Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 July 1950 — Page 9

Sal iS

vv

Take Spankin g

§, Held Like Silent A-Bomb

State Roads field 1 Years Behind

Higher Weights,

oe

Minute Quantity Spread Over City |

totorons ear Eo teddrer | SAYS SIOCKIQY | Covi WinsCutio ites Waring | Spade Hol Cove, From Private Business Booster | WASHINGTON, July 25 = An Invisible dust of radioactivelthe. demands of today’s traffic

president of the Indiana State

The vigor of Mr. Jackson's] attack made his sandy red

dragged the farm co-ops up on the white linen of the head table

_ He said the co-ops are ducking millions—yes, billions—in federal income taxes. And that at the same time they are competing with private industry. That gives them, he said, quite an edge. = - » HE TOLD THE ROTARIANS that President Truman talks; about plugging the loopholes in the income tax coliection, but the politicians, in both Democratic! and Republian parties, take a! look at the power of the farm vote and back demurely away. { He said when the co-ops which “point with pride to their banks, insurance companies, their rental buildings, oil derricks and re-| fineries, to their elevators, retail] and wholesale stores, their trade-| marked equipment and merchan-| dise,” claim they're paying their! . taxes, they don't mean squaring | off with their Uncle down along the Potomac. : “As matters stand today,” he! said, . “they are practically the! only group still whining to be! subsidized in the form of federal net income tax exemption.” t # = = HE SAID THE LABOR, UNIONS, colleges and mutual in-| surance companies had come into the tax-paying fold, but there still | was a seat remaining for the re-| luctant farm co-ops. It was private business at bat. Mr. Jackson told the whole story, | as a rebuttal to a speech made a few weeks ago before Rotary by the able Hassill Schenck, presi-! dent of the Indiana Farm Bureau Co-op Association, Inc.

mound, laying them hot and fast, over the luncheon plates. The Rotarians ate it up. He was talking their language.

The ‘War Clause’

THE INSURANCE COMPANIES are pulling in their necks— and putting in “war clauses.” These clauses limit the amount of insurance and the type sold. to members of the Armed Forces. John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. announced yesterday that it had taken the step “to avoid a flood of low-cost, term insurance business from military personnel.” This, sald John Hancock Mutual, would tend to make insurance more expensive for other people. And on Aug. 1-2 the insurance commissioners of five states, who happen to be on the committee of the National Association of Insurance Commissioners, will give the war clause a talk-out in

Chicago: . i ~ LJ » WHATEVER THEY DECIDE

| | {

CA-1TTY } BIG LIFT” I will probably become national BIG STEAL” i policy of the big companies. Now, if there’s anybody in the 1h world who needs insurance for his “dd REN family, it's a soldier who's laying

his life on the line to keep free enterprise going in this copntry. What I don’t understand is why,

By HAROLD H. HARTLEY, Times Business Editor | THE INCOME TAX-FREE farm co-ops got a word-| washing today. In fact, it turned out to be a steam bath. | For Indiana It was 57-year-old Clarence Jackson, executive vice

turned on the heat before a shirt-sleeved audience tarians, puffing after-lunch cigars.

{mind that they may have : . Ibe just as quick on the jump-|Representatives measure to pro-yse of the fission products of nu-| hair bounce a little as he back when the time comes.”

in the Claypool's Riley Room and Which read “President” or “Gener-

welted them with his logic lash. (®! Manager” come down to the {office occasionally with a hang-

sit behind the frosted glass doors, It Would be a step in the right ito the target. come state highway system de8 |direction, but’ even more judicial Sand Coated BY arying Rasian product all ficlencies. A congressional comjassistance would be necessary 10 very fine sand would be coated, A highly deadly layer on the sur mittee reported them to be $317,-

[they've t, they can make th But today business was on the|qot . De

| |

“death sand” could spread over cities of the earth and kill their for more than 11 years at the

House Approves 3d U. S. Judgeship om. This specter of radioactive poisons is raised again by Dr. Louis Indi 1 {N. Ridenour, dean of the University of Illinois graduate school, in a jana needs "two report appearing today in the, roving judges. Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. | Radioactive “death sand” beThat was what Judge William (Citing a brief paragraph in the cause of its novel and unique, E. Steckler of the Southern Dis- famous Smyth report of 1945 and properties may be useful in spetrict Federal Court in Indianapo- an Austrian discussion of 1948 by! - told {cial situations, Dr. Ridenour conlie The Times today when Dr. Hans » the ‘cludes but its proper use in war questioned concerning a House of analysis concludes that insidious. .'vo very difficult. Invisible Poison

The “death sand” is prepared

Builders’ Association report showed today. 5 Actually, the state's motorists face an even worse highway pic‘ture, according to Col. E. R. m Needles, president of the association with headquarters in Wash-

at least Chamber of Commerce, who of Ro-

n. { go pointed out that substantial increases in traffic volume, weights and speeds are doing much to offset efforts to over-

to

{vide the state with a roving clear reactors would be a difficult And that's why the men who judge {weapon to use because of delivery!

{operate federal courts in Indiana with radioactive poisons 519,737 in Indiana.

and face of the ground would weigh

over look. _ © |at maximum efficiency, to provide spread very thinly over the area only 12 milligrams per square Cites High Costs with the surThey can’t sleep for trying to Deocosary time for deliberation where it is desired to Wipe Out meter and would be quite invis- COl- Needles, a New York con-ig,., Mr. Abbott

and consideration.”

The bill awaited Senate ap- The person in a poisoned areal proval today. has no way of knowing that he The bill creating a roving judge js in danger either by the eviwas authored by Winfield K. Den- dence of his senses or bv anv ton, Indiana Democrat, but won ypsophisticated tests, He may restrong support from Republicans. ceive a lethal dose of radiation “Federal litigation today in In- before he knows that he is endiana is bogging down,” said dangered, and yet a few days Judge Stetkler, youngest federal later he may die. district judge in the nation. Peay = Carries Greater Load There are 200 judges in the 84 court districts of -the United|

States. In proportion to number of cases to judges in all districts,

sulting engineer, cited & 2 per

icent rise in Indiana traffic fa-|

life. ible. Secrecy has been clamped down {in the United States on any hints about this kind of warfare since 11945, but Dr. Ridenour figures out that enough radioactive fis-| ision products are produced each! {month at the Hanford, Wash, plant to contaminate 144 square miles. . :

Hog Prices Climb 25 Cents In Fairly Active Trade

the southern Indiana district car-| HOg prices were 25 cents higherigood grades ries a greater load than any. today in active trade at the In-$22.50 to $24. i ripind oiled 8 Po. | dianapolis Stockyards. . Canners and cutters brought ing judge as a “step in the right Good and choice 180 to 240-316 to $19.25. Medium and good) direction.” pound barrows and gilts sold at|sausage bulls sold at $23 to $25. It would, however, only help 524 to $24.50. {Beef bulls were largely $24 down-| bring the Souris wt to a Sulrent Several pens of choice 200 to|ward. would not permit Judge sofpounders moved at $24.65 to) Vv ‘pric ; i Jexine Mavhants of New York, Steckler and Judge Luther M. 524.75, whicli ‘was: the ines Der. prices Were Steady on y. {Swygert, Northern Indiana Dis- ¢, y 5 { : a jre . n {top. Weights 270 to 300 pounds choice grades brought $30 to! Roping talk is “scare talk,” trict Court, Hammond, to close prought $22 to $23.50. A few $30.50. Top price ES $31 Al a r. Bell said, and has little justifi- the courts for summer, a neces- 170 to 180-pounders moved at $22/comparable grade of grass chives Carolina's

figure out what to expect next. | Nat'l Tile NATIONAL TILE & MANUFACTURING CO. up at Anderson should have no complaints. Neither should anyone else in the tile business. { Tile means building, and there's | been nothing wrong with the health of building in the last four years. National Tile rung up sales totaling $1,277,828 in the first six months, and handed Uncle Sam $100,659 in taxes, and had left $164,234 in the profit column.

Cotton Tale THERE'LL BE PLENTY of cotton, no shortages, if the speculators keep their hands out of the market, That's what W. Ray Bell, president of the Association of Cotton

1,341,000 vehicles in the state.

{than the average number of years m [(16) needed to overcome defi-|

{ways and are brighter than pros-| {pects in three of the four states) i which border it. $4 Years for Illinois jet were salable

ino additional

would be adequate to its needs of

slightly ‘more

cation in fact. sity because of the unavailability one and one-half to Rhode ; vabllilyito $24. sold at largely $25 downward. } , SUE RE SIT _~ i of certain necessary witnesses! Slaughter pigs, 120 to 160/Common. and medium calves Island's 60. Indiaa rates ninth. ” «AY a solid left ana defendants at this time. pounds, brought $17 to $19.50./brought $21.50 to $29. Earl B. Lotkerige, superin-,

on the government's low acreage estimate. | And he said we'd better lay off increased imports and lower tical for the handling of criminal

¥ : : R | tendent of the state maintenance Summer Sessions Needed Sow prices were strong to 50 Spring lamb prices were fully for the State Highway Commis-

4 , ../cents higher. Some weights over! , | Summer sessions are only prac 1400 s higher poe Sema | No Heady . Sood and Shoice fades sion bore out the report and add- { < 0 .ied that among Indiana's b- | tariffs. |cases, Judge Steckler said. ; cents or Fore higher. Good and Common grades were priced g na What he didn’t point out is that, At the present time only ome le o 0 ounders broughtigownward to §20. {any revenue from much of the those gambling Texans make/Criminal case is pending before, ' 4 9 rs - | A trucklot of good and choice traffic which uses its highways! their money out of oil, then shove the Indianapolis court. And that| Sows $17 to $20 95-pound fed yearlings, No. 1in east and west travel. i the cotton market around. js & complicated case that must Sows from 400 to 550 poundsipelts, held steady at $22.50.! emt And with the kind of dough| eard by a jury and involvesibrought $17 to $20. Heavy Slaughter ewes were scarce and i {15 counts of violation of the In-| weights, 500 pounds and upward, remained unchanged. Medium d Folklorist, Author {terstate Commerce Commission moved at $16 to $17.25. {choice brought $6 to $11. A To Speak at IU like a trained seal. istatute. | Early sales of steers and heif-itrucklot of one and two-year-old | Times State Service lo | The September grand jury willlers brought Prices which were 50|breeding ewes sold for $25. | BLOOMINGTON, July 25— te as Usual [dump another heavy load of in-icents higher than last week's) {Alan Lomax, nationally known

| Noo timat: f i THIS IS WHAT makes people dictments, arraignments and level. Due to higher asking prices, | the Indianapolis Stockyards were: folklorist And Suter of aes gr-rr at the government. | |

|cases on the two Indiana, courts. trade was slow. Gad i % ; | | The Department of Commerce A federal indictment for murder; Two loads of high good ads, 500; salle. 1500; salves, lsent out last week ‘a. release on Probably will appear on thei choice yearlings moved at $31.50. : - {mid-year construction activity. It;calendar in Southern District|Several loads of good light and| was marked “Release July 2.” But Court, Judge Steckler said. | medium weight steers brought | the envelope was postmarked| Here's the “box-score” on cases $30 to $31. Bulk medium and “Washington, July 19.” {in Southern District Court: igood short fed grades brought!

chin for its

i {lems was that of not abtaining

ton market sit up and perform

Tots, Teen-Agers

7:15 p. m. tomorrow. {

| | win be. given Thursday evening ib;

Somebody would get fired for Civil Cases $28.50 to $30. { a that in private industry. Pending Apr. 1 ...... carves 357 Common and medium native et ut Fuses {World American Airlines. REX E. KASLER, Indianapolis Cases filed Apr. 1 to July 24, 147 grassers were salable at $22 to! | mm etn manager for Commonwealth Life i ~——328. A load of good heifers Hollywood Editor Dies Insurance, took Lloyd B. Deutsch OP file since Apr. 1 ..... .».. 504'brought $30. Little was done on Youth's Nose Broken DEL MAR, Cal, July 25 (UP) —

assistant manager, and Robert Of these civil cases,

E. Davis and Glenn Chaille,' agents, to Virginia Beach as a|

136 have other heifers. f . Arthur Ungar, 64, editor of Holly- | been terminated, 368 are pending. Cow Prices Weak In Fight Over Ball I weod's “Daily Variety” ri ¥ | Other Civil Cases Cow prices were weak to 50 Indianapolis youngsters, from started publication in 1933, died! high sales reward. Those insur-| These figures do not include cents lower in slow trade. Bulk tots to teen-agers, received their here yesterday a few hours after ance men do get around. |“outside federal district regions” common and medium beef cows share of cuts and bruises yes- he suffered a twisted knee while AUSTIN D. RINNE, North-{in Judge Steckler's bailiwick—/moved at $19.25 to $22. A few|terday. [swimming at the beach. Death western Mutual, will address the Terre Haute, Evansville and New| Running from the grocery, Gil-/ apparently was caused by a heart

70th annual meeting of North-|Albany. Civil cases pending in|Local Issues Ibert O. Sweazey, 8, of 206 N. attack. western agents in Milwaukee. these courts probably amount to| —— —— | Richland St., slipped and fell on tetas em RICE IS BEING USED by half again the above total. —— | STOCKS. + sia ames a stick which he had in his Official Weather Oldsmobile to remove carbon from| Criminal cases pending today|{merican States com = 38 --imouth. He was treated at Gen-| yNiTep sTATES

cylinder heads. It is blasted in,|/in Indianapolis Federal Court Ayrshire. Colleries com .. 12 {eral Hospital and released.

{ i

rr aL = Submarine T S

populations by radioactivity without the noisy warning of an atomic|current rate of road construction jo; nob with the fishes at the bottom of Lake Shafer, said today |expenditures, an American Road yp. Korean War has brought added significance to his venture.

to protest “hidden taxes,” said it was more important than ever that the government cut home, : . front spending in view of expected when she divorced his father in :

mands on the§ ! 2s ® APY + nation’s budget. | Keenan Wynn, actor, said today : “The big test in Hollywood he was sorry he

of whether the§ government is

ter - com phone connecting him

gm - = a n | Things were going along ane OUT Bur talities in the first four months at the altar for Stevem Calhoun!

{of this vear as one of the “highland Doris Campbell of Highland, |costs” of an inadequate highway Park, Pa.—until Steven stepped { network. There are approximatelyion the train of Doris’ gown.

But Indiana prospects, as bad treatment of a head cut. Doris, jas they may be, still- are betterijeft at the altar, went home to

{ciencies on all the nation’s high-/wedding was only make-believe.

Pineville, W. Va. says Pineville!

“At the present rate of expendi- slicker” reporters painted them at! tures,” said Col. Needles,” and if as. hillbillies in stories about the deficiencies ap-/home town of the first infantrypeared in the interim, it would be man reported killed in the Korean 1966 before the nation’s highways War.

1950. In Illinois, it would be more ©sted in painting the metropolithan 34 years, in Michigan nearly/tan conception of hillbillyism 34 years, in Ohio over 35 yearsithan in presenting the true local and in Kentucky almost 11 years,” background The number of years needed to Shadrick, 19, killed by a Red place deficient highways, the [8unner as he tried to knock out

report showed, range from North (2 Communist tank with a bathan (Zooka.,” Mr. Isom charges.’

‘tody battie between Fred L. Man{del Jr. millionaire Chicago department store owner, ‘former wife, Mrs, Bernard Schu- | bert, Mildred Lillie of Los Angeles yesiterday approved an agreement stole 11 quarts of oil from a Shell giving Mr. their son Stephen, 12, during sum- | two cases of coke from “he Phil{mer months. He'll pay $350 a lips 66 station at 42d and Colmonth to support the youth. Mrs. | lege. {Schubert won custody of Stephen! The boys also said they

New Castle Man Head GOP Speakers Unit

Jelly Roll” Jite of Jelly RolliCale J. Holder today announced ‘cries, oil, cokes and beer, |Morton, will give a convocation appointment of Crawford Parker, 001s and auto accessories. address at Indiana University at!New Castle, as director of the

GOP Speakers’ Bureau for the Another convocation address{1950 election campaign. :

{by Dr. John H. Furbay, director terms as Henry County GOP main open 24 hours daily until the {of air world education for Trans chairman and three times as 10th Korean War ends “so that the | District GOP secretary. Last year community may pray for peace,” ‘he was president of the Indiana!the Coldwater Ministerial AssociCounty Clerks Association.

©

ax H ays War Boosts C

Korean Conflict Emphasizes Need For Home Economy, Abbott Declares’

By OPAL CROCKETT Paul Abbott, 27, anti-tax crusader of Monticello, who's playing

Mr. Abbott, who submerged in a glass and steel tank June 18

ilitary de- [1944.

slapped ‘ | banquet. The unidentified apologized, too, “second - h an ar Though the audience applauded ‘him, Mr. Wynn safd “I felt bad.”

2 Youths Admit

Caught by Police, Car Filled With Loot

Two 16-year-old boys admitted other four filling station burglaries Doris is 7 and Steven, 3. et SEF being caught by bolice early T 7 & jattempted break-ins. N The ys, one from IndianapSah lao, soutry editor of olis and the other from Beech Grove, were taken to Juvenile Aid Division for further questioning. Their car was loaded with a variety of loot, police said. A merchant police officer, Arthur Schangen, 44, Fairland, Ind, saw two boys prowling at the Marathon Filling Station, 83d St. and College Ave. He reported to police and they nabbed the two boys in their car at Broadway and Westfield Blvd. The boys admitted tampering with a coke machine at the Marathon Station and burglarizing two other filling stations during the night. They said they took $5.10 in nickels from a coke machine outside the Phillips 66 Station at 5201 N. College. Earlier they ‘looted a station in Beech Grove. is ended. Superior Judge Two other nights of burglary were admitted. On July 23 they.

Steven went to the hospital for

tizens resent the way - “city

“Reporters were more inter-

of Pvt, Kenneth

~ ” » A six-year, cross-country cus-

and his;

Mandel custody. of station at 6301 N. College, and

broke ~!a window in a burglary at t g July 14 at a filling station at |B, Westfield. : Police found the boys’. car State Republican Chairman l02ded with loot, including bat-

i

CITY TO PRAY FOR PEACE

\ COLDWATER, Mich, July 2§ Mr. Parker has served three|(UP)—All churches here will re-

‘ation announced today.

OPEN TONIGHT

for your convenience until 9 P.

® Come In... Cdl in...

!

without taking the heads off, Humber 5. Cases Sisposed Of eis kn srk Yas" pt 16 ¢1'| Pleas H. Mears, 3, of 157 W. Sunrise 317 | Sune 8,05 p.m under 40 to 60 pounds pressure. (Since Apr.1 are 84 and defendants Belt R tk Yds com...... 3% 36% 29th St, was struck by a“car|Toiar srecisitation aise dant 0 Lederle Laboratories has a new released, jailed, suspended or | Bobbs- Merrill pid 4%% |driven by James R. Majors, 23, Bicees ince. Jan. Ante Jan. J 1am 5 sulfa for animal “pink eye.” (Placed on probation in this pe-| Cu phos: com i000 38” * lof 2856 Kenwood Ave. as belture in other sities: © ove Lhe lemperaIt's easy to use. In a squeeze|riod number 139. - | Co oan 4% Did oven #3 2i"'|crossed in the middle of the block|atianta .... ne & bottle, you just pinch, and squirt| Most criminal cases in outside Cummins Eng pra oo... 98% 10] |near 20th St. and Kenwood Ave.[Borol, o o the cow in the eye. districts are transferred to Gonti-Car-Na-Var ......... 1 13% He was treated for cuts and Chicago u dy £1 59 | "nm. [southern district court for dis-|geis kee com = 0 '* bruises at General Hospital. [aC InRE 8 | | : position. Equitable Securities com {Denver 56 Too Big, Too Fast Family Finance com Hurt in Pool Evansville 63

{ i

Judge Steckler told The Times Pamily Finance 5% ofa .

RENZO CARLI who runs the his fellow jurist, Judge Swygert, ‘avs Corp ofa ww : a Hamilton Mfg Co com .

00 " 4 ayn ; Swimming pools claimed three Ft. Worth v Indianapolis

injuries. Maggie Cushenberry, 12, Kansas City

28 1

Sa323sazzesssaandnay

| OIL or COAL FURNACES, GAS or

Phone LI.5611—RI. 1275

ELECTRIC RANGES, WASHERS, ROOM HEATERS, WATER HEATERS, REFRGERATORS

KALAMAZOO SALES

st.

2

2 W. Maryland

[Farina factory in Turin, Italy, was equally overworked. |*Her{-Jones cy A pfc ... HS 75 if he’s willing to risk his neck, | tells George Weller of The Times pe Home T & T 5% vid oi 921 W. 27th St., was playing at! Min meanolis-St Paul ooo... 60 the insurance companies won’t|{Foreign Service that Americans ing Asse Tei 2 pra "Douglas Park in a sand pile. S8he|New Oricans 7 JING HIGH” ' lay a few bucks on the same line. make their cars too big. Youth Bound Over ind Gas 27a Co com. ‘oq «(fell over a small retaining wall| Oklahoma city LL. a , PONY EXPRESS « Maybe I'm off side in this, and] And what for, he asks. On Robbery Charge lindas 8a L com 21% and skinned her left leg and arm. Bililoiren 1110: i maybe not. Business is business| Families are getting smaller... +. : oo |Indpls P & L 5% 107 | Sara Lee Miller, 7, of 47323an Antonio a | SIDE and bucks are bucks, and always Yet we build those extra big, [onfi®n Lickliter, 21. of 1733 fndpls Jaler Co, com, 13 |Brookville Rd. received a cut on|8t Louis = ooo 8 the twain shall meet. {cushy rear seats which are empty | — t a a Vals ed to grand |inpis Water Su% J aE {the head while she played at the a == SHELBY 3 ; { { y for trial on _a robbery| Ons a .oom 3 1, Ellenberger Park swimming pool. . 3243 cool BUT IF ov EMORY Dart unt on ie hime: are aq1 Charge. He appeared in Municipal | Kingan & Go 4% otd va o ] Bat Catal 12, of Boren RESO let me down, I think it was the wrong. too. Over there they like|COUrt 3 before Judge Pro Tem liyicn corp .'... . "S35 'Y4v|Shelby St. slipped on the paveCAREY, U. 8. A rivate insurance companies Aust bid " So they build cars guar- 0 O'Connor. Lickliter is one|giinooiiorpeton com... 13,2 13, iment at Garfield Park pool and —— p d i . : lot three youths arrested for the Nat Homes com ............. 1& 20 (injured her head. Al! were cared Prospest pouring "1 at Homes p Niwa A 00 14 { ioe Sere DONE the lean about {antes to 30 sixty Hills an hour {May 23 slugging and robbery of N Ind ub Berv com bd 2 for by private physicians. HIRLPOOL” business + | THERE'S ITALIAN cunning Ben Loyal, 46, of 542 N. Dearborn \*paleer’s2%y bis °°. 0000 30 123 Girl Burned by Grease Meets B y {about that. The cars will’ do St. P R Mallory Co com 2 ; : Mots Humytawys a vow Dey Jie saying tn |maybe sixty-five. But the Italian| For stealing a $125 adding Frugiess Latnary com -. 2% moana Jo a hols, . an 3 SIDE ) “We'll take you for $10,000 worth, | Who shoves the . accelerator machine, Robert Cameron, 42, REL SEL IO Sn ©" live at 225 N. Jefferson aE was | . y 2 » through the floor enjoys making Temperance, Mich, was sen-|*Schwitzer-Cummins ofd > 18% : Get the rest from Uncle Sam.” % So Ind G &E com ....... . 3, treated and released at St. Vinhis car go faster than it should,|tenced to 180 days an the State g ind G & E r 12 , hor pn 1 suppose the insurance com- brags about i Farm and fined $100. Stokiyy-Van Cams ! 13% cent’s Hospital after she pulled oP panies will be sitting on my neck |°"288 TNC To v. Wiad. Rasa * |Stokely-Van Camp _pfd 1 1" a pan of hot grease from the . and kicking my ears in. aly cot need Terre Haute Malleabls ...\... 7's 9 |stove and burned herself. | ® But you add it up. If you get a ing Joads and il lon't need Fyneral Causes Crash, |ulted “Feleshane s% ofa lied Woviniy Caldwell, 9, of 1840 RO! L peed i ‘ | Onion ala on Crean ! e { Color Br different answer, let me know. | 3 inose big wide rear seats. Hearse Takes Injured Ex.dividend Central Ave. Jeil on Weaken gate pre Hoosiers Buy It + hos ( off | MOULTRIE, Ga. July 25 (UP) Hh, 5 ..|on his chest and side. He was 8 . 5 | Two cars ran together yester-|Bastian Morley :+ (treated and released from Gen-| APETOWN a GOES for insurance B ast Touches day when one of them made a Biber Bertiftrer us | ks - |eral Hospital, | Al HEAD . i sudden stop in a funeral proces-| Citizens Ind Tel 4%s 61 .«| Joseph G. Commisk 18, of BYSTANDER ; 4 ; y. 18, of} : There are 5,590,000 life poticies Attack Rumors sic which was entering a rural /Eoumbis Club. 3-5" 62 +12808 Spencer Ave. wou in fair]

Iota van per family compared with

Davia per { in 1946. g

hat-—$5820 million, a record.

p BRIAN So the thrifty Hoosiers ned of six or seven sticks of side b Serv 3%s 13... Paper Art Co 98 § . | DON'T CRY’ been tucking away some of theif |gungmite, was set off in analley| ~~ (BSc doyico diam ug wt (Plans Achievement Day Cale STORM = POSIWaS sar gS here safe. yy the Berkshire Hotel last night. GETS AGRICULTURE POST | &iiisend ~~ Warren. Central. 43. Club XAS” "ree - 1 Its h ” AH bought | Many of the hotel’s 220 guests| WASHINGTON, July 25 (UP) Local Produce Achievement Day will be held] IN FULL 946 Indiana fam hues of vayoft at ned into the streets and nearby| The Senate late yesterday con-|— ~~ ~~ ~~ __________|Friday at Warren Central High VE FOR CAESAR $1,819 milion wa R pay residents flooded police with in- firmed the nomination of Clar-, JExes—Current receipts & Joe, to ofa | School, where 4-H exhibits will Ee ——— the end of the lifel'ne. Ee officers said, fearing anience J. McCormick of Indiana to|3sci. Grade B larke. 3%c. and no rade. be on display from 10 a.m. until| Colles at 19h y lair raid. : be Undersecretary of Agriculture. “gouitry— ; , 18¢;|8 p. m. : ow WA-8i0 “ What's Next? | Manager Ray Saunders told Iya ander 4% Te “ind Leshorna. sei Locka Bn Township PTA will be FROM INDIANA® A LOT OF BUSINESSMEN detectives that the hotel had ex-Il) §. Siatement and stags. lle. o . in charge of food concessions. i PARE WA. string along with Leo Cherne of 'perienced “labor troubles” in cl, | Butterfat—No \ 83c: No 3. 50e - | Recreation will be provided in the ern coo 1258 the Research Institute of America. recent weeks. Maids and ‘house-| o, cuivaron. July 35 (UP)—Govern-| Local Truck Grain Prices afternoon and a band concert] E THIRD MAN" For years he’s been taking a keepers are nonunion, Mr. Saun- ment Sxpenses 4 and receipts, Sor ihe cur-| will be given at 6:30 p.m. The

telling them what

1. His Indianapolis WA 9090 ife Tax Ine. Tait, brings the news that manI IN COLOR ° 2 power reserves and draftees are “MYRNA LOY going to be tapped much faster THE DOZEN" than the signs indicate—and patTHE SIERRAS” soot io art ; ; “Companies n s now es to review and apply their World

in the state totaling—hold your

That makes an average of $4800

have lio:

look down the road apiece and |ders said.

associate, Join Movie Theater Offers

people, finding replace-

War II experience in training and holding ments for men at least up to the

DETROIT, July 25 (UP)—A| {bomb explosion near a downtown | {hotel set off rumors of an enemy lattack, police reported today. The bomb, apparently fash-

condition at General Hospital! After getting his nose broken in| {a fight over a ball.

|Warren Central 4-H

cemetery. a Magen, slightly Injured 0 inne. Srikite Jans = T ' -| s pital fn Ie her nad attr 5s os rn livered the corpse at the grave: Elman i

pared with a year sgo: o— This Year Last Year 55 § 2.470.188,723 1,458,442,049 1.441.440,1 705 1.028,748.5' 2,681,367

day will be concluded with a - italent show. {

mais nin 1

$25 For Gorilla Head

PHOENIX, Ariz, July 25 (UP) {—A $25 bounty was placed today on the three-foot-high head of a gorilla. : Theater Manager Harold Stesson offered the reward when the! outdoor advertisement for} “Mighty Joe Young,” a motion picture, disappeared.

i 252 Gold Res. 30186.541.064 24,518.41 INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING Hi

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THE SCHOENLING

INCINNA

- Compares with the Nation’s Finest

Q.~Are the girls in St. Louis and Milwaukee more beautiful than the girls in Cincinnati? »A~-No, they are not!

Q.— Are the beers brewed in St. Louis and Milwaukee better than the beers made in Cincinnati?

A~—Ne, we don't think so!

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And, Here’s Why: = Cincinnati people, their work, their skill and their taste in the finer things compare wth the nation’s finest. For 100 years the city of Cincinnati has been famous for fine beer. And, when you ask for Schoenling, a real Cincinnati beer, you get an extra dry lager

beer without equal anywhe : Fe Do this. Make a flavor test. Compare Schoenling with

“the beer that you are now drinki do, you'll find that Schoenling has with more age, more boc

you every day. / most modern brewery

today.

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