Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 February 1949 — Page 7

Mr. Postil

portable rege s forms. Dan man, holds a er for IBM

’ ters i . 'orms ¢ thy features typing a 16+

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t to $15.75.

: cents,

- Grathrie, Okla,

"

MONDAY, FEB. 14,

oa .

to $21.50.

.

. Cows Up $1 to $2

* Cow prices rose §1 to $2, most- . ly $1.50 up. Several loads of good . beef cows reached $16.50 to $17. Common and medium grades . ranged from $15.75 to $16.50, as canners and cutters sold at $14 Some dropped to $13

in early trade.

Bull prices rose as much as 50/night. : good heavy sausage bulls _- selling at $21 to $21.25. Medium - sausage and brought $18 to Vealers remained steady atone cash drawer with smashed $2050 to $31.50 for good and ©88S, after they found the drawer choice; $20 to $29 for common and mediums, and $14 to $20 for

good $20.50.

culls,

Estimates of receipts were hogs, 5250; cattle, 875; calves, 875, and

sheep, 600.

Receipts estimated at 39,300 in the 12 major markets today compared to 90,700 a week ago today were pointed out as cause for the

rise.

In sheep trade, sellers demanded higher prices, slowing action: Prices rose 75 cents to $1 above in later trade, "with quality considered. . A deck of good and choice Texas 87-pound fat lambs reached $24.50, as a deck of southwestgood T8-pound lambs .sold at $23.75. A deck of “northwestern

Friday's levels

ern medium and

‘mediums 92 pounds sold at $23.75. A

$24 and up.

Slaughter ewe prices dropped Odd head were salable at

$1. $8.50 and less.

Stout Field Flier Saves lll Child

A Tenth Air Force maintenance major braved high winds-and-& blizzard in a huge cargo plane to save the life of a 66-year-old Casper, Wyo. girl suffering from brain fever, Tenth Air Force officials at Stout Field announced

today.

Major Frederick H. Welch, tenance division, Tenth-Air Force, volunteered to bring the girl in his cargo plane from Casper to when weather con-

’ Col.,

41 tons of food rations; 5000/%

Several loads of medium and heifers and mixed yearlings, 00 to 1000 pounds, sold at $22 to $24, compared with last week's ~$48-10 $22 prices. Two loads of medium and good 1375-pound| averages reached $22, as a few §00d head of steers sold at $23.50. Scattered small lots of common and medium yearlings sold at $18 Three loads of mostly

beef bulls

~weighing| 3- safe.

Toad “of southwestern fat slaughter 95 to 968-pounders sold at $24. Natives were scarce, with . a few common lightweights sell- , ing at $18 to $20 and eligible at

Loot 8 Stores

Thugs Fill Empty Till With Broken Eggs

Door - forcing, egg - smashing burglars broke into eight business establishments in the 6100 block E. Washington St. during the

Merchants who arrived to find their stores burglarized this morning reported that the intruders had taken time out to fill

contained no money.

The mapor haul was at the pSheridan* Hardware, 6125 E. Washington St. where they broke a back door glass, dropped a rope between bars on the window and unlatched the bar. They took $80 from a cash drawer. Steal Soft Drinks They also took an ax and cutters which they used to break into the Irvington Feed Store at 6129 E. Washington St. Here they took two cases of soft drinks and smashed the eggs In the empty cash drawer, i Eggs were also splattered over the walls of Broadlick Bakery, 6112 E. Washington St., where the thugs took $2 from a cash drawer and failed to break Into

Other spots burglarized in that block were ‘the Wilson e, 6128 E. Washington St., nothing taken; Sheridan Theater, 6116 E. Washington St. unestimated quantity of- candy taken; Hamill Garage, 8 N. Sheridan Ave, unknown sum from a vending machine; the East Way Inn, 6117 E, Washington St., nothing missing, and the Schreiber Filling Station, 6136 KE. Washington St. three cartons of cigarets. | Two other attempted burglaries were being investigated by police. Thieves broke into the Ringham Filling Station, 10 W. McCarty St, but failed to open a safe. Burglars smashed a window in Terrell Market, 924 Hadley St. but were unablE te pull mer Shandise through the bared winws.

PATRIOTIC GROUP TO MEET

The Federative Patriotic Sociaties’ will meet at 8 p. m. Wedneslay in the Central YMCA.

Local Issues

Agents Pin Corp American States pid

EeaRNranun

The R. J. Snyder family of Fon du Lac, Wis., shown at a Mil. waukee railroad station en route to Tacoma, Wash., to join Mr. is.

Miss Nofcier Gets State Library Job

Miss Lena B. Nofcier, former, secretary and director of library extension of the Kentucky Library Commission from 1930 until 1945, has been appointed head of the Extension Division of the Indiana State Library, effective) Mar, 1. i A native of Ohio, Miss Nofcler since 1945 has been organizing the library of the Asbury Theological Seminary at Wilmore, Ky., where she previously had served from 1925 until 1930. Miss Hazel B. Warren, Extension Division head since 1926, will serve the State Library as consultant. for Library Certification and Placement after her post is taken over by Miss Nofcier,

Fourth Recaptured; Alert 4 States

GOSHEN, Feb. 14 (UP)—State police in four states were alerted

of the Elkhart County jail, after a fellow epecaper who was recaptured told police they had headed for Detroit.

of the jail early yesterday through a small ventilator shaft opening. . . Paul Gang, 22, South Bend, largest of the prisoners, suffered a long cut on the abdomen while getting through the opening, 7% by 10% inches, and was _ recaptured later at Bowling Green. His cut was not serious. " Gang told authorities the three other prisoners had gone on to Detroit and state police in Michigan, Ohio, Illinois and Indiana were alerted to pick up men answering their descriptions. Stolen cars reported in Goshen Elkhart and-nearby-La Grange were believed to have been taken by the three men to make their getaway. The others were Raymond Terry, 25, Osceola, Ind.; charged with kidnaping and rape while

hart, charged with parole violation; and “Walter Shes, 21, Brooklines Mass, charged - with auto theft. Terry was accused of kidnaping an Elkhart girl from her

ditions made accomplishment of|Americen Siares Bi%a’i ! gi» 8 [voy Iriend 1 a lovers’ lane ease. the mission by light aircraft im-|Avshire Ool Com ".......". 0 14. 14% 3 I nti LS Ayres way pid ser i004 (UU, S, Statement Bucks Strong Wind Belt RB & ah [=] 2" | WASHINGTON, Peb. 14 (UP)~Govern- © HI 100K Off in leas than 400 766] Bonbe-berrill com 11s.l. 1 13 men peer, tne Teceipty for the eur. of Pinay fhace B, the Jace Of emtrat Sor. pid . 13 ao TID . your ago: * Woo nds. e C n te This Year Last Year ; ' : $ 21,630,076, 2 pn Sudition in the Children’s of] fA 430.074 411 unit ti Sixty-one Tenth Air Force air-| I [Subtle Debt 203.00 138,500,087 : ve Qummings rreneres 97% | Public “Debt ms , 548 4, ) 7 tons of hay to stranded livestock Corselinist, ad 87: 1, ji AAPL ARNG a = Shaiaticun Westar a 3 wagne Jackin ‘an pid... Bw Clearings curb a rigrena eda ve van $11.373,000 areas of yesterday i pL ot [De edt era ssee continuing ‘operations. Home Tel & Tel Pe ‘pt a 10 L | Prod A total of 220 Tenth Afr Force|fook Drug Co com ... we. Loca uce personnel pad Sowa 901 Sortica au % |” poultry—Powls, 4% Ibs. and over, Be; n he + com . Army, Navy and pe ; " breed springein. Jae colored 2 ind : L 3 ags, Force relief operations. I <r. | 336, And No. 3 poultry de less than No. 1 Drop Food, Clothing at Fm eR © Among equipment and supplies fe: Grade B ore 34c; Grade A small, aro oF delivered to the Jemersen National Li © [Mog and no’ grea. Se. jini areas by the Tenth Afr od bors "prices Spply’ when delivered ab ree were 15 tons of clothing; "

foday for three escaped inmates|

The four made their way out

armed; Hoover Grant, 20, Elk-|

. who is in the Army. Keeping frack of the I1 youngsters

Rites Tomorrow For ‘Aged Sisters Two elderly sisters, Miss ‘Ma-| tilda Miller, 80, and Miss Emma, Miller, found dead Saturday in| their home, 701 E. Morris St.

will be buried in Crown Hill fol-!

moving a small Army, says Mrs. Snyder.

morrow in the Robert W. Stirling Funeral Home. The women, who apparently died of heart attacks late Tuesday night, were discovered by an egg deliveryman when he noticed a four-day accumulation of papers on the front porch, They had spent their Hves living and

1

jul nealmne

business.

Dodge at Cincinnati

Corp., announced today.

ing will be arranged by R. W, Peek, regional |

new models about Feb. 25, Mr.

working together.

Peek said.

The FBI charged that Hetges used the money to finance a used

First investigation of the Dyer

Dodge dealers of the Indianapolis ares will preview the new motor car line in the Taft Auditorium in Cincinnati tomorrow, L. Lk. Colber, president of the Dodge Division of the Chrysler

C. A. Templeton and John Gra-

ham of the Detroit home office sales staff will speak. The meet-

Dealers will be stocked with the

"WASHINGTON, Feb. 14 (UP) «Rep. W. R.~Poage (D. Tex.) wants to give farmers a chance to talk more as well as listen, Rural electrification is bringing radios to isolated areas, Rep, said, but there still are 4 million farm homes without telephones. He has introduced a bill to permit the Rural Electrification Ad-

. {ministration to finance telephone

lines on much. the same basis as it now finances electric service. * Mr. Poage heads a subcommittee that begins hearings on the bill today. REA Adminstrator Claude R. Wickard is the first witness. “The bill is not 3 move to put

Phones for Farm

Telephone & Co. are obi Pec. dh

i Kroger's 1948 Net _[Set at $9 Million

The Kroger Co. with 96 outlets in Central Indiana, reported gross sales of $825688323 for 1948, Joseph B. Hall, president,

“|told stockholders today. The net

income was $9,311,120 after reserves and taxes,

Earnings were $5.07 per share after reserves and taxes as com-

sald.

losses,

paid during 1948 to the company’s 27,436 stockholders.

See Level Meat Prices After Carcass Drop

Retail meat prices were expected to stabilize this week after a 4%-cent drop In carcass quotations in the last two weeks, a

morning. 3 “Steak “will retail around 75 cents a pound. Pork wis reported steady with ham prices already on their rise

Mr. Hall said $2.5 million had man ; been deducted from 1948 income inspection of the hooks den the a hed inst inventoryl

Dividends of $3 per share were p

leading meat retailer said this e

tb the high demand Easter level,

Sears Employees $910,350 Richer

Sears, Roebuck & Co. employees collectively were $910,350 richer today, as the 437 members of the company’s savings and profit sharing pension fund received individual statements showing their part of Sears 1048

pared to $5.23 in 1047, the report|P

lowing services at 3:30 p. m. to-

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RAISIN BREADS

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