Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 May 1949 — Page 17
7, 1949
ligh School of Fountain embers are
Qualify Jpen 17 (UP)— he National nt stood at dline passed mpleted for
will be held 0. Qualifye uled May 24 at Washing other locali-
a
TUESDAY. MAY 17, 1049
Jackson Rejects Mechanic Offer
‘Too Late,” He Tells Race Car Group
Bob Jackson, Perfect Circle Pis-
ton engineer, today formally turend down the offer of Indianap-| olis Race Cars, Inc. to take the post vacated Sunday by Chief Mechanic Ed Metzler. “At this late date,” said Jack-
to any of those concerned, the cars, Indianapolis Race Cars, Inc., or the Speedway management.” Jackson had made the trip from Detroit to the Speedway at the request of Fred Holliday of the Holliday Steel Corp., after Metzler quit Sunday. It was hoped the
veteran mechanic would take over
Metzler's job and get the three cars ready in time for qualifications this week-end.
With the job turned down by! it was understood in|
Jackson,
Gasoline Alley that the race car
group was attempting to make a
chanic whose name they would! not disclose.
Slated for Trial
|
Darnell, O'Brien Wrestle Tonight
Billy Darnell of Philadelphia i adeiis ley, Cal, will wrestle in the main. event of the first outdoor pro! card of the summer season at Arena
tonight." Darnell and O'Brien will compete for two falls out of three
with a time limit of 90-minutes on a card which calls for two supporting bouts to precede the
v Vanderbilt = : niversity athlete, will face son, “1 don’t feel I can do justice! Cherry Vallina of San Diego in the semi-final event, while George Overhulse of Amarillo, meets Tom Bradley of Detroit ini. the opener.
Butler Athletes Book Heavy Slate
headliner.
Don Lee, former
Baseball Team To Play Purdue
Butler Universit, 1 will deal with another. veteran me- omen Fgh Sity athicles wi as they near the end of their re-
spective sports schedules.
The baseball squad meets Meanwhile, Randall Banky and Purdue at Lafayette today and Roy Worline of Indianapolis con-| | will play Ft. Harrison in a practinued to work on the race cars [tice game at Butler Thursday. formerly cared for by the late {Saturday they play a doubleCotton Henning. The Maserati header with Miami University in slated to be driven this year by) Mid-American Conference com-
Chet Miller, and wheeled in the | petition.
race last year by AAA Champion] Ted Horn, was slated to take the] track today for a trial spin. ' A new fuel mixture has been
poured into the Maserati's tank; in an effort to increase its speed.
It was this factor, its lack of speed, along with the two other) cars of the group, that caused!
the war of nerves between Metz-|
ler and the race car group that ended in Metzler's resignation. The other Maserati, slated to, be driven by Lee Wallard, has developed rear end trouble, and mechanics Banky and Worline have torn ‘it down in an attempt]
| 173 to locate the trouble and get it! pniisdeionia, Hopoed mR a Bg ready for qualification by Sat-| Chester Pa..
urday.
The tennis men also play today against Wabash in the last home {contest of the season, and a return match with Ball State at
Muncie is slated for Friday.
Having triumphed over DePauw yesterday the Butler golfers will try their luck in the State]
meet at Purdue Friday. Saturday the cinder men wi
defend their Little State crown at Ball State. Butler has held the. ot
Know Your Golf— Don't Be Afraid 0f Your No. 4 Wood
By GENE SARAZEN Winner of Them All MANY beginners are afraid of
Tex,
wood shots. Yet the No. 4 wood is much more accurate than the No. 2 or 3 iron, of which it is the equiva-
(10th of a Series)
lent in distance. The long irons are suraignt faced, harder to con-
The Nos. 3 and 4 woods are used for long fairway shots from favorable lies. The average golfer, who does no* hit an exceptionally long ball, finds the No. 3 wood, or spoon, his most useful club. = s SO IT . important that he
80 he will have the Jreatest con-! fidence in playing it. The ball is played in, or Just | off the center, with a slightly open stance, Get away from the flat swing, or what we call low hand travel, used in the driver, Note the position of the hands and left knee in the fllustration. The hands are in closer to the body than would be the case with a flat swing. » = ®
THE KNEE is cocked to permit a fuller body turn. Swing back straight away from the direction in which you are going. Hit down on the principle of your long irons. Because of the double eagle I scored with it to tie Craig Wood {in the final round of the 1933 | August. Masters Tournament, {subsequently defeating him in ithe play-off, you might suspect the No. 4 wood is my fa-
1
championship for three straight o.ite club. The fact is that the
years.
Fight Results
IL GTON, Del.
— Billy Fox
CH.
AGO—] sted Rick ‘Leland. 147, Gary, Ind. (1).
Lie AIR
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ster Pelton, 145. Detrott. |
No. 4 wood has always been one of my pet clubs, You are shooting for the green with these clubs, so accuracy is {your main concern.
i Tomorrow: Trap Shots.
learns to use the club properly,
Dodgers Trade
Ramazzotti to Cubs
CHICAGO. May 17 (UP)—The Chicago Cubs have traded Infielder Henry Schenz and cash to the
The players will shift uniforms when the teams play here tomorrow. Schenz played in 96 games for the Cubs last year, hitting .261, He was pushed out of a job late in the season when Chicago ob-
1948 but played in 27 contests with the St. Pal farm team, hitting 286. He has played little this season for Brooklyn.
Stock Car Races Carded May 25
Hard top stock car drivers with a yen for a heavy foot can have their chance to demonstrate their prowess on a midget race track in 10 days. Officials at the West 16th Street Midget Speedwey have announced a program of hard top stock car racing May 25. The race for stock cars only will be run for the first time in history in this area. Entries are open to drivers, car owners and mechanics 21 years
old or more. Drivers may enter
cars with hard tops and whose parts are of the stock car variety.
{Only models from 1939 to 1949
will be accepted, but pick-up yi trucks, jeeps or convertibles will be ruled out. ; Drivers must wear crash hel-
mets and the doors wired or
bolted closed. Bumpers will have to be removed and upholstery can| be replaced with a bucket-type seat. Time trials and final events will be conducted similar to the midget racing program. Trials
will begin at 6:30 p.m. and the| p. m. Four|pearing on the Circle Theater heats, a trophy dash, semi-final | stage.
final events at 8:30 p
and feature events are booked.
Ba aang
GR ET
S. Bond Dri U. S. Bond Drive Covered Wagon To Be Exhibited Here An 1849 “gold rush” covered wagon will be exhibited here tomorrow at the U, 8. Savings to launch the Opportunity Savings Bond drive in Indiana. Marilyn Maxwell, Hooster-born stage and screen star, and Band Leader Russ Morgan will par ticipate in the rally to be held at 1 p. m. on the south steps of the Monument. They will join Gov. Schricker, City Controller Phillip L. Bayt and state and county savings! bond officials in the half-hour program. After arriving at Weir Cook Airport aboard a Navy “flying box car,” the century-old covered wagon will be escorted through the downtown district by city po lice. The entourage will stop a the State House and City Hall Richard Geib, Butler University graduate student, and Dick Stan-| field, senior class president at] Technical High School, also will speak on the program. Th oth Air Force band at Ft. ¥ directed by W/O (ig) Greer, will play.
aon.
program are the Shortridge High School band, Washington High School Colonial Chorus and the
ensemble. Wally Nehrling,|* WIRE announcer, will be master of ceremonies. Others on the program are J.| Dwight Peterson and Willis B, Conner Jr. associate vice chair-| men of the advisory committee] of the Indiana Savings Bond Di-
ion County chairman.
ered wagon will tour industrial plants and high schools in the city, It will leave Saturday morning for a six-week tour of
the state. Miss Maxwell is currently ap-
Mr. Morgan will appear at the Indiana Roof tomorrow.
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on Monument Circle teache:
Other musical groups on ae)
{phone Co.'s financial structure at
Taylor Degrees
IU Professor To Teach Abroad
Time was when U. 8. .schelars went to Europe to study at the feet of European masters. Now the international education processes have been reversed with Europc-n educational fr~"Sdone
Prof. John C.
summer in Hel delberg Ger many. Just be-
fore World War i I he spent two ref. Andressohn
years being taught at the Universities of Berlin and Munich. He was invited by the American Military Government in Germany [to be a visiting expert in history. |
Kammins Praises ; New Parking Law|:
Zoning Board Head | Backs Ordinance
Zoning Board President Jack! |Kammins today hailed the city’s’
Broad Ripple High School brass|e¥ off-street parking law as a/Chapel. Burial will be in Ander-
| ‘progressive step toward elimi-| [nating traffic congestion in In- | |dianapolis. | The new parking measure was {passed unanimously at a City Council session last night. Mr. Kammins told councilmen!
vision, and J. Berry Meek, Mar- that if Indianapolis is to plan for night Young, Indianapolis,
|further expansion the off-street
Thursday and Friday the cov-/parking law is a basic require-land seven grandchildren.
‘Mrs. Big Crawford
ment. | Urges Parking Meters
He said the city could further| relieve the city's traffic congestion by installing parking meters. An ordinance to install 500 parking meters on a nine-month trial basis comes up at the next council session, A public hearing on the parking meters will be held May 23 in the council chambers. The new off-street parking ordinance requires every new building outside the Mile Square, including; churches, hospitals, apartment] houses and office buildings, to provide off-street parking space.
Rate Probe Hears Phone Engineers
Two Describe . Expansion Plans
Two telephone engineers today described the Indiana Bell Tele-
a rate increase request hearing
Thieves Steal Pants Off Firm
erally stole the pants off a North Side department store owner last Tuesday
{native of Burksville, Ky. who
!Crawford,
‘Bag 450 Pairs Of Trousers Hard-working thieves who lit-
night returned and hauled away 450 pairs of trousers from his store again last night, police said today. Police summoned Alfred Paul, 3743 Kenwood Ave.. to his store, Paul's Ready to Wear Department Store, 2863 Clifton St. after finding a circular hole in the front window of his store before daylight today. Mr. Paul reported that 450 pairs of trousers ranging in size from 30 to 42 and valued at $2500 were missing. Thieves apparently entered the same way they did last week when 200 pairs of trousers and |aparts and T-shirts valued at were stolen. A hole was ut art thick glass with a Fans cutter and the door un4 reaching through it,
oy Sal said his theft inJurance covered only $750 of the
Mrs. Cla J Young Services for Mrs. Lula J. Young, \ 11028 Church 8t., who died yester-! day, will be held at 3 p. m. Thurs-! ‘day in Moore Mortuaries Peace
son Cemetery. Mrs. Young, who was 88, had {lived in Indianapolis 24 years. {She was a native of Wayne Coun-
ty, Kentucky, and a member of the Methodist Church in Tomp|kinsville, Ky. Surviving are two sons, Good-| and| John Dugger, Bowling Green, Ky.,
Services for Mrs. Ida Crawford,
died Sunday in her home, 825 Darnell St, will be héld at 10 a. m. Thursday in Jacobs Brothers West Side Chapel. Burial will be in Crown Hill, Mrs, Crawford had lived in Indianapolis 35 years and was a member of the New Baptist Church. 8he was 45. Surviving are her husband, Big Indianapolis; three nieces and one ‘nephew,
Democratic Club Meet
The Irvington Aggressive Democratic Club will meet at 6:43 p. m. Thursday in Buckleys in Cumberland for & chicken dinner. Elmer F. Straub, former state adjutant general, and a member of General Eisenhower's staff in World War II, will speak.
Err SPU UAT eC GUE ANNOUNCEMENTS | Death Noes
AMS~-Joh so’ vers. ne Shuey. of a fe father of Thomas A. i
Wed
Ar hur Kr anachildren, Sl
before the Public Service Com{mission. Lawrence J. Dunnewald, Bell's
|equipment and building engineer, 1° déscribed the additions made tol.
the telephone company's plants during the past two years, and its program for 1949. Earl R. Moore, Inventory and cost engineer, explained the methods by which the utility's plant is valued, and also testified on recent price trends of equipment used in telephone plants. He also described the company's depreciation’ rates. - Bell's request for higher rates is based on the higher cost of makihg post-war expansions, compared with prewar costs. The hearing opened yesterday and the telephone company's testimony, which company spokesmen say will establish the need for a rate increase, is expected to be completed tomorrow.
85 to Receive
Times State Service UPLAND, May 37 -- Taylor| University will award degrees to) 85 seniors at commencement ex-| ercises June 6 in Maytag Gymns-| sium, the largest class in the 103-year-old school's history. Hoosiers among the group are:| Jeanne Keys, Indianapolis;| Wallace R. Anderson, 8ims; Roger L. Celevenger, Jual H.| Evans, Prince E. Schaeffer, all of | Muncie; Leon L. Fennig, Berne; | Robert E. Henthorn, Anderson; Byron M. Hunt, Auburn; Jerry L. Hesler, Elwood; Stella M. Miller, Peru; Elmer N. Nussbaum, Monroe. Vernon J. Peterson, Kokomo; Frances R, Prough, Shipshewana; Norval 8. Rich, Berne; Ellsworth Runyon, Greenfield; Wanita J.| Sheagley, Cutler; Edward C.| Thornburg, Lynn; Ralph Woltord| and John W. Hambidge, Upland; Evangeline N. Witmer, Ft.| Wayne; John L. Bontrager, Elkhart, and Benjgmin H. Rigel, | Austin,
John L. Lewis Ready to ‘Talk’
PITTSBURGH, May 17 (UP) John L. Lewis today asked ene of the biggest operators of captive mines in the country to open negotiations for a new soft coal contract,
The letter from the president] of the United Mine Workers was regeived by the H. C. Frick Coke Co., big coal mining subsidiary of the United States Steel Corp. Harry Moses, Frick Co. president, would not reveal full contents of the communication. “Lewis has offered to meet us| {for contract negotiations,” hel | said, “but we have not yet feplieg, {to his letter.” | Mr, Lewis proposed no date or {place for the start of negotiations but left the way open for the) {corporation to pick May 25. This 1s the usual 10 days from the date of Mr. Lewis’ notice and ex-| actly 30 days before the ines} begin their annual vacation,
Ain phon on xirllo3
1 SE
oof Mra
dranagali Frank + Brann, a nday p. a Wed + 3:30 p.m at conwood Me hurch: Burial “Greenwood. iends viled. Ftieh 8 may call at the J. ; L OME uess ays from to Pp. mi, evenings to § CLAR 808 Cent ral Ave, wile, “ot fr Ras cl. Gi gt di? £182 5, ho ister of Teall a don,
ind
Dagny ia ploy eg Bi cl n foes vived by five grsndehitdren foi bE ds Thy 8 Sli ERAS SHINE a i TUT pak tusry after 7 vp. m. Bh! Tes
FLA NERY Cara: ol IL 031 Gulltord
Ave, mother of Mr gan. passed away Sunday p. m. Pu neral service Tuesday, 8 m.. at the ROBERT W. STIRLING vd: ERAL HOME. 1420 Prospect 8t. riends invited Burial private Wednesday, 3 p. m. Crown i Cemetery. - , beloved hus and of Beula aime, brother r of be ert Frame, Indianapolis, » Mrs. Charles A, Downs of Kekomo, Ind. Bledhends AWRY 3 Sunday noon ner esd from SHIRLE)
NAL CHAPEL. § Hiots. Burial Washington Friends may cull al 2 Gapby m. Tuesd GAUDING — Al fred F [away Monday at residence oftnted ne ey:
BE Rp cool aT Vi
GIBSON —J ney W. ath fran
BL, age $ ie i
ark, chapel after
Jae rine. ea Jou
3b own’ mil Cemetery, GIESUE EL—Carrie L, age ee Jeter Yr most Js Jo
¥, iso survived by § erandchils
and 4 grept - gr hildre assed away Sun eral Wed. HY ROE W, Wash,
Unt . Church, invited oly Cross Cemetery. Friends may call at mor-
DIALY eee BALL-M. Louise, of 4107 EK. Mi Michi. sntered into rest Mondas evening. ag ia Ralph an Rana all, sister of Mrs, M very} He in oer Quip, and 8 r a er ¥ an 30 al hed hk 10 CHAPEL. 2050, Michigan Bl. Priends are welcome. Burial Acton, 1nd age NC ence D, and her of Clarence B _ chile Way 5 2 9 Funeral Wednesda Y, 1.30 Pom jg SEN 002 uris ora Park. Friends i]
oved
igan Bt. rs; daughter ot Frances m, RIES PEACE "C ¥. en arses elon of fe 174 he of ClarArcus dren and 2 great- ranch) dren Aus. \ asa Pi
HA RETRON — at Ey
Goldie
son, {athe Lyther Harrison Jr dan of Mar arrisen, brother of rn Maude Knight, Mrs, Fiors Bowi-
, Harold, Pr uk and John Hare
risen Berv) nursday, 10 », m., al MOOR RTUA BEN DAVis CHAPEL, 6112 Ashington & Friends ares welcome. Bur ashington
ark. HARVEY —Stephen L, Rus usband of oi. Ruth Arve; other of Mrs, and alter i fal Spans of rman
Wednesday, riends invited
XBAI oul John A. 1183 Ww 8. Lydnhurst Dr. entered into rest Nov. 20, 1943, Solo~ mon Islands, age 21 years; son of Mrs. Margaret Bennett, stepson of Claude Bennett, brother of Mrs, Minnie Jensik, Mrs. Mary Kars, Mrs, Georgetia Creech and Margaret Kralg. Services Wednesday, 3 p. m., at MOORE MORTUARIES, BEN DAVIS CHAPEL. 6113 W. Washington St. Friends are welcome, Burial
Floral CANA harie Th FT [iets Fo Bo ro HARA, Muth a ane rN |
sdassat, will
PERSSON peter O. beloved Buse Peter O. band of Mrs.
ice ursday, Mark's Evangelical an Prospect and Linden x invited, Burial Crown Hill.
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tea a «he u ay BoA ht We iS far Sly Toh h
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'LLIVA SULLIVAN—-Daniel C. beloved Buse C, beloved huse and of Nerine C. Sullivan, fa! ame) Sunivan ive “died ghar, Shh Sesltency. Si18 elb; N. Meridian hi ay 3 om fh oh bh ry Ln tends ) call at f ners
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Piste, M4 Raagal ir
ny neral 0:30 a m, Burial Mt. wig ey a Mal
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services at the funera
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Biri Kinuis 25
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ERR cl TI ER HAWKINS--Ws sincerely app GET i out moth ym \ Te!
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8 Funeral Directors CONKLE FUNERAL HOME
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Or. Fred M. Hickman, Dentist
ation Bide WATON GRYSTALS PITTED
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