Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1945 — Page 36

RELEASE OF

J 3 SURPLUS RUTTER] OPENED HERE

k,

. United Press WASHINGTON,

learned today.

Government's Action for Army Expected to Help Growth

Staff Correspondent

Dec. 14~The government has halted the release “of surplus butter stocks, a move that is expected to intensify the na-tion-wide butter shortage and accompanying black markets, it was

In ending butter rationing last month, officials reported the supply would not meet the full unrationed demand. However they explained

“ ENFORCE RULE

CPA to Crack Whip Ove Priorities Control.

By SANDOR 8. KLEIN

United Press Stall Correspondent’ WASHINGTON, Dec. 14.~The ci

home construction.

Monday or Tuesday.

part of ties other government’ agencies and particularly to field offices. ‘4 This, it was felt, would provide for decentralization and better ad‘ministration on a regional basis. * Hitch in Plan . The official said it would be difficult to draw the regulation so that

s

would flow into homes at specific “price levels within the $10,000 limit. Consequently, he said, there would be nothing to prevent a contractor from using priorities materials to build houses at the top limit only,

ence shows that many pre= fer to lower price houses be-

veterans. 2 PICKETS CLOSE 2D

TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Dec: 14 (U. P.).—~Mill No, 2 of the Terre Haute Paper company was closed today because its 140 workers refused to . cross a picket line established by -, striking employees of mill No. 1. Mill No. 1 was closed Nov. 28 when 110 members of the Paper Makers union (A. F. of L.) struck after the company refused to grant their union g closed shop contract.

BEDFORD, Ind, Dee. 14 (U. P.. ~Picket lines of the U. A. W.C. I. O. opened today at the AllisonBedford foundry to permit payroll clerks to re-enter the plant, When the strike started Nov. 28, the union offered to allow payroll workers to enter the foundry. A General Motors corporation plant. The management declined the offer, holding out for permission for all office workers to get to their jobs, The payroll ‘clerks will be allowed to do work other than issuing paychecks to the strikers, union spokesmen said, .

NAMED SALES AGENT AT ADDRESSOGRAPH

_Addressograph Sales Agency, 428 N. Meridian st., has announced the tment of Don W. DeTray as

new sales agent to replace the W. G. Ryan, «+Until recently Mr. DeTray was

*

and

American Budge ir Society, Inc. 13th st, a perinar 3 no capital ing, EB. D. Brown, B

: 4 R 1d ’ A Calne Kluver.

ummins os erstsing shares elnred $20 ‘Corp; change of gt Fr

ue par

ON NEW HOMES

vilian production administration intends to crack down hard on any builders who attempt to divert pri-

orities materials into high-priced A high-ranking CPA official said today that there will be strict en-

forcement of a forthcoming -regulation which will set up priorities

ito homes costing $10,000 of less, probably will be announced next

"Enforcement will be carried out sharply. However, even then, the by the CPA's compliance division y

#ét quotas of building materials amount of butterfat in these prod+

TERRE HAUTE MILL

. |injunction dgainst the I C.C. The a petition woyld render ineffective the |’

, Rockies, said the proposed rate in-

t 5: role

that 100,000,000 pounds of govern

duction season. : ¥

r

dealers are voluntarily limiting customers to a quarter-pound apiece— when they can get any butter at all,

rose proportionately as the supply diminished. - = ” » . THE EXISTENCE of a black market was officially recognized in an agriculture department market survey. . The survey, made public in New York Wednesday, said “celling prices are the minimum prices and in instances they are pierced.” No relief for the butter situation in sight until at- least March, when production will ° increase

supply is expécted to fall short of demand. The greatest scarcity was report. ed in New York, New England, Philadelphia, other Atlantic coast and West Coast cities and in some parts of the south. Even in Chicago, near the production center, supplies were “comparatively small.”

. ” » ” A MAJOR FACTOR in the butter shortage is the diversion of cream from butter to whipping cream and ice cream, officials said, Wartime controls limiting the

ucts were lifted early this fall, Since that time butter produce tion has declined even more sharp ly than is usual during the winter season. Officials confirmed that under OPA ceilings it is more profitable to make whipping cream and ice cream than butter, Agriculture department and OPA officials ad there are no plans to

business men and women will begin an air tour of Central and South America Jan. 30 to premote the “In-

Trade Development,” Gov. Gates an nounced today, The Hoosier group will travel by Pan-American World Airways Clip-per-and as the first state group to make such a trip since the end of the war will be setting an “inter. national friendship" precedent for other states, the governor said. No list of those to make the trip was announced but it was reported the group would not number more than 16. i} The tour is being planned unde the sponsorship of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce and will take the group as far south as

ment butter was being released to civilians and should help tide the nation over the winter's low pro-

THE ARMY this week asked the agriculture department to halt the sales. It is expected that the military may recall about 25,000,000 pounds scheduled to augment civillian stocks. This amounts to nearly a week's supply for the nation. Officials termed the post-ration-ing butter shortage even more severe than anticipated. Grocers and

: y A group of representative Indiana

diana Air Age Plan of Foreign’

Petroleum Products. Establishment of the Petroleum Marketers Advertising Agency at 1031 E. Washington st, has been announced by " Harry Miede-

-

are Gaseterla, Bonded Gas & Ofl System and , 5) Bonded Oil of Ohio. Mr. Miedema Mr. Miedema was with The Times and The News in the business office and editorial department. For the past 12 years he has been a member of The Star's national advertising staff. He is afMliated with the Indian~ apolis Traffic club, the Indianapolis Passenger Traffic club, Center Lodge, F. & A. M., Scottish Rite, Shrine and Murat Chanters, and is a past officer of the Indianap-

"The office of price administration [olis Junior Chamber of Commerce. reported that black market sales

show at

actual kitchen designed by Cald-well-Baker Co. of Indianapolis, The display is being constructed for the Columbus Specialty Co. of Columbus, Indiana, manufact: rers of Cosco kitchen stools. . Furniture show editions of trade papers will carry full page advertisements on the display.

Annual Yule Party

The Advertising club of Indianapolis will hold its annual Christmas Tom and Jerry party at its regular meeting in the Lincoln hotel next Thursday noon, Dec. 20. Claribel Cummins and Dorothy Everman of Keeling & Co., are cochairmen. Increased business activity has necessitated expansion of office facilities by Sidener 4 Van Riper, Ine

Extra copy space, a new conference room and additional quarters for research are now under con struction at the agency's offices in the Rough Notes building, 1142 North Meridian, They will be ready for occupancy about Jan, 1,

“Second Hand Selling” will be the subject of an address by Mrs. Katherine Cleaver, advertising manager of Continental Optical Qe, next Thursday at the advertising practice course at Butler university,

Rejoins Sales Staff Sgt. Emery E. Dobbins has reJoined the sales promotion department of J. D. Adams Manufacturing Co. after recently receiving his honorable discharge at Camp Aterbury. Sgt. Dobbins served two

Month contest, established here b the local club two years ago.

to copy the plan. used in Indian. apolis, 3

NE EQUIPMENT

PHO IS INSTALLED HERE

Additional telephone equipment installed in the Garfield and Belmont central offices of the Indiana Bell Telephone Co. has made it pos-

Buenos. Aires, Argentina, and Santiago, Chile. It will return to Indianapolis by March 1. “This plan is our post-war contribution to the carrying out of an international friendship policy,” Governor Gates said. “These citizens eof Indiana are going on this tour of the principal Latin-Ameri-can countries to establish business vontacts which will provide jobs for our people and income for our businesses for many years to come, “Not long ago we heard a Jot sald in Washington about doing business at arm's length. ‘The Ins diana Air Age Plan implies a substitution of an ‘arm in arm’ policy for an ‘arm's length’ policy.”

DEWEY HITS PLAN TO

NEW YORK, Dec. 14 (U, P).~ Interstate commerce commission plans to raise freight rates 10 per cent in New York, Indiana and other northern states have been attacked by New York's Governor Thomas E. Dewey as a “threat to the economic welfare” of the north. Dewey submitted an afdavit to a special three-judge federal court yesterday in support of a petition from nine northern states for an

scheduled northern increase and a scheduled 10 per cent decrease in southern states. det The governor, speakihg for New York state and acting also on behalf of northern states east of the

would cause injury which

crease “could not thereafter be compen-

HIKE FREIGHT RATES|

sible to provide service for about

as soon as the phones are available, “Telephones are coming in increasing quantities now,” E. G. Plum, Indianapolis division mans ager, said. “We are making econ siderable progress in pre service for those who have ding longest.” 5 . “Even. though we have received many new applications in the last few months, we have been able to reduce the total number of waiting applications in the area from 17,500 to about 14,500 at the present time. We expect to continue to make

further reductions each month, andthe propeller plant of the Ourtisswe hope to furnish service to every-| Wright Corp. it was confirmed to-

TELEVISION SETS DUE BY NEXT SUMME

PRINCETON, N. J, Dee, 14 ( P)~By next summer celvers costing from Jess fo $300 will be on the dio Corporation of announced. R. C, A. demonstrated table

:

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., Stars on map above indicate major areas where sirike of United Steel Workers would add fea’s huge steel industry is concentrated within the area indicated in white, Inset photos show

A feature of the home furnishings the Chicago Furniture Mart January 7 to 19 will be a reproduction of one segment of an

Mi Columbus is now the third eity|S

1150 additional phone numbers in| 500 the area. They will be installed just|Medium—

panies

4700 PORKERS RECEIVED HERE

Friday Cattle Cleanup Holds Steady Level.

Typical Friday cleanup cattle trade was fully steady at the Indi. anapolis stockyards today. Hog and vealer levels continued

»

unchanged. Fat native lambs dis- (Ft played a alight weakness but others Home

were unchanged.

Receipts at the stockyards this|:

morning were 600 cattle, 375 calves, 4700 hogs and 1650 sheep.

FOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (4700)

sesesnsscenst ssstsvetnanne

sesnssessr uses

*Eugene G. Grace, president, Bethlehem Steel Corp.; Benjamin F. Fairless, president, U, 8. public Steel, and Ernest T. Weir, chairman, National Steel Corp.

ndiana Stocks and Bonds

Of0d to Choice 0- 400 POUNDS ...veriearees Geod— . Jo. 500 pounds ..... cesses 14.00014.20 edium— 250- 550 [email protected] Slaughter Pigs Medium to Gi 90- 120 poun

ERE

Ea hi Ei ries

TT Medium— 700-1100 POUnAS .uoeicivanes 18 15.75

1100-1300 POUTIAR ,[email protected] : roves 10.50012.7

esis ssvanean

[email protected]

sett enennnane

eanrrreans [email protected] sevansanenes [email protected]

care 00 cetnee 25

cssssesasanss 12.95015.35 0.0012. 13.50914.50

sovasie 18.00016. verenes 10.25016.

Cows (all weights)

BOO covsnsrnatniiiiirnniiegen

11.78 11.38

teeta ans

tter and

PEFR RARNIY

CALVES (38)

: E Vealers (all weights) and choice ............. 17. 18.05 Common and medium ........ 11. 17.00 CUHS ..av.iiivininea naive ares [email protected]

Feeders and Stocker Cattle and Calves

Steers Ohoteo—

800 pounds ......euve... [email protected] veessnsesene. 13.50015.00 pounds ..cececnsanee 13.50 800-1050 POURS ..ousvesvones 1300813.50

verennniness B78010.38

SHEEP (160) ~ Good and IR rg 0 se 1.00 Common sd medium 111111 ST 48 Choice and closply sorted..... 14. : Frnet ang Shleg, «xr rrenes TE CIMIRON = asx 4 +5 20 50s va dass as 10.00911.78 a ————————

RFG CONFIRMS C-W PLANT SALE TO LILLY

Ell Lilly & Co has

receivers at its laboratories terday, The black and white tures were refletted on screens ing in size from 4% by 6 to 6 by 8 inches,

: Ti

B E

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3

3g

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TTR TIN [email protected] “ae 7.50: 1 3 hy . 5.75@ 1.50 Good (all weights) +. 3.000. [email protected]

Lincoln Na P R Mall

Mastic Asphalt

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ory pfd P R Mallory com Marmon-Herrington com

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CETRETY

...| DONATE $5 MILLION TO U. 8, '| WASHINGTON—Over = $5,000,000 $7; |in money has been donated to the U. 8. government since Pearl Har«

ranks of the idle. Most of Amernation’s most important steel com Corp.; Tom Girdler, chairman, Re

ANDERSON TO TAKE POST AT PURDUE U.

Maj. Ernest W. Anderson, former

res Chief examiner of the Indiana state egg board, will succeed M. EB Jack-

son as assistant in poultry hus.

1:1!|bandry at Purdue university begin.

ning this month. He served as the first secretary of

.,|the. Indiana board prior to his ::tjentry into the army in 1040 and is ««o|8 graduate of Purdue where he {majored in poultry,

Mr. Jackson will assume duties at

++.| the Kansas State college as a poul- {| try specialist.

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NEW FIRMS AND PARTNERSHIPS

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TRUCK WHEAT

Beonomy Purniture Outlet,” 237-41 B.

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0% bor by 50,000 patriotic persons.

Xa Ma Berman, o, Tl; Benjamin R. ¥ Wy Ross, New York, N Yi RS

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WAAR DEATH NO1 Indianapolis 1 BARKER—Mar Ploy Mabel R y noniag | at Shirley Bro EB. Washington officiating. B Spencer, Ind, “may call after

BENEDICT~-Ba father, of Mr Meitrour, Nao P 1/c Howard a or of William

ssed away 1 , ‘m., at We * Friends may ca 604 Morr ' CONRAD! st.

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