Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1952 — Page 25
3, 1952
NATCH|
Usual Low Prices Jom Service
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R-X ‘Tablets for d discomfort of Mugeular Lumto your complete y refunded. Why today for WIN< 12.00. The B.°M., al Chemists, Ine
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AFERS!
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ANAIFE IE MBIAITIE! LAINIG ESS) NR EAOIRIT AL INTE led | INIESTIRE) SLL IA ININ] . FLARE [REIT A INEZAES I JB) SITY
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THURSDAY, JAN. Sagsar = TRA Si
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
War | il, Gen. Van
a : Adin.
lush Defenses To Bar ; To day ~Busin e S S U.S. Tackles
a Idle Crisis in |p &e} An Eas e-Up etroit Area Nn In Labor Hunt.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UP)—|. By Harold Hartley
| Secretary of Labor Maurice J. Tobin yesterday .set up a special |defense manpower committee to grapple with mounting unemployment resulting from ciwilian|} production cutbacks in thes Detroit area. : Na : i : : : | The action followed a plea from] OT YOUR JOB nailed down? : Sen. Blair Moody. (D. Mich.) for Or did you think you felt it wobble as the YearHigher copper allotments to avert Vy s wo |”"a human tragedy in the automowore out? : |bile industry which now is feeling Men who know the rock-bottom -on employment are the the impact of the nation’s multi-: personnel men:—And they don't = [billion-dollar rearmament proalways spill the beans, not if they :
- t . |gram’ are on the manhunt. No One Yet . | The 10-man defense manpower, : t / J CAD the Indiana committee will represent the CIO, Actually the employment pull WHO WILL HE ed) - rep | has lost a little of pie en} It State Chamber of Commerce is/ AFL and various phases of in|" still talks big but when you count still in the who-is-it stage. |dustry. It will cover the detroit} the names in the time racks of| On Monday the executive com-|area counties of Macomb, Oak-| gz a the state they are down about|mittee of the Chamber will hud-/land and Wayne. 0 3 a AAR ’ (dle. ey, * 23,000.
Not much will come trom og 2 = that.
a
But the Selector ball willl Faces Many Problems
AND AFTER Christmas there's|start to roll, and a committee to, Mr. Tobin said the committee|s usually .a little dip while indus- do the job may be named. will deal with “a wide range of}: try digs its heels in for another| a = = u 'problems” but added that “mount year, gets orders and materials| I COULD STRING, out four oring unemployment” will be its| : : ; : lined up, and adds up where it! five possibilities here, but . it is/ main concern. ? A hn ® ; stands. . # unfair because they all can’t have| “The latest reports to the labor } : iv()e Cw, The biggest ease-up has been in| It: But at least four are actively| Department's Bureau of Employ- Nn labor. But the supply of (in the race for this job which willl ment Security ' show unemploy-| common 14 pay anywhere from $12,000 up.
i . ese ra technical men is still short. Th «No ong has the inside yet. 1 since spring.” Mr. Tobin. said.
-
a
100th MISSION—Ist Lt. Milton T. Kane in the cockpit of his F-84 Thunderjet a ment in Detroit has about donbled| from his 100th mission against the Communists in North Korea. The son of ‘Mr. and Mrs. V. L.. Sim-
ter returning
monds, 1024 Spruce St., he has been awarded several medal. including the Distinguished Flying Cross.
fellows know how to do something] $. rs cnn al } . can tell you that with assurance., In September unempl a i . A ' ' ; gs . : i 3 essary. ; ® 2 nployment in| special, and something necessary. ‘ye "Voce iq still wide Open.’ | Detroit war ati Sy no Now with the 5th Air Force's 49th Fighter-Bomber Group, Lt. Kane is awaiting reassignment to an | Air.Force base in the United States.
# wu By October it had increased to!”
2 r [
denberg Ur
Hints New Bomber Ab U.S. From
I berg warned yesterday that
Isharply increase its present st
|ger of world-wide war.”
In an exclusive interView. the
|Air Force Chief of Staff said the
Soviets have ‘a new long-range bomber présumably capable
|bases. Russia also unquestionably {is developing better fighters than {the MIG-15, he added.
! Gen. Vandenberg said the United
|
|States” has just begun to show
..iprogress in its effort to build an dis- * courage possible Russian aggres-
“adequate counterforce” to
{sion and that the “heaviest part”
lef the rearmament drive still is
|&head. ’ / ‘Need More Tools’ “In my opinion,” the four-star {general asserted, “the danger of
{general war will not decrease apipreciably until -we hold in our
| | | |
{hands the tools we would -need to 4
(fight such, a war successfully.” ! The goal of the present defense drive is to. build the necessary plant capacity to turn out adeiquate weapons and military supplies in case of emergency rather than building a huge stockpile of
AND THE toughest market of Men Don’t Fuss . 196,000 and was still sing. Ad- — : all is office help. One personnel ; pGNwr Say MUCH -about|gitional increases in loy-| : officer told me flatly: “Its hardig, onions 1 jeave that to thelment in the Detroit area are an.| 1 to find a competent stenographer. men We men don’t stand or | ticipated ”» : | - ay Q ine “I ‘mean the girls: who'll take ‘much fussing with our clothes. A government task force sow : ; ; : a page-long letter from the | We just want to be decently|is pondering whether to cut auto- : boss and boil it into “two 6r covered, and warm, and Know| mone nroduction to 800.000 units Set in Stee Ta S three little paragraphs, put.in where the buttons are. That's/g,." (ro second quarter of this = / the right punctuation, and cor- enough for the average guy. Mr. 7
Time Names Mossadegh Man of Year:
year. Moody. said output
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Jan: 3
rect the grammar. They're The fashion pump kéeps WOMEN ¢hauld be held Ninn, By WILLIAM JACOBS : scarce.” |stuffing dresses not yet worn out. ., during ji 5.21 milion car Scripps-Howatd Staff Writer (UP)~—CIO President Philip Mur-|
ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. lray hinted strongly yesterday| » : . _cl/that top officials of the United| Decision Due Jan. 12 = Jan. 3—Top policy makers of | rkers will recommend
Steel the CIO United Steelworkers on a nation-wide steel strike. . ”» # =» {production will be made Jan. 12./today were prepared to place ar. Murray, who also leads He “that's hard to beat. | sor THEY aid get fooled. The If the National Production Au-la 45-day deadline on the govern-| 8, Steel union: 2010, reporters he). “And that ‘government sickly ooh on "iy ose longies with thority follows a tentative deci-ment’s efforts to settle their wage | oo ing orwary i olig in| leave a lot of times is. just added an ankle peek and a ‘swish, [ion to make the cutback—as|dispute with the. steel industry.|) 25 ington next Dnday lo at-| vacation. Some take it whether| oo "Tho ve The girls hooked Administrator Manly Fleisch-| A highly placed union Smciall Ls 4 preliminary Waile Stabili ick : why | : ¢ mann has hinted it will—the isni Ey Da i .{zation Board hearing on the they are sick or not. And (for entire new wardrobes, until] vi man-igaid the special international connot? Who'd turn down paid time = © op discovered ruffies. |POWer committee will have even off?” . | They just sewed the ruffles more problems to handle.
: ] : |union’s wage deadlock with the vention of the union would be industry. He said he hopes for on ; laround the" bottom and had] HE REALLY burned when he resses which were at least long,
a asked to take this course during: chan qy WSR action. said, “And who do you think 18|, 0 op oven if some of the ruffies
, the two-day session, Wwhich.opened The union's executive board met! paying for all this? You are. Winny Talks
here today. here to adopt a recommendation] : The idea is to extend any strike for presentation to a special con-| dl Taxpayers jalan natch, ea threat from the- day that the vention of some 3000 rank and. Ae By aance. Cen: re as : : Wage Stabilization Board (WSB)| (ie jeaders today | we Bagng ue FInRnee wh | WHAT THE mere ingenious it ruaman opens formal hearings in the dis-| a. : de i od ena; ter, and finance the people Who| oo, oqters did was to add in- / I-Ie by 45 days beyond that Jie] r. Murray declined to say spe-|
He blamed the Army Finance into the rag bag, and buying new Center for mopping up the mar- ones. And those designers are ket in clerical help. “Fifty bucks usually smart enough in their 57 week with three weeks off plus changes to keep the girls from annual sick leave” he said, making over«their old dresses.
quarters,
Final decision on second quarter
8H n
MOHAMMED MOSSA-
work in it. Then we have to run hened dresses / “ = cifically what the union's leaders; DEGH—He oiled the wheels of up our own wages to match the} IT1Eue 10 thelr Jonge s look like Set Saturda Approval Expected | will recommend, but there ap-| chaos D y out of our taxes.”|>Y Tnakine thelr Sulfles 0K Ie ! peared little question they are * wages they pay out 07 Nope, A Peeping petticoats. And it got : ? If the 2500 delegates attending|, ‘= = "0 Co man's ap-| © By United Press One man’s opinion: Pe them by, and got them whistles. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UP)—|the convention. approve as they g : Pl NEW YORK. Jan.
lot of 'em. peal for continued steel production!
: I don’t ‘know beans about p.acident Truman and British|are expected to do, the action asChamber Dinner
{styles but I have heard the word : a {sures uninterrupted production in |“basics” mentioned in the chatty| Prime Minister Winston Churchilliy),. “steel industry until late Feb-
| for national defense. {said the decision was ‘“‘unani-
| ’ i vo inforn | mous.” i V v - f th [will hold two informal meetings THE IDA AP a Civics Bt Se San a d to open thelr talks Be EY. shine the approval of the The reference to the Wage Dagazine. ber © om : wreay P Board hearing was considered! He put Scheherazade
tp. i Bg glide with 88 world. diplomatic “and wilitary|convention io. defer the strike; rdinarily ! S ) i 1 right there, because an annual | designers’ whims, and save Siig 22001SM%, BAnIStation officials meeting of a Chamber of Com-| cost of replacement. y : > i merce needs no other -descrip- : yw | But . the officials emphasizéd|.. tive board—have set up these strike is in progress. tioh. | ONE OF THE most sensible that all plans are tentative untill .,n4itions: - The members all come down statements on style comes from definite word is received on when| N : ” to the Riley Room of the Clay- |Harry Jackson, a California re-| |. ON If the W3B
have its’ annual meeting. -
originally ---scheduled for New i
Year's Day, the policy makers— 2Vare that the WSB refuses to wheels of chaos,” in this case, the international ex- investigate a dispute
Wakes Bo to the WSB Dec. 22 after media- Britain. the Liner Queen Mary will dock] ; © 4 |tion efforts failed to produce any-| * pool Hotel, as they have -many |tailer. I read it in Earl Lifshey's in Néw York with Mr. Churehilf{Seconimenations. within 15 ois times, and eat a mass-produced column in Retailing. land his advisers. | s
: : : : . strike. dinner which is amazingly good,| It was simply this, and it" mentatively, Mr. Truman and| TWO—If the WSB makes recconsidering how much of it has makes sense to me. He said: :
{the Prinde Minister will lunch at\ommendations which are acceptto be prepared. | “To- me fashion is phony un- | Blair House Saturday noon and gple to the union®“but not to the # Bed | less it fills a basic need.” {then board the presidential yacht industry the union still reserves THE HEAD TABLE is a mile, 54 that, I think, makes sense) Williamsburg for a cruise down ithe right to strike. long. That I AO lone to you, and cents, too. | the Potomac. They will return| o¢ (qurse. the union reserves stay on the job until the conven- failed to wir Ki iy Si " Floor-Bound [artery dinner : [the right to reject any WSB (jon could act. The extra ordi-|fainting llow who is missing SV , 1 Mr. Churchill, who will stay at recommendations, since they are nary meeting is scheduled to last/country 4 The one fello '| EVERY DAY we are getting the British embassy, will lunch not binding on either party. ; :
| hourly wage package and 20 other time,” the magazine said. {contract improvements. Mr. Tru-
strike. (a peril all its own to world order The steel workers Wage Policy quite apart from communism
|two days, but Mr. "Murray said it/the non-Communist world, the U.
Hog trading opened active to-
The question before the conven-|4ay at the Indianapolis Stock-
[tion, Mr: Murray said, is whether Yards. ; \the union shall accept the “chal-|- Frices jumped to mostly 50 it -was reported, because of jange” of the industry's stand and °€nts higher than yesterday's av-
25
qui , is the little guy who, < sitti : | te Steen through. Thats the Se on ung on ths fooniwin Defense Secretary Robert A. At yesterday's secret executive could wind up its business today. S. has some dire responsibilities executive vice-president. That! That's the way they did it pack | Lovett ori Sunday. He will attend ;5arq" meeting, Philip Murray,| Mr. Murray's 32 page report to|to shoulder. One of them is to night he, lets the officers run-the! in tne- caves-and around. the In. > Jin0er at the embassy Monday union president, was boiling mad |the convention lent further weight meet the fundamental moral chalshow, although he has done most| qian campfires. And that means night at which the President as he traced the development of to the belief the union's leaders/lenge posed by the" strange old of the work. ; | civilization is slipping slowly to] 59 will be a guest. {the steel deadlock. (would drop their strike at least wizard..." I've seen many a secretary its haunches. g The first formal talks will get DiSalle Gets Protest temporarily. bo - making himself scare In a cor- 7» a . |under way at the White House : He said significantly that “we | ° ner. But it is unusually near the] TI AM LOOKING at what they/Monday morning and resume/ ‘Among those who came in for are a great union, not only ve od @ Pric door so he can see who came and!call an informal seating en-/that afternoon. Another White|a thorough tongue-lashing were cause we are strong, but also be-| 1) es who didn’t. / ~*|semble. It is a big square short-| House meeting probably -will be/Benjamin- F. Fairless, president ‘cause we “re conscious of - the| : » legged table with two similar ta-| held Tuesday. : of the U. S. Steel Corp, the in-/responsibility which our strength J LIM Here THEN THE SPEAKER. He is bles nesting underneath, like a| Mr. Churchill will go to New/|dustry’s traditional pace-setter; gives. us—responsibilities to. the| : usually the top noté in the highiset of telescoping occasionals. [york Wednesday for talks with|U- S: Steel Co. President Clifford nation upon whose continued free-| brass of business. And he comes| These are nice in a way, but his friend Bernard M. Baruch |H00d; U. S..Steel Vice President dom we all depend.” | full of it. and for an hour tells/the ladies had. better face the ang then go to Ottawa for sey-|k Conrad Cooper, and Price the members what they have|fireplace if they want to remain| gpa days. (Stabilizer Michael V. DiSalle. been thinking fgr months. And ladies. Either that or wear = | Mr. DiSalle got special blisterthey like it. And you can see slacks. These tables have all of| , He 1S expected to return here jpg
| : | Jan. 15 for more talks with Mr.| t d to Kco-| «ai : lerages ; smoke layérs move from the! the perils of a-low chair. { a private memorandum “CO-| “disregard “the President's re-|®rages. hs hands in applause. | ai { Truman and to address Congress nomic Stabilizer Roger L. Put- a 2 gh ! Early sales choice ' weights fanning of ‘hands in app | FRANKLY, I think th ight|Jan. 17. H 1ans to leave. for| {quest” or adopt. the ‘patriotic Big ) Bg But this year Bill Book, that Al ’ ink they mightisan, 1/. he pla {nam. 'course” of postponing the strike @round 170-240 pounds brought
In this memo, Mr. DiSalle is hile the wage board hears the $18.75-$19.25,
quiet little fellow who runs Hogs 6000. barrows and ‘gilts.25-50 cents
the 80 all the way and sit on the London Jan. 19 or 20. floor, as I have seen many do in| En
C. of C.,.has dug up a Kkeynoter. supposed to have urged a Strong; . «I nighen. Dal 0 Nd Kilts 05 It will be no ordinary party, asia delightful informality. But . M F : |public position on wage ‘and price | : 51835 Jie choice A 240 pounds $18.7I see it, on Thursday, Jan.’17. (where would the furniture mak- City. an aces |controls, and to have said that if Zack Miller Dies: Ei 20ers Wh: | 240-200 pounds $18 - ’" ’ en
..|ers come out in a deal like that?
Freres got 1s bese Mail Theft Charge
thing to sit on. Something be-|
|either side used the steel dispute] .
lto wreck controls, they could be Celebrated Oklahoman Mr. Murray |
165 pounds $15.50-518: sows 25 cents to [fully 50 cents higher; choice 300-425 pounds $1525-316; lights to $16.50; - 425600 pounds $14.25-%$15.50
eH I No J. RALPH FENSTERMAKER,| :
: ugh J. Baker|'. 5 ” ‘made to look silly. 5 PY eis ; > : : president o Hie HuBh of | Side yourself. : { A 26-year-old. man Who au- has taken ‘strong exception to. ayaco: Tex dan, 3 : Up). Active: “steers Ang yearlings stengaer ately Co., and two-te hres Otherwise we'd have a. folding thorities said was on parole fromithis view. (Col. Zachary (Zack) Taylor Mil- mercial and good yearlings and light
steers $28-3532; good to choice $32.50-$33.50; high choice 1180 pound steers $35; utility and commercial native yearlings $24-$26.50: {heifers scarce: cows strong: utility and commercial $22.50-$24.50; odd head to..
the C. of C., along with Bill Book, scrounged around and got a man who has his fingers on the
ller, last of three brothers who
It is known that the union boss] : faced a U. S. Commissioner's has -already teleph8hed Mr. Di { Jones 80d managed the aimed hearing on a charge of mail theft./Salle twice to protest vigorously anch in ahoma, died in
chair industfy.. And I don’t mean|a Federal Court sentence today| the chairs. I mean the industry itself.
button. oR : od . . Willis Jr. 2856 Paris To {Hillcrest hospital here early to- LL active, steady chofce to . He's a steel mar, executive vice Coming Down = waged} DS ry as he at- Hie publicizing of this Teport, day from caneer of the liver. sei “steady Wally’ hg comercial, » i» 3 F * ’ a , - president of U. 5 Re I OU WOULDN'T expect WOmM-|tempted to cash a stolen check Produce | The Oklahoma Pioneer and Shep. 1500: Slaughter lamos. active, 50 royal flush in spades nLhe lh - en to clap their hands over steel’s for $100.35, postal inspectors said. : |Jockman who - lent countless oe fu er Hogg, to brime wooled labs. goods gi 7 +1 8 {Pig sxpanaion, but they should. Merchants and police were| Eges—FOB Cincinnati, cases included wo, tpousands of dollars io bis lad Shows early full wed hon Austin o S gh. en we make more steel, we alerted to the theft by retired gradsy Ie Soneumers Orage 1. 8, A| Indian friends and once Was slaugher ewes unevenly lower to 50 cents
cured. by Indian medicine men, higher: cull to choice, $7-514.50
" » =
use more coke, which is simply BUT MORE important he was
coal heated in the absence of air.
38'2-44%c; |
medium white, | . wholesale grade had been hospitalized six weeks.
$l'ac; U. 8. 3812-431ac)
brown mix,
letter carrier Ferdinand L. Young, 746 W. 25th St., whose check was|
(commercially . graded 40 per cent) extra
|year for 1951” today ‘by Time]
Mr. Truman referred the case oil fields in defiance of Great!
) ! [ “ “In his strange way this strange {thing near a settlement of the old man represented one of the| is (union's demand for an 18; centimost profound problems of his
“The split between the West {man asked the union to call off a/and the non-Communist East was|
Committee agreed last week to for all its power, the West in 1951 cope “with a. weeping, leader of a helpless . . + In its leadership of Cont Car-Na-Var
26: pitie amen & Steen 5»
weapons themselves. denberg did net discuss this, but he said: “TI expect to continué to recommend that we recognize the threat (of general war) and do a great deal more than we have done in the past to prepare ourselves against it.” Gen. Vandenberg also did not
‘lrefer to the “continuing discus-
sions” on the fiscal 1953 military spending program which is expected to delay delivery of President Truman’s budget to Congress {until late this month. .
of’ hitting U. 8, cities from" Russian .
Gen. Van-|
rt
Russian le to Hit - ed Bases
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3. (UP)—Gen, Hoyt S. Vandene
Russia's air Yhreat is of “ine
escapable immediacy” and said the. United States must rength to eliminate the “dans
Gen. Vandenberg
$50 hillion on military spending next year, which might slow plans to build the Air Force from 90 to 143 wings. Congress also has indicated it will scrutinize military spending {more closely this year in an effort to brigg federal income and outgo as near into balance as possible. Gen. Vandenberg : sai ee {advances in Soviet air progregs lare the result of. a “prodigious nas {tional effort,” and added that the {United States “is only just beginining to make the investment in lair power that the developing [world situation demands.” .Asked whether Russia's strate'gic bombing force has grown in {the past year, Gen. Vandenberg
| The Chief Executive is said to replied with a terse “yes.”
|have imposed a ceiling of about
‘Red Germany Shies From UN Inspection
i | BERLIN, Jan. 3 (UP) — Com{munist East Germany ‘is willing |to let West Germany inspect poli{tical conditions in the Soviet {zone, but is still opposed to any {United Nations inspection.
| The East German government {election commission made known
its stand last night in announcing {completion of a proposed law for . 3—Mo- |German-wide elections based on Nations forces drove the ComMr. Murray Rammed Mossadegh, - premier of the 1924 Weimar republic election munists off two heights on the. {Iran, was named the “man of the!law.
in the man committee make such an in-| |significant, as Mr. Murray is well|petroleum business and oiled the spection, but would “oppose any| the magazine decision” depriving Germans of while a said of Mossadegh, who directed their right to handle their owh {nationalization of his country’s affairs.”
| He said the Soviets now have a |bomber of their own design which iis bigger than the copies of American B-29s generally assumed to jcomprise their long-range fleet,
Reds Driven
1
i By United Press | EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUAR-
TERS, Korea, Jan. 3 — United
western front in a surprise attack
| The commission said it is will-l¢qq,y ling to let a joint East-West Ger-|
| The 8th Army units were be{lieved to have recaptured all Dec. 28. \ Breaking the New Year's lull, ithe Allies jumped off at. two
Local Stocks and Bonds
points west of Korangpo. They {rammed head-on into Communist
STOCKS American Loan 8% (........00 | American States capseasans en | American States pfd .... . 24 . {Ayrshire Collieries com . 17 L § Ayres 4'2% pid . A ‘ed Belt RR & Stk Yds com ..... 3 | Belt RR & Stk Yds pfd » | Bobbs-Merrill com
| Bobbs-Merrill pfd 4% ... 7 Central YR vis. inerinase- 330 Chamber of Commerce com .. 21 Circle Theater com ... . 48% | Citizens Ind Tel 5% ptd 49
Com Loan 4 pfd ...... Consolidated Fin 6 pfd {Cummins Eng com ".. 37 {Cummins Eng pfd
Bid - Asked! Out. 9 ,
1% 1%
|troops and heavy fighting broke
Red resistance finally broke an thour after the attack began and | the Communist survivors stag- : gered north in retreat. il
il'aj "PANMUNJOM, Korea, Jan. 3 4 { (UP) — The Communists 35 * categorically - rejected a United
today
[Nations compromise plan for vol=
|untary repatriation of war pris=
PR Ee om 15 161, oners and ° civilians during - a | Eastern Ind Tele 5 pfd .. 97 seri y | Equitable Securities com 25 ...;| Korean armistice, : ee | Equitable Securities pfd . 94 However, the United Nations | Pamily Finance com
crs
| Family Finance 5% ptd
Hays Corp pfd ww .... avis | Hamilton Mfg Co com . 2s Herff-Jones cv A fd 10% Home T & 'T 5% pfd ia {Hook Drug Co com a Ind Asso Tel 2 pid .... 38 | Ind Asso Tel 2% pfd .. 50 Gas & Water com 24'%
i Ind {Ind Mich El 4% ptd ...
*Indpls Pow & Lt | Indpls Pow & Lt pf “ens |[ndianapolis Railways com ... Indianapolis Water com. ves Indianapolis Water 4'4 J ad Indianapolis Water 5% p Jeflerson Kingan & Kingan & Co pfd A Lincoln National Life . Lynch Corporation .y | Marmon-Herrington com Mastic Asphalt . re Natl Homes com . Nat! Homes pfd .. ‘iva N Ind Pub Serv com *N Ind Pub . Serv 4'y pfd N Ind Pub Serv 4': pfd cas dR N Ind Pub Serv 4.56% pfad 2 P R Mallory 3 | Progress Laundry com Pub Serv of Ind com .. ...... Pub Serv of Ind 3'a ptd...... {Ross Gear & Tool com‘.... Switzer-Cummings pfd . So Ind G&E com ‘ 80 Ind G&E 4.8% pfd Stokely-Van Camp com
National Life com..
Stokely-Van. Camp pfd 163%, | Tanner & Co 5'%% nofd...... .100 |*Terre Haute Malleabls_ ...%. 12 13! {*U 8 Machine Co 7 23% 3 {United Telephone 5% pid ..... 91 . Union Title . Cais anannes 58
*Ex-dividend. BONDS
[American ‘Loan 4'2s 55 {American Security 5s 60 .. | American Loan 4%s 80... {Bastian Morly 5s 61 .... Batesville Tele Co 4'as . Buhner Fertilizer 5s 58 Ch of Com Bldg 4'as 61 | Columbia Club 3-58 62
-08
Equitable Securities 5s 60 ... 96 ‘Hamilton Mfg Co 5s 68 +: 100 | Indpls Paint & Color 5s-64....100 7 Indpls Public Loan 5s 64 .... 96 ‘ Indpls Rallways 5s 97 . .. . 62 Ind Limestone 4s 75 ... « 4 Ki IInd Asso Tel 3s 75 . .. 9 Vis {Kuhner Packing 4s 59.. 100 ‘ws Langsenkamp 55 48 ... « 1 | Raper Arts co 3s 5 a 3 98 | Sprague Device 58 60 ....:.. | Traction Term#hal 6s 57 92 98
157%,
| Rear Admiral R. E..Libby refused to accept the Communist rejec{tion and told the Reds to study {the six-point plan further. He {said the Communists still haven't the ‘‘remotest concept” of what
" |the. proposal means.
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Sell or Rent vu Abbott & Costello, Mighiy Mouse, efc.
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. . resident salesman for Carnegie But when we use more coke we stolen large white. 43-6: drown mix, 42-46c (He was 73. ; Local Truck ‘Grain Prices . . a rren ceipts se change -40¢ a— > Steel in a year most of us remem | get more by-products, and- from Hyman DeLott, proprietor of a Market unsettled. Prices unc anged to Truck wheat, $2.39 ber with a cringe. It was 1929, /these the girls will' get more store at 2634 Northwestern Ave. enerally lower than most. instances. J, S. Statement New No. 2 white corn. 3184. right here in Indianapolis. * (nylon. ’ '| Chickens — Fryers commercially grown — oy No 2 yellow corn, $1.74. If the C £ C. boys listen ii notified police when Willis asked|over 2'2 pounds, 33-35c; roasters, 5 pounds WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UPi1—Govern-| Soybeans $ un s LD " y KNOW WH 3 y ” ta have the check cashed in his|and up. 33-34c; hens heavy, 28-30c: hens| ment expenses and receipts for the cur-| mc OYDEANS, $387 i = closely to Dave Austin, and he AT that many? [18 EYE He shed Th TIS leh, “to-nc: id roosters, YL10c rooster) Tt nical vear Thioush Dec. 35 compared lets his tongue and mind roll, 1 Cheaper nylons, and medicines, Postal | * t id Wil changed prices. Increased offerings of | With a year ago, Yigr Last Ves think they will come away know-|dyes, and thousands of other | oslal Inspectors sai Bryon Doted merv. 50 score, 30c: medium] EXDSDSeS $31.376.342.303 319.083.012.753 ing the score. things. a Fay two other federal checks and}, orter tom ocular. doc, "| Receints 21,800.099.987 "13.403 858.113 I know he knows. All I hope' .Nylon already has put the silk-| $10 in cash on his person When = More color comics than in| San Deo 250.480.995.104 245.137 304 988 is that he says it. And the pros< Worm in the breadline, "and -I|arTested. any other Indiana newspaper | Gold res. "220695.227.884 22.105.631.452
They ‘said Willis has a record |
perity rabbit will be out of the think it's moving in fast on cot-|
‘ : | are printed each week in The | INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE hat for 1952. {ton, suh. . of three previous convictions on ae Times. : Cet IANA OLis Of NG Fae. 000 check stealing charges, and was} > Lo oc. iDebits for the day. .... Haa22 000 ; ” ; paroled Nov. 7-from a five-year 2 gL. ‘ . . sentence. £
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Bertram Gross Takes : Model 17C112
Democratic Party Post
WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (UP) ‘|—Democratic National Chairman Frank E. McKinney announced today that Bertram M. Gross, former executive secretary of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, has been appointed director of. the National| Committee's new research divi-| sion. . ? : Mr: Gross had held the post with the Council since the group
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