Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 May 1952 — Page 9
LEAGUE headers) d.
York. in.
LEAGUE ° headers) 80. sinha, SSTEEDAY 0 i 2% th fia $1 hs 10 003 1ii— 711 9 ) nar By y
Winning Pitcher— al postponed, cold LEAGUE 00 100 000-1 8 1 00 010 11x— 3 8 0 and Lollar: in,
y. Home R! iain (4-3). Los-
HEI] 0
McCullough. Home Mearson. Losing
‘Scheduled)
seball
010 2 a0 004 x— Isenberg nd
s 2 8 0 ussell,
LYE 7 Tot M. SHARP
LAP
14 CE
THURSDAY, MAY 29, 1952
Speed Is Key On Track Trip
By Harold Hartley
HERE'S HOW to get to the track fast. Trains out of Union Station will do it in 12 minutes,
55 cents each way.
$200 Million gm Today: «BUSINESS gio After
Real Hot Fight
By United Press | WASHINGTON, May 20-The |Senate approved a $67 billion | ‘foreign aid bill last night—$1,2' {billion less than President Tru|man requested and $200 million {below the safe minimum prescribed by Gen. Dwight D. Eisen-| ‘hower, ! Final passage was a roll call
1
First out will be the “work train.” It leaves at 3: :45|vote of 64 to 10.
At 6 a. m. they'll run every)
1 Rn wll the customers G's, : 5a they say, and got about
quit. Indianapolis Rafiways will run|
80 busses from the bus terminal. | the hamburger treatment The fare is 75 cents one way, | Pruden, got about $1.25 a round trip, same as last again as they say,
year. ” * . THE FIRST BUS goes at 4 a. m. In the next hour they run every 15 minutes. From 5 to 6
(half of it himself. The little guy whose fap got ftzie | $6500, netted, | 3 G's. The {rest went to the guys who live | {off fighters, trainers, handlers managers who Wedge in for a cut.
| IT WAS A GOOD show at the
a. m. they'll leave every 10 min- Coliseum, in the best mauling
utes. minutes, from 7 to race time, every two minutes.
For 6 to 7, every three | manner,
I sat at ringside with Tom T. Sinclair, vice president of King-
The bus run over the special ap’ s, his father, W. R. Sinclair,
route takes about 25 minutes. chairman and president;
board
And there'll be 100 busses to members, Herman Krannert, bring race fans back to town, | president of Inland Container, that’s 20 added. Everybody wants an4 gam Sutphin, president of the
to come at once. s =
| Beveridge Paper Co.; John Karol, {vice president of CBS in charge
CABS Now RUN to the track| network sales; Hal M. Rank,
on the meter. It adds up to|
“about $1.75.
But on race day with four to the cab, it will be $5 each way,
with $1 added for each passenger [TA NABET,
over four. # 2 =
THE BIG movement will be,|
as always, in private automo-
biles. And nobody knows how ioe and Legler, 58-year-old
jong that will take, and tempers will be as frayed as a barbershop whiskbroom by the time they arrive. Impatient children. will be getting into the lunch during traffic waits, and someone's sure| to spill lemonade on the back seat trying to pour it as the car makes a jack rabbit jump. " » n
JOE CRIPE of the Convention and Visitors Bureau told me he has plenty of private home rooms listed from $3 to $5 per person a night. It's a free service. The Plaza 9567, until 5 p. m. today. Then reservation quarters shift, with a full staff, to the mezzanine floor of the Claypool Hotel.
” HOTEL MEN are saying even with the higher rates they won't do much better than an ordinary week end. They have to clear their rooms a day or two ahead of time. And it takes a couple of days to get back into the swing after the race crowd shoves bags out the door. But the stepped-up hotel rates don't hold a candle to the Jesse
James schedule in Louisville for
the Derby. . ® »
1 ENOW FOR a fact that someone tried to get Mayor Alex Clark a two-room suite in a middle class hotel. It could be had, all right, but jt was for three nights only. And the price was $525. He didn’t take it. What I'd like to know is who did. :
Not So ‘Mad’
I FINALLY met the guy. He wore a gay bow tie, oyster flannel suit, with wide, ironed-out shoulders, and gray ostrich-skin shoes. But he usually wears alligator. It couldn’t be anybody else. It was the real 38-year-old Earl (Madman) Muntz, in town to tee off his television store at 44 N, Delaware. It was the coming out party for Muntz TV big screens, with
peeled prices. He's got a 20-inch|
job marked for $129. But he talks of coming 36-inch screens.
. = ” ‘ HE WASN'T 80 “mad” as the radio-TV gagmen make him. For a kid who started out in life washing cars in Elgin, Ill, he's done right smart. Said he'd sold $72 million worth of new and used cars. He led a caravan of Muntz Jets (custom-built with Lincoln motors) down from Chicago. He makes 5500 of these a year to sell at $5200 each, says he can’t keep up with orders,
o sg » WHEN YOU mention his wife, you touch a soft spot. She is the former Miss Joan Barton who started broadcasting when she was 4 years old, and will soon do a TV show (for Muntz television) with Jerry Collona. * He will shoot $2-t0-8$3 million advertising television this year. That's what he said.
. » o s LUNCH AND refreshments were rolling in an indoor garden’ of cut flowers, Everybody was eating, talking, buzzing. And some guys can smell food. A couple of bums whiffed it, worked into the crowd, got almost up to the buffet before they were spotted and led with a firm hand back to the sidewalk out front.
Swat Party I WENT TO “da fight” You gotta say it that way. Pitchin’ leather ain't‘ play. And . juicin’ noses ain't a joke. . Neither is the dough they toss around. For a gate of about $27,000, the welter champ, Kid
-| illustrate it.
reservation phone isifilled
| “Hey, I drink another brand.”
| He told me the “What'll You
|Kingan manager of merchandis{ing and advertising, and Denton (McVey, Kingan canned goods| who won a buék from
| 4 8 8 AND I WAS the guest of one the nicest little guys I've ever met, Paul Warwick, head of War-
[think-master of such advertising |Successes as Kingan’s, Pabst’s {Blue Ribbon, Seagram's, Equitlable Assurance Society, Edgeworth tobacco, and many, many more.
iHave?” ad line for Pabst’s beer has become the world’s second best known, and told a story to
” ” ” A MAN WENT into a bar.
“What'll You Have?’ And without looking up, the customer in the next line with “Pabst Blue Ribbon.” And when the cuostomer looked up, he was surprised and said.
But he drank the Pabst’s, and ordered a second.
A Show for Sharon
BLOCK'S SHARON COLLINS has something, in her eyes and educated fingers, I first heard about her last year. Marty Clinton, editor of Block's Booster, tipped me that Sharon had a future. He discovered her. She did, amazingly accurate portraits of store people. Because the people were busy, she worked from photos, five of them. » ” = FROM ONE she would pick the best eyes, from another the chin |¥ or cheek, and the tilt of the chin |}
is that she does free-hand drawing, no tracings, or mechanical gadgets,
Sharon is the 23-year-old
She works in oils and pastels, and studied at John Herron Institute after being graduated from Buter. td ” » SHE'S MOVING along, Jacque Lacker of H. Lieber Co. took a! look, and spotted 18 of her paintings for a special two-weeks’ show on Lieber’s third floor, starting June 2. I don’t know much about art. But I've seen her work. And if ever a girl had a camera eye, and color sense, she has. Down deep, I'm pulling for her. I can understand her. ® & = ONCE I TALKED with an artist who did a portrait. The picture didn’t look at all like the person. The artist explained that
got into every portrait. I'm one who doesn’t want any artist's “personality” in my plc-|8 ture.
And the bartender sing-songed|
{mostly Nos. 1 and 2, 225 pounds
from a third. The uncanny part|! 300-40
daughter of the late Criminal|f Court Judge James A. Collins. and
some of the artist's personality ver as a
= a 3 iil a Sommers
The action came after the Sen‘ate had voted a $200 million {across-the-board reduction in the measure despite an impassioned plea by.Sen. Tom Connally (D. Tex.) . He said the cut would be interpreted to mean that this country was faltering in its op{position to communism,
| Ok's Amendment |
32 an amendment by Sen. James! P. Kem (R. Mo.) which would, ban economic or military aid to any country which ships war ma- | terials or strategic goods to fron, § curtain countries. A similar ban was passed last| year but Congress later softened it due to strenuous administration objections that it would cripple America’s allies. Senate Democratic leaders, with Republican support, previously [had beaten back economy efforts {to impose across-the-board reuctions of $500 million and $400 illlon and to trim European idefense support aid by $500 mil{lion.
Rally to Sen. Long
But on the final showdown, several Republicans and Democrats deserted the administration land voted for the $200 million slash proposed by Sen. Russel B. Long (D. La.). Before sending thé bill to the Senate floor, Sen. Connally’s For eign Relations Committee had trimmed $1 billion from President Truman's orginal request of $7 billion and economic aid for other free nations in the 12 months {starting July 1.
Top Bid Is $22.25 On Choice Hogs
Top bid on bulk choice 170-240 pound hogs in trading at the In-|in dianapolis Stockyards today was $22.25. A few short loads of choice
down, sold at $22.35-22.40. Sows were about: steady, with chdide 300-400 pounders bringing bids of $17.50-18.50. Odd commercial and good light steers and heifers sold at $3032.50. Bull trading was dull. Utility and commercial cows sold at |$21.50-24.50. Choice and prime vealers sold about steady at $34-36. Hogs 6500; fakrly acu light to me-
dium barrows and Wednesday's best p oa ier wetkhis
heavi barely steady; Bulk 4 En FERRE
¢! d ds $18.75 or ee 400-600 nds Sgt 80: Joy near 400 naunds 7.75; over 600 ounds down to $18.50; on steady at $14 Cattl trade steady
aE = 450; few a’
ny Hs ra oy ut, fi i Hi A ani HH ig Ei down to i Sheep
26; oad” Ey
n around $34.50choice Pio ‘prime o
choles to ving inane A: §
and small or 8 on - in at 4% a Ea b to thors ghter ves Te I Te Shgpis 30- 1 eu’
Child njored in Fall
An B8-year-old child was finjured yesterday when she fell out of a tree onto the back of a chair
U. S. Statement
WASHINGTON, MAY ment d r ts for the I re rough 37, compared wi
IAI
Just my own, that's bad enough. 8
By United Press ITHACA, N, Y,, May 29-—A
fake bulletin saying’ Russian planes had bombed London and
Marseille, broadcast by masked captors of a campus radio station, alarmed many students at Cornéll University early today. But the “near panic” was confined to dormitories and fraternity houses because the station, WBVR, cannot be heard off the campus, Student announcer William Ellison said 10 students wearing Halloween masks entered the broadcasting room, tied up the station personnel and broadcast “flashes” and bulletins” intermittently for eight minutes. Business Manager Ellis Duell said the seizure occurred at 10:07 p. m. (Indianapolis Time), “while the station was broadcasting
Gavilan dragged down _ about 8
Fake Red Raid See Pulled off at Cornell
Eibh Rene uf # pind
After broadcasting the bullein that London and Marseille had been bombed, Mr. Duell said, the masked announcer interrupted the music again to say that the planes “are now over Newfound. land.” “There was no break in broadcasting activity, so it sounded very authentic,” Mr, Duell said.
R. J. McCarthy, supervisor of Broeress
campus police, cident on hunting publicity, but said the
blamed the in-
the dormitories.” Campus switch boards were jammed for several hours, Mr. McCarthy sald he would report the “invasion” to the ¥BI.
piped only into campus Juildings through a telephone circuit, federal laws were violated.
classical music. » ¥
"DON'T BUY TELEVISION_WITHOUT ASSURANCE OF SERVICE
® PHILOO © ADMIRAL
® WESTINGHOUSE 26 Years of Dependable Service
® RCA VICTOR
® MOTOROLA ® SYLVANIA
® ZENITH
wm were “hot on the trail” of ne
Cornell officials today said
00 | the dining room table at the home
{Produce ty SB puck: ac
while playing. The girl, Celena American Reilly, of 524- Lambert St. was|\mericas [treated in Methodist Hospital, |Bell
“student pranksters” |g, bulletins “caused great alarm in te kely-Van Camp com
However, since the program was|4
% hi fu
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
‘Senate Approves Foreign Aid Cuthenta Care
PAGE oy
The Senate also approved 40 to]
| 3 i,
on fables.
Lge
| | A
{worteing the waiting period between jail and institutional care
- |checks were made twice a week.
{eral J. Emmett McManamon. | Refuse to Start Action
NIN 3 a % " y i
¥ United Press otsibility
~~ SINGLE ACT—Rosemarie Hinman, 22, faces the possi of an empty house at her graduation ‘recital in Minneapolis - night because the Post Office failed to deliver her 200 invitations. The secital climaxes six years of voice training paid for by waiting
IF AMATEUR radio operators to the 500-Mile Race tomorrow, fault of¢th
local amateurs. The local club is prepared with information about hotels, private homes renting rooms, restaurants and parking places. Gerald Todd, 3601 English Ave. is club president.
No Medal
Poor spelling changed an Indianapolis man's bad driving to good. Police put “w” before “r”
I was filed on reckless driving charge.
Earn Place in Sun
The lifeguards who loll on Indiana beaches take a workout to get there, At Camp Limberlost near LaGrange June 15-25, swimmers will attend an aquatic school. They'll devote 30 hours to water safety instruction including first aid and lifesaving, Graduates are qualified to serve as lifeguards and water and first aid instructors in camps and city recreation departments. Enrollments are faken by the Indianapolis Red Cross.
All in the Family ~°
Five generations will sit around of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Plain, #222
i Bt i SHE HEE
ade pe 85-58 Gh
sna Prep?
ve ers, vy, geialy hens, b 15-
Cateady with offerings [5 fads, with supsly and
prices unchanged with buyers nd | ne Pureh ases need.
amery, ae. 4c; premiu butterfat, Soc: regular, 44c. Hers
~ig% 4% ‘ii 0b ih
‘8 pte
e Indianapolis Radio Club, * The 16cal 350-member club of men and women amateurs is directing visiting amateurs by radio — all along the way. All visitors have to do en route is speak up with questions in microphones installed in their cars and they'll " answers from
[HAT GOES ON zp
get lost coming it won't be the Inc.
Basebill: Indianapolis Indians vs. Louisville Colonels. Victory Field. Box seats, $1.70, mezzanine, $1.40, grandstand, $110 and bleachers, 60c. Children under 12, 50c. 8:15 p. m,
Carrollton Ave. tomorrow and Saturday. It's a gathering of five
“reckless” in their report. War-| 0 ions headed by Mrs. Eliza-
beth Glass, 74, of 839 N. East St., great-great-grandmother in the group. Mrs. Plain, 56, is great. grandmother and Mrs, Eileen Sanders, 37, Detroit, the grandmother. Completing the five generations are Mrs. Plain’s daughter, Mrs. Jo Ann Worrell, 19, Detroit, and her 18-month-old son, Bruce Jr.
Four Full Years
versity of Rochester. Miss MacNabb, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon C. MacNabb, 6616 N. Pennsylvania 8St., was awarded the Theta Eta sorority prize. She was president of the Women Students Association, had the leading role in the annual all-girl show and directed music for the camgrade pus radio station.
i OPS Sues Muncie Wholesale Company
A Federal Court injunction has been asked by Office of Price
hens gtabilization against a Muncie
wholesale firm accused of charging too much for potatoés,
Commodity Sales Co., Ine,
Local Stocks and Bonds|named in the suit filed yesterday,
is accused of selling seed potatoes
to hotels, restaurants and clubs . (for more than. price reguldtions =++«lallow,
Commodity Sales is the seventh
we. |firm to be sued in Indiana by ::'|OPS. Three suits have been filed «+ |against Indianapolis firms.
...|Local Truck Grain Prices
heat, $2.15.
tro: 3 Talo onl.
<
[S0) = IT
4Advertisement)
RHEUMATISM PAINS PEELE
do the work to ¥
ahd &
OUTFIT $199.50 MERIDIAN FURNITURE
1713 N. MERIDIAN
y-Van an Camp, pid nner & Co _5%% pt 8
nited lenhons 4% ote
ra, dai Yrsdsennenen BONDS
students who masked themselves and took over the campus broadcast station. They called the broadcast a “lunatic stunt.”
WIGEST CASH © PAID
STANLEY Jewelry Co. 113 W. Wash. Linesin Hotel Bids.
a...
America's Outstanding Combination
Seit-Storing Windows and Doors No Down Payment Small Mo. Payments
MA. 5554
084 8. BAST 82.
LOANS
~' WE BUY DIAMONDS * WOLF
‘mapped today.
¢ patients,
§ needed,” Mr. Fairchild said. “And
Speedup Urged
three-point plan aimed at
for mentally {ll persons was
The action stemmed from re-
ports mental patients were kept in Marion County jail for several months while awaiting commit ment to state hospitals, The program, discussed” at a meeting of judges, law enforcement officials and doctors yesterday, includes; ONE-—Setting up separate Municipal Court dockets for mental examination cases and criminal prosecutions. The new system will allow the courts to keep a close check on the jail time of mental
TWO--Daily examinations by General Hospital doctors to screen
mentally {ll from drunk cases in}:
the jail. In the past, premental
THREE—Clarification of state laws to find oit who may sign commitment papers for mental patients. On the latter point, Prosecutor Fairchild said he would seek an opinion from State Attorney Gen-
Mr, Fairchild said mental patients often are kept in jail for months because their families have refused to start commit ment action. In such cases, Mr. Fairchild said, either the Prosecutor or General Hospital officials could start proceedings if it is decided they would not be subject to false imprisonment suits. In any event, Mr. Fairchild declared state laws should be changed in the 1953 legislature to allow officials to act when families won't. Officials attending the meeting blamed the long jail confinement on lack of hospital space and attendants. “Taxpayers will have to realize more hospital beds and help are
all this costs money."
Local Deaths
JAMES CO. BREEDING, 66, of 6618 College Ave., salesman for Miller Jewelry Co. Services 2 p. m. Saturday in Moore & Kirk Colonial Chapel. Entombment, Washington Park Mausoleum, Ld . » WILLIAM EARL GENTRY, 77, of 1235 Bellefontaine 8t., former shoe store owner. Services
in Shirley Trothers Central Chapel. Burial, Crown Hill,
4. nn 917 W. North St,
jockey, Bill Powell, Services 1 Pp. m, Saturday in Stratton & Shaw Mortuary, Burial, Floral Park.
ROD, 69, former Indianapolis resident who died Tuesday in her home in Brown County. BServices 2 p. m. Saturday in Hisey & Titus Mortuary, Burial, Memorial Park. pin . GEORGE ANDREWS, 59, of 5230 E. Washington St., Apt. 33, member Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, Services 11 a. m. Saturday in Shirley Brothers’ Irving Hill Chapel. Burial, Highoma Lawn Cemetery, Terre aute.
Money tq Loan
Money to Loan
WE HAVE YOUR INTERESTS x AT HEART!
For cash fast . . , When YOU need it . , .To solve
_ YOUR problems . . . For terms arrariged fo fit YOUR _
paycheck . . . Do business with a company that proves it has YOUR interests at heart.
OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT UNTIL $:30 P. M. CLOSED SATURDAY
4 CONVENIENT OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Pan so)
MA ket 9426 Penn. af whi, ow Solty’. GR Burch, Mgr. Woman's Loan Office . Yesibeny Mann S414
fost Bldg. 54 Monument Circle .......... Helen L Cox, Mr. Woman's Lean Office “n
“fountain Square Sunny { fo Yen veassnas. [Mporial 1109 Shelby St. E. Gerringer, Xr.
EERE ER
. wTioed Today st ta Woteuae alibtoos, Open Friday alghts ‘S00 5:00 F, M. and Satarday "th 1:00 P.M,
BR
Sa
$20 to $500 without endorsers Ng Get a-lodn to consolidate overdue bills, for seasonal
expense, for any good purpose. Monthly payments arranged to fit your need.
; Phone or come In today! : @ wo FINANC
106 E. Market St, Lemke Bidg., 2nd Floor—MArket 7567 -
Winois Bldg, 3rd FL, 17 W, Market St, Cor. Illinols St.—PlLaza 5403 Merchants Bank Bidg., 3rd Fl, Washington & Meridian-IMperial 5414
C ASH LOANS
LIBERAL LOAN ©0. LOAN ON YOUR CAR 60,
| ' - a MERIDA LOAN CO., INC. ua Det. L n un 0 N. Meridian LI-8863 INLAND FINANGE GOP.
A LOA -s AR LOAN. 00.
were to be at 10:30 a. m. today| kp
MRS. MARY POWELL, 77, of bot of radio station WIRE disc {
. > JOHN W. CARTER, 71, of 101}¢
To /June MacNabb of Indian- ; apolis went a prize for “contrib- hk Xam ge Spuish-Amitionn
uting the most” during her four turday years at Women's College, Uni- Savariay u, Roysim 4 hii
MRS. MYRA GERTRUDE EL-|,
BLE TERMS
| PERMA-GRETE DRIVES
“PROVEN OVER THE | YRARS® | Are Guaranteed and Dustiess
TRISTATE CONSTRUGTION GO. | nko k
i LLL il
iP 4% D
COURTECUS SERVICE
SELLING OUT CASTLE FILM LIBRARY
wifi, 4 Price
eh Camera Co.
Usual Low Prices
REPAIRING 53." RITES swwavny snor
LARGEST SELECTION = of Linoleum in Indians
RUGS from $2.39 ba a an te ei ER * - PAINT : LINOLEUM Lo.
of i RC late James rt ie ot i
hi a a
