Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 April 1947 — Page 6

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© Housewives From Getting 35-Lb. Allowance - : By EARL RICHERT on Scripps-Howard Staff Writer

‘Mpusewife this year is uncertain because of the scheduled end of ration-

fig and price control on Oct. 31.

“* @ongress has ordered rationing fixed at ot least 35 pounds per person for home consumption this year—10

on re {

certain After End Rationing Oct. 31

Hoarding Before Deadline May Prevent

pounds more than last, including canning sugar.

t government plans are to,

validate enough stamps to enable proximately purchase of this amount before available sugar.

Oct. 31. The market is free after

that date.

Whether the housewife actually will be able to buy the 35-pound rations before the end of controls depends upon Whether

she is able to find the sugar.

en Hoarding Predicted

phe sugar ‘Will be on the “store shelves if widespread hoarding does not start in expectation of increased

prices.

Some industry spokesmen expect

{his to happen and they say the agriculture department will be unable to do much to prevent it. They say sugar may go io as much as 20 to 30 cents a pound after expiration of controls. ‘Others believe that purchasing ‘power and demand will be down so much by next fall that

two-thirds

“ WASHINGTON, April 22—The sugar outlook for the American

a rate to provide her with

of the

Prewar sugar consumption aver-

aged 6% pounds per person. At

the current rate of income, it is

estimated that the American public

would use at least 100 pounds of sugar per person annually. But]

this demand will fall if the income level drops, government economists

SAY.

Hogs Continue

Steady Decline

Prices Drop $1-$1.25 In Uneven Trade Hog prices continued their steady

there |decline at the Indianapolis stock-

oard | yards today, dropping mostly $1 to . will be little jnlinatian to b $1.25 in uneven trade. Cattle prices were generally steady in an active trade and vealers and fat lambs were unchanged.

ii expectation of higher prices. Gus Burmeister, sugar economist for the department of agriculture, holds that opinion. He said that only ‘a month or two would elapse after expiration of controls before new sugar starts coming to market and that most handlers would hesitate to gamble with such a high-priced commodity, especially if a recession started. Sees Inventory Control

He also expressed confidence that

GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (3675)

130- 140 pounds 140- 160 pounds

160- 180 pounds .. 180- 200 pounds . 200- 220 pounds .. 220- 240 pounds .. 240- 270 pounds ..

270+ 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds Medium—

ded adatadadad

REIBA

sEEBEEREES susIRRRTSY

T. F. Donlon, assistant to the pre

* TOP SALESMAN—Fred Hemelgam (left), Haag drug store

clerk, 1201 Madison ave., receives keys to a new car given him by

the company for his selling ability during a company-wide contest,

sident, made the presentation.

Official entry blanks for The Times Home Show Photo contest, a duplicate of the blanks that appear in The Times, are available at downtown camera shops and at Home Show booths. Amateurs trying for the $100 in cash prises must enclose the official entry blank in an envelope attached to each photograph. Any subject at the show in the Manufacturers building in the state fair grounds may be photographed. Prints submitted must be in black and white and not less than 5x7

Use Official Blanks to Enter Home Show Photo Contest

| Pictures may be mailed or brought to Photo Contest Editor, Indian{apolis Times, 214 W. Marylgnd st., ! Indianapolis 9, by midnight May 5. Prizes will be: First, $50; second,

‘nounced John L. Lewis’ United Mine

3... Ek

“ ¥ meet » Si

yy

fast passenger trains of the Rock Island railroad, collided here early|!

v3 mericen Soares peri hl , 8 Ayres ¢W% prd........0l108

Threatens Labor Peace

today.

deaths were reported.

-The soft coal industry presented

duction in basic industries during|under. sc; Leg 1947. chickens, 38¢; cocks and stags, 16¢; No. 3

yreshir com *. : - Belt R Stk Fe com ..oeriil 33% pid we 80 Bd . 95

Belt R Stk Y. Eleven persons were hospitalized Babhe-M rin oid and several others injured. No Qentral Soya “Go . Echo is in Logan county, Arkan- Consolidated Inguiudes oid. an nt sas, about 200 miles west of Little Cons Fin eis

. 8 . | Ameri Loa Outlook Is Bright [Rock Bivcone fas, som 0 ME 134) merieds, Et 1 In Other Industries [local Produce pliner SADE "70 Hy Hi (Gh, CoR, 8 00. COME. iu vue sive 5 ne : Ind Asso Tel C 3 pd... 0... 404° Conunpia, Clilh 13s WASHINGTON, April 22 (U. P). TOR ora omeemm— ind & Yeh hi hd Delta Coll Sts 86

Indpls P m il Poultry: H 1 , 3% 1 Indpls P & L 4% ptd ........ the biggest threat today to the na-| overt; Eaekda ping Mac cours | indianapolis “Water ota... Joe" tion's hopes for uninterrupted pro- and Je. 18¢; No. 2 poultry, 4c less than |Indpls

Indpls ee p horn hens, 20c, soft meated (Jeff Nas Life com ............ 184 17 |Ind A Kingan & Cocom ............ IN 4% Toi

hl ine com...... . | United Tel Co § crest aan Ae. 100 ada | GRISK Tite oon 3

ater ¢l A com...... 20 NY% Railways com ........ 12 1% | Ind

The outlook was optimistic in-the poultry. fon ne

8 i... . neoln Nat A 3% pid ..... 87 Loan Co > { . oid |

I 0. \ 60c; 3. 87. steel, auto, rubber, meat packing wir as vent rece.pts. 5M [bs to case, and electrical industries. :

But the possibility of a strike on

noon pid... ‘a Ber A large, 43c; mpdium, 40c; no|Marmon-Herrington co as grade, 33c. . Mastic Asphalt” ., mn LAA EH a oe rn 8s B87 ett Hea ‘

July 1 still hung over the soft coal fields. That is when the government must return the mines to pri- FREE PARKING vate management. : d y The government was making some : progress in its attempts to head off CHI another coal shutdown. It an-|}-

Workers &nd many leading mine operators have agreed to meet here April 29 on plans for direct negotiation for a private mine contract. Silent on Wages What Mr. Lewis will demand additionally in wage raises is unknown. The answer may be found in the wage settlements developing in other basic industries. A pay pattern of 15 cents an hour, including-basic raises of 11% to 12% cents, has been accepted by unions and companies in the packing, rubber, auto, electric and steel industries during the past four

OFFERING

Aoress

the Street STORE HOUR

STAR STORE

Saturday, 9130 to 5 P. M, Dally, 2130 toS P.M

|

WW. Wwe 1a Loh (oY Yd

59th ANNIVERSARY

“Values. Like Old Times”

months. The new contract between U. 8. Steel and the C.1.O. United Steel | Workers, providing an average beast

$20; third, $15; fourth, $10; fifth, $5, and sixth to twentieth, honor-| able mention certificates. Entry blanks may be obtained free of charge at: H. Lieber Co. | and branches, Hoosier Photo Sup-| plies, Inc., Post Photo Shop, Capital} Camera Co., Indianapolis Camera Co. and The Times. Blanks also will be mailed if request sent to

"Phone

the agriculture department could 160- 220 pounds ...... aaeates handle hoarding through its in-|Good to Pacing #T think the average American] 3go- 400 Bouewife Wik have al the super tey pny ooo: NAHE that she wants to e home 0 sveessnssinss AN :

year, especially if she continues %0|'350. 350 pounds ............. [email protected] economy,” he said.

. ve 35 00 create soe 24.00 . 11 32.00 Jounids sressenenene HAGENS

sesssensacess [email protected] HEIFERS

Choice— 800- 800 pounds ......coi000 0. 25.00 800-1000 DOUNAS ...oceveece. IB. 35.00

800- 500 pounds [email protected] 800-1100 DOUDAS <avsssessesss 31.50833.00 Medium— 500- 500 POUNAS .eevesesecess 16.50821.50 Ci I

ommon— 500- 900 pounds .....evcseeee 14.00016.50

Cows (all weights) GOO .ovoreinsicisnatessaine 16.00918.00 Spokesmen point out that the... ~~~ reressess [email protected] increase in sugar rations for home| cutter and common ......... [email protected] use this year is 40 per cent larger canger .............occeecnns [email protected]

than last year, although industrial Bulls (all weights)

users get an increase of only 25| Good (ell weighted ........ [email protected] per cent. Until April 1 of this|ssusage—

year, such industrial users as candy ta IZ oe ‘ makers were limited to 60 per cent| Outter and medium ......... [email protected]

of the sugar they used in 1941. . LE NLVES (e25) Ren Now they are receiving 75 per cent.| Cool on? he medium 11... lo dai so Of the 88 pounds of suger expect- | Culls (75 pounds up).......... [email protected]

ed to be available for each person| Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves this year, 3 will go for home con-|, ic. Steers . sumption and 53 for industrial use.| 500- 800 pounds ..c..cceee... 18.50§30.50 ¥ any more becomes available, 805.1009 ponies coseeriones. 18.00019.00 housewives are to be given up to| 500- 800 pounds ...eeseessc. J830g21 0 80 pounds per person. - 800-1050 pounds 17.00918.50 Before the war, according %0|’300-1000 pounds ..eeseees.. }[email protected] Mr. Burmeister, homes, hotels, res-|common— taurants and institutions used ap- 500- 900 pounds .........e00 [email protected]

... VETERANS Haghe

VY IROTIA yn Fidelity Trust {Names Storen

by the directors yesterday.

LEB [| H a

LIEN TTR

the Union Trust Co.

BOOKS

REPAIRING

AT YOUR NEAREST BRANCH OF

DAVIS CLEANERS

Featuring: | ® Better Materials

fj publie library business branch.

Foreman’s Place in Management, Other new arrivals are:

| Function, Future, by Jerome Sill.

i2 House Committee Hunts

William Storen was elected a vice ; president of the Fidelity Trust Co.[nesses will be asked to discuss 2

Mr. Storen has been active in|improvements in marketing and dis- | banking circles for more than 35|tribution, the development of new years. He was affiliated with Scott crops. New uses for existing crops, County State Bank in Scottsburg|international trade in agricultural from 1913 to 1930 and has served |commodities, two terms as treasurer of the state. [agricultural resources, and the im-| Since 1934, Mr. Storen has been

| with the Security Trust Co. of Infl | dianapolis as a vice president. He | resigned Jan. 1 at the time the Se-

curity Trust Co. was absorbed by

Chester Bowles, former OPA chief, || has outlined his plan for Tomorrow || Without Fear in a new book received recently at the Indianapolis

Another new book at the branch, by Charles C, Smith, discusses The

The Radio Station: Management,

fii Here Is Television—Your Window ll te the World, by T. H. Hutchinson. : li Get the Job, by Willard Abrahm, helpful hints on obtaining positions. FRANK PENR BREWING COLLOUISVILLE 2, KY,

inches. An entrant must submit|The Times is accompanied by not more than five photographs.istamped “and addressed envelope.

Answer to Farm Problems

The house agriculture committee has begyp the most comprehensive hearings on government f policy since passage of the triple-A law in 1937. The United Press has asked the committee chairman, Rep. Clifford R. Hope hearings by the house committee on| (R. Kas.), to outline his views on gariculture which are under way| *6Ticulture’s problems. here are intended to cover the whole|provement of living standards in postwar agricultural licy. [rural eommunities, . tude and scope were held in 1937.|8eneral agricultural legislation at From those hearings came the agri- this session of congress. Rather, the cultural adjustment act of 1938. [fort will be to bring before the During this 10-year period vast|COmmittee the best agricultural changes have taken place in the thought of the country. field of agriculture. Mechanization| We Will start the hearing with has advanced by leaps and bounds. [Secretary Clinton P. Anderson. Improved techniques and new meth- [After that, we will hear from farmods of production have been intro- ers, farm leaders, government offiduced. New varieties of crops and cials, economists, scientists, and all

thers who are interested in th ve been de-|° . strains of livestock ha overall agricultural problem and can

e contribute to a solution of the same. Production Expanded From the record thus made the

Yields and productivity have In-|committee hopes to find the key to creased and during the war years |comprehensive legislation to be conour total production expanded by sidered early in the next session.

one-third. Up to the present mo-! si ment increased consumption at U. S. Statements ome broad am mana h and demands from abroa WASHINGTON, April 22 (U. P.).—Gov-

have absorbed all of this new Dro-|ernment expenses and receipts for the duction. z current fiscal year” through April 18 eom-

The question which is bothering [**"*¢ *'™ # ye4r ago:

Hearings on Postwar Policy Underway By REP. CLIFFORD R. HOPE

This Year Last Year farmers today is whether they can Expenses ...-$31,552,678,066 $52,469, 377,531 eceipts «+. 34,038,076,811 34,751,258,7 continue to produce abundantly as|geeeines 2485398744 »

times become more normal and sta- Defleit 0 yar LFTS 113.72 W « | Cas ance. 4,886,123, 636,620,974 bility yetwrns to the war-torn coun- |g ii. “Gene 257837733074 274.351 931.373 tries. Gold reserve. 20.506,319.693 20,250,844, The purpose of the hearings is to find the answer to this and other| INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE

{phone

793 | Workers yesterday for a 15-cent

of about 15 cents hourly, was re-! garded as the pace setter. Strikers ‘Bitter,’ | Union Leaders Warn | WASHINGTON, April 22 (U. P.).| —The government today studied| plans for reviving key negotiations) in the 16-day-old national telestrike as union leaders warned that the strikers “are growing bitter.” Official sources said Secretary of| Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach was | convinced his last peace proposal was dead. | He was reported “seriously con-| sidering” asking Southwestern Bell Telephone and the American Tele-! phone & Telegraph company’s long distance department to resume negotiations here under government sponsorship. Such a request would mark Mr. Schwellenbach'’s second attempt for a pattern-setting agreement in those two key units of the Bell system, Meanwhile, an official of the striking National Federation of Tele- | phone Workers said the picket vio-| lence and demonstrations yesterday! in Detroit, Seattle and Louisville| were “to be expected.” | “That sort of thing occurs in all large and long strikes,” he said. “The strikers are growing bitter and short tempered.”

Hint Pay Demand Cut By Auto Workers

DETROIT, April 22 (U. P.) —The negotiating committee of the United Automobile Workers (C. I. 0), still holding out against an offer of a 15-cent hourly wage increase, meets |

Fancy patterns and stripes, best selling colors, full cut, perfect fitting, sizes 14 to 17. $398 Value. y ’

Reg. 98¢ Plain white, blue and -maiase, made of fine cotton combed yarn. Sizes small, medium and large. Irregulars.

made of fine sanforized blue chambray,. full cut. Sizes 14 to 17. : 2

Reg. $2.98 Men's uniform work pants made of sanforized blue and tan drill. Sizes 290 to 42.

with General Motors negotiators tod

~ MEN'S PAJAMAS

55% Values

$295

White checked material, full collar, coat style, full cut, sizes A-B-C-D. $5.00 Value.

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

MEN'S T-SHIRTS

Men’s C. B. Cones Work Shirts

Men's C. B. Cones work shirts

Men's C. B. Cones Work Pants

EXTRA SIZE COTTON

PRINT PAJAMAS

$3.98

Two - plece $ style with elastic waist trousers, neat floral prints in blue or pink grounds. Sizes 40 to 48. Also cotton crepe pajamas in

54°

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$738 ‘MATERNITY SLIPS

Adjustable waist rayon crepe slips for the lady in waiting. « +

Tearose. Sizes 32 to 40.

$24

Star Store, Street Floor

ANNIVERSARY SALE THIRD FLOOR SAVINGS! SUMMER PORCH RUGS ,

re were indications that the | union had modified its demands! for a boost of 23% cents. |

C.1.0. union holding out against | the 15-cent formula set by the United Steel Workers contract with | U. 8. Steel. : General Motors"settled its dispute with 3200 C. I. O. United Rubber

ix , . ... JOX0S: 5 v0 0 4 4x1 6x9

increase. Previously it had settled with the C. I. O. United Electrical

urgent farm problems. We want 0 | pepe ®

Workers for the same figure.

check up on existing legislation and see whether it fits present day conditions. Our objective will be con-| structive. We want to retain the good and discard that which is outmoded and ineffective. We want to determine what new legislation ‘is needed $0 meet changing conditions. Subjects to Be Discussed | |

Among the subjects which wit]

Its Territories and

Bonds of the United States Government,

Municipal and Corporate Seeurities 1 Reel Estate Bonds and Preferred Stocks

— |

Insular Possessions

three words above. Over

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Building contains 15,000 sq. ft. 21% acres land. Fully ing machines, core blowing machines, No. 5 ou Air furnace and annealing ovens in 2 f 1

h pe fittings ad other products, LN Ie » Ready to ate, 000.00 includ land, djury machinery, Satierny, eaNipment, and raw material, au - ud, wl

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——

vestors need. and ask for,

N FOUNDRY :

CASTINGS WITHIN ONE WEEK

ipped with air mold. polas, 2 brass melting furnaces. ood condition. With small additional tings, Patterns and equipment or

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‘Market

The “Golden Rule” of investors might well be the

this maxim—but more than that, we've done all in our power to make it as easy as possible to heed. “Investigate . , . ” Our large Research Department Is continually supplying specialized information in-

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Tight-weven, colorful fiber rugs for porch or sun The U.A.W. was the only major |] room. Very sturdy. Red, blue, brown and green.

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Round or square i style covered weg 2 5 washable leatherette in assorted | colors.

and over, we've repeated

Investment Securities Commodities

INDIANAPOLIS §

fortable.

|

| Porch Chairs

| METAL CHAIRS

support prices, revision of parity, | ® Indianapolis Bond and Share Corp. Cl tru, Atte 1 Soom, cVES conservation of our! 129 E. Market Street canvas back and Ble; ' " e; easy to seat. Collapsible. ° store =— well ERT made. Xr ALL-METAL FOR 75 YEARS ale, HASSOCK PORCH SWING

4-Foot oak swing with eS 95 chain.

All-white chair 95 with green tubu-

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PORCH GLIDERS s1 595

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TT os i; ar a on a iS 4 = be J iad 1 i : 2 2) vy a a ; ra : oe Sm > ry : . on iy Aa iid g 7 i THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ~~. _ = —— TUESDAY; APRIL 22, 158 BB TyESD/ too [2 Swearmliners Collide [ae Mi TO! eA « [11 Are Hospitalized | ndiana Stocks and Bonds - - ify = Coal Situation |= mmm wr we me The east and west bound ROGKStS|rgunss pin Oop sam... tee

and Frede tor

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