Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 10 July 1951 — Page 13
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TUESDAY, JULY 10,
o} Jobless Fund Up And Here's Why
By Harold Hartley
IF YOU'RE A HOOSIER,
million, and it’s piling up.
The jobless pay fund is loaded. Last count was “= Two Hoodlums
A lot of states are going the other way, paying out more
than they're taking in.
Clarence Jackson, over at the Indiana State Chamber
of Commerce, said today that] Indiana has enough dough in| the unemployment fund to take care of average unemployment for 17 years. " s ” INDIANA NICKED the kitty in 1949-50 by about $3 million, but the rest of the states were sapping their unemployment lifeblood by $600 million. So we weren't pad.
{
| 1
lazybones and his brother isn’t tapping the till.
THEY'RE CAREFUL aboutiactly how many times Railroad-|
that. If you're out of Work men's has made loans, mostly for|
, ,__ housing, and how much of the And you've got to prove you're town it has helped build.
you've got to prove it.
trying to get a job. If you don’t the state will get one for you. That’s why we've got bucks to! burn in the unemployment fund. We don’t burn em. We work, Instead. n = » i WHEN I USED to take too big a piece of cake, and couldn't eat it, my mother would say, “Your|
egg to put through a mortgage. 5 pandit in line of duty. A com I could see that in the statement. ony official said today that the |
it carries nearly $33 million. And| its whole assets add up to only castro, 36, and Frank Piazza, 40, healthy In Indiana is that eVerY ¢51 million, not small by any/were slain yesterday when they
means, but the $33 million’ is a tried to invade.a Brink’s armored, big chunk of it. {
1951
mere THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Doing Their Duty Worth $3000—
Today +Business ti, "ed "Brink's G
-
&
: Ro PAGE 13
ards To Get Rewards
Foil Holdup By Slaying
you'll eat, job or no job.
$50,000 Robbery “Averted in Chicago
By United Press CHICAGO, July 10—Three
say different things. For instance,
before me lies Fermor 8. Can- Brink's money guards were in line, |
non’s statement on the Rallroad-|ror rewards today for killing two! men's Federal Savings and Loan pandits and routing a third who! Association. {tried to rob them of at least] To me, Railroadmen’s means gso 000, { housing. It's where the little peo- | Brink’s has a standing offer of!
ple go when they've saved a nest g1000 to each employee who kills!
3.8 8 {reward might be increased to give IN FIRST MORTGAGE loans gach of the three guards $1000.
Hoodlums Rocco (Lucky) Bel-
I got curious. I wondered ox} at Bo 5 pairy Co plant . {on the northwest side. Both were
notorious gunmen. Hero of Fight The hero of the gunfight was
" = » SINCE IT STARTED it has has worked for Brink's only three| made 115,500 loans, and the aver-\months. He. was slugged on the
age was only $2500. |forehead by Belcastro who used]
That's what I mean by helping|a sawed off shotgun as a club
shoot.
39-inch-short Bill Arthur, both of
BLESS THEM ALL—Jim Tanner, who weighs 329 pounds, ard
New Bern, N. C., are the big-
gest and smallest Shriners at the convention in New York. Scenery's from the Havana-Madrid, a midtown nightclub.
|Guard Julius Blanchart, 25, who The Nobles Move In—
100,000 Shriners Give
TE .. ATI
Deadline for Air Force Enlistments Extended
Hog Prices Fall te 150 Cents...
Trade Opens
Rather Slow
Hogs. opened rather slow today at the Indianapolis Stockyards. Prices fell 25 to 50 cents, | Hogs, 8500; rather slow; light and medium weight barrows and gilts, 25 to 50 cents lower; heaw ler weights around 25 cents lower; bulk choice 170 to 250 pounds, 1922.75 to $23.25; top, $23.50; 250 © [to '290 pounds, $22.75; 290 to 350 pounds, $21.50 to $22.25; 120 to 1160 pounds, $18 to $21; sows, {weak to 25 cents lower; choice 300 to 550 pounds. $17.75 to $19.25; few, $19.50; big weights, | $17.25 to $17.50. | Cattle 1800; calves 500; steers and heifers slow; early sales about steady, but strong asking prices against weaker bids retarding scaleward movement; few sales good and choice light to medium~ weight steers $33.25 to $35.50; {some choice and prime held above {$36; commercial and good yearlings, $29 to $33; canners and cut[ters, $17.50 to $22; two loads medium 650-1b. feeder steers, $32; cows slow, steady to weak; commercial, $27 to $29; utility, $22.75
HONORED—Roy W. Howard (center), president of The Indianapolis Times, is welcomed as an honorary member in the Murat Arab Patrol, marching unit of the Indianapolis Murat Temple, by Clarence Flick (right), patrol captain, and Glen L. Campbell, Temple potentate. Ceremony took place in New York yesterday during the Shriners’ 77th annual convention.
eR Their R ds to Broad Shout ai they van norton, 24 [omen 1 sammea same wed © Thejr Regards to Broadway
Mood Indigo
Mr. Blanchart had driven the]
By United Press
armored truck up a 125-foot ramp
NEW YORK, July 10—Nearly
viewed by long-time Noble Gen. | Douglas MacArthur. |
Times State Service
permit young men who have al-|to $26; vealers active, steady;
ATTERBURY AIR FORCE ready passed draft physicals to choice and prime, $35.50 to $37;
I'VE COLORED EASTER eggs, eyes are bigger than your|and that’s fun. But I know a guy stomach.” who colors typewriters. And that is what impulse buy-| I was talking to Paul Cockrill ing is—seeing things and takingjover at the Indianapolis Typemore than you really want be-(writer Co., 25 E. Maryland. It's cause it’s right there and easy to|this fad of colored offices which get, like the cake. |got him into it. I think the country stores of| ® » » long ago started it. They strung | If the desks are apple green or stuff out in plain sight all overiioney brown, or the color of the the store. And seeing it made you|secretary’s eyes, Paul can match think you might want it. (it with a typewriter, new or old. = s ” = EJ = THE HARDWARE STORES IT COULD WORK many ways. were next to get wise. Then came|If the stenographer comes in the five-and-tens which function Pright and cheery, she could have most on sight selling. Whoever One in canary yellow. Or if she’s went into a five-and-ten and /80t a sulk on, sit her down in
came out with no more than he went in to get? The drug chains followed quickly, then the supermarkets. It's eye ‘appeal. And instead of having a clerk suggest why _you might want, they put it right under your nose. And you begin to see a lot of things you want but prob-/ ably don’t need. ? = o s n IT PAID OFF, and it’s still “paying off. The food chains put 15 per cent more in their cash registers in May thad they did.& year ago. The drug chains’ were up 6.6 per cent. Some of that, of course, is in-| creased prices. But a lot of it is simply having higher incomes and practically no resistance. We just pick up the stuff, and imagine we need it. * | Like the pelican, our beak holds! MOre. . « «
H Is for ‘Hobby’
{one to match her mood indigo.
dairy plant, then waited while his| partners, Guards Emmet Ebert,
to the office to pick up Bowman'’s|
{ and became suspicious when he|
and meat cutters’ smocks. | When he saw one of them; adjust a mask over his eyes, he pulled his .38-caliber pistol. | Tried to Shoot Guard Belcastro attempted to shoot] the guard with a sawed-off shot-| gun he pulled from beneath his smock, but the gun jammed and
And he even gold-plates them. And it’s not unusual for him to
{make a gold name plate for a
portable gift. In fact he just did it when a church gave one to its pastor. 2
Miles
Hubbard of the Naval Ordnance plant is having a show-through party, with lunch attached. He's going to let. public officials
See ag anech as ii good for them 1 ) S8e, but no peeking at the'ultra-/car seen -eariler outside the plant : 2 : "The car may have been driven’by/a murder charge. la fourth member of the.gang,
secret stuff. Bids H¥ says the plant is spending more than $1 million a month for wages, materials and services, 2. 8 wn
nance plant, its fluorescent acres, gum-shoed over its hardwood floor. And I'd like to see it again, running on a war basis, { I remember the ankle-bending
I'M BUSIER THAN a guy with] a jigsaw puzzle. And I'm also in| trouble. Hobson Wilson, the insurance and surety bond man, breezed by this morning. He dropped off a couple of key chains. And right there I stopped.work. Or rather,
I started. = 2 »
THESE WERE little nifties, plastic with a whole alphabet of gold printed initials enclosed. You tear out the initials and slide them in the holder. It's personalized, a slick trick. | My trouble was trying to find three “H’s” in the alphabet. Try it sometime. |
Sawyer’'s Seesaw
COMMERCE ‘DEPARTMENT is having trouble. It has the job of telling who gets defense contracts. Its trouble is how much should it tell. At first it adopted the open, book policy, and put the dollars right down alongside the contract. | » ” » {
MONKEY BUSINESS)
THEN started. And the Commerce De-| partment began to bend its poli-| cies like a willow by a stream. Some manufacturers kicked about telling how much of the government dough they were getting. So Charlie Sawyer left them out. Then the public and .the politicians kicked. If the government is handing out the taxpayers’ money, why not tell who gets how much?
2 2 8 SO TODAY THE nimble-
footed Commerce Department has| reversed {itself again. And you'll]
find the cash listed right along in the contract awards. But that’s only:today. Tomorrow, it may be different. It’s who-shouts loudest.
Still at It
THE GIANTS OF television haven't put down their clubs. They're still slugging it out.
_ CBS is going into the making of television sets and probably will make its own color sets even | if the rest of the industry won't. |
» ” = AND LUSTY RCA is plugging away with demonstrations of its electronic system in New York, never letting the public forget that its color will come in like a breeze on the present black and white sets. And I predict the big boys will keep on hammering one another until they see the bucks begin to , slip, then they may get together with a little barbershop harmony and sing, “Why are we throwing our dough away?”
The Figures Speak IN THE MIDDLE of the y the statements roll in.
aaah
march to music over the public address system. And I remem-| bered it even better when my eyes| fell on captain’s first name. Miles. |
Fooler
IT DIDN'T COME glad it didn't. | But Vic Peterson who presides
| | |
to me. I'm
lover The Times city desk brought of Mrs.
it over, and said, guy?” He wasn’t.
“Am I a lucky!
ON THURSDAY Capt. Miles H. by Mr. Blanthart’s second bullet,
| PVE TOURED the Naval Ord-|
he swung the stock against Mr. (Blanchart’s head. Mr. Blanchart {felled him with a shot through the heart, then fired a shot at Piazza, - Se Mr. Kobylinski and Mr. Ebert| heard the shooting and raced back, arriving just as Piazza, hit
|
{stumbled over a concrete block. {They each pumped a slug into him and Piazza fell dead. ' ‘The third bandit apparently {escaped in a souped-up 1937 model
(officers said.
Why, Donald Y.
In a divorce suit filed in Superior Court 3 yesterday, by Mrs. Aileen Wagner, 41, of 2548 N. Delaware St., she charged. her husband, Donald Y., 38, “failed and refused to properly provide food or meat.”
Mr. Wagner is a butcher.
Gl Wounded in Korea
Due Home Here Today | Cpl. Joseph F. Smith, nephew] Lottie Anderson, 543 Blake St., was scheduled to ar-| {rive here today from Korea where
to a second floor garage at the 160 000 Nobles of the Mystic|
Monday receipts of at least $50,- Way from dozens of mobile cal3 liopes, doused pretty girls with Suddenly he saw Belcastro and water pistols and invaded night Piazza approach with a third man|clubs to drag shrieking show girls} |
noticed they wore gloves, caps strolls.
current theme song, “Give My Regards to Broadway.”
Welcome Mat Out
{ New York draped itself in bunt-| ing to welcome the Shrine on its first visit in 65 years. “Welcome Nobles” banners fluttered from hundreds of marquees.
from their lines for midnight Scores of hotel lobbies echoed to bag-pipe bands; practicing for two grand marches the Shriners
Bucking tin lizzies and trucks BASE, July 10—The deadline for enlist in the Air Force. loulls steady, Shrine took over Broadway today, crammed with Hlsivians wearing draft eligibles to apply for Air 27, las a five-day convention opened. /tassled red fezzes spe TOUBN parce service has been extended 7, and Ted Kobylinski, 34, went | They serenaded the Gay White Times Square blaring the order S|from July 1 to Aug. 31, Lacey Murrow, base commander, announced today. . The extension will continue t
Gen. |
commercial and good, $29 to $35; culls and utility,
= . $28.50 to $31. Local Truck ‘Grain Prices sheep 500; fairly active; slaugha ———— — |ter lambs strong; bulk choice and No. 2 wheat. $204 prime, $32 to $33; few good and | §% J iis corn N02: |chotce, $30 to $32; good and choice
i: N ts, 68 ol Yo 7 omia Sc. 00. slaughter ewes, $12 to $15.
’
9
{One sharp contrast was a flapping’ ired and gold flag over a Third | Ave. saloon which specifically declared “Welcome Herman.”
Misfortune caught up with three, portly Shriners who stood up in a cab and poked their heads and
From Central Park in New York City the Indianapolis Murat Temple Horse Patrol *will perform for the CBS-TV network (WFBM-TV) at 2:30 p. m. tomorrow. The Horse Patrol is part of .the 800-man contingent of local Shriners attending the national convention in that city.
chests tHrough the sightseeing top as they cruised Broadway. ‘ Armed with wat&igtetots, th fired on pedestrians untily at 44th and Broadway, they ran out of ammunition and discovered they! of the 28th Division, died, in. Gen- were stuck fast in the top of .the eral Hospital last night of a/cab. Two patrolmen helped them" stomach wound inflicted by Ed- out. : win Husbands, 43, of 2144 Sugar| The convention's “piggest and| Grove Ave, during a scuffle in|gmajiest Shriners,” 329-pound Jim | Eddie's Cafe, 401 E. Washington Tanner and 39-inch tall Bill Ar-| St. operated by Husbands. |thur, both of New Bern, N. C.,| Husbands told police that Sgt. gwept into the Havana-Madrid, a | Jagloski became involved in an midtown nightspot, where they argument with three men from jyred half the chorus line outside his company at Camp Atterbury, for a midnight walk that created |
after the men made jibing re-|a traffic jam at 50th and Broad-| marks about Sgt. Jagloski’s food way,
served at the camp. Sgt. Jagloski |
was a mess sergeant. Ordered Him Out | Individual Shriners ranged from x a Georgia Noble driving a miniaAccording to Husbands, he or- tyre racing car adorned with the dered Sgt. Jagloski out of the slogan “The South Will Rise
will make down Fifth Ave. today and Thursday. They will be re-
$3000 Bond Set For Cafe Man in Shooting of Gl
Bond has been set at $5000 for a local restaurant operator who fatally shot a Camp Atterbury mess sergeant #une 29. He was bound over. to: the grand, jury, on
Sgt. Willlam M. Jagloski, Company K, 169th Infantry Regiment
Carry Placards |
restaurant, and when the mess Again” to a Brooklyn contingent
It was a businesslike little fold- he was wounded Feb. 7.
| sergeant refused to leave, Hus-!|
carrying a placard reading “We! bands shot. He said he intended |
Shake With Men and Shimmy]
“Uniformly Fine Since 1869",
A GooD ComPaNion |
Here's another pleasant way to refresh yourself: mix yourself a cool Bond &° Lillard highball, lift it to your lips and let it slide down smoothly! Whether you choose Kentucky Blended Whiskey or Kentucky Straight Bourbon . Whiskey-you will quickly realize why this. fine:tasting whiskey has been a “favorite for 82 yeqrs. : Err
®
Lindh
|8chool, was injured today when a|® vear ago: |heavy screen in the locker room Expenses
ear, And I get
er from the General Telephone| Cpl. Smith, who also saw ac-| Corp. And it was labeled very tion in New Guinea and the Phil-|
plainly, “Common Stock Dividend iPpines in World War II, will have | No. 61.” a 30-day rehabilitation leave.
2 AND IT SAID the check en- Fisherman Catches
closed is in payment of the regular quarterly dividend of 50 certs Only a Sunburn Claude Hawkins, 19, of 805 S.
per share. Then they spoiled it with a rub-/ Church St., can lay claim today
ber stamp, in little print at the to being the city’s hottest fishbottom, which read: “Complimen-!erman,
tary Copy, No Check Enclosed.” | ie caught no fish. As if 1 hadn't found out by| pyt he did catch a severe sunthat time. | burn on his back, necessitating (treatment last night at General
Custodian Hurt as Screen Hospital. ~~ Conks Him on Head U. S. Statement
“ Joseph Schmalz, 67-year-old] WASHINGTON, July 10 (UP)—Govern-|
{ment expenses and receipts for the current! custodian of Shortridge High fiscal year through July 6. compared with
Last Y 608.9
This A ..$ 1,044,362,475 $ 086 d 736,417,562 320,669.154 307,944,913 288,252,902 | ho 6,456,558,548 4,549,260,403 | {Pub. Debt .. 254,711,042.497 257,220,328,418| He was taken to Methodist Gold Res. .. 21,755,963,867 24,230,673,950
Hospital with a possible fractured! INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE skull. | Gleatings ....% 9,812,000
Year
lof the gymnasium fell and hit Besin
him on the head. Cash Bal
| i
LL »
of
used in a crackdown on
Cl $26,108,000 In Edinburg, Ind.
ARK—Poiice Chief O'Neal and Traffic Capt. A motorists who park in restricted areas. Tow-in
to hit Sgt. Jaglowski in the legs.] The bullet struck the sergeant
{in the stomach. {
Husbands had been free on| $1000 bond in the shooting, pend-| ing a hearing before Judge Alex| M. Clark in ‘Municipal Court 4!
on charges of assault and bat-!
tery. (iL
Today he was rearrested on the murder charge. Husbands cur-| rently is on parole from a life] sentence for bank robbery. He
| 'had served 13 years of the sen-|glrcle Theatre com
tence. {
Arrested in Cincinnati {gor
Since his parole from the State Prison at Michigan City in 1943, |
Husbands was arrested by Cincin- |Family Finance §%
nati police on Nov. 23, 1947, for grand larceny. This charge was reduced to petit larceny, for which he was fined: Formerly of Williamsport, Pa., Sgt. Jagloski is survived by his
wife and two children, now living i
udry Jacobs inspect
wat
Vian
; | Progress Laundry com
With Women.” Local Stocks and Bonds|
July 10— STOCKS American Loan 5% pid American States com American States pfd.... Ayrshire Collieries com . 8. Ayres 4Va% - L..ens. Belt RR & Stk Yds pfd....... Belt RR & Stk Yds com...... Bobbs-viertli com .e Bobbs-Merrill pfd 4%%... Central Soya ............ Chamb_of Com com ...
Asked
om Loan 4 ptd Cummings Eng com Cummings Eng pfd............ Consolidated mn 8 pfd ...... ta Elec. com ,... “enn Eastern loa Iele 5 pfd ... Equitable Securities com ..... Equitable Securities ofd ...... Family
Finance com
seesnens
Hays Corp: pid’ ww : Hamilton Mfg Co cOM...caveee *Herfl-Jones cv A pid Home T&T 5% pid Hook Drug Co Om. ...cuvvenes ind Asso Jel 2 pfd .....ee.. Ind Asso Tel 2% pfd......... Ind Gas & Wat com.......... ind Mich El 4)» pla 9 Telephone 4.8
nd van Indianapolis Water com
36% 18 | | Indianapolis Water 4% pfd ..101 103% | Indianapolis Water 5% pfd...107 110 | ndpls Pow & Lt com . RN 32% ndpls Pow & Lt pfd ease 9102 100434 ndpls Ath Club ‘Realty Co 8) 84 | ndianapolis Railways com ... 4 5 Jefferson National Life com .. 10 11] Kingan & Co com sen 3 4% Kingan & Co pfd vrs venue 88 S | Lincoln National Life ........ 84 Lynch Corporation Marmon-Herrington com Mastic Asphali
Nat Homes com Nat Homes ofd N Ind Pub Serv com
P R Mallory Co com any Pub Serv of Ind 3% ptd Pub Serv of Ind com ........ Ross Gear Tool com .
om. ivan So Ind G&E 4.8% ofd ...... Stokely-Van Camp com ...... Stokely-Van Camp pfd rtauner & Co 5%% via ... Terre Haute Malfeable U 8 Machine Co iieeens {inited HsPhone 6% ofa ....
Union ‘ cess BONUS Allen & Steen 8s reves ‘ee American Loan 4'4s 55 . American Security 5s 60 American Loan 4'%s 60 Bastian Morley 5s 61 ........ Batesville Tele Co 44s ...
Buhner Fertilizer 5s 58 ....... 97 eens Ch of Com Bldg 4%s 61 ...... 96 eave Columbia Club 3-58 62 ....... 27 . Citizens ind Tel 4 6] .... 10] Po fauitable Securities 60 .... 97 . Hamilton Mfg .Co 5s 65 ...... 8
8 Indpls Paint & Color 5s 64 ... 987 avy inapls Public Loan. 5s 64 . 4
Ind Limestone 458 75 .......... ing Assv fel 38 78 .. ..e... indpls Railways 5s 67 .. . Kuhner Packing 4s 59 ..... PEIN ngsenkamp 5s 58 . ine Koh Teg " Publio Seryice 1s 5... 101% Sprague vicer 5s 60 Term 58 87 .....covnus 88 Local Produce : Bems—-Oultent Apts. 54 Ibs. and to , 43c; eA large. + arads B TATE. . and Grade A x 3 ol
gh En
‘ day Siw
“Uniformly Fine Since 1869"
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