Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 August 1950 — Page 16
Wosks After Passacie.
By PAUL LEACH, Times §
Special Writer - WASHINGTON, Aug. 8—Within two weeks after enLaw, it is expected, installment buying will be restricted. before material allocations and pri-
f orities under the same act are imposed on industry.
—— Retatle
Public Housing
bankers and -others-have!-
25 Cents Off
© Best Choice = Lot Brings $24.25
Hog prices were steady to 25 cents lower than Monday's average today in slow trade at the Indianapolis Stockyards. .
to all hands, oo” " :
Sites Studied
i H. Hartley is on vacation.
SUMING that the Federal erve System will manage all restrictions
. of all I: sales would require initial ments and a definite period for making up the balance. This tions warranted. °° While no ratios have been fixed, so far it is expected that on home| appliances — washers, refrigerators, radios, sweepers and the like —initial payments of 10 to 15 per
ment
Automobiles J re ae continue se , AS they . at around one-third down-—cas or trade-in — with an 18-month ~_payup limit.
- » . ” " HOME BUYING terms have " already been tightened up, resulting in insured loan requirements by the Federal Housing Administration of larger down payments) and smaller mortgages. Whether this will .be restricted further is doubtful now, although one sec~tion of the Control Act wotld let the President make any real estate credit regulations he cares to. The House bill still contains "this section, which is highly objectionable to the real estate in-
iderably in the Sénate Bank-| a What this will be in the final bill is anybody's guess.
a. 8 8. -° THE PURPOSE of all credit restrictions, especially on installment sales, is to help hold down, “inflationary effects of a bigspending economy. When the buy-
{negotations ed E
“City Council Hears Outline of Plans
Indianapolis Public Housing Authority was prepared to start
plese The commission bared its plans
EE
tion of ordinances for installation
signels, increased cab rates.and creation of a civil defense office. | Harry V. Wade, housing authority. chairman, sald about 750 low cost public housing units are planned for the first development
thority will attempt to purchase about 27 acres of the old Bouth Side circus grounds on BSoutheastern Ave. 500 Homes Planned
If negotiations are successful, the IPHA plans to erect about 500 homes on the site. Many wil house two families. In disclosing the proposal to councilmen last night, Mr. Wade said a second location for about 125 units will be erected in the Redevelopment Commission's slum clearance area near W, 10th St. and Fall Creek. As the first homes are completed there, families now living in substandard quarters will be moved into the new construction. The older houses will in turn be replaced by public housing, until a total of 750 units are completed under the first year building program. Opposition Doubted
Several attempts to build business structures on the old circus grounds have met stiff opposition
dustry. It has been toned doWRnig .. yome owners in the. past.
Mr. Wade doubted, however, that home * building would meet the same resistance. ‘ He sald schools serving the area carry a lighter load than most other sections of the city suitable for the project. There would be no need Yor new sewer building programs, he stated.
. * a ublic has excess money in| Cost estimates for the program 425, and sheep, 1050, ble to/Louisville has al- Man Youth Jailed pocket and consumer goods getihave not been completed. ‘Two ——————— |sady been paced underground" 1only 1 ULL JATIGU N x «(after work on the TnL Year pro» Officer Clarifies ah Hg a ion Faces Reckless started, . Wade said. : . Raitrosd signaty | EDMistment Rules [stem gost into service. Homicide Charge on 8 ws { In other action, Council roy A Snbmcement SATs on , god Ra Bgini igen come in the Contro . lceived two ordinances which par iio Jiri ve war lth Students olis man whose car was struck
More than 1 million retailers,
plus some 32 state merchant as-| soclations formed a Consumer Credit Task Committee. Under the chairmanship of William J. Chey-| ney, director of the Retail Credit Tey iitute of Washington, this task | committee has been meeting al-
Board people. The first move to this end was made by the retailers instead of being organized into dozens of| trade groups by the government, | as they were in the last war, which split their effectiveness In| looking after themselves. ‘Thus, | ~-they can-present-a solid front to government. : - Bg yor — ; - MEANWHILE, committees for| ice mandgem
tions with ~Conimerce = Sawyer, who -i8 expected to han-, * dle those controls. .. °° . These working plans, which Mr.| Sawyer and the ‘Reserve Board| favor, do not jibe with the ideas of theoretical want. government to do all the . regulating and policing . .
{would require that railroad -cross|tersections with streets.
cinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railroad would need flashers at West, Chesapeake, Missouri, Maryland, ‘most daily with the Reserve Washington, Market, Ohio, New { Michigan, | Clair, 9th, 10th, 15th, 16th, 17th Sts. and Northwestern Ave.
| be.established as.the hourly. rate,
bureaucrats who|pairs.
ng signals be installed at 21 in-
If passed, the Cleveland, Cin-
Indiana and St.
Vermont,
North, Walnut,
Warning bells would be installed at Court and Pearl Sts. Another’ flasher would be installed by Monon Railroad at| 81st St. TT Taxicab Fare A taxicab fare increase from cents to 35 cents for the first
h if
po
2
Councilmen were also called on to appropriate -$4675-to. finance preliminary operation of a defense director's department, and transfer $100,000 in gas tax funds to the Works Board for street re-
The Works - Board “received
_ |pounds, brought $17.50 to
today for Its first
of 21 railroad crossing flasher
areas. The chairman safd the au- steers moved at’$31.
week...
$23.25. $23.50. Slaughter pigs, 120 Sows 25¢ Lower
brought $21. Sows held around 25 cents lower. Weights, 450 pounds downward, were salable at $19 to 21.25 Jew. rea
F 450 ached :
Weigh $17 to $19.25. Sows weighing over.
Market on steers and heifers was slow. Load medium to good 1000-pound steers sold at $29. Odd
[moved at $31. _ Liberal share of gopd grade steers brought $29.50 to $30.75.
1 + Cows Steady
Cow prices were fully steady In fairly active trade. Common and medium beef cows were salable at $18.50 to $21.50. Odd head good grades reached $22 to $22.50, Canners and cutters sold at $15.50 to $18.50,
Vealer prices were steady in fairly active trade. Good and ichoice calves moved at $30.50 to $32. Common and medium grades brought $23.50 to $30. Culls sold at prices down to $15. Common and medium heavy grass calves sold at $22 to $26.50. Bulls Steady Bulls sold at steady prices. Medium and good sausage bulls moved at $21 to $23. Cutter and common grades brought $17.50 to $20.56. Good beef bulls moved at! $21.50 to $22.50. Sheep market was fairly active with prices strong to 50 cents higher. Bulk . good and choice] spring lambs moved at $27.50 to moved at $28.50. Medium and good grades brought $24.50 to $27. Common and medium springers brought! $20 to $24. Bulk slaughter ewes! were saleable at $8 to $11. |
(the Indianapolis Stockyards were! {hogs, 7900; cattle, 2325; calves,
Force Recruiting Office, |
It was pointed out that once a man has received a letter calling him up for his preinduction physical, he is disqualified from enlisting in the Armed Services.
“We can take them up to the|
time they receive that letter,” s M/Sgt. Henry H. Hawes of the Public Information Office. “After that it's too late” / Sgt. Hawes said he wished also to remind all those interesféd that the recruiting office in Rdom 416, Federal Building, is opesi from 8 a. m to 9 p. m. seveh days a
»
Cornell-Dubilie¥ Decl Divit
J
per_share onthe common payable Sepf. 10, 1950, 'to stockholders of yecord Aug. 24, 1950. Directors also declared the regular quarferly dividend of $1.31 per sharé on the company's $5.25
head of choice club yearlings
1
3 8100-Lb. Truck ©
Here hy Sept.
Station Buildings Well Under Way
Big time TV will soon beam its way into Indianapolis through a chain of relay stations on the Bell System's Dayton - Indianapolis microwave system. > The big day will be around Sept. 30, Indiana Bell said today. The relay station at Greenfield should be completed by Aug. 15. Now it is only a stub of itself— 120 feet in the air. Its ultimate height is to be 243 feet. Construction at the other stations along the way between here and Dayton is further along. The steel work is finished on the station at Glenwood, and the antennas were placed on it yester-| day. The station at New Hope,
Radio relay station in Greenfield on the Bell System's Day-
11th 8t., is 63 years old. But he can boast the strongest ankles in Indianapolis. /
sewer Jaying job in front of 50 E. Troy Ave, this employed as a Jdborer by Barney & Massa, Ft. Wayne contractors.
ford, 41, of 552° W. 30th St. had
backing driver's seat Mr. Leadford could not seg Mr. knocked down by the right rear :nd of the truck. :
ran over Mr. Short's legs above the ankles. “The truck weighs 8100 pounds.
Ankles of Man,
ANDERSON SHORT, 314 W.
Mr. Short was. working on a
fhorning. He Is
A truck driven by Dallas Lead-
lumped a Joad of dirt and was p slowly. From the
Short, who was
. uo _» DUAL WHEELS of the vehicle
An ambulance was called. When - it arrived Mr. Short
Is
“IMr. Heusel s
'$28. Small lots of choice grades!
of..Cornell-Dubilier. Electric Corp: fit.& declared a. diyidend of 20 cents stock, . mes B
cumulative preferred stock, series Ave.
this week. -
Louisville. 4
Rank High
Score Outsanding Marks at Purdue
State Service
semester of the 1949-50 year.
mester. ‘They included: Rex R. Veteto, 1301 N. P Hersche! J. Jivel, 3257 Ruckle
Alp! ene
Cc C, Chas
ti
A, Cheetham, 1523 K. Collins, 5821
een, RR. 1, Also Robert ol : il, 3910 Colles Cotton,” 836 N. Bulle
M. Cotton, ottrell
. but{Council permission to purchase
. they will, in the opinion of the in-lan undetermined number of addi“dustry people most affected, result! tional parking meters.
in more effective compliance with] After hearing appeals
fewer public employees and at| . s ” n “REGULATION WwW” was born|
Sept. 1, 1041, two months before born, Moore and Gray ‘Sts. for a gf
Pearl Harbor, in an executive or-! der by President Roosevelt. At! ‘the - outset - anti-inflationary re-| strictions: called, for an 18-month| maturity and.a down payment of one-third on autos . . . on most other consumer goods 15 to 20 per cent down and 18 months was the rule. On Mar. 23, 1942, the maturity was reduced to 15 months and one-third ‘down was required on everything but- household furniture, which called for 10 per cent down. 3 It was tightened again Mar. 6; 1943, to 12-month maturities and; a third down, with home furniture going to 20 per cent down. On Dec. 1, 1946, maturities went back to 15 months. The whole regulation expired Nov. 1, 1947.
‘Wife of Attempted Plane Bomber Divorced
—Mrs, Betty Gibson Grant has divorced her husband, John H. Grant, who was convicted of trying to murder her and their two children by time-bombing an airap, one . Grant, 32, was eonvicted last week on six counts of attempted murder in connection with his _ plan to wreck a United airliner last Apr. 17. The aircraft tech-
= EOS-ANGELES Aug: 8 (UPjiferred
from about 40 residents in the area, Council,_struck from its files an Indianapolis Railways asking permission to use Dear-
trackless trolley turn-around. / Tufts College Grid Assistant Dies ; BOSTON, ‘Aug. 8 (UP)—Henry D. Buckley, 40, assistant football coach at Tufts College and a former Boston College end, died at a veterans hospital yesterday of leukemia.
A native of Medford, he played football at Boston College from
{1928 to 1930 and later was assist-|
ant coach at Medford High ‘School. He resigned the post to
Tufts, He leaves a wife and son.
Times Special
$4,810,425.
petition AR
devote full time to coaching at!
NEW YORK, Aug. 8—Revere Copper and Brass Inc. for the six months ended June 30, 1950, shows a net income for the period of This is equal after pre-
A -payible Oct. 15,1950, to stockholdegs of record Sept. 21, 1950, Local Issues : ~Aug. 8—~ n States com. ..... Am: an States PP Ayrshire Colleries com. .
& Bobbs- Mer Bobhs- Merri Soya
Cummins Eng pra 7" jConsilidated Pinance § ptd.. ontin-Car-Na-Var ais ay
Jeita Elec com Ina Tels » ord Equitable Securities com mily nes. om . Pamily Pinance 5% nfo Hays Corp ofd ww . Hamilton Mfg Co com . Herf-Jones ey A pfd ome Hook Drug Co som ind Asse Tel 2° 4 nd Gas & Wat Co com. nd Mich Blee 4'» ofd ndpls P & L com _... ndpls. P & L 4% pid .. {Indpls P % {Indpls Water Co od 3 n r 4%% ola Jefferson. Nationa! Life com .. n om
.r
% ofd |.
{
common
for the same period last year.
Storm Rips -Canadian Town, Kifiing Two
nician faces a possible maximum prison sentence of 120 years. Mrs. Grant, 29, yesterday won restoration of her maiden name and also was granted a request
_ see their children
|terday.
| }
stock-dividend; to-$3.58 per: Ran. SEX share on each of the 1,286,916 3¢ shares outstanding, against $1,791,500 or $1.21 a share gi,
WINNIPEG, Manitobia, Aug. 8 (UP)—A storm of near hurricane force killed two men, toppled trees, telephone. and power| |poles ‘and tore off roofs .and chimneys throughout town yes-
Several areas of the city were ir that her husband be forbidden to| without electric or. telephone serv- , Marie Ann, 6, ice for several hours following 5, without athe minute storm, orst in 28
N. Wal ‘{136 8B. Ritte Jr. 250 S.
ashinkton _ Bly ngLo! ath St: Robe: 1 Winthrop Ave.: Perrin _Ave.: E. 10t]
Ne.s.
afiace A
r Ave. Dearborn
8t.: Rich
{Calvin - E. {Evelyn J. Hynes, R. R_ 6: Gene E. 707 Clarendon Pl; John M win d i ‘ence EJ Tem
Charles W. Kelley, #435 Rookwood Ave Virginia A. Kennedy, 712 N. Bosart Ave 2 Oakland Ave
y Ave + Virgl
CE: 354 . MoQuistan, Jay Meador, 1315 . Meranda. 2505 A. Nelson,
WwW. 33d St E. 62d St 314
Park 4th St. Rich obert
8, 1 " entral Ave:
session
Hamilton Mfg es -... 0 indpls Paint & Color sa 64 .. ” Indple Pubic Loan © 64 9 Ind Limestone 4s ™ 4 ” y 41
am dolph| men at N. Illinois and New York
X ui Wace . Wade, 352
.|2 U. 8. JETS MISSING
MANILA, Philippines, Aug.
0., will be finished by the end of arose and walked 50 feet to the
When the system gets into operation, airborn pictures will be picked up by the Greenfield station, relayed to the tower on top of the Indiana Bell Co. building land then relayed through coaxial Noon estimates of receipts at cable to the tower on the Merchants National / Bank and to
LAFAYETTE, Aug s8—Purdue University today announced the names of 106 Marion County students included in the list of distinguished students for the second
All had a grade point index of
critical,
. “Beeler, io ir xT: drove him to the county line. nox §:I Near Royalton; he said; Bradford ¥:|produced a pistol and ordered him Ww. Oskito take his money,
pou “S343 Janet. Dre Rod] MI. ham, 6689 Pleasant Run Pkwy: i, di born in Union County and had
< rriof RR 18; Donald E Geringer. 3133 te, MK H na v . or 2 : _K.. . Goodwin,
m i Drelldon - Z. Green ard H. y E.|Bolden were armed.
ca het N on’ 1 No him up early yesterday morning N.. Gale St, 4 William J
Lester je K. Kittre 608 nrad, 851 8.
7 W. Michigan St. 6037 Crittenden
pomner; er Sts. Mr. Remmetter, operator
e, Ral r.lhe stopped at the crossing, and
ghn, hs t Bt. tstetter, 310 Harlan-8t.: 8 N. Euclid Avenue:
ard,| W. 77th St, was charged with
N. the theft of a radio from A. i| Tellestrom Radio Service, 815 E. Beech | 30th St.
(UP)—A search for two U. 8. Air Force F-80 jet fighters missing .jon a routine flight led today to the wreckage of one of the planes.
jambulance, climbed in and was whisked to General Hospital. - Hospital officials said his continy vag “nod.” But ‘they were going to take X-rays to make
Stolen Tax Kills
by a ‘stolen taxicab brought a reckless homicide charge .against a 20-year-old youth. Harold Bradford, 20, of 1438 N. New Jersey St. was brought to
by state police and booked on the homicide charge. :
noon in Witham Memorial Hospital, Lebanon, 20. minutes after the taxicab struck his car at U. 8.562.and Whitestown Rd. near Lebanon.
was learned his injuries were not
‘Produces Pistol
Bradford at the Indianapolis bus station and
-iout of the cab. Bradford then drove away without attempting Mr. Arvin risaid. _
a print shop near his home, was
lived here 60 years. They stopped the car after a block’s. pursuit and found Wood-| ard, -Branden--and- Bolden riding; in it. They said Woodard and
| Robert M. Cole, attendant at ithe Gaseteria filling station, 21st e. St. and Capitol Ave. identified {the three as the men who held
;land took $15. ‘i Police also sought a connection "with the slugging of Albert Craig, 1136, manager of Craig Cleaners, [2168 Northwestern Ave. last night.
Slugged by 2 Men Mr, Craig was held up by two iimen, one of whom was armed.
be
en; who operated] vice
Too Low
Rote Jeopardizes
With R
Le
Plan fo Stem Malik's
Ability to Finance
utility would earn a profit of only
-|1.97 per cent in 1951 if it didn’t
get a rate increase and if it went ahead with present plans for improvements and additions.
“In my opinion this demonstrates -the critical position in which the company finds itself,” as he described the company’s finances in of its petitien for a $1,229,000 an- - He said Ahe rate of return was
TR SAL SHS To ATTN oy
ability sto get new money finance improvements, Wants 6 Per Cent Income Associated, Indiana's second largest telephone company, serves ‘some 94,000 customers through 39 exchanges. It asked for a rate boost last May. to Increase its income on’ invested capital from 3 per cent to 6 per cent. The hearing began yesterday in the Indiana Supreme Courtroom with charges by spokesmen from 20 of the affected cities that Assoclated’s service was “lousy” and no increase should be given until it was improved. : Most of the cities asked thal rates be fixed for each exchange instead of on a system-wide basis
offered, as the company suggested in a proposed new rate schedule. Will Rule on Delay The PSC ruled that question would be settled after the cities submitted written briefs. The PSC also sald it would rule at the conclusion of today’s hearing on a request by Public Counselor Walter F. Jones‘Jr., for a 45-day delay before cross-examination of the company's witnesses and presentation of the public's case. Associated President Herbert E. Hussey, Lafayette, testified
|yesterday- that -the company had lexperienced unusual difficulties in
the post-war period of shortages and rising prices in obtaining equipment to modernize its exchanges as rapidly as the utility hoped to do so. Plant Superintendent C. C. Whitlock testified as to the cost of improvements, and cited Valparaiso as one of his examples. He said four long distance stations -were-added in-1948-at-a-cost: of $33,500. :
Crowded at Valparaiso
board at Valparaiso was crowded and the company intended to replace it as soon ‘as a building could be constructed. In the meantime, he said, four tempooperators were being added to distribute the load and cut an-
Marion County jail early today|swering time:
Robert R. Miller, general com-
mercial superintendent, was the Leon L. Teeguarden, 70, of 1828|third witness for Associated. He W. 57th St. died yesterday after- testified on the desirability of fig-
uring rates on a system and not
exchange basis.
“It is conceivable that under the
exchange method of establishing “rates,” Mr. Miller said, “a great| Bradford, also treated at With-"many of the smaller communities am Memorial Hospital, was re-of this state and a large part of
five out of a possible six points turned to Indianapolis after it
for subjects taken during the se- the rurdl area might entirely bel
cut off from telephone service by prohibitive rates.” :
By United Press Sen. Glen H. Taylor, who bolted
the Democratic Party in 1948 to run as the Progressive Party's
vow —F TC: Sa me Ne Ns Idaho Democrats to forgive and forget today. = . k Mr. Taylor sought Democratic renomination to a six-year term in the Senate, ~‘His“battle against” two “other Democratic hopefuls was the standout contest in primary elections in Idaho, Nebraska and Arkansas. * In Nebraska, Gov. Val Peterson bid for GOP renomination to a third term against two opponents, -and, former Rep. Terry Carpenter sought the Democratic
four other candidates. Two Runoff Contests
Arkansas voters decided two run-off’ contests for State Supreme Court posts.
{They eslugged him and took his wallet containing $44. He was iitreated at Methodist Hospital| for head injuries. { i| - Earl Remmetter, 1558 Park ilAve., reported he was robbed of $20 last night at 25th and Wheel-
of an Indiamapolis Railways bus, sald two men boarded the bus as! :/robbed him at gun point: James Morris, 23, of 57 8. TATSENAl “AX ve “Féportéd he “was robbed of $22 last night by three
Sts. Radio Theft Charged Earl Lee Franklin, 25, of 1077
4| pre-burglary in connection with
Three men sitting on a porch across the street identified -him 8ias the man who smashed the window of the shop and took the! radio, police said. - t He was captured by Sgt. Gleich!
and Patrolman Jefferson, who Gold Its pilot was killed. Thirteen{less than an hour later took part
i pied searching i ue Caligire of Woodard, Bran-
Mr. Taylor's Republican colleague in the Senate, Henry C. Dworshak, sought renomination to a four-year term. He campaigned on his record while two opponents, Fentress H. Kuhn and Abe McGregor Goff, accused him of isolationist leanings.
Mr. Taylor campaigned in favor of a Columbia Valley Authority,
[the Brannan Farm Plan and
larger old*age pensions. He stumped the state with his wife,
a four-piece cowboy band.
Local Truck Grain Prices
No. 2 No.
truck wheat, $1.94. white corn, $1.99, No. 2 hew soybeans, i1a 3 ew 33. No. 3 oats, Soe.
U. S. Statement {held by juvenile authorities
FASHINGTON, ho 8 a rent fiscal year gh phe. with a year ago:
£ 2 g: 33 Hh gasses 23302 g3%33
Figns Corp. Saseutive said the]
“The statement was madé by ; —Heusel
lof West Lafayette, first ‘Witness _|in the second day of s rate inbefore. the
|Public Service Commission.
depending on the class of service
. Johnny for the first time in two
-‘rooms-—behind -a- vacant grocery|
Votes 10 Forge |
gubernatorial nomination against,
Church, 743 E. Pleasant Run ., when Mrs. Fred J. Craw-|
lported seeing two girls attempting {to enter the building. The girls
REE
Leaders of the anti-Red under the United Nations banner
at worst, local-
: agressor It and, low it jeopardized the utilit EE oa a
“Every word of Malik's” one authority said today, ‘‘was pure propaganda intended to white‘wash Russia in Asia’s eyes. But he had to be allowed to say every ‘word. Otherwise Tence-sitting friends of the free nations the world over might have complained: we were gagging him." — wy Now every fence-sitter knows that Malik has had his day and his Council opponents are free to get tougher ii they choose. One evidence of a tougher stand
among Council members to be baited by President Malik’s nagging. Last week some of these were almost too ready to talk back with a few hundred well chosen, but delaying words. This week a conspiracy of silence may suddenly become So profound that Malik will hear the sound of brave men falling dead half around the world. There should be, too, stronger insisterice of parliamentary procedure. Motions properly before the Council should be acted upon without the often ' irregular speeches which bogged down earlier meetings. “But,” an observer warned,
Johnny Is Home—
casualties of the Korean War to
This morning his mother saw
«His body lay in. a funeral home in the neighborhood where he played kick the can, winked at pretty girls and then strutted proudly in his new Army clothes. Drained of Words . Mrs. Marruso, a widow, was drained of words. : “I just can’t think,” she said slowly. “I've been sick-—deep sick inside—since I heard that Johnny was killed.” The words were those of a Czech immigrant whose husband died 11 years ago, his own life Shortened by service in World ar I.
Mrs. ‘Marruso has an older son. They live in three small
store.
to Get lot 5 . ; wv Reds in UN Tod Leaders of Anti-Communist Majority ~~ : LAKE SUCCESS, Au. 5 Deeguie. of the ie
the Security Council
Delaying Tirade Stafl Writer nations were
down : y were laying plans to cut wn last week’s flow of talk which ran on and on while soldiers
“don't expect it. willbe easy tr
hold Malik. If we were dealing only with delegate Malik it could be ; Wwe are up against a triple threat.” :
, There are three, two present in the flesh, one officially abae t, but the most powerful of
Malik and te Malik. Sometimes it is hard to know which is talking. But it is never hard to recognize the master's voice,
off on That belongs to the third fili. eal oor I tnt 1h “Deputy Toreigh
Minister Malik, Tying down the Moscow line, &
Early on today’s order of business should be the fo of the Council's invitation to
; John M. Chang to attend the delibera«
tion upon President Malik since last. Tuesday. So far, he has stymied it with p own. a Cals He will, if he can, observers agree, set up more stymies today,
{and later. He could repropose
withdrawal of all foreign troops
will be increasing unwillingness. from Korea. He could reoffer a
status quo cease-firing order which would, of course, leave North Koreans astride five-sixths of the southern republic, free to proselyte and propagandize. He could drag in all his refurbished red herrings and when the Council has voted him down, he could set the stage for doing it all over again by declaring the vote illegal. Any vote, he has said, is illegal if it is shared in by the delegate from Nationalist China, “He talks,” one critic said after the Council broke up last Friday, “as though nobody was legal but Malik—as though everybody was out of step but Jake.”
Private Who Died of War
Wounds Comes Back in Box Mother, a Czech Immigrant, Says
‘I've Been—Deep Sick’ Since | Heard DETROIT, Aug. 8 (UP)—Johnny came home today. A brown wooden coffin brought his body, one of the two first.
be returned to the United States.
Pvt. John L. Marruso, 19, was fatally wounded near Taejon, a month ago today. His body and that of a Little Rock, Ark., soldier - "
'were-returned-aboard-the Navy Transport E."T. Collins,
Wipes Smile Off Defendant
Judge Alex Clark wiped the smile off the face of Henry Clayton today. Clayton, 41, and his wife, Lucille, 36, had been brought before Judge Clark in Municipal Court 4 on vagrancy charges. They were arrested after Mrs. Clayton shot her husband in the finger with an air gun at their home at 538 Vinton St. yesterday afternoon. At their arraignment, Ju Clark dismissed the a ge looked up to see Clayton grinning. “Do. you think it’s amusing?” Judge Clark asked. Another grin was the sSwer. Judge Clark Felnstated poo vas
Joseph, 20, went to work as
Bis 2 it Hopeful Letter... Mrs. Marruso shook her head! to’ check the tears. From her! purse she pulled a letter. It| started:
“My Darling Mother.”
He talked about his buddies, the strange customs of the Far East, and his dreams of coming home. “I just hope that no war breaks ouf before I leave. There is a lot of fall of Communists over here. But there are no signs of war— thank God!” Johnny was wrong. He was flown from Japan to Korea within a few days affer the Communist attack. Wounded. in the battle of Taejon, he was flown to a hospital in Japan where he died.
Four Boys Held In Car Looting
Four boys were held by Juvenile Aid Division authorities to-| day after two of them confessed looting two cars last night. Ralph Jones, 24, of 1504 N. Park Ave. called police after he saw two boys drive up on a scooter and rifle the glove .compartment of his car; parked on
another nearby, he said. When he shouted, the boys ran
police arrived, four boys came up to claim the scooters and were taken in custody.
and 12, admitted ransacking the cars. The other boys, aged 12 and 14, were held for questioning.
2 Girls Held in Attempt
{
Two girls, aged 13 and 15, were
in connection with an attempt to bréak into a church. - Police were called to the Garfield Park Evangelical Reformed
Pkwy ford, 2110 E. Garfield Dr., re-
| A brief was filed on the of Indianapolis ‘Railways from a ~~
15th St. The boys also ransacked b
and abandoned the scooters. After:
Police sald two boys, aged 10]
To Break Into Church |
grancy charge and ordered Clay ton held on a $1000 bond. ye
1y. on_ Street Work ....
The ity of Indianapolis told the
(Indiana . 8upreme..Court today -#¢- —
didn’t care how two rail’ firms divided their portion of the cost o a grade separation project—
ust so they contributed 20 per cent. :
Hancock Cireuit Court decision ruling that it must pay 5 per cent and. the Indianapolis Union Railroad 15 per cent of the cost of a Shelby St. separation project. “~The ¢ity sald it was mainly interested in the two rail firms paying 20 per cent of the total cost, which is the percentage the Hancock courtWeterrtiined they should pay.
INSTALLED AS PRESIDENT
Philip H. Sweet, 5737 N. Mich,. ~ - Road, has been installed as pres-
ident of the Purdue Association of Indianapolis. Mr. Sweet has announced..plans for the Purdue Alumni picnic at the Lynwood Farms, near Carmel, Aug. 26. —
*_ FINANCIAL NOTICE
Indianapolis Power & Light ; ‘Company
'' Notice To Security Holders Indianapolis Power & Light Compan: made generally available to its a ers an earnings stat solidated
Fire and Extended
(overage Insurance [TIAL CURL
MUTUAL AGENT
Mutual Agency, Inc.
1740 North Meridian $1. _ WAbash 2456
Present are Council President
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‘South Korean Ambassador. tions. This has been an obliga«
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also 'voted nc Company © tion was norn out. Observer room worker work soon. A that departm: stop producti
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Times LAFAYET mately 250 le: clubs in India
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FARM INCO The drop it
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fixed Thursday, 1950, at two o'c ard Time at ¢ 101 East 27th place for the p
when or-rescinding th by the board, Board ¢
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C STATE OF IND
COUNTY OF RE lie
Notice to Credi
nie The creditors, terested the Recelv Inc. has counting { 18, 1 L
