Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 December 1949 — Page 3

THURSDAY, DEC. 15, 1040

~~ Coal Men ji | Stocks Dwinding *

Yards Have Supplies - For 3 Days to 1 Week

(Continued From Page One)

er St., and about 600 tons at the Sexson Coal Co., 2120 Hoyt Ave. “We could haul out all we have in a week,” he said, ‘but we have | acknowledgments of shipments on| the way. At the Keller Coal Co. Sher-| man Dr. at 21st 8t., John Keller] said he hadn't “enough to amount! to anything. Nobody has much| coming,” he said. We burn about | .a million tons a year and the little dab in stock now won't last long. “People ought to write let-| ters to the President and get ac-|

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“WR

RRA dl

i

tion,” he: said. Clifton Wilder of the Wilder Fuel and Oil Co., 1310 W, 20th St. |

still had a two-ton order limit but said he would have to go back to a one-ton Umit soon. He has about 250 tons of eastern Kentucky coal on ‘hand, and a little ‘“‘semi-Pocahontas,” a new coal in Indianapolis. Charles Wright of the Wright | Coal Co., 5125 N. Keystone Ave.,!| said “It's bad.” He said he has less than a car of West Virginia lump, a quarter car of West Vir-. ginia egg, and a car and a half of East Virginia egg. He has put in no rationing, but-expects to soon, Rations Deliveries Charles Russell of the Russell Coal Co. 936 E. North St. said his supply was “not too good and not” too bad.” "He is selling in one-ton lots unless the haul is long, then the customer gets two tons. At the Jordan Bros. Coal Co. they reported they didn't have much on hand, and were down to one-ton deliveries. ) That's about the story. There was coal around today, eneugh! to take the edge off panie buying! Nobody would have to freeze for ~ a few days, and with proper-ra-| Sioning of the supply, and some still coming in, the ¢ity seemed assured of warm homes for! Christmas.

"DALLY DAWDLE

SHOPPING DAYS |

Hogs Ranked By ‘Junior Mi

Hoosier Wears Blue

By HARMAN W. NICHOLS U

lines and mink coats.

The daughter of Mr. and Mrs,

etable Growers Association.

she'd rather be a farmer's daugh-

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{4-H-er Hankers for Fine Tomatoes

Carolyn Rudy

Shoes ‘at Vegetable Growers Convention

WASHINGTON, Dec. 15.—The “Junior Miss America” a heap more.of hogs and tomatoes than she does of plunging neck-

If you ask the pretty brunet the annual

AND WE TAKE THIS OCCASION TO add— |

And there are soaps and emollients and |

Above Minks ss America’

Jeans, Low-Heeled

nited Press Staff Correspondent thinks

She showed up for the picture fellows wearing bobby sox, blue jeans and a pair of low-heeled shoes. Carolyn Rudy, aged 17, of Bluffton, Ind. ‘was right in character.

Earl F. Rudy, she was here to WaV She's pretty enough to have attend the 15th annual conven- Der choice. tion of the National Junior Veg-

Has What It Takes Carolyn has what it takes to! make a senior “Miss America” at contest in Atlantic City, N. J. She doesn’t care much|

iter than..a step-child of Broad-| whether she gets the nod next]

|year as “Miss Indiana,” but there! is some talk that maybe she might when she comes of age. In the big time, the score card] is rated on talent, beauty, and how a gal looks in an evening! gown. Talent? Carolyn’'s got it. She plays the piano and can sing “Always” like it always should be| sung. And, although she is a little country girl, she's not afraid of | people. She and her brother have| been appearing in public for| years,

She's Got It Beauty? She's got it. Evening gowns? She doesn't own one, she says, but if she looks as cute in one as she does] in blue jeans—she couldn't miss.! Carolyn is the kind of a kid you hope your own daughter will] grow up to be. Wholesome, she | was raised out among the bees] and clover in Indiana. She's 4-H-er. Her speciality is raising tomatoes. She also is a pair hand {behind the sewing machin {she can cook. Her mother, who ypretty enough to be a “Mrs. America,” said that her daughter has |taught her a thing or two about |how to broil a steak. | The youngster doesn't know] |exactly what she wants to do. All| of this full about the “Miss Junior |

. |America" title, which she won in

Pittsburgh last August has posed a lot of problems. There are offers to model for magazine covers. The photographers are after her all of the time. She maybe wants to be an airline hostess. Or perhaps do fashion modeling. Or go to college at DePauw at Greencastle, Ind. study music, 6f course. Isn't Spoiled But With all of that, the Kid isn't spoiled. She has learned a few things ilke putting on the| grin when: you -don’t feel like it and to-give her best when there are a few handclaps available. But her heart belongs to daddy back thére on the farm. Jonight, she'll have a chance to cash in on a few of the 10,000 awards to be passed out by the A & ‘P food stores and the W. Atlee Burpee Seed Co. Carolyn has her mind set on what she'll do with some of that money in case she wins with her tomato entry. Will she salt it away against the day when higher education becomes a problem She will not. “I'm going to put it all back into tomatoes,” she said. “Fine tomatoes got me where I am today and I'm not going to let them down. Besides, there's money in raising tomatoes.”

John R. Stover Burial to Be Saturday

Services for John R. Stover, who died Tuesday in the home of! his daughter, Mrs. Blanche Gind-|

. (Ing, 5049 Matthews Ave., will be

|at 9 a. m. Saturday in Harry W. [Moore Peace Chapel. Burial will be in Mitchell. He was 87. Born in Campbellsburg, he lived in the Edgewood section of Indianapolis 16 years. » | In addition to . the daughter, |he is survived by two sons, Secle| and Albert Stover; Indianapolis; | a brother, Tom Stover, Camp-| bellsburg, eight grandchildren | ‘land four great-grandchildren, A —— i SET’

CAROLS SUNDAY -

denwood will sing carc's, before a

|

|

Fund Will Clothe Surviving Child

(Co.tinued From Page One) last day for Clothe-A-Child to buy clothing before Christmas. That| isp't far off. You can help Clothe-A-Child do the job in thesa three ways: ONE: By sending checks or money orders—for! anyamount — to Cloihe-A-Child, Irdianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St. TWO: By telephoning RI- 5551] and asking for a donor appoints ment to take one or more Clothe-!| A-Child children to the storés and shop for them, Donors spend their own money to buy the outfits. TREE. By placing -one or more dimes on The Times Mile-O-Dimes on W. Washington 8t. in front of the L. Strauss store, Lerner Shops

land Clothe-A-Child headquarters. |

THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES.

; Malnutrition | . ‘Couldn't Gel Milk, Baby Died, Young Mother (od | Stalks Family

+ (Continued From Page One)

secure prenatal care from General Hospital, Tut shy was refused

_| because she -had moved from the city into Decatur townihip, mak-|

ing her ineligible under the mu-nicipally-owned hospital's free {medical plan, She went withcut any prenatal care during her entire pregnancy.

Having Other Trouble

In the meantime, the expectant mother was having other trouble. “The first week the food order was at-the grocery like he said it would be but the second week it wasn't,” she said. "I called him and he said it might be there tomorrow or the next day so I kept running back and ‘forth from Monday until Thursday, It was there on Thursday. “The next week it wasn't there either dnd the grocery man said the trustee never did bring them in on time. He told me I could go ahead and get the groceries be

cause I had such a long way to go

Direct Donors St. George Progressive Club .....vvvsvssvé Children Employees of Goodman Mfg. Child

C0. sevevevasecnenns

In Memory of Henry Kahn ......c0000000.1 Child Mortgage Loan Division Prudential Insurance Co. 1 Child James M. Propst and Employees of State Auditor's Office «vssssss1 Child Mrs. Thomas Teller ..1 Child

: Capehart, Jacobs Wasting Time?

New Issue Creeps Into Political Debate

“es

(Continied From Page One) |

health program he favors—a. de ductible plan in which individuals pay the first small costs. while government insures. against the heavy expenses of major illness. This does not match his party's plan, - The Senator said he was not interested in Mr. Jacobs’ views.

He said Mr. Jacobs had accepted

the debate to defend the New Deal party's position, not his personal.position. Mr. Jacobs replied that he and the other Democratic Congressmen were as much a part of the Democratic Party as President Truman or Federal Security Administrator Oscar Ewing. He said he did not favor the Ewing compulsory health insurance plan. He added that he and other Congressmen would have a great deal to say about what was | the party’s policy and forecast| that the final health legislation | would be more like his own plan] than like Mr. Ewing's, The Sénator asked: “What bureaucrat in Washing-| ton is going to say whether I am sick enough to participate in your | plan? It would be just another, example of government by. rules and decrees instead of by law. Under such a plan you will be| | building up to complete 100 per| cent socialism.” Who Would Define It? Mr, Jacobs replied: “You have been expounding the philosophy in these debates of helping those who need help. Un-

der your philosophy, who would} -

decide which ones need help and *which ones didn’t?” - Sen. Capehart quoted Mr, Ewing as saying British socialized medicine would be “good for the | American people.” He said Mr. Ewing had criticized American doctors who were contributing money to defeat the plan in Englang. : “Mr. Ewing was horrified about doctors who send the money over [there to fight socialism,” Sen. Capehart said, “but at the same time the New Deal has sent $8 billion of the taxpayers’ money to | support the Socialist government

“The. debate moves tonight to’

Christmas tree on the Mall there Rooasvelt High School in East

at 4:30 p. m. Bungay,

hicago,

“ito the store. He let me have- them {and I signéd the slip when it came in, “The $6 wasn't going around and 1 asked Mr. Edwards if I couldn't have a milk order. He (said no, one quart a.ddy ought to be enough. “I took it to the commissioners and they sald they would order him in to court Mr. Edwards didn't show up and one ‘of the commissioners called him on the. telephone. He fold the commis stoners he hadn't told me that and they put me on the phone, He sald then he'd give me $2 a week more for milk but he never did.” Baby Underwelght at Birth The mother sald she asked the store for the milk order but was told it had not ‘been author: ized. She went to the hospital on Oct. 7. and her baby boy was born five minutes after she was admitted The baby, hospital records show

atl.

was underweight at birth and|missioner’s Court ruling ” an »

steadily ‘ lost weight, The baby was readmitted on Oct. 24 in serfous condition and he died on

Oct. 31. Death was attributed to diarrhea; with other causes un-

known,

The girl's story of the appeal hearing was corroborated County Commissioner William Bosson Jr. He said there were iso. many times” that the Decatur “trustee had_faifled to appear when .ordered. that he did not recall all the details of this particular case. He added: however, leved- the girl's story of the tel ephone conversation was correct, Due In Court Today “I have a hazy recollection of! it.” Mr. Bossan said. He sald Mr. Edwards was in Commissioners Court at 2.3 p. m, today in contempt of court proceedings in.another case where he had failed to obey the Com-

that he be- ~~

due

peal case. “We'll ask him to take the Reese case up at that time,” Mr. Bosson sald. “He had the right to refuse because of no previous notice. If he does we'll reschedule it later” Mr, Edwards could not be

reached for comment.

squeak in Car

Motor Was a Cat

WILSON CREEK, Wash. (UP) Three Wilson Creek women could not understand the strange squeak coming from the motor [of their car as they were out driving. They finally stopped to investi. gate and, lifting the hood of the car, they found a cat clinging: to the top of the storage battery, more dead than alive. They lifted the _BTOBEY feline to the

CHRISTMAS STORE HOURS: 9:30 till 5 AS USUAL

and

Contributors Previous Balance ....$4250.85 | — i. Gov. & Mrs. Henry F. STRALU SS SA) S Schricker ....... ‘ene 10.00 : Stark, Wetzel & Co. .. 250.00 (SATURDAY 9 till 6) M.S. A, coir 10.00 Mr. & Mrs. Harry J. Herff .....cooiviinns 50.00 Juanita & Jess Hubbard 10.00 | Employees of the In- : | f ly Ce in Water This is very apt Company, Inc. ...... 14.10 to be one of David R. Wilkinson ... 20.00 Omega Kappa Alpha the fine Chapter, Sorority ... 10.00 |, SPORTSMAN — Mrs. J. W. MeDivitt ... 5.00 Elma Holtgréh ....... 10.00 ~ PIPES--featu red / Elizabeth J. Hert ..... 25.00 ~ . at 3.50 Co Anonymous ,....... 5.00 } Paramount Pep Club . ve 10.00 just side the A JL. 8S. ae sveeens 5.00 d r W, Mr. & Mrs. R. T. 00T8. py Giddens ....... cesee 10.00 \ In memory of Mrs. Able Parks ....ccc000 10.00 LU. tiivivssvevessss 10.00 In memory of Clara L. Waulzen Zachary .... 5.00 No name ..... disses 10.00 Arthur Dixon ......... 10.00 Pressmen's Benefit Association .....cveeee 50.00 Meadlawn Calendar Clrele ...... iivives 4.00, . Indiana Casualty Adjusters Association .. 10.00 L.ED. ...... resrrues 2.00 Mrs. Linny W. Jordan . 5.00 Liberal Art Guild, Second Christian Church 2.50 Mrs. Jos. Taylor .... 1.00 Eh Employees of Foster & Messick Insurance Co. 10.00 V.W. sovestscesess 3.00 Speedway Classic Bow - ing League ‘<....... 25.02 Jerry Kadet .......,.. 2.00 Indianapolis Lions Club, Trustees Fund ...... 25.00 We Ho A soviianiges 10.00 Employees of Michel Pharmacy No. 1 .... 8.25 Delta Psi Sigma Sorority In memory of . 8 Edelle ...coc0vtivnse 15.50 | M. Sullivan ...cov00aen 1.00 In memory of Mother Esta ..... cosveeese 30.00 Parent Teachers Association, School No. 383 5.00 A Friend ......c0000. 3.00 Today's Total ...... 702.87 ~ Total to date .......5$49858.22

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