Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1952 — Page 15

s convention | 20 years—

ng television formed well ries hé could

ongress Mr. Many Demo- ), 111.) as che te, and some ndidate than aightforward pt the nomihis sincerity t that. They

haven't been e healed. Gov. Adlai is list. The hopping vote y Republican, against him, ly knowh. nf Oklahoma sn't run. He rs and. if he keynoter—a uld be in a

). Okla.) ‘is Rayburn as speaker, Mr, 1 the govern gton scandal is author of 1 era legislaNorthern and ynroney says, former Connearly every

‘um

't you say, : ur right to

rvverveasrsesroved

on a nice, e of the city paid for our ty decided to e and ashes, utters up the and ashes, londay mornousewife outness. ed; the city vn the street ~ No dirt to

it that the se are plenty,

but the city ogs from in

a once beauhe dogs.

row, City.

‘of any other

light case of I read about, ry last sum1e hiccups for the doctors

has got over 2 try another

s your mouth ass of water. ral remedies But I have eral different

feel I should r any more

ound a cure irtainly hope

[orristown

nay over the

anything but ‘would have ging'in hates surprise, What promnal platform

ne thing . . «

1d county to that, he will uches. y a bunch of

thing to do

y is to fire all ' those “gray n the young

. People are don't want,

" M,, City

s is down for ling" bugs of le will set us 3%

. can say to the r the Depart1s, ouch. I did hat this sum as rewards to ‘6 of deserters pent any way ) governor of 1 Zone for en-

on of Fine sed President lild that back 400. For the Lng we must , for the edu-

, $26,498,000; |

! Indians, $4,aw and order 517,000. nternal Reve8 taxes, wants do it. Points ably have to elinquent tax ends to spend

turing two hee

WL mien

=

»

“Today «Business

“thing happened.

ST ala

TUKSUAY, YAN. 22, 1904

~ Cadillac Reply, 190 Horses

: By Harold Hartley CADILLAC’'S ANSWER came through today.

On its 50th birthday, Cadillac put a‘ 190 horsepower

“engine on the road.” te That, I think, was Cadillac's answer to Chrysler, ard

- > iw 3 i.

¢

Ho

Lend

THES LNDIANAFULLD

Losing

4 LVOIuD

\

~p.

* °

PAU 10

ers Victory | In Sight for "Little Guy":

By DON TEVERBAUGH Times Real Estate Editor CHICAGO, Jan. 22 — The big fight for higher interest rates on FHA and VA home loans‘is going! |into the final round, and the boys with the dough are losing on _ |points. | That's the word from one of

anyone else who wants to play] the big motor muscle game. | \ I suspect if others want to up Where the Jobs Are the ante, Cadillac will raise it| again. It intends to remain the/I think is an important map.

most powerful car on the Ameri-!

can road,

|are in the state.

do not understand about Cadillac|would suspect. is that it is not altogether a luxury car, although it is big, fast, population and like riding in bed.

a un n

GENERAL MOTORS has

centers.

big stake in Cadillac. Strangly, on the. fringe of Chicago, is a

dt Is the same it has in Chev-| fourth. :

rolet, smartest of the line. And] av

that stake | NEXT THERE is Muncie,

is leadership. Noth-| . { | . cba fsar . ING WIR: Come arch tase to it,| Which outshines GM's Anderson, J Cesta ron Coty — pose with newest addition to the famous family, 10-déy-old Nancy |one key administrator to schedule A Cadillac probably costs little Torte aus the Evansville grea that's when the shortages of Suzanne, before leaving LeRoy Hospital in New -York City. Mr. (his resignation. sow ra tn fio Hire tw drive over x five YeAT| fark HO on the Yndiana homes will start to pinch the Roosevelt, son of the late President, is a U.S. Congressman. ory, heya Tow ne to the perio an a smaller car. But > : {il _ | public. imme meen a mm me WOlVES JUSL ) § you don’t trade them in every| fide of the Ohio river from Louis-| And the public is getting a little ° ih eine president of yeas: Bd they don’t change as This points up an important tired of being pinched. They'll] ‘tke to Win’ Push oO e James H. ; side radically. And ‘they are amaz- : : P

fact. And that is why Cha of Commerce clamber and fign for more industries. n ” ~ ‘IT IS NOT only the payrolls of

ingly thrifty. n » » ; A CADILLAC will give a small car a pretty hot race on economy alone, Few realize that. I have never thought for a moment that Cadillac was sitting back basking in its success, and a poliances. twiddling its thumbs when Chrys-| power eight.

‘ {around the cities. Auto manufacture is a rough

I HAVE in front of me what|

It shows where the most jobs, ) They are in aud One of the things most peopleleight counties, about where you large institutional invesiors=-not}

Wage money swirls around the| Indianapolis] {would be one place, South Bend |another, the Ft. Wayne area a a third. Then up in Lake County,

pers Yell and it'll be heard in Wash-| im t/ington, Mr. Downs says. Right

the industries which count, but) the people who feed and clothe Trade Secrets { the workers, sell them cars and| The brainiest builders of the

But when the cities are hurt,/builders who are building bejter) game, but it is played honestly. tpoy wail and bleed. And the lit-|and cheaper houses than all their

[Chicago's biggest mortgage |brokers, | It has been a mortgage money | strike all along, he said. And it comes from the big money boys, | {the insurance companies and the|

the brokers. | | Keeping score: is the little guy| who wants to buy a home. He {knows why he can’t. And the vetleran who can get all the 5 per cent money he wants—but none, lat 4 per cent—knows pretty well, (too. The big push is coming in the] [second quarter, the experts say.

| |

[now Congress has got its collecitive ear to the ground. Elections are coming. By NOBLE REED A campaign to tell the people

{that Gen. Eisenhower “is the

[nation told the resf just how they

| Except in a recession, there are/were doing it yesterday in a two-|0nly Republican who can win the ler popped with fits 180 horse- ajways more job opportunitieshour session.

They came from presidential election,”

all sectors of the nation—36 home | jaunched in Indiana.

has been

A permanent Marion County

1

But everyone who takes on the tle towns, for some reason, kespleorupeisions, |campaign committee was organ-

champ is in for a race. right on ticking.

= » on & » » THAT'S WHY Cadillac put 190+ horses under the hood. Not many simpler living in the smaller comwill use them all. ° | munities. ‘But if anyone wants to talk;

back on the road, they're there, their own gardens, and some have, |deep freezers. And the wives put

and ready to go.

How It's Divided

WHAT HAPPENS when a rich man dies without a will, as did Peter C. Reilly? * Under the law, roughly, told, the estate reputed at $1 mil-| lion, and no debts, would go one- . third to the widow, and the two Wheeling, U. 5. A. remaining thirds would be divided] ENTE RIN G Terre Haute, a equally among the three children. couple of years back, I picked up ® "8 -ia student. BUT SOMETIMES it is not| He was married. and was going that easy. Lawyers and trust de- to school at Rose. Polytechnical partments tell you the best way Institute. And he couldn’t find a still is to make a will, then keep home to rent, so he bought one, it up to date with the law, anda little down payment, and the changes in who is to benefit. [rest by the month. Lots of people do not make, 2 an = wills. One reason is, I- suspect, IT WAS the kind of home he that they do not like to think bought which interested me. It of the day when it becomesiwas a second-hand trailer, and he ‘effective. said he-paid $7000 for it, the price

of a small home today. Ten Cents Rebate When builders began to push

1 HAVE SEVERAL bad hab- housing, putting up something its, but this is one of the lesser over a million a year, I thought

have breadlines. And in these days of television,

(tically everything in the little I am towns they have in the cities, except for crime and poverty.

And lots of the workers have] {up things in the fall. They seldom]

radio and auto, they have prac-

{ This is what they say is ahead ized following an Eisenhower-for-in '52: ; [President luncheon attended by

ver | Storage walls which come ready I {INK it is because of the ‘ t for installation, thereby cutting 200ut 200 Republicans at el

{Columbia Club yesterday. George S. Diener, member of {the legislature, was elected per-

{labor cost on the job. Thése walls are easily moved, {lending amazing flexibility to the

hays, attorney and long-time

| Expandable houses. : ! > GOP leader, vice chairman; Mrs. They grep 1 quite sure how these 11. riett Stout. member of the

(will. come, but they are a neces-|~ .nty Council, secretary and |sity for the baby boom which pce Savage, realtor, treasurer. started during the war. | Prefrabricated bathrooms and | chimneys, especially for the low cqst homes. he savings they offer in labor costs is tremendous. | A more attractive, better de|signed low cost home available in- greater numbers. And more attractive, livable low rent apartments and homes,

Other Leaders Present

Other GOP leaders attending the luncheon Clerk H. Dale Brown, County Treasurer Louis Rainier, Circuit

County Coroner Roy Storms, City Clerk Grace Tanner, Sheriff Smith, John Hughes, former na-

— 2

PROUD PARENTS—Mr. and Mrs.

Taft Acts to Guide GOP

Imanent chairman; John Ruckles-|

included County)

Judge Lloyd D. Claycombe, Supe- | rior Court Judge Walfer Pritéhard,

Sanitation Job Quit by |

Bookedis |

By JOE ALLISON { James H. Bookedis, superinten{dent for nearly four years of the city sanitation plant, has resigned |effective Feb. 1. - | Mr. Bookedis said vesterday* his x 3 physician has ordered him to rest Sk 7, |following overwork in helping to / (plan a multi-million-dollar expan|sion of the disposal plant and the [sewer system. He told the Board of Sanitary Commissioners. he expected to enter private industry after a vacation. He said he ‘hopes to estab-

{lish a consulting engineering a 8 |office., & S ™ | While .Mr. Bookedis refused to * confirm" it, rumor at City Hall Me [hinted that politics played a major

— [role in his decision to resign.

Follows Police Shakeup

The recent shakeup of police personnel and suspension of for{mer Chief John J. O'Neal prompted

United Press-Acme Telephoto.

Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.

ns; the Sanitation Board, today said J Mr. Bookedis'. successor ‘‘problably” will be nominated at the

{board’s next meeting Monday. He declined to name the candi-

Home Loan Rate Fi

date. daylight after |5 years. BELQIT, Wis., Jan. 22 UP)-=-| Democratic minority board Sen. Robert A. Taft said last{member Oscar F. Barry Sr. said Long Snooze—

night that Republicans will win| yesterday Mr. Bookedis’ resigna{the Presidency in November “if{tion was “news to me. I can guide the campaign.” | One top official of the lew i i ; Republican administration sa The Ohio Republican delivered ee 2 arti a blistering attack on administra-| 1048Y Ta advise Me Roonedis ition domestic and foreign pol-| > It ew) : cies in a speech that climaxed| eneiil. a /day of hand-shaking in small ' Qualified Engineer southern Wisconsin towns. The official explained,

He opened a two-day stump- Bookedis is a well qualified en‘Stassen for

convention delegates in the Apr.! other {1 primary. lone.

than politics-ridden

i

Speaks to 2000

; {Brandt and Mr. Speaking to 2000 persons who Mr. Bookedis’

attended a Lincoln Day box lunch) expansion of social in the Beloit College Fis]

work in planning the sewage dis-|

FLYING RIP VAN WINKLE?—The bat gets his first sight of

‘Entombed’ 15 Years, Freed Bat Flies Away

Could

L.

there be a Rip Van]

“MT. Winkle in the bat world? . B. Allen, general building hanging in some retreat in a ing tour in a battle with Harold gineer, He can go much farther contractor, thinks he has found semitorpid

yesterday -embedded in a layer of}

Co., 326 Doing

W. Ohio St. . { a remodeling job

tional Encyclopedia, the bat in cold climates spends its winters

(hibernation) st&te ..

Wisconsin's 30|in- his) profession in some Work one which has been hibernating and appears occasionally during city at least 15 years. He found it'warm spells.

The book also states the bats

Sanitation Board member Louis cork, between two layers of ce-in this region live almost excluBarry praised ment in the Winston Machinery sively on insects.

Mr. Allen said the cork had

: In'some small insect life in it, and posal plant and in assisting in what was formerly an fice stor-thought perhaps the bat could

{house, Sen. Taft asked that he be| drawing up a series of giant new age room, Mr. Allen discovered have subsisted on this. given the presidential nomination sewers scheduled for construc- the bat when the top layer of ce-|

and the direction of

the GOP|tion this year. jcampaign.

|cans fos

around a curtain of generalities,”

cannot .get into Eade pee. At the same time he gave a pat| 11: during which he was in charge |

fon the back to Sen. Joseph R.

|McCarthy (R. Wis.) for raising the

lissue of communism in the State|teSt site where history's

iment was I Mr, Bookedis is a graduate of mammal’'s He warned that the Republi-| Purdue University and has a law caught in a compressed block of] and He is a veteran of World War limited to a space of inches.

cork,

removed. The feet were securely

furry,

its movements were,

Cut of 5 to 10 Per Cent In Spud Prices Due

WASHINGTON, Jan. 22 (UP)

Officials of the machinery com-|— Potato distributors were

of all supply and maintenance pany said the cement and cork, at the Almagordo, N, M., atomic wall had been installed between! first} 15 and 20 years ago. And it was|

Standardization of floor plans, but greater variation of each plan to avoid look-alikes. Some builders on the panel reported they were able to obtain from 25 to 50 different appearances for ‘their homes, working from just one basic floor plan.

Apartments

Fritz Burns of Los Angeles predicted a great increase of low rental apartment buildings. They

ones.

{the trailer would go out of busi- are a good investment and suit-

tional young Republican leader and Elmer Sherwood, former) state adjutant general. : Chairman Diener said a state director for the Eisenhower cam-| paign will be named next week when headquarters will be opened in downtown Indianapolis. Congressman Hugh Scott (R. Philadelphia) former national] GOP chairman who was luncheon] speaker eulogized Gen. Eisenhower as the “only man in the country who can lead us out of our

Department. Once last year Mr. Taft said he could not agree with all of Sen. McCarthy’s charges. But

partment.” Hits on all Fronts

Sen. Taft attacked the admin{istration on all fronts, blasting

last night he said ‘that it was the pro-Communist policies of the State Department which fully justified Joe McCarthy in his demand for an investigation of conditions in that de-

atomic bomb was exploded. He|not broken open until yesterday. was there at the time of the 1944 The bat flew away. blast. There was no possible entrance Before the war he was bridge|to . the cork insulation from designer for the State Highway!either end. . Commission, According to The New Interna-

Local Truck Grain Prices

granted higher prdfit margins yesterday but the government said spud prices at the grocery store still will be rolled back 5 to 10 per cent Jan. 28. The Office of Price Stabilization approved the higher profits for distributors, who now will be able to collect 86 cents a hundred pounds in profit instead of 60 {cents as previously decreed.

Wheat,

O. C. Drake, Ex-Collector

$2.40. . 2 white corn, $1.85. N . 3 yellow corn, $1.75. Oats. 92c. Soybeans, $2.79

I get hungry between meals, ness. But in that, I was wrong. and nibble peanut clusters, And Certain people still like them. I have been stopping at Mrs. 2 2 8 » Stevens’ candy store just offi I HAD NO IDEA how big the Washington on N. Illinois. trailer population is until I learned 1 usually buy a quarter's worth. from Edward L. Wilson, of the And in doing so, my faith in| Trailer Coach Association that humanity got quite a lift. 11.7 million Americans live on Ll 8 # 8 wheels, day and night. I WALKED IN and Carmen, And what he calls “the mobile Bird waited on me. She remem- population” is increasing at the befed me from the day before. I rate of 200,000 a year. Yaid down my quarter. And she 2 87 =n said “I put in 35 cents worth.| Yesterday you left me an extra to live in a trailer, although I can dire.” see their advantages. I recall hearLittle things like that put thejng Cornelius Vanderbilt Jr. tell stamp of big integrity on people how he had bought a deluxe and business, right down evenitrajjer to roll around the country. to buying a quarter's worth of| «y's the only way to see it,” chocolates. {he said. gs a = | And if I recall the Vander- _ AND I ADMIT I have no busi-iy 4 fortune correctly, he could ness doing it. I should have ., vy have had his own’ private

stopped that when I was ten. But 410044 train, on the New York|

1 see-others doing the same. So I am not alone.

—Like a King I LIKE PEOPLE who tell me the good things. They aren't always tearing the world, and its people, to pieces. ‘ R. H. Wheeler of the H. H. ‘Woodsmdll Insurance Agency, 108 E. Washington, called me. You will remember the Woodsmall ad slogan, “We insure everything

{Central which his family held { heavily. | = » = IF YOU HAPPEN to have the wanderlust and feel the tug of a trailer coming on, I'll tip you off to something. : They. are heavy. And it takes a good sized car to pull them. And it takes more gasoline than for the car alone. : But for those who love the western sunsets, and the Wayne ” fronds of tropic palms, and the But the heveatter, frothy white ON ral: of New

o = " . ; cen two| England, all in the same year, MR, WHEELER had taken /the trailer is the answer.

items back to retail stores and

wad been treated like a king. 'Spff-t, Catsup

One was long-playing record which skipped grooves. The store; IT'S HARD to keep the neck of ( a catsup bottle clean.

gave him a new one, so fast he hardly knew what had happened., The stuff sticks and hardens. It required no excuses, no exX-/Then someone wipes it off with plaining. {a dish cloth. And that doesn't 8 2» |help your appetite. THEN HE had been given a shaving brush, used it a couple, coffee “of months, and it began to shed. syrup, So he took that back. The same . uo» SO THERE are now three plasThe nice part is that he tookl/tic containers with squirt-pump the time and trouble to tell it. plungers which never spill the y 2 8 stuff and keep themselves clean. SOME PEOPLE might have They're made in sets of three by gon and forgotten it. But|the Wecolite Co., 552 W. 53d St, not Mr, Wheeler. New York. He had been treated right, and] And the whole set is less than he wanted the world to know it./two bucks. Ought to help your

1 like men like that. appetite. 4

cream. Even

PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS

i C69 nae ch san A UAMLOEE CoM 175110 ( § WAGHLY ALL BRATS RSEEVED.

ap .

I HAVE NEVER had the urge|

Same goes for mustard, and:inspection. 2 pancake signed to show the reader allljg73; S1450:

{able for sites which are not fit for residential development. “Build these apartments and] you'll drive the public housers crazy,” Mr. Burns said. He told how his firm had built 16 units of one-bedroom apartments to rent at $45 per month

present chaos.” ‘He Is the Man‘ “People

in Europe have said

has been able to bring European peoples together in common defense,” he said. “Ike’s abilities to

and had received a citation fromigo that in Europe means he is the Policy after his

[tne city council. Things worked man who can bring us together out so well, the firm now is build-in the United States.” The Congressman said polls show the Republican Party has only about 32 per cent of the! voters in the U. S. | “This means we cannot elect! a president with Republican votes| alone. However, we do have an| Eisenhower majority,” he sdid. Rep. Scott appealed to Repub-| licans to support the General Aas) one way to tackle the “very difficult job of dislodging a vast net-|

|ing more than 100 such units.

Honor Times For Section

National honors have been won by The Times for its special Parade of Homes section published during the recent National Home Week. work of corrupt government pow Honorable mention went to The °F in Washingtdn. Times in the awards won by eight |

States. Presentation of the awards Hog Prices Gain |

States. Presentation of the awards will be made at the annual con- . | vention of the National Associa- Up fo 25 Cents | tion of Home Builders in Chiedgo. Don Teverbaugh, Times Real| Hogs brought up to 25 cents, Estate Editor, will accept theimore than yesterday's averages award for The Times, only Indi-|at the Indianapolis Stockyards to-| day. Choice 170-240 pound hogs sold at $18.25 to $19. Choice!

ana newspaper to be honored. Seventy-six newspapers were ensows weighing 300 to 425 pounds) brought $14.75 to $15.75. |

tered in the judging.

Cites Reader Interest Cattle. and calves were fairly, The Times 40-page section en- active. Choice 1200-pound weights| tered in the judging by the Mar- brought $34.25. Good and choice fon County Residential Builders, light to medium weights sold at) was selected for the award be-|$30.50 to $34. cause its stories of high reader| Vealers were. moderately ac interest, layout and use of pic-(tlve, bulk good and choice bring-| tures. ing $34 to $37. | Featured in the section was a| Bulls were steady with yestermap showing the location of 800/d2Y- Sheep trading was weak,

.| HOGS—8500: fairly active: enerally| houses in various stages of con |strong to 25¢ higher: bulk choice 110-240 struction and houses open for|pounds $1325.13. about 50 head No. one|

ightweights $19.25;

240-275 . 18.80: ounds $17

ounds $16.50-17.25: 120-163] 5.50: few 316; choice sows

The section was de- 275-325

pounds $14.75-15.75: few $16: heavstyles of houses in all price|ier weights $13.75-315. ony . | « Cattle, i calves, 300: slaughter ranges. |classes fairly active:

steers and heifers The Times Real Estate section sjading zood or better steady to strong,

is the largest section of its kind|O/ners steady; two loads 1185-pound high : choice st . 334-35: s in Indiana, and had the largest md Yr hal an hotce

1200-pound weights, $4.25; half-load high | real estate classified advertising choice and prime 1100-pound steers. 335; | Section in the state.

bulk good and choice light to medium weights, $30.50-34; commercial to good, $28-31; mood and choice heifers, $20-32.50; one load choice 860-pound heifers, $33; cows strong, some canners 25-50 cents higher: utility and commercial. odd good, $24-24.50; canners and cutters,

Grain, Feed Dealers ats

the General is the only leader who) He said President Truman's dé-

lat the “unnecessary” Korean War, free spending, “5 per centers” and a drift toward a

|economy.” to work in auto plants about 1910

sire for bipartisan foreign policy top tax collectors during the de{is “pure hypocrisy” because the pression, died yesterday in Bowl{President tossed aside bipartisan ing Green, Ind.

The average car on the road to-|since the week-end. f day is eight years old, compared| One retailer said his distribu-| with an average age of five and|tor ‘“suggested” he cut prices to| one-half -years in 1941, acording|meet competition started when a to the Automobile Manufacturers|distributor lowered the wholesale

American Americon

and became one of the state’s|Avrshire Collleries com L Ayres 42% Belt RR & Belt RR & Stk Yds pfd *Bobbs-Merrill com ve Bobbs-Merrill pfd 4% Central Soya ..

Of Tax, Dies Local Stocks and Bonds

o STOYKS Bid Asked planned| Otis C. Drake, who came here|American Loan 6%... 96 ae

—Jan. 20

States States pfd .

. 58 3, . . .100 . 33% « lig . 13a

vw 38%

18’ id. ve Stk vd com

a’

[pou re-election in| Services for the 80-year-old | Chambe; of Commerce com .. ML . {auto assembly worker, miller, tax | Gif ens tose £200 "0" 329 On the question of foreignjofficial and Mason will be at Commonwealth Loan 4% fd. 85 ~~ 88° policy Sen. -Taft said that “as a2 p. m. Thursday in Bowling Rosuildated Na, Big roreen "ee 1% good neighbor” the United States|Green, where he will be buried. |Summins Eng com’. ta. 3 wants to help the rest of the; Mr. Drake first worked here sn Delt E10 om Suid . 18 16% world as“much as it can. the assembly lines of Cole, Willys-| Equitable Securities rom "550%" 5% Hi But, certainly, that cannot be/Overland and Pathfinder auto Faultable Securities od ares a primary object of foreign policy|plants and also in the Continen-|Family Finance 5% ptd -e Or an excuse either for the wreck-|tal factory at Franklin. Hamilton Mis Co com hd ing of our economy.at home or| For many years he ran a flour feo, ones Class A pid "i for the terrible tragedy of war,”|mill in Bowling Green. At one Hook: Drug Co com. ig: he said. time he was a miller for the Com-|ind Asse Toi Pa Ms Sen. Taft warned the admin-mercial Distillery Co. in Terre ind Gas & Water com 244, istration spending already has|/Haute. Ind Telephone 4 8. 0." "10: $8 » cost the people “20 per cent off He served more than eight i ro, un BR ealty Co... 38% 38° their freedom” through denying|years with the U. S, Internal Rev-| Ind Pla Dow & Lt Bt om Wi 98 them the liberty to buy the things/enue Bureau as deputy collector, |Indiananolis Water com. ... 11 we they want and need. first in Indianapolis, then for|Indianapolls Weiss sk of 105% 103 about two years in Terre Haute. jeerson National Lize com., 1004 12 Ai C h He left government service in|“Kingan & Co pfd ... oi. 58° e300 ir Crash Leaves, [1936 or 1937. Eh Coton Te ore ld, 18 . armon-Herrington com .... 5 6 Se Masti . pa Mother a Widow | Works for Schools |i pia,” FL is son, es, heads the book |N"1n4 Bu sery | ; 239, . For Second Time and supply department of Indian-|N Ind Pub Serv 4's pid... 0° 9° apolis public schools. : N 23 Pub Serv daly 3, Bw TACOMA, Wash., Jan. 22 (UP)| Otis Drake's brother, Harley, |p; R. Mallory .... ......0" 31a 30% —Mrs. Stanley Lankiewicz Jr, has been a commission merchant [Bub Serv of Ind com 29'5 who thought “it couldn't happen|at Indianapolis Union Stockyards Recs eas: ar oqo Hd eoee: 80% 83% again,” “today faced life as a|for some 50 years. sovitser- Cummings’ pfd .... 17 0 widow for the second time. Other survivors are two other |8o Ind G&E 48% ptd oo. 188 * joa Mrs. Lankiewicz, already the brothers, Chester, Plainfield, and Stokely-Van vd Soe mother of three children and ex-| Ernest in Tecumseh, Mich.; his|janner & Co slat so: pecting a fourth child, had lost| wife, FElizabeth; two grand- us Maghine Co 0°.’ two husbands in airplane crashes.| children and three great-grand-|union Tic or ° 5% Pfd - Her second husband, Capt.|children. Exdvaend. os Stanley Lankiewicz Jr. an Afr] Mr. Drake belonged to Clay |anen & steen 8s ....... Force navigator. and two other Masonic Lodge in Bowling Green |American Loan 4%. 3 crewmen were killed Saturday in|for 56 years, 11 as master. He |American Loan 4. 60... the crash of a B-17 in the|Was also a member of Eastern|peruan Morly sei Olympic Mountains. Star. uhner Fertilizer 6s 58 .. ) Ch - Her first husband, Lt. George —. Compa "club 233°63 eens 8 ane Duerr, an Air Force bombardier, : i Hamilton Mfg Co 55 85 —....100 oo. was killed in the South Pacific. Motorists at Muncie . [ndpis aint % Color 5s 0411100 IU “When I married ‘Lank' I Enjoy Gas Price War Indols Raliways 5s 07 "°° 62 6 : e 8 19 ..qgprrcan i thought it just couldn't happen | MUNCIE, Jan. 22 (UP)—Motor- Ind Asso Tel 3s 75 PY aan 0 ne " { hy . an » n . again,” she sald. ists here enjoyed a gasoline price| kangsenkamp 35 48’ ein 197 x war today which resulted in a 4-|Spragus Device 5s 80 oii... 9 ” Autos Are Older cents-a-gallon slash. in 31 aad

prices | Traction Terminal Bs 87 au

lL 138-35¢.

INDIANAPOL CLEARING ° HOUSE CIOATEES &.osxseinsmsnivaseres $12,082,000 Debits ........c0c0iinse $51,387,000 Produce

Egss—Prices FOB Cincinnati cases included on graded eggs: consumers grades U. 8. A large white 44-46'3c; brown 4242'%¢; U. 8, medium white 38-43'2c; brown mix 38-40c; wholesale grade (commercial graded 40 per cent) extra large ite 39-40c: current receipts cases exchanged Market about steady; prices unchanged and unsettled undertone. Chickens — Commercially grown fryers

J1.v132-33¢c; hens heavy 25c; hens light 19-20c: ves.j0ld roosters 17-19c; market and undertones ..|steady at uncha

nged prices. Butter, Creamery. Score 84¢; medium butterfat 72¢; regular 87c.

® Fire and Allied Lines, Full-Coverage Automobile, and Inland Marine Insurance under dividend-paying policies. Savings to policyholders since organization, $14,630,000. Net losses paid, $33,770,000. ASSETS: ;3:1::3:$13,892,612 LIABILITIES. ;:::5 10,016,939 SURPLUS. 3,875,673

GRAIN DEALERS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY

INDIANAPOLIS 7, INDIANA Western Dept, Omaha 2, Nebraska

GRAIN DEALERS MUTUAL

AGENCY INC. 1752 N. MERIDIAN: STREEY WABASH 2454

MONTHLY INTEREST REDUCING

. ple.” ; :

Elect Officers Today

<n Delegates to the 50th annual! convention of the Indiana Grain and Feed Dealers’ Association elect new officers today to close their two-day meeting. Ti ‘They were told yesterday by Allan B. Kline of Chicago, president of the American Farm Bureau, that America gives money and goods to other nations “as investments to make those nations stronger.” He said the reason should be emphasized as the “American way.” : . Gov, Schricker said the feed and grain industry now is a bil-lion-dollar business in Indiana and is “vital to feeding the peo-

IT'S. TIME TO DISPOSE

for them through a Times LOWCOST Classified ad. Dial PL aza

1 Neppt it

s ‘dustrial

connection.

WRITE E. N. TURNER

of |. un-needed belongings. - Get CASH |

$15-20.50; vealers moderately active, strong: bulk good and choice, $34-37; few high choice afid prime, $37.50-38; utility and commercial, $25-34; bulls steady: utility and commercial, $23.50-28; best heavy eligible slightly higher. Bheep 700; slaughter classes dull, weak;

good and choice native and western wooled lambs largely $28-29.50; ized utility and good $25-27; cull and utility

312-20: sult to choice slaughter ewes quotaYoung man—mechanically inclined. Headquarters IndianapoIts. Territory Kentucky and Indiana. Must be acquainted inand mill supply and] wholesale hardware trade. Sal-ary-expenses. Application must be complete, including past five year ¢mployment record. Don't apply unless you are seeking permanent

~ I317EAST 211 STREET CLEVELAND 23, OHIO

wenn

Association.

price because of a decline in sales. |

For FAST...CLEAN...DEPENDABLE J SEWER SERVICE CALL YOUR §

| AT LOW COST

, ; ~

SEWER SERVICE C0.

A NATIONAL AVAILABLE

Home

Loans

00

HI. 8988

ROTO-ROOTER |.

-®. No Service Fee ® No Commission

SERVICE

LOCALLY 150 £. MARKEY §t,

LY

FLETCHER AVENUE SAVING & LOAN ASS'N

oo

"Phone Mr. Reed At

PHONE MA. 3411