Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 February 1951 — Page 13
ere for Ger-
p's property {uernberg in nd hard ex-
bly be coms nally broken entralization
y, upon the gs were conle is clouded, upp and the 1at has hapf the “cold
“city I have and wish to ublic service
r which apForum enriter of the nd fully the
ater volume, for reduced chain stores. stores have 1 of coffee.
ie telephone to eliminate atly increase into considhe telephone mpany must ent, e companies 3 which now ne company
Lt evil of the and he feels he. picture I 1. Television petitive busiare high in ndustry and to rise. iven to the of telephone of all comring of tele18 has been hy , Cornell.
ncerning the partment. I criticize this
od condition icks, Marion
sn the heavy 10 p. m, the unday mornand over the
to and from
lone nothing a stretch of ’s curve just that is pro-
sun that is .
' the road is
, great num-
1 and would e done about er puts anyof accidents
be done in
ywnsburg,
1ER
taught . . « many many rather gray from wrong « In face of rthwhile . . . '« ++» & thing would prac- « « then too look to God do the right , the lessons rer till today eart . . . as
burroughs
ols cure the in-
nd return to tie.” *
» f this same 'o be guiding 088, Charles of ODM ense Mobilie various or- } gone out | Production ing the use copper, alu- | tin—is not wut down ciThese orders temporary. t eventually 8 lifted, me «time bedone. There | failure to arce metals It will take to get full lanes, tanks ded for de-
t If no war y will be in up producIt will also
upply plenty
im or whatkeep civil. n going full ls can be
3
/ know when I'll get a chance to.
{
\
yf HAROLD H. HARTLEY Times Business Editor
I'M IN THE middle. I've been there before. But I'm quite humble about it today. I wrote a piece about automobile insurance and said the General Motors sold it at a 25 per cent discount. .» In fairness to other insurance men, and insurance companies, that was not true. There are no discounted rates in Indiana Jhat I 50 find.
order, a lot of it will fill waste
” Workers-CIQ. today, Here's the
~ called an ‘outright fraud’ by the
THE COMPANIES filed "kets their rates with the Insurance How ‘Long? Department, and so long as the] THE SLOW START on the decompany is sound and can pay/fense program may mean ‘a long off, the rates can be anything ac-|pull. Several men whose opinions ceptable to the department, I respect think so. Let me go on. There is what| One is Dr. Earl Butz, is known as a “conference rate” economist up at Purdue.
farm He pic-
_ which is the rate set for differ-tures a ten-year pull, and tells
ent afeas by the Bureau of Cas> {farmers to get up to peak producualty Underwriters from statié- tion and stay there. He also astics. {sures them that it will be profitAll companies do not charge able” not a runaway prosperity, the conference rate. The insur- but'a good living. ance subsidiaty of General Mo-| om
tors is below it, but quite a few AND TODAY I HAD word other companies are, too. " [from Lewis 8. Rosensteil, presii dent and chairman of Schenley THERE ARE several com- Industries,’ Inc, which makes panies which sell at low rates, many things other than liquors, and it's pretty much a choice of such as industrial alcohol and where you want to place the penicillin. business, as to who gets it. { But there isn’t any chiseling.'as being from five to ten years, I'm told that's. against the law. ! perhaps 15. 1 liked his language; too. He said we need three things, Fraud? mainly, ‘production force, I WAS HIGHLY interested in tary force and moral force.” a memo from the United Auto| ' His closing words, “We must get lean and lanky because we face a dual economy of producition for peace and war.”
way it started:
“The price control order issued by the -government was
Haul Your Own | " THE DEEP DIP of the mercury ; has caused a coal hauling crisis. It is not a shortage of coal. It's drivers. | When the temperature hit bot-| tom, drivers reported they couldn’t| get their cars started, and some didn’t want to work in the snow "8 0 and cold. About half of the city's! NEXT PARAGRAPH: coal drivers showed up today. “The price control order, freez- < ga
ing prices at their highest levels, . FRANK HARPER, secretary of! simply legalize the scandalous|ie Indianapolis Coal Merchants! profits of speculators: and War|aggqciation, told me the situation) profiteers. It also increases thei critical, and some families are costs of defense effort by billions actually distressed. of dollars, increasing the already| This is how he said you could | inequitable tax load of most mid- help. When the coal has to be dle and lower income American/wheeled in, shovel a path for the families.” |wheelbarrow. It will save the 5 = = |driver’s time, help him to get a THEN THE MEMO began to load to someone else. shape up: | And for those who are actually “It is absolute folly to try to! lout of coal, find a way to get to find some formula for wage con-the coal yard and pick up a few|, trols so long as the country re-hushels to tide over the zero| mains without any over-all sys- wave. : : tem of inflation controls. Spe- | cifically when. there is no effective N lly control of food pricés, which rep-| TIONALLY you hear of resent more than 40 per cent of » vo¥e which was hardly neces-
Internatidhal ¥xecutive Board of the UAW-€I10.” Then, the board called for a rollback of prices to pre-Korea levels, and in the same breath ordered hands off the basic UAW-
CIO wage agreemernits, |
|—A tremendous atomic blast at
He measured the war economy
mili-|
pining Flash Reported Seen In Four States
4th. Test in Week Sets Off Burglar Alarms in City
LAS VEGAS, Nev, Feb. 2 (UP)
the proving grounds: 100 mil from here rocked this resort priv before dawn today, causing minor
alarms in the downtown district.
A tremendous cloud mushroomed into the sky seconds after the blast. It was the first time Las Vegas residents have reported seeing such a cloud following a test blast.
Residents of four western states —Nevada, Utah, California and Arizona-—saw the blinding flash that accompanied _t the explosion.
Many residents “said the blast was the strongest of four explosions at. the proving grounds, located on Frenchmen Flat, in the past week. Mrs, Amnie C. Bille, a resident of Fairview, Utah, about 350 miles northeast of Las Vegas, said she
damage and setting off burglar}
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ighty AExpiosion Rocks Las’ Vegas
Speaker
. . bus-
Dr. Spencer Myers . iness and schools.
- i, “The Schools in the World of Business” will be discussed by Dr. Spencer Myers Wednesday at a meeting of the Indianap-
olis Chapter, National Office Management Association. Dr. Myers. is deputy superintendent of Indianapolis Public schools. Savings bonds and awards will be presented by NOMA to three high school winners of a recent essay contest on “What the Businessman Will Expect of Me.”
saw the great light from the! blast. :
“Like a Sunset”
red ‘and orange, except ‘that it! lasted only a split- second,” she said. A plate glass window was {broken in Marfer’'s furniture store in the heart of the Las Vegas business district. Police received a call from the Boulder Club, a gambling casino, (that onesman playing there had suffered a heart attack. He was taken to a hospital but was found to be suffering from appendicitis. Burglar alarms in Las Vegas were set off, as happened after the second of the test explosions. Police Officer. Elmer E. Gardner said the police desk was deluged {with telephone calls.
No AEC Comment
The Atomic Energy Commission {field office confirmed that "the {blast was from “one of our perilodic tests,” but would say nothing (more, It would not comment on | the possibility that today’s blast was the strongest. Z
A spokesman said there was “no singnificance” to the fact that AEC . representatives left word that they were “unavailable” for nearly half an hour immediately after confirming the explosion. The AEC would not confirm that
the average family budget.” The UAW puts its finger on the|
{sary, the results were so sure. I am thinking of the recent]
trouble when it said without any oll of the Indiana State Cham-| over-all system of inflation con-\p.. of Commerce on whether the| trols. That's the Soule: “merit” or “bi-partisan” system a = should replace the old political] THE GOVERNMENT let the pork barrel. cat out of the bag, let it be known| » ae | what it was going to do too long! SINCE BUSINESSMEN see before it was able to do it. {their cost sheets loaded with] The over-all controls system isitaxes, they are particular about the answer, if there are to be any 1VIo is to spend all their money. | controls at all, but the govern- And they don't want political ment is in no position to enforce ‘hangers-on feeding at the tax] such controls—the solid wage- trough. { price freeze—and won't be for| So the State Chamber got what | many months, if ever, lit probably expected Wien hie; {ballots were coun e vote Eight Solid Pages |was 89.9 per cent for the “merit” I GOT A COPY of the price system, and 8 per cent against] and wage regulation order in the the rest with no preference. _ mail today. . And that 8 per cent. My It is eight pages long, fairly| guess is that a few of them fine print, on pages the size'of the| either have relatives on the Congressional Record. public payroll’ or they get a | I haven't read it and I don’t| little of the fax dough in their businesses.
'Five Names
I HAVE often wondered who dreams up the names for trains, | and why. The more to my amazement is the fact that some trains have] two names. Take the fleet-footed|
i
And I don't know how many businessmen will try to get it into their heads. It looks like a tough job. Even with the eight pages, there are thousands of questions unanswered. And this is why the Price Stabilization office with only six telephones is one of the Sycamore which does its luxury | busiest place in town, shuttle between Chicago and a 8% = : {Charleston, 8S. C. RALPH HESSLER, who is * 8 » handling information, is trying to| IT IS called the Sycamore get all of the explanations out to|going south only. When i* turns unions, chambers of commerce, newspapers, radio stations, civic organizations and management. But that has been slow. The envelopes were late in arriving, the weather and the railroad, strike jam didn’t help. » # » BUT SOON the printed, matter will start flowing over the country by the ton. But.if it isn’t any easier to read than the long, fa-land the name Carolina Special tiguing paragraphs of the original|gells more tickets going north.
it has a brand new name. The
same train which went south] as the Sycamore.
|is, but I suspect the trip is dramatized by the name at its starting point.
Today's Weather Fotocast
J SS “HANSAS ( Gy,
3 HE yon 3
PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS
LEGEND , CLEARING BOURKE “scavrenen [7 ATHCTIO | Debits a LLL 92000 . . SHOWIRS y n* . Yrs SLEET SHOW, { Schiff's “Shoes De woe: (I ; re wo ULPALOFF. COPR 1951 EOW. 1. A WAGNER. ALL MIGNTS RESERVED. or the Entire Family
fatomic scientists here for yester-! , /day’s experiment.
28th Division Troops
north-going name is the Caro- |der way lina Special. But it's exactly the |,hase.
HL
ppfiavaty’ \ otf ons
a = ttt
FOTOLAST®
[the cloud that mushroomed into {the sky after the blast was an
A. social program at 6 p. m. will precede the dinner meeting.
U. 4 Weighs Civil Defense Plan to Halt -
Await Action of Reds on - Acceptance Of the total proposed appropria-
. {tion, $150,000 would be made Of Proposed Truce available at once for administra-
ASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (UP) tion of the program. The remaine United States would con-, ing $500,000 would be set up as a sider halting at the 38th Parallel contingency fund to be spent only on previous United Nations’ terms on approval of the State Budget
‘lif Red China and North (Korea, Committee and the Governor in
now smarting under defeats, an emergency. The measure was agree to a truce. |introduced by Rep. Alembert W. - Officials said the present plan Brayton, Indianapolis Republican, to avoid, if possible, another stab and Sen. Sam J, Bushemi, Gary
by United Nations forces into Democrat.
North Korea, was based on the Teeth for Gross Tax
“hard facts” that new threafs of Communist expansion were Six bills, all designed to tighten mounting in the Far East and up machinery for collection of Europe. Danger spots included back gross income tax payments, Formosa, Indo-China, Yugoslavia were introduced in the Senate by and Western Germany. | Sens, Leo Stemle, Democratic There was a strong possibility | floor leader, and John A. Kendall, that the United States would op-! Danville Republican. The measpose crossing of the 38th Parallel ures would require out-of-state by ground forces if the lost| firms doing business in Indiana ground to the south can be re- to file yearly reports with the conquered and the Communists | Secretary of State on their sharerefuse peace terms. A defense holders and employees in Indiana. line then might be set up to await| * Further bills would provide for a change of heart by the Reds, a reciprocal agreement with other Influences on Diplomacy ates to bring lawsuits to collect
'munists' and their Korean part- {firms living outside of Indiana.
“It was like a beautiful sunset, on Executed i in
Rape Case
Virginia to Send 3 Others to Chair
RICHMOND, Va., Feb. 2 (UP) —Four of the “Martinsville Sev-
chair for rape today despite an]
half of the condemned “men.
Civil rights groups in this country and scores of individuals from abroad, including Russia and Communist China, bombarded American courts and Virginia authorities with pleas to save the men on grounds they were not given a fair trial. Six separate juries convicted them. The chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court refused at the last moment to intervene. At 7:05 a. m. (Indianapolis Time), the first man was led from death row to the bleak execution chamber. The three others followed in rapid order ‘and by 8:05 a. m.—exactly an hour later —the last one was pronounced dead.
{atomic cloud.
in 24 hours. It was witnessed by a party of AEC officials and
8 State Roads Being Repaired
The Indiana Highway Department announced today that the {following roads are closed be-
cause of construction.
IND. 1—North of Greendale; 2 miles] ove city streets and county gravel. 16—Closed immediately west of Do. in Miami County; detour 1 mile over County Roads 26—Bridge Sut two miles west of Road 1 in Jay County; detour 11 miles over - Roads 303, 22 and 1. IND. ' 38—East of Soblesville; 10 miles over Roads 32 and 13. IND. 49—From Road 14 to Road 10 in Jasper County; 22 miles over Roads 14. 53 and 10. D, 85—Closed north of Owensville for bridge repair: detour 15 miles over Roads 41 and 168. IND. 69—Closed south of Mt. Vernon; detour 4 miles over County Ropas ND. 762—Ferry closed at Walfash River. GROUP 3-B — Relocation under conj struetion not affecting old road. ° S. 24-30--By-pass East of Pt. Wayne. U. S. 52-—By-pass at Lebanon—Road work completed. ND. 59—From Mansfield south 3 miles| in Parke County.
rape
here Monday. Only official
tions.
facing the straight-backed chair, vintage of 1902.
Chair Tested
First they watched the chair] being tested with electric bulbs. Then the procession of condemned men started. After each execution, prison Superintendent W. Frank Smyth returned to his office to make: the official announcement to waiting newsmen, Bodies of the men will be; claimed later today at the state anatomical laboratory.
The four = followed another
man, George Thomas Hailey, 25,
to the chair, He was executed for raping a schoolgirl and killing, her with a shotgun.
| |
In 2d Training Phase Times State Service CAME ATTERBURY, Feb. 2— Troops of the 28th Infantry Divi- |
ining, are now well unthe second 13-week|
|vidual tr combined arms training. The “Keystone” |doctrination in preparation for|
combat. Training will
and tactics under overhead artil-| lery fire.
a lr | | Pe,
A
Ay
\:
1
\ / " X Lg - ed ra A - ] TAnLAnTA
TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—Frigid and very cold are the words for conditions over much
of the nation, The coldest temperatures are predicted for the Mid-
freezing line has been pushed southward to Miami on the eastern seaboard, Newd deponent
more? *
Mississippi and Ohio Valleys. The | sayeth |
members
u. S. Statement
| ment expenses and receipts for the current
\ This Last Year | Expenses $ 3 8il, 201. LiF $ 24,206,959,875 | Receipts 2,912,089 21,041,813,949 Sur is 40,868, 098 De ett 3.256,145,926 asd 143 04388 258.803.408.300 22,392 92,313,182 182 EN 4,304,§14,634
| Cas al . Bub lc Debt SMa ny DIANAPOLIS CLEA arings
Lined up behind him were four, of the “Martinsville Seven.” In the order in ‘which they, went to their death they were! {Joe Henry Hampton, 20: Howard)
| Lee Harrison, 19; Booker T. Mill around and starts back northig,, having completed their indi- ner, 20, and Frank Hariston Jr.
19.
Next Monday morning, the!
It consists of unit and |death chair will claim the other|{adRis faint
{three—James Hairston, 21; John
Division will Clabon Taylor, 22, and Francis| is 3 | No one seems to know why this go through a series of battlé in-| DeSales on, 38. Indpis 1 Railways 5s 67
The seven men were convicted
include'of raping Mrs. Ruby Stroud, wife! And the name Sycamore close combat, village fighting, in-lof a Martinsville,
sells more tickets going south, filtration under machinegun fire| {ment store manager.
Va., depart
Episcopal Church ‘Names Men to Vestry
The Episcopal Church of the
election of the following men to|
|the vestry: W. W. Hammond and! | HOMES FOR SALE | Thomas P. Jenkins, wardens; B.|
| Lawrence Dorsey, John R. Fenstermaker, W. I. Longsworth, {Harry Reid, R. Hartley Sherwood,
| Foster Stanley and Roy Whaley. | Delegates to the House of |
23 sa” | Churchwomen
include Mrs. Andrew - M, Taylor, Mrs. Fenstermaker and Mrs, Harold Hartley. The Rev. Laman H. Bruner Jr, is church rector,
WASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (UP)—Govern-
fiscal year through Jan.
{with a year ago:
31, compared
® 140 £ Wash. ® 259 E Wash. ® 346 W. Wash. ® 1063 Virginia
Big Stores
. frostbite casualties
en” died in Virginia's electrics merican
international furor raised on be- China assault on Chiang’s strong-
ners might have become more in| They would also broaden the terested . now in ‘a cease- fire, | Store license laws providing for {United Nations advances north- |injunetitn Huts pos close Stores ward, unishi at failed to pay the state tax Punishing Air strikes aha) Also the bills would extend the fluence Red diplomacy, they- said, Statute of limitation from three At the ae fom Vie ad to four years to give the state tration will continue its policy of| more time to bring legal action keeping Formosa isolated from jon unpaid taxes.
the Chinese Communists. Sex Offenses Officials said the U. §. would, Stiffer penalties for sex offenses jy to persuade Generalissimo against children are provided in {Chiang Kai-shek not to attempt a bill introduced in the Senate. an invasion of the mainland and The measure would increase the aircraft and ships offenses from the present status (Would be used to stop a Red of misdemeaners to felonies providing prison terms of 1 to 10 years on convictions, -
Tax Study A two-year study of the complicated taxing structures of the state, county and township units inIndiana is provided in a bill introduced in the House. It would create an 11-member
i
This policy is not unchangeable. t The: administration is considering whether to supply arms to Nationalist guerrillas on the mainland. But present policy is to have Chiang sit tight on Formosa because -his troops are outnumbered, equipment that the United States would have to supply is bipartisan commission to make needed elsewhere and since the specific’ recommendations for a Korean War js a United Nations| general overhaul of the tax strucoperation .other countries ‘would ture in Indiana at the 1953 ses{have to be consulted. sion of the legislature.
Local Stocks an d Bonds School Building
A state school ND authorFeb. 3 ity that would take over planning iii and construction of school pulls: ings in Indiana would be estab- » lished under provisions of a bill ‘lintroduced in the House of Rep-
STOCKS gmer Hoan States ofo *Ayrshire Colleries Com ei: RR Stk vo 2 fd Belt RR & rds ‘com’
Asked
$650, 000 for Two Years
House Measure Has Bipartisan Backing, Would Set Up: 11-Man Advisory Council
. The - all-inclusive oivil defense bill appropriating $650,000 to 1s d |finance Indiana’s home defenses > !duced in the House today.
Supported by hoth Republican majority leaders and the Demo‘leratic administration, the measure would create an 11-member advisory council which would hire a full-time director and staff.
| { | Strategists hoped Chinese Com. back taxes from persons and|
Bill Asks
in the next two years was intro-
Name Commission To Fight Crime
Hog Prices
To Strong
Are Steady
‘ by sb red Neste wr 1
on
Trading Opens Fairly Active = At Stockyards
Hog trade at the Indianapolis Stockyards opened "fairly active today, with prices on light and medium weight barrows and gilts Steady to strong with yesterday's average.
hw
ve
8-Man Citizens’ Group Appointed Here
{AR eight- -member - commission to fight vice and crime in Indianapolis before it “gets out of hand” was named today by city and county law enforcement agencies, Prosecutor Frank Fairchild, Sheriff Dan Smith and Mayor Philip Bayt announced the appointments today. They are: Mrs. Meredith ' Nicholson Jr., member of the city Board of Health and secretary of the Indianapolis social hygiene association; Mrs. Harriett Stout, member of the county council; Dr, Henry White, pastor of the Irvington Methodist Church; Walter Myers Jr., rattorhey, and unsuccessful candidate for judge of Superior Court 5; Leo F. Welch, secretary of Celtic Federal Savings and Loan Corp. and former city coun-
attorney and*former state Senator; Charles Boswell, chief probation officer of juvenile court, and Silas Kivett Jr; attorney. To Schedule Meeting Prosecutor Fairchild said an organization meeting would be scheduled for next week. “The group will have to teel its way,. since it will have no statutory powers, It really will only work with the law enforcement agencies, and attempt to reflect the will of the people,” Mr. Fairchild said. “The board will have to do its own thinking about the crime situation in Indianapolis, we don't intend to tell it what to do,” the prosecutor said. The board will be empowered to do -nothing. It will have to depend upon private sources for money for investigations, and it will have no authority to compel witnesses to testify. “For the first few weeks we will be organizing,” Mr. Fairchild said. “These things are slow getting feet up.”
Stage Walkout ‘At U. S. Rubber
cilman; ‘Robert Lee Brokenburr, and lambs offered fo make a. oud
Three other members of the|Bobbs. Today’s blast was the second|group convicted of are
scheduled to pay with their lives
witnesses were permitted to watch today’s execu- Peont Elec They began assembling before dawn and were led by pairs to the pale green chamber where they were seated in boxes
i%
R Yrds com ....iresentatives today. Bobbs- Merrill pia. 4% 1. '® | The measure would create Central a i oom ++ 34% 31 lpoard composed of the governor, Circle Hom . 58 .|secretary of state, auditor, treasCu s Eng pid. . 98% 98% rer and superintendent of public’ Gono da nan « 37 construction.
The U. 8. Rubber Co. plant was tied up by a walkout this morning. Union officials wouldn't. talk, but the company said the walkout was in sympathy with one man who had been suspended for refusing to do the work assigned him. } The company said the employee, an inside trucker, had twice ignored the foreman's orders, and as a result was suspended Thursday and Friday. Other workers began to walk
The authority would be given
Hogs, 6000; bulk choice 170 to 1250 pounds $23.50 to $24, later {price paid freely for weights up to 1240 pounds; choice 250 ‘to 290 |pounds $22.75 to $23.50; scatterjing 290 to 340 pounds $21.50 to $22.75; 120 to 160 pounds $27 to $18.50, few $19; sows steady; bulk 300 to 550 pounds $19 to $20.25; few choice lights $20.50 or above. Cattle 500, calves 200; steer supply comprised four loads; commercial to good 900 to 1050pound weights unsold early, held around $31 to $32; cows steady but less active than earlier in week; utility and commercial cows $23. 50 to $25.50; canners and cutters $18.50 to $23.50. Bulls steady; odd head. commercially good, $28 to $28.50. Vealers in light supply, active, steady; few good and choice $38.50 to $40; common and medium $28 to $38. : Sheep. 200; not enough sheep
market; nontinally steady; goed and choice wooled lambs quotable $35.50 to $36.50; common and medium $30 to $34.50; medium to choice slaughter ewes quotable $14 to $20.
Meat Packers
Strike Looms
CHICAGO, Feb. 2 (UP)—Wage negotiations with two big meat packing firms have broken down and “all hell is likely to break loose” among workers in the in-
The CIO United Workers told the wage -
work stoppages which spread throughout the in. a Spokesman for the union He OR eman or es Wien that union planned a general A representative of Swift said it was ‘absolutely untrue that Swift has broken off ) tions.” He charged that the work stoppage “apparently is for the Purpose of ringing pressure. for
Senator's Wife Ill, GOP Majority Cut
The serious illness of a 1 tor's wife today cut the lican majority in the Indiana ate to just one more than | Democrats. Sen. Harold Hindley, La Port was told late vesterday.his wife would undergo an emergency op-
*
“
fe of
o
rn Ind 8 pid 15 ipower to select sites and conFautiable Securities com ..'|strfict school buildings on them, nance 5% otd 100’ [financing the projects with loans Ea Co Som * _..|from the state common school ome Ta Th fa. fund. Hook Drug co, Som "1%. | The bill provides that the Ind ‘Gas & Water Com .... buildings then shall be leased to nd Yelrpnine "8 ote": 10 the various school communities. iindpis H&L co fom te : 30% The rental revenue would be used Indpis Ath Club Reaity Go.:'seve |. (to Pay back the loans. | Endnage! ter Co so Teg 108, 18%| The measure was introduced by {Indpls Water 4% i03" 18312 Rep. H. H. Wilson, Greensburg 0 ierson Ratlonal 4 Republican and Rep. Kenneth
Kingan & “Co pfd Lincoln Nat Life ......
Lite . iLyneh Corp Seavhasas Marmon-Herring orf com... {Nat Homes com ..............
Mastic Asphalt ....... NM Hom is ofd . (N Ind P Com . 4% void
~ {Blackwell, Franklin Republican
oi “A bill to limit single trucks to , 136 feet in length and combined
i IN Ind Pub | fry 4% 101 103% tractor-trailers to 40 feet in (Prarie, Fmdes Sa va... 2% =a léngth was introduced in the allory i SOM: ..:. cs 7 7 EE Ln. gi Bpfioes hologi of In a pid. .... 2 9p Ross Gear Tool com ...... 3g nsin no ists {Schuitzer Cumming pid 318 19% | Lice $ 9 Psy
All practicing psychologists te license
So Ind Ind G&E pfd phan Stokely-Van Camp com .... alokely Van f 12% pid
So Ind G&E ped..." ll... {would have to get a &
18% from the medical board under pro-
Tanne Terre JR Malleable .. 11% visions of a bill introduced in the 1.°8, Machine Co "'......... 3W ..."] House.
tinited iiepnone %* { Union Title *% ota
“1H. T. _ Griffith N Named
BONDS Ammete: Rigs ir 478 55 % d f S Pp I's a an 28 99 ...¢: 98 (American Loan 4'%s 60 Wa n o t. av | Bastian Morley 5s 61 ... vo mee | roe Batesville Tele Co 4las 98 oe] Howard T, Griffith will serve as
Buhner Pertilizer bs 58 .%.. h of Com Bldg 4'as 61 ... 987 + [Columbia Club 3-58 62 ...... { Gitizens ind Tel 4%s 61 - itable Securities 6s 60-.,,. to Co 6s 65 5s 64
pls Public loan Sa 64 nd" Limestone 4 75
- |copal Church Vestry for the com-| ling year. Mr. Griffith succeeds Omar 8. ‘Hunt who was. elected warden |emeritus. John E. Hollett Jr. is] {the new junior warden holding
= =
Hami i
75%
\oausenram Sl . {the office vacated by Mr. Griffith. | Ind ub ery uk R- 10h {Scott B. Clifford was re-elected Sater Are Co 8s any |treasurer and Harlan Johnson | *Ex-dividend i ‘lelerk. Other vestrymen include]
{Donald W. Alexander, mond Miller
NOW IS THE TIME to buy C. Ray-
{your better home where you will |enjoy a greater sense of comfort ig, 11ivor and John M. Webb. {and tranquility . . . a secure re-| —————————— fuge from the coming inconven-| DIES OF EXHAUSTION * fences and shortages. Shop for, FLORA, Ind, Feb. 2
. SHOP THE ing his car from a snow drift. TIMES REAL ESTATE WANT He was returning from church ADS! when the car became’ stuck.
LUA AY AL
LW ETT 10]: 9 A
BEAUTIFULLY CLEANED MOR mE Tol [dd 331 30)
REGULARLY 99° — NOW ONLY —————y
KY ra BRING IN ANY EAL SWEATERS
BEAUTIFULLY CLEANED AND BLOCKED
REGULARLY 49° each — now 2 for
49°
-p INDIANA'S
DA |S §) LARGEST
4 i C leanens
PANTS SKIRTS BLOUSES
CLEANED, ‘SPOTTED and PRESSED
BUSINESS SHIRTS
senior warden of St. Paul's Epis- |
Leroy B. Miller, +George B. M#rrison, Reginald H.!
(UP) | Advent today announced the your better home where you williO, L. Hausensluck, 66, died of (find the LARGEST NUMBER OF exhaustion yesterday while push-|
out on the second shift yesterday. eration in a South Bend . By midnight the plant was well pital today. Hoe
down, : About 1550 workers “suspended GEN. SCHILT PROMOTED themselves” to support the fellow Christain ¥. Schiit, C.M.H,, 58, stationed at Norfolk, Va. has
union member. The company cannot negotiate been promoted to the ot major general in the Marine
the grievance while the men are on strike, aygoraine to the conby th Navy Department today. ge Schilt attended Rose Polytechnic
tract. Institute in Terre Haute.
Novice Debate Meet Local Truck Grain Prices
will Begin Tomorrow
LAFAYETTE, Feb 2—Beginning college debaters from 23 col-| No. "truck wheat, $2.34. leges and universities from five E d h $3.07, states will have entrants in the| {N° i Yellow earn, $162
annual Novice Invitational Debate Tournament to be held here tomorrow at Purdue University. A total of 64 teams will partici-
WATCH REPAIRING
pate in the four rounds of debat- “by EXPERTS ing. Ratings will be made on a team, school and individual basis. At Miller's Modest Prices!
a Is, $34 ibs. oultry— owls, under 4'2 lbs, and Legh Eo 200: RL and stags. 19° and No. 2 poultry. 4c less Butterfat—No. 1. 65¢: No. 2. 62c.
MR. GROUND HOG S AYS:
NT JHESE PRICES | CAN'T TO GO BACK IN THE GROUND wd
.+.1Can Save... Buying a
ash
POULTRY from HARRY’S”
Local Produce Quick SERVICE |. Eggs—Current receipts. 54 ibs. to case, Miller Jewel Co. ERAS AE ryco.
29 on the Circle
4 Doors From Power & Lishd Oa
Young Fryers ii. oe 0 0 0 0 0 0 41 ANY BREED Young
Hens 41¢n
f You Choose ‘Em — We'll Dress 'Em While You Wait
EGGS =: 43¢0e
Med. - Open Sundays Till
Baking ¢ © © © o © o oo
“No Limit"
‘HARRY SMITH
“POULTRY CO. ;
337 W. NEW YORK ST.
" LI-5952
PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE
