Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 December 1951 — Page 13

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Today «Business

3 ; Here's Preview Of Tonight

By Harold Hartley

3

THIS IS THE NIGHT we've beén looking for. f

It has a one-two pnuch,

:. The first punch comes when you begin to yell, “Fill Stayne, 43, an interior decorator. ‘er up, Ed, and not so much water.”

Then you leave out the water, and figure the ice will dilute it. But you don’t wait, and you begin saying things to your best friend’s wife for which she ought to slap your face. But she does not. She's had some, too,

® u » FINALLY the bells start to ring, and the whistles blow. But none of them means it’s the end of the round. And you find yourself out in the kitchen, mixing your own with your wife hanging onto your coat tails, ' The guys out there are telling stories you've .heard a hundred fimes. But they seem funny, so you laugh anyway, and shoo the little wife back into the living. room

with “the rest of the girls.”

» » " SOME GUYS will never see the New Year in. They'll be out before the old year goes out, and they'll snore the bells through on a davenport. And about 3 a. m. your wife will tug at your sleeve and say something about “taking ' the sitter home.” That’s costing you 50 cents an hour, but what's 50 cents an hour. comes but onsch a year.” And the old guy takes another short cut to the kitchen. =

= » ‘THE HOST puts more-wood on the fire, and says, “Come on, stay for breakfast.” ae Now you don’t want breakfast. But it's an excuse to stay. But by this time the little wife has lost her sweet pleadings and in a stage whisper, lets you have it, “Get going, you big bum, you want to fall on your face. You look awful.” ; ” = = THEN SHE GETS your hat and coat and you wiggle into the coat, loose as an acrobat. And many goodbyes, and out to the Then the chips go down. You want to drive. But the wife says, “If you drive, rn yan i rfoot, and slippery ; rs just shot $79.95 for her new long dress. So she drives. " = =

GETTING undressed is quite an occasion. You pile up the clothes by the chair, slip into your pajamas, still loose as an acrobat, and roll in. In about five minutes, it seems, the kids are up. They've had a good night's sleep. And the light

hits you between the eyes. = ” s

YOU TRY to send them back to bed. Then sneak into the bathroom for a swig of milk ef magnesia and a couple of aspirins.

Then you take a peek in the|left for only one reason. mirror. It frightens you. It can’t!

be you. Your face looks like a melted candle, and your eyes won't open.

o ~

td un "THE WIFE is up and .down sense, | stayed out of the kitchen the night|qo with my neck and ears. That before. And the kids are bubbling jeft me two other haunting rea-

stairs. She had more

and tearing the house to pieces.

So after breakfast you saunter)

quietly into the living room. heaven knows I do little of that, stretch out on the sofa, and find and none knowingly.

it's too short. So you tip-toe upstairs,

little darker. » » »

THEN YOU slip downstairs

in,- and you wonder why. you have to mix another round.

But you try a sip. But switch'a little hair-off-the-dog.

to coke. Then you explain to the] But it will be milk for me, all neighbors, “I have to work to-/the way. Try it, dusted with nut- —Dee. 31 MOTTOW. Don't want to overdo meg. ASTOCK oan a... am it. American Sta

As if you hadn't.” Glass Grows

I HAVE ALWAYS touted glass, as one of the biggest money-home of Carl J. Kissell, 4601(g

makers we have.

And it is taking over fast|According to firemen, the blaze|Gom Loan 4 mia ~ Pro: Sit especially in insulating in building'started in the living room. Sohsoiidaten Ru 6 ptd . i ~Na-Var .... 1% materials. Mr. Kissell found the bungalow |Cummins Ef com’... 37 Libbey-Owens-Ford has gone in flames when he returned home Berta Eiec aby Pld «++: 1% into fibers. Pittsburgh Plate Glass from work about 1 a. m, astern, Jog Joie 8 oid -.. $1 es

“New Yearsh|

! (one-fifth of an ounce of diesel

and back into bed. And there, with sponge does. the covers over your head. you squeeze it, and it takes a big saw wood until the room seems a drink. Holds it well, too.

. 2 And the neighbors have dropped] And|may be a little something in it,

bu ve

Fires 3 Shots At Husband,

PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 31 (UP) oA 38-year-old. mother fired ‘three wild shots at her estranged husband yesterday after threaten{ing to kill him, then plunged to {her death from a room of the! Bellevue-Stratford Hotel. {

The woman was identified by |police as Mrs. Gloria Stayne, of {Philadelphia, wife of Martin

and a count of nine.

Police said they had been parted for more than a year and she had been living at the hotel since Dec. 11,

Since then, Det. James MecCullough said, Mr. Stayne made occasional visits to his wife and their daughter, Rhoda, 5, at the hotel, meeting therg in the lobby. Calls Wife Mr. Stayne told Mr. McCullough, his wife and daughter were not waiting for him when he went there yesterday. Mr. Stayne called his wife in her room and was told that the child was quarantined at the boarding school where she is a pupil. When he went to her room and began discussing plans for a divorce, Mr. <Stayne told detectives, his wife threatened him, then went to a bureau, took out a 32-caliber pistol and fired one

! 1

is moving into it in a big way. And Randolph Bernard with his Glass Fibers plants is going great guns. He was former executive vice president of Owens-Illinofs, the big bottle-maker, He pulled out, |started his own company in what {he could see as a fast-developing industry,

| 5 on » * | OWENS-CORNING has gone {farther than any other company jh glass wool and thread. Spun {glass they call it, and make it {from crystal-clear glass marbles. | ‘Now I hear what I can hardly believe, that soon Owens-Corning, a subsidiary of Owens-Illinois, will outtun its pgrent in sales, {Maybe not this yéar, but one of | these years very soon. The future of glass lies in its

‘abundance. It is made of sand,| Shot. mostly, and everyone knows Mr. McCullough said that the

there's an unlimited supply of Shot knocked Mr. Stayne’'s hat that. - from his head, but he was not ’ . harmed. Mr. Stayne said that Feucht's Find while he grappled with his wife; I FELT GOOD about Carl

two more shots were fired. Then |Angst going on the board of the|N® Tan from the room. {Bankers Trust Co. which reflects Wed 19 Years : [the strength and energy of its Mr. Slavic told police that Ottojhe hagfheard a window being raised’ when he got into the hallway. $e rushed back to the room, but his wife had gone out the window. Detectives gaid the couple had been married 19 years, and that Mrs. Stayne had recently returned from a trip through the south. A note was found in the room, police said, but the contents were not disclosed.

Cleveland Firm Given Sewer Job

A long-awaited sewer contract which holds the key to development of the Northeast Side was awarded today to a Cleveland firm. : The Works Board granted the contract for building the first leg of the E. 34th St. main sewer to the partnership of Angelo Mara Construction Co. and The Square Construction Co. Low bid submitted by the partAnd it 1s nership was $1,372,404.50. Other {bids were submitted by Columbia Construction Co., Inc, and Cantucei Construction Co. The city engineer's estimate was $1,407,507. ' First leg of the sewer is to run from Fall Creek east to within 110 feet of Temple Ave. Branches will go northward in Schofield Ave. to

(hard - working president, {Feucht. | Mr. Angst is a director and treasurer of Allied Laboratories, Inc., the parent of Pitman-Moore |which turns out great volumes of {medicines . for man and animal here and in Zionsville. ! = » = | MR. ANGST was president of Pitman-Moore from 1935 to 1947. {I had lunch with him some time ago, along with sales - minded {Kenneth Valentine who succeeded him at Pitman-Moore. Mr. Angst carries responsibillity quietly. He stays calm and (pleasant outside, does his think|ing directly at the core of a quesition and comes up with answers right on the target. | His face at the board table {is a definite feather in the cap (of Bankers Trust. Just watch {the Bankers Trust figures, and {you'll see what I mean.

Mile in a Bottle

| T HAVE A MILE sitting on my desk. And it is in a bottle. { The bottle is about the size of one in which you would buy |toothache gum. And the liquid is the mile. $ » » » | IT'S FROM GM.

(oil which will carry a ton one mile in one of GM’s diesels. | That gives thrift a lift, as if {the railroads didn’t ‘know it. | They're buying diesels right and

They are cheaper.

Dies in Leap |’

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__ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

[a

HAPPY NEW YEAR—Miss Nancy Lake, R. R. 16, does a bit

Indiana Roof.

‘Like Insurance Firms'— Gamblers Use Business Methods, Court Told

“By FRED W. PERKINS Seripps-Howard Staff Writer

isn't certain, but the United Mine

—just in ease. Union sources confirmed today|

that the executive council, meet-| ing here last week with President John L. Lewis, levied a special assessment of $2 a month on all working members for the next) three months — longer, If the three international officers deem it necessary. : i The action was labeled “‘confi-| dential,” btit it was disclosed by| a miner in the hard-coal region

United Mine Workers Get Ready for Strike

is ‘about $22,800,000. One-fourth is kept by the local unions, oneWASHINGTON, Dec. 31 — Alfour goes to the district organizacoal miners" strike in the ping tions, and one-half is remitted to

[UMW Secrefary-Treasurer John Workers is getting ready for one Owens.

2 A Month Assessment— 0 © Bu

No Regular Strike Pay Despite its strong financial condition, this union-—unlike some smaller ones—does not pay regular strike benefits. Officers point out that even $10-$20 million would not go very far in weekly paynients to several hundred thousand men. However, the local unions, sometimes aided by the international, relieve cases of ‘actual hardship and in some cases have established commissaries to pro-

of practice celebrating with some

of the thousands of balloons, noise makers and confetti to be used tonight in the party at the

U. S. to Get British ‘Debt Payment

WASHINGTON, Dec. 31. (UP)

of Pennsylvania and officials . here recognize that it is hard to] vide meat ang groseries w

trikers’ families. keep secret a matter affecting)” - almost half ‘a million men, Mr. Lewis has said nothing ib

{licly about his plans for winning {additional benefits for miners in 11952. However, he has announced

The assessment on 75,000 anthracite miners and 400.000 in the| that his executive board has given

% {the international officers the bituminous, fields will Taise 32-iusual authority to make demands y Sy *arlylts coal operators and conduct

1951 the union levied & larger assessment—$20 on each member "E0tiations. —but there was no big strike last] Early Demands Likely year and the $9.5 million is said| It seems likely that demands, to be still in the union treasury. perhaps not in definite form, will The UMW is said authoritative- he made well in‘advance of March ly to have about $28 million 1n|31, when the present contract exe liquid assets. This is exclusive of pires. several million. dollars worth of » They are expected to be af-

real estate in @ashington andifected by the outcome of the cur

Treasury Grows

- {told police was .a

elsewhere, and - $100 million inirent steel dispute. The CIO United |cash and government bonds in Steelworkers, in a special conven{the union's welfare. and retire-/tion next Thursday, is generally |ment fund. |expected to hold off its threatened | Not including the welfare fund, strike until the National Wage administered by three trustees|Stabilization Board has had a headed by Mr. Lewis, the UMW’s chance to make recommendations assets make it one of the nation’s|for settlement. wealthiest unions. Dues are $4 a| Coal operators say they will be month for a working member, |surprised if Mr. Lewis’ demands and when there is full employment|are less than what the steel union in the mines the annual collection finally wins.

Watched TV Murder My stery— Teen Baby-Sitter Blames 'Vision' in Slaying of Girl, 6

LONG BEACH, Cal, Dec. 31jand watched a mystery that (UP)—A 16-year-old bobby-sox|ended in a slaying. baby sitter confessed strangling] “Then Ilay down on the sofa in the 6-year-old girl she was car-|{the living room,” she said, acing for yesterday after what she|cording to Capt. Burns. Capt. “vision” or Burns said she then told of see“nightmare” brought on by|/ing Donna Joyce with a necktie watching a murder mystery on|around her neck “in a bad television. dream”

By FRANK CLARVOE

nesses to tell about Remmer’s

Scripps-Howard Staff Writer CARSON CITY, Nev, Dec. 31—

The gambling business imitates many practices of respectable pursuits such as the sale of securities and insurance, according to testimony being presented here

association with Reno gamblers Bill Graham and Jim McKay, who gave Remmer his start and to whose gambling empires Bones has aspired. Remmer spent part of the Christmas season in San Franby the U. S. government in at- cisco, visiting his present spick tempting to convict a professional and span establishment, called gambler of income tax evasion. | Sones Corner,” in the heart of The man on trial is Beefy El- the Tenderloin. mer (Bones) Remmer of Reno. Citess Teamwork

and San Francisco. He is ac- ; cused of evading income taxes of| Harold Maundrell, Remmer’s

—Great Britian will start repaying her $3,750,000,000 postwar loan from the United States and her wartime lend-lease debt today with dollars she got hy selling

gold to this country, it was dis- dead. with. b fath ; er yo closed yesterday. : ‘Iknotted around her Ra 20g The British government an- “I had a vision—a nightmare,” nounced two weeks ago it’ will she was quoted as saying by pay on schedule today the first|Capt. J. M. Burns of the sherinstallments—totaling $138,500,000/1{f's homicide bureau. “I often

Booked by juvenile authorities on suspicion of killing Donna Joyce Isbell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy J. Isbell, was brunet Delora Mae Campbell, who led a neighbor in the small hours of the morning to where the child lay

and, unable to find a necktie, took a stocking instead.

“I stuffed a sheet in her mouth to keep her from making any noise,” she was quoted ‘as e¢onfessing. “Roy didn't wake up at all.” 8he came running, shoeless, to Dr. Willner's residence crying ‘something's wrong at the house, come with me.” “I must have done it,” she told Capt. Burns. “There was no one else in the house.”

—on both obligations. [felt like strangling my brothers

$160,687 in 1944-45-46, Federal|former auditor, and other witJudge Roger T. Foley is hearinginesses have told how places took the case betore a Jury of ranch- bets before the $50 revenue stamp ers, housewives and professional and the 10 per cent tax put most men. So fer Suoul 10 Withee of them out of business. They

have testified. The government has called wit- laid off bets in much the same

Sponge? | TI RECEIVED a sponge, all Christmas wrapped. And I wondered. > The note said it had nothing to

34th St., and in Kinnear Ave. to! service side streets. ? The rest of the 34th St. sewer, which may be placed under con-| tract in the spring, will extend]

{

St. { A $3.25 million general sewer | bond issue was sold Dec. 19 to! pay for the start of the 34th St.| line. Unless other sewer projects interfere, the rest of the issue will be used to pay for the other two legs. Completion date today was set I stopped right there, this being for July 15, 1953, {New Year's Eve. Local builders have long con-

{sons. One was to use it as a verb. But

| » = ~ AND THE OTHER was what a Dip it in liquid,

” » SO I AM sticking to milk. There area has blocked housing development,

Local Stocks and Bonds

{powdered sugar and vanilla and

Blaze Destroys Home

S Ayres 4'a% pf On Lafayette Road it RR & SE Yai SIT A fire destroyed the $18,000|Bobbs Merril pid 4%.’ y

41% |Lafayette Rd. Circle Theater :

early ° yesterday. com

Citizens Ind Tel 5% pfd.

NATURAL SILICA ROCK ASPHALT to be more "'skid-proof’ than any other road surfacing material.

An outstanding safety feature of Natural Silica

Rauitable Securities ofd ..

amily Finan Family Finance 5% pfd Hays- Corp ptd Hamilton : {J -Jones Home T&T 3% p13 Tou

‘Hog Prices Up

further east in two sections to the|the Indianapolis Stockyards this vicinity of Emerson Ave. and 38th/M0rning were running 25 cents

lurdays. Heifers were scarce.

{tended that lack of sewers in the}

‘lcents to 50 cents, **'imercial, $22.50-24.50;

‘122. Bulls. wea

::|McCarthy Book Attacks Marshall

way one insurance company ar- | ‘lranges with others to share large risks, or a number of security companies team up to handle a large stock or bond issue.

| Some people known to police | blotters in many cities were interlested in such syndicates.

25 to 50c Here

Sales of barrows and gilts at

to fully 50 cents higher than Saturday’s prices. Some instances showed gains of 75 cents. Sows were strong to 25 cents or more higher. Steers were moving slowly and | steady to weak. Several interests | were bidding lower than on Sat-

defense objections, to show their 'agsociation with Remmer, and {thus prove he profited richly. °

Grossed $412,556 From the now defunct Menlo, a {poker playing club in San FranMaundrell has testified, gross profit in 1946 of

Sheep were active and gener- cisco,

ally steady. i came a Hogs 8500; active, uneven: barrows and,

gilts 25 cents to fully 50 cents. instances $412 556. 5 cents higher; bulk choice 170-240] pounds $18.75-19.25: 300 No. an | The house and supposedly 180-220 pounds $19.50; 240-270 pounds $18

: $17.50-18.50: 120-160 Remmer, who had invested $175,nds $16-17.50: few $18; sows strong to) 35 Cents or more higher; 300-425 pounds > in this enterprise, raked it in 16 few Jeniwoizhta. $16.25-16.50; 425- by charging 25 cents per player ale 95500: “calves. 300: steers slow,/every half hour in small poker Jieady on toe likhiw ight steers, $34. sev ower; choice lightweight s » ; : eral loads held near $34: commercial and hour for $40 limit poxer. Often good 850-1075-pound steers, $30-31.75: 1 - good - to choice, $32.50-33.50; utility and house players helped fill up a

19: 270-325 pounds,

**** lcommercial native yearlings, $25-30; heifers ta ple, and for this chore got to

scarce: short load choice 800 pounds, 334: y cows steady to weak;ssome late sales, 25 keep half their winnings. The

Uy and and house absorbed their losses.

5.50; ters, $17.50- : aE eBoy 750. cents lower: utiity Records admitted to evidence land ial $25-30.50. vealers active, Steady: choice to ow. prime, 338-40; com-|Snowed a very orderly method of mercial a sb0" a Sonerally steady: doing business and bookkeeping. gholce and orime native lambs 30. 5: The Melno was considered the > - “ mos H 1 380: Shorter 30°50, ull and utiity| most profitable of Remmer’s $20-27: load choice and prime 90 pounds many places of diversion.

weston, lami _J3156; wll vw ‘choke! tn addition to plenty of fine ~ clothes and a high standard of living, Remmer also had at least one commodious safety deposit box, the government says. This jhe registered under the name of {Henry Clay.

| ————

WASHINGTON, Dec. 31 (UP)

|—Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy (R.| . — %|Wis.) today published a book at-|10 Lithuanian DPs ‘tacking the record of Gen. George "IC. Marshall.

‘Arrive in U. S. by Air

version of his June 14 Senate

Indpls A . *Indpls 26 aaa 9, Possesses the desirable non-skid char- ndianapo 4 2 * . . - n: ANADO, 9 acteristics which make for safer Ing tanapolis Water 3% of 5 08:4 Yan ie ; binds . ati .s driving on modern highways. Scientif- . |Kinsan & Co “com ile oom. 33 dn . 0 . “as ically-conducted, non-skid tests prove a. |Lincoln National Life .. 1 Lynch Corporation 15

Marmon-Herrington com .... Mastic , Asphalt Natl Homes com

Nat! Homes . N ind pid

6% 17%

‘2

90 24'a

err B% i Pub" Serv of A om ni wk EA rh Switzer-Cummings ptd 17 . So ud G&B . 153

CORR + iszenes &E pe f [SPokely-Van Co Dp ma Stokely-Van Camp pfd

Rock Asphalt is its 'skid-proof'' quality even when ere: ER WET! Why? That's because Natyral Silica Rock Dinsted Telephone 8% bid ©." ar 3 8 cis hescissiinnanns

Asphalt is made up only of sharp sflica sandstone impregnated with a pure, natural

highway and safety

applications of rock asphalt for “deslicking” when

ether types of drivi

gerously slick. One

“It has paid for itself in some instances in cost of guard rail repairs saved."

fMENTUCKY RB

KENTUCKY ROCK

*Ex-dividend.

Allen & American rican Am

sphalt. Some

engineers are spacitying light

ng surfaces have become danMidwestern engineer reports:

»

Bs 60 . . Traction reaAR 5s 57 "

'alspeech about Marshall, then Sec-

..|shall, **|criticism. Some of Sen. McCar-

..'|Secretary of State.

..|Carthy cut the 60,000-word speech - {into eight chapters of about 40,-|3 tees ]000 words. :|\chapters, one outlining Gen. Mar-

...|press reaction to the speech.

{retary of Defense. # - | The paper-backed book is en-{Oneumonth old (titled “America’s Retreat From | Victory, the Story of George Cat-i} with the N {lett Marshall.” It was published, yee he New. Year {by the Devin-Adair Co. of New|

. infants

retail for about $1 a copy. When Sen. McCarthy made his Senate speech about Gen, Marhe invoked considerable thy's supporters said at the time portation advisable. that they felt he “went too far” |{in his remarks about the World

War II Chief of Staff and former Evansville, Ind. In publishing his book, Sen. Mc- Toledo, O.

The|. |government has been trying, over|.

several interests bidding | og meg and up to $5 every half

champion soybean producer.

Most of that will go to repayl""" Tisters. part rf the principal of the loan and to pay interest on it. Interest and principal repayment of her $603 million lend-lease bill will take only $19,200,000 of the payment. Today's payment will be the first of 50 equal annual installments.

| Officials here said that to meet {the payment, the new Conserva- | tive government in London chose not to dip into the few American dollars it uses to buy goods here.

Instead, it sold part of its relatively better stock of gold at the fixed rate of $35 an ounce. The United States will buy gold at that price whenever it 1s offered. While the U. 8. Treasury is not Sidney G. Willner to the scene. allowed to give official confirma-|, Capt. Burns said the teen-ager tion of such transactions, it was|t0ld him she read a mystery understood Britain . sold this Story Friday night and when she country at least $136 million went ® the Isbell home Saturday {worth of gold shortly after Dec.|n8ht turned on the television {16 when she declared her intention to pay what she owed.

Ran Away From Home

A sephomore son High Schoal, she told investigators she has lived with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Reagan, here since she ran away from her Ft. Lupton, Colo., home two years ago.

The Isbells said they called Delora Mae to sit with their daughter and her brother, Roy Allen Isbell, 8, while the wife, Garnett, went to work at Douglas Aircraft and the husband went on duty at Los Alamitos Naval Air Base, where he is a petty officer. The boy still was sleeping soundly when Delora Mae led Dr.

Morgan County Man Top Soybean Producer

LAFAYETTE, Dec. 31 (UP)— Earl Musgrave of Morgan County today was declared Indiana's 1951

WITH OUR AUTO

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Factory Distributors I” Bendix Metal Clens ¥ Carburetors i” Brakes ¥ B-K Power Brakes and “Hydrovac” ¥ Handy & Pierce Governors ¥ Ignition

His yield of 60.9 bushels an acre topped 103 participants in the annual contest sponsored by the Indiana Corn Growers’ Association in co-operation with the Purdue University agronomy de-

at Woodrow Wil«

_ Mrs, Isbell arrived home from work a few minutes after the deputies entered the house.

A safe containing $150 in cash and $150 in checks was stolen last night from the Roosevelt Inn, - 2106 Roosevelt ‘Ave. the owner, Stanley Stickford, reported to police today. 3

HOME PLATING (0.

7 SILVER 2. RHODIUM 5 BRASS 5 sou - [ N - ; CADMIUM CQEaP=<D correr-nicka CHROME

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We home.

The book is a 187-page revised NEW YORK, Dec. 31 (UP)—|} {Two aged Lithuanian women, ® {five expectant mothers and three over 2a pound

among 70 displaced persons whoo 3lc: arrived by air today to start new |p

Mrs. Ruth Tropin, port Hason {officer of the International Refu|York. Sen. McCarthy says it will gee Organization, said the flight was the last for 1951 of the “compassionate airlift” designed Jears for DP's whose age or physical condition makes speedy trans-

Oldest of today’s passengers were Magda Janusauskiene, 88, len route to a new home at and Felidia, Lebediene, 93, who is going to]

partment.

third with 55.7 bushels.

Runner-up was Russell Wealing of Benton County, 58 bushels, and Henry Preiser of Cass County was

Phone CH-8T17

i

i” Wheel Balancing

E Front End Alignment INDIANA

SHELBY

Carburetor & Brake Co. UPHOLSTERY. CO.

50c; current receipts cases exchanged, 41c; market about steady: anged to lc lower on graded eggs. Chickens— Fryers, commercially Roasters,

a 34c: roe | Sotinds and up, 33 to sc; Gs pounds.’ 33 : INSURANCE IN FORCE ....OVER $250,000,000 * ’yY, 3 gat, reito 34c: Bla" nasser pl A the market ASSETS ...... csesseseses OVER § 70,000,000 1 Y: Teceipts 8 3 - : ulet. undertont minal: few. ducks and| ~ Meridian at 30th Street Hickory 9671

Beene at 20 to 23 Butterfat, 75¢c: Regular. oe, INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Bika, soe inl el

Get Your Cash Immediately

® Television Sets

Heo tacked on two

ROACHES

|shall’s life up to World War I and the other commenting on the

SPECIAL NOTICE To All Merchants, Manufacturers and Jobbers

Clothing, Dry Goods. Shoes. Hardware, Variety, Gift shops. Toys, Dishes, Novelties CO Holises,' ete. If you have merchandise oni the shelf, under the counter, in t ek LO a seller Ji Jopotheree Ww you can't sel us. Prompt and cash on

|

IT ALT A Local Truck Grain Prices th long standing y 4 | Bay 2 om, 51.88, CK ASPHALT Hg ‘ i 2 yellow corn. $1.78,

, $3.07.

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* "INLAND CITY JOBSERS Co i ATTN GTO, Lae : 4 i.

® Fur Coats eTransits ® Cloth Coats ® Trunks ® Jewelry ® Diamonds © Men’s Suits ® Watches ® Cameras © Overcoats

BLL ‘ w

Produce 323 N. DELAWARE, LL 4346 $631 MASSACHUS! AVE. eee Mists ss—Prices B Cincinnati, cases in- So— cluded on gr: eggs, consumer rades: | A Large ite, 54 to 55'zc: Erown ) ix, 52 to 86%c: US Medium White, 48 to 47%e; Brown Mix, 46 to 47'c: wholesale ow . : rade com'l raged 40 per cent, Extra- . 2 ¢ arge White, a to 50c; Brown Mix. 47 to

prices ungrown

Butter Creamery—o0-eore. 83¢; Medium) a I

40

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