Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 31 January 1952 — Page 23

public the ’r sources, urged that ome others ward from

on explana--

ld the Civil an amendlaw so per= 1 not necesonsored by 1g. 25, 1950. se penalties

ess than 90 or. to that,

owever, did ission from ses in 1948;

the Boston on to sponpointed out 1s approval the Senate

ent actually the case is , who point

k?

) with 105 nine planes

-third divi1d one wing

on Russia's of intelli act nations, Rome two oviet Union | .men, or85 are arsaid Russia

. She has,

Ss many in

ever, claims in 215 divit the West,

ie Russians under conwhen she Brassey's publication, nes in the the Black

go she. was

is in operA second

11 in stocksi

ivisions, inwithin two * could exe

division of firing line. 18,800 men t, thé year n 5000 Ruse 1 that from

lews

2 \ber. is one he Voice of roadcast to ocracies.”

ggest short*h Imperial nga Din.

est govern= -ordinator.” 0 is hide in AWer,

'NON Deme a “political addicted to

5 delegates rave.” But ling whose

°

ring

. “I speak is subject.” r. ‘Norman the pinklent pastor Collegiate

rk. He told annah, Ga.,

'd to throw. 2- the TV

rand didn’t artoons. ' t on to say rietor of a of a nine-

1amed Elize :

y was have ay (Elizaon account 1d) and the to the doce re the Senped up and y this tele-:

3

>

«

-

THURSDAY, JAN. 31, 1952 .

‘House OK’s Truman Today «Business

gE ’ “a hd Sd Yo U Wa nt |e House yesterday approved a . President Truman’s plan to overLz A TV % ‘Ti n Fa r {haul the Internal Revenue Bureau) ’ @ lbut Republicans warned other

| measures will-- be required to

§ } A By Harold Hartley ‘houseclean” the scandal-shaken!

Pe

agency, | DOES YOUR HOUSE have a “fin ear’? The ‘House action in rejecting a ; Et. Youll be wanti y GOP resolution to. veto the reDon’t laug ‘ ou € wanting one. organization—was-a foregone con-

Next Sunday at 11:15 a. m., for the first time, this|clusion. Even when criticizing the| s

: o. TV or 3. have|Pian. most Republicans said they town will be able to get two TV programs. But you would Vote for it 4% he “Sr

to have the “tin ear,” up on the {step” toward a tax cleanup. roof. |wages per hour go down in the Norman Cissna, who runs the hosiery mills, will the workers] Bloomington station, told me it/drift off to other .higher-paying| will be as strong as WFBM-TV, industries? I think so. { ind will have a tower 300 feet

or : {The nylon al Ss ame. It SO THAT ought to flow in here| a B11 Xo ip ai] oles vote. like cream. And it also will col-| ipa wages differ Stast. of. Drive Stilled lect some of the cream from the . Indianapolis TV time market. He said his phone had been ringing steadily for two days. He said people wanted to buy time|

at one-third the Channel 6 rate. | 2 2 » {ruption program.

s n » | : ! ; | y ves a| I HAVE a suspicion that we, The rest of the cleanup cam-| ) | iki Sie ME com-|are over-produced in more lines paign has stalled for lack of| car-stealing spree ‘after a 90.mile-an-hour police chase for 16 miles during which several shots were [combat team in the defense of Academy, died at the U. 8. Army petition. It has such a strong|than hosiery. Business has’ been | someone to direct it. Atty. Gen. J.| fire following that nothing can dent expanding much faster than abil-| Howard McGrath has been un- — its earning power, which has been|ity to buy. lable to find a prominent lawyer

whispered at about $1 million last| - That means surpluses on the Viling te undertake the. job.

year, |factory level. And surpluses mean

now can have it. . That is more than a shot in the Channel 10 will duplicate onlyiqark from the curbstone: econo-! four programs now on WEBM.imist pve heen watching them Milton Berle; “This Is Show Busl-ipujiq Hew and bigger factories for| ness,” “Man Against Crime.” andijg years. ? |

xing. - i International Box g | eg’ = McGrath's administration.

IN ADDITION Channel 10: will AND INGENIUS machinery is

night, the Comedy Hour (direct) decent living is. federal taxes. [thinking that corruption would Sunday at 7, the Goodyear and] And the politicians are still|be eliminated. Philco shows, and Red Skelton, yelling for more. | How Plan Works _ live. rH ! 4 About 1000 Channel 10 aerials Big Bank League | The plan would abolish the na-|

week. And there’ll be more. The| standing St Iroians banks ini Bloomington ‘station will be di-ip "oo "Mlup to rect-line fed out of Cincinnati] ) i ork. with plenty of Retwor A res Ee othisesh thie! mou BUT I DOUBT if you will get America. But if you take it, give

it without a set-of ““tin ears’ Part of it to me. It's got $6,815,

RCA Service Co., one of the best|ahead of National City of New service outfits in town, and he|York, and nearly $1.7 billion stressed.

Bloomington would cost about New York. {(D. Ark.) was concerned because £32.50. | From there on the drop is home folks” might/not get the s.8 8 steep, but there still are about ‘2% Jobs in various hy BUT HE EXPECTS s0 many|five sitting around the $2. _| Revenue Commissioner John B.|€TS, carly that Foof-top crews WHI Dave pes. rong $25 Pl hunlap said the Civil Service grandmother, Mrs. Rosa Darko. to work all over the clock to 2 2 3 {Commission plans to hold ex-

catch up. IN INDIANA it is the Indiana|

i \ ive| fice. petition will cut into the captive| Next In Tine, the. u area of the o < / ’ umber two Indianapolis market. But how), McClellan Hits Hack much, I don’t know. {bank in the state is the Merchants

' miNational with $149,377,771 Clell iq tat v what I'll do. In| 71,771.) Mr. McClellan sa any state re Toons both. And|Third m line is the American/has men competent to serve the

i ,| National with $138,607.907, and taxpayers of that state.” He told ’ value of my] pay that'll double the va Yithe Fletcher Trust is fourth Mr. Dunlap he doesn’t like the ; + wv = with $131,055,887. . |idea that a Californian might be V :R THING I have no- 8 nu 3 sent to collect taxes in Arkansas. ao a 16-inch screen, SOMEONE SENT me the an-' But Secretary of Treasury John about a year and a half old. But) nual report of the Bank of Amer-|W. Snyder contended the author- ocemmeotzl most of the pictures are bigger ica, foundedsby A. P. Giannini|ity to shift personnel is “an im-|80Ve a {in 1904. He got his start by lend-| portant factor in the removal of} And I've been wondering if ing to little people when Cali- temptation ... if a man knows he| Subjects to. make me fornia was on the‘ bounce. is subject to being moved, he is

-trade in for a bigger screen, so. And I think the figures of the less likely to set up lines of opera-

than the screen. that isn't a way

I can see It all. |American Banker, official’ pubii-|tion-"

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES :

Plan To Overh

ih » 2 @

tein, PAGE 23

aul U.S. Tax Bureau ’

4

t 4 & &

GOP Leaders Warn Other Steps Needed

WASHINGTON, Jan. 31 (UP)

Much stronger opposition is expected In the Senate, where the Executive Expenditures Commit--|tee opened hearings on the plan | Keeping women’s legs Wwell-\yesterday. House action on the higher. {dressed is a hazardous business.| resolution came in the form of a

| One mill, the second largest in! Unless the Senate acts unfavor(Reading, Pa., quit. It turned out ably, the reorganization will be-| {900 workers and leased its four come. effective automatically at buildings to Western Electric, I midnight Mar. 14. It is the major am told, plan in Mr. Truman's anti-cor-|

BABY BANDITS ROUNDED UP—Six “bandits,” 7 to 14 years old, and their dog sleep off a

at

{ |

oe

[Seoul a’ year ago and his back Hospital at Fort Jay yesterday.

Local Deaths Plane Plant Workers Quit In Pay Row .

LONG BEACH, Cal, Jan. 31 ylpbadina. whom he met in Italy| rade.” |Gerdenich, 15, realtor's daughter sons, three grandchildren. Burial, (UP)—Production and mainten- during his first hitch after World] Gen. Wilder was retired from | ance workers at Douglas Aircraft War II, was going without allot-{the Army as a colonel in 1920, and their/In 1927 he was restored to his

Mr. McGrath’s problem is fur-|

But the people who have been|trouble, spelled u-n-e-m-p-l-o-y- ther complicated by the fact that

choice of programs m-e-n-t-, he will himself soon be under in-| demanding a ! vestigation by a congressional]

committee, The House Judiciary Committee has voted to hear com-| pilants that the Justice Depart-| ment has been lax in prosecuting! {certain tax fraud cases under Mr.

Services Set | Monday for Schoolgirl

LISLE) PRITCHARD, 64, of 628 N. Keystone Ave, Born in BloomMember of Altar Society at St. Philip Neri Church, where rites will be at 10 a. m. tomorrow. Requiem Mass for Janet K. Survived by two daughters, two

{who died. on a Pike Township Holy Cross Cemetery. fast out-running take-home pa | In the House debate yesterday, school bus, will be celebrated. at, nffer “The Show of Shows,” 8 s Y- | Republicans assailed the Revenue to 8:30 Saturday night, the Rob-| But don’t blame your boss. The Bureau shakeup as a “fraud” Heart of Mary Church. ert Montgomery Theater Monday |biggest fence between you and a which would fool the people into]

MRS. ADDIE HESSEL, 78, of . 45030 Central Ave. great-grand-| ¥ mother of six; widow of Isador,| it . . {real estate man; mother of Irvin home to write letters urging their well Funeral Home at 8:30 a. rh clothing merchant. Serv-| Congressmen to expedite their I got home” he said, “because now - before the she didn’t want to worry mie about di how she was getting along. It Douglas spokesmen said the!'was a good thing my folks took Veteran E itor 2500 idle employees made no de- her in. (LORA| mands on the company. The com- | 1015! pany’s industrial relations di-| life resident.| rector James L. Mayer said “he| Harry! couldn't understand the walkout | {as we have been making every | possible and reasonable effort to { resolve the labor disputes at the

DEMOS Z. ROBINSON, 64, of| “Ong Beach plant.” | moderately active 636 Pierson St. years. Services 11 a. m. Saturday, |

Jacobs Bros. West Side Chapel|.,_ oneratively i tine Burial, New Crown Cemetery. pe ar Ly neZolia

9 a. m. Monday in Immaculate|

Services will start at the Black-|

(Monday. Burial arrangements lhave not been completed. - Miss Gerdenich, son of Mr. and [tion’ i [Mrs. . ; s were sold in Indianapolis last 1'wavE BEEN looking at the on 0% POLICAIY anpoied taxi LL, Ro Grae” pupil, She | 25 district commissioners/talked and laughed with other under civil service. Only the|pupils yesterday afternoon as she That's a big league, runs into bureau chief would remain a presi-

ices 2 p. m. tomorrow, Wald Fu-|labor dispute neral Home. Burial, Washington| Wage Stabilization Board. Park Cemetery.

MRS. CHARLES FLORENCE) | Bellefontaine St., {Services 3 p. m., Saturday, |W. Moore Peace Chapel. {Crown Hill.

BLESS, 66,

left school and boarded the bus. Artificial respiration failed to Loss of patronage under such!revive her. Sheriff's deputies gave 1833,795 bucks (billions) th ge 3 peated 10 in Ye Seat en : id ; > aluminum, onjS2% ucks ons) in e' some opposition in the Senate lhe girl ha en: carrie aie re Laas o till, which a tax appointees. At|into the school. A priest came to I talked with J. C. Keyes of the| It's about a billion-and-a-half the opening. hearing, however, administer last rites. , criticism of other points was

lived here 535]

Born in this city, she had attended Tudor Hall before her parsaid the outside aerial to bring in|ahead of the Chase National of| Chairman John L. McClellan unis gg Ser present home, Besides her parents, Miss Gerdenich is survived by two brothJoseph and Maten Jr., and her]

ARTHUR BURROWS, 77, of

Scouting was one of her extra-

aminations® for the positions onjcurricular activities.

I actually think healthy cOm-= noi oy Bank with $368,691,425. a nationwide basis, not just in the

James E. ‘Burton Dies Here at 75

James Edgar Burton, 124 W. 14th St., 75-year-old public.-reta-tions man whose interest in politics was always keen, died here] » » ] { MRS. URBON E. (DOLLIE)| |WILSON, 65, 56th and Millers-| ville Rd., past matron of Millers-/ workers Union, CIO, local said $1_ lower, commercial grade $28-28.50 ville Eastern Star Lodge. 15 ices 3 p. m. Saturday, Flanner & walkout and did not have any- | thing to do with it.”

neral Home.

4 a =n MRS. LULU MAY EVANS, 50,

of 910 S. Kenwood Ave. Services tion Board. The WSB panel has 1 p. m. tomorrow. Craig Funeral not returned its official opinion Burial, New Crown.

He wrote on

Serv-| they

made an unsuc-

Rushville Man

T've had the urge, often, but|cation of the banking industry,

not the money. {were a little moldy. For the Bank Local Truck Grain Prices

Congress here in

Dies at Dinner

. . of America has, not $6.8 billion, The Shocking Stocking but $75 biltion. New No' 7 White com. £1.29

New No. 2 vellow corn, $1.75

I WANT TO TALK ahout the. Where Mr, Giannini got ahead oars. 9%c ctorkings you wear, was in the spread of banking. He | _Sovbeans. $285 This country can now produce pushed it along all lines. He sold P d ahout two pairs for every pair credit to consumers, financed) roduce

One of Rushville's last blackslumped dead during a

e of the found- . on 3e company dinner at the Claypool Japan's Police Reserve

ers of the Hoo- * |'sier Motor Club. Services will be at 2 p. m. Sat-

About. 70 persons at the Ster-|

sold. (homes, taught thrift to school

Egss—FOB Cincinnati; Consumer grade In simple words, that means We | children, went into estate man-|U. 8. 4p 8TE0 White,” 43-45%c; brown can make about twice as manyjagement, set up Christmas and T-41%4¢; brown mix, 38-41%c: “wholesale ear out. grade: (commercially graded 40 per cent) stockings as We can vea d. They vacation Savings Clubs. extra large white, 39-40c; current We can’t sell them abroad. a ® x =» ceipts cases exchanged, -33-35¢

make them cheaper with much Market quiet and weak; purchases li

9 t h d to 1 cent lower HE DIDN'T overlook the per- Shrrent receipts: movement to retailers

. y r own, lower wage So we buy on a but/{Sonal finance business, lent siow. and tupples scoumulated or else. ey are . a8 § {mone to salarie “hickens ally | they do what stockings are sup-| y ried people, and|3ac; hens.{ heavy, 28-20c; hens, pose to do. They cover legs. z 2 n

YESTERDAY the org

prices; ‘trading quiet.

anized:in, Tenplan checks which did

| buttertat, T5c; regular, 68c. away with checking account min-| :

urday in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary with burial in Crown

st Prominent Terre Haute Physician Dies

. Times State Service

TERRE HAUTE, Jan. 31 —

Commercially grown fryers,

Wyatt Funeral Home, will be held Saturday morning in Rushville. Requiem Mass will be celebrated in St. Mary's Catholic Church.

{wage earners with good jobs. rae hen ar nrices 1 cent He made commodity loans, put {higher balance steady at unchanged Qorvices were being arranged toButter—Creamery. 90 score, 85¢c; medium day for Dr. J. Rudolph Yung, |prominent physician and surgeon

hosiery workers of the country

hod to take a 25 per cent pay cut./imums, formed thrift clubs, and|local Stocks and Bonds

They had been making about | even assured the payment of a

B ‘will b Vi émeThere for 50 years. urial will be in.Calvary Ceme

He died while « Mr. Mullins retired from the]

$1.50 a hour and working only a loan by insuring the borrower's ~—Jan, 81

three-day week. | {American States cas The industry, 20 per cent or-| 8 = | Americen States pfd ... ee 34

= ganized, is both over-produced] THE LATE Mr. Giannini didn’t|Avishire Collferies com

and harassed by non-union mills|overlook anyone who could pos-|Beli RR & Stk Yds com .. . 33%

through the South, in Philadelphia sibly do business with his bank, | Beit RE & Str Yds fd 13% and through Pennsylvania. And he wound up where yowd Bobbs-Merrill pid 4% ......... Ts The non-union mills set the suspect, with most of the gold Chamber. of Commercesgom .. alte price of stockings. So the union in California, on deposit. (Gitlaens nd Tel £% oid : Ie S0” mills either meet the price or eA L i | onsmdates ih Loan 4% ptd.. 82 don’t sell. ir-Loom Cont Car-Na-Var .....00.0" aid ” ” ” . y or eae aL : G-E HAS A NEW portable Cummins Eng ofd .... ..100 : e in- A pita Elec com ...:... gt HERE IT is in figures. The Ino iio tan" 10'6 a windmill, and| Busters faa Tele § pid .:2x: 81

. > . ilion . dustry can produce 85 I will suck fhe air out of a room|EiiiEhls Secale: OF: 3

pairs of stockings a year. Amer, "00 "yl gues but it at the Family’ Finance com

can women buy less than 50 mil-| pe, 300 HAYS. Corp pid: wu’ 8 soe 32 lion, and they buy them at the| 1 weiohg only nine and a half|amiton Mfg Co com ....ce 30 non-union price. pounds. And it can “rev up” a|Home T & T 5% pfd .. 50 The three plants in Indianap-|sjpstream like an airplane, if you! lag Asso Tei 2 oid '.: : 38 olis, Real Silk, National Hosiery want that much. ind Asso & ar . 1 and Fulton Hosiery, as well as YT x» . {nd Mich EI 4% i AY 9 the Wayne Knitting up in Ft! y gxnow about these ventilat- | indpls” Ath “Cup Realty {ON Wayne, will get the pay cut, buting fans, I bought one a few indpls Pow de Lt of . i 83" the mills will make a grab 4#0riyears ago. It was made by [idlanabolis Railways com ... 4

the market with higher produc-/Schwitzer-Cummins. I put it in|indianapolis Water i pt 88 tion (from three to a five-day|front' of a window, and tie the|sjemerson National Lite com. 10%, week) to keep take-home pay up|curtains back. Kingan & Co com 3% to a level where workers can get] Then I get back, too, before it|/Lincoln Nationa!

by. takes me right through the win- furmon-Herringion ea dow, and onto my neighbor's Nat go a BACK OF this lies the sinister{lawn, all mussed up, and in|Nat Jigutes pid...

‘shadow of something else. If|shredded pajamas. N Tha Pur Serv pid vee

N Ind Pub Serv 4.56 P. R. Mallory ............. Progress Laundry com .. Pub Serv of Ind com ..... Pub Serv of Ind 3; pf ., Ross Gear & Tool com *Switzer-Cummings pfd 80 Ind G&E com cen So Ind Q&E 48% pid ..

Stokely-Van Camp pid .. 14 Ratu ele "| Terre Haute aflcable : it)

8. Machine Co ........ 2% njted !

Bastian 58 Batesvillg Tele Co 4 Ry reilizer 5s § Ch of Com B 128

Phoenix, Ariz., with his wife. An llife to cover it. | STOCKS Bia Asked authority on thyroid and goiter | | American Loan 8% “...|surgery, he wrote many medical 181, | articles. He had served as police ./surgecn and health board presi:1:|dent here.

blacksmith trade five years ago after being a familiar figure to Rush County farmers for half a century. He was born on a farm in that county. He is survived by his wife, Nell, {four sisters in Rushville and seven

«: Missing Coed Found,

Blames Storm for Plight

y% WELLESLEY, Mass, Jan. 31 { (UP)—Nancy Strout, 2016% Wellesley College junior +++: |been reported missing from the -|8chool since Monday night, was found by police last night in a «+++| Boston rooming house. She said she had missed her ".|train on a trip to New Haven, & {Conn., Monday because of a snow 25% | storm and had spent most of the {time since seeing movies, police . reported. She is the daughter of| [Richard L. Strout of the Chris-| tian Science Monitor's: Was ton News Bureau.

A daughter, Dorothy, is married) Jim Boehning, who manages| year-old the Earl Tavern at Raymond and who had Shelby Sts. Ruth Mullins, another daughter, works for the BannerWhitehill furniture firm,

Hoosier, 101, Dies

KENDALLVILLE, (UP)—Jacob Cogan, served his 101st birthday anni-| versary less than ago, died today in McCray Me-| He was Noble County's oldest resident. Mr. Cogan was 101 on Jan. 13.

YOU MAY

31 who ob-|

three weeks|

"| Water Shortage Closes

Schools at Delphi, Ind.

DELPHI, Jan. 31 water shortage forced this city to close its schools yesterday be3% cause there was not enough wa- , ter to make steam in the school “ heating plants. > ,| “Several factories also turned 3|0ff heating systems in the 2-day- » old shortage. Repair crews fixed a leak in a water main but then were plagued by a stoppage in}. 2: another section of the main.

u. S. Statement

:| WASHINGTON, Jan! 31 (UP) ment expenses an fiscal year through Jan 329

Shi di isl

Rd RB

A NEW

CYR FREE

". REGISTER AT YOUR INDIANAPOLIS "FORD DEALER

FEB. 1sta2nt.

YOU NEED NOT BE PRESENT AT DRAWING J TOWING.

urplus Cash Balane 3.758, [Gold Reserve 22,

ing payless

Company's plant here walked out

sterday. They said they were going

“We have participated fully and |28

The workers wera out for 43 days last fall when they asked

for a 10 per cent salary increase, ! plus 10 cents an hour. The com- {A pany agreed to the 10 per cent|pounds, Services| general increase but offered only |§ 10 a. m. tomorrow, Patton Fu-| four cents an hour. : Burial, New Crown.| The workers returned to work welehe cattle Oct. 22 when the dispute was|so¥:

submitted to the Wage Stabiliza-

{as yet.

UAW Shuns Dispute Officials of the United Auto

Company officials said they

would maintain regular shifts

but admitted operations would be! crippled. In all, 12,000 are employed at the Long Beach plant. recede cre sii

Defense Corps to Replace

TOKYO, Jan. 31 (UP)-—Prime

ling Beer Co. dinner were eating Minister Shigeru Yoshida said in the Florentine Room of the|today that the Japanese national] hotel when James Mullins, 73, fell police reserve will go out of ex-| into the arms of his employer,|istence in October and ‘be re-| Leslie Craven, 48, Rushville, own-|placed by a new defense corps.| er of the Rush County Beverage |The 75,000-man police reserve is

to be increased by ,000 men

Services, being arranged by the within the next fisc®I-year. i

mm

"111"

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|

11 Beautiful Cabinet Styles Including Light Weight Portable Walnut— Mahogany— Blonde— Lime Oak and Maple

vo

Forgotten Korean Gl Claims $1297 Back Pay

By United Press IT, Jan. 31 — Riccardo don't see how «the Army could fought nine jose track of a guy when they months in Korea without get- make you sign everything 20 ting paid for it, said today he times” will write his Congressman about! the $1297 he says the Army still yaare in the Army shortly after owes him. . “I've tried everything. else in four months,” vear-old metal worker said.’ wrote to the Army and didn't get Technology. any answers, Veterans Administration a dozen through,” he said, “I can make a

times but nothing has come of! payment on a house and go {that, either.”

Del {the

Mri. Del Vecchio said he paid $30 comes through.” and options on a house {when he received his’ honorable « 4 |discharge last October but had to $30 and the house when his back pay failed to come]

told me at the VA mar 1882 Hero, stuck my neck out on that ° Dies In N. Y.

“and I guess that made me mad.

I told them I'd been sticking my| wow vORK Jan. 31 (UP) —

neck outsin Korea, too—without gu." Gon “wilber Elliott Wilder getting paid for it.

lin

Gen. Wilder,

{give up through.

1 {house #eal,” Mr. Del Vecchio said,

Forgotten Man and Medal of Honor, and oldest froze with the 35th Regimental|/graduate of the U, S. Military

|pay includes a disability pension Gen, Wilder, 95, was born in {for his corporal and then sergeant. { on pay day he was always a for- Point in 1877. gotten man “It's a good thing there were highest decoration for action in |free cigarets and candy bars,” he Horseshoe Canyon, N. M., April said * While Mr, De! Vecchio was go-|said, he “assisted under a heavy his wife, fire to rescue a wounded com-

But

ment checks at home 2-year-old son, Mark, was sick.

Studies Architecture . “I didn’t know about that untilitwo daughters. .

“Now we're all living with my

parents,” Mr. Del Vecchio said. "I

Mr. Del Vecchio served two World War II. Between hitches he studied ar. chitectural engineering for two years at Lawrence Institute’ of

“If that money ever comes

back to school besides—Iif it ever

|

|(Ret.) believed to be the oldest holder of the Congressional

|Atlas, Mich.,, on Aug. 16, 1836 and was graduated from West

He was awarded the nation's

23, 1882, in which, his citation

{World War I rank of brigadier general by act of Congress, He is survived by two sons and

Dies in. Florida

Hog Prices Here Newspaper organization, died at Off as Much as 25¢ a hospital here yesterday follow= The hog market here was only|ing an illness ol several weeks. . and, The 65-year-old newspaperman ‘Co-operated Fully {some prices were off as muchlhad most recently served as 100 pounds. supervising editor of the PittsCattle and sheep prices at In- burgh Sun-Telegraph and the tion and official hearing in|dianapolis Union Stockyards were| Detroit Times.

southern California and Wash-|also weak in spots. | ington,” he added. “This includes|

25 cents per

The quotation from the Mar-las editor of the San Angelo Stan330 W. 10th St, World War I] several appearances before the keting News Seneice of the U. 8./dard until 1918, news editor of veteran. Services 1 p. m. tomor- Wage Stabilization Board.” row, Stuart Mortuary. Burial, ! {New Crown. : :

” n ” MRS. MARY L. BROWN, 7G, of 2137 Highland Pl., former beautician and chiropodist.

{ Agriculture Department only moderately and medium weight

Seta from 1916 to 19227, news editor of : ower: Heavier(the New York Evening Journal 8.75. several hundred Nos. from- 1927 to 1937, managing a around editor of the New York Journali pounds. American from 1937 to 1945, and ew $16; sows steady, bulk, 314-15.75, Tew. executive editor of the Chicago

: calves, 200: choice light-| Herald-American from 1945 to fairly active. steady;

weights about steady

one and two, 180-220 pounds, 5 head 190-215 pounds

2 120-165 pounds,

ers| 1947,

to 26 cents or more jower: He had b prime mixed] prime Mixes) He had been vacationing here. com-

load high choice

ound steers and mixed 334-34.50 | mercial to low Choice, $27-33; utility to

bulk

odd : Sanners and cutters $16vealers very active, strong to mostly $1 higher: good to prime $37-39: old prime For Men, Women and Children $40: utility and commercial $32-37 ! some bidding 50 cents

{head $24-24.50;

to

| 00; moderately active;

{lambs weak to 50 cents lower: good an “knew nothing about the: k 50 i d- and choice $26.50-28.50: cull and utility $20-25:| three loads good and choice 88-99-pound wooled western lambs $20 25,

slaughter a. Stores © 1063 Virginia

quotable steady. cull to choice $6-1

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ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. Jan, 31 (UP)—Robert Hopkins Wiley, veteran editor in the Hearst

Prior to 1947, Mr. Wiley served

the Chicago Evening American

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