Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 December 1950 — Page 50

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Eorly. Holiday Buyers Ignore Nippy Weather . Mat

(Continued From Page 49) _ | Friday he came out with _ ‘removal (same brand at 65 cents.

would act about like the » were losing plenty per can. of up| on park, | “Live” Christmas jtrees are be-| | Livestock Pork went up. He thinks eggs ginning to show up. But don’t! will, too.. The reason is the holi- jook for’ them much before’ the . : a a. the baking and, of] last two weeks, Where they're, Prices Close Steady ~q Of kept inside they lose their nee / : : il aon drink” 10h y ~ To 15 Cents Higher Despite Big Receipts

course, the '|look scraggly, wind up on a bon-| ye olde eggnog. fire out back the day after | Elsewhere in the supermarkets’ Christmas.

there’s peace and plenty except in the vegetable shortenings on on the coffee shelves. They're '‘football items,” priced below cost to lure the lush, heavy-eating, holiday trade. On Thursday one chain adver-

If you have a rabbit appetite, go for salads, slight dip below 25 cents 12 oz) in “tube tomatoes,” the’ reason being that the Florida and Texas crops are due. But if you prefer the hothouse]

CHICAGO, Dec. 2 (UP)—Hog there may be a prices experienced the heaviest (for run of the season this week to lead the livestock market to an

tised a name brand coffee at 69 brand, they'll stay 39 cents peri .,ceq the week steady to 15 cents... A competitor read it. On!/pound all winter, ‘cents higher despite the heaviest

Walter Hadley, 1735 §. Meridian St., has been sell- receipts since January. Straws ing furniture Yen bedding for 20 years. He has to The advance applied mainly to park a tot. And he gets parking tickets. [butchers weighing less 3 28 His trouble is that he ‘leaves his car by a parking meter. The \pounds. Sows Somptised : 0 y an first nickel runs out while he's working hard to make a sale, So/estimated 8 per u 0 Teenipts) he invented a cure for the over-parking pest. {and sold lower. Closing sow pri

tate A was the transaction involving this Jue bedroom house and seller of this property together last month. The broker re erie semen = ee 4516 W, Washinglon St. Mr. and Mrs. Eimer W. Smith sold sale of the dwelling at 1907 Priscilla Ave. fo Mr. and Mrs. their dwelling fo Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Finchum with Mr. Green. W. Shipley. The house was sold by Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Nik on

FEE Ts

He's got a device which holds a {showed a decline of around 50

nickel and sticks on the wind- . shield with a suction cup (see picture). When the cop comes along to put on a ticket, he can take the nickel off the windshield and drop it in the meter, “And so ean a friend” Walter. What he didn’t figure are the small boys who need nickels. But he explains that away with “But it's broad daylight. And who'd steal with everybody watching.”

GULF .OIL

adds

CORP. has just

bought the assets of the Sohin- .

Fleetwing, Inc. in the Detroit area, expanding outlets there by onethird. Deal took in 85 filling stations.

president, was one of the 15 active railroad presidents to entertain Donald Gordon, chairmanpresident of the Canadian National, on his first visit to Chicago yesterday. SY L. DE CESARE, 3330 E. 38th -8t., is the new Indiana-Ken-tucky sales manager for Park Tilford Distillers. W. V. SPAULDING of the H. I. Heinz branch in Indianapolis got the winner's nod in Heinz's master salesman contest, gets a trip to Pittsburgh. 4. D. ADAMS MFG. CO. de-: clared a 25 cent dividend on com-

N, Meridian 8t., fancy wear, Is putting in a shop-| ping service for blushing grooms-to-bé and hardnosed husbands.

in Indiana, where on the ear. & °° crop's coming along, too.

TANK YOUY | MEMBER METER PAL cus LAD o ?

A nickel on your windshield.

ymon, payable Dee. 30 to Dec. 15 | JOHN W. BARRIGER, Monon |Polders.

THE SLEEP SHOP, Inc. 3762 ladies flimsy and

YOU HEAR mostly about corn liquid in Jasper, elseBut the tpbac-

Production per acre, mostly south, has jumped from 1000 pounds to 1300 pounds In. 10 Years. And that extra 300 pounds is worth $150 per acre. on. 10,000 acres, a cool $1.5 million to 8000 Hoosier tobacco growers. |

Mear Harold H. Hartley with “The Human Side of Business”

on WISH at $ p.m.

I

Double, Brick Home Move Fast :

| | |

| |

| |

|

This Yoursrooma: side double involved co- Shoration between | Al Alig of Fieber & Reilly and Rey Harris of Gregory & Appel. |

They helped complete sale of 3685.

E. 36th St. Nov. 2. Purchaser

was Robert B. Lynch, a car salesman with Hatfiald Motors, and | sellers were Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Osthoff. Mr. Osthoft is employed by the toy hound Bus Lines.

bedroom baker Realty Co. The house at

Shirley R and Anne M. "Wasion er hecd this sturdy two. | ick dwelling last month in a top sale for the Stude. |

6255 Homestead Dr. was the

property of Wilbur C. and Daisy M. Stokes. He is the former

er of Stokes Pharmacy. The transaction was negotiated by

fudebaker ‘Salesman tL DO Emmert.”

Getting Ready for Full Scale Mobilization if Necessary

(Continued From Page 49)

and other workers 3 cents an | hour. United States Steel Corp. has granted a 10 per cent wage | ‘boost. Obviously, worker:® pur- | chasing power is increasing. Yet, at the same time, the supply of goods available for iolvillans 1s bound to decrease |

~-as military needs for steel, copper, aluminum, and other strategic materials increase.

Thus, television companies | have anounced reduced schedulss for next year, Therefore, money will have to be siphoned off by taxation +~to bring effective demand for s into balance with supply. | =herwise: Inflation.

pe 0 ‘Dark Gray’ IF CONGRESS, however, goesn’t levy higher taxes, if prices go up again, increasing | the cost of living, which in turn . boosts up wages, then price control will be unavoidable, That's the real problem the accelerated timetable poses. | fund the 5% per cent rise in 1 prices accents the prob-

Indeed, if the Chinese assanlt causes another wave of panic buying -- by business men and housewives alike—the

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pressure in and out of Congress for price ceilings will mount, So much so that hasty decisions might be made before

we can evaluate the full economic consequences of ‘this “entirely new war.’ Meanwhile, in the words of W. Stuart Symington, chairs

man of the National Resources Security Board, we've moved from “light gray to: dark-gray | mabilization.” And that means lighter controls faster.

Brick, Tile Set Post-War Record

| Brick and tile production con- |

{tinued to pile up this year, higher! than in any other post-war period. |

Output during the first eight months this year ran 6 per cent (higher than comparable periods, {the Structural Clay Products In{stitute reported yesterday. A production report shows brick ils up 12 per cent over last year {and tile zipped 13 per cent higher {in the same period. Facing tile iis also up 12 per cent, the Insti: {tute reported.’ | Shipments have exceeded outiput, reduced inventories .and spurred advance orders with outlets for delivery, the Institute said. :

. ® Westinghouse ® Motorol a

i i

151.50

HE GOT IT

1 [cents for the week. Eastern slaughterers, unable to ® obtain enough hogs | v js usual sources due to the crippling | {storms, came into the Chicago

{market in large numbers. | Week's trading was featured by

Pease loser hs | active markets and dally clear-/o¢ other pieces of real estate and

ances, A brisk shopper demand fea-

!tured the sheep market this week,

‘on good to choice wooled shorn lambs.

Good and choice wooled lambs included the following: closed steady, with a weak under- ‘ [tone. Middle and lower grade natives ended the week definitely Shorn lambs declined up

weak. jto 50 cents. Sheep held fully steady. Prices on most weights

the cattle market this week.

from the!

of St., 4002 N. New Jersey St. 6685

lh ifers; steers and ‘yearlings were E. Pleasant Run Blvd, Lot 6 in aly to higher iy a of [Arden addition, Lot 48 in Welling- i

5 | i ¥ $ §

Topping currant sales for the: Herinan Greenwood Real Es. A Timex real estate ad and Realtor Art Lamb Brought bayer

Nov. 22. Mr. Shipley is with Indianapolis Railways. Mr. Milk, 'employed by Underwood Corp., is moving to Florida.

ciety of Architects will be hosts for more than 100 members from

wood completing the transaction on Nov. 10. Mr. Smith is an auto | mechanic. and Mr. Finchum is employed at Allison's.

Nl Weather Crimps Architects’ Plans [ior more than 100 members trom

ew roject Si The: current inclement weather | week-end in South Bend, state. Discussion of new materials has forced postponement of the! {changed . to the January dates yng uses in architectural prob-

annual district seminars of the by Great Lakes district chapters, lems will highlight the meetings. American Institute of Architects District Director John N. Rich-| From Indianapolis, Chapter

In N. Side Sales

specializing in housing sub-division and industrial real

University farm Mr. Baldauf

management ‘school, has been affiliated with the farm feeds division of-the Quaker Oats Co. since 1940. He was dis trict representative except for four years in the Army. During his service stint, Mr, Baldauf was stationed in the Aleutians as military policeman, engineer and farm manager in the ter Corps. . He is 37 and lives with his wife and child at 1028 Winton Ave. in Sueedway. Mr. Baldauf will take his real estate license examina.

to Jan. 19-20. ards reported yesterday, [President Don Compton will lead The meeting, scheduled for this' The Indiana chapter of the So- ia 15 thambers delegation

Acreage Purchased

tion next month.

For Lieber Rd. Homes

(Continued From Page 49) 1

two farm community properties. The list, submitted to the Real } Estate Board by Associated Chairman Warren M. Atkinson and Secretary C. Scott Padget, 5

R. E. Walker—2422 Northgate Ji Street.

‘Ford Woods—3428 Broadway. R

{ American Estates Co. 5421 {Pennsylvania St., 5148 N. Illinois

ton addition and Lot 141 in Ar- B

Slaughter steers, yearlings and den additoin.

heifers closed unevenly at 50c to; . weighty Ave.

higher, choice steers showing the full advance.

Bulls were 50 cents higher till the 40 Resemore Lane, 4128 E. 34th final day when part of the ad. St, fvance was lost. Both vealers and Ave, steady to N. Norfolk St.

stock cattle sold at strong prices throughout.

Grain Futures Mart ‘Reflects War News x’

CHICAGO, Dec. 2 (UP)—The sudden swiftness of the turn of {events in the Korean War was {reflected in an unsettled grain {futures market at the Board of

{Trade this week.

Gen. MacArthur's announce-

ment of a “home-by-Christmas” * A, H, M. Graves, Inc.—3504-6 |offensive sent prices on a down- (Clifton St., {swing in the early part of the |week and they shot quickly up

[past the previous week's highs {with the news that United Na[tions troops were retreating.

Compared to Friday's close last

iweek, wheat yesterday closed 115

ito 2 cents a bushel higher; corn {4 to 53% higher; oats 4% to 45

{higher; rye 3% to 5 higher, soy-,

beans 915 to 10% higher and lard 80 to 125 points a pound higher.

Traders watched tickers from!

Lake Success and the nation's] 13037, 3041, 3045, 3049,

icapitol with as much interest as they did the prices in the market.

Late Friday word that a price

|stabilizer had ‘been appointed by {the President confirmed reports made earlier . that such a move 'was imminent.

TOLEDO, O., Dec. 2. (UP) —

{When the wind blew Edward Al{len’'s hat off his head, a stranger

yelled, “I'll get it.” The stranger jretrieved the hat but fled with it lin the opposite direction.

and «1227

Jack C. Carr Co.—3002 Park (representing seller), 1650

Leland Ave. 4103 N. Kitley St.

305 N. Post Rd., 4305 College 1922 Carrollton Ave, 1736 342 Hanson St., 1289-31 Broadway, lot at 8128 E. Washington St., Tract 51 in John-| son's Kessler View addition, 3171 = 24th St., 6856 N. Keystone! 28 N. Park Ave. and 5833 Tiiinois St. in co-operation with Gregory & Appel. Fay Cash—23 acres on Lieber Rd. south of Kessler Blvd.

Driscoll Realty Co. —Lot at 76th and Meridian Sts.

Gerdenich Realty Co. — 4704 Rosslyn Ave.

i i i i

2

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5637 Oxford St., property on Morgantown Rd. in Smiths Valley (represented buyer) and property on Paddock: Rd. in Smiths Valley {Tepresented buyer). Hall-Hottel—3946 Hillside Ave. in co-operation with ‘Fieber & Reilly and three lots at 21st St. and Emerson Ave, F. M. Knight Realty Co.—1616 N. Leland St. John Lookabill-Homes at 3013, 3017, 3021, 3025, 3029, 3031, 3033, 3053 and!

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3057 N. Stuart St. Bruce Savage Co.—3837 N, New Jersey St, lot 3 in Highwoods addition and 2425 E. 38th St. The Spann Co., Inc. — 5009-11 Central Ave. (represented buyer) | N. Capitol Ave.. = F. C. Tucker Co. -— 3308 N. Euclid Ave. and 5351 E. 9th St. Walt Veon Co,—258 N. Persh-| ing Ave., 5817 Primrose Ave. 2515 E. ‘40th St. and 6111 Primrose! Ave.

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27 Transactions Listed By Studebaker Realty

The George Studebaker Realty Co., {hunt for homes here, compiled one of the top transaction lists in|

the last two months.

The fast-moving South Side realty company reported 27 prop-|

| erties listed and sold, including estate. The list included property at

11829 Holloway St. sold for Clystal and Mildred Powell to Omar and {Carrie Smith; Farr. Place in { Mooresville, Virgil and May Farr to Morris --Barlowe;- 801. Cottage:

__|Ave,, Arthur and Edythe E. Cope-

land to Floyd and Emma Littleton; 1516 Market St; Marie Snyder to Paul and Letha Smith. ‘ Other properties sold 705 Orange St, Anna Wehlage to Herbert W. and Maude Smith: 1447 8. Illinois St., Henry C. and Gail Dippon to Erwin Baumeister; property on Eplet ‘Ave. west of Tibbs Ave. Joseph -and Helen Robbett to Maxine Slone; 46 Roberts Rd., Bernadine R. Morgan lo Virgil and Grace Fox: 1765-67 E Raymond St,

included

yiovanni and Nora

[Modaffari to Paul N. and Evelyn !Brandelien.

Others were 1015 E. 9th St, Lewis W, and Edith Below to Vida M. Bilderback; Morgan! County farm, William and Doro-| thy Marchbanks to John and Rosaline Frump; 734 Prospect St.

| Earl and Mary Cloe to Mayme

Clifford-and-

Ingram to Iva Dell Combs; 1253!

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Twyman; 3650 Carson St. ‘Sture | and Grace Elfsbn to Alphaus and | Helen L. Coons; 712 8S. Whitcomb | 5 St., Joyce M. Courtney to Gerald- 8 ine Good; 806 N. New Jersey ‘St. Bl rand 1321 Marlowe, Lawrence wna ff “EE Blanche . Dunbar to Raymond Duncan; 249 N. Bellview Pl, Charles and Betty Crane td Joseph B. Scance; 1631 Cruft St. | Joe and Maude Martin to Julia F. Gray. Others were 740 Murray St. James Bailey to Onis and Eileen! Howes;\1829 Lockwood St. Vern- | on and Edna Alexander to Thom-! as Anderson; 10 Lincoln St. in| Brownsburg, Charlton and Lela! Burris to Claude Butler; 3101 N.| Temple St., Joseph and Bernice!

Model 9777

W., Ray St,, William and Juanita | Mottler to Herbert and Ruby Tur-| ner; 867 Westbrook St, Ensley! # Roberts to Robert L. Johnson; 611 Ingomar St, Elsworth and Mar-| (Jorie Bland to Edgar and Effie]

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East Sid

Grinslad Will Be | (Continued

down and mo $58 covering taxes and ins benhoft said. T a 4 per cent no burn up the mo Non-GIs will ly $1800 down, X, with the s: ments as thei bors,” the proj

Installing

Crews are nc stalling utility munity, includi with a city ma Riley Ave. h: proposed colon; . All houses w city water, gas ter neatly on larger than

project sites, T

foot wide conc side and service side drives. The dwelling basements with furnaces with install oil units And the basem enough to enab development b) Krabbenhoft sa The frame bt ture double oak plastered walls, cabinet wall be kitchen, featur earlier Grinslad tops. The commun Public School 6 Riley Ave, Lif chial school at 1 Ave. Transpor ping sites : ski

colony.

N. Keystone at 52

Mon. & Pri

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on Featur Insta

SHEET Mi 1816 Fast 30th

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Shuttioworth-Th 3814 College A

Twa blocks _ Stone veneer * heat, all c * features.

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