Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 February 1948 — Page 12

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45 2. WASHINGTON ST.— §

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Landen Says Russ to Relieve Periodic] War Not “Inevitable OTTAWA; Kas., Feb. 5 (UP)—

| Former Gov. Alf M. Landon said! [) ss eng last night that war with Russia ISCUSS 1 ur S

[State Bankers

In an address before a Repub-/ licane group, the on

| a a= On Inflation |has swung from a lurid, terrific) N A

{and unreal honeymoon with Rus|gia to the opposite extreme of |ereasing casual acceptance of the |jmminence of war with her.”

e-time presidential candidate sal

[By DANIEL M. KIDNEY

./ex-GIs and guaranteed by the

Hold Conference With Hoosier Congressmen

Times Staff Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 5--Indi-ana bankers are doing their best to help curb the inflation spiral by curtailing unproductive loans, even when they are asked for by

Littleton to Miss Neighbor Davis

(UP)-Residents of this town of 3687 agreed today that “we're going to miss Bette Davis” who disclosed that she is offering her summer home here for sale. “The whole town turned out for her birthday seven years ago when they held the premier of ‘The Great Lie' in Littleton,” said one townsman. “Guess that

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

: - ‘With Insurance Firm - Church Plans Tea | us. Bernara ut. terian Church. LITTLETON, ' H., Feb. 5 The Meridian Heights Presby- |S: Audubon Road, has completed

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Meridian Heights. Complete 25 Years resided In Irvington 48 years and

- {is a member of Irvington Presby-

25 years of service with Grain! terian Church Will give a tea In psalers Nationa! Matuet Fis to | NOW Many Wear

{honor of college students and em- surance Co., the firm announced p ; © ployed young people beginning at today. be F ALSE TEETH 3 p.m. Sunday in the church so-| Mrs. Benckart, receptionist, be- With More Comfort cial rooms. {came the 18th member of the em- PASTEETH, a pi & alkaline (non The Rev. Roy B. Connor Jr, ployee service group. C. R. Mc-| acid) ‘powder, holds false teeth more pastor, will give a talk and John Cotter, president, awarded her a fmiy. To est and tak lo Hoss, James Poole, Miss Marcia ClAOAd service pia and a bOU-| plates No Ses fo oo et of roses, one for each year Matthews and Mins, Jour oF tvme of “service. * Mrs. Benckart has Men: [..» committee, |

shows how we feel.” ‘The film actress has spent summers here for the past nine years since she bought her 165-acre Sugar Hill estate and used It as the site for a century-old Ver-

- jwe are mindful of the need for

"|president of ABA. Othér Indiana

” lanapolis, .also._ attended.

jgovernment, mont barn which she had disSuch was the report given the mantied and rebuilt as a homes Indiana congressional delegation|She named it “Butternut Barn.” by President Robert ‘D, Mathias| Miss Davis announced her of the Indiana Bankers Associa- plans to sell the property yes-| tion. Mr. Mathias, who also is|terday at Palm Springs, Cal. The! president of the Old National|price, $67,000. Bank of Evansville, presided at! =

a dinner given by officers of the Heart Ailment Fatal

association at the Willard Hotel . . last night. To Famed Biologist LAREMONT, Cal, Feb. 35

Present were the top-rank figures from the various agencies) (UP)—Dr. George William lan-|

BIGGER | BREAD VALUE |

ROEBUCK AND CO

of government concerned withlter IT 74, whose textbook on| banking. Treasury Secretary 8ny- piology touched off the = 1923 der came for cocktails, before the ‘monkey trial” over the teaching) dinner, and demoted Chairman of evolution in Tennessee, died

Marriner 8. Eeelop of the Federal yesterday of a heart ailment.

(Reserve Board also was present.’ Dr Hunter, a lecturer at Clare-|

{ship, Thomas B. McCabe, has not! months. { {yet been approved by the Senate land sworn in as a Federal Re-| serve Board member. [ Says Banks Sound | Sen. William E.- Jenner (R.! Ind.) and all the Hoosier Congressmen, except Majority Leader Charles A. Halleck (R. Ind.) and Louis Ludlow (D. Ind.), were ‘he bankers guests. Mr, Halleck and Sen. Homer E. Capehart (R. Ind.) were out of the city. Mr. Ludlow! still is ill - “The banks of Indiana are in| excellent condition,” Mr. Mathias! told the diners. But we are en-| tirely conscious of the dangers in; making loans at the present ad-| vantageous level of our economy. “We have done a splended.job| in aiding reconversion and willl continue to do so. We have spread the full facilities of banking sérvices to the masses and not con- |e fined them to the classes. Now

conserving capital and keeping our reserves readily available. “In dealing with veterans we have advised caution in making loans for enterprises which may not prove profitable for the vet-

not to repeat the mistakes made by banking after World War 1.” Evans Woollen Introduced

Mr. Mathias explained that the : ’ ABA program includes such -con{ferences as this with the con-}. { gressional delegation from the : state, He stressed the fact that

they were merely here to “get acquainted and ‘exchange ideas’ ‘and not to demand the passage or non-passage of any specific measures, =~ Evans Woollen Jr.,, Indianapolis, was introduced as the next

bankers present were Herbert C. {Morrison, Crawfordsville; Robert {I. Shoulty, Bedford; Burr 8. Swezey, Lafayette; James M. {Givens and Otto Frenzel, Indianapolis, and Joseph E. Kelly, ML

| Don E. Warrick, executive man- | ager of the Indiana Bankers As-| &

!sociation, and John A. Alexander, |general counsel, both from Indi-

industry is wor

Ed

| His successor to the chairman-|mont College, had been ill several ||

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