Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 August 1948 — Page 4

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Postmaster Albert Goldman

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CORDIAL GREETINGS — President Trurnan and Gov. Thora: E Dewey, presidential candidates, shook hands during dedication eeremonies at New York International Airport yesterday. In the background are (left to rght) New York's Mayor William O'Dwyer, Col. Robert Landry, the Frodients: air advisor, and

of New York-City.

Kansas City, Kas, late in Jin. :

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00 POUNAB «s.\svsnrses 33.50032.00

Te pone pees GH

is 450 Gavanesnnns BL 50 3m CH $50 Pounds ont BiSGERN sn . 30 8 5 5 swerse [email protected] um iad Rade bi 57 or bins [email protected] BP , CATTLE (300) LI is Steers D1The 18% 04 0B . "5 3% Ag 164 Ya ow ‘13 ‘a8 11 ar ie ne " otters 4% chotoe— 86 | G00 800 POUDNAR ..ciiiariiis 36.00 38.00 fo $05-100 ey ia [email protected] ? | Good 108 | 400 800 pounds ............ 2.00836.00 hie Cows (All Weights) TE TOU un er sn iss rois sna ARAL 23.00@:28.00 [CH nd commen 17.00430.00 o I SOON aa, 0000 o Bulls (AD Weights) 3. Beet 1014 G00d (All Weight) Liiliuss ue [email protected] 38: 1G00@: <<... de ieareiirs is 24.00025.00 Me | altestenass 5 23.006.34.00 CATTLE Good to choles ......oviiveine on to m (78 Ibs. up)

Cutter and common.

Steers Feeder and Stocker Csttle and Calves

RESIDENTIAL BUS—Mrs, Harry Truman gre dnt with & big hug and kiss as he I as at Fairfax Air Bote in ° President's Alar » was more than an hour

Good Common and medium

shananes

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tai Local Truck Grain Prices Prices

U.S: Reds Open 14th Annual ay Tong

To Be Closed

NEW YORK, Aug. 2 (UP)—

taken by the Communists in 1944, when they failed to put up a nominee in the presidential race and gave tacit backing to Franklin D. Roosevelt as “the com-mander-in-chief.” . William Z. Foster, national chairman, will be the keynote Speaker tonight. The press has invited and part of his speech will be broadcast from 9:30

two days

3

;

£2

tween 200,000 and 250,000 votes. The party's publicity depart. ment said that through legisla-

tive or dita action it % has been removed from the bal-

lot in eight states.

Typhoid Down ;

No. 3 red wheat, $3.08. No. 3 te sorn, $3.13 0. low Tr $1.87. No. 3 soybeans, 14% moisture, $3.10. +38 ——— a

INDIANAPOLIS, CLEARING HOUSE

z22

Nis Set Tomorrow For Mrs. Carrie Leaf

Services for Mrs.

Carrie Leaf,

50 Pct. in State

“Als

diana State Board of Health.

That parallels the position]

Hoosiers have suffered fewer cases of typhoid fever so far year than in the same period of 1047, according to a sur s15,000| Vey revealed today by the In-

Only 26 cases of the fever have been reported this year, the report stated, as compared to 50 cases over the same months of last year, and a five-year median

3 0030564 N. New Jersey St. who died Friday in General Hospital, will

Ba AGREE ON HUNGARY CHIEF 00

be held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Wald funeral home. Burial will be in Crown Hill. She was 77. Mrs. Leaf, who was a resident of Indianapolis for 70 years, was

of 486, Dr. J. W. Jackson, director, Communicable Disease Control, accounted to improved sanitation in rural and urban communities

Soars On Wings of Inflafio

Velvet Glove Behind the iron Cortain— if Soaring Cost of Living

And War Memories Hold Grip on Budapest

Famous Hotels Now Blackened Skeletons; Food Plentiful; Family Incomes Low

Tobin Cabinet ~ Refusals Bared

Job Turned Down Twice hy Labor Leader

Daniel J. Tobin, president of the International ‘Union,

That was my first post-war impression of the Queen of the Danube. It was in startling contrast to the drabness of once scintillating Vienna. It was entirely different than I had expected to find siege-wrecked Buda-

during those two months ‘the Nazis held out against Soviet armies

Not only were 300,000 persons killed, but in both Buda and Pest, on either side of the Danube, about a third of the city was destroyed. Marked By Bombs Almost every building 1 marked by shell or bomb. hotels — Ritz,

"

along blackened skeletons. Across the river the Buda skyline is marked by ruins of the centuries-old castle, last strong hold of the Germans. The seve bridges wefe blown up by th the Nazis when they retreated across the river, But there is a new landmark now. It is the Liberation Monuthe St. Gellehert Hotel, erected to the Soviet solSets who fell in liberating Hun-

Food is plentiful. Only bread, sugar and flour are rationed. Prices on rationed items are fixed, but for a 15 per cent premium almost unlimited additional quantities can ‘be had. Nylons Available Here one can buy nylons, French perfumes, American beauty products on the open market. Those who have the money can get excellent clothing from big stores se -to-wear down to exclusive specialty shops on the fashionable Vaci Utza. Foreign papers and books are sold freely, "not" just in tourist hotels but in kiosks on the principal streets. saw on sale 20 British dailies

Tobacco is plentiful. More than one and three-fourths billions of cigarets were made during the first half of last year, and Hun-

if garians like their owu, so U 8. cigarets have no barter value.

For tourists, the cost of living is about on a par with that in

& Paris. Double room in a finet-

class hotel is about $11 a day, but there are all sorts of service, sales and luxury taxes, which apply also to cafes and restaurants. After 10 p. m. there is an additional charge of 5 per cent for music, a 20 per cent luxury tax, and an entertainment tax of about 9 cents. A satisfying meal is a angan restaurant costs about

Average Family Income

A typical working-class family with one child gets about $62.40 (719 forints) a month. (The forint is about nine cents, 11.20 to the dollar.) This income includes wages plus a family supplement of $1.62 a person plus living supplement of $1.35 a person. Rent takes $1.53 to $4.50" a month, clothing $7.20, heat $4.86; electricity $1.08, amusements $1.44, education $3.60, farces $1.35, taxes $1.08, insurance $1.44. Food calls for about $33.84 a month of which $16.20 is for meat, $1.98 for bread, $5.94 for sugar, $2.34

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"First of Three 4 : ROSETTE Correspondent BOA , Aug. 2—A city gay with national and Sogialist red flags—beautiful, women in light “new look” sumdresses—shops filled with all sorts of

In an article in the current issue of The TR ster, the union's m e, hy Tobin's executive assistant, Thomas E. Flynn, wrote: “His (Mr. Tobin's) second rejection of an honor that most

Reject Agreement

Governor's Plan Fails To End 90-Day Tieup

DAYTON, O., Aug. 2 (UP)— The United Electrical Union (C10) announced today the membership of local 768 unanimously rejected an t, worked out at a conference called by Gov. Thomas Herbert, which would have ended the 90-day-old strike at the Univis Lens Co. At a stormy sessiofi at the CIO

ilabor hall here last night, approxima

tely 100 members unexpectedly voted to Teject an agreement reached at a meeting of 22 representatives of the union, company, state, eity, independent workers, and church leaders yesterday. Told to Stay at Home Police Chief Rudolph Wurstner ordered all employees of the company to stay at home after the local had rejected the agreement. A previously scheduled mass meeting at the Univis plant, scene

was canceled after the agreement was reached. : The agreement would have returned all workers’ to their jobs this morning, with the union accepting the company’s 11 cent hourly wage increase, and leaving the status of 11 union members whom the .company refused to rehire to the decision of an arbitrator.

————————————— High Notes of Singer Break Bow! in Home

» Foreign: Service BRISBANE, Australia, Aug. 2 Musicians who ‘shatter wine glasses with high notes are mere pikers alongside New York's EthMerman. Take it from Mrs: Robert Wil-

¢|lis of Monto, Queensland. She!

says Ethel’s recording of “Anything You Can Do I Can Do Better” broke a 12-inch-wide mixing] bowl in two pieces. Mrs. Willis“ is not too happy )Jabout the singer's achievement, BOWSVar. It was a.brand new w

Lions to Fete Tribe

~Ted Sullivan, business manager of the Indianapolis Indians, and members of the team will be guests of the Lions Club of Indianapolis at their luncheon ‘Wednesday in the Claypool Hotel.

of repeated and bloody violence,

men would regard as the crown-: ing achievement of their lives was on June 29 in conference with President Truman at the White House.” 3 “The first time was in 1943 when the late President’ Roose velt made a similar offer to Mr. Tobin of the cabinet post,” the article said. Not only did Mr. Tobin decline appointment, the Flypn article said, but he refused also to recommend someone else to succeed Secretary of Labor ovis B. Schwellenbach, who “died June 10. *This is in line with Mr, Tobin's consistent policy of accepting no personal honor and exerting no personal influence in petition Mr, Flynn wrote, wrote.

State te Health Board Slates 2 Parleys

Two public conferences, one on restaurants, the other on venereal diseases, have been scheduled here tomorrow and Wednesday by ‘the State Health Board. Both will be held at the Indiana University Medical Center. More than 100 physicians, nurses and educators are expected to attend the venereal disease seminar. Speakers include Dr. Carl C; Kuehn, director, and Leo J. Rail, administrative assistant, Division of Venereal Disease Control of the Indiana State Health Board; Mrs. Amelia Henderson Baker, Shidemiologist, Chicago Health Board; Swank, Hot Springs, Ark., Robert lie Giacomo. and Dominic Libert, Washington, D. C., all with the U. 8. Public Health Service.

ference will be Dr. L. E. Burney,

| CORRECTION! In our ad of Monday July - 26 through error we announced Immediate de. livery of Friden Caluoulaters & Allen:Wales Ade ding Machines. Immediate delivery applies only to Friden Calculators.

SERVICE & SALES 215-8, Meridian: $1, MA-5348

|

for rice, 90 cents for dark flour, $5.04 for potatoes, $1.44 for fat. |

VAN RN

for the decline.

born in Jennings County. She was a member of Queen Esther Chapter, OES; Golden Rule] Lodge, Brotherhood of Railroad en, and Clara. Barton! Chapter, Daughters of the Union| Survivors are her son, William | C. Alexander; two sisters, Mrs.| Addie Essigke and Mrs. Bertha Patterson, and two brothers, Cale and Jack Alexander, all of Indianapolis. i

BUDAPEST, Aug. 2 (UP)—All Hungarian party leaders have,

Sh oti Sr ne voy. receipts, 84 1

so. 1; Tle: No. 3, 88,

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“800 pounds L.uieciini.. 3.00@3000| Szakasits as president to su B00 POURS ..+svarensss 20.00@3800(Z0lan Tildy, He will be elected ! » formally by Parliament tomorrow 1000 pounds .....cver.. WAVGIM| 0 the Text day, it was reported B00~ 000° DOUNEE ....: ives 3L.00@ 4.00 3 : ano Clie tears) RS Deana down ates oar [email protected] Local Produce “Poultry — | ringers aad broilers od broilers, 3c; ALUMINUM AWNING gE watt hy, eA Weather © Year Resnd . “300; 4% ibe. |f] Trotection 8! poultry, to wes(l 601 N, Penn. St. L1-3377

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Addressing the restaurant con-

state health commissioner; J. C. ° Schneider, executive secratare. of the Indiana State Restaurant Association, and David E. Hartley, sanitarian, Division of Food and Drugs, Indiana Health Board.

investigati violation of an!

Indianapolis mil Mrs. O. B. Ly dent of the Ii men’s Council, s directors of the at 10 a. m. tomo: a five-member c vestigate “both s tion.” Action Foll She said that mittee’'s investig: would decide whs take. Mrs. Adams s move follows ms

19 to 20 cents a C. Winfield Hu retary of the Mil Indianapolis, sai due to the highe ing paid the farn He predicted th might rise to 25 « winter. : Judge Paul C

dent of the Indi tion of Communr

gation of the sec Last week Fe indicted eight = in the Chicago a

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