Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1950 — Page 22

"HAROLD H. HARTLEY les Prices stop wart Doubles Prices City Buyer Wan

HENRY II has a lot of his famous grandpa in him. : \ I] It's gray mater as well as blood, and the Midas touch] ie99® Against Trend

of the right word at the right time. : Toward Inflation In the midst of a panic, Henry Ford, the original, stood| PY LARRY STILLERMAN.

on the steps of the nation’s capital and raised wages to The song might now be “How five bucks a day. Is A Gouna. Keep 'Em Off the The country picked up its | There's a boom on in farm land

: pi ’ . ‘packed up his extra shirts and| ears and said, Who's this | went back to newspapering Sale areun 4 central Indiana, guy throwing his dough| Ohio some of these days. (Just homes

” . around? | yp He doesn’t like the smell of |. to put their money into a Le things. It’s those “5 per cent- commodity that will in BUT OLD HENRY became a | ©” in his hair. value as inflation in spurt bes friend of the poor man, sold | They “kmow somebody” who |niphie at the dollar's purchasing Fords like mad, piled up mil- | ‘knows somebody” who has a |... lions like cord wood. | “cousin” in the right place Who can get a contract.

Mrs. Edna Runyan of

~ 2 . Now comes young Henry, made

receives the ceremonial

: Anderson (left), 4 here the desire for “40 tomahawk as the new Great Pocahontas of the Great Council of os ose Simos, Indiana, from Mrs. Mary Frances Arnold, retiring state president.

So. 8 : ! Rides : of the same stuff, and says every-, HE TOLD THE American doubled the value of most farms, The ceremony ended a convention at the Claypool Hotel. g

thing seems to be going up ex- Automobile Association that a since 1940-41. The pre-war price

| | . : cept Fords. ' Connecticut manufacturer got a Ve% approximately 3150 aR acre. Homesick His 1951 Mercury was born in letter from a Washington firm But unlike homes Bere there's) |

jclaimi to have - ing an inflation hurricane, but he tied ng ve the inside| much 1 land ; |

down the price. And he’s passed track” to the treasury dough on| ; : » war contracts. . | Farmers have a big poke in| the word that he’ll hold the line ban A A Slo :

on his other cars. sy. 8 IT THE “FEE,” he said, was [crop years and high prices are| Costs $78 Million $250 a month.to cover *“ex- helping them resis{ ‘fantastically Red C took IT'S GOING TO COST him | penses for entertainment,” free [high offers.” Bs | ross LOOKS 78 million. Can you imagine a | whisky and dinners, I suppose, | $200-$300 An Acre i guy passing up that kind of | for the order placers. * | What's happening here is typidough? Charlie S8awyer’s straight as an cal of activity in rural real estate . ; I can. He'll make twice that arrow, and he won't a. around throughout “the Middle West./1and by Christmas didn’t seem much by being the first one to ‘when that stuff’s going on. He'll Prices are firming up and demand ke such an impossible wish io announce it. X go home. Wait and see. lis heavy for investment rather 2 home-sick little girl in Juvenile That kind of puts the next play than for resale. {Center today.

to General Motors and Ch «Hog Capital | Yesterday The Times printed on ot vs 9 P Most of the move to farms 15 the story of 14-year-old Marian

For Chaperone

Being with her family in Kng-|

Shortage Laid to

curacy.

ler. But it won't worry them.. 1 SAW IKE HOAGLAND yes- coming from the “commuter”| They're both 10aded with lucfe, terday. That's always a treat. ann man who wants less M- unable to join her soldier-

# =» =» ! A i WHO KNOWS, they might even a told me something im- than 80 acres and a fashionable

cut prices, if the credit controls back up the production line.

Ike is a town-booster, house away from big city hurly-| ’ : {accompany children under 186. you know, one of the best. (burly. Sever) sons calle ne

But Henry II, like his grandpa, In the month of Septémber A United Press survey ShOWS pies today, offering nelpfulsug-

got there first with the words. Indianapolis became the hog [that investors are bidding against) oogtions, Meanwhile, the Indi-

N ash, Willys-Overland, Hudson| runner-up. ana.

on prices. |Indianapolis 236,010; St. Louis|0F more while average-producingMarian’s trip.

» " ou HE WAS QUITE innocent about cago, the piker, ran a bad fourth

, ; lan acre. The United Press survey | arrangement for her transportait, too. He said “We want tc be with only 164,524,

also shows the brisk market has tion as a dependent. As soon as

sure we are doing our part in PR TTI Ll oper Made it difficult to buy farms in the military assigns her to a ship.

holding the line against inflation.” most Midwest states. Red Cross will contact familios|

twill repeat,

» n = | | hip And ther thing he'll be | { Not Farming Value scheduled to go on the same cre of 8 er a more 'Ham-on-the- Hoof | The same is true here although |and line up a chaperone. cars, just like his grandpa. | THE AGRICULTURE DE- “t's not unusual to get $400 an Meanwhile, offers from persons : « |PARTMENT did something silly. acre for farm land around Mun- Who might be able to help Marian]

The ‘Big Lie’ [It advised Indiana farmers t0'cje and Anderson,” said Guy Wil-|get to her family more quickly CLARENCE JACKSON'S good bring their hogs in, get the high-|jjams, local rural real estate| Were still being considered. at sparring with the lefties. est prices, % B abe | broker. 2 | $75 000 R But today he took off his gloves, |. Indiana farmers know all about| gyi this price reflects the Prepare vest and sent a haymaker all the way hogs and prices and when to .pome” value of farm land and| ’ 9 | up to Elkhart County. Bustle hem oft to the Stocicyards. not the “tilling” value, he said. For Julietta Facilities He shook the chin and put en a FOSPerous,| «rhe $400-an-acre is high for! Marion County Comimisisoners bees in the bonnet of the CIO- [they eat more meat. And that'sifarm jand that is strictly the oday AT a $75,000 appropriPAC up there for a little line Fight now. Bo they're truckingwork type and not the home gion request to finance the over-| they peddled in print. their ham-on-the-hoof to theiyyne» Mr Willams pointed out. haul of sanitation facilities at!

{flects the “home” value of rural, The money was ruled. out of acreage and not the true farming the 1951 budget proposal before, THERE'S ALWAYS a faster Worth, he said. approval by Councilmen. Com-| | Frank H, Cox, another rural missioners said this will be the

» ~ » MR. JACKSON'S State Cham-13,000 a day. ‘ber of Commerce caught the line # " on the bounce and threw it back, Dri Bomb with the fuse still sputtering.

father in England because regnu-| lations call for a chaperone to] Occurs After Filling Inspections started after Mr. |Floreancig, received a series of complaints declaring quart containers short of proper measure. Inspectors learned that shortages were occurring in cartons after delivery to retail stores and homes where they began to leak. Unless this fault can be overcome local firms may have to return to glass containers, he

i

And he did it arter six independ- capital of the world, snout and [each other for land in Lowa, east-|anapolis Red Cross, which has) ents, Packard, Kalser-Frager, Shoulders above St. Louis, the [ern Nebraska, Illinois and Indl peen assisting in the case, said it!’ { was In touch with military au-| and Studebaker had put an uplift! Here's how the figures stack up:| Choice acreage is bringing $300 thorities trying to expedite]

| 194,892; St. Paul 181,098 and Chi- !and seldom brings below $200! Marian's father has completed

Lama Wesley and Mrs. Cor:

and is to be corrected.

he said.

Edwin Joyner Services Arranged

Edwin Joyner, who lived at

2858 Highland Pl, died yesterday. | He was 63.

Born in Wilson, N. C,, he lived

here 62 years and was a member of the Bethel AME Church.

Private services will be at 1

packers at the rate of 12,000 to ; ip. m. Friday at the Patton Fu[Boost in rural land prices re- Marion County Home, Julietta. P.M. Friday of the TSHOR in| rown Hill Mrs, [240 women by June 30, with the a Umber apportioned on a population basis among the s'= Army

Surviving are two sisters,

The PAC, according to Mr. |WaY. Take waterproofing. lrealtor and director of the Real {Booker; three brothers, Cecil, { third attempt since 1923 made to ' . : Jackson has been telling C10 | Krnest Spickelmier, president of |p i 00 Boog corroborated Mr. havet he at overhauled or Henry and George; seven nieces

workers that their {come xen tne Splckelmier Co bas a nV williams’ views and added farm replaced. wefe being hercased b muse You press the button and pti-1t [|and in counties surrounding Mar-| Originally the disposal plant at " Rin yietery goes the spray which lets fabrics lon County is now. bring a $200 |Julletta was installed to service pol pie mg purge StaY out in the rain without soak- Sil-asre minimum, up 25 per cent 320 people. Population at the m pre-war prices, center has since increased to 600,

the “big lie” and “hate your|!N& through, and soaking you. reir iil +f ncinding the ‘administration. “neighbor” techniques, get back to Not So Soft 2 School including the administration facta, INDIANA WATER is almost is fo Give Fined $100 and Costs AND HERE'S THE spoonful of hard enough to skate on. Any Handwriting Program | A :

poison he didn’t like: {housewife will tell you that. | “Your pay check is skimpier That's why the soft water boys Whitcomb Riley Schools will pre-| Pleading guilty to an assault by a few dimes a week because | are getting together at Purdue on sent a program at 9:30 a. m. and battery charge, Kenneth E.| of a political victory by war |Friday, to do something about it.| 'hursday at the Atheneaum fori Stenson, 22, of 1202 DeLoss St. profiteers, { Instead of putting in § softener |the Handwriting Department of was fined $100 and costs and sen“Their Republican and Dixi- [On a by-guess-arid-by-gum basis, the Indiana State Teachers Asso- tenced to 30 days on the Indiana crat stooges in Congress |they’ll learn how to test the water ciation. : + |State Farm by Municipal Judge jammed through a law which |to tell exactly how much softener! Dr. Joe Fy, Wilkes, professor of | Alex M. Clark today. | leaves tax-free excess profits of |You need. |elementary ’ | education, Middle, Stenson was arrested Oct. 17] war speculators and opens tax | That will make for two things: Tennesse State Teachers College, sor an attack on Richard Patton, loopholes for the rich. {Easier washing and more dough Murfreesboro, Tenn., will be the 1521 Randall Rd. well-known “After the profiteers’ con- |for the softener services. speaker. | gressional stooges scuttled an Swiss Switch His topic will be “The Place of Witnesses said Stenson attacked, immediate excess profits tax, | WHEN THE BOYS WENT to Handwriting in the Language yr. Patton at the Armory as hel

income tax 20 ” { BE ramones every [Europe to fight World War IL Arts Program. started to enter the ring to referee week from now on.” . (the watch market went with a wrestling bout. |

It does: read a little phony. | them. uv. S., UN Flags Fly | 21 And sounds lixe something slipped] And when the boys came home. Over Red Headquarters Law: Camps at Door

{the watch business, or a bi y : out from under the Iron Curtain Le 3 aE g PYONGYANG, ‘North Korea, Until Burglar Returns

IPLC Biggest Day | That's the tear-talk in the Oct. 25 (UP)—The blue and) 1,,gne the surprise of ‘al YESTERDAY was ironing day. watch industry. The world is buy-| White flag of the United Nations|,, is; to find an Indiana State And that made the Indianapolis ing 85 million watches a year, 20d the American Stars andi, one; sitting on his doorstep. Power and Light Co. happy. |but only a fourth of them bear .' pes fluttered today over the|™ y,.i:s what happened to RichIt was cloudy, too, and that/the stamp “Made in USA.” former headquarters of Com-i,.4 whompson, 19, of 701% 8. made the smile even wider. bps. . : munist Premier Kim II Sung. |Bosart Ave., arrested early today! And it was cool. So down camel] ire Inflation The two flags were raised Tues-| charge of burglary. an old record and up went a new) ‘GOODYEAR PULLED PRICES day in a.simple ceremony al-\" qu, ner James Hiner did a lit-| one. : . {up today 7% per cent. (tended by 8th Army Commander ,;, getective work, learned

# = = | If you go fancy and use white Lt. Gen. Walton H. Walker and rnampson’s address and went to WITH THE city's irons turned side walls, they'll cost you 10/his staff to mark the 8th Army's. os to await his arrival.

on, and the lights burning in theiper cent more advance headquarters in this|my, : , . i pson was so astonished to daytime, and electrically con-| mnere’s no change in tubes, And|former Communist capital. find his uniformed visitor he con-

trolled furnaces going into action, gooqyear ex 1 plained it by saying! fessed . burglarizing the FiveIPL put out 5,025,000 kilowatts. materials cost more, so why | U.. S. Statement Points-Tavern on Ind. 29.

uJ} took 43 years for 1PL lo Betis) couldn't tres? its first million-kilowa Yip, ; |” WASHINGTON. Oct. 35 (UP) _Govern-| ADMITS FATAL STABBING That ‘was in March, 1927. Food Up Again | Ee SATION OEE". Compared with, Elizabeth Anderson : Bowman, FOOD PRICES, which had lost * Yer 880: |53, of 649 N. Blackford St., today

% = o 0 mil This Ye Last Year | IN NOV. 1989 IT hit two mil-| yop toothold on the inflation hill, Expenses § 1114300 5 13036988381 agmitted the fatal stabbing Satlion KWH, and three million in dug initoda Receipts ER 10.831.30. 148 | rda ht of Anna May Moc December of 1942. And ini Novem-|"S z Cush | i 423438383 yen kford St. She

Dun & Bradstreet announced Sep Debi st Tes aseensaiidi 42, of 659 N. Blackford St. She ber of 1047, it pushed over thei,,,; jts wholesale price index cov- Gold Res. Balen Sess. 715 was bound over to the grand jury

RO ton Rw: 2 mark. «juice FIDE 30 staple foods had gained) INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE |without bond on a charge of ) S! ! r AamEFEar. wie : char EE CE beer 2 cents in the last week, | Dey , $a4.519.000 TOUCder.

to know that we're becoming a

and three nephews.

Mrs. Georganna McCray 65.Year-Old Man Dies et , dled Sos - Of Injuries From jarday | in General Hospital. She! was

A native of Hopkinsville, Ky., she lived here with her sister,

two years. She was a member

of the First Street Baptist Church in Hopkinsville. | Services and burial will

Saturday in Hopkinsville. The

y will be at the Stuart Mor-

tuary from 2 p. m. to 8 p. m. !tomorrow.

Only immediate survivor is her

| sister, Indianapolis wrestling referee. | Macknolia D. Davis

Services for Macknolia D. Davis,

‘laundry foreman at Camp Atteri bury, will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow at the King & King Chapel. Bur-

ial will be in Floral Park. Mr. Davis, who was a veteran of World War I, lived at 2206

Kilroy Ave. A resident of Indian-|Deita apolis 27 years, he was a member of the Jones Tabernacle AMEZ

Church.

Mr. Davis died Monday at his 8

home.

Hi Surviving are his wife, Jose-

phine, and a brother, Charles, both of Indianapolis.

North Side Kiwanis Hears Brownson Charles Brownson, GOP candi-

date for Congress, blamed an “un-

certain, wavering foreign policy” for most of America’s troubles abroad in a speech before the North “Side Kiwanis Clubs last night. “I believe in a realistic foreign policy which recognizes that we now. are engaged in a show-down battle between free America and Godless Communist Russia,” he said. :

local Produce ~~

r » » I THINK CHARLIE SAWYER'S getting fed up.

russe == Today's Weather Fotocast ied

I wouldn't be surprised if he : Jy

“Get Real Helpthe Modern Way, | ST PAG SNecze; . From These Miseries of :

WATERY Ever

ptr receipts 39 ibs to case. BE ST ie Crade Fg RB pig Aetie {ne 00 ue 26 13%. 204 Nora poultry. 48 les

No. 1. i a 3 tterfat—No. 1, 5Je; No. 2, 50c.

RUNNY NOSE

Local Truck Grain Prices 5h

HE 1 H :

ment would give him a better 20 chance to ge out ni the school

i

BEE

g 3 w“ 8

Leaky Milk Cartons ss unchanged; bu

Leaking milk cartons may force local bottling plants to return to the use of glass containers, A. T. Floreancig, city weights and! measures supervisor, said today. Mr. Floreancig reported this to the Safety Board and added that his bureau had inspected 29,100; quart containers for their ac-

gs gE

'f

$29.50; load good 1150-pound held ‘at around $29.75. Two loads {good yearlings held above $31; | common light native steers and heifers $22 to $25; cows steady. Odd good beef cows $22.25 $22.50; common and medium $19 to $22; canners and cutters $15.50 to $19. Bull prices steady; medium and good sausage bulls, $23 to $25; best $25.50; cutter and canning bulls $19 to $22.50; vealsteady; good and ‘choice $33 to $38; common and

In the rounds of local bottling firms, inspectors found only one measure violation. This was attributed to a mach'nery fauit

Sheep 1850; fairly active; native lambs steady to easy early; later trade fully steady; western lambs and ewes unchanged; good and choice native lambs $28.50 to $29.50; few $30; common and medium $23 to $28. Two loads ood and choice shorn southwestern lambs 87 to 96 pounds, No. 1 and 2 pelts, $20. Large ioad good and choice wool northwestern lambs, 101 to 102 pounds, $29.50. Few medium to choice {slaughter ewes $8 to $13.

Continued leakage may consti{tute a problem requiring investigation by the Board of Health,

A 65-year-old man died in General Hospital today of injuries received in a fall Oct. 15. Everett Morrison, University Heights and James FOr Personal Attack [Mrs. Corrie Hunt, for the past Jound or hal in a rooming ng police he had been drinking and fell down in trying to get to his be room. Hospital reports indicated a

Local Stocks ‘and Bonds

wold) Sa nn >»

2000

sent to Washington as personnel] wy .q¢ of a 3-cent increase on

n consultant for the office of the rice of milk per quart was

quartermaster general for two removed today when farmer repyears. - ‘i resentatives retreated from their His salary as deputy will beg. onq for an 80-cent-per-huns $11,000 a year. He will report) j..gweight hike. here Dec. 1 at a salary of $6416) ppg action was taken late yesfor the remainder of the school terday at a meeting of dairy year. {producer association officers and Dr, and Mrs. Myers have two gistributor representatives. It children, Judith Allison, a highiwags their first get-together since school junior, and Spencer Jr., athe four dairy associations united high school- sophomore. last month in their demand for He was graduated from Short-/3n 80-cent hike. ridge High School, Distributors flatly Tefused to > meet the demand. Rather than Couple to Celebrate go to Purdus University Tar atbi- . tration, farmer representatives 50th Wedding Year {decided to drop the 80-cent deMr. and Mrs. Warren Baker mand and dicker. will celebrate their 50th wedding) Unofficially, dairymen said they anniversary Sunday at an in-lexpected a boost of about 25 or formal family gathering in their{30 cents. This would raise per home west of New Ross, Ind. quart prices a penny, according They are the parents of two|to distributor estimates. daughters, Mrs. Opal Huffman, J. D. Littleton, president of the New Ross; Mrs. Mary Duncan,|Indianapolis Milk Sales AssociaLinnsburg, and a son, Russell, In-| tion, which represents local dairy dianapolis; seven granddaugh- producers’ groups, said negotiaters, Carolyn Huffman, Hanover tions with distributors will open College; Maureen and Jane Huff- next week. He said “I think we man of New Ross; Grace Annican get a raise,” but would not and Mary Ruth Duncan of Lians-|specify how much. burg, and Saraellen and Jeral-| Meanwhile, about 2300 dairy

; 7, [dine Sue Bakgr of Indianapolis. [farmers of one association were Army Offers Commission . — To Women Graduates

WASHINGTON, Oct. 25 (UP) —The Army has offer~d second leutena~t commissions to women college graduates between ages of 21 and 26. The Army said it will appoint

: notified of a meeting here tomorCommissioners Hear row night to discuss the “eco-

nomic situation for dairy farmNational Scout Head = [orc They are expected to pro“The boy as an individual must test local milk prices, which have not be lost in a crowded world.” jagged behind other milk marThese were the words of Dr. kets. The meeting was called by George J. Fisher, National Boy the Independent Milk Producers Scout Commissioner, at a dinner Association. last night for 150 central Indiana | iam ———— scout commissioners. {CENTER OF CAPITAL Wallace O. Lee, emeritus com-| The geographic center of the

areas. Women with dependents missioner, was presented with an District of Columbia is near ‘the under 18 are not eligible.

award for outstanding work in| corner of Fourth and L Streets, {maintaining ‘the highest percent- N.Wi, Washington. 5h |age of units in good standing in| .

i

|the history of the counil,

ACCIDENT INJURIES FATAL NEW CASTLE, Ind, Oct. 25 (UP)—Mrs. Ida Mag Newman, 65, Pontiac, Mich.,, died today In Henry County Hospital of injuries received in an auto accident near Spiceland Sept. 27. Her husband, Lewis, was killed in the wreck.

1500 RAIL TUNNELS There are approximately 1500 railroad” tunnels in the United States. Their aggregate length is about 320 miles, |

No More Mortgage or Rent Worries! "Win Part of $1000.00!

I's. Wonderful! See

! Friday's Classified Section!

INDI ANAPOLIS

S| re LARGEST. SELECTION we

OXYGEN THERAPY This Equipment Can Be Rented at HAAG'S

WASTE PAPER AMERICAN PAPER

STOCK COMPANY RL 6341 320 W. Mich.

of Linoleum in Indians RUGS from $2.39 ‘Look for the store with the big ced * HOOSIER + : PAINT & LINOLEUM CO. | Washington Ri1-8313

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ON ITS

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Army as one team. team is tr Rusty Rus season as ready equa of his ve sor, Matt proved Ma prudent m highly rec assistant when he Jetic direc From tl young Rus Mustangs last fall, ai job he has it is quite chip off th

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