stalks grow to the top.

| |

| w ¥ . | “YOU REALLY ought to take the {bud off the stem when you try to { root them this way,” she said, “but {I didn’t. And one bud opened up | right under the jar.” An experiment Mr. Tyler4ried last {summer proved highly successful, | too. He bought a package of rhu-|

ing some of your own, if you want to enlarge your rhubarb patch) and planted it in May. It germinated)

young plants to the edge of his | garden (best place for these peren-| nial vegetables so they don't inter-| fere with soil preparation each! spring). Sts .

|

(you might try collect- |

|

[tournament like this since before {the war, Ferniand Isais, formerly

of Mexico City, holds international structed court for a couple hours of |

| pitching garlands, Horseshoe players are a closely (knit band throughout the world.

{horseshoe player of the nation will Ibe stepping up to his newly con-

tossing and talking. | The game being over, Harry 8S. Truman will probably have reached

PAGE 15

Free Speech — Hyde Park Talks |. Fall on Ears of Scoffing Crowds

By FREDERICK C, OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent LONDON, April 24.—All my life I've read how orators in Hyde Park denounce anybody they please, but never have I seen in print one line about what they actually say. This I now propose to remedy. ‘One gentleman with two teeth told a scoffing crowd that America probably would use the atom bomb on them any day now. Somebody made a noise like a donkey braying, and the Londoners laughed.

A lady in red on a ladder screamed

la denunciation of hecklers who

wouldn't believe she route to heaven.

There were perhaps 5000 people near, the marble arch and 15 speechmakers. The wind was strong, and the oratory of all kinds blended in a verbal bedlam which has continued without interruption since the days of Queen Victoria.

Fifty years ago the cops tried to stop it. The citizens tore up an fron railing for hundreds of yards, Since then the orators have been saying what they please, so long as they keep it clean. Let's listen to a few of them:

knew the

» ~ » “BEER HAS been growing weaker for weeks,” cried a small man in a monocle whose sign said he was the brain trust. “Hear; hear,” beer fanciers shouted, A well-tattooed eitizen in a dirty shirt without a collar said wives were nuisances. “Why don't you buy a shirt?” demanded a member of. the audience. | “I buy nothing” screamed the speechmaker, “I am an ex-burglar. This shirt I got off a clothesline. | The wind blew it off. Next week I'll {get the collar,” | He said he was no Hyde Park { windbag. He said he was the only intelligent man in the park, He'd | spent his whole life avoiding work, | “And look at you,” he said, point. {ing at a listener in a neat blue sult, “You work all the week and

get six pounds for it, and the gov- ~

{ernment takes most of it away from you.”

» » ~ AN INTENSELY serious man in a {red tie looked long at me and he | squeaked in exasperation: “That's the trouble with Americans—they stuff their bellies like they do their ashcans.”

white-whiskered man in a

They even have their own paper, some important informal political pion silk hat paraded with a ban-

“The Horseshoe World.”

GARDENING: Exporiinent With Hot-Kaps on Rosebuds="

Mrs. Robert Rugg, 1151 N. Tibbs ave., and her staked raspberries. |

“I COULD hardly believe it my-|forated iron hanger stock, bending | (1,

self,” he said, “but some of those plants had roots a

thick: Another idea of Mr, Tyler's— when he couldn't get lumber to

| finish his rose trellis he used per-

THE DOCTOR SAYS: How Hospital Fires Are Caused

jit into an arch and painting it)

|didn't know what he meant either]

well. This spring he transplanted the| took them up.” The stalks of the i. 1 caw it) seedlings are already surprisingly |

~ »

the valley? : | Mrs, John W. Judy, 6333 Park] ave, has the pink flowering variety.|

{

Smoking in Bed Dangerous

| By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. |is more important, in the long run,

FIRE hazards are also created)

HOSPITAL fires most often start to have trained personnel in a fire- by the careless storage of rubbish |

from smoking in bed, with defective proof building than to develop and waste in storerooms or closets. |

| gas or electrical equipment a close| | second. If employees, visitors, and | ambulatory patients are permitted | to smoke in hospitals, proper receptacles for cigaret butts should be provided to prevent them from being thrown in a corner or into a

|

fires. Fireproof construction and firefighting apparatus are not of much| value if nurses and other hospital] personnel are not trained to handle fire emergencies. ! Modern hospitals have schools of instruction for nurses and other employees in fire prevention and | fire-fighting:

~ ~ »~ HEN fires occur,

| W ili and other hospital employees “a

in-|

and transoms; and to ask the telephone operator to call the fire department. The nearest fire-fight-ing equipment is put into use, and the fire curtain between tlie burning section and the rest of the building are lowered, provided exits are not thus cut off, ;

®

extraordinary schemes for removing persons from the building in case of fire. Every nurse should know the lo« cation of every piece of gas or electrical equipment in her section of the hospital,r and she should

wastebasket where they may start report any defective apparatus to

the proper authorities.

All bottles or cans containing clean- | ing fluids should be properly labeled, kept tightly covered, and destroyed | | when empty. | | Oxygen tents may be a fire hazard |i they are not properly used. Use [of oil on valves should be prohibited, and any possible source of an electric spark should be elimi-

|i nated. Patients wearing dressings

Ask Me

Four Major Air Lines Have Terminals at Weir Codk.

Q-—How many air lines terminals in Indianapolis?

have What

A—Four major air lines have|

terminals at Weir Cook municipal airport, They are TWA, Eastern, American and Chicago & Southern. Ther6 are 36 passengers flights daily from the airport. Seven. of these are west-bound; 10 east-

finding themselves in extremiely difficult circumstancN.| The ideal fire escape for a hos-| bound, 10 north-bound and nine “We are thus compelled to appeal to governments|pital would be one in which the sotith-bound, Of the 17 east-west

conscience of humanity

5

qo.

bed patients could be flid through! a chute on their mattresses, but it

1

flights, five are direct . trans-con-tinental planes.

iia

:

| soaked in alcohol should not be per-| mitted to smoke, In spite of shortages, fire protec tive measures have been developed | 'in hospitals during the war period. | Removal of old, unused furniture,| completion of wiring, insulation of | operating rooms, and provision of additional fire escapes have decreased fire hazards. | | ‘The greatest progress has been | attained through schools of instruction and through periodic fire-pre-vention inspections.

FOXES IN BREEDING TIME WASHINGTON. — The: - breeding and rearing séason for American wild fgxes- extends from February through May; the gestation period is 51 days and ‘the average litter 1) five pups : : : . geile 2 4 S

bp a

» t ARE YOU interested in lilies of

| “raspberries are just like grapes,

| decisions,

Rarely offered in plant. catalogs

Use Plant Protectors to Safeguard Stalks

these were growing in the garder:

of an aunt in Richmond who had

{ner advising the crowds to be prepared to meet their god, A pretty girl talked earnestly with a small audience about the human soul. An orator in a double-breasted suit identified himself as a Socialist and said it was a crime the way the British government was treating India. i Nobody was listening to a redhaired young man discussing Ireland, because everybody was dis-

had them for years. They do not|cussing Ireland with his neighbor,

multiply as readily as the common variety and should not be planted with them, Mrs. Judy said.

- » » STILL ANOTHER valley lily that seems to be a distinct variety is a white flowering sort with variegated green and white foliage. Mrs. A. P.

Augustine, 6280 N. Chester st, who has three growing in a shady damp spot in her yard, found them in an old-fashioned garden near Tipton. They flower at the same time as the ordinary kind while the pink ones blossom about two weeks later. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rugg, 1151 N. Tibbs ave., have between 60 and 70 black raspberry bushes in a small area simply by staking the plants and pruning closely. Most of the raspberries are the transplanted wild variety, perhaps two dozen are nursery raised stock. Set last year, they look as if they would bear a bumper crop this season.

” . » MRS. RUGG explained her system of pruning. “Last summer and fall I clipped e ends off the new growth a number of times. When I cut a

%oot, long when 1| White. (Ladies, see your plumber—I|pranch off it developed three or

four new shoots. When those grew a few inches long I cut them back,

20. If you want new bushes it's all right to let ‘the strands grow long, touch the earth and take root, she explained. But, she added,

you can't grow cordwood and fruit, also.” Hence her close pruning.

* HANNAH ¢

* Newspaper Syndicate

#49)

Q 0

wan LET'S LOOK finally at a man In |an old pair of pants and an undershirt with a banner which said he was the happy traveler. “The only way ta be healthy like me,” he began, “is to take a lemon and some bicarbonate and soda and ..." : “You ain't seen a lemon in a year,” interrupted a solemn youth, This made the happy traveler so unhappy he invited the scoffer to leave. The young man elected to remain, and made a sound known across the Atlantic as the bronx cheer. The happy traveler shook his fist. A puff of wind got his banner. He grabbed for it. His ladder teetered. He lost his balance |and landed on the grass. | An expressionless cop helped him {up and away he limped. I left too, (at long last an expert on free | speech, Hyde Park style.

We, the Women———

Case Argued Against Flighty Foreign Brides

By RUTH MILLETT

WHAT ARE we going to do about these foreign brides who" come to America, take a look at the living conditions their husbands have to offer them, then turn up their noses |and walk out? Take, for example, the case of the {British bride who spent one day with her husband in his home in North Carolina, decided she didn’t like the house he expected her to | live in, and left him flat. After paying her way over here, do we just keep her—and keep, too, the other foreign girls who decide after they get to America they don't want the men they married overseas? » ” ” JOB competition is going to be hard enough on American women in the next few years without turning a lot of foreign girls loose to compete with them for the positions available,” And, certainly, husband competition is so keen these days we don't need foreign women flooding the market, looking for husband

| number two after refusing to live with, husband number one,

» » n WE BROUGHT these women to

.{ | America because our fighting men

married them and we felt we owed it to the servicemen to bring their women to them. But if they aren't

made, why shouldn't they go back where they belong? 3 * We haven't enough eligible Jobs, men, or housing facilities to wele, come with open arms the disillusioned girls who came to Am ica to join their husbands only

find they guessed th : — ko a 1 aaa ) ip Some gh Re Lge 5 aint a

: ¢

going to stick to the bargain they