Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 June 1946 — Page 14

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"June 24-29 Sessions.

| © More than 50 realtors from the | Midwest and Canada have regis- | tered dor the institute of real estate

in the Severin hotel, will be Fred 1. Chapman, Minneapolis, Minn.; ‘James C. Downs Jr, Chicago; PF. ‘Durand Taylor, New York City, and ‘Delbert 8. Wenazlick of St. Lous. RR. A. Franke is chairman of

‘the course sponsorship committee. ‘Other local committee members are ‘R. W. Coons, Howard Fieber, Charles B. Forrest, M, L. Hall, R. E. ‘Hueber, Robert B. Kersaw, George Kuhn, D. T. Nicoson and Earl B. realtors ‘sponsoring the, ude James R, Day, E. E. ‘L. McKee of Anderson; Bippus, Harry Fitzgerald, O. and Leonard Rausch- ; Harry Branning, ter and George A. Poag e; William J. Funkey, es and Milo Vale of] Gary; Edward Kablin and Warren Reeder of Hammond; R. D. Rob-| bins, Kokomo;

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Muncie; Bernard W. Glenn

mond; Marlin Miller and H. Park , South Bend, and D. C. Johnson, Walter Maehling and J. F. Phister of Terre Haute,

INSULATED FLOORS

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v

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trustees at

exercises.

the governing board

Wildermuth will Judge begin his eighth Wildermuth three - year term July 1. President of the board since 1938, he was unopposed in the balloting, More than 70 alumni classes were represented at the celebration. Graduates of more than 50 years ago were inducted into the new Emeritus club. Oldest alumna present was Mrs. Emma Jennings Clark, a member of the class of 1873. Mrs. Clark. who is 93, is the university's oldest graduate.

SHOOTING OF MAN

shooting last night of a 25-year-old

With chest wounds, Wilmer Isen- | hower, 5142 W. 10th st. was taken | to the hospital last night by his | father, Harold Isenhower. The son had driven home in his automobile after being wounded by a 22-caliber bullet, Police were told by the elder Isenhower that the schooting occurred at 25th st. and College ave., after the youth stopped to examine

PROVE PROTECTION

Contractors report that home| owners insist upon basements be-| cause they believe floors would be cold without basements.

“Basementless” homes, however,

ean be built with insulated floors!

for protection against cold winds.| A wood floor must be built a! foot or more above the ground for! ventilation and will be cold without insulation. { - A concrete floor or a combination of structural clay title and| concrete becomes its own insulatie medium. The temperature of ground under the floor slab | fluctuates very little with the | Seasons. However, at the edges of | the floor slab where it is exposed to winter cold, insulation should | be provided.

the tires on his automobile. One of three men standing on a curb nearby fired several shots at him, according to the report police received. About the same time, Purvis Johnson, 29, of 1520 W. 20th st. called police to report firing several shots at a “prowler.,” He was taken to City haspital where he identified young Isenhower as the man at whom the shots had been fired, police said.

Tarzan Tactics

Charged in Suit

CAMDEN, N. J, June 15 (U. P.).

J: Re-elected at l.U.

BLOOMINGTON, June 15,~~Judge Ora L. Wildermuth, Gary, today was re-elected

alumni member of the Indiana university board of the “victory reunion” preceding the school’s 117th ¢ 0m m e ncement

First elected to university's

in- 1925, Judge

Powder

a tip from Mrs. A. D. Peisker, 2107

transplanting powder works wonders. : She uses it always on tomatoes, sweet potatoes, peppers and cabbage. “They will surpass in growth those plants that haven't been treated,” she said. She mentioned, too, the homemade transplanting solution (3 rounding tablespoons of chemical fertilizer stirred up in a gallon of water) but she prefers the packaged powder. “I take special pleasure in the flowers that are hard to raise from seed,” she said. Among these are foxgloves and seedlings of a coral lily (tenuifolium) she brought from {her Colorado garden when the Peis- | kers moved here six years ago. " » » | FOXGLOVE SEED is “fine as dust” but sown fresh, protected during hot days by the time-hon-ored method of covering it with cloth or burlap until it germinates, |it produces flowering plants the]

TIMES SERIAL —

CHAPTER 36 | CQLIN DROVE the car into the garfige in the basement of the Medical-Dental building, and Ann said, “I'l meet you at Frederick's in an hour or so. I don’t know how long I'll be.” “Oh, I'm coming up with you,” Colin answered. “But why, Colin? you to come up.” “Oh,” he answered airily. “I understand that women always fall in love with their obstetricians, and I wunt to look him over and find | out if he's worthy of you.” 2 un 8 | THAT WAS the last very clear | memory Ann had of the day. She! saw the doctor, and the next thing | she knew Colin was driving fast| to the hospital, trying not to show! his alarm. “But after all,” Ann said, “lots | of people have toxemia. I've read |

It's silly for

dangerous. Not when there's a good ! doctor in charge.” : | Later, when she was in bed, and | momentarily unattended save by Colin, some of his obvious panic in- |

—Mrs. Beatrice Larsen, 48, describes

fected her, and she remembered | {more of what she had read about

her spouse as a “massive man with | toxemia.

|bulging biceps and superhuman | “Look, Colin,” she said, “if I look| I couldn’t” Colin said.

Insulation may be added to w= Strength”—but no compliment is|8s if T were going to have a convul- | -eoncrete floor by excavating six| intended.

inches and pouring the slab over 8 cinder or gravel fill. Where floor and foundation meet, dirt is excavated under the floor

ginders or

gravel. should be used at the edge of the slub.

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COMMERCIAL OFFICE

RENTALS SOARING! any was wees. it boung

Commercial office space rents,

according to Practical Builder,

In one Chicago case, an engraver faces a monthly rental boost from|

$250 to more than $600, an increase SWered, uneasily wondering how|and walk to Daddy,” she {Of 150 per cent. Other tenants have AND knew, so soon, |been given the alternative of pay- couldn't have,another child.

ing big increases in rent or moving. Rae Walters, Chicago regional! OPA difestor, has advocated rent control for business properties and has announced that “commercial

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sion, shove a towel between my | teeth, will you?” 1 | corn \ nurse, | said: “Get me a special nurse, will you? Three of them, so she won't be left alone.”

The nurse was calm. “If yéu'll|

come down to the desk—" she said. “And leave my wife,” Colin's Ss anguished. i | “I'll stay with her. She's all right. | | You just run along now. You'd! | Just be a nuisance here. Wouldn't | (he, Mrs. Drake?” she would talk. “Colin, don't you think |

| uncontrolled by OPA, are soaring,|[it Was smart of me to have twins, | a Seeing as we can't have any more? |“And she has

Don't you think so, Colin?” i “You're a smart girl, darling— | no question about it,” Colin an- |

that she

“Are they beautiful, Colin? Does the boy look like you and the girl | like me?” |

|

n n » COLIN HAD seen those two for-

{ | |

{went intq the incubators, and

— | privately thought he had never seen | Home Water Conditioner

{anything so awful in his life, | He couldn't tell Ann that, course,

|1t was, without knowing that, | He was silent so long that Ann worried, and, weak as she was, became insistent. “What do they look | like, Colin?” “Just—just like babies,” he answered feebly. They didn't o course. They looked like nothing | human, but at least he could tell! Ann they looked like babies. By!

Re.

have fmproved. to improve some.

They couldn't fail

" ANN WAS getting impatient. She

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| the. indignity of ‘Junior.'”

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the time she saw them, they would |

East 46th st.

Mrs. Peisker has 60 varieties:of flowers growing in her front yard. With some 20 other kinds tucked in here and there as well as a large vegetable garden she often has to do transplanting on hot, windy days. To perk up a wilty transplants she finds the commercially packaged

green fingers the biennial foxglove sometimes lives over to flower a third or fourth year-—-even in our ideal-for-zinnias climate! She uses liquid chicken manure to boost her plants - along. “Quick growing plants produce better, I've found,” she said. A quart of manure mixed with about four gallons of water makes a good side dressing. “But I keep the plants well watered for at least a week afterward. The more fertilizer you use, the more water a plant will need.”

” » » NOT ALL the best potatoes grow on the west side of town! Arthur Price, 2325 E. 46th st. is rightfully proud of his early Ohios—"the best I've ever had,” he said, adding modestly, “It's just been a good season.” He also has a cabbage that would make good slaw any day now. He uses little. chemical fertilizer, but puts manure on his garden every spring, believes in continuous

-— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Judge Wildermuth GARDENING: Here Is a Tip About Transplanting |

Revives Wilted Plants

0 By MARGUERITE SMITH HAVING TROUBLE with your transplanting these days? Here's

>

he has late corn started between his potato rows. :

» ” DR. W. E. KENNEDY, 3920 Winthrop ‘ave, who has been raising roses for over 20 years under Indiana’s hot summer sun, passes on this thought for beginners. “When—1 began gardening, my roses used to play out regularly,” he said. “I visited the Hill nursery in Richmond and told them my troubles. = They said probably I wasn't feeding them enough, especially potash. It stimulates good root growth and that makes healthy roses. Ever since, I've giv~ en my roses small regular feedings with chemical fertilizer. They're like people, they shouldn't gorge one time and starve later on.” Pointing to a flowering crab now hanging full of tiny dark red apples, he®said, “I picked this out because it bears good fruit, In the spring the. blossoms are deep pink. The apples are attractive, then in the fall the foliage turns red while the apples make a dark red jelly.” Some varieties of flowering crab bear sterile blossoms, others have fruit so small it isn’t worth the picking, but if you study your catalogs carefully you cah have a

SPRINGER RAPS HOUSING SETUP

‘Says U. S. Plan Would Hurt, ‘Private Industry. :

Establishment of a’ permanent national housing agency would undermine the private housing industry, E. W. Springer, president of the Indianapolis Real Estate board, has charged. President Truman's executive or-

der would abolish prewar .independent status of the federal housing administration, the home loan bank administration and the federal public housing authority and consolidate them within one agency. “We oppose the continuation of the national housing agency,” Mr. Springer said, “because it Would result in an extension of restrictive governmental controls over housing and would impair the splendid services the federal housing administration and the federal home loan bank board have rendered to the construction industry, particularly to the thousaids of small businessmen who build, finance and service the nation’s house.”

flowering crab and eat your jelly, too. y

PROBED BY POLICE == year, Under Mrs. Peisker's | cultivation. To douple up his space | de ———————at :

Police today investgated the |

mn mes oe nnn Tha Heart to Find...

was feeling pretty well, and she wanted to be up and around. Most of all, she wanted to see her children. Children—it had a nice sound. Much nicer than child, really. She was proud of herself for having two at once.

“I want to name her Margaret,” she said. “I hope she'll be as nice as Margaret Duncan. And, Colin —would you—I mean, do you want to name him Colin?” “I'd rather not... Not unless you especially want it. I think it's a handicap to a child to suffer under

Ann nodded wisely. Tae.

| |

By Hazel Heidergott | burst of speed tumbled flat, each into a parent's lap, where they were picked up and hugged. Ann kissed Margaret, and looked across to Michael, who was clambering up to Colin's shoulder, his father’s hand holding him steady. She looked around the room, and found it good. Here within her reach was everything she could ever want. And suddenly she knew a great truth, that had been developing a long, long while, and finally had blossomed into something incredibly beautiful. “Colin,” she said softly, “I love you.”

do

“I DO, too,” she agreed. “Of course, Colin's one of the fancy! names you're supposed to avoid in naming your children, anyway—but —well, I've always liked Michael for | a name—although it's another one of -the fancy ones—but after all, |

lots about it—it isn't necessarily there's your father to name him | sored Hoosier boys’ state opens to-

after. I think Michael Drake is a! nice name—Michael Drake, Second | —much better than Colin Drake, | Junior. { “Won't we be.a nice family, Co-! lin? Practically ideal, I think. A] boy and a girl—why, nobody could ask for anything more.” | a ” =" ‘ i ANN AND Colin were sitting on the rug in front of the fireplace,

T 2» (each holding a baby. RANG frantically for al Margaret and Michael, perhaps a and when she appeared, | ite backward because of their {poor start, were just beginning to;

walk, at fifteen months. Michael

clutched Ann's outstretched finger

|desperately, while Margaret was hanging onto both Colin’s hands. | The twins had reversed Ann's ‘express desire, Michael looked like! her, and Margaret like Colin. » » ” do you s’pose she’s going to have your nose? Your nose is perfectly lovely on you, but it would take an awful lot of character for a girl to live down a nose like that!” “She's going to have a character,” Colin

“COLIN,

lot of said pridefully. | n't got much nose of! any sort yet.” Ann leaned and kissed the back! of Michael's neck. “Be a big man murmured to him. » ” » AT THE SAME time Margaret let go of Colin's hands, and the two babies staggered drunkenly toward each other, passed, and with a final!

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LEGION BOYS’ STATE | OPENS TOMORROW

The 10th American Legion spon- |

| morrow on the Indiana State Deaf | school campus. | Some 420 Indiana youths were! scheduled to attend the citizenship training program. The boys organize their own city and state governments under the guidance of public officials. Special speakers will include Governor Gates, National Commander | John Stelle, and Lloyd Wampler, | Bloomington, the governor of tee | first Legion boys’ state in 1937,

{ STRIKE HITS ELWOOD ELWOOD, Ind. June 15 (U, P.).| | —Production was halted today at | {the National Trailer Corp. as a strike by United Steel Workers union members (C.I.0.) idled 125.

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LODGE HEAD BACKS ° HEALTH INSURANCE.

Edward F. Poss, Toledo, O., national president of the Fraternal Order of Eagles, today was on record with a plea for a nation-wide health insurance program. Mr, Poss, in an address before the Indiana Eagles convention, asked legislation to “bring medical care within the reach of all persons.” He opposed socialized medicine but advocated “something . . . to provide every citizen with proper medical care.” He recommended an - insurance

Move Fuselage

Of Largest Plane

LOS ANGELES, June 15 (U, P.). —The 220-foot, 60-ton fuselage of

| Howard Hughes’ Hercules, world’s

largest airplane, begins its 28-mile

hangar to its Long Beach &ssembly dock. : The trip to the $150,000 Terminal Island graving dock where the two 160-foot wing sections and huge pontoons will be joified to the fuselage was expected to take two days. The 34-ton., wings and pontoons, each big as a house, were hauled to the harbor last Tuesday and Wednesday without incident. Moving the fuselage was expected to be a bigger problem, since it requires a highway clearance of 40 feet. Hughes officials spent two years studying ways to mave the $20,000,000 plywood flying boat to salt water, The cost of the trip on house-mov-ing dollies was $58,000.

INSURANCE CAPITAL TRIPLED BY SEARS

The Allstate Insurance Co. automotive insurance subsidiary of Sears, Roebuck & Co., has increased its capital structure through an additional investment of $2,000,000 by the parent company, Calvin Fentress Jr, president, reported today. The capital stock was $1,000,000 as of Dec. 31, 1945.. The additional $2,000,000 will provide for increased premium writing, Mr. Fentress said.

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Some 500 persons attended the] closing sessions of the state con- | vention today. |

NAMED TO NLRB WASHINGTON, June 15 (U, P).} —President Truman has nominated | James J. Reynolds Jr, of New| Jersey, to be a member of the] national labor relations board for a five-year term beginning Aug. 27,

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Both heat ar Indianapolis today and ton lief in sight f The local we tagged yesterd: of 1946, today in temperature The weather warm and hun Thundershowe: provide brief 1 heat, but only quently, the we Yesterday's wave, which lakes, rivers for relief, sen 92, the high Previously, a June 11 was t Heat ( Yesterday's points short © for June 16. ' ture ever rep the 16th was weather bures At least one the oppressive combination / old watchman the office of : he was emplc attributed to | The same over most of | terday, but °r Indiana and ised cooler te Thousands ¢ who sought he

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