Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 June 1951 — Page 26
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market is turning pale
" A big steel salesman told me the “steal” in steel is Killed, Too : hE;
over for mustache-twirling villains,
Boies:
Tough Even for Black Market
Harold Hartley
THINGS ARE GETTING so tough, even the black
Prices are softeni
Then I turned to leather, and I got the same story.
M. A. Delph, 517 W. Ray, just got back from Washington where he sits on the alloca-
= po be pr
Texan Hits the ‘Ceiling’—
Two Rounds Won't Satisfy Cattlemer
_THE INDIAN APOLIS S TES
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They Want First Rollback
Beef Industry Seeks Complete Victory
{From Indianapolis—
| ‘Seventeen’ Is Revived As Broadway Musical:
Br United Press
NEW YORK, rage 22-—The humorous tales of puppy love that the late Bodth Tarkington wrote some 35 years 'ago about a teen-ager of his home town of Indianapolis
have been tapped again for entertainment in the musical
tion board. He's one of the biggest hide men in the country. He said the
hold-back on beef in time will make shoes, gloves, leather jack-
ets, half soles and leather belting/they make steaks
short. “The whole dog-goned thing seems to be all mixed up any more,” he said. “We cut some tanners to 60 per cent of what they used last year, and they
By EARL RICHERT
‘restaurant. He said the steaks and Seripps-Howard Staff Writer
roasts have a genuine meat! flavor, : : “The steer's just a middleman he beef industry is not go-
turn the grain into meat. 80 when ug... "oi i direct from two-thirds” victory against
grain, 'we put him out of busi-\Price Boss Mike DiSalle’s ness.” three-step price rollback proMakes sense. But what would gram, a spokesman said today.
we wear for shoes. Beef gives us| It will seek complete victory— the bulk of our leather. elimination of the 10 per cent
WASHINGTON, June 22-%
anyway,” he sald. “All he does isling to be content with al
comedy “Seventeen” which opened at the Broadhurst The.
ater last might. An Milton Berle, the comedian, Sammy Lambert and Bernie
Foyer joined in producing a, Ivouthtui lively show dominated! Brooks Atkinson—New York {by youngsters. Times: “. . . Still a toushing and | Mr, Tarkington wrote about liproariots portrait of the torture {Willie Baxter and the coquettish, | ¢ adolescence . . . done with baby-talking Lola Pratt in 1914... sympathy and relish. ‘Sevin a series of magazine stories. |enteen’ is a minor literary classic.
These were collected into a novel i vl * called “Seventeen.” There fol- {The musical play takes it on =n
'satistactory entertainment for those who approach it in an n= | different frame of mind.”
One-Bucket Wash?
don’t want it.” . ~ ~ THEN 1-GOT HOLD of Lawrence Jullmann, of Taylor Belting| easier, for car washers, too. Co., 247 8. Meridian. First thing] Now you can slick up your car
THEY KEEP MAKING things! |
in effect as well
per cent each in live
rollback already
as the scheduled]: rollbacks of 435
animal
lowed in ‘order a silent movie, al stage play, a musical comedy, a| talking movie and the new mu-| sical version.
{equal level” Otis I. Guernsey Jr.wNew York Herald Tribune: *“, , , An {ice cream musical about puppy love with a few good tunes and’
he said was he wished his name started with a “P” instead of “ly. ” “Then maybe I'd have some rich relatives and wouldn't have] to work so hard. Light leather's hard to get.
. That's the center of the cow's)
Their hide's difAs they get
back, old cows. ferent from people,
thinner. “Business slowed up thre®weeks ago. Some are looking for price cuts, And there's too much red tape. A guy was in who used to do $4000 a week, He's down to $2700. Blue, too.” ” 8 » CERTAIN TYPES of lumber are scarce, but that isn't the war It's the upper grades of soft
without going back for another bucket of water. Adsth Laboratories in Brooklyn has a water-saver called “No Hoze Car Wash.” You throw it into a 10-quart pail, fill with water, and it turns to suds. 8 » ”
THE LABEL
THEN,
[grime at a cost of 475 cents.
Might mean a lot in water conscious New York, but not much out here. The stuff costs $1.50.
going right ahead as if it didn’t have one foot on the auction block,
It's having a record season,
TELLS]
THE FRENCH LICK HOTEL is
prices on Aug. 1 and Oct. 1. Joe Montague, counsel for the Texas & Southwestern Cattle Raisers’ Associa-! tion, said the elimination of|— aioe —
Mr. Richert older they get thicker and we get| YOU, off comes the grease and the Aug. 1 and Oct. 1 rollbacks,
as voted by the Senate and House! H Trade Here Banking Committees, would not be enough. (Odds are that Congress will go
rollbacks.)
of the grades of steers raised on
Mr. Montague said ciminaton of the first rollback was econ. fa 0 C ower sary because it reduces the prices| |
"WE'LL DO IT THIS WAY'—Mao Tse-tung, chairman of the Central Els Government of China, talks with Panchen Ngoerhtehni (the Panchen Lama), temporal ruler of clusion of an agreement which gave China _power in Tibet.
‘lif We Believe, He Will Look After Us'- ore
Track Star | {literally stopped the show. LEE Fil Active, Price Stopped by Shrapnel i in 1 Leg bad a single appesrance in a dia County in California .-
Former City
An Indianapolis Marine wrote home from Korea: “We will be moving out again I don’t know
Writes Libretto [lot of artificial joy .. . a fii Sally Benson, a promin en t|satire even or a Julome show, | y the N-| {with less real sparkle than other short-story writer, wrote e Be recent comedies: about high bretto of the show and stuck fair- J
: school America.” 2 ly close to the original with it8| jonn Chapman—Daily News:
1907 period and Indianapolis lo-{“If it only had some music it ibet, at the con- | |. Kenneth Neison, making his would be quite a mice show..A a {broadway debut, was cheered by good time-tested plot by Tark-|first-nighters as highly effective ington, delightful sets by Stewast !in the role of Willie, They were Chaney, a company of nice young just as enthusiastic about Ann [pecple 2 and charming dances.” Crowley-as Lola.
But it was Alonzo Bosan wae © Short Quake Rocks tie
Acme Telephoto
{logue and song bit early in the! . . {second act as an elderly Negro FULLERTON, Cal, June 22
{reminiscing for Willie's benefit| (UP) — No damage or injuries about his own youthful marriage. were reported today from a short,
woods, pine and fir. Plywood's cut in on the trade. and is putting in a new entrance What I think is happening is|{road. that buyers are gagging on prices.| And just to make it interesting, They're sitting back, waiting. But|W. O. Seelbach, the manager, has they may be issued a formal invitation to all
Texas and southwestern ranches! to below parity and pre-Korean| prices. Texas cattlemen have com: piled figures showing that it costs about 35 cents a pound now|
the business in the state stayed
If the defense ball keeps rolling, there'll be a Jot mores bucks around than goods. You know what that means. ; Prices may take off again like a kite in a hurricane. And you'll look back to today and say “It wasn't so bad after all”
Building Slide
BUILDING BOUNCES in May, but not this year. It's usually good for a 10 per cent gain. But last month it
turned tall, went 20 per cent the °f: DOt the girl,
other way. That's down. That's the way the
But building was about the only thing which slipped. The rest of
sidewalk engineers to come down to produce a 400-pound calf in and enjoy the digging through|Texas and that the present 10 August, per cent rollback sets a ceiling of Says tall, Germanesque Mr,[31% cents a pound on those Seelbach, “All suggestions and calves, below cost of production. recommendations on construction] Mr. Montague sald the cattle methods being employed will be/which have risen most in price| thoughtfully disregarded.” in recent months are not the| y commercial-grade steers raised on It's Roses : ranchés but the canner and butter, YOU SEE HER in June,
a cows, prime beef and bulls. sweet young thing in a frothy| He said it was the high prices formal, and her first gardenia. ou these Other grades of cattle, . ' rather than those on commercial 1s the gardenia, I'm thinking e0.y tat cansed: the Agriculture Department figures to show The sale has fallen off. Weath- that cattle prices averaged 1521
Business er's too hot. The petals brown to0 | per cent of parity at the time of | Research Bureau of IU tabbed it.|fast, look stale,
the first rollback.
. nu In Cattlemen’s Corner
» AND THAT. GAL with the
put. BUT THE LONG look in the! survey showed retall shelves getting a little lighter and consumer incomes moving up. Livestock sales were down in May, but that was the farmer hold-back of beef And newspaper advertising, bless it, went up one per cent for the month, and six per cent above a year ago.
Spin Arounds
THE BARBER CHAIR'S come back, And it's in the living room.
The spin-arounds look like any|} ont
other chair, except you can turn on a swivel without getting up. ” ” ”
TWO MODELS showed up at| 8!
the Furniture Mart in Chicago. One looks like a padded barrelback and the other looks like a hard-bottom kitchen chair, on the
fancy side. The barrel-back is by SanHygene Co, Akron,
$130.50. And the kitchen job is
made by Standard Chair Co.,|}
Union City, Pa, and its tag reads
\ It's roses;
wind-blown hair and the fresh |young eyes, whdt does she wear? cattlemen on the House floory will | tender buds, or a|be the House Agriculture Com-
\fragile, ribboned orchid, mittee Smdep Bo Jeadershup oH
Local Stocks and Bonds'™ C--
The committee has unanimously adopted an amendment which
June We
n 0% ot ....| Would knock out the whole beef rl +++1price rollback. program as well ® Tohiarie as all other rollbacks on goods,
..|services and wages. | Mr. Cooley pointed out that in A hearings and in a lengthy study . |made by his committee of the ‘|beef price rollback program not 1a single consumer group or in- ._. (dividual, other than government si: officials, had appeared in favor +++|0f the rollback program. nei] “We called publicly for con- % '|sumer witnesses to come in and :+--testify,” he sald. “And not one . |appeared. They knew what was involved too.”
‘Probably Padded’
Mr Cooley said some of the 2 cost of production figures presented by the cittiemen probably
apes dav ates rs. 3 uf" "Wore adden eran Na Rallwa 8 oo a 5 But the fact is that the first erson iv Co com fo com ... 1, u rollback was supposed to be for Kingan Socom .....i ie
[No. 1 and 2 from 180 to 225
Carrying the fight for the| cutter and utility $20 to $28; can-! ine states in March. Don’ t worry
Trade opened moderately ac-in 5 few days. {tive today in the Indianapolis | Stockyards, with choice light and whether there are any Shins on | medium-weight barrows and gilts this side of the 38th Parallel or ipriced weak to 25 cents lower not. But whether there are or {than yesterday. ‘not, I will not be afraid, for you | Hogs, 7500; heavier weights bid ye taught me to believe in God,
1 I ay and if we all believe hard enough,
[$23 to $23.50; few hundred cHbice He will look after us all.” These were the words Bob pounds $23.75; 240 to 200 pounds! Vest, Howe High School track $22.25 to $23; heavier weights star, wrote to his parents, Mr. {scarce; odd lots $21.50 or less; and Mrs. Willie Vest, 230 N. Wal120 to 160 pounds $18 to $20.50; cott St. a month before he was {sows steady to weak; choice 300 | wounded in Karea. to 425 pounds $19.25 to $20; choice lights $20.25; 425 to 550 pounds {member of the 16th Marine Bat$18.50 to $19.50. Cattle, 250; calves, 300; slow; steers and yearlings weak, tend-| ing lower; one-half load choice | yearling steers $35.50; odd commercial and good $31 to $34; 'a hospital in Korea. heifers scarce; cows weak; com | “I am getting the best care in mercial $26 to $29.50; few com- ihe world. . I had ice cream mercial to good $30 to $30.50i or dinner, the first since I left
{when he was struck by shrapnel on June 10. “I have a broken leg and a (hole in it about the size of a |quarter, " he wrote June 13 from
{ners down to $18; vealers active, about me, I'm all right.” |generally steady: choice and The track star, who won many prime $37 to $38.50; practical top'a blue ribbon in half mile and 100$38.50 freely; odd prime $39; yard dash competitions, may | commercial and good $30.50 to never participate in track events ($36.50. {again because of his wounds. A Sheep, 100; hardly enough to junior at Howe High School when| test quotations; market considered he was called to service, he had about steady; utility and good been looking forward to his final spring lambs $30 to $31; good year of high school competition. $32; slaughter ewes quotable He also was on the school footsteady; good and choice $12 ball team. to $17. ¢ Active in a number of clubs! Bulls about steady; commercial and organizations at Howe, he and good heavy $29 to $31; cutter also was a member of DeMolay | and utility $24 to $28.50. |and attended the Woodruff Place!
| Baptist Church. Man Awarded $250,000 For Rail Wreck Injuries
MINEOLA, N. Y,, June 22 (UP) —The supreme court has award-| ed $250,000 to a man injured in the Long Island Railroad’s Thanksgiving Eve wreck that!
Hiser Shortage Grows by $597
An extra shortage of $597 In| the funds of vanished Blackford) killed 79 persons. County Treasurer Lester Hiser| The verdict, returned yester- has been discovered, Otto K. Jenday, reduced Sherwood G. Fau- sen, chief examiner of the state
bel’s claim for $500,000 almost in! hoard of accounts, announced tohalf, day.
Mr. Faubel, 39, of Hempstead! Racneck of all taxpayers re- |
the show's high mark musically and the number also contained; just about its best comedy mo-| ments, thanks largely to Bosan. The melodies of Walter Kent
a. sone, 1 Could Get Mar-| rumbling earthquake which showk ried Today,” in whic aurice| Ellis joins Nelson and Bosan, was| HS Orange County city fast
The tremor also was felt at nearby Brea where a small patch
{of plaster on the ceiling of the
fire department office was knocked
The 18-year-old leatherneck, a
{talion, suffered a broken left leg |
{to the floor. The quake was net {reported elsewhere in southern California. Brea night police Sergeant {George Miller said he received about 15 calls from residents who What Reviewers Think Rt ocala from Le Excerpts from reviews: ision. The first shock was felt at , Jack Gaver — United Press: 9:29 p. m. and was jollowed; by ... One of those shows that you/an even lighter shake.
can't actually dislike cut actu A with oh a Local Truck Grain Prick
ness. Just say that it won't harm Ne. rbeane. at Jr. anyone to see it and there may be! Xo: : : enough high spots to make ft 4 Fite ‘orm we
and the lyrics of Kim Gannon| were sprightly. and nostalgic. Dania Krupska created some en- | gaging dances for the deft young cast,
Pfc. Bob Vest
aq
** 61:YEAR RECORD OF FAIR-DEALING
$15. Paint Push-Up
Lincoln oer Life . 34a Lynch Corporation “on ae Mastic Renna °° COM sever 4% "Sn
Taavseras 8 es the benefit of packers and pro-
work as a result of his injuries and subsequently lost his £10,000 {a year position as controller of a
cessors to restore their operating margin,” he said. “But not a!
N. Y, claimed he was ble I i unable io vealed that the $597 payment by! an Ohio firm had not been entered on Hiser's books, Mr. Jensen said.
PAINT PRICES are on the hop. The OPS has flashed the goahead for a 15 per cent rise retail to go Into effect between now and July 16. This is to absorb cost increases for new materials since the Korea outbreak. And it will affect varnishes and lacquers, too. =
® = BUT, SAID THE OPS, it may
mean a rolback for those who Union
had hiked prices out of line just
ahead of the Jan. 26 freeze date.| Allen
There will be a lot more increases than rollbacks, you can bet on that.
Middle Man
J. L. BRADFIELD, Fall Creek
Pkwy. radiant heating engineer, i
tells me those meatless steaks are £0 close to the real thing you can hardly tell them from the real McCoy.
jasc Ash single packer or processor apRep. Cooley sald he believed the House would vote to knock “a lout the entire rollback program. Price Adminisirator DiSalle ‘thas said that consumers did bene-
»jup 10 per cent. * He sald elimination of the entire rollback program would cost
& "i American see beet consumers $700 million aln tan “n| Mr. Montague said the beef inBuhne * sii |dustry, insofar as he knew, had ot Som +|no intention of trying to get tizens In
++ (beef specifically exempted from wu. (price ceilings. Thus, if the rollbacks are barred, the most the Office of Price Stabilization could ..{do would be freeze beef prices at ++ |their high level as of the time of -o the first rollback,
‘ring « 13 78 hd Ti Tel 3s .s
Hod wer hy ayy
He first ran into them in Cal-! ifornia. In a basement vegetarian!
IROW-—More damp, humid weather i of hation, including indians. Scattered
"Pub ir 4rts Es Term
.. Catholic Parish to Build
Residence for Nuns {| The 8t. Thomas Aquinas Cath‘olic Parish will build a residence {costing $75,000 located at 4825 [Kenwood Ave. to house the teachw “5 Ing sisters of St. Thomas’ School.
red brick with limestone trim. Charles W. Brown is the architect and the Rev. Fr. John Holloran, the church pastor. The most Rev. Paul C. Schulte, archbishop of Indianapolis, today applied to the Zoning Board for a variance to permit erection of the residence.
Crash Injuries Fatal
Rin iicHe WINCHESTER, Ill, June 22 Am (UP)~Mrs. Merle Daugherty, 20,
Andessub, Ind., died en route to a hospital at Jacksonville ves|terday of injuries she suffered in a highway accident which, critically injured her husband, | Charles, 28. Their car went out of Ronirel, and ‘crashed about five miles "yt of here.
Sr? & ne ir za
the state, with little change in
«[Peared in favor of it.” |Newark, N. J.,
4 it from the first rollback of 10|§
s IB. es a xe x va x 35,700,000 in his home town of Hartford SA ‘Gi fe AT per cent. If it had not been for Se For the Week ~ ” City. Yan amp pid that roliback, he said, beef prices| Gustine .... hos tineee| Terre to consumers would have gone;
The residence will be buflt of.|
firm. He is the The new amount raised the {father of three children. More| total shortage to $9730. | than 400 persons were injured in| Hiser disappeared last fall. His| the collision. {burning truck was found near {Hartford City but no other trace |has been found of the absconding {official, previously highly regarded
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE For the Day
Clearings $10,623,000
6 Years After Okinawa
OKINAWA, June 22 (UP)-—8ix to" fate. 4 Case, 430: Grade A laree ise Goedel years ago today, after 83 days of . Large, ada, 356. ~ and Grade & medium, 430: lsome of the bloodiest fighting of 4 over, age World War II, the battle for OkSE ie “and Lh "t less! iInawa. and the final battle of _Butterfat-—No. 1. 63c: No. 3. Soe. | the Pacific was efided.
Local | ocal Produce _
FACTS OF DEATH—William R. Patterson Jr, 4621 Critten. | den Ave, fot). gots pointers on machine oe from instructor Ivan |
C. Kipp at the Airman Training Unit,
“S. Naval Air Station, Whidbey Island, Wash,
Si itt
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Mrs. W. E Eormer Te 0f Indians
Mrs. Rosa Ellen teacher of Miami Marion, died yes Home. 2019 Wintl was 77. Mrs. Young was cock County, da late John W, and ) pioneers of that co to Indianapolis in tending school in Marion and tes Marion. Prior to her {ll ing a stroke of 12 was active in Suth terian Church. ,. Mrs. Young and William Edward interurban motor Union Traction ( their 58th weddir
Apr. 12. Bervices will be tomorrow from
meral Home with JIOOF Cemetery at ~ Surviving with h #« daughter, Mrs. Indianapolis; thre -F., Frankfort; Ru yette, and William Apolis; four sister Boller, Marion; ! Michael, Carmel, 3 Miller and Mrs. F Indianapolis; eight and six great-gran
William E. Snr
Services are set tomorrow in Main New Castle, for W Smith. Burial wil Mound Cemetery t *Mr. Smith, who Temple Ave. die struck by a car as Fast St. Tuesday. a retired barber. Survivors are a Helen Thomson, W seven grandchild great-grandchild.
Mrs. Mary Cl
Services will be morrow in the FP Home for Mrs. MN 2073 Highland Pl. 1 Woodhaven. Mrs. Clark, a 1 bama, died Tuesd ‘Hospital. She wai Mrs. Clark had | here for 35 years Member of the M Church. ‘A grandson, Ern Vives.
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