Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 June 1951 — Page 3
9, 1051
P's | me
vo missing ame frag on today. e of Guy ssigned to nother. It
e North At-
ates at the away from of specific uture United inst aggres-
earmarking ions use was in a letter 5 Secretaryy U, 8. Dele3, It consti. nterim reply t fall's Gen1 United Namate armed n call for furesistance to
. the Ameri amed in nonkeep from uabble over ch as the resbate on the ue. The exresident Trud seek some ith Congress vecific forces ations cam-
ed the Amerd Air Forces ea and said } the mainte2s as fulfillthe purposes ions of the the uniting
at, after the ) government “extent” to 1ld maintain ited Nations
d today they pparent plot in President the nation’s at a parade
bombs were ds on which d the troops ‘sary of the
Die nn., June 9 's Siamese
. The 7-day-oined at the heart. Their Litchfield, is er condition
" Mind ave planned t when thei
restalling a e behind.
bring sit
-3 Persons Killed |
SATURDAY, JUNE 9,
Big Storm Rips |
Through Dixie;
By United Press | A big storm belt brought
drought-quenching showers to Dixie today, but stirred up severe Wwind-and-lightning squalls — in| tluding eight tornadoes—that left three persons dead in Oklahoma and Virginia. !
The wind-whipped rains lashing, most of the South broke a six. weeks’ dry spell that threatened! 10 ruin many farmers in Missis-| EB ppl, Georgia, Alabama and Tennesasee, But along with the blessed rain-| fall came violent blows that deetroyed houses, schools, and power lines along their path.
; Causes Bus Wreck |
The wind drove a bus off a road in Virginia, causing one death, and Air Force officers were in-
vestigating whether bad weather | caused eight jet bombers of a | flight of 71 to crash in Indiana, | At least seven twisters ripped through scattered sections of] Oklahoma and another was re-| ported in Kansas as the storm front rolled eastward. The biggest Oklahoma tornado! @ppeared as a huge black funnel racing across open fields to the! towns of Corn and Colony in the southwest part of the state last! might. |
terns INsITIIn
Dive in Cellars
Most residents had time to dive for their storm cellars as the twister cut a four - block - long gfath htrough Corn and destroyed two schools and 51 homes in the two communities, Eddie Mergert, 30, was struck by a lightning bolt between the two villages and was killed. Anpther lightning bolt struck and killed Lee Mosley, Sayre, Okla. #25 he worked on the Panhandle A, & M, College farm at Goodwell, in the western part of the state. The southern rainstorm struck ¥rem Virginia to Arkansas. Power 2 lines were knocked out in Arkansas, Alabama and Georgia and: two planes were demolished at: the Clarksville, Ark., airport. I ?
1951 :
vr
EET YETI EYEE REET TITRE ANETTA IEEE REET RETIREE EEA TERE RIOR RAEI '" v p * ak
Dateline: Holl
BEAUTY IN THE SUN. . .Swimming movie star Esther Williams makes good tse of her leisure time by resting beside a pool. She is shown here relaxing between “takes” of her latest movie “Texas Carnival.” It'll be in technicolor. The picture will mark her return to the screen after becoming a mother for the second time. Won't it be nice to see her curvacious figure again?
reESrS RESON EE IRRNE SHEER SEEENT RATERS ESTATE SPER EIA F SERRE E IST A STRESS rr rere sreremenetvneners S. Urged fo Give
Ousted Teacher Wins
Fred C. Brinker, a Wabash ' County school teacher, won an appeal to the Indiana Supreme Court late yesterday in a suit concerning his dismissal. i538 The state's highest court re-: versed the judgment of Wabash! Circuit Court and ordered a new trial. The lower court had returned, a judgment in favor of Merrel D. Coffin, trustee, and Liberty school township. Mr. Coffin sald Mr. Brinker was dismissed because he did not file reports properly: |
An Indianapolis business executive—one of your neighbors—describes his big-game hunt in Africa ... in the Sunday Times tomorrow. It's as thrilling as a trip through the African jungles. Read about the exciting experience of Gene L. Williams, vice president of Gaseteria, Inc. . . . tomorrow . . . in the Sunday Times, It's his own story. >
But the high court ruled Mr. Brinker had filed reports with the school principal as had been done in previous years and said
if he were to be dismissed, he —The FBI office here announced
Arrested by FBI
NEW ORLEANS, June 8 (UP)
and later were blinded. | Dr. R. L. Beurle, of the experi- iodine in heart disease was re-
!mental and research department ported by Dr. Herman L. Blum- oo 0 "0 medicine,’
flashlight, they
LONDON, June 9 (UP)—
{
at St. Dunstan's, wrote in the British Medical Journal that sev-,
eral such devices have been used.!
Carried in the hand
medical su
Radar Units May Help Exploding Atoms
Appeal to High Court ‘Local Man Writes Blind Find Their Way
Of African Safari |
{World-famous St. Dunstan’s Hospital is experimenting with hand-
Used on Heart
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J, June 9 (UP)—Exploding atoms now or ership of the controvarsial| are being used to treat types of Tideland oil fields. carried radar units in an effort , + gisease, a scientist reported) {to give “sight” to the blind. | The experiment was suggested| These exploding atoms are 'by fliers who used the electromic radioactive iodine, produced in |“eyes” on World War II missions the atomic energy pile at:Oak lands. The legislation was pro-| {Ridge, Tenn. Use of the radio-| posed after the Supreme Court ©
today.
gart, professor of Harvard Medical School.
Dr. Blumgart- told the annual meeting of the American Heart) like a Association the radioactive iso“bounce” radar tore when administered under Licensed Nursing Homes yester-| pervision cuts down the/day elected Mrs. Alice Wilson,
~ CHICAGO, June §--Meat supplies shrank on some butcher ‘counters and in the nation’s leading packing houses today as the country prepared for a possible major beef shortage, The American Meat Institute sald 95 of the country's biggest beef producing plants reported they dressed 76 per cent fewer cattle this week than in the corresponding week last year, i
| By United Press
WASHINGTON, June 8 (UP) Republicans agreed today to help rush controls extension legisiation through Congress, but the administration had a new head. ache with the beef price rollback. As President Truman won assurances of co-operation from leaders of both parties for axtension of the Defense Production Act, the House Agriculture Com{mittee threatened to lead a farm
{veto of the beef order.
iit will decide within a few days {what—if any-—action to take if)
tithe beef order “immediately.” |
| President Truman was reported
{to have told congressional leadlone. He was sald to have told) {the group he knows as much) | about beef as most other people, |
{hurt the beef industry. i { Republican assurances of co- | operation in pushing through ! legislation | came from Sen. Homer E. Cape-| {hart (R. Ind.), ranking GOP| | member of the Senate Banking | Committee. i | Sen. Capehart, who attended a! | White House meeting late yesterday with other congressional leaders and top mobilization of- | fieials, assured Mr. Truman that| | Republicans will work to get “the | best controls we can” out of the { House and Senate Banking Com- | mittees.
|
States Tideland Oil
WASHINGTON? June 9 (UP)— | The Chamber of Commerce of the ! United States urged Congress today to give individual
states |
Hoosier Profile |By Joe Allison
BILL 18 a dipiomat. ~~ He's also a top-flight complaint
on municipal functions, and a personnel expert who must hire éxpensive technical help on a budget based on pre-war tosts, : All this is just incidental, however, to the principal job. Oficially Bill is Willlam H. Hunt, the City Civil Engineer, City of Indianapolis. For more than 14 years Bill Hunt has been designing sewers, streets and manholes, checking on proposed changes in private property which might affect the city and the hundreds more tasks for which his office is responsible.
He hasn't been City Engineer
He started with the office in 1930 after several years as a private Sontractal, ! *
*
HE WAS GRADUATED from Technical High School in 1927 and tried independent home bulldBut in 1928, on an October day commonly known as Black Friday, the bottom fell out of buginess. And Bill's business was no exception.
ng for awhile,
In 1930 he went to work as a
the City Engineer's office under the administra. tion of Mayor Reginald Sullivan. There he remained, advancing through street and sewer design work, until shortly after Peari Harbor, when he volunteered for duty with the Army.
As a warrant officer with the 2
lery Battalion at Ft. Monroe, Va, Mr. Hunt served more than three and a half years, receivbloc drive for a congressionalling his discharge. | After a brief stint with the City Engineer in | Committee members authorized 1945, Mr. Hunt joined a private engineering firm {Chairman Harold D. Cooley (D.| where he specialized in design of sewers and {N. C.) to tell the administration sewage treatment plants,
+
WITH THE Jan. 1, 1948, return of a Demotithe government does not cancel cratic administration under the late Mayor Al
Feeney, Mr. Hunt returned to
| Despite this action, however, office as project engineer on the Shelby St. under-
pass. .
Early in 19049 he was named assistant City {ers the beef program is a good Engineer under M. G. “Ole” Johnson.
w
clerk, a whiz
all that time.
draftsman in
Bill Hunt...
d Coast Artilsiderable detail
self,” Mr. Hunt about not being Other ruffied
Hunt and Mayor Feeney had hoarded all the cement in the city. At great length and in
front of her home needed repair. “She was willing to have the work done her-
“Engineer must be diplomat.” how the curb im: rt
she des
said, “but she sure was angry: able to get the cement.” RE
citizens must be told that “
ects of great interest to the individual must wait"
the engineer's
to get jobs done
When Mr. Johnson resigned June 30, 1950, Mr,
Hunt was.advanced to his present
That's where the diplomacy, complaint clerk,
and doesn't think the order will personnel expert—and engineer—jobs started. | The old saw says, “Hall hath no fury like ‘a
woman scorned.”
Mr. Hunt can vouch that the fury of the to extend controls citizen whose plea for a sewer, or a new street,
has not been answered immediatel
“Most complaints I get are legitimate and
reasonable ones,” he said. * < + BUT NOT S80 the woman who day last fall.
She insisted, violently, that Mr.
post. experience,
difficult to keep of city salaries.
when he's home of Holland, and There he re
y is far worse.
called him one
until larger, more urgent city jobs are completed. This, Mr. Hunt declares, is never easy. Some don't understand--ond others won't. . One of the biggest problems of the city engineer, Mr. Hunt says, is that of knowing how
tangled in red tape.
THIS, HE INSISTS, comes only with
4 WB -
without becoming hopelessly les.
ton ¥
5
* ¢ »
Personnel problems recently have been : plying, he points out, because it is increasingly
qualified men at the present level
Tre But all these problems fade for Bill Hunt:
with his wife, Ernestine, a native his 7-year-old son, Bill Jr. & laxes with his “retired” cocker.
spaniel, with which he has hunted over most of Indiana and parts of Wisconsin, and thinks of new fishing trips, a No. 1 pastime,
won y
|
3 Hoosier Gls | Listed Wounded, 4 Missing in Korea
Three Hoosier soldiers are listed as wounded and four as missing in action on the latest Defense Department casualty list, WOUNDED
The Chamber recommended in {a letter to the House Judiciary)
ruled ment
that the federal governhas “paramount rights”
Nursing Homes Elect
! Committee that Congress pass a | pending law which would give i states title to the offshore oflett, Mitchell.
Pfc. Martin H. Lee, husband of Mrs. Carolyn J. Lee, Portland. Sgt. 1/0 Kenneth KE. Pruett, husband of Mrs.
Sgt. Vernon B. Smith, husband f Mrs. Rosa M. Smith, Evansville. » i MISSING IN ACTION | Pvt. Jackie D. Blair, son of Mrs. Myrtle O. Goff, Bloomington.
Sgt. 1/¢c Norbert A. Brzyckl, Delegates to the sixth conven-'son of Mr. and Mrs. John A.| to alter Gen. Ridgway's tion of the Indiana Association of Brzycki, Chesterton. |
Cpl. Jesse L. Perkins, son of (Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Perkins,
Mi
ay Rebuff |
Businessmen TOKYO, June 9 (UP)—Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway has upset American businessmen in Japan by refusing an honorary membership in their Chamber of Commerce, it was disclosed today. He informed the chamber by letter last week that his duties as
Rid
any national group. Miffed chamber officials point-|
Marcia A. Pru- ed out Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Air Force
Gen. Ridgway's predecessor as! Allied commander, had accepted. They sald Gen. Ridgway's hon|orary membership would not ‘have placed any obligations on (him.
did not reflect a lack of interest
television program at next Allied Supreme Commander did convention of the American not permit his affiliation with cal Association. The
{pital
A week of privats talks fatled | 11fe. Sada { Jane Gail, decision. yr. Ww. M The supreme commander said Tex, is b {nis inability to accept the offer Farley F
Operations on Patients To Be Color Televised = PHILADELPHIA, June 9 (UP); ~-A caravan of ambulances cars. rying 45 doctors, 60 patients and’
Pennsylvania Hospital here today for Atlantic City, N. J. Sm
the patients on a medical colop=
Medi telecasts will originate at Atlantic City Hoss
Plane Takes - Sick Girl to Texas io DENVER, June 9 (UP)—A 14" year-old Texas girl was to be [flown to Galveston In an Alr
Force plane today to: save her: 3 : eg el
diughter of Mr. ane’
or
should have been notified on or|the arrest of five Houston men beams off objects barring the way . ase a Al ! before May 6, 1949. Instead, he yesterday for transporting gam- lactivity of the thyroid gland and|Pierceton, president. She will take Montgomery. in the chamber. Its advice, he [of the ‘Hospital here said was notified May 10, four days bling equipment across the Texas- of blind persons and give a warn-\thys lessens the work of the office Jan, 1, succeeding Mrs.! Major Harold K. Slater, son of| said, would always be “gratefully her condition might be relieved by after school closed. {Louisiana state line. ing signal. heart. Honour Huffman, Logansport. [Vernon R. Slater, Huntington. received.” flying her to sea level, pals a x 2 We, the Women— : [Blackwood on Bridge— a8 Doing the U ted You Need Not Reiterate to Sh s Aids Your Personalit VN pi Ids Your “ersonality You Have First-Round Control % By RUTH MILLETT “ oy ” id Mr. M ; HAVE YOU SURPRISED anybody lately—your | YOU EXPERTS Clive ME 4 Jom, sud I. UZ | orth dealer. a husband, your friends, your family, or even yourself? = | frankly, as he watched the Bay ” sy ro Ly ‘Both sides vulnerable. AES Have you done anything to make those who know What do you mean?’ demande r. Champion, . NORTH 2 ou best say: “I didn’t know you could do that” or, “I had { “Why, you've told me time and again never to lie about aces, Mr, Champion : | Ya jdea you were interested in such-and-such”? "Or to make | Mr. Muzzy replied, “and on this hand Jou had two aces. ut you oan] ss 3) yourself think, “I didn’t know I could do stowed ouiy one by bidding five diamonds. You ean e your — yg 88513 Ey that”? J OL » D4 . a If you haven't, take the next opportunity 3 On the bidding I mew DY ace of spades was a dead card, wien 5 oar 8 that comes your way to do something you've sald iH amp oa tor ge at | first round control had to be &/ ae pa) Mr a never thought you could do. It might be SE ynats the Teasth | 0) Br no- blank suit as Mr, Champion had x 30 7 § 3 saa : making anything from a speech to a slip- it when responding the ace, himself. Holt 3 Hono : cover. All that matters is that it is some- trump. Later, when Mr. Masters bid 54 3 4]
thing nobody,
expected now
Ruth Millett
fn the past.
including yourself, would think
you could do. What's the importance of doing the un-
and then? Well, it has several
* good effects on the personality. It gives you a new confidence in your. self to find that you can do something you always figured you couidn’t do and so avoided
And it adds a 16t of zip t@& your personality so far as others are concerned. There is always admiration behind the statement, “I had no idea you could do so-and-so.”
# - x
| AND UNLESS YOU CONSCIOUSLY do the unexpected and tackle the challenging opportunity occasionally, you get pretty
set and narrow in your ways.
You become one of those persons
who are forever saying, “I couldn’t possibly do such-and-such.” And that is a mighty easy idea to sell to others.
So if you want to be proud
of yourself and interesting to
other people don't set a lot of limitations on what you can and
can't do.
Tackle something difficult now’ and then—something that
seems difficult simply because yo talent or ability to do it. And s
u always figured you hadn't the how yourself and others that it
is something you can do as well as the next person.
The Social Scene—
Week's Activit Dinner Session,
A dinner meeting and a card
on the social calendar of many Indianapolis residents for next week. | The Indianapolis Chapter of the Daughters of the American Colonists will meet at 5 p. m, Tuesday in the Louis XIV parlor of the Claypool Hotel for a social hour. Following a dinner, the report,
ies Include
Card Party
party are among events checked
MUSEUM GUILD HAS L
guests yesterday at a luncheon in
M. Bugbee, William F. Wiggins
UNCHEON-—New members of the Children's Museum Guild were Club. Among them were (ft to right) Mesdames Charles M. Harrison, Alex Clark, Robert B. Stone, Robert B. McConnell and F. L. Layden. Other new members, not shown, are Mesdames Chester C. Schuetr; William D. Gamble, Ben
Meridian Hills Country
and Thompson Kurrie.
Delegates Announced
Four Indiana delegates will attend the three-day conference of] the General Federation of Wom-|
|
of the delegate to the soclety’s national assembly will be given en's Clubs at Mt. Union-College,|
during a business meeting. Mrs. Lewis W. McCormick is president, of the local Chapter and Miss Margaret R. Waters is in charge of .arrangements for the meeting. ‘ A ladies’ bridge and canasta
party will be held at 1 p. lS
Wednesday in the Indianapolis Country Club. * James Mason Denny, son of Dr. and Mrs. James W. Denny, 84 N. Audubon Road, and Marti . Ruth Knauer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Knauer, 5034 Carrollton Ave, will be graduated from Oberlin College during com-
will receive a bachelor's degree in music. Seven other Indiana students will be graduated.
Hospital Guild Plans
ummer Party
the St. Francis Hospital Guild,
will be held June 22 In Ayres’ niceq of the GFWC and the Ohio)
-Auditorium, Committee heads include Mesdames G, L. McFarland, Fred W. Nordsiek, Edward Trimpe, Louis Groh, Harry Pandolfo, Charles Gaither, Charles Schneider, John
mencement exercises Monday.
Mr. Denny will be awarded an O'Connell and Katherine Als-
A. B. degrees and Miss Knauer
\ .
‘meyer.
| Alliance, O.,
| Thursday.
Representating Indiana will be Mrs, Oscar A. Ahigren, Whiting son, the new president. All junior, first vice president of GFWC; Mrs. past presidents of the chapters way MTS. have been invited to become coun- Monday.
Claude 8. Steele, Knox; Cogley Cole, Vevay, and Mrs. {Henry P. Humphrey, Osgood. | Theme of the conference will dom.” It is held under the ausFederation of Women’s Clubs. |
Installation Set
meeting in the Press Club at 8 p. m. Monday.
’
’
Organizations—
Card Party, Guild Meeting
Among Events for Week
A picnic, card party and White Cross Guild meetings will he on a terrace overlooking the for-
held by organizations next week.
The annual picnic of the Artman Council, ITSC, will be at the | Tuesday through home of Mrs. Lloyd Pottenger, 3400 Lafayette Road, at 11 a. m. | Thursday. . short business meeting will be conducted by Mrs. Elza Hen-|
A
leil members,
{heim at 1:30 p. m. Friday. Mrs,
{Darnaby will be hostesses.
Several unit meetings
| Officers of Theta Sigma Phi been scheduled by the White Cross will be installed at a dinner Guild of Methodist Hospital next
week in the Service Center.
The Third Christian and Broad-
fo J
X { A card party will be held by A summer party, sponsored by \.° «gconomic Policy and Free-/the Ladies Auxiliary of the Alten-
Elizabeth Anding, Mrs. {Emma Swank and Mrs. Robert E,
have
Baptist groups will meet
. On Tuesday the Grace Methodist, Calvary Baptist and Bellafre units will meet. Wednesday meetings have been scheduled by the Broadway Meth-
ship groups. The Temple Sisterhood, Municipal Garden and Ben Davis units will meet Thursday. Meeting Friday will be the Riverside Park, Prentice and Oaklandon units,
odist, Quaker and Perry Town-|
This was over Mr. Muzzy's head. “An ace is an ace,” he said, stub|bornly, “Brilliant deduction,” sneered) Mr. Chantpion. “But you are missing the point completely. Once is enough to show any first round control.”
Hlustrate Convention NATURALLY, ir. Champion was right. This deal illustrates another part of the Blackwood convention, designed to handle situations where blank suits are involved and where one partner has cue-bid an opponent's bid suit. Mr. Masters’ two-spade bid showed first round control of spades and a terrific hand. His
| |
Symphony Unit to Meet
imes State Service
T! COLUMBUS, June 9 -- Miss announcement highlight today’s
| misie Sweeney: will entertain the | Columbus unit of the Women's {| Committee of the Indiana State {Symphony Society Monday | {evening in her home here. A buffet dinner will be served {mal Italian .gardens of Miss Sweeney's home. After the dinner, guests will hear the Cincinnati Music Drama |Guild’s performance of Rossini’s |opera “The Barber of Seville” in [the audjtorium of Christ Church. This is the third annual appearance of the group. Featured in the cast will be Georgina Moon, Robert McSpadden and Hubert | Kockritz. | Attending the dinner and opera from Indianapolis will be Mr, {and Mrs. Anthony Brooks, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin E. Curle, Mr. and Mrs. Howard B. Pelham, Mesdames Charles Latham, Jack lA. Goodman, George Fotheringham, David Willams Jr, and William ‘Macgregor Morris.
| |
| OUTSIDE of the suit in which the
"contract.
{ (Possible 216) —Mrs. L. J. Black-
four no-trump he was asking his partner how many aces he had
cue-bid had been made. It was Mr. Champion's duty to deduct the ace of spades (if he had it) in replying to the four no-trump bid.
Avoided Hopeless Contract THIS HE DID and thus the partnership stayed out of the tempting but hopeless grand-slam
Note that Mr. Champion did not have to have any MORE aces to respond with five hearts. He just had to have the right aces,
CJ 1062 C0138 SOUTH Mr. Masters S—none H-K Q 7 6 4 DK QJ 2 C—A Q 38 4 The bidding: NORTH EAST SOUTH 1H 18" 32 4 6
ow
Zn -
3 H Pass 5D Pass
wowi¥y
hi
g = {ICH
for example, he would both of them and could then have bid the
i
If he had held the two red aces,
Bridge Results—
Tournament
"Miss Sweeney fo Scores Listed Entertain Group
Results of play by two local bridge clubs and a tournament
bridge news. Winners follow:
St. Joan of Arc Club, Wednesday night: N & 8 (Possible Score, 216)—Mrs.- V. R. Rupp, Mrs. E. J. Ittenbach 151.5; Mrs. William Peele, Mrs. Donald Graham and Mrs D. A. Sweeney, Miss Winifred Kavanaugh 117 (tie); E & W
more, Mrs, John Kirby 131.5; Mrs. Vernon Warner, Mrs. E. C. Ball 121; Mrs. George Ryan, Mrs. Kathleen Abbett 125.5. Marott Club, Tuesday night; N & 8 (Possible 264)—Mrs. Mary Welch, O. K. Fraustein 170; Jerome Jacobs, R, W. Lee 161; Sidney Kasle, 160; BE & W (Possible 264)--Mrs. Arth Falender, Pettijohn 160; Mrs, Alex Metzger, Mrs. Kirby 159; Mrs. EW.
Chaille, Mrs. William Epstein 156.
The On-to-the-Nationals tournament is scheduled July 7 and 8 in the Seelbach Hotel, ville. Thé women's pair, men's pair and
Easley Blackwood pe! Mrs. Kenneth|y
slam,
Chi Omega E Plans Rush -
LEY i
| Alumnae To Meet °
Here Tuesday = °F
Plans for summer rush activi ties will be made Tuesday by Indianapolis Alumnae of Chi Omega Sorority, They will meet at 7:30 p. m. in the 38th St. branch, Merchants National Bank. : _ Committee appointments ! announced by Mrs. Stephen Bak. er, president. ar : They include Mrs. Frid Wolf and Miss Jean Fox, p ; Mesdames Royce Stevens, P. T. Parker, Jack Catterlin and William:
mixed pair events will be played
