Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1952 — Page 13
‘my:
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barrier” suit, sent field and wind dampness, igh marks. It nt foam plasa loose cotton.
hobnail effect n, creating an nan can jump out, shake out 3 and be warm olonged wear188? ° flannel shirt able for wear=« The material instead of 10, ssary in cold ent nylon. ab uniform i= ent wool. The nylon mixture ye now is 16 says this fure the wool con-
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IVERSARY
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| TUESDAY, JAN. 20,1952
| Detroit War
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SU THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
THE CANADIAN BUCK is out of bed, and pounding
its chest.
Its buying legs are strong. It's out-running the Amer- ©
ican dollar.
Last :summer I traded a $20 bill for $21 Canadian, fastest money I ever made. But no more. Now I would have to givé them £20.02 for $20 Canadian, which isn't the way I like to trade. n ” = ’ THE CANADIANS got scared. They were afraid their dollars all would run over to play in the deep clover of Uncle Sam's backyard. So they put on controls. Americans could shoot their bankrolls in .Canada, on the spin-spots of Montreal. But if the Canadians started blowing their dough south
of the border, they got in hot water, * So n 2
THEN CANADA got wise. The dominion decided its buck was pretty good, after all. So it dropped the controls, and entered it in.a free-for-all with American dollars. And what do you think? The King's lucre outran the American puck in ‘no time. And the Canadians who used to insist that we pay them in American dollars now say, “Nixie. Pay us in Canadian.” 8 ” ” YOU AND I have been wise to the wobbling worth of the Yankee buck for a long time. But in some way, by dog sled or carrier pigeon, the word leaked north. . <.If I had bought a sockful of Canadian dollars last summer I would have made better than per cent in six months. That 10 per cent a year. o n ” AND I HAVE a deep-down hunch some of the insiders who knew in advance, cleaned up fortunes. But you and-I, who keep running for the morning bus to get to work under the wire, weren't in on it. We never are.
TV Revolt
HERE IS A thoughtful woman, talking sense: She's got a case, She is Mrs. Margaret Romine, R. R. 1, Mooresville, Ind. She'd just come home from a meeting of her Home Economics Club. The club is interested in all phases of the home, mental moral and physical. And she said her club gave TV a good going over for its beer and wine ads. She said, “You see, mothers do no take their children to saloons,
5 's
. 80 naturally they resent saloons
being brought into the home. n n = “WE KNEW that drinking, robberies and murders being depicted are sure to start these youngsters on the wrong road. “It is not: surprising that we have problem children, the surprise is that we haven't more.” Those are strong words. And the press belonging to the people is the place to get them said. I think Mrs. Remine's point is that television images sink in and become a part of the personality of the viewer. She is thinking deeper than
‘most people. And she says a lot
of mothers won't buy television until they stop showing what fun it is to drink. I know WFBM recognizes this and tries to keep its “adult shows” on after the normal children's bedtime. But the big’live network shows have to be taken when they are available. . Nine p. m. in New York is 8:00 p. m. here. And an hour can make a big difference. -
Score Card
COMING. FROM A man, this surprised me. He was Gen. Lawrence H. Whiting, president of thé American Furniture Mart in Chicago. He keeps his thumbs on what yqu
furniture
Australia, Holand France.
erland, Sweden, land, Argentina That's the top ten. He rated them on the number of appliances, radio, TV, telephones and how much juice they used. - He said only a third of the nation now has television sets jumped frem 3.950.000 to 12,499,900 in 16 months. And 95.2 per cent of the homes have radio. u n »
AND THE refrigerator figures will amaze you. Electric refrigeration doubled (from 15.093,000
to 33,521,000) from 1940-50. Here's the big growth items. Radio and TV,went up about 500 per cent, appliance 350 per cent, china 200 per cent, floor coverings 150 per cent. And toys went up over 300 per cent.
Wheelchair Saga II
THIS TO the lady who wanted the wheelchair. It: costs $700, and she couldn’t find one anywhere to look at. And her husband wanted to be sure. For her, if it did all it was supposed, to, it opened up a whole new world. With its battery power she could go up and down curbs to the supermarket, and to see neighbors. u 2 o I WANTED to find someone who knew about the wheelchair, called the Auto-ette Cruise-about, made in California. «And Mrs. Fvoli Davis, bless her, phoned me from the Health and Welfare Council, to tell me her daughter, Marilyn Harold is secretary to the manufacturer. He is an invalid himself. His name is Everest N. Jennings of Hollywood, Calif. And to Mrs. Davis, my warm
|good wish for today. She wanted
to help someone she has never known. : How 1 wish there were more like that.
‘Awfully Thin’
NEW CAR MODELS are popping right and left. The hour of the big pull on purse and pride has arrived. And while there was rough go-
ing for dealers the last half of)
last year, the new models always have something no other cars ever had. That is almost irresistible allure. o 2 n AND DEALERS are getting their first look at their allotments. Some are sad. They see the cutbacks are more than talk: Without cars they can't do business. And the cost of doing business is mountain-high. So unless they can get something to sell and service, their profitbooks may get sick. One summed it up: “The new car schedules look awfully thin. And for May and June, our best months, it looks
tough.” * des
Burglars Hit Circle Shop
Police today were called to In; vestigate the theft of more than $2000 worth of merchandise and a heavy cash register containing $150 from a haberdashery on Monument Circle. Nat Smith, owner of the, store at the west intersection of Market St., said burglars pried open
Detr Output Sputtering Today ~Busiitess : Canada’s Buck ° _ Steps: Ahead
«By Harold Hartley.
but
n Crack Down ers On Sullivan
Washinaton Stalling Is Blamed
By CHARLES LUCEY Scripps-Howard Staff Writer DETROIT, Jan. 29—War production in this big, brash capital of mass production is sputtering §§ along on two cylinders. 8 An off-again-on-again, hemming’ - and - ‘hawing uncertainty about Washington war planning is set down by both top manage ment and top Jahor as a major cause,
- Hint Blasts - - Caused by Ak Short Circuit
MATTOON, 11 | An electrical short. circuit may {have produced the chain of exIplosions Sunday that -wrecked | [three buildings with a loss of |$500.000, authorities said today The blasts rocked the business district like a string of exploding artillery shells, injuring one man seriously. A drugstore, an 84-year-old hotel and a furni-
Nineteen . ture store were wrecked and sevmonth: . leral other buildings were dammonths after [OUCH OF RUGGED STYLING—In this new Ford V-8 truck. (55oq 8 . Korea the big % ' Tre Chief John Storm said town's factory p. ad N Ww the original explosion was tracel ¥ spires look down or S e to an underground tank = of
Hog Prices Dip; _ Cattle Strong
Barrows and gilts dropped 50-
butane gas in an alley behind the drugstore. He said the tank may have been leaking, but what touched ‘®ff the gas was un-
on scarcely more than a trickle of munitions, A year
1952 Truck Is Unveiled
ago
men $ i : , y 1-here said 75 cents from yesterday's aver- KROwn. Wait tili we get . i x : : i < i sent a sheet of tooled up — then Ford - unveiled its 1952 trucks ages in trading at the Indianap- The explosion sen 8 Mr. Lucey vou'll see war today, designed to fill 97 per olis Stockyards today. Choice 170- flame across the alley to the y ] see 235 pound hogs brought $18.25- Central ‘Illinois Public Service
cent of all hauling needs. L. D. Crusoe, vice president 18.75. and general manager of the Ford $19.25.
goods pouring. out.
c reached Co. building, knocking out There's been progress, to be
electrical transformer.
A an
few weights
caused,
oh but you hear the same pjyision, said the new trucks will Sows were uneven and around A short circuit was phrases today. be shown to the. public Friday. 50 cents lower than yesterday. which may have touched off The - shifting, guns-and-butter, A new “Courier” series offers Vealers and slaughter calves three more rapid-fire blasts—one
half peace-half war attitude has five powerful engines, including were strong to 50 cents or more behind the furniture store and
been hard for Detroit to take. It three wholly new high-compres- higher than yesterday. Bulls and two behind . the hotel — Chief is especially bitter now because sion, low-friction overhead valve sheep were .generally steady. Storm said. there are some 100,000 unem- types. Hogs 8300: only moderately ctive: bar- . No natural gas leaks were ploved here. Civilian production Ford points to its range, from re TH FI any ant $1825. 18 5 found in the two-block area of has been cut back. but war orders the 114-inch wheel base and 4700- few hundred Nos 1 and 2 81% agots 0 the blasts. Some officials haven't come along fast rnough pound gross vehicle weight to heavier weights Unsold. 120-185 wounds therorized that the butane tank to take up the slack. heavy duty 195-inch wheelbase 30> lor (over chowe ‘300.435 "pounds May have been leaking for some In early World War IT when weight ratings of 41,000 pounds. Be Toe ne imter classes time, sending explosive gas
volved generaily. Detroit iz baffled at a lack of urgency which seems so often to govern Washington’s approach to arms production now,
Bnd sound proofing. Cites Nine Newsmen
Backing Taft Bid
Probe Fatal
i t Stabb n a At least nine leading Indiana One top ue industry man says I 4 |newspapermen are in Sen. the goal apparently is to “buy Robert A. Taft's presidential bid,
small production and big insurance.” Lot of Waste Motion |
Production-s mart Detroiters! say there's no such thing as smail| mass production—yet there's heen! a lot of waste motion trying wo ? achieve just that.
The greatest single block to war output has been the handling
State Prison
United Press
Willis of Angola said today.
Br Mr. Willis, an honorary mem
An investigation was under way Editorial today in the fatal stabbing of in-/chairman of the Indiana Taft
death by another prisoner, Ralph supporters:
—often the bungling—of the ma-| Corbin, 25, at Indiana State chine tool situation. War goods Pri (Wayne News-Sentinel, Max Fowl makers everywhere are in a| jrrison, er’ of the Frankfort
lather trying to get the presses, grinders, lathes, milling and punching machines and other tools to process steel and alumi-! num into weapons. Yet only in recent weeks, say industry men, has Washington put into effect a priority system that really is effective. A second check on production has been the slowness, sometimes inevitable, in getting design and engineering translated into blueprints needed before a §pb can
|witnessed the fight yesterday, Herald-Argus, Rudolph G. Leed
las a clerk and asked about a purg
a [to look” at a work list, Corbin pyrg Daily News, Wilbur GEORGE SS.
N : : H Bjorass’ ew vice president with Lahr | and Haro]
woe | Lt. Krumm disarmed Corbin, renceburg Press, Advertising. land ‘Bjorass ran to the hospital. [Cross, editorial” writer ® He was not believed seriously Hammond Times. Madden Joins mire + ars but physicians said he was in “extreme shock” 11 L h and died several hours later, Huge Pecan Supply roll. A y VU. : a r gency Once Ruled Insane Purchased by VJ, S; A major slow-up has been the | : : : military policy of ordering thou-| The resignation of George 8. Corbin was adjudged criminally; 7h Agriculture sands of changes in war weapon Madden as publicity director for insane and confined to the prison, announced vesterday designs and specifications to get the Wm. H. Block Co., effective hospital in April, 1948, but re- chased an additionfl the latest and best instrument of Thursday, was announced today. d to work as “cured” in ounds of shelled pécans war that can be made. In one Mr. Madden, &fter a month's arne 2 : : P 1. tank, made up of 12,000 parts, vacation, will join the Lahr Ad- June, 1951. He was plated in 14,000 changes were ordered. | vertising Agency, Inc., 915 N. Me- solitary confinement {immediately 04 ridian, as vice president on Mar. 1. after the slaying. rices on Lhe big 1951 pecan cro He had been with Block's since] (groner R. L. Beck was called p ace Pp P April, 1932, and became advertis- ;, investigate, but did not file ing manager of the Higbee Co, 4 report immediately.
HOUSE
Slow in Spending
Detroit voices amazement at
’ INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING Washington's slowness in: shovel- a
Clearings . es
On Two Cylin:
Jan. 29 (UP)-—,fare?"
former U. 8. Sen. Raymond E.|
MICHIGAN CITY, Jan. 29— ber of the Indiana Republicani,.p plus $35 for board an Association and vice...
{for-President Committee, said he mate Charles Bjorass, 34, whom, 4..ted a poll personally. He] } authorities said was knifed to listed these editors as Sen. Taft's Engineers, Ltd. one of the cost-|
Clifford 8. Ward of the Ft. site,
Times, paid work: Guard Lt. Arthur Krumm, who Charles A. Beal of the LaPorte,
said Corbin entered the prison of the Richmond Palladium-Jtem, double yard office where Bjorass worked pon Montgomery of the Peters- hours Tuesday; 18 hours Wednes-/of a rifle. He received no treatand Attica newspapers, day; |work detail. When Bjorass turned wajter B. Lowe of. the Greens-| hours L. Keéhn- day and MADDEN— plunged a prison tableknife into|gqan of the Martinsville Reporter, back, Lt. Krumm said. william D. Murray of the I.aw-|
WASHINGTON, Jan. 29 (UP) because his $617,000 contract tol ¢rom w epartment | build a reinforced concrete build-| orld War IL has pur- ing for use as a control head1,590,000 quarters was a
This brings to $2,370,000 the variety. total amount spent by the govsupporting growers
s13.145.000 in the allotted 125 days, the gov-| $44,369,000 ernment canceled the contract. |
: ° . ; 0 ck-Thinking Del Quick-Thinking ~~ Delinquency ho By. United Press Counter Man : SULLIVAN, Jan . 29—S8ullivan ; County parents were under an’ in« Thwaris Holdup [5ins pests vers under amis “HAVE YOU into Juvenile delinquency or see their ¢ en 4%« ho =children sent ito reform schools Ihe end of one ol these 158, be and themselves to jail. Circuit Judge Norval K. Harris
ever, looked
Edward Martin, 28, working be-/iccia4 a warning yesterday when hind the counter at the Toddle po gantenced Hughie Ridge. 22 House, 907° N. Pennsylvania. 4 nis cousin. Donald Ridge. 20. hadn't. But he was looking at to trie Inalarns State Fark Th ' one early today. in the hand of... were accused of contributinz one of, two middle-aged coffee 4,0 delinquency of minor girls drinkers, They were sentenced to six “Get .the . maney.,” the bandit maonths- but, with five months
urged Mr. Martin scooped all the suspended. bills from the cash register. “If parents must be sent to jail Then he took .another look at and boys and girls to reform that. big automatic. It didn’t'school to clean up ‘this sodden scare him too much. He ran out mess which exists in this county, the rear door—with the money. we are going to do just that’ The bandits ran out the front Judge Harris said. —without loot. ; In the future, he warned, statuThey, didn't even pick up the tory rape charges would be change from the 30c they paid pressed against young men wan for their coffee. “have sexual relations with girls - sunder the age of consent.”
violations. of the juvenile delin{quency statutes, but declined to be Nets Big Pay rants and a bus station where juBy United Press iveniles loiter and which serve “as Nevada atomic test site WEr'€ nile delinquency such as the Indipaid up to $756 a week by anapolis sex parties have the peo-
¥ ° ’ Four minor girls and their par. Golden Time ents are scheduled to appear bee |fore Judge Harris Saturday. The more specific. City police planned to keep LOS ANGELES, Jan. 29— a meeting place for youngsters on Construction workers at a the loose.” cost-plus contractors, a rival con- Ple stirred up and they wa 2 struction firm charged today. |stop it before it gets out of hand,
judge said the hearing involved On AEC Job close watch on several restan“Recent ouicroppings of juve= Jesse
the order was to clear decks and “The 145 V-8 achieved the active Jeers steady to 50 cents higher: through a condujt that runs un- Isaid County Prosecutor get vast output fast. Detroit was Sreatest economy and smooth- Regnfe heifers firm. load high choice der the alley to the sites of the The fabulous wage went to a Bedwell. in its element. It did its war job Ness With the - highest horse. fod prime ALO BONN ik 3364 234 other explosions. ; eplumber for 206 paid hours of He referred to sex-and-liquor magnificently. power per cubic-inch displace- choice light and medium weights $32- Police, firemen and a detail of work in one week, plus subsist- parties arranged by an Indiananis in differ ment of any of the 10 leading J. 0;,rommircial and, 6pot }i" 3.0750; National Guardsmen patrolled : ‘ois woman for her 16-year-old But this is different. There are : : ercial h ; i ence. Carpenters earned up to rifle . : ‘ models in the industry.” Mr, cows fully steady; utility and commercial the wrecked business establish- ‘ I § son and his friends which authors terrific problems in traveling : £21.24. vealers and slaughter calves ac- $325 a week and laborers up to down two tracks: one defense and Crusoe said. tive, ‘strong to 50’ cents or more’ higher ‘ments during the night to pre- Ra ities uncovered recently. o Si fe Much has been done for the %00d and choice 336-38. mostly 231 Ub: iyent looting, but withdrew yes- <i Br one 2 = JL few low prime $3850. odd prime individ- . y . The Senn, Joh ha ftortie, comfort of the truck driver. uals 340. utility and Sompercial vealers terday as merchants boarded up| Bruce W. McNeil, president of > . 'S Ives $27-: i j ; . is Theaim Solio: he na tional Cabs have foam rubber seat ang Slaughter Cal lity? and commercislltheir shattered windows. the McNeil Contracting “Ch ley Dies arms but on plant Pim Phi padding, insulated headlining, $5.28.50, wood $3138. v steady:| Fifty persons were routed from charged before two special ap in Really big vol J capac Y- key locks on hoth doors, cigar good and choice native wooied lambs the hotel, whose ancient mason-| Atomic Energy hearing officers] World ih n ame orders. in jiohter, dome light with auto- $2830 Cull And ut A ed 104. | ry walls.were badly cracked. |yesterday that his workers were Of Effects of ) erms, aren't in- matic door switches, arm rests eee r—————————— ae Ee | pirated” away by his cost-plus- '
| fee competitors. | He.said he failed to complete a |contract at the AEC's A-weapons test site near Las Vegas, Nev. be-| cause the Las Vegas labor market was disrupted by the huge wages paid by other firms. His attorneys cited the case of
Brutality -
\ s Col. Alfred C. Oliver Jr. fore mer Ft. Harrison chaplain who was chief of chaplains at Gen, {Pershing’'s headquarters: in la plumber, M, H. Stewart, who [World Yar 1, ded Yesterday in [received $721 for one week tir Japanese prison-camp brutality {in World War II. He was. the father of two {Indianapolis men, David R. and Pay records of the Haddock | Alfred C. Oliver IIL Mr. and Mrs. David Oliver left ‘plus contractors working at the today for Washington. where showed Mr. Stewart drew the services for the 67-year-old chap.|week’s salary for 208 hours of lain will be held tomorrow in the i {chapel of Walter Reed Army He worked 40 hours on Mon-| Hospital, Washington, D. C. figured on the basis of (Col. Oliver's neck was broken time for overtime; 12 when ‘Japs hit him with the butt
| 206 Paid Hours
gs day,
24 hours Thursday; 32 ment until his return to the Friday; 48 hours Satur-igtates and had to wear a brace 32 hours Sunday. {till the day of his death. | . When he worked the 48 hours| Captured on Corregidor, the on Saturday, the records showed, courageous chaplain also was d/Mr. Stewart worked around the heaten by the enemy for smug-
of the clock for which he was pald gling medicine to our prisoners.
|/ Bolden time,” or double-double; 5 nq for smuggling notes out of { time. ithe camp he was thrown into Golden time” is paid for over- gqjjtary confinement for a month,
time on week-ends. | Col. Oliver had served at Ft, | Mr. McNeil said it was Impos- garrison from 1932 to 1937.
sible for him to pay such wages, pa retired after his return
| His survivors, besides the two {sons here, are his wife, Della, another son, John in Washington, D. C., and his daughter, Mrs, Jean Baxter, Ft. Bliss, Tex. :
Storm Rips Capital Of Fiji Islands
WELLINGTON, New Zealand,
“regular” contract as opposed to the cost-plus|
‘Men Pirated’
| Mr. McNeil’s contract was ‘'awarded last May 22: When he |failed to complete the building
ing out the arms billions voted Cleveland, in 1946. He returned to, gi Debits : . He tenced by Congress. It cites recent fig-| Block's as publicity head in 1947. i oNgmaly mg ures that in 18 months the De-| Tom Sl. Josep od *- Produce
His background includes expe- ined to the, prison in 1949 for
He charged that it was impos- Jan. 29° (UP)—S8uva, capital of sible for him to keep enough the Fiji Islands, was a scene of workers on the job to get the devastation today in the wake of
fense Department spent less than!
rience with H. P. Wasson & Co., i - [$15 billion and had four times as Goldstein Brothers, FEI os parole violation. Colin was ie | Eggs—FOB Cincinnati. cases included Work done. one of the worst hurricanes ever ‘much unspent. and W. H. R ! |turned for parole violation to fin-|on sraded eggs consumer grade U 8 Al In one three-month period, he to hit the islands. One death was - H. Roland, Eleouybgten, ish a 10-year auto banditry term : General Motors, even though IIL x ‘ rom Yiareat County U8 ihm Wholesale. trade brown|said, he had to hire 119 carpen- reported. ; / Sed coc) RLY. |graded “40 per cent, ext white; ters to maintain a working crew| No detailed r : ‘holding major war contracts) Active in_the Ad Club, he was, Tne knife, filed razor sharp and |39.40c. Current receipts. cases’ exchanged of 2¢/ men on his job. 2 'received RR Seen
which antedated Korea, turned]
only about 10 per cent of its Ad Clulys course at Butler Uni-tyrned over to Warden Alfred F.
for twolyears moderator of the with a friction-tape handle, was ory’ 8 A arsstd at prices lc lowar Chickens—Commercially grown fryers,
e said carpenters and laborers liminary reports said the roofs of
i 51. | [32c, hens heavy, 27-28c, light, 19-20c; old | deserted his job to go over to the t ? — might to munitions in 1951 versity, and has been publicity Dowd, who ordered a complete roosters,’ 17-1oc. Heavy type hens firm Haddock 2 —~ 5 they -heard Dr geet Bolelems
| Ford, employing 77,000 men in chairman of the Merchants Asso-!| this area, has only 2500 on war| ciation. jInvestiSation: work. $e
Butter—Creamery, 90c, score, 86c, Mr, Dowd said the killing might lum butterfat, 73c, regular, 68c.
med-
‘heavy for one man to handle, and Washington cannot’ escape blame
'his shop's front door between 8:30! Production on the big contracts|ing civic drives. He is a member |Bjorass worked ig the prison hos-
p. m. yesterday and £40 a. m. is six to 12 months or more away. of the Scottish Rite, the Murat pital at. the time - A today. * |. Walter Reuther, United Auto Shrine and the Press Club. I aT, Corbin. was
He said the cash register, too Workers’ president, says that as ,
Building Trade Slack
the clothing, including 38 pairs of for some bad direction of defense slacks, 40 jackets and 35 shirts, planning, neither can Detroit] must have been carried out the management . escape blame for
He has been active in publiciz- have resulted from a feud since Local Stocks and Bonds
they could earn up to $325 and been blown off. $219 a week for their classifi-
cations. x i Son? a : When he appealed to a Las Voice to Get Most
Jan, 20 STOCKS | American Loan 8%... | American States ‘s | Americon States pfd . Ayrshire Collieries com Ayres 4'2% pid ... Stk Yds com Beit RR & Stk Yds ofd
18
[least $300 a week.”
tA < i SR 4 : Ve Si al rns na
~ iy .
sig
Vegas union hall for carpenters, Powerful Signal Known
Mr. McNeil said, he was told he| ‘ would have to pay carpenters “at! WASHINGTON, Jan. 28 (UP) | —Construction will begin soon on {a powerful new transmitter which will give the Voice of America “the most powerful radio signal
U. S. Offers to Share
| i y obbs-Merrill com _. 3 "ies put into your home. front door and carted away from not seeking war contracts more obbs-Merrill pid 4% ......s. 2 : ” He unloaded a truth. He said the well-lighted Circle. vigorously attr Korea. . I / M B Coniral Born, vcs som Joie ivy Arms Costs With Japs fing od thuay. t said th the living standards are not nec-| ‘Mr. Smith valued the new reg- ere ay e ro £ SPA ter Lie an ....| TOKYO,~ Jan. 29 (UP)—The e partment sa e . i Big Items Are Problems ; : transmitter, which will be located essarily synonymous with grac- ister at $633.15. He said he had| Ak a bld.. 8 ;-|United States offered today to E TA di N.C y ious living. He'd been to Europe. $500 insurance for “burglary and, Today, Mr. Reuther and auto Times Washington ‘Bureau junemplovment. problem’ fa th Condolidated Fin 8 pfd ....... 1 Thre with Japan the costs of heat ag yg a H will * = =a theft™to cover his stock of nearly Management are agreed you can-| WASHINGTON, Jan. 20—Con- p nthe immins Eng com III 3 * maintaining American - manned 0 hed i on ang should pe HE LISTED France and Switz- $35,000 vajue. He succeeded a Not solve Detroit's unemployment gressional hearings on the grow- BHAINg trades there, he sad. |Liimiyd Eve od .... goj[SCTelites in Japan aster the oc. will b ont. erland as places where people previous tlothing venture in the by throwing a bale of new: de- ing unemployment in Indianapol's D . of Je Eastern ing Tels 8 pid . ....|cupation ends. i rn Srograms to Europe enjoy themselves, even without location several months ago. (fense orders into the area. 8o- building trades may result from enies Building Equitable Securities fd iii] An American mission headed anc al Hn America. eeem—— motor cars, TV sets, appliances, eee ee lcalled “rabbit” stuff can be pro- a conference being held here to-¢ ’ Family Jinance com id ....|by Special Ambassador Dean| de- duced fast—a simple item like day. te : Slum Here Hays Corp pfd WW . ........ :.:|Rusk opened negotiations with modern plumbing and heating de Crash Near K tl d =i . : | Pp Hamilton Mfg Co com = the J : { vices, as the Americans knows r Kentian (helmets, for example — but the, W. 0. Beard, decretary-treasur- Herfl-Jones Class A pid ; 91, | the Japanese goverhment on the them. * "Kills Indianapolis Man |/lad” time required for design er of the Marion County Building| An oficial of the Indiana Em- 530s pp £, Von? - aatalled « aquninisitative -agress But Americans did spend p 'and tooling on the really big ord- Trades Council, laid the problem Ployment Security Division re- (ng Asso Tei? pfd .......... 3 B, | Dent 10 Scvetn the styuening of $15.15 billion for furniture in James F. Armstrong, 21, of nance items is so great that jobs before Rep. Charles B. Brownson, ported the traffic of construction 129 Gas & Water com 1" 28 5: S. lang, sea and air forces 1051, 4 drop from $15.9 the year 2529 Columbia Ave., died in St. in volume often are a year or Indianapolis Republican. workers through his office here nd Teicphone § £. “ol: 38 jisse une] Japan can guarantees before. The slip came from Elizabeth's Hospital, Lafayette, more in coming. | He asked immediate assistance was only normal for this period | he ” Afn Chup Reaity ol. 38% 38 | i Tg seeunty. : “porrowed” buying, people who late yesterday, several hours after Mr. Reuther long has urged to try and get 150 tons of rein-| Marshall Abrams, managing 14pis Pow & Li of wr? Bima t Bement » required by rushed out to buy in 1950 what a truck-car crash near Kentland. S0me auto industry facilities fo forcing steel released to complete director of the Indiana Buildin Mdianabolls Water com... 11 1810 Yost Re d1 ran ig “they would have bought in 1951. Mr. Armstrong was a passenger get machine tools built. Generali construction of the United Chari-| Congress, an affiliation of 23 con-| ndianapolis Water se t 39, 1 s Ye gned last September in ns . in a car driven by Donald Horn, Motors took the lead in this by|ties building being built by the struction groups inthe state, said Jefterson National Life com. 19% $4w San Francisco. gb THE GENERAL had a score 19, of 81415 W. 12th St. It stalled Setting a contract to build Bullard/Willlam English Foundation at the primary concern was over a *Kifgan & Co pfd [1:lilll! Sl 11 card, on living standards. And on U. 8. 41 and was struck in the all-purpose lathes in one of its|600 N. Alabama St., Indianapolis. federal agency announcement last [ren® coraoration +. iii ive 18 you, of course, were at the top. rear by the truck, driven by Fisher body plants. It had gone Approved Last April | week. EC it ron Om ae 8 N 1] M 3 |] | 8 ul G Next came Canada, then New William D. Powers, 49, Crawfords- 1¢/ Washington early in, 1951 to| The $1.2 million charities build-| The National Production Auth-|Nst “frome tom ta Zealand, Great Britain, Switz-iville, |offer its facilities. It took months|ing plan was approved by the or said there would be no new No Homes pfd. ) - for Washington just to clear the|tional Production, Authority in|starts in construction of indus- N Ind Pub Serv 4% pid 25 . + -|paper work—a point on which Mr.|April 1951. It was allocated 250 trial or commercial buildings dur-|N 1nd Purser san ota... 341s 285% Reuther is highly critical. Buttons of steel, but was cut-off by|ing the second ans Mr. |B; B. Mallory era sat 0% in September came the contract./the controlled materials planners| Abrams reported ’ De hy Touadry oe 0 30% For months, GM has tried to|after-only.100 tons had been de-| “This hits the construction Rass Geac: a ored tom 10: Bh get ie project Fling The goal/livered, Mr. Beard explained. The worker hard ™t a time when he Fy ofd RT . was a 50-a-month production by|green ‘light for the remainder] : 0 Ing G&E com oes 2 A Coving, 955. Pen, tn ouner da ould Eve 15. 10200 malig ror epiesonid, Be returning tof 11 008 418, we, ob Hh) MASEL II] A lovely basket of gifts awaits ‘Washington decided the urgency|tradesmen immediate employ- said. anner & cod % Tia. 08 nS Jou m on expresses of goodwill ‘wasn't so great, after all. The ment he said. | “I don’t feel that unemploy- U-8. Machine Co rrr. i 20 16:3 1952 Dat Jubii Weed local awit | order hasn't been cancelled but it| Of the 9575 American Federa- ment has been serious enough to| Unie Title one 8% ofd ..... 41 iy 43 ghants if you have just moved te may be, ; . "|tion of Labor union men repre-|draw a congressional study.” com. on Tend sense 0 oe the city, are a new Mother or have It's the off again-on again busi-| sented by the 19 unions making mented C. W. H. Schrader. presi-| allen a Steer ns moved within he Ey. They ness that keeps this city off|up the council in Marion County, gent of the Building Contractors American Foun aa as nd nv » Pothing to buy. No cost or oblibalance. 7 3500 now are unemployed Mr. of Indianapoiis | American Qecurity 5s 6 8... Yition: Armage do civ | L S \ 5 . 8 “ees AT our elcome on a z Full basketball coverage is a rip: Uu.s in & oy La Hostess vhore phone is listed bi AR | Included in the Home Edition of |lem presented here by the UAB- ~* <° Statement {Eh of Com Bide 412s 1. al below. - 7 . A Ro ] 5 i | imbia Club 2-58 62 s 9 FT / your Sunday Times. CIO from his district recently, wasHINGTON, Jan. 20 (UP)—Govern- HoliabfSecurities 59.60 ... 38 «oo. : fo. all : me iy? - ——|Mr. Brownson said that he ment expenses ind receipts for the cur: Tis. Pant Color. 58. 84, 188 bl YOU ‘MA i: Wel n w Local Truck Grain Prices thought the problem of relaxing hues "ith a shar aou® Jan 20 come [ndols Public Loan se 64 i000 08 0 | "WINE Welcome Wagon wo. nmr a a tor materials in the case of the char-pypenes an 121938. 310538 nd Asso Tel 38 75 4 NAME DEE RE fa Na Warsi i Chan 2 New No. 2 white corn, $191 jes buLlaing of sumeient interest geipts’ 5 as ona 30 21704 430.204 Kuhner Packing 44 es ONE FREE!! : [New York. @ Memphis @ Los Angeles {0 ve nv od . 2 Yellow cara. te mh g in Indianapolis. Cash balance. -1.831.030013 3.931 Teese. nes By " - mimes | Toronto 2 : — 2 gras Sy : 5 “ab ES . a, is po a a : - x = La Sa Jean oe mith
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