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The Indianapolis Star from Indianapolis, Indiana • Page 25

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
25
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

7 LOWELL XTSSBACM' THE TUIXGS I nEAIT Star The Indianapolis FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1967 Sports Financial Classified Page 25 Alexandria School Bus, Car Collide; Driver Of Auto Injured Cooks' Nevada Property Sold For $5 Million 100 yards from the Cunningham School. The bus had just pulled from the school. Trooper Appleby said the road in front of the school is not posted as a school zone. derson. Two of the pupils on the bus were shaken and released after being checked by an Alexandria physician.

The collision occurred about mission on the sale and financing of the Prell operation. Lippman, Indianapolis developer and owner of a prop erty management firm, had been accused of fraud by the Story May Not A HUMOROUS story which a small boy telephoned to Child Life Magazine officials here the other evening won't seem so funny when the lad's parents get their telephone bill. The boy talked at great length trying to explain why it was so important that his story appear on the magazine's joke and riddle page. The fact he was calling from his home in Portland, and the toll -charge was mounting didn't seem to bother him. P.S.

It wasn't much of a Joke, and probably won't be printed. GOODWILL INDUSTRIES officials are proud of the fact that Goodwill employe-trainees paid $145,669 in taxes on their earnings last year. That makes these handicapped people tax PAYERS Instead of tax recipients during their rehabilitation at the Goodwill plant They are paid a wage based on their production. MRS. THELMA JOSEPH of Lizton called to punch holes in that story Sunday about spectators carrying away cartons of beer from a truck wrecked on 1-74 near Lizton.

There wasn't any beer in the cartons, she says. It was grapefruit and oranges. True, a beer truck was wrecked in the same area a day later, but the truck wasn't broken open and no beer was lost. Insurance adjusters, called to the scene of the citrus fruit truck wreck, first tried, vainly, to sell the fruit, then told spectators to help themselves to it A SCHEME to entice scarce half dollars out of socks, or buried fruit Jars, has been devised by the Bradley Barbecue, 3840 East Washington. The restaurant has announced that for one day, next Monday, a 50-cent coin will be WALTER WINCIIELL AFNB that he tained promise of broker fee from terests and at the arranged for his don't miss the annual llome Show Today through Sunday, February 12.

Manufacturers Building at the Fair Grounds. See the House of Changing Moods, decorated and furnished by Block's interior designer, Mr. John Britz. It dares you to be different! sociates and relatives to get STAR STATE REPORT Alexandria, Ind. A car slammed against the side of a loaded school bus driven by the Alexandria police chief east of here yesterday afternoon.

None of about 30 pupils aboard the bus was injured and the driver of the car suffered only minor injuries. STATE TROOPER Jack Appleby said the bus driver, Clifford L. (Pete) Sayre, 39 years allegedly ob the finder- the Cook in same time old, Alexandria, told him he stopped for a stop sign and then pulled into the intersection of two Madison County roads, 2 miles east of Alexandria, after another car had business as passed. Sayre said he failed to see the car which slammed against the left side of the bus at 3:45 p.m., according to the trooper. The trooper said he will confer with the county prosecutor before any charges are filed.

The drive of the car, Miss Myra Heater, 17, R.R. 2, Alexandria, told police she was driving about 55 miles an hour east on Bethel Pike. SHE WAS treated for minor injuries and released from Community Hospital at An By CAROLYN PICKERING The Aladdin Inn, a Las Vegas, (Nev.) motel-casino, yesterday was sold to the Prell Hotel Corporation for $5 million, exactly half the price of a previous negotiation when the Cook Brothers Trusts of Kokomo were attempting to sell the property. Approval of the Prell Hotel option was given yesterday by Federal Judge William E. Steckler on the recommendation of Sigmund J.

Beck, an attorney for the trustee, American Fletcher National Bank and Trust Company. THE BANK was named trustee last Oct. 8 when the trusts and related properties went into Federal Court reorganization under bankruptcy laws. The purchaser of the 300-room Aladdin is headed by Milton Prell, one of the initial developers of the Las Vegas resort area. The Prell firm had contracted little more than a year ago to buy the hotel for $10 million.

UNDER TERMS of the option, the company will maintain first mortgage payments The LUm.H. 3 ock Co. 20 per cent of the stock in the Prell Hotel Corporation. LIPPMAN HAD submitted a $1.2 million broker fee to the trusts for his obtaining a purchaser for the Aladdin. The compromise sets out that Lippman will settle for $75,000, plus $297,000 to Hilton Construction Company, of which he is the sole stockholder, for $312,000 borrowed by the trusts.

In announcing the settlement, the bank a month ago charged him with fraud, said: "Mr. Lippman will have rendered a valuable service if the option is exercised." Last 2 days! 43rd annual Hoosier Art Salon in our Sixth Floor Auditorium. Open today and tomorrow during store hours. No admission charge. Brando Congests Village Traffic Thi LLm.H.

3lock fit 'I End Humorously worth 60 cents on a pork, beef or ham sandwich. All the half dollars collected in this fashion will be placed back in circulation, the management pledges. GRADY FRANKLIN of Western Electric public relations here was in New York and decided to look at the Associated Press headquarters. Walking into the big newsroom, he started to introduce himself to the first young man he saw: "I'm Grady Franklin "Oh, from Indiana, I believe," the young man interrupted. They never had met, but the young man, Dick Horwitz, a Wirephoto editor, explained that he was a correspondent for the A.P.

while he was at Indiana University, and he remembered seeing Grady's by-line when Grady was the Crawfordsville correspondent for The Indianapolis Star. A "CREDIT" CARD for use only with cash has been copyrighted by a retired Chicago policeman. He calls it the 100 per cent down plan. The idea Is to encourage merchants to give special discounts to customers who pay cash instead of charging. When you buy something at a co-operating store, you show your card and get a 5 per cent discount for cash.

THE FELLOWS at the Indiana Reformatory and the Indiana State Prison ought to enjoy this one. The warden of Porte Allegre prison in Brazil, angered because he was to be dismissed, turned all the prisoners out on his last day in office. It was just a gesture, however, Insider's Newsletter reports, as police rounded up and imprisoned all of them, including the warden. A MAN HOPES his lean years are behind; a woman hopes Jiers are ahead. IIIIO AD WAV AXD ELSEWHERE new companion (as we noted recently) Is Edmund Kara.

He was the best friend of her late chum, Edwardo Tirello, accidentally killed by her auto on her estate The George Roys (he's the handsome lark at the Copa) expect their fifth child in May Airline hostess Suzanne Lort (a Mitzi Gay-nor double) and platter-promoter M. Karle are Cloud-9ish. MANY BROADWAY restaurants are hurting. The Big Street resembles one long lunchroom (many now close at night) Nobody enjoys gossip except when it's mentioned up and down Broadway with names that "elude" us now. The headliner who gave one of the cast a gold key to her un-dressingroom with this memo: "Don't Knock.

Just Enter." RENDEZVOUS-FORrTOUS; Princess So-raya, the ex-queen of Iran, with Actor Albert Shelley Winters and Chick Madden resuming at King Henry IV Comedian Dick Martin and song-architect Ruth Batchelor wondering if Thizzizzit at Limerick's Maxmillian Schell and Inez Walker, the modelulu, at the Ground Floor "Rat Patrol" star Chris George at the Hollywood Beachcombers with Actress Jill Donahue, daughter of Director Jack Donahue Hotel King C. Hilton with Dodie Marshall at Tracton's Roger Price, the cartoonist-humorist, with Mary C. Wells at Asti's Hedy LaMarr's son doing the town with charming Anita Albert, an editor Madamoiselle. THE INTELLIGENTLEMEN: Random House commissioned Newsweek's Mel Gus-sow to ready an "authorized biog" of Darryl F. Zanuck.

They want it in two years. Zanuck took that long to film his new blockbuster "The Bible" William of a Manchester's next book will be about the Ruhr, Germany's important mining sector. That's why he was there recently until the Jackie Kennedy hurricane blew him back to the United States. on Page 17 TO YOUR nEALTn With Good Diet If you take enough of each to make a well-balanced diet and you do not have to go about with a food-weighing scale you will take in sufficient vitamins to keep your tissues well supplied. VITAMIN A (in yellow fruits, green and yellow vegetables, butter, whole milk, ice cream, cheeses) will help protect you against night blindness, help you resist infection, and keep your skin soft and your mucous membranes firm.

Vitamin Bl or thiamin (found in all meats and poultry, eggs, enriched whole grain breads, cereals, white potatoes, milk) will help keep a normal appetite and improve digestion; prevent hyper-irritability. Riboflavin (in cheeses, ice cream, meats, fish, poultry, eggs, and milk) helps keep skin and tongue smooth; prevents cracking at corners of the mouth, helps vision and prevents greasy skin around VFTAMIN or ascorbic acid (mostly in citrus fruits such as oranges, limes, lemons, grapefruits; also in strawberries, cantaloupe, tomatoes, cabbage, green peppers, broccoli) firms up walls of blood vessels, helps you resist infection, lessen fatigue and helps wound healing. Vitamin or the sunshine vitamin (butter, fish oils, vitamin milk and, of course, sunshine) helps body build calcium and phosphorous into bones and helps absorb calcium. THE MINERALS like calcium, iron and magnesium will be a part of the combined intake of a well-balanced diet. Eat moderately and well, and let nature take its course.

Don't go through the daily ritual of taking vitamin pills to build yourself up. You may not need them. The booklet, "Practical Guidt to Skin Problems," is available to readers sending SS cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Dr. Peter J. Steincrohn, co Ths Indi-anapoli Star.

to a Las Vegas savings and loan association and pay the trustee $9,940 a month. If Prell is able -to obtain additional financing for en largement of the hotel, it will exercise its option and pay the trusts $5 million in full satisfaction of the $10 million second mortgage, which has been in default since November, 1966. Beck said a thorough in vestigation had disclosed the new option price is equal to the value of the property. In addition to. the Aladdin transaction, Judge Steckler also approved a compromise settlement of litigation arising from Leo A.

Lippman's com- Woman Found Dead In Garage Mrs. Martha H. McCord, 35 years old, 7330 Galloway Drive, was found dead in the garage at home about 6:30 p.m. yesterday by her husband, Robert D. McCord Marion County Sheriff's dep uties reported.

Her body was found next to the tailpipe of her automobile, deputies said. The death, due to carbon monoxide poisoning, was believed a suicide, according to Dr. Arthur P. Kebel, a Marion County deputy coroner. "Dear God: I pray that Thou shall protect us all from harm and evil.

I pray that Thou will also help the men in Vietnam. Forgive us all for all that we have done wrong. Bless our flag and help keep this country free. "Help the teachers over the world to teach us how to read so that we will be able to read the Bible. Dear God help us to grown in Your loving ways.

"In Jesus' Name we pray, Amen." Sarah Lou Kelley wrote today's prayer in her fifth grade Weekday Religious Education class from School 82. Each day during the Lenten season, The Indianapolis Star will publish a prayer written in class by one of the 22,000 boys and girls Sarah enrolled in Weekday Religious Education classes in Indianapolis and Marion County. PIXies By JACK WOHL icM Lenlen Prayer by CELEBS-IN-THE-CROWD: Marlon Brando with an Adorlental congesting traffic near O. Henry's in Greenwich Village Casey Stengel hailing a cab with his best umpire-killing voice Novelist Mickey Spillane, looking like one of his characters, wolfing a hot pastrami sandwich at Max's Adroit Actor Paul Newman, a new regular" at La Scala on West 54th Street. Only patron permitted to feast there without a cravat Diahann Carroll floating down "The Apple Tree" aisle in cloud-pink gown and ditto hair ribbon Ruby Keeler and M.

Berle bringing vaudeville back to the Plaza Hotel foyer Hollywood's Hugh O'Brian (never trapped by any of the world's loveliest women explaining his long "Why make some woman miserable and i SALLIES IN OUR ALLEY: Melina Mer-couri's husband, Jules Dassin, is busy improving her musical "Illya Darling," a hit in Philadelphia Harold Gary's part keeps shrinking daily Gary broke up the troupe and "Butcher" Dassin when he yelled: "Julie, if you keep cutting my part you'll be charging me admission!" Dick Enberg, describing a fierce prize fight, nimbly reported: "They fought like they were dating the same girl!" MIDTOWN VIGNETTE: Passengers on special buses to the "Trotter" tracks usually have their heads buried deep in their racing sheets When one bus paused for a traffic light an elderly woman said to Fred, the corner news vendor: "My, my, but those people in that bus are a studious bunch. What could they be reading?" Fred looked at them and sighed: "Yesterday's winners and today's losers." TIMES SQUARE TRAFFIC: Doris Duke's Dr. Crane PETER .1. STEIXCRftnX. M.D.

Pills Not Needed DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: What do you recommend as a good diet? Is it necessary to take vitamins, too? Mrs. C. COMMENT: A good diet for anyone is a well-balanced diet. Just what and how much you eat will depend upon the age, health and occupation.

You ask, "Is it necessary to take vitamijre?" I suppose you mean buy pills. That will depend upon your diet. Most people on sensible diets need not spend money on vitamin preparations. LET'S SUPPOSE you are a growing youngster or young adult. In a general way, the following plan should provide you with an adequate and healthful intake of energy foods, tissue-rebuilding foods, vitamins and minerals.

Nature gives most of us varied appetites so that we are likely to get sufficient nourishment. Everyone has heard that proteins, fats and carbohdyrates are the mainstays of a healthful diet Proteins are found mainly in meats, fish, poultry, eggs, milk, cheese, cereals, bread, beans, peas, nuts. When you take these foods you not only get a supply of energy, but you help repair body tissues, and form body substances we call antibodies which help fight Infection. AND ANYONE KNOWS what the fats are: Fatty meats, butter, cream, salad oils, tc. They help keep your skin smooth and healthy and supply energy in large amounts.

Carbohydrates come not only in the form of candies, honey, jams, syrups, sugars but also in fruits, dried or otherwise. Also In breads, cereals, potatoes, corn, cookies and they all supply energy (and if you take too much of them, as of anything else, they add up to extra layers of adiposity). our own season spannneir oj) Off to everywhere and anytime now through Fall. Handsome in cut and detailing doubly handsome in your choice of wool blended with nylon in diagonals, checks and matchstick patterns. This coat, exclusively ours, in your choice of subtle spring colors navy or white, too.

Choose it and charge it in misses' and petites' 6 to 18. BLOCK COATS. SECOND FLOOR ALSO GLENDALE AND SOUTHERN PLAZA jumper 'n blouse for you who wear half sizes Our sheer crepe buttoned-to-the-hem jumper teams with a splash-print tailored blouse. Your fashion option wear the belt or not as you wish. Proportioned by Cohen Brothers for the half size figure.

Choose it and charge it in black or navy, sizes l412 to 22l2. 10.00 II CAREER DRESSES, FOURTH FLOOR; GLENDALE AND SOUTHERN PLAZA 1.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1862-2024