Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 March 1950 — Page 13

6 to 7 million, 12 million. the same Haggerty, who being against

we should take n many of our ming displaced

:

ou take a few them are from

of the labor re Communists oint, of course, it, upright peopurse, does not ome here when ur own citizens 1't got enough

this is that all to be carefully

both the State ows. that the le.

Publicity’ ille, Ind. commentators Bergman, as creen. man had been d the publicity erization, there isionment that d the millions

2 story of Miss ediocre in her he would have wun. nst Miss Berghich tricked us idol. All of us icity campaign our twin -facul--

levelopment..of.... is

ought us to a thoughts and unscrupulous s for their ad-

when we were and emotions. ) a new age in » thoughts and city merchant

erned, a brief who developed y have created it themselves

and individuals ugh to invest ent of tourism ntage of their * indirectly on ons of AmeriS. Whittaker ration.

ications, offer reading underirst line of de-

nflict. — Gems

ased on strict, ffairs of Yugo= to Yugoslavia

1s a habit of 1s a habit of jritish Deputy nN. :

CS d M. Vinson's

more emphasis ive boss of the

precedents in

1, and Salmon

iy gave the 0 Roger, his - al, and Roger 1 the cash.” tent Jackson ey Chief -Jus= ody said, look oesn’t make a it. getting it 5.

- was busier rial activities

ie was always al rights for 8 president of Freedman's DT. . resident Johne I with the re roblem, then nd presided at impeachment

# ran for the ination twice epublican and mocrat — but would have

ler got some en they testiter witnesses-: . And Chief™ lidn’'t like it obert Jackson erg to prosear criminals.

rn

Ab Lt

..been

.... We had. trouble. In the window.

bricks. --I--don’t-rent-to—or-from

he

~ Today in Business— i

By HAROLD H.

day kicked up the cost of h

Times Business Editor the whegt country yester-ome-baked pies, lip-smacking

kitchen bread and baking powder biscuits. ss The market bulls looked at the weather and yanked wheat prices up. The big flour makers moved fast, chalked

But Acme-Evans prices didn’t move, and neither did the super-markets. They'd

a feather) Nn the wind, up one day, down the next. It went up 20 cents a hundred late in February, then lopped off | a dime early last week. And! today, it was back up 15 cents.|

” » THIS IN ONE of the pie-and-bread-bakingest towns in the country. You can find more cherry and apple pies cooling on window sills in Indianapolis than any-| where else between the oceans. | That means the grocers sell | flour in 25-pound and even 30-| pound sacks. It is one of the cheapest foods there is. : Today's little puff in price didn't muss a hair on the grocers’ graying heads. It jitterbugs so! fast, they don't watch too close.| It .makes them dizzy. os 80 SO THEY DON'T change prices! unless it has a long, steady pull up or down. > “Piffle,” said one, or words to! that effect. “If we changed prices | with every breath of the market, we’d lose money on the crayons we used.” 4

- up a raise in flour of 15 tents a hundred.

merchants will be taking him out

back “of the woodshed for a 240-pound porkers sold at $16.25

their feet dry. But that goesn’t mean they're not going to buy. In fact, liké Christmas shoppers, they get a little anxious as the deadline nears. What it means is that stores get a terrific pounding in the last few days, Customers wait in line to buy. Here's a hunch, the way to shop easily, almost leisurely. Try shopping on a rainy day.

See how easy and unhurried it fully steady prices in fairl is, how much. time clerks have| cattle trade. Small lots of high-

for you. (good and low-choice yearlings Just slip on a raincoat and some and a few meédiumweight steers! bad weather shoes, and drive gold at $27.50 to $28. Several

down or climb on the bus. You'll release the spring on your shopping anxiety. And it'll be apple pie easy.

Sleepers for Men “WIVES WHO are at coffee-and-aspirin stage over what to buy for husbands, may take a tip from what other women are doing about Easter gifts. They're sleep-dressing up their husbands, with a touch of color, candy strips or pumpkin yellow, or maybe just big dots like the

On Market

Early Top Price For Choice Porkers $16.25 to $16.50

Hog prices today held barely steady with yesterday's trend, after fairly active opening trade brought quotations as much as 25

Stockyards. : -.Several hundred choice 180 to {to $16.50, the early top price. Later trade. brought. $16 -to-$ bo POP hundredweight. Weights from 240 to 270 pounds sold at $15.50 to.$16. Bidding ranged .from $15.25 to

Pigs from 120 to 160 pounds sold about steady from $13 to. $14. A few reached $14.50. Sows sold

to 600-pound. good and choice grades. Weights from 270 to 300 {pounds moved at $15 to $15.25. - Steers Steady | Steers and heifers

brought y active

{loads of medium and low-good| 850-1100-pound weights moved at $25 to $26.50. Several loads of mostly good {1200-pound ' steers remained un-

. sold, sellers asking $26.75. Com-| d Cross Drive {mon and medium mixed weight! at

native yearlings moved $21

{to $25. A load of average-good| 750-pound heifers sold at sas, [0fals Medium and good grades moved y :

at $23 to $26 Cows ‘brought stronger prices. {Good beef cows sold at $19.50 to $21. Young heifer types reached

They aren't getting rich on flour|circus clowns wear, to keep him gon’. $23. Common and medium|

anyway. One grocer said he was paying $1.95 for a 25-pound sack and selling at $1.99.”

Round and Round LATE YESTERDAY I stopped by to help blue-smocked Barbara Hutchins at -Ayres trim one of those little panel show windows between the Washington St. doors.

there were three bottles’ of perfume; the real thing, no colored water, all. dolled up with spring flowers, so real you could. almost whiff them. Our. trouble wasn't with the perfume. I let her handle that. | What got us down was a square gold compact hanging by a gray| ribbon from the top of the win-| dow. It wouldn't stay still, kept spinning.’ And how did we know when it finally stopped turning, whether] the fancy ‘top or the dull bottom] would be face-out to the street.

I gave up. And so did Bar-|

bara. It was around five, and near ine running a multi-billion dol-|

quitting time for both of us. But I think I'll go by to see which] side won. ; | A Hottie RENT CONTROL is still a sizzler for public officials. They're| caught in the squeeze between the landlords who are hooked with sub-standard rents and the tenants who want to keep them where they are. I'm going to stay in my neutral corner, out of the way of the

anybody. And there's a lot of injustice. for all sides in any government regulation. . But the word I get from the insiders is that the federal rent control law will be renewed before June, and that generally, controls will remain on in cities over 100,000. . That's not a guess. That's what I'm told by peéople who ought to know,

Lent Unsweetened = | SOME OF THE candy stores!

weren't doing so well yesterday.| Wm. H. Cumming, district sales manager, who recently succeeded O. Fred Yando, one of the hottest district sales bosses in the Ford

In one three clerks were standIng solemnly behind the counter, arms folded. Lent isn’t the best time to sell] candy. A lot of people give it|

~up-to-practice self-denial. — : Once there wag -a boy who who's listening to what and when SOS Were injured slightly today and Ba

promised his mother .

{from looking like something they...

cat dragged in at snooze. time. That’s what's happening . pajamas gre moving out of the

ught $17 to $19. Canners and! |cutters moved at $14.50 to $17: Most sales were $15 or above. Bull Prices Steady

County Campaic

Flour Prices - Hold Steady Manufacturers Move Fast After

. Big Blow in Wheat Country

HARTLEY, THAT DUST BLOW out in

cents higher in the Indianapolis ;

$15.50 on heavier weights. ob

steady at $13.50 to $14.75 for 330

had pushed the 1950 Red Cross Church, will officiate. drive over the top.

#

THE INDIANAPOLIS TOMES © For Four Lifers

1! High Court Attacks

$e

[Rites Thursday For C. F. Gilbert Services for Clarence F. Gilbert, who died yesterday in his hom {428 8. Spencer Ave., will be held ‘at 3 p. m. Thursday in the G. H.!| ‘Herrmann Funeral Home. Burial ‘Methods of Counsel will be in Washington Park. | 3 .. - Mr, Gilbert was a lifelong resi-| dare IN Suite COUT 0 oe of sngmnecol See en

; (ber of Irvington Lodge 6686, te t Lake County Jus Fatenced °/F&AM. A shipping clerk at Eli winter are already

The four convicts were sen- Lilly & Co. he was 44. ‘Hall,

. - Mingle Asks Aid Of 90 Coal Dealers .. The wheels of Indianapolis’ drive against air pollution next turning at City

He is survived by his wife, Loutenced on pleas of guilty to a Superintendent of Air Pollution charge of a ne an injury] ise; A stepdaughter, Miss Betty prevention John G. Mingle today while in the perpetration of an RODImADR; Yis parents, Mr. and|gaiq he is calling on 90 of the armed robbery. A Gary police- Mrs. Charles F. Gilbert, and a city’s’ coal dealers to aid in the man was. injured in an effort to SISter; Mrs. Dorothy Tracy, all of pattie to wipe out smoke in the block a robbery in which the Indianapolis, and a brother, Har- oo. 0 © oo square. hn four were charged. |F¥, Long Beach, Cal. Smoke control regulations, reDefendants in the case were : laxed during the recent coal emerWilbur Abraham, Hosea Lee! ' gency, again will be tightened Mitchell, Robert Everson Herbert [S. ammon when dealers report normal supand Orville Franklin Harland. | "°° 7" "7CTTTTIWEIRE lolies of. low volatile coal, ME, + —An-—opinion- written by James m+ Mingle said. A. Emmert held that a rurer [jac at A Dealers will be asked to urge attorney and hiréd counsel for] p customers to lay in next winter's one of the defendants failed to fuel supplies during the summer give the men proper representa- Burial to Take to olfest future Jol sergenties The court did not rule on ad-| : Mm se () ditional charges by the defen-| Place in Forest Hill Most violations in the mile dants that their confession had! Mrs. Metta O. Hammond, wife square, the superintendent said, beth Shisined through biutaljof the late Joseph B. Hammond, ice methods or that police of+ : Le Er dnat Poles foe | Greencastle real estate dealer,

are traceable to apartments and rooming houses. Many, he adden, iare merely converted homes using . their money while they were in died last night in the home of 2 old hand-fired equipment. This, jail. daughter, Mrs. E. L. Norris, 3331 combined with high volatile coals, The ruling said the four men Guilford Ave. She was 80. results in the excess smoke. were not told of the-charges or| Mrs, Hammond was the oldest, There are about 2000 apart. permitted to enter a plea for live st worth ments and rooming houses in the {nearly a month after their arrest, | ving Past. Worthy matron ef city and approximately 100 in the ‘They were allowed only 20 min-| Greencastle Chapter, Order of gowntown district. About 400 are Red Cross drive division chairmen Russell R. Hirschman and gles Soasultation with their at- Rasa Sar nt a char listed as smoke violators. ] 1 orneys, w inves - e ncy (Owen ———————— Mrs. Robrt D. Park . . . their groups went over the top 13 per yy Ts HH A Chapter. OES, and > R $125 ; cent. ‘were obtained, the order showed. Member of the Gobin Memorial WOMAN eports | “The right to be heard by coun- Methodist Church, Greencastle. ‘Robbery Assault {sel as provided by the Indiana Burial will be in. Forest Hill y : ga e |constitution as well as the due Cemetery, Greencastle, following] A 28-year-old Indianapolis | Rites Thursday {process clause cannot be nullified rites at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow in the| Woman told police she was robbed Services tor 1 a Bar. DY appointment of incompetent Rector Funeral Home there. {of $125 by a dancing companion ey os Drover bar loounsel Who give merely perfunc-| In addition to her daughter,|who beat and assaulted her in his irett, a retired superintendent of {ory or casual representation » survivors include a son. J. Clem. | car early today. : the Foley Construction Co., will [5 dge Emmert ‘wrote. " Gosport; two sisters, Mrs, Cora) The woman reported her assailCi Prai De held at 2 p. m. Thursday in the "“p0 “Cl of the Lake County Dorsett, Monticello, and Mrs, ant had danced with her in a onnor Fraises | Moore & Kirk Ben Davis Chapel.|. inal court wos reversed and Maude H. Mugg, Quincy; six night club on W. Washington St., Vol t w k rs Burial will be in Floral Park. the Supreme Court instructed all/Brandchildren and 12 great-grand- and later offered to drive her olunteer orke f p | - | The Rev. Donald Dunkin, pas-|four defendants be permitted to children. home. Instead, she said, he drove Marion County residents today tor of the Lyndhurst Baptist withdraw their pleas of guilty.| A A. Th {her to the 4600 block Fall Creek Judges Oliver Starr and Howard ’‘oron A. Thomason _ |Blvd,, where he attacked” her. Young did not participate, Services for Aaron A. Thom-| Sheriff's deputies took her to

James Barrett

Mr. Barrett died yesterday in

stores in gift packages to make, pu; prices held steady. Me- Per cent of the $350,214 goal, was wags 68 the Old Man look as young and gjym and good sausage bulls sola tallied at the final 1950 fund cam-| dashing as he sometimes thinks at $1950 to $21.50. Good beef Paign meeting last night in Ipalco| yr

he is. [bulls weighing 1500 pounds or|Hall. This exceeded the goal by gn. | $14,077.71. Sh |

more moved at $18 to $21. Lighter Whoops ’ No t Weeps weights reached $22.50. i Willis B. Conner Jr., campaign | one I've missed kicking Vealer i eid: stead ti chai Pralsod the S50 oan | through the underbrush of the prices. held steady at|chairman, praised the volun-| business world __|$28 to $29.50 for good and choice teer workers who made possible TES tHe BUFIAT VAUIE Dusinesy, Brades. In--sheep--trade; shorn the success or the drive. Harlan and a whopper. lambs sold strong to 50 cents|J, Hadley, Indianapolis chapter Next June 18-20 the town wiil Pigher at prices up to $26.50 for be full of burial vault makers. [£000 90-pound Fed western shorn They're coming to improve their a ll pe! = an Jor ses trade, and stay up a little late at| Good to choice 97-pound wooled the Lincoln Hotel. natives sold at $27.50: Medium

vice chairman, thanked Mr. Con-| ner for a “job well done” and Cauble promised the people of Marjon and 10 County their contributions would city. be spent “prudently and for the,

You know how conventions are when the boys get away from their home town. They're often like kids just out of school. They hit the line hard the first day, then spend the rest of the convention sleeping through reports and getting back in shape. These burial vault boys aren't weepers. They're kinfolks of the funeral business but they're big

lar business, so -I'm-told.—

Elephant Gun . WITH AN ELECTION ripening, the Republicans are beginning to bang away at the public job tree, trying to knock off the juciest plums. They're loading their elephant guns with Fair Deal spending figures, firing salvos into the corn country to harvest X's under the party eagle. . John V. Beamer, Wabash, told the Marion Rotary Club today if every farmer in the United States sold his farm, its equipment and livestock, it wouldn't bring enough dough to run the federal government seven months. He made a good speech which aded up to—"the way to stop it is to throw out the Democrats and let us Republicans run the show.”

New Ford Executive

land good brought $26 to $27.

purpose for which they were in-

| tended.” |

{Common dipped to $21.50. Slaugh[ter ewes sold steady at $9 to $15. Late estimates of receipts were: {Hogs, 11,625; cattle, 1600; calves, 1425, and sheep, 700.

| ' i 3 ‘Grand Jury Indicts Man for Murder

| The. Marion County Grand, [Jury indicted one man for murder and another for rape today in 17 indictments turned over to Criminal Court. Judge William D. Bain received the indictments with Judge Saul IL Rabb shortly before noon.

e

(with the Mar. Marvin Harris.

Shelby St., was charged with | Other indictments were for in|cest, {and burglary. . | - [DEMAND LEOPOLD QUIT: | BRUSSELS, Belgium, Mar. 28 | (UP)—Socialist party leaders de|manded today that King Leo |abdicate immediately. The demand increased the chance that |a general election will decide his

13 per cent of their quota. {J

C. Wilson Chapel

She was 84,

following Do

of

A total of $364,291.71, or 103.9 his home, 5133 W. Miller St. He!

Although: <& native of Salem, r. Barrett had been an Inds resident the past 36

Surviving, are his wife, Brid(gett; two daughters, Mrs. Mary + Edith... Wilson and. Mrs. Irene {Doris Maddox; two sons, Allen |and James; two brothers, Ed and { Bishop; two sisters, Mrs. James and Mrs. Maggie Porter, grandchildren, all of this

|

| Mrs. James M. Carter Per had lived | - Mrs. Josephine Carter, native of! The townships and downtown Kentucky, divisions, headed by Mrs. Robert Huff's D. Park and Russell R. Hirsch- buried in Crown Hill man, respectively, each reached rites at 1:30 p. m. Thursday in the sons,

the Ga,; Lewis Clupper,

Geo LG {ason, who was shot fatally Sun- General Hospital and Jae Soot rge Ll. v r {day in his trailer camp home, 2457 her to the scene of the e, '9 Ppe |S. Hobart St., were to be held at attack. She said her assailant Services Arranged {10:30 a. m. today in the J. C.lwas driving a late model maroopRites for George L. Clupper, an|Wilson Chapel of the Chimes. |color sedan. elder of the Fountain Square Burial was to-be in Washingtdf| ——— [Christian Church, who died yes- Park. a ina Ge iterday in his home, 1906 Lexing-| Meanwhile, police were holding Parking Meters t ; ton Ave. were to be held. at 1:30! Curvie.Estel Pierson. 21 Berry's: Office: Ay -Gity Hall ep p. m. today in the J. C. Wilson Lick, Ky., who they charged fired! ; Chapel of the Chimes. the fatal shots, Ring eters HAVE SoM SND The Rev. W. F. Mathis, pastor] Mr. Thomason, who was 35, was| dot 8 ahted ig office of the Fountain Square Church, employed by the Terminal Trans-| C 8T nters for the past ‘two was to officiate. Burial will be in|port Co. a are ve been converting a secBowling Green, Ky. | Surviving are his wife, Rose- | £008 or the City Hall basement A native of Wabash, Mr. Clup- mary; - a daughter, Joyce M.|

in Indianapolis) Thomason, and a brother, John-

{into a compartment for the exiclusive use of meter equipment.

seven years. He was 67.

| Surviving are his wife, Ethel; sister, who died yesterday intwo daughters, Mrs. Wilma Hol-| Louisville, Ky. Nursing Home, will beland, Bowling Green, and Mrs. ———

ris Butler, Indianapolis; three FREE CHEST X-RAYS

Forrest Clupper, Decatur,

Bowling, the v

Mrs.

Free

inie, all of Indianapolis,” and a| Mayme

Marshall,

chest X-rays for residents icinity will be given tomor-

| When completed, counting ma|chines, carts, and other meter equipment will be moved from {the cramped quarters of the City Controller. :

subscriptions and per cent of quota were:

Piofessional 195 por cert: Gov-| °f Eastern Nop Nineveh, Ind.

Aspy, $22,022.83 or 111 per cent Public Service, Fred F. Marston, $58,991.10 or 105 per cent; Com-| fue | Walter Eric Jones, 27, of 146 mercial, Karl A. Ziegler, $73.-Carter, Indianapolis; Curtis Car-| |Tacoma Terrace, was charged 910-37 or 103 per cent, and In-|ter, New 4 knife-slaying of dustrial, J. O. Waymire and John|Cleveland, O., and John Carte % |F. Modrall, $135,018.33 or ‘100 Naples, Fla.; a sister, Mrs. Lucy|Co. and a member of the Beth-| | James Ben Kelly, 42, of 2308 per cent.

rape. ' ~ Ernest -Rietel — land Len Craft, Yakima, Wash. fg sodomy, drunken driving Services Arranged

{ » Who died yesterday in|Glenn, Chicago. many, who died Saturday in80Mery, w ; i {his home, 33 S. Harris St., will be| ga" ' General Hospital, will be buried 3 ’ { in Floral ED after rites at g held at 2 p. m. tomorrow in tne| Mrs. A Odlin Kaler |

Pold catholic Church. Wisconsin St. had been an In- MTS. Clinton Auter and Mrs. Mary|Ind. She was 49.

DUE Givistons: whole Re Cee r, wh h as i |Green, asd Milford Clupper. In- row in Blanton Hatchery & Sup. | Local Produce I a rad Dean an pn dianapolis; three brothers, W. T- ply Co., 5707 W. Morris St. | Eggs~—Current receipts, §5 lbs. to case, {3621 Bluff Ave. had been an In-/Clupper, Wabash, and Harley and The inati nsored by 21¢; Orade A large, 28c: Grade A me..dianapolis resident for the past 10 Hugh CI Nashville, Ind. | ie examinalion, sponsor Yidium, 24c; Grade B large, 24c. and no Residential, Mrs. Guy E. Mor {Hug upper, ashville, Ind.!ype Marion County Tuberculosis| srade, 20c ! ison, $36,244.21 or 108 per cent; Years. She was a member of the and eight grandchildren. - MHL abel e088 #1

20c. 1 Rr Iatian wr] “Ty Poultry—Fowis, 473 164 and over, 2%¢; | Methodist Church and the Order . | Association, will be from 2 p, Mm. under 4% lbs. and Leghorns. 14c; cocks Floyd W. Burns, Beryl Jennings | Services and burial for Beryl both days.

[to 4 p. m. and 6 p. m. to 9 p. m.|and stam, 12c, and No. 3 poultry, 4c less | Butter Fat—No. 1, 8c: No, 2. 550,

| She lecves h

rnmental and Education, Bon O.! husband, James

IM. Carter; two ~daughters, '|Dessie Peevler, Indianapolis, : |Mrs. Esther Carter, New Castle; died this morning in his home, sons, Edward and Oren 9740 Washington Blvd. He was 52. A resident of Indianapolis for Castle; James Carter,{three years, Mr. Wyatt was! r, president of Indiana Hearing Aid|

BUSINESS [ECN

1a 1A)

LAUNDERED FINISHED CELLO WRAPPED

4 4 LL 238} HATS : Ne #

CLEANED $ 00 r

AND BLOCKED 19¢

EACH

} a .

CLEANED AND PRESSED

79¢ IN; {ol

ANY MAN'S LADY'S or CHILD'S

$700

[Carter, Celeste Tex. and: two lchem Lutheran Church. ; {brothers Lon Craft, Lubbock, Tex.,| Surviving are his wife, Ma “stepdaughter, Mrs. Col YY I : !Brown; two sisters, Mrs. L. M.| William S. Montgomery {Peet, Des Moines, Iowa, Mrs. E. T.| Ernest Rietel, native of Ger. Services for William. 8. Mont-| Young, St. Louis, and a brother, ins rg| George W. Usher Mortuary. Burial] Mrs. A. Odlin Kaler, former In; Somorrow: In St, Jom 8 will be in Floral Park. He was 66. Indianapolis resident, died yester-| Mr. Rietel, who lived in 333) Surviving are two daughters, day in her-home in Columbus, in Mrs. |

Wallace;stwo sons, James H. and| Born Indianapolis,

» give up on local stations, still give WFBM When a taxicab collided

dianapolis resident 70 years. He

lumbus follow-| VIRGIL LAMAR pune pug Fe ama Era oni. ed nd re, ova 4 Coins Joon seg A tions executive for. the Ford Cen- coNQLU ‘EL |, Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. - {Kaler who has operated the Kaler tral Region. out. of Deri "CONCLUDE TRAVEL PACT Eq. Montgomery, all of Indianapolis. Ka p

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia, Mar. “Mise Massing; two sons,

coming to town as assistant tolog (IP) -The.United States and|“>'d H. Rietel and Albert Rle-U. S. Statement

| Yugoslavia concluded an agree-| tel; a sister, Mrs. Zelma Romer,

|

|

and six grandchildren and 16 wasHINGTON, Mar, 28 great-grandchildren, all dianapolis.

ment - today that will | American citiznes to travel again| in Yugoslavia.

rent fiscal year throug pared with a year ago

Hee ie | SARASOTA, Fla: Mar. ~ 28 Baibll® = 4.00 ions whos Horan re AUN | ons were. Injured Mightly. soap (CF jo Uelng Bros. Bamum(iil i, tits iley Circus has reached an|Gold Reserve ~24.270.573,849

head-on| agreement with the American |

24,

: E 2 (UP |—Govern- | «1 ment "expenses and receipts for rof In h Mar.

24° com. morrow in the Flannigan, Reed

eInpire; RS 1 : p—— “| Expenses ¥20.100. 470.050 535.48 133 904 besides h d,| AMAL Er RE A CIRCUS IN AGREEMENT [Receipts ~~ 27.848,295.403 20.217.193.041| Survivors besides her husband, | PHONE WA 4521 For Store Nearest You Hooperville Doings * 6 HURT IN CRAS ] '3:320.060.136 | include four sons Lai

5,655,861,035 | grandchildren. 251.738.639.868 | 24.307,605.895

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE

Candy & Tobacco Co. wholesale firm, there since 1929. Burial will be in Columbus following services at 2:30 p. m. to-

1 y: 48 8 4 (PEPTLX :

& Inslow Funeral Home there.

and three}

candy for Lent.- But when some- a long comfortable edge, accord- Yih a Say bus on 2 downtown | Gyjiq of Variety Artists and will §larines iim. one passed a box, he 100k _a ing 30 my report... eis OIC TODOTLE cil toonsummaten=it =i New LiF en — piece... 1 Here's The current popularity y “Truck sein Prisac Dext-month—cireus manager Ar- LOCO} ISSUES His mother umpired his morals readings in black and white. Local Tw Grain Prices thur Concello reported here. The|—T Mar. 30m promptly and said he'd have to| WFBM 29.7, WISH 20.9, WIRE No. 3 Yuck ‘wheat, $211, | circus opens its spring season in|- STOCKS oC Bla Askes keep his word. |19.9, and WIBC, 18.8. | No.2 yellow corn, $1.34. Madison = Square Garden on *imerican bieess ory 4 25" “But,” he explained. “I just| Radio advertisers won't go for| No: 3 Sats, 3, $3.45 : Apr. 5. . | Ayrshire. Collieries “com... % gave .up the square pieces.” (power alone anymore unless it| bic Se Belt RR & SUE Yar Ootd 802 ool 1 Rai D 2 jpetls: They rate advertising on 8. : . BeR-RE & § Y 3 fee pe ’ v ry a Rainy Day the sales dollars they count in } i ‘ *Bobbs-Merrill rd 4%% You'll like -. IF THE weatherman doesn’titheir cash registers, and buy a : ok ) a Boys om 4 ; : wo put away the sprinkling can, the station on its cornflakes capacity. EVENTS TODAY ond . DIVORCE SUITS FILED Gmmin Ene oo 1 V8is is fine flavor. | Murat ne ircus—Throug! Apr. 8 rances vs. Ja . ummins Eng pfd . 98%; 100 8 4 mes Wheeler; Margie vs.|Consolidated F 3 NITE |Pigst Annual Indians Food Fair—Last day, E3f1 Bewley: Catherine ve. D. Moore: Bolte’ Eire com" ® ™¢ 83a 103 Fair Grounds. B bar 2 ok Luey N Hamilton; Percell Eastern Ind Tele 5 ptd ree {Central Indiana Council Bey Scout Band p’ Baraasn; Pauioe’y 0) B:,VS- Robert| Equitable Securities com “es gneert 8 p.m. Caleb Mills Hall. |yijeria ve Raloh Das: ‘sary "B< E- Eoxi| Pamily Finance com : Indianapolis and Marion County Wompn's| \" Kalser: Alice Rony Mary E. vs. Paull Family Finance 5% otd 100 |" Qemoeratic Clubs Joint Session—8 p.'M..| Biizabeth J. vs. E. Lucian De Shek: oni ays Corp oid ww if a yt v Aes am es sae North Park: Chapter, OES, Installation of %1\0ti: “mais or’ Boreater Vhotisle| Hertl-Jones ¢ 4° re u Officors—8 pon. North Park Temple. |Alols vs. Richard § Wrihi™ SneloCVi8: | *Home T & T 5% "pid , Rotary Club-—Noon, Claypool. Warren L Garrison; Mary Nar er | Hook Drug Co com 16% LARGEST SELECTION ==t|Luiheran Service: Club—Noon: Litcois. | jpoomune; Benita vs. Robert A Martin: | Ing cas & Water Co oom 23% Guaranteed WATCH|| of Linoleum in indiana | gbo6 5. m. avout. KORgie ‘strane: Bharoh va.” Kenoeih [nd Mich Elec Ce bid” ae i RUGS from $2 39 ety Indiana |" * “o8s€. *Indp & L 4% pid 102 { 4 Usual Low Prices . Acne oh General Practice—Noon, BIRTHS *Indpls 5% REP A R f -Day Service for the ote. wi the biz red | Parents-Teachers Association Conferénce— Boys nap. I Co 5% pid 9% {; 8:30 a. m., Indiana World War Memorial. | 4 *Indpls Water 4%% pfd +101 103 5 * HOOSIER * | Indiana; chapter, Refrigeration Sery. Ad St. Francis—Emerson, Virginia Jami-| jefferson Nations) Life com 10 3 JEWELRY SH | lee Fngineers Society—8 p. m. Antlers.| %0ni Marvin, Beulah Akers. {Kingan & Co pfd 68 7 oP PAINT & LINOLEUM CO. A At Coleman James, Hallie Emberton; Fred, | Kingan &# Co com pa 5 43 8. ILLINOIS ST. 1 KE. Washington si-s313 | EVENTS TOMORROW meyer: Chucien, Joan Lamkin: P| Kon Meter fitvon com +1 1% Murat Shrine Cireus—Through Apr. §. : » } . | Mastio A - gton com ...., i i - Murat. : Al Methodist—George, Pauline Hines: Nat' [fo MSP0E -. «.cooaee J English Speaking Union—Noon. Athletic Larry, Slicla Adams; au onein | Nat A 00. 03 % ; 8; | #a%abagas 1 ’ Purdue Association of Indianapolis—Noon, Alice Hilken ober, Grace Pock: Jack, [N ind Pub rn Terrains 31s Ba e ub. 3 est, Lucille Rosen- | uf : 2G Watch Repairing Episcopal Diocese of Indiananells Leader. | barger; William, Katherine McDonald. ®R a. ib SCIV. 4%a% oid ".. ni = 1 » Se or Women—Throug! 85, | At St. Vineent's—Joseph, Dorothy Geary; |p: 9 Ya biog Laing od TCL tli | ennetny Elsabett Harker: Jack. Geral bub Hors led Som i, lo * Wolf S an, Inc | Press Club Buffet Subper & Seuare Dance | Sine edi tiherman; Willtam, Marie Pub, Serv we Ina 34 oid ». ussma | 30 p.m, ub. | : | Sch ® §/ Junior Chamber of Commerce—Noon, | Girls { tzer-Cummins otd 19% : { At St. A ;/%80 Ind G & E co 25 239 W. Washington 81, | Wesmoston. ~~ | *'rhomas, Rosemary Bation. + ©" +80 19d & &E pid Wl _——————————" MARRIAGE LICENSES [Ab General_Henry, Frances Johnson; | Stokely-Van amp pid is Edward R. Ashbaugh, 41, 5512 College;| JOMeS: Jimmie LeMosiey. Tanner & Co Sia% fd . pailian, bonlea, P5130 i RL A pw au Sdmond. Virtisl Roralyd d Machi . eable % 4 3 | Robert A. « Sh : | e erry, Mary Belknap: Wil-| finited Telenh: ‘8 : L. M. Esterline, 19, 3 one §% ofd ... You Save Because We Save | ores" Enbelic of" N10" ibira:| Sam: Sue Blevins, Dr. M."Borotny Unto’ "lle “MEN'S SUITS & OVERCOATS Lucille Dawson, 57, 2130 Central. | Burnell, Mary Jane Roberts: George! -dividend ; mas D peoyce, 36, 17 N. New Jersey:| Doris McGinnis; Joseph, Arde Goodwin: | AIG Bias $22.95 $29 95 {Otto F. Prenk, 60. 5517 E. North: Dic E.| Ernest. J ire. American 102 ; to | Mattox. 48, 1238 College. |At_St. Vincent's—Norman, Helen Rusch; | American ROBERT HALL Clothes | ™ ar tuura Sarr scons, ™: 124+ Jo) Paul Evelyn Sims. %, - : A es C. Burns. 29. 1344 W. New York; DEATHS : Ey a Cor. Senate Ave. & Maryland St. soma M. Jac 36, 333 Beauty. ° oa : oo “Open 9 te 9 ; itcnmoueh. 3 $21 Division: \Zoma Gootee. 65. at 626 Massachusetts. Wy, Fest tn nati os Theta Posen 3 23 12 Villia; , - Bout — WAR ih dh Bh iia Mas Baler Myers, 171, at .2857 N. Hiinois, Wier co ® | overt € - i lor- Frederick Rubly,. 78,~ at Long. : NN ‘aREWING il Crut Invalid Walkers [li wilion 2" Vounce oh 1365 N. Taivot: atelectasis a y : 2 . | | 3 18. 106s Park. George 15, at a ¢ : - and Posture Beds Rich nals il; Lilllaniq ry ine Greenwood, 66. at 128 in : Distributed By cau o we sur aumons © Hill EE ware: Sarnia ir at Mobos, sa GE > _ CAPITOL CITY SUPPLY CO, INC. ¥ : 4 he Ri A, atne 19, 6156 Winthrop; Sarah Sinoma, \ 314 ‘Wade: Sheil nd Pu ir 4 { Wi 4 GE 3 ” be ph Peas WOLF SUSSMAN, INC. , in. 6155 o. Orie N. Roberts, 6, at 1314 prieii-| Pape ih 8591 , S14 E. § Clair Street ih! c. » 41 [Pusige. monis. : Publi . , Phone RI. . : h Je Hi 239 W. WASHINGTON ST. ; Yates, Lousty er anion Reem 83, 95 at 2713 Publ a Ts ; . wi de 2 Sr ne oon " 2 i FS

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