Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 September 1951 — Page 13

»

|

tal rates, vilege at

BEERETIRREROR NER

wn hing nd a fistful

part of the

Paying Girl $25 To Keep Quiet

By United Press ST. LOUIS, Sept. 24—Wallace 8. Macker, 46, yesterday denied a 13-year-old girl's story that he Doastd of killing Mrs. William

Drébes, 38, and paid the girl $25

to keep quiet.

“You haven't got anything on me,” he told police. “She’s crazy.” The girl, Jacqueline Donlon, said Macker told her last Wednesdey that he had killed Mrs. Drebes because of despondency over a love affair with the woman.

The girl said Macker boasted he had done a ‘professional job.” Macker gave her the $25, Jac.queline said, and warned her to keep her mouth shut. “If this doesn't, keep it shut” she quoted him, “I've got something else that will.” + Mrs. Drebes, wife of a. jewelry firm. president, was found bludgeoned to death Sept. 14 in a bedrom, of her home, Her husband, William, 38, said he and his wife had been estranged for nine years because she had affairs with other men but had continued to occupy the same house for the sake of their two children. Jacqueline said Macker, a railroad switchman and father of three children, frequently had

“ threatened to kill Mrs. Drebes

because he said she had “led him on” and intended to “drop him.”

City Hikes Sewer Project Budget To Entice Bidding Indianapolis today ddded more than $340,000 to the cost of the 34th St. main sewer in an effort to get contractors to bid on the project. Local construction executives declared the city's original estimate of $1,067,155 was more than 30 per cent too low and declared the city engineer's office was “unrealistic” in estimating the cost of new sewers, Today the Works Board tentatively approved a new resolution including an estimated cost of $1,407,507 for the first section of the 34th St. sewer (Fall Creek to Temple Ave.). Public hearings have been held on the second section of the sewgr ie will run from 34th and ple Ave. to 32d St. and Forest Manor Ave. The cost is estimated at $556,547.50. Local contractors

have not indicated whether they will bid on this project.

400 Broad Ripple Pupils to Make

Business Tour

Nearly 400 pupils from Broad Ripple High School tomorrow will tour business and industrial plants as part of a school study of community and business problems. The social science and business education departments are sponsoring the trips under direction of Miss Winifred West and Willard Gambold, department. heads.

Students will be transported by bus to the tour sites which will include U. 8. Rubber Co., Federal Building, World War Memorial, Fletcher Trust Co.,, Wm. H. Block Co., Lincoln Hotel, CocaCola Bottling Plant, State Board of ealth, General Hospital, American Legion headquarters, State Library, State Employment Office, Weir Cook Airport, Kahn Tailoring Co., Union Station and Radio Station WISH. At Union Station a train has been provided for the inspection of Broad Ripple pupils.

3 Hoosier Brothers Held in Fatal Brawl

SEYMOUR, Ind. Sept. 24 (UP) ~-Three brothers were held today on charges of assault and battery in connection with a Saturday night brawl in front of a tavern which erided in the death of Kenneth Tankersley, 31. ° Police said they were investigating the brawl involving Tankersley, Harold Black, 28, Kenneth Black, 23, and Donald Black, 26.

MONDAY, SEPT. 24, 1951

Denies Slaying,

" CONGRATULATIONS, JA

Baker, Miss Ruth White and Loui

Youth Gives Baby Beer to Learn

‘His Reaction’

DALLAS, Tex., Sept 24 (UP)— A 17-year-old boy who fed a year-old baby beer “to see how he would react” was held by police today after the infant strangled. The youth, too young to be punished as an adult under Texas law; admitted to lice that he gave Leslie Fletcher beer twice yesterday while visiting a baby-| sitter who was left to care for the baby. Mrs. Betty Lois Fletcher, the baby’s mother, was at a movie when her child died. - Her husband, Clifford, is overseas with the Army. Mrs. Fletcher had brought the baby to Dallas from nearby Garland yesterday so that her 14-year-old sister-in-law could look after the infant. » ” -

THE 17-YEAR-OLD youth and, another boy, 12, visited the baby’ sitter’s South Dallas home during the afternoon. The 17-year-old fed the baby beer twice, Detective T. L. Baker quoted him as saying in his oral statement. .The second time, the infant's hands started to turn purple. Then, his statement added, he gave the baby some orange soda water but the baby gagged. Then a doctor was called. The baby sitter told practically: the were were

thheld and no charges aced. .

caster passes out the cake as he celebrates his 50 years at Mayer & Co. British-born ‘Jack Lancaster began with Mayer's as messenger boy, is now office manager. Congratulating him (left to right) are Mrs. Dorothy Harris, Miss Ruth McClain, Miss Hazel

CK—William John (Jack) Lan-

arles

s Schneider.

Vote Registration

Boards to Visit 12th Ward Today

Branch .vo'ter registration boards will visit six locations in the 12th Ward today.

Residents who are not regis-

[tered or have moved to another

precinct must re-register to vote in the Nov. 6 mayoralty election. Branch boards will operate today from 2 to 9 p. m. at the following sites:

Fire Station 1 at 1445 W. Michigan 8t., School 4 at 630 W. Michigan St, School 16 at 1402 W. Market St., School 24 at 908 W. North S8t., School 30 at 40 N. Riley Ave. and School 63 at 1115

IN. Traub Ave.

In addition, the Registration Office, Room 12, Courthouse, is open from 8 a. m. to 10 p. m daily, including Sunday. : Indianapolis newcomers are eligible to vote if they have lived in the state six months, township 60 days and precinct 30. days before election. .

Seeks Help for Israel

WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 (UP) —Israeli Prime Minister David iBen-Gurion has called on Ameri-

same story. Their namesican Jews to back to the limit

his nation’s $500 million, inde-

|pendence bond issue.

Bought Heroin With Loot

NEW YORK, Sept. 24 —A veteran thief who boasted he is * best burglar on the North Ameri-| can continent” confessed yesterday that he staged a spectacular | $64,000 jewel robbery in the! crowded Waldorf-Astoria Hotel! lobby and gave the gems to a; narcotics peddler in return for $100 worth of heroin daily. Joseph Ireland, who has spent many of his 40 years in prison for nearly a score of thefts, said he’ had to steal to finance his! daily doses of narcotics. He told Asst. Dist. Att. Aloysius! J. Melia that he staged the Waldorf robbery single-handed in the crowded main lobby of the hotel last Tuesday while the persons in charge of the lavish exhibit were away for only a few moments.

Linked to Other Thefts

Ireland made the confession | while he was awaiting sentence; on an attempted petty larceny charge brought by a jeweler. He also was identified as the bold thief who stole gems from other jewelers recently. ! Joseph Norello, 35, to whom Ireland said he gave the jewelry also was arrested. Ireland said Norello did not pay him anything for the gems but promised to provide him with his daily supply of narcotics. The jewels were taken from a showcase of Roy W. Johnston and Co. in the Lexington Ave. lobby of the swanky hotel when the Waldorf was crowded with delegates to the American Bar Association’s annual meeting. Ireland was identified by two jewelers as the thief who stole

i

gems from their stores. A third

Admits $64,000 Gem Theft In Waldorf-Astoria Lobby

jeweler charged him with attempted petty larceny, which was

{the charge upon which he had

{been arrested.

Arrested 19 Times The admitted burglar and drug addict, who has a record of 19 arrests dating back to 1929, said he studied the Johnston set-up in the Waldorf for about 10 days and got the number of the showcase lock, which was x-275. Then he called the manufacturer of the lock in Long Island City, he said. When he asked for a duplicate key for the lock, however, the manufacturer became suspicious and hung up the telephone, he said. Later, Ireland he saw an iden Broadway store and stole it. He had a key made to fit the lock, went to the Waldorf, unlocked] Johnston's lock and cleaned out] the showcase. Ireland’s arrest came after detectives Randolph McLaughlin and Christopher Coyle showed pictures of jewel thieves to some

old authorities,

iof the city’s jewelers who had

been robbed recently. The pictures also were shown to an unidentified Waldorf guest who said she saw a man take the Johnston gems. The Johnston jewelry has not been recovered yet. “If you will release me, I will take you to the jewelry,” Norello told police. Toe

Where to Go

Dancing with Ralph Flanagan and his orchestra, $2. Manufacturers Building at the State Fair Grounds. 9 p. m.

i

Your InTo

By EVER HEAR OF “the on a foggy field. :

you're the best prophet since Noah predicted the flood. They are the forces of change,

with their toes dug in up to their ankles, They come from Don Woodward, second vice president of Mutual Life. They are, in this order, (1) inflation, (2) boom, (3) foreign tension, (4) struggle for equality of income and wealth, (5) thes giant strides of science, and (6) big government. Set down the Big Six on separate lines. After each predict the direction. Then add up what you get, If you're right, you 'I1 be the smartest man in the world. Trouble is, a lot of people will think they know, and get a lot of Wrong answers. And that’s why this. old earth takes a sickening wobble now and then. Too many wrong answers. But try. I'll give you my guess now, It’s “Up” for every one.

Fire Water

CAN WATER make a fire? It can, and did. I dropped in to see Everett Johnson at the Johnson Coal Co., 2112 Northwestern. He had his hat on but his coat off. And his hands were coal-smudged. When I ‘tried to shake hands he explained about his fire the rain made. He had a big pile of fine stoker coal, It was packed tight. When the .rain came, it sealed the breathing pores of the pile, and the heat’ down in the

* ‘middle couldn't get out. ” Ed ” IT GOT HOT ENOUGH to set

the coal smouldering. And how do you think he put it out? He did that with rain, too. All he had to do was open up the coal pile, let it get air, then let the water get to the coal. And the fire was out.

8 Per Cent Bounce

had too much of their dough tied up in merchandise and raw materials. 3 They began to wload, play it close to the vest, But in August, the IU Bureau of Business Research reported today, business felt an 8 per cent updraft. And prices slowly began to turn

around, And IU says what you've read here afore a namely, for the rest of the year, the spin will be on. Things are going to hum. . Not crazy buying, but a steady climb. And who'll do that? It will be you, the consumer.

Button, Button OUT AT KINGAN'S after today, there'll be two gold buttons shining in the lapels of two important people. Rolled into a single package they are a full 100 years of packing know-how. W. R. Sinclair, the warm, friendly chairman of the board, and Elmer Kranning, of the cutiting department, both practical

ical lock fn a Meat men, got their fifty-year but-lternational Dairy Exposition at

{tons up at the meeting of the {American Meat Institute in Chi-

cago:

MR. SINCLAIR'S an Irishman, no mistake about it. He got into, the meat business in the town| where he first drew the breath of life, Belfast, Ireland. He came to Indianapolis in 1906] to start Kingan & Co. Thirty

president and chairman, Last year he handed over the presidency to H. Frederick Willkie who is shoving it along new and promising paths it has never known before.

ELMER KRANNING got into| {the packing business when he was 13. And because he didn’t {want to get vaccinated. Maybe| ihe thought the needle would hurt. | Funny thing, too, he’s got {eight children, and they're all |vaccinated, He's never been very |sick, nor have they. So who was|

. right?

| I'd say Elmer was. Ducking]

{the needle got him into the meat {business he's liked for a full half {century.

‘The Brass Ring

WILL THERE BE shortages? And can you believe we'll get into the rat race for merchandise again? It's hard to convince anyone. And it ought to be. The people have been fooled too often. They've thrown their sweatedout bucks in wild abandon at the ‘shortage list” only to find the stuff. showed up on the shelves |about as fast. as they took it off.

AND, LIKE YOU, I'm not listening to very much shortage talk. | I've got to be shown. But when al

man like J, B. Elliott, president in| charge of consumer products for

big, reliable RCA-Victor, runs up, the warning flag, I take a second look. Today he said TV sets may be ‘in short supply by Christmas, and why. It's metal shortages. And I have been noticing more wooden

cabinets, and a few in plastic. But

that's nothing like the wince of television's innards, tubes, cir[cuits, copper Je

THE _ SIMPLE TRUTH on which you can count is that the vernment will try to keep civil8 Production running. But if it

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

TodausBusiness

That's the league your bucks are in, trying to score

If you can figure out what these six things will do,

and they're pushing us around

‘moist. And they have even stirred

BUSINESS SETTLED during

the summer. Stores and factories began to wonder whether they

years later he was elected both;

in the way of defense needs. JA

Dollar Is ugh League

Harold H. Hartley

Big Six"?

ring, 'I think, may be labeled “Television.”

Petrochemistry A WHOPPER of a word. But when you break it in two, it's not so tough.

chemistry. And that opens up a whole world of wonders, We think of oil as gas for our cars, and oil to make the sewing machine run more easily, or to take the § squeak out of: a Joor, = » BUT HET MAKE other things from crude oil. Raincoats, the ones you can see through; garden hoses, those thin, light-weight pretty ones in red or green, unbreakable refrigerator dishes, waterproof curtains (shower), nylon, rayon, frozen food wrappers, bug bombs, artificial rubber, anti-freeze and anti-knock. Even things to eat come from oil, Such as a solvent for food and drug flavors, and stuff they w put in tobacco or shredded cocoanut meat to keep it soft and

up a brew to keep the mold off bakery products. EJ ” » ITS THE HYDROCARBON family which has a million cousins, depending on how thei atoms get together, I've seen those formulas spread all over the blackboards in organic chemistry. But that was for only one semester. For some reason they didn’t want me back.. The old prof said, in the interest of science, it would be just as well if I didn't come back.

No Slips

WAR PRESSURES attack quality, More production, less time, shrinkage in skills, can let standards slip. The public always will take the best it can get, even if the best is not as good as it was. Plants are watching quality control, like hawks hovering over product pride. And this week quality control classes, with a language apart, will get under way. » » =

DALE CUE, of International Harvester, came in. He spoke of “concepts of variation,” “control charts by variables,” “charts by attributes,” and “linear multiple correlation.” Such is the jibber-

. It's a blend of petroleum and|.

ish of keeping things straight on 2

Jenner OK’s: Big | Military_Budget,* | ‘Vetoes Tax Hike

WASHINGTON; Sept. 24--Sen.

| William E. Jenner (R. Ind.) will|

vote against the new $5.5 billion! tax bill because he does" not| want to “take ‘any more money! away from the American people and give it to their government.” That was the keynote of al full-dress spéech he made th the Senate today. The junior Senator from Indiana said that the purpose of taxation is to buy protection and we are not getting it under the present administration's foreign and domestic policies,

di J - o HE VOTED for the $60 billion military defense bill two weeks ago. But he is against raising the taxes to pay for it. Sen. Homer FE, Capehart (R. Ind), who also voted for the

up -his mind on taxes yet, - “I want to hear the debates, he declared. “I never like t decide until I have heéard al sides of the argument.”

Finance Committee under Chairman Walter George (D. Ga.) did a good job in drafting the tax bill. But he (Jenner) is “unalterably opposed” to its passage.

Hog Prices Here About Steady

Trading opened fairly active at the Indianapolis Stockyards this morning. Prices were about

steady. 12,000; aMer rade 1 eak, instance ts lower: x SENS choice 185 to 240 unds, $31.25 - fan, later Briges freely; late sales, $21 to $21. $31 20 fon few $21, 500 Fol hla, 2080 10 3 5 tru pounds, $19.50; 160 To 185 n

Das. $1188 to. 418

9. to $21.35; 120 to 160 Bounds; $17 or mote; SOWS Slow, uneven. arod : sa: Poun. 5, 0 3 few $19; 200 to Sounds s, $16.25 to $17.50; big weights, ite or attle, calves steers and heifers slow, fully steady: 0d high “choice 2 low prime steers iheral snarg hota} good a at eligib) Hes. $33 Heady. utili around $31 or hd, $18 to RE ra yi: ® wv 3 : Lh head prime, $40: u

Hogs, es 25 c

to ty to good,

eep 2000: moderately active, early gales and indications spring lamps weak, top 50 cents lower: chol $31 to $32; good a este n A Tn ¥ pelts steady Ho chan A and ‘choice, $11.50 to 314, Bu steady; commercial and good, $27.50 to $30.50; commercial and good, $23 to $27.

Former AMA Hea

d Dies CHICAGO, Sept. 24 (UP)—Dr. Herman Louis Kretschmer, 72, former president of the American Medical Association, died yesterday at his home after a heart attack.

Local Stocks and Bonds

Sept. 24

STOCK

line,

the prod

to be held in Treadwell Hall of Arsenal Tech from now till December, will have as their twohour target for each Tuesday night, the simple slogan of “No slips, no let-down” in the worth of what they make. And, more important, in the worth of what we buy.

For Men Only

LIKE CHEESE? Most men do. And smart wives keep a chunk around for pajama-zlad refrigerator robbers. I'm one. And that's why I'm looking forward to the “Cheeses of the World” display at the In-|

ithe Fair Grounds the week of Oct. 6. | I was around when this idea was born. And it was sure fire. Men veered off their course every [time when they got within eye range of the big cheese display. { ® # n THEY LIKE the delicate flavors jof cheese. They like it strong or

melt on their tongues. Just watch itheir eyes roll. | And when someone asks me if I'm a man or mouse, I think of fal the cheese I've eaten, and wonder.

Asks Data on New

uction And the quality control rninl SE

mild. And they like samples to|U.

‘Troops to Europe

| WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 (UP)| {—Rep. B. Carroll Reece, (R. (Tenn.), asked Secretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett yesterday, {if additional American troops will be shipped to Europe, in the | near future. If they are, he said, it will ~ “shake the faith of the people | in the mutual defense aid program.” Mr. Reece released the text of a letter he sent to Mr, Lovett eight days ago. He said he had not yet received an answer. In the letter, Mr. Reece said] that when the Atlantic Pact was/ being proposed, Secretary of State Dean Acheson said that no American troops would be called to Europe in time of peace. “The people,” he said, “still re-| member: this clear and unevasive reply and cannot see how it could {have been given in good faith.”

Traction Terminal 5s §7

Local Produce my

Butterfat—Premium. 0c: regular Eggs—Current receipts, 54 Ibs ana Terr to case 390: Grade. A large, 0c; ade

B large 43s, and Grade A medium. 90 Sinan. Powis. 4 bs d 25 ou! we and over. o | ander 4% lbs. and "Lechortn. 180 180; cocks | nd stass 156. and No 3 poultry. eo ese | than No. 1. {

U. S. Statement

Te:

WASHINGTON, Sept. 24 (OP) —Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year throncth Sept. 20, com{pared with a year ago: This xea t Ye pat t EXnenises 3 13. 313,838, 912 $ 1 8 643, eipts 955,697,278 712.627, (Bef? 3.908.139.833 Cash Bal 6.000,222,442 Public Debt 256,979,389, 41 Gold Res. 21,933,430,687

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE (Clearings Debits

7.000 $48, i: 000

newspaper executive, “that they

arms bill, said he has not made!s

"8en. Jenner said the Senate s

7iand recreational centers. It

....|lcure most any type of equipment

1a KING'S =

Honor Noted

{fied, greying publisher of the Buenos Aires newspaper, La Prensa, had his opportunity last {March to play ball with Argen-| - {tina's president Juan Domingo {Peron or face the consequences.

“Tell them,” said the unruffled

may jail me or kill my paper. But tell them .also that they will never compromise the ideals of La Prensa.”

Now an exile from his country, his newspaper closed, Dr. Gainza

accept an honorary degree from Northwestern University, the Freedoms Award from Freedom House, an honorary membership in Sigma Delta’ Chi at Chicago and a life membership in the

made by King's Indiana Billiard

King's« Indiana Billiard Comipany offers one of the stocks of new equipment for restaurants, taverns, cocktail bars {surprise the housewife to know that she can buy kitchen ment, silverware, furniture and chinaware at King's.

There are five huge departments of merchandise, each with individual display and backed by large stocks. The departments include equipment for hotels, restaurants, clubs, taverns; glass and china, kitchen utensils, bil-| Billiard liard tables and its kindred equipment, and a complete Tetail furniture department.

King's Indiana Billiard Com-

*¢ pany also has a large building denT voted exclusively to the sale of a iiused equipment.

This stock is complete and you can usually se-

Paz is in the United States to|

ANOTHER FINE INSTALLATION BY : : KING'S INDIANA BILLIARD COMPANY

Pictured above is ‘one. of the latest latest remodeling in ne ; Company at 1631 | nallations 1

PAGE :

Publisher

Overseas Press Club of New -

By ERNIE HILL NEW. YORK, Sept. 24 (CDN) | City. : pnd SES Dr. AlbertorGiainza Paz: the digni-| Dr Gainza Paz 1s being hafled

as a symbol in the world fight freedom of speech Pi press, be it in Anxgent

slovakia, Venezuela or 1

By the standards of Bonfils am Tammen, of Dana and Greeley, even by the standards of his uncle, Ezequiel Paz, Dr. Gainza. Pas 8} ¢alm, colorless man. i oF He speaks dispassionately abe the five-year struggle tyranny and early this year led to h from Argentina and the of Latin America's greatest news-

paper. “I might have net some a their demands,” there would have De more. In the end, we w

have been stripped of a We made the choice that decent. people would have made.” !

rl

or furniture for restaurants, tave erns, bars and recreational ters.

rent the necessary 0 serve food and HEE 8 large gatherings, or According to Claude King, custom manufacturing of bars, restaurant counters and other equipment to individual specification is tion is another of King’s Indiana Company's complete de’ partments. The company also maintains a * {large warehouse which makes it possible to purchase merchandise by the carload, for savings storage facilities make it possible to

give immediate delivery on almost all their lines.

8

Sorestios ot wha ron ser 8,3 guatty wo ron wast

stl” Eve 500 Sua. Pe

TIS age we

_ Phone CH-§T11

SHELBY UPHOLSTERY CO.

8631 MASSACHUSETTS AVE

Cummins Eng ves o > as Elec com Ns in 16% in Me DR J A Rl Equitable Securities bia ...| 88 |l.| WITH OUR AUTO Famil nance com .,..... ¥ Family Pinance 6% pid .... § RES BE Ewa 8 we | PARTS and SERVICE 5 0 COM sisean forttigest Fed oy og Jui], Faetory Disisliton Hook, Drug Co com Saunas in 1 ”. Bendix Metal Clene Ind Asse Tell at pia i000 fu |] ¥ Carburetors Ind Gus & Kater com ex int 33% (33% ¥ Brakes Ind Telephone ¢ ge co.’ “II ¥ B-K Power Brakes and ub Real Y.. % “ ac” Sp Po Fait fom PR Hn 100% ” aydreva Piercs mo PEA i Indianapolis Water com... 16'a 18 or andy Governors Indianapolis Water 3% bid - 10s, =| 4 Front End An het 8 oy an" 2M, su) 5 Front End Alignment Indianapolis Railways com ++. 4 5 | lancing Jefferson National Life com .. 10 11%} INDIANA ! Kingan & Co ped Sein A 64 68% | ; i Lincoln Nationa} Life 9a. 108 | b | bs. orpor OR". vie rich coher i+ | Carburetor & Brake Co. | Mastic” Asphalt ‘com .... 8 . 3 : astic BP came LA ARE LI 4346 3 Nat Homes com (new) ...... 16% 18 | 323 N. DELAW : Nat Homes pfd ........ 100 105 N Ind Pub Serv com. ...,... 22% 23% | pe . *N Ind Pub Serv 4% pfd...... 96 9714 | N Ind Public Ser 4'2 pfd...... 23 2% | Progress Laundry com ...... 38 Pub Serv of Ind com ..... LE 28% Houe PLATING (0. { Pub Serv of Ind 3a ptd. ll 84° & $ Ross Gear Tool co vias 43 ’ i Schwitzer- Cumming oid... in 11% L SILVER } 80 Ind GE& 48% pfd ..... 1107 109 | ” RHODIUM | Stokely-Van Camp Som ane 17% 17%) BRASS i Jiokely-Vy -¥an, Camp pid ....... 1% 11% 2 { Terre Haute Malle pla rae Bn on y, SOLD | United acbine Co" oo 0 wll B BRONZE | Onion Title Ta CADMIUM }i *Extra dividend’ 4 COPPER-NICKEL | BONDS CHROME i Allen & Steen 5s i American Loa 1a 3 { a 22an 44s A ‘38 . Silverware Replated | c n - ini i Bastain Morly 5s 61 ........ asns Antiques Refinished Soha Batesville erilaee st 3. iii ® Commercial Plating and Polishing T Tr 58 Ch of Com Bldg 4'as 6 ike 917 MASS. A 9088 Columbia Clus 5. 3s 1. - creel ASS. AVE CApitel Citizens Ind Tel 4'as 61 asesl amilton Mfg Co 55 65 . vane ndplis Paint & Color 5 Ret 100 Va sit | Indpls Public Loan 5s oo 98 Lies] Bq Aimestons 3 3 ai Saks in 34 76%! AD seve an alas Indpls Railways 3 5 idenere 51% | INDIANAPOLIS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY er A BE be {| 2960 N. Meridion St, Indianapolis 7 N Ind Pub Serv 3s 73 .... 96% | Public Service ie 15° % | {Sprague Devices 5s 60 5 value five times at age 21-—with no

Name. .......

Cees sss

Address

| I | Id like to know more about your new child's I I

LAE ORK S1

3 TG NEW Y

LINING Mn an 2641

[0 $5000 AT AGE 21

y

increase in premiums.

Child's Age. .

Bese seen

= | ] | policy, which increases in | | | | |

PEERLESS ELECTRIC SUPPLY co.

WHOLESALE ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES

Distributors EMERSON RADIOS — APPLIANCES

Pl-aza 2361

122 SOUTH MERIDIAN ST.

COMPLETE EQUIPMENT

KING'S INDIANA B

MA-3491

HOTEL CHINA--GLASSES—-SILVERWARS

All Types of Recreation Room Equipment Let Our Engineering Department Solve Your Problems Ask About KING'S RENTAL SERVICE — ANYTHING You Need.

Fixture Store Complete”

Designers and Builders

RESTAURANTS, BARS, TAVERNS, HOTELS, BILLIARD ROOMS

{

ILLIARD CO., INC.

1529 to 1645

!

\