Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1949 — Page 15

Ly season, sit tter. Tell him rs of humans y their door. just unhandy, hand, you and

free enterprise e things that jperous one in roup known as obbied our Inws that make o sell cigdrets

igarets cost 95 were raised to legislature put ising the price legislature and paler to sell a ther tax of 20

r a few at the jewel of great

alling the tune ; the fiddler.

ossat S

h, the nation's . what he sees

“soft security”

that does not olitical affairs,

measure up to | a tough dieta-

. Bush recently Mass. He ad-

the way down pendence and 8 & people ndouts on an pucracy, Rusts building of t will conquer ut them.”

lieves Ameri“wit to recogns trend, reit is too late, sirens with conomic theorguide us down er 3 precipice.”

; great sign,

«town.

. gallon backlog in the reservoir,

“ about 11 feet deep which jointly!

«We're Lucky

' Hon gallons a day, and 39 mil-

" rainfall declined 29 inches for * the year against an average of

* five feet at the spillway, its deep-

* that In the early twenties the wa-

* been ticking since 1932.

MONDAY, DEC. 12, 1949 _

nO

- Water

Today in Business—

Baths Unlimited

rder Here

Supply Ample

For Every Demand

By HAROLD H. HARTLEY, Times Business Editor

WHILE THE EAST is

getting jittery over its Satur-

day night bath, and how many glasses of water to drink a

stuff which gushes out of the

As a matter of fact, Indianapolis is “water rich,” with!

, day, Indianapolis need have no fear of running short of the

kitchen spigots.

seven ‘billion gallons “banked” in the Geist impounding

reservoir 16 miles north of

In ‘addition to the seven-billion-

the Indianapolis Water Co. has 56 rock wells, from 350 to 475 feet deep, and six gravel wells produce about 39 million gallons | a day.

THE CITY uses about 55 mil-| lion ctthes from wells, leaving 16

million gallons draw on the reservoir, the White River and Fall

Creek, For a city which has so little natural water sources, we're

lucky, indeed. We've never been in trouble éven in 1944 when the

29.9 inches. Even that year the reservoir.at its point of greatest draw fell only

est point. The reason Indianapolis is not and will not be short of water is|

ter company laid the pattern for industrial growth.

1000,000 Meters

tion long ago fed its ranks on immigrants who were satisfied with even a small slice of the American Way. But that day is passing fast. The men who snip lapels and sew

{the buttons on are looking for

college men, trained in materials and management, to carry the flaming torch of fashion in the future. ~

New ‘Plumber's Friend’

HISTORY WAS BEING made

over the kitchen sink yesterday. (had been purged or. reprimanded.

Down on the estate of Carl] Freyn, Indianapolis plumbing expert, near Edinburg, a powerful"

new sump pump was demon-|

strated.

Before plumbing tycoons from the Midwest, Mr. Freyn used the power of his new principled pump| to crush five-gallon gasoline cans, lifted 300 pounds of. sand from the floor and drained water from| one end of a farm to the other, all by vacuum. Mr. Freyn had noticed that [the ‘“‘plumber’s friend” which most householders and plumbers used] to suck clogging waste out of] drains had had no improvements for years. So he applied an air[tight vacuum valve in its dome

’ are Ropor—

French Reds Launch Hunt For Titoists’

Party Reveals 1st Inside Row

Since Last War By United Press The French Communist Party

today disclosed a big scale purge

from the party line, A long resolution of the party's central committee revealed the crisis. The resolution, published today, lambasted party” “leaders

(demanded the ouster of “Titolsts| and Trotzkyists.”

{ It was the party's first public] wrangle since the war The resolution did not say spe-| [cifically that any party leaders

[But it left n6 doubt that such a purge was on. Among the charges were: ONE: Lack of energy in the |Morbihan, Aisne and Marne departments on the Communistsponsored “international day of peace” Oct. 2. | TWO: Absence of demonstra[Aa against the recent North Atlantic Pact conference in Paris. | “That fact that the Atlantic Pact military conference did not [provoke demonstrations compar|able to those which greented Gen. |(Omar) Bradley in August, 1949, should inspire Communists not to {relax their actions,” the resolu-| tion said. THREE: Failure of Communist |civil servants and postal em-

ANOTHER REASON is that and tapped suction power ne- employees to answer the 24-hour * there is no unmetered water serv-|glected for years.

* {ce in town. The entire system It should be on the market” pOUR:

has 100,000 meters which have] It took eight years to install them. | In New York and New Eng-

soon.

‘Which Twin’

FASTEST moving item in the|

general strike call Nov, 25. Infiltration of ‘police (agents, Titoists and Trotzkyists into Communist party organizations. The resolution also charged]

» land the water shortage is caused toy departments this year is the| {that in recent municipal council

“Sharper- Needlemen

» dustry, he has to be right.

» Schaffner & Marx wants to estab- . lish a clothing institute to train

. sheep herds a hectic race.

3

* away out of sight under the’

» . ,

a rl Ra ER CTR hil ‘ alt de pipe

by lack of metering, too much

“free water,” and the lack of it is, -a doll hair that can be sham-| Party

rainfall. So feel free to take as many, ‘baths as you like, run your show-| er as long as theres’ hot water; drink all of the aqua pure you ean hold. You're paying for it, and there's plenty more where _ You got it: b

THE THREAD, SCISSORS

ahd ‘button boys are bat to give,

-frade “tone.” rey have been watching how! Du Pont, General Motors, West-| ern Electric run their shows. They want to go and do likewise. The needle industry is looking for young career men. They want to move up on the main stem with other big industries, | attract college graduates, train them for executive posts. The clothing industry probably has suffered from the public misconception that it doesn’t require much skill to sew a button on a coat. But the industry knows, “Detter.”

o » ” ONE OF the biggest, and most joked-about, suit makers pays its designer $50,000 a year. He sets men’s fashions, and in a business| ds competitive as the clothing inMorris -

Greenburg of Hart,

bright young men for top jobs. The head-throbbing truth is that the synthetics industry is giving the cotton plant and the New rayons, nylons and other fabrics , are moving into men’s clothing so ! fast that it takes a little more test tube background than most] . suit makers have to handle their new materials. . » - THEN, TOO, the suit cutters are getting tired of their tradition, the lofts where some of the , Clothing is put together. Not all * are like this. Some, such as Fashion Park, have good buildings and fancy lawns, but there still are a lot of them tucked

rafters of lower Manhattan. ~The clothing industry by tradi-

LEGAL NOTICES OTICE

AL NO FP PUBLIC HEARING Dockat No. 411; 15 15 the matter of the BEE as Rutter Srrock. Lines, "Lie

u na. for a certificate of d necessity as common carrer Vintrastate, as more specificall

the a blicatio ‘that the Public ‘naians he conduc!

HR “Commission 9 A gooue. Indo oR % Bute houge. Tala: india: TE CE on

op pr EE Ge FE fi. 4 i, ic wy. Milway RE Hor poi

eagion a poster for Rprow ® : B t. ndincapotie, 12 ao , December Sime

Fenrens | gi!

Brovert fersta h v t the bl Boas 3 ttt will conduc ms o ol pray” ouse, Indianesday, January

RHEUMATIC PAINS

dated Er at ‘Ahwu:

far Easy EE oH

202 N. Delaware 4, Ind.

de Sah A

\

\ it

. -

- A}

Jl

Toni doll. It's what you think]

Pry come with Nylon hair in {platinum blond, regular blond, redheads and brunettes. —8Shampoo is a part of the kit. Stores can’t get enough. In fact they've been on the

hard-to-get list since they were:

introduced last June. Stores will take all they can gét. They sell in two sizes, $9.95 and $11.95. Think up one like that and you can go sun yourself on the Rivi-|_ era for the rest of. your days. Another-item moving -fast on the toy floors is a Dick Tracy tieup. His fire chief and squad cars are the rage with boys. And still another in the popular price range is a metal doll house with plastic. furniture at $3.98. These are the big numbers in toylands and you'll find more of them than anything else under Indianapolis Christmas trees this | yea

a —

ONE OF THE newest prospect finders is a rental system for {television receivers. Several outlying retaflers are urging people to rent TV sets over the holidays. Since only those who have been bitten by the television bug are likely to rent sets, it gives dealers a fresh and active prospect list. They not only can try to get renters to keep the sets and buy them, but they can keep after the renters when new models come out. ” » » PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS are in their best season. They go {to students mostly, although {many a business man likes to have one around the house. The other two big seasons are geared to education, graduation presents| in June and going-te - school | equipment in September. n » - INDIANAPOLIS WIVES are sprucing up the bedroom attire of their husbands this year, Pastel pajamas edged in deeper shades are the rage. It's turning the tables on husbands who usually g0 long on flimsy boudoir attire for wives in the gift season. » . »

slippers with bunnies and elephants mounted on the an selling strong, but they're bad where's a dog in the house. The pooch pounces on the animals, tears it off.

Staying Put DON'T LOOK NOW but there's been no riding up of foundation garments—in price—during 1949. | The industry, proud of holding the price line, reports that bras, | for some reason no one Knows, oo’ | sell best in December, April, May| io and Jurfe, and girdles sell best! durin hose big eating months, | Octo November and January.

{trade has its best months, too,

and flourishes from March to

June.

Olds Cuts Prices

of the Oldsmobile division, an-

cut prices from $55 to

Matic drive.

Jury Selected - In Abortion Case

today, in Criminal Court 2. Fugene Bishop,’ 8t.,

last June 11.

on the high school girl. died during the operation.

Groff, 22, 1611 Lafayette Rd.

been granted a separate trial.

“stock. _exchange opened ona buoy-

8. E. SKINNER, vice president| lof General Motors and manager)

A jury int the abortion trial of) an ex-convict was being selected

, 1537 Bteele| is on trial fo pertorming an abortion on a 17-year-old high school girl at a tourist camp on

At the time of his arrest Bishop, police said, admitted he attempted to perform an abortion The girl Her boy friend, James Rodney

charged jointly with Bishop, has

[by-elections some Communist local organizations had failed to follow the party line and as a result the Communists had lost seats. Australia GOVERNMENT investigators said today the Australian Communist Party has made plans to go-underground when—it—isout-| lawed by -the newly elected Freel - Enterprise’ government early next year, ‘The --Liberat- Party of - Prime Minister - 2lect - Robert Menzies, and the Country Party of A. W. Fadden, which together will control the 123-member legislature,

‘|are pledged to outlaw the Com.

munist Party. Although several seats still are doubtful, the probable distribu-| tion of seats in the new House of Representatives will be 73 for the Liberal-Country Party coalition and 47 for Labor, Meanwhile, with the threat of

ization of banks removed, the

fant tone. Numerous stocks went up.

Great Britain

THE Conservative British press commented volubly today on the defeat of labor in the Australian elections but refrained from flat predictions it might be the forerunner of a Tory victory in Britain,

‘China

GENERALISSIMO Chiang Kaishek narrowly escaped capture in the week-end coup which turned Yunnan province from Nationalist to Communist hands, reports reaching Hong Kong said today. Chiang escaped because of the loyalty of two of his generals and flew from Chengtu to Formosa, where he arrived Saturday night, [the reports said. | These reports said the plot was |engineered from Hong Kong by |Gen. Lung Yun, former warlord governor of Yunnan province who

of leaders accused of straying v

and, & {members for “weakness,” “devia-| |tionism,” and “opportunism,” and|

the Labor government's national-}

£

Prices Steady

Trade Moderately

Active Here |

Light weight hog prices today| held steady with Friday's quota-| tions in moderately active trade in the Indianapolis Stockyards. Prices on heavier weights dropped 25 cents. Good and choice 170- to 225-

|$16.25, the top price. Early estimates of receipts were: Hogs, | 10,000; cattle, 2000; calves, 500, and sheep, 2500. Weights from 225 to 270 pounds moved at $14.50 to $15.50. Choice| grades near 225 pounds reached] $15.75. Prices from $14 to $14. 50] were paid for 270- to 310-pound-| ers. A few reached $14.75. Bids of $13.75 were made for several lots over 300 pounds. Other Prices Listed | Lightweights from 100 to 180] pounds moved at $13.50 to $15. Lightweight sows sold steady, but heavier types dropped 25 to 50 cents. Most 270- to 450-pound-ers brought $11.75 to $13. Some] reached in Big weights to $11 to $11.75. Some bids dropped to $10.50, Although inquiry was. made. by buyers for steers and yearlings, Hof avi -and only. grades barely. good and - less! were available. Medium to barely good sold about steady, as did

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Drivers Awarded Lape) Pins.

for Safety Records on Nation’ s Highways 0 4

Robert A. Stough, Hancock Truck Lines, Inc., safety supervisor, pins safe driving awards on the lapels of several drivers Jone ored yesterday. Shown with Mr. Stough are George Gregory, William Wright, Richard .Eisenmenger, Junior Dalrymple, Robert Fritsche, Joe Prairie, George Carter, John Toguar and Clyde Morgan.

Lightweight Hog Hancock Truck Lines, Inc. Groves Reported Honors 17 Operators

Thirty-Six Others Receive Recognition

At Firm's Annual Banquet in Hotel Lincoln Drivers with more than 168 combined years of jockeying tractor-|

Hancock Truck Lines, Inc.

Seventeen drivers received awards at the firm's annual safety — Retired Lt. Another 36 were recognized for having Groves,

{banquet in Hotel Lincoln. been honored during the year.

Fred Kohout,

the principal address. | Roser, operations

N.

A.. Btough, safety made the awards.

vice president, am G welcomed the 125 guests while ne ppnaner, Sterling Shaw, Purdue Univer-| {pound butchers sold at $15.75 to gity technical division, delivered

{trailers over highways without accident were honored yesterday by|

Vearl Pittser, Ray Parker, BenAlvin Lawson, n, Ronald Sage, Jay Thompson, Joseph Clinton, Clifford Harris, * Valter Reynolds, Paul Phillips,

manager, was Martin Rhine, Carl Sinclair, Raymaster of ceremonies and Robert mond Thompson,

supervisor, Charles Wright, Among the Fay Fullan, Robert Hayes, Ralph|

Roy ‘Ward, Russell Covert,

|honored guests was Howard E. Hiil, Henry Kegley, Justin Kegley,

{Fairweather, . Interstate merce Commission supervisor.

Recelve Awards

Those distinguished yesterday. were Ral}: Adams, Clarence Cole-! man, George Gregory, Lloyd Reisner; Howard Cox, Willlam Wright,

Richard Eisenmenger, Junio

Dalrymple, Robert Fritsche, Hers! bert Wagoner, Joe Prairie, George is. Carter, John Taggart, Clyde Mor-| + gan, Robert Moore, Harold Markle!

and James O'Bold.

Honored the Robert Earl, Marshall °

Com-/|

were ‘William A. Edwards,. Nicholas! pers will: “3, a Giampone, Lealle Underwood, Em-

Russell Marks, James T. Nunn, (William Benger, William Bland, [Delbert Brinson, James Caldwell {and Dale Donahue.

Printing Group

Books Meeting Arthur A. Wetzel of Milwaukee, ‘wit —address the annual meeting of the Indus

Ti

night-at, the Lin

rn Issues

beef cows moved at $1525 to $17.50. A liberal share sold at

.1$16 to $16.50. Common moved at

{$14 to $15. Canners and cutters ty cows| 33 $11 to $13.75. Odd weighty cows sold -at $14. Medium and pad beef and sausage bulls moved at $1650 to $18.50. Odd head of sausage bulls brought $19. Vealers Up $1

higher, although choice were scarce, Other grades remained steady. Good and choice brought $30 to $32, common and medium from $18 to $28.50, and culls from $11 to $18. Sheep prices remained steady.| A few good to choice native lambs less than 100 pounds each sold at $22.50 to $23 per hun.|dredweight. mostly choice 90-pound fed wooled western lambs rfoved at $23.50.

fed westerns reached $23.25.

has been bitter against Chiang ever since the generalissimo ousted him in 1945.

India THREE demonstrators were in-|

canes charged 500 persons pro(bill, which permits women to! |marry, obtain divorces and iniherit outside their castes.

‘Bulgaria

THE government introduced

{testimony today at a mass trea-|

son trial that one of the 11 de-| |fendants gave state secrets to! 8. Minister Donald Read |Heath. Among the secrets, according {to the testimony, was the amount |of tobacco Bulgaria sent to Rus(sia and the amount of money in/® © |efrculation. | A commission of experts said|

{

And "it you're still with us, we in a statement read at the trial {might as well tell all. The corset

{that Tsonu Tsonchev, former na-|1 [tional bank manager, gave the information to Mr. Heath and |another American named as Col. |Iartzeevitch, a former military| (attache,

f

Italy

THREE HUNDRED peasants

nounced today that Series 88 has|in the Rome area were charged by| | pol ice today with “abusive occupa-| These cuts are in addition to tion of private land and resistance the recent cut of $25 in Hydra- to thé wuthorities.”

| The peasants participated in| continuing land grabs in which| peasants move their belongings, onto wealthy estates and set up| housekeeping. Anti-Communist peasant 8| unions joined the squatters move‘ment over the week-end, charging authorities had not carried out the

|uncultivated land. Ae

tJ, 8. Sip

BJ ASHINOTON, |

FEE

present law for atest ion of

Slaughter ewes remained steady.

5 Deaths in Blast Laid to Gas Leak

BIRMINGHAM, Mich., Dec. 12

THOSE NIFTY new house/jured today when police with| (UP)—A gas leak in an antique|,

shop, reported to police a few

kle are|testing against the Hindu code minutes too late, was blamed to-|

day for an explosion which killed five persons and injured four| others, one seriously. | One of those killed, Lee Carroll; | was a fire inspector investigating) {the leak which had been reported by the shop's proprietors, Mrs.| [Charles E. Jones, a widow, and] her crippled son, Wilson Jones. Both Mrs. Jones and her son were killed as were Ruth Branson, a customer, and another unidentified | woman, also believed to have been a customer. ——

‘Local Produce “Poultr ind Li, ver, or 1c |

{oder : i te Toss then No. 1.| yA trent receipts 55 | He. rade A large, Yc; Grade A medium. | e B large, ize and no grade, 25¢. | Buttoriat—No 1, No. 2. 52¢ |

Local Truck Grain Prices,

r-Towis od,

“No. | hie wheat, $1.90, or i ite corn, i 2, Jellow orn, $1.1

No 3 Pe TN osns, 13.08

help

with the purcahse of on

ALEXANDER SMITH rug or corpet ... @ HOME-DECORATING PLAN * worked “sur fust for you by CLARA DUDLEY your color-scheme consultant at Alexander Smith SHOP AT YOUR LEISURS

|

|

4214 COLLEGE AVE wn. 1376

Best vealers sold at prices $1 N

A load of good o-

A short load of good and choice A

RAINIER FURNITURE €0.|

VEx-divi

108 108 ”

r Art

ce 3M | Public Telephone 44s Traction Terminal Ss 7

| Sets Luncheon Meeting

- Rites Tomorrow 5 For W. J. Miles

Rites for William J. Miles, re-

tired Indianapolis interior decora‘itor who died Saturday in the home of a daughter, Mrs. Neal McGinn, Detroit, Mich.,, will be (held at 3 p. m. tomorrow in Flanner & Buchanan mortuary. Burial will be in Crown Hill. Born in Wabash, Ind., Mr. Miles had lived in Indianapolis most of his life. He was 88. Survivors include four other daughters, Miss Beulah and Miss Shirley Miles and Mrs. Bessie Frediund, Indianapolis, and Mrs. Jene Ryan, California, and two sons, Willlam and Charles Miles, 5 Both of Indianapolis, ;

| Advertising Club

Direct mail advertising wall

{feature the Thursday program

:-jof the Advertising Club of In.|dianapolis, Inc. The luncheon- ‘| meeting will be held in the Indianapolis Athletic Club. Harry A. Porter, new president

|of the Direct Mail Advertising

% Ya 1112 direct mail award winners

Association, will speak. Members

CROSSWORD PUZZLE

Asiatic Deer

Answer to Previous Puzzle

ISIAIL INIT] IBIE IRINIAIR [0] EIRIAISIELIARIEION IAIE]

HORIZONTAL VERTICAL

1 Depicted 1 Seasoned, type of 2 Interstice Asiatic deer 3 Fashion 7 Its antlers have three 13 Waken 14 Put in 15 Conducted 16 Empty 18 Greek letter 19 Pedal digit 20 Mine

5 1t is found in «— 6 Tear 7 Liquid measure 8 Individuals 9 Exists 10 Seines 11 Tracks . entrances 12 Dwarfs 21 Misdeed 17 Sloth 22 Hebrew deity 25 Rnocks 23 Lieutenant 26 Great Lake (ab.) 24 Venture 27 Throw ~ 29 Measure of

area 30 Atop 31 Mixed type 32 Pronoun * 83 Prescribed amount of edicine 35 Single 38 Correlative of either 39 Plural ending 40 Feline animal * 42 In front47 Rested . © 48 Follower 49 Tint - . 850 Goddess of infatuation 81 Domineered 53 Straightener

- va Y

85 Stoat 86

4 Bushel (ab.)

(TIAINEZANIO IR] | IAFAE INIE | UITIEEAAIPIE IGIAIRIS | RIEITIE! GIOIAID! ) } ) “APT | ABIE IL | ISIEIRIE EASY] ILIEIS[S] AIG [O FIMIA IY] IRIAFARINITIEIRFIAIRIE RIEITIR AICIET IM]! INIO [R] SITIEEIRIEIO] IS[TIAlI [N]

27 Labor 43 Secrete__ 28 Preposition 44 Half an em 33 Tractable 45 Seaweed 34 Speaker 46 Remove 36 Tidier 47 Mentally 87 Natural fats sound 41 Time period 52 Two ( 42 Solar disk 54 Pro

refix) ing

Senate Aspirant

Printing - : tries of Indianapolis tomorrow rent st

os vi gy G Ri rd former Afr Force fr

will also be shown an exhibit of |

War II Atom Chief

To Enter Politics

WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (UP) Gen. Leslie R, war-time head of the Army's Manhattan Engineer District, definitely plans to enter [politics next year, it was learned today. | He will make .a bid for thew Senate séat now held hy Chairman Brjen McMahon (D. Conn.), of the Congressional Atomic Energy: Committee, authoritative {quarters disclosed. . Gen. Groves' ambition to be the Republican candidate raises the |prospect of a political grudge] |fight in which conduct of the nation's atomic program would be a main issue.

Spy Hunters Deny ‘White Wash’ Attempt

WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 (UP)

day that they have

Can bo at is

—House investigators denied to-!

“Baby Sitting ‘May “Solve Problemy’

I am writing you as I’

iI pom til 7 a thought maybe you me by letting me know how I might make scmsé money dressing envelopes or thing like that. There are of us in our family and only my husband and one daughter working now and my husband's

ii

1 work Isn't steady.

By JAMES GRAYSON If you could get off earlier in the evening you might make some money baby-sitting. Once you get started satisfied. employers will tell others and more business will come in, That is, provided you —= did good work. As I have mentioned before In this column, it is difficult to get addressing of envelopes to do at home. Business establishments don’t ltke to send work out to strangers. And besides it is a lot If you have a personal job problem, write to iy ames Grayson, care of The Times.

of trouble to send such work out and bring it back. Ch addressed envelopes

g

If you have done night work it would be well to inquire at the

Washington St. and Senate Ave, Talk with them about the kinds

out about the for such workers, Have you ever thought

secret documents and atomic

INDI 1

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A

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Guaranteed WATCH REPAIRING “ov es RITE'S JEWELRY SHOP

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heifers, and cows. Bulls sold at "eel. em 6:15 p. m. The ne prices stralig to 50 cents higher. STOCKS B14 Asked | Danguet will be terials were slipped to Russia in| PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Dec. Steers Hit $20 American States pfd ........ 2% [preceded by a 1943 and 1044 through the lend- (UP)—A FE pein Several lots of medium and |Ayrsh tes com EH ‘lcocktall hour wi leass pipeline. : ake good steers reached $29. Odd ot ARS ek Pla ser ub [aed i from 5:30 until head and small lots sold at $28 AE o> ds com |. i 16:15 in the Tray- Mr. Wetzel Gen: ga to $28.59. Medium to barely good | Bobbs- Mert 4 “*|ertine Room at the hotel. I , Sonflied with Mr (steers averaging 1050.- pounds Sion $%| Approximately 125 members later, no ry. Gen. Groves sold at $23.50 to $27.50. Common Som } SEES gi are expected to attend along with |, wever, that he would! The jand medium lightweight native . 8 officers of the Indianapolis club hava. Siven a eieures steers moved at $17.50 to $22.50. umm 1 |ot Printing House Craftsmen and homents x ussia it the Most medium short-fed heifers Ye % the newly organized Young Ex- questions.’ asked different sold at $22.50 to $24.75... Several 11 |8cutives Tub, a subsidiary of the Rep. Harrison loads of common tors medium gi association indicated that brought $20. Medium. and good Pam A : Sommittes Would

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