Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 May 1947 — Page 7
g road trip that \e homie grounds hy on a victory
and seven clubs pledo, Louisville, raced the Tribe thind Tost by run and two 8s batted in. The in<making mood st tilt and they arkers on seven he Hens at bay the ninth, as scheduled for but lasted eight, ¢ Tribesters ope rl Jones on the 8 were nine for ight for Toledo. inished in a 2.3 8, the Mud Hens the eighth and 2 out. Bob Wren Ernie Andres at cut loose with a first and Wren to third, m Fly ted the next two Clary sent a itini In right and 1¢ with the wine citch, er in Toledo lash nth for the Ine and they got a ‘hey lost five by | their 18 defeats ain attractions. ll be joined here er Woody Wil n recently pure lywood ‘of the y pitcher Manuel n on the inactive in arm infection.
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Pilot mi-Pros nd., May 24.—Joe polis, has been e the Frankfort team for the cure ly will also play organization. He »mi-pro and proe behind him.
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on and Ray Sts. aswel
~~ ~~
.
Ta society should be making. He was restless, this idesistic Indianapolis physician, .
In the last decade, the 45-year-old fireball has
stepped on a lot of toes in fighting for a grade-A milk ordinance, the abolition of organized prostitution, the
“ corityol of venereal disease, and a better deal for men-
tal patients. Much Has Been Accomplished
ALTHOUGH DR. BEATTY, is the first to admit that much remains to be done, his friends stress the Jong, aitidey the chy and sate Baye uken I hime
No one denies that organised prostitution has been virtudlly eliminated. A public health center continues to apply control methods to a post-war spread of venereal disease and there is the brightest outlook for an intelligent handling of mental patients in Indiana ¥ \
Dr. Beatty had an opportunity to show his interest in public health when former Mayor Walter Boetoher asked the physician to recommend any changes af " hospital he thought might improve the service. chairman of the Indianapolis chamber of comhealth committee, the energetic physician led fight for the milk ordinance. He was on his way further. achievements. Herman G. Morgan, late city health officer,
fly
Dr. . asked Dr. Beatty to undertake what appeared at the out
break of World war II to be an insurmountable problem-—-control of venereal disease and the abolition f the traditional “line” of bawdy houses. He began his program at the county jail, meanwhile seeking Federal funds for a broadening plan. At the jail, his insatiable interest in human beings led him to study the derelict persons whose jumbled lives were without purpose. They lived from day to day, giving little thought to their future or that of other human beings. They were the symbols of licentious and irresponsible living on which venereal disease spawns. Dr. Beatty also observed that an even more un-
This iulbpired his interest in mental health, now his chief activity,
Pushes Mental Health Reform
HE BECAME HEAD of a committee that succeeded
"two years ago In getting the Indiana general assembly
to authorize the Indiana Couricil for Mental Health.
5 3 a : E 8 § rl
Frese i 3 ffi] : Ij Hi:
Bathing a Beauty
WASHINGTON, May 2¢.—The weather's hot. The sentors are snarling. And why don't we lean Back and relax? I have here a cordial invitation, with love, from Maria Montes to catch the next plane west and watch her take a bath. 1s anybody still interested in politicians in wool pants with baggy knees? . ,: I thought not. That Hollwood is a wonderful place and I don't take a bath like
Her's was an Arabian Nights tub the size of a small swimming pool” on stage eight at Universal City. It was filled with water dyed scarlet, because Director Arthur Lubin wanted pink bubbles for technicolored modesty’s sake. ; : There were 54 men on the stage. Fifty-three of them were hanging the spotlights, adjusting the cameras, and stirring a 50-pound sack of bubblebath “powder into the pool. The 54th man just stood there with his eyes wide open. I didn't jot down any notes; I figured I'd probably be able to ,remember.
Toil, Trouble—Buf No Bubble
MISS MONTEZ stood by my side; she said she didn’t much like the idea of 108 eyes watching her remove her white bath robe. Her worry was premature. The bubble-bath stirrers were working up a sweat, but no bubbles. Tn Lubin sent fhe third assistant director the street to the drugstore to buy out his stock of liquid shampoo. This also went into Miss Montez’ tub, bottle by bottle. Still no bubbles.
Beauty Bugaboo
HOLLYWOOD, May 24.—Marilyn Bufedd, - this year's Miss America, may soon get a choice role at
M-G-M, We hear. Gale Robbins, Miss Chicago of
'1938, has just landed the second lead in Milton ‘Sperling's “Ever the Beginning” at Warner Brothers. Maybe Marilyn and Gale will blast the old Hollywood bugaboo that beauties can't act. Venus Ramey, Miss America of 1945, couldn’t do it, though. Venus just went home to Somerset, Ky. after nine months of haunting casting offices without luck. But she still ‘has a sense of humor. She told me her father had given her a tomato cannery in Kentucky and that she would, go back there gnd run it. “Many a vegetable has been thrown at a would-be actress, but I am the first would-be actress to be thrown at/the vegetables.” Ty Power is pleaditg with Annabella to give him a divorce as soon as possible. The reason, of course, is pretty obvious, Her name is Lana Turner. * Cary Grant and his favorite girl friend, Betty Henzel, have called it a day. Ed Gardner is talking to Irving Berlin about writJne the music for a new Duffy's Tavern movie.
What's in a Name? © THE VERY pretty Iris Bynum who has been gharing dates with Clark Gable and Orson Welles is the same girl who was engaged not so long ago to Bing Crosby’s script writer, Bill Morrow. This is Hollywood, Mr. Jones: Enterpriee studio
Each Wednesday and week-end, weather permitting,
r added:e
FIGHTER—Qne who believes hat the improvement of civilization comes only from a con. tinual struggle is Dr, Norman no Cote for interested president of the Indiana neil for Mental Health.
Indiana state prison, where the prison's Aeopital for the criminal insane now houses more than 300 mensd
tally-deficient individuals.
“ The public-minded physician has succeeded in get- | -
ting 10 top-notch psychiatrists in privale practice to serve as consultants in bettering Indiana's treatment of the insane. Representative of his drive is the mental health bill's precedent-breaking provision for $10,000 salaries for psychiatrists. For years, it was considered disrespectful to the governor to pass a bill providing for salaries higher than his own. “I want to see every mentally-deficient person have a chance for recovery, not just the privilege of lanEE in some state institution or becoming the town fool,” Dr. Beatty declared. + “Moreover, it’s amazing how many persons in jail are psychotic problems and need help. There is a reason behind most criminal acts, 8 TeMsOn U4} ofven points to a mental disturbance.” The balding father of three likes to play bridge and poker. Only in the last few years, however, has he had much opportunity. And then only after he Besuie 34 Som Overwsik “shd:was. idly i=slow own.” To do this, he bought a 40-acre Brown county retreat, which he since has expanded into several hundred acres. His family calls it “Beatty's Frantic.”
Dr. Beatiy Selires 30’ Brown coumsy. do frowse and relax. He asserts that public apathy since the war has allowed venereal Aisease control to slip. “It takes drastic methods, including quarantine, to control this ever-present menace and the public simply will not accept them in peace-time” Dr. Beatty asserted. (By KENNETH HUFFORD.)
By Frederick C. Othman
The second assistant director went after a case of soap chips; the experts stirred them in. No bubbles. The first assistant director hauled in from stage. seven three bushels of borax left over from a snowstorm and dumiped it in, too. Nary a bubble. Director Lubin .was’ desperate; so yao. Dulveraul Pictures Corp. Funning_ $300 passed
\
Expenses . were hour, bubbles or no Bibles. TA Two Hours had and Miss Montez still was unbathed. Mr. Lubin had an inspiration. He ordered’ thé studio fire engine stoked up and hauled to the stage. Live steam soon was seething through Miss Mantez’ bath.
‘All Senors Shut Ze Eyes—'
‘YOU THEENK she is too hot?” inquired La Montez. “She maybe take off ze hide?” .
crop of fine bubbles. “Lights!” he cried. “Pul-lease,” cried Maria. “All senores will shut ze eyes.” Fifty-four pairs of eyes went closed, she hoped, and next I saw of Miss Montez, she was submerged in bubbles. An electrician, who did not believe in the Lady Godiva legend, said—regretfully—that She Wors 4 Dink ywbher ean sui He was sorry that he peeked. 80 Miss Montez had her bath in water nearly boiling. When Lubin finaly let her up, she passed out. ~ Smelling salts brought her around and what ghe sald then I shall not repeat, because I don’t understand Spanish. Ah, memories. Now she’s about to take another bath in p copper-lined tub and she writes that she'll let me hand her the soap. I wish I could be present for this event, but then again, as Miss Montez’ baths go, it probably will be an anti-climax.
By Erskine Johnson
bought ‘Body and Soul” as a theme song for a movie. They threw away thé song and kept the title. Martha Stewart, comedian Joe E. Lewis’ wife, and Mrs. Danny Kaye were talking about the latter's new baby. . “Why,” asked Martha, “did you name her Deena?” Mrs, Kaye explained how that was the name of Danny’s first successful record. “You mean,” laughed Martha, “that if I have a baby I'll have to call him, ‘Sam, You Made the Pants Too Long.’”
Stock Play for Connie
CONSTANCE BENNETT will star in “Over 21” in|,
summer stock. It's about an army wife in Alabama. During the war, Connie was just that.
M-G-M quietly has dropped Jan Clayton, imported |
from Broadway after her hit in “Carousel.” In all the talk around Hollywood abput rival technicolor queens—Laraine Day in “Tycobn” and Maureen O'Hara—everyone is forgetting the origina] techni-< color king, Sir Cedric Hardwicke. Sir Cedric was lured away from the New York stage to appear in one of the first full-length color fllims, “Becky Sharpe.” Main reason was that his “typical pink and white English” complexion was most effectiva of all those tested for the new color film. It's good to hear that Benny is packing in the customers on his eastern personal appearance tour. - The best gag in Jack's act, of course, is his repeated efforts to play the violin. He just about succeeds at the end of the show when they lower the screen and the newsreel starts.
Ty ~~. Allof Us He
fl By . Barton Rees Pogue
I N some May, not too far distant, It were good if memory Might so move the deep devotion Of the noble and the free =
And in our sorrow raise \ Memorials, for dead and living Of heartfelt prayer do praise.
© If all our many "millions, / Bare of head and bowed in heart, This one day wight cease their toflin Halt their play to, i i In a solemn / For the losers ag the lost, = So the living know we fathom , What our victories have cost.
As quiet as a country pathway Let our streets give up their noise, As poignant as a parent's heartbreak, Over the loss of girls and boys, Let our hearts bow down in tribute, In grief let us acclaim Each wound, each maim, each torture, Each gold-encrusted name.
Not by law or proclamation, Not by urging of the press, But by gratitude outpouring May this day in stateliness Shine above all others . . . , They, too, bore their oross, : They were saviors of our freedom, ‘Let us magnify their loss!
=
‘Summer Thundershowers, Sunny Mornings May End Delay
In Planting Due to Cold and Wet
By THE WEATHER EDITOR °*
That we meet in solemn conclave, wh
Warmer Weather On Way
ay R Return Some To
Muscatatuck Tests Slated
In Se ons;
Reha ion Goal
Of New Progra
Screening Tog the WN tuck feeble-minded institution to determine if some: patients can be returned to their homes. probably will be started in Beptember. A four-point plan also Gesigned to reorganize the teaching methods at the feehle-minded cofdnies at Muscatatuck and Pt. Wayne was sdbmitted to Governor Gates today.
Aims of the plan were: ONE: ‘To® investigate the feasl-
stitution for return to their homes! those individuals who can be expected to profit from the recently extended special education services in Indiana. TWO: To set up criteria for selec-
present educational staff, in order that improved teaching and administrative procedures may be introduced ‘into the ‘school program.
Inspected Institution - Dr. Schmidt, who has devised new
stitution at Muscatatuck last week with Governor Gates and other state educational and mental health officials.
The method of possibly screening out patients from both Muscatatuck and Ft. Wayne in an effort to restore them to normal, useful lives has the 100 per cent backing of the governor, he announced fdllowing the inspection
tip. The -era--of - the summer - afternoon -thtinder. showers and - ‘warm|!§ the tnspe Ben Watt, state su-
smug days should Siar nest week 1 GF! WERE SiR 8 TN And not too soon because Hoosier farmers are
crop
sore about She, rain-soaked, chilly spring. which bas serio, dea
Bad weatMr hast done much to keep the temper of the eity|
dwellers on an even keel, either, Weather ians predict temperatures “be normal by next Wednesday. Between now and then the temps are expected to fluctuate between three and five degrees below normal. ‘Rainfall is destined to be light with southern Indiana getting about three-fourths of an inch in showers in the next five days. Barometers point to clear days in Indianapolis. - A little rain in the north is anticipated. Chief Forecaster George F. Brewster said the heaviest rainfall in Indianapolis during May occurred last Wednesday when .8 of an inch was recorded. “But that's not se much,” he asserted. “On the same day more than two inches of water fell in the western part of the state.” -
Plant Corn in South
Mr. Brewster said he has had reports a little corn planting is going on in southern Indiana, He believes an opportunity to begin widespread planting will come next week. The county agent’s office reports) that tomato planting is way behind schedule and said that it is almost too late for “direct seeding. Some wheat is turning yellow because of excessive rain, Pollenization of fruit trees has been delayed by the wet spell. Bees. which aid in this process, have stayed in their dry hives, and the damp clime is keeping the pollen from drifting. Strawberry producers have some
of soybeans have been planted.
breaking for planting has been very slow, Don R. fiughes, director of the fish and game division of the state conservation department, didnt
hunters and fishermen. He said the production of quail and pheasant eggs has dropped off fast at the game farms because of “the damp and cool weather. “We should have seen some wild broods- of birds by this time, but we. haven't,” he said. Anglers are due for a shortage of fish1f it doesn’t warm up, said Mr. Hughes, explaining that high water and low temperatures are keeping fish from laying eggs. Apparently trees are the only thing that haven't suffered from the weather, C. E. Sutton, an assistant in the forestry division of the conservation department, said five million young saplings are really going to town in the state.
Red Cross to Offer * Water Safety Course
A Red Cross Aquatic school will] be held at Camp Limberlost, La hGrange, Ind., from June 19-29, to offer instruction in advanced water safety, accident prevention and first aid, James P. Carroll, local Red Cross chairman, announced today. Applications may be made by calling the Red Cross water safety department; Lincoln 1%41.
Carnival—By Dick’ Turner
Fortville “M: GREY — ENTER— N—MIKE
- JACKIE DRIVERS.
| FAST
tand, 60¢
\
We, the Women
THE HEAD OF A women's specialty store recently ,
* His figure may not be too high for Fifth Avenue, buthere’s a bet that 35.18 'Way out of line Jor Mains. Not So on Main sh,
THE MAIN ST. matron isn't giong to regard 80 Jer SCH 51 Sie Shas Jn ber choses, chuoiste {im
she won't be able to afford. to throw out that many good garments, That would leave her not much better off than | or with
By Ruth Millett
Then, too, the average woman {is pretty ingenious when it comes #0 renovating clothes. She'll be able 30 do. Job byl lowering hems, letting dresses down from the waist, and so
Can't Afford Discard :
BESIDES, EVEN if 80 per cent of her clothes shoud TOOK Sit of aie io the average Waar,
sa
— : OPR. 194 ol
Tell th to Er as I've checked it to “words with only, one meaning!"
eliminate cd we |
plants in bloom and a few fields But, generaly speaking, ground
paint a very bright picture for
| PAT. OFF. : their shirts on, Miss Megan! ll give |
tty |Porintendent of public instruction who accompanied Gov. Gates and Dr. Schmidt to the feeble-minded colony, is mapping out the program to set up special classes for the mentally . and physically handicapped in special schools possibly yet this year. Have Special Training
State Teachers. college. and. proficient In the Schmidt system of teaching the feeble-minded would form the hucleus of the teaching staff in the mentally handicapped division of the system. Dr. Schmidt, upon Gov. Gates’ suggestion, wrote the four-point report for study by state officials. If the governor approves the setup 3s he indicated he would, Dr. Schmi would take a six-weeks leave of absence in late Se and start her work at Ma
Body of Drowned
Painter Recovered The body of a 46-year-old house painter was recovered yesterday from Fall creek, near Central ave. where he was drowned. Charles M. Nichlson, 720 Massa~ chusetts ave., had gone to the creek: yesterday afternoon to fish with his son, Richard, 22, and lost his life in deep water.
tatuck.
POOR SHORTWAVE RECEPTION By Science Service WASHINGTON, May 24—This will be bad week-end for shortwave radio listeners attempting to hear broadcasts from Europe, the national bureau of standards predicts. Disturbances which began Thursday evening with an abrupt magnetic storm are expected to continue through Monday.
The Heart of America—
The Big But Gallipolis’
York, and quiet, quaint, friendly a local girl, Miss Maybelle Small
New York apartment. He yearned for the friends and carefree life of his boyhood days. Yes, he would chuck it all and come back some day. - He even bought an old-brick
him honors.” In 1035 Frank R. Vance gave a big. testimonial din ner for him in absentia, ©Odd's telegram to Mr. Vance is now proudly exhibited in the Hoel Lafayette lobby. It says: : »
bility of screening out from the in-}
Brick Dream House Is Vacant,
0. O. Mcintyre Kept Putting Off Return, But Death Brought Him Back fo Spot He Loved
By ELDON ROARK, Sctipps-Howard Staff Writer
GALLIPOLIS, O., May 24.«-The lgje columnist, won fame writing aboyt
Odd was born in Plattsburg, Mo., but he grew up here and married home town and wrote many columns about it as he sat in his Juxurious
ESPALIERED TREES—Mrs. Walter Morton, 3434 E Foll Crook. ; : bivd. trains a peach tree beside her front door. Creek
2 =» #
Gardening—
Fruit, Shade and Beauty— : All on'Ordinary Lot Here ?
Espaliered. Trees Provide the Answer; 3 Not Difficult If One Has Patience, Heeds Roles By MARGUERITE SMITH. ~~ EIGHTEEN FRUIT TREES on an average sise © Br150 ah
with front and back lawns an urbroken expanse of grass—that's the seeming miracle accomplished by Mrs. Wala Moran, 334 ¥ si Creek blvd. She trains espaliered trees against the brick walls of their,
8 E :
“Any fruit tree can be trained to grow wherever you want it, even in a Space no more than two feet case wide,” she says. “It’s easy and [to upright wires fixed simple to do. ‘I first interested must when I saw ed trees in French and English gardens. They are common there, for space is scarce and the climate less favorable than ours. And wall-grown trees are better protected from cold. “I decided fo try it. Now when I hear people say they want a hedge for privacy I wonder why they don’t use fruit trees instead. You have the flowers ir®spring: beautiful—then later you have something to eat.
» s > “THEY DON'T make too dense shade and I can have flowers, Even my roses do well under them.
“The yield is not so large as from i an orchard tree but the fruit is doer n always bigger. So are the leaves.|ordinary, Rochester peach purchased We've had peach leaves eight inches k long and the first peach we picked weighed just under a pound. The, peaches color to a richer, red, teo, “The trainipg is interesting and easy to do if you follow a few simple and have a little patience. The tree~ comes from the nursery a one or maybe two-year-old whip. You top it back to where you want the first arms to develop. Then for a Narrow space you can train the branches to grow straight up, or for a wide space you may want two, 1 four, or six Benisthes iin pairs. \ a “EVERY Tae ends to grow tall Beaten, R of and round. So you have to watch
it closely, especially in the spring when it's growing rapidly. When new young shoots grow where you don't want them they must come off unless they are in a place where
hil tf
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Pride Finally Ca Came Home J
O. 0. McIntyre, newspaper |is
two cities—big, bad, roaring New {comes here for a little Gallipolis. the summer. And to get, she doesn
He always looked upon this as his
