Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 October 1949 — Page 35
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Chamber of Co
To Analyze Election Conduct
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What most of them know about politics comes over the luncheon Sams at their clubs or is read
weekly news magazines ere it ends. ‘Who Is That?
IT IS NOT uncommon for a brilliant and successful business man to glance over the sample ballots in his evening newspaper and ask about more than one name, “Who is that?” Yet within two or three days he will be asked to mark, ballots, selecting his government from among these unknowns. Parties see to it that their top man is well known. They would never try an unknown for Governor or Mayor. But on down the line is where the parties get in their fine work. Mr. Jackson in his survey of Indiana election habits, which has taken the better part of a year, will tell the board of his State Chamber of Commerce, with vivid accuracy, how the people have
been voting and he will venture
into reasons why. Pressure Groups
WHILE THE EXACT content
of his report is not yet revealed, it is probable that he will list the effects of pressure groups, and name a few. : The political trend toward what ess men “socialism” worries business more than anything else. In it is wrapped up those brow-furrowing subjects of taxation, government controls and spending. Frankly, most business men do not know what to do about it. And while Clarence Jackson may not indulge in the instructive phase of politics, he surely will be able to paint, in detail, a backdrop which will point out unerringly the course for business to follow. Watch for the Jackson report. It will be worth any businessman’s time.
Insured $10 Million THOSE ARMOR-PLATED trucks in battleship gray you see parked in front of banks and bus-
iness houses carrying bags of money in and out are insured-—
for $10 million. This week Brink’s, world’s larg-
movers, is clicking off
its birthday with 25 target-
trained men and five bullet-proof | trucks shuttling Indianapolis’ big
money back and forth between banks and cashier's cages, carrying pay rolls and negotiable bonds
P, A. Caffrey, a 1924 Daven-
port, Towa, high school fullback,
heads the office here. He has a meaty handshake, muscle-padded
shoulders, and eagle blue eyes. All- of Brink's drivers trained. They can hit their targets, and when they pile out of a truck they do it a certain way to foil holdups. One man gets out first and draws his gun. Then comes the money man. The guard scans the street. for suspicious cars and pedestrians.
No Holdups Here THERE NEVER has been a Brink’s holdup in Indianapolis. Mr. Caffrey joined Brink's in a year when there wasn’t supposed to be any money around, in 1933. Yet, he says, there was plenty of money, as banks and other businesses were shifting funds trying to get on their feet, and save other businesses, In Indianapolis Brink's has about 300 customers including filling stations, banks, bulk oil plants, and pay roll windows of factories. Customers pay what the protection is worth which may range from $25 and up.
” ” . Night baseball is not new. In 1888 the first after-dark game was played under arc lights in Ft. Wayne.
Bread and Butter ADVERTISING MEN were told not to take the economists too seriously, but to pay more attention to practical business men, at a huddle of the American Association of Advertising Agencies in Chicago.
Sound advice it was. What}
Clarence B. Goshorn, their president, and head of Benton & Bowles, was telling them, was to stick closer to the bread and butter and they would stand a better chance of staying out of the agency bread line. The hard-dr advertising men have proved their profession
are
mmerce Report
INCOME TAX agents are redoctors for bet-
it
income office,” he explained. It made the father so angry, that he paid in cash, then went to the income tax office and reported it.
Home on Wheels
THE FORD MOTOR CO. has a new touring home which will approximate a three-room apartment on wheels. It will be called the tour wagon and will sell around $3500. It will have bunk space for two, a galley stove, kitchenette, a refrigerator, wardrobe space, a shower, With unfolding equipment it will sleep four.
70 Electric Years THE LIGHT which floods the room with brilliance in a splitsecond as you flip a wall switch is 70 years old. And while the growth of the electric industry has not been confined to illumination, it was through the carbon filament light bulb that it grasped people’s imaginations. There are 39,500,000 wired homes in this country and 90 per cent of the farm homes have electricity available. The Public Service Co. which serves residents in three-fourths of Indiana's counties has spent $230 million since 1940 and by 1952 will have trebled its kilowatt output. ‘We think of electricity in terms of lights, toasters, radios, television, washing machines and clocks, but it also drives the wheels of our biggest industries, multiplying the productivity of man, increasing wages, and raising living standards. Not many will disagree with the claim of the power companies that it is the cheapest household servant there is.
Million-Hour Safety FOR SIX STRAIGHT years the Research and Development Division of Schenley Laboratories, Inc, at Lawrenceburg moved along serenely, rolling up a million manhours without a lost time accident. Dr. George Ward, head of Schenley’s research section, and
Dr. Kurt Ladenburg, head of de-|B velopment, received five safety|c awards which carried with them Som unusual significance. The awards |C
Richard Ends writhes in pain as he is lifted to a stretcher from the elevator of the Central Supply Co., 210 S. Capitol Ave. The 19-year-old employee's right foot was cut badly yesterday when it caught between the car platform and the second floor door jamb. He was taken to Methodist Hospital.
Survivors said coffee planters on the slopes of mountains were swept away with their families and livestock. Many persons were believed to have been washed into the sea. Less than 500 bodies had been recovered. Planes from the U. 8. CaribCo nd Headquarters at
Hoosier farmers carted 13,000 hogs into the Indianapolis Stockyards today and sent prices falling 25 to 50 cents a hundred pounds. City butchers paid $18 to $18.25 per hundredfveight for good and choice 180- to 240-pound porkers in moderately active trade. A few reached $18.35 and $18.50, the extreme top price. Bids from $17.50 to $18 were made for 250- to 290-pounders. Lightweights from 160 to 180 pounds sold at $18 to $18.25, and from 100 to 160 pounds at $14.50 to $17.50 and .nstances $17. Sows sold weak to 25 cents lower. Bulk of 300- to 550-pound sows brought $16 to $17.25. A few reached $17.50. Odd heavyweights dropped to $15.75 and less. Cattle Prices Steady
+ Most cattle prices remained steady. A limited supply of highmedium and better-grade steers and heifers brought fully steady prices, but average-medium and lesser . grades remained barely steady. Odd individual choice steers sold at $32 to $34. A short load of good and choice 983-pound steers sold at $31. Four loads of medium to good steers moved at $26.50 to $28. Common and me-
Local Issues —Oct. 20—
STOCKS American States pfd .. American Slates com . SETS Avrer the hs hy ww elt & Stk ¥
Asked 25
13% 104
FERy g
were earned in an antibiotic
making penicillin and streptomycin under precision routine. Lane Bryant, Inc, this week gave a watch to Miss Helen Delaney for 25 years service and to Paul Frank and Miss Margaret McAllister also in the
Club which has more than 100 Ho
members, James F. Wilson, assistant district manager of the Chicago district for Bigelow-Sanford Carpet Co., is the company’s new district manager in.Indianapolis. American Airlines, Inec., is
black ink bottle. AA reported a net profit after taxes for the first nine months of $5,935,000, compared to $3,416,000 for the same period last year. Those two-fisted Indianapolis Home Builders will maples in their bowling league at the Fox Hunt ter, Tuesday. They feed on steaks, smoke and hear speeches, then spread themselves around tables,
cards.
11 Top Reds to Face Sentence Tomorrow
Federal Judge Harold R. Medina will sentence the 11 top U. 8S. Communists tomorrow. The defendants, members of the “politburo” of the American Communist Party, were found guilty of conspiring to teach and advocate the violent overthrow of the federal government. Before passing sentence in federal court, the judge must rule on defense counsel motions to acquit the 11 or grant them a new
digging its way deeper into the X
boom the!S
ecreation Cen-|gs
12 to a table, and peek at hole|Am
NEW YORK, Oct. 20 (UP)—|T
entral Soya ........ ircle Theater com 0) n_4%_pfd ont Car-Nu Var 1 Eng pia 100" plant| Consolidated Finance 5 pido. 95 C dated Ind com & Ya C ated Ind 1 2 Delta Elec com ......... 9 10 Bled sepuen Con BR erft-Jones el A ptd 9% 10% Home Tel & Tel 1% pid 51 fei ad i SEE NE fod Quad Water, Co com oo Ih dav 25-Year Bots EL COM. .....oraeens 3TVe 28% Indpls P&L 4% pid.. 94 9
pls & L Cres . pls ater Co com dpls Water Co 5% Je ...106 pls Water 4%% pf erson National Lifecom .. _.... 1 Kingan & Co pfd ........ Kingan & ‘C
ne eom ...... 1 1% ‘elephone 5% pid 97 FA Union Title Co... rsenis: 5. BONDS . Allen & Stew 58 57 ........... 95 . erican Loan 38 80 Jouve 9 . Americ an 41s 56 .. 9 Bastian ley 5s 61 .... +3 Buhner ‘ertilizer 5s 58 ...... 9 Rh pe Columbia Club 2-85 83... 08 Hamilton Manuf 5s 57...... 105 Indpls Brass & Alum 5s 56 ... 95 $e In t & Color 38 64 ... HT R Far Sve 70 i 108° Tha" Rsto ei 3s 18 |: Indpls Ways
In tors Teleahone 36 61 = ow Ves one 3s vere .s Kuhner Packing 59 . Langsenkamp 5s 153 106%
N Ind Pub Serv 3%s 73’ Public ‘Service Swi 78 "111 1064 guslic Telephone ils ow area 1% res “Bx-dividend, O07 ‘ttre
Local Produce
Poultry—Fowls, Vi 2c; inder 4% lbs. and Lp vy br J 2c, 8 ers, 20c¢; coc 14c, and No. try, 4c_less 1 85 Ibs. to ease, 3 A ‘me-
Es ent _ rec ; Grade A oP Be: Grade thy Te de ¥ Jar, Baal"
Official Weather
Butterfat—No. 1. 54c: No. 2. Sle.
over and over again. Hardly anyone buys private labeled goods anymore. Even the big outlet super-markets are shying away from private labels. They have
CA ee
The {
1 wing dable shows the tempera-
learned their customers already are sold when they march through their electric eye doors.
s 2 = Mall order cigarettes (to save
[LOANS
Autos © Diamonds © Jewelry Watches # Clothing ® Radios, ete. GET CASH IMMEDIATELY
a? At Vers Bi
Ea clon
ne!
Worth,
dianapolls (City) Races Ss own
vren stares weares uReAv Local Truck Grain Prices Sunrise ...... 6:00 | Sunsed ...... 4:59 No: 2 Ted Tack wheal 3183, Xo. yellow corn, 93c.
. 2 oats, 62c. No. 2 yellow soybeans, $2.01.
IndianapolisWaterCo. DIVIDEND NOTICE
dollar Te an ve cents ($1.25) share has been declared by the of
Directors on the 5% Cumulative Stock, es ‘A’ Da 8
erred ¥! Janus; 8 1950 ‘to holders of record 1
December 10, Preferred Stock, Series “B”
% Cum January 37150 ers of record Common Stock, Class “A”
A d of twenty goa, 0 3 = paid £5 wis, AE
. {seated at the head table. “lially honored were Carl Poland
OO!
Preferred Stock, Series, “A”
rly dividend of one
10838 en decir vo Bf SBT eR 10, i
‘© | January 3, 1950, to
Hog Prices Fall 25-50 Cents Per Hundred on Market
dium sold unevenly at $18 to $26. Cutter thin-weights dropped to $16. Good beef cows were salable at $16 to $17.50, Young heifer types reached $18. Common and medium sold at $14.50 to $16. Canners and cutters brought $12 to $14.50. Weighty cutters reached $15. Sausage Bulls Scarce Although scarce, good sausage bulls brought $18.50. Medium and good sold at $15.50 to $18. Canners and cutters dropped to $13. Vealer prices jumped another $1 above yesterday's $1.50 to $2 rise. Good and choice sold at $28 to $33. Common and medium moved at $20 to $27.50. Culls dropped to $14. Fat lamb prices rose 50 cents or more. Yearlings sold 50 cents to $1 above Tuesday's quotations. Slaughter ewe prices remained steady at $8.50 down. Lambs at $24.50 to $25 Good and choice fat native lambs sold at $24.50 to $25. Medium and good brought $21.50 to $24. Common and medium sold at $16 to $21. Cull prices dropped to $10. A load of good and choice 96pound shorn fed Texas yearlings in No, 1 pelts sold at $21.50. A comparable load brought $20 yesterday.
GM Division Here
“Awards Employees
es State Service
Tim: 8 ANDERSON, Ind., Oct. 20—The
‘|Delco-Remy Division of General 1 Motors Corp. handed out 677 gold
watches here last night. Men and
‘i,/women who have given 25 years - lor more of service to the vast GM
plant were honored. The watches and congratulations were given at a banquet in
{the cafeteria of Plant 2 to 565
men and 112 women. The 16 oldest employees were Espec-
and Richard Boze with 41 years
- |each,
C. V. Badgley, general manager, and Byron Stewart, assistant personal director, presented the program which consisted of enter-
al speech by Mr. Badgley.
Meat-Eating Thief
“ Loots S. Side Store
A dirty and hungry burglar -|\was sought by police today. manager of :..|Shapiro’s Market, 1016 S. Meridian St. reported a large quantity «+«.lof soap, five kosher chickens, 15 ....|pounds of butter, 20 pounds of :rismoked meat and a quantity of .-..|cigarets were stolen last night, A
William Shapiro,
....|rear window had been forced ++ lopen. :
U. S. Statement
tainment and a brief inspiration-
the Panama Canal surveyed the disaster area to determine where relief is most desperately needed.
Editor's Estate Exceeds $1 Million
George B. Parker Will Filed for Probate
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (UP) —George B. Parker, late editor-in-chief of the Scripps-Howard Newspapers, left an estate of $1,476,205, according to a petition for probate of his will. His son, George B. Jr., and his daughter, Mary, were named as beneficiaries. The bulk of the estate was in security holdings which were valued at $1,412,000. Mr. Parker also left $47,618 on deposit in the Riggs National Bank of Washington, $1000 worth of household furnishings and an automobile valued at $200. The petition, filed in Federal District Court yesterday, also noted that Mr. Parker left five acres of land in Westchester County, N. Y., assessed at $7800, and two acres of unimproved land near Longmont, Colo. valued at $7587. The probate petition listed Mr. Parker's debts,
neral, at $15,000.
Mr. Parker died Oct. 10 at the
age of 63. His wife had died last June.
Highway 6 Gets Coating of Butter
LA PORTE, Ind, Oct. 20 (UP) —Residents along Highway 6 near here drove carefully today to avoid skidding in butter. The butter poured in a 14-ton stream from a passing trailer truck last night after fire broke out in the refrigeration motor. Norris Roth, 26, the driver, said the flames spread so quickly that he could not put them out with a hand extinguisher. He was on his way from Minneapolis to Trenton, N. J., with the load.
Baldwin Honored
By Senate Colleagues WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (UP) —The Senate said goodby yesterday to retiring Sen. Raymond E. Baldwin (R. Conn.). -~ Senators praised Sen. Baldwin as a man of “rare attributes” and a “great credit to the Senate.” He is resigning in December to
including expenses of his last illness and fu-
to live e.
transplanted from Rochester, N. Rochester today. “Belgique” is a half-angora,
Mr. Briddon left the cat with his parents in Rochester three years ago when he went to Europe to study. He returned this year, accepted the post at Culver and moved his family, including Belgique, there in September. However, when Mr. Briddon let Belgique out on his own for the first time about Sept. 27 the cat sniffed the Hoosier air and disappeared. The Culver family advertised for their pet. But it was not until today that they learned from Acme Telephoto Service that the cat had turned up in Rochester. ‘It arrived at the home of Mr. Briddon Sr. on Monday. Mr. Briddon of Culver said Belgique apparently prefers Rochester and that he would not try to return him to Indiana. Mr. Briddon said the cat was
Belgique . . . "Indiana is all right to
Cat Doesn't Like Indiana, Walks Back to New York
Belgique ‘Hoofs' It From Culver, Ind., To Rochester, N. Y., in Less Than Month
Footsore but purring contentedly,
Briddon Jr. an instructor at Culver Military Academy. The cat walked the 550 miles back to Rochester in less than a month’s time.
visit but | wouldn't care
a cat which had been Y., to Culver, Ind, was back in
half-alley cat owned by Arnold
named in honor of his European wife’s native land, Belgium. The family dog, still with Mrs. Briddon’s parents in Mons, Belgium, is named “Yankee.”
Panel Discussion Set
A panel discussion on radio’s public service potentialities will be held during a meeting of the Indiana Chapter, National Association for Education by Radio, at 4 p. m. Oct. 27 in the Claypool Hotel.
DR. PENCE TO SPEAK
Times State Service GREENCASTLE, Oct. 20 — Dr, Raymond W. Pence, head of DePauw University's department of English, will address the Northeastern Indiana Teachers Association next Thursday in Ft. Wayne.
What
thorized an arms aid p h Extended the reciprocal trade
slum clearance program. down. Tightened defense unification. “five percenters,” and unification.
agencies.
Approve the nominations of
Power Commission. Revive price controls or other
The displaced persons bill. Social Security extension. Federal aid-to-education bill, Civil rights program. Oleo tax repealer.
become a Connecticut Supreme Court judge.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (UP-—Govern-
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING ak MES sco ssrnrtnrsrassranrnn y Di vo yesy ery neY 25.515.006
“All Risks” INSURANCE
CAMERAS SPORTS EQUIPMENT
MUSICAL OTECT costly PR fi,
. ELMER O.
ak
Secratory
.. {ment expenses and receipts for the cur- ... rent fiscal year through Oct. 18, com- . {pared with a year ago: is Year Last Year Expenses § 13191412308 $ 10, 9 0: Reoelnts 10,327,900,45! 10.331.003.8% urplus ,060, deficit 2,379,511,847 ash Bal. oe Ser asd 2 4,668,447,903 E A S Y T Oo C A R R Y ub bt 256.801.088.808 252. 1186.007 Gold Res. 24,605,981,235 3,977,472,003
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What the 81st Congress Did And Didn't Do in 1st Session
WASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (UP)—Here is a summary of the record of the 81st Congress in its first session:
Raised the minimum wage from 40 to 75 cents an hour. Appropriated $37.6 million to run the government. Ratified the Atlantic Pact, renewed the Marshall Plan and auRenewed rent controls and authorized a low-cost housing and Raised the pay of all government employees from the President Passed a long-range farm price support bill. Investigated the Atomic Energy Commission, Washington's Authorized President Truman to reorganize government
What It Refused to Do
Repeal the Taft-Hartley labor-management law. Approve the Brannan farm plan. Authorize universal military training.
tional Security Resources Board and of Leland Olds to the Federal
Grant Mr. Truman's plea for higher taxes. Authorize a department of welfare.
What It Left Unfinished
Point Four of the President's plan to develop backward areas
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ican political system, Mr. Manion said,
‘Inside U. S. A.’
Cast Arrives Here Star Beatrice Lillie, and other principals of “Inside U. 8. A," were resting “incommunicado”
at hotels, leaving orders not to be disturbed. The Arthur Schwartz-Howard Dietz musical travelog, suggested by John Gunther's book “Inside U. 8. A.” will open its three-day run at the Murat at 8:30 p. m. today. a
* EXTRA SCENI® BEAUTY
agreement program.
Mon C. Wallgren to head the Na-
wartime economic powers.
® EXTRA CONVENIENCE by GREYHOUND
scenery
Autumn-painted .. crisp . uncrowded hotels and re-
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