Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 May 1951 — Page 17
a
Ut
t,” he said. “I eeks ago that y company and y wasn't worth
njected primar. way from one nss Michael Di¢s will cut the 00 million an‘rom the cattle
»
00,” said Hugo
“Tt can't be
1ey want us to he had never 11 office. * « tinued, Yis- all” our crowd fis ut our productlemen wanted and I wouldn't uld hurt them,
self and one of 1 farm owners an average of es,
rum
at you say, your right
witz’ article on He has done bring this to taken. Public ome screaming j00ting of the The commitat time recomme the survey ger demanding
18 a statewide form. Such a yers, personnel siness and laons ... a well cere interest in set up back in ve studied the 1d prepared a ‘nize and iInte-
an of the Marthat did the "he continuous urvey, done by 1 amazing retaff in writing unday’s paper survey that did orth, We made 1948, '49 and this has been ‘elfare Council banded. “Welfare Surid have had a > penal survey, ’ickwick Place,
acArthur as a ve any officer 1 of doing his AS a general. witness. that I tment and our ore the newsmen began to
hate Truman” t violent oppoioing condemn is even worse . Our foreign at. in the last rmed in pretty
live in a “one rid. We have ld, a Mussolini d a Stalin one for a Mac1at I feel Macge and dotage,
would say, as {oosier Forum rmanding genjer. But there Ss are supposed
-awfordsville
SN rd nth and week r. . . You are you are my hours pleasant em sweet . . and years... have a magic Is to work . .. . does much e is a glorious : . that all . no poet ne flies all too share . . . be- , because your Burroughs.
itch
‘orkers, has a He gays that are now emountry on the 3s watch moveve to be cased fitted up with to the retail
e an argument vorkers in an 4d 25,000 in a ing to the un-
the additional erican watch hly important iming mechaquipment. The competing new 'laim as much 't of thing.
r hesitate, nor arch for peace, long the road,
ay.—Secretary ~~
7 Francis P.
I'm the repreome 7,000,000 nd I owe them/ actions of Conbert A. Taft mpaigning for
RY
)
STUCK FOR A PLACE How about a streetcar? Marshall Dale, 20 for sale. You can Buy them.with®
has
‘Today +Business 20 Street Cars Up for Grabs
By Harold Hartley
Times Rusiness Fditor
to live?
head man of Indianapolis Railways, He'll soon have 170 more.
or without. Wheels, I mean.
+: Sou won't need the wheels because you won't have any
track.” So buy them without. The price, stripped of under-iron, is $200. If you insist on .the it!ll, be $500. n n n THE CATCH 1S THAT’ you can't set them up for hot dog joints. or even trailer-camp homes in town, There's A law. You have to find a pasture. And a street car would look funny in a setting of. cows, sheep and a babbling
iron,
brook, But here's who'll buy them, Farmers. They use them for chicken and hog houses. But they've got to haul them away. 5 » » THE TRACTION COMPANY also will have about 1200 tons of scrap steel for sale. The Illinois
line from 34th St. to the Fairgrounds will yield about 1000 tons alone, worth about $40,000, But the rails stay in the street from downtown to 34th St. on Illinois. Here's: why. The buried rails provide the necessary negative power return in the trackless trolley system.
= » ” AND, IF YOU BUY those street cars to live in, overlook an added expense. Think of all the curtains.
Got a Quarter? THE WASH ROOM “loan” used to be a nickel. Then it went to a dime. Now, in some places, it's a quarter. And that's got the OPS in a spin. It's the pay toilet. Apparently the OPS wasn't quite sure this was one thing which should not be frozen. Tho whole thing was stirred up in Washington, D. C., where twobit locks appeared in the Union Station washrooms. And it happened that the coinswallowing locks were made nant here in Indianapolis by the Nik-O-Lok Co.
one of don't
E J = = I CALLED NIK-O-LOK. And 1 hadn't been around too much.
—JIt—turned—out--that-two-bit—locks
are used in New York, Cleveland, Detroit, Philadelphia, Chicago, Utica, N, Y.,, and of all places, Erie, Pa. Charlie Steinmetz at Nik-O-Lok was my answer man, He said they'd been negotiating the two-bit lock before prices
were frozen, but in Washington,
they didn't get them installed until after the freeze date.
RUT THE OPS thinks it may! come under the freeze offer which made the inddstry shudder. The reason was that the order said everything not specifically ex-
empted was to be frozen, sure enough. But my question to Charlie
Steinmetz was, “What do you get for a quarter that you don't get for a dime, or even a nickel?” “Towels and soap, and a place to wash dp,” he said as smoothly as if he had rehearsed it for the 40 vears he's heen n the business,
DON'T L AU G H the pay toilet off. There are between 30.000 and 40.000 (I could count better than
that) in the country, and they turn in an average of $10 a month apiece. That's sitting pretty close to
$5 million a year,
The Big Why
TOMORROW the NPA is going to stand up and stake it. There's a trouble-shooting sesgion in the World War Memorial auditorium at 1:30 p. m, If trouble’'s all the NPA is looking for. it can close its eyes and bang. Then go out and pick up the birds who don’t know the answers,
oy y ” RILL F. RIGHTOR, hoss of the local office, says there'll be some “experts” on hand, no “theorists,” and they'll dish up tha answers like ice cream to a social on the church lawn, The plain truth is that nobody, Including the most incandescent minds in the Capitol domes, can cough up answers for all of the NPA's troubles. But they can try —and try they will. ov n r THF. TROUBLE with the NPA i= that when it helps one it often hurts another. or vice versa, or juat plain vice, that's where they get squeezed. The NPA or any other government control won't work unless the people see why it should. And I'm afraid a grod many ifn the business of getring ready on the factory front are looking on the rules much the same az a
PARITY CLOUDY AND CLOVOY ARiAy
- PAMUNEGRLPRLAFE COP 19%) FW 1 A WAGNER ALL MGNTS Asian
(fire stations the town was buying a kind' of
& setaeint barking out the orders
for a dress parade. n u n
1 PON'T SAY it is a “dress. parade.”’ ‘But there are quite a few manufacturers who cannot under-
stand the hig WHY of it all, just now, Super Giveaway? STREET TALK has it that a
whopping big contest will hit the printed pages tomorrow.
The idea will be to get the whole country writing “a few words’ on the American Way. But the payoff will be unusual,
so the gossip has it, a chunk of American industry itself. n n n I'VE SEEN THE TEASER ads from the supermarkets and it looks to me as if somebody's going to hit it rich. The prize will be upward of 30 grand. Nice vacation dough. You'll be in the know—tomorrow,
Sweet You?
THE SMELL - GOOD business goes up with the thermometer. Staying ‘shower sweet” all day will cost Americans millions. It's how they advertise that gets me, They time their radio spots ta catch you dripping with a towel in your hand. They put doubt in
your mind, and dough in the drug.
store tills.
n ” = THEN THERE'S that new ‘‘flying billboard” of Dial soap. It came to town yesterday, was neoned up like a carnival midway.
And it had a veice, too. And the voice was that of Charlie Hoover of Valparaiso. He read the ads, skimmed the city, and winked his neons down on the town.
= » : WALTER HOPKINS was In this week. He's the “Dial” soap man in town. He told me about his plane, then left me a couple of bars. I thanked him. Then I began to think, with some doubt. Why had ‘he left them? A nL?
{
SO I PASSED out a few bars to friends. And they looked at me as if we weren't friends any more, They were wondering . as I had wondered.
Rate Race
WHEN THE SAFETY BOARD opened the bids for the five new in town today,
+ Just
Insurance on insurance. It works like this.
up the five stations at an esti. mate of $65000 each, which probably will be teo low the city
will be able to stay in Class 3 in the fire insurance rate race.
E. M. SEL L ERS of the Indiana Rating Bureau said simply that the National Fire Underwriters had come to town, found it had grown, and that the locations and facilities of fire stations needed to be brought up to date Leroy Keach, chairman of the
Safety Board, phoned, and he felt - the town was in for a penalty fire
rate unless something is done quickly about our ability to control fire, Frankly, we have better protection with war and bomb talk in the air.
A Miss and a Mile
I RODE IN A cab. And it had a conductor, just like a street car. The “conductor” and long blond curls. She. was fix years old, and called me “Ma'am”, She was the “conductor” account of the parking problem Where to park children.
had blue eyes,
on
» » ” HER. FATHER, JIM, with an ear-to-ear grin, drove the cab. And his wife, Betty, had gone shopping. Being a downtown cab driver, he came in mighty handy. His wife just hailed the cab put the child aboard, and got her buying done.
on n ” AND THE LITTLE girl. Jean,
Hel>n was having the time of her
life. She ran the “flag.” When I got in she started the meter. When T left, after my mile. she stopped it. And her father collected the dough. But I've a hunch, Helen Jean got her share of that. too. She was dressed mighty pretty,
And Jim looked like that kind of a father,
Hear Harold Hartley on
WISH at 5:45 ppm
ts |
1 pn
\ ’
Tr HN FOIn LAST mn scarring acre SHOWIN lll ARCA Gone WA tt Tunnel 27% RAIN
TONIGHT AND TOMORROW-—The instability of the air
along the cold air front running
from off the New England coast
southweastward to Texas is expected to set off numerous showers and thunderstorms. Cooler air will offer relief to warm, humid le-
calities with the advance of the new air. mass behind the co'd front.
*
har 7 Sh FESR
By putting
I'll feel a lot safer if
EEE TE dT YT
Hog Trading Opens Slow on
Hog trading opened slow. at the Indianapolis Stockyards this morning. Cattle receipts were about average for the day and prices held steady. Hogs, 8500; glow; limited early sales; choice 170 to 240-pound barrows and gilts mostly 25 cents lower at $21.25 to. $21.75;
few lots to $22; later sales largely $21.50 down; few loads 240 to 270 pounds, $20 to $21.25; mid-session slow, some weighty = butchers without bids; 120 to 160 pounds, “$17 to $19; sows 25 cents lower; 725 "to A550 pounds, $17.25 to $18.75; few $19: odd big weights down to $17 or. less, Cattle R00, calves 300; all slaughter classes mostly fully steady; odd - prime yearlings $3 to $28; bulk good and choice yearlings $34.50 to §36; two loads mostly choice steers $35; scattered commercial and good light steers $32 to $34; choice around 600-pound steers and heifers $35.50; good and choice near 675-pound steers $34; utility and commercial cows $24.50 to $29.50; vealers active, steady; choice and prime $34.50 to $37; commercial and good $28 to $34. Sheep, 50; choice to prime native spring lambs $36; slaughter ewes steady at $18 down.
low
* Bulls, commercial and good, £29.50 to $32; cutter and utility, $25 to $29.
Msgr. Sheen Is ‘Named Bishop
WASHINGTON, —Msgr.
May 23 (UP) Fulton J. Sheen. wellknown author and radio orator, was appointed by Pope Pius XII today as titular bishop to Caesariana and auxiliary to Francis
Cardinal Spellman, archbishop of New York. Bishop - elect Sheen, 56, will become Cardinal Bishop Sheen Spellman’s fifth auxiliary. Bishop- Elect Sheen has been a pilosophy professor at Catholic university here since 1927. He is noted for about - 30 books on religion and philosophy and
a series of radio talks over a national network during the past 21 years.
se Douglas Warns U. S.
Of Inflation-to- Come
WASHINGTON, May 23 (UP) An end to economic ‘controls would be like letting the bathtub
overflow and trving to mop up the water with a handkerchief, according to Sen. Paul H. Douglas (D. Il). Warning that the nation now is going through a ‘lull before
the storm really hits Mr. Douglas said inflation will become a greater menace in the fall when defense spending jumps to twice the current rate.
Warns Red ‘Puppets’ LOS ANGELES, May 23 Undersecretary of the Navy Dan A. Kimball warned the “Kremlin planners and Kremlin puppets” today to study America's growing defenses “long and searchingly” before plunging the world into another war. He spoke before the Propeller Club.
(UP)
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings £ %.939.000 Debits $£30.160,000 . o Local Truck Grain Prices No. 2 truck wheat. $2.13, No 2 oats, 80c No. 2 sqvbeans, $313 No. 2 white corn. $1.65 No. 2 vellow corn, $157 Local Produce Fien—Currens receipts, 54 Ibs. and aver lo case, 42c; Grade A large, 46c;: Grade B Large, 42c, and Grade ‘A medium. 43c; no grade, 33c.
"HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES:
Come on, Cowpoke, See if You Can Throw This Bull Columbus Boy
By ANDY OLOFSON
Half-buffalo and all bull The “world's largest living steer” has invaded Indianapolis, making even seasoned bhig-cow hove at the Indianapolis Stockvards stand pop-eved in ment, “Biggest durn thing I've seen in my 40 years here,” said one livestock veteran as he viewed the 3140-pound, 6-foot-tall, 10-foot-long steer. Confidentially,
ft's-a Brahfalo.
For an ignoramus like me, they explained that means a7 crossbreed of a buffalo (the great
American,vanishing species) with a Brahman cow, (the sacred ani-
mal of the Hindus in Indias,
The result is property of Mrs, the 3-D Ranch,
immense, the Colony, Okla. Now on a nation-wide exhibition tour.the over-sized, 10-vear-old steak-rack had to seek the hospitality of the Stockyards for quarters big enough to keep him from feeling cramped.
The Brahfalo will be aon public
display Friday through next Thursday in front of the W. 16th St. Midget Speedway. His proud mistress gladly vol
unteers the information that her out-sized pet is the one successful experiment out of 19 in trying to cross the huffalo and the Brahman lines. Mrs. Davis is mighty her exhibit. She will probably
proud of
have no seri-
ous argument to claims that he is: ONE The largest steer living. TWO The one successful
blending of the symbols of Buffalo Bill and Mahatma Ghandi. But, Mrs, Davis, don't
amaze--
Denver Davis of ©
try tol
PAGE 17
Times
Photo hy Dean
BUFFALO-BULL—Owner Mrs. Denver Davis stands beside her unique show animal.
tell Hoosiers particularly the species from Kokomo--that vou have the largest steer that the world has ever seén. For there are many old-timers
in north central Indiana who pug-
naciously remember “Old Ben." the . fabulous steer that died in February, 1910.
“Big Ben's” stuffed carcass still
Nine Technical High School
Seniors Cited
on Honor Day
Paula Hawkins
Richard Gillman Pr :
Marilyn Loomis
Nine seniors at day in the annual ceremonies held in nasium. Winning departmental honors were: Paula Delphine Hawkins, program production.
Honor Day the gvm-
Poultry—Fowls, 4'2 Ibs. and over, 30c hi inder 4'a lbs. and Leghorns, 23c; cocks Kathleen Rose White, comand st 5 . s and ais, 45c, and No. 2 poultry, 4c less mercial. _Butterfai—No. 1, 4c: No. 3. Sic. Ernest Henninger, music. sa Nancy R. Gillman, music and Local Stocks and Bonds the Milo H. Stuart medal. Richard 1.. Gillman, the May 5. STOCKS Bid Asked American Loan 5% pfd ....... [1] American States com ......... 58 American States pfd vs a X er S r é Ayrshire Collieries com . a 113 ‘LS Ayres 41; ‘ 103 106 > Belt RR & Stk. Yas pfd .. . 63 66 Belt RR & Stk Yds com 38 § Bobbs-Merrill com Bobbs-Merrili pfd 1%% Central Sovs . Rl, Chamb of Com com i “Tear down vour high school Circle Theater com . : ed Com Loan 4 pfd 98 building and get rid of it as soon ‘ummings Eng com Cummings Eng pfd ‘ as you can, ’ « 1 1 : Sonsol Ae ear pfd 1% This recommendation by an InDelta Elec com 16! i Tniversity schoo & ey Eastern Ind Tele 5 pfd * diana Univer ity sch A Survey Euuitable Securities com ..... 25 staff was made lagt night at a tab : Larne Souties St... meeting of Beech Grove school Family Finance 5% pfd 100 officials and parents. The survey Hays Corp ptd ww < A : Hamilton Mfg Co com ., also sald an estimated 45 addiary. 1 t : ges or Ao 1114 tional classrooms will be needed
Hook Drug Co com 19 within the next 10 years, ind Asso Tel 2 pfd 4 “ y nd Asso Tel 2'; pfd 50! ll. ® y LO ET a The IU. staff, headed by Dr. Ind Mich El 4's ptd 102 Harold H. Church, outlined the
Ind Telephone 4 8-10 pfd 9R
Indianapolis Wale; Lom 18 19 results of an extensive survey of ndapls & 1, com In 30 GG v & star *‘Indpls Water 4'2% pfd font 2% Beech Grove schools started last Indpls Ath Club Realty Co .. 22 December. Indpls Rallway com 4 8a Indois Water Co s% pid 107 1004 Dr. Church said the Sulkin Jefferson National Life com 0 Kingan & Co com e! ‘ie 3a Ve program should be started next Kingan & Co pfd #3! 66! Lincoln Nat Life ‘ 83 : 86 ® Year If the school system is to Lyneh Corporation 154, 16 meet an estimated 20 per cent Marmon-Herrington com ... 5 6 we y Mastic Asphalt 71, increase enrollment expected by Nat Homes com 28 1961 al Homes otd 103 : : N Ind Pub Serv com 2% Requested by Board *N Ind Pub Serv 4'4 pt. . 94 06a ' . pnd Pub Serv 4'; pid .. 21% Jv The investigation was started i rss AM ary & - P BR Malloy Go coon Nn 341, At the fequest of the Beech Grove uh Serv of Ind 3',; pfd .. R2' R5 Se y un, Sery of 1d, 2 2% 4 chool Board with the support *Rons Gear Tool com vor 4} of school administrators and the Sehwitzer-Commins f seve 18 % sn Ind’ G AE com ofd ..... 18. 13% Parent Teachers Association, 80 Ind GAF 48% pfd 105'a 108’ v ir Stokely-Van Camp com save 47 : 17' The School Board has Acquired Stokeiy.Van Camp Did anaeiy ie 18 a building site comprising about anner & Co pfa ... - Se aule Malfeanls ©. Tl 121s 17 Acres in the vicinity of 13th, achine Co denen a3 3% , Dh Tel hone 5% od. Albany, Buffalo, Cleveland and
Ojon TIE .......c. iennes 58 eer
Detroit Sts.
BONDS | A further step toward rehabiliAmetican® Conn "4s a8 88 Ry ftavion of the Beech Grove school merican Loan 4's 60 ....... es BYSte ) 3 rw American Securily’ bs 80...... 91 “ens y m was made yesterday when Baten Morley oH» a a vw... the State Tax Beard approved a atesvilie ele 0 1] .“r ane BARIel Bertier os 53 : 3 **+- 25 cent increase in cumulative Ch of Com Bldg 4}as 61 ...... «++. building fund tax levy. Payable in “olumbia Club 3-58 63 ..... "9 eo Zitirans Ind Tel Abas 61... 101 ... 1952, ‘the new rate is set at 75 Gouitable Securities 5s 60 .... 97 soo cents Hamilton Mig Con 2a 2 . . p Inti v napis aint olor 5s “es Indpls Pubiie Loan bs 684 . opi Ation p Ind Limestone 4s 75 ” Mr. Church told the delegntion (nd Assn Tel 3s 75 Indpls Ratlwass Hs 87 ss that 10 reams should he con-
Kuhnetr Packing 4s 2 Annzenkamn fa AR
N Ind Puh Emrv 1's 13 in Caper Arta Co 5: 5R Pithite ervice Jigs 7% . 1 102% Spragus Deyices sx 80 25 . (Trac Term 58 M1 erst vars BA seed
!
structed in the first phase of the program to meet immediate needs in the high school grades, By 1959, he said, four Rew, ele:
Edward Landreth
Kathleen White
Clayton Ray
Technical High School were cited yester-
Nancy R. Pearson
Ernest Henninger
ag ~ Nancy Shearer Harry F. Markus: medal in electricity, Nancy Lee Shearer, the Esther Fay Shover medal in English and the Riley Sholarship medal. Marilyn Loomis, the Marie K. Binninger (social studies)
and DeWitt S. Morgan medals. Clayton E. Ray, mathematics and Riley Scholarship medal. ‘Edward Landreth, . mat hematics; the Binninger social studies and the Faculty Scholarship medals.
Beech Grove High School
mentary for primary grades. Statisticians pointed out that Beech Grove's population had grown by 900 per cent from 1910 to 1950, and the last census placed the population count at O689. There are 1670 residences in the city, they said. and the study disclosed that 85.8 per cent of those homes have children in
is preserved in a Kokomo city
park. And the Kokomo Chamber of Commerce will swear on a stack of Bibles and produce oodles of affidavits that "Big Ben”
ONE Weighed 4720 pounds at his zenith of 8 vears of age. TWO - Towered 6 feet 4 inches at “the fore-quarter.
Seek Candidates | For School Board
The Citizens School Committee has invited the public to submit the names of qualified men and women as possible candidates for election to the City School -Board: The committee, organized In 1929 to present a slate «f candidates for the non-partisan. efection of School Board members, has opened campaign headquarters at 130 E. Washington St. From the list of possible candidates, the Citizens Committee will select five to he recommended for election to the Board at the Citv balloting next November, The committee's list of candidates, placed on the municipal ballot without political party designations, have been elected over all other candidates in every election since 1929.
THREE inches from tip of tail to end of
Measured 16
FOUR - Had a belly (girth, that is) 8 inches.
Nighty-Night—|
REVERE, Mass, May 23 (UP) -- Thousands of children go to sleep to the story of ‘Peter Rabbit." but they don't do so well while listening to the progress of “Swifty,” the mechanical rabbit at Wonderland Park Dog Track. The City Council adopted an order asking the Revere Association to tone down the loud speaker comments on the progress of “Swifty” and the greyhounds racing at the track. | Mothers complained that the announcements kept their children awake, the council said.
Death Takes Former Detroit Publisher
DETROIT, May 23 (UP)—Edward Douglas Stair, 92, former publisher of the Detroit Free Press, died early today after a long illness. Mr. Stair, who also had been a
theatrical producer, an auto manufacturer and a financier, was publisher of the Free Press for 34 vears, selling it to John 8. Bright in 1940,
SERVING THE INVESTOR
SINCE 1913
THOMSON & M¢KINNON BROKERS 5 EAST MARKET STREET
PHONE: MArket 3501
| rooms should be added
Legal Notices
LEGAL
NOTICE Notice i= hereby given that the undersigned Purchasing Agent for the City of Indianapolis will receive sealed bids at his office for the following departments for merchandise, service and equipment at the times as hereinafter designated. Ridder's hond or certified checks in the amount of 2 of vour bid proposal must accompany
your bid Make check pavable to the Cit of Indiar Al poli £
sitlan No. 12408
Street
1 Commissioner e them. Opening 9.00 AM, C8T, Monday, June There are now approximately 4th. 1951 One only 3,-ton pick-up truck equipped 770 children enrolled in the CItY'S with fot Rater Roatee tan do atauippes schools, windshield wipers. oil filter, spare wheel engine to he 6 or B8-eviinder. all in ac 38 Per Room cordance with specifications on file in the : Department of Public Purchase Declaring there was too little Requisition Na. 10909 . : Department of Public Sanitation planning done in most Hoosier Opening 1200 Noon, CST, Monday June 4th. 185! school communities, Dr. Church One only commercial refrigerator hetween 25 and 30 cu. ft. capacity, and one | declared: only modified commercial refrigerator he eres tween 25 and 30 cu. ft, capacity, all in! There are too many Inade- accordance with specifications on file in y the Department of Public Purchase quate buildings, wrongly situated. Requisition No. 7512 o Roard of Park Commissioners There are ag many children out- Opening 100 P. ) CST, Thursdar : June 7th. 1951 side. knocking at the door and Qne only dump truck similar to Ford readv to get in, as vou now have F-6. International L-162, GMC or equal ] C , : with 4-speed transmission, B8.25x20 rear in the first seven grades dual tires 10-ply hydraulic dump 2°; ry nz - ards. as per specifications on file in the Dr. William Fox said the av- Department of Public Purchase | erage class enrollment in Beech The City of Indianapolis reserves the : right to reipct any and or all hids and ta Grove schools is ahout 38 pupils \ none or more venders all to the tho "yr an to the City Indianapolis to a room, although ‘the figure AGBLIARe Lo th Ca Porcr ois Agent
listed by the state as more ideal ig 30 to 32 pupils, Cites Building Lack Dr. Paul W. Seagers said it might be possible to save 17 of the existing classrooms, but the system would still need 28 addi- ~ tional class spaces. Some of the building shortcomings listed by the survey staff In-
cluded lack of showers for. the gymnasium, ton little office space, rooms need new lighting, inadequate auditorium, exposed wiring in some places. :
106 City Hall NOTICE TO BIDDERS Seale bids will be received by the Board chaol Commissionsrs of the City eof Indi lanapolis at
r 10:00 o'clock a.m. CST 1100 vclock a. m, CDST' on Tuesday | June 5, 1951, on the following Collecticn . and removal of ashes. trash and rubbish from the buildings and grounds used for public schools | and library purposes n the City oF Indianapolis All in accordance with SZecincalions on
file in the office of the Board, 150 N, Meridian 8t Indianapolis The Board reserves the right te accept or resect ar or us h THE ARD JF SCH i 4 ANAPOL Br. M VU RATLEY, Piusinsss ATOLLS Mav 18 1951 30 FORD 2 dr. Title Na. 1995658 ta be snld far storage and tow costa L. H
Wischmever, 84885 FE. Washinton
That's a Int of hull ana, Oklahoma, or . ..
rimmerman
feet
measure of 13 feet colliding with a car driven by
he it Indi- *
*
Dies in Crash 0f Two Bicycles
A voung hicyclist died in Bare County Hospital in Columbus, Ind., yesterday, fatally injured in a collision with another
tholomew
hicycle last Saturday. He was Jerry Turner, 10, the son of U. J. Turner, Columbus.
Police who investigated the accident declared it “just one of those unfortunate things.” They said. neither of the bike riders
involved was in danger from other traffic at the time of the accident, ?
Young Turner suffered a head injury in the fall which followed the collision, Meanwhile, a hlownaut was blamed today for the highway accident which killed Mrs. Adelaide Taylor, 31, of Villa Park, IN:
Car Hits Bridge
Mrs, Taylor was a passenger in the car with her husband, Bryant, 29, who was injured. Police
said the car went off the road and hit a bridge abutment on U. 8. 35 near Thornehope yesterday. Another
life was lost to the
92 Indiana traffic toll with the death
of Samuel Block, 60, who was fatally injured in Gary when his car sideswiped a traffic pole and crashed into a passing truck after
Samuel ‘Lewis, 47, Gary. Lewis was arrested on charges of drunken and reckless. driving,
lock S
DOWNSTAIRS
CALIFORNIA
sig AT
F
and GABARDINE
SLACKS
If you're quality-wise, you'll be pleased with Haqqar's
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You'll admire the cool.
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If you're price-minded (and who
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just 5.95! Come in now!
TANS, BROWNS, BLUES, GREYS, GREENS, SKIPPER
Sizes 28 to 42
Mail and Phone (CA. 8511) Orders Carefully. Filled
BLOCK'S MEN'S SPORTSWEAR, DOWNSTAIRS STORE :
