Speedway Flyer, Volume 17, Number 36, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 April 1949 — Page 5
SPRING CLEARANCE REDUCTIONS 25% • 50% COATS - SAVE SUITS - SAVE DRESSES - SAVE BLOUSES REDUCED TO $2 AHD $3 SHOP FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 8 P.M. BELMONT 0210 1500 MAIN STREET
DELAPP’S AUTO SALES 5020 WEST 16TH STREET For Good Clean Cars I BUY, SELL OR TRADE BE. 2358 Bus. LI.
For Venetian Blinds and Draperies CALL EMMETT VENETIAN BLIND CO. 5242 Crawfordsville Road Belmont 4551
SPEEDWAY LOCKERS 1008 MAIN ST. RETAIL MARKET BELMONT 1051
’FULL DRESSED FRYERS 63c lb.
Custom Butchering Custom Butehurin«. Carinc and Smoking th* Yaar Around. CaU BE. IMI for Appoint-
YEARLING BEEF Choice—Aged Before Cutting GROUND BEEF lb. 39c Chuck Roastlb. 47c Rib Steakslb. 59c Stewing Beef lb. 55c Sirloin Steaklb. 65c
SMOKED PICNICS lb. 39c LONGHORN Cheeselb. 49c STARK A WETZEL - Wieners I lb. 43c Cold Cutslb. 45c SMOKED HAMS M to H LB. AVERAGE 59c lb.
Riley Memorial Foundation To Raise $1,000,000 Perry W. Lesh, president of the James Whitcomb Riley Memorial Association, today announced the association would sponso? a state-wide campaign for $1,000,000 or more to be used in support of a rapidly expanding program of medical and surgical research at the Riley Hospital for Children. Organization work is already under way in many counties of the State and leadership will be announced shortly. Research in diseases and deformaties typical of childhood will be a major factor in the work of the expanded division, it was announced. The State of Indiana is now building a new structure in connection with the hospital, particularly designed for research purposes. Money raised by supporters of. the campaign will be used to equip the building and expand the staff of scientists who will carry on the research work the announcement set out. Work in the research laboratories will be under the general direction of the Indiana University Medical School which has been at work for some time developing a staff trained in many phases of research in medicine and surgery. Together with scientists brought from other research centers the Medical School faculty will develop the program in the new research center, the announcement stated. Some of the permanent research investigations to be carried on are studies in heart disorders commonly affecting children; nerve transplants; a broad study of dangerous viruses; rheumatic fever; gland irregularities and so-called “bone banks.” The Riley Association, which will sponsor the fund raising campaign, is the original sponsor of the Riley Hospital, and carried on the campaign for its construction and equipment. It has continued its close relationship with the hospital, but has not conducted a general campaign effort since 1926. Riley has cared for 75,000 children in its beds and thousands more in out-patient clinics since it opened. The forthcoming campaign is expected to round out the Riley Hospital’s service to the state. Perry W. Lesh, president of the Riley Association Board of
v tOC*. '•*. Would You Work Up Her Interest?
t^O > **KO«:S T S DELIVERY Fff*Js2s - 2401 W WAsHl|gjroM
Our Own Open Kettle LARD 1 lbs. 25c
Wholesale Prices Boot and pork •old by tho wartor or half. Completely prueuMed. wrapped to eoDophano and fast fraaen
SAGE SAUSAGE , , lb. 29c BROUWER CUT Pork Roastlb. 45c Fresh Picnicslb. 35c CENTER CUT Eork Chopslb. 65e ork Liverlb. 29c
THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
Governors, issued a statement covering the aims and objectives of the program. He spoke for the Board of the Association. “We stand today on the brink of exciting discoveries in medical research,” he said. “On every hand there are challenges already half met Somewhere, some time, someone will answer these challenges. We hope to have a share in providing some of the answers. “The State of Indiana, recognizing the great opportunities for research at Riley and related units, is now constructing a specially designed building to contain modem laboratories, specialized equipment and work space where scientists may carry on their studies. The research laboratories will be staffed, and the work directed, by men of extensive experience in the investgative field. The full resources of the faculty of the School of Medicine and of the University will be enlisted in the work. “A coordinator of research will supervise the operation of the research units, with faculty and lay assistance. “Visiting scientists have often expressed great interest in the clinical facilities available for study at Riley. Our program contemplates taking full advantage of the resources at hand. • “Research in ' the diseases of children at Riley, now one of the great children’s hospitals, is no new idea with those who have been engaged in building and equipping the hospital. For years they have looked forward to the establishment of a highly organized division of research which would equal in effectiveness the operational achievements of the institution. The task of creating the hospital has been a big one, but we are now ready to enter the new field." With the help of public-spirited men and women throughout the state, we shall create and maintain a research program here in our own state which gives great promise for the future. “Gifts of every character will be sought and accepted. Long term payment plans have been adopted. Gifts of property or trust funds will be welcomed. Permanent memorials may be established; gifts may be made for specific purposes and restricted to use of income.”
In addition to Mr. Lesh, members of the Riley Association Board of (governors are George A. Ball, Muncie; 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 & Co., 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; Herman B. Wells, president of Indiana University and Evans Woollen, Jr., chairman of the board of the Fletcher Trust Company, Indianapolis. Arthur V. Brown, chairman of the board, Union Trust Company, Indianapolis, is treasurer of the association. Local Man Finishes Training Course Mr. H. M. Grimes of 1659 Christopher Lane, has recently returned home from Hartford, Conn. He has just completed a four months intensive course in the Special Agents Training School there. Upon completion of the course, Mr. Grimes was appointed special agent and engineer for the Automobile Insurance Comany
FRESH Bay It Where It 1$ Baked It’s Fresher DECORATED CAKES PARTY ORDERS SPEEDWAY PASTRIES 4906 W. 16th St. Behnepifani BAY A. PBICE. Prop.
and Standard Fire Insurance Co. of Hartford, affiliated with AEtna Life Insurance Co. Offices are in the Merchants Bank Bldg. Mr. Grimes will assist B. H. Peterson, state agent, and P. B. Miller, special agent in handling the state of Indiana. A native of Indiana, he was educated at Vernon High School and Purdue University. Before entering the insurance field, Mr. Grimes was employed by the Indiana State Highway Commission, Indiana Rating Bureau and served three years in the Navy CBs. , I MUSICALE (Continued .from page 1) partmerit of Parks and Recreation) with Mr. Renato Pacini, assistant concert master of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra as director. The admission for this program is free. Hand Grenade. Weeks Golden Glow Overture ...Johnson Melodic Overture .Epperson Speedway High School Band Mr. Lincoln Northcott, Director Alleluia .Titcomb Thy Word Is a Light Morgan Speedway Christian Church Chancel Choir Mrs. Helen Robinson, Director Meditation from Thais „.Massenet Czardas Monti Mr. Renato Pacini, Violinist Miss Patty Hilficker Accompanist O, What a Beautiful Morning —.Rogers The Surrey With the Fringe on Top .Rogers De Bule-Tail Fly .Minstrel Song Speedway Choral Club Mrs. Helen Robinson, Director
WHY NAME CALLING? By GEORGE & BENSON President of Harding Collego Searcy. Arkansas
THE CALLING of names is a propaganda technique based on delusion and trickery. It has been common in politics for a long time, and has done its part to give politics a bad reputation among the people in general. Americans are accustomed to a certain amount of this in election campaigns. But surely we have not come to the place where we expect it in the halls of Congress. In legislative sessions, when serious national problems are being discussed, it is a bit disturbing to hear so much name-calling. Any American has the right to disagree with another and to speak out his mind. But it is not necessary always to discredit those who disagree with us. Freedom' THE WORST thing is Fragile that has happened in America in the last twenty years has been the tendency to divide our people into class groups. Our country has long been known as the "melting pot,** where immigrant lads and backwoods boys can become bankers and industrialists. High bom or low born, rich or poor, in America .it never really has mattered. The important thing in America is that a man may plan and live out his own dream. Some folks apparently have forgotten that these freedoms of ours are fragile and perishable. Unless we attend to the keeping of each of them, it is possible to lose them all. The building of class consciousness is one of the very worst things we can do to our American life. It could be the entering wedge of all kinds of
k H«*c httuJ Dr. Benson and the radio drama. "Land of the Free”? Cheek yowt local station for time.
ALL WOOL AXMINSTER RUGS LOW PRICED LUXURY IS NOW POSSIBLE WITH THESE ALL WOOL AXMINSTER RUGS AVAILABLE IN SIX DIFFERENT PATTERNS. size 27x48 inch only $4*95 ALEXANDER 5c - $1 JO STORE 1414 MAIN STREET BELMONT 0271
YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO GAMDLE In these days of high rapair cost and high damage awards in coat 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. Hero is bow it works: Your annual premium is divided into five easy payments. 1. 10% is paid with tho appUcatien. 2. 80% is paid when tho policy is delivered. # 3. 80% is paid in two months. 4. 10% is paid in four months. 5. 30% is paid in six months. There is no added cost for this easy payment plan. B. F. Rosier lßS.mceAgo.cy 1007 < LYNDHUBSY DBIYE Bflmant 1118 Flnanefngk Ftoeb Md XJfo InsaonMto
The Marches of Peace ...Mueller Serenade Romberg Speedway High School Chorus Miss Pauline Hendrickson Director Thoughts for National Music Week Mrs. Easley W. Blackwood Treasurer Indiana State Symphony Society The Rival Sisters Overture .Henry Purcell Concerto Grosso Op, 8 No. 9 —.Handel Largo Allegro Minuet in G ....Georges Valensin Two Preludes Chopin Rhumba Dansante ..Brown-Miller Allegro from Serenade for Strings Mozart Teen Sinfonietta Mr. Renato Pacini, Director First violins Bruce Fowler, Martha Hofmann, Jane Woods, Mary Margaret Sutton, Ronald Russell, Susie Sertell, Bessie Whitted. Second violins Marietta Sears, Elaine Cook, Marybelle Rice, Marigold Leete, Paul Rettig, John Hilficker, Pat Bemhart. Easley Blackwood, Patty Hilficker, viola; Joanne Hilficker, Janet Heller, Marilyn Cook, Joanne Bemat, ’cello. Lauralee Burke, bass. The Star Spangled Banner ..Scott i Calves Net Anemic Among all farm animals, the calf is least susceptible to nutritional anemia, ft is born with a fourmonth supply of copper and iron in its liver, and before it exhausts this supply it is supplementing its milk diet with feeds that contain these minerals. The pig, in contrast, is born with only enough iron to last a week or 10 days, and if it does not have access to soil or receive a mineral supplement by the end of that period, nutritional anemia is almost certain to develop.
£3
“isms," any one of which in time might well put us in chains. A Low THE TERM "big Level business" is used as name-calling by unthinking persons and by those who have isms up their sleeves. Name-calling of business, big or little or any size, can have nothing but an unwholesome effect upon the American scene. A U.S. Senator was quoted in the press recently as saying; “it appears that big business would rather risk a continued inflation of prices than balance the budget through increased taxes." You see, all the people of the nation are paying about a third of their total income in ~taxdg. Must anyone who believes that taxes should not be raised be placed on the receiving end of a name calling campaign? One senator on the Senate Labor Committee keeps branding as “fascist" certain of those who oppose increased taxation. Does this mean the Senators cannot make out a reasonable case for increased taxes? Does it mean that they can defend the case for higher taxes only by hanging ugly tags on those who oppose tax increases? If we must try to turn labor against management—if we must turn the public in general against employers who are providing millions of jobs at the highest wages ever earned—then I am afraid we have reached a level that signals the end of our American way and our high standard of living.
PAUL’S D-X SERVICE 5232 CRAWFORDSVILLE ROAD 1 tUI r 1 days a week Washing - Greasing - Maintenance Tune-up - Starters - Generators Mufflers and Tailpipes Installed ROAD SERVICE BEL 0035
BY TNI CLOCK . . . INSTIAD OF BY THi CALINDAB au TNI TIMS
f=W=|
Gek an XL AUTOMATIC l&cVuc WASHER Why should every Monday be *waoh-day." week after week? Well, as a matter of fact, the modern home-maker doesn't have a wash day—Monday or any other day. With her automatic Electric washer, keeping up with the family laundry is a matter of only miautes-msytime It amts her. A lew +—'■ spar* minutes are euongh—psrimps brfere the femap coame home to dinner-just long enough to stow soiled eftghii in the washer, eet the controls and flip the switch. It’s automatic from then on! Ask your favorite Electric appliance dealer to demonstrate hie automatic washer to you—and while you’re there, look at the Electric dryer and the sit-down automatic ironer. too.
TV OUR w| Wpy 'ct'ectw 4PPLI4NCE ItNDI.MAPOLIS V i
DOT \FOOD STORE
BONELESS Veal Roast "■ 53/ NU-MAID OLEO MARGARINE adored ] h QKy quartered ,w " UUr HERSHEY’S CHOCOLATE SYRUP 2 Gms For 29/
FKESH BAKERY GOODS T DAYS A WRa| LEW'S MARKET I Lyndhurst at State Rd. 34 Belmont 45Gb1
THESE PRICES GOOD FRIDAY. APRIL 29TH THROUGH MAY 2HD
Bacon OSCAR MAYER Sliced—“A” Grade 1 ib. pi«. 45/ GOLD MEDAL Flour 5 it. B>g 44/ “Potatoes’ U.S. No. 1 Cobbtaral 10 »• 39/
page 5
