Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1950 — Page 15
TOPS portan (plants in Detroit. he siatarials I ; op ; ¥ fhe Dag If the nine TH UAW lon], The ig 00 lapproved by perorthance and 00 : iit Evanston Ave. and 46th SF... co-operation for successful business. - ors 2 fal 3 Aur ”, win .......{ Mork out. a pension plan. for. Aheir. et ATE He CE . : RRR - ; : ic i - gremmenem rN “1 GALLS FOR $100 a-montn| Workers. Lous bullding commissioner and S ents Merchants Assoc at on ashers pensions at 65 after 25 years of It the unions foros similar com- president. - . a . service, and defines r togeth codes : s ee Tenrame.2 the Sherman ARITA lw thea aes pony Taro ph : Aids Thriving Trade Area [ The pension contract is nailed Wrong way? : approving certain materials for Nn C ive [ p h Plan if-C : Coral | gown for five years, and theiCamerg Check. certain construction, Mr. Baum/t Shops Plan for New Half-Century Se : - —— A veltare secti | TRUCK DRIVERS are Tore Will Receive Code Over-Supply Drops On Former Sand Lot, Cinder Parl Site - courteous than they used ly MARION CRANE SR —— om Sel EE gerd h clude eration diol But. - QOMPanies are ati: : Baum hi el... -Best .10..$20.25. Top. fee REG TT success. B.
de Mercury the. |
nder production
-O:Matic Over > sponsibility to create and regulate : clude a five-piece breakfast set management in the Atomic BH es wo 1781 N. Bancroft St., was a Ger a growing, healthful city through| LAP Prices looked steady, but|and bridge set, canned food, can- Energy Commission, The charges alue delive man prisoner one year and was 3|2 BTC supply was too light to test th ord x i%| code enforcement.” Ket 8 St the dy, laundry service, deep.freeze resulted in an investigation of the : SEL wounded sevén times e Italian The Mayor u builders to market. A small lot of mostly and other items. JAEC, campal rged choice, but heavy 107- pound
So back it went to the
called a “G-String” after the ini- Ing at 11 pe mr wes Defare clos. YALE. GETS $4 . MILLION CROSSWORD PUZZLE tials of its inventor George & 83 [at 8:30 a. m. tod NEW HAVEN. Cc June 5 x : . m, ay, he found the iN, Lonn, June : ‘ ‘Goubau. . i |safe had ‘been eid and the (UP)— Yale President Charles s B 19 Answer Provious Puzzle American Machinist says it may] 3% loffice ransacked. Seymour said today that as of tate anner- SIHIEIDTHIE IRL hasten the day of videophone, fhe M B | The burglar missed a spare §21|May 1 about $4 million in’ gifts SA ie] Jf Hal AE {elephone you can see over. TH 58 lin roll money in the safe. had been received toward the co HO NTAL p— h AEE AV EES RT And what an eyé opener that 81 | versity’s $80 billion development RIZO VERTICAL Fi NTS - will be for early morning or late- tH - IANAPOLIS CLEA! CLEARING my pusE program. “1,4 Depicted is 1 One-sided TIRE abenight calls. 53 | Debits Bs : : 996.000, tet eet the flag of — _(Dbi0.) DIAL TWO KILLED IN CAR CRASH, ee State 21t is [SIRS
ability payments from $50 to|puzzled
$100. dents their drivers have. smaller cities, represents fivelan over-supply -of hogs shove planted in KE. 46th St. In and near Evanston Ave. There's a new gadget which|years of code study by BOCA|prices 25 cents lower in fairly Taunted by progress, old shops watch new trades go up in lots Blend Run will take the mystery out of thejofficials and other national build-|active trade in the Indianapolis alongside them, jamming the fronts along the heavily-traveled|
THE SUPERMARKETS are gtill footballing soap powders,
It is a simple camera, eitherichall to eliminate “home pound porkers sold at $19.75 to h vegetable shortenings, sugar and) © 8 ® SP BD we oe practices by fos-|$20.25. A half-load of the supply, Ssually Hgister Tipeies tat a | Norwaldo Ave. last Jan. 16, OV Soap powders are going at/Drake pedal action, and it records|tering adoptin of material per-|estimated early at 11,000, reached ficueq' away in a residential dis-| Although such differences as
about cost, two for 45¢, or under. Sugar is advertised on a nonprofit basis of 79 cents for 10 pounds, and Crisco, Spry and other wv le shortenings are being ad-peddied at three pounds for 69 cents, The same package, I am told, costs the grocer 80 cents, There was a run on coffee blends when they were offered by one store at 57 cents a pound, with a two-pound limit. It takes only one “loss leader” to coax in a $10 to $15 grocery order. And when it goes with that big
+ an order, I assure you there is no
“loss” to it.
- Business 13 GONE 1056) Arreniee Collier 0 com
2ooAie - ges executive committee tor spprovel What it got was thuni®s down.
the number of acci-
accident, and either clear the driver or get him into hot water.
on the face of the film the face of a built-in stop watch and speedometer,
Perfect Timing
HERE'S ONE YOU could have guessed blindfolded. It's Luggage and Leather Week, June 12, The time to beat the sales drum is when someone is listening. And with bridal and graduation gifts, and vacation travel in the offing, there'll be plenty of listeners to the come-and-buy chants of the slick luggage trade. It's nice stuff, too, have you seen it?
formance-type building codes. Mr. Baum, reporting on the progress of the conference, said in an interview before the meeting that the performance code reduces cost of building. ’ “Buflders, material producers spend less time and money to get their materials approved under, the performance regulations,” he said. “Under this code, a material is approved for local use upon submission of a performance record from a recognized laboratory.” Specify Material: Many current regulations set up, specific material use and thereby
Ion SLStes. SOIL. sennrier- 0 .
11%
= gals high through government producAOI or 104 {missioners are wrapped up in en-| Choice heifers sold at $30.25 |0ld home. " Next Sunday he will get anibt 10 fis _ {forcing obsolete codes. The meet- High good and choice animals Merchants » saw the ioe for co-|tion payments. 5 Gov honorary LL.D. from Beloit Col- {ing this week, here for the first/brought $30. Mixed yearlings Operation last year, when newer| THe was opposed by Jormer 3": lege, Beloit, Wis, where he got/Cen wy|time in 30 years, will stress co-imoved at $30.50. Medium and business development at Evans- Nelson 3 Riuschel Who bas eri his AB in 1929. He received his 8 4 gy |OPeration between buflding or-|high-good heifers brought $27 to|ton Ave. brought more trade into{!cized the farm proposal as a AM and Ph. D. from the Uni-G 2 ganizations and the ultimate uni- $30. Common and medium ani-|the community, So the E. ¢6th hare to farmers and consumversi tf Chicago and is a Phi|C 3 wz [fication of all building codes, Mr. mals were paid for at $21.50 to|/St. Merchants Association was) hg Hh and Beta Gamma Seite Kiso eo w 1 |Baum said. $26.50. organized. Candidates muat get 35 per cent Sigma, tops in liberal arts. and|Essters 3 ora LLL 8 -+..| Mr. Baum spoke after the meet-| Cows and bulls were steady. Scon after the first business oo, ne Vote to win nomination. business. .
Amputee's Choice CHARLIE STUART, who has the hustlingest Studebaker agency in these parts, was pretty proud 3 today when he delivered a Stude-| 154
‘baker Commander with automatic transmission to an amputee, The amputee, Monroe Parneell,
The reason the amputee ‘took the Studebaker transmission, Mr. y Stuart said, is that it has “no roy back and no creep,” essential E complete control. Times Four WILD words have been —— about the growth of television. Tt| 8% is a case of Jack measuring the beanstalk.
The industry took a shot at 5 gn million #éts for this year and is
now talking afrtly about 7 million. JIt’s hard to get a reliable figure}
it's like counting the bubbles on|4 a glass of champagne, The in-|B
on't hold still long|ge se burned her with an iron was CIVIC leaders about the future of laugh.’ a lot Joe "8 Shen Be Burglar Scores arraigned in Muncipal Court 4 to-|the district. Within 10 years, Wil-| ~ PARADE MAGAZINE Here's one figure you can rely| Equitable .“ $1 78 ‘Strike’ day on a murder charge. {lowbrook watched its own busi- Comes With
on. It comes from the manufac-
turers themselves. Production for
the first quarter was 1,550,000 sets. Pimes four, that makes 6,224,000 for the year. Seven million may be about right.
G-String : THE ARMY SIGNAL CORPS, those telephone men in uniform,
has a new transmission line which i. a “uae pant \ hy RD ¥3 Window Which he opened iy; “Johnson said a. scuffie|the 11 stores and offices there, | The child was struck by a car may aake televinon ProSHmS) goto) Is Total precivitation Ji Jan, a 31 the an ey. manager. Robert started when her husband burned] Warrén F. McCune, #=soclation|driven by Grady Daniels, 535 Bell
single wire with special insulation.
In good barracks language, it's Athintion
Service s 15 Traction Te Termins! 5s 8 ee
Official Weather UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU
“The toll eg tania “shows the tempersture. dn in other cities. Bligh Low
3. Angeles,
-iton,
miss out on material and con-
“The problems of building com-
‘ ing was called to order by Charles| Good
Bacon, city building commis-
vas Ea 2, President of the conferénce :-{and. the
big man-in-BOCA “policy|
: Jjeommitiges.
Feeney Speaks At a noon luncheon, Mayor Feeney welcomed the delegates warning them of their “vital re-
follow code recommendations to back up commissioners in their
#hifirm administration of planning
a city’s progress. After the luncheon, delegates
j{heard talks by Gilbert E. Morris,
superintendent of buildings in Los Cal.; Robert E. Gray, county building. mspector, Day0.; C. J. Caddell, building engineer, Madison, Wis., and
“|George Caleb Wright, Indianap-
olis architect. An exhibit of new building ma-| terials and techniques was opened on. the mezzanine of the hotel.
A burglar scored a $178.70 “strike” last night at the Broad Ripple bowling alley, 1010 E. 63d St. He did it by rolling the safe
# for $160 and a desk for $18.70; . (all in cash,
Police theorized that the culprit apparently hid in the establishment until it closed, because there was no signs of forced entry. He
{Heebner Jr., 34, of Box 271 on {86th St., said he checked all doors; {windows and the safe before clos-
'|Commion and medium brought $20 $27.
Hoosier farmers today watched
Stockyards. Good and choice 170 to 250-
$20.35, going to city butchers, Weights from 250 to 290 pounds brought $19 to $19.50. Pigs from 120 to 160 pounds brought $15.50 to $17.50 ‘Sows sold at prices 25 to 50 cents lower in slow trade. Most loss was suffered on heavyweights, Good and choice 330500 pounders sold at $15.25 to $1725. A few 270-330 pound weights brought $17.50. or more. Weights 600-700 pounds sold at $14.25 to $15. Cattle Weaken "Cattle prices wedlkened slightly. Two loads of medium weight high-good to choice-grade steers sold at $30.65. Three loads
$28.
beef cows moved at $22 to $23.50. Common and medium grade animals sold at $19 to $22. 'Canners and ‘cutters brought $15 to $18.75, A few reached $19.
| moderately active trade. Good and choice sold at $28 to $29.
g
spring lambs brought $28.50. Odd good 80-pounders reached! 30, as a small lot of common! sold at $25. choice slaughter ewes brought $6, to $11. Weights 140 pounds and! less sold at $8.50 and up. Noon estimates of receipts were: Hogs, 11,500; cattle, 2450; calves, 850, and And sheep, 125.
Held for Grand Jury In Death of Husband
A woman accused of fatally stabbing her husband after he
Johnnie Mae Johnson, 28, of 1041 N. Tremont St., waived hear{ing and the case was bound over to the grand jury. The defendant was held without bond. Her husband, Andrew, 33, was found dead in the bathroom. of their home Satuday night. Police sald Johnson died of several knife wounds, inflicted by his wife after an argument over his drinking.
Vealers sold-at steady prices int
her with an iron she was using to press clothes.
BEND, Ore.
{to the
That's the story behind the growing cluster of shops and stores
street on both sides with concentrated rows of business activity. opened his restaurant east “of i
Strangers to the neighborhood
trict and is no larger than any other average city byway, But they have a right to be astonished. In the:early '20's, when the thoroughfare was a cinder-covered road with paths running crazily through weedy lots to muddy sidestreets, every middle-of-the-block sand-lot was the home field for the neighborhood baseball nine, Today buildings that once sheltered cracker-barrel stores and gossip-filled barber shops still stand, but interiors bustle with modern ideas and plans for the new half-century. .
More Than 30 Stores
: More than 30 stores, some less Local Issues struction progress, he said. brought $30.35. Bulk medium t : tion for Senator as a supporter of Double ‘Dr.’ “This results in waste and a steers pega than a year old, extend from Agriculture Secretary Charles I. DR. ARTHUR M. WEIMER, “June B— sie skeq|DiEher building costs,” Mr. Baum moved at $28.50 to $30. Common NOYWaldo Ave. east to Evanston Brannan's proposal to let farm | dean of the Indiana University American "oC|said. “It's political in nature.” land medium - brought $22.50 to] Ave. their line broken here andiprices find their natural market = School-of
there by a still-unused 0% or an
meeting, the group held the Harvest Festival, gave Pris to
b
shops and themselves, In another move to advertise the area, another give-away show will be staged on June 23 in Easy Soft Water, Inc, 2035 E. 46th St.
{Gifts from merchants will in-
Barber George Balinger and rocer Zack Estridge are two of
tthe merchants still operating who
|ploneered develo A few medium to|hyen reiopment. of, the
Saw Development
They saw the street, cutting through the center of the Willowbrook area, which extends from 42d to 52d 8t., become the dividing line for older residential development on the south and new construction on the north, Then other young; hesitant business minded men, and couples, quickly consulted older, learned
ness center grow. J. Arthur Rentsch built up the corner at Evanston. Ave. while Mr. Balinger leases stores he put up at Crittenden Ave. Mr. Rentsch, with his own offices near the corner, dug deep in 1941 on his first business venture there-—purchase of the northwest corner, Today he owns three -of the four corners and leases out
president, added the newest touch “stretch.” He built and
four groceries conflict on a small scale, competition is washed away by such attitudes as “there's enough business here for all of us.” - The merchants know cooperation means: success.
Brannan Plan
Faces lowa Test DES MOINES, Ia. June 5 (UP) ~The administration's Brannan farm plan undergoes & major grass roots test today in the Iowa primary election, Former undersecretary of agri-
seeking ‘the Démocratic nomina-
Otherwise, the nominee will be named at a state party convene
warm, fine for field work, and it
port. Saturday ‘afternoon, \ y past Plsha was found bY Virgh
rived: Tt WEE TONE Kt 530°
culture Albert J. Loveland was|
levels while keeping farm income]
three miles southwest of here, A plane was heard over Shoals during a heavy rain about 4:30 Saturday afternoon, and Harrell began looking for it when he reno word from Graysville te Mrs, Be Staebler had
in a densely wooded hollow,
1 Death Notices
h L. 1; HEE
Ri ANNOUNCEMENTS |
was possible that _might not turn out in force to vote. On the Republican ballot, Sen.
battle on his charges of mis
That Dog-gone Pretty Look
® Hollywood makeup men .make a French Poodle look mighty pretty. ® And those French Poodles can act, too. OPARADE MAGAZINE tells you all about it and shows pictures of the “glamour” : -poodies - of ¥ Hollywood next Sunday. ®1It's a ‘“dog-gone good
- THE SUNDAY TIMES
Traffic Victim, 9, In Serious Condition
condition in General Hospital to-
iday when she was struck by an automobile,
8t., yesterday in New York St.
near Highland Ave,
June 5 (UP)--| 8The-— is its nicknamed
; pis MLE
Bourke Hickenlooper faced a v
Nine-yéar-old Clare Ellis, 1108%; ay E. New. York St, was in serious pos
day with injuries received yester- dia
dor oy eo Co hy oe o, will be rps on Rk a un fed (100) Doom. RE W Y on “this ork shal
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WRITTEN “MESATIVES No a
rs
Two members of Shipstad's and| official flower the “oe wry ETTIEITIEL fer Johnson's Ice Follies of 1950 were| 12 Eucharistic State” i HEINIT IEP AP IE IAIL IER] killed ‘and a third was injured | wine vesse] 3 Mode A ERE a } critically today when their car; 13 Century plant 3 Thwesd . IL aL) plunged off the highway, | 14 Wolfhound 8 Koregian 20 Tenmis shoes < 42 Preposition A 8] 1 18 Degery city 21 Small state 43 Carpets YY: Te 1950 18 Excavate 7 Retain 24 Interstice 44Upon 19 Palm lily 8 Egyptian 26 Ohio city 45 Roman 700 TECHNICIANS | 20Prica Sun fod SI ovell A | 22Chinese + Aged 341ts capital is 46 Sand at Your Service * measur 10 Mariner Ame 40 Girl's nam ke DE ee Str HALT, : | 25 English school 17 Concerning 37 Thaw 3 Till sale (ab. | Gronce wr Conruy | 3 ips shod ; E300 le an = i 28 Learning 1 aes. 29 Babylonian 8 Central Division wie . 's A Engineering Bldg. Chicage 6, MN. miko. ’ . Established 1925 31 All right (ab) ing GEE CHICAGO FAIR—-1950 + $2Pronoun ity 5"
alia Ba eh oh a Eh she , ii i gh GHEY Zp org ny Vega
rh se ron
cnec Proposal pax
“| 5 Florists-Monuments
into ears. For in Hand,” Mr, TODAY AND TOMORROW—Fair and w ~quality the Only northern New England and FH : for the westernmost areas of
attend. Members plene vis, w. v. 2 * VELMA HENR'
3 Card of Thanks Bo t
FUNERAL FLOWERS LOT Waibineios se FR-o08
