Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 July 1950 — Page 7

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PAIRING

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Prices!

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retard the blight may

Kroger's Chief

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Talks on Shop Joseph Hall Discusses Methods With Cashiers, Stock Boys

By HAROLD HARTLEY, Times Business Editor - + 1. HAD LUNCH with a corner grocer yesterday. In fact, he has groceries on a lot He is Josepk Hall, president of the Kroger Co., who was in town going around to see his stores. : You wouldn't think a man as big and important as he is in the food business, selling well over $800 million in

eatables a year, would have! time to shoot the breeze with cashiers, stock boys and the like, - | But he does. Here he visited! every one of Kroger’s 24 stores in| the city, looked over the books, | discussed new merchandising] methods, | shuttled off to fresh front to do it all over again. ~~

¥ 8 8 | HE WAS 51 on Thursday, had) a breakfast to celebrate it in his! home in Cincinnati, but you never saw more freshness in the face! of a man than you see when you! look at Joe Hall { He's steel-graying at the temples but there's an eagerness! in his deep blue eyes which you!

find only in a man who likes hisstation at 30th and N. Meridian|

job. He talks easily, and when a detailed answer doesn’t roll

quickly off his tongue, he turns| ing what he wants.

to Rodgers N. Brown, his Indi-| anapolis manager, And there he gets it, pronto. | He tells me shopping hours) are changing. More families shop!

of corners.

saturated bark. And it's knockout drops and “curtains” if they get enough of it.

Retired Pastor, 80, - Dies in Masonic Home

Times State Service GREENWOOD, July 15—Services for the Rev. Matthew W. Yocum, three times pastor of the Greenwood Christian Church, be at 3 p. m. tomorrow in the

wood Cemetery.

Home at Franklin. wood pastorate first in 1897.

Well known in Christian Church |

No Wick, No Fluid

HERE'S SOMETHING tricky, churches at Muncie and Milton. |

a ers,

gas, no wick, no fluid, Jacque Salz, president of the

distribution through tobacco Boyce, Brazil

pocket “mystery toy” for smok-|

Retiring from the ministry four {years ago, Re lived with Mr. and!

| ‘Surviving are his son, Herschel, |

dealers in New York and Phila- Benjamin Yoder i

delphia this week.

Expect it out here by fall.

Selling Secret

IF YOU SELL for a living, here’s one to remember. At the Standard Oil training

the customer cordially — then wipe the windshield before ask-

resided in Fort Wayne many ie {years before comi t - It creates a sense of service anapolis. . ng. to Ina and obligation, even if the driver] For the last 10 years Mr.

only came in for a Coke, directions.

or route

And SO tells me that man : y.a together in’ the evenings, husband driver who hadn't intended to!

and wife go together, decide pyy anything, will sa . n » y, after his right in the store. | windshield is sparkling clean—

- u “yp HE SAYS THERE'S a new 1M not empty, but see how

and well-earned respect for chain

many my tank will take.”

store meats. Ten years ago, he Tattle Tale

said, this was not true. Their big problem is produce, keeping it fresh and attractive, They run it up from the south and in from the west in trucks which turn their wheels day and night to cut travel time. It's well refrigerated, and well handled at the stores. About the price of coffee, he said, we won't know until October when the coffee bushes blossom. Then they can tell by the number I blossoms, whether they are thick or few, how many coffee beans there will be,

= . THIS YEAR THERE were 18 million tons of coffee shipped into the U, 8. with a crop of only 16 million. That meant two of the five million-ton carry-over had to be used, cutting the carry-over to three million. Now if the coffee growers don't build up their backlog this year, there may be more price trouble ahead next year, He told me, too, that -it is a well known fact that the first pack of citrus juices is not as

" sweet as the later pack. The rea-

son is that the later fryit has had more of a chance to develop

. sugar,

® =» AND ANOTHER SECRET, he

said it is true that frozen orange,

juice has a slight vitamin edge on freshly squeezed. A fellow in a big job like that has a lot of figures to look at. And he knows more about our

buying habits than we do our-|

selves. For instance he said the average Kroger shopper leaves

10 years ago that figure was somewhere around 59 cents. I didn’t think the gap was so long. He's a swell guy to talk to. And he’s alive and stimulating,

and his conversational sparkle|

never dulls, And you begin to see why this former Chicago real estate man in 20 chaotic years rose to head a business whose cash registers ring up well over $800 million a year.

No Canadian Chicken FRANK BODWELL, personable sales manager for American Airlines, let me In on a little secret yesterday. He told me that shipments on Canadian chickens, alive or

dressed, and eggs, had been for-|M

bidden.

There's a chicken disease rampant in Canada and the em-|;

bargo is to keep it out of our flocks.

TV News THERE'S A NEW. pocket-size magazine on the newsstands, trying to get its roots down. It is TV News, a program and fan magazine published by Don Satterfield, former publisher's representative for Hearst in Milwaukee. : The magazine programs both Indianapolis and Bloomington and will try for next-of-kin advertising for television.

On the Board RUDOLPH GROSSKOPF, of Nutz and Grosskopf, Inc. leather findings, 107 8. Pennsylvania St. has been elected to a three-year term on the board of the Shoe Service Insititute. ‘The institute is a national association of wholesalers in the shoe repair field—sole savers,

Bad for Birds

{Cincinnati Cleveland

THE MEN WON'T LIKE the government for this. It's a kind of meddling. A new study by the Department of Agriculture shows that only half of the men own business shirts and— Only one out of three has a raincoat.

Death Toll of B-50 Crash in West Now 4

TUCSON, Ariz., July 15 (UP)— The death toll in the crash of a B-50 Superfortress in the Galiuro Mountains near here rose to four today. Rescue parties late yesterday found the charred bodies of three missing gunners; S-Sgt. Harold G. Martin, 27, Shamrock, Okla.; S-gt. Robert R. O'Daniel Jr, 26, Azusa, Cal, and Cpl James P. Adcock, 21, Birmingham, Ala. ; The other victim of the Thurs(day crash was T-Sgt. Robert L. { Jones, Tucson. |chuted to safety when an engine burst into flames shortly after

Force Base.

‘Rooster Bests Boy In Back Yard Scrap

out second-best in an argumen

[of his home, 2124 Wendell St. | | yesterday. Police treated Jeffie for a wound!

in the right wrist where the!

rooster spurred him while he was|in Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic $2.10 at the cash register. But collecting eggs. His mother, Mrs. Church. Burial will be in Holy|

(Mary Evans, took Jeffie to Gen-| (eral Hospital, where he was given (anti-tetanus shots, -

Official Weathe

| UNITED STATES ~July 15, 1950

Sunrise . . 5:20 | Sunset 8:12

Six-year-old Jeffie Evans came!

WEATHER BUREAU

Benjamin El Yoder. who died | {yesterday at St. Francis Hospital, | { will be buried in Crown Hill after {services at 1:30 p. m. Monday in! {the G. H. Herrmann Funeral { Home. | Mr, Yoder, who was 49, lived at|

|Sts. trainees are taught to greet|216 W. Raymond St. A native of|

{ Berne, he lived here 14 years. He

{ Yoder had worked with the Indi{anapolis Forwarding Co. as a trucker. {| A veteran of World War I, he was a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. He was also a member of the Methodist Church at Ft. Wayne and the Loyal Order of Moose at New Castle. Surviving are his wife, Irene; a son, Russell, Fort Wayne; a stepson, Robert Kaylor, Indianap{olis; two daughters, Mrs. Ruth Goff, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Elnora Driftmeyer, Fort Wayne, and two grandchildren.

Emmett M. Hayth

Services for Emmett M. Hayth, 315 N. Graham Ave, were to be at 4 p. m. today in Shirley Brothers Irving Hill Chapel. Burial was to be in Washington Park. Mr. Hayth, who was 74, died Thursday at his home. A native og Jonesburg, Mo., he lived in Indianapolis 24 years and had formerly lived in Terre Haute. He was employed by the Pennisylvania Railroad and was a con{ductor when he retired in Decem{ber. Mr. Hayth was a member of ithe First Baptist Church and the {Order of Railway Conductors. | Surviving are his wife, Emily; ia son, E. James; a sister, Miss

Ask

> Rev WLW. Yocum

church, Burial will be in Green- mother,

Friendliness Often Solves Bad Problems

; * AE EE i an Former Baseball Player Dies Here former professional baseball player, will be at 2:30 p. m. Monin Flanner & Buchanan

DEAR MRS, MANNERS: I WAS RAISED in a broken home. I girl raised in one. How ‘can I keep my marriage going? ‘My husband soon comes home from prison. , Willi to him, as I promised. He and my baby mean the world to me. Before he was sent away he spent most of his time with his

I've

‘don’t want my little

|mortuary. Burial will be in {Crown Hill.

His Own Actions Mr. Stewart, who was 71, died yesterday at Flower Mission. He

1 wasn’t raised a grouch but [lived at 1336 W. 30th St.

I'm getting to be one. It seems | po...) 1h4iana; | polis, Mr. Stewthat there is too much strife Il |,.¢ 1,4 resided here nearly all

Advised to Check Hos of 90 BEDFORD, July 15 — Services for William S_ White, a traveling 2 representative of = the Indiana 5 limestone more than

been faithful

I admire a man for lov-!

{ing his mother but I also think, The Rev. Mr. Yocum, who Was his place

: ugg ; is with his family Har IY p Willis 80, died yesterday in the Masonic once in awhile. 4 : . ‘

His mother often;

A native of called him before he was out of . Clay County, he served the Green- ped, saying she needed him. = Sery turned out she wanted him and Ces 0 In 1900 he went to Sullivan, but {her whole family to drink. Then, returned in 1903. His last pas-imy hushand would lay off work. | torate here was from 1928 to 1936. je had to ‘pay her back for|

5b |drinks even if we didn’t have circles in the state, he also served enough money to meet expenses.|

{

His family holds it against me! er {for not drinking. I talked my.

took care of that, too.

their home but I want to keep, them from ruining my home.

asks and I keep myself present- movements on the Monon line. |piciency are satisfactory, have alin Detroit in five years. -

Director of ‘the Indianapolis talk with the boss and learn what| |office, he made frequent trips to he has to suggest. Then do it./ducing corn whisky in a 250- formerly postmaster of Peru. {the city, mixing with Monon and Find out what you need to cor- gallon still, Mr. Beer said. i other raliroad officials. He began rect, Ask him to be frank. Don't! {with the Rock Island Lines iniget mad at what he says. 1904, then served three years from| There have been all kinds of {1917 to 1920-in the U. 8. Navy.| objections to older workers. Some He returned to Monon in 1921 as of these are real, some imagicity passenger agent.

able. I've done all I know to] make a go of my marriage. i LONESOME YOUNG WIFE, INDIANAPOLIS. Prison chaplains and rehabilitation officers know a lot about what goes om in the minds of men in prison. Talk to them, and talk straight to your husband. Learn what he | wants in a wife and home and where you may have failed. If things stay rough, seek family counseling from the Family Service Association? | You have a serious problem, that's for sure, but sometimes we act so serious we defeat our purpose. People ordinarily don’t object so much to the fact that we aren't like they | are but more to our intolerance. Your husband wants some fun. “Incorporate it to replace . the fun he thinks he has drinking. . Try friendliness instead of frowns with the inlaws. Forget the past, and don’t expect miracles. It's quite a hop from | a bar stool to the front row in church.

Made Her Very Angry

told “Southern Indiana” her ex-| husband would expect changes if) she took him back. She said he asked to come back after he found out he couldn't get the “other woman.” Don't you readers think the wife should be the one to expect the changes?

{Jennie Hayth, and two grand|children, all of Indianapolis.

Six men para- Giephen F. Mesker

| Services were being arranged

N. Hawthorne Lane. Mr. Mesker, who was 62, had been with the Pennsylvania Railroad 43 years. Before his retire-

| ment three and a half years ago,

¢| he was a boiler inspector in the] with a rooster in the back yara Midle West for the railroad.

Surviving are his wife, Helen; and a sister, Mrs. Esther Crawford, Tigard, Ore, Services will be held Tuesday

Cross.

Rev. B. W. Rhea

Services for The Rev. Bennie W. Rhea, 1011 Coe St., will be ‘at 1 p. m. Monday in the Pilgrim Baptist Church. Burial will be in New Crown.

The Rev. Mr. Rhea, who was

Precipitation 24 hours ending 7:30 a.m. 00/58 died Thursday in General | the man you want.

Total precipitation since Ja ficiency, since Jan. 1

ean 117% Hospital. He was a member of &

ture in other cities Station ACIBOES -..nosiniinarsiensininans Boston ... Burbank ... Chicago

ver ‘“w Evansville ayne . Worth ..... Indianapolis ansas City Miami ...-..... Minneapolis-St. Paul

New rleans

ttsburgh .... San Antonio .. gan Francisco t. Louis .. .... . Washingt Dai vriivasviase

The following able shows the tempera-

{the Pilgrim Baptist Church. Surviving are two brothers, William, Indianapolis, and Virgil, Des Moines, Ia. and two sisters, Mrs. Cordelia Thompkins, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Hattie Brown, Pittsburgh, Pa. .

Husbands come crawling back home after “back street wives” break up their homes. Thelr

wives are considerate enough to.

take them back because they

the plane left Davis-Monthan Air today for Stephen F. Mesker, who {hope to make men of them and died yesterday near his home, 850 because they feel men helped

{make their homes. { DAILY CITY READER.

What chance would: two |

people have going back to-

gether thinking each other was |

wrong, as before divorce? Love didn’t mend rifts the first time. | Why would it, in middle age, with a divorce, heartbreak and | bitterness in the interim? { Surely they knew both have to change and that neither will change completely. Sometimes men crawl away from home because their wives | try to make mice of them in- { stead of men, as the women want them to be. If you women i want men, and you do, you | have to learn to handle them. You don’t really win when you get a divorce because you lose

JULY

MACHINIST 181, W. South LI-6212

insured to $50

FUR COAT $1 STORAGE ¥ MARLYN FOR 60. LARGEST SELECTION

| of Linoleum in Indians RUGS from $2.39

DDT SPRAYED ON ELMS to be healthy for the trees, but it's and squirrels.

es

=

* H ER * 402 N. Capitol Ave. PAINT & LINOLEUM CO. |] "51.5 yg 211 BE. Washington RI-8815

| PERSONAL LOANS lz, mazems

Personal Loan Department

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Oe.

OXYGEN THERAPY

This Equipment Can Be Rented at

You Save Because We Save MEN'S SUITS & OVERCOATS $22.95 .. $29.95 ROBERT HALL Clothes

GEO. J. EGENOLF

SALE!

ningham, 2303%

| Leroy;

Passenger . Official Dies in Chicago | Harry B. Willis, Chicago, gen-| al passenger agent for the Mo-| : Eshaad oi ting ad wy non Railroad, will be buried in It's the new Stratoflame cig- Mrs. John P. Jones near Milton. {Chicago after services there at buying habits, then|aret lighter which uses butane Last January he moved to os started to chureh, but his motherly 3) p, 1m, Monday. ~ {Masonic Home, | Mr. Willis, who was 61, suffered I have nothing against myi, peart attack and died yesterday,

Stratford Pen Corp. is making Detroit, and a sister, Mrs. Edith in-laws. I feel sorry for themigfier he returned from a business {that they should want to ruin meeting in New York.

Agent since 1940, Mr. Willis di-|

rected all train traffic throughout! I always do as my husband world War II, scheduling troop

Surviving are his wife, Frances, one of any age. land a married daughter, Patty, in/is that the older person can mot | Davenport, Ia.

Benjamin Cunningham land factory procedures. Services for Benjamin F. Cun-/again this can apply to one of Guilford Ave. any age. {were to be at 3 p. m. today in you are guilty of this. {Shirley Brothers Central Chapel. {Burial was to be in Greenlawn alert as some of the younger {Cemetery at Franklin, Ind. Mr. Cunningham, who was 42, skilled than many due to your died Thursday in his home: inative of Franklin, he lived In patient and more tolerant. Indianapolis 10 years. A machine operator at Inter- too much. It is easy to tell others {national Harvester Co. five years, that you've “been doing this for (he had formerly been employed years” and “this is-the best way." fat the Allison Division, General If you are told to do your job Motors Corp. He was a member a certain way do it that way. {of the Loyal Order of Moose. . ” Surviving are his wife, Ellen;| {three sons, Benjamin, John { a daughter,

Le FUNERAL HOME brothers, Tevis and Arthur, and while and do more smiling. Maybe 1505 SOUTH EAST ST.

{mother, Mrs. Goldie Spencer; two of the work. Whistle once in a

\a sister, Mrs. Louise Goldsby, all you ought to do a littie kidding! You made me boil when youlof Indianapolis.

oer EXCISE Times Real Estate Advertiser ays:

BOU

our department and that a good | ¢ is ire. years, ih sd biog

part of it is directed toward me. He retired from professional ; Dunn Memorial I'm in my fifties and am one of |y,501411 20 years ago, after play. rday eer one of Edinb : the old-timers, having been ino with teams in Canton and Scotland, Mr. White came to this continuously in the employ of ipeyrgsiown, IIL; San Antonio, country 62 years ago. A stone the company since 1915. I don’t mex: Virginia, Minn. and other carver, ted want to quit but will have 10 (cities, He also played and man- Stewart University, Edinburgh. unless they stop riding me. 004 amateurs and worked as Mr. White was a field man with Have you any suggestion$ as |, umpire here, ithe Indiana Limestone Quarryto how I can win at least | pe is survived by his son, Nor- men's Association in 1920 and decent treatment from the man, 1336 W. 30th St, where helater became associated with the others? /made his home. Also surviving Building Stone Association. : {are three sisters, Mrs. Wesley He traveled for the Indiana By JAMES GRAYSON {Lewis and Mrs. Alta Feeley, Los Limestone Institute from 1033 Maybe you are a grouch. Angeles, Cal, and Mrs. Vina until 1943 when he retired. Being one of the old-timers Sanders, Indianapolis, and three j . . should not make you one. brothers, Guy, Indianapolis; Har- MTS. Allie Morrissey |Grouches come in all ages. There vey, San Jose, Cal, and Reva, Services for Mrs. "Allie Mor might be several reasons why Davis, Okla. {rissey, lifelong resident of Miami County, will be at 3:30 p. m. to-

| Jou are geting that way ae Sr tet————————— {if you are to blame you w ve Bee 1 i ‘morrow in the Eikenberry Fur Raids Whisky ineral Home at Peru. Burial will

{to correct your ways. | If you have been assured that! DETROIT, July 15 (UP)—Po- pe in Mount Hopé Cemetery there, you can stay as long as you wantilice Sgt. Charles Beer led a raid, Mrs. Morrissey, who was 80, to, provided your health and ef-itoday on the biggest still found gied yesterday in Duke Memorial |Hospital at Peru, Her husband, Three bootleggers’ were pro-the late James R. Morrissey, was

. Surviving are three sons, Thurl | “It was pretty smooth stuff,” G.; Hazen R., and Oran W., all {t00,” he said. ‘Indianapolis. Jnrie

YOU'LL FIND US {inary. They could apply to any A common one {adjust himself to the changes EASY TO TALK TO ithat are taking place in office Here

But you'd better see if

Physically you may not be as

|workers. You should be more

You should be more ¢ But {watch your talking. Dof't talk

A! experience.

{Don't argue.’

i Be 2 and/one of the boys, .Don't let them his/get your goat. Do your share

HHERRMANN

Cut out your grouchiness.

line;

LI panel Me. 8488 [))e

“We are happy to report that 1950, up to July 1st, has bgen a banner year for us—thanks to THE TIMES!”

Taney eo WENN AMA uy HOW INDIANA

ay a INDIANAPOLIS S

a y Management a 950 ortg: July 10, 3

But ve c operty Vere 1wp copy cen vertising “7 . ad ia scoponton PALES st LOW 68 pest wishes ese B98UF

Shown below ore thes’ homes typical of the mony recent sales made by Barth Realty Company appearing EXCLUSIVELY in The Times.

LEVARD PLACE WASHINGTON BOULEVARD. von't miss the big REAL ESTATE SECTION of tomorrow's SUNDAY TIMES! . .. the

2% oes of interes

i Indianapolis SALE. win plus ‘three

only ane of Hs kind oppar

ri It brings FO and

you OVER 1000 HORE FOR 34 : sige s inte ting news an a Se tures of local real esto home building ey 5551 before midnight tonight, to start home delivery of The Sunday Times. Y. reach

* A

you early tomorrow morning