Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1949 — Page 29
d colleges? re effective, ultural and xports dure 1 of adjusts y; Western f the world
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risk it. No ) desl with a dominant pl force in to stop with ents.
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ited States; rather than ut good ecorily re-eleo-is why the e a fighting at the polls
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‘ route figured out.
at White Sulphur Springs, where the service is so with whipped cream and French names, stacked up
. day for two) to take a nap. The maid waits out- , yp oiving sulphur water.
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By Ed Sovola
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: Inside Indianapolis,” .G e ne Gilliatt, Claude out for Iroquois, S. D., members of the Gilliatt, Jack Chambers, Bill Riley and Mrs. liatt Gang," (left to right) Ralph McGee, "Mr. Riley, check signals.
THE GILLIATT gangs crowded around the Riley tapped him on the shoulder. A hard hunter, road map on the table. All eyes focused or Riley. Tough as they come. This year it would Iroquois, B. D.,, a speck on the map, really be tough. A week ago while training his “Everybody got the route straight?” asked pointer, Riley broke his hand. Mrs. Riley thought Claude Gillatt, the chief. A hushed silence fell her trip would have to be called off, Riley had over the room. After a ble length of the doctor leave his trigger finger free. He was time, murmurs rippled through the stillness. going hunting. , Bill Riley, senior member of the gang, Ralph McGee, watchmaker in the Collins drew the cast of his broken hand across his Jewelry Store, Franklin, loved hunting and just rugged chin and blurted out he had a better as long as he got to where everyone was going, eh Two new acer) oh ne he was satisfied. . ann { pheasant expedition to Gene Gilliatt, Colonnade Hotel owner, 843 N. Dakota, Jack Chambers and I, stepped back. pferidian St. followed in his father's footsteps. After all, we were new and without voting or pas been ever since he was strong enough to suggesting powers. And had heard four different carry a gun and walk through the woods. versions of the best way to get to pheasantland Mrs. Riley enjoyed getting out with her hus-|§
from Indianapolis, band. It's one of those fine relationships where \ i : 3 a husband and wife run a business together, like Sounds Like First Trip the same things and go ahead and do them. A “YOU WOULD THINK this was their first good sport, Mrs. Riley. trip,” whispered Jack. Jack Chambers, partner in the Finchum Truck“Don’t let the Old Man hear you grumbling,” ing Co, was in the same cornfield with me. The I barely whispered. ‘We're lucky to get in with Old Man explajned to us that if we went along them.” we, were buck privates in the outfit. There would Gene Gilliatt, the Old Man's son, slapped the be chores around the house where he, Gene, Ralph, map and asked what was wrong with the' way Jack and I would be staying. Buck privates had they went up last year. errands to do and only one thing to remember: Ralph McGee, the quiet member of the Claude Gilliatt was the boss of the gang. What gation, thought a ‘combination of last years he said went. Hunting was a great sport and a route and the route the Old Man had figured out lot of fun. But with seven people covering a would suit him. “And if we get lost we can ask field, someone was calling signals. for directions at gas stations.” OK, Chief, Jack and I agreed one day, count “When we start we don’t ask anyone for di- us in. rections,” stormed Riley, “we go.” I settled back on the seat of a power mower Pheasants, Here We Come in the show room of the Riley Lawn and Golf THE ROUTE WAS SETTLED. Riley knew Course Equipment Co. and sort of chuckled to where he was going. The Old Man said he knew
myself. Jack was in no mood to talk. There they were, members of the Gilliatt gang, where Gene was driving. Jack and I got a slip
arguing about the route with zero hour only a of paper with the route on it and we were told
few minutes away. They had started talking ‘0 follow. Riley and his wite would stay at a friend's
home in Iroquois. The rest of us would occupy sation was sort of casual. a house owned by Ewold Holm, the locker man Ones we got underway, I knew everything In Iroquois. would go smoothly. Claude Gilliatt, Willard Equipment was checked for the umpteenth Hotel owner in Franklin, always made noise at time. Jack and I recited again the type of cloththe start. He’d be purring like a kitten when ing we were taking, Everyone seemed satisfied. fhe Gia began esting wp (te youd lor South
Bill Riley, would storm around until Mrs. Pheasants, here we come.
Driving Out Evil By Robert C. Ruark
NEW YORK, Oct. 22—I suppose this is 3 very as there is one underpaid cop on a beat that gamsinful city, because a man named Newbold Morris bling will be condoned. So long as there is one says so, and I want it understood right now that politician in thrall to a rich manipulator there 1 am four-square against sin of all sort. But what will be fixes up top. So long as there are fixes up nobody tells me is how you are going to stop it. top all you can do is admire the rhetoric of freshMr. Morris, who is running hard to be mayor, faced boys who come out flatly against: sin, beagainst Mr. Will O'Dwyer, has startled me loose Cause rhetoric is all it is. from my shoes with the announcement that there Despite my own bitter reaction toward bookare horse books in town, a horse book being a makers, I must say in all fairness that I never had place, or situation, in which it might be possible one stick a rod in my nape and command me to to make a small wager on a steed. I do not see bet. Violence of this sort has never been necessary how it 48 possible that this deplorable circum- in the trade, because a horseplayer is the kind of
stance has escaped my notice. ” LaGuardia Tried It, Too No hole has yet been digged so deep that a bookie can hide from a truly serious horse fan, equipped
SOMF. YEARS back a little round man named LaGuardia was on the radio daily, admonishing big a bunch and two limp dollars in his sweaty the children to turn stool pigeon and inform on their fathers if they caught the old man sneaking : et down on & hot nide'tn the Aft at Tamates, State Takes Two-Faced View
It was natural to assume that the Little Flower WHAT I cannot undergtand in the constant
Pheasarit humere , . Just before pulling "Gi
piled into three cars and was off.
had wiped out: the menace once and for all, sinc® running battle against betting is how a state can |=
few fathers dare face the wrath of a righteous make a moral issue of same when said state is in the race-track business, and takes its cut of the But now I see headlines that Mr. Morris has trimmed suckers with a placid face and a clear forced the bookmakers into hiding, and that he conscience. If the state is sore because the illegal has run Mr. Francis Costello, the prop villain, all bookies invade the state's racket, that is underthe way out of town, and that he says the cops standable, but it cannot be morally good to lose are in cahoots with the books and there is noth- your substance to a pari-mutuel and morally bad ing but evil all around the mulberry bush. Mr. to lose it to a bookmaker. O'Dwyer, the incumbent mayor, more or less af- poggibly I have a low estimate of human nafirms this startling news when he says that there {ure put I know of no single way to curtail the are more serious things for cops to do than chase persona! whims of adults, short of locking them bookmakers. This seems highly cynical of Mr. in a bare cell. The gamblers find ways to gamble; O'Dwyer, who appears to be callous to rampant the drinkers find whisky, even in legalized proevil. : hibition, and to date nobody has been able to disObviously, now, the thing to do is stop this courage love as a popular practice among people. wholesale sinning—to crack down on the canasta casinos, shut up all the bookie shops, knock off ginfulness exists in this paragon of cities, but I the numbers, and frown severely on hopscotch, gm simultaneously sad with the United Nations if it is played for possible profit. All I want to and Mrs. Roosevelt that unpleasantness exists in know is how Mr. Morris proposes to enforce his the world. We must drive out sin; we must stop all-out crusade against sin. wars; we must put two chickens in every pot, and So long as there are two men and one horse I will lead the first charge if somebody will just alive on the globe, there will be gambling. So long tell me how.
Lush Business By Frederick C. Othman
“Everybody ready?’ Yes. The Gilliatt gang)
critter who will climb that highest mountain in| = search of somebody to remove him from his wag. |:
Together with Mr. Morris, I am sad that such |§
WASHINGTON, Oct. 22—I have been doing a sines with chauffeurs in green livery to drive 'em fittle investigating over in West Virginia, where to their play. Champagne costs extra. the cpal strike negotiators are meeting, and I The clubhouse at the first hole has.a buffet, think I know why they are getting no place fast. more elaborate even than that of the Russian The place is just too lush for ’em. embassy on Stalin’s birthday. It was turkey, fresh
The gents are holed up in the Greenbrier Hotel strawberries in jelly, lobsters, custards, and cakes
super, the food so superb, and the countryside so On tables until a guest could founder just taking technicolored, that I don’t guess I'd be in any @ bite of every dish. hurry to sign a contract, either. There's a swimming pool with mirrored walls, Say John L. Lewis grows weary from a morn- gentle hosses to ride in sylvan glades; a night club + of ling. He goes up to his room ($40 per to entertain the bored, and a fellow in a red coat ing of snarling. with green stripes to pop up with a glass of fine,
side until he’s up. Then she rushes in and changes i od linen #0 he’ll have fresh sheets to sleep on Cc &0 Owns Shebang t y . . It's that kind of place. Never a wrinkle in the THE PLACE has been decorated by Dorothy sheets. Makes a fellow, whether he be union chief Draper, who has made it prettier than a set in a or coal mine agent, feel languorous. When he’s on Deanna Durbin movie, and if I were a negotiator an expense account he’s inclined to pity ordinary, I'm afraid I'd be inclined to negotiate indefinitely, underprivileged millionaires, The weird thing about the situation is the fact 3 . that the whole super-duper works is owned by the Caviar Any Old Time makes
Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad. This line ; most of its money hauling coal from mines in the 80 JOHN L., his cohorts, and the mine chief- surrounding hills. At the moment it isn’t making tains have -been glowering' at each other these any, because it isn't hauling any, because the boys many weeks in one of the most’ upstairs aren't getting any place. in the world, nestled smack-dab in the middle of This is what you might call a vicious circle. If 7000 acres of private scenery. : I were Robert R. Young, I think I'd boot the negoThey can have caviar three times a day, if tiators out of my hotel. Either that, or put frogs they want it, and breast of guinea hen. They've in their The longer he keeps ‘em comfortgot butterfiies hand-painted on the walls of their able, the less business his railroad does.
i br i te ta. +
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You could visit the Juvenile you always give 4 Ve | Ald Division, but can’t you [and don’t see how you could ane handle this yourself? Try new 'swer differently. tactics — not just accusations.
us. Chey don’t all respond to the same things. If you must, talk to parents, but be friendly. They may be perfectly good parents—of mormal, jca™ energetic children. who are |. UTHERN INDIAN. bound to get out of line oc- + 4» SOUTHEF As | casionally, as you and I did a The opening of “God Bless America” is the waltz version of the same notes used in the song, “Once There 1iveg Sudo ! 1 Little skin, you might have more | by Sige Jw S the ua og We trouble than you do now. was written by H. W. Old or New Trend? | and the words by Philip Win-
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