Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 October 1950 — Page 16
py
.. BUSINESS ov T ASLE far 8 in there pitching. . By business just got wi how Ao do it.
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yo
NE
E They found labor matched! - 2 their lobbies, threatened of-
fice holders with defeat, and swung a mighty club in the law
ZT halls.
- <r
hat. They assessed members.
And that's something business “hasn't got around tp, but may soon. ’ ” THE STATE C. OF C. helieves| that a lot of things go wrong In politics. because the voter is wn « fused, fed borderline truths, ° pamphlets which have no truth i" in them at all, §, So the State C. of C, has its ¥ participation program which goes : right down to the local level of ringing doorbells, town meetings. It reaches the man in his home. ~ ~ ~
EA
THE PLAN IS WORKING ke|
a charm. In Kokomo and New| Castle, for instance, the people became aware of which ecandidates were qualified and which were not, But business will have te Z paise more money. Thera are © fewer to give, fewer to work. It's a tougher job. But in Indiana business is on the way—te your front door and to the polls.
"Grain Merger
THE GET-TOGETHER of the Cleveland Grain Co. with the in-| terests of Sam Harrell and associates was really a {trade management and facilities. But there was cash involved, some $2,330,000 plus a grain inventory of $1,800,000. In simple language the Cleveland company needed a tie-in with the Goodrich Brothers | country elevators to get the | grain. Together the two com“panies ean store more than 6.000,000 bushels, © Kurt F. Pantzer, director of *$he Indiana company and Charles | adN. Wells, both of Barnes, Hickam, Pantzer and Boyd handled the) “Segal details with Horner H. Coch.ran representing both the Ohio “and Indiana Sopa nies, ” - ARTHUR C. W ATKINS, Cleve- | sland, president of the Cleveland | “Co. continues. But after that | there's an officer mix. Charles | aR. Barkley, Cleveland, vice presi-| “dent; G. A. Pritchard, executive . Nice president; Edwin K. Shepper, Lice president; C. B. Libbert, vice president and treasurer, Indiah-| Tapolis; R. T, Creekmore, vice | president, and Evans. M. Harrell, £pecretary, Winchester.
ting- bigger.
Off to Everywhere
I THOSE TWO globe-trotters,| . gd Dowling and Elmer Krueger, z were off today in seven league air £ hoot to tramp the dust around pe world.
d and winked good: Office safe. 1 te atl Bastern Ar. This time they used acetylene Rian § ©; Tra ..: a ——¥tnes— FHght 186 Tor—Chi [torches, punches and hammers. |} Lincoln Nat Life . 1 134 Ber ° “headway. armon-Herrington com . » 6 We Cos Sy umioipa Alrpor Los! A small office safe yielded $60! | Mastic oo Dhalt 0] . { Angeles, then off to Tokyo, Hong for their efforts but all the big | Net Homes pid . 1 . Kong, Bangkok, Calcutta, Delhi, 53f¢ yielded was “experience. N ing ih Sery Sa 103 eens Soe a ] ; Karachi, Istanbihl, Rome, Switz- Shi ER Mallory Co 20 Ye { erland, Germiany, Vienna. Paris, ip , Movements ocoyress LAUDALY So a 3 Spain, Porfugal and back home By United Pros {Rab serv of Ind 3% ’ | Nov, 18 after the votes are , New York er vals—De Grasse. Havre: Scawitze r-Cummins pid isis! ) Puerto Rice, n Jusn: Sania Mar So Ind G 3 B 21 gountéd. Salpasaise; Yrusuay. Buenos Aires; ers-80 Ind G & E of fa’ ui, - 4 n-3 New York Da partures—Steel Director, Stokely. va Camp y . THEY TRAVEL LIGHT and Beirut. Tanner & Co ne ota a * fast, see a lot<in a hurry. — Mache Coa a in ~. And you can go and do. like- Official ‘Weather Onited Telephone 5% otd ... 98 “wise if you have $1700 plus tax UNITED STATES ES WEATHER BUREAU Union Tit PONDS ZL 87
HAROLD H. HARTLEY Times Business Editor
Then labor found a way of raising election funds effectively < and fast. Unions didn’t pass the
of its price ball on washers.
Keep an eye on this Harrell Jed somewhat batfered and operation. It's big time and get- (scorched but with | tx professional
— og og Prices Steady in Active Trade
Good, Choi EP at the ballot. box anymore: Grodes hoice
At $20 to $20.25 Hogs were moving at generally
steady prices in moderately active trade today at the Indianapolis
NESS
se in the last few years as to
Business leatied tow heavily on lobbies, depending on!gteckyards. 4 taking over the legislators after they’ re elected.
Good and choice grades, 185 to — {270 pounds, brought $20 to $20.25. (covers up "three “types of ~ dis-| A few loads sold at $20. 35. (honesty: “By wage workers who are giving less in labor than they | should.
{mostly $20, occasionally $20.25; 120 to 160 pounds $15 to $17; sows | steady early; later weak to 25
“By employers who are in- (lower; few choice light sows creasing prices to include all |§19. 75; bulk 300 to 550 pounds taxes. {$1850 to $19.50; around 600
{pounds up $18 to $18.25. Cattle 2800; calves 600; steer
“By sovarnment ‘which is fooling us with sulisidies, pensions and other things for which it (and heifer trade opening slow; is going into debt.” {scattered sales about steady; His curtain line is a memory | Some interests bidding a shade plece: “The American people are’ lower; cutter and beef cows’ finding out they cannot get some- *teady; bidding 25 to 50 lower [thing for nothing.” - jon canners; high medium to aver-
"TV Color Fight age good yearlings and lght|
(steers $29 to $30.50; liberal share WAYNE COY SHOULD have| (here considered eligible to sell at
heels when the FCC gave the CBg8| Nothing done on heifers; 0dd| color system the tentative green|head high medium and good beef light. cows $21 to $21.50; common and RCA wanted the FCC to leave medium $18.25 to $21; canners the decision up to the public. And and gariere $15 to $18; weighty Admiral’s Ross D, Siragusa said cutters to |if the CBS system goes through it |Dulls; taking largely $24.50 down. | will cause the public to lose 95 Vealers fairly active, steady per cent of the $3 billion it has good and choice, in TV sets, mon and medium, I've a hunch .there’s some CUllS, $17 to $24.50. royalty swag mixed up in the Sheep, 1500; only moderately deal and that's what the yowls Active; fat lambs, 50c lower; good | may be hous and choice, $27 to $28; top, 528; uv Th [medium and good, $24.50 to $27; VP They lcommon, $20 to $24; largely $22 THE oy So PULL on appli-jup; two loads good and choice ances since the Korean War is/90-96-pound fed yearlings, weak still jacking up prices. [to 25¢ lower at $24.75; siaighter Admiral raised appliance tags ewes unchanged; medium (from §10 to $30. (choice, 8 to $13.
And Bendix has kicked along ‘Barkley Takes sly Dig At Gary Republican
$25 to $31;
Look for more until the govFhument puts the whole kit and kaboodle in the -deep freezer, |
wages as well as prices, If not, the economic. guessers, ‘dent Alben Barkley took a sly
{who draw the curves into. the fu-|di§ at a locally prominent Re|ture, predict we'll blow the top Publican when he addressed the loff the inflation mountain. |United Jewish Appeal meeting
here yesterday. 'Cob-iana Dr. Philip Rosenbloom, high in
I GREET THE ENDL ES inge-| [UJA affairs and Gary GOP cirnuity of the American in finding | cles, moved through a group of uses for the corn cob. {Democrats with the remark: Recently a Hoosier firm showed |guess I'm a lone Republican.” ~ how corn cobs could be ground | “Brother, if you're a Republican up and blasted into an electric you really are alone,” he Veep motor to clean it. cracked. The latest came last Saturday |“ at a farmside gas station between Paoli and French Lick. Local Stocks and | Bonds The farm wife came out, filled my tank then wiped my wind- | shield with a wet corncob, It worked, too. in
amen & it & Sk a1 com
Safe ‘Greets’ Thugs Eel Hain With Steely Sener
The big safe at Tiffany LaunInc., 425 N. Senate Ave., set-
din
li:
dry led down. to a steely silence to-
all have their ¥yes on the large
Allen & Steen
a———b i rp n——————————
Hogs 12,000; 160 to 185 pounds, |
$18.50. Little done on|
$32 to $35; com-|
GARY, Oct. 2 (UP)—Vice-Pres-|
“J .
Ya ” (Rar . Ca Public debt » Go d reserve
{A430 Vincent
{known that most of the television|$28.50 to $30.50; medium oras| e a S fee 26.
{industry would swing from the natives §25 to §
Pittsburgh Papers
Mailers Seek Wage, | Insurance Increases
PITTSBURGH, Oct. 2 (UP)-— Pittsburgh's three daily newspapers suspended publication today after members of the AFL Mailers Union went on strike higher wages and Increased in-
surance benefits.
The two afternoon newspapers, the Pittsburgh Press, a Scripps|Howard newspaper, and the Sun{Telegraph, halted their presses olafter running off a small number |of copies for their files: ) | A spokesman at the Press said several bundles reached the mailing platforms but cr 3 ‘not picked up. / Meanwhile, publishers of the three papers e scheduled to meet at noo today to discuss the situation. A representative
of the Pittsburgh Publisher's As-|
sociation said no union repre-| sentatives would be present and that no meeting with the union Has been scheduled.
The other Pittsburgh daily, the morning Post-Gazette, was forced to suspend publication last night. The early editions of the paper never left the mailroom and _|shortly after midnight when the newsstaff normally would have been getting the later editions ready, a telephone operator said,| “Hverybody's s gone home.”
U.S. Statement
i NASHINGTON, a 38. 2 (UP) -—Government exbanses an pts for the current ‘|fincal ear i: roueh t. 28, compared A Year ag oy 14
Bs ais
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24.602.423
orplie
ance
. a INDIANAPOLIS “cuEArING HOUSE Brg ae tg ie Lm {honor unsullied. 3 es cy rd ola is i i - Manager Artist T. Gant, 441 N, |Home ¥ & T s% otd PB ei Walcott 8t., #aid the lanudry had |Ind Asso 8 Wh 2 2 i : I n | |been- enteréd for the second time i Hin nf 108 © 107° this year but couldn't remember x) euliy ptd Ni 3% exactly how many times in the aan be ahd » pl rasta 100% + Indianapolis |lagt’ few years. The safe crackers 4ih lib Sealty Co dpls
‘BIRTHS BOYS s—-Salvatore, Doris Cherry Richard,
fm shits SA
. Mary
Wioriass Brive preg
hey were!
2 That is the only way the North
or oe
Times the Talephoto Marines push toward the 38th Parallel against the North Koreans after i Se house-to-house fi ghting.
ay,
Vidory ar lela han Final— _
North Koreans Like Ghosts; UN Forces Hunt Opposition
| Reds Flee Garbed das Civilians; Retreat
Safely as Enemy Seeks to Salvage Army
By JIM G. LUCAS, Seripps-Howard Staff Writer SEOUL, Oct. 2—KEven in defeat, the North Koreans Fetain
most of their ghost<like qualities.
Their attack. four months ago was sudden. It seemed to come for from nowhere and everywhere at the same time. It rolled on at ‘blitzkrieg speéd,” but often you couldn't see it until it hit. It was (here one minute and gone the next. It did everything it shouldn't,
{many things the experts said it couldnt, but it was always there, | pushing us back. Just as abruptly, it was halted., We hit what seemed an Iim{penetrable barrier one day and] |the next almost fell on our face from the force of our own momentum, July in Reverse
Since the fall of Seoul, it has ‘been difficult if not impossible to locate the front. This is July in {reverse. . | The other day, I went with Adm. Arthur D. Strible to 10th Corps headquarters. There the staff had a task to set a bomb line, That's an imaginary point behind which it isn't safe fo hit You might bomb your own men. Adm. Struble thought it would take a couple of hours, He spent all day at it. Time after time the bomb lines had to be changed. Today, we have theoretical bomb) lines. But they aren't worth much, Correspondents who two weeks |ago considered a 500-yard ad|vance big news now refer to the {rambling South Koreans, to the |onrushing Ast Cavalry and fo the 'racing Marines. There are some . isolated spots of resistance. But
i
\
’ Pretiek. il in fierce
. A
after Gud alcanal w we never really bothered. Here, because the Reds 'had no air force, we never tried much concealment. ‘Worst Kept Secret’ Even when we were losing it was always possible to spot our ‘ine from the air, On the enemy side nothing stirred. As for our Inchon landing plan, Rear Adm. Arleigh Burke says it was the “worst kept secret of the war.” We've been lucky. At Inchon where the Seventh Fleet is at anchor, merchant ships often don’t bother to douse their lights during air alerts. A few days ago, however, we had a taste of what a surprise attack might do. Two Yaks got through at dawn and| bombed. the cruiser Rochester, One narrowly missed Adm. Struble. Another bounced off the fantail crane. Inches either way and it would have set off a magszine, If that had happened I wodldn't be writing this story. Nobody slept on the Rochester that night. Eventually we may learn. But we'll probably have to do it the hard way. -The enemy already knows. And that's how-—even in defeat--he’s still able to make
they're 40 and 50 miles apart. By our the time you get to’ them the
Ji} {crouble--i¢ there was any—is|
|
Fly over yesterday's battlefield and all you see it a lot of white/clad civilians walking: down the |roads., From the air you wonder if Korea ever was at war. An | occasional war-wrecked town is
merely a cigaret burn on a bright day
green carpet. Many of the Reds’ |best soldiers came disguised as (civilians and refugees. They're {headed back the same way. Good Cameafiage
‘Koreans can salvage some of
JE _ Pauline Amt: |
R Sewell, ©
am; J Viral Sait a 00 ob-| their armies. It's not a very nice am. Dorothy ~Legeins: |way but they're not proud. A old, Nell Sork. Morris. salvaged army or any major part e narles ry Jobm-| lof it can always regroup and fight . Mary Lee Miler. (again. The Reds are able to do : tine en A its for two reasons. sy good ual, Jean gan: Thomas, Ruth Taylor: te K and y night John. Mary Hudgins: Richard, Patricia. ment. At Rome" James, Dorothy Gibson. 864. W. We should learn something. Francis—James, Mary McBride: {Stacked against the enemy, we fie; Charies, Frances know nothing about camouflage.
Walter, B ie Pri ler ter. Bonnge Price: We've never had to learn and
| AS General—Joe; Batty Mitchell; C At aul,
J
Juanita Vandiver;
less than {fAinal.
2 Men, 2 Women
West Reich Police
ight ana
” |assigried demonstration points.
a [French Film Star Back For 2d Hollywodd Tr Try
Danielle Darrieux, Belgian Wolfhound And Third Husband Arrive in Movie Capital
French film star Danlelle Darrieux is back in Hollywood today,
{to make second for American Bo pa i a Belgian wolthound and her third Mitsinkides,
was rehearsing today with the San Franciseo Opera Co. after a
Smash Red Riots
T, Germany, Oct. lice
using clubs and firehoses smashed Communip demonstrations
{the
Ramon “Vinay, Chilean tenor,
The Reverend's
reached the American
|personal plea to the president of
cleared up his passport
Chilean President Gonzales Videla Ii the singer's passport
{last week to force him to fulfill
engagements in Santiago. He got after singing “Otello.” “Even so, I had to pay the Santiago people for three sellout performances of “Samson and Delilah” that’ I couldn't give,” he said.
8500-Mile Bounce
Senora Ana Becker left Buenos Aires today for a horseback ride to Ottawa, Canada. She estimates the 8500-mile canter will
and will require four horses, Decision “Under no circumstanees” wil) the Rev. Billy Graham make a
Minneapolis evangelist said today. 4 He said he had
t West Germany last and arrested more than)
The focal point of the Commu-| nist riots was Frankfurt, where ‘more than 100 Communisis were hammered into submission in a bloody three-hour battle and {rushed to police stations. By this morning police reported all quiet in Frankfurt and elsewhere in Western Germany. Close watch at the borders kept out many East German Communists who tried to get in to take part in the demonstration. Most of the Communists eventually were released. But some of ‘the Red leaders will be tried for “resistance against the state.” In Frankfurt, the majority of the 130 arrested will be tried, several on a resistance charge tha makes them liable to five years imprisonment. TAS The Communists had been boasting for a week that 200,090 Communists would demonstrate over the week-end in various cities of West Germany, especially the industrial Ruhr. Hundreds of Communists were arrested before they reached their
Other hundreds were turned back. The remainder were beaten into submission, In Frankfort, police backed by hoses mounted on sanitation department trucks marched shoul-
|“The Billy Sun-
been asked to take the lead in 3
day Story,’ ii scheduled by Astor Film Corp, Mr. Sunday be- L came a leading . Graham Srangeit in ts MT Wr first quarter of the 20th Century, after giving up a professional baseball career, The Rev. Mr. Graham is eonducting a 19-day revival in Min. neapolis. He will appear at Cadle Tabernacle here Oct. 10,
Historic- Words - President Truman's famous letter criticizing the Marines is
¢| mow owned by a Chicago in-
surance executive, Harry Frasier, a bought the letter from Rep, ordon L. McDonough (R. Cal), The California said he had received one offer of $10,000, but had turned it down be. cause of its “political aspects.” Mr. Frasier said he was a buck private in World War I, and was never a Marine. The letter said the Marines were the “Navy's police force” and had a “propaganda machine” comparable to Stalin's. The President later apol to the Marines for the “wording of the letter.”
presented the
der to shoulder against the Communists.
Rep. Mc check to the Marine Corps League
| for its welfare program.
Of Playmate;
Face Vice Counts
Two women and two men awaited arraignment today on vice charges after arrest: yester-
Gloria Myers, 27, Plaza Hotel, was arrested in the hotel. She was charged with prostitution and disorderly conduct. Mary Black, 30, alias Rosella Black, was arrested in the Earle
and vagrancy. “The hotel manager, Russell Edward Lannoy, 35, and a bellman, Daniel Mason, 32, of 705 N. Benate Ave. also were arrested. Lannoy was charged with keeping a house of ill fame, and Mason was charged with pan-
15-Year-Old Denies
police foday how he stabbed a
Rodney, McRae broke down slaying of &-yegr.ald Joey Housey “I don't k Then he burst into tears and]
‘Don’t Know. What Came Over Me'=
Youth Admits Fatal Stabbing
Aided Search
Sexval AHack
Charge; Boy, 8, Missing 3 Weeks
DETROIT, Mich, Oct. 2 (UP)—A 180-pound 15-year-old told
playmate to death with a paring
knife, then helped in the two-week search for thé boy's body.
under questioning to admit the three weeks ago.
'w what came over me,” he said.
‘poured out his story, police said. | tector test. Police sajd he stole "He said he had taken the fam-& motor boat and crossed Lake
take two years and three months
ily car to run an errand for his/St. Clair to Canada, where he mother and had picked up Joey| was found at the home of relas “to go for a ride.” {tives. “All at once, I remembered a Police said McRae had been one paring knife that was in the back of the most enthusiastic memof the car,” he said. “I got it and bers of the volunteer search parstarted stabbing at Joey. He!ties which looked for Joey from couldn’ fight much because IT was the time he disappeared, Sept. 9,
dering.
HEOREANS SOCIABLE “+ So sociable and formally cour-
{teous are the Koreans that their government once maintained a iministry of etiquette | mony.
PARILY CLOUDY AND (LouDY ant
CUSPATOFF CoPM 19SOE ran AND TOMORR
t 2 ween at wT mestene.
FOTOLAST LEGEND sane EIN Foe omzILE - ra :
THUNDER storms
& wa RAIN
OW—Clear shins and Yer weather. aren atorh far mast she pot 5 a Fy poe SF i Rl hates
Snow is
rp vo os
: Gedry
to: the cost: and food and hotel - re - ee A “4van 60 oy, Frances Wade: Th tl ly 1 m n Loan 4%t 60 ade; omas, apparently, you only learn the! - ) ) . ; ) 8 . ) } ; i Kathleen Wolfenber Dr money. Thai's the standard fee Sunrise. . 5:42 | Sumet 8:28 | Bastian Morley a8)... :2e| Coo aren. Vioiet Giasé: Semen hard way. “In the Pacific war > for globe girdlers, Precipitation 24 hrs end. 7.30 00! Bubner Pertilizer go 58 = ee] RE gg. our, Mary 2 aughs: | - L . : i | er; Harold, - oe place they hous get in Fxcess since Jan. 1 ce a. 1" Re an 4 u. . w) Ghariene Rien: Nachum Nola. Graves: . ussian territory. Ed did the —— nteoare reve liam, Joyce Lake; Ru on. Virgin & - n i : doiph. V last time, you know, and made ture in nee ng ianie shows the tempers Ha % hr J Coulombe. David EC a Shea. © ob] the big magazines. But the S20" elm a ing ho Lon be $4 [AL St Vinggnvs fines. Ruth Bouthers: word 1 get is that the Reds have Bost : id da 28 | Bi Ty Elo John, Helen locked the door this. time. Daa HL iirreaakiervesss He 8 fpdsls Ss 07... La LIL | Roroth i Pow ers Joe, uo, : v 4d : ” 8 rence. ho Canada; George. | - . 53 35 Lan Ss ara EES l ~ Three Ways r iB i i 3 1 apg er ad Carlos. Mary Buck: Ocien Cr " ks ae iam, Ruth ’ of f " t n #8 Bite. Ys eed VOATEED ROGER BABSON na he ns Bates Jr ben LT 2% At Reet adist—Clarence. Vivian Ault; Clitsaid today up in the evergreen Ran as City .. er rniinren 8 # “Ex-dividend. AR oy; David. Juanita 2: mountains of New Hampshire Miszesoolis-8t. Pas Ho3 i. Reerd i Gi ndianapolis, 4 that infation is & “form of dis hey Yap #5 Local Truck Grain Prices a : gfe rages West; || - in the City of 1 State * bonesty.” OWF CL. oliil pe TE jogs aw: Brace . The T5-year- nid sept at who mrgh oi a od Jo 3 3 Yas wheat, ae gerton: Wiraae: Ty Cr An i put his finger on the 1929 depres: san Frageiaes .....iii lll In | Me 3 yehow corn ES | pe pai 8 s on ahead of time sai infgtinn Tule S en tisrers = Xo i he $3.04 | Jae Leonard, RL rit Alma | Bank of Indianapolis, located in | William a 78. at 1168 N. Keaitte, | [Betty all Anderson, 5 ah 2200-M. Ata pes Yagliesy \njesita) 15 he PIORGeed Werget merger and | Emer Unni m, 66; at General, eere- A of the id Ag : by the
| Jean . kelly ae Me General, .hyper- | Jonathan Corrigan Dombek. 4. at Riley,
ad an fn, 58. at. 530 Guilferd, 5, 89, at 330 EK. 48th,
[ Lemon sroncal hemory 8r., at 2653 rebral Hemorrhage 3653 Northwestern at 140 BE. 234.
i . 1 vas Never
at
Tae Union Trust CoMPANY .. OF INDIANAPOLIS
© Notice of Shareholders’ Mesting |
Notice is hereby given that pursuapt 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 Fast Market Street,
19, 1950 at 1:30 o'clock P. M. (C.8.T.), for the purpose of considering and determining by vote whether an agreement to merge and consolidate the said Bank and Trust Company and The Indiana National
Board f Directors of The Union Trust Company of Indianapolis and * executed by a majority of the Directors of The Indiana National Bank of Indianapolis, providing for the consolidation, is on file at the Bank "#thd may be inspected during business hours.
i one OF THE BOARD QF DIRECTORS.
of Indiana, on Thursday, October
the City of Indianapolis, State of
| Indiana, nader the provisions of the laws of the United States shall be | adopted, ratified and confirmed and for the purpose of voting upon ‘consolidation
CLARENCE R. KUSS, Setretary
ce | Gomer Ottis Burto osclerot rd om, Methodist, | al hemorrha
too big.” juntil his slashed body was found Avolds Lie Test in a shallow grave on the shore Young McRae was picked up inlof Lake St. Clair on Sept, 23. |Sarnia, Ontario, yesterday, after] Young McRae denied that he [running away from his suburban attacked Joey sexually, although Ist. Clair Shores home Friday to| police described the slaying as |avold tak taking a a state police le de-! “the work of a sex maniac.”
|
well Biwi “38. at 5237 N. Penn. |
pr 7, at St. Vineent's, | .
id_Ha es Moore, 8r., 79, at Meth- | y Poole. 84 84, at 1537 Kappes, srter- | xe aylor, 81. at Methodist Hospital, § P. Tuell, 74. at 2037 N. Niinois ' Carrie A. sekman, 68, at 1237 Bradbury. !
aelerotie Norr 5. at 1855 Norris
pa |
-
WAN Central Division . Saglasaring Pig - doy
11 THE INDIANA NATIONAL BANK OF INDIANAPOLIS : Notice of Shareholders’ Meeting
Notioe is haieby given That pursuant to-call of its Dircctrs, a spacial meeting of the shareholders of The Indiana National Bank of Indi- ~ anapolis will be held at its banking house at 3 Virginia Averive in the Qity of Indianapolis, State of Indiana, on Thursday; October 19, 1950 | at 11:00 o'clock A. M. (C.8.T.) for the purpose of considering and : i determining by vote whether an agreement to merge and consolidate
soit aon of he two banks. A copy ofthe alaeeid two.
Union Indianapolis, providing rite om Be 2 Bnd dy Le pd ig er
ch 1 erst
SCHOOL TIME is WeRE...
Nokd i, friend—the Wile ones fond medium siwed omes Joo] are going 10 school these dew. ” Pva insteweted olf wy deivers io be doubly eavebi 144 ot school crossings and Fd Nike you o go sory ’ 100— you lmow, those youngsters Gre gonna be So thaleaders of tomorrow. Let's oll give ‘em & chance %o grow wp end make fis on even better place ove.
1s et er eu
kunt mame, cor
New Yo
