Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 September 1951 — Page 2

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_.___ THESINDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

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MONDAY, SEPT. 17; 1051

~~ To Be Hiked 15-2 Cents”

By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 17— Ceiling prices of beef and some pork products at the butcher shop are going up by|

an average of 1 or 2 cents a pound The Office of Price Stabilization will issue an order today raising wholesale beef ceilings. By the time the increase. is passed on to the public, the housewife will be, paying an .average of 1; to 2 cents more for beef, the agency said, | The action didn't do much to satisfv. Wilson & Co, a large meat packer. A spokesman in Chicago said the higher ceilings are not going “to help us buy beef on the hoof.” “Our problem is to remain in| compliance with livestock ceilings,’ he said. “We can’t buy " cattle and stay under the ceilings so long as the sellers demand over-ceiling prices.”

| made no statement and paid no attention to booing pickets.

BRUSHOFF—Staring straight ahead, Deputy Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko of the Soviet Union ignores a reporter as he boarded the S. S. lle de France at New York for return home. He

‘Shocking’ Report—

U. S. Allies

By JAMES DANIEL Seripps-Howard Staff Writer i

WASHINGTON, Sept. 17--U. 8. ‘efforts to deny war materials to the Red Chinese are not meeting with complete success. - | Other nations with forces fight-| ing on our side in Korea still are not making a real effort to keep military goods from the enemy. Despite such controls-as we have persuaded them to adopt, the Red Chinese still are~able to get a great deal of what they need through loopholes in the Allies’ regulations or by resorting to smuggling. These conclusions were reported to the Senate today by Sen. Herbert O'Conor (D. Md.), chairman of a subcommittee on export controls and policies. First-Hand Report Sen. O'Conor said it is “snockvery time when ‘our military leaders are warning us of a Communist build-up for another onslaught in Korea, war goods are still going to Red China ” Worse, he said, is the fact that

| — Pork to Increase

ting retailers to raise their pork, prices on hams, shoulders and/ bacon. An official said the increase will be about 1 or 2 cents a pound. ; : The new wholesale beef ceilings vary from ,area to area. They

‘MISS FLAME’ SEARCH

Sponsored by The Times and the Junior Chamber of Commerce Here ig my vote for the following red-haired entry in the “Miss Flame” search in conjunction with the Fire Prevention Demonstration Sept. 30 at the Fair Grounds: represent an over-all increase—a

hike of 1 cent a pound, on the HER NAME

average, in the cage of Def 801d) yup A PYRRMEE \...coirereriririsvasnrsnsarinrrerass by the carcass. The agency gaid the increases were necessary to restore “fair” | profit margins to packers. Nor-| mally, when low wholesale prices; cut into packers’ profits, they re-| cover their losses through sales of such by-products as hides and tallows. | |

Packers Hurt

ana many oc. megion O ABC's Ba a ee ant er many mo. L€gion Opposes s Ban ers are in a “critical position,” an|

® : ‘ org omen mit oe. ON Liquor-Sponsored Teams

which are to go into effect Hea The State American Legion basketball, golf, softball and nesday, represent a Re " went on record today opposing various other athletic contests. amount of “readjustment 10 fe (he Alcoholic Beverage Commis-| William Clarkson, director of fect more accurately the Jela 1a slon’s ban on beer and liquor the state Legion's Americanism value of gach out oF means “Ponsors of bowling teams and pepartment, said the enforcement To the hou tek and 1¢28ues. : lof the state regulation threatens that meat from ¢ . rh The bowling committee of the to dissolve a larger part of the rounds will go up slightly in p by Legion, in a formal resolution, Americanism program “which the choice loins ought to go down, Y promised to bring the unpopular Indiana Department has been a few cents, and ribs will stayi 0 4; the attention of its apie where they are, an official said. 145050 members and to top of-|years.” Operate at Loss |ficials of the state Legion for, ; As for pork, an official said getion.

wholesale ‘prices have been forc-| The entire Legion’s program oo Remote Control : ing pork retailers to operate at & ,4,,0¢10¢ ig threatened by the |

SPANAIR RENNIE REINA NB RENAN IIRIESIERIRRIRINRRIIETS

If she works, where employed .coceesvscervsscessssssnssins HOME ADDRESS

Mail or bring this coupon to: “Miss Flame’ Search, Indianapolis Times, 214 W. Maryland St, by.midnight Sept. 26.

BS EPIRA IERIE NII RIA EEE

been adjusted. | : s, gi 8! Another order to be issued to- oy ye : rE pri? has day will increase the ceiling price |), oyoq for the development of of the utility grade of live cattle youngsters. In the resolution, from $21.80 to $2345 per 100 gon.4” py Ralph Kalan, Ham-| pounds. . mond, and Farle Prewitt; Terre! This grade is used by canners .;,.ute, the Legion's bowling comfor the Amy. asd SUS rapre. | mittee pointed out that the Legion nts 1ass than 10 per cent of ana sponsored junior baseball. beef sold at retail, the agency MUNMOMOBOROBONOROTOMONONOHNOGOL sald, >

Garrett Rural

ling heifers to his herd today. He bought them at an auction at Harrison, Neb, via remote control, Illness kept him at home, so he did his bidding by telephone and bought the animals at $33.80 per hundred pounds.

TIFFANY ... Dry Cleaning for Children’s School Garments

Pupils Transferred ®

GARRETT, Ind, Sept. 17 (UP) —Thirty-one pupils who attended| a rural’ one-room schoolhouse)

branded as ‘unsanitary” by their; . parents, were transferred to the

Garrett city schools today. | The pupils, who just completed summer vacations, had an extra) “holiday” last week while their parents picketed the Schopf school. The parents met with county school superintendent Carl Stallman and Keyser Twp. Trustee Lester Smurr Saturday, and Stallman agreed to close the school. | “It's detrimental for the chil-| dren to be out of school,” he said. So | The parents charged the school ¢ had no plumbing, that their ; . children had to drink water from a gallon thermos jug and wash : z, Telephone LI. 1327 their hands in a mop pail. Routeman Will Call

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Rites for Niehaus ‘

-ANGQLA, Sept. 17 (UP)—8erv-| ices will be held today for George N. Niehaus, 73, former president of Tri-State College, who died Fri-| day night: after long illness. He was founder of the institution's School of Engineering.

itfany aundry

425 North Senate

~ Widen Your Appreciation Of The World You Live In THROUGH EVENING STUDY

ELEVEN POPULAR LECTURE COURSES

th k OPS int a VIMY Fl ’ C } Bi lg Nurses to Meet a another order permit ISS ame onres an FT. WAYNE, Sept. 17 (UP)-

to build throughout the

loss under their retail ceilings... B—ohih forbids alcoholic per-| CULVER, Sept. 17 (UP)— and in the case of pork chops and 0" y514ers to sponsor contests! Cattle feeder W. L. ~Overroasts these ceilings already have any kind. } meter added” 50 head of yeur+}

Twentieth Century Drama Tuesday 6 P. M. Appreciation of Music Tuesday 4 and 6 P. M. Appreciation of Art Tuesday er. M Introduction to the History of Art Tuesday 8 P. M. How to Improve Your Vocabulary Tuesday 6:15 P. M. Twentieth Century British Literature Wednesday 6 P. M. Interior Decoration . ’ Wednesday 7 P. M. Twentieth Century American Literature Thursday = 6 P. M. Introduction to Prose Fiction ~ Thursday 8 P. M. Beginning Spanish Conversation Thursday 6:15 P. M. Advanced Spanish @onversation Thursday 6:15 P. M. i

. Also 175 credit courses offered this fall 7 : Semester Begins This Week

~ DOWNTOWN CENTER

traders in the Far East already are talking about a full-scale resumption of trade with Red China : - “purely on the basis of a possible Some 300 northeastern Indiana cease-fire which at best is only nurses meet here.tomorrow for a a stoppage in active military comdisaster preparedness and casu- bat.” alty prevention conference with The O'Conor report is based on stress on what nurses should do on-the-spot observations of Kenif their communities are bombed neth Hansen, former Economic The nurses’ association and Allen Co-operation Administration county civil defense. council will trade expert who was hired by sponsor the conference. the Senate to investigate trade

-

i mm — d : ds “Robert A. Lovett was sworn tm ) |as : $ t { War Goods to Reds uci or rie, tow

for your busy hours at home...

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Lovett Sworn in | As Defense Chief |

Still Ship ! Ip WASHINGTON, Sept. 17 (UP) |

|

. ' defend the nation from attack. with Communist countries. Mr.

Hansen went to Hong Kong, The New York banker took

Gen. George C. Macao, Japan and Korea. jover from He reported that substantial{ Marshall who handed ihe De

quantities of American military goods are leaking from our bases on the Ryukyu Islands and are

Lovett with ‘a great deal pleasure and satisfaction.” Robert N. S8tohl, defense ad-! being smuggled to Red China. |; i i ative, officer, adminis-| No American personnel are {o..4 the oath in a brief ceremony named as selling these goods butigiiended only by top military ofthe report says this may be hap-'fi.ia)s and members of Mr. pending. Sen. O'Conor urges the ; .¢tg family. Army to make “new and far- a. Marshall, 70, resigned af-| reaching efforts” to stop the traf- on one year in the top Defense! Be, particularly Whos prejudices Department post because of perJ. S. prestige in the Far East! that such trade is occurring trom 3013! Yeasons other than health,

our very own bases.” the British continued to let The Army had no tmmediate .,.j,;, plack, an essential for!

comment. Bulk of the report deals with{PARIng tires BO hrogn says

Hong Kong where trade with|, erica's allies ban the. shipChina doubled annually in 1949 ont to China of highly strategic and 1950, and reached a peak in materials for which the relatively, late 1950. Last June the British y,ndeveloped Chinese economy

Chinese Reds had four days’igtee] auto parts, radio parts. notice and moved 120,000 tons of medicines, Te and yp: go

merchandise out of Hong Kong through. These are presumed to! before the ban became effective. pe civilian goods, though official Bypass Hong Kong {Red Chinese purchasing orders, {intended only for building up, ~ Many European vessels, includ- China's military power, list these, ing British, had been bypassing as essential. Hong Korg and going directly to, The report credits the Hong Red China ports, and this prac-/Kong British for putting up a tice seems to be increasing since good enforcement against smugthe Hong Kong ban on® outright glers operating from their own military goods was ordered. |territory. But fishing boats get But the subcommittee’s inves- their fuel ration at Hong Kong, tigator found that much of the then put out to sea and sell it to goods legally imported to Red Red Chinese ‘agents. They -keép China had a supporting military just enough to go to Portuguese use. For example, after stopping Macao for a load of fish and the sales of rubber to Red China, return home.

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fense Secretary's. commission to Indiana yesterday. of was a Tipton farmer run over by

‘through a ditch,

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Three More Added

To State Traffic Fatality List

Three traffic victims died In One of them

his own truck. Another was a 13-year-old boy killed in a skidding car on a country road. A third was a pedestrian thrown 75 feet when struck by an auto. The dead: Clarence Schinlaub, 37, Tipton, Donald K. Meyer, 13, Fountain« town. Nottie Washington, ‘54, Bacramento, Cal. The Meyer boy was killed when

the car in which he was riding

skidded on a gravel road and smashed into a bridge half a mile south of Fountaintown. The driver — John G, - Barrett, 17,

ing and astounding that at the moved to clamp down but the would have no use anyway. But Fountaintown—was not hurt.

Mr. Washington was walking in the center of U. 8. 40 half a mile east of Stilesville, state police said. He was struck by a car driven by Marion J. Thomas, 464 8. JExeter Ave. Mr. Schinlaub, a Tipton farmer, died in St. Joseph's Hospital in Kokomo from injuries suffered late Friday when he was thrown from his own truck and run over by it. After ‘colliding with another truck on the Tipton-Howard County Rd. about 1 mile east of U. 8. 31, the vehicle plunged tore through fences and circled a field four times, {

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ift Ceiling Price On Beef Today |

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Cool Pilot

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