Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1950 — Page 11

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OARD RACER yr Shakeshals: | s are my choice rady smoking: | sit me oa "T°"

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ERN, sporiscasters dcasting is fap! sy on my throat, imels for me - mild!"

i'T KNOW how n smokidg could | I changed to "Jeanne Wilson, Lr.

ID HAYES, come. I found whae rhildness means made my own 0-Day Test!”

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‘don’t aim to be disrespectful, but I don’t remember I told them. Charlie Coy, 1804 Central Ave. ex- ; ": : . .

wish they'd hurry up. If I don’t eat pretty soon,

——yupted and asked my name and what side of the family I was on. :

Bill's Going

McDonald has been it on in his corruption

butter as it comes from the spig

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Fine Day for a Reunion ~~ ~~ salad ." NODDING to a couple of the men, I sat at a “macaroni and cheese,

© pict ought it was a fine day A ; lone ate a concern about angel food cakes, devil's food cake, white cake, “Charley.” He should have been out by then, raspberry and peach pies, : ‘Charley hung the banner wearly that morning; and pineapple and marshmallow salads. The Coys Charley was bringing the ice; Charley was the were eatin’ folks. mas. 1 ped- I — aay urged She Wee af a wu, on stomach stopped- . : : rs date ries 3 i to an elderly the table. Make as many trips as you like. ‘woman who was holding a chocolate cake: “1 The assembled took: the gag in good fun when

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plained. He thought it was great.” Mr, Coy was

She told “Bim her name, they laughed, asked the president and bis daughter, Mrs, Mike Navarra,

how a certain 8 certainly was, “that he passed sway! ex chided reunions. soon Charley e SE Tor being late. No one was serious. While New Officers Elected “his hands were full and he was busy, I greeted AFTER a short meeting, election of new of-|, the head man and he i #1 com. ficers (Mr. Coy didn’t want a Tth term), everyone, * “Charley sure works on these things,” visited. Practically a Coy by then, I did my share. |: ‘maented to a quiet, thoughtful man. wand 1 Shook hands with some of the latecomers and “He sure does” answered the man, made them feel a bit uncomfortable for not re-

membering that my name was Ed. to starve.” Tin going to gray-haired lady smiled at me and 3 The reunion broke up early in the afternoon shook my hand. I smiled back and started to say on

what a nice day it was for a reunion. She inter- ivarg

one family was from ‘burtpns. was : “bas You -sir; there were-the-Seftons;- the-Sipes, ibe Hollingsworths, DeLoys, Staleys, Thatchers, Ogles Clarks. Tuttles, Commons, Wolfgangs but the Coys were the main limbs.

chores to do. There were Coys from Greens-| Sheridan. Lebanon, Anderson, Westfield and South Bend, the Will War-

<A pleasantly and wearing my on-the-way-to-church-hello-reverend smile, I told her my first name, that my folks came from Kentucky. Seemed to be enough. Later I was to learn that

t-grandfather Coy settled in the hills of Ken- W : : on an rd Coy clan migrated from. No more question in my mind about reunions.

v the Coys, say your a cotland. Luck and the Coys were with me. Find yourself a clan like 5 Several of the older ladies watched me. I don’t cousin three or four times removed and reach.! know how many glances over the shoulder came Ummmmmm. my way: —A-small speech. and my press card were See you all next year, cousins.

cherry and marshmallow}:

Julius felt and it was too bad, 6052 Dewey Ave, Was secretary “of the Coyif

ince most of the Coys were from out of town and ||

Families, Girl

arines Leaving For War Drills

“Light up, fellas. It's a long train trip to the West Coast.” Ready to move out of Union Station are (left to right) Pfc. Eugene Wells and brother Pfc. Don L. Wells, both of 1611 Lafayette Road, Pvt. William Jump, 1849 N. Warman Ave;, and Pvt. Howard Kimberlin, 2206 Wheeler 5+.

2 p i leaves for the cushy striped NEW YORK, Aug. 20—Bill O'Dwyer, who is As his excellency still technically, mayor of our town, speaks a fine pants job in Mexico, he has had the foresight to Spanish and is an affable guy, when he ain't pout- feather the nests of close associates. A . ing and has a pretty young wife, and is a devout Joe Boyle, is supposed to be upped to deputy police Catholic, and so he will make an adequate ambas- commissioner, at nearly Hwige the Salary, 2d Youle dently needs one in a qualify for a $6000 pension. Same applies to James) Stor 8 Msziey, 'Whish evs y Furey, a chauffeur, who was appointed deputy o b brother Furey! ob is a good one. It pays $25,000 a year, commissioner at the same figure ant will have a $12,000 eee to help fend goes with Mr. O'Dwyer to Mexico, his vacant slot off the wolf. I don’t know how the altitude will is to be filled by another chauffeur, Bernard Col-

reconcile itself with Wi heart bounce that has kept him semi-constantly

in Florida and on the West Coast. Departure Looks Peculiar terrain—and high police olielala being demoted, . Mr. O'Dwyer I'wouldn't have let and angry questions ng as n Congress, an my LJ wers Me > —_ York with anything bookies being arrested 60 times without conshort of a submachine gun until my term expired. victions. Jd * Thé departure looks just a touch peculiar. The streets of New York have been torn up for This has been a year. Sen. Estes Ke- leisurely reconstruction for about three years, and fauver's crackdown on crime has paid off aston- the work never seems to get finished. We have, at ishing dividends. It spear-headed investigations ‘he moment, sweeping plans to indoctrinate the here which led to the conviction of Frank Erick- city in self-protection against atomie attack. The gon, the nation’s No. 1 bookmaker, who had gone mayor himself has been on television to tell us his gambling way unhindered for over 20 years. how to act against coming adversity. Every man, : - Costello's Florida fellows are feeling woman and child must give his all. Yes, sir.

Frank ostelie ttorney Mil the heat at the woment. District A ion Jump or Push?

It has, indeed, been a peculiar year, with police: captains committing suicide and whole precincts uprooted—to be switched, man for man, to other

This is the man Mayor O'Dwyer. recently de- prochures on expected atomic bombing, with New nounced for his efforts to clean up & graft-laden York as the clearly defined target, and the papers

affinity between the police, high-and-low, and the and magazines have played the terror broadly.

5 By Robert C. Ruark Dr ofted Hoosiers | «Ready for Camp

dicky ticker, the old ins. Same dough. My, my, and mercy me.

ey a

60 Leave Thursday For Ft. Knox

The. Indiana Draft Class of 1950 has a rugged life ahead.

ings at 11:30 a. m, Thursday by Gov. Schricker, Brig. Gen. Robinson Hitchcock, State Selective Service director, and Col. Harry A. Welsch, chief of the Indiana Military District, the initial batch of 60 drafted men were to leave for Ft. Knox, Ky., shortly after noon. Here then is what the citizensoldiers can look forward to: ONE: A streamlined and intensive six-week training program. The same course on “how to kill” took 14 weeks on a strictly 40hour week basis in World War IL Use ‘Live Ammunition’

TWO: Nine hours a day, with only free time limited to Saturday afternoon and Sunday. THREE: “Live” ammunition in

organized criminals who run the bookie business. The greatest challenge ever to face the captain

Things have been hotter than usual in Kansas of a city faces Mayor O'Dwyer, and what oes

City. Murder has been done, under the portrait of he do? President Truman, over racketeering squabbles. For a long time the close connection of profes- breezes off to Mexico. Did he jump or was he sional crime to local politics has been suggested, pushed? Was it heart trouble, gop trouble, gam-| as well as the tie-up of crime to police, and crime bling trouble or the firm fist of Democratic boss to Washington, and crime to industry. Mr. Costello, Ed Flynn, or a combination’ of all? Whatever it! the so-called mastermind, has had a lengthy arm was, Bill's subjects don't like the smell. A captain] in the political cookie-jar, both local and national, signs on for the duration of the voyage, and in the for a many a dredry year. minds of many, Bill O'Dwyer just jumped his ship.

Gay Shindig By Frederick C. Othman

GAITHERSBURG, Md., Aug. 20—The frost is pounds. The poor devil was about out of dolls. about to gild the pumpkin hereabouts. The apples Almost every lady who sat in his scales weighed wax) are piled in meticulous pyramids while the. The rows of cakes, with the bites removed by rows of angel food cakes, each with a slice re- ‘the judges, were the prize winners. One of the moved and a bite taken therefrom, are going stale. j34jes in charge said maybe it was a waste of The hogs with the pink complexions are taking good cake, but it also was ap art—and the artists _ their ease under electric fans, the snow-white of the chocolate-walnut three-layer jobs would | tractors are plowing up the same furrows over rather their productions turned to stone than dis-| and over again, and the fat cattle, as vain as appear down any human gullets. bathing beauties, are showing off their shapes ! each evening at eight. —Thereisn't-acity- slicker for miles around. What I'm getting around to in my own bucolic way is that county fair time is with us again. My. bride and IT took in the shindig here at Gaithersburg and I want to report that the best way to _ forget this world's troubles is to gaze upon a

“butter at home and there was no sugar shortage in Gaithersburg. They could make cakes for mere eating. purposes any time they felt like it. ) | Calls One-Ton Bull ‘Baby’

UNDER THE guidance of my bride, however, |

cid and also productive, . : * "handsomest bovines in these parts ‘lounged in i

: i : their boudoirs, There was one Holstein bull by the Fried Chicken Costs Only 25¢ name of Prince, Igor, who weighed almost one ton. | SHE GIVES MILK, but this is almost pure

He glistened (hair tome did it, is my guess) and! ot, and according

snp RING guernsey. With. long. exelashes, Plan, we soon, woupd.tR.in.ihe. cow, harns where the

the end of his tail was frizzled in a permanent] to Mrs. O. there isn't anything more beautiful than ‘a pure-blooded cow. Inflation has not yet hit this lush countryside, or if it has, the ladies in the pretty house dresses at the lunch counter were not aware of it. Fried chicken they ‘were selling at 25 cents a portion. Roasted sweet corn, with all the guern--sey butter a customer could spread on, cost a nickel. ‘A slic} of homemade cake was a dime; so was a large portion of potato salad with chunks of egg liberally mixed in. My dinner cost 45 cents. Mrs. O., not caring how she spent my money, ate 50-cents worth. sis I guess I wasn’t strictly accurate about the absence of ‘fast talkers. There was one, in the business of guessing peoples’ weights for 10 cents and a kewpie doll if he was wrong by three

him baby. A fellow in a pink shirt: came through distributing dodgers urging that we cow experts vote for an ugly gent (his picture was on the paper) for sheriff. We threw these underfoot; politics is of slight interest when you are discussing important stuff like what to feed a baby calf to make her as sleek as her mother. Plenty of vitamin A, in case you're interested, is helpful. We finally had to pull ourselves away from the cows, the pigs with their piglets, and the red chickens that enjoy laying oversized eggs. We had mud on our shoes and peace in our souls. Tomorrow: Back to politicians and slang-bang Baiesalling in Washington. Car’t say I anticipate -it.

All of a sudden our beamish broth of a bye training,” about one-third will be

Also, said she, they had plenty of eggs and hag heen proposed for construic-| But that is only part of the)

wave: The i4-year-oid==som-of ~his-owner-catied Meridian-—8t—propert

most of the training. FOUR: Following this “basic shipped to various specialist schools, with the rest slated for more intense unit training for infantry or tank duty. From the latter group will come candidates for officer training. It will take about four months to ready men for the real thing in Korea or any other hot spot, Army officials estimate.

Medical Office Building Planned

- Permit Sought for

$100,000 Structure "|six cents from the proposed 1951 tax rate before the new spending A new medica! office building schedule was adopted by unanimous vote. 2

Thanks for the lift, dad . . . bus driver M. O. Fulford, 3402 S. Rural St., was right on hand when his son took off for war training. His son is Sgt. Oscar Fulford, 32 N. Tacoma St. Mr. Fulford drove his son and other Marines to Union Station, where they departed by train for Camp Pendleton, Cal.

Council Economy Ax Chops 6 Cents Off 1951 Tax Rate

$888,126 Larger Operating Costs Will Be ———Met by Higher Property Assessments...

vo ] By DAVID WATSON ‘A new Indianapolis city budget with a clipped tax rate will be given te the Marion County Board of Tax Commissioners next month. . »

It's still going to cost [Tate originally proposed for next The Klein & Kuhn real estate|something like $888,126 more to Yer. a } firm, which filed a petition for| operate the city next year than it], Finance ' Committee Chairman clearance to erect the two-story|is costing in 1950. Councilmen ac- Joseph A. Wicker, Democrat, building, estimated cost at $100.-| tually trimmed $73,000 from the|COmmended department heads for 000. It will include space for den- budget submitted to them by Con- [K€SPINg requests down. tal offices. i i {troller Phillip Bayt, ——3 EEN REUeRtad RE EAT THERE IE To Be A “A variance of building line re- sorbed by the boost in reassess. quirements has been askedl to al- ment figures, increased revenues low location of the front of the and reduced spending for the re-iy,.. wi wo. oaid building within 35 feet of the mainder of this year. Boiled down." (1. ~asos that the new budget

tion at 3611 N. Meridian St. {story.

street parking facilities will be provided. Now on the proposed site are a frame duplex and four frame houses. : Another petition to be scheduled for public hearing is the request by Impeller Pump Co. for permission to build a $15,000 building in the 300 block 8. La-

the taxpayer a lower rate next; e year ing still boost its income, 2 Pout 28 new firemen. because property assessments have gone up. - | Reduced spending for the rest

rate reduction:

new spending schedule, furtheri,..¢ $25 000. reducing the tax rate. :

Salle St. The firm, precision be 4 t, voiced a lone dissent ~|for the city general fund, $60,000 equipment manufacturers, will gcrat, f “aye” for, : ; provide parking s s for 23 fore casting a vote 0 y {Sanitation Department, $40,000

passage of the new budget. - Health and Hospitals, “I anf against spending $25,000/and Redevelopment Commission for the Symphony Orchestra,” $112,000. Mr. Ross said. “But when you're, Park

cars.

Charters 40-Seat Plane for Three

| take action. Therefore,

on the 1951 budget.” tenance proposal cut $500; elimi

Marines Prepare to Hit Red Foes

Marines of the Ist Division march along a breakwater jubting out into the bay of a South Koreto A ther pa ii » A RES

am & Ee 2 Ler

_ {told airline employees not to re- pe.

.diangpolis last night, a friend state law.

: plane, which returned to get the tary of the Indiana Taxpayers

"I DOUGLAS IN IRAN

{—U. 8. Supreme Court Justice erty. : | This is a reduction of 5.8 cents was knocked to the ground from ham and eggs last week,

A New York man chartered a administrative

Although approximately 30 per- nate

{his wife and a French poodle to ing, only one taxpayer comment- of Redevelopmen: at a salary o

|Lake Placid, N. Y., because he oq on the spending schedule. He $5000; increase executive secretary "ure. oF depression cycles” until Henry A. Werking, presi-/to $6000 a year but reduce from

was “in a hurry.” - | was The man, a stock broker who! gent of American Homé Owners, the proposed increase to $7000; cu lease his name, paid $1800 for the, qr. {$66,000. five-hour flight. : |support of the orchestra and A full crew—pilot, co-pilot, and stated that it should become selfstewaidess — was aboard the supporting. He questioned city

Werking also challenged represents about $496,800.

Marion Tree Trimmer Shocked Fatally

who had driven the couple to the, The do al | g pound should also be airport discovered the broker'smade self-supporting, Mr. Werkwife had left her cosmetics bag|ing said. behind. | ; Called Right Step -Alrport officials radioed the] “walter Horn, executive secre-'liam McClain, 21, a from | Association, described the - tax rate reduction as a “step in the - |right. direction.” The new rate worked * Ischeduled by Councilmen is $1.99 of here. Jack Rinker, 27, also of Marion

They said it arrived safely in Lake Placid early today.

x for 1951. The current rate is! TEHRAN, Iran, Aug. 20 (UP) $2.048 per $100 of taxable prop-

| Wil Douglas was touring ! | western Iran today with a burro from the current schedule and a the tree and his

i arm was frac expedition. x iy 4 | reduction of 6.1 cents from the tured. :

$y

TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1050

riends Embrace. |

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'Girl Away From King

A hefty swing of the ax by City Councilmen last night chopped | -

“It is our hope that they have Peto nderestitabed EIEN neds SEH ‘and that prices will not increase p | a. sufficiently next year to force a swing manufaccurtailment of their programs,”

y-line:~Oft- this.-means. the City. CAN. CHAIR. poyides-for-65-new-policemen-and: Her-parents

| Here is the breakdown on Couni¢il action which brought the tax met

Increased miscellaneous income the invitation. of this year will leave surpluses.isop the city general fund, $35,000; These can be incorporated in theigro ith and Hospitals Departt Reduced spending estimate for| Deauville. Councilman Guy O. Ross, Dem- ithe last five months of this year $40,000 |

| ] : Department salary slash {a lone wolf, there is little use to of $500 a year for superintendent : I vote aye|of recreation; park garage main-:nation’s

assistant] : ; 40-passenger plane to take him, sons attended last night's hear- proposed for executive gecretary Prediction of . Federation Presi-

{redevelopment properties fund by The reduced tax rate roughly After passing the County Tax

American Airlines 300-mile-an-| contribution to John Herron Art|Adjustment Board, the new vice commander was. surprised anyone . worried ue Sat. |Institute, and was told support/ budget will go before state tax: of thé Military about her making a 180-mile trip utes after the plane left In- by the city was mandatory under commissioners, “14 Order of the alone down the rapids of the Col-

WABASH, Aug. 29 (UP)—Wile trimmer Marion, was shocked fatally yesterday when a limb touched a high tension power line as he at Somerset, southwest

his fellow workman with the Janke to help him find a “radiant officials said today, They too the | Townsend Tree Service of Muncie, blonde” waitress who.served him stand after the Comimum®s’ & = &

PAGE 11

Cp. Dale W. Morgan {ries to coax wpaing “smile from tearful Dale Jr. to match the one displayed by his wife. The scene was repeated many times last night as the 16th. Infantry Battalion, _USMCR, left Indianapolis for Camp Pendleton, Cal. of amp endigion, Male a

2

Photos by Bill Osles, Times Staff P! rapher. This umbrella never had it so good as when of Bs, on a leave-taking which included (left to right) Pvt. Gerald Kurt, 3550 N. Chester St., Miss Carol Davis, 3519 N. Grant Ave., Miss Pattie Haydon, 3525 N. Grant Ave, and Pvt. John Weyreter, 3624 Wallace St.

About People—

Parents Whisk-U.- gS

| Farouk Leaves Resort Without Accepting

| Offer of St. Louis Manufacturer's Daughter r King Farouk of Egypt left the was served by the wWailress, who |fashionable Deauville, France, had “a smile as big as all out. (channel resort today without tak- doors.” He said she was of me{ing a 16-year-old 8t. Louis girl up dium build, with blue eyes and {on her offer to show him around “radiant blonde hair.” | the United States. -| “She'll remember me,” he added, “I'm the 3 | “1 —To-help the mayor, Mr. Martin {sent along a self-drawn map [showing where the restaurant was {located. ; fo Maver Janke said there was : one hitch . ., the map wasn't of ~~ Tollet,

yground

turer, - was at Biarritz and made the offer.

‘whisked her away after she the king extended 8

. ® » » Mrs. Jaye Kurusu Maddox, - daughter of a Japanese “peace seven - Jar : ambassador” who was in Wash- ¢ A lov took Miss Medart {ington at the time of Pearl Har{the king and his retinue from bor; is waiting the outcome of a It was believed ne bill to restore her U. 8. citizenmight be going to Le Touquet, ship, It is now pending before land there were rumors He was on President Truman. ” | his way to meet Narriman Sadek, Mrs. Maddox is the daughter of {| 17-year-old Egyptian beauty to|Saburo Kurusu and the wife of an . iwhom he is said to be betrothed. American army officer now stae "| ® = {tioned in Japan. She will be unAstrologers convening in Los able to accompany her hugband, Angeles came up with tips for the Lt. William J. Maddox dr. when political and business he returns home in November _ileaders today. [unless the bill sponsored by Rep. | War clouds after 1053 was the Jay Lefevre, (R. N.Y.) is signed into law. Mrs. Maddox was born in Chi= , | cago While her father was serving 1953 and after that “an exéellent/in the Japanese consulate. Her ¢ business cycle.” : {mother was an American. She 2 £8 {achieved U. 8. citizenship at birth, Herman OC. Higgs, commander but lost it by voting in the Japan~ of H, Weir Cook ese election in 1946. :

land

¢ dent Edna L. Scott. “Low pres-|

Chapter 212, was | . Nn elected juni or A Chicago art teacher said she

Purple Heart at orado River. Florence Kibler, 35, its national con- embarked by boat “Aug. 10 at vention. He com+ Hite, Utah, and arrived in Lees mands a zone Ferry, Ariz, Sunday. The reason which includesithe trip took so long, she said, Michigan, Ohio, was that she stopped frequently - Illinois, Wiscon- to paint scenes along the river. 8 i n, Kentucky| - a ee : and Indiana. - | All letters addressed to Avenue 4 ZOU {Joseph Stalin, 8t. Julian, Frahee, | Eugene Martin of Mt. Carroll, will be returned marked “Address i 111, asked Joliet. Mayor Arthur Unknown,” national government

Mr. Higgs

pated St. Ju'lan eity ¢> Mr. Martin said he stopped at named Awesre ("=n a Jollet restaurant last weak and Lhe Red Fit Horn J

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