Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1946 — Page 23

C. 13, 1946

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warm, comle ‘scuffs with leather soles. erfect! Blue 4. Sizes 5 to

269

Inside Indianapolis

LET'S TURN OUR. thoughts away for awhile from Aunt Minnie's Christmas present, Junior's preposterous suggestion of what he'd like and think about the good ol’ hot dog. That American standby for the hurry-up meal, on the hoof lunch and picnic indispensable gets lost in the shuffle about this time every year. Let it be said I haven't forgotten. There's more to a hot dog than meets the mustard, relish and bun. Especially if it's at the Kingan & Co. hot dog department. It really should be called the wiener department, but for clarity's sake—you know there are wieners, frankfurters and sausage links—we'll call them hot dogs. There's a lot of space and personnel devoted to hot dog making at Kingans. The process begins by cutting up beef, pork and pork fat. Each then is ground individually by a grinder that spouts the stuff like a fire hydrant when the pressure is up. ‘ ”

Stuffing Machine Is a Dandy

HUGE AMOUNTS of the meat are put into low steel box trucks and hauled to scales in front of an emulsion machine which pulverizes it like nothing I ever saw, The emulsion monster has a 450-pound capacity. Batches of raw material for future hot dogs are weighed in 50-pound helpings. When all the meat is in, the galt, flavoring and sodium nitrite is added. That's all the ingredients that go into hot dogs.

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A HOT DOG UNDER PRESSURE — Fred Johanson makes a I|b6-foot wiener in eight seconds.

“house truck and pushed upstairs.

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"By Ed Sovola

In a few minutes the meat has a consistency of

SECOND SECTION FRIDAY, DECEMBER 183, 1046 Johnson, 112 W. Walnut st., operates one of the four \

hare stuffers. I don't know why it's called hare . i stuffer, Maybe because this ingenious machine can | —- turn out a 16-foot cellulose casing hot dog in eight ’ w 4 %

PAGE 23

Rescue

seconds. Just as fast as Mr. Johnson turns out the long ones, Mrs. Maud Brown, 1907 W. Washington st., with the aid of a linking machine, turns them into] the conventional five-inch “dogs.” | They still don't look right—pale and shiny in cel-| lulose jackets. They are loaded directly on a smoke-

Hugh Deering, 534 Arbor ave. has the job that gives the hot dogs their color. For one-and-three-quarters of an hour he lets the hot dogs hang in the smokehouse. Dampened hardwood sawdust supplies the smoke. | It's gurned by a gas flame one floor below the smoke- | house. Mr. Deering has his hands full with 31! compartments, { But that's not all he does. After the smoking! process is completed the hot dogs are wheeled into the steamhouse where they cook for 10 minutes at a! mere 168 degrees. | A cold shower awaits the hot dogs after the steam bath. Then they go into the refrigerator. They] have to stay in there at 50 degrees until the crew in| the sealing and banding department are ready for them.

Sausage ‘Court’ Tests Produtcs

IT'S HERE THAT samples are eaten every morn} ing about 8:30 a. m. Robert Heid, sausage department | manager, calls the chemist, a representative from! the sales department, plant superintendent and the | sausage foreman. ' A braunschweiger, a cooked ham, | bologna, meat loaf and a couple of hot dogs are cut | and tasted. | This sausage supreme court has the final say about the products. If they taste right there's just| a smacking of the lips. If not—production of the faulty item is stopped and the trouble is corrected. Everything I sampled with the experts tasted good. Of course, my vote didn't count. The experts agreed! all was well on the sausage front. The final operation consists of pulling the cellulose jackets off and sending them through the Kartridge-| Pack machine which puts the Kingan Co, label on! each individual hot dog in short belts of 10 each They look like short machine gun belts when they're readies for a plunge into the Indianapolis Athletic packed in boxes. - [f ir ro reid ot Ail It takes five women to strip the jackets off the| <P POO! Wer ng a.new lype underwater swim. hot dogs and supply the labeling machine. At this] Ming device for shallow-water rescues. stage the skinless hot dog comes into being. | With thoughts of the Christmas goose and turkey— : are people eating hot dogs? They must be—because d ec - [OWN

more than a million are made each week. Did you

TO THE RESCUE—Dorothy Webber, Butler

university junior and member of the Blueqills,

LAST « MINUTE INSTRUCTIONS — John Dunne, representative of the Mine Safety Appliance Co., Pittsburgh, Pa., places the mask en Miss Webber. The demonstration was comducted for the fire department drillmaster's school.

GOING DOWN-—Miss Webber starts down the pool steps info the deep end wearing” the device perfected by the Mine Safety Appliance Co. for the navy during the war. The equipment permits the wearer to remain under water at a 35-foot depth for an hour.

Change Made in Choosing Special Court Judges

: Ee

Bankers Warned Due of windsor

| Mr. : Bilbo Lispths

| i Visits Privately On Housing Loans [sits Private!

a — Pact Is Sought

‘By Frederick C. OV House Leadership

The Indiana supreme court today| THREE: The trial judge may announced drastic changes in pro- h*me—a slate of three attorneys,

i from which one. shall be selected as

Association Speaker cedures to be followed in Hoosier ; specidl judge;

WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Senator Theodore G. Bilbo couldn't rouse a rabble if he wanted: He lispths, This is embarrassing to The Man. So sore is his mouth from an operation a while back that he can't wear his lower plate. He can only mutter to his lawyer, who functions as his mouth piece in tle senate’s caucus room, All is not magnolia blossoms and soft breezes in Mississippi. That much the special war investigating committee has learned so far in its inquiry into $25,000,000 worth of army air fields built by The Man's constituents. There also seems to be a slight case of incipient murder involved, though nobody seems to be taking this seriously except possibly the gent who fears his days are numbered. These apparently unrelated subjects I'll try to drop in their proper niches as we go along. The Man was an object of sartorial splendor in red, white and blue necktie, diamond horseshoe stick pin, red kerchief, and brown suit when he walked in. He ruined the suave effect only when Senator James M. Mead of New York, chairman of the investigators, remarked it was a nice morning.

Lispthed Suggestions

“YETH,” the gentleman from Mississippi agreed. Then he subsided in his chair, directly behind his lawyer, as though they were riding a tandem bicycle. Ag the day progressed, Senator Bilbo poked his attorney with increasing frequency in the back, and lispthed suggestions for the defense. An assortment of army officers, some in mufti and spats and some in official brass, told about the three air fields built in Mississippi by Senator, Bilbo's friends The evidence indicated that The Man took his pals to see the generals, that he bombarded the undersec-

I ——— HT —

Urges Restraint WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U. P.),

cours, | The procedure of asking the su--Authorized by a 1037 legislative preme and appellate court clerk to —President Truman spent nearly 30

tact, the justices included among the! ns : : minutes in conference today with 13.—The ordered changes an erate OH on 3 pane Day Joy 0 Ant in jon the part of inexperienced home the Duke of Windsor. may still concerning selection of special nique to obtain more time. In this buyers, wholesome advice from| Women members of the White ) . | judges. way, witnesses damaging to a de- bankers and “a lot less government | House staff jammed the lobby of The | Bu ¥ Was PROVIDE 3 romplceuel, 0 donger will a trial judge, who fendant might die, move out of the|interference,” will all contribute to|the cts 1 a Joor ab ¢ acto ay in ublican efforts has en disqualified to serve, ask!s . i solve the housing problem. This was . committee will get to these later, |to settle the contest over G. O. P.!the clerk of the supreme and appel- aj anze their minds BOUL edt of : et Wil-| sccompanied by Lord Inverchael, ‘house leadership in the new con- late courts to name a trio of attor-| The rule governing changes of liam A. Marcus of the American|the British ambassador. Cheated Each Other gress. neys from whom a special judge|venue also a been Se aroare | Trust Co., San Francisco. Natty in a grey, double breasted THE GENERALS agreed that they sought vaiiantly| The Republicans hoped to work may be selected. While it formerly was possible for| Mr. Marcus urged delegates to the Suit, the duke told reporters that to keep Mr. Bilbo off their necks. They let his friends out some kind of agreement that| Under the new procedure, one of an attorney to come into court, find regional conference of the Ameri-| Nothing official was discussed” dure build the air fields and they tried in vain to check would be satisfactory to the two| three steps shall be foMowed in the the weight of evidence against his can Bankers association here not to|!n8 his conference with the Presi charges that the foremen were forcing their laborers leading contenders for the majority selection. |client and ask for a change, now he| ‘throw fuel on the flames of infla- dent. to kick back $2 fees to keep their jobs. leadership—Reps. Charles A. Hal-| ONE: Opposing counsels may|will be expected to file a change pe- tion or pave the way for wholesale White House stenographers “They were cheating each other,” testified Douglas leck (Ind) and Clarence J. Brown agree on a special judge. tition 10 days in advance of a foreclosures” crowded in among the reporters as I. McKay, then assistant to the chief of army en- (0). | TWO: The trial judge may ap-| hearing. He said the excesses of “previous they questioned the duke in the gineers, “but we could find no evidence they were, The 1948 angle enters the pic- point a special judge at the request| The new procedures will become SPeculation in real state and mort- 10bby outside Mr. Truman's office, cheating the government.” ture, members said, because Rep. of opposing counsel. effective Jan. 1. gage lending” should be avoided. Denies Investment Report Detailing the cheating and telling about how much | Halleck has been identified as a|— remem = . | Mr. Marcus spoke at the final| «The last time I saw the Presie each field cost took most of the day. Then sun was Supporter of Governor Thomas session of the regional savings and/dent was on V-J day,” the duke

E.| . » | sinking low when Senator Homer Ferguson of Mich- Dewey of New York for the G. O. P.| Polio Fund Driv 100 In Pageant { mortgage conference of the asso-|gaid, jgan called for the testimony of Edward Terry, who Presidential nomination. |

; | cation. = | “My visit was cut short then, used to be Senator Bilbo's clerk when The Man was Al the same time, Rep. Brown has | Cast Tomorrow “The present volume of mortgage You will recall things were slightly unofficial mayor of Washington. Mrs. Terry wasn't on been tagged a supporter of Senator

. debt constitutes no threat to the confused. 1%. Robert A. Taft of Ohio. pens n ount | Turned out that he was scared. The committee | Some of Mr. Brown's colleagues

“Peace on Earth,” a Christies eredis Sueure of the Datiof” he| “I found the President looking : . 3 said. “But we have ‘a set of factors in great shape.” lawyers said they had G-men looking for him now, said he would be satisfied to Iet| ., 4. aRnual infantil lV pagent, Wi, pe given by a cas ol which can easily lead to trouble for ee rn ol his visit with the but that he had geported his life had been threatened the powerful leadership post 'go| ; ‘© PATaly= 100 tomorrow at 7:30 p. m. in St. .nger and borrower both. President was social, the duke ree if he testified. A couple of weeks later, he wrote, ao Mr. Halleck if he could be chair- |sis fund campaign opened in Marion | John’s Evangelical Lutheran church, Almost panic buying of both plied, “no, private.” mysterious phone voice also offered to do away with man of the house rules committee— county yesterday with the appoint-| Norman Eickhoft { his wife and daughter. He disappeared. or the house Republican steering ment of Paul V. Brown, director of S' Wil take the

a | Compromise Urged

: By DEAN W. DITTMER retary of wag¥ith letters and telegrams, and that he uly DEAL hui FITTMER 4

got them what they wanted. WASHINGTON. Dec. The charges are that they kicked back a little 1948 presidential election something to The Man, such as a $25,000 check, a je o long way off. limousine, and dream house number two on an island | they built on a lake at his pecan plantation.

More production, more restraint

Aviation

PEOPLE ALL over this country are buying airplanes, Some of these people are still attending schools, some are jobholders and some are responsible businessmen. ig They all have undergone flight training of one sort or another and are licensed for solo flight. Flying is just another human enterprise, largely dependent upon physical skill, co-ordination and judgment of speed, time and distance. I see little, if any, difference between flying and golf, tennis, baseball, horseback riding, swimming: or playing the piano. Stay away from any of these activities for any length of time, and for an appreciable period you will be trying to find and time yourself to .doing the essential, subconscious things. Stay away from a piano for a while and it will take some time to get your fingers doing exactly what vou want them to do. No one plays the piano well if he has to think through the movement of each hand and finger. The same goes for golf, or tennis, or flying. ” The more highly skilled an airman becomes in doing the subconscious things of -the-cockpit-and in making the subconscious decisions, the more time he has for planning. It doesn't make any difference how fast or slow a plane may be. Safe piloting means planning ahead, knowing what you want to do and should do. In a fast plane you don't think any faster. you just have to think farther ahead. Aside from this factor, the slow plane demands a lot more flying and airmanship.

Must Fly Often

THE ONLY WAY to become proficient at anything is to do it often—to eat it, sleep it and drink it. John McGraw used to pound this into our heads

3

P.).—Tens of thousands of workers transportation system was a strike.

stock and real estate by persons He denied a report that he f i who feared inflation and the scar-!planned to invest in an American Senator Bilbo nudged his mouthpiece, Attorney committee. Indianapolis Parks and Recreation, part aM Soe : Forrest Jackson of Jackson, Miss., who smiled genially | Won't Step Aside__ | ero. je Ci m restrictions on home building drove planned to buy an American farm. Campaigns will be conducted rected by Theo Prices up 100 per cent and higher, Asked where he planned to settle sippi politics. He said The Man joined the senate in phy virtue of seniority can have the throughout the nation during Janu- dore R Wukase h | : Local Bankers Attend to know where to. settle down,” “Yeth,” Senator Bilbo said. More tomorrow. Much he wants it.” According ‘to his| Henry 0. Goett, president of the | choir led by O. R - re mn more, I'm afraid. friends, he will not step aside for marion county chapter, announced Spurgat will sing. lending featured the morning ses- A i . i my nopin | The majority leader ordinarily nas allocated during the past 11 Wambsganss is y Pp heads the house steering commit- yonths more than $39,000 for the pastor. The St. made by banks during the ourrent, _ | pressed the opinion that the jobs| rhe nact few months 107 new formance with “the following “com conditions. in. the years ahead,” L. about baseball, and it's just as true of flying or any pers to keep party harmony. cases in Indiana, and 23427 in the |ganss, Gladys Wampner and Ada 1088 division of the association Maj. Gen. W. 8. Paul, war departe other activity. | They said Mr. Taft withdrew as nation he said. | Behrmanh. said. ‘ment director of personnel, said to= is a mighty wise thing to start right and recognize |lican leadership because he elt ‘ “ . among prominent bankers from the tg power to avoid asking congress that after an absence from the cockpit—by absence that Mr. Brown, a fellow Ohioan, Oklahoma City Crippled by Strike Midwest, including Vice President to extend the draft. ) : h b ) . Yim ’ will The draft act expires March 31, you until you settle down and close the gap by house leader. OKLAHOMA CITY, Dec. 13, (U.!decision to paralyze the city's street | Co., Indianapolis, and iam | 1000 "and the army must decide bee “feeling” the behavior of the ship. Taft Backing Brown | . loan center, Indianapolis. . : ; live av. by { ~ d { ’ enough men through voluntary ene behind. thie ‘scenes for Mr. Brown were stranded here today by a sur-| The sudden lack of bus and Hol “When making farm loans, a local oug 1 g ,

city of homes due to the wartime!rajlroad and another that he as fund director » » j= and informed the sehators that this was mere Missis- | But Rep. Leo E. Allen (R. TIL), | 0 dren's choir, di he said. down, he said, “it is very difficuls demanding Mr. Terry's appearance. rules committee chairmanship if ary by 3070 chapters. and the adult | A panel discussion’ on mortgage something else. that the chapter’ executive council The Rev, Louis \ Cp | “The terms of mortgage* loans By Maj. Al Williams j= [care and benefit of county polio John's Senior Normpn Eickhofl period of high prices must be flexSome Republicans, however, eX-|yi time Walther league will sponsor the per- ible to meet changing Sp could be parcelled out to tWo MeM-/ea5e5 occurred in the county, 422 mittee in charge: Theodore Wambs- A. Toble, vice president of the sav-| WASHINGTON, Dec, 13 (U. P.) = Now, if and when you have your own airplane, it!g candidate for the-senate Repub- | s——— Mr. Tobie led the discussion gay the army will do everything in I mean a week or 10 days—the plane will be flying had the inside track to become William B. Schiltges, Fletcher Trust Dufty, director of the bankers’ G.I. 1¢." tpat date whether it can ges . . Mr. Taft has been plugging away | ; First Flight Dangerous ; , ; It they said. He may force the issue prise strike of streetcar and bus ley service threw the city into con- {bank should have a thorough

EVERY PILOT has had to learn this lesson.

listments to fill its needs, It exe pects to decide by Feb. 1.

. . «i . ’ . y > g g he h 2 makes no difference how “hot” or how good you are, to & showdown when house Re- employees. fusion before dawn, {knowledge of the Jarkl jog Xie] Gen. Paul said the army didn’ J x "my # ’ . i . , ¢ ar 5 v " In ts $ 3 : or how much you learned about flying. The first publicans hold their caucus on Jan.| The walkout came only an hour William Gill Jr, city manager, markets for foun ot ets in 3 want draftees if it could do. withs flight after an absence from the cockpit is a dangerous 2 unless some settlement is worked after an arbitration board had ordered all police, fire and other araiery Wi Jam b Sag a ae out them. It believes the draftees . pe vr » . v y » ir -— T, > 2 » 1 I'S one. The only safeguard is to recognize this hard out before then. turned don street railway union \municipally owned vehicles — not|sistant vice president, o id is the most expensive soldier ever fact and behave accordingly | Mr. Brown has been told that he demands for a 20-cent hourly raise. required for other. purposes--to pa- | National Bank of St. Louis, another used. In bygone days when I thought I was “hot” 1 €&n have’ Mr. Halleck's present job; Oklahoma Railway union em- [trol company routes and assist panel member, said Little Useful Service " as chairman of the Republican con- ployees voted at 3 a. m, to remain stranded citizens. | Mr. Meacham said the most acute

was dreadfully disappointed whenever I got back into : or the cockpit after being away from it for any length gressional campaign committee. He “in continuous , meeting” rather

| was reported to have turned it down than accept the board's recom- the Amalgamated Association of [today was the Satine The Jame thing Bos Jor piloting a new flatly. mendations for a 5-cent hourly Street and Electric Railway a. d prices, which closely parallels the r » We oD ue oy re Wi um Sr into ‘the bell | During the 1948 congressional wage increase. Motor Coach Employees of America situation prevailing at the close star ron y driving myself into the belief | | : : : . own was ir- nion officials nied that the (A. F.of L). of world war I. that~I could fly anything with a motor and wings— | CAMpAlgn. Mr. Brown chair U . fic de He = ———— ey 2

: : ; mn man of the G. O. P. national ex-|——— si Ent 7 jfrespeostve Of yew Wii Skill Ji fon’ rue ecutive committee—overseeing the i To DIL, surely is heacec lor troubie, mittee and the senatorial campaign | You have to fly every day to reach your peak of he committee, @irmanship. Each and evéry divergence from every- —————— day flying is the yardstick of individual risk. We . . . think our way through our student pilot days where Jury Dismisses Suit every move is the result of individual decision, ‘Against Bobbs-Merrill After that we are supposed to fly- subconsciously. \ . with all our wits and senses devoted to planning ahead A $100,000 damage sult against of where we are in the air. Like all basic rules, this Bobbs-Merrill Co.. Indianapolis pubone is simple and it should be implanted indelibly lishing firm, and Bertita Harding;

in the mind of every pilot who does not fly every day. Indianapolis author, has been dis“"Imissed by. a federal jury in New

a . . The local union is affiliated wih problem in the farm mortgage field Gen. Paul Pointed out that a “trend in farm land Graftee comes into the service for

18 months and spends most of thas time in “training or being transported to an overseas theater for —roccupation duty. He also gets 4§ |days leave. Less than half the period of ‘his service is devoted to actual duty. In addition, a draftee costs the {government all the expenses ine {volved in the G. I. bill of rights. The army ‘has extended the draft holiday through Jan. 30, still ‘hoping voluntary enlistments will {do the trick. - The latest recruiting figures, for [the period Nov, 22 to 30, show only [5126 enlistees compared to the (army's peed for 9000 a week. Howe

We, the Women

By Ruth Millett

|ever, the discharge rate has been |considerably slower than at first (anticipated.

York. Brought by the former Hapsburg Archduchess Assunta, the suit involved the book “Lost Waltz,” a history of the Tuscan branch of

RECENTLY THE New York World-Telegram devoted 4 full page of pictures to telling the story of what goes on behind the closed door of a plush Fifth Avenue beauty salon. The pictures were presented with the comment: “Look, gentlemen! For years now your women folk have been barging right into your barbershops without ever letting you have a peek at their beauty salons. Well, here's a pictorial inside story for you on what goes on in those forbidden premises.”

Dirty Trick on Women

THE MEN are bound to have found the pictured story educational. But jt was a dirty trick te play on women, for the most unglamorous hours of a woman's life Are those spent in a beauty shop. : What she goes through in order to come out looking well groomed shouldn't happen to a prize pooch being slicked up for a fancy dog show, . Wir

« \

‘girls how little they had to worry about in the way To Christmas Party | a

a . is . f y v

iranion Mob Mauls ‘Tudeh Party Members

| TEHRAN, Dec. 13 (U. P).—A {mob estimated at 3000 and identified as Azerbaijani or their sympathizers {stormed the left-wing Tudeh club (today. At least 20 party members | were injured and furniture and |windows were smashed. | The rioting here coincided with jan announcement that gegernment %» i f {troops had reached the Azerbaijan ik [capital of Tabriz This was coupled ' . . {with a report that Jafaar Pishevari, SOUTH SIDE SOUTHPAWS—No one can tell these |3 left-handers of school 22, |yremier of the Azerbaijan regime, at 1231 S. Illinois st., that it is unlucky to be a port-sider on Friday |3th. Reading had fied to Russia. up the | and down around the 3 are Ina Atwood, Aaron Rubin, Bobby Johnson, Robert a i hiealy. . ti Dozier, Aubrey Atwood, Edmond Simmons, Bennejane ierbertz, Insez Sanders, Norma (pers and’ chased them through

Nahmias, David Kinney, Saddelle Camhi, Larry: Dillon and Bobby, Denease. streets. Tate

the Hapsburgs. With her hair stuck to her head in tortured pin| The former archduchess charged curls, her face plastered over with greasy cream, “her privacy had been invaded” and her hands stuck out in the air motionless while her | that she had been libeled. nail polish dries, she looks about as intelligent, civil- | ———

ized and charming as the women G. 1.'s on Pacific 10 Orphans Invited islands took snapshots. of #y order to show their own

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of female competition. | The American Legion James C.|# | Bracken post and auxiliary unit 417. No Sight for Men {will A or a Christmas party at| THE MODERN beauty salon is a wonderland with | 4 p. m. Sunday in the V. F. W. hall, assembly line-like precision, making a blond of every | Denny and E. Washington sts. Ten | woman who wants to be ohe, giving every woman the | children, orphans of veterans, have advantage. of curly locks, transforming weather-beaten | been invited to attend. skin, and so on, Committee in charge includes EuBut the beauty processes tliemselves should have | nice Bracken, Nidrah Hopkins, Ruth forever remained a mystery to the masculine mind. | Ittner, Rosemary Koss, Betty StahlThe finished product is all the men should ever huth, ‘Adeline Buchanan and Marhave been allowed to see, . wr guerite Pattison, - a»

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