Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 May 1944 — Page 2

“Rk bd

ELA

~

rarely altered product.

FEED-BOX

ocratie

be picked by

committee is

labor vote for

and will

of going.

to turn out a

date.

dromes and a

by the nearly

surprise dawn

molished,

finery.

Forget Dies?

committee will be allowed to die with present congress, and retirement of committee ringmaster. Election casualties of committeemen have made membership uninviting. Most congressmen feel Dies’ withdrawal offers good excuse to forget the whole thing.

AT LEAST TWO anti-New Dealers will be absent from Demconvention. Wheeler his notified party leaders in Montana that he doesn’t want to be a delegate, and Senator O'Daniel of Texas has announced he won't be a candidate “under any conditions.”

EDDIE RICKENBACKER may

for congress against Rep. Marc-

Harlem district, which is ctherwise largely Italian and Puerto _% Rican, with<some Negro aoters. a ‘» ‘

C. I. 0. Vote Drive

C. I. O. POLITICAL

ough registration campaign for New York City to get out the

Some 5000 workers will be assigned to the city’s 3000 precincts, to talk tec workers in during registration week (th» first in October). They will urge workers to go after hours to register, have facilities waiting outside buildings to take those with no other means

for Roosevelt, to offset an expected big majority upstate for Governor Dewey.

NOTE: Republicans see some solace in C. I. O. political action committee's apparent success to Thev hope it will stir A. F. of L. chiefs tn activity (which would be without publicity if possible) on the G. 0. P. side.

Ten Japanese ships totaling 35.000 tons received direct hits in the

,

(Continued From Page One)

1945, another indication we're far from the end of the road. Navy is ready to place orders for nearly half the new tonnage, will keep the rest as a “working balance” against operational losses, expected to be much heavier in future.

» =

“hear-

whose advice a syllable in final

TIP is that Dies

Senator

Republicans to run

action organizing a thor-

F.D. R.

factories

transportation

Herculean efforts will be made | { ter could be used to

big vote in the city

al installations, air- | key oil refinery in|

100 planes which |

assault. One ex-|

ploded and others possibly sank, the communique said. Two floating | drydocks and other naval installa- | tions were badly damaged, and the | Braat naval engineering works de{will be “the most important story Other carrier planes completely |€Ver to be told in this country, indestroyed the Wonokromo oil re- volving the cabinet, and other rank-

Woehly Sizsup by the Washington Steff of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers

POST-WAR PLANNERS, talking reconversion of industry, are being quietly warned that our military producement agencies must be kept at top form for an indefinite period. This is why: Germany has already indicated that the next time she is ready to make war (if we allow her to rise again as a military power) she will strike first at the United States, recognizing that defeat in the last war and the present one have come because of fresh American troops and heavy American production, ready at a crucial time,

THIS MEANS U. S. may never again have three years er even one year to mobilize for war. *r Platforms of both political parties will be written before delegates hit Chicago and before resolutions committees are officially organized. Republican platform will be largely compilation of planks prepared by Mackinac conference delegates, who were assigned specific topics. Democratic leaders favor shortest possible platform (one proposes 500-word limit), which will say: in effect: Our policies are well known, we stand on our record. Both parties plan to curtail pre-convention platform ings,” conducted heretofore for special pleaders

antonio aggressive American try is invasion-conscious—hope it Labor party member from New | Will soon subside before wrecking York City. ‘their efforts to force bonds of Fifty-ninth st. section, where sympathy with men of the armed Rickenbacker lives, was trans- | forces. ferred in New York's reapportion- * a a ment to Rep. Marcantonio’s East | Less Gas for You?

Allies Wreck Soerabaja, Big

Japanese Naval Base in Java

(Continued From Page One) |lombo

co ! batten, Adm. Chester W. Nimitz ncentrate on a single Japanese and Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Shipping, nav

| target, {comparatively small.

. |ten’s s 8 i 8 \ | the vicinity of the former Dutch | po oro east Asia naval forces in|

the at i A naval base were damaged heavily | attack emphasized the growing,

danger to Japan's East Indian contook part in the dawn carrier strike | oo 0M the direction of the and night land-based bomber raid, ! a spokesman for MacArthur said.

Ten Ships Are Hit |

Dies Threatens

| June,

Nineteen Japanese planes were | destroyed on the ground at Malang | |, and Tanjong Perak airdromes | | Daturally expect the cabinet many others were damaged, and Officers, two were shot down in the air. allied forces lost three planes. The Japanese navy did not challenge the American and British Dies s carriers and supporting w. and no surface action was

All Return Safely

Australian-based Liberators, mak- | ing their seventh 2500-mile r trip flight to Soerabaja, followed up o the carrier raid Wednesday

The Roosevelt to answer the facts which

arships, would be made a month before the involved. Democratic

|

night, sition as chairman of the

state delegation might be called

Indian ocean, as well as from the ever-approaching ;and southwest Pacific offensives.

| “limitations of other members” of ound his committee for the investigation

May Be Different

CALIFORNIA politicians talk up legislation to stop cross-filing, restore the old-fashioned twoparty system in-the state. Horrible example of the week was defeat of Rep. John B. Costello, who got the Republican nomination but was barred from the ballot because he lost the nomination on his own ticket—Democratic—to a _ Republican! 1

Party leaders hope return to old system would restore some prestige to their organizations, give them greater authority.

Another electoral reform Californians propose: To require presidential primary ballot to list the name of every major aspirant the

on to vote for at convention. Only candidates whose names had been before the voters would be eligible to receive the delegation vote, though-state could still send an uninstructed delegation if it preferred. | » 2 » TOP LABOR leaders have their fingers crossed on the current upsurge of strikes—while the coun-

GASOLINE REFINERY operations in Midwest. and Fast are at new peak and reserves are mounting, but your chances of more generous rations depend on (1) invasion demands and (2) maintenance of crude supply. (You may get less gas if military needs are prolonged.) ” n 2 SENATE COMMITTEE investigating liquor shortage will try to

‘sion With Hiding Reports On Court House. (Continued From Page One)

corridors. Addison J. Parry, president, charged that the com

light,

tion,” Mr, Parry said. County Policy Stressed

“The commissioners are

interested to the request.

continued.

reasons for it.”

killed, Shop Condemned

basement, dangerous fire hazard.

the state fire marshal's office demanding that the county abandon within 90 days the Marion county juvenile detention home quarters at 938 W. New York st. on the ground that it is a serious health hazard and a fire trap.

remodeling work has been under way for three months.

Suit Blocks Transfer , porarily blocked by an injunction suit brought by 21 residents living in the vicinity of 25th and Keystone declaring that the use of

tion would depreciate residential

terfere with community life.

discover why more of still sizable stocks aren't getting into the market, whether it's true that stores are being held back in hope of higher prices.

WFA and WPB have stymied | distillers’ plea for limited production of whisky and alcohol. (Lat“blend” bonded stocks, make them go | farther.) 2 s ” HOUSE MILITARY affairs committee starts hearings Tuesday on surplus-property-disposal bill. which members say will pro- |! duce evidence of unwarranted destruction of army material War department officials will be called to explain it,

it

5 to Honolulu now are able to

although the action was

Participation of Lord Mountbat-

central Pacific!

| New Deal Expose (Continued From Page One)

the congressman said, and

Ing government personalities.” Expects Rebuttal

the President and Mrs.

I propose to give to the nation,” he said. }

aid the fact that the report

convention was not significant, stating that it would have been made earlier except for

f un-American activities, “my pocommit-

{of County

causing extensive damage to rail-|tee and b y the fact that I wanted way yards. All the Liberators re- the committee continued.” turned bot Pee ate oh | “My challenge is this: For six The ony PS Were vears I have been telling the people attacked > the harbor, and that|that a group of men who don't only 8 few ‘enemy planes were believe in our form of government caught on the I, have entrenched themselves in our

- Dies asked that the “Ia thur and De

for last Wednesday but it was post-

Jr, representing the commissioners

the petitioners.

[to delay hearing on the suit.

One county councilman declared hat “No public official has any

0 play politics.”

‘SERVICES MONDAY

FOR MRS. L. L. TALL

Dr. Roy Ewing Vale will read the

{funeral service for Mrs. L. L. Tall [st at 11 a. m. Monday in her home, more than 5500. - 13146 N. Illinojs st.

Burial will be n Crown Hill.

hospital. She was a Survivors include a daughter, Mrs.

dianapol's.

FIRE RUINS GARAGE, CAR Fire destroyed the garage and automobile of Harold Ferguson, 1645

[S. Sherman dr., yesterday. The loss

was estimated at $1000.

By JANE STAFFORD

Science Service Writer

PHILADELPHIA, May 20. — How to help the war-bereft mothers, wives and other close relatives of the fighting men who will not come back was told by Dr. Erich Lindemann of Massachusetts General hospital, at a meeting here of the American Psychiatric association. These people, who have what psychiatrists term grief reaction, are likely to suffer symptoms of physical distress and mental and nervous abnormalities, he said, on the basis of experience with surviving relatives of the Coconut Grove fire victims. Tightness in the throat, choking and shortness of breath, need for sighing, an empty feeling in the abdomen, lack of muscular power and intense subjective distress described as tension or mental pain are common to all sufferers from grief reaction. + Lack of strength and exhaus- , tion with the complaint, “Every.

aside its

oo’ piv

prejudice against the com- 1 life rad dence” vein ni

Sor . ; d.

Council Charges Commis-

of collapse, threatening the lives of many persons using the court house

the council

missioners never once mentioned the fact that they had a letter from a city building engineer warning about ‘the danger of the sky-

“No commissioner offered to appear before the council this week to explain the reasons for their request for the $14,000 appropria-

well aware of the council's policy against appropriating any money unless officials requesting it are sufficiently present reasons for

“The commissioners were either not sufficiently interested in the appropriation or they had other reasons for not making an appearance before the council to explain reasons for their request to eliminate court house hazards,” Parry “The council is always ready and willing to make a study of every request if officials explain

Charles E. Bacon, structural engineer in the city building department, declared in his letter that if the skylight should collapse during office hours some persons would be in danger of being badly hurt or

The commissioners had requested $8900 to replace the skylight with another type structure and also asked $5900 to remove the carpenter shop from the fourth floor to the The state fire marshal’s office several months ago had condemned the carpenter shop as a

The commissioners also revealed today they had another letter from

rmer Sho

2Fo

s (Continued From Page One)

Keystone ave. ss = =

MISSING

dale ave. : PRISONER

Parkview ave.

st.

army air forces,

Link Belt Co,

®» » s

sinking of the transport

previously was reported missing.

Gantz, Washington.

view ave.

Jd

T. Sgt. Roy Modglin, 1818 Lawn-

8. Sgt. Robert N. Mitchell, 22

Lt. Robert H. Miller, R. R. 1, Box | 589.

CPL. JAMES O. ADAMS, previously reported missing in action, was killed in the sinking of a transport April 20 in the Mediterranean area, according to a war department telegram received by his mother, Mrs. Donald Kolloch, 1413 W. 31st

An aviation mechanic with the the 21-year-old soldier entered the army Jan. 28, 1943. He attended Shortridge high school and formerly worked for the

CPL. ALBERT J. GANTZ, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gantz, 4311 N. Keystone ave., also was killed in the in the Mediterranean area April 20. He

The local airman, who was 21, was assigned to a photo reconnais-| sance squadron of the army air forces. He left for overseas in| March after completing his training { at Will Rogers field, Okla. A grad-: uate of Shortgjdge high sehool, he was employed by L. S. Ayres & Co. bs He is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs.

8S. SGT. ROBERT N. MITCHELL, missing since a raid over Germany April 8, is a prisoner of war in Germany. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Mitchell, 22 ParkThe 21-year-old radio

Davis high school. He is a member of post 1405, V. F. W. 8.8

A navigator on the Flying Fortress, he had completed 23 missions since he went to England in September. He LL had received the Lt. Robert H. air medal and Miller three- oak leaf clusters. — Lt. Miller was graduated from Southport high school and attended Indiana university. His brother, Richard IL. Miller, is starting gunnery training with the army air forces at Denver, Colo.

NAZIS RETREAT

Anchor of Defenses,

Now Fire-Swept. (Continued From Page One)

Commissioners for more than siX staggered Nazis were swinging back months have been making plans 0] like a pendulum to the alternate or remove the detention home from swing line ‘behind the Hitler line the West New York st. building to| ahead of 5th army forces pound25th st. and Keystone ave, where

ing at their heels. Take Aquino Airport

- Along. the. only original eg. over our target.” --—-.-.’: MCSt the Hitler line still in enem erbol: fighter bombers at.

army forces pushed | forward over shell-cratered roads | to within 1000 yards of the defenses

buildings there as a penal institu-| running south from Aquino to East of residential property values and in-| Aquino, British tanks reached the | barbed wire entanglements skirting The junction suit was scheduled the town and captured its airport. | American cruisers and destroyers poned until June 6 at the request steamed boldly into the waters of Attorney Victory Jose | Terracini to bombard it “successThey pumped many shells and Frank Beckwith representing into the town and neighboring roadFires broke out where the Councilmen charged that commis- | shells crashed, and a German muni|sioners agreed to a test suit on oc-| tions dump was believed destroyed. |cupancy of the countyv-owned build- | ling and that they further agreed ander, allied commander in Italy, announced in a communique on the Mr. Jose explained that a contin-| ninth day of his “on-to-Rome” of[uance of the case was necessary in| fensive that the 5th army had order to have time to prepare evi-| already captured the “commandin dence sufficient to defend the coun- | features” of the Hitler line. ty’s position.

: ot. 7 x i YA Ge However this project was tem-

{ hands, 8th

| southeast of Pontecorvo.

{ fully.”

| ways.

Forced to ‘Switch’ Line

1 i

| “The enemy therefore now has (right to use a children’s institution been forced back upon his switch Nine, which runs approximately from [Pico to Terracina,” the communique Isaid. “This switch line protects the flank of the enemy line across the lied raid on Berlin, Deputy Press

Liri valley.”

German prisoners taken since the! that buildings damaged included art of the offensive have risen to| the old Imperial palace, in the cen-

| A high military spokesman said of Under den Linden. {the German command had com-| Mrs. Tall, who was 81, the daugh- mitted a blunder by failing to beter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Topp. gin an orderly retreat to the Hitler was born on the present site of | Methodist

1

strength of the allied attack; Allied Traffic Heavy

member of the Tabernacle Presby- | terian church. James E. Roper, United Press John H. Jefferson, and a grandson. war correspondent with the 5th | William Tall Jefferson, both of In- army, reported traffic moving up [to the front was so heavy along and | Formia-Ttri roads that extra milipolice had to be called out Jeeps, trucks, halfwere almost ‘bumper to bumper on both roads.

{both the Formia-Gaeta tary to keep order.

tracks and tanks

War-Bereft Mothers, Wives Must Be Freed From Bondage to Dead, Psychiatrists Told

ately or be delayed. A slight sense of unreality, which may make the person fear insanity, a loss of warm feeling toward other people, a tendency to isolate herself from social activities, are other features of the condition, Sometimes the grief reaction comes at the time of separation when the beloved one goes over= seas, in anticipation of and as a safeguard against the notice of death, . Many family disasters may result from this, if, as in cases Dr. Lindemann cited, the soldier returns and complains his wife - does not love him any longer and demands an immediate divorce. In such cases the wife has done her “grief work” so ‘effectively that she has emancipated. herself from the departed husband and

.

must readjust herself to his pres- :

ence again. : : Te “grief work” which the be reaved must do consists in Sipating herself from patterns of actions,

N

T0 FINAL LINE

‘5th Sweeps Toward Coastal

Gen. Sir Harold R. L. G. Alex-

g

line as soon as it realized the all-out

Invasion-Area Hit By Big Air Fleet

..(Continued From Page One)

through thick clouds to bomb airfields and other targets in northern France this morning.

y Called ‘Luckiest Raid’

American crewmen said they flew through several heavy anti-aircraft belts to reach three airfields, but encountered no German fighters. “It was the luckiest raid I have ever been on,” Maj. Donald L. Weiss of Denison, Iowa, Marauder squadron commandar, said. “The whole continent seemed to be covered by a cloud. We saw just one hole on the entire trip—and that

tacked unidentified objectives in northern France this afternoon. Report Big Night Raids Many big formations crossed the channel in a non-stop parade by daylight today after some 750 British bombers dropped destructive loads on the French transport centers of Tours, Orleans, Le Mans and Boulogne. The R. A. F. also jabbed at Cologne and mined enemy waters at a total cost of seven planes. . United States headquarters announced that Flying Fortresses spearheading the 1500-plane®attack on Berlin and Brunswick yesterday dropped bombs squarely into the heart of Berlin. Soon after midnight German coastal batteries fired about 10 rounds across the straits, but British guns did not reply. Twenty-six heavy bombers and 19 fighters were missing in yesterday's Berlin attack.

LONDON, May 20 (U. P.).—An official German broadcast recorded in London, said today that 200 persons were killed in yesterday's al-

Chief Helmuth Suendermann said

{ter of the city at the eastern end

‘TRIO OF GIRLS WINS BEST PLAY CONTEST

The winners of the senior play contest at Washington high school last night were announced as Kathryn Harris, Letitia Harrah and Loris Ollman. The play was a mystery, “Nine Girls.” The drama was directed by Mrs. Beth Wright. . The judges were Norman Green of the Athaeneum Players, Miss Menka Gulefs of Manual high school, and Mrs. Ruth Herin of Broad Ripple high school.

and readjusting to an environment in which the deceased is missing. Comfort alone will not give enough help in this job of grief work. The severe cases, especially when the person develops great and often frightening feeling of: hostility, will need the help of a psychiatrist. Since there are not- enough psychiatrists to aid all the warbereaved, ministers and social workers ‘will have to acquire enough psychiatric knowledge to _help the persons with normal grief reactions and to recognize the signs of more ominous trouble and refer such patients to psychiatrists for aid. ,

| risons on the south coast of France

_.| mans were convinced that the allied .{ude to further extensive operations

Holland as an anti-invasion meas-

Gigantic Allied Concenrations Sighted at Corsica, Lisbon Reports.

By ROBERT DOWSON

LONDON, May 20.—German gas-

Stockholm newspaper Allehenia said said today. The dispatch added that the Ger-

offensive in Italy was only a prel-

in the Mediterranean. Corsica is an island lying about 100 miles off the southern coast of France. A dispatch in another Stockholm newspaper, Aftonbladet, reported that all leaves for German troops in Holland had been canceled. Ready to Flood Holland The dispatch said that a traveler confirmed reports that the Germans were prepared to flood vast parts of

ure. | (The OWI reported that the Berlin radio, in a short-wase broadcast to the United States, had interrupted a program with an “invasion” bulletin, purporting to be from “general headquarters.” Using an American accent, the announcer said “the invasion of the continent has begun.” The OWI said the broadcast likely was designed to start a flurry of rumors, to lay the basis for psychological let-downs.) Meanwhile, London military observers interpreted the recent announcement of German appointments to meet the invasion as evidence that the German army high command and the Nazi party had buried the hatchet to form a united front to oppose the allies in the west, May Be Over Rommel Some observers were of the opinfon that German infantry Lt. Gen. Johannes Blaskowitz was now on at least an equal footing with—if not above—Marshal Erwin Rommel. The Express recalled that Blas kowitz “once called Hitler a fool to his face” and that Field Marshal Gerd von Runstadt also was not fond of Hitler. Both men previously had been retired. (The Russian radio said that the Bulgarian government had ordered, a general mobilization of troops and that German forces were concentrated in Sofia and its suburbs as well as in the Bulgarian Black sea ports of Varna and Burgas.) »

JUDGE CONVICTS 15 SECT POLYGAMISTS

(Continued From Page One)

sentences after defense attorneys asked for time to prepare motions

United Press Staff Correspondent FE

sance reports of troop movements and gigantic ship concentrations at| Corsica, a Lisbon dispatch in the|

for a new trial. If the new trial. is denied, the defense plans to ap- | peal the convictions to the state! supreme court. Found guilty were:

ser and C. F. Zitting, flve wives] each; John Y. Barlow, Oswald Brainich and Moris Q. Kunz, four! wives each; Albert E. Barlow, Edmund F, Barlow, Ianthius W. Barlow, David Brigham Darger, Joseph Lyman Jessup and Heber K. Cleveland, three wives each, and Arnold Boss and Alma Adelbert Timpson, two wives each. Judge Van Cott assumed responsibility for both verdict and the forthcoming sentences when polygamists waived trial-by-jury and submitted their cases to him on the basis of written stipulations.

Other Charges Pending The defendants still face at least! one other state or federal charge in connection with their practice of polygamy and four of them face two, charges. Joseph Musser, leader of the sect, is also charged with state and federal conspiracy and has been indicted by the U. S. government for mailing allegedly obscene literature. A federal conspiracy indictment charges the 12 members of the fundamentalist “priesthood group” with mailing obscene literature. A government appeal of a federal judge's ruling to quash this indictment is now pending before the U. S. supreme court. Verdicts and sentences for nine other fundamentalists charged with white slavery and kidnaping are expected to be announced soon by U. 8. District Judge T. Blake Kennedy of Wyoming, who will judge each case on the basis of ‘written stipulations without a jury.

JAPS BEING DRIVEN FROM MYITKYINA HUB

(Continued From Page One)

India division—15,000 men—and their full equipment was flown 230 miles from the Arakan fighting front into the Imphal plain without the loss of a man or a plane. It was the first time an entire infantry division had moved from one front to another by air, : Lt. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwell, commanding the north Burma offensive, arrived at + the newly-captured Myitkyina airfield Thursday for a front-line conference with his subordinates and to see for himself the

play.

On the entertainment committee Byrne, Hubert Collins, Dr. Rulon C. Allred, six plural Russell Holler, Tracy Druliner, Ed wives; Louis A. Kelsch, J. W. Mus-| Errins, Maurice Morgan and Regor

are Cecil

Carter,

SENATE RATIFIES TAX SIMPLIFICATION

had agreed to a plan for the senate to consider reducing the new 30 per cent cabaret tax to 10 per cent. An amendment by McCarran to do this

Dr. E, C. Young “Agricultural economics will be the topic of two speakers before the Indiana bankers war confer--ence to be held Mdy 24-25 in the Claypool hotel. Burr S. Swezey, president, Lafayette, will preside. The present and future farm problems will be discussed by Dr. E. C. Young, dean of the graduate school, Purdue university, and Harry J. Reed, dean of the school of agriculture and director of the agricultural experiment station, ‘Purdue university. Dr. Young will speak on the “Economic Outlook for Farming After the War,” and Mr. Reed on “Keep Agriculture Sound.”

SEC HEARING SET FOR LOCAL BROKER

PHILADELPHIA, May 20 (U. P.).|1 —The securities and exchange commission today ordered a h held June 14, in the Cleveland, O., office to determine whether the|Medium broker-dealer registration of Fred Sharp, Indianapolis, should be revoked for alleged violations of the securities act of 1933 and the securities exchange act of 1934. According to the staff of the Good— SEC, Sharp realized secret profit through the sale and exchange of various securities by withholding certain information from customers as to the prevailing market prices, and by selling securities to customers far in excess of the prevailing market prices. The staff also charges that Sharp persuaded customers fo exchange one security for another on an even | 2004 basis when the security relinquished was of far greater value than the one received in the exchange. Sharp filed a written notice with the SEC on April 22 requesting withdrawal of his registration. Ace tion on the notice was deferred.

‘CHINESE FOLLIES’ AT MURAT TONIGHT The Murat Shrine will close its social season with a stage production, “Chinese Follies,” at 8 o'clock tonight in the Murat temple. More than 3000 members and ladies are expected to attend, and dancing will follow the stage show. Ted Campbell's orchiestra and the Lyin Williamson novelty band will

will be considered

with a bill to increase the national

debt lim

vides that wage earners receiving up to $5000 a Year would pay all of their income taxes through withholding deductions from their earn-

ings.

would have to file no tax returns except a withholding receipt provided by their employers.

ers would be given a choice of two simplified tax forms on which tol®

it.

compute their taxes.

tax would be replaced by a new

: 3

Hi

28888 C2 » .

gpssedeEE £

gE8338EEEE

] i

tess sesscinne

sess aerans “~

Fil lit

to 270- 300 pounds 330

“330-360 pounds . 360- 400 pounds . Good—

3%. 3% pounds Serssssnestae Medi

pounds .....8......

sebsesesnsses

700-1100 pounds ............. ag. 1100-1300 POUNAS +..eenveenses Common-T" 5 ua

700-1100 pounds ............. 10.50Q13.39 Heifers 3 Cholce— 600- 800 pounds ........ verses 18 , 800-1000 pounds ..... BASHA

. 153591874

600- 800 pounds ......,...... 14.35 15.98 800-1000 tensssrensnns 1000 14.35Q15.38 500- 900 poun “reseteinanse Common” a 00101 pounds ............. 10.35Q15:80 Bulls (all weights) wm Beef a ny . Good (all weights) ........ 12.00 Sausage— 13.0 Fetrranterr enna nsid 10. Medium ...............c0cee 9.78@10, Cutter and common ....... 8 L &

Vealers (all weights) hie

Medium — . 800 pounds down ............ 10.50012.00 SHEEP AND LAMBS (9) Ewes (shorn) Good and choice .............. 6.80. Com'non and medium ......... $.80-

LAMBS

Good and cholce ........... . 15.00Q1530 Good and choice ...... . 850@ 8 Common and medium .. 5.500 6.

LOCAL ISSUES

Nominal quotation, apolls securities de

ers.

3

Bid (Continued F o | ASonis Ja Sop oon “ee . Pb cebew gents n or cas . va f3e ontinued From Page One) | Agents Pn Yds com .. Lew al Belt R Stk Yds pfd ... 8 reed sald he had requested a delay until Pobbs-Merrin com. 5000" Sh ee. y . | Bobbs-Merrill 412% pfd 80 criss Monday so he could study the meas Circle Theater som’ 3. it the | Ure: | Comwith Loan 5% pfd.. 102% ng Senate Finance Committee Chair-| pecs DEC oom (oo coeereeeres i 5 man Walter F. George (D. Ga.) re- Hole 2&7 rL Wayne 7% pid. 51% .. .. plied that usually he would have ind seo Tess nig Po: 13 1164 been “happy” to grant the delay, Ind Hydro Elec 1% ptd ...... 98% 98% but that he felt the pressure of|indpls P & L pfd ....... "108° iii" “ ” o!*Ind P & L com “ . 16 J important” legislation made it nec- |, °F | Raflways com. | Et oe essary to insist upon immediate! Indpis Water ze rorveamay 108... consideration. Jo Nat Lite com 4. Om li 18 Senator Pat McCarran (D. Nev.), Lineoln oy uo ds% pd... 0 announced meantime that George PR Mallors 42% Pa.

P R Mallory com .......... N Ind Pub Serv 5%;% N Ind Pub Serv N Ind Pub Serv 7 *Pub Serv of Ind 57, ...

srenny

*Ex-di "idend

2 Serv of Ind com 16 t Ogress Laundry com... . 14 18 In connection Cfogtess Laundry cc 103 108 Stokely Bros pr pf . 18% 174 United Tel Co 5% .. . 9 uw Union Tile com ...... . 3 ” Provisions of Bill Van Camp MilF pf .......... 25 veshn Van Camp Milk com ...... 19 age The tax simplification bill pro- BONDS i. Algers Wins'w W RR 4'3%....100 rr ‘American Loan Ss 51. ........ 97 1 American Loan 5s 48 woe 99 10! Ch of Com Bldg Co 4'%s 61.. 83 3% Sse, Jd, Tel 4'as OL... 108 18 > onsol Pin 5s 50 ..., ....... r Thus, 30,000,000 taxpayers|ing A-so Tel Co 3t4s 70 108 ies Indpls P & T. 3 trsirean 106% 10834 Indpls ‘Railway Co 5s 67..... kid 3 Indpls Water Co 3%s 68 .....107% 1 Kokomo Water Works 5s 58...108 Seb Ta ini 20,000,000 ta Rubner Packing Oo " 3 +o. n 100. e remainin ,000, Xpay- | Mors 10 Stores 5s 20... .1 as 8 pay Muncie Wa‘cr Works 5s 66..%.105 ew N Ind Pub Serv 3s 73 ......... 101% 103%, N Ind Tel 4%s8 65 .... ...... 88 91 Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 13 ..... 104 106% Richmond Wate Wks 86 67.0108 3 fchmon ater s 57... Wp The present three per cent victory | Richi Perm Cory 55 87 Co! 87% ik U 8 Machine Corp 5s 52 » 108"

three per cent normal tax, and the ‘ present normal and surtaxes combined in a single surtax..

TALKS ON ‘NEW DEAL: AND JUVENILE CRIME’

An address on “The New Deal and Juvenile Delinquency” will be given at the monthly dinner meeting of the Professional Men's forum by Juvenile Judge Mark W. Rhoads at 7:15 p. m. Wednesday in the Columbia club. The dinner is at 6 p. m. and non-members are welcome to attend either part of the

meeting.

U. S. STATEMENT

LOCAL PRODUCE tn Butter—No. 1, Butteriat - No §

- WAGON WHEAT

Up to the close of the marked today, Indianapolis flour he elevators paid $1.63 per bushel for No. red wheat (other grades on their Ne. 2 white oats, and No. 3

.

79¢, No. 3 yellow shelled corn, $1.08 bushel and fo. 2 white shelled ; a —————————

PENSION GROUP MEETS Indiana Old Age Pension n will meet at 8 p. m. Tuesday .in.

progress they have made.

Frank Hewlett, United Press war

WASHINGTON, May 20 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through pared with a year ago:

This Year. Expenses ...$81,839,850, War Spending "Tada ] ee. 36,934,647, Net i. 66,

ay 18 /com- ;

15.00916.00 EE « 18. 16.38

Good to choice ............... 16001680 Common to medium ......... 10.009 14.50 Common ......... .......... 9. 11.29 Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves Steers Pf 00-330 pound T - Pounds ...viienneee. 13.50Q14 800-1030 Rounds. nf eiee 125081408 “ 300% 800 pounds .... ¥¥..... 11.00@1 800-1050 DOUNAS voveveeenesns 11. 2 Hg -1 POURdS s.ivvseencees 30, Common nwgns - 800 pounds .......,.... « [email protected] Calves (steers) . BDI er. va poun: OWD tieuppennasne Medium — v ot pounds down ..,......... 11.000 12.00 Calves (heifers) Good and Choice pounds down .......0e0ee [email protected]

furnished by Indisme

hs

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Hoosie

Amid

(Continued

that literary-m diana were asl day. Nobody k “Maybe we'vi selves out,” ex son, “but I ca dry spell.” + “The writing out of Indiana the south, but you,” sald Dav bers, president People have b week, but he o When George ty near Brook he was at his ple from all ov den Farms and stant round of merriment. But yesterda wooded farm and wildflower: ing it all bac would have no

“<The memaori

the spacious la of great oaks | where the farn ance enjoyed hospitality, ga in . little grou; minisced of the r Throughout filed past his room, gazing re ¥ man who la Servi The services Was no music. Opening the Rev. Voris B. Trinity Metho land, said: “May he, th

Short talks + friends, Judge Landis and Ji Chicago, and F of Purdue unis

0. K. Fai

WASHINGT —War labor 1}

bituminous m

averted new ui coal industry deadlocked di of trouble (ir Appalachian f The WLB vo with two of its bers dissenti “portal to por the United 70 per cent « dustry, The new miners $8.30 including tra provisions cor tract negotiate U. M. W. Pres and Coal Adn Ickes for the | operation, “Under their | operators, the basic wage of | with overtime

Await

Release of t the new WL probably will coal prices. 17 cents a ton the Ickes-Lewi

ANDERSON -H ors; Sister, Mrs. Nathan.

EARL P. - vivors: te, a: Mike, Ike, r Andrew

deughte Mrs ur 'nbro EVANSVILLE