Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 August 1951 — Page 9
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Inside Indianapolis By Ed Sovola
PICKLED HAMS (not actors) at Stark, Wetzel & Co., are the pride and joy of two men, Paul Dotts and Ed Cosper Jr. Their main interest in life is ham and when I stumbled into their domain they welcomed me with an open pickling barrel. The barrel was empty. There are many ways a ham can get pickled. Paul and Ed claim the way they do it is the best method. I._saw how they do it and. disagree Hearty: I'm not going to change. @
CYWAY (Rive, Ja-aose to a ham 1han meets
a
. ivy e and Jhustard, Grandma would be, sur- u gv EATS MNES G0 Pol BIR ey App
pickle and cure a A Paul and Ed can do it in a fraction of the time and have every one of the thousands taste the same. The two picklers are able to handle 800 hams a day. That's a lot of ham. I felt self-conscious in the room. The formula for the juice the men squirt and pump into hams is secret. All they would tell me is that it's a briny solution. They wouldn't tell me how much proof it was. Same procedure "oo “> by soaking. IT'S EXHILARATING to be around men who are interested in theil work even though, from an outsider’s point of view, pickling hams every day might get monotonous. They-keep their interest up by taking pride in the result. Besides, they both love ham and they know if their acute tastebuds aren't satisfied, they have themselves to blame. Paul has been pickling for five years and Ed
you needle it. to locate the ma inch and inserts
the juice on. a balloon. The
AUTOMATIC pickler the weig amount of fluid
For seven da of juice. Then t
and eats.
for four. Sometimes Paul pumps the juice into I asked Expe picnic hams and Ed the big ones. Then they'll pest. He answe switch. It’s a tricky job to handle the big ones tion that with ry where one main artery is used to send the juice tops,
throughout every ounce of meat. I WAS SORRY that I didn't bring an umbrella. Every time the pickling juice sprayed me Ed claimed it was an accident. There were too many direct hits for it to be an accident. Ed explained the hams in the barrels were .... oo on ham walking around the day before. Once a pig gives more. . . .” his all to Stark and Wetzel, it doesn’t take long I changed th before he loses his identity as a pig. Overnight wat ready the internal temperature of the carcass is re- . . longer tim duced to 38 degrees and by afternoon, Paul and blame the guy f Ed are pickling hams. Probatis. the The room they work in is kept at a tempera- ) ture of 40 degrees. They never have trouble keeping cool at their jobs. . ; PAUL WAS using the spray needle on the picnic hams. The ham is jabbed several times and as the needle enters the meat, Paul shoots a spray of pickling juice. A ham is increased in weight by 10 per cent. After it goes through the original
able to tell his o city ordering a pot luck.
dering into the idea that two m pickling juice in
more. I
every part of the ham in a few seconds.
of the whole business begins.
“I am my ow
afternoon was Paul's and Ed's enjoying their work. much thought except to devour it,
and be proud of doing the best The next ham wonder how
There's More to Ham Than Meets the Rye | :
ORT aaa OBYrer weet
in pipeline for the pickling juice.
Once it is located, Ed stretches it about an
the single-hole needle and turns
You could see the ham inflate like
main artery carries the fluid to This took Grandma several months
. > on
scales instantaneously show the ht change and when the proper has gone into the meat. No
guesswork is involved.
ys the hams remain in a barrel hey’'re smoked and the best part Somebody buys
rt Ed how he liked his ham the red without a moment's hesitae bread and a glass of beer was
A man after my own heart.
os
HE WAS EQUALLY as confident about being
wn product when he's out of the ham sandwich and has to take
n ham expert,” Ed. “You can’t s. Stark and Wetzel hams are e subject. Ed looked as if he
to talk about the finished product
e than I cared to listen. Can't or trying to boost his product.
best thing 1 got out of the statement about You seldom give a ham
Before wanpickling department, I had no en would do nothing but squirt to hams. And do it for years job possible. I'll appreciate thousands of
sandwich I eat, many
its a the Pam fetus to men and women there are that I don't know Ed. at the moment, was engaged in pickling about who work every day trying to make life the large hams. He used a hemostat to hold the a little better, tastier, more comfortable for 3 me . .. oh, and you.
artery. It takes a sharp and an experienced eye
It Happened Last Night By Earl Wilson
NEW YORK, Aug.
/]
Nowadays when tele-
of
STEVE GETS
ousefly Guest Star Iron Man of TV
50 to 60 fan letters a day and
sion is just one guest Har after another, it was everybody calls him “Steve.” : a pleasure to see Steve Allen, the new ‘iron “They all say ‘I've never written a fan letter man” of TV, use a fly as a guest star. before,’ ” he said. “I want to get one saying, "I don’t mean a human fly. I mean an ordinary ‘I've written millions of fan letters and here's
another one and Steve, son of dienne of her da
housefly. Steve always eats breakfast on his program. He does 85 hours a week on CBS- TV. That's more than any other person living—or half dead.
80 that’s how the fly came in. prhetically.
was born in New York,
do you care?’ Belle Montrose, vaudeville comey. and straight man Billy Allen but has lived everywhere
“I don't think it's the same flv that keeps For a- while he was a radio announcer. He coming around,” admits Steve. (He's 29, 6-foot-3. spouted the usual excited commercials. wears specs. and is quite normal except that he Call up and order one right now. Do it this plays the tuba.) very moment. The number is , . . Do it now.
‘Well, we turned the camera on him.” Don't delay! . o> < oe : Steve SAYS, “I found out I could sell more - “WE GOT these tremendous closeups of this - just- sittin’ around.” & ' r > Ba *, -
little fly. crawlifg around inside a cup. People applauded. TI don’t know what's so great about a fly. ‘But they loved it.” So the fly's always welcome to help itself to Steve's breakfast. It's about the only thing he ean make use of without finding that it's got some kind of a union. Steve likes to make use of things that tome in up unexpectedly. If something goes wrong on most is tricks st the show. he elaborates on it, instead of brushing One day he
Go to Church N
For only 29,
STEVE'S FANS know L pianist and composer (author of big-seller,
accomplished “Let's Indeed. he's just
he's an
ext Sunday”).
signed a Columbia recording contract.
this Iron Man McGinty of TV
is a great performer—and he’s only been on TV New York since Christmas.
What he enjoys ich as the balloon gag. brought on a balloon, and said
past fit. ; Ne : . “This has some writing on it. I wonder what it And now the gag-shootink ‘type of comedians js" He blew it up and turned it around before are borrowing { rqas dN uetdtods the camera 3 > ERR 3 LN TE eps a = n The. wring said “Dear Steve, vowre full. A FEW peple may abject, One viewer wrote’ of hot air.” He is, too, and it’s very wvaluible. in, ‘You're supposed to entertain. You eat’ your ¥ breakfast at home, voung man'’ WISH I'D NS Steve's answer to that was to shave on the description of a show, ‘too. He'd had a barber come in and also into the public ey a tailor, to measure him for a suit “There are only three or four things 1 haven't done on the show,” Steve sald, “and vase maker wh those you can't do.” good living. Th
‘
Winfield House By William McGaflfin
LONDON, Aug. 27—O0ne of the world's fanciest homes is Winfield House. In beautiful Regent's Park, one of the most fashionable residential districts in town, stands this Georgian-type man sion surrounded by 14 acres of grounds
PRESIDENT Lewis Douglas a <the house too b
also too pretent to an austerity-r
It is like a country estate in the heart of London. Only the grounds of Buckingham Palace tinued to live .at are larger. government from Fifteen years ago Barbara Hutton, the dime who once lived . store heiress, built this three-story, brick, 35- Morgan. room mansion at a cost of more than a million Winfield House,
TODAY'S WORST PUN: 0 quit
i oe fea] AID THAT: William Gargan's ham "A guy who tries “to get e and gets into the public's hair.” Nat Cole tells of the ‘cause he couldn't urn a
at's Earl, brother.
Hution Dream House To
* - - Be Officers’ Club TRUMAN accepted the gift. But nd Walter Gifford both have felt ig and expensive to live in and fous a place for an ambassador idden nation. So they have con14 Princess Gate, the gift to our another American millionaire in London, the late Pierpont
named after Barbara's grand-
dollars. She spent another million rurnishing it. tather, Frank Winfield Woolworth, has stood idle. No expense was spared to make it a wonder home. The problem was what to do with it. "A year The main marble staircase came from an old after the government accepted the house it was
A special air conditioning plant and warm.
French chateau. was put in to keep every room clear
rumored, without foundation, beth had been offered it.
that Princess ElizaA couple of years ago,
Fach bedroom has an adjoining bathroom with a 60-year-old woman was found murdered in its goldplated taps and doors inlaid with mirrors. grounds. There is an indoor gymnasium, an open air o oo * swimming pool, a tennis sour, and greenhouses RECENTLY ihe house Ras rung with the BARBARA hoped to find happiness in this 1aughter of young boys and girls, children of the house with her second husband, Count Kurt von American military and diplomatic colony here,
Haugwitz-Reventlow. Her newly born son slept who hold meetings of their teen-age-club there. there in a nursery padded with pink kid and A handsome decoration, a relief in stone of the protected against kidnaping by iron barred win- American great seal, was installed over ‘the endows. trance. But the marriage failed and Barbara aban- But what permanent use to make of the
doned the houSe in 1939, putting her furniture in storage. During the war the Royal Air Force used it. Five years ago Barbara, who has been successively Princess Mdivani, Countess von Haug-witz-Reventlow, Mrs. Cary Grant, and Princess Troubetzkoy, gave the house to the United States government as a home for American ambassadors in London.
house?
be newly furnish
officer rank. Regular meal
Opening at Columbus Tyner Promoted Span Set for Sept. 15 A: Morris Plan
Times State Service Ls . 7 om William J. Tyner has been 'OLUMBUS, Aug.” 27—Formal ) COLUME! wing elected assistant secretary of the
dedication services for the open- 4 , . i Indianapolis Morris Plan. » Ind. 46 bridge ug of nae jew Ing $ bridg Mr. Tyner has been loan officer
over ‘White River into Columbiis ™ in Wayne County last. night, but will be the afternoon of Sept. of Morris an . no one was injured fatally. Invited to the dedication of ». three years and § + State police said eight cars
which opens ap- in the personal § proaches here from the west and loan business 12 § southwest on Rds. 46 and 31A (years. A World are Gov. Schricker, Lt. Gov. John War II veteran, A. Watkins and State Highway he was graduCommission members: Jap Jones, ated from Tech- | Albert J. Wedeling, Thomas B. nical High School McDonald and Samuel Hadden. land attended In-
diana University. Highland Boy, 8,
He and his wife : ‘a nd daughter Succumbs to Polio By United Press
live on RR % The new officer : HIGHLAND, Aug. 27 (UP) is Boy Scout executive committee Philip Prucy, 8-year-old son of member. He belongs to New Mr. and Mrs, Edward Prucy. died Bethel Saturday of Infantile paralysiz. maker Businessmen’s Association,
Baptist ‘He was Lake County's fifth polio Masonic Lodge 714, and Indianfatality this year. iapolis Cancer Seay,
900-foot span
Mr. Tyner
it will be an officers’
Church, Wana-
That was the problem. Now it has been solved.
Winfield House is to ed and converted into an Ameri-
can officers’ club for the use of officers from the three services stationed in London and civilians of
sg will be served and, “country club.”
in general,
20 Autos Are Involved
In Three Accidents
RICHMOND, Ind. (UP)
were involved
third.
|riously. Troopers pavement for the accidents.
Shirt Tale
NORWOOD, Mass., Aug. 27 (UP) — Two policemen stopped a car yesterday and were shocked when the driver stepped out wearing only a shirt and shoes. They booked him for dunkenness when he offered the explanation: “It was hot,”
Aug. 27 ‘Three separate highway accidents involving a total of 20, autos occurred within a few hours
in one collision, seven in another and five in a, Nine persons were hospitalized, but none was hurt seblamed wet]
»
>
The Indianapolis Times
. MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1951
MEET aT pee His rae ee reer wx Ea a Tr conversation with a neighdorhood pal is credited by an Indianapolis soldier now serving with the 31st Infantry (Dixie) Division here, for steering him down the road to national fame as a rod and ree! fly and bait caster. As evidene of his Pvt. Charles Sutphin, of 4968 ° more than 80 trophies now
W. 1tth ‘St. and a member of adorn the Sutphin household. = = 5
SUCCess
Company B of the 200th In- v PVT. SUTPHIN'S present fantry Regiment holds three lh : ’ Me duties with the former Alaamateur world records garnered bama-Mississippi National in stiff national competition. Guard outfit as an infantryman He is tied with Adelea Mc- have prevented him from enterDonald of Chicago for accuracy ing much competition, and distance with 3 ounce Since his induction into the bait (99 feet). Earl.Osten, of Army last February he has been Long Beach, Cal, and Pvt in one meet—the Ft. Jackson ait and 1 a. « ; Sutphin jointly hold the world bait and fly casting tourney. rd a Ge Modestly, he requested his Fecon mn all-accuracy (383 (cores not be official because of feet) and the Dixie Division his experience, and relinquished soldier is sole possessor of the top prize to the runnerup. title for accuracy with the bait It was at this contest he met bob, old tournament friend, Ben ia . : Hardesty, three-time national And it all goes back to Re : ' fly and bait-casting champ who that afternoon in 1940 when 1 who was giving an exhibition. saw a friend of mine casting in Representing the Shakespeare his yard,” the champ says. “He Co. of Kalamazoo, Mich fascinated me and it wasn’t Mr. Hardesty tested his skill in long before he had both my casting fy and bait lures into father and 1e practicing :kish rings We've been doing it ever since = n n a n = ne 3 PVT. SUT ALTHOUGH the “Yankee” in Ss as «( a V VT. SUTPHIN has come a’ tho “Dixie Division” has been long way since he entered the unable to cast much while at
national juniors at St. Louis in Ft. Jackson, he has dabbled in
1940 where “I made I pretty other athietics. : As a pitcher for his B Comsad showing.” During the en- 4 i 8 § the en- pany softball team, the right-
suing Six years, the free-reel handed speedball artist won 14
ing sharpster snared eight na- games without a loss. Pitchtional junior titles in" the flv ing for the 200th regimental and bait casting class to gain Softballers he racked up 10 widespread attention from fish. mound decisions and was ni tagged for three defeats.
ing enthusiasts A graduate of Speedway High
During 1946-47-48, in an ef School, Sutphin is the son of fort to pick up invaluable tour Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sutphin of nament experience. he traveled 1968 West 11th St His wife, from Indianapolis to Long the former Miss Katy Heaton, Beach, ( and to Ft. Worth of Indianapolis, is living with Tex., to try his luck and her husband in Columbia, 8. C..
Each time he other title.
carted home an- he is stationed at Ft.
The School Picture—
er 5 va
PAGE
ul
MEET THE CHAMP—Pvt. Charles Sutphin—a whiz with a rod.
No Relief Seen For Soaring Enrollment
By DAVID WATSON erage of 1000 babies are born (Secomdd of Four Articles) here each month. The 8975 born : ENDogts Or here-hr- 157 are mow entering the” THE -ENDeofssming-en classrooms.
city's rollment figures in the Indian- :
A major jump in births was apolis piiblic schools ig not in recorded in 1946, when the total sigh reached 11,688 for the year. 2713 sight. more than in 1945. There are no odds on the outcome in the race of construction . gn versus classroom Population. THE FIRST important rise in
primary grade enrollment started ‘about feur years ago. It. has been : .climbing steadily~ wmgnce. ’ While there were 41,750 chilTrends ‘of things. to co re ; Bs ome “were «dren--in the primary grades in
seen/M pre-school “erirollment es- 104% 2] 4 timates-compiled” by admnistra- 1947, the enrollment tabulations
“The only answer is build, build, build.” 1s the: way’ one educator expressed it. £ >
; : i for ‘last February ' disclosed an tors in their planning, Thev an- IQ Heit I 8. ey ah. lementary count of 44/788. icipate ‘1000 more elementary x ; : . . ) . 3 Despite “the rise expected next grade children this fall than last. . They expect 400 more in the month, full brunt of the increase high schools and bas don i will not hit the schools until SChOOoIS ¢ ad- “+ eer in the |} An ey 8 next year T'hat is when the y = we the kindergartens babies of 1946 will become schoolWithin the next five years an yge children
increase of 10.000 children is expected in the elementary schools As those children grow older, the heavy enrollment figure will be passed on to the high schools.
clagaroom he school
As the search for space was undertaken board planned transfer of pupils between buildings and districts. This was designed to trim class
” ” : enrollment figures in crowded CURRENT history is the only buildings while using rooms in on , © other units left vacant because sound platform from which the of population distribution planners of public education 4n : : : Indianapolis can work. And a 8 2 major plank in this platform is HERE is the chess pldving the birthrate trend It is planned to transfer about It now is estimated that an av- 51 pupils from School 42 at 1001
| |
}
WELCOME HOMETOWN HARPIST—Six Navy recruits from Indianapolis greeted Mary Spalding, Indianapolis harpist, when she
| was featured soloist with the San Diego Symphony Orchestra in a concert conducted by Dr. Fabien Sevitzky at the Naval Training | | Center in San Diego, Cal. Kneeling in front, left to right: Everett | Taylor, 1903 N. New Jersey St., and Dudley H. Dunn, 1638 N. Belleview PI. Standing, left to right: Gorden Roach, fiance of Miss Lillie Simmons, 2331/; Virginia Ave.; Wallace Driskell, 1631 Leonard St.; John Minardo, 16281/; E. Washington St.; James Cooper, 2259 | Jackson St,
lconditions also were
| United | for problems |
|natural role.
W. 25th St. to School 41, at 3002
adar St
, reducing No. 42's class
department. at School.
MOVE ° involves kindergarten pupils
High ANOTHER
Technical : transfer of:
average 26 RNR: en EigRth, SERA BURL from from a-rented building. at . 4307 + Another 21 pupils would be schools 14,75 and already E. Michigan St." fo. School’ 82 transferred from School 87, at have heen enfolled Hie] at 940 N. Wallace St, 2411 Indianapolis Ave, to 41." gchgol 10 would thus enroll ~~ Vhen this takes place. pupils eliminating a transportation pupils from Kindergarten grades formerly enrolled at 82 from problem through the 7th, with an average Schools 57. at 5435 E. Washington The greatest overload in these’ class size of 36. St., and No. 77. at 401 N. Arlingschools was found to be in the He ea - lon Ave, will return to the Senonis ! a Pupils from School 83, at 1501 ccnonl in their district ; third grade. with School 42 con- Kappes St. will be divided pe- |. 1 1 tr, distric next ROE SC riDos rerv i $ Nn VY : “month. ducting classes described as Very ween Schools 46. at 1701 Miller) ; + large > St. and #4! 1902 W. Morris St. They were first taken out of As. of June, 12, School 42° was School 83 will be abandoned tém- their districts because of space
operating gue junior seafiigotaats class in excess of room ayailable This wi: as possible by utilizing the gymnasium and classrooms of the home ‘conomics -and arts units. At theSchool 41 had five vacant
time rooms
same
” n
DURING the last school vear found to be overcrowded at School 10, 12535, Carrollton Ave. On the basis of spring enrollments, class would have run to an
40 pupils next month
Part of this condition caused by three under-sized rooms accommodating 30 children each, This forced a greater load on the other units, Solution to this problem involves transfer of about 70 pupils in the 8th grade to the Rth grade
Sizes
average ol
was
industrial
PEFATILY, caused by small’ en- Shortages at 77.and wn and cone Follniant i venlent transportatiot’ to 62. ~ Imen - ni ~K iy lg About. 70 pupjls “will bé trans- : : . ferred from’ School 80. at 920 E, AN EIGHTH GRADE depart- 624 St. to Broad Ripple High ment would be established at School where two classrooms can
Manual High School to accommo- he made available, These date pupils from School 8, at 520 wilt be in the Sth grade, Virginia Ave. In turn, 6th grade ing the class pupils from Schools 7
pupils reducaverage from 42 13 and 28 pupils to 38
would be transferred to No. 8, In the Arden addition. bounded causing that building to become a by White River College Ave school for 6th and 7th grade 71st St. and Pennsylvania St. pupils only pupils will be transferred from This would relieve crowded the Nora School in Washington School 28, at 931 Fletcher Ave. Township to School 91 at 5111
10 Evanston St room Their nearest building is School
which has a class average of pupils. It would also make
to establish kindergartens at 80, but that unit is too crowded Schools 7, 748 Bates St.; 13, at to take them. Thev will attend 714 Buchanan St. and 28. Each School 91 until new School 59 is
of those schools would then house completed and additions are made ‘pupils from kindergarten through to 80 grade 3. i (Next:
Schools of Tomorrow.)
Their Enemy Is Traditional—
Japs to Need U. S. Aid in Asia
(Note: On Sept. 4, representatives of most of the Allied nations of World War II will meet
| | in San Francisco to sign a peace | treaty first of
with Japan. This is the three dispatches in in which Earnest Hoberecht, Press general manager Asia, discusses Japan's after the treaty is signed and probable role as a free nation, By EARNEST HOBERECHT United Press Staff Correspondent TOKYO, Aug. 27 (UP)~Japan hopes to become a bulwark against Communism in Asia when a peace treaty is signed, but if she does, most Japanese and foreign observers agree, she is going to have to have an army
And to maintain an army big enough for her defense. the Japanese say they are going to have to have U, 8S. aid Until ‘the Japanese army Is ready to guarantee the country's security, the U, ‘8, will have to handle that job alone. It is expected that at least two American divisions will be kept in {Japan after the peace treaty is signed. Individual Japanese believe the most important role they can
play in years to come will be that of a stabilizing influence in Asia, as a deterrant to the spread of communism in this part of the world. This is a traditional and Russia is Japan's {traditional enemy and the Japanlese have a strong dislike for communism,
Program They Want
- The Japanese believe this could be accomplished with a program like this: ONE Creation of a defensive army in Japan. Japan expects
to have a conscript army of per- - haps 20 divisions of 10,000 men
each She does not expect to sta-
started after most American ne. tion troops abroad unles specifi- cupation troops were sent to fight cally requested to by the United in Korea. It will be years before Nations an ajr force or navy can beg
TWO--Use nf trial capacity to process raw materials from the {ree areas of Asia in a combined effort to combat Communist economic aggression THREE~—Japan also expects to participate in the development of
Japanese indus- built up
Need U.S. Support Even then, the Japanese doubt if they can support this kind of force without U. 8. help. A mutual defense treaty, which will probably provide for stationing U. 8. forees in Japan, is in the
other areas of Asia. and there is Works and will probably be signed some indication that the U. §. at the San Francisco conference, plans to call upon Japan to sup- There is only minor Japanese ply technical know-how in coun- opposition to enough rearmament, tries where skilled workers are to protect the country. The loud. lacking $ est opposition comes from the small, but vocal, Japanese Come Loophole In Pact munists Although Japan's new consti- _. There are only 50,000 registered A sta . , tution renounces war, it does not onimunis R the country and about 40,000 more are considered cay Japan cannot have a de- , ; : N fellow travelers. This is a confensive army. . . : ; siderably smaller number -than I'he loophole lies in the phras- the one-time postwar high of logy. Japan “renounces war, or 300.000 Communists. but the Japs the-threat or use of force, as a anese fear that many have gone
means’ of other
settling with
nations.”
disputes underground This ig one reason for the plans to rearm. The Japanese feel that this hard core of Communists could create considerable trouble
in an unarmed’ Japan.
19 Ousted Cadets “Seek To Enter Notre Dame
for a defensive ig made greater by Communist on the mainland of Asia. the Sino-Soviet treaty, whose language is aimed at ‘halting Japanese . aggression,” and the increasing numbers of
Russian troops on Sakhalin : : . . Island, within sight of Japan's SOUTH BEND, Aug. 27 (UP)
northern shores. oa total of 19 ousted West Point In addition to a 200,000-man|c2dets, with three applying toe army, Japan also would need a | day, seek admission to the Uninavy of 200 to 300 small vessels, Versity of Notre Dame under none larger than destroyers, and terms of a millionaire’s offer to ‘with no submarines. They would foot the bill, university spokes. 'be- solely for guarding Japanese| men sa sald today. coastal waters. A post-treaty air! The “anonymous rich man ofe force would include fighter planes feréd to pay room, board and tube for home defense and perhaps a tion for any of the 90 cadets dis« ‘few longer range reconnaissance missed from West Point fon cheats models. ing on examinations. He sald he As a start on an army, -the felt “a man who makes a mistake Japanese have a 75,000-man na- should have a heasonable ki tional police force, which was to rehabilitate himself,”
.
Japan's need force
successes
