Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1950 — Page 7
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rf y “Alon 45k TIMES BOOK PAGE |,
g the Monon" Painted in Broad Ripple : = — RADI
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| oi pr : Taal lh / TTT wmn 1260 wist 1070 WiRE 1439 sh 131 Stor A 8 vet 5 | E00 Make Mine Music Easy Deus It Jordan Music, Toa and Crompets — Mows—1590 Cid Melody Trail ou "VVS | | ag So Doo Lite A DD kc ; Be or hg Retervit Solute my . Adwatoe Epen Aer, a : | uy, - © Faxinalieg Rhythm sR escri es Wan | L200 armel Girls True or Fale Wolody Billboard Stars john Edwards Nowi—1590 Chub Americans Chars erer | 54 i. Nn Cliff Cameron Shida. ov { .30 Patricia Stevens Hoosier Nit Parade Kemay Jagger Marlin Brohers Sammy Kaye Ary Band Wh a + | 45 Wapicter Cus ._ Radio Free Eurepe News—Sports Audeey Totter Sports Reel “le | +} + 100 News—Gilbert Forbes Eddie Rickenbacker — Voices and Events Lobe Waltes . MNews—Opes House Vaice of fhe Enamives no Had a Purpose Ein Se - como . ; . i | . of i - IEE PREACHER AND I SLAVE." A novel. By Wallace Stegner. bo 48 Yo Boye pO pre En: Vout ral Tlie aston, Houghton, Mifflin, $3.75. Ton Questions Saturday’ ' " : | Gene Autry Twenty Dance Date ) Sign OH « . "KON-TIKL" By Thor Heverdah!, Chicago, Rand McNally $4, | | 3.8 > merich “ hb oS = 2 is ? By EMERSON PRICE | i lew, = oe sia jveurice bs Peri ew, If you had chanced to visit a hobo jungl i — il Parade oy TT Saluda ) : 8 gle during the :00 Busters Your Show Hit Parade Baseball Chatter : early years of this century-—there, as lke as not-—you| 8 5 Say . "e . a fy : fay Dance Dae Bight have found Joe Hill, whose real name was Hillstrom.! Gb i oo i 378 Wr wits Notun Jeet Rong .r im . iim oe was a wanderer with a purpose. His face bore the! : tlh For coer . Ein i ; | T7100 Midwestern Nayride ——— om Se marks of many violent encounters with police, but had you, ri J lw hi ne «iw, ! Bhan fathomed the deep resentment in his eyes you might have 9 30 President Truman Prosidost Truman Presiden Tmin President Tremen President Truman discovered, rievertheless, that Ai a ee | i : ALi ace i, Som sere pins they w : 1: The author's Joe Hill is a man] | 100 Nows—Gilbert Forbes George Young—Hows Allen lefiries ee TTT Mg intelligent eyes. both vain and generous, yet : 10:1 Lenals Norman Quin. Guest Star Dick Haymes “, ® ’ on a ile Joe looked much like given to violence; a man ‘who! J | 130 Oscar Dumont Tommy Dorsey + Dancing Party Scores Grand 0id Opp his “jungle comrades in the flick- feels no sense of guilt in the . : y= Ry y | 4S ' King Cole Irie a Variety Hour ) aN ering firelight, he was not, prop- COmmission of armed robbery. “Along the Monon,’ an oil by Edmund Brucker of the Herron Art School faculty, was painted T7200 ilies Record Pa owi—Sportm .- ~ erty speaking, a hobo. Joe Hill @% long as his victim is rich. The during the summer in Broad Ripple at 64th St., one of several local scenes Mr Brucker put Nh | 3 2 boll but Sh, Mindy Carson Varlely Nour ow Girton was a member of the Industrial Feader must deter:aine for him-| aq for display in coming art shows : HY «- = . 9 Ebeny Bichings we : ot £4 Workers of the World, the IWWs, S¢If how much of the Joe Hill ___ enim en rg ’ — REE a5 - - . - ! “ - ” -
the I won't work boys, the Wob- !e8end to believe.
IWW had been very great; he had
. »
pies. indeed nis uence nme oc eee Gandhi's Long Struggle to Vanquish Evil, WFBM-TV—Channel ‘On Th 5 Air | WCPO-TV—Channel 7
elpe ul it into a “singin Norwegian, believe a - ° » * : . * ogee . 5 on "ons tne some neg vers n-ne ar racine wr (J plift His Native India Definitively Related | ssw. tmcuocse
SATURDAY
written were on the lips of Wob- cloniZed before the dawn of his- TWENTY QUESTIONS - Film §. blies throughout the land. tory by White men from Peru “THE LIFE OF MAHATMA sincerity, chivalry and sel(-suf-/And it was this love of his toes, $0 tontem Sa star Dane Clark wil be the *% Merry Go 3.00 Cube Rudy : oii rir a Wess 0. Jaw GANDHI." By Logs Fischer, fering, to convince the oppo-|that brought about his assassina- 30 Wen Barrie 10 D0 NC ’ |panel’s guest on the “animal, 7.00 Cartoons Review ir Ay artis of primitive ; Mey Jo A n hall New York. Harper & Brothers. Peosy brain and conquer his tion. A Hindu youth, angered by] 6.45 Quinian 10:15 Roving Camera Mineral or vegetable show. Bill 7.40 Phantom 5:30 On Stage y is car oons : 5 eart.” "events in Pakistan and Gandhi's: 4. i . Slater moderates the program. . Empire 6:00 M: ies of were hanging in IWW halls from found it too difficult to build a $5. There were times when Gandhi conciliatory attitude, joined a 30 Shuckwagon 10.30 freviey . . WIBC m. i ath ri Chicago to the West Coast. These grass sufficiently durable to make By LEON RUSSELL could have had the governments gang of plotters and Hot the Toles 10:33 Sign oe [mir Cy. Your favorit A-00 Burn. Em Wy 6:30 Shinstov cartoons were somewhat stereo-| ® ong and dangerous voyage. | (Can evil, in this day of mon- of South Africa and India at his Mahatma who was on his way vor ) at ¢ th : t yore 8:30 Play It Safe ’ to + typed, as were most radical car-| >° Mr. Heyerdahl decided 10 ster military and economic ma- mercy.” At such.times, he relent to prayers. WLW-T—Channel 4 = ge De ATP aye: 9:00 Caron 7:00 _ - toons of the period. The boss, Prove his thegry sound. He or- chines, be vanquished by good ed, because he could accept no oo « wm i w 5 Feat ‘ p.m, 9:30 C : {ganized a crew of six, including wij} and kind hearts” concessions that were not given GANDHI HAD his human fail- SATURDAY [7 p BA Whitewe
the man of wealth, was always;
INDIANS:—RED- BIRDS Play | 10:30 Acrobat Ranch . $00 Cavalcade of
. himse]f; he found balsa wood in , ' | well fed and fat; a heavy watch. . | Mbhandas K. Gandhi. believed voluntarily. ures, and Mr, Fischer is too good 8:30 Matinee 6:00 Voice of { chain looped across his heavy ine A a, and with this wood jy . 14. He spent most of his * a = a reporter to overlook them. But 9:30 To Be An'cd Enquirer by play account of the tilt at] 1M Go ’ un . ey jullt a crude raft. TbeY jie trying to prove it. PARADOXICALLY, he offered they are dwarfed by the virtues| 10:00 Movies 6:15 Wendy Barrie | Columbus. . . . WIBO 8:15 p.m. ao 0 Wrestling
paunch, and he smoked an enor-
named it Kon-Tikl in honor of ay .,ic Fischer, a capable jour- to help England in the Boer War that made him a world figure. 11:00 Hullobaloo 6:30 Film Features
MY FAVORITE HUSBAND— 125 Duvoct Dupe 12:43 Wettig
mous cigar. His face held a cal-|)ecendary sun god. and they set " culated look of evil. fost gary the BE od nalist and roving correspondent, and the First World War. In- “Millions. in all countries 12a Gadgets 7:00 One Man's [Lucille Ball flutters about in a| }.40 News and 1:00 One to Seven The worker, on the other hand, {}..+ favorable currents VILE | nas written the Mahatma’s biog- dians were citizens of {he Brit- mourned Gandhi's death as a per-| 1:00 Cowley's Alley Family {gay comedy. Screen Actor Rich- : Seorly Club was lean and stooped with toil,| carry them to Polynesia raphy. He knew the little Indian ish Empire and received its pro- sonal loss,” says Mr. Fischer. | 3:00 Cinema Corroll 7:30 Hayride ard Denning takes the role of the 1.50 Fons in the
and held a tin dinner pail in his hand. His face was frank, open ovage in Mr, Heyerdahl's “Kon-
and honest. i : : {tiki,” and as an exciting tale of | But what kind of a man Was .gienture—a true one you are His grandfather and father had
Joe Hill?
personality, and has conducted tection, therefore they owed the “For Gandhi was a moral man,| 4:00 TV Rengers 8:30 Show of Shows | 44
Now we have the story of that)..." coorch to produce a Empire their services in times of and a civilization not richly en-| 4:45 Armchair 9:00 To Be An'cd |g. lwork that is definitive. crisis, he argued. dowed with morality felt still] Theater 9:30 Wrestling
independence, but for equal rights assassin’s bullets ended his life.” 12:45 Weather
for Indians as citizens of the Em-
Did he die a martyr, ¢ jikely to encounter its equal been active in Indian politics, and
to the cause of labor, or was he i {Mohandas h — for. . ohandas himself went to Eng- i ? a murderer, as charged? TOFS Jomg time. lland in his youth to study law, Pire, and for self-rue for his War on the Indiana Front se . = = THE STORMS these naked, He practiced the profession for country. oi
WALLACE STEGNER, in a bearded men encountered, the several years, and attained an
foreword to his mew novel, “The strange sea creatures — whale/income of $25,000 to $30,000 a it was natural that he braved the a Preacher and the Slave,” warns!sharks, snake mackerel and the year in South Africa. «superstition of centuries, and mM * {to-authors upon request from the g Dittoront fume sach day us that he is writing neither a|blood-thirsty sharks themselves—| s = a launched his fight to free the un- } nwar 0 ar OVING exposition Press, 251 Fourth Ave-| Wh comet tne worl $10 | \touchables from their age-old nue, New York 10. | 5 correct tunes worfh $25
history of the IWW nor a blog-|all make for exciting reading. ! raphy of Joe Hill, though Joe i¢| The little craft made the 4300- 37, that Gandhi began the austere his protagonist. The IWW poet mile voyage to a Polynesian is- life. His reasons for doing it, and | and song writer was put to death/land in 101 days. In landing, the his struggles in -achieving this’ by the state of Utah in 1916, raft was crushed on treacherous|goal, are traced at length by Mr. | after having been convicted of reefs, and the crew barely escaped | Fischer. But the outcome was
murder.
(that: The IWW, of course, claimed] Whether or not the author, «using the clay that was there Joe as a martyr, and Joe stead-/proved that primitive man could}, + i {he turned himself inio another) fastly denied guilt up to the hour negotiate the wide Pacific in so! of his death. And Mr. Stegner,ifrail a craft is beside the point. | cage of second birth in one life-!_
relying upon certain facts avail- He did prove that such a voyage (in. » - he : : | he said. “I'm hired to teac able, builds his own Joe Hill intomade by modern man could pro-| Gandhi's first important in-| 3 ready to man the barricades if BE Bard I'm aol hired 10 CAITY i a complicated character and an|vide material for a really en-|y,vement with legal authority “% teresting one, grossing book. began in South Africa. Indians, |
b imported as laborers, were the, . : Reinforcements came from pest job we can under the eir{Ini ye Book Makes Case \victims of firm racial ancrimna- Tf Miners nearby towns. The village of New! motances.” : " tion. They were restricted by | Waverly sent about a dozen peo-| TT EE i
. * or Life in Reverse legisiation was proposed. iat ii i TET 3 ol. Civil resistance became his "THE MAN WHO LIVED BACKWARD." A novel. By Malcolm|weapon. Ross. New York, Farrar, Straus, $3.50. This instrument was not an oF Re AEE a Ee TL Stw cach. prise. ave sheen pets
“The Man Who Lived Backward,” by Malcolm Ross is the bi-\gan to be compulsive, Gandhi zarre story of a man who did just that—Mark Shelby, born, 1940, would ease up. “Civil resisters,
died 1865.
Shelby moved backward through time. He began his service in| 5, World War I by marching in a victory parade, then went on to aght| S } w : jaamp. vided up so that all township apprentices at the Indiana State in France. He would read of a disaster—perhaps a shipwreck—in mar oman
his newspaper, and hasten next| day to the departure point to see the victims boarding. { But he was, of course, unable. erge that the longer a man to prevent the tragedy: the eventijjves, the more complicated and
had, for him, already: occurred. burdensome life becomes. j t He was on the wrong side of For Shelby, of course, the com- a Srim Underground vote nad dec, tween the two prep:schools. | Indianapolis Beickiayers Union, |plexities in the lives of those VIG HE ay n Principal Willlam Helms said) Local No. 3, which sponsored Mr. time. laround him unravelled. For ex-. |brought up would be. he plans to open the Onward| Showalter, received a large gold The romance in his life began, ample, a friend he “met” first | Select Boy, 18 ' school Monday under the old sys- trophy. .
for him, as a boy of 6, when he on a morgue slab, victim of drink, found himself living with a wom- next day was alive, and, as the an of middle age. But as the years reversed themselves, beyears went by, for him, he grew came a man of means and disolder and she younger, and love tinction. ! blossomed. The experience was,| This is indeed a unique book, * for her, the reverse. As she grew and, once the reader adjusts older, her lover became first an himself to the reversal of.time, a adolescent, finally a child. ™. ifascinating one. a |
| Old but Not Forgotten Automobiles | Described; Stanley Brothers’ History
“GET A HORSE." By M. M. Musselman, Philadelphia, Lippincott, $3.95. re Sm = "THE STORY OF A STANLEY STEAMER." By George ——
New York, Norton, $3. | “A smart, intelligent woman [Just when rescue seemed at hand. |
IT WAS IN 1906, w y when he was |, radation. ONWARD, Sept. 9 (UP) Dnward parents parked their fam-|
He insisted, in fact, that the {ly cars bumper-to-bumper around the town schoolhouse today to| end of “untouchability” was es- prevent high school classes from being moved to the nearby rival sential before India could be- town of Walton. 'come self-governing. . The cars were drawn up in a solid ring to bar workmen from | “His major task, as he saw it, entering the school. An airplane hovered overhead to watch for was to purify India,” Mr. Fischer “invaders” from Walton, and| == 0 4 writes. “England's expulsion men stood around to sound an air tm. School had been kept closed would come as a by-product.” raid alert. this week because of the squabble. | person. His was a remarkable| po. 1. aver hated his enemies. A crowd of 50 to 75 Onward “We're definitely not going to]
- tee — | residents, chiefly women, . stood throw the high school kids out,’ | h school
with their lives.
{the enemy appeared. | Get Reinforcements {out the consolidation program. The teachers and I will do the
. | ple to aid in patrolling the school-! ¢ By ROBERT MUSEL De a od residents of the larger Local Man Wins Fair
___ United Press Staff Correspondent towns of Peru and Logansport of- Bric ) 3 oh | NE CUMNOCK, Scotland, fered to help. kiayer Competition Sept. 9 Rescue workers brought, The ruckus started when Tip-| A silver trowel trophy and =
laws, and even more restrictive] i
" By TOM BOARDMAN implement of force. When it be-| y B |the surface on ‘a stretcher today Turner decided - it would be anted to William (Steve) Show»|after strapping a special oxygen cheaper and better If the com-|_,... ‘winner of the state cham-
‘mask hi t bination grade -and h schools Mask On his fate 10 protest hum on 5 J igh |pionship cantest for bricklayer
Mr. Fischer explains, “hope, by. J P pe Yitrom deadly pockets of “black at Qonward and Walton were di-
{pupils attended grade school at pair, ; ‘Onward ‘and high school at Mr. Showaltar, 3705 N. Illinois. Walls: > defeated Charles Heck Jr., EvansWalton . happens to be Mrs. ville, in the finals of the third foot curtain of the poisonous gas| Turner's home town. But he de- annual contest Thursday. Sixteen {and would be brought up shortly: nied vigorously ‘that his decision apprentices were entered in the The trapped men themselves, fn | 1" ir. A0Y Way connected with) contest, which began last Saturppe selves, Ib |4he intense basketball rivalry be- day.
Officials at the mine entrance [said that an unspecified number |of other trapped miners had been | {able to ‘stagger through a 500-/
» . “= THE BOOK seeks to demonstrate an - argumentive -point— 'that life would be better lived in
| fos
| : T | “They chose an 18-year-old boy. : i | When he reached the-surface Co t i ° | safely, they were told about it on |their connecting telephone line |and a faint cheer could be heard . } ; {coming up to the-pithead shack 6 | i Y AH from Be ratvah tomb. nvit ng our fn X / The boy was conscious, though - pate and dazed. i : in i Be special mask hid WE Teh SAVING $ ps ‘tures and the crowd of séveral| . thundred watchers did not recog- ; :
{nize him immediately. ACCOUNT | The men had been trapped 43
i
and . a half - hours while rescue .|workers dug feverishly to reach '|them through a nearby shaft.)
THE AUTOMOBILE dndustry i the United States 2 litle] of the world" is the caption for [the workers ran into a 500-foot| Having a savings account and building it with more than 50 years old, but rief past makes one of the most’ : . | pocket of the “black damp” which | - oh. : . colorful and nostalgic stories in American history. | Hie. drawing by Aldjdtoy, or leven blowers could not suck from regular deposits is one of the best ways to pronigh Re me ot ra Sram paibe Wiliys. nelia Otis Skinner's new book {tP%, Raft. : | vide for unforeseen emergencies, future opportuniK n, n, v Auburn, Cord, T'lerce-Arrow, : {It t one more peril to the Co : TW ; Stanley Steamer, Peerless, wd Most of them were casualties| of familiar and humorous essays, men mea me ay had sur-| ties. The money you save today is an investment of the depression years en — | “Nyt in May," to be published | zi tain of mud | : . . only such giants as General Mo-itracked down. a 1917 Stanley; Sop} "25 y Dod ! Mead {Toren 2 Jmng Mp 18.5 Te | in greater future security for you and your family. tors, Ford and Chrysler survived.|Steamer and put it back on the ($2 75) ' - : | underground. A lete history of the auto-iroad as his family car. [I = en El A the United States would) He also ns the story of those, - * 14 CONVENIENT OFFICES fill volumes. hardy old ankee automobile ‘ M. M. Musselman, who writes mEkers, te ae wind. The = EVENING LAW COURSES i Fletcher Trust Company makes it convenient to azines, the movies andi ! ccessful, z ol 2 x . ob wag Bo Ee "were rugged individualists. They! Applicat ons Now Being Received for the | _ save regularly. When you open your inferest{kept ‘their Kingfield, Me., factory, 2 yh : ’ ving Savi Ad ie . fic the automobile ~era oa 8 log a, ie expand to} . Following Courses: earning Savings Account at our nearest office you -reading book, “ a Horse.” meet the dema or r cars. | ; 3 . Its skillfully done with a light Customers simply had to wait} FIRST YEAR Labor Regulation Sulawelically become a customer of our Downhand and with plenty of photos their turn. When a car was de- | S————— ? . | town Office — where you con make deposits and to evoke the past Look re ont PA ah Contrauts 1 J paw. downed... withdrawals. And, you can make deposits at any - Another au e pu e no eve in| - i A ———fintieq -this—month—is The Story instaliment buying, paid adver-| Introduction to Low Legislation 1 J of our 14 offices—near home or work—or deposit of a Stanley Steamer,” by George tising ‘or guaranty. They|l pions Court-Research Neootioble Instruments 1 eh AE NOTk OF depo Woodbury. Woodbury, author of thought the name Stanley was ot gon | _ by mail if you wish, free envelopes ore provided. | “John Goffe’s Mill,” tells how heguaranty enough. Usually it was. Torts — Law : | a dd P ! . ’ = | 7 Mere than 90,000 depositors bank here. Just History of Measures EXPERT WATCH and | | ADVANCED Procedure ; ohothane ot of uae Pee Bers in the india ‘l If King Henry I had been a JEWELRY REPAIR . Business Organizations 1 Property 1l—Wills bout ry ve pe sons in ian. smaller man, or had a Jimmy | Reasonable suis Co Sntimates LE £3 En apolis area uses our convenient banking plan. Durante nose, our yardstick oat : | Constitutional Law Research | raf foin : i measure might have been quite Searasieed | Why them different. According to the World FW cn isi] Criminat Law. and Review and Refresher | Book Encyclopedia, the legal] oy ne... Sale TET be ] tf .yard during Hemys - loen] Equity gn x ? ; was the distance from the tip o ee : $ sh . ’ his nose to about the end of hs} | Future Interests: oy ip J AR TNA ay Aad! thumb. ‘Government Contracts ~~ Taxation 1 | - ’ . go ST § we ty ily - oa 3 Ei ry 25 igh | Lan : - TELEVISION. SHOW Every Night | industrial Disability Law Trial Practice £1 URRY See These Models in Operation — Come in and Compare Sets || ~~ Registration—Sept. 25, 26, 27 -
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OIRIAILT [SINLAKI HORIZONTAL 3 Myself
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