Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 January 1949 — Page 17
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, Th | | “THURSDAY, JANUARY 71, 1049 goin on the Wighways .No. 10" %-: ;
love to fire the man because then: they would > i k asd i ow have reached the ultimate in recobd-making— re aort Th re its hair aad tok I took Sook many Hh Jb a the oR — finish. : “Don’t get the idea that we don't Know what A Sad working: ‘on the we're doing,” he said. “You find such uncon-! Sh y |
problem of “perfect production every day, no one types mass production, foresees, in the near future, that accomplishment, Aroliable flaws 18 an 8 ee of Fawn, "wich we
so Clyde Hardin, matrix repairman, is safe in : : : pi pf SA ane ER ay Yen apr be i gen marr hen Du Cal & r rooj ers s Awa 5 You see, Mr. Hardin is the liquidator of all record has to be recorded, which ti . y - ] ; at A aga SANE bo
ticks, , grits, scratches, rough lines, mashed 2 costly proposition as well as troublesome, lines and dents that appear on matrices, those A singer may forget words to a song, develop,
in stamping out the platters you buy, all these things are important when you're mak-, What ‘are ticks, pops, grits? You know, that's ing records for a profit, Flaws that can be exactly what I asked Mr. Hardin when he men removed are quickly turned over to Mr. Hardin. tioned them. I thought he was talking about a Cynthia Judson, mold tester, is the young lady breakfast food or something. instrumental in picking out bad spots when they A tick is a small imperfection found on a occur. She plays the matrices all day long. matrix and is caused by some im ty in the always on the lookout for trouble. Trouble spots solution used during electrolysis, e process are marked with a red pencil and the nickel and which deposits nickel and copper to make the copper platter is sent around the corner to Mr.! second generation of records from the master. Hardin. Now, this small imperfection would result in 1 saw four shiny discs come in for the Hardin a slight ticking noise on your record if it were ‘treatment. One had a small dent. This was releft in the matrix. That's why the name—ticks. moved by a few taps from a small mallet on a ! e140 cr pointed stick placed directly over the dent. Of Pops Are Grown Up Ticks course, you have to know how hard to-hit, how, POPS are ticks grown up. They ke more many times and where the place the pointed stick.
jse and: do nothing to help along the fidelit : "i Rose Sud: 40, nothing 3 help jong she Haenty Chisels Made Out of Needles
record people.
TICKS and pops which have to be cut out of the metal require delicate cutting with tiny| chisels. These chisels, incidentally, are fashioned, from sewing machine needles. For one particular, tick Mr. Hardin used a No. 9 converted sewing needle. This is as good a place as any to say I lied to Mr, Hardin when 1 said 1 recognized the tick before and aiter removal. He showed me how to use his glass. he spotted the tick and marked it § but I guess my eyes are going bad on me, One consolation, however, the ticks are Imperfections in grooves that measure five-thou-sandths of an inch. A hair, you know, is two to three thousandts of an inch. Immediately the idea occurred to me that Mr.
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h : oy . gt oe ia ad ea Death came to John Donald Gootes, 2125 Olive St., in the The heavy Army truck plowed over a 20-foot embankment and Hopped they short of 4 Youded which would surprise the recording artist. Seymour district of the Indiana State Police Tuesday when his creek after the crash. Mr. Gootee was on the wrong side of the super d wabdans Highway ot the That is not possible. He can't change the fre-| car crashed with an-Army truck on U. S. 31 at Franklin. time of the accident. He is the second fatality of he year in the Seymour district.
__ quency although on sheer noise such as is found | in parts of Spike Jones recordings, he could tone! down a pistol shot or a loud crash. Boy, what a position to be in. Imagine making Spike come, out on the same decibel level as Guy Lombardo. | | When Mr. Hardin isn't in the groove cutting, i, the nickel for dear ol’ RCA, he's playing jive ! records on his record player. There's one instance
CHICA 20 ool pes
records for his own amusement. The more Mr, Looking at noise . . . Clyde Hardin picks out @ Hardin plays the better the production re Mr | bad spot in a posond, ment is doing. In the groove, so to speak.
Inside Inferno By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Jan. 27—The American saloon, of the tipple famliy. You cannot talk long to } which once provided a snug retreat from the gall a martini hound—no* unless you get down on they of domestic and economic chafe, seems just about floor with him. finished. It is interesting that addiction to the Juster| Once a place of considerable grace and de- belts—the five-part gin martooni, and the double; corum, given to the quiet expansion of the intel- dollop of rye on ice-cybes—grows in popularity, ! lect, it has finally become a co-educational mad- as today's drinkers seek a short route to uncon-| house full of shrieks and fury. sciousness. The intrusion of television into the homely It could be that the saloon, once man's tl bar is, I suppose, the final stroke. But the victim haven from the frenzied world, has taken on al was dying, anyhow, done in by the dry martini, portion of the world's frenzy. the whisky-on-rocks, the radio, the juke boxes, Recently I wandered in—and just as quickly | the women, the absence of § decent free snack. out—of a place on which a modern Dante might | Where was a “oRtanc quis iim 18 somg, of wmodel his inferno. = If said : “tavern A the speakeasies of my tender time, even if the Inside two separate television sets, on different! booze's parentage was dublous, and an occasional channels, went full toot. { case of blind staggers dwelt in the decanter,
Most of the speaks were quiet, at any rate, and Jukeboxes Belch and Gurgle Er —— Am EE a muckle of them stayed that way after it got g | Sgt. Clifford McCrory ior . Trooper A. D. Warrick, who investigated the tragic accident THE BARTENDER had tuned his personal bed rail h d 9 . y h that | 3 : i ie Joga) again. For awhile, that is, they stayed that "0 "0 oe din. and a doom-voiced news| nets 3 smash rail on a types Sup is report in post headquarters as Lt. Harry McMillin Considering that the original function of the broadcaster oa Anetiously retailing the freshest looks a A ROR To eaameaas troke tl erv free the , { . *h © public Bouse was to stroke the nerves free the MD ebox belched and gurgled In a far corner. 9€YMOUF- Post Charts Show Drop ihe trooper had to go st least 30 tod and a pinball machine clattered in another. Every miles to the scene of the accident. fred Joultice Ol Aah, a I der iony voice in the house was raised in a scream for Whenever F ull For ce Is on Job No arrests have been made for To build sufficient courage even to enter the dominance, with the female yipping soaring over) " ' By VICTOR PETERSON "these three tragedies. The crimmodern ‘grogshop, a man of. average ‘sensitivity {he male bellowing. It Was a place to leave. SEYMOUR POST, Indiana State Police, Jan. 27 — Hoosiers paar Inc SMPle Ue 10 8 os would have to get hollering drunk before ¢he Very. few saloons bother to set up a slab of don’t have to die in:“murder on-the highways.” om iS Doin where e wo a shoved his nose into the bedlam. : rat cheese, a sprig of herring or a pig's fetlock, | Prevention pays off and statistics at this post prove that y writhing on the pavement. : any more, to soften the bounce of the raw rye! carnage on Indiana roads can be decreased. An increase of three men would Drink Fit for Sword-swallowers on an empty stomach. The dish of potato chips| But this is a fortunate post, one in which patrol strength al- put Seymour post in excellent provides no nutriment and its salt only increases condition by Indiana standards. 4 ONCE IN, and unwarily sober, there is little most reaches an ideal proportion for the amount of territory as- Yet h till 1d h t 4 to do but stroke the torso with flame if the man ‘he thirst. That goes double for peanuts. There 0,04 for coverage. ots i ft em one an 8 ou ave > intends to remain on the premises. And as ia‘ 13 ROthIng in those skimpy vittles for the alcohol; Gharts kept here show a direct, The Seymour Post of the In- om ata mies 0’ y® swift anointer of the nerve-ends, the Martini is ail - 10 Tassle with. relationship of deaths to the diana. State Police has ome of [BUC FUE CRETE CL oe by itself. : Very few places, today, set up a slug on the number of troopers on patrol.| the best trafic records in the Aven only three are heavily - " A drink unfit for consumption by other than house, as’ a gracious gesture io a gracious cus- Since 1946 the fatal accidents in| state. , An almost adequate » ORL y pop A blanket of grinning skulls, pathetic memories of tragedy,
professional sword-swallowers, it assaults its user tomer, whose custom and comportment is apprg- the district have dropped . from patrel of troopers is given as ted. ey | ral Jountan. Bis leave blots of horror on. Indiana roads. Today the Seymour dis. with all the subtlety of a sledge on the skull,’ ciated. The law generally forbids it, on the 52 to 40 in 1947 to 34 last year. the reason. However, death andi eich Bas. four men assigned trict has been added. In its most popular. form-it is simple gin which grounds’ that a courtesy cup, for free, will drive! The grim toll reaped by death | stil rides the roads. The sec- ta the compact Yerritory., Other ; has been breathed on by a man who has gargled the recipient to drunkenness. is tabulated ‘on monthly charts. ond fatality of the year for the wire ne Hooper strength sections. of the map of Hoosier- 56 east of Scottshurg. It's a good vermouth. That gives it flavor. Most of the ameliorative aspects of standup Some months the fatals show a; district was marked up Tues | owh. One: Jennings, one; Soot! Ihde robles of trafic i road SUD the tat Jovi cause I have known more weepers, fighters, failers, drinking seem to have departed the scene, and rise; other months there is a day. This article is another in two; and Washington. one. ' + he p Shin of vel Ry Howe vars Sopp A yee, eh
" ' The Times’ series aimed at screamers. mumblers and stumblers among. the I think I shall build my own private bar. It'll definite decrease. A t4 ¢ 4 ‘ halting unnecessary carnage. concentration of troopers, “murderers” still ride on rubber “ martini alumni than among all- other branches be small, maybe, but by cracky it'll be quiet, In the last three months of KE '¥ such as enjoyed by this post, prob- over such a dangero i ay As Millin said. “But I think the
in J 1948, the ~~ i I waver Ari determines how the people are go- ably seems out of proportion to U; 8. 31. This is the most acci- Sreatest difficulty, is the, feeling ty district’ skyrocketed. During Ing to drive. Those striped cars other areas in the state. It is a dent seared road in the district of immunity the people in the
. * . impress the public. concentration which should be and is characterized by a series drea have. Unless a driver pleads that period an average of 8 of 17|impre pu Wind Still Blows By Frederick. C. Othman available troopers on oh assigned | “When the men are not out, the &ppreciated. It came about dur-|of narrow bridges which dealSulity to & charge it. has been al- | strike duty at Salem. rate of speed on the highway Ing the war when more men were death to. the unsuspecting. /most impossible to get a case to
‘ shoots up, the drivers become 85Signed here for security rea-| The most dangerous bridge and rial. If the case comes to trial WHEN the Returned to regu-/more ~areless. As soon as the Sons and because of a great in<! curve in the ent ./it has been almost impossible to WASHINGTON, Jan. 27—The subject today is Sen. Wayne Morse of Oregon, who offered jar road oral the number of men return to the post, the speed flux of People. |pined hi is rod var Bal 0 a conviction.”
wind, hot air, the big blow, pot likker and where rule designed to end speeches of indefinite length, |... f month d d im-/drops—so do the accidents, in- ” Th in row wait for * Third on the list of death is not to tell how not to mix a mint julgp. If that said in answer to polite questioning by the South- mens Mg When the ee is! juries and deaths.” ENCOMPASSED by the district a of a. ! has State Rd. 150 sharled with hilis gounds confusing, then I'm on the right track, erners that he never had, either, been a filibuster- on duty the post averages about] Even so, the average number of was Camp Atterbury, Freeman more, 81 carries the greatest ahd curves so dense that there because some of the most talkative gentlemen in er, himself. two deaths a month. This up-and- men rvallable each day will run Field, Atterbury Field and a Jong volume ‘of traffic in the district|®r® few legal passing zones. all the world, namely Senators, are trying to fig- But you spoke several hours on a bill once goun ride of “murder” is evident no more than 12. However, this stretch of the Big and Little Inch and is a vital link ‘between In| These are three of the most ure. out how to quit talking so much. (14 hours. to be exact) and you changed fiy mind! every instance personnel is called Post is one of the few in the state pipelines. It also bordered the dianapolis ahd Louisville. Trucks heavily traveled roads in the SeyThey also seem to be. running into a talkathon for me” insisted Sen. John Stinnes of Mississippl,| to special duty for any appreciable| Which still works around the highly important Charlestown are thick along the road and the/mour district. The fourth is US in favor of more talk and uniess some of the leader of the pro-filibuster forces. {length of time. |elock. It is a skeleton crew which powder plant. berm 1s bad despite donstant -ef- 90. anti-talkers - back down there's likely to be so Ibi d Hi If “It only takes motorists a few operates at night and Lt; McMil-|' Thus these men are available for forts of the State Highway De. Death also works 50 but ocmuch pro-talk talk in the Senate that the gentle- No Spe inder riimse days to discern that the roads are/ lin bemoans this fat, patrol today. Lt. McMillin feels partment. casionially takes a “holiday.” men may get no work at all done this year. Or «I APPRECIATE that statement.” said Sen. not being patroled as they should . » their very presence is the cause PE a filibuster, complete with culinary references, po- ,. ... “I never knew that any prolonged speech be.” Lt. Harry McMillin said. “A! SO FAR this onl there have for the continued decline in the, THE second, most dangerous. TOMORROW: Charlestown etry, biblical quotations and telephone book read- .° . . or changed anybody's vote.” decrease of lecrease of troopers immediately been three hit-run accidents dur- murder” which so mars other fond is a puzzle, It is State Rd. Post, Indians State Police, ing, seems to be developing. against the very law Sen. Russell Long of Louisiana, whose pappy. id sha, would hd Sivustering. know. is the ‘age-old Huey. used to talk about soups, juleps and other | ° 1bus A matters almost without end, squirmed in his seat. t Ab t Pe ‘Social ienists Ch h Y th F i hi system whereby a single husky Senator, like the He sald he still couldn't see what was wrong with Mos ly ou eop e urc Ou e ows late Huey Long, can loosen his collar and ex- the ‘AYbuster.
» : : pound for hours, days, and even weeks on Any Sen. Pepper. who engaged in a filibuster once “Appointment of Kichard T. effective Feb. 7, to become execu- Will Meet Feh. h Plans Week- End Retreat
subject that pleases him and so keep his fellow and confessed he was sorry for it. sald he believed rth
—— Rm
as general man { the tive secretary to the Hotpoint lawgivers from voting on a bill he doesn’t like. 14 yu vr way Jong enough for any lawmaker v fone ROA TH rol Club of the Hotpoint or Indianapolis will furnish the charge of arrangements, Re. talk on any subject; he offéred a rule to chop o offices in Chicago. : setting for the first week-end re- source leaders will be the Rev, Dixie Delaying Tactics the' long-winded ones after a fortnight of oratory Rhriment Nd Unit to Hold Forum treat sponsored by the national|A, Wilson Cheek of Philadelphia, SOUTHERNERS in particular are filibusterers on any one subject, plant. Camden $m 8 In Claypool Hotel Youth Fellowship of the Evan- E. and R. youth director; and the from 'way back and by their long-distance oratory Sen. Homer Ferguson of Michigan, among oth- N.Y was ane Edward Murphy, 23, of New Indianapolis Social Hygiene gelical and ‘Reformed. denomina-' Rev. Fred C, Schweinfurth, Lake-
tion beginning tomorrow at 7:30 wood, O., executive secretary of °
have managed to keep polli-tax and civil-rights ers, spoke In favor of still another rule and said p. m. in the Zion Church, the denomination’s committee on
legislation from reaching a vote. The Northerners in passing that he was tired of hearing cook books at the moment (aided by that reformed filibust- read on the floor of the Senate. erer, Sen. Claude Pepper of Florida, are trying to Sen. Stinnes sald he had seven or eight (or get through a rule whereby a recalcitrant Senator maybé more) Senators who wanted to talk in can be forced to shut his mouth. favor of fillibusters.. He wouldn't promise when The battle now is before the rules sommittee, they'd finish because he sald they had a lot to
nounced today. [York City, hospitalized with & Aggaciation will hold a luncheon Mr. Orth for. kidney aliment, tried for four meeting and panel discussion merly was man- days to figure out where he had Feb. 5 In the Claypool Hotel enn Yr kore om] evangelism, ager of the) th 1 observance of Social Hyglene Day, lg BE rn a seen the man.in an adjoining P*d proclaimed by Gov. Schricker, |forum discussions. music by the Three Under Amen Ind. plant dure|Under treatment for. ulcers,, I" Dr. Harold Christensen, pro- Chimes Hour Singers of Van ing the war, Then he remembered and called fessor of sociology and family| Wert, 0., tomorrow night and AS Draft Dodgers where the anti-talkers already have had their say. Ben. Long. fingéred the gray grapes on his when top: secret Police. They placed his ward- jife at Purdue University, will Saturday, and fellowship meals! yorvey G, Foster, special say, and where the pro-talkers now threaten to two-tone red cravat. ’ - , proximity fuses | Mate, Princey Bozell, 48, underiserve as moderator. | will highlight the sessions ending | talk at length. If the committee ever survives this “This is all new to me.” he said. “But this gov: gov: RT Orth 5 he Armeq Suard. charging him with assault- . The panel will discuss all Bunday afternoon. “Let God
words and reports a bill to the Senate ernment has been in existence for 150 years. ing Mr. Murphy Jan. 2 and Tob-|phases social hygien of Speak. theme of the. interdebarrage of Services were being manufac- | [bing him of $30. of hygiene includ ational Youth Week which nounced the arrest in Richmond,
limiting the filibuster, then the Southerners are we seem to be getting by. all right. I'm not certain i venereal = dise trol, expected to talk it, or themselves, to death. that this thing can’t wait.” vared thane, ’ va i tihuaton tamily life education Dé@ins ' Sunday, also has been|Ind.. of thres men fot violation of And that, T suppose, is enough history. Now And wait, for a while at least, it will. While a #® = =» | land recreation. chosen for the retreat. the Selective Service Act of 1048, let's join the rules committee and listen to the number of gentlemen get a'few hundred thousand) Irving Scheer, 35, of New York Relay =. ¢ Basstn: extension Purposes of Day Guest speakers will include Dr.| Gerald D. pro-talkers cross-examine the anti-talkers: well-chosen words off their chests. (City, a. mailman who for two (AgIon ah it nu Pardue University In his proclamation, Gov, John Biegeleisen of Eden Theo-| Louls Sieger, | years has been hunting a Jarger porary appointment as federal ex. Schricker said the state and the |logical Seminary, the Rev. Jefs/Elmer Pepper, . {po Ppo |nation are mutually dependent ferson Rogers, Cleveland, denom- residents, were . apartment for his fly of four, tension agronomist. He fills the } * . fered 1 ints ood toda wit le b fecen the health of the citizens. national race relations secretary; ante issued | Test Your Skill 22? 5 savons who can ¥ ponition Jeft vacant by. the ' Feb. 5 will be set. aside as Social Donald 'L. Berry, youth leader of (Caughts, vo UIZ as er ??7? Tes uv | to anyone who ean find him three resignation of O. 8. Fisher. 4 " hy J {or four rooms. He already has Hygiene Day tc alert citizens of the Congregational - Christian torne - a | deposited the blood with the Red ua. the state for united action to Church and A Sudan - the Chi on by the F " - i . : Mrs. Rose Della Barre of Ever- combat disease and foster happy rd nary, = Did Robert Schumann commit suicide? For whom'is the dahlia named? Cross blood bank : ett, Wash. only got her hair home. lives, it sald. vid Lednington, Dorothy Exeh ni In 1884, the composer tried to drown himself in This flowering plant was named If honor of . mussed when she fell under a bus’ <Mre. Meredith Nichpison Jr. | Phister ana, Joan Becker o fete i
the Rhine, but was rescued. He spent the follow. Andreas Dahl, Swedish botanist. Dahlias belong| Jason D. Yocum. assistant th yesterday. When the bus started executive. secterary of, the asso-|dianapol ig Aw Jabra 48 8 Gorman Savius wets bo died the inthe family And re indigenous to Mesies th director of Fuse University [he rear whee ran aver het hair ciation, is In charge of reserva:| vein Tt. Pie, prositeit of the in 1856. and Central America. . , [Musical organizations, w Wil goin, go. She was uninjured. J; ona. for. the; evept.. . Dindlanapuiie: Federations Su
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