Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1951 — Page 20
PAGE 20
It’s showing up in little feeling the pinch.
They're losing money, fast. selves ‘‘suckers’ to stay in business. They're living on hope. Cash ceilings may let them do|
business at a profit, but they doubt it. Legitimate packers are keeping some meat rolling through. But beef's down 7 per: cent in the nation, and big city packers are off 40 to 50 per cent. . » ” THE FARMERS ARE holding off, waiting to see what the government does. It's good pasture weather. They turn their stock out, and hold it. Tem Sinclalr, vice-president
y HAROLD H. HARTLEY Times Business Editor |
BLACK MARKET meat is here.
kd ay - 2 . y
— |
BUSINESS Waste of Men
In Washington
DAY IN Senices Sui
Stories in Times
Prompt Action
By MILTON BERLINER Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
: | WASHINGTON, Apr: 25— They openly call them-| y AT : y open ‘The Defense Department is making a ‘comprehensive ii iinet Sty” . of ihe possibility of eral income taxes, and that makes replacing-enlisted men in the it a much different story. i : : Taxes today are not what taxes Washifigton area with service| {women and civilians, it was re-
were in 1929, Or can you remember? |vealed today. Sa The question of wasted man-| power, as reported in The Indianapolis Times and other Scrippsa-|
towns. Honest packers are
Sugar Scare WHILE MR. BRANNAN had the words rolling, he” did something else. It sounds crazy.
He asked housewives to start buying up sugar. He wants them to pile it in pantries. That's'exactly what went wrong |
recent House Appropriations Committee hearings. Rep. John Taber (R. N, Y.), ranking GOP member of the com-
|
and treasurer of the big Kingan last July and August. The price mittee, told Defense Department & Co. said “a lot of meat is went sky high when the grabbers witnesses that he was ‘frankly going into the black market '§ot it. disturbed” by the article which operation at the edges of the Hn told how 20,000 servicemen were! corn belt. WHAT HE WAS trying to say peing wasted around Washington “Newcomers are getting the was that there's plenty of sugar in non-essential jobs. business. We know what it (but they can't get it around to Revealed Job Figures costs to operate. They must be [the stores in time for the canning Mr. Lucas reported that 3000 charging over the freeze season. {to 4000 enlisted men were work-
prices.” He agreed with other packers. “What we ought to do is to close until they get it straightened out.” Ed = ” WHEN GEORGE STARK, president of Stark, Wetzel & Co, heard the news of the coming rollback from three to four cents a pound, he asked: “Did Mike DiSalle say anything about the black market
in Indiana? There were strong hints that some locker plants were peddling’ beef under the counter and over the ceilings. But no packer would put his finger on one. Ld » =
JOHN CHAILLE, manager of out what it can use in May, it|
the Emge Packing Co. ($15 million a year) in Anderson, said: “It's lousy the way its all set up. What the hell is the ceiling? Each house is different.” .
“Packers are a bunch of fools to keep on doing business at a loss. They keep trying to grow. | They keep hanging on until their banker calls and says: ‘That's all.’ "”
Punk planning, I'd cll it.
{ing in the Pentagon, 18900 in pub-|
CONVENTION HOSTS—Dr. Edwin W. Stricker ! Howard papers in a series by Jim of the Central Avenue Methodist Church, and Harry Lucas, was thrashed out during tending hospitality to Protestant pastors and teachers meeting
here.
Text With 5000 Errors Is asa hus Bible Basis, Expert Says
Pastors’ Conference,
Of Necessity for Revisions Being Made
.By EMMA RIVERS MILNER Times Church Editer “The King James Version of the Bible is based on a Greek text |$34.50; good cows $31 to $31.50;
Don’t we have a canning sea- | ljc-relations jobs; 13,000 on re-| which has 5000 errors.”
son every year?.Or was surprise?
it a
RCA Layoff THAT LAYOFF of 3500 at RCA, what happened?
It was steel. They weren't out of it. But by the third week in April the plant had used all the go ment allowed. There was nothing to do but shut down. y
” ” Ld SOME OF THOSE people won't come back. It always happens. Is this going to be a regular thing? Employees want to know. It won't. As soon as RCA finds
will budget its production, give employees steady jobs.
Up and Away
cruiting duty here and throughout |
the country; 1350 on ceremonial made this statement and others equally arresting about the Berip-|$20 to $32.50; odd head choice $32;
duty here; 800 flying special missions out of Washington for high
government officials, - and 225 running a correspondence school. { Adm. Forrest P. Sherman,
chief of naval operations, told the| {committee that these articles! |were misleading. But the formal] Defense Department statement made it clear that it was con{cerned with the problem of getting enlisted men out of the {Washington area and into the fighting ‘jobs they were. trained |for. | Tells of Efforts Lt. Col. D. 8S. Daley Jr. of defense's manpower control division {told the committee that “we are trying to get all the enlisted personnel out of Washington that
WHY DIDN'T I get into a busi-!we possibly can.”
ness where there are ‘“prizes'?|
Like this. Louis Bland of the Adding Machine Service and Sales, 215 S. Meridian St., has six men who will—all for free—take an Amer-
Defense Department statistics show there are 60,605 service personnel in the Washington area.
Armed Forces Day
“The government's got the live- \Can Airlines plane to Chicago. Group Invites Doug
3 = ” ~ ’ stock producers on their necks, pPEpE'S THE “guest list”: How-, Members of the Armed Forces daring them to roll back prices. ,.4 RB Bland. Raymond E. Collins, Day Committee and Rainbow
Then there's labor daring them not to.” “The packers are in the middle of this mess.” : r ” . 3 BUT THE PACKERS aren't alone... The whole government's in the middle of the mess, too. It can roll back prices and please labor, or it can let prices go and please the farmer. And I'll bet those black-cigar guys have got their coats off, sleeves rolled up, counting which side has the most votes.
Charlie's Chant
CHARLIE BRANNAN'S in there itching again. "His nervous fingers are stroking the feathers of the frightened farm vote. It looks a little as if Eric Johnston and Mike DiSalle had sold Mr. Truman on icing prices at the source, on the farm. That made the political payoff, called parity, look pretty shaky. Then, as I plot this little drama, Charlie dropped around for a parley at the White House. » » = THE TRICK IN Washington is to hold onto jobs. And they won't hold them if the farm vote gets sore, and labor takes a walk. 80 chirped Charlie, “Farmers are not overpaid. Rather than being overpaid. farmers are earning less for their labor, less for their investment, and less for their management ability than dthers.” That was cracker-barrel music. He came out flat-footed for keeping parity pavments oiled up. = - = HE D*BEEN LOOKING around. He said labor’s getting a break. He said an hour's labor will buy 1.5 pounds of steak compared with 1.2 pounds in 1929; ten loaves of bread now against 6.4 loaves in 1929; 13.8 pints of milk compared to 7.8: 2.3 pounds of bacon compared to 1.3: 2.5 dozen eggs now, 1.1 then; 36.3 pounds of
potatoes against 17.7 in 1929.
yd r rn ” WHAT LABOR WILL tell
Charlie Brannan is that he has taken the hourly rate before fed-
New - Safer Relief
Sour Stomach Headache Acid Indigestion
Try the NEW
CEEVESS Effervescent
@® 0 Doctors recommend alkaliz- . ing a sour and acid stomach caused by too much food or drink. They prescribe a granular effervescent to quickly and safely neutralise and balance the stomach acida—to aid in digestion and improve general well being.
CRE-YESS Effervescent
© 0 ls truly a new modern formula designed to bring not only pleasant and lasting relief from stomach distress but also to eliminate the headache and other aches and pains that so often accompany acid indigestion. You therefore get more for your money when you nse the NEW.—-CEE-VESS Effervescent @® 0 Try this new kind of safe and pleasant relief today. It costs only 570 and you must be satisfied or your money refunded. It (s available at all ;
Marvin D. Field, Curt W, Hirsh- Division Association today .in{land, Oswald D. Phillippy and vited Gen. Douglas MacArthur to Voyd S. Wagoner. ‘lattend Armed Forces Day cereThere they will board the char- monies here May 17. tered streamliner, “City of San - The invitation wds extended by Francisco,” and skim plain and télegram by Elmer W. Sherwood. mountain to San Leandro, Cal., all Rainbow Division historian. He next week. also will tender it in person in - 7 own Chicago tomorrow. THE TRIPS are prizes for sell- The association here is coming Friden Calculating machines. posed of members of the Indiana And they're going out to the fac- Regiment of the 150th Field Artiltory. lery, Rainbow Division. It was But I don’t know whether they the first Indiana regiment to go
Dr. John C. Trever of Chica
tures read by Protestants,
Dr. Trever last night addressed the Indiana Pastors’ Confer-
ence and the State Christian Education Convention. He has done extensive biblical research in Israel and has just returned from several month's study of ancient Hebrew manuscripts In Britain and France.
The pastors are meeting in the Third Christian Church and the educators, in the Central Avenue Methodist Church. Both: conventions opened yesterday and will clese tomorrow, The groups will meet jointly tonight in the Scottish Rite Cathedral. Cites . Discoveries In speaking of the many errors that have come to light in sources of the King James Version, Dr. Trever said that discoveries of ancient manuscripts and archeological material make the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible a necessity. “The completion of the new versjon, Sept. 30, 1952, will be the greatest event in biblical history in- 30 years,” he commented. The speaker came here as representative of the committee for the new Revised Standard Edition. He heads the department of
English Bible. division of Chris-!
tian Education, National Council of Churches. “Ninety per cent of the Protestant Christians in the United States and Canada are backing the new version,” he continued. “A committee of 25 scholars has been at work on it for, 15 years.” Describes Work
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
{Hog Prices Are Strong to 29¢ Higher
Trading Moderately
Active at Opening | reception in Tokyo or may have Hog trade opening was mod- mercial Japanese monitoring erately active at the Indianapolis service which took the program Stockyards today with light and|from the air. medium weights strong to 25 A Scripps-Howard dispatch cents higher than yesterday. \from Tokyo Monday, telling what Hogs 8550; opened moderately appeared in the Nippon Times, active; light and medium weight said the Voice of America was barrows and gilts strong to 25/giving the Japanese a completely cents higher; early choice 170 to distorted view of American press 250 pounds $22 to $22.50; 150 head reaction to Gen. MacArthur's rechoice No. 1 190 to 220 pounds moval. $22.65 to $22.75; later bids $22.25, Basis of the statement was the down; choice 250 to 290 pounds... 1a¢ the Nippon Times quoted |
$21.25 to $22; choice 250 pounds| $22.25; Shor weights scarce; Only newspapers favorable to the
sows steady to strong; choice 300 Truman administration, omitting to 550 pounds $18.50 to $19.75 or mention of pro-MacArthur sentimore; odd big weights $18 to nent. The Nippon Times told a $18.25; 120 to 160 pounds $17 to Scripps-Howard correspondent $19.50. yesterday that it had taken the Cattle 1050, all press comment as it came in from in demand;|a Japanese commercial radio ‘steers and heifers firm;' COWS monitoring service called Radio |strong to 25 cents higher; good press. i |and choice light steers and mixed p.4;, press told the corre-| \yearlings $34.50 to $36.50; choice |, 40nt that it took the com-| $37.50; good to choice 1150-pound | ons Gown as it came over the! | Steers $35; load choice held around | air. SR Sholce 19 ow Jrime bod Voice of America officials here| yearlings and heifers
eft), pastor ller, are ex-
calves 275,
Educators Told
|canners and cutters $20 to $26.50.
g0, widely-traveled Bible scholar,|Bulls steady; commercial -bulls| =." oo up by being quoted in
° ‘ * the Nippon Times as applying the cutter and utility $26 to $29.50. 1,4...\ive to MacArthur's policies -~the quotations are recognizable as having come from its Saturay transmission to the Far East, But the Nippon Times’ version omitted entirely the first six pages of the voice transcript, as | A !disclosed here. This omission ex|“This idealism bears witness to! Announce Deadline cluded = long quotation from a the truth that man is a child of | pe deadline for receipt of ap- New York Times’ news story and |God and is free to be master of nications for entrance in the U. S. a Times’ editorial on the MacArhis own fate. Unfortunately,| Naya) Academy at Annapolis is thur speech, a long section of the
Vealers active, steady; choice nimi Anspiine en and prime $38 to $41; good to their loss of that heritage, of $38. d their Christian idealism. Sheep 50; not enough to estab“America’s greatness has been|lish market; all slaughter classes profoundly influenced by Chris- quotable steady. tian idealism,” was his comment. | 0
WEDNESDAY, APR. 25, 1951 | 'Voice' Told Both Sides, {Bvt Someone Didn't Listen
Mistakes in Reception or Editing Gave Tokyo the Wrong Slant ~~
By ‘Seripps-Heward Newspapers \ WASHPFNGTON, Apr, 25—The slanted resume of American press comment on Gen. MacArthur's speech which appeared in the Tokyo newspaper, Nippon Times, Sunday, apparently was not the fault of | the Voice of America broadcast from which it was taken, The version that appeared could have come from mistakes in
resulfed from editing by the com-
ments from the New York Daily News and Journal-American.
In place of the New York Times’ ‘news =story, which bal. anced both sides of the questions raised by the MacArthur controversy, the Japanese monitoring service apparently handled it so that excerpts from a bitter antiMacArthur editorial from the Washington Post was moved into the lead. The Post comment had been at the end of the voice broadcast. Otherwise, the Nippon Times followed the sequence of the voice broadcast, with one notable exception—the omission of a proMacArthur comment from the Pittsburgh Post - Gazette which did not reach the paper. ° On its over-all coverage of the MacArthur controversy, the voice has broadcast, according to spokesmen in New York, directly and by transcription the entire MacArthur speech to all points, translated summaries to all foreign countries, the full text of
$32 to Say that with one exception—a | speeches by Sen. Robert A. Taft {newspaper editorial comment that (R. 0.) actually called the administra-|Leader Joseph Martin, of Massa= {tion's foreign policies “ambiguous” | chusetts, plus pro and con coms ment from Congressmen and the | press.
and House Republican
The press comment roundup from which the Nippon Times drew a part was prepared by Moshe Decter, 29, a former com=bat infantryman and public rela {tions man, employed since Febru‘ary by the Voice in New York as a script writer.
Local Truck Grain Prices
No. 2 truck wheat, dl
Christian idealism, at present, 15 | May 21, Rep. Charles B. Brown- General's own remarks, and olf Bd oy dying of indifference and neglect oon" announced today. strongly 'pro- MacArthur com-| No 3 yhit er
as evidenced by perverted moral and social values such as honesty, integrity and personal responsi-|
- bility.
“There is great need for moral! and spiritual rearmament.” | The two conventions will come to a climax tonight at 8 o'clock in an ecumenical, or world-wide, service in the Scottish Rite Cathe-| dral. Delegates will re-ehact the’ founding of the National Council of Churches. Dr. Henry Smith Leiper, associate general secretary of the World Council of . Churches, will speak on “The Applied Dynamic of Christian
EVEN IN
NEVER SUCH A VALDE!
A
Unity.”
Stove Blast Fatal
COLUMBUS. Apr. 25 Mrs. Rosa Ann Sweet, 47, was burned fatally yesterday when a kerosene stove she fired up exploded.
U.S. Statement
WASHINGTON, Apr. 28 (UP'—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Apr. 23, compared
UP) —|
BARGAIN BASEMENT
i
deserve it or not. ‘The Friden is into World War I action, and be- _, | 2-'0T8 and teachers were ena good machine, practically sells came a part of the division -or- abled to see the tremendous color itself. ganized by Gen. MacArthur. and romance reflected in the So why should they get prizes? Chairman of the Armed Forces Packground of the new version Day Committee joining in the in- (NTOUBh remarks made by Dr. 8000 Pushes vitation, is Fredrick F. Marston. Lrever. He described for them ONCE IN AWHILE. when no — Ra She york of John Wpyeclif who one's looking. I go over and push . . made the first English translation SE NE Dye 5 Lush Dog Bite Brings Two of the Bible in the 14th Century. Station.
i Charges Against Owner Wyclit was martyered for his I like to see the Allison engine
effort. The 12th dog owner of the week run, the Harvester Motor turn, | William Tyndale, whose transand I like the Indiana Bell exhibit © >, charged by police yesterday
lation in 1536, he said, furnished which talks back. a S08 bite investigations climbed y), +, ndation for 90 per cent of
” rd . a bos ow 1% anager of Alabama St. was ordered into Gath at the stake for his scholar8 | 2po wy X- Municipal Court under charges of ly undertaking. The contributions posi on, tells me, he's going to failing to put his dog on a leash °f John Rogers. Myles Coverdale give the little fellows @ break. and faflure to’ get ity dog 2nd finally the much-loved King Today he’s beginning to set up . gel a cty dog : license. ’ James version all came in for deexhibits of what our small man- Bitten by the dog was Herbert tailed mention by Dr. Trever. Rfactufers can make, Salinger, 69, of 2025 N. New Another speaker, Dr. Edwin When the big guys go by, take yoreey gt. Dahlberg, pastor of the Delmar a look—and maybe they push a (ther bite victims yesterday Baptist Church, St. Louis, charged button or two—they can see what were Paul Companiotte, 48, of the pastors with their responsithe little manufacturers make, 1623 Hoyt Ave.; James O'Connor, bility’ and influence as ministers nuts or bolts, or parts of machine 4 and his brother Charles, 1, of of a free, unmuzzled church. tools. 5020 Park Ave.; Herbert Alex-| Church Holds Key IT'S A SWELL "IDEA. The der. 45, of 2212 Sheldon St. “The Christian Church holds
hardest thing about defense is the key to a free world,” he said.
getting the little fellows and tne Backing Truck Smashes jo" Dr. pahiberg named 2s the| i:
following four reasons for believing the church can save con{fused mankind: One—The church
big ones together into a war production team. i The “little man's show” ought to work. Those buttons pushes -a day.
Plate Glass Window
on E. Maryland St. shattered a gociet , the family y 8000 plate glass window of the Corll ir a vi hay does any Dillon Office Equipment Co., 143 has a free pulpit, the freest plat|E. Maryland St. form in the world today. Three— More Shaves | Driver of the truck was Nor- The church has set the pattern DO YOU THROW your razor man L, Harvey, 29, of 806 Udell for worldwide friendship. Fourblades away too soon? st. The church has an eternal per-
take
Vincent Hegarty, 36, of 2038 N. the King James version also met
A truck backing out of an alley stands closer to the basic unit of| 29°
with a year ago:
This Year Last Year Expenses $ 33.007.674.459 $-31.858 1391461 Receipts 37.385.603.912 29,903,712.328 Surplus 4.378.019.452 Deficit 1.954.426.5813 Cash Bal 7.286,736.187 4.3388.867.105 Public Debt 254.649.924.337 255.588.544.108 Gold Res 21.806.434.067 . 24,246,583.214
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE
Clearings . ..... . ...% 8.632.000 ; Debits -a “ .. -.$21,848.000 i - | Local Stocks and Bonds | New low-priced i i 5 —Apr. 25— { mens we TANK CLEANER American Loan §% pid ....... 98 EC American States com......... 28 ve American States pfd ......... 4 3 Syrsiiite Colllertes. com .... 133 REL s Ayr 42% . ) 3 Belt RR & Bue rds ee a. 68a $12,715 Down 0 t t r com ..... fy J . Donal ore da% ih Complete with attachments
6 Monthly Payments of $8.08
Bobbs- Merrill pfd 4'2% .. Central Soya . Chamb of Com cem ..
Circle Theater com .. Com Loan 4 pid . 2” “ NN LE ee mmings Eng p aig aaj a 4 Consolidated Finance § pfd . 96'a .] /) Contin-Car-Na-Var .... vo Va 1% COME . .... veonvss 14% 18 Eastern Ind Tele 5 pfd ....... 97 ves Equitable Securities com ..... 25 i. Equitable Securities pfd ...... 94 RAN | Family Finance com 100 wil mily Finance 8% pid . 100 | | Hays Corp pfd ww . .... a | Hamilton Mfg Co com . : Herf{f-Jones cy A pid 110 . |Home T&T 5% pid . 54 | Hook Drug Co com .. 19 |Ind Asso Tel 2 pfd .. a | {Ind Asso Tel 2% pfd 51 Gas & Wat com 25% {Ind Mich El 4% pfd 102 !Ind Telephone 4 8-10 pfd ..... 98 {indiana diols Water com ......: 3 9% ipls RED a fe a wwe - . !Indpls P & L 4% pfd."...... [LR |indpis Ath Ciub Reality Co... 84 81 . { indpls water Co Pr . 103 14 | Jefferson Nationa e com 2 |Indpls Water 4'a% 101% 104 IMAGINE! A grand new G-E Kissa & Co eon, Arius vEva aye od o % ’ 3 |+Eincoln Nal Le (111 Ws dul Tank Cleaner—complete with e New, improved design! yne. orp . “a vv 2 | . Marmon-Herrington oem 5a 8'a an Tn. ae attachments—at a ptice so low
Nat Homes com
Nat Homes pid
LL 26 . ’ ! Tile we're expecting a stampede!
‘o Lightweight!
Here's how to get eight more rb ent spective developed through prayer Sn tod Bob aerv ars pi 2 a 0a | . : shaves. Camp Time Is Near and closeness to (70d. *N Ind Pub Serv 4l; pd ...... 22 21% It’s a, top-quality cleaner, too! You keep them in a deep.-deep, Plans for medical examination While Dr. John J. Haramy BR Mallory Co Soom toe Br Really he di 't eo Real suction power! freezer which will hit 125 below. of youngsters planning to go to president of the Indiana Council! pun Serv of he Rey aan LS ea ly Bets out Fe rt rom #2 : of Churches, agrees with Dr, Rots Gear Tool com. ..... 1 , rugs an carpets raperies, fturTHAT HARDENS metal. Trou- Sommer camp will be discussed Dahlberg and Dr *| *Schwitzer-Cummins pfd ..... 18 19'2 ’ ’, y : > <3 Ind G & E com . ...... 21 21) Moi . ble is most home de “reesers 7 Un CNS ACUIMR 304 ing the hemtage of Crrstiane, me Spdtiak iste i Jacl nishings, everything! And the ~~ '¢ Easy-to-use attachments] 0 just under th . . is | 2 OIE <0 gue vs ‘ oo » . A for he Ta a: tomorrow in the Columbia Club, uttered a grave warning About Fanner ae ca lyr btd 11. 0 " 3 sparkling red-and-chrome finish : i * : : : erro Haute Malleabls ...... | . De But if you peek fnto the com- - [Bt Machine Co 0. ITS In makes it 2 beauty! Ask for your . pendably G-E! mercial deep freezer Bob webber Reds Let Long Hair Down— Onion THIS aes... aw demonstration of -the Webber Appliance Co.,| — BONDS . " Allen & Steen 83 ..... arse 38 American Loan 4%s 88 ..... 08
Se et ee Soviet Fires Opera Chief
= «o FOr His View of Farm Life
Director Failed to Reflect ‘Richness
And Joyfulness’ of Collectivism have to take it. By United Press As for buying one to harden LONDON, Apr. 25 The Russian government has fired the dirazor blades. Just keep on buy- rector of its state-owned Bolshoi Theater for staging an opera which
» ” ~ BUT THOSE DEEP deepfreezers aren't used for blades. Freezing stabilizes molecules in metal, make it extra-hard, good for .airplane engines where they
ing blades. It's cheaper. failed to show ‘the best qualities of Soviet farmers.” A brief radio Moscow announcement ¢vesterday =aid A. V. SoloHear Harold Hartley
on qovnikov had been replaced as Bolshoi Theater director by A, I Anisimov for “unsatisfactory direction.” ‘ ; Mcial ublication; —— — oi ea I of All-Union Committee of Fine Arts the dispute in a half-page edi-|—final authority on new artistic {torial ‘a week ago. It said Her-| Works ~for permitting the produc-, man Zhukovsky's opera “From tion of an “unhealthy, inartistic” {All Our Hearts” failed to reflect OPera.
[the “richness and joyfulness” of|
WISH at 5:45 p. m.
OFFICE SUPPLIES
| SOCIAL | STATIONERY GREETING CARDS DECORATIONS & | FAVORS
Thenre Called False
|life on a collective farm. | The newspaper said the now Stalin Attended dismissed director, Solodovnikov,| Authors, composers and stage was guilty of an irresponsible at- | designers were jolted by the Prav- [titude. |da blast because the opera had| Pravda complained that the op-| (received a Stalin prize only last era's theme of life on a collective]
1 LEATHER GOODS |month. farm “falsely portrays farm life.” DRAFTING Furthermore, Stalin had attend-| . “Its Soviet people lack. living e ‘ed the opera shortly after its/human traits,” Pravda added. MATERIALS !premier. He sat through the per- “Their -spiritual life is impover-| {formance of ‘almost’ four hours ished and nowhere are represented | \J i 1]! O IN 8 R LY {with such top Politburo officials the best qualities of Soviet farm- \ JAN . \ as Viacheslav M. Molotov, G. M. ers. The farmers possess no con-, 38 N PENNSYLVANIA ST MA 1471 Malenkov and L. P. Beria. vincing vitality. One does not
Pravda, the official Communist senge the labor of free people-of. |Party organ, even assalled thea socialist village.” £4 ;
a : . .
si ug
American Loan 4%s 60 ... American Security 5s 60.. Bastian Morley 5s 61
ox : - a ag : Authorized Dealer Indpls Railways 5x 87 .. . ‘ Kuhner Packirig 4s 59 [angsenkamp 58 58 N Ind Pub Berv 3'as 73 Public Service 3's 18 .... Sprague Devices 58 60 ... 25 Trac Term B86 31.............. 84 mn KEEP UP WITH THE TIMES! Solve everyday problems through Indianapolis Times Classified ads. They help you with selling, buying, renting, swapping, job finding, loss-recovering and many other categories. Phone RI-5551
to place your ad. | {
od THINKING OF = | BUYING STOCKS? PHONE: MArket 3501 | THOMSON & MSKINNON . © a NNO, QUA Li S EAST MARKET STREET : vip : | ae a ’ *
a TL
oh Theyre going fast / Order yours TODAY 7
Ton GENERAL @D ELECTRIC VACUUM CLEANERS
0 on MN ne RS i 0 RS RS £0 lw
' WEDN
Home To Res
Ben Olse model hous a plaque tq at the Stat Richard Home Shov make the
p. m, It WXLW bre Pp. m. in the Kitchen & Mike Du through Sa from the Home Show Sponsorir the Advanc tributing C Today we Day at the one-half of hibitors . a League. L. ed Hoosier show, Tomorros Estate Bo husbands 3 cluding visi Indiana wil pit.
BRIDE - | LEMS? To
for your br of the capa who place t Classified § apolis Time
Leok fer th * | PAINT &
aL
OXY(
This Equip
I 402 Day Phene 1-5367
CHECK
oe oo For accurate keoping on sew Eleciric 0-Graph, ween * Expe
tr 5 EOS
® Jewelr ® Men's ® Came ® Shotg ® Micros ® Typew Electric Electric Musical
Public
as an want y basket moved Mother a new There's obligat Wagon listed receive
Waele
New York ©
PH(
