Speedway Flyer, Volume 17, Number 35, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1949 — Page 4
page 4
RALSTON’S r grocery | Groceries / Meats ICE CREAM 5230 W. 16th Street Res. Phone, Bel. 8929
PTA CARD PARTY APRIL 27!
WANT-TO EMPHASIZE "I'M AWFULLY GLAD?" fwm. w®SSm®
PTA CARD PARTY APRIL 271
The smartest housewives have always sail Stop baking at home and instead Buy It Baked, the modern way And have more leisure every day. Buying it Baked is truly a modern convenience. And all our baked foods assure you the same fine quality as when you make your own. It’s smart, it’s economical, it’s practical. Buy it Baked. DECORATED CAKES PARTY ORDERS SPEEDWAY PASTRIES 4906 W. 16th St. Belmont 0231 RAY A. PRICE. Prop.
PHILLIPS INSURANCE AGENCY e*Y° P me jjSx ft**™™/
SAVE LIVES!
Complete Insurance Service Auto Financing Belmont 2211
- “DEAL WITH A STRAIGHT SHOOTER” Bud Harvey says: During the past 15 years I have won many city, state and national clay pigeon championships. If you wish to sell your car or buy a car I will shoot straight with you. Come to Speedway City where the overhead is low and look at these can and compare prices.
FULL PRICE ’34 FORD CPE. __sl2s With Rebuilt Motor ’35 FORD CPE. __slso With Rebuilt Motor ’3B NASH SED. __slso Runs and Looks Good *39 CHEV. CPE. $295 One Owner—A Perfect Car ’4O DODGE CPE., $495 New Paint—Runs Perfect ’46 FORD $1295 Convt. Coupe
BUD HARVEY’S HOOSIER AUTO SALES “Hl blow my top to buy your jalop” 13th and Main St, Speedway City
Fourth Annual Sale Begins This month the Teen-Timers are preparing to give their fourth annual rummage sale which will take place the third week in May for a poor district of Indianapolis. Every year we divide the streets of Speedway into five main groups and two girls are given a group to canvass for old clothes, toys, comic books, dishes, etc., and every year you people of Speedway have been very generous by donating whatever you can. Once more we are about to begin and during this spring cleaning time we ask that you keep us in mind and save what you can. If you have some things
Join Sutphin’s Bait and Fly Casting School ITS FREE Tuesday and Thursday evening 5 till dark on Prest-O-Lite Tennis Courts. SUTPHIN’S SPORTING GOODS 4832 W. 16th St. z BE. 1321
YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO GAMDLE In these days of high repair cost and high damage awards in cost involving bodily injury, driving an automobile without full insurance protection is simply gambling with your future. You can afford automobile insurance on the Buckeye Union 5 Pay Plan. Here is how it works: Your annual premium is divided into five easy payments. 1. 10% is paid with the application. 2. 20% is paid when the policy is delivered. 3. 20% is paid in two months. 4. 20% is paid in four months. 5. 30% is paid in six months. There is no added cost for this easy payment plan. D. F. Rosner Insurance Agency 1007 N. LYNDHURST DRIVE BElmoni 1110 Financing. Fire. Automobile and Life Insurance.
FREE PICK UP AND DELIVERY STORE HOURS: 7 a. m. to 6 p. m. Mon. thru Fri. 7 a. m. to 4 p. m. Saturday WE DO OUR OWN HAT BLOCKING Service Is Our Slogan, Quality Our Motto Walt’s Speedway Cleaners & Shoe Repair JIMMY CUTRELL, Proprietor We Operate Our Own Cleaning Plant 4723 W. 16th Street ’ BEL 2925
TAX ACCOUNTANT Individual, Partnership, Corporation JOHN FIDGER BE 0434 1520 Main St. Speedway, Indiana Bookkeeping Systems Installed Or Maintained.
floral ffiark (ffmdenf - ONLY PUBLIC CnornßY ON WIST SIDS V A A Coaaaat jlaaata aa4 tatasaaast Mb V'Ya A A; ! MW Conall Rd.—% Mlle Wee W Cwtral tala HoeM
, FULL PRICE ’4l CHEVS $795 Coupes A Sedans S to Choose From ’46 PLMS. $1095 ’47 CHEVS $1295 ’4l MERC, tudor $795 Like New ’46 MERC, sedan $1495 Immaculate ’4B CADILLAC $3195 Sedan
ready now, why not call the Teen-Timer nearest you and she’ll be glad to come around and pick it up. If not, please remember our deadline is May 20. Thank you very much. Dee Covell, Publicity. Card Party At St. Anthony’s Hall The Altar Society of St. Anthony’s will hold a card party Sunday, April 24 at the School Hall, 371 N. Warman .Ave., at 2:15 and 8:15 p. m. C.&T. Those in charge are Mrs. John Haney, chairman, and Mrs. Wm. Glennon, co-chairman. The E.F.G. and H’s of the parish are assisting. Luncheon will be served between games.
FULL PRICE ’4B OLDS $2795 Futuramic—Convt. 2 to Choose From—Red or Gray ’42 PLYMOUTH $595 4Dr—A Real Buy ’4O DODGE $695 Convt. Coupe A Beautiful Fire Engine Rad Many Other Cars At Wholesale Prices
THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
Governor Proclaims Mental Health Week Gov. Henry F. Schricker Monday proclaimed April 24-30 as Mental Health Week to coincide with the National Mental Health Week observance designated by the American Psychiatric Association and the National Mental Health Foundation, at the request of Edward F. Gallahue, president of the Indiana Mental Hygiene Society. With the governor at the proclamation ceremonies, in addition to Mr. Gallahue, were Rogers Smith, M.D., Indiana Council for Mental Health, Murray DeArmond, M.D., president, and E. Vernon Hahn, M.D., past president of the Indiana Neuropsychiatric Association, S. Paul Clay, Jr., chairman, mental health committee of the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce and president, board of the Child Guidance Clinic of Marion County, Mrs. John K. Goodwin, treasurer, board of the Child Guidance Clinic and Mrs. Montgomey F.
General Plowing and Grading Yards Will Plow Small Gardens CALL BELMONT 1322 x before 7 A.M. or after 4:30 P.M. week days or all day Saturdays or Sundays.
ROLLES & SEARLES PURE OIL STATION 5002 West 16th Street i ■ COMPLETE MOTOR OVERHAUL MOTOR TUNE-UP GENERATORS and STARTERS REPAIRED BRAKES RELINED—WHEEL BALANCING ROAD SERVICE BEL. 0026
Be sure with Pure
ON THIS! ITEMS
BU E ° Iy * 1 I pn* st « P-on Can I / / I I White I 8 I sire trim. / ■ ws et, red A , X'liyr hi,!h - Pa ' n "*' ■ ]■ Oval Waste Carefully Rolfocf aMTWI HI sflThs- I BASKET Steell Matching HI aMRIms iM DMOnrtfoMl ill ill ***’ | | i | «< w > » F° r kitchen » etc White. Red trim I | HHHHHHHHH * nter *° r> Iffir 'W- BREAD BOX 4-Pc. Canister Set 7Qc Regularly AOC 89c V>s«t H| W White with ted 4 handy sues for tea, coffee, etc. round White. Red trim and covers. —****** comers. Save! ALEXANDER 5/-«1 - STORE 1414 MAIN STREET BELMONT 0271
Lewis, president of the Council of Social Agencies of Indianapolis and Marion County. Observance of the week is receiving the assistance of all groups interested in the advancement of mental health, including the Junior Chamber of Commerce which is cooperating nationally. During the week, prominent speakers will appear before many civic groups of the state to present scientific facts about mental health and dispel superstitions about mental illness. Also, final plans will be made during Mental Health Week for the drive to raise funds for the building of the proposed Child Guidance Clinic of Marion County.
Liberation Reminder Townspeople of Wiltz, Luxembourg, have established a permanent war memorial in honor of General Patton’s army which brought about the liberation of this war-torn city. One of Patton’s tanks has been placed on a concrete base in the Square of the Martyrs and the Stars and Stripes is staffed above.
James Whitcomb Riley Research Fund
-'I W - 5
ANTON HULMAN. Jr„ Terre Haute, new State Chaiman for the James Whitcomb Riley Centennial Research Fund.
Anton Hulman, Jr., nationally known Indiana business man and civic figure, has accepted the state chairmanship of a projected $1,000,000 James Whitcomb Riley Centennial Research Fund for scientific investigation of children’s diseases. “I am proud to play what part I can in exploring the possibilities of tearing away the mysteries surrounding so many of the diseases that strike children as well as adults,” Mr. Hulman said in accepting the appointment.
The fund will be a broad cooperative effort involving the good-will of the people of Indiana toward their sick children; the medical resources of Indiana University and some of the country’s leading researchers into the field of children’s diseases; the state of Indiana, which, has set aside funds for a special researchwing to the James Whitcomb Riley Hospital for children, to house the scientific investigations; and the Riley Memorial Association, for 25 years sponsors of the Riley Hospital where more than 75,000 of Indiana’s sick and crippled children have been treated and set upon the road to normal, healthy lives. The association will act as trustee of the gifts collected for the new research fund. State-wide organization for the fund is now under way. With its completion, Indiana will become one of the country’s major centers of research into
the most typical of childhood. Although no limits will be set, and no medical boundaries prescribed, for research activities, there are a number of medical phases in need of immediate intensive investigation. Among these phases, to which the fund will be applied at the beginning, are extension of the techniques of bone surgery already being done; transplantation of nerves; direct surgery of the heart and vascular system, which includes the delicate operations now being done on so-called “blue-babies”; rheumatic fever; tumors; endocrine gland disorders; bone “banks” and diseases of the blood forming organs. “ A minimum goal of $1,000,000 has been set, and it is hoped that this sum will be obtained by state-wide financial participation during the James Whitcomb Riley Centennial year,” Perry W. Lesh, Indianapolis, president of the Board of Governors of the Riley Memorial Association explained. “This, we believe, will provide necessary financial support to enable the research center to contribute extensively to the knowledge of preventive and curative medicine."
The Riley Memorial Association was organized in 1916 for the purpose of memorializing Indiana’s most noted poet, whose writings showed his great love for children. Riley Hospital, generally recognized as one of the nation’s outstanding children’s hospitals, was dedicated in 1924, and since that time has given hospitalization to more than 75,000 indigent Indiana children, and cared for more than 300,000 clinical visits. In support of the research fund, which will operate as a separate entity from the hospital, the Riley Association has already pledged $50,000 a year for five years from the hospital funds. Officers of the Board of Governors of the Riley Association are: Perry W. Lesh, president; Herman B. Wells, president of Indiana University, vice president; Alfred Gauding, Indianapolis, assistant treasurer. Other members of the board are George A. Ball, Ball Brothers Company, Mancie; Arthur R. Baxter, Indianapolis; William Lowe Bryan, president emeritus of Indiana University; Joseph J. Daniels, Indianapolis attorney; Carl F. Eveleigh, executive vice president of Eli Lilly and Company, Indianapolis; Joseph A. Franklin, vice president and treasurer of Indiana University; William C. Griffith, president of the Indiana Trust Company, Indianapolis; J. Dwight Peterson, president of the City Securities Corporation, Indianapolis; James A. Stuart, editor of the Indianapolis Star and Evans Woollen, Jr., chairman of the board of the Fletcher Trust Company, Indianapolis.
Bindweed Seeds Bide Time Seed of bindweed has long been known to remain viable in the soil for many years. This long life has been an important factor in making this weed one of the farmers’ most tenacious pests. PTA CARD PARTY APRIL 271
An Enterprise Story By GEORGES BENSON Presktonl et Bending College 4* Searcy. Arkansas
FREEDOM of enterprise is a strong and dynamic principle. It continues to work us wonders despite the many ways we have hedged it about The sorry plight of our time is that we have found such a fine way of life, proved that it works so well, then eared so little to protect and cherish it Yes, a lot of us pay first-rate lip service to free enterprise. I But when it’s time for the crucial test, what happens? We let the politicians (who ought to become statesmen when elected) spread the death-web of bureaucracy far and wide. We seem to agree that government can do it —oh, just almost anything so much better! We tax industry and incomes until capital is too scared to have any enterprise left. In short, we back enterprise right up to the precipice, and seem not to realise what we have done. Miracle I HAVE SAID that Medicine free enterprise still works us wonders. One of the moet amasing examples of freedom of business onterprise has been working miracles right before our eyes now for five years, and we have scarcely noticed it. Ono of tho nation's top science writers. J. D. Ratcliff, has outlined the miraclestory of penicillih manufacture in the January issue of “Nations Business." Ratcliff says this great medicine Js now the biggest selling item in the drug trade, saving 50,000 lives yearly from pneumonia alone. . Just a few short yean ago penicillin was made in laboratory flasks and sold for a fancy price. Even during the war, a black would have liked to°naii down a monopoly on thia miracledrug. But, then, American industry tackled tho job of producing pons-
TOWN NOTICE ON DOGS A new proclamation hag been inacted to better control the rapid spread of rabies. This proclamation is severe but is absolutely necessary for the health and welfare of children and adults. It reads in part as follows: It shall be unlawful for the owner of any domestic animal to allow same to rotyn the streets unattached and that all animals shall be kept either on leash or tied up in the confines of the proper owner, and any animal found unattached on the streets in the Town of Speedway shall be confined by the proper authorities and disposed of during the period of emergency. The owner of any domestic animal failing to abide by this proclamation shall be taken into a court of proper jurisdiction and fined in a sum not exceeding Ten ($10.00) Dollars, and each day the violation exists shall constitute a separate violation.
Card Party The Sahara Grotto Cast Auxiliary is sponsoring a “pillow slip” card party Tuesday, April 26 at 8 p. m. in the Grotto Clubhouse, 4107 E. Washington St. All games will be played. The public is invited.
Xi* 48AM BUMMUI
Many a good homemaker heal* tates to cook fish. Yet It can be cooked so many different ways and Is a welcome change for a main course. Fish Casserole usee either fresh or frosen fillets. Wash 9 lbs. pilots. Wipe with doth. Break into largo chunks and place in greased casserole. Cover with 1 pt. sour cream, % lb. grated Cheddar cheese, 1 small minced onion, H am white wine (or % cup lemon juice), 1 tsp. salt, U tsp. pepper. Bake la moder* ate gas oven (375 # F.) tor about 30 mlns. Serve on hot noodleo—l cups noodles boiled in salted water for about 8 mins. Serves 4. see A new aluminum foil that saves cleaning time can bo put.on the bottom of your broiler to catch grease from cooking foods. We once and throw away. There are only three usee In* cold water in the average homo but there are 140 different usee for hot water. An automatic gas water heater ensures a reliable supply of hot water whenever it is needed. Take eggs out of the refrigerator ahead of time when you plan to beat them. They whip up faster and better at room temperature. Simmering is an excellent cook* ing method used by good oeoks to retain food values. Turn the mb tow to simmer position to keep soups, stews, vegetables and fruits gently cooking. o e e Evaporated milk can be soured by stirring in wdl 2 tbsp, lemon juice to one cup milk.
units but today a dollar's worth of penicillin will rout dreaded pneumonia. _ | How did all this happen? Well, it took enterprise and lota of it Penicillin manufacture was pretty much a guessing game at first. It took courage to invest and to plan. According to Ratcliff, one small company in the chemical industry had thia eourage and vision. Ask the IT SEEMS that a Question > man named John L. Smith, president of Charles Pfiser A Company, Brooklyn, gets the main honors for penicillin manufacture. Smith was an immigrant to this country at the age of two years, and worked his way up to an education in chemistry. After ho became president of that small firm, specialists in microbes and fermentation processes, Smith heard of penicillin. Then Smith took a chance, made possible by Amer*] ica's system of enterprise. This man Smith made plans to spend 4H million dollars for a giant new penicillin plant. That was big money, for his eOW was doing only about twine fthat amount of business annusufiy. Besides, science was not wrtain about what penicillin could do. But, Smith had seen it sayb lives, and he intended to produce R. He did, in vats as largo as tank oars. The demand was groat. Thfo others bogsn to make it. Sy. the Pfiser company's sales juifoodto M million dollars a imK Ths country had its precioul penicillin. This is a grand suceesg strny. ™ry bill so kname, g* mtlonal policy, with the waMont will
