Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 July 1951 — Page 10
a
. Crumbling By Harold H. Hartley
“fair trade” is crumbling like|
¥
THA an old tombstone on a weather-beaten hillside.
business, boys.” and dangerous at the
has put out the word, “No that goes.
) for the kitchen wall
and But metals are disappearing from ‘people are playing coy withiclock faces. And here’s a tip, If
you need an electric clock, don’t
The manufacturers are putting wait; »
The retailer is afraid of being qon't
happening. 0"
to/@ryer has
Then there was the new home
cuts without losing their|cleaner (vacuum type), with the
swivel head. You sit it in the cen-
80|ter of the floor and with a feather-aig-lweight hose, you can go all about
the room. But watch metal disappear from vacuum sweepers,
a» THE HAMILTON-BEACH hair
; stopped coming through. Unless there’s a change, expect to find them by
caught by a price cutter down their, \,
o o THE MANUFACTURERS are up a tree. Some retailers are so big and important, the manufacturers need them as outlets. So ‘the manufacturers. don't press them. They just hope their outlets will stay in line. And as for retailers getting their heads together on prices— that's out in the eyes of the Justice Department. So it looks to me-as if business is going back to real competition, real merchandising. And the frightened merchant who wants to give his stuff away can do it— but he probably won't be in business long. No one is when he operates at a loss.
n " - PRICE FIXING is phony. And it is sometimes harmful. Prices and quality are fixed in Russia, ro competition, and pretty punk merchandise. It takes brains to be a merchant, to know pricing, selling, and to be able to run the hard race of competition. I think you will find that prices find their own levels, and all the king's horses and all the king's men, can't get by long if they make them either too high or too low. “iy
o ” ” THE PEOPLE set prices. That's you. And that's the way it ought to be. And a good merchant has to be an even better merchant to stay neck-and-near with a hard competitor, I think down in their hearts, most merchants will agree. » » ”
REMOVING PRICE competi-
tion would take the salt out of) their daily bread, the spice and]
sparkle out of the game they love best.
That's trading goods for your]
dollars.
Push-Button Paradise
I HAVE JUST COME from the Land of Magic. - The place was full of alluring, push - button time - savers for grown-ups, I saw a 24-inch television set which was so close to a home-size movie I could hardly tell the difference. Made the people seem real, as if they were right in the room with you. § I saw new electric blankets with a new control which looks like a bedside clock. And no lumps in the blankets, either. They're filled | with continuous wire, no rib-| punching thermostats, i 1 saw metals changing color, from peace to war, percolators and singing tea kettles, and little| traveling irons which are off to
the front, and off the market. | ® = =» slipping into
AND PLAID-FACED CLOCKS Vice presidential
In red and yellow (named the
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i. 5
And where was this Land of Magic? It was General Electric's 1952 showing. I mentioned about one item out of 20 of the most fascinating display I've seen in months: I could have spent a couple of days, just playing with the appliances. » . "
EARL WEIDERRICHT (which is Irish for “Again right”), sales manager for General Electrjc Sup-
ply Co. housewares, showed me through. There wasn't anything there I couldn't think of. That big 24-inch TV set was tagged $775. That sounded like a lot of money. Then we did a flashback.
inch set cost that much. That's how fast things change. ; a vv =a I HATED TO LEAVE Earl's show in the Warren Hotel, especially the Lionel Train which is wreck-proof, has a built-in (whistle and, so the sign said, “real knuckle couplers.” I'm just a kid in long pants.
Max's Maxim |
MAYBE YOU'VE HEARD of] that guy Hess. His name’s Max. And he's got a big store over in! Allentown, Pa, | He's been telling off the trade.| He thinks straight. No beating about the bush, He knews what! he wants, and how to get it. | He makes it simple. He says advertising simply tells people what he has to sell and why they| should buy it. It may be price appeal. But that isn’t always| the big thing. Telling how it will| {make their lives better is more]
{ important. | ” ” ” | | SO MERCHANTS WHO buy! new things, then tell the world, what they've got, distribute it pleasantly, quickly to people who can pay, have very little triuble. But telling people what they have, truthfully, year after year, is what pays off. Few who do it] consistently, and wisely ever fail.|
Al's Bigger Job
IT WAS good news to people around town to hear that Albert] F. Watters, former personnel manager for the big RCA plant Indian a polis, i now has the ' alle. same role at the top of his company. He's personnel hoss for the RCA-—the whole works. He succeeds Edward M. Tufft who is
| |
| {
|
shoes. Mr. Watters
| Al Watters lin Harrison, N. J., at the tube plant -where he began as a spot welder's attendant in 1935, then {various machinist jobs, assistant (foreman, general foreman, assistlant personnel man, then to Indianapolis. As my fingers walk through those lines, they are ticking off |a success story, thumb-nailed, but | positive proof that there still are {plenty of better jobs for the men who are willing to play the game for all their worth. The company invariably finds they are worth—more and more,
Local Truck Grain Prices
No. 2 white corn, $1.72 No. 2 yellow corn, $1.62 No. 2 truck wheat, 32.00 No, 2 oats, 60¢ No. 2
soybeans. $2.77
Local Produce
Eggs—Current receipts, 54 bi, and over to case 39¢: Grade A large, 50c: Grade LB large 43s, and Grade A medium. ‘To; no grade. 3c Poultry Fowls, 4'a lbs. and over, 25¢ under 4% lbs, d Leghorns, 18c; cocks and stags, 15c afd No. § poultry. do less than No. 1 Butterfat-—~Premium, €0c: regular 5Te
TARILY CLOVOY AND CLovey ARias
Felix T. McWhirter, Founder 130 E. Morket St. MA-1301
-
| Yo give sweltering | Rove. A sight decline in
he WAN Fall ee
Two and a half years ago a 14-|
{ buildings.
MONA AMEOFE COM 1931 (OW L A WAGER ALL MOATS MSEIVES.
TODAY AND TOMORROW-—Scattered showers are ex- : Hoosiers some respite temperature is forecast
1000 Still Out In Lake County
By United Press More than 1200 workers were
idle in Indiana today because of strikes stretching from Lake Michigan to the Ohio River involving steel workers, beer and petroleum haulers, food packers, freight handlers and bus drivers. But three other walkouts, including 8000 CIO United Auto Workers on the Studebaker Corp. assembly line in South Bend, ended this morning. Nearly 4000 persons were on
2900 CIO steelworkers at the General American Transportation Corp. plant in Mast Chicago settled a piece work rate dispute. Calumet area strikers involved 800 employees of the Pullman Standard Car Manufacturing Co., truck drivers who distribute almost all the beer sold in Lake
strike In Lake County alorte, but!
PR Le
ESDAY, JULY 18, 1051
cs
County and 100 CIO packinghouse workers
Transit Strikes Spread
! And at Evansville, a walkout {of AFL bus drivers and me- | chanics spread to a second transportation line. Twenty-five struck against the Evansville and Ohio
| Valley company yesterday, and a dozen more against Evansville Suburban and Newburgh lines this morning. It stopped commuter bus riding between Evansville and several Ohio River tities {in Indiana and Kentucky. | The Studebaker walkout ended ‘when a union spokesman called { the strike unauthorized and asked | the workers to return to their { jobs while negotiations continued {in a dispute over manpower questions. The bus employees quit to pro{test wages, They demanded a 10 per cent increase and rejected a company offer of a 5-cent hourly raise. A seven-week walkout of AFL molders ended at Peerless Foundry in Indianapolis when the union accepted a negotiated agreement reached yesterday. !
Heavy Duty | VAN NUYS, Cal, (UP)—The thieves grow husky in this San Fernando Valley | community. They even |
steal | Perry Kinney told police yes- ‘| terday that someone made off | with his 10-by-5-foot aluminum | building. He said he was planning to move the building to downtown Los Angeles and set up a shoeshine stand, but when he went to look for it, the build- | ing was gone.
1 |
Shell Casing Plant | Workers End Strike
EAST CHICAGO, Ind. July 18 (UP)—Some 2900 workers who struck the General American]
+ |Transportation Corp., returned to Diocese in Seattle an
work today following settlement of personnel dispute.
The strike began last Thurs-
{day when 59 workers walked out, and
claiming their work should be spread over two shifts. Their
{fellow workers refused to cross Most
picket lines.
The company, which
July 18 [utility $22.75-$25:
Fairly Active Here, Prices on Increase
Trade opened fairly active this
non at Boulevard Station this mornin
ENJOYABLE EXODUS—There's nothing fike a baseball game to break the. monotony of business. That's why 45 members of the Brightwood Merchants Association climbed aboard the Mofor Chicago. They'll watch the White Sox York Yanks this afternoon, then get back to business. An annual event, this year's baseball safari seeking union| 18 supervised by James C. Millican. > recognition from Libby, McNeil! —
and Libby at Hammond. Hog Trade Opens
ce Stocks end Bonds Nay [raft Board ..Named in Carroll <. 4. County Dispute
STOCKS Bid Asked American Loan 5% pid 8 American States com ...... 58 American States pfd ......... 24 Ayrshire Collleries com ...... 18 LS. Ayres 4%4% .. ' ..... 03 105%] RR & Stk Yds pfd..... fi ‘ Belt RR & Stk Yds co! 34Y
Bobbs-Merrill com iy Bobbs-Merrill pfd 4%% .. Central Sova sake Chamb of Com com .... Circle Theater com ... Com Loan 4 pfd Cummings Eng com ... Cummings Eng pid ....
103 |
Tenants Housing A Racket, Says
Business Bureau
Continued From Page One
Mr. Thomas why she hadn't been notified of any vacancy since the service had advertised 50 to 60 vacancies. Mr. Thomas explained: “Well, take 50 vacancies for example. Probably half of them would be out of your price range or wouldn't suit your requirements for one reason or another. “That cuts the list down to.25. Ten of those wouldn't take children. Three probably would be for -colored. That leaves 12. Now there are four parts of town-— North, East, West and Squth. You ask for the West Side. Probably only three of the listings would be on the West Side.
| Firewood
EAST CHICAGO, Ind, July 18 (UP)—When Nick Onio, 59, began trimming his trees, neighbors called police. They objected more “to his tools than to the trimming. Onio eplained that he noticed the limbs of a back yard tree were too long but he couldn’t find the ax. The neighbors said that Onio. loaded a repeating shotgun and began firing away at the branches.
Pike Twp. Group Protests Building Of Oil Tanks
Pike Township residents formed battlelines today to block a new
lords preferred someone else.” Submits List
.| “So, you see how 50 listings boil down to three that you could their area. use and perhaps those three land-|
Mr. Thomas submitted to. The
1
Upwards of 200 property own= lers were set to appear before the {Marion County Plan Commission | tomorrow to protest the construc.
bid by industries to move into
lay the New (been found houses through hi
service.
sald they were satisfied with th
plaining he paid the Service $2 for getting an apartment on
efforts.”
office every day for a week an findlly heard a landlord call in
A new Carroll County draft vacancy which he took,
Times a list of 116 names of Indianapolis “clients” he said had tanks.
housing units the service found for them at $25 total fee each. The third was not satisfied, ex-| paar a petition by Socony-Vacuum
{tion of $1 million in oil storage
In May, Pike remonstrators
Ss - peat down an attempt by a pav-
Of these, three were contacted ing materials company to build by The Times by telephBne. Two|a plant on 86th St. near Coffman
e Road. Present Petition
Tomorrow, the Commission will
5/0il Co. to rezone more than 100 a acres in the area from agricul-
“fluke” and “not because of their {ral to industrial use.
The oil company is seeking to
He said he sat in the service’s|y;q 11 storage tanks north of
dig6th St. near the New York | Central tracks. It will join with
| Sinclair» Refining Co. and Phillips
In the first three weeks of oper-| p.i.leum Corp. to build 14 tanks
morning in the Indianapolis Consolidates »n 3 ofd 96's board was appointed by State Se-|ations here beginning last Mar \ ey Dr ree | £ .| the highway. Stockyards, with prices fully 25 es Dy Safdar: or "6% lective Service officials today to|28, the Service reported to the| "Sth o hie State paw: 44 the cents higher on barrows and koujrapje Securities com ..-~ 3% "“‘|replace three men who quit be-|{Better Business Bureau that it| oy 855. pres ‘ Family Finance com _...... 91 : {had registered 284 clients at Pike Township Community Coungilts, Family Finance 8% ofd ...... 9 100 |cause they opposed Selective Serv-| ch 5 charge for ph at $5 i charged that the rezoning ys rn EY “es | » hq * 5 ls Hogs 4500; bulk choice 170-240 Hamilton Mfg 0 COM. nuns 3 lice deferment policies. | » g 4 ng .ap iwould create a “civil defense Hor-Jones cv A pra ; 10% p Hitchcock {plicants’ references and credit. ds.” pounds $2350-824; short deck Home T&T §% pid 2" rig. Gen. Robinson he 1 Mr. Thomas said he didn’t Problem and traffic hazards. choice No. One lightweights Hook Drus Co com .... 18 (Indianapolis selective serv jr [know “how many more” had been “We feel the master plan should $24.25; 240-285) pounds $22.50- Ind Asso Tel 2% ptd 8 rector, named Laurente A. hn | registered for the service since be adhered to,” he said. “We're $23.50; 290-340 pounds $21.50- Ind G8 pV G8 on 3‘ 103 finest and fui. oy that time. the only territory around metro$22.25; 120-160 pounds $18.50-$21 ina Telcohons 48 ity Cot 98 |S oe: an i ali er ope wl Mr. Thomas stoutly defended politan Indianapolis that's resior more; sows sharing advance;| Indianapolis Water com, _... 16%. 17%] Bn : : {his service as “strictly legitimate” dential and agricultural, and we choice 300-550 pounds mostly Indianapolis Water 4% pfd 101 103%| The old board, headed by Rob-| d legal | want to loop it that way ERO Rr . O8LY. Indianapolis Water 5% ptd ...107 ert Davidson handed in resigna-|2"C 684% |want to keep it that way. $17.75-819'50; smoot lightweights! Indpls Pow & Lt com ........ 32% 32% : 2 “Tenants Housing Service has “We also believe that groupin . ; Indpls Pow & Lt pfd ......... 931s 96 [tions May 30. Mr. Davidson, Wal- 8 S. 2.30 g grouping, $19.75-§20; big weights, $17.25- [halanapolis Ratiways com - 4 5 | M. Toh d C. E. Helvi been licensed real estate brokers oil storage and refinery facilities $17.50. Jefferson National Life com.. 10 1113 ter M. Johnson and C. E. elviel n Ohio f : : a i Kingan & Co com ........ 4 4% wrote Gen. Hitchcock that they|D o for 31 years and hasiin.gne locality would create a big Cattle 500, calves 400; all/Kingan & Co fd. ......... 61's 64, | : Yi never been criticized before,” he i lem,” h - taugh : | Lincoln National Life .....00" 8412 86l2 opposed agricultural and occupa- » civil defense problem,” he con slaughter classes about steady; Lynch Corporation 1.1... 13% 18%ltional deferments and the test-|%31d: ; tinued. “Additional oil trucks one load choice 1000-pound steers Marmon Herrington com ..... $14 6% ings method of deferring college] Had ‘Incompetent’ Worker using 86th St. would also increase $35; load 1050-pound held at Nat Homes com ............. Jo Ba tadents | Mr. Thomas admitted, however, traffic hazards” $35.35; high utility to good native N"nd Pub Serv com ...... 21% 23%! mao otter said “our decision in|that during the first few weeks| Ar. Bass said almost 200 resi yearlings $27-$32.50: good to|N Ind Pub Serv 4! pfd Aa AN R pia = ur decision Mi ¢ operation “we had an i - oo : choice $33.50-$34.50; 1 IN Ind Pub Serv 4% pfd ..... 94¢'2 97 |guch cases would be of small im-| P an NCom-i gents would appear in protest choice $33.50-8$34.50; heifers very frosress Laundry com ceoreens 31 1 portance since it seems apparent Petent person which caused some i. orrow. In addition, he said,
scarce; commercial cows $26-$29; canners and cutters $17.50-323; vealers mod-| erately ‘active, 50¢ lower; choice
{and prime $34-835 50; commercial
and good $27.50-833.50. Sheep 500; rather slow; weak: few choice to prime native lambs $31; bulk good and choice $29 to $30.50; utility $26 to $28; prime closely” sorted 85-pound pool] lambs $34; choice to prime sorted) $32; good and choice $30; slaughter ‘ewes scarce; good and choice! quotable $10 to $14. Bulls steady: commercial and good $28 to $30.50: best heavy commercial eligible to $31: cutter and utility $24 to $27.
Pope Pius Elevates
| WASHINGTON, July 18 (UP)!
—Pope Pius XII has elevated the Seattle diocese to an archdiocese!
the Most Rev. Thomas A. Connolly. bishop of Seattle, has been named archbishop. The lev, Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, Apostolic delegate to
makes the United States, announced that|
| fanner & Co 5% % pid
{Ch of Com Bldz 4'%s 61 Columbia Club 3-58 €2
0 | Ind Limestone 48 75 fina A | Indpls
Pub Serv of Ind 3'2 pfd ...... Pub Serv of Ind com ... Ross ear Tool com .. . *Schwitzer-Cummins pfd 80 Ind G&E cis isnes *So Ind G&E 2; |. SGPOERNEER Stokely-Van Camp com Stokely-Van Camp pfd
eo. ‘mp IA
Terre Haute Malleable U. 8 Machine Co ............. 2 ~nnone 5% ofd of
Union Title *Extra dividend. BONDS
Allen & Steen 8% American Loan 4'28 55 American Security 5s 60 American Loan 42s 60 .. Bastian Morley 5s 61 re Batesville Tele Co 44s .. Buhner Fertilizer 5s 58 ..
~
83, that a large majority of request-| #8 ed deferments 22v, through appeals.” {
17%2/the third one to resign this year. | 12 {Earlier -in May, two members of ; 3% the Floyd County board quit over Since the $5 fee is charged merely On Batch of New Laws |“educational discrimination in the fT d (drafting of men under the new credit. law,” and the Noble County board | i ....|stepped down last April because cents by anyone,” he’ said.
“***|lof the student deferment policy. | | {three houses with the service for
lseaks Bond tssud: OK
jconfusion and (lax service,
will be given]
basis.” : Mr. Overley said his burea {considered the service a “racket
The Carroll County board was|
checking references an
“This can be done for about 2
'rentals when it first opened a
The city of Bloomington asked; tions.
but ; $ collecting signatures this person has been fired .and we group is g sig
are now operating on an efficient
of 300 property ownérs on peti(tions.
u
» State Acts Quickly
Indiana's batch of 1951 laws 5 probably will go into effect Tuesday, Secretary of State Leland
Mr. Overley said he registered Smith said today.
It was expected earlier the gov-
s ernor’'s proclamation declaring
{part of the bureau's investiga- the laws effective would come
“itizens ind Lei 4's 61 101 A ; about July 31, but Mr. Smith said CULE “2 °° |the Indiana Public Service Com-| “I was given the names of four distribution of 15,330 volumes to Indpls Paint & Color 5s 64 97 mission late yesterday for per- persons seeking to rent the prop-|county clerks is progressing faster
Punic Loan 5s 8a ss Ler 38 1b . Railways 5s 67 ........ Kuhner Packing 4s 59 Langsenkamp 5s 58 3s 3
N Ind Pub Serv Paper Arts Co Public Service 3%s 75 ... Qoragie Device: 5s Trac Term 5s 57
6 Bailed-Out Reds Fail to Appear
| NEW YORK, July 18 (UP) Six bailed-out U. 8. Communist
seneie 101 101% 23 |
shell casings, agreed to add nine the pope also established two new leaders failed to appear in Fed-!|
workers to the department where the dispute arose.
dioceses: Yakima, Wash, and
{Juneau, Alaska.
{has been all around with RCA. Cheer in a Forecast—
}
| By Science Service | WASHINGTON, July 18-The | Kansas-Missouri flood areas can | except “substantially drier weath|er” during the next 30 days. | This is the prediction of the U. 8, {Weather Bureau's extended forecast section for the period of from mid-July to mid-August. The current prediction reads: “Rainfall indications point to substantially drier weather over the
~ central plains, including the flood
areas with totals for the 30-day period not exceeding seasonal [normals.” | West of the continental divide, {however, where conditions bordering on drought have recently been experienced, “abundant showers” are expected. Also, in the northern third of the nation, greater than normal amounts of rain are forecast,
FOTOCAST NG 6 ames [Tu GF? ome low
wer [C74 sari
from the heat for tomorrow.
Drier Weather Is Ahead For Flooded Midwest Areas
Other parts of the nation can expect the usual amounts of rain. The middle of July to mid-Aug-
ust will be warmer than normal
over alliparts of the country west of the Mississippi. “Greatest departure’” from normal in the West, according to the weather bureau, will be in the céntral Rocky Mountain states and the west central Great Plains. East of the Mississippi, temperatures are expected to average near or slightly below normal for the 30-day period. }
FOUNDED 1885
The average yield of all
regarding securities that
overthrow of thé government.
Are your investments paying anything like
6%?
the New York Stock Exchange, figured on prices at the end of the year, was 6.7%. This is an impressive illustration of the income an investor can obtain today by a careful selection of common stocks. A Thomson & McKinnon representative will be glad to review your portfolio with you, and assist you in obtaining a better income by giving you the facts
safety, yield and possible price appreciation. Write for our booklet Investment Facts”
THOMSON & MSKINNON
leral Court today for a hearing to set a trial date. The hearing was | |postponed until 2:15 p. m. (Indi-| lanapolis Time) by Federal Judge {John F. X. McGohey. | He directed court aids to make sure the six—who have been in| and out of court and jail almost daily since their arrest, June 20— were properly notified that their presence in court was necessary again today. + Eleven others of the American | Communist Party's second-string|
leadership arrived on time from | the Federal House of Detention] where they were sent yesterday| after the District and Appeals Courts denied validity of their Civil Rights Congress bail. All 17 are charged with conspiring to advocate the forcible
dividend-paying stocks on
recommend themselves for
BROKERS IN SECURITIES AND COMMODITIES
200 Circle Tower Bldg.
l
"
MArket 3501
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE AND OTHER PRINCIPAL |
14 |mission to issue $1,750,000 worth erties,” he said. PevEnie bonds came to see the property and he,
so |of water works I have ignored the
.-|to improve the municipal water didn’t rent it, works system.
|service since that time.”
When you finan
“Only one ever| than expected.
INDIANAPOLIS
CLEARING HOUSE Clearings ana. $10,688,000 | Debits $37,583,000
ce a car
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