Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 September 1951 — Page 4
SPEEA eb
They Call I" ‘Progress’.
: ever works out the way you think
- in an apartment,
' sometimes I think we used to|cause it included perishable items edged that here was no ordinary
whistle. She..just doesn't under- Seems to.indicate an existing. .cul-
ee
SUNDAY, SEPT. 2, , 1951 °
i THE sae TIMES =
“You ould Get To Ft. Wayne Faster
If You Had Started 10
By BILL FOLGER
UTMODED: ; ; ; : That's what Indiana . =~ HAs =F Railroad called its its inter- fe Yn urban cars when it scrap- x ped the last of its rail lines a “= = . I = —
little more than 10 years ago. | De lixe. Modern. x
~ That's what it: called the buses which replaced them. . 39 - But -today" it takes longer to v
travel Indiana by, bus-than’ it did 20 years ago on the inter: urban.
Good Old Days
THe: big cars clicked over. the rails from Indianapolis’ to Ft, x1 - Wayne and Louisville nearly === |} © . : incr an hour, faster than present bus ; ; " schedules. — ; ‘ Buses ‘take 4 hours, 5 minutes to make the trip from Indianapolis to Ft. Wayne via Muncie and Anderson. “ ‘Interurban limiteds made if
< XQ Louisville and Ft. Wayne lines, sleepers ‘and diners to Louisville.
ville the interurban running time was 3 hours, 10 minutes. Today it's a 4-hour trip by bus,
2 hours, 15 minutes—and according to the schedules, In those .days Indianapolis were much more likely to ‘Even a town as close as Law- was the greatest interurban » on time, ‘especially in*winter rence was closer by interurban electric center in the world. when snow and ice glazed Hoo- —only 24 minutes from down- - Hundreds of trains a day
pier highways. Hoosiers who town Indianapolis. Today it's rumbled in and out of Traction
lived near the tracks said they 40 minutes by bus. Terminal. The cars crisscould set their clocks by the in- As for deluxe transportation, crossed Indiana from Ft. terurban cars. the interurbans offered obser- Wayne m ue north to Jeffer-vation-lounge cars on the sonville " the south, from
* From Indianapolis. to Louis-
Potomac Patter— Tom Donnelly
Home Is Where
The Homework Is By ANDREW TULLY
: - | Scripps-Howard Staff Writer ; | ‘WASHINGTON, Sept. 1— . Things must be nice and re-
Noe 2 BIDWHISTLE sat on her front porch, languidly laxed for U. 8. officials in fanning herself and watching the three youngest Bidwhistle children, who were splashing about with a water- show the sights to people like
color set. “Get any of that paint on the porch furniture (Mrs. Morris Cafritz, Washington and I'll break you in two,” she |social leader, and see that she said in the general direction of gets places she wants 10 get ang
attends plenty of parties. the children. Rare Mumm Mrs. Cafritz’ who is fond of She turned to me. Nothing Found in West
reiterating her staunch belief in {the United States Supreme- Court, {was - practically breathless when rainbow and then what have you BERKELEY, Cal, Sept. 1 had been so NICE to her! got? Just a pot. I thought if I/(UP)—A natural human mummy, In Paris, for instance, Brig. ever got my family out of thatia rare find in California archae-|O¢D: Anthony J. Drexel Biddle crowded apartment and into alology, is reported by anthropolo- took time off from the defense house of our own in Pretty View gists on the Berkeley campus of °f Europe to show Mrs. C. around Acres I'd be the happiest woman the University of California. Hie pe the European . e, es on earth. The partially mummified re-|;)50'tossed her a swank.luncheon. Pretty View Acres is one of mains of an eight or nine- “year-| Then, when Mrs. Cafritz went those enormous Virginia real old child, with an accumula:ion| 'to Berchtesgaden, ” n estate developments, Row upon {of prehistoric archaeological ma-| g
had his hideout, a guy named Col. ¢ two-story red brick terial and various objects dating, Jaw. © y Jia the 49 Cold Tash perieeyNathan Bartlett of the ECA of-
“Surely it's better than living were found in Bamert Cave 2 a in Paris fixed it so she could
it will,” she said. “Have you ever noticed? You work and you slave
to find that pot at the end of the trip the other day. Everybody
ry Clements. stay at the Military Hotel there: isn't. it?” I th additi . During her grand tour, Mrs. C. asked. “More room and privacy | hy ion to the dessicated re-/aiso was given parties by Amand no landlord to tell you you, Do foe. aril, the iil bassador and Mrs. David Bruce d so forth?” ces of bas-iin Pa. can't have pets an |ketry, shells, arrow shafts, i Paris) Ampasssilor and Mrs; s = ®
mains. of food, acorn shells and |p MRS. BIDWHISTLE sported. pieces of netting. passador. Stanton Griffis in
sThat's what I used to say. But) The find was important be-| Even the bullfighters acknowl-
have more freedom in the old (which disintegrate in the usual tourist from Keokuk: In Marjorapartment. Now the kids have|open site, according to Dr. |ca, a toreador dedicated a bull) more room to play in, sure, at Robert x Hejast, associate pro-to her. I have to watch them every min- fessor of anthropology who reute. In the old days if they got [ported it, Red Roistering out their crayons and jam and| The dry, closed, protected loca-. MARX SHOULD be around ameared up the wall you could tion of the site, in this case, ac- these days to take in some of] always tell yourself, ‘Oh, well, it/counted for the preservation of those strictly capitalistic parties) belongs to the landlord: But] archaeological findings. [ossed b¥ Comumemis: Russia and!
valleys.
Europe. Plenty of time to
{she- got back from her European |
where Hitler .
re- James Dunn in Rome; and Am-
Years ‘Sooner
anywhere in Indiaria — Evansville and Bloomington were | among : the few ° exceptions— could be reached in three hours. or less from Indianapolis. - : What happened to Indiana's | ‘nterurban cars? ° :
Resting Places
The older ones were sold to \nybody who would haul them dl wway. You can still see some Of them today. Two of them are ’ serving as diners at 1345 N. | | = Illinois St. and 1101. N. Capitol Ave. Atkinson & Co. is using another. for its office near E. 42d St, in the plush Devon Woods development. . The sad thing about Indiana’ 8 interurbans- is that many oi. them were abandoned just before World .War II. They almost had survived depression | bankruptcy. It was probably | the competition of the motor | truck more than the motor bus to that doomed them because freight service was more profit- | ~dble than passenger. Indian- | apolis had large freight houses. If they could have been kept alive a little longer, four- and five-car trains could have rolled troops and .supplies in and out of Camp Atterbury and Ft. Harrison: They might have gained new life, recovered depression losses and cashed in on the postwar boom.
|
Terre - Haute in the Ww Richmond in the east. ‘They :whizzed through the flat cornfields of central Indiana, hummed through. the hills. in the southern part of the state, wound' their way along the Wabash and Ohio
They crossed state lines into Illinois, - Kentucky -and Ohio. Almost any town of any Size
They're Never Too Busy to Be Nice to Mrs. Gwen Cafritz
the war, saw quite a lot of Philip Mountbatten, now -the Prince Philip who's married to Britain's Princess Elizabeth. First time this State. Department guy saw. His Highness—at| a poker party-—the latter was introduced to him merely as Phil Some time later, «when another guest joined the party, the Yank| took: him around to introduce him. When he got to Philip, he said _ casually: ho , “Say, Phil, I don’t believe I caught your last name.’
‘Who's Who?
Mr. Griffis
- Cafritz
the young senator from Louisi-i ana, is touring Europe with Mal-| colm Boyer. But don’t raise those eyebrows, please — Malcolm hap-| pens to be a lady, wife of the. -gen-| .eral- manager of ‘the Atomic En-| ergy - Commission. And just to make it more confusing, Mr. Boyer's first name is Marion.
~ Foresight
ORIGINALLY, Cuban Ambassador Luis Machado had planned to take only 10 cases of rum to San Francisco for the Japanese peace treaty conference. But now that the Russians are going to » attend, Luis is doubling the ration to 20 cases.
Cheap Blowout IT DIDN'T cost the American taxpayers hardly anything, really, when the officers. of the Italian training ship, Amerigo Vespucci, for the affair and were delighted!gave a party for a bunch of govto find two bars serving whisky, ernmental and social big-shots cocktails, liqueurs and cham-|the other night. All’ we had to pagne, and a buffet table that) pick up the check for was the must have made some of those cost of operating the eight U.S. |oldtime czars. and kings ‘writhe in Navy motor launches which trans-| their graves with envy. ported the guests from the dock There were 15 different kinds to the ship.
Gen. Biddle Mr. Bruce
Phil
Adm, Fechteler
Guerrillas
‘ministry here in Taipei.
'the guerrilla leaders.
MRS. RUSSELL LONG, wife of
County Can’ J Repair The
Bumpy Roads | Ahead’ Bother Both For Some Suburban
Reds, Chiang - Property Pu rchasers
AED Formosa, Sept. 1 By JOHN V. WILSON (UP) —THe recent visit by Planning to build that ‘dream home” ‘Maj. Gen. William C. Chase, ‘Marion County? . chief of the United States| = Better investigate the legal status of the Toad that military assistance advisoryruns past your property first. : group, to the Taicheng Islands! Under existing state laws, “hun-|
gave a great boost to the morale |dreds of miles of rural. roads ‘of Nationalist guerrillas off the Cannot be repaired at eounty ex-
in suburban
curbs in each, new within the city limits.. On the other hand, Mr. Nord-
subdivision
ense. iChekiang coast. P Unlegs the road mets pre- siek says, such a restriction United ‘in the anti-Communist'scribed standards, the county Might stop the future —develop-
iment of the county. He points out builders would pass on the additional expense to the buyer,
cause as they are, however, the has no obligation to maintain it. leaders of the guerrillas in that Nor can the county build a.new /theater ‘are quarrelling still like road past your home. * Some developers now are build-
‘brothers in a family. It will take It's ‘a Warning ing concrete streets in county sub--
[plenty of time and efforts by| ~ t 7 Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's! This is the warning of County givisions, Mr. Nordsiek said, but
government to whip the more
{than 20 partisan units int a com- |He repeats it daily to irate citi- east improvements possible.”
(zens who" complain about the Not Enough Cash pact force. |condition of county roads: : : . ibiti h Theoretically speaking, all guer-| * mirgt off, he asks the location The state law prohibiting’ the rilla forces come under the com-'u¢ the road in question. If it is county from building new roads mand of the. mainland work com- not a part of the county highway OF ‘repairing non-approved old mittee of the national defense system, he and. the other tommis- ones~dates back to 1932. | sioners are powerless to act. “If we used tax money to build Some leaders, however prefer, How can a road become a part roads, that Sune sunlividel or to - obey .orders from military of the county. system developer shoul Nave " Tare organs rather than from the com-| - It must first be built to mini-iwould De no funds No m Fo mittee. This condition has led Mum specifications. Require - thoroughfares, Br. Nordslek ex toward the creation of a scramble| ments include a width of 18 feet, plained. 1 f and He was unable to estimate the for power and manpower among compacted gravel surface. | proper drainage.” That means ex- number of miles of rural roads {pense to property owners. over which the county has no jur-
‘Some .Men Desert Must Approve It isdiction now.
Fifteen ‘men of Taicheng Island Then the residents petition the hundreds. must fun up into the |deserted and joined another unit commissioners to accept the road further “north recently. In turn, into. the highway system. After {the enraged Taicheng commander approval, the county assumes re-
{enrolled the servic sponsibility for future repairs. officer of that Vice ota Jason) Mr. Nordsiek blames the road
| So far no milita : EO Os ry figure on the nan who, in their haste to make {spot has been given supreme com- 4 sale, claim a road is maintained {mand over all units. A naval cap- by the county when it isn’t. tatin, Chan Teh-pei, in charge at «Every prospective purchaser sea along the hekiang coast, has of suburban -property should be
Washed Up—
BRISTOL, England, Sept. 1 (UP) -«A court fined ship's steward Norman Ewing 10 pounds ($28) today for drunkenness after he got “fed up? “with washing dishes in the officers pantry
been doing good work to pro-/warned to find out the legal of his ship and tossed them mote coordination among the'status of the road first,” Mr. ov erboard. : various units. | Nordsiek said. “It will save thein, " The ~ nationalist government a lot of grief in the future. Youth Held Tor. “Aiding
“They should find out whether they must maintdin the road-or whether it is now being main-, tained hy the county,” he added. “A seller may infer the road is being maintained by the county, but he dctially may mean it has
tion. Most people agree . that Only been opened to public-use.” |saped jail at Owefisboro, Ky. _ there still is great room for im- New Rules Asked Edwards was accused in a fedprovement. - Since the county can’t. force eral complaint with helping the
i real | es : lopers. to build escape of Thomas Lis Supplies Inadequate real estate develop d escape 0 enby, James
{has done its utmost in selling the! dea of co-crdination and c6-oper-{ation to guerrilla leaders. Almost all of them have been summoned to Taipei, where they hate been given political-talks with the aim lof achieving unity in will and ac-
Prisoners to Escape BOONVILLE, Sept. 1 (UP) — Kenneth Edwards, 23, was arrested here yesterday on a charge of smuggling hacksaw blades to four federal prisoners who es-
roads, Mr. Nordsiek believes the Van Lafferty, Joseph Christine Besides bickerings, the Na- county néeds a regulation like and Richard Stephens. itionalist 4sland-based guerrillas the one the city adopted recently. Lisenby and Lafferty were
caught in Illinois and returned to the Owensboro jail.
lalso are faced with another acute! The city ordinance. requires problem—Ilack of supplies. Al-; ‘builders to construct streets and
most all islands along the 100- | i * WANTED °
mile strip from Hangchow Bay. to. MEN—WOMEN—GIRLS
the number of guerrillas growing daily, they depend increasingly lon food and munitions from {Formosa.
| The Nationalists are shipping more and more support to them but the supplies hardly ever fill {the demand. Three or four units, hungering ‘and lacking arms, have been marauding on the high seas. for the past few months, thus de{livering a crippling blow to Na{tionalist prestige off Chekiang.
|
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Commissioner Fred W. Nordsiek. others “try to get by with the
when it's your own property you| feel different, somehow.” Buelah Bidwhistle, aged
The natural
mummy, one - of {three so far found in California,
.{was wrapped in a cordage carr 3, ap ling net and sandwiched: between [PATtment of elegant food and|thating dishes loaded 10 the gun-
It’s. beginning -to look as if each country ig trying of hors d'oeuvres, mountains of It was really a swell party, wy to out-do the other in the de- caviar, salmon, rockfish, silver There were two Kars and plenty | of grub and a U.S. Navy orches-|
J ft |) § DY 1 AR K E T. S Yt A
A
proached the porch wall with aj Wo "0 00 = |arink. wales with lobster newburg, tra played for dancing. Sone SP ater an openwork ests were Nav brush dripping crimson WEMtwined burden basket. Judging|, Latest entry was the Romanian ATS, turkeys, loins of beef, el, ruin
color. Mrs. Bidwhistle reached, ‘the artifacts accompanying {Ambassador, Mihai Magheru, who her just in time, slapped the; ‘yr. 0. ocoribed the child to the put on a big party to. celebrate brush out of her hand, and-redd | nrehictoric ancestors of the Mi-/ Romania's liberation — by the| her a lecture on destroying valu-/ wor tripe. Russians, of course. mble property. Heizer said th “ ‘The well-known - capitalistic| Buelah began to ery, noisily. |burial was rare elthaugh Cave! catering firm of Avignone Freres 20 = o Indians, the fact that the other actually did all the work and it|
on id Mrs.. Bid-|two cases were also children Was strictly a major league ef“YOU SEE?” sa fort. There was a staff of 25 on|
occasional | hand, including a doorman, a
e different tural practice of se “carriage caller,” an announcer,
pecial interment of children in
How." who presented the sts to Am-| “But at least” I said, “you’ ro caves, guests to Am- . able to have that dog you've al-| He spegulated that the cave] bassador plus Mme. Magheru,. 17,
wmoney all the time.”
* her head. HI uve & Bose of my goes to
« whistle said.
waiters. and assorted pantry| {helpers and hat Check girls.
A CROWD OF 300 hungry and | thirsty free- -loaders showed up
at had served as a kind of retreat| during the period when the Infans were being crowded ‘from their land by the gold | miners.
ways wanted.” 1 looked Jericho, a large, rather defeated-| looking Irish setter. He was | sprawled across the front steps, motionless. “Yes " Mrs. Bidwhistle allowed, A Wallow Changes Hands—
“hut he doesn’t get on with the Bears’ Loss Is [U's Gain
other dogs -in° the neighborhood. It's yipe-yipe-yipe all day, snarling and fighting and yapping.| * Times State Service And you know Bong All| NASHVILLE, Sept. 1—A wal had acquired, and there is a the people in the neighborhood lowing ground for bears has been! {possibility it ‘might establish who haven't got dogs hate all), herfted by "1 Sumer school of botany and! the people who do. Or at least 'M"e¢rited by ndiana University. geo ogy they hate thé dogs. They're al-| Not that University officials
ways calling me up to te me expect bears to come wallowing Match Russ Propaganda, that Jericho ran across eir at the shrine, but it does give N VE lawn or something. You'd be sur- {pe ew W Chief Urges
Hoosier prised how unpleasant people can gc h ool another ; NEW YORK, Sept. 1. (UP)— hy a ‘Frank C. Hilton, , newly-elected
be about little things.” | historical spot. national commander of the Vet-
8.7 | Bear Wallow. MRS. BIDWHISTLE poured ‘Hill, Brown . | erans of Foreign Wars, has urged _ the federal government to build
me a glass of luke-warm lemon- County landade and went on with her griev- mark, -will be a propaganda machine equal to ances: turned over to Russia's. “Then you take the plumbing. the university The Reading, Pa., veteran, who Something’s always wrong .with this fall by the rose from private to captain in it. Well naturally there's no use Wife of the late World War II, charged that the asking Mr. Bidwhistle to look at Marcus Dickey administration lost China because it. He's hopeless, Hopeless and one-time secre. helpless., So I either have to pay tary and ada fortune to a’ man to have him vance man for come in and fix it, or listen to it James Whitcomb Riley. | rattle. In the apartment THEY| when the keys to the house Pesoutces of Asia. fixed it. Maybe they took a week with the bear wallowing Yourd| or two but they fixed it. There i, the front yard are in over, are so many things that can go t; IU, it will mark ithe first: time|
8 EE el waya. seein 40 mews In 15. years the House as been|u. 8. taritts will be cut Oct, 1 on repairing. It's just money, money, ant. certain cameras, toys, machinery, Mr. " Dickey died some six china, clocks, Harmonicas-’ and A large police dog from across ‘months ago, but in the years he 'wool yarn, the State Department the way snarled at Jericho. Jeri-/!lved at Bear Wallow he found it/announced today. The . lower cho ran under the front porch. to be a focal point of interest foritariffs were negotiated with Ger“That reminds > Mrs... Bid- the curious. So insistent were ‘the many at a mass tariff cutting
,
rm eee ee
Mrs. Dickey
to exploit the people and natural
U.S. to Cut Tariffs
shoring up. We've only been in out a sign: last winter.
this hose a year and already it's’ “The bears ar t. starting to fall apart.” She shook gota, " $ no wallowing “I declare, I just didn't’ know how well off I avas when I
the FIt hos not been deter ol Hr Lins NEW FO FOR Wi WEEKS
Mrs. Dickey, however, believes it || Te. Tt cote mi wa
atory., > a The land also adjoins several ‘the university
| means.
new Chief of Naval Operations, is
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 (UP)—|
“That ‘porch needs Visitors, Mr. Dickey finally put, conference at Torquay, England, ]
LSE eer
cheeses, pastry, salads and about a short ton of Secretaries of State George W. ice éream. Heads of all diplomatic missions got invitations, of course,! and so did a few newsmen. Am-| {bassador Magheru also claimed! {he invited “a few Washington |intellectuals’ — whoever
| Cafritz.
that céptain, Silvano Brengola. About at 400 showed up for this one and
Back home in Romania, the Spoie~ well of the peasants celebrated too—some of ‘em had a square meal. be ham and pizza.
Plain Clothes Man : —_—— 3
ADMIRAL William Fechteler, Exercise ‘Snowfall’ earning a reputation with news- WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 {men as an expert story-teller. The other night, at a small gathering! of reporters, he kept the boys fas|cinated with tales about life from {the Yangtse River to Reykjavik. {He's strictly old shoe, too; showed lup in civvies instead” ot hs elegant naval garb.
Spelling . Lesson THOSE PEOPLE who emerged gasping for breath from the Sia-| mese Embassy the other .day| had just been enjoying the hos-! pitality of Siamese Ambassador
Watertown, ‘N. Y.,
weather conditions.
(Advertisement)
HEARING RESTORED TO OVER 500 DAILY!
those special curry. dishes évery- gay in the U. S., it-is estimated.| body had a good idea of what is meant by the phrase, earth policy.” Ambassador Waithayakon and the Princess tossed the party as a farewell for Lady La-iad Pibulsonggram, wife of the Siamese 90 premier, who was winding up a three-months’. visit here. Every-
makes this possible.
all is worn in the clothing.
it failed to counter Soviet propa- body liked Lady Pibulsonggram There is no receiver cord, or | ganda which said America wanted but society editors and linotype tubing of any kind, up or down operators all over the town the neck, nor any separate re- =
|breathed sighs of relief when they | ceiver. learned they wouldn't have to °
Just Plain Phil : once! Write F. B. Bowman, 16 N. A STATE DEPARTMENT aide Delaware, Indianapolis, Ind., CA who served in Australia during 9734. -
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| Perkins and Jack K. McFall, & chief of protocol John Farr Sim-|S mons and Mr. and Mrs. Merzs
Night before, the Italian em-| = bassy gave a dinner for the ship’s|
high-class & ‘booze and tasty Italian dishes like = prosciutto, which -turned out to
(UP) 8 = The Defense Department said £ = today a joint Army-Air Force ex- & = ercise will be held next Jeauary = = and February at Pine Camp, near £ = to train men § = and test equipment under cold The exercise = will be known as “Snowfall. y |8
Hearing poorly? Modern elec: | Prince Wan Waithayakon. By the. tronic science 18 how restoring
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May. County, -
The urt _diana’s™ | know whg
diana Stal
first three d During T Saturday,
‘Youth Acti
a constant and apprek
- the Hoosier
have entries agriculture Farm {ol youngsters | what the 1
"and how im]
F
Winning judging cor thrill, for ir lad knows | knowledge { of his life. The girl v vegetables, ing her owr girl who wi happy farm The 4-H and leaders for perfect “projects.” Witness sweet-faced Carthage, the making perb cherry . This lass division co from 12. cou was a plea: the stage of plaining her as her .h through the si The The daug Cecil Pike, leader, and
_ clothing, f«
farm- and projects. She, and exemplify ti pledge: “1. give 1 thinking,” n loyglty, my ice and my ing for my my country The influ spreads anc growth of 4 Today, 4-H’ers are clubs in th they're incr per cent yi the cities, a
Lai Marion C membership the largest ¢ Fair to boc departments The count (31 boys an entries for t ing display. Almost 3( population 10 and 21 h Indiana has age of 4-H the nation. It is boos the county and home ¢ and by the as senior le Many ind tions furnis personnel movement, « huge divid across the i
2 Ind Some of t State Fair National 4; Chicago, frc tional indu tions. Some wer tained grou diana Bank Standard O others. The community tial men a: were 4-H m There's a toward con ward worki organization up new grou The succe fund drive, civic. projec least in part 4-H membe concrete re into action.
Th . Indiana w before the Lever Law assume nati As far ba a Corn. Clu Miami .Cou the kind of tion seen ii
nation toda)
The 4-H i when- home and the wor Not only eager to cc decorate ar their homer moved into and animal Yesterday weight Here the Coliseun Boys were
there were ,
down to tir see over the brown-and-v led them a veterans wt beamed wit lines. Ne
It may ponderance girls from « Twelve-ye Richmond,
- accepted th Judge J. B.
0., for the try, “Lucky But the b all competit Anne Ben
ty, showed"
pion. steer,’
