Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 July 1946 — Page 5

XY 2 1946 Se

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HOMME SL AL SALAM HL BRL ETN RTO TT EUSA TT HASTA N RN SAL SR HE ERE TT ERRR ENTERAL FL LPO SANE OR ECE TEER R NRE N NTR HTL RE EI EHR I OEE ELIOT SETHE O OTC E TORTI LIRA CITLAREUAOTPTTOH EIU 0 000A SEH TIOTOIOOINEEIS ANTI CTIEIEIIE 00 SOEI0IOMNIOLETTAITROIECTIRBIRI LILI Hn HAH RAS EA TT EH ET ER LET ARS 1 MONARO un wv > - 5

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| TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1048-. WHY BE FAT

Eat a

a

iy TN oA

20,000 Hogs Move to Market GATES STUDIES I

Here; Prices Tumble to $17

Haw h wore Slander, i raeel 1 figexercising. tives, aris Wi ie ADS (© wntihued From Page One) of Wholesale Fresh Fruit and you don’t: cut out t any meals, Vegetable distributors said today. In or but- serday’ s wild livestock splurge. Indianapolis, = the

THE “WM. BH. BLOCK CO. greatly increased prices, the marToarlont Ean is Ad as Reminder ket will level off to some reasonable

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VEGETABLE COMPOUND

ROSE OIL MACHINE

“You can't repeal the law of supply scancel » y noticeable, urring in| and demand. | scattered markets, ye Level Market Forecast Many Indianapolis .grocerymen |

The spokesman said that as soon were marking other commodities al

RENT CONTROL

on INDIANAPOLIS TIMES.

‘Noblesville Men 1 SHOT HERE,

s-. Commissioned,

Times Special

NOBLESVILLE; Ind, July 2-

| Albert N; Thom, son of Mr. and!

decrease” was Special Session SSI Hinted; Mrs. John ‘Thom, Noblesville, been nominated by President Harry |

tor|

Survey Ordered.

(Continued From Page: One)

as buyers realize the housewife will| few cents below . ceiling, however,|seqttered sharp rent Increases and

point, Meantime, the general trend among large packers was to hold off pros, good will Teter than quick | ro

buying in hopes prices. would come Xn down. Te to be following the same trend as hogs—lower than yesterday. Fresh fruit and vegetable prices b ACES SH AKEUP: all parts of the country since the end of the ( OPA, the National League ge Palestine Underground. ; | JERUSALEM, July 2 (U, P).— Fifsy-four members of the under-

Price ranges ‘on cattle seemed JEWISH AGENCY have.dropped 10 te 15 per cent in | British. Link Zionist Body to ground Irgun Zvai Leumi held in a}

not delighted let meat spoil rather than pay aware of a strong focus of public efforts to evict tenants continued Fone attention on prices right now. Many |i, fjter in, large property owners’ dealers. advertised their ceiling and in Indianapolis moved to hold the below ceiling prices with a view rent bulge to not more than 15 per

cent.

The management division of the | { Indianapolis Real Estate Board yes} | terday voted to limit-its meinber- |

{ship voluntarily to 15 per cent rent!

| increases. The group consists ol pro- |

| fessional property and rental mana- | versity, gers serving owners of homes, dou- in July, 1941. bles ig aparuments in the city. he

, 8. Truman . permanent | dnission as first |

coms |

regular army. He held a temporary |

. during the war,

Noblesville high|

school, was a star foot- | ball player, and!

Lt. Thom

of Purdue uni-| Thom entered service Early in the war he! spent 15 months in the Southwest

Lt.

Aparyment Owners associa- | pacific, where he flew 78 missions |,

Wh also adopted a resolution urging a voluntary rent increase ceil-

/ing ‘of 15 ‘per cent. Owners were gs an instructor for more than ag . treadom.

| urged not to increase rents at all except in case of substantial “inequities.” z Robert DeWeese, regional rent

®xecutive for the OPA, said the

{as a bombardier, Returning to the states, he served

{year and then was sent to the India-Burma-China theater, where | he spent 19 months with the 20th! air force flying B-20s. Recently Lt. Thom

spent six|

has Fleging Car Theft Suspect

lleutenant in- thie | seriously, jaght and today.

rank of major Washington st, . n 3 | times by police, who open fire when Martindale ave, was found shot in A graduate of he attempted to escape. -

where he| William O'Rourke and Patrolmerr 5 shooting earlier at” Martindale}.

ws

| reported his condition a8 serious. Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Lohman, 1812 Prospect st, were awakehed|| about 3 a. ‘m. today by a noise in|. : their back yard. Turning on a yard|_ Rows, hey saw two Jrowléss, x. Mr. ed three shots

ONE SERIOUSLY

ay man fell wounded. . Si hospital he Nig identified as Presn Ewing, 19, of 2208 Pleasant st. a. a From information obtained trom him, pblice later arrested Kenneth | Leak, 21, of 2207 Lexington ave. | Both were held on vagrancy charges Joseph Miller Jr., 21, of 433% E. under $3000 bonds, was shot thiree, “go preston Hagan, 23, of 2708

Wounded by Police.

Three men were wounded, one! in shootings here. last

"| both legs at his ‘home early today Sgts. Lawrence McLaughlin and when. police investigated reports of | the Kansas City Baptist temple. "Police charged that one of the | George Burford and Charles Lind= ve. and 24th st. ushers drew a knife to back up his {er went to the Washington st. ad-| Withesses sald two men and a warning to three men th the audi« dress to’ question two auto theft woman were arguing in the street | ence against booing Smith, A secs | suspects. |and that one man, not yet identi- jond usher offered his assitance, . Hit by 3 Bullets | fied, fired several shots. When po-| The Speech was halted until order They found Miller and a man lice arrived all three had disap-| Was Testared. i gong his name as Dane Payton, peared. When they attempted to ar-| Later police received a call from rest the pair, Miller made a dash a witness who said Hagan was the! victim,

YOUTH NAMED IN SLAYING

WASHINGTON, July 2 (U, P.).~ | Eighteen-year-old Henry Eisen NEW JERSEY 170 YEARS OLD Lehi 8 dicted TRENTON, N. J, July 2 (U, P)). in the Indian war club slaying of. its 170th Don’ B, Glendening, 42, a radi, res | pairman.

When he failed to obey an order to halt, all four officers opened fire. ! Miller fell a few yards away. At City hospital, physicians said —-New Jersey celebra three bullets entered his body and birthday today.

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complaints coming into his office weeks in Washington, D, C., where

| duced “pretty good evidence” of the alliance. | May Cut Recognition

| were searched for

British military . camp ‘in - Sudan were Jodged almost entirely against |

| have escaped Sunday by tunneling small property-owners, A few cases, { out, | have been recaptured.

it was revealed today, but 30 he pointed out, indicated deliberate | | profiteering but ‘many others werd | The escapg coincided with reports based on owners’ ‘anxiety to ‘eviet ) that the Jewin agency, world Zion- | tenants to make room for their ist organization, MRYSRARIR0 broad own: families. a, fundamental changes after the) Eviction Orders Retuseit British claimed eviderice had linked] Township justices of the peace it to the militant underground| reported they were. refusing .many Hagana organization. | | requests for’ eviction orders. Official quarters said a week-end.) swoop on agency headquarters, p1o-| gay declared that reports they had raised the rents in their Polyanna apartments, 633-37 E. Maple rd. | from $42.50 and $45 to $150 a month, | had arisen from a misunderstanding. “At no time did we set a price of

Some quarters believed {he British would eliminate the internation-| al aspects of the agency, recogniz-|$150 for the apartments,” Mr. Yount ing only the Palestine Jews in their| declared today. He said he and his political relations with this country. | wife merely sought to evict the fam"The. British reported the second ilies from the property so ‘that -it phase of their Palestine campaign can be turned into business offices. was advanced substantially by the| He said “tht following letter was discovery of & big unders ound &m- sent to the tenants: : munition store in Yagour village] “You are hereby notified that your near Haifa, It contained explosives, apartment will be leased to profesrifles and small arms ammunition. | sional G. 1's, that I may expect Twenty-five ‘Jewish settlements | you to vacate same on or before 30 arms. Three|days -from above, date, (July 1). truly,

Five rpersons were killed. to -business rentals. Yours

| (Mrs.) Alma Yount.’

French Fry ‘Nipper’ Nipped

DETROIT, July 2 (U. P.).— Robert E. Novak, 22, was arreste ed yesterday on complaint of

tained. | About 80 Jews were injured:

New Opposition Rises | On Loan to England |

WASHINGTON, July 2 (U. P) Treatmerit of the Jews in Palestine {has créated new opposition to the 1$3,750,000,000 British loan, it was, | disclosed today. Administration leaders said they | believed the senate-approved loan | was still safe—that it would pass the house easily. But they conceded the vote would be closer than | they. expected. The house is to | |pegin debate on the issue Friday.

POLITICS REVEALED IN FIGHT OVER OPA

| | (Continued From Page One)

he: went around nipping French fried potatoes off their plates. “I just love French fries,” Novak told a judge, adding he had no money to buy his own.

was speaking as a minority mem-} ber of the rules committee. Condemning the veto as showing 'a “reckless disregard for the wel|fare of our country,” Mr. Halleck said: : “The truth is the President Is the misguided follower of the most violent partisans of the New Deal. Cites ‘Fallacy’ “The crisis confronting the country has been deliberately created. | It, is politically inspired to the end that government shall direct economy and control the American people. And the President has been victimized by the planners and the plotters who bring. this about.” | Mr. Halleck brought out the ba- | sic disagreement between the ‘Tru{man administration and ‘‘conserva-

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| tives” on both sides of the house and senate. That is what they term the “fallacy” that wages could rise | without prices going up. This will be the subject of the hot debates this fall. Senator Byrd and Rep. Howard W. Smith, conservative Democrais from Virginia, both are for saving something of OPA. Wants Rent Check

Senator Byrd introduced a bill | for rent control. Mr. Smith plead- | ed for the rule which permitted the | house to act om" the interim re- | vival of OPA. Both are up for re- | election, | Senator Taft was at to have | been ready to vote against the conference report on the bill which the President vetoed. He reportedly was talked into supporting it by Majority Leader Barkley (D. Ky.). So party lines are scrambled. And | the voting record is ‘so snarled that almost every senator and congress[man can make what he wants, or needs, out of it, Whatever happens, come Novem- | ber, each party will be out there on| the hustings blaming the other for the price rises if they are high enough to be a “burning Issue.”

TEXAS EDUC ATOR QUITS

AUSTIN, Tex. July 2 (U, P.).— | Dr. Theodore Hornberger, professor of English, today became the 14th| University of Texas faculty member within one month to resign in a. row | over ademic freedom. |

SURPLUS GOODS ARRIVE WEEHAWKEN, N. J, July 2 (U.] P.).—The 8. 8. Alexander White first of 10 ships bringing surplus government property from the Paeiffc for sale by the war assets administration, docked here today,

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Mr. and Mrs. Edward Yount to-!

| Sulraged restaurant patrons that |

he assisted: in planning for the! atomic bomb test. At the present time he is stationed at Roswell, NoM. Vy,

Bloated: By begin » Before Discharge

Times Special MARTINSVILLE, Ind. July: 2"

oN

Lt. Col. William Bray, who expects!

to return soon to Martinsville after’ duty in the Pacific, has been elected | commander of the local American Legion post. Col. Bray will arrive]

at Camp Atterbury within the next |!

few weeks for his discharge. |

ut

TERMINAL LEAVE PAY

BILL MEETS DELAY

WASHINGTON, July 2 (U. P.).—

The Senate military affairs come! today: postponed for one | thousand ‘men and women were de-| Otherwise, the rent will be equal week action on a bill to give ony}

mittee

and navy enlisted personnel $2.666,-

376,000 in terminal leave pay. The postponement came at the request of Senator Edwin C. Johnson (D. Colo.) who has asked the burean of the budget to report its position of the bill which would give "to enlisted men discharged {before Aug. 31, the same leave pay benefits enjoyed by officers. The budget bureau previously expressed its opposition to the meas{ure in a letter to the house military affairs committee, shortly | before the legislation was approved { by: the house.

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