Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 February 1952 — Page 26

2

-

. careful about digging too Soop) cere early in December.

PAGE 26

0

a

THE INDIAN APOLIS TIMES

FRIDAY,

- FEB. 8, 1952

Today Business Ellis Arnall Named U. S. Price Stabilizer

Takes Over Job Feb. 15 From DiSalle

It's ‘Snowing’ In Bloomington

By Harold Hartley

| |

TV set. He still had his overcoat on.

day. And he wanted to get Bloomington.

His wife was in the kitchen.| - gf She called in, “What you getting,’ slipped, loaded with Ed?" land feature, and no small amount No answer, 80 she voiced the of advertising be line again. Finally, he said, al-/ most in a pout: “It's snowing in Bloomington.” » . n

printed front and back pages. Western Newspaper Union has been printing “patent insides” for country weeklies since Civil War

By

MERRIMAN SMITH

United Press White House Reporter WASHINGTON, Feb, 8-~For-{mer Gov. Ellis Arnall of Georgia,

ON THE NORTH SIDE a man sat down before hig Who likes to tackle the “impos-

sible,”

Truman He was in a hurry. He had had an aerial put in that Michael V. DiBalle as price sta-|’

bilizer, Mr.

was named by President yesterday to succeed

Arnall will take over the

{Job Feb. 15 from Mr. DiSalle, who

fact, fiction {gs running for the U. 8. Senate from Ohio. Mr. Arnall tween the locally fered the post nearly three weeks

was of-

ago and finally accepted after

down,

AND IT WAS, on his TV days. And Farwell W. Perry, Mr. screen. He had found what oth- yn president, whom I have has h ers had discovered that fringe re- ,.. in his office, savs it just

ception, even with Channel 10/4504n't pay off anymore. “yagi” (aluminum ears on 12: r uo uw foot staff) he couldn't duplicate W¥BM's picture,

once having reportedly turned it

Arnall,

eld a Washington job,

{scored his most notable political

became Georgia's governor by de-

AT ITS PEAK more than 7000 feating one of the state's most country newspapers were padded formidable

politicians, red-gal-

The Blpomington station is just, jout with WNU stuffing. Now {t'lused Eugene Talmadge.

Senate Action Awaited Mr. Arnall's appoiritment must | be confirmed by the Senate, which| Undersecretary of Navy Francis presidential race: received the nomination late yes- P, Whitehair presented Medals of

as strong. And in Bloomington, § at WTTV, they tell you that Ine Do gritbled 10 1412 dianapollis gets their station, as well as Bloomington gets WFBM-TV, » » ~ BUT IS it good enough? TV re-, ception is tops for 50 miles. Beyond that, it is your risk when! you put’in an aerial. | I talked with RCA Service Co. | which knows TV reception. And I was told on the east sidés of town, better than on

not enough to make it worth while. But in its glory days the “patent inside" carried complete novels as serials by. such names as Booth Tarkington, Rex Beach, Jack London, Stewart Edward | White, Zane Gray. ” ” ~ AND THROUGH it flight columniets as {MeIntyre, Will Rogers, A Bt 3d vent) Hurst, . and Beatrice the north and became household names. south sides So you see its passing has . ds.» meaning. But it is like the buck-

THE FOUNTAIN SQUARE board, nickel heer and the 5-cent area is complaining. Trolleys, C'82T: Simply a memory piece. electric signs, other interference! “snow” the picture, even.with al signal booster and high antenna. TV signals are tricky. A building, a water tower, or even a big tree, in the right place, will deflect them. So it is a matter of

it was America's top source of] getting used to Iringe racepHion, lentertainment, out where the

GENERALLY, this is the rule meadows turn green, then brown, | of experience. Properly installed] land houses are three miles apart.

outside antennas do a reasonably | good job. Inside antennas (rab-| Cheaper Eating IF YOU LIKE fish, now is the

bit ears) "are usually unsatisfac-| tory, but you can give them a time. It's got red meat beat a try, take them back if they don’t mile in price. do the job. Standard fish,

such -top0. 0. Fannie Fairfax

” ~ ”

year, only five per cent of its income. I hate to gee it go. At one time)

terday. Little opposition was ex- Honor today pressed since both Georgia. S8ena- young widows of three Marines -Richard B. Russell [Walter F. George—have said they|

tors—

will not oppose fit.

Some political observers saw in|/Shepherd Jr.

Mr,

who never before,

and

YOUTH AND TALENT—This group of singers and their conductor, 4. Russell Paxton, comprise the Arsenal Technical Choir, which

is on a fund- raising campaign. They need $1500 to finance a trip, Feb. 17, to the convention of the National Association of Principals of success at the age of 35 when he| Secondary Schools i in Cincinnati. Ti hoy will present a concert in the Technics! gymnasium at 8 p.m, Wednesday. Tickets are $1.

‘Widow of Heroes ‘Get Honor Medals

WASHINGTON, Feb, 8 (UP)

to killed in Korea.

|attended by Gen. Lemuel

C. |the result of his New Hampshire other Democrat would it be pos-| Weights sold at $17.75 Marine Corps com- primary contest with Sen. Estes| Arnall's acceptance of the mandant; other high-ranking Ma-| Kefauver would have nothing to!

the moist-eyed

The Political Arena

By United Press

lLdtest ° developments in

Democrats

TRUMAN — President Truman | Ohio said he'd rather have Mr.| = kept the nation guessing | Truman The preséntation ceremony was labout his political plans. He said | anyone else”

| still

post an indication that Mr. Tru- |tipe officers, and members of the'do with his decision on whether

man may have decided to run/dead heroes’ families. for re-election. . | Receiving the medals were Mrs They pointed out that Mr. Ar- Elizabeth C. Monegan, wife of nall has a private law practice in, Pfc. Walter C. Monegan Jr. 19, Atlanta and is president of the Seattle; Mrs. Donna Z. Reem, Independent Motion Picture Pro- wife of 2d Lt. Robert Dale Reem, Association. Mr. Arnall}26, Elizabethtown, Pa. and Mrs,

BUT THIS doesn’t mean West- ducers ern Newspaper Union is gasping| Would be loath to drop them for Margaret LaVerne Windrich, help set up a permanent organi-

for breath. It did $22 million last|® government post without a wife of S/Sgt. Willlam"D. Win- | vio the 2 my wag fairly good idea of the President's drich, 29, Carlsbad, Cal

|intentions.

Sums Up Political Plans

Mr. Truman announced Mr, Ar-

inall's appointment at his weekly! news conference during which he also summed up his political plans |by recalling a phrase from his| (first campaign for the Senate in 1934.

Cpl. Windrich’'s. mother,

C hicago, 1nd.

Split-Period mT Plan Called Wasteful

i Mrs. | {Herman Windrich, lives at East!

|

WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (UP)—| |Sen. Richard B. Russell said to-| He said he will just let the river|day that allowing men in univer-

two

take its course, but added that sal training to split their training!

haddock and he might find it necessary to put|into three-month periods!

The set owner who is out on a ocean perch runs about 43 cent§yp a few walls here and there—| would be “one of the most waste-|

limb, and should expect nothing, |2 pound. Sirloin and round steak is the one with the built-in an-|has held about §1.08 a pound, and

tenna. He gets a blank. At least, (up. If you wanted portherhouse gijacy of Sen. Estes I do. and teabones, they've been/(p, Tenn.). around $1.15, He refused again’ to

SO FAR As 1 am concerned,| But one big chain supermarket on the North Side, the station I broke beef prices sharply with rely. on is the same as it has al- prime and choice steaks at 89 ways been, sure-fire and clear as joents and hamburger at 59 cents. a Rembrandt. 8 2 = . That's WFBM-TV, Channel 8, SHRIMP IS moving. There's a always there. ® 5 new: breaded shrimp, all ready ; for the skillet at 59 cents for 10 Shirts Like Roaits? * vi{ourices, but be careful not to une MIEN A Deiniess finds the go-|derbuy. Shrimp are easy to eat, ing rough, it begins to look over and anyone who ‘buys one packits cost sheet. (age may wind up hungry. | It examines every item of ex-| Margarine which hit the bil-| pense carefully. And a finger|lion-pound mark last year is still runs down the payroll, pausing at'8oing strong, at a bottom price each name, This is done by de-/of about 20 cents. And strangely, partments. {butter is holding its own at 90 And the contribution of each/cents. Butter eaters won't give | person is weighed against his up. wage. ‘ » » n : There isn't much else a com- EGGS ARE CHEAP now, under pany can cut. They whittle at 50 cents a dozen for the Grade A! advertising, but that makes sales| Large. And they've been riding even worse. So the wise ones are easy since their tumble from LL

into selling oosts, Prices are lowered by bulges in| = = supply. And if you follow the, WHAT FACTORIES do is to|priceés, you'll save the price of a look for machinery which will new suit for Easter, | make the payroll smaller. And| sa there has been a lot of this done.! For proof, you simply have to| Jy GOT A LUNCH in the mail. look at the rise in the use of

electric power. {which I can scoot past the cashier

Ellis Arnall It was a coupleof tickets alt otal Stocks and Bonds

But how about stores? They| at the Russet Cafeteria without have wage costs, and taxes, and dipping into my pocket.

8 Ki Aner can Loan 8%

—Feb, 8 i Asked

upkeep. But there isn't much! It's Russet’s 30th anniversary, Amerioen Bteies ped’. 5. machinery you can buy to reduce which is a long time in the res-|AYishite Collieries com .. an the-basic expense of a store. That/tgurant business, and - they're Belt RR & Stk Yds com ..... is" person-to- person Selling. Werling ut a surprise’ about the Ee 3 8 figure “30.” obbs-Merrill p EERE. Ya A FRIEND of mine phoned me x x = SIU]. S0YM okiieice” com" 31d and read a piece from Boston. It! CARL DAWSON SPENCER {icle Theater com —© ....... 48 told what a 79-year-old store, The sent them along with a note that| Commonwealth Loan o hi 85 Continental, did about it. it was his own “90th birthday.” |Sonjolidated Fins ptd ....... #61 1 It put in a supermarket depart- He is one of the eldest active Cummins Ene Com Liuririss 8 ire ment store, Customers wait on|advertising men in the country, Delta Elec com® ..'%" “oe ay 18% ‘themselves. And then the store but he can’t pass himself off as|pisierh Ind Tele § pfd -..oo 81 .... dropped prices. 190. He'd have a hard time con- quitable Securities fd ...... 94 “es Customers pick out their own vincing anyone he is 71. Family Finance Sn old ore pas} merchandise. They pay cash. They| So I'm going to breege by the|{jaY3 Corp pfd ww seul _carry it home. And the store buys| Russet, Feb. 11 or 23, and see Herfl-Jones Class A pfd 0% in volume. yea goes. - He's ‘got my interest| Honk Dros So roma ova I WONDER what this would) fud ES Lae fu L “ ay a on .e i 4 1 do to the quiet, refined atmos-| On- the-Cuff Note ad ATR Te Ja " phere of a good department store.. A HOUSEWIFE called me and| Jado Be Af beh air La Would you get the same “lift”|dropped a piece of wisdom worth! fodole Pow ALA Bt reall 9 from shopping, and talking over|remembering. FE ie tom he 1

purchases with trained clerks who! She and her husband had been!

“ 1 indianapolis ) ST hdienabolls Is Water " ‘of «0s 708% Bh

Water 4%

know what color you ought to/borrowing money from finance Jefferson Nationa Life com... 10% 13! have, and the right style? \companies. And she wanted to|[iosan & SO Sm: ii at 3" I can see where it’ would save know what it cost and why, . IL ncoln National fiir 138 payroll money, but would it be as So they handed her a little rR Noun aay 3 Wal much of a pleasure? printed form which said the rafe MarmonsHerrington ‘som .1... “43 ied a 2 » was approved by the state. But Natl Homes oom... eth, 18 |

AND WOULD I think as much She also told me there are differ-! of a sport shirt I picked up and ent rates, carried to the cashier like a! And here's what she found out: chuck roast? “The easier it I don’t think so. But you may money, the higher the rate is.”

{Natl Homes bid . in x Ind Pub Serv com

oe

AE 1hd Pub is to borrow |p" Progress Lavaary: Nn Lene

rv

Huns Serv of Ind 3’

{Ross Qear & . 45 ui i Fifty-Fifty EE. fn, esterday, Killing two. railroad nks Must Talk | ONCE IN AWHILE I miss the Stokely-Van Camp com ’...\. 14% [section hands and injuring two| : AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK | boat, eH gut ealiod, NE Sr & Co Saas yi! ie | others. button-holed a blue ribbon for its an abig, of Ha on, (feife Jlaute Malieabls ...... 13} The dead were identified as! ‘advertising. |distributors for Quaker Oats and |Gnitea Telephone 5% pd ..,.. 9 ° :{Samuel Brinnum, 45, -Gary, and| Banking Magazine tossed hon-| |General Foods, in words coated | TR Ia alien Vt ‘| Sam Blair, 20, Walkerton. ors to only 27 banks. And Ill|With kindness, told me I was a|, =... SONDS » il Jos Jankowiac, 25, and Mario throw in a blue ribbon, of, my little damp in my report about|American Loan #%s 88° ....: 81 1% Scarbaugh, 60, both ‘also of Walk-| .own, because bank advertising is the pileup ot Sommen labor. | American 0... 5 111: ferton, were taken to Holy Family tough. HE SAID he nat been + eT a Hospital in LaPorte. , oF ryears it has had téo much [to 8 t : ay en rying| Qubner Fertiliser ts 58. th rn of the “banker's glass eye” in it,| el a couple ‘of men a 8 R “oes too blue-ndsed, Se it Ay a tough business, 1380 Madison Ave. and Enuifable Securities 58 : Crash Kills Man, 73 time getting down where it could that muscle labor was still ‘hard HH Faint Color ud 84....100 | (LIGONIER, Feb. 8 (UP)— » to get. blic 5s {Charles A, Nine, 73, Syracuse,

talk to le, peopl . = But it must be spotty: For 1 common feel of Jim Rogan, & American National's presidént, for five men to do unloading and| ‘and I'm glad to see it in his ad- about 100 showed up: vertising. . = ‘Banks have to talk to people, “AND THAT.” he said, i in the language of people, before COMpletely contrary to what they can do business with people. Was 60 to 90 days ago. Then That's a lot of “people” but We would advertise for five and isn't that what banks are for? (One or two would show up.”

in: another. ’

Commencement Set ‘BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 8 (UP) University holds its

—Indiana Uni Aid yes: commencement

So I'll take a vote each way, ta wrong in one place, but gat Rrices

: Swtay|

Ind Smeatone. ts

I'VE ALWAYS sensed the broad called Charles Streich at Tal y Asso lel & "’ & Co., and he sald he advertised: ds

24 2% al ub Serv 4% pid ..... 2 b gory da aptd Veen 4% 2 2 %

pid .... 25

of Ind co! BS 3 3%

rague Sa » 95 > ction rane 388T ...... 90 ” Produce FOB Cincianati, ¢ go + on on

Eo Er

{United Packinghouse

is Four” packers.

$69 Million Contract

white. 33d Rsumer crue D, 8 pr iid : RR, a a

and sometimes a dam.. This may|ful things we could do.” have been a reference to the can-

Split-training . has

college students to fit their train-|

the result would be

8 a y|ing period’ in with summer vaca-| whether he will run but promised tions: But the Georgia Democrat, to do everything possible for the who is chairman- of the Senate Democratic candidate whoever he/ Armed Services Committee, said may be. , |

“double ex-

pense and efficiency divided byl

two.”

Youth, 18, Confesses

To 2 Bank Robberies

PORT WASHINGTON, Wis:

Feb. 8 (UR)—FBI agents reported catholic, as it is today, because|ing with little help toward imtoday that an 18-year-old bOY|iy Agia it is an agent of America. {proving their own lot.

captured last night has confessed two bank robberies in Wisconsin.

Robert Kultgen was captured at| Wis.

his home in Port Washington,

Roy K. Moore of the Milwauke

FBI office said at Milwaukee that

Kultgen admitted the $1887 hold-| the Bank of Ashippun|

up at

i

Wednesday and the $429 robbery | of the Commercial State Bank of |

Neosho last Dec. 12.

Swift Grants Packers

'6-Cent Wage Increase

| Asta that will effectively counter-/‘Do nothing in the State Depart-' las, Tex., iment and you will make no mis-

CHICAGO, Feb, 8 (UP)—S8wift & Co, has given a 6-cent hourly

wage

its 26 meat packing plants.

The agreement is similar to settlements ‘reached earlier this lweek with Armour & Co. Cudahy Packing Co. The union

s"|saig it would begin talks with “Big

Wilson & Co., last of” the

Cancelled by U. S.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (UP)—

and

a

increase to 30,000 CIO| workers in|

The government yesterday ordered cancellation of a $69 million ma-|

fard Machine Tool Co.

{chine tool contract which the Bul- ; Bridge-|

port, Conn,, had subcontracted. to

eral Motors Corp.

The National Production AU: p.n0h and the adjoining home of thority, which’ instructed the Gen-| lits minister, the ' Rev.

eral Services Administration to cancel the order, said the action was taken because recent cut-

backs in jet aireraft procurement

and the adoption of new engineer-

ing techniques for jet enginé pro-igy, nara) will be held Monday for|

to run for re-election. KEFAUVER — E. state organizer of the Kefau clubs of Texas,

0. Gillam,

ver

said the Tennes-

zation backing him for the presithe dential nomination. :

ss d—

Hog Prices Dip ‘At Yards Here

| Light to medium weight barrows ‘and gilts ‘dropped 25 cents Republicans from yesterday's averages at the TAFT—Sen. Robert A. Taft of Indianapolis Stockyards today. Heavy weights were steady to “as an opponent than 25-50 cents off. because with no! Bulk choice 170 to 240 pound to $18.50.

| By CARL HENN - }

|segments of Indianapolis i Richard Kavner,

AFL Official

Arrested in

Labor Tiff -

Arrest of a leading AFI, Teme sters Union official last nighf fin« {covered what is charged to be<the latest union move to sign up Hew labor, Louis, 135

St. trustee. of Teamsters Local

{here since its officers were ousted.

|last year, was arrested on a war-

rant charging malicious trespass Wednesday at a Hoosier Pete {filling station, 401 Kentucky Ave, Mr. : Kavner's case was cone tinued today in Municipal Court 4 until Feb. 22. Police also held a warrant for Gene San Souci, assistant to Mr, Kavner in Local 135, on the sama charge. The warrant has not vet | been served. Both were issued on {affidavits signed by Joseph 8S. | Johnston, city station mandger for Hoosier Petroleum Co. Sought to Check Card P. H. TL.ogan, company president, ‘said Mr. Johnston placed the. charges after Kavner and San Souci invaded the station Wednesday to check the membership card of a truck driver who had stopped there for gasoline. Neither Mr. Kavner nor Mr,

sible for a Republican to bring Several loads, at 240-275 pounds, g,uci was available for comment. out the “issues” involved in the brought $17 and $18,

coming election.

critized Illinois, Indiana and Ohio for

publican hierarchy” and said the

Sows were around Steady. Choice 300 to 425 pound weights avefaged $15 and $16. Cattle and calves were nominally steady. Cows were slow, steady to 50 cents lower than yesterday. Util-

STASSEN-—Harold E. Stassen

their, ‘‘semi-isolationist Re-

see senator would visit Austin GOP can win the White House, ie : ry COWS BY about Mar, 15 to attend a state- only by a ‘colorful campaign” $31 fq commeteial cows brought wide meeting in his honor and! and a ‘definite, constructive, lib- NY clos ’ Bulls. and sheep ‘were eral platform. /mainly steady.

Better ‘U. S. Salesmen In Far East Advocated.

BY JOAN SCHOEMAKER

A missionary’'s zeal is a neces- {the individual in matters of for-| [sity for a State Department work-! ‘eign relations.

er overseas.

That's the opinion of John c.! former Office of Wa ar! Information and Voice of Amer-|

Caldwell,

ica employee, .who addressed

Born of missionary parents

{foreign service.

Communist aims in Asia as:

ONE-—-To eliminate America as South Koreans ‘to the American _ way of life when they ‘observed | TWO—To destroy the Christian| the luxury in which: the staff was) Church,

la world power.

both -Protestant

Points Out Mistakes

Four basic policy mistakes in|/they are going to like our ideas,” L. |Asia were pointed out by Mr. he said. o |Caldwell. He accused the United

States of failing to: Properly evaluate the aims communism in Asia.

Develop honest ond objective re- their respective jobs. State Department. port what their superior wants Barber's house to question him Public Debt

|porting’ in the

fa ito

In-|

been pro- dianapolis Town Hall today in Kefauver posed by some educators to allow|the Murat Theater.

in

of |

{tioned with the diplomatic corps,’ he said,

China, Mr. Caldwell applied the the 350 best houses for its staff. lideas behind their work in China These and utilities were rent free. to the work of State Department|South Koreans were forced to

|officials in Washington and injiive in poorer conditions. {bassy staff members were pro-|

Pointing" but what the United| {vided with free taxi service and States has done wrong and what|14 bars were set up for their {could be improved on, he rated Service, \

jhe said:

re

{overseas duty,

{ Hogs 10,000: uneven; light sod medium | weight barrows and gilts weak to 25 Sentaf lower: heavy weights steady to 25 cen {instances 50 cents off: bulk choice 170- 240 |pounds $17.75-18.50; several loads 24: 11s} {Pounds $17-18; 275-325 pounds §16-1 165 pounds, $14.50-15.50, few $16; cows 120: 165 pounds $14.50-15.50, few $18; so pounds $15-16: 425-600 pounds $14.15.25, Cattle 600, calves 200; nominally steady; {eight loads choice 1244-pound steers bought to arrive at $35. cows slow, steady to |smots jo ig lower: gulity. snd. commercial cows $21-24, odd head $525: canUnderstand fhe importance of ners and cutters §17-21: vealers active, mostly steady, top $1 lower at $39; good to prime mostly 139: commercial $34.50Bulls steady: commercial and good

593d to choice $38: $28-

He ¢ 20.50; best to $30: utility $25-2 harged the government Sheep 500; steady; good Ba choice nailed to give enough attention tives mainly 328-29. choice to prime con-

sidered eligible at $29.25-29.50: deck mostly for choice 103-pound fed wooled Westerns $29; Sisughter fwes quotable steady at $6- 13.

Officer Dead, Two Hurt in Gun Fight

FT. WORTH, Tex., Feb. 8 (UP) —An ex-convict was in custody in a hospital today after killing a policeman and wounding two others in a fierce gun battle witnessed by his wife and child. District Attorney Stewart Hellman said he would file a murder charge against Robert Hugh Bar-

choosing its salesmen

“In Seoul, where I was sta-

“the embassy took over

Em- |

“Obviously we won over few”

ber, - 27, ‘who suffered bullet] wounds in his right arm, right| and living, and the way they were liv- {leg and chest ig gun yd yesterday. '

{ H. E. Cleveland, 50, veteran po“People must like us first, if/liceman, was killed. Detective A. Armstrong. was seriously] {wounded in the chest and DetecOf failure in the Department, tive H. D. Holloway was shot in| the right leg.

“Many officials are afraid to Another officer, Detective P.O. port what they actually see in Pope, escape injury. They re-| ‘The four policemen went to

Develop a Voice of America injto hear instead. It has been ‘said: [about a $15,000 robbery in Dal-

fact the Communist Tes.

last month. Barber's, wife and 4-year-old,

Mr. Logan sald he understood the Teamsters Union was instituting truck checks at filling =stations in various parts of Indian.

apolis as part of a pressure cam -

paign to sign up station operators. Once signed, the operators would be ruhning unionized stations where unionized truck drivers could buy all their gasoline, he said. At present, Mr. Logan said, none of the 800 stations in Marion {County is unionized. : Several months ago, Local 135 quietly began cracking down on drivers who owed back dues, and instituted checks at truck terminals in the city to determine

whether drivers of local pick-up °

trucks held union cards. The move was interpreted by truck industry observers as the first step in a drive to organize Indianapolis employees of truck parts and supply companies. While that continues, one spokesman said, the pressure also is put on gas companies to become unlopired,

Flu Closes Schools

In Five Ohio Towns

COLUMBUS, O., Feb. 8 (UP) — {An outbreak of influenza has closed schools in five Ohio towns,

a survey showed today. At least.

781 pupils have been stricken. The disease has¥Yorced cancellation of classes in Peebles, Cetlina, Roseville, Centerville and | Jackson.

iu. S. Statement

WASHINGTON, Feb, 8° ment expenses and receipts for current fiscal year through Feb. 6, {pared with a year ago:

the com=

is Year Last Year Expenses $37,619,401,107 $23.523,0056.282 Receipts 29 1907.6 637,710 23,850.990,761 | Sur fia , —— 327,985.478 | Deficit 7711 1,763. 1 —_ ye.

| Cush Balance 4.308.701.342 _ 4.531,916.380 ® 258.847.302.467 258.023.818.813 Gold Reserve 22,990,061,882

22,341,245,527 INDIANAPOLIS LEARING HOUSE Clearings for the $1

ay 0,346,000 Debits for the day MH

680 te mere ——{takes. Aas rdaughter witnessed the Shooting. [emits fer the week 197.242. 000 ‘Hoosier GI Questioned - In Buffalo Stabbing | “TOURNAMENT TIME IS COMING Times Specizl A BUFFALO, N. Y., Feb, 8 — A Hoosier was one of two GIs being questioned today by local po-|

lice about a stabbing at a down-

town gas station. The men are Pfc. Swain, 26, Muncie,

Miss., Fighter Interceptor Squadron Niagara Falls, N. Y. John J. McCarthy, 33, owner of the station was slightly on the chest after

Thomas and Pfc. Charles F. Cotton, 29, Hazlehurst, | both assigned to the 136th

at

cocut an

argument with one of the soldiers.

Fire Destroys Church

BLOOMINGTON, Feb. 8 (UP)

Fire blamed on a faulty heat the Fisher Body Division of Gen-| control unit yesterday destroyed

{the Gospel Assembly Penticostal

| Hazell. a

Rites Set for Editor

Millard!

WASHINGTON, Feb. 8 (UP)—|

duction have reduced need fOr wi am H. Nicholas, assistant ed-

the tools.

“12 Die as Locomotive,

‘Motor Car Collide SOUTH BEND, .Ind.,

Feb. 8

(UP)—A New York Central Rail-|

_|road’ freight locomotive collided

| was killed today when his auto

¢- {skidded sideways on. icy U. 8. 6} Wnto the path of a milk truck ‘*|driven - by Toblas M. Mast, Shipshewana. The accident 2 ‘curred three miles west of here,

|

«Faure Wins Vote

to 275.

Fores banding

PARIS, Feb. 8 (UP)—Preniler| Edgar Faure won his first vote of confidence today from the French National Assembly. It up-| held his austerity program to cure France's many economic ills, 29

g in Field

SR in Feb. 8 (UP)— Mich,

Is |

itor of the National Geographic Magazine. Mr. Nicholas, 53, died |yesterday of pneumonia.

Kee

transparent

3 (Ego HOLDERS

Records Clean],

}

"in industry for over 17 years.

Protect important data against grime, wear and tear. Slip them into rugged, noncombustible V. P. D. PLASTIC HOLDERS. Leatherette bound.

0075 gauge acetate. Keeps

them clean, seen always. Used

5

STATIONERS

= “

E. 38th St. (1 Block West of College) On or About , Prizes to Be Given Away!

$259.95

SOON 2 LOCATIONS! Watch for the Grand Opening of Another SUTTON SALES STORE at 638

Febroary 21st. Valuable

/

PHILCO 2120

HUGE 20 INCH BALANCED BEAM - PICTURE

of i i 3 28 { 11 4A FLA

ore EVENINGS TILL 9 P. M.

LARGE PARKING AREA “SHOP THE WINDSOR VILLAGE SHOPPING CENTER :

Designed to Receive U.HF and Color

New value triumph with Balanced Beam 215 sq. inch picture and “Colorado” Tuner. Built-In Aerial System. Hand‘Some simulated Cordovan leather finish cabinet. Full view, easily ac- - cessible controls. See itl

4233

DELIVERS Only $3. 40 a week

4

being -

(UP)—Govern-

“FRIDAY

G

NEW with Frank other day, grease. I | elevate Dic

Williams

* able comme rather on i The cri mean and ri Schroeder. | Why didn’t

IT WA time) that | under the t these days, he’d be us develops th “TI had c me. “I mad could help v have a deey ious to brin Becaus son, even fc getting no Australia a tionable. T Cup matche regularity i “That r lection off | tice matche

” TODA) off bitterne of the team the. courts ¢ For several _ iness to dey

and conditic penses exce It was tralian pres isted. The s ~ der repeate and duly was to take He read it “Ted c: he was furis much chanc

flaming we Shields denied the and straigh I went tb Si was near h ~ believe hin started the : (Ed N: "hot, one of . reporters.) " Althoug tralia was h it-interestin five-set mat . world’s lead by the way.

” DESPI ored by the by the prim of savage a radio char: into the sit His wor the very pe able, the te a confident and: lack of The cli when an Ex tion, sough! ahead of V “That’ at no time players.”

Faull “Nam

~. Walt Fs . 500-Mile Ra The Lit new rear-driv