Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 February 1949 — Page 13
Dip role hr ‘then in com (80° 10 85°F.) bulk, sbout 1 hot oven (400°
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(ARD WATER
the
Would Build New One
WASHINGTON, Feb. 17 (UP) —President
he sald he was aware it would be cheaper to tear the mansion down and build a new one, Because of the White House's “tremendous historical significance,” he ‘asked that it be repaired. Condemned as a fire-trap, the presidential family already has moved out is living across the street in’ Blair House. Mr. Truman sald the repair job on the White House ill tke * a minimum of 15 to 18 months .
Under the plan drawn tor the Federal
to.
Chairman Harold D. (D: N, C.) sald he will seek immediate House action on the bill. It was introduced by Rep, Walter| K. Granger (D, Utah.). It makes available the entire amount of the revolving fund of the Regional Agricultural Credit! Corporation. Loans would be! made to farmers who need emergency credit to help them re-
And while the government is spending an astronomical sum Fv armaments and foreign aid, the barest trickle is going for improving the lot of America’s neglected youth,
Those are the .|the cream of the country’s child psychologists, children’s welfare
[of exclusive interviews granted by the experts when they assembled in Washington for 4 meeting
Children and Youth.
dition that exists all over Amerfca Is what happened in a large} {eastern city. , d A drive to raise money for a children's receation center failed, in a section of the city which consistently had had a high delin quency rate. A confidential study was made to try to determine
Cooley just why the drive for such an obviously needed project had been)
unsuccessful. { It was found that among the! {people in .that area who were |solicited, there was practically no unemployment. Three-quarters of them were | workers whose average incomes (had doubled or tripled since be-|
fore the war. Close to 80 per| cover from losses inflicted on! cent of this group had new cars. |
livestock, crops and trees by the| And they had 80 per cent of the
winter's unprecedented snow and! cold.
Economic
A. D, H. Kaplan, Brookings Institution economist, said today, the nation's economy is having! a healthy economic “burp.” Mr, Kaplan told the House-Sen-
The baby, he said,” eventually has to have a burp.”
Wallgren
Sen. P. Cain (R. Wash.) said today Mon C. Waligren's nomination National Security
be chairman of the!
|children in the area who would [have benéfited from the center.
| ‘The other 20 per cent were
|miscellaneous white collar workers, and employees and teachers in a nearby university. They had javeraged a far less increase in |income. | But it ended up with, the high
ate Economie Co that the|income group o! to sub.e¢o was like a baby that hasiscribe less than half of what the “been 1 the bottle very fast.” lower income groups offered to
conclusions of
of the National Commission .on, A prominent. welfare worker! A typical example of the con-|phenomenon in America:
dui cultural responsibility.”
{better dental care be started.”
9 to , American Youn?
Playtime, Redistribution of social . responsibility hasn't caught i Air redistribution of income. ‘
explains the reason behind this
“There has been a revolution. {ary redistribution of income in country over the past decade. But there has not been a come parable redistribution of social
This social lag apparently isn't U4! onfined to the city. The head of 4 national child ‘welfare agency was asked to send a case worker to a certain rural district in a | Midwestern state to in jreports of an extremely. bad health. and education problem that existed there. He explains:
“To his astonishment this case worker discovered that the section was one of the most pros. |perous farm areas in the country. In one of the. counties the average farmer had an income of $20,000 a year. “Yet he was sending his Kids to a one-room school with a téacher who got $90 a month. And the farmers there wouldn't listen to suggestions that a public health nurse be hired by the {county or that a program for
; Parents Untrained Dr. George D.- Stoddard, president of the University of Illinois, believes that the country's social
Indiana Stocks and Bonds
- Resources Board is “the most
capricious, potentially—dangerous and injurious nomination of the 20th
Cental: >t on President - Ema. A
nominee, | Sen. Cain said he would consider |C
himself “a complete moral coward |
fit only to resign ‘my’ Seat in the
Senate” if he did not oppose the!Deits
nomination of the former gover-
nor of Washington, Sen.
Security of the two or three most powerful jobs in the nation.
Vets Pensions
Experts estimated that the Rankin pension bill would some,
“day take mope than $7 billion airs
year from the treasury. Not all
of this would be extra expense, Meio
however, because some would] duplicate present veterans’ hene-| fits. :
tra cost would be $3 billion. Mr.
Rankin’s meastire would give $90-
The experts Agured that by| of ‘1nd 1900—the péak year—the net ex-| Jub Serv of Ind
United atrhone "» pra wan per Bid Asked|Union Title Co >. ...... 50 anne » oe BL 14 . a. ses eit Y La .- - ares bs M FH ooo Sm . 1 13 el Vs lL ve dobbs pid ... «3 6 . hue Soya com .. + 28% . wee sees Circle r som .. . 89 ¥ W om | Ph: iene. 88% = 8 : Consolida nance pid ..... 98 103 108 Cont Car-No Var ..... i 3 ng: com «14 “ - 93% ¥e Ind . % . ri mm
N Ina Pub Serv I% rd Ceea01 104
NE
16% "|
x 8
ind. Pub. Serv N Ind Pub Serv oa ,h
a-month pensions to all veterans
Car
of World Wars I and IT when|
they reach the age of 65.
Foreign Aid
The Senate Foreign Relations, Committee apparently is con-|
vinced it can make no substantial breed
cut In for new foreign
8d funds despite fallin com- “ig ~ adn ae. Saling. oon
Both ae Tom Connally (D. Tex.), and Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R. Mich.), GOP foreign policy leader, agreed that the group should: authorize the full $5,580,000,000 requested by the Economic Co-Operation Adininis tration for the second phase of Marshall Plan operations.
Today’ S Weather Fotoust
re CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS
CWA IREOES, CAO. 4 FL. WARRANTS ESLER , er ONOHT AND. TOMORROW. Mish of ley Canadian, a in the nest 24 hours wil
100 |with a year a 4s : s na is Tou + 21 103.030.333 2 |Bxpenses 1 574, . 31,108, 8 |Recet 7 35.323 913 von Be Surplus 1.809,376.240 ,221.942,170 of [Cosh Ball 8.304179.778 13%, ~ 5 883 2 0s |
4 4 058 Pub Debt. 737 284, 8 4% (O0ld Res. 24.263.772,703 22, 1, 74 3 ’ ¥ INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE |
Clearings | Debit
Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU Feb. 17, 1040 6:35 | Sunset
3
Precip ation 24 h hrs, “ending 7:30 &. 00 { Total precipitation since” Jan. 1... 8.99 Excess Pine Jan. 1. eiiaiieas “46
table shows the tem tempera-|
Low Atlanta .. lu. iiivireniine ions 6 Tac. Chicas ananas 3 Poultry—Fowis, 4% Ibs. and over, | Cincinnati 24 | nder noe and Me, hear Cond 2 Pe 8 aT ade; ocoks, tier stags, REDVEr ie =| and o x a reath 40 less than Ne. 1. - Warne 19 55 0 oases, Pe . ET A Tre AY ogi; i a Srna B ue A email iandioti ei a 3 1-006 No-3- 8b: os “Nogeies sire sduns = J “ {Above prices “apply when delivered at! A ' Jocal local plant. Err pp wn ee as -St. Panl . . 20 R Local Truck Grain Prices Oklunoma. City" i | Pittsburg $ius ane 23 | 0. 3 fod Fy San Antonio i | ; 36
2 oats, Tie. New No. 3 yellow. soybeans, $2.08,
in New England, New York State,
ww W55 y r. T Toe Dhig: Yalay. will be affected with readings in the
tire in other cities: Stat!
and Michigan<—where
go Tl
pounder. brought $19.50 to $20.50 and $20.75,
‘Weights from 250 to 200 pounds sold at $1825 to $19.50, while {prices from $17.50 to $18.50 were ro 200 to 350° pounders. weights from 100 to 180 : sald. at $19 and less, Sow {prices remained steady with yes{terday at $15 to. $16, up to $16.50 and $17 ‘for choice lightweights, and down to $14.50 for heavy-
weights, Steers Drop In cattle trade steers and heifers dropped to prices 50 cents and! more lower as buyers bid lower. Quality was considered better on
the stock. Most sales were on | weights under 1050 pounds. | { Several loads and part-loads| af Mddium ana good 150 to 90. responsibility pound mixed yearlings. sold. at) $21.50 to $23. These are com-| pared to yesterday's sales at $22
workers and experts on youth to $23.50. Two loads at good
have failed to present a dramat- near 725ic enough picture to the public $23, on just what are the real needs stee
of America’s youth,
He says American parents have
not been educated fo their full cents a hundred pounds in fairly
responsibility in this matter, Katherine Lenroot, chief of the brought $17.50, U, 8. Children's Bureau, Stiaste/camu ion and mediums sold ‘at $2350. Commons dropped to 10816 to
the failure of the
jactive trade.
$17. Canners and
divert more of its multi-billion] Lite brought $14.50 to $16.
tax income to helping youth.
She reveals that “less than two good heavy sausage bulls sold at at $25. per cent of the 1950 federal [$22.50 ts Promotion of (and good beef bulls brought $19 steady, tommu- (to $22,
represen education, housing and nity facilities.”
sini
Neat: Dues the American wath-| $74.00 to $31.50, for good undlhogs, 5850; cattle, 5075; calves,
ad make 3. pote mother?
4
Il prices remained steady, as to $23. Medium sausage Vealers Steady Vealers: remained steady jchoice; $20 to $29 for common |
a
FRIRICE Se tt
Mes Dorothy Shinkle, Attorney John A. Carson, Mrs. Lola Small, Mrs. Evelyn McLaughlin ‘and Otte Ray . . . they insisted on being tried.
and medium, and $14 to
culls,
In sheep trade, the bulk of fat ~pound heifers brought jambs ranged from prices steady as a load of lightweight|to 50 cents higher than yesterday. rs reached $24. A load of Bulk of good and choice natives . [907-pound average sold at $23.85. sold at $25 to $25.50. The top NIghly industrial town, still sting Cow - prices dropped 25 to -50 price
was $25.50.
A short deck of choice 99 to cutting blows, had good news to-
Good Jeet Sows) 100.pouni] Avirage of Medium day. The Nickel Plate Railroad| 1947 Sales~-$3,280,000.00 y oi and good moved a Oli spending $2 million here for 1948 Sales<8$4,200,000.00 around $19. Four loads of good terminal and repair facilities, and choice southwestern 97, 92, The new. engine terminal, for An Increase of 28% 93 and 102-pound averages sold steam, and diesel TotOmO- bial. ey earings Were romalnad tives, car repair and additional G SM C . although = quantity -was/tracks will be built on a 50-acre BOROR . Good and choice were site four miles east of town where whines Emginanning
scarce. quoted salable at $7 to $8.50./the Nickel Plate already has 12 at| Barly estimates of receipts were miles of classification tracks.
375, and sheep, 1150,
A —
$20 for Railroad fo Repair Ft. Wayne Facilities
Times Special FT. WAYNE, Feb.
perience in Indiana, announced that the project would start about May 1 ahd would be completed in 15 months.
17--This
(ing from a recent production.
OFFICES IN PRINCIPAL CITISS aa ane L. White, president of \ the road, with much of his ex-
Lndianapolis gas u
i les. for gas In 1935, in th s in the cost of p ay-_
‘huge {increase : oil and other expenses.
+ roll, coal,
dry - v? Because a foun
coke, oy 2
RARER Seine
coke mar ke
wand: fo
d for all it 18 worth - Te for these increase
" wisol
to help
A
A
aN A,
und?y,
pay
costs of doing business:
N i Y/ =m ANA a
KIN TY ik :
oday than ® e face of gor
RETR ps SIN OF 00 NPR aT -
gas making,
ARRON
p——
& COKE UTILITY
