Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 20 September 1950 — Page 12
°
Today in Business—
The Little Lady’s Going to Buy
With Lid on Device Credit, She'll Get Clothes, at Last
HAROLD H. HARTLEY, Times Business Editor SOME STORES are expecting a little upswing in women’s wear, | Middle income and marginal wage families have “been | shooting their pay on appliances. They went the “No Down Payment” or next-to-nething down route, and got their pay ‘tied up. : Then came Regulation W
$35,000 for the deal. But it won't/180 to 260 pounders this week and slapped the fail, not in that part of town, |Price of $21 to $21.50.
brakes on “buying with ajand not with Joe Stout running it. |
smile.” a Negro Education Now it takes some cash to get| THE INDIANAPOLIS Coma washer, deep freezer, television! mittee of the United Negro Colset or radio-phonograph. [lege Fund, which operates 32 During the hard goods spree, Negro colleges, met yesterday the little lady got a little bare. noon in the Lincoln Hotel. If she needed a dress, undies, hose| Top citizens all, they also had or anything else in the cover-up telegrams and letters of entrade, she waited. {couragement from other top citFamilies with real dough kept/izens John D. Rockefeller Jr. $2075; choice lights $21: buying ready-to-wear. That powler McCormick, chairman of 600 pounds bid $18 to $18.50. showed up in Increased sales of International Harvester Co.: Jobn/ Cattle Trade Slow
high-style women's wear, |Holmes, president of Swift & Co., But the middle range stalled,!ana Donald B.
didn’t ride the buying rocket. of Quaker Oats, Family money was going into items slated for the scarcity list. men can give their time and| Cattle, 1000; calves, 400; steers & = » |money to Negro education, a few and heifers slow, steady to weak . OTHER FACTORS have hurt. In families where the son is of go and do likewise. draft age, there's some holding| back. And the same goes for $25,000. young married couples, If they're chairman. going to have to live on $85 a| Joe Brown organized the local $22.50; canners and cutters, $16 to month, plus a small allowance, effort, and the campaign will step|$18.50; vealers fairly active, they cut down. And it looks as if the little lady who flips the breakfast eggs and darns the socks is finally going to get something to wear. And- you may hear her mutter, “It's about time.”
Perfect Cycle
A RUMOR WHICH HAS been beating through the automotive woods for 28 years, took on flesh and blood yesterday, became real and undisputed. It was the sale of the Perfect Circle Corp., with four plants in Indiana, now in its third generation of the Teetor family. The instant of public release In a sale that big is important. I can't say exactly how important, but the Perfect Circle Corp. stock has edged up about four points
Slip 23 Cents In Slow Trade
Quotations Steady To Weak in Light Cattle Market
apolis Stock Yards.
|weights were around $21.
Lourie, president was steady to weak with yester{day's decline. There were not
Perry E. O'Neal
drive, holding its asking date $35; common and médium, $25 to until November. |$31; bulls steady; medium and
Igood sausage bulls, $23 to $25 Get It Straight
/cutter and common, $19.50 THERE WAS 80 MUCH hub- $23.50. bub about Regulation W coming, Sheep were fairly active, with back, that people got confused.’ | They heard about the one-third . down and 21 months provision Sales of lambs about steady; me-
overlooked the much easier terms 800d and choice up to $29; comfor appliances. (mon quotable down to $20; It's 15 per cent down for ap- slaughter ewes unchanged; meplances, which should not make dium to choice $8 to $13.
much difference. Most people can| . rake up $30 to finance a $200 pur- Capehart Raises Communist Issue
chase. | 8o it’s still pretty easy to buy, appliances, and there are plenty around to buy. All you need is $15 per 100 and you can buy anything you want.
in the last week or so. That's . ot “leak buying.” Jobiana Charges Shielding of * = INDIANA fs bursting out at it i | TODAY, WITH THE informa- payroll seams. goutatitsi Reds in Government i
tion out, you can probably expect some profit taking on the stock, an old, old story. It was called a merger, but when a small company throws its chips in with a big company and becomes the tall of the dog, it|muscle power, loses control. : It w " Be L And to me that means sale. The on't on advantage of doing it that way| woRD I GET is that 2. strike
. Tat av ©lds million in capital yo yp of the Beveridge Paper Co. ale we | will be settled soon. will iS : Quel Swekiividery Internatiofal negotiator Pete, Wy d Spi i Sains taX | perrigo of the Printing Specialty iiss been going up and down the| son Products stock, oT ond Paper Products Union 18 In|yiate admitting they (Reds) were| sn # : 4 1o Bu Sompany ‘andy, government,” he said. IT'S BEEN PRETTY WELL| Company offered six cents an ars Lent 2 I bean \nown that Perfect Circle could/hour with a night differential. ort oC fe ot thef bought if someone would pay The union is asking 15 cents COMMUN trators the price. General Motors was|across the board. government proved to be once interested, but nothing jelled.| Best guess is the settlement ® difficult as dislodging them So that's the cycle of Perfect|figure will hover around nine ro South Korea. Circle, a business born before the cents, with paid holidays and va-| _ Cites Official Inaction automobile era, but which grew cations’tailored to please the un-| Sen. Capehart said the Repub- - with it until its sales hit around ion. licans in this fight were first met
Today's employment tally from the State Security Division totals 1,260,000 for mid-August, up 32,000 in factory jobs. Add harvest jobs and that about mops up all the state's
: Times State Service PORTLAND, Sept. 21—“The question before the voters in this election is whether they want to support a party which admits having 800 Communists in government positions or a , party |
which forced the removal of those " [Communists i This was an issue drawn by Sen. Homer E. Capehart in a| speech here last night before a Republican mass meeting. | “My opponent (Alex Campbell) |
almost
|
Prices for barrows and gilts were fully 25 cents lower than yesterday's average as sales were rather slow today at the <Indian-
- Early sales of good and cholo) indicated a!
| Sows were around 25 cents low-| jer, with prices averaging between! [$19 and $20.75. Choice light-)
When the Freedom Pledge reached Fire Station 13, it collected a lot of names. Fire Chief
| Hogs 10,000; rather slow; bar- Roscoe McKinney lead his firemen in joining the Crusade for Freedom by signing the statement.
(rows and gilts 25 to 50 cents low- 4 J ) and guts and 180 to 260 Sponsoring the Crusade is the National Commission for a Free Europe, with pounds $21 to $21.50; 160 to 185] pounds $20.50 to $21; 120 to 160, - pounds $15 to $17; sows 25 cents to instances more lower; good and; choice 300-550 pounds $18.75 to over
Slaw trade in steer and heifers)
It would seem that if these busy enough sold to provide quotation. |
for autos, and unfortunately, had dium and good, $25 to $28; few,
discuss situation at the third annual Hoosier State. Press Association
‘Korea Film Slated
[officer of the Hoosier draft, said| LAFAYETTE, Sept. 20—Col./it was accepted procedure for:
mechanical conference Oct. 28 at| Indiana University.
Albert J. Priller Services Friday
| Lifelong Resident,
Retired Cabinetmaker Albert J. Priller, 3 Karcher St.,
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _ Chief McKinney Joins Firemen in Freedom Pledge
Prices of Hogs
rE
8
en. Lucius Clay as
thinks the other is all right. Unfortunately, it wasn’t always {80. The Marines had little use for Gen. MacArthur in World War IL He was the competition; they took one route to Tokyo and he took another. - They felt he tried to suppress those Marines who were with him,
As an ex-Marine, it's been interesting to watch the feeling disappear. At first, the Marines stubbornly held to their old position. Then followed a phase which can best be described as the “Well, maybe the guy is human after all” stage. Immediately aft-
Rent Control To Be Heard
| |
Suit Here in November
A suit to lift property owners housing law as amended this year.
here from the rent deep freeze
The suit contends Mayor Fee-
(will be heard “sometime in No-/ney is not part of the governing
vember” in Federal Court.
It was filed yesterday by the | INational of us here in central Indiana can with Tuesday's decline; not lifelong resident of Indianapolis Owners, Inc., newly founded or(enough sold e ‘provide quota- and a retired cabinetmaker, will ganization of 1200 rental prop- Mayor Feeney had not signed the they are stories the Marines tell The campaign locally asks only tions; cows about steady; common | be buried in St. Joseph Cemetery erty owners here. { is'and medium beef cows, $19 to after services at 9 a. m. Friday, The Federation's petition asks | |$21.75; good quotable, $22 to/in Sacred Heart Catholic Church. the court to mandate Federal | Services will also be held at
Federation of
Housing Expediter Tighe
Home, |
|body of Indianapolis. The Council ordered decontrol on July 5, but Expediter Woods returned the resolution because
order. May Seek Injunction Mr. Wible said the Federation
E./may also seek a Circuit Court in- (justification
18:30 a. m.{in G. H. Herrmann Fu- Woods to uphold City Council junction to prevent the Council
aside for the Community Chest steady; good and choice, $32 to|neral Horde. Mr. Priller, who was action decontrolling rents {68, died yesterday in his home.
‘Mr, Priller retired 13 years ago
Survivors ‘include his wife,
last
| July,
Filing of the complaint for a
rent controls on housing as well as commerical properties. Mr.
{from voting on any new rent |resolution. The pending suit will not be
; his job at Robbins Body Co. declaratory judgment shadowed heard until after Nov. 1 unless it too us Jol member of RY re a report by Mr. Woods that he is declared an “emergency.” Fed-|thur stopped a young Marine as| |Heart Church and the Knights of Will seek to keep or impose new eral Judge William Steckler is!
|St. George. |early sales of lambs about steady. | 8
Sheep, 1000, fairly active; early!
[now conducting the outside divi;sion of the Court in Evansville
Mary; five daughters, Mrs. Ruth Woods yesterday also said he will and Terre Haute.
Hornberger, Detroit; Mrs. Delores seek federal price ceilings on real|
Barron, Denver; Mrs. Mary From-
estate sales.
builders yesterday, means more
Rent controls die here on Dee. 131, 1950, unless ceilings are con-
hold “and Mrs. Silvie “Jefferson, This -action, -said realtors and tinued by Council action.
{Indianapolis, and Sister Regina!
|. Congress Is not expected to act
Priller, Daughters of Charity Or-| Tegimentation” and a further ex- on the Wood's plans until after
der, Mobile, Ala.; seven sons,| Walter, Asbury Park, N. J.; Harold, U. 8. Navy; Hugo, Bloomington; Joseph, Mooresville, and! Albert, Edward and Alfred, Indi-| anapolis; a sister, Mrs. Florence Sullivan, Indianapolis; a brother, Frank, Long Beach, Cal. and. 15 grandchildren.
Two 18-Year-Olds Flee State Farm
Times State Service PUTNAMVILLE,- Sept. Two 18-year-old inmates of Indiana State Farm walked away from their dormitory early today. They are Willlam McCarthy, R. R. 4, Indianapolis, who was sentenced Sept. 1 to serve one| year for vehicle taking, and Keith! Brown, McMinnville Tenn., sen-! tenced Sept. 8 to serve 94 days| for petit larceny.
Times State Service | BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Sept. 20 Franklin D. Schurz, South Bend |
PLANS NEWSPRINT TALK
In our Tribune secretary-treasurer and buying $94,000 worth of kha business manager, is scheduled to|drill from an old foe—Japan. Copyright, 1950, by The Indianapolis
the current newsprint
|
$13 million a year. with a barrage of “red herrings” The exchange ratio was four Goodyear Gesture {and “bugaboos” from the Presiand a half shares of Perfect TOMORROW Goodyear Tire & dent. | Circle to one of Thompson Pro-/Rubber Co. does one of its noblest| Then When the Communists ducts. jobs. And that looks as if the Teetors| That's when the rubber comhad made a good deal. pany taps winners in the Indiana .On the bases of sales volume it soil conservation contest.
would be over eight to one. It'll be a luncheon at the Marott
y |Hotel with an all-expense Arizona | Progress Progress {trip and plaques going to Nelson. THE PROGRESS LAUNDRY; Bajioway, Covington; Lawrence operating three laundries and two McKinney, Wingate: Warren dry cleaning companies is about\Graves, Hillsboro: J. Lee Foster, to stick its service toe into the| Attica, and Ward Mann, King-| warm, inviting waters of the self- an | serve field. —— » Cm keep clean There's inspiration in the faces
were on the run from Republican | attacks, the Justice Department|
nition,” he said. “Now, with communism an ad-! mitted enemy, we find those who held up the attack against the 3
mitting that at least 800 of them were in our government. Who. put them there? How many more are there? : “Why doesn’t the party which
was reluctant to pass the ammu-' _ A | Local Produce
Communists in Washington ad- 20c and stags, 13c, and No. 3 poult “When were they put there? |
| ner
U. S. Statement
Eggs—Current receipts 55 | le; Grade A large, 47c; Grade A medium.’ + Grade “B large, 32c. and no grade]
Poultry—Fowls, 4'2 Ibs. and over, 23¢:| 43 lbs. and Leghorns,
nder
an No. 1. Butterfat—No. 1, 83c: No. 2. 50¢
field 55 years, will open a selfserve laundry with 30 Bendix twirlers at 42d and College about the middle of next month. Joe Stout, president, says: “That's what the people seem to want, They bring their laundry,|
leave it washing, and go to buy|1951 hereabouts will be Sept. 22 |
their groceries. When they come
back it's clean, and dry if they 82s miser will unveil its polished E nose to the Indianapolis public.
want it.”
ADDED WILL BE an on-the-|drive any other car. They've been . spot dry cleaning plant. And that Nash owners almost as long as 1950 follows a trend, too. No expense there's been a Nash.
of pickup and delivery. Faster
service, 24 hours, and five if you a
early-to-bed fellows who keep our soil producing.
Nash Peek
of the farmers who attend this affair. They're ruddy, clear-eyed,
THE FIRST NASH PEEK for
That's when this rugged little
There are people who won't
And that speaks pretty well tor |
admits 800 were in our govern-
ment expenses and receipts for the cur
WASHINGTON, Sept. 30 (UP)—Govern
trols to July 1, 1951, under the
Noble H. Wible, executive secre-|
City Council has the sole authority to decontrol rents under the
20—-The Aussies, most of whom
{istence !Sept. 29. This lecture, the first of! [the university's convocation ‘series bs... to cee fOr the year, is entitled, Korea — Battleground for Freem.”
With Mobile Arsenal
tension of landlord subsidizati of renters.
More Regimentation The federation’s action also followed faflure by City Council last Monday to extend rent con-
on
local option rent control law. The complaint named Mr. Woods and Louis G. Schaefer, acting rent director, as defendants. It was filed by Attorney
tary of the federation.
The complaint contends the
Aussies Buy Khaki From Old Foe—Japan
CANBERRA, Australia, Sept.
|January, .
War -Type State Militia Studied
Truman Holds Bill Giving Authority
ton Hitchcock said a bill now on President Truman’s desk authorizing states to form “replacement militia” for activated National Guard units would be very similar lar to that of the last war. The measure provides for the federal government to supply
still hate the Japs, are finding | one post-war development ironical. | Australian manufacturers, - it seems, don’t have enough khaki! material on hand to fill Army requirements for uniforms. To outfit its fighting men, therefore, | the Australian government is] ki | Times | C.
and the Chicago Daily News, In
Times State Service
{Homer F. Kellems, former chief local draft boards to order the Pp information on Gen.|induction of delinquents even if uglas MacArthur's generaljthey have not had physical ex-|
[only complete color-motion picture! “They can straighten out their film of South Korea now in ex-| delinquency in the Army,” he said.
| . . Local Truck Grain Prices of troo No. 2 truck wheat, 31.80. |staff in Tokyo, will present the aminations. No. 3 white corn, $3.10. No. 2 yellow corn, 31.37. No. 2 soybeans, $3.07. No. 3 oats, Tic.
at Purdue University]
|
s Captured
[—Two AWOL soldiers from Tex-|283 enlistments. with. more than :|as, captured in an automobile, |60 per cent of the goal already ac-
but did not elaborate.
jcials at Ft. Harrison announced “South goals for recruiting in the Army and Air Force for the remainde of the month. :
{enlistments in “Indiana, a 50 per cent increase over August. More {than 65 per cent of this goal has COLUMBUS, O., Sept. 20 (UP) been attained, Army objective is
ment give the people the answers
ny product to have served so in
INDIANAPOLIS, Sept. 20 (UP) |
—Today’s polio totals in Indiana | since Jan. 1, compared with the same date last year:
No. of Cases Deaths Counties | 266 16 64 | 1949 77 80 71
New cases reported today: Four | 8t. Joseph County and one in|
rent fiscal year through Sept. Ar 880°
to those questions? I challenge ™™* ™ * M8 85, [i vear day. ithat party to do so.” | Receipes "031100318 | 83439ae373| Officers said Robert Pitcock A —— | etic Lalance 4.958393 5908 334430423 Crooksville, O., and Richard Rife, : ' ” 56,906,364, .371,308.371 Columbus, had in their car 10,000 Polio Totals Rubik nee iti still
rounds of 22-caliber ammunition, |
CLEAR] noUsE (11 boxes of 20-gauge shotgun! ciemsies TOU CLEARING 2s tF me gauge shotgun ebita iio 9%8,892,000 . : : shells; fishing equipment; knives; Local Issues three electric razors; eight shirts: two blankets; animal traps; re-| —Sept, 20— |volvers, rifles and shotguns. Amen STOCKS oo 4 *“**| Police said the youths admitted american States pid ..... Bee 14 |Stealing several cars and pulling L pfd ...... 102%3 A jobs” in seven states,
Po *B. k Yrds pfd
. 8. Ayres 4' oli RR & 8t
18, com-| were held in city prison here to- complished.
| LUTON, England,
nt ; Belt RR & Stk Yrds com .... 34% - gh want express service. long without letting a customer Vanderburg County. First case | sBobbs Merrill com"... 12, KILLED IN CRASH Progress has set aside about down. : {this year in Vanderburg County. | Central Sova a 43ie ,4s'a KNOX, Ind. Sept. 20 (UP)— a fiw. Charles Rohr, 7, « dairy products y . . So Cummins Eng com .... .... S28 company truck driver, was killed | | Consolidated Finance s ota |. os last night in a collision on U. 8.| ) . niin-Car-Na-Var .......... 1% 1.2 35 near here. Mr. Rohr was dead ) . ’ | Eastern Ind Tele 5 pfd . o7 on arrival at Holy Family Hos-| Co : \ Family Finance com “ag pital in La Porte. Family Finance §% o . . fd w y | Hamiton fe Co com 25'a 28 Official Weather | Herf-Jones cy A pfd .... 000. 1 Il UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU |Home T 5% pid ....... 3 —Sept. 20, 1950 [*Hoo Drug Co con . i Ye 16% — Hind Gas a Water com 00000 Haw 23% Sunrise 8:00) Sunes... 4:48 (Ind Mich Elec 41 pfd Il 108° 107 {Ind feigpoone 3% pd ........ a, 3284s Total precipitation since Jan. 1 [inde pi 4% pra 11100 dels df Bema ince Yan 0 TM HG . [Pots Water. Co. 5% pra 108 ‘|, The following table showy thie tempera- | i *Indpls Water 44% pf 102 ture In other citi&s : | Jefferson National Life com © 1 13 | Station? High Low | | Kingan & Co com 65 | Atlanta . I 55 64 | | Kingan & Co com ..... eee 4 5 [Boston . roe . 1 5 | Kingan & Co pfd va. 84 #9 Burbank Seiad 81 55 | Lincoln Nat Life 128 133 (Chicago . dy 72 63 | Lynch Corp. ....... ..l.... 144 14'p Cincinnati : I. | 82 6 Marmon- Herrington com ... 3a 6% Cleveland . i550 | ! Mastic Asphalt .. 6 [Evansville ...... 89 7 Nat Homes com .:. tire. 23 . Pt. Wayne 73. 89 | Nat Homes pfd 103 | Worth 31 70 | *N Ind Pub Serv com 21% Indianapolis (City) .. #0 66 IN Ind Pub Serv 414 pf 1%, 1K Naas city reve . it 9 | ph Maljors Go. com Pr 345% Minneagau=t. Paul Ill Te a1 | lok ress Laundry com |New Orleans ....... .. S87 70 | Pub Serv of Ind com 25% New prork . 0 6 {Pub Serv of Ind 3% ..... 8's Qkishoma -City loa | Schwitser Cummins ofd ': 1314 San Antonio 193 8 | er £ 3 SE nana . 20% $an _ Prancisco .. 67 52 | PARTLY CLOWDY AND {Bond Qu Epid [3 | Washineton, Dc" 9 @ CLOUDY ARIAS Fanner & Co ia vrd » — nn i h Jerre Haute. Malieabie 104 The New Method of i { Olen Tie onone 8% otd £00 - Roach Control BONDS ) ’ , \ ¥ A &Bteends ~~ ....... 98 -...| SCATIER(D lon & Seen Me woo iB eee] Why bother with messy powder when 4.9.2 SHOWIRS tian Morley Ss°61 --«(} liquid, brushed around just where i Is ville Tele Co 28 sens 5 om r Fertilizer 5s 58 ....... soi. |) neaded, kills roaches, sais, walerbugs and Stu n of com Bidg'sHle {1 22221} ofher crawling Insects and Is effective for ; THUNDER olumbia Club §. BE tay ete : * STORMS Citisens Ind Tel dvs 61°... +10 ---- |} many weeks. Invisible, odorless and stalni | Ramis Reo fats, 38 ooo om, 49:2 KK reaches th sunfry, guick 7M MCUSHIROFF. COPR 1950 LOW. 1 A WAGNER ALL MGHIS RESERVED. fain on Mf WS | Jen ym - A : | Ind Limestoge sds +. ov.io 38 1" (} secticide. packed with fo kill ; TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—Thunderstorms and showers will occur tonight and early tomor- Ind Ksso“Tel'ss'1s a : power fo ki ’ y bop : . ndpi v eras row in Pennsylvania and the Virginias and from the Mississippi westward through the | Kubiner Packing 4 5 gg” of Arnott Exterminating Co. Rockies northward from the Gulf to the upper Great Lakes. Two major air flows are reported, ERE wile ef Exterminators of Rats. Mics Moths El b) J i y 3 . > s Ean unas ean wil n 'one warm and humid streaming up the tropics and Gulf and the other cool mass pouring across es is citings ar a hn ! i the Canadian border into the plains and y Mountain area. : ILL [Le ass 08 A SRA = Vi ” as ih IE 2 2 i x : of ; y % 2 4
ow
small arms, ammunition and basic uniforms to the wuncompensated auxiliary guardsmen. Meanwhile, Gen. Hitchcock, also state draft director, said moré than 100 Hoosier draft delinquents would “go to the head of the class” in their local draft boards. FBI Called In Local FBI officials reported they had been summoned in on Some cases of “draft dodging”
Maj. Walter Miller, operations
Recruit Goals Set Indiana Military District offi-
The Air Force hopes to get 454
|share ithe landings on Wolmi he mes{saged Vice Adm. Arthur Struble, [commander of the Seventh Fleet,
—Official State of Indiana will be conveyed here this evening to officers and
men. of Pennsylvania's 28th Division.
officials will camp for dinner at the officers’ mess and a tour of the cantonment. The Governor will be accompanied by Brig. Gen. Robinson Hitchcock, general, and possibly by Lt. Gov. John Watkins. |
er that came the “You gotta admit he's got his good points” era. In a matter of days the Marines were in the “Honest to Pete, he's all right” stage. And now some [Marines are even ready to fight |the man who gets verbally rough with Gen. MacArthur.
Stories Making Rounds A number of stories are going around. I have no way to knowing they are true. I suspect most {of them aren't. But the point is
{each other. | | IT think I know what that| means. They are looking for some for their flip-flop. They feel they've got to have some explanation for the boys back in the States who still cling to the “hate that man” tradition.
One story is that Gen. MacAr-
his party boarded ship at Sasebo, and inquired: | “Son, do you have a girl?” | The kid said he did, back in Texas. Gen. MacArthur is supposéd to have replied: “In a couple of days (the invasion had not started yet) she’s going to be mighty proud you're a Marine.” Another yarn is that Gen. MacArthur settled back in his chair after dinner the other night and remarked: “President Truman probably will give me hell for sending the Marines in ahead of, the Army.” The odds are considerable that Gen. MacArthur never said any such thing. None of the Marines I know dine with the general. But| I've heard the story a dozen |
time State Adjutant General Robin-
| Ss. | | Softens Up Navy Too Perhaps without realizing it MacArthur has done his of courting good will. After
that the “Navy and the Marines never shone more brightly than this morning.” That did a lot to soften up the Navy as well as the Marines. Adm. Struble has always been a MacArthur supporter, but some of his men had their doubts. One officer said it was the first time Gen. MacArthur ever used the word “Navy.” In World War II, he insisted, the general always referred to “my ships.” It’s a new tune the ILeathernecks are singing in Korea these days. But it's a heartening one.
State to Officially Greet 28th Division
Times State Service CAMP ATTERBURY, Sept. 20 greetings from the
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 20, 1050 All's Peaceful on the Pacific—
MacArthur and Marines (AreJustLikeThis) Now.
Leathernecks Get Praise for Spearheading
Landings; They Return the Compliment
i By JIM. G. LUCAS, Scripps-Howard Staff W KIMPO AIRPORT, Sept. 20—One |{feuds—between Gen. MacArthur and the Marines—is over. : At least, it seems to be over between Gen. MacArthur part of the Marine Corps—which is most of it—that landed at Inchow and started barreling down the road toward Seoul, Each
}
riter of World War II's bitterest and that
Just yesterday a Marine major told me with considerable feeling, “That man is one.of the real military geniuses of our generation.” I learned later than Gen, MaoArthur had awarded the major's commanding officer a Silver Star, The whole regiment felt it had been honored. Jothi Howl Strangely, the feeling that Gen. MacArthur will protect the Marines from their detractors. “Show the old man what we can do and he'll got to bat for us,” they say.
Campbell Flays GOP Leadership
Sees Isolationism Enslaving World
Times State Service HAMMOND, Sept. 21—The Republican leadership was accused here last night by Alex Campbell, Democratic senatorial nominee, of “urging the American people to abandon the rest of the world to slavery.” Mr. Campbell said the GOP is still trying to convince the people that their leadership of isolationism will “somehow pérmit us to be free in a shell.” “One moment the world sees the Republican Party snarling that American aid to Korea is pouring money down a rat hole,” he said. “The next moment, many leaders of the same party are rattling the sabers to make Formosa an American military outpost even if it means going to war with 400 million Chinese. “They (GOP) bitterly oppose what we do in Korea with the support of the United Nations. Yet they advocate that we embark on a program of Formosa first which is nothing less than imperialism gone mad”
Sees Confusion Natural The candlidate said it is no wonder the American people are confused, . “The Republicgn Party calis itself the only h of the American way of life and at the same time votes the Communist Party line on foreign policy,” he said. “Four Indiana Republicans who are supposed to represent Indi-
ana citizens fought to kill vital legislation for aid to Korea many months ago. -
“The fact that these die-hard isolationists from Indiana failed to derail our foreign policy did not change the minds of the ag-
gressors. The Red invaders are
still counting on men and women like Indiana’s two Senators and four GOP Congressmen to make American intervention impose sible.”
® General Telly's coming with a Brand-New Deal... Watch for the Store with the “TELE-PLAN" Sea/! R$
Gov. Schricker and other state visit the training
state adjutant
They will be guests of Maj. Gen. | Daniel B. Strickler, commanding officer of the 28th. Gen. Strickler
- Swedish Review Honors rection.
Indiana U. Professor BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Sept. 20
has won recognition as the author of the most significant articles on 18th Century Swedish history to be published in the United States in the last 10 years. The tribute is contained in the
current issue of the Swedish His-!
torical Review published in Stockholm.
Future Homemakers To Meet at Butler
Annual business
——— at Butler University Saturday will| girls
Miss Hattie Lundgren, head of
be attended by high school
from 14 Indiana counties. |
the home economics department,
Precipitation 24 hrs. endin 7:30 a. m. 2.27 5ald the session would open at) : 1319319:30 4. m. and continue until 3:30
Pp. m. in Jordan Hall.
SHAW STILL GAINING Sept. 20 (UP) —Doctors reported a steady improvement” today in the condition of George Bernard Shaw, 94-year-old playwright,
jwho broke a: thigh 11 days ago.
The flareup of his old kidney complaint was subsiding, the bulletin said -
Prof. John J. Murray, Indiana| shells, seven boxes of 30-30 rifle University history department, |
meeting of |Future Homemakers of America
sald the visit will not be an in-
WATCH REPAIRING Immediate Service On * © MAIN SPRINGS © CROWNS O CRYSTALS and © STEMS Reasonable Prices!
—— ; JEWELRY (CO
|
the laws of the United States, shall
hours.
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THE INDIANA NATIONAL BANK OF INDIANAPOLIS Notice of Shareholders’ Meeting
Notice is hereby given that pursuant to call of its Directors, a special - f meeting of the shareholders of The Indiana National Bank of Indi- { anapolis will be held at its banking house at 3 Virginia Avenue in the City of Indianapolis, State of Indiana, on Thursday, October 19, 1950 at 11:00 o’clock A. M. (C.S.T.) for the purpose of considering and | determining by vote whether an agreement to merge and consolidate the said Bank and The Union Trust Company of Indianapolis, located in the City of Indianapolis, State of Indiana, under the provisions of
the purpose of voting upon any other matters incidental to the merger and consolidation of the two banks. A copy of the aforesaid Agreement executed by a majority of the Directors of The Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis and approved by the Board of Directors of The Union Trust Company of Indianapolis, providing for the consolidation, is on file at the Bank and may be inspected during business
BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
‘be ratified and confirmed, and for
J. KURT MAHRDT, Cashier
solidate the said Bank and
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any other matters incidental to the
of Indianapolis;
Tae Unro® TrusT COMPANY OF INDIANAPOLIS
Notice of Shareholders’ Meeting
Notice is hereby given that pursuant to call of its Directors, a special meeting of the shareholders of The Union Trust Company of Indianapolis will be held at its banking house at 120 in the City of Indianapolis, State of Indiana, on 19, 1950 at 1:30 o’clock P. M. (C.S. and determining by vote whether an agreement to merge and conTrust Company and The Indiana National - Bank of Indianapolis, {ocated in the City of Indianapolis, State of Indiana, under the provisions of the laws of the United States shall be adopted, ratified and confirmed and for the purpose of voting upon proposed merger and of the two banks. A copy of the aforesaid Agreement Board of Directors of The Union Trust Company of executed by a majority of the Directors of The Indiana National Bank providing for the consolidation, is on file at the Bank
SY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS.
ast Market Street, ursday, October T.), for the purpose of considering
ii ion approved Indianapolis and
CLARENCE R. KUSS, Secretory
