Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 August 1948 — Page 12
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THE IND IANAPOLIS TIMES
3 %
FRIDAY, AUG. 20, 1048
© Invoke Credit Curbs On 11 Items Starting Sept. 20
+ ing the
on
Vacation
" DELA) D HONEYMOON~—The op amiles of newlyweds were on Sher fabe of Mr. and Mrs. E, P. ry ml R. 3. Kokomo, as they left Indianapolis yesterday on the Hoosier Farm Bureau
western tour, at the
been away from 4 ir 200-acre fa
LOOKS MIGHTY GOOD
bronzed
it her in the aoa s Hoosier Harvest he best early in her life, but she has t 12 years she has toured most of the m Bursa trip, but she vows. it will not
were married 34 years ago. Except for a week orld’s Fair in 1933, this is the first time they have rm.
McClure's 86 years, least as the strenuous ecial,
ter-in-law live with her on the h Mrs. MeClore still is active in
ess Clodfelter, R. R. 5, Craw- |"; fordsville, looms as the life of the farmer no more than boar laugh and booming voice made him a friend of all. In the diner he told J. W. Runyon, waiter, the fried chicken-was the-
rty-on the tour, The suned the train when his hearty
finest-took-
ing meal he ever had seen. Now 71, Mr. Clodfelter has lived @n
a farm most of his life.
oo years in town." Unlike many
“But I'm city broke,"
he said. "I lived of his fellow tourists, he manages
to get away from the farm about = five years.
«items coming under the new re-
. (controls, which expired last No-
Board officials : that, in the future, they may {alter their regulations to To
0f One-Third Fixed on Cars
15-Month Limjt Set In Most Cases WASHINGTON, Aug. 20 (UP) —New government controls. on installment buying of automobiles and 10 other items will go into effect a month from today. The Federal Reserve Board announced the new rules last night. {They require a one-third downpayment on automobiles and a one-fifth downpayment on the others. In most cases, the customer must pay the balance within 15 months. The new controls were authorized by the recently-enacted antiinflation bill. They are designed to cut down the demand for durable goods by curbing the power of the ordinary consumer to obtain them on credit. Similar controls were in effect during the War. 18 Months to Pay
Besides automobiles, other
strictions are cooking stoves,
dishwashers, ironers, refrige tors, washing machines, air conditioners, radios (including television sets and phonographs), sewing machines, vacuum cleaners and furniture and rugs. In general, the restrictions apply to all purchases costing between $50 and $5000. Consumers buying items priced at mote than $1000 will be given an additional three months—18 months in all— to pay the full balance on their purchase. In addition to the 11 specifically mentioned durable items, the new restrictions also apply to repayment of private loans for vacatiops and other non-emergency purposes. There is, of course, no nt for any down-pay-ment on loans. Consumers who borrow funds
payment agreement with the
lender. , Stiff Penaltios Merchants who violate the new regulations are liable to a maximum penalty of $10,000 fine and 10 years imprisonment. | The new rules ‘are somewhat more liberal than the wartime
vember. They required a onethird down payment on virtually all items. ‘In making the new rules’ a bit more lenient, board officials apparently were mindful
Since the old rules npirea, in. instaliment buying credit to an all-time high of hen billion. Some merchants have been allowing as long as 24 months to , complete payment on some
served notice
juizis sad gover other ‘air
DEATHS
Fe
He oO. a. 93, re« LUMBUS--Mrs. Evelfn Eileen Spauld«
QUEL mas. Wil bi 1. Loy, 87. D Rosetta Hobson, “. : Tair am Ellis, 89. . rhard 2 Grimme, 00; 8; Sharon Ann
KEWANNA-—Anthony Felder 3 oVATAYETTE—Mrs, , Felder M, "Kuipers,
*ia PORTE—Conrad Reiter Sr. 73, car-enter-contractor; William J. Frens, 178, Srmer lumber and coal yard superintend-
ILL CREEK--Mrs, Share! Mr ON—Flave Moss A Rendall A °, machinist:
4“. E-Willlam BE. Miller, 61. NY. Ss. Edith 1, ewhouse,
N Wolf, 10 I PLYMO OUTH—Schuyler C. Rineh: | POLAND-=Mrs. Hester Siisabeth: “Ehoter, a IIDON--Cearge Street, 82, retired ROCKVILLE--Mrg. Neva Saslintau, mn. SOUTH BEND--Mrs. Wally Eby, B51; Miss Elaine Sutton, .28; Paul ‘Wukovits,
Willis - McK 6s;
of the warnings of some econo. os mists that a too-drastic kbouse. letirb might bring on a bust. makeshift
STATE |
‘| smokehouse, - ,imain on the Willey farm,
‘then burst
PARTLY CLOUDY AND cloudy he
the Northeast.
cast.
7 REC PATS PEND. COPR 1948 EDW. L. A WAGNER. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—Cool temperatures with low winds stirring is the outlook for
mometers. will be in the 50s in these northern states.
GS) pmizzLe
5
FOTOLAST LEGEND
’ rr jac AREA
SCAJTERED SHOWERS
Tw AIR FLow THUNDER STORMS 7 RAIN
The Weather Bureau says the mercury will drop into the 60s by dawn tomorrow from Boston to Atlanta, in the Ohio Valley and along the Great Lakes. pected from the Dakotas through the Rockies to Washington and Oregon.
It shows the path of a new Canadian aif flow.)
(Note the cool arrow at the top of the Foto-
Still cooler weather is exBy daybreak ther-
MACOMB, I11., The “ghost flames” destroyed
yard, next to the charred ruins of their home at dusk when the blaze broke out. “I just looked up and the barn had burst into flames,” she said. “We just’ stood and watched. There was no chance to save it.” The barn, which contained hay, burned down in 26 minutes, Mrs. Willey said. Firemen were too late to save it. Seem Spontaneous “You wouldn't have been able to save it if you had been right there with the fire hose,” James Peak, a passerby, told Macomb firemen.
The Willeys also reported an outbreak of small fires in their They/ have lived in tent since their OT burned down last Baturday, and used the milkhouse as a dining room, Mrs. Willey sald that ‘she opened the door to the milkhouse terday morning, and noticed smoke. She put out a small blaze ‘in shelf paper in a cupLike the other fires which have plagued the Willey's for weeks, yesterday's blazes on spontaneous. There's No Telling “There's no telling what might happen next,” sald John Stone"Macomb insurance broker who ’ sold the Willey’s the insurance on their farm buildings. Just six buildings—three chicken brooders, a chicken house, a and granary—reabout twelve miles south of here. The blazes began two weeks ‘ago, when the Willey's first noticed brown spots on their wallThe spots spread ‘and into flame. The Willeys doused the fires but more appeared—200 in a week.
‘Situation Unchanged’
In Atomic Plant Strike
LOS ALAMOS, N. M,, Aug. 20 (UP)—Striking AFL atomic energy workers today ignored a warning that their walkout might damage the nation's * atomic] weapon program. W. T. Roberts, co-chairman of the walkout told a mass meeting last night that the “situation
paper.
80. apparently is unchanged,” and
asked the men to report for another meeting Sunday. The 3350 workers evidently planned to continue their walk-
‘Ghost Flames’ Destroy
2d Barn on lllinois Farm
Mystery Fires Appear From Nowhere,
Now Have Little Left to Burn Down
Aug. 20 (UP)—There wasn’t much left for the “mystery fires” to destroy on Charlie Willey's farm today.
the second barn last night.
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Ty aTY HAY Myers. CITY-Charles Reitenour, 172,
2 Local Physicians "To Address | Ww. Session
BLOOMINGTON, vier 20-—-Two Indianapolis = physicians, Dr, Thurman B. Rice and Dr. Wendell C. Anderson, will address the annual community and school health workshop here Tuesday. Dr. Rice directs the Indiana University School of Public Health, and Dr. Anderson heads the cancer control division of the State Health Board. Some 100 teachers, nurses and public health workers are attendworkshop’s two-week session.
New Officers Elected .
y Young Democrats NORTH VERNON, Aug. 20 P)—Basil Amick of Scottsburg elected president of
Jack Jaffe DF a Practice
stated today that he has begun practice at 12 N. Pennsylvania St., where he is affiliated with his father, Dr. Harold Jaffe. He will} conduct a gener-
lenses and visual training.
Indiana
tering Northern Illinois College Pr. Jaffe of Optometry in Chicago, Ill, where he graduated last June. ,/He recently passed the Indiana Optometry Board examination and has received his license. During World War II Dr. Jaffe spent 31 months in the Army. He was stationed in France for
a t, (year as a surgical technician with
the 164th General Hospital.
8 Colle, 14. Dr, Jack Jaffe, youngest mem- SULLIVAN—Mrs. Lilly Jane Cunninghsm
78. ber of a family of optometrists, | TERRE
SHELBUR. Ne Linda -months. SHELBYVILLE—Mrs. Mary Brown, 81. OUTH BEND--Churmaine
| Mrs. Sarah Jane former school teacher. TOPEKA--Mrs. Ada May Yoder Troyer, 69. UNION GITy~Thomes Kerr, 0M, aus store propriet:
los; NStAurant om)
Gayle Tuttle,” ‘18
HAUTE--Mrs. Maty A Alice Myers, ohn H. a amr, 7,
hard. VALE RAISO-—David Tanner: John Mal. oyee. or
tomer’ “ma = R. Rhods, 31, truck R1-2391 R1-2891 “iNeees sseon ssn, w, ro. ALVIN WELLS I! “Walks RTON—MTs Kathryn Gathoon, Hair Shaping Prom ABE en 0, Jame and Styling © gallery “operator PE VANS, 411 Roosevelt Bldg.
EuIL WV NY,
ILLINOIS AND 10TH ST
WAKARUSA - OPM arme WARSAW te rv
Richard , 88
pany employee
YOUNG GOP TO MEET
for Aug. 26 here.
® So-Lite Aluminum Combination Storm Windows
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vey 8 Evans, 85, retired farmer Mollenhour, 85, retired 3 RADere aT Mts. Bdnas Schramm, B86. WATERLOO--Mrs. Alice M. Howard, 84. WHITING Wiliam McCoy, 64, oll com—r——————————
TERRE HAUTE, Aug. 20 (UP) —Tom Potter, chairman of the Indiana Young Republicans, announced today that a meeting of district officers had been called
hy
RHEUMATIC PAINS
WINTER-X Tablets for pain sag discomfort of tism. y Muscular Lume Stor? ASK pour Grapes: tor ‘Tablets, 100 for $3.00. The B. M. Keens Co. Pharmaceutical Chem:
BR-200m; Eve. and Sun, BR-6930
ists. Indianapolis & « Indiana.
Engraved EMBLEM RINGS $15.00 to $75.00
New Painless Cure
the J. Cohen of this city in
wi Mr. |syringe is attached and replaced Willey now*has lost his five-room frame cottage and two barns to with approximately the same the fires, which seem to come from nowhere. Mrs. Willey said she and her husband were sitting in their bandages are required.
Diamond Set EMBLEM RINGS All Orders $49.75 to $500.00
For Abcesses Reported NEW YORK, Aug. 20—A painless cure for abscesses which leaves no scars is ‘eported by Dr.
the journal of the American Medical Association today. Pus is drawn from the abscess th a large needle to which a
amount of penicillin solution. No
Down PaymentToday’s Weather Fotocast ~~ [Af ¥er dE Siro of Pluck
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