Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1948 — Page 5

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must cover his Spring! rper” coats r suits with 1s label as-

orkmanship rT

18 to 15

ngth shorty all wool aturing full tiny stande, blue and

shorty (36 b collar, flap y full swing blue, beige, $25

thertone all sweetheart kets and a k. In grey

00000000 AOA RRA 40 Rtg AERATORS

Bureau Gites. "47 Net Saving 0$2,919,409

Members to Hear Report March 2, 3 The Indiana. Farm Bureau Co-

operative Association today re1047 sales volume of $32.

8 Sales for the year showed a sharp increase over 1946 when 931,000, Marvin

J. Briggs, general manager of the association, said in his report prepared for presentation at the annual meeting set for March 2 and 3 Net Savings Gain Net’ savings for the year were $2915049 as compared with £1784971 the previous year. After payment of four per cent interest on stock, Mr. Briggs said,

portion to the volume of business done during the year with IFBCA. County associations, in turn, will add their own net savings and refund the whole amount to their farmer customers on the basis of the amount of individual | patronage given the co-up. New Plant Completed The year's expansion program, Mr. Briggs said, saw completion of a new phosphate acidulating plant at 2435 Kentucky Ave, and a merger with the Indiana Wool Growers Association which in-

ing of wool in the state by 81 per cent. An egg and poultry marketing department established during the year now tes grading and marketing stations in Indianapolis, Evansville, Osgood and New Paris, and poultry and marketing plants are established at New Paris

0-Op Sales |

being lo and

Si a. —-

ANNIVERSARY MODEL—Wi “98" Oldsmobile

was designed for

dren 4 > oe + & - -

Display New Type ‘Olds’ This Week

- Body Changes Among Series ‘98’ Features The new Oldsmobile, the “Futuramic” series “98,” will be displayed this week. It was specially designed for the 50th year of Oldsmobile, old-

cent is on new body styling, increased horsepower, driver vision and wider seats,

Range of Prices

at $1790 £. o. b. for the club sedan, $1960 f. 0. b. for the de luxe four-

does not include accessories.

Feature of this new model is a 115-h. p. eight-cylinder engine

Hayden.

I

auditorium to deliver his m After surveying accomplishments of women in recent deecades, the President said their organizations had at hand “a ready weapon”—‘‘the power of the consumer”—which had not been used to its full effectiveness. Control Bulk of Wealth _. “It has been said over and over again that women control the bulk

“They certainly channel its day-to-day-- spending for food; for

HA

the things that make for better living.” Then the President urged American women to go all-out in ‘the fight against inflation by using their power as consumers. “This is a weapon which you can use together,” he said, “to Souibt Su of the enemies that now - threaten us— of living.” he hen, eost The President also asked leaders of women's organizations to make it their “special responsibility” to work for peace and

Truman Urges

Meeting of Labor Bureau Group WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (UP)—President Truman on Women to Wee these “power of the consumer” e President spoke at the opening meet! of a N tional Conference of Women’s Organizations io Bey the Women's] Bureau of the Labor Department. He went to the departmental |;

of the nation’s wealth,” he said.|-

clothing, for education, for alll

most models,

The “Futuramic” series starts °

: door sedan, with the convertible 3 creased the co-operative market- Coupe selling at $2310 f. 0. b. This

U. S. Women en To Fight High Cost of Living:

Use ‘Power of Consumer,’ President Tells

Hogs sold mostly steady today

at the Indianapolis Stockyards. Steers and heifers ruled more active than recently with strong to spots 50 cents higher.

Vealers lost $1. Fat lambs

looked weak to spots fully 25

est car manufacturer. The ac-| ™-

improved | 2%-

[email protected]

op $32 |

oa SE : SRE

ih aiphasis on Srecalol streamlining the 1948 "Futuramic” series | i : | tor the company's year. The eight-cylinder motor and" new high-compression head for smoother performance. . : —

club sedan shown here has an

Medium 800- 900 pounds ......es0eae 20.50G 23.50 Common : 500- 900 pounds - .... . 17.00930.50 Cows (All Weights) GOO vivir cre 18.506021.00 Medium .. Rh ananas ss inans 17.506 18.50 Cutter and common [email protected] Canner . 13.50@ 15.26

cents lower. oad rerea 1.50922.00 Feb. 17 {ood avs neBasansrarrancs 2. 33.00 GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (6150) MUD ‘wove ann sasaistruvesss 9. 1 vv. [email protected] Cutter and common 16.00 19.00 vee 31.00 2% 30 Good to “choice . 25.00029.00 38 | Common to medium ....... 13.50% 35.00 Culls (76 pounds up ......... 13.50

Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves Choice

500- 800 pounds .......s. wee 31.00923.00 Good B00- 800 pounds ...ececeeees 18 [email protected] Medium —- c J POUDAS .iivivernnins 16.500 18.00 ol 300 900 ‘pounds T1300Q@18:50

{ Calves (Steers) choice a

J taa.50 to ries [email protected] ses 50@ 19.50 505" 1,0 inds down + 18.50619.00 | yoo qium : Bu Ba 500 pounds and down ...... [email protected] a. 10giusel o choiShives (Heifers) [email protected]| 800 pounds and down ....... [email protected] ."1s0ginap] 00 vounds @snn ie 1100280 Lam

ssnssisnenes

W. ment expenses Tent fiscal year 00! pared wi A

Choice closely. vere 3.50 Good to choice . [email protected] good . [email protected] 15.00@ 18.25

vee [email protected] | Medium to hes akan Common Yearling We x - WOOGIN 00g 1g chotoe TE. RE 17.00019.00 . [email protected] —e . . [email protected] 24350 20.00| Good and choice... i... [email protected] “TiCommon and medium ii. 6. 1.50 20.5024.2 nueum |), S, Statement [email protected]

, Feb. 17 (UP)~Governand rece for the curthrough ~13--a8-com~ oat A . Expenses we o ol pts ...... 25.891,819,182

Anti-Taft Move

Blocked by CI0

Reports Unions Asked To Not Picket at Gary By DANIEL M. KIDNEY Times Stall Writer WASHINGTON, Feb, 17--Gary labor unions did not picket Sen.

20 1% Robert A. Taft (R. 0.) when he 18 20° made. a presidential campaign|ind . 15% 1 speech there last week because Kings a oo ory Life com... 1 they were asked not to do so by|fen . their leaders Rep. Ray Madden, |jace ‘S% Gary Democrat, told his col- Mastie Mphalt 10% leagues today. N Ind Pub Serv 4%% " Mr. Madden revealed that CIO N Ind Pub rv 5% . oe President ‘Philip Murray, Joseph|p y Germano, district CIO director of | -Pub Serv of 1d." “oth

the. Chicago area, and Joseph

against low living standards.” “The Only President”

Prepared speech to pay tribute lo Mrs. Franklin.D...Roosevelt.. | 1 want to tell you she is do-| Ing a wonderful job,” he said. ‘Mrs. Roosevelt has made al wonderful contribution to the na-

= Then he added: - “He’s the only President I ever think of as President.”

Physician to Address

» Kiwanis Club Dinner “The Father in the Home” will be discussed by Dr. Lillian G. Moulton at 6 p. m. today before the first ladies’ night dinner of the Kiwanis Club of North Inailanapolis. © The dinner will be in Spencer's Restaurant. Dr. Moulton 1s a practicing Physician and consultant to the Child Guidance Clinic at Riley Hospita), .

John N, Goll will talk on National Security: Week and Dr. Russell Hippensteel will show a film on child health. -

Main Spring Arch Shoes |

WALKOVER

. 28 N. PENN. Across From Loew's Theater

tion since the President died.”

{| quarter of a century.”

| Bodies of 63 Yanks (Taken ‘to Honolulu

Goin, sub-district CIO director in Indiana, all publicly requested)

umet district not to picket the Taft meeting. In congratulating the for non-picketing, Mr. Madden, a minority member of the. House Labor Committee, took occasion to again criticize the Taft-Hart-

Still Opposed: to Act

“All the industrial workers in nd the Calumet district who have studied and familiarized them-|; selves with the hidden provisions

}

Ross Gear & So Ind O&R 4.3 pfd Stokely-Van Camp com ... “ Stokely-Van Camp pfd Mr! Truman departed from his their union members in the Cal-|Terre Haute MaHeable

estons 4s 75 pls Brass & Alum bs 66... 97 Indpls P&L 3%s 70 «108: nd Asso Tel 3s 75 ... “ [ndpls Rail - 34

investors Telephone 3s nd Ru

of the Taft-Hartley law, are op- |} I5¢ Pub Serv jie T3100 109 posed to it and are clamoring for Pub Tel 4%s 85 i Bom its repeal” Mr. Madden asserted. [Tig Tym Corp Se 57 93

ese: f

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Debits

Local Produce

PRICES FOR PLANT DELIVERY Pouitry—1048 springers and broilers, 38c; Leghorn springers, ; cocks and st 10c; hens, 4 4% and orns, 17c; No. 2 poultry, 4e

0. 1. Butterfat—No. 1, Tic; xa 2, Te. i

and grade B large, 36¢; grade

Hobo Ho Along Pulling’ 1000-Pound Load

oreign oT BRISBANE, Australia, Feb. 17 ~Police rubbed their eyes in dis-

3 | belief recently when they saw

Hobo Daniel Berrin, 35, toiling up a hill on foot. ’ Behind him, Daniel towed a large, home-made trailer piled five feet high with his belong:

ae + 3% 10% ngs—ranging from stale bread Union Title com .... ....... 54 to a broken-down flivver. The } V the--cops ssed, wi hed unions Allen & Steen 8s 57. ...... 97 10 easily half a au. “ 3M ... But what fascinated them most 8 + |was Daniel. He had strapped

it five miles. He also had one ‘feg and had to hobble along on crutches, :

Plan Valentine Party

| A Valentine party will be given {at 8 p. m. today by the Ramona

|Grove 63, Supreme Forest of {Woodmen Circle,

{Mrs. Albert Wells is president.

“A great deal of misleading propaganda is. being circulated among members of . organized labor in an effort to convince them-that the restfictions set-out in this bill -against union organization, collective bargaining, local union restrictions

against exercising :their right of free speech. and so forth, is a concession to union labor. However; when the -obstinate employer starts taking advantage of the numerous restrictive pro-

union labor has been ‘set back a

U. S. Army Says Reds Let Koreans Maul Two Yanks

Charge. Aides Attacked While Watching... Parade; Detective Takes Their Camera

SEOUL, Korea, Feb, 17 (UP)—Soviet army officers stood idly bers. y by and permitted a crowd of Koreans to’ maul two United States liaison officers during a military parade in Pyong Yang, capital Board has asked the federal dis-| of the Russian zone, U. 8. Army authorities said today. | visions of this act, the public will| © The Army report identified the two officers as Maj. Darrel G.|tion restraining the union from soon realize that the progress of | Costello, Imogene, Ia., and Maj. Richard C. Biggs, Berkley, Cal. |continuing its strikes against 14 Both are stationed in Russian-|™ : ’ ” occupied Korea. |

The two Americans were

mauled on Feb, 8 ‘when they Joined a crowd of civilian tators to watch a parade by

units

), 12 and 14

opper, fashwing back, slit pockets. zes 10 t6.18. ) in Junior 25

at Now! i

A 4 tanapor

Men, Women! Old?

Get New Pep, Vim ~ Feel Years Younger

ComRar

everywhere—in InHaag Stores. seven months for the unrecord-

Business Interruption

I ST EL

fF] pays MUTUAL

ance

Te call the AGENT

HONOLULU, Feb. 17 (UP)— |The bodies of 63 American war dead from isolated and unrecorded graves in the southwestern | Pacific were brought to Ft. Shaf{ter yesterday aboard the Army LST-7T11. ; Fifty officers and enlisted men

of the Graves Registration Service searched Pacific islands for

taken to identification labora tories here. . They will be buried

SIA femme ses 3 A

of the newly-formed “army for| all Korea.” The parade was. held! {to mark the -second anniversary | of the North Korean Peoples Committee, 3 \ Approved by Koreans | As the Americans stood at a vantage point near the official re-| viewing stand, they were approached by six Korean civilians) and a Meutenant colonel from the all Korea army. { The liettenant colonel protested that the officers were on “Korean soll and the United States has no| business here.” After the parade, thé Americans| treturned to their jeep which-was: parked directly in front of the Pyong Yang Soviét Officers’ Club. [They were surrounded immediate} ly by about 15 Koreans who tried

During the scuffle, a Korean detective drew his pistol and de{manded that Maj. Costello hand over the camera he was carrying.

SPeC-|The major handed aver the film terday, the ITU

but kept the camera. It was unidentified Korean. . While an estimated 100 Soviet officers looked on, six Korean

kept, the Americans prisoners for: a half hour. Che Although no protest has yet been made, Lt. Gen. John R,

Hodge, American commander in! po

southern Korea, pointed out that Soviet liaison officers in Seoul have “complete liberty of movement- plus full freedom to photograph all military parades.”

|

“Middle East.

|attacks, jssued since the U. 8S. {published documents on pre-war

.4John Foster Dulles.

'Ithat he never took part in any

Ya Ibs. and over, 25¢c; under

in their hail. |

|

Reds Charge U.S, Britain Peace Plot

Accuse France of Plan To Attack Russia

MOSCOW, Feb, 17 (UP)— Soviet Russia charged that the U. 8. and Britain conspired indi-| vidually for separate peace with Germany and that France planned an attack on Russia from the

. These allegations were contained in the fourth and last installment of Soviet propaganda

Soviet-Germany relations. The U. 8. move for a separate

Year of ‘Living Death’

Veteran, Who Has No Blemish on His Body,

Unaware That He Is

death” from which he never has

a-tree when the car crashed into was found lying unconscious on, Waltham Hospital. His fractured skull and lacerated brain were operated upon. He was given con- © stant medical attendance and. later transferred to Cushing|™ Veterans Administration Hospital *

his muscles.

By ALAN WADE, United Press Staft Correspondent FRAMINGHAM, Mass, Feb, 17 — One year ago today war veteran Ralph Abbot, 35, of Norwood, went into a coma of “living

On Feb, 17, 1947, he was hurtled from his automobile against

boys’ body,” Dr. Roland A. Glass-

here, Today, in spotlessly clean ward thing done for him, both at 307 of the Veterans’ Hospital, he Waltham Hospital and here. We, was fed fluids through a tube in'still hope for a miracle, But he| his nose and intravenously, He is slowly josing weignt on] Je Wi ven a massage to exercise does not seem to mproving.| rg indy : We still “regard his condition as

‘Mr, Abbott's sur-

they did not know if the soma set any kind of a record, - Before he was injured, Mr. Abbott was a ward attendant at the very hospital where he now lies. Doctors said his coma was of

Fed Through Tubes

awakened.

a stone wall. At 1:15 a. m. he ! a Weston street and taken to that of Miss Helen Louise Busch

={mann:- Known as-‘“the.coma girl,’ she ‘died at Westfield last suinr of the hospital staff said. “Yet/mer at the age of 39 after near

it would be a miracle that would 2C years of irregularly broken

ank among the greatest if he|sleep. Her coma developed from hould ever recover.” {injuries suffered in a bus accident “He has had every possible at Painesville, O., in 1928 while

[College for Women.

r—————————— SOUTHPORT OES TO MEET Southport OES will meet at 8 pm. tomorrow in. the Southport

Hogs Steady Today: Steers, xsi Hos. 3 5 Heifers Slightly Higher

Allen Dulles, brother of Republican foreign affairs adviser

Basis of Charges

Dulles talked with a Prince |Hohenloe, proposing to join Germany in establishing a zone of safety in Europe against bolshevism and pan-slivism. This, the Russians said, was a move for a separate peace.

the Russian charges were ‘‘nonsense.” He said he dealt with the anti-Hitler - underground as an officer of ‘the OSS in Berne, but

negotiations similar to those described by the Russians.) The British move for a separate peace, the Russian charge said, was made by Max Aitken, son of

September, 1941. On Night Fighter Duty (In London, Mr. Aitken said he was on duty with a night fighter squadron in Coltishall, England, in September, 1941.)

also that France's Gen. Charles De Gaulle and Gen.’ Maxim Weygand, who was then in command of French troops in Syria, planned a military operation to enter Russia from the south and seize the Caucasus.

seize the Cave i Price Adjustment Pleases Hoosiers,

The Russian charge sald Mr. |!

(In New York, Mr: Dulles sald]

Lord Beaverbrook, in Lisbon in}

“The “Soviet “statement charged]

Hoosier farmers are happy, rather than sad, about the slump In farm commodity prices Ralph Harvey (R. Ind.) reported here today. A farmer-legislator, who returned from a week's visit to his 10th congressional district, Mr. Harvey offered this first-hand

report: ai My farm is about 8 miles from B small | New Castle. During the week 1|® 2 Table Lamps was at home the market toppled.|® 2 End Tables So I talked to a good many farm-

er friends about it.

price-slump was a thing in their opinion. They thought that $29 per hundred for hogs was just too high. And they want to see the market level off at around $24 or $25.” r » » THE FARMERS know that the government has provided a floor

prices cannot hit bottom as they

Harvey said. “I feel sure that such supports will be continued by this Republican congress, so the farmers will be given sufiicient assurance of fair prices to continue their unprecedented food production,” he added. His farming area is largely de-

[Castle Chamber of Commerce re|garding the Marshall plan.

‘Advocating the independent set- | himself to the load and hayled up as proposed by the Herter com- | mittee of the House, Mr. Harvey |¥

od

was properly explained. He is| | withholding judgement as to his!

f

‘said he found an adverse audience softened. considerable. when ERP

Union Charges lliegal Restraint

cal Union (AFL) charged today that federal district court injunetions. could

or hold benefits for their mem-;

The National Labor Relations]

trict court here to jssue an injunc-|

newspapers throughout the coun try. . The NLRB contends | union is carrying on an unfair| labor practice. | In a reply brief filled late yest a

section of the Taft-Hartley act ' ! snatched away from him by an ig unconstitutional because of the; |:

manner in which it authorizes the NLRB to obtain injunctions’ against the union. Once the in-!

{police . approached the jeep and junction was issued, the court lost| “all control over its .duration,” |’

the union said.

| |

Rep. Harvey Finds |* WASHINGTON, Feb. 17]

Rep.| &

“Without exception they said Sofa and mafc all

of price supports so that farm A

voted to feeding cattle and hogs|l Mr. Harvey explained. While at|® +home he addressed the New}

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® 2-Pe. Mohair Suite

ding and long-wearing mohair Tables finished in walnut,

did after World War I, Mr. [B=

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8-Piece Bedroom Group ® Bed ® Spring and (@ Chest Mattress

The International -Typographi-/® Vanity @® Bench © 2 Vanity Lamps Suite finished in walnut. Vanity is

tly... deny Popular, drop-center style. Resilient 90unions the right to strike to win|coll spring-—comfortable mattress.

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9-Piace LIVING ROOM OUTFIT

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