Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1950 — Page 13

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“AND ALL you do is poke your nose around

i. barbershops all day?”

“Well, now; let's not say that” Barber Ex-

aminer Clarence O. Maze ‘thought there was a

better term than poke. “Let's say I inspect” he added.

' It never ceases to amaze me how many different people do different things to earn a living. Here was a man with a home address in Greenwood, with a barbershop in Franklin, inspecting tonsorial parlors in our city and points south. On the state payroll were three other examiners. “What do you do when you inspect?” : “Do you have any time?” asked Mr. Maze.

~ Brother, he sure didn’t Know me very well. Any-

way, we got the time business straightened out and got to work. Mr. Maze, that is. ‘His job is to see that proprietors of barber- - shops respect the rules set up by the barber board. Such things as closed compartments for tools with the proper amount of disinfectant, clean towels, hot water, proper plumbing, etc. Quite important to the health of the patrons. You don't want a little nick to turn into a violent eruption.

13 Regulations Cited

THERE ARE 18 regulations ranging from prohibiting the use of rubber mugs to cleaning cuspidors every day. Mr. Maze showed me his little inspector's book by which he grades the barbers and sends in the report. Of course, then he also wants to see the license in full view. It's

“Looking around . . . Clarence C. Maze, aber

examiner, makes the rounds.

side Indianapolis ssa sevoe

against the law to set up a barber pole and start , 3 : Bn one enterprising man nuns : = WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1950 . PAGE 13

3 on His explanation was that until he learned the According to the

m=miaEsw Grass Roots In Hoosier Politics

guy was surprised and sort of disappointed. | : : : It's significant that an examiner always puts! y f in his dppearance at the wrong time. In a small| Ar : downtown shop a barber had some tools lying : 5 " a

g E i 4 ;

around in the open. Doggone, he was just going to put them away in the cabinet, honest. Formalde-| hyde? That was another thing he was going to take care of, as a matter of fact, just before Mr. Maze walked in the barber was thinking of formaldehyde. ; Ee | On the report Mr. Maze graded the checkoff! items: Face towels, sterlizer cabinet, room, wash! stand, steamers, sterilizer dip, rules posted. One is good, two is fair and three means the condition| is bad and must be improved. The owner signs, the report after it's completed.

Each barber in a shop is checked for his steamers, mug and brush, work stand and tools! and equipment. In a lot of cases there is much concern over the condition of tools and appearance of the stands when Mr. Maze walks in. |

There is something about a state examiner and his report that builds a fire under a man whose livelihood depends on his art which must comply, to sound ®rinciples and rules of cleanliness and’ sanitation. . i ~=Mr: Maze explained that all barbers know the, rules but being human, they sometimes forget or get lax. He also pointed out that tough crackdowns on violators wasn’t exactly the solution to the problem of keeping the profession in top condition. | When you close a man’s shop or lift his license Fe his means of earning a living are gone. A great, TREC s " a an. ! Sa " LE geal of Giscretion ia Heceasaly Jo Sulde ud leash Top Republican party leadership recognizes the importance of the party's community clubs, gives He's only four years old, but John Wesley Innis, son of ha measures are resorted to only after a man has ll possible support. Cale J. Holder (left), state GOP chairman, attended a recent meeting of the Perry county chairman, is a veteran c ub goer. What he like most a h had a couple of warnings with no results. Township Republican Club in University Heights school. Political strategy was mapped between the political meetings is the food. His mother watches as John Another small shop. was cautioned about leav-| courses with Walter Kendall, center, club president, and John E. (Jack). Innis, county Republican. chair... Wesley surrounds’ _a piece of pie. Grownups like. the food and ing used towels on wash stands. Mr. Maze didn't! man. 2 Times. Biatt. Pholosranhe: social aspects, too. ' like the term poke but he sure does that when he's! cheeking a place of business. I wish I could have! read the minds of several barbers as they watched, in silence the inspection of their tools and stands.

Finds Hotel Shop Clean

WE WERE ON the street before Mr. Maze showed his enthusiasm for a hotel barber shop. In the joint he didn't display any emotion at all. I didn’t know whether things were good or bad.| - It looked good. One of those places you have a feeling is up to snuff. Outside, Mr. Maze went into a tizzy about the cleanliness of the sterilizers, condition of the linen, clean floor, sparkling mugs, lighting and ventilation. : “That's the way all shops ought to be. They're never surprised to see me,” said Mr. Maze. “What do you do about some of these husbands and wives who ¢ut each other's hair and the kids’ hair?” 2 Mr. Maze doesn’t mess around with what the old man does at home. When he charges and hangs up a sign, then is wheh you can expect to see the examiner. : : Not a bad job. 4 a pe—

Eh a

Photos by Bob Wallptfe

Playing It Safe

By Robert C. Ruark

NEWYORK, Feb. 8—The brewing of a helt-

broth of such violence as the hydrogen bomb is a desperate antidote for global nausea. But in 8 hard-ball league, every so often you got to come ‘in with a hard ball, or so Bernie Baruch was saying the other day when Harry Truman _ ordered the atom chefs to cook him up a mess of hellbombs. : : There is something in the prosecution of a war called desperation practicality, in which the action is never really nice, but is commanded by the crisis of the moment. I think maybe I have a good example for you.

Where Sportsmanship Won't Pay

I WILL use a false name for the«fly-boy. He comes from Oklahoma. He went into the Air Force as soon as he could qualify when we started “the rassle with Germany and Japan, He was one

“of the "8th Alr Force's top peashooters. His

official score was 28; possibly he shot down 40 German fighters, if you count the probabiles. Pete is a nice guy today. He doesn’t wear his medals too heavy on his chest. He doesn’t brood about. all the idealistic little Nazis he shoved out

Ar OL NG SKY. He works for. a living.and. is. adjusted. to his community. He does not describe himself self-inspection, considering he had been reared|it 18 the other way around, be-

as “Colonel,” which is the’ title he bore when he

. was graduated from the AAF.

—er-s into the boss boy of the Luftwaffe. This gu

I had dinner with Pete the other night, and . he was telling me at some length about the time he violated aH “precepts” of sportsmanship in a war, because the violation seemed practical at the moment. His conscience still doesn’t bite him a bit, although he is guilty, technically, of coild-

blooded murder in the interests of practicality.

Pete possibly had no peers in his business, which was killing Germans who flew Focke“Wulfs and Messerschmidts. He was an ace

“geverals tes: around: when We hooked “up With

an F-W over Kiel, Germany. He had bumped

-————MeLEAN, Va., Feb, 8—All over the place the Subject is potatoes. Fifty. million. bushels. of same-to. .with-a- friend of ‘mime whose wire bought a Tarps | OLe8es

80 good he made a real bum ¢ e “Our man ‘was praying fe . hie peashooter through the clouds at Kiel. Pete was trying desperately to coax the fight out to

tato Problems

be dyed blue (maybe I ought to be in the potatodying business) and buried so nobody can eat 'em. So the Department of Agriculture is hinting that this is Congress’ fault because it wouldn't

pass a law allowing the government fo pay the

freight on potatoes shipped to hungry people. Wow?!

- ¥ou should have heard the lawgivers lambast Sec-

tetary of Agriculture €harlie Brannan on that one. “+A number of gentlemen said the government had better rush those potatoes to hungry kids be-

_ fore the voters get sore. Rep. Reid F. Murray, of.

Wis., said it had been his experience over the

years that the average government department

ean find a law authorizing it to do almost any-thing-if it's jn thé mood. The present law, he roared, says that the government can distribute the potatoes, as well as the powdered eggs and all other foods in federal warehouses, to the needy.

Péfato Souffle Congress’ Fault ““MRS. HELEN GAHAGAN DOUGLAS, the Democratic Congresslady from Los Angeles, said the potato souffie was Congress’ fault. She said

“cohorts voted to pay the freight on the spuds’

"distilleries to be turned into- gin, but refused to ship them to mere people for eating purposes. This hurt the sensibilities of Rep. Clare (no jockets) Hoffman, the terrible-tempered Michigan publican. “The member from California said we - Hai 4 surplis of potatoes, intimated that they ere rotten, and said Congress was to blame for it" he rumbled. “I just want to point out that the

—sea; because the Baltic gave hima little ad-! i vantage. : RO “You see,” Pete said, “if this cove gets shot on Me ee a ‘ { i et Robert E. Hughes seats his wife at the Perry Township club Both-parties recognize that participation of women in their political organizations is imperative air tomorrow, working on us. But if I get shot, festive table. He is Young Republican chairman of the township for success. Among the women Republican workers at the Perry Jowwow were, left to right, Mrs, down over Germany. 1 am a POW for the dura-| and a member of the board of governors at the township club. . Donald Peoples. Mrs. Allen Hunter, Mrs. Morris Joyce, and Mrs. Jerry Ganstine. ~~

tion if they don't kill me, out of sheer pique,|’ ’ - when I float down onto the deck with my, Party Doesn't i parachute. Over the Baltic I've got a little more ; : : . advantage, because the water is neutral and Dominate Units : . . te go ory uc Ho came mous wn moe mo Students to Hear Nobel Peace Prize Winner Pete got very lucky. He came out of a dive political clubs are spontaneous " . -

and for a split second he had the Jerry—by his {

| About People—

and luntary, in ‘contrast to! s Dr. W. N. Brigance, head of|is pastor of Wallace Street Prese own ,admission a vastly better flier—under his Yolumtaty... 'n ag Dr. Mott, Methodist Layman and Author, Wabash College igutoe, depart-| byterian Church, guns. He squirted a couple of yards of stuff at|those in some parts of the coun- k ot Earlh Coll Ch | Hour Dient. serves: on PRE the Focke-Wulf, and it caught fire. They were try, particularly the East, { To Spea at arinam CoO ege ape ov #0 i : committees Singer Jane Froman, walking

still over Germany. a Mr. and Mrs. Hoosier, in the Dr. John R. Mott, Nobel Peace Prize winner in 1846, will be the)’ The German pilot stepped out. He was hang- neighborhood organizations, have! chapel speaker tomorrow, 10 a. m., at Earlham College, Richmond. | ing from the side of the burning plane, and his|their chance to take a personal The prominent Methodist layman and author has devoted himself chute already had filled with alr and was about{part, all year round, in the in-'{o projects of world-wide concern since his graduation from Cornell | to jerk him safely away from his flaming crate, |triguing game of politics. [University in 1888. Fourteen na- ~~ bmn a - ; A minute or so, and he was home to Papal Regular party organizations tions have honored him for his| Appointment of Dr. Ronald E. Goering, a new F-W, and business as usual on encourage the clubs which grow international work among young Osborn: as associate professor the morrow. : in neighborhoods, wards, town- | people, N ! in head of the Bad Spot for a Gentleman ships and colleges, but do not| Dr. hiv den History| eer PIT E-RAYS-he-had-a-second or-so-of-intenseid0minate them. To same extent. — ti Birtier School]

which will name| for the first time without braces t tion's five and a cane in nearly seven years, most aftective|said today she will leave a Tor responsible a nd Peka, Kas. psyintelligent speak. chiatric cli ni c ers on significant h 18 week. “It public questions, WOD't be a new. Awards will he Jane Fram au , distin-| given 10 the stage, but a’ speakers under Petter ' of hope,” she said. Dr, Brigance Sponsorsp p a/Bhe said she is Alpha, national honorary forensic considering . offraternity. : jars Apcluding a : A Winners will be announced at 'elevisiom “show the 3 o he Jeliglonl; ve National! Intercollegiate Con. nd a Broadway born Is profes ference of the fraternity at the, Musical,

Mott di-

of Religion, ef-| fective Sept. 1, was. announced today by Dr. O. L. Shelton, dean

tian Student Movement. Until 1915 he ‘was! secretary of the! World's Student Christian Feder- | ation which hel,

as a sportsman. cause thé exchange of ideas in “I think fast,” Pete says, “This guy is the hundreds of local clubs goes far best filer I ever saw. He isn’t hurt. His chutejtoward fixing party policy. works, He hails out, he lands. Tomorrow -he+— The so-called: grass roots- pohas a fresh kite. and he is back in the air. He{litical clubs not only are a a is so good Hé will kill me, next time out. If he thy force within the party, but doesn’t kill me, he'll kill one—maybe six, maybe/they influence township govern-|

Miss Froman

: ; tucky Mar Miss Froman, injured in the 20-of-my hoya: “This-is-not-how you win-a war." {ment toa great “extent "says J Wor War ost 4 sii sor — of church URiversity aRen 3 ¥ ~B-llorish of a Pan-American clipper So ‘Pete did an eminently practical thing. He|Cale J. Holde?, Republican state was general ar] Iw Osborn history at OTE neater. ADDOMMIedIE. lob Rarer te. F013 wath uh

pushed over his machine, came to point-blank !chairman. i Dr. Mott

Northwest, 1 i tal rm ne ret he = by President Truman will make ania USO tour, has been singing in range of the talented German flier, and cut him| On the Republican side of In- YMCA War Work Bry Ye Christian College, Eugene, Ore. Ra checkup ia wheel ‘chair. She entered tha : " (He .1s..completing.. work for his oe the 8: Mint rotiite rat HeTVEuS exhaure

in two pieces with machine-gun fire as _the!diana's ’ ane A Cn de BTEC LE are a8. lhe political tence, Mr. Hold-! RE TR ER y . a Jerry floated down to the ground. Then Pete er estimates, are about 500 local EE Bae Wir “Work doctor of philosophy deBTEE {oday to gee if tion” brought on by the strain of : : pa’gn. there. He “edited the Christian pe popioore ooo Listing braces. a fia

few home. . clubs... Ther 87 blic : "This 18 what you call desperation practicality |e here ars St Republican Dr. Mott holds positions With Board of ~Publication's “Front : are In 8 hardball Jeagins, You or y women's eluba, affiliated with the the international YMCA and has pani snd formetiy— wan=ins_tatk ir Br Froderiok- Went Hoa cs. served as co-chairman of the christian Church - minister in be: aided by 2- Wabash College's department ‘of in scle religion, will address the college

whieh hard National Federation of Women's: balls, which is what B. M. Baruch meant When Republican clubs; and many oth- J ! : , [World Church Conference at To- Arkansas, Oklahoma and Oré-| hearts in “scien he sollegy me tif " {Vesper service on at We See’ ||Sunday evening.. Miss Katherine

Ye lysed the hullaing of the H-bomb. Sometimes or women's GOP groups spotted : : eh Senilemnn na Var ___ {through every county and town. 5 gon. : tific tests for Taylor will play .an organ pres lude and the Wabash Glee Club

FR . “proper weight young GOP organizations ih most rec edve-d two iim. & L.Coing. pro-. jwill Sing... iclsco, will be assayped under thei ....q Lightning” Friday at meets

ET - : we ” {Richard _R. Hiatt, son of Dr.| vis Douglss_ U8 Ambassa. 5 + THERE are Young Republican/a 217 Coll . Wis Douglas, U8. ASE and fineness of EA 3 : : nd Mrs. Vergll Hiatt, 3747 ColBy Frederick C. Othman \dor to Britain, sald today he will J duced by the | Robert Beckman, publicity des mints... n. Phila: wopagtrment, <Allison ~Divigioh; Gee. on {watchful eye of Mrs. Nellie Ross, i, 0 ¢ the Indianapolis Optimist ‘Mint director. - in Severin Hotel, z

which fe of the Indiana universities and honors . at the Mr. uman atured potatoes fried. And I got to talking ny LE ee CONGO ot-Woarrt Ar. Trum sack of potatoes at the grocery, only to discover| Throughout the state, in addi-'ster, 0. =. % when she got home that the label said they had tion, are clubs organized along! He ha 8 rebeen grown in Canada.’ She is sore; Claims’ the township, community, ward or celved a sophogovernment's right hand doesn’t know what thelracial lines, Marion County more honor left hand doeth, alone has 25 Republican clubs of Scholarship and | The only good news I have for the big, bald |various kinds. ithe Caroline Brannan (who probably never will eat another| “These are not clubs where you © outs Harrold potato so long as he lives) is on the personal side. ship PY ize of $100

have to lay down a membership Last fall T harvested a large -¢rop of potatoes on ree to belong.” explains Mr. Hold- presented in the

{He plang to spend 4 a “oNth'S™ VACHE" “2 [tion at his ranch { linear Tucson, J |Ariz., arriving {this week. The ambassa‘dor Is recuperat{lng from a leg operation. Mr. Douglas

, | ; the cops. Clubs in nearly all counties, andilege = Ave, has A {return “to “Lon - e coins "| don in" March. ga 3 » |delphia, Denver and San Fran-iera) motors, will speak on “Hare -

” » ~ ak i. Prof. Herman Berg, DePauw Violinist. will’ give a recital at Donates $10 to Help 18:15 p. m. tomorrow ‘at DePauw Build A-Bomb for Joe

[Honey Rolling wii ReCMmpany CHICAGO; Feb. 8 (UP)—The

my own acres in Fairfax County. fi a sophomore year said he would | nna envelope looked like thousands. Lik P H f Id er. “More than likely they 11 pass|, "the student Mr. Hiatt stop at Wash- Mr. Douglas | John V. Bergen, sophomore and of others arriving at: the offica e Prospecting for Go ; the hat to finance coffee and p,ijing the highest general aver: inovon for a few.days before con. on of the Rev. and Mrs. dohn/of the Collector of Internal Revs THIS WAS hard on the back, but sort of fun,|doushnuts. The clubs are a place ,o. 4t the close of his freshman tinuing to England. " |H. Bergen, 1522 N. Leland St., enue.

something like prospecting for gold. These po- to talk things ‘over, to blow off| r. tatoes have been washed and dried, as per in-|Steam. They provide a stump fori" py giatt is head of the classstructions. from the Agriculture Department, and People Who want to be heard.” |i.,] janguages department at at the moment they are reposing in my root cellar, # =» Butler. - / The depa t sald surplus potatoes were] ILLUSTRATING just one type # » ow 1

mT. {holds a Schelde scholarship at! Inside, a clerk found $10 and - Queen Mother Mary, who Is suf- Wooster. The Rev. Mr. Bergen a letter—but no filled-out income k of | ave {tax forms. fering an -attack of sciatica, was! . i ; { " for! | The sender, who was unidentis a We better TWO New Voti ng | fied, said he owed no income tax;

d ‘maintaining| ! ; good for stock feeding; This I doubt. I tried a few|of vital party job that can be Dr. Harry E. Crull, head of the a4 8 He wrote: ot of my biggest potatoes on Tommy, the horse. He|dohe by a township organization Butler mathematics department Steady progress Areas Set Up | “I am not a dime ahead after ‘was not interested. If we had not been such good|/is a telephone communications; * and director of o's 8! he Board of County Commis-| bills are paid . . . out we are eats

an aL Phys | ers today: created two new ing better than before, and no ©! voting precincts, both in city landlord can put us out. L ment in: London, {wards 4 | “S80, here's 10 bucks, and let's Despite her ill. One new precinct, the 13th in! build a bigger and better Ashomb he 19th ward, will include new than the one Uncle Joe Stalin is {residences in the ‘vicinity of the cooking up for us. ish a carpet that : ia : y tan she made to raise old Hoosier Airport which was

dollars in Brit.: converted into a housing develop- Can Child ‘Bride

ment. The development is be-

{tween Tibbs Ave. and Kessler Have Happy Life?

Blvd., west of U, 8. 52.

< thé school’s Uni: - versity College, has been selected to write an as-| tronomy section | for a new edition of “Physical Sci-| ences,” a survey hook for college x freshmen. Co-au-, Queen Mary thors of the text

friends (and if- I had not hurriedly substituted a setup” worked out in the Perry pan of oats) I think he would have kicked me. He|Township Republican Club. and| ‘on shoes, . discussed at a recent meeting of| hat by getting af is that my potatoes have|the group. a : E not cost thé government a cent. They are in first- i | class condition. I do not intend to dye them blue. Starting A a Jew hey Pe And I think it would be silly to follow the federal’s (connor or nin otters. with each § advice and bury them in the same plot from which Inanuer of chain letters, {2 1 dug them so laboriously last fall. : person reached taking the respon-| I've got a better solution. Without benefit of sibility of : ieléphoning estan subsidies, or government forms in triplicate, I'm [Other persons, it is possible for]

ness, the Queen | managed to fin-

drive. The car-

’ : “| ill go on. display in London : ¥ as y America was Agriculture Bill as it now stands had the blessing going to eat ‘em. It is as simple as that. If this the organization to reach thou-| book to be pub- pet wy The second new precinct was ® When Sf Ws administration.” Bives thie Jeceialy any ideas on getting rid of his SO in 8 brit] lished by Pren- today. {designated as the 15th in the 20th shocked by the marriage 2 The Congressmen then filed down to lunch, potatoes, he's welcome. mS" °= |period. Such a setup is invaluable| - Dr.Crull = oo poy will be yy r «| ward, including the Meadowbrook | of a 9-year-old Tennessea . i . : ie - when there is a meeting to Pub- | of. E. J. Cable, Prof. R. W. Two Indianapolis students a Apartment development. | girl to a 22-year-old hill : . ® iy Rian = licize, a rumor to spike, registra- Getchell and Prof. W. H. Kadesch, Purdue have been named officers| Purpose of the additions. ac-1 - billy, “pa rior gossip e UIZ aster 27? Test Your Skill 7? tion to be turhed out, or other all of Iowa State Teachers Col- of campus organizations. Jack L.| cording to President Fred W.| forecast an unhappy fuR= : hv chore of value to the party to be|, Cedar Falls, Towa |Fehrenbach, 6132 E. 9th St. a! Nordsiek of the Board of Com-| ture for the little girl. LC — = ahaa - . Ee 3 . . laccomplished. E ogo, ar a Eris of ‘the €hior, was elected president of missioners, was to avoid “dis- | ® Today . . . at 22 years of 2 What kind of wood is used in making baseball ounces which is about as much weight as the aver-| University of Tiinois. . the Catalyst Club, honorary for|sranchising voters in annexed ' age... this “child bride” : : : age player ts In & bat. , OES UNIT TO MEET ¥ : students in chemistry and metal- areas of Indianapolis.” has her own report of her

te

=. Sade a xin In New York and Pennsylvania. In

§

NRT RR AN L rs oN y 1% FE 50 ye vt

made from this wood would be heavier than 30 of Ma own 80. of His willl howselioid, inéss meeting.

¢ LJ » { ; : L L.. {lurgical engineering. ; 1 - ‘. type of marriage. “ ‘ CoE. ud | The . auxiliary to Southport] A one-pound, 9'3-ounce baby : The commissioners also ap : Do the privileges extended to a foreign am-|Chapter 442, OES, will meet at/boy born three months prema-| Mary E. Hammond, 4735 N. Illi- proved minor boundary changes ® PARADE Magazine tells bassador also apply to his household? : noon‘ Tuesday in ' the chapteriturely to. Mrs. Conrad Traub, of nois St, was elected vice presi-/in several other precincts. The) ‘you about it next Sunday. Under American ‘law the privileges and im-|temple, 5600 block of Rd. 31, for|Louisville, L1l., was reported hold- dent of the Virginia C. Meridith twé. additions brought the total PARADE MAGAZINE munities of an ambassador extend to a covered dish luncheon and bus- ing his own today. Food is given Club, home econohiics. organizas number of -voting precincts in = = . , ; She Members Xe " |the child though a rubber tube, tion, Nr ‘Marion County to 395. ee BIGGER SUNDAY TIMER jo pa y a - . ; E : : rd G0 ie fa ii » J 3 i J gs : i Sik \ | . ASX “

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