Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 October 1950 — Page 13
ulance or of any | may save lives y help to victims,
L Tecumseh St.
e power to think way only, will ben seeking since 1 & large scale, | the dishonest rich and power. tical stooges. . nust be founded
ments as well as mistakes, which n when they atje, to cover their apt to right the
the torch of reapes not stand the )m a professional lence of its truth.
hat do the most f those who most ie least hardship Fy from one vilege to another nce between the rprivileged Gove or all time have
enthroned on the its, footstool the 3 at the expense h change for the Ig as the moral mains at such a irn to think and
(ERS ’clock . , . worn ways notice certing out . . . they + + » don’t doubt through the day owing and were he i. . « for they had ill dawning light ty . . . of this old 1 turn the wheels number . . . then 8 . . . NOW worn e one that’s neat ting out. en Burroughs.
or
’ ler 4 » gain of West Virginia \didate for publie
in in the neck— House of RepreVirginia.
n; meade eyes at don, Republican
“and getting denation in
e tried for the
‘mew ones as
this far has seen it yet in these
‘entirely unlikely that TV: set owners would scrap their black i awiite acts. almoet new, Just 10 te-
—
But that's about all.
You can get a few dows on the farms for a dim : : e toa . quarter, higher in town, Aad But if your tongues been hanging out all year for a Thanksgiving pumpkin pie, dusted with nutmeg,
thick topped with whipped cream, you may be out of luck,
There's a shortage of
canned pumpkin, the second year in a row. Soc»
z * = = : FARMERS USED TO grow) COLOR NEVER SOLD a them between corn rows and use Movie. The black and white films
them to feed cattle. But the soybean boys came along with vita-min-enrichéd meal. And that
almost put the pumpkin out of lét color scare you off. There's lots of fun in a TV set. And it]
{ought to pay for itself in pleasure) form, mostly 220 pounds down:
business. Today, farmers get about $8 a ton for canning pumpkin down
around Greenwood and Franklin. Saved from football, basketball jngjy: bulk good and choice ‘and baseball games alone. {
And they won't do the work for that kind of dough.
= » “o YOU WON'T SEE MUCH canned pumpkin advertised between now and Thanksgiving. The reason is the grocers haven't g much. = : So if you're a pumpkin pie man, and you see a can sitting on a shelf, grab it, pay for it, ‘put in under your coat and sli home the back way. : You'll have something that'll
be pretty rare on the bountiful : boards Thanksgiving Day. Java Jolt
GENERAL FOODS MARKED down the wholesale price of Maxwell House coffee today, from 84 to 82 cents, - That means only one thing. The ginghamed gals who push the carts in the supermarkets haven't been tossing as much coffee into their baskets. It must be piling up. And when it piles up the roasters cut the!
price and unload. Power's Pulse
FIGURES GET ME down.
They're cold, impersonal and un-
interesting, make me want to put
‘on my hat and go for a walk.
Trends are different. They point to the tomorrows, how we're going to live, and why. I've kept an eye on two big companies which are getting bigger. They are the Public Service| Co. of Indiana and the Indianapolis Power & Light Co.
.» = ® THEY'RE PROSPERING. the first nine months this year the PSC took in about $2.2 million more than last year, and IPL put over $3 million more -in the
HA . —— _Times Business Editor THERE ARE ENOUGH pumpkins for Halloween faces.
ROLD H. HARTLEY
And by the same token, it is not probable. that the FCC would daré {to make present sets unworkable {for at least ten or 15 years, maybe never, : | & 2 >
Top of $19.25 Paid; Trading . Moderately Active
Light and medium weight average today in moderately apolis Stockyards.
A few early sales of choice mals were fairly uniform with
sell as well, and in some cases
better than technicolor. | ‘don’t
|. So if you're on the fence,
| ‘in a year, in the ticket money
were $18.50 to $18.75. 1 bi 75 cents lower; choice, lightweight fairly
$19 to. $19.25; latter price s§
200 to 250 pounds usually highly
rows and gilts were around-50 to : {75 cents lower than Friday's
ive opening trade at the Indian-
to 220 pounders bringing $19 to $19.25. Most bids for mixed weights around 200 to 250 pounds
Hogs 13,775; moderately active; arrows and gilts mostly 50 to few hundred]
bar-| °
act-
ani170
uni-
par-
| ae mixed $18.50 to $18.75, few $19; Ham's the Buy 1250 to 300 pounds $18 to $18.50; | IN SPITE OF the deluge of 120 to 160 pounds $15 to $17;| _, 4 the Manchurian frontier.
thogs coming to market, 12,000 ito 13,000 a day, pork prices are |getting their strength back, crawling up. Last week they added about 2 cents a pound across the boardy And my best information is that this is the time to buy hams, if you can get them whole, or butt ends, at around 50+to 55 cents a pound. ;
cents a dozen, for grade A large, but the word over the country is
means don't buy too far ahead. | “Storage potatoes,” which] means they come mostly from!
| better. ONE GROCER SAID, “There were a lot of Indiana potatoes shot around at 79 cents for 50
eat them fast before they develop soft spots.” i Maine potatoes are for about $1.39 for 50 pounds, and a lot of that is shipping cost. | Even fancier will be the “Idaho| russets” which will be priced at! $1.79 for 50 pounds. They're bakers and delicious. i
Robot Boss SOMEONE'S ALWAYS taking the fun out of life. _ And now we're being robbed
In of that quiet little session with lambs, No. 1 pelts,
the boss when he tells us that jwe've earned a better job and a raise.
DuMont (television) is putting $26; slaughter ewes steady at $8
sows fully 50 cents lower; £00 $16.50 to $17.75: choice weights $18; odd heavies $16.25 or less.
Cattle Quotations
Cattle 2950, calves 425; demand for high medium choice steers under 1100 pou
Ii
oddly moderate inquiry for heav-
dium to low choice yearlings fully steady; heifers firm; little done that they are headed down. This on steers above 1100 pounds; | cows moderately active, steady; several loads good 950 to 1050 pound steers $30.75 to $31.50; Maine, are begining to arrive,|some held near $32; medium to| They'll be higher than the. local average good steers under ‘1150 crop but grocers insist they keep pounds $28.50 to $30.50; common Hamilton Ave. and medium yearlings $23 to $28; |
high medium to mostly good
{to 900 pound heifers $30; g beef cows $22 to $22.50; common hart. pounds but the buyers had better and. medium $19 to $22; canners| Earl Hicks, 20, New Castle.
cutters $15.50 to $19. medium
and Bulls unchanged;
set to sell good sausage bulls $23 to $24.50; odd head to $25; vealers.active;| steady; good and choice $34 to
$36; common and medium to $32. Sheep, 1625; fairly active;
tive lambs steady to weak, lower 3 lity considered; good Place,
average qua
bulk d and choice 300 to 550 pounds
extremely |
good
5
An American soldier flushes four North Koreans from hiding in bushes near the front. The
|
i
}
3 3 o Acms Telephoto by Ed Hoffman,
ght-
Local Woman, Fo
Killed in Week-End Traffic
to nds,
months. Victims yesterday o night included: ; Mrs. Florence DeVault, 806. N.
and
800 Edward Foster, 17, Huntington. ood! Neal P. Marchessau, 24, Elk-
| Mrs. Geneva Autersen, 32, W. and
0: Terre Haute. Hits Tractor-Trailer
Mrs. DeVault was killed
$25
| Mrs. Florence DeVault, 70, Loses Life in U.S. Crash; Several Injured in Fog and Rain
{ Death .of.a 70-year-old Indianapolis woman in a three-car crash Eggs held steady at around 72) ier weights; early sales high me-/,., "/ ont and four other fatalities in state highway accidents brought the week-end traffic toll in Indiana to 15. o A number of others were critically injured in fog and rain as |state police reported week-end accidents the heaviest in many
last:
| i
dq
ur OthersRuss Act to B
lock
U. S. Threatens Veto of Others
LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y., Oct. 30
(UP)-—Russia sought to throw a final block today against Trygve| Lie’s continuance as United Na-| —— tion's Secretary-General while’ the United States and 13 other coun-| tries circulated a resolution call-
Evidence Sought |i rusted ® rescuion
(extend. the Norwegian's term for
0f Gary Crime foes more years.
State Again Asks For Recordings:
Soviet Delegate Jacob A. Malik, |
who vetoed Mr. Lie as a candidate| {for re-election three weeks ago, requested another meeting of the Security Council to consider new | nominees, . 4 GARY, Oct, 30 (UP)—The state! Chief U. 8. Delegate Warren R,
of Indiana gave the Gary Crime Austin, who vowed. last week to
in- Commission a second chance tostantly when a car operated by day to produce tape recorder evi- cj] president for 10 a. m. (Indian-
veto any candidate but Mr, Lie, called the closed meeting as coun-
na. her daughter, Mrs. Ileen Imel, dence linking public. officials with apolis Time).
crashed into a tractor-
to choice, $28.50 to $29; top, trailer and another automobile on
$20.50, sparingly; common medium, $23 to $28; good choice 100-1b. shorn
‘25¢ lower at| Chicago,
and|U. 8. 52 at 42d St. and}
was passing a
$28.75; fed yearlings steady; good driven by Mrs. Eva Horsley, 35,
and choice No. 1 pelts, load mostly choice full
till. PSC sales, 9 months, $33,060,-/in an “electronic . brain” to pick to $14
823; IPL sales, same period, $18,625,312. | There were a lot of other fig-| ures, and you can go to their offices and see them if you want to. What's important to me, and to you, is that every day we live, someone is inventing a new way,
- in which to use electricity. |
_ AND THE BIGGEST FIELD of! all is coming. It's push-button electric heating. They call it “radiant heating.” It has the gently heated wires right iri the floors and walls of your home. You're never conscious that you're being kept warm at all And your home stays at summer temperatures the whole year through. We take it the easy way. And that's why the big power companies are betting bigger. And you and I keep fumbling for more and more buttons on the wall.
Roses in Poses WHEN L. 8S. AYRES’ STORE| opens tomorrow, there'll be a bee-| line to the sixth floor. It's the National Rose Show with 50,000
choice bleoms nodding politely to,
flower lovers. Roses will be shown in bridal settings, with fashions and spe-| cial room arrangements, as well| as in the many roles they play|
‘in a woman's life, courting days,
weddings, then in her own back! yard garden.
” # » : THERE WILL BE BIG, full blooms and migiatures, and such
the magazine, and “Vanity Fair,” with soft, lush, réd petals, and “Demure” a pale pink miniature. What will be done with 50,000] roses after the two-day show I ip
don’t know. !
Why not the home for the aged, veterans hospitals, just scatter them around to —people|
i
who can’t grow or buy their own?
IV's Troubles
STILL THE SAME, not enough gets. But if it ended ‘there, -it| might not be ‘so bad. Eventually production overcomes demand. But there's a manufacturer's; excise ‘tax coming Wednesday| which will raise prices from $20] to $50 per set. This means a rush fo get in under the tax wire. Some TV retailers are pretty
‘much in the dark, While they
know the tax is to be paid by the manufacturer, what they want is| a ruling on whether they are re-|
sponsible for collecting the tax]
on sets in stock. : Add to this the color dilemma. It is far from solved. And TV fans are fairly safe for three to five years in Indianapolis.
which they already have
I
» ” » % BIG SET MAKERS, with the exception of Westinghouse, are;
bucking Columbia's color system, just okayed by the FCC. They won’t make sets to receive it. But if enough makers, even small ones swing over to the color con-
werters, the big ones may have to} . follow, ;
One thing which is undisputably true is that color television will have to be “sold.” And no one out
y | Se J ! R IT'S sor, a market woirld have to build up-And it is and
air,” named for pe
the guys who are to move °u another notch on the ladder.
Leather Weather
WITH A WET WINTER come ing on, it's wise to keep well shod, and wiser to lay in a few extra pairs of shoes. vow 3 { The reason is that they'll be from 50 cents to $1.50 ‘a pair higher when the robin tunes up| in the cherry blossoms. | BERGHOFF BREWING, Ft. Wayne, won top divisional honors! for safety. The fleet drove a full year with no accidents. J. L. JEFFRIES, Southern Pa-| cific Lines, tells me his com-| pany’s sinking $14 million in new rail and fittings. | FOUR INDIANAPOLIS men won committee posts with “the American Institute of Account-! ants. They are William H. Walk-| er, Roy G. Thurston, Tom L.| Thursfon, Tom L. Melvin, and! A. J. Jerman. : HUGH C. CAMERON, is new Indiana district manager for the! Perfex Corp. temperature controls. : i Official Weather
UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREA © =Oect. 30, 1950 5
Sunrise ...... 6:11 | Sunset ... 4:48 Precip. 24 hours ending 7:30 a. m. .. Total precipitation since Jan. 1 .... 46 cess sinte January 1 13.38
i The following table shows the temper-| ature in other cities: | + Station High Low ASIANA oi. a vara 79 61 Boston .. 55 Chicago -.. ~ 51 | Cincinnati 57
Cleveland
66 nver:. .. 84 47 Evansville 80 50 Pt. Wayne 51 Pt. Worth ......... 89 64 Indianapolis (city) «13 58 Kansas City .... . 8 87 Los Angeles ..... «0 - 87 ami v 3 «18 i Minneapolis-St. Paul ki 50 | New Orleans ...... a3 64 | New York . 70 58 | Oklahoma City 88 61 | Omabia ....... 51 | Pittsburgh ..... 61 | San Antonio .. 63 | San _ Francisco .. 57 1 St. Louis 82 i
Washington, D. C. 55
A A I | Buhner Pertilizer 5s 58 {Ch of Com Bldg 4'as §
| Citizens In
ni { Ind
$25.50; of 2348 Shriver Ave, on the wooled, three-lane highway when the ac-
cident occurred. : | Mr. Hanson told police he saw (Mrs. Imel's car loom up ahead
‘heavy fog. He crashed into the
® Local Stocks and. fonds of him in the center lane in the
Oct.
lien & Steen 6s merican Loan 4%s 60 ,, astian Morley 5s 61 . latesville Tele Co 4's ..
Loan 5s 64 d Limestone ‘48 75 . Asso Tel 3s 75 ...
Traction Term a. Pn
*Ex-dividen
Fomine |
Horsley car in trying to avoid a
Motorcyclist Kiiled
5314
| Mrs. DeVault was pronounced
2, of 749 East Dr, Woodruff, oanized crime.
Attorney General J. Emmet
Russ Propose Romulo
In a closed session last week,
McManamon ordered his deputy, Russia proposed Brig. Gen, Carlos
State . police said the tractor, James Watson, to return here and western operated by 'S. H. Hanson, 37, “once more give the commission i, cucceed Mr. Lie. Cari, chance to produce its evidence.”
P. Romulo of the Philippines and Dr, Charles A. Malik of Lebanon
In separate ‘ballots, these candi-
The Crime Commission says it dates each received four votes—| made the recordings by secreting three short of the majority necesa microphone in the office of Blaz sary for a Councik recommenda-
Lucas, deputy Lake County pros- tion—and the other seven coun-
lecutor who resigned last week. tries abstained. Voting for Rus{The" recordings, the- commission sia’'s candidates weré the Soviet said, gave evidence linking the Union, Nationalist China, India office of County Prosecutor Ben and Egypt. ’
Asked collision. The Imel car crashed linto the trailer and hit the third
{Schwartz and other law enforce-| iment agencies with vice, gam- opposition, 14 countries; led by the troit, told police she had a little |U. 8.. were ready to present a trouble but it's all ironed out now.
bling and prostitution.
Despite Russia's blunt-spoken
Notre Dame Nunto Get | Achievement Award
Sister Mary Madeleva to Be Honored At Women's Internation Exposition
prime minister of Pakistan; Mrs. | Asta Meidell, achievement work in Norway; Mrs. Ruth Bryan |
E ig, ter to a| Rohde, first U. 8. minister to aj, through.
-—
4
«
ek
Sister Mary Madeleva, .8.0,, poet-president of St. Mary's Chl-
lege at Notre Dame, today was named one of seven “Women of Achievement” by the Women’s National Institute. :
#
.She will be honored on Nov. 10, during the 27th annual Wom-
¥
ambassador to DenLiaquat Ali Khan, (no relation to Rita), wife of the outstanding! service
for
in social
|
foreign country and Congress-|
{woman Mary T. Norton, of New| |Jersey. |
No Tall Tale
en's International Exposition in New York City. Others to receive | ithe award will include Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, Mrs. Eugenie M. Anderson, : =a. mark;
lin Chicago today, weighing’ a healthy five pounds, three ounggs.
Elizabeth weighed only two pounds, one-half ounces when she was born Aug. 9 and dropped.to
11, pounds but an oxygen tént and eyedropper feedings pulled
Meanwhile in Boston 24-year-old - polio victim Mrs. nald
{Sharp was reported in “excellent
condition” after birth of a seven-
If anybody looks skeptical when pound, six and one-half ounce girl
Hoosier GI Adelbert Colby relates yesterday.
his Korean battle experiences, he has an official Army report to back up this story. Sgt. Colby,
Americans armed only with carbines who entered the enemy
Change of Heart
Paw Paw, Mich, civic leaders
3563 W. 12th St., was one of five t,qay canceled plans for the usual
community Halloween party.
[stronghold at Woolim-Ni and cap- George Morgan said the party
tured 14 North Korean prisoners..was eliminated because “it ddes
with its prisoners and reported the enemy troop concentration, it
U. S. 24th Division joined the Allied knockout offensive in Northern Korea with a new thrust to- pater, after the patrol returned sothing except: serve as ceht¥al
headquarters for pranksters” and
took an infantry company two said instead extra police officers
hours same town
Lie for UN Post meg wows 1v.
Margaret Truman, wearing a
strapless dress, broke into tele- ment expenses and receipts
cancellation the last
the “Toast of
round after round of applause and ecritics said her soprano voice showed “marked improvement.” Among an estimated television
Miss Truman
|audience of 10 million were her
parents and her grandmother who tuned her in at Blair House in Washington.
Not Chicken Feed
The “Chicken of Tomorrow” may. be just an egg to anybody else but to Virgil Gry, Rossville, Ind. it’s a possible $5000 nest egg. Mr. Gray has been selected as one of the nation's leading breed-
|ers of poultry to display his chick-
ens next June 15 in the national “Chicken of Tomorrow” contest
finals in Fayetteville, Ark. Win-|
ning breeder will receive the $5000
lfaward from A & P Food Stores,
originator and sponsor of the
contest,
New Wrinkle
Mrs, Eddie Mae Johnson, De-|
R stopped the peri show and forced Cash Balance
the Town” Re- Debits
view. - The R800-' member studio audience gave
| Mr, Watson came here Satur- resolution to a General Assembly She said an intruder broke into {day to investigate the commis- session, tentatively scheduled for her house while she was ironing
commission
os dead of a’ broken neck at the wiih me or permit me to hear the __|scene. Mrs. Imel was reported in alleged tape recordings.”
103 |fajr condition at Methodist Hospi-|
11 . Je tal today
von ty
1 |mikhart.
ist! Irma J. Elismyers, 22, Elkhart, to
07 sustained a fractured skull.
}
The Rev. Bernard Spong, com-
{mission chairman, said he would] HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 30 (UP)—
to him. He indicated also that
28% Mr. Foster was killed early the commission preferred to have
19
108 |yehicle on Ind. 5, 47% ton. | Arden Keith Ball, 16, Hunting-
|pital. Donald Hugh Lineback, 22,
0 {tomobile, val a Dies of Injuries
111%! ceived in a head-on collision Sat-
‘88% Sunday when the car in which he someone higher than Mr. Watson! |was riding, collided with another hear them. : { near Hunting- °° |
_. One of Three Quiries The attorney general's inquiry
13 , { 14%a/ton, the driver, was Jn critical is one of three being launched on 6 /condition in a Huntington hos-the commission's charges.
A county grand jury is sched.
21% Warren, operator of the other au-'yjeqd t6 open hearings tomorrow received slight injuries. in the case and the Senate Crime
Investigating Committee headed by Sen. Estes Kefauver (D. Tenn.)
T | Mr. Hicks died in a Richmond nag indicated it will make an in- ... hospital last night of injuries re-|gyuiry, re
The Rev. Mr. Spong charges,
1% |urday night on U. 8. 40, near Cen- however, that the grand jury
.» iterville. .
‘l Five other youths, sat, Jim Ryan, 17, the driver, ail of
robe would “whitewash” the of-
including fctals. |
The Rev. Mr. Spong denied that
{New Castle; were injured when the commission was acting as a «++. [the car crashed into a truck op-i“Republican mouthpiece” in this
...lerated by Hibbon Alphal
.. ‘highway.
++++/the car in which she was riding "Istruck: a truck on Ind. 46, eight :* imiles south of Terre Haute. =| Jesse Devow of Riley, operator of the truck, told police he tried 107 [to drive off the highway to avoid icolliding with the oncoming car.
T
oday’s
PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS °
@
‘scattered showers and rain
-
or.
*o
Weath
T SRG US PALOFF, Cort SOLOW. La wane. ALL meats arseves. oo TONIGHT AND TOMORROW—The storm battered Pacific Northwest will y in tonight. Elsewhere the ‘weatherman is: calling for fair skies in the next 24 hours. Warm air is flowirig up the Mississippi and central v. Grea Lakes region and Middle Atlantic states. «. ~*~ % , Ls | :
nh SLEET Sho 3 Soigw suowens. 77777771 ®AAM
r Foto
cast
partly cloudy
continue to have or ys into the low-
‘
+
{
- At St Jea
|
. {At Cpleman—Joseph, Majet
| |
|
At
i
!
of predominantly Democratic, steel *:|Kansas City. Police said the car town. ../lwas on the wrong side of the had no ulterior métive in with-
He said the commission
holding its evidence until just be-
*=*-| Mrs. Auterson was killed when fore the November ‘elections.
Th Indianapolis
BIRTHS
3 BOYS. . Francis-—~John, Mary Nelson; James, Bridgewater: Wahlon. Iona Wampner; Morris, Mary Walters, : At General—Isanc, Thelma Dale. § ta Muhler: Rare rd; 7
Tents on Ibamone oo Mary Benz: Jessie, Mi Donald, Nelda Border; y * ward, osemary Bartley; Christine Clements; Joseph,
roara Kyles, At Methodist—Emerson, Walda Bentley; Cecil. Florence Mize; Roger. Martha
,
Estan; ; Edward, ElizaDonald, Doris Mayhew; » Bern Rohm. 3 . Vineont's—Phillip, Jeanne Allio; Dwight, Jane Barker: iph, Mary
Sharpe; Lynus, Daisey Vols: Marjorie Veza: Harry, Mary Lo loway: Thomas, diouise Thompson.
Franeis—Allen, Willie Mae Lents; Ruth ; ol
St. ay,
1 Armstrong: Ri Allanson: - Willie, Sylvia Christi
m, Margaret Satier-| zabeth Worrell: Albert, : de, Barbara Apple- | 3 i Jay, Violet| Oswolt: C v Toney. } At_Methodist—Charles, Betty Chamberlin; |
- Doe, Stella, Keys. harles, Leo Moods: | Carl." Lois Pfeifer; C! les, Phoebe Boyd: William, Florence Owens. lene Hubble; Rob-
At St.-¥Vincent's—Earl, A ert h son: David, Charlene rtha McIntire; John,
3 y Pergu Young: Notman, Ma Mary Schubert. At Hame—Harry, Geraldine Bush, 47 ake, ' — |
DEATHS . Howard Brennan, 85, at 1317 W. 36th,
uicers. . Mary Coffield, 67, at 2500 E. 10th, coro-| nary occlusion. : Ls man, 67. at 942 N. Alabama. |
Kinna: ’ cerebral vascular hemorr
Marie Kafahl, 71, st 875 Middle Drive, Woodruff. Place, cerebral Orr | Georgiana McCray, 43, at. General, arterio-|
i
nnor, 70. at 732 Fletcher, myocar: |
Shorts. 43, at 719 N, Capitol, hemorr
Nina ditis.
uae 8 Ulrich, 15 at Sb Vincents,
—t?
{Humor girl will be launched today {when a e said they had been hidden truck hits the streets. The Good | prevent theft and that their Humor Co. heralded the event as i3i5/a passenger on the motorcycle, hiding place was unknown even| 2 Sign of the times.”
{= Mr. Marcatesseau, a motor- pe “delighted” to let Mr. Watson Th 's fi . * e career of his «++ |cyclist, was killed when his Ve- near the recordings but needed SRF Of history's first. Good 100° |hicle crashed on a curve at the tne permission of the full com-Michigan-Indiana line north of mission,
lady-driven ice cream
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,'sion’s charges but left after the tomorrow, which would continue but he left without taking any“refused to discuss Mr, Lie in office for three years. [thing when she hit him in the
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to fight its way into the will be assigned to duty tomorrow
night. U. S. Statement
WASHINGTON, Oct. 30 (UP)—Governfor the eur-
vision last night rent fiscal year through Oct. 36, compared ith tw short with a year ago ! wit wo ¢ his Year songs th at Expenses $11.565.804.877. $1 1
ecelpts
436,090.86 446,606,632 4.199,793.919 - 4,692,391,387 ublic Debt 256,880,267,527 256.589,742,197
0 f Gold Reserve - 23.289,004,129 24.584,133,001 act of] '
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings. . cease 8 9,883,000
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INSURANCE COMPANY Meridian of 30th
——— ei ee
ASSURE YOUR FAMILY A GOOD INCOME It's easy with our special FAMILY INCOME plan. The full value of the policy is conserved during what is a critical period for the family — yet @ liberal, certain, monthly income is assured, which is about 3 times what likely could be earned on the proceeds
Information Todety [~~ =" INDIANAPOLIS LIFE | Nome -.
HI-9621 | City
if the policy was, paid in one sum™
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| Address
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COMPLETE EQUIPMENT
'MATRY’S ‘Heating & Sheet Metal Co. 30S. Meidion St LL 6684.
“KING'S INDIANA MA-3401 :
“Fixture Store Comple
Designers and Builders FOR |:
HOTEL CHINA—GLASSES—SILVERWARE All Types of Recreation Room Equipment Let Our Engineering Department Solve Your Problems “Ask Absut KING'S RENTAL SERVICE—ANYTHING You Need BILLIARD CO., INC. 1529 to 1645 Southeastern
” fe RESTAURANTS, BARS TAVERNS, HOTELS, BILLIARD ROOMS
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