Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 July 1950 — Page 20

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Rail Income.

No More 2 Men fo a Berth; Airlines Given Part of Traffic

oe) pi

Gets Evidence Its

By HAROLD H. HARTLEY, Times Business Editor THE RAILROADS, suffering from acute passenger

hunger, are beginning to get their health back.

They were the first to know “there’s a war on.”

Troop movements are filling passenger runs.

Thirty men rolled out of here last night to Ft. Riley,

- Kansas. And more are moving every day.

Own Secretary Is Soviet Affiliate

By ROGER STUART Scripps-Howsrd Staff Writer WILBERFORCE, O., July 21—

trains are running) °° TC don't kick or Party leaders was urged here by

out of St. Louis almost daily| ears?)

for Randolph Field, “West Point of the Air” down on the Texas table top.

. Military men will get plenty] Pies.) Th p - of sleeping room on trains in| Have your hair cut and neatly fore Teleration's ual, an this war. combed. (A good tip, If you'vel,,, ome time, has been given

SELECT a good conservative the lowest federal appellate tie. (Lay off those Yuletide yip- bY

ever been around a fraternity

IN THE LAST war they put/Douse in the mornings.)

two in a lower berth, and one in an upper. Now it's one man to a “berth, lower or upper, no crowding and

ters.

Shave,

a guy can roll around to heart's, Wore garters.)

content, peek out of the window at the towns at night, wondering what their names are. In the last war, the big troop trains had the right of way. They rolled at night, at high speed, from coast to coast. » a '» THE RAILROADS did a mag-| nificent job, getting enough men| at the right places at the right! time.

- There's a little rivalry, I hear, between .the railroads and the airlines for troop traffic. So the local boss of troop

nails. the final exams.)

Tn ion Slean Jou 8 hgest subversive by the Attorney Gen-

# DON'T WEAR gaudy orna-| ments (elk’s teeth, gaudy rings! or big knife chains). Take a bath, brush your teeth. (All that, just to get a job?) That's how it's

There you are.

done.

Sinclair Buys

(For some of the boys that means both whiskers.) Bhine your shoes and wear gar(I didn’t know the boys

operation at Hartford, Iii,

documented evidence of the extensive Communist affiliations of its executive secretary, the Rev. Jack R. McMichael.

showed he has supported at least 10 groups termed Communist and

eral.

e 21 signers showed up. At th | concluding session, Bishop Franicis J. McConnell, the federation’s re-elected president, praised Mr. | McMichael who thereafter was, | given a rising vote of thanks.

A proposal was introduced to change the name of the federa-|

. tion, an unofficial but influential SINCLAIR REFINING CO. aqjunct of the Methodist Church. | just picked up a sweet little oll| pat was in response to demands | along [trom official church bodies that |

movements is splitting it up so with its pipe line which crawlsiine word “Methodist” be elimi-|

there’ll be no tears on either side, Strange, isn’t it, that scrapping over the profit buck when we're all supposed to make sacrifices to win a war?

Half-Gallon Milk

SOME DAY SOON you may

market, : . One chain has experimented with the half in Peoria.

Watch those cartons. I picked

The refinery pours out 30,000] barrels of high grade gas a day, |

Unimportant

I LOST MY driver's license. In agreed to submit it to the federbe able to pick up a half-gallon|e,.; 1 10st my whole pocketbook tion's 5000 members by mail.

carton of milk In your SUper-i..i, ine license in It and asked

duplicate.

Ser to Rockford, Ill, from Peru, | ated.

Vote Down Change

To “eliminate confusion,” the

{for Boclal Action, |ence voted down the proposal, but |

The conference called for the

munist-control bill. It also asked

Judy Abel, secretary to Mahlon presidential amnesty for what it The public likes it. Most people|y op girector of the Bureau of referred to as “political prison-

and the milk splashed around ditto mine.

pretty lively.

And I agree with what you're

Motor Vehicles, asked my ad-| ers.” In addition to conscientious dress. She sald there are 15 guys in Communist groups as the Holly-| up two in an independent market Indiana with ‘monickers which wood Ten, the Executive Commit-|

|objectors, these (included such

itee of the Joint Anti-Fascist Ref-|

ugee Committee and the director!

Prepared by 21 members, it]

; stays down down.

Today's Weather Fotocast

o * . A CLERK NOTICED my shaking the carton. She came over shook them herself and took them away. “They're not full” she sald, and put them in the back room, giving me two full ones she selected.

Cartons are a convenience. But you can’t see what's in them, or how full they are. That's something for the bottle makers to beat their drums about,

The Egg and You SUMMER JS A BAD season for

Chain Reaction

thinking. That's

many.

entirely too |

plant shutdown, one of its suppliers, the Solar Aircraft Co. maker of jet engine parts, in|

scheduled vacations,

that means to keep going.

persuasion of the Air Force behind them. And who'd argue with that? *

sometimes keep them, not under refrigeration, until they

grocer may truthfully say he got them only , he has no way of telling how long they have been out of the nest.

Prof. E.R. Menefee of the poultry husbandry staff of Purdue University, executive secretary of the Indiana State Egg Board, gives the following hints to the egg buyer: . " .

~ BE SURE they are marked “Grade A Fresh.” If a grocer adwertises fresh eggs and mentions the price, he must also state the size.

The best eggs should be kept under refrigeration. Shells are porous and the egg will deteri. orate in rooms above 68 degrees. And that goes for homes, too.

And, says Prof, Menefee, don't]

store them near foods having strong odors, Or your eggs may taste like] onions. Maybe cauliflower.

Want a Job?

A BIG COMPANY got out a Httle booklet. It was written for the first-job hunter, the college] graduate. It was well done, and told In plain language. As to dressing for the job interview, it told the men to— Wear a clean, neat, well-pressed suit and hat. (The hat companies;

boys go bare-headed).

8 freshly starched collar that! (Where do you get

A Penny Saved

SPENDING FOR THE average American has always been more |

fun than saving.

So all sorts of tricks have been Michael argued that “the matter ® pe devised to put a kick in saving. [Is too complicated and the timege The kiddie's bank which slides too short for us to work out a out a chocolate bar when a coin (resolution which would be satis-| goes in is one of them. It's a good factory for everybody.”

idea except that the bars have to be pretty small to show a profit on a penny basis,

One of the old banks had a had sharply criticized U, 8. policy

figure of Willlam Tell with a/\P the Far East. The future of Korea,

.(termined “peacefully, if possible, H {by

rifle instead of bow and arrow The penny was put on the rifle barrel,

Then the child touched wil- neglected to explain how this | He

Ham's foot and the penny flew ™I8ht be accomplished. {ud Mic In a statement widely circulated I» HP aR

straight as an arrow and knocked

{ship Council.

|aganda, which “pictures Ame

WHEN THE ALLISON plant(38 & warmongering nation, canceled its scheduled two-week itself as the chief exponent of|

Des Moines, Ia., also canceled its half-truths and lies can be dis|pelled by the forthright offer of If Allison has to run, its sup- luniversal disarmament through | pMers obey the same rules, And the United Nations according to! {the terms of the Tydings Resolu-

All such cancellations have the tion.”

| American |Red aggression in Korea.

These on-the-spot ph

-Divorcee Critically Hogs Up 25-50c, Some 75¢, Man Shoots Son,

Hurt in Shooting

Spurned Suitor Kills

Self as Police Near MUNCIE, July 21 (UP)—Mrs.| Clara Williams, 28-year-old di-|

|vorcee, was in critical condition ‘today from gunshot wounds in-|

along with other distillates, diesel | Executive Committee suggested a flicted by Robert (Little Bob)

fuel, asphalt, road oil and fuel oil. new name—Methodists Federated | {Garvin, 40, who took his own, Seven Subdivision

The confer- life as police closed in on him!

jafter the attempted murder. An eyewitness -to the shooting, | Eunice Kidd, told police Garvin, came to Mrs. Williams’ home vil

the good State of Indiana to issue defeat of the Mundt-Nixon Com- 3 phox of clothing. The three of

{them had a drink.

Garvin pulled a 25-caliber Ger-iman-made automatic pistol and

{shot her twice in the back, Mr. {Kidd said, warning him to “stand {back against the stove and keep jout of the way.”

Jealousy Motive Police sald Garvin shot Mrs.

of the American-Soviet Friend-' Willlams out of jealousy when

ishe transferred her affections to

Condemnation of Russian prop- Mr, Kidd. He said he had been

“We believe this campaign of

{lowed her. ‘eral more low them.

rica "going with her” since they met! and | June 4,

Mrs. Willlams ran screaming

|peace,” was approved at the final lout the back door into the yard P"| session, The federation said: lafter she had been shot twice, Mr. Kidd said, and Garvin fol-

He said he heard “sev-

otos show Mrs. Dorothy Reese, 31, Chicago, immediately after she lost control of her car and rammed o The move for his ouster failed,| parked auto. She was critically injured. Mrs. Reese's face is reDeveltheloss, when only two oid flected in the wet pavement as she hangs crazily from her car.

Force of the impact which tossed Mrs. Reese into the street is shown in this rear view. Note the twisted steerin victim clings to the door with one hand, awaiting help. The crash |

started a chain reaction down a

In Active Trading Here

Hog prices today jumped 25 to| 50 and instances 75 cents higher] In active trade in the Indianapo-| lis Stockyards. | Good and choice 180 to 230pound porkers sold at $24.25 to 1824.75. The top price, $24.75, was, id freely. Weights

from 230 to 250

Projects Approved

Defers Apartment Plan And $300,000 Motel

The Marion County Plan Commission yesterday approved seven subdivisions and two business districts making up 240 acres. The lack of planning for adequate sewage facilities was responsible for deferment of plans for a 58-unit apartment project, a $300,000 motel, and rejection of a 31-acre subdivision. | The commission held that the {apartment and motel must secure approval of the State Board of Health, before final approval would be granted.

| pounds moved at $23.75 to $24.50. Prices from $23.50 to $24.25 were! paid for 250 to | Weights from 270 to 300 pounds] | brought $22 to $23.75. Heavier, weights remained scarce. Pigs pounds moved at $22.50 to $23.50. | Eightwelghts from 120 to 160 ds brought $17.50 to $19.50. Good and choice grades of sows weighing 400 pounds and less moved at $1825 to $21. Weights 400 to 550 pounds brought $16.50 to $18.25. Extreme heavyweights fell to $15.50. Clean-up Cattle Trade In clean-up cattle trade, small lots of medium and good yearling steers sold at $29.50 to $30. A few medium grassers moved at $25 to $27.50. Good beef cows brought $23 to $24. Comgnon and medium sold at $19.75 fo $22.50. Canners and cutters were sold for $16 to $19.50. Scarce medium and good sausage bulls sold steady at $22.50 to $25. Vealers sold steady. Good and choice brought $30 to $31. Comparable grades of grassy calves brought largely $29 and less. Common and medium veal-| ers moved at $21.50 to $29.

Spring lamb prices held barely

The residential subdivision was rejected on grounds that the State]

shots” but did not fol-| Board of Health does not approve Good and choice sold at $27 to

|use of septic tanks in the» plat,

{investigate found Garvin stand-| {son Ave. ing over her in the yard. As one! shouted, “Don’t do that!” Garvin homes ranging in price from $12,-| Slaughter ewe prices remained

Plans for the division included]

During consideration of this re- raised the gun and shot hi 1000 to $15,000. rt, the fewer than 100 delegates in the temple. mself

po present debated briefly a sugges-|

tion that a stand be taken on Local Issues

intervention against

Criticizes U. 8. Policy Earlier, the Rev, Mr. McMichael

| Bobbs- Merril oid Han ? ya ve

Sia Eng com

July 21

8 This - was voted down, how- American States com ae. nw; lever, after the Rev. Mr. Me-| Arbre tes pid hu t RR & Stk yas ota or 67

i Belt RR & St Bobbs~- Merril 2 ls Central 38% 40 om Loan "% o a. —

1%!

he declared, should be de-

the Koreans themselves.” He

oy 1nd

ota" ons & Wat to com.

i 4D 2, Eleo “a Dia ved Fie

Palin pid... &Ls >

the apple off his son’s head before Within the federation, the 21 mem-|in bis P 5% : entering the bank. It never bers, most of them clergymen, ndpis Water Co 54 nid’ ow missed. {said “a careful investigation has|iidpls W Nadal Li > 2%» {shown that Jack McMichael has Kinean & Co co . som 1 Bul ANOTHER MADE IN 1888 had|SuPported or signed statements|incoln Not S1F va 1» a trick dog. When a coin was put|°f many groups with a pro-Com- on-Harrinaton com Hi in the dog’s mouth and a lever | MU nist bias. He has also sup-|sastic Asphalt .......... - 6 was pushed, the dog jumped {ported plain united fronts with pt J omes Ta ae i 3. | » through a hoop and put the penny | {Communists or pro-Communists. No Ind Pub Serv 40 pfd |" $938 100%) in a barrel. His removal was asked “for oF Bho, did em 3 Richard Freije, vice president | MT effective” federation. be » as ie of the Indianapolis Morris Plan,| The conference re-elected three 100 |

learned that Anthen

gast of Terre Haute had a col-|dents: {Los Angeles;

lection of banks.

80 he went to see them, and the | Tippett, fever hit him. He started his own Bishop Lewis O. Hartman, Boscollection, - - ton. Six additional bishops were elected to the federation’s top THE FEVER HIT Bill Schloss, committees. Since the Scripps-Howard news-| shen will like that. A lot of college! had special lighted showcases built papers reported the Communist especially smallbias of Wear a clean white shirt with boys and girls, could see the full! Kansas City, the federation has ingenuity of the savings bank in-/been under fire within the Metho-|go ldist Church. tseélt. H

» . president: of Morr's Plan, too. He

80 customers,

ventors,

ny W. Pender-| {Methodist bishops as vice presi-|

Bishop James C,. Baker, Bishop Donald H.

San Francisco, and

its 1947 conference in

Raflw uhner racking 9 a

tha Asso lel is re 8 LL

~dividend

n isis}

To Present New Plans The commission withheld ap-| proval of a proposed motel on] the northeast corner of Mtichner| | St. and Washington St. The plans! covered more than five acres. C. B.| Durham; representing a southern chain which planned the motel, | said he probably would present|

month, The $500,000, 58-unit garden‘type apartments planned by the ae -Mere Corp. was proposed west of Keystone Ave. on the .|north side of 52d St. M. L. Hall, ‘| president of the organization, in-

0 "| Hleated that a revised plan would]

{be submitted at the next meet other vehicles, Mr. Colbert said.

lof the commission. Three business places in the| hj cOUmLY were killed in action by the commission. Théy are a gas Istation at the intersection of Stop

8 Rd. and U. 8. 31; another at| {82d St. and German Church Rd.;

land a barber shop at Minnesota {and Panama Sts, .. Others Approved Plan commission approved seven subdivisions; 123-acre tract, . east of High School Rd., between {Ind. 67 and Thompson Rd.; 40{acre tract,. northeast corner of 130th St. and Arlington Ave.; 17%acre tract, east of Holt Rd. on the south side of Oliver Ave.; 17acre tract southwest corner Southport Rd. and Manker 8t.; 20-acre tract, between 18th and 20th Sts. on both sides of Berwick Ave.; 1li-acre tract, east of Cossell Rd. on the south side of Michigan St, and a one-acre

sa tract, on the south side of Min- ‘| nesota St.

east of Tibbs Ave. The commission also approved

: J a tourist court motel 100 ft. west

of Mitthofer Rd. on the north side of U. 8. 40 and construction of an Indianapolis Power and

..| Light Co. substation on the south

side of Epler Ave. west of Meridian St.

“Local . Produce

Local Truck Grain Prices

“No. 2 truek. ‘wheat, 81, 9. No. 2 white corn. $3.00. No. 1 yellow corn. $1.40. No. 1 soybeans, $2. _No. 3 oats, 68.

“jand §

Ey

2%; Grade B large. 23c. and no grad —fowis. ang ver. 18¢: under 4! sng Loehorna. eo and No, 2 ER ‘% than Bes. Butterfat—No. _L 830: No. 3 60e

re m—

Packet 50¢ saving on these

~ famous Simoniz products

steady in sheep trade. Some common grades were hard to sell

270-pounders. |

| weighing 160 to 175

[Eve of Return Preparing to Take ‘Throne Tomorrow

BRUSSELS, Belgium, July 21 (UP) — Hundreds of Royalists

precautions were set up to safe. guard the exiled King's return to the throne tomorrow. The first public demonstration for the King since parliament voted to recall him came at a solemn thanksgiving church serv. ite celebrating the 120th anni versary of Belgium's independence. The demonstrators chanted

Leopdld’s name for 15 minutes and ved pictures of him, A neral representing the

King—the first official representative Leopold has had since 1840 —was cheered wildly. Meantime, an informed source said Leopold had ordered a | guard of 5000 gendarmes and soldiers on duty wher he ends his five-year exile, The source said the unprecedented security precautions will include the sealing off of the air field where Leopold will land and the route he will take to his suburban palace at le at Laeken.

Acme Telephotos, wheel. The

line of parked cars.

Takes Own Life

Retired Grocer Was . Visiting in Joliet, Ill. An Indianapolis grocer who) recently retired to people I haven't seen in years,” gxcess since J

shot and wounded his son and| The following tasle shows the tempera then took his own life in Jollet, “Ea io Sine ies tlanta

Official | Weather

; UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU ~July 21

sven 5:34 | Sunset . . 8:08 “go visit] Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m.

Sunrise

11. | Boston Joliet police said Everett An-C Chi +h Sy drew Lewman, 69, who lived at Cheha 713 King St. here, shot his son,|Renyer, ....- John, 27, through a screen door! | Eb. Wayne .. yesterday, then went to the rear Indianapolis icin) A of the house and pumped two iiss CY * bullets into his own body. |New anand St. The son, at first reported seri-|New York as ously injured, was reported im-| |Qilapoima city.

"Paul".

proved in St. John's Hospital in| | Bitisburgh Joliet today. | Washington. D.C:

Operated Grocery ‘U. S. Statement Mr. Lewman had opérated a —

HINGTON, “July 21

iscal vear through July 19, compared

Total precipitation since Jan. 1... 5 a : an. 1

WAS (UP) Cover grocery at 1102 N. Tremont St.| | ment expenses and receipts for the reat ;

he left two weeks ago, telling her he planned to visit a sister in Montezuma and then go to Joliet to visit his former wife and son.

$27.50. The top, $28, was paid for

Common were worth from $20.!

unchanged. Noon estimates of receipts were: hogs, 4500; cattle, 450; calves, 300,

{and sheep, 350

Army Gives Dodge $25 Million Order

DETROIT; July21 (UP)—L.L.| ch ‘new plans to the commission next Colbert, president of Chrysler

|Corp.’s Dodge Division, said today that Dodge has received {more than $25 million in orders for Army vehicles, The orders included $14 million worth of cargo, troop transport and ammunition trucks and $11 million in ambulances and

Joliet police said his former

| wife, Frances, 62, a school teachTwo policemen who arrived to {located at 25th St. and Edmund-|one lot of choice grades. Medium | er, told them Mr. Lewman at-;

and good moved at $24 to $27. | tempted to see her July 5 and {that she would not let him into!

her house. She obtained a re straining order to prevent his visits, she said. The Lewmans were divorced in 1936.

Knock on Door Early yesterday the son, who

front porch, was awakened by a iknock at the door. He said he heard his father say: « “I've come to talk to you.” As he started to the door, he said, his father fired at him, Lewman once owned a gas station in Cleveland. He later sold the station and moved to Indianapolis,

as a “nice quiet man,” who lived

was sleeping on a screened-inj-

His landlady described Lewman|

the past two years, | with a year agoi Tat Ya 8 ar His landlady, Mrs. Bertha Nel- Expenses $ 1.584, 183, 15 8 2.223. 986.960 | Receipts 1,217,788,148 son, said Mr. Lewman sold the urplu 206.304.980 080. oz 9 efic iy » r Cash Bal 4.362,442.16 015 store three weeks ago because he Ao Ee 4 1 33 3.08 981. 13 had been in ill health, She said Gold Res = 24207055763 24,518.534,381

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Glearh ngs

195,000

Walch Repairing

20 Years Experience

* 1 LWID

{alone anc had no visitors. She 'said he owned two guns.

i

0

PREMIUM QUALITY

AALS

Inthe Hondy

TOTE" A CASE

Twiive rt.oumct FLAT 100 tans

AATEC your Fingertips |

AE flor

ME DIFFERENCE

Lou B One-N Steng

Calls ( Pilot * Bench’ NEW YO! Casey Sten simplest che identify the strongest be “It's Lou York Yanke he adds the

difference fir chase,

“The Yan because we bench,” Ste

Cleveland Ii year for the

Boudreau full-time she young Ike most recent ager” is sti versatile pla shape to pia step Into ar good of the falters. Pla; “The guy Stengel said manager ar player stren; of about eig Stengel fig weakest of for the An He rates th team to bea as “the tean do it” and Red Sox as to explode i

Fears

There is « Stengel fear “That Le: erybody in or seven of four mysel lemon is th with a capil But gettir Stengel see shortstop a

in the enti

race. “You see Mize can §g day's rest,” the way gu; Joe Gordon

100 Gol In City J Approxim expected to annual city ment beginn secretary of ‘Association, Qualifying will be held match play Run Tuesd Wednesday quarter-fina day, and finals at Co hole route. Linksmen fore June 1:

Amateur

The schedul League a} Rive peaders beginn C. Atkins No. 1: Vestal | No. 2: Allison 4, and Capitol

. Legion | American Ls schedule ga artinsville Pe lion, County