Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 March 1952 — Page 13
TEN
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up’
to say it."
Heats IR)
of war just velt went in orld War II. . ‘ass to send ell the boys . they. have
r? Just tell , we are not nose 105,000 1s of dollars that just a
-man at tne itions of our nilitary man 1 liberty. A think of the of our sons 18 in a conwhich must ortions that a Hitler, but honest and
W., City.
who signed other races Why should wurches and lice. bad districts ave wonders an shop in ve had new 3. But some
reated. very ‘e are a few ing on the ily religious stic attitude,
. Pine St.
mself
e of the least Aatthew 25:40,
a time to toke y the departed
old so vividly ve are to be y, brothers and do it “in His
to help those my brethren.” ie and church
to India, ” to that hard
e people who
osets and sent rvice? vhere sickness
I lately to try im? Inasmuch! » have sought them waiting
) Do
the money ships in the mehow had tc had been of its offioath: “We ld a fence n and hers. rying oil to
vy ident of the rp. went on rried oil to e State Detold him to ships was in 2; the Come m to take a 1 down the skip that, ankers with ur of them ) operators, the law. 8 must hire en, on penver day. The est and Co, $847,000. id another /n to Washhe Federal Commission id, too. The | to $8000. ean. Cleanhas some
-
hl
- TUESDAY MAR.11,1952 ______ aici
| Urges OK
2
w
«x
oday ~Business
~ Prober Asks Taxpayers For Aid
WASHINGTON, Mar. 11 (UP) Chairman Cecil R. King of the
&»
Of Truman
La
~4
Fight to Keep Mars Hill Line
More than 200 transit riders
— THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Plan To O
-
TTR
Daring Theft Pulled Here
Two crooks with -a sledge hammer and a sackful of cash were the object of police search today. They gained attention of the law by a daring daylight cash
Prosperous
verhaul Tax Age Hose Bandit Works Up.
\
‘Business’
PAGE 5 ’ nc Reuther Hits
At Reds In
- We Don’t Want
House tax: scandal investigating committee urged taxpayers last
stormed the Statehouse.today to gnateh yesterday in front of the protest city transit system's plan rade Winds Tavern, 509 N. Dela-
A 2 ‘Good Old Days’
By Harold Hartley .
I WENT TO HEAR a hoBut I got let down, with a thud.
He was the big guy, sitti
right wing, the president of the Chamber of Commerce of
the United States I could write Chamber of Commerce speeches backward, with my left nand. and my eyes closed. 4 8 =» : AND THERE'S no surprise for me in the chant .about free enterprise. I'm for it. But I've heard all about it. Or I thought so.
And that's where D. A. Hulcy, talking to the Indianapolis Chamber ot Commerce got off the beaten path.
He followed pattern about the “good old days.” Then, quite suddenly, he gave them a sharp toe in the .pants. And right there is where 1 began to listen. s o as : IN FACT, said Mr. Hulcy, the good old days are exactly what we don’t want. He said: “I .don't the stables. “I can get muddy roads—and yard pump. “We didn't have it as good in 1890, when you could get a soup bone for a nickel. “But you couldn't buy an electric refrigerator to keep it In for love or money.” Then, one out of six high school. Today it is of five.
miss livery along without the bagk-
went to four out
» » n AND THE WORLD didn’t know one vitamin from another. Everybody was swigging patent medicines, or the other stuff, (they were much alike) and the average life was 50 years. Today it is 68. He went the rounds of the things you couldn't have—in 1890 —the pop-up toaster, three radios to a home, the car and automatic washer. I expected that. But his point was that the government gave us none of these things. = n u AND, in Mr. Huley's words, all the government has ever done toward a better living is to give the economy a shot of benzedrine, a needleful of Treasury dough. Then he laid the hammer right on the head of the nail, and drove it home. By taxes, and controls. big government destroys a man’s chances and here it is—big government cannot guarantee security. It only talks about security, and makes promises. = un » WHAT MADE ME string along with the C of C president was his admission that business is not all lily white. It has purple spots on its moral record. Any man who can admit that business is not running a private heaven, all its own, has my vote. And my confidence. For he's tonguing the truth.
One Big Paycheck
T OPENED the letter. and held tight. It looked like a check. All T could see was the amount, $180.2851333. I don’t need to tell vou it wasn't for me. If it had been, why would
"I be sitting here, hitting one little
>
key after another?
2* x = IT WAS General Motors’ way of telling how much it had paid out in wages to Indiana labor in just one vear, 1951. Indianapolis got the biggest chunk, £79.927.790. But Anderson .wasn’t far behind with $74,091,478. And I wonder what Anderson does with all that dough.
night to demand that their Senators approve President Truman's plan for overhauling the Internal levenue Bureau. In a highly unusual nationwide radio appeal, the California Democrat said the scheduled Senate vote on the plan on Wednesday represents “a crisis in the fight for good government.” “Honesty, competency and efficiency in tax collections are the issues,” he warned, “Reform is needed, but it may not come unless you demand it.” The reorganization already has
hum speech today.
ug away out on the tip of the
be policemen, postmen, firemen, nurses and stewardesses, 3
to discontinue bfis service to Mars Hill. Indianapolis Railways. Inc, wants to halt the Mars Hill servfice or charge patrons arf extra 10 cents. to ride outside city limits, W. W. Harris, Rallways vice president and general manager, testified before the Public Service Commission. the utility consistently had lost. money on the Mars Hille line. He suggested either cutting the service or raising the fare 10 cents for riders who use
ware St. Ray Hope, 50. of the Barton Hotel who witnessed the theft, told police he saw two men with a sledge hammer approach the truck of Herbert Leaman, 40, of 4712 Crittenden Ave. a coin machine collector who was inside the tavern, “One of the men smiled at me nicely,” said Mr. Hope. "The other hit the back door of the truck with the sledge hammer like he was going for the gong at the county fair.”
vT% Farm Speech’ By CARL HENN Finch Sinclair Station, 2601 W. P ST “Who is the ‘radiator hose" .18th St. at 6:53 p. m. Took $80. MINNEAPOLIS, Mar. 11 (UPY = bandit? .. Mar. 3 Shell Service Station, __ Walter P. Reuther, president of: * A lot of service station at 1006 N. Emerson Av at 6:35 the CIO United Auto Workers, « tendants in and around Indianap- p. m Took $115 . Mar. 6. - spoke at the Minneapolis Farm olis are fervently wishing police Sonoco. Filling Station, 2180 8. Forum yesterday and used the would 8nd out quick East St, at 1218 a. m. Took occasion to rap Communism on * : : $66. . , . Mar. 7. Texaco Filling international and domestic levels, 7: The nameless holdup man with Station, 4000 KE. Washington St Speaking before 800 persons atei% the smooth technique has ap at’ 65% p. m: Took $167 ~tending a lunchéon meeting of peated A mes gince Jun 2B Mar, 8 Ernie Mueller Auto Serv- the forum. Mr. Reuther accused
early in the evening. Except for two occasions, he has worked alone. His take so far exceeds $1250. Detectives, by now familiar with his tactics, are baffled by the lack of distinguishing marks.
Eveén Hopalong Cassidy is slipping a little. Scientific and educational toys are outriding him on the playtime range. n u ~ THERE'S A ‘People Wagon” with father, mother, . and teacher in it. And a colored chip wagon to develop color sense. And Ernie Bushmiller's cartoon heroine, Nancy, which appears in The Times, is in a sewing kit. There's also a switchboard which flashes and buzzes with plug-in equipment. u n = BIGGEST ITEM is probably the bike that “grows,” can be adjusted from the earliest years to the teens. But: the western stuff still strong. There's a horse's head which attaches to the handlebars, complete with lasso. There'll be plenty to buy in this year’s toylands. So start stuffing your piggy bank now. Use green money, too.
Hoosier-Born LAST NIGHT
is
in front of the
Athletic «Club there sat, splendid under spotlight, a Studebaker Champion.
There was no question as to why it was there. You could read it on the side. It was the Pace Car for the “500” this year,” an Indiana product, which will step out in front of what Indianapolis is famous for. n n STUDEBAKER is the car which “came out of the war” on top of the independents. I talked with a Studebaker official, and he told me why. “No car,” he said, “can afford to fall behind either in body design or its power plant.” n » ” AND STUDEBAKER was the first to pick up the airplane motif, use lots of curved glass, collect lots of jokes about not knowing where it is coming or going, and as a result. ran its sales to something over a half-billion dollars a year. 3
Who Cares?
HOW MANY times would you wash your hands in 8000 years? Don’t get out a pencil. I'll tell you. The answer iss565 million times. I don’t figure such things out. But the U. S. Sanitary Specialties Corp., of Chicago, did. " n ” IT WANTED to find out, If it had just one customer, how long it's year’s output of liquid soap would last.
My quick answer is that it would last much longer than the company.
Then, where would we get more soap?
Hog Prices Up |
|
25 Cents Here |
Bulk choice 170-250-pound bar. rows and gilts are selling 25 cents higher than yesterday with a top of $17.75 in trading at the Indianapolis Stockyard. $16.25-17.25 is the selling price for 250-280-pound hogs. Bulk choice sows brought $14-15.50. All slaughter class cattle were active.” All grades® and weight steers sold at 50 cents higher.
cleared the House which voted down a veto resolution. It will go into effect automatically Friday unless a constitutional majority of 49 Senators votes against ft. The Senate government operations committee opposed it 7 to 5.
Defies Unwritten Rule
It was this vote that led Mr. King to make his radio appeal in defiance of the unwritten rule
that a member of one House of PSC had to move the public hear- gality of ‘the 1951 state law com- nickname by
the line outside the city. Mr, Harris estimated the utility could make $17,000 a year on the line if the PSC allowed the company to charge a “premium” fare to Mars Hill, The Mars Hill line starts at Illinois and Washington Sts. and goes southwest outside the city limits to Mars Hill. So many people came to protest the discontinuance of service, the
Slowly then, the two picked up a sack of cash containing $275 in silver and drifted away. “They didn’t start to run until they got around the corner,” Mr. Hope told officers.
Victims invariably describe him as well-dressed, 28 to 32 years old, 5 feet 8, 160 to 170 pounds light complexion, round face and black hair, light-colored felt hat (and shiny shoes. An awful lot of men fit that description. :
Test Suit Trial Set On Health Merger
Trial of a test suit on the le-
Follows Fixed Pattern
The elusive bandit earned his the way he ap:
Congress never tries to influence ing from the small commission bining Indianapolis and Marion proaches his work
the vote of the other. The proposal would abolish the present 64 politically appointed tax commissioners and replace them with up to«25 district offices manned by Civil Service employees. Only the nation’s top tax collector would be a political appointee. The President’s plan has stirred
up angry opposition from some,
Senators who have an important ! voice in the selection of tax col- Cole, 22, South Bend, was killed
lectors who, in turn, wield con-
siderable influence. The plan also Was riding struck-'a gasoline transport on a county road near =
produced an apology yesterday. Sen. Walter F. George (D. Ga.) said he was “wholly in error” last week when he charged Secretary
of the Treasury John W. Snyder was in a South Bend hospital inj, Th¢ following table shows the tempera-
with the responsibility for appointing former Internal Revenue Collectors James P. Finnegan and Denis W. Delaney. Sen. George made the statement Friday after President Truman sent a letter to Vice President Alben W. Barkley saying that Senators who oppose his plan are more interested in making political hay than in ridding the government of corruption, The Georgia Democrat, chalrman of the Senate Finance Committee, also accused Mr. Truman of trying to shift the blame for tax scandals from the administration to Congress—a charge he did not withdraw. Mr. Finnegan and Mr. Delaney are among the three tax collectors who have been indicted for misconduct in office since the
start of the tax investigation. Marion County early today at the injury here. Mrs. Clara Scatter-
Four others have been forced out of office and there have been wholesale firings in the Internal Revenue Bureau.
Bayless Returned To Los Angeles
LOS ANGELES, Mar. 11 (UP) —John Bayless, Hollywood bank for $19,628 last month and then left a trail so plain ‘he was picked up in New York within a matter of hours,! was returned here yesterday for trial, [ Under escort of two U. 8. marshals, the notorious 39-year-old stickup man arrived by train| chained to another prisoner| wanted here on a car theft charge. He will be tried for holding up the Hollywood branch of The Bank of America last Feb. 25. FBI agents in New York were notified and they took him into custody as he climbed off the plane, still carrying a briefcase containing most of the money,
Expect Resignation ATHENS, Greece, Mar. 11 (UP) The resignation of Premier Nicholas Plastiras appeared imminent today following doctors’ confirmation that paralysis of the left side of his body had
Muncie got $9,486,092. Kokomo Good to ‘low prime vealers were Set in.
cashed in $9,194446, and Bedford (foundry) collected $7.309.469. ” ” a AND SINCE that big “check” wasn't made out fo me, I'm glad it went where it did, to 42512 Hoosiers. And I don’t regard it as a special gift to Indiana. GM got its money's worth.
What, Already? THEY NEVER quit, those toy makers. Just when, we got our last
Christmas bills out of the way, and are squaring off with the tax office, the toy makers step up with their playthings for 1952. Children are imitators. So toys imitaté things used by grownups. In the toy show in New York, there are dolls with the new poodle haircut and bell-shaped ckirts, and a. kit for complete beauty parlor. » ” n THE NEW TOY furniture has eontour chairs. And then there's actually a gadget which "uses
atomic energy for peaceful ends” The thug stuff is out. And the uniforms for the small fry will
selling for $§36-38. Utility and
_ commercial vealers brought a top
$35.
| Hogs 8000; fairly active: barrows an gilts mostly strong to 25 cents higher but rather uneven; bulk choice 170<250-pounds barrows and gilts, $17-17.75: 250-280-pound, $16.25-17.25: 280-330-pound, $15.50-16.50: 120-160-pound, $14-15.50; sows, steady: bulk choice, $14-15.50. Cattle 850, calves 300. all slaughter classes active: all grades and weight steers fully steady to 50c higher; small lots choice yearlings and medium weight steers $34-34.50. "part load held around (335; good to choice light and medium weights $30.50-33.75; utility and come mercial mixed yearlings 324-30: few high choice heifers $34.25; good and choice heifers $30-32.50: cows strong: utility and commercial $21.50-25 few good $26-27; canners and cutters $17.50-2150: sparingly $22; bulls steady: utility and commercial $24-28.50: vealers moderately active, steady: good to low prime. $36-38 few £38.50-39; 35
utility and commercial $26cull $25 down. * Sheep 300: market not fully estab. lished: small lots mostly good to choice natives fully steady at $25: choice to prime held near $27 slaughter ewes scarce quotable. steady: good to choice salable $12-15: culls down to 16
Produce
Eggs—FOB Cincinnati. cases included on graded eggs Consumer grade, U =8 A large white 38-41';c: brown mix 36-39'2c U. 8. medium white 34-37'2¢. brown mix '4-36'2c; wholesale grade, com'l. graded 40 per cent, extra large white 34-36¢ brown mix 34-36¢. current receipts, cases exchanged 30-31c Market steady and prices unchanged Supplies ample for fair demand Chickens — Commercially grown fryers 28-29¢: hens, heavy 26-27c; hens, light 1920c. old roosters 17-19c. ¢ Fryers about steady and balanc fully steady at unchanged prices Butter—Creamery. 90 score 82c: premium hutterfat 72c, regular f7c
aN ntlmg Sn
.,.. HGH hr i] Yana
TFs) won naw
ve “ or TONING han “te
’ cd ‘ fusens
a —Mar. 11, 1952—
» Lanner
Local Stocks and Bonds
STOCKS | American Loan 5% | American States | American States nfd .e *Ayrshire Collerfes com .,, L Ayres 4'2% ptd sens Belt RR & 8tk Yds com ..... Belt RR & Stk Yds ofd . Bobbs-Merrill com Rohbs-Merrill ofd 4% Central Soya ° : “aes unne Chamber of Commerce com | Circle Theater com 1 Citizens Ind Ter s= pfd Commonwealth Loan 4% pfd Consolidated Fin 5 pfd Cont Car-Na-Var Cummins Eng com Cummins Eng ofd ‘Delta Elee com ce Fastern Ind Tele § nfd
‘Equitable Securities com ..
Eauitable Securities ofd Family Finance com . Family Finance 5% ofa .. Hays Corp pfd ww sane Hamilton Mfg Co. com Herff-Jones Class A pfd Home T & T 5% old .e Hook Drug Co com Ind Asso Tel 2 ofd Ind Asso Te: 2'5 pfad Ind Gas & Water com ind Mich Ei 4'a plo Ind Telenhone 48 nfd Indpls Ath Club Realty Co Indpls Pow & Lt com Indpls Pow & Lt pf Indianapolis Rallwavs com Indianapolis Water com *Indianapolis Water 4', pf ‘Indianapolis Water 57% pf Jefferson National Life com Kingan & Co com . Kingan & Co pfd Lincoln Nat Life Lynch Corporation . . P R Mallory eres Marmon-Herrington com Mastic Asphalt Natl Homes com Nat! Homes pfd *N Ind Pub Serv com N Ind Pub Serv 4V. ofd *N Ind Pub Serv 4'7 pfd N Ind Pub Serv 4:56% Prozress | ayundry com Pub Serv of Ind com Pub Serv of Ind 32 pt Ross Gear & [oo! com Sond G& Ecom . ....... So Ind G & E 48% pfd ... Stokely-Van Camp com ...,.. 1 Stokely-Van Camp pfd ..,... Cn 5'2% pfo ‘a #Terrs Haute Malleable U Machine Co teen Onited Telephone 5% pfd .... Union Title ‘Extra dividend
Allen & Steen So | American Loan 4'%4s 55 American 8ecurity 5s 60
| American Loan 4'2s8 60 | Bastian Molev 5st 61 {Batesville Tele Co 4'2s .... |Buhner Pertilizer 5s 58 |Ch of Com Bldg 4'2s 61 Columbia Club 3-58 62 ‘ Equitable Securities 5= 60 Hamilton Mfg Co Hs 65 Indplse Paint & Cclor 5s 64 ° (ndpls Public Loan 5s 64 \ *Indpls Railways 5s 97 nd Limestone 4s 17 «ind Asso Tel 3s 75 . Kuhner Packine 4s 59 .. Langsenkamp 5s 48 ve . Paper Arts Co 8s 58 .....%... Sprague Device 5& 80 arses iTraction Terminal 58 #7 ......
the Indiana State ’
1s
MURDER
On the Highways
SOUTH BEND -- Marilyn Y.
chambers Senate,
today when a car in which she
here. » Eugene G. Van Dusen, 25, Mishawaka, driver of the car,
a fair condition. | State police said the car was speeding in a 20-mph-zone when it struck the transport.
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings $13,055,000 | Debits 16,038,000
Local Truck Grain Prices
Truck wheat, $2135, Oats, 93c New No. 2 white corn. $1.75 New No. 2 yellow corn, $1.65. Soybeans, $2.77,
Winds Here Da
Thousands
Winds of gale force lashed
tail end of a deluge that poured nearly 2'; inches of rain here,
|. Gusts reached 65 mph as they {uprooted trees and utility poles,
blew electric power out of thou{sands of homes, smashed windows land caused thousands of dollars damage. Heavy wind lashed most of Indiana, Central and southern parts
pour, with at least four communities getting more than 3 inches of rain. The Weather Bureau predicted floods along sections of White River and both its forks, and along the Upper Wabash. Heaviest rains were at Petersburg with 3.6 inches, Vincennes 3.23, Evansville 3.12, West Baden 3.05 and Edwardsport 2.99. White River Near Flood U. 8. weather officials said White River will be one foot short of flood stage in Indianapolis, but is expected to pour some water around homes in the Ravenswood and 70th St. areas. Elsewhere: in the state, the White and Wabash Rivers are expected to flood lowlands around Anderson, Muncie and Wabash.
In Indianapolis; the airport weather station measured 2.48 inches. The downtown count was 2.21 inches. | Electric service was off in many sections of the city and county
Thousands of homes south, east and west of the city were without power or lights for periods up to two hours when gusts drove pow-
er- lines together, blowing out fuses. Affected were .the areas from Jordan Lane to the Johnson
County line, including the entire Southport district; from E. 82d St. and Hague Rd. east to Indian Lake, and from 7100 block Rockville Rd. west to Hendricks County. Many - residents didn’t know about the trouble. wage restored by 6 a. m,,
even Service before
... many of them got up
.
fore important.
phone us for a check-up
convenience.
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE AND OTHER PRINCIPAL
the
! The Pennsylvania Railroad un-|
FOUNDED 1885
Changes in. a company’s financial status. its com“petitive position, or new developments in the industry of which ft is a part, have a marked effect on the value of its securities. Periodic appraisals of your investments are there-
Our Investment Research Department can supply you with the facts you need. So why not write or
We'll be glad to have you drop in at your
Write: for our current Stock Survey
THOMSON & M¢KINNON
BROKERS IN SECURITIES AND COMMODITIES 200 Circle Tower Bldg.
County health facilities was set He picks on privately. owned today for Mar. 25. service stations where one atJudge Norman E. Brennan, Su- tendant is on duty, at a time perior Court 3. instructed attor- when no customers are In sight. neys to file briefs before the hear- He walks up to the attendant ing. ‘and asks, usually, for a radiator The health merger law also is hose for a certain model and year, designed to take Julietta out of The attendant has to go back politics by removing control of into the stock room to hunt for county home from county it, or to look in the catalog. When he looks at the stranger again, a nickel-plated revolver is {looking back at him, After giving up what money he has, the at-|
commissioners.
Official Weather
UNITED STATES’ WEATHER BUREAU —Mar. 11, 19 .
“Sunrise 6:04 | Sunset 57 (OT told to stay in the back room
Precipitation 24 hrs ending 7:30 a. m. 2.21/for five minutes. By then, the
Total precipitation since Jan. 1..... 83% Excess since Jan. 1 ‘ 143 Man is gone.
re in other cities:
Station 0 Bano 4 3¢ ‘accent. Sometimes he holds ational. Bank. [SERED vi rvss - 1 11 ‘handkerchief to his face with his {Cleveland 88 42 left hand. while pointing his gunito finance services of Crossroads milk a Ft. Wayne BY 38 iwith the right. Pt. Worth 66 n He is never nervous, and never, Indianapolis <5 3 { (Kansas City . 4 29 (threatening. | Miami : H a | dl te 0 Hits All Sections Qkishoma City ’ 5 i maha . 4 | Ban Atonin : 3 i} south without any pattern or reg[jan Francisco - NM 42 (ularity. Nobody knows where he| Washington. .D | 54 50 | will appear next, or when. Here is!
(his record to date: | Jan. 28--K&B Service Station, |1811 W. Washington St., at 8:14 {p. m. Took $150. . . . Feb. 18— {Turner Oil Co. Station, 3702) |E. 10th St, at 9 p. m. Took $30. |<. . Feb, 19—Langford 8 rd |Station, 4120 FE. New York #t., at 7:54 p. m. Took $40... . Feb, 22 | Texaco Filling Station, 6401 Col- . {lege Ave, 439. 61, Clayton, Was SeHIVg OUliss0. . . . Feb. 27—Shell Service.
of a ear at Pennsylvania and] Ohio Sts. when the wind blew the Station. 203 E. 30th St. at 7:43
door against her and knocked, her to the sidewalk. She was, treated at St. Vincent's Hospital Ry : {for an injured hip. ! nning of Stop Sign Windows were broken and poles Blamed in Two Deaths uprooted. | State police today blamed a | The area near. 31st St. and motorist who ran a stop sign at
rken of Homes
The storm caused at least one
who held up a/of the state took a heavy down- Kessler Blvd. was blockaded after|the intersection of Ind. 39 and
water reached a depth of 21; feet. |U, 8. 52 for the death of two
persons in a car-truck collision.
derpass, 7700 ‘W. Washington St.,| Authorities sald Charles Gor-
‘was so deep with water that even don, 44, Lebanon, and Ver! E.
large trucks could not go through. Workman, 38, Gary, were killed! High. water closed four high- in the crash yesterday. They said ways in the state—U. 8. 31 south Mr, Gordon's car ran a stop sign. | of Memphis, Ind.; 58 southwest of |. ———— AR Columbus, Ind.; 245 near Dana,| and ‘Ind. 358 between Plainville and Edwardsporl. : Several trees were torn up at Traders Point, Morris St. east of Lyndhurst Dr., and Pleasant Run Pkwy. and Emerson Ave. Indianapolis Power & Light Co. reported wires down at Rockville and High School Rds, 1000. N, West St, St. Clair 8t. and Missouri St., 1500 F. Washington St and St. Joseph St. and Carlyle Pl. On U. 8. 40 east of the city, three utility poles were left hanging. At 38th St. and College Ave., a light globe was broken. The Weather Bureau said winds will diminish today, but it will be colder. The temperature will drop to a low of 28 tonight.
Shatters Windows Gusts of wind shattered at least three large plate glass windows in the city. Police passing Richman's Clothes, 22 E. Washington 8t., found an 8-by-15-foot window broken. Store officials estimated damage at several hundred dollars. A
10-hy-11-foot window was blown out of Monarch Buick Co.. Inc., 1040 N, Meridian 8t. And Mrs. Lena J. Chaney, 724 Park Ave. reported a window shattered in her heauty parlor at H28 Massachusetts Ave.
of the
Tax Included Warranty Extra
makes this beouty a -piece
on your portfolio today? “Movie-Clear” pictures.
®
TAKE UP TO" © 78 WEEKS TO PAY!
MArket 3501
\
"ADAMS"
WITH HALOLIGHT
Bic 17" console
| 5369s
Watch out for Changes!
The touch of the master craftsman
niture worthy of the finest home. The Sylvania receiver a masterpiece of dependable engineering producing
ice Co,, 3854 KE. Michigan St. at
9:03 p. m. Took $126... Mar. 9 Cowan Shell Station, 1428 KE. 62d St, at 10 p. m. Took $305
His hours are regular. his overhead is low and he carries very little equipment. The “radiator hose" bandit has a pretty good business worked up. But it probably won't last.
Griffith Heads Easter Seal Drive
Willlam C. Griffith, Indianapolis banker, has been named Marfon County chairman of the 1952 taster Seal cam-
paign. He will work with George H.
Craig. Brazil, the Indiana chairman of the month - ¢campaign to open Friday. Mr. Grifith's & appointment was announced by Edwin H. Gable, president of
Mr. Griffith tendant is locked in the rest room, Marion County Society of Crip- if we do not, the workers will lose
pled Children and Adults, drive sponsor. Mr. Griffith,
Inc.,
3145 N. Meridian
| He is always “calm, cool and St., is president of the Indiana |collected,” detectives are told. He Trust Co. and vice president and|“we must watch out for the Hish Low talks in an even voice, without director of the Merchants Na- farmers who farm farms. Some
The Easter Seal campaign helps
Rehabilitation Center regularly
enrolling 20 crippled children.
“Communist forces” of turning ‘hunger into aggression.” ro
-
And at a press conference, hd: i
accused the United Electrical Workers Union of following” ’ “every twist and turn” of the
Communist line. Scorns Challenge
Mr. Reuther made the accusation against the UEW after scorning a challenge from UEW - leader Tony De Maio to debate union issues at the Minneapolis Moline Co. The UAW is attempts ing -to wrest control of Moline workers from the UE. In hig forum speech Mr. Reuther sald the United States must dem~. onstrate to the world that “ta put food in your stomach, it is’ not necessary to put your soul in chains.” od “The shortest road that, Come Imunism can travel is through an empty stomach,” he said. “Freedom’s fight must be won in the rice fields in Asia—as well as on’. the battle fields.” ] "i
| Calls for Unity
,
Mr. Reuther also urged farmers,
'and laborers to work together to ,
‘solve their basic problems, “for
their jobs, the farmers will lose their farms and we may all lose our freedom.” Mr. Reuther also warned that
say that it is more profitable to. milk a dairy farm than it is to dairy cow." | In declining the UEW debate |challenge, Mr. Reuther said he:
,
,
Easter Seal contributions last was not interested in getting in- ,
{year provided physical and occu-| volved 'pational therapy treatments for munistic tricks’ for propagandisHe strikes east, west, north or 335 Marion County handicapped ing or maneuvering.
children and adults. Of each Easter Seal dollar contributed by Hoosiers, 91.7 per cent remains in Indiana.
Pole Denies Spying On Gls in Austria
SALZBURG, Austria, Mar. (UP) Heinz Silomon, 42, Polish-born displaced perso
1 a
in Austria.
8ilomon, accused of handing to P. m. Took $80... . Feb. 20—|agents of Communist Czechoslovakia information on the location]
and equipment of
{Civil Affairs Court here.
U.S. Statement
WASHINGTON, Mar. 11 (UP)—Government expenses and receipts for the current
r ago:
This Year Last Year Expenses $ 43.043,769,669 § 23.817,075.160 Receipts 35,092,206,020 27,790.665,007 urplus 973,500.147
p 7.951,564,648, ash Balance 4,222,707,226 ublic Debt 260,270,048,668 Gold Reserve 23,200,679.737
»
of fur-
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The Store
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n, ! |pleaded not guilty yesterday to jor Hospital, Shelbyville, is Paul. at 8:05 p. m. Took| charges of spying on U.S. troops H. Welch, 41, of 337 8. Bancroft’ Fair in St. Vincent's Hos«'
4.829.603.7095 258.705.838.930 | 21,050.700,677 By ee —————
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2 Indianapolis Men
Hurt Near Shelbyville =
| One Indianapolis man was Ip leritical condition today and ane lother fair after being injured in
la head-on auto crash on U. 8. 421 four miles northwest of 8helby- :
A
‘ville yesterday. | In critical condition at the Ma-
|Ave. {pital here is Dr. Harry E. Kitter« man, 57, of 5108 Graceland Ave.
|
| Injured by Auto
{Long Hospital following an auto {accident last night at Capitol Ave. and Market 8t. Mr. Murphy was struck by -a car driven by Simon A. Perkins, 22, Evansville.
- -
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TURE & APPLIANCES
TILL 9 P. M.:
°
“standardized Com<'*
wr
»
State police sald Mr. Welch's” American|car skidded head-on into the ve. forces, went on trial in the U. 8./hicle of Dr. Kitterman after pass. ling another car. s
| J. W. Murphy, 88, Shelbyville, | Racal year through Mar. 7. compared with/ was in fair condition today at. ay
Dowritons Wheat 1 NG y :
E335 |
