Speedway Flyer, Volume 19, Number 5, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 October 1950 — Page 4
page 4
STATIC by LAWRENCE WITTE
Bob Hawx made one of his rare departures from tradition on a recent Monday night Bob Hawk Show over CBS when he permitted one of his quiz contestants to accept assistance in the answering of questions. Ray Burch, a veteran of World War II and survivor of the Bataan “Death March,” was
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e AMBULANCE SERVICE Try our Ambulance Service for greater XTfek comfort —Immediate "Around the Clock" service—To any part of City, State out of State. “Chapel of the Flowers” STEVENS MORTUARY 3186 W. 16ih Street IMperial 6125
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TAX ACCOUNTANT Individual, Partnership, Corporation JOHN FIDGER BE. 0391 1520 Main Street Speedway, Indiana Bookkeeping Systems Installed Or Maintained.
umar SERVES AS A ’SUTER’ WHILE ALL OF YOU SLEEP? / else but the telephone/
The telephone a “titter”? Why sure! For while you and your family sleep, the telephone stands guard. Always ready to put you in touch with help if you need it—always ready to serve quickly whatever the reason. What price such peace of mind? Less than W an hour.
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having trouble with his answers, but felt certain, he told Hawk, that his wife would know them aIL “Bring her up,” Hawk insisted while the studio audience roared its delight. Mrs. Burch, teaming with her husband, marched right into the Lemac box; but neither could answer the jackpot question! Red Skelton is ailing. He has put on so much weight Doctors fear glandular trouble. .... A recent headline in the Fort Worth, Texas, Star-Telegram stated: “Radio Serial Leads to Arrest of Young Dr. Malone.” Seems
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a quack M.D., practicing without a license, represented himself to patients as the “Young Dr. Malone” of CBS radio fame. He got away with it and might still be, were it not for a faithful daytime radio fan who decided he didn’t sound at all like the Dr. Malone of the airwaves. She called the police who imposed a 30-day “limited practice” period on the imposter—in the county jail! .. . . Robert Young, star of NBC’s “Father Knows Best’’ on Thursday evenings, reports that in his family, mother definitely knows best! Twelve-year-old Barbara Young was scheduled to go away to boarding school this term for the first time and was gloomily dramatizing the separation, when her mother presented her with just the thing for her state of mind—a pair of pajamas in blue and white ‘prison’ stripes, with a great red heart over the left side of the jacket. Barbara opened the package, struggled to maintain her gloom for a moment, and then burst into peals of merriment. Now she can’t wait to show them off to her new classmates! Particles A-Plenty There are more than 10 billion phosphor particles inside each two-foot-long fluorescent lamp. Yet this quantity amounts to only an “anthill” of powder! weighing one and a half grams—naif the weight of a penny. The phosphor transforms ultraviolet radiations into light
(H Milo W.j»f Clermont on State Hwy. 34 er Crawfordsville RdJ Show Starts 6 pan. on Sunday FRIDAY and SATURDAY OCTOBER 6-7 STERLING HAYDEN JEAN HAGEN in “THE ASPHALT JUNGLE” DOUBLE FEATURE “RETURN OF THE FRONTIERSMAN” with GORDON MacCRAE (IN COLOR) CARTOON SUNDAY and MONDAY OCTOBER 8-9 JAMES STEWART J. CHANDLER in “BROKEN ARROW” DOUBLE FEATURE “GAY INTRUDERS” . with JOHN EMERY CARTOON . TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY OCT. 10-11-12 ESTHER WILLIAMS VAN JOHNSON “DUCHESS OF IDAHO” DOUBLE FEATURE “WINNERS CIRCLE” with JEAN MILLER CARTOON
The 4M’s that make a good job at PREST-O-LITE
Manpower 3^ij-^|j 7 ~g§==. =yj|wßg A successful business must have skilled, experienced and efficient employees. Through their dependability and enthusiasm they not only help a business grow, but also help advance themselves.
Money must be provided for plants and equipment. Thia is obtained from stockholders, and by borrow* ing. Money from sales is needed to buy materials and to pay employees* wages and benefits.
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THE SPEEDWAY FLYER
High School Students To Compete In Essay Contest Indianapolis high school juniors and seniors have a chance to compete for SIOO in state awards and $2,000 in nation-wide prizes by entering the 1951 essay contest on employment of the physically handicapped, S. S. Springer, manager of the Indiana Employment Security Division here, said today. Mr. Springer said that announcement of the coming contest had just been received from John W. Crise, Division director and chairman of the Governor’s Committee for Employment of the Physically Handicapped. “This seems an especially appropriate time to receive this notice,” Mr. Springer added, “since this is National Employ the Physically Handicapped Week and interest of the whole community has been aroused in its observance and in the need for utilizing manpower by considering a man’s abilities and not his disabilities;” Notices of the contest are being mailed this week to public, private, and parochial schools throughout the state, according to Mr. Springer. He said all 11th and 12th grade students are eligible to enter by writing 1,200 or less word essays on the subject “Equal Opportunities in Employment for the Physically Handicapped.” Indi-
ana’s first-award essay will be automatically entered in the national contest along with winning essays from other states. The national contest is under auspices of the President’s NEPH Committee and has the approval of the National Association of Secondary School Principals. The Governor’s Committee sponsored a similar contest for 1950 in Indiana early this year, Mr. Springer pointed out. He said that entry dates of this new 1951 contest were set as October 15 to December 15 in response to popular request for a first semester competition. Parade—Pranks Highlight Grotto lowa Convention . Sahara Clowns Assist Traffic Worries of the dissolving dollar, the 38th parallel and Korea were crowded down , side street Saturday afternoon by thousands in Davenport, lowa, as they filled the business district to over-flowing to watch the antics of the Midwest Grotto Association. With a parade as long as their name, (The Mystic Order of the Veiled Prophets of the Enchanted Realm) the frolicking fez-wearing funmakers changed the downtown area into a jamboree of drill teams, firecrackers exploding, bands, water pistols and more clowns than Ringling Brothers circus. Clowns from Sahara Grotto “assisted” traffic officers by laying down in the street in a la-dare-
FREE PKK UP AND DELIVERY STORE HOURS: 7 a. m. to 6 p. m. Mon. thru Fri. 7 a. m. to 4 p. m. Saturuay WE DO OUR OWN HAT BLOCKING Service Z« Our Stojan. OuoUtp Our Motto Walt’s Speedway Cleaners Shoe Repair JIMMY CVTIHL, Proprietor We Operate Oar Own Qaaning Ptemt 4723 W. lath Street BE. 0561
f \ji |ateriafe To produce high quality compressed gas cylinders and apparatus we must have die best steel and brass, in the right amounts, at the most favorable prices. This helps to keep production going at a steady pace.
| \ / J anagement HI Another “must* that helps to make good jobs is skilled management Trained leaders provide the planning that determines the growth of a business and the advancement opportunities it offers.
devil fashion. This caused some minor traffic confusion. The procession of Oriental splendor, intermixed with a hodge-podge of organized shennanigans, was a colorful prelude to the closing of the Grotto’s two-day convention, September 29 and 30, in Davenport. “Laws can discover sin, but not remove them.”—Milton.
HRB JEyAI. ira ■ b mA ■ !■ w rvraro sieoi a—■A remmm Mk Broadcast: ""■J™ IVeoember 1» Prtsssr.r.ss.Cook potatoes covered, in voter until tender. Turn on oven; set at moderately slow (330* F.). Mi* together meat; oats, catnap, milk, onion, 1 teatp. rale and few graine popper. Shape into 4 patriot. Put into geeatod •hallow baking pan. Bake about 33 min. Drain potatoes; «ave 2 tablets; liquid. Mash thoroughly; add liquid, milk, remaining H teaep. salt and few grains pepper. Boat until light and fluffy. Put on top of bssAt baked moat patties in shape of nest. Bako 13 tain, longer or until lightly browned. Fall ranters with trsomed peas. Makes 4 servings. ★Use hoof, veal, lamb er lean posh. Fan Fill Naodt PET MILK
VQuick, easy way to make ‘ ■ ■ Save time and work with this new, speedy Jway of making croqnWl Try this tested recipe for ham croquettes; they’re delicious and easy on the budget, too, Make the mixture when you are not busy put in a square shallow pan to ©hill. At mealtime, out and prepare aoootdtog to directions. Just a few mto- ■ utes of frying will give you H erisp, tempting croquette! 1 you’ll be proud to serve. Clip ■ the recipe now! Cut into 8 triangle* by cutting |» mixture twice from corner to oonMr « lhen twioe moM ■ thru center from side to side. Is ♦•WoZaaM flotm eoamlv /I teaspoon l cornflakes <* teaspoon pepper \ /fine broad crambe I teaspoon mustardV ’1 egg, slightly beaten v 1 teaspoon onion juicO \ wife 1 tablespoon Jt 1 cup milk k j water Melt Spry in saucepan. Add floiu7w3K"pepper, mustard, and onion Juice and blend. Add milk and cook until thick and smooth, stirring constantly. Add ham and blend. Spread mixture in Bxß-inch pan and ehUl until stiff. Cut as in picture. Coat each triangle with cornflakes, then dip in egg, and again eoat with eornflakee. Fry in hot Spry (875*F.) about inches deep 2 minutes, or until brown. Drain on absorbent paper. Makes 6 serving*. To pan-fry croquettes, heat cup Spry in skillet and fry on both sides until golden-brown and crisp, -taqnissfr
Allison Turbo-Jet for Commercial Transport Allison today became the first engine manufacturer to receive Civil Aeronautics Administration approval for commercial transport operation of both a centrifugal compressor turbo-jet and an axial flow compressor turbo-jet aircraft engine. A CAA Approved Type Certificate was issued today for the Allison Model 450-D4, which is an axial flow turbo-jet engine manufactured by Allison Division. Another Allison made engine, the Model 400-C4, which is a centrifugal type turbo-jet, was certified by the CAA in May, 1948, and was the first jet engine ever to receive Civil Aeronautics Administration approval. The background and experience gained in the developing and manufacturing these two turbo-jet engines since the end of World War 11, has brought about improvements in engine components which have increased operational life of the engines many times over, according to E. B. Newill, General Motors Vice President and General Manager of Allison Division. It is now felt that they have the dependability and relibability demanded of any type of engine which is to be installed in commercial airplanes, Mr. Nevyill declared. Military models of the newly certified engine power such modern jet aircraft as the USAF F-84 Republic “Thunderjet,” F-89 Northrop “Scorpion,” B-35 Northrop “Flying Wing” and the Boeing B-47C “Stratojet” The Allison Model 450 has a power rating of 5000 pounds thrust while the Model 400 develops 4600 pounds thrust. Over 300,000 hours flying time have been accumulated by these two turbo-
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jet engines. Later and more powerful models of these engines are also in production and development and are available only to the military services. Annual P.TA. Day At Children’s Museum Annual P.T.A. Day at the Children's Museum, 3010 North Meridian Street, will be observed with open house Thursday, October 12, from 2:00 to 5:00 pm. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. Mr. Frank Long, an expert glass blower and member of the museum staff, will give demonstrations of the glass blowing art for the entertainment of visitors during these hours. Families of all local school children are urged to attend and become better acquainted with the many services and opportunities the Children’s Museum offers to the children of Indianapolis. Mrs. Grace Golden is director of the museum. Mrs. R. A. Blackburn is chairman of arrangements. Hostesses will be members of the Indianapolis Council of Parent-Teacher Associations and Mesdames Andrew Bicket, John M. Gainey, A. Frank Gleaves, Herschel Harms, Ralph Hart, Harry Kennedy, Robert D. Pritchard, A. M. Ross, Harold R. Spiker, Harold J. Stewart, Hugh A. Thomson, William Wick, J. Walter Wilson and Joe Weddell. There’s very little bother with ashes when garbage is burned in a gas incinerator because with average family waste, it takes nearly two weeks for the ash tray to fill up. Keep cooked rice in covered container in your gas refrigerator. Handy for stuffed peppers, rice puffs, any fruit desserts using rice.
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