Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1950 — Page 15
a of the Pos
i LET i: leetli ie ii. REE
price ceilings e retail level
World War II, till, that it is a shirt, with. ig the button-
It in your pay ent payments, . Take home 1 kids see the ind, Miss Marcolor of $110,« ome, of 225 people blic money in and automolderness lodge nd the White cozy for the
uch style, we
neome-of-$3 ai Ea
an saying reind never had oretty healthy
pprove of the p pay for the . Approve even {ber of the or-
anapolis civie se “Welcome aying: “Good-
TE
he two great gether. Never 1 so near to into organie yvernor of New =
m while they hile they sup- - nd to virtues erent Atlee,
steadily drifte nity for some inously wider, diff, Wales.
Now
ed of by the ent agencies. =
* Force wound h 79,000 air- | and indiffer- - 21,000 were y are coming ons now. The > sold abroad, s and colleges ap. posal job was candals. committees y found that sold for junk thout repairs, try at good
Ss. Commission ships for less f lead ballast ut into them, the lead was the deal had
adaches were reign liquidaecially in the y storage de-
— Liked
will open in Ft. Wayne and/M vansville. exif eee — bowit
Tue de Som
He Wants to Know What You Owe, How Much You Get
By HAROLD H, HARTLEY, Times Business Editor
“WHEN THE BANKER
invites you into his private
office and closes the door while you sign ‘your home mortgage, you may think that’s strictly private business.
But, alas, it isn't.
The government now wants to know how much you
owe, how much you get in your pay envelope, what interest
you pay, and whether your loan is insured by the FHA. ~The Bureau of Census is| about to undertake a yardstick job on who owns how much of the roof they lve under. Students of politics will see something more in the survey than a dull question and answer
go 0 le who owes what, the little tellow Who pilots the gravy train will
s OR “monetary ‘soup and put more votes in hock. s Rt - 8 A DEBT HAS always been considered as an ultra-private matter between borrower and lender, and .if the borrower pays off the deal is closed an no one is supposed to know it took place. But now with the government nosing into the private affairs of} the wage earner who is sweating, out a mortgage, he'll have no more financial privacy than goldfish. What's happening seems to be that the individual no longer owns the government. Instead, the government is gradually taking him over, right down to his humble shoe laces.
Imported
IF YOU DIDN'T GET to Europe to bring back a trunkload of the stuff they sell to tourists, you still may be able to sport a new handbag and say “It came from Paris.” The word I get is that the bigger local stores will be well stocked with continental merchandise on the frilly side this fall. This will include leather goods, fine linens; figurines, other fancy “pottery, and opie Hive, .
‘on money did the trick, plus the trend in America to cull out more and more of the luxury-type merchandise. ! And speaking of silver, I've often wondered why some manufacturer has not got wise to the awkwardness of the handle on the ordinary table knife. Why not make handles larger, grooved to the fingers, and hol-
..Jow, of course for lightness? |
Lipstick and Rouge
“STORIES "ARE GOING the rounds that some of the big auto makers are not going to switch to new models this fall.
You can write that off. There’
will be new models, but do not expect much change.
BobbsThe new models will be what!B
is called in the trade a “lipstick and rouge” deal, a chrome facelifting with new name plates and
hy become a little city by itse —And only three months ago the land speculators were writing it off because there were no sewers,
Hats and Shoes DAYAN’S, which means fine linens to most people, ready-to- | wear to a few more, will cut the
millinery on the floor above. Shogs will be fitted and stylechosen under Robert Gillman and Herman Schnabel, old hands at the trade.
89. Million Drumsticks
MAYBE ms too early, maybe
through the gers and five crew members a
Seven passengers were injured and one died from a heart attack when a propeller on this Ameri. can Airlines — shown at Denver where it made an emergency landing, tore loose and ripped uselage. The accident happened 21,000 feet over the Rocky Mountains with 52 passen-
.
Price Takes 125-Cent: Jump
. Best Grades Hit $25 Top; Lighter Weights Uneven
Light receipts boosted hog prices as much as 25 cents in the, Indianapolis Stoukyards today. | Good and choice butchers | (weighing — 180 pounds or more;
25 - cent hike. — {totaled 6000. Best grades from 190 to 250. pounds sold .at $24.50 to $25. Lighter 165 to 190 - pounders | brought uneven prices of $23 to $24.50, Sows sold at figures 25 cents higher. Good and choice 300 to 550-pound weights moved at $1850 to $22. A few near 600
Ea arl y receipts,
sold at $24 to $27.50. Sellers re-| flowers fo Mr. fused to sell good heifers for less| is executive vice president, than $28.50. A load of medium | and good grade steers also remained unsold, sellers asking $29 per hundredweight.
Common native grass steers
it isn’t. There'll be plenty of turkey for the belt-bursting holidays. = Phe “EoUnt ready #4; 500,000, and multiplied properly produces 89 million drumsticks, the same number of wings, but, fortunately only 44,500,000 necks for Junior to crab about when the plate comes to him last. Cranberries which look prettier than they taste, will show up in| a million barrels. Wo answer to cranberry jelly
cherry-red discs to give the] Thanksgiving plate a touch of color
Sooner the Cheaper IT’S ALSO a little early for this too. But not if you want to save a few bucks. : Bob Burnett Jr, of Sentinel Printing, Inc. already has his quotes out for Christmas cards. Before Oct. 1 you get 20 per cent off. In October you get 15!
per cent off, November 10 per
cent, and from Dec. 1 to 10, 5]
“THE PEVALUATION “DEAL Per cent —
And after Dec. 10, you line up at the counters and fight it out, read hundreds of verses to make sure they say what you'd like to say, and probably don't.
LOSES 10 YEARS IN SWAP GRAND HAVEN, Mich, Aug. 23 (UP)—Police today sought a modern-minded thief who stole a 1947 car from William Manni garage and. left a 1937 ‘model in ‘its-place.
buy it in cans, put it in the! refrigerator and slice it down in!
ng's {most recent figure available for]
|
{
¢ situation. Farmers [The answer lies somewhere bhetween them. A Times investigation of milk prices, from farmer to housewife, today showed an unusual] development in the normal eco: nomic picture.
did five years ago. More by Bottle _Housewives pay one cent tore] per quart than they did five years, ago. And that price is going] still higher,
t charged milk companies have
to farmers. seek $15 million damages.)
apo year, farmers in the Indianapolis: Milk Shed area received
1$3.75--- per hundredweight.. for {Grade A blend, which consti-
com errill ptd 4%% Central Soya » conns "
Bonaey oom Loa 4% fd hk my
Com Cumm!
a few Improvements to talk about, The dies for a new model go
into production almost a year in|ramin and the Korean War| family Fin came too late for any switch in 3
advance,
plans.
100 Robert Halls
_. FAST-MERCHANDISING Robert Hall Clothes, a pipe-rack cash-on-the-line ready - to - wear house, expects to open its 100th outlet - within three months. Last year Rp obert Hall opened ~jts—88th—store. This year Stores
Maryland St. and Senate Ave. sticks to the bare essentials of . selling, no window displays, no
credit department and no collec- Pub -
tions. But it does pour on the advertising where it will do the{S° most good, in newspapers and Stok some pe 0 commercials. | Stok
Land
ay VOOR IT on" the
Ent In at least one lands pur-|
chase for its new transn sion
plant on the East Side.
The news leaked and landown- & C ers hiked prices. One small hold-|Sitizens out, I am told, brought almost E
$800 an acre.
Contin
Delta Elec
pfd Gas & Wat Co Som . ch Eleo 4% oI & OE:
Water Co com ..... *Indpls Water Co 8% bd thdpls Water avy son in Natenal | LiTicoln “Nat Lynch Corp
Lite com wr
. : " 2 X Ind Pub Serv 4%. pfd . 98% 100% N Ind Pub Serv aes’ pid ... 20% E, Te P R Maiiory Co com ......... 26% sundry com ...... 20Ya 25% 26% .. 88 0%
18% 2
1a 18%)
Ve Ya
: i lyse properties and $3 milion, 1h Sosellaneous.”
In the same breath I'd say" “to ind]
— ook for & land boom out-Shade=|In
land Ave. on the thrift home level, or a little better. new shopping centers, - theaters, bowling alleys—in fact it may al-
F.MOMCUS ILOFF. COP. 19S0EOW. L.
That means i
Today’s Weather Fotocast
A. WAGNER. ALL ments RESERVED,
askes |For the same period
i: Buy More Realty
“| were ‘$1.3 billion at midyear, up. 201980 million - since Jah, 1. J
.|rental housing is’ owned through|
a ¥
in 1946,
last five years:
A% lof July went up one cent in Au-| , Bust this year.
“And the Milk]
Insurance Firms
Holdings Show Gain Of $80 Million
4 their roots in real estate.
Commercial and industrial yours LIE
ATR ?
Test portfolio “of ar ats. gc est po by American firms-in the! " |first half this year. | A report from the: Institute’ of | Life Insurance showed realty pur|¢hases notched $100 million. in {the first six months. ‘Of this, $56 {million was in com jal prop erties; $26 million, rental housing |
Farmers Receive Less for Milk, But Housewives Have to Pay More
Contradictory Situation Has Both Producers And Users of Indianapolis Area Complaining
! By TED KNAP When farmers get more for their milk, the housewife pays Vind per bottle. But when farmers get less for their milk, why for $4.43. Instead, the June, 1950, does the housewife still pay more? = pr That's the big question today in the Indianapolis milk price .re complaining about sliced milk checks and {housewives are grousing about higher prices at the per- quart level.
Good beef cows brought $22. 50. {Common , and medium sold ati [819050 to $22. Canners and cutters] moved at $16.50 to $19.50. Weighty | a cutters reached $20. In fairly active vealer trade at| - —————_ | steady prices, good and choce| {grades sold at $30.50 to $32. Common and medium brought $24 to lare too much like their parents.” —Dr, University report stating that, on g30 Good and choice heavy, State Board of Health, basis of increased costs to farm- | qlaughter calves moved at $29! Because juvenile court authorities know ers, milk in Indiana should sell, $31,
(Last of n Series) J
By BOB BOURNE ‘skinned’,” the committee stated.
The group quotes a Purdue
Lambs Up 50 Cents price held a state average of Prices on native spring lambs the parents. $3.41. {In Indianapolis, the price | rose 50 cents. Good and choice], was $3.60.) The committee, headed by!lots at $28 to $29. Medium and cause children's antisoclal atti-|
less per hundredweight than they | wil
“Vite insurance companies B have!”
| Foundation predicts another pen{ny increase in September or Oc- | tober. : ¢ The August increase and the! {anticipated one, however, can. be {traced to higher prices to farmTheir per-hundred price was | boosted 40 cents in August and 1 rise another 30 cents by Oc- | tober.
Dairy farmers received 72 cents | T5:
that the ‘due to rising costs of labor and | (An amended complaint filed in materials for processing and dis-|a sizable dairy farm. { Marion Circuit Court this week |tribution. C. Winfield Hunt, executive gsec- other areas, outside the upper |ized today, with the appointment Army formed a trust to raise consumer|retary of the Milk Foundation, prices without relaying the boostipointed out that milk has not The 124 a ines as much as other food prices. He added that although In the second half of July, the tlie prices have risen in the ugh {féw years, they have been outpaced by the boost in consumers’ 3 income, “Some farmers ‘are “pulling 1 no tutes the bulk of the milk sold. punches about whom to blame. | than No. A “Milk Producers Committee”
"-|they were paid $4.47. But the last week sent out a print-| X retail price has gone up. Local Truck Grain Prices ‘| Here are July prices of tne; [the area, The letter plamed local
milk producers associations for
any
‘Middleman Boosts’
Dairy Farmer Casius Bottema of [good brought $25.50 to $28. Com.- | tudes and eventual wayward-| Plainfield, was formed several mon brought $21 and higher. | ness years ago. Members say it repre-| Three decks of good and choic el {sents several hundred dairy farm- |94-.pound fed yearlings, in fall|Where delinquents result from ers in the Indianapolis. area. | shorn ard No, 1 pelts, reached {broken homes, it is found that One of the committee leaders, | 323. 50. Slaughter ewes sold the parents married young. Joe Rand Beckett of Mars Hill, steady at $8 to $12 ior medium| They were physically ‘capable sald, “We're -gétiing an awful | and choice grades, | poke in the nose.” Noon estimates of “The cost of living has gone up| were: hogs, 5975; cattle, and costs of operating a farm calves, 3 325, and sheep, 1225.
875; |ages, that keeping a home was! | father. ra-men-sized- job. They were not | [ready for it,
uaa cicada: have risen. But the milk price has | EE —™ ‘home. He. Dairy representatives explain dropped in the last few years.” "Form ‘Wayne Township’ The story of Danny TMustrates| yw, oo “middleman” boost is!said Mr. Beckett. A local the point. He is now 14 and is in
at-| torney, Mr. Beckett also operates | ‘Disaster Relief Group | White's Institute for Boys at WaWayne Township's disaster re-| bash. His parents were married Farmers also point out ‘that lief committee was being organ- young, and his father joined the of 12 members by William H. a steady job.”* carries on.
Midwest, pay higher milk prices. | He was
New York pays about $5 and| Book, South Carolina about $6.
chairman of the Indian-! dishonorably dis-
ok ~years- with: in. National-Bank.-Employees A few mediuin SE yearlings Grauel, who started with the oly in oe ond i now
Delinquent Parents Major
"land heifers sold at $22 to $23.50. Concern of Juvenile Court
Couples Who Marry Too Young, Fight Before ~ Children, Show No Affection Offen fo Blame —
“The trouble with most juvenile delinquents is that they Thurman Rice,
Indiana
this to be a fact,
{most of the work of the court is concerned with the parents. Records show that more than 80 per cent of the cases deal with
“In most cases,” said Juvenile Court Judge Joseph O., Hoffmann, {sold in various weights and truck | “we have found that discord and selfishness on the part of parents A few weeks ago, the father's {name got on the police blotter In the great majority of cases again when he came home drunk and attempted {youngest daughter—8 years old. The mother was in the hospital
of marriage but not economically at the time, and it was Danny's receipts stable, They found, at their early | {lot to call the police on his own
Danny doesn’t care much now. ‘He sald he wanted to leave
to attack the
wanted to. go to
The father is under lock and key, and will be for some time, {but the havoc he left behind will “pecause he couldn't get live as long as the family name
These are the children Juvenile - |apolis Red Cross disaster relief charged from the service after Court is concerned with.
| committee. {he stole a motor launch to go for| Members are Gordon Harker, a joy ride while he was stationed | Robert Teeter, Fred Pattman, in Panama. {Jennie Kelly, Paul White, Wil-| i Ne Omar RR Hal edi Tram “Carroll, Lawrence Kelsoe, Staxta.Iuinking... 1 3c; Grade 8 iacie, | Catherine Dunn, Harry Harding He came home to a wite hel over; He: Madison T. Shadley, Melbourne hardly knew and they. proceeded | liquid; - to havd five children in rapid suc-|] ne {cession. The father, pressed with ie |a family that kept him confined {at home, began to drink.
Local Produce:
und over; yy Louhorns 176; cook No. 2 poultry, é¢ less: Weber and Township Trustes
Samuel W. Johnson.
u. S. Statement
| under 4 Ihe and and Big 1
} tterfat—No. 1. 83¢: No. 2 Boe.
|ed letter of protest to farmers in sheild HINGTON. pus 5 To The couple argued and fought, 9. No.3 truck wheat, $104. naes. snd ‘Teceiots for {ie"ei [at first alone and then in front|] secticide packed with power fo Kill 2 white corn, $1.97 rent ems ren Aug. 21, at the children. In the last 10)
No. 2 yellow corn, $1.37, his
r pared with a year JE:
i: | Year Farmer Reta failing to get a fair price for| [io { soybeans #215. Last Year |years, the father has been ar-| Arnott Exterminating Co. ij 7 4 > 947 55 iE fre | farmers. = = he fit eeipts a $5088 % Hh : fia # rested 60-timesfor-drunkenness;| —+—Extorminators.of Rats, Mice, Moths a|l8 I. | “Milk produders. in the Indian INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING mouse Cash balance 5.138.830 830.318 4008814. 707 | vagrancy, child abuse and chudf = and Other Insects {1050 : 35 ire| APOlS Milk Shed are being FSi" 21.706.000 Gold yeserve 2% 352.87 475, 3.2% 2 007 04d 141 (neglect.
The New Method of
Roach Control Woy blr ih ms pow when 49 brushed -
wi other crawling insects and Is effective for
eh
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