Speedway Flyer, Volume 18, Number 29, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 March 1950 — Page 4
page 4
LEADERS IN RED CROSS DRIVE
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Enjoying their preliminary work for the 1950 Red Cross Fund Campaign are these three leaders of the North B group of the residential division. Noble C. Butler, colonel of the group, watches as Mrs. Elmo Gill. 2867 Colombia, and Miss Lois Zimmerman. 1503 N. Pennsylvania, outline their plans for the house-to-house drive in March.
GRILLE 16 SHORT ORDERS SANDWICHES STEAKS SALADS FRENCH FRIES Open 24 Hrs. a Day. We Close Sunday at 9 PM. 3660 W. 16th St. Market 0558
DEE’S DEAUTY DAR 1672 Ellen Drive BElmont 2568 PERMANENTS Machine Machineless Cold Wave MANICURES, SHAMPOO AND SET HAIR BLEACHING AND DYEING "Let Bernice Do It" Appointments Anytime Day or Evening
HENS - BAKES - FRIES - EGGS “Fresh From The Farm Daily” Open Monday thru Thursday 1 P.M. to 6 P.M. Open Friday and Saturday 9 A-M. to 6 PM. WE DELIVER SPEEDWAY POULTRY MARKET 4904 W. 16th St. BE. 4362
Have You Been To The BIG BARGAIN CARNIVAL At ALEXANDER'S Yet? This Greatest Value Show Is Now On. Don’t Miss It. Sale started last Wednesday, but we still have ample stock of most items advertised in circulars distributed. ALEXARDER 5c SI JO STORE 1414 MAIN STREET BELMONT 0271 OPEN EVERY FRIDAY EVENING TILL 8:30 P. M.
Real Estate Insurance SPEEDWAY REALTY CO. 614 STATE LIFE BLDG. Phone MA. 2551 We Would Appreciate Your Listings Call Our Local Representative H. L. McNaughton BE. 1221
Berlin Airlift When the Berlin airlift was in operation,-coal was flown in paper bags and often the bags were serviceable enough to be used three times.
Licensed Bonded Insured EDWARD WOODLOCK PLUMBING and HEATING REPAIR WORK NO JOB TOO LARGE OR TOO SMALL BElmont 2387 4918 W. 13th St.
PATRONIZE ERNIE OR RAI % AT RAY’S BARBER SHOP 3634 W. 16th St. 4
WE NEED YOUR OLD REFRIGERATOR TRADE IN NOW AND SATE »Call Your Neighbor • R. W. (Bob) ALLEN BE. 2568 For FREE APPRAISAL DAY OR NIGHT Super-Freezer Ches! : D. R. SMITH CO. BErai'S r E'Rl s i , o H m s ' <h ° ni ‘ m Indiana’s Largent Frigidaire Dealer ihoners 803 Virginia Are. DRYERS HOT WATER HEATERS New Low Prices From $189.7&
TAX ACCOUHTAHT Individual, Partnership, Corporation JOHH FIDGER BE. 0391 1520 Main Street Speedway, Indiana Bookkeeping Systems Installed Or Maintained.
Io Stair-Climbing AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC WATER HEATER*
No stak-cMteg trlps nro wMr noeossnry when your instam hot •**•*«**»* water supply eMhoe fromnnootenoteßsctrfc water * ") healer. The tamiegwn and taming s> are done the ( OfcriflfoufW ) convenient, sale, dependable wap—whh ( mu V -~x\l
FVisit You? [ L APPLIANCE
INDIANAPOLIS OAAPAMV MMMnsnssnsm—a————_ —— - - - -
Bill at Rights Our Bill of Rights was adopted four years after the Constitution, but it was not ratified by Georgia. Connecticut and Massachusetts until 150 years later. 4
and effort also moans money saving, n \X/7 ;j z« . g|H too, bocavso only the am a ent of / M water you need is heated...at Hto / IfJ” ■ low flocMc water heating rate. Ifimßjfl £SSjSSi > 1 Far hoHw hr-*™ hw. m -. t ■ . MbOte* w pving, nscrncaoy* lyumaiii |[|
THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
My Brownie Dog and I He often went out hunting In field and wood near by, Some time we’d trek together My Brownie dog and I. His coat was brown and glossy He had a trustful eye We romped and played together, My Brownie dog and I. We never crossed a highway Where traffic hurried by And we were oh! so careful My Brownie dog and L But . . . once he went alone, And then a car whizzed by And then my Pal . . . my Buddy Came home to me to die! Now we do not walk together For he has lovelier fields to roam I wonder if he misses me Up there ... in his new Home! Anna E. Young
Nyasaland Nyasaland. familiar to few but stamp collectors, grows in importance as a source of tea,, tobacco, and tung oil for • Great Britain.
haOACDI THIN,SICKLY KIDDIES
suffering from B Vitamins and Mineral Deficiencies Most mothers don't realise this! When your child won’t eat. is pale, sickly, puny, backward at school, nervous, has an easily upset stomach—it’s often because he’s suffering from such nutritional deficiencies. Kiddies need two to three times more of these disease-fighting, health-building elements than adults. So start your children on Hadacol at once. hadacol is almost a miracleworking nutritional treatment for kiddies troubled like this. hadacol helps build strong spines, muscles, sound teeth. It improves the appetite, aids digeshadacol even helps build up red blood to course through their little bodies, bringing unbelievable new strength and energy. Watch school marks improve! Mrs. C. R. Reaves of Anniston. Alabama, writes: “I’ve been giving my little girl hadacol for about eight weeks and it’s done her so much good. She eats more and is more playful. She doesn’t mind taking it at all.” Nd matter what you’ve tried—srive HADACOL a ehanee to help your kiddies. Trial sise only 11JS a bottle. Large family or hospital site for SMS.
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Above is a scene from a Donkey Basketball game which will bo re-enacted here when Ralph Godfrey's Donkeys come io the Speedway Gym io present their comedy games on Tuesday. March 14th.
‘Your America* Story Given To Schools “What we do in our lifetime will shape the mold of our nation’s tomorrow. In America, a soldier, sailor, or airman is part of the Citizenry; he has always been a citizen in arms.” We know that our armed forces are maintained to defend our nation but we are not so familiar with their other missions. One mission is not to neglect the education of its men as citizens of a united nation. The Bureau of Naval Personnel, Clearly recognizing this fact has prepared, after 20 months, a series of 10 separate illustrated pamphlets, each bearing the general title, “Your America.” Educators who examined them expressed a great deal of interest, and as a result, it was decided to distribute this series to the secondary schools.
Ambition of A Three Year Old When I get big I want to be A Grandpa to a tad like me. I’ll have a front yard and yard out back With a walk in the middle like a railroad track. Where a kiddy car and a sturdy bike
Can go for many and, many, a hike. An apple tree with apples on it, An Aimtie Mae in a pink sunbonnet. A chicken yard with chickens in it And he eta feed them evejy minute. There’ll be one black duck and some that are yellow What a time he will have, that dear little fellow. I’ll buy him ice cream most every night. In the Spring he will get the very first kite. I want the boy I have in mind To be very dear and sweet and kind. * Of course he must be a very fine lad Same as the one... my grandpa had! Anna E. Young
Paper Sale, Saturday, March 25th W. S. C. S. Speedway Methodist Church
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ACROSS 1. Crust one sore B. Butte #. Buddhist monument 10. Medicinal plant IL Small mallet 12. Lincoln’s assassin 14. Part . of “to be* 15. Pinch 1C Toward IT. Wandered 20. Entire amount 21. Bounder 22. Hastened 23. Neglect. aaa duty 20. Moneys 27. City 22.401ti?* > 29. Viper 30. Guides 34. Neuter Ss.Cr*m m 35. Anger 41. Coins (IL) I* F shaped iS.StaS"’ (slang) 44. A vocable 1. Begin 12U
4. Chief god (BabyL) 5. Raging 6. Drooping T. Cry of a cow 8. Colonized IL Fuel 13. dutches 15. Man’s nickname 18. Measure of land 19. Wild ox (Tibet) SA **ssur<sw tetter
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PUZZLE M. 4
Industrial Editors To Meet Industrial editors of Indiana will gather at Butler University, Friday, March 24, for a one-day conference sponsored by the Indianapolis Association of Industrial Editors and the school’s journalism department, Dr. DeForrest O’Dell, department head, announced today.
Topics for discussion by editors employed in the industrial field will include pictorial presentations, handling of union news, employee relations, technical articles, and the mechanics of production. Members of the board of governors of the Indianapolis association are assisting Butler’s journalism faculty with program arrangements. Included on the committee in charge of the conference are John Kleinhenz, publicity director, Indianapolis Water Co., president of the local association; David K. Banker, Jr., Allison Division of General Motors, vice president; Newton Gou dy, Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce, secretarytreasurer; C. W. McDermod, Indianapolis Power and Light Co.; Mrs. Ruth Rhode, L. S. Ayres and Co.; Miss Mary Elizabeth Hendricks, Eli Lilly and Co.; Miss Jean Johnson, Blue Cross; and Robert Smith, Indiana Bell Telephone Co.
BAKE SALE APRIL BTH At Speedway Savings & Loan, W.S.C.S. Speedway Methodist Church Yus, too, aa tefr through Yow RED CROSS GIVEMW LEGION AUXILIARY CARD PARTY MARCH 25TH
LAST WEEK'S ANSWER
22. immense 23. Edible mollusk 24. Places of lodging 25. Mischievous person 26. Distant 28. A hat (slang) 30. Ventured 31. Expressed juice of apples 32. Cornered, ssina tree 33. Place
Answer to Fastis Na. S 35. Ftowerlees plant 38. By way of 39. Bovine animal - 40. Past
— __ Tj* “STATIC" by T.awnKNCE WITTE
WATTS WATT: Bob Crosby turns to CBS’ “Club 15" on Mock day, March 27. Dick Haymes ha* to give up the series for a movie commitment in New York... Foley, baritone star of NBC’S “Grand Ole Opry” can do some beaming this week. Latest survey shows that his recording of “Chattanooga Shoe Shine Boy" is rated among the top five in both the list of waxings most played by the nation’s disk jockeys and th* list of the best-selling popul** single records. . . Following the broadcast, Monroe’s orchestra will play for a dance at the County Center, Charleston.... Capital records has just signed jazz pianist Art Tatum to record for their outfit. LIVE MIKES: Newsgal Rad< Harris starts a new series, “Stars Over Broadway,” via MBS on Saturday, Feb. 25. Radie will give the latest news in the show world and feature interviews with guest celebrities. . . . Berry Kroeger, starred in CBS’ “Young Dr. M*-* lone,” will play a featured role in Rodgers A Hammerstein’r* newest production, “The Heart of the Matter,” which opens next month. . . . Fred Waring and the Pennsylvanians will make a tour during March. They’ll play Reading, Pa. on March 20; Baltimore, March 21, and Pittsburgh, Maith 22.
THE RADIO NEWSREEL: Bob Hope is reported angling with hi* Tuesday night NBC sponsor to tape-record his show. If the deal goes through Bob wants to do a five-times-a-week daytime series. ... Despite rumors that he might switch to CBS, Phil Harris ha* signed again with NBC and will remain in the Sunday night lineup. .. . NBC is auditioning “Information, Please” expert John Kiernan for a new series along the lines of Alexander Woolkott’s former series of chats. . . . Alan Young’s TV series via CBS ha* been bought by an oil sponsor..., Rudy Vallee becomes a disk jockey soon and the show will be recorded and syndicated throughout the country. ... I hear CBS would like to get Dennis Day to move his Saturday night show, now on NBC, over to their network. . . . That’s all for now.
Share and Share Alike I ''l A few days ago I visited Evansville, Indiana. It is from there that my story originates. In front of the Hotel Vendome, considered the largest and most modern hotel in the city, was a small and dirty-faced boy. Over his shoulder was slung a worn strap and at its end hung a small box. We walked back and forth before the revolving doors of the hotel, and on reaching one particular spot in the sidewalk would shout, “How ’bout a shine, only a dime!” I had seen him several times during the course of the day, but each time he was without a customer. Sometime later, it was then nearing 8 pan. and he was still there, I was once again attracted by his familiar call. But this time I saw a gentleman raise his foot and ask for a shine. The boy seemed so little compared to the plump man that towered over him that it didn’t seem possible he could master a pair of shoes twice the size of the splintered box on which they rested. X went to see just what kind of a job tee little fellow could do. Not more than five minutes at work and Jhe little guy said, “That’s all mister.” The man glanced at his shoes, gave a nod of approval, and in an ai< es snobbish superiority threw the boy his money. The little follow not expecting to receive his money in such an unappreciative manner, dropped the earnings terown him and the money went rolling. A few feet from where I stood tee coin settled. Before X could roach the place where it lay the slenderfaced boy picked up the money and ran to the corner. "Hey guys!” he yelled, motioning with his polish-stained hand, “enmo we’ll eat supper!” At the h—-Mus-ing two smaller boys, from the opposite side of the street and also of the shoe-shining occupation, ran to his side teen they ran. When I reached tee intersection I saw the last of the tens enter a nearby drugstore. That was the last I saw et te» boy. If I had known his name it would beyond all doubt appose in this paper. And why?- Become that little fellow was willing to what he had earned •nd a supper for three. The coin that I saw?—• qnMtse.
Meeting Set
