Speedway Flyer, Volume 15, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1946 — Page 3
Speedway Savings de Loan Association • Member of FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK Current Dividend Rate 3 Per Cent 1518 Main Street Speedway BElmont 0610 WE MAKE LOANS FOR PURCHASES WE MAKE GENERAL REPAIR LOANS
FACTORY RADIO SERVICE f On all makes of radios. Our twenty years of experience qualifies us to give prompt and efficient service. RADIO BILL 3050 West 16th Street Belmont 2484
Good Salesmanship Flower Seller—Buy a flower .sir? Passerby—No thanks. F. S.—Buy one for your wife, sir?
FOR YOUR DAILY SELECTION We offer finer foods . . . ... At greater savings GROCERIES VEGETABLES FRESH FRUIT Speedway Food Mart 16th at Lyndhurst Belmont 3843 TRADE IN SPEEDWAY
SPEEDWAY STUDIO & PHOTO SUPPLY “Your picture is important to you and your family.** WEDDINGS BABIES GROUPS Studio Hours: 1-5 Photo Supplies Papers Baby Books Chemicals Frames Photo Floods Bel. 0446 1432 Main St. John Wilson »-• Photographer
Eulah’s Beauty Shop 1647 PRESTO ST. All New and Modem Equipment FEATURING Eugene Machine Waves; Roil and New Ray Machineless Waves and Rayette Cold Waves TELEPHONE NO. BEL 5139
RUGS BEAUTIFUL COTTON SHAG RUGS All Sizes and All Colors PRICED FROM $3.98 to $19.95 HASSOCKS $8.95 to $13.95 ——————— % Speedway Furniture Store 1414 Main Street Belmont 2988
Passerby—Haven’t got one. F. S.—For your sweetheart then? Passerby—Haven’t one of those, either. F. S.—Well, buy one to celebrate your luck, then!
fashion magic ■ BOD with mirrors ■ Anyway you look at it—it's a classic I A bailie! for every wardrobe I Deftly done* by Bobbie I Brooks of a "smooth as cloud lining” rayon fabric. Colors are luscious... _ _ ~ *8 30 ' * 1500 Main Street
Father Of Fem E. Norris Passes Away Jerome Duenk of Mulberry passed away Sunday, September 15 in the hospital at Frankfort, Ind. Cerebral hemorrhage was the cause of death. He was the father of Fern E. Norris, reporter of the Suprelne and Appellate Courts of Indiana. Mr. Duenk was 69 years of age. He was a farmer and outstanding breeder of stock and holder of many local and national awards before his illness. He had been in failing health for ten years. He was a director in the First Federal Bank of Mulbefry and a former trustee of Ross Township, Clinton County. Survivors include the widow, Mrs. Lucy Ellen Duenk; several brothers, a son, Loyal Duenk; grandchildren, Patricia and Joan Duenk and Max S. Norris.
POLISH YOUR xd OWN FLOORS / I Rent our high-speed polishing equipment. Easily handled R . by women. j SCHOONOVER'S A HARDWARE AND AUTO PARTS 16th and Main Street Belmont 4600
STOKER SALES A SERVICE America’s Outstanding Stoker “The SMITHway” Featuring the ‘Tackaged Unit-Drive” BElmont 5811
FHE SPEEDWAY FLYER
Braised Chicken With Dumplings Broadcaatt Sept. 21,1946 3 JA-lb. chicken 154 twipMai 1 % cup* MMCtMKT baking powflMr flour yj <up rollwi MU, 2 ’/> tMapo.ua aalt quick cooking f.w grain* pwpa* 2 tablaapoon* flaMy 3 tabtapooa* hot cut panlay 2 water Vs cup water Cut chicken into pieces. Roll in mixture of 14 cup flour, 114 teasp. salt and the pepper. Brown in shortening. Drain off fat in pan; add boiling water. Cover; simmer 114 hours, or until chicken is almost tender. Sift 1 cup flour before measuring. Resist with baking powder and remaining 14 teasp. salt. Fold in rolled oats and parsley. Stir in quickly Vs cup milk mixed with the water. Drop by tablespoons on pieces of chicken to make 8 dumplings. Cover tightly; cook slowly 15 min. without lifting cover. Remove chicken and dumplings to serving dish. Stir remaining milk into liquid in pan. Heat slowly, but do not boil. Serve at once with the chicken and dumplings. Serves 4. You Will Need/
Decisions mi By GEORGE SBENSON -wl r President of Harding College Searey. Arkansas E 3 ~~~
MEN AND nations gain or lose by the quality of decisions they make. Founders of this remarkable republic made a wise decision long ago, in favor of personal self-reliance and individual achievement. A mer * ca **• K reat today because so many smart people were left free to do as much as they could, as well as they knew how, and gain as much of a reward for themselves as they were able. •People may orate about America’s greatness coming from her vast natural resources. The resources exist all right but the redskins had them before Columbus came and didn’t know the use of a wheel. Some people boast of this nation’s blueblood heritage. It was good. Our forbears, in large part, came from Europe. That was probably the smartest thing most of them ever did. Greatness AMERICA’S economln Liberty ic system is what made America great. It is a system of liberty giving every man the right to pick what he wants and go after it hammer-and-tongs, get it if he can and enjoy it to the extent of his capacity, so long as it does not trespass the rights of somebody else. It is a sprightly hnd dynamic economy, quickly adjustable to changing tiipes and conditions. , Limitless opportunity and keen competition have borne u rich harvest. Our farmers live better than the peerage of some foreign lands. Our laborers have more than workers in other countries per have had at any time. America has 7% of the. world’s popu-
COLORFUL AND SPECTACULAR ROUND-UP TO BE PRESENTED AT FAIRGROUNDS
Indiana’s finest riding horses and most skilled riders will present a colorful and spectacular round-up at the Indiana State Fairgrounds this week-end as the Western Riders* Association of Indiana brings its annual roundup to Indianapolis for the. first time. A 1946 show of unprecedented proportions and will come to the capital city under the sponsorship of Forty and Eight, Voiture 145, of the American Legion. The first of two shows will be staged in the Coliseum at 8 p. m? Saturday night. The second will be staged in front of the grandstand starting at 1:30 p. m. Sunday afternoon. Approximately 1,000 horses and a wide variety of equipment reviving the “home on the range” mode of existence will run the gamut of expert horsemanship and showmanship. Among the events will be one Saturday night for children 12 years old and younger, and an event Sunday afternoon for children 12 to 16 years old. Indianapolis will get a preview of the round-up with a downtown parade starting from the Indiana World War Memorial at 2:30 p. m. Saturday afternoon. The parade will move south on Pennsylvania street to Washington street, west to Illinois, north to Ohio, east to Meridian and north to the state fairgrounds. A 20-mule team from Gas City will be one of the novel features of the parade and both shows. Forty clubs make up the state association. Some of them located in distant cities started riding towards Indianapolis as early as Wednesday. Officers are Dick Williams, Centerville; Don Cooper, Muncie, vice president; Hazel Tuttle, Muncie, secretary, and Reed Abel, Winchester, treasurer. Mr. Abel is chairman of the round-up committee.
Mass Meeting For Parents Dr. Paul Popenoe To Speak Fathers will be given an opportunity to participate in P.-T. A. activities early this year. Dr. Paul Popenoe, nationally-known lecturer and director of the American Institute of Family Relations, will speak before a mass meeting of mothers and fathers Friday, September 27 at 8 p. m., at Shortridge High School. His subject will be “The Changing Family in a Changing World.” Dr. Popenoe’s visit is being made possible by the Indianapolis Social Hygiene Association and the public schools, who feel that every mother and father should take advantage of the opportunity of hearing this out-
ffiark (fftmdenf j -i-iu-,- 11 i v ‘[T ONLY PUBLIC CmormY ON WIST UDI V A Conatant planning and development pro- .1 * f 741 gram to create beauty a®d harmony in all • v V W eacdona of eaeaetety. 1 TAJ IR »•» CoaeeU R<L—% Mila Wear of Central State Hospital -Afta.
lation and 80% of the world’s automobiles. We send more children to high school and college than all the rest of the world combined. Opportunity DURING the last Stimulates two years of World War 11, from a startled start in December 1941, America made more war materials than all her allies and her foes put together. An American carpenter can buy more with his pay for a day’s work than any other carpenter anywhere 2'4 times as much as a carpenter in Germany or France. And the same goes in all trades; the butcher, the baker and the streetcar conductor. Freedom of opportunity fires everybody to try; thus men of great genius come to light and the whole nation benefits. Then competition between meh of special ability stimulates them to zealous effort in developing products of exgellence at fair prices to develop and hold profitable markets. This enables America’s middle class to enjoy luxuries unknown to run-of-mine kings. Mass production for volume sales demands fine and expensive tools. Buying this machinery calls for capital investment averaging $6,000 per industrial job in the United States. The thing that made America great was a decision to be free: Free to work, free to think, free to earn, free to save and free to invest and make a profit. It is called Free Private Enterprise and it’s too valuable to lose
standing speaker. It is hoped that half the audience will be fathers. Admission to the lecture is by ticket only, which however, is free. Parents of children attending School 57 may obtain their tickets from the P.-T. A. president, Mrs. Robert C. Hodgin, by calling 81. 2091. ABOUT VETERANS An appeal to the newspaper editors of Indiana to take the lead in refraining from using the term “veteran” in the headlines or text of crime stories where a man’s veteran’s connection has no relevance was voiced today by William C. Stalnaker, director of the State of Indiana Department of Veterans’ Affairs. Stalnaker, in a letter to every newspaper editor in the state, addressed these remarks: “You will agree with me, I am sure, that the 12,000,000 men and women who served our country in uniform during the war years are in the news in every respect. Naturally, being the cross-section of our nation, as they are, they are involved in every venture, public and private. And just as naturally there will be a very small minority element among them to correspond to the element among non-veterans who display criminal tendencies. “This fact makes it patent that veterans, as such, should not be defamed by the use of the word ‘veteran’ in connection with news about criminals. It reflects unjustly on the millions of lawabiding veterans who have quietly returned to their homes and occupations. “We don’t read that ‘John Doe, Civilian, murdered his wiie": or, ‘John Doe, a member of the A. F. of L., the Knights of Columbus, and the Chamber of Commerce, robbed a bank’. It is just as unfair to use the label ‘veteran’ in such a story where it has no relevancy. “Therefore, I urge you, as .an editor of a Hoosier newspaper, to take the lead in the United States in this move to purify discriminatory headlines by dropping the ‘veteran’ label from crime stories.”
G. 6. BEAUTY SHOP 1723 Allison BElmont 5582
ORDER NEEDED COAL EARLY In all thing*, success depends on previous preparation. Prepare for winter now. ORDER YOUR COAL BILL GARLAND Champe-Garland Coal Co., Inc. 1422 W. 30th Street Wabash 4543
FURNACES (LEANED BY VACUUM NEW FURNACES COAL GAS OIL Repairs on all makes of furnaces MAURICE BRUCE BE. 5300-4
FRED W. WINGERT Paper Hanging Enameling Painting Estimates Materials Furnished 4933 W. 11th St BoL 4735-J
SPEEDWAY HOBBY SHOP COASTER WAGONS $10.50 STAKE WAGONS __ 17.50 4 P .M. to 8 P.M. Mon. through Fri. 10 A.M. to 8 P.M. Saturday 4906 W. 16th STREET
Skidmore’s Barber Shop 1542 MAIN STREET 3Barbara < “Friendly Sanded* - Shoa Shine
Window Blind Service VENETIAN |KU| WINDOW SHADES WOOD—STEEL " cn PAPER—OIL DELUXE BLINDS - 2TO 3 WEEKS UM , SERVICE = Hill W' Washing Rataping ||l| Re-Cord Refinishing XHUjpH OU Shade* Cleaned, ReHntad DRAPERIES SHOWER CURTAINS EMMETT VENETIAN BLIHD COMPAHY 5242 CRAWFORDSVILLE ROAD Res.: Bel. 0947-W Of f ice Be. 1276
Speedway Pastries We Do Our Own Bakinp FANCY CAKES and PASTRIES SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY FIG JAM COFFEE CAKES Belmont 0805 4906 W. 16th St
BLUM FLOWERS “FOR EVERY OCCASION” 3433 W. 10th St. Belmont 3035 “Flowers By Telegraph” *
MOOREFIELD COAL COMPANY “We Don't Keep the Best - - We Sell It” 2820 W. MICHIGAN STREET BElmont 0350 Owned and Operated by Zeb. Maddrey
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