Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 November 1949 — Page 10
ord Nai Se
Among Best
Inspectors Keep Tight Check on Sanitation From Barn to Buyer By DAVID WATSON Twelve years of tugging at its figurative boot straps has raised the sanitation rating of the ludianapolis milk industry to a position comparable to the best in the nation. For the second time in two years the Indiana State Board of Health has given local distributors a total rating above 90 per cent ‘on’ the basis of in | made in accordance with federal! milk codes. { Of the 17 local distribudng; plants in Indianapolis, 13 were rated above 90 per cent in sanitation. Only six per cent, or 70|_ major cities with ordinances formulated under the U, 8B. Milk, Codes, were included in the upper| brackets of latest tabulations, Under supervision of the City ‘Health. Department, eight milk insnectors and a supervisor make periodic checks of plants and equipment used In the processing of Indianapolis’ milk supply. The Indianapolis Sales AssociaHap has sald approximately 540,000 pounds of milk are distributed
There are about 48 quarts of milk per hundred ponnds, 88 Per Cent Low In 1987 Clarence L. Taylor, director of | the dairy division of the Health Department, said local distributor ratings were as low as 38 to 40 per cent during first surveys made in 1937. Spot checks on distributing plant conditions are made with 100 per cent as ‘the perfect score. Point values are placed on 23 to deter
gations are made without warn-
Distributors themselves are re: Claus next Saturday morning
partment was marked pansion. tributor permits provide depart. mental income at the rate one cent on approximately 24 quarts of milk. Pasteurize All Milk Although result from an ace tion of minor sub-standard points in the di operation, major fac-
low y| mother and dad to visit a ow matings usuall
. This. scéne shows three of the bi
dangers in school bus
will
the car coming
safety. alongside the bus_stop and stay stopped while the bus unloads children? Will cars behind this one
Roy oy Rogers § Riders Club Everyone in Cowboy Gear, Select Typical Boy, Girl
‘Tony’ Burrow, 2'4, and Dick Prince, 3", Win Top Applause aot Fountain Square
By ART WRIGHT
A boy and a girl were selected as typical Roy Rogers Riders dally in the metropolitan area. Club members yesterday during judging on the stage of the Foun-
{tain Square Theater. Receiving the most applause
| Martha Joyce (Tony) Burrow, 2%, of 717 N. Tremont St. and Richard Eugene Prince, 3%, of 0644 Speedway Dr., Speedway City.
S80 many club members at-| tended yesterday afternoon's Roy Rogers’ show dressed in cowboy| outfits that the two “typical” members were selected instead of one as originally announced. The winners each will receive Roy Rogers cowboy and cowgirl outfits, the gift of the Wm. H. Block Co. store. They also will head the delegation of Roy Rogers Riders Club -imembers who will greet Santa
when he arrives at Weir Cook|gf Alrport to" begin’ ‘his stay at Block's toy department,
Members should have their par- {is with «ts accompany them to the air.
port. 7 "0 THE No. 1 cowboy melody in
successful the the Roy Rogers Mystery Tune Pitswater. tion division of the Health De-|Contest was played for the first Sand for ex-|!ime yesterday at Block's toy deFees charged for dis-Partment and at the Fountain Square Theater. The club memof/ber submitting the best contest question card every week for sev-| ural weeks of the contest will get {a free trip to Hollywood with
rrom fellow club members were:
|ers Riders club may compete e In the “mystery tune” contest. » . . will
‘CLUB membels receive
Roy Rogers Birthday Greeting Cards, good for a free “birthday” admission to the Fountain Square Theater, when their birthday arrives. Those who will get birthday cards this week are: David Risdon, 3. n a
st On Nataite, John Stipp. 11. ol Williams, 11, of morrow, Jimmy Ross, Ave; iii, LDosnd, %
i110 lyn Ave Suck Boras: 110s of uesday, Edward Go og 13 LexTown, 2 “ih ay. Nor
a Beale rt Karr, Asheraft, 10, of Ay, Patty Bart.: Rosemary .; Charles Kay
By DONNA MIKELS THE PROSPEROUS - LOOKING gentleman driving the sleek, | black car would never believe it! if someone called him a potential murderer. It's not the sort of tag you'd hang on a respected businessman with a wife and family, a pillar of the church whose only policg| record was as he would jokingly put it, Ygoing through a red rlight—the time I got caught.” Still it was this man who shot |
Rogers and see movies made. The Roy Rogers tune will be! |
played daily at 10 a. m., 2 and ‘
} ma, . Wi PRIEE fi ip. m. at Block's toy department : A B i”
and at every show in the Fountain Square Theater. This week's
Operating apolis office, milk inspectors cover
and ithe theater, CantAINAES Are ax Only members of the Roy Rog-|Roy
Roy Rogers Riders Club
bution. Last year 10,500 examina--tions were made. Mr. Taylor sald the inspections do not result in a rating for enSurcument measures, but serve as analysis. Outcome of tabulai has brought a high degree of . co-operation from’ distributors found lacking in sanitation points,
with all cities evaluated on the same basih, ' Local companies rated 90 per cent or above included Banquet Jee Cream & Milk Co., Borden's
‘Boy Hookey Player
3 Hes Members card signed 1s by
"Sponsored by The Times and
TE a to ear ii Satie Fo 0 0 boys of wirls
Aad under : a lon And take © go Vor the oy m WH. Block fain Square Theater ioe to yA your 9 » Rill shiv eard Van ; Name SALE TUNERANER ARREARS
Birth Date. eas Month. seers
Membership Application
(Breet Address .....ooeseesrerniincininnnnnes City censeasees
MEMBERSHIP IS FREE: Membership in The Roy Rogers Riders Club is absolutely free. There are no fees, dues or nothing to buy to become a member,
the Fountain Square Theater
3 than » & tamily 1s : sliaible te Join the Riders Club. their p ¥ Information may oe iis > a sepAra of paper but wm accomoany this application
only "007 Fount Bare Fhbater Lou Mempershin ¢ Card i to ae
"Yodr.. . Phone No
Accidentally Shot
hookey may cost Glen Willlams
: “Dalry, ‘Maplehurst Parms;| Medo-Sweet Dalry, Mutual MilK| Co, Polk Sanitary Milk Co.) Wm, H. Roberts & Sons and Schaefer | Dairy. is: - Group for Separation. Of Church, State to Meet
First Indianapolis membership
meeting of the Citizens Commit- |;
tee for Separation of Church and, State will be held at 8 p. m, tomorrow in K um Center, ac-
cording to Dr, Robert Risk, chalr-|
man, Speakers will include Dr, Merrill E. Bush, director of the depart. ment of adult elucation and social relations, American Unitarian Association; Byron Miller, Midwest| director of the commission on law| and social action, American Jew-
secretary of the Citizens Commit-|
toe, | (Advertisement) : i New Hearing Device i Has No Receiver : Button in Ear
ish Congress, and Charles Posner, mi |
Jri-loss of sight-ih one eye. - The 15-year-old son of Mr, and Mrs. Glen Willlams of Seymour was shot accidentally In the {face near Freeman Field yester-
{day when he “cut” school to hunt| He was sent to an Indfanapolis’ eye]
rabbits with three friends.
specialist after treatment at. the) hospital here.
THE
worn. As water
a Walk on
SEYMOUR, "Nov. 12 Playing}
their normal health and strength when shoes permit it,
“Bubbles of Air” With "Sole Fitters”
CENTRAL oom CL
Ode Potion Sis Entranee—1) MN
SHOES MUST BE
SHAPE OF
NORMAL FEET
,. +» If you want healthy, comfortable feet. Unlike clothes, shoes cannot be altered to fit, After a shoe is once made, no amount of wedging of soles or other alterations can make it fit, ACTIVATOR ‘shoes fit to begin with, because they are NORMAL shoes, trouble disappears when ACTIVATORS are
seeks its own level, so feet seek
To take pact Fo the Roy contest closes Friday and the Riders Club activities, fill out the Hare, thelr Indian. Dext contest begins Saturday. membership application in The cover Question Sars, avaliable at the Times. Tales 3 to Block's toy some 2700 producers in a 50-mil n uare Theater, must be/department, Fountain Square . ropped- into the contest box at/Theater, or The Times and receive
|
That is why foot |
UNTIL 9P.
Motorists Urged to Exercise Caution, Visualize Possible Results of Breaking Law |
heed the flickering red winging light atop And—the oncoming cars on the malfiple lane highwoy reakzs thet they she must shop wn
lice who will follow up the report will try to bring home to the err-
willgyl =" y
(playful children near Edgewood | 'School the other day. The “Stop 11 rocker arm was {out, the red lights atop the front ‘and back of the bus flickered a {warning and a patrol boy with la red flag was just crossing in ‘front of the bus, . a 8:8 AND. YET this “good citizen,” either unthinkingly or in ignoruc of state laws, drove right
Y Nothing happened. But it " {might have. A chance whim of an unpre-|
by the big yellow and black|dictable child, a split second’s he was instructed to do. But it school | bus unloading scrambling difference in timing . . . these orjis these “mi, « « « these or(is these “mights™ that State Po-
(home a few minutes sooner, might have been facing those)
the bus and stop alse?
any of a dozen other factors) {might have turned that “minor” (trafic violation into a major tragedy. The red-haired, freckle-faced boy who banged noisily into the
house across the road a second)
later might have been carried silently in by grim-faced police. The motorist, instead of being
same police, or even worse, the accusing eyes of the parents of a dead child. . ” " NOTHING DID happen, except that the bus driver reported the license number to state police as
bus moves on?
ing motorist,
They could arrest him and take him to court—he broke a state law. And if he were a. confirmed reckless driver they probably
would.
“But the police feel instead he should be made to visualize the possible consequences’ of his act +» hear the screech of brakes, feel the sickening thud of strikIf he can be made to feel these things deeply he will never want to repeat his
ing a tiny body.
offense
It is the other driver's inner convictions, police feel, and not convictions in court that will make Indiana highways safe for
its school children.
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e of Child
Hassfl KE. Schenck, Boone County farmer, was named presi= dent of the Indiana Farm Bureaus for his seventh two-year term
A request for modernization state laws on eminent domain relating to gas and ofl lines and cables. A request for a critical study of welfare laws as a means of
American Farm Bureau tion convention next month at Chicago. They are Mr. Schenck, Larry
dent; Mrs. Russell Cushman, Fortville; John C. Peterson, Carroll County; Elbert Carr, Wabash County; Earl Peek, Shelby County, and Earl Voss, Ripley
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Rain, At New You windy weathe continue with peratures )
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while attempt ages. Doctors at where Darrel Mr. and Mrs 1322 S. Belm« na City a boy would lo right eye. Mr. Crawfo age containir kitchen tabl knife, his wil lice. While tk of the Toom, string aroun such force tl slipped and © his eye. :
Trolleys ¢ W. Michi
W. Michigs St. trackless their regular
