Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 17 March 1952 — Page 13
iol” '
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'm rivalfy has trade” lobbies, e the natione | last year by
if Congress
some econo= a year to the 0, the Ameri= the National 1stice Departe sion in oppose
| fair trading, ormerly could a particular it be sold for then became 11 the product
{gs forbidden ess exempted Sherman Act. ouri and Vere bia allow fair
ve Court ruled »d to abide by to. observe it. | order houses tates couldn't for customers
e slightly dif.
Fair Trade is jon of Retail whose - antie The associae
secretary who’
h a $25,000 a
051, drug, perse yureau $46,000 ational Assoipped in ,with ent that fair ants against ar before, the
to stop retail enough woron to weigh 1t, too. to be heavy that 20 law11, introduced onn.) and remmerce Com
, “pushbutton and point to nd telephone he Commerce
lobby is the ich makes its to makers of worth buying small enough
$102,000 for es a bill ape idicilary Come ene J. Keogh tore and mail
amended that e price-fixing 's wholesalers nanufacturers ied for price oved that the ible efforts to reducing the
hat the House but that the
e Word
the heaven, but times. Matthew
athering on the ing in his own = e signs of core ce stronger than ms in our own 0 con interpret
d is gone, afraid, ne; hey played; ly laid, ly ills, ly shade, the hills, ost; ands. , . . wrung, rld was young.* 2d thyself to us hearts, help us glory or decay,
did. Amen, bert, Nathan by copyright, 1039,
this one the
vise have not for .wordg. their sedans s, which is gh it they're ~ helicoptere
well as fulle
ns this year omatic, mere atic, hydrde ’ dual-range -my favorite These cost hould, with
also have ty-level seat ushioned ine and safetye lds. Have a hese“and the rd. e pretty, too, cost so much uld, that is, 0 pay extra essories. mean, adverthink you're icent and I se your die- . not know g about, but
Ty
~ the next two weeks.
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California Storm Leaves Four Dead
By United Pres 1.0S ANGELES. . Mar. 17
third Southern California” storm of the year played out in the desert area east of here today,
leaving”in its wake four persons’
dead, costly “baby tornado” damage and 31 persons ‘marooned in a huge snowslide, A freak twister swept through nearby Santa Monica vesterday, It whirled a half-completed skiff through the air, blew down a tile garage building onto three cars, knocked over a brick chimney and fireplace, scattered windows and collapsed several other boats. Rescuers who snowshoed into a mining camp near Bishop, Cal. reported that- 31 persons marooned. in the high *Sierras by a
snow slide were safe and snug with plenty of food. The .miners and their families
were trapped Saturday when tons of snow charged down'the mountains, Nine buildings were destroyed, four homes damaged and telephone service was cut off. Short-wave radio reports from Bishop, about 200 miles northeast of here, said the |victims have diesel-operated stoves and food from a nearby hoarding house at the site, Authorities warned new slides may come at any time because of a. heavy blizzard. But. the marooned families said they could hold out. The state division of highways hoped to open the only road into the camp today. It reported snow drifts from six to 10 feet deep.
bound for Camp Pendleton at Oceanside Cal., also were stranded by snow near a winter camp at Pickle Meadows inf the Sierra Nevadas., Rotary plows cut away heavy snowdrifts in the highway to free the two busses.
Mrs. Ann Marie Reed Rites to Be Wednesday
Mrs. Anna Marie Reed. mother of 11 children, will be buried in Floral Park Wednesday after 1 p. m. services at Mt. Paran Baptist Church. She died Sunday at her home at 920 N. California St.! Mrs. Reed wads 64. A native of Ellenville, Ga., Mrs. Reed came to Indianapolis in 1923. She had belonged to Mt. Paran Church since 1932. longed to the Independent Order of St. Mark's, Household of Ruth Lodge, Purple Heart Nurses, and|
U. S. Production
The
Wife Shoots Colonel and Two busses loaded with wvarines Kills Herself
The colonels their bedroom killed herself.
headquarters. with pain, gasped: “My wife has shot me and killed herself.”
that of Lt. Col. Lowell E. Peaster, 50, Hanscom nearby Bedford.
She also be- lish-made floor about 10 feet from her body.
-
SMILIN' SAMS—Board of Works president Howard W. Sams looked like this when he got the caricature treatment from Lenn Redman of Chicago. Mr. Redman will be doing his specialty for the 1952 Electronics Parts Show in Chicago in May. In addition to his city job, Mr. Sams publishes technical books on electronics.
Hog Prices Drop 25-50c Here
Most bids on hogs were 25-50 cents lower than Friday in trading at the Indianapolis Stockyard today. Choice 170-240-pound porkers brought $16.50-17.25. The fatter hogs, 240-270 pounders, sold for $15.75-16.50. Sows were about steady, selling for $14-15.50. Most good and choice light and medium weight steers were selling at $31-34. : bid for commercial cows. Good bulls were selling for $26-27.50. Vealers sold 50 cents lower, Hogs 15,000: rather slow: early commanding officer of ‘the sales light fo medio, weight batons Aad Air Force Base at De de a6. 00 13.25 top 319.00; 340-310 pounds $15.75-16.50; 120.60 bounds $14-15;
: i i : sows about steady at $14Police found him in his pajamas Cattle 1600: calves 200: steers and year-
|
By United Press ARLINGTON, Mass., Mar. 17— lady - shot him in today and then The telephone rang in police A voice agonized
He gave an address. It was
uneven
& : ,e lings mostly fully steady: two loads averand bleeding. Mrs. Peaster Mas age choice 1176 pound steers Phe, pr ; 08S g loads. choice near 105 pounds : sprawled, fully clothed, acr ihe small lot high choice and prime held
bed of the guest rom, dead of a above $35: most good and choice light and bullet wound. A 38-caliber Eng-
medium weight steers. 331-34. commercial to good $26.50-31; scattered good to choice the heifers $29.50-.32.50: cows about steady; commercial $23,50-25: utility $21-23; canners and cutters $17.50-21. culls steady: commercial $26-28;: good $26-27.50; vealers only moderately active, steady to 50 cents lower; good to prime mainly $35-38; utility and commercial $25-34.50
revolver was on
Bullet in Spine
Widows’ Club. “She shot me,” Col. Peaster "“gheep 600: little done on native lambs; : Sn sai “ , i ; several small lots utility to choice about Surviving are six daughters, said. “She was going to leave me, [teveral amall lots utility to choles about
Mrs. Freda Small, Mrs. Ina Sey- There was an argument. She Was 98-pound fed wooled western lambs about
more, Mrs. Anna Fowler, Alesta Clark, Mrs. and Mrs. Mattie Williams, all of Indianapolis; five sons, John, Lonnie, Earlie, Emmett and King, all nf Indianapolis; two brothers, Charles Hicks, Indianapolis, and
Mrs.
going to leave me. She was going Addie Harris to leave me.”
25c lower at $26.50; odd utility and good wooled ewes steady at $10-12.
Col. Peaster was taken to a
Sevitzky to Direct
It had ripped through Vancouver Symphony Fabien Sevitzky, Indianapolis
hospital with a bullet lodged in his. spine. his chest just below the heart.
of
~— 'RUss Rate
{duction and is demanding something be done. The President's
A top of $25 was]
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Ai
-. - Ey
LS
seiieved Today «Business
| ' s k 5-1 Higher | By JIM G. LUCA! ; Bo oy Cas Banks Feel WASHINGTON, Mar. 17=The | - Air Force is $4 billion behind ir : : aircraft * procurement and may {drop further back by June 30, the Tax Push lend of the fiscal year. 1 That's the main . reason why President Truman sent a hurry-; By Harold Hartley up call for Gen. Hoyt Vandenberg, TL “ an’ lt er te yy Andel Key | THERE HAS BEEN a “tax run” on the banks. West recently. The President said! That means depositors have been dipping into their! at that time only that he wanted savings, : it SCuss : 0 pias ® miportany, but » And those who couldn't square off with Uncle Sam, $a ’ had to borrow. ———"" EE | Moi the talks, Gen, Vanden- One business man who thought Are we back to pocket lunches g flew from Key West to ¥'t. “ blondes” in! \Worth, where B-36's are made. |D® had about $700 to pay, found to keep those "boils blon aM | out, from his accountant, that he. Washington in mink coats? Later, Air Secretary Thomas K. ,weq $6000. He didn’t have it, so! If someone will hand me a [Finletter and a party of top AIriqe to the bank. nail, I'll bite it in two. (Force generals flew down to Ft.| Insurance companies have felt Then I'll pass it to you. Worth for another conference. ithe pressure of tax borrowing. It : i | Originally, the Air Forcetakes time, letter-writing to the People, Mostly [planned to write checks for $16 home offices, and such: And some, QUICK: Bob Osler's Life Inbilliogs worth of planes during the said, “Hurry it," so they wouldn't surance Magazine carried its bigfiscal year. As of now, it's spend- miss the Monday midnight post- gest ad this month eight pages, ling at a $12 billion rate. mark. two colors, It tells the story of Clay P. Bedford, deputy defense, It spun the finance companies, the power of newspaper advertisproduction administrator for pro- too. ing. in: Indianapolis ‘selects The curement and production, spent, The sobering effect of higher Times. ... The California Oil Co. several days last week in air ma- tax payments, and the grumbles yses atomic energy to make a teriel command headquarters at about paying them in face of tax new motor oil which lengthens Dayton, O., trying to break bot-|scandal headlines, left the public/engine life 50 per cent . .. Society
tlenecks. One report is that Mr. muttering to itself. of Automotive Engineers is givBedford “raised alkinds of hell.” And that muttering will last as ing three “500 Mile” tickets to President Truman . apparently long as those tax loans last which, Purdue students as. prizes for
has suddenly become aware of for some people, may be a long, diesel study . . . General Motors, the dangerous lag in aircraft pro- long time, is putting Hydra-Matic shift in aj
Kingan Trim-Back parcel truck . .
sudden interest is linked by some IN THE MAIL this morning rrayelers Insurance . . . Charles |to an announcement of a Senate came the news .that about 40x, oeffman is new Indiana and larmed services subcommittee, supervisory people had been|yentucky manager for Magnavox,
. John F. Hunt? [5128 F. Washington, has joined to Washington this week to talk/come his campaign manager, sald
rcraft Reported Laggin gB
»
James A. Farley
WASHINGTON, Mar. 17 (UP), James A. Farley, who masterminded the late President Roosevelt's first two presidential campaigns, has been approached to become campaign manager for Sen. Richard B. Russell, contender for the 1952 Democratic nomination, it was disclosed last night, Informed sources said “certain Senators’ who are friends of the Georgia Democrat “approached” Mr. Farley on the subject, They said Mr. Farley is coming!
it over with those Senators. | Seeks ‘National Campaign’ | The sources sald Sen. Russell]
4
Sen. Richard B. Russell
with him over the third term issue, . But they indicated Sen. Russell would- ‘welcome Mr. Farley as his campalgn manager. It was understood Sen. Russell does not want a manager from the South because he is anxious to make a “national” campaign that will not be tagged as an exclusively southern Democratic move to capture the White Houge. Sen. Russell, asked on a television program yesterday about reports that Mr. Farley will be-
he had not heard that this is the case. But he praised Mr. Farley and said he would welcome his
headed by Sen. Lyndon Johnson dropped from the Kingan payroll.| with offices here ...M. G. Schaef- himself has had no direct contact |support.
|(D. Tex.), that it intends to in-| They ranged from 36 years of ,, wage incentives for Western (vestigate aircraft procurement. service down to a year or less. piactric will tell it to the Society {The Johnson committee particu-!And the one to whom I talked,|;or the Advancement of Managelarly wants to know jeopardizing our national security. ed to know why he had been let|nay 26 at 6:30 p. m. Russia is reported to be out- out. producing us five to one.
Edwin H. White, CLU, director| The company made no officlaliyngyrance Research and Review, ‘announcement. It apparently|, qerwriting, has been upped to |tigured it is a private business, ., = Ww. C. Love, Standard We are producing approximate- to be run in the interest of both|q's new consumer manager in ly 600 planes per month. — less workers and stockholders, and let| patrojt, started pumping gas in fan one fourth our Warn Yar it go at that. Indianapolis in 1922 , . . where {IT rate. e once expected to be * = = , he producing 1800 planes by Septem-| BUT 1 HAPPEN to know Sadar A am at t ber, 1953. The President's budget enough about it to tell you that P ’, * |
[—which flattened out all defense|(1) it is true, 40 were let out (2) \goals— later cut that back to 1200 (seven were put on the company’s Local Stocks and Bonds
Plane Production Down
(planes. Last month Roswell Gil-|retirement pay (3) the others —Mar, 17— patrick. Air Force undersecretary, were given dismissal pay up to STOCKS » De Asked told Congress we would be turn-|four weeks, and (4) that the com-| American Loar eens {ing out ‘only 950 planes a month pany is trimming back its cost JA lueH an Staion vid N. 171 | {by the end of 1953. He said theisheet to make a better showing pI
L 8 Avres bate ld | reduction was part of a slow-|with the stockholders who are|Bet RE & BK Xo fa™. 15 8
{down in the whole rearmament let altogether happy with their Sobba-Merril com _..-.. L .
program. Central Soy { yn. I WAS SENT a chart which
veel cee 1 1
I8Ys |
5
B .a..s Several reasons are cited for Chamber of Commerce com “4
ircle Theater com the plane production lag. Short-| itizens Ind Ter 3" pf
ages of critical materials and purported to show where the coommanwesith) Loan 4 ie "n | 'machine tools usually rank first. trim-back took place, one out of cont Car-NeVar al [An aircraft industry spokesman production, two out of sanitation. Summins ne 1a : fe u |pointed out that most aircraft/six out of fresh and frozen Delta Hee €Gm go opq=titit gn LL,
+ tern In {factories operate on ‘a 40-hour meats, eight out of processing, 12 Eauitable Securities com . 'work week, with little overtime, out of manufacturing, nine out gIris Finance com... He =aid the industry could pro- of receiving and shipping and two Hays ‘Corp
with Mr. Farley, former Postmaster General and one-time Democratic National Chairman
Sen. Russell also said President Truman appears to be looking fot an “heir apparent” and has been
if we're'a 19-year-old man, said he want-|, ent at Butler's Atherton Center| who helped elect Mr. Roosevelt|“disappointed” in his search “a Dr. in 1932 and 1936 only to breakicouple of times.”
Lovett Tells of "Ferment Over Advance in Arms
Ry United Press DETROIT, Mar. 17—S8ecretary of Defense Robert A. Lovett said today the military is in “a true ferment” as it switches to super weapons for new methods of war-| fare. | In a speech prepared for de-| livery before the Economic Club of Detroit, Mr. Lovett said the turmoil is the “result of amazing advances in applied sciences and technology” which have prompted the emphasis being put on guided missiles and atomic warheads. For example, he said, “if there
on “the threshold of new develop-
explain the new weapons, but said they ‘completely astound” military planners. Mr. Lovett sald that modern weapons carry a “terrific cost” due to both inflationary pressures and to their own complexities, Mr, Lovett's speech was aecompanied by charts, one of which showed “a typical fighter” plane with more than 10,000 pounds of horsepower thrust. The typical World War II plane had 1500
|knocking out tanks at a distance
without using another expensive tank or a_very expensive piece
pounds of horsepower thrust, he
....1s a cheap and reliable way of said.
Buried Alive 29 Days
MEIRINGEN, 8witzerland, Mar.
3% pid .. 5 siiilof artillery—and I believe there!17 (UP)—A dog buried under a ww... «lls or ‘will be—it doesn't make seven-foot snow slide for 29 days
= PAGE 5 - y Badly Farley Urged to Guide Sen, Russell’s ’52 Race
ments” in weapons. He did not, ~
: . Air Force officers sent a case Symphony conductor, left yester-| - lout of personnel. {1ton fav com : the Rev. Coy Hicks, Detroit; 23 "Wri blood to the hospital for day for Vancouver, B. C., where, |9uce more ni poy hi hi I ar to remind you that this Hortl-jgnes Gass a #% much sense to go ahead and build was dug out alive in the nearby grandchildren and six great- : jnecessary priorilies, materia a/ : Home J Gow. lan excessive amount of tanks.” |Gadmen Vall ports said randehildren the commandant. for the fifth consecutive season, and tools. is the company’s business and it Hook D Soom Tadeo 19 | ot Pt men Valley, press re g — ee | Neighbors of the Peasters said he Will direct the Vancouver 8ym-|" pg, tne Jast two months, he is charged with operating its tina Alto sl .2% ptd 8 igen Bar fling today. It was unable to move. Muncie Rites Set lthey were a quiet couple and Phony. : said, deliveries have approximated stockholders’ investments for the ind Gas & Vie pd “35 {visual to Tadar: from certain e e “highly regarded.” Dr. Sevitzky will conduct the|q,. | ow <chedules, but have done greatest benefit to its rank and|ind Telephone 48 pfd ..... 98 (visual to radar; ce n ypes| | ughtly —regarced. Vancouver orchestra's final con-| ae he y i Indpls Ath Club Realty Co ... 14 .lof artillery to rockets; from] STOP | N ed Before an | file workers and the shareowners. indpls Pow & Ltcom ........ 31 3% or r. Jo. cClelian | Married Be sa [CETLS Of the Season next Sunday nothing toward picking up ground! | Indpls Pow & Lt pf ........ 93 96 |piloted aircraft to guided missiles Times State Service [ Both Col, Peaster and his wife, ¢€r! Seal : lalready lost. All Reich {Indianapolis Kallways com ... 4 842 |and from World War II explosiyes and | MUNCIE, Mar. 17—Attorney Leona, 43, had been married be- and Monday. He then will fly to _ Production of the F-86 Saberjet | eic | Indianapolis Water om iw WS atone warheads.” plosiyes i . s Frederick S. McClellan Sr. will be fore. His first wife and two New York to conduct auditions | gjop ep plane—the only airplane! IT WAS unanimous, the. much {in diinapolis Water 8% pf . 8, 12h Yesterday, at West Point. N. Y..| GO! \ NN 3 buried in Beech Grove Cemetery adopted children were said to be there and in Philadelphia over a approaching the Russian - made mulled-over choice of Jack Reich JSHeston Nations! Lite SOM vv Ie Wg 3 By, Ys Colt ' A " here after 10:30 a. m. services |iving at Athens, O. Mrs. Peaster’s four-day period beginning Apr. 1./MIG’s we encounter in Korea—is 2% executive vice president of the Kingan & Co pra... . 1b oer of a 3 nS With Our Sales and Service! ee rm er eee mettre ets ' o oi li . y § A tomorrow at Meeks Mortuary. qaughter.by her first marriage . . 170 per cent behind schedule. This Indiana State Chamber of Com | Lynch Corporation Uh ii Mr. McClellan died here Saturday spent the summers with her, but Local Truck Grain Prices is due aimost entirely to shortages | Merce. (RR Salo on tam Bal Brake and Carburetor at 76. now is With a grandmother at! eres wees —— |of machine tools. The F-86-F, an| When it came right down to |MarnanilorCpston © ov ME PLATING (0, [| Service on An Makes of carat An attorney here 54 years, Mr. walnut Ridge, Ark. Loic wheat, 3237, limproved Saberjet which may be the vote last Saturday, the hoard Nail Sa. an 10s | . McClellan was first secretary of (ol. Peaster was a veteran of New No 3 white corn, $1.78 a better ship than the MIG, is just ined up in xomplete support, Nf pup Perv 4ve pid FHA / SILVER Motor Tune-Up the Muncie Bar Associaiion, He World War II combat in Africa "Soybeans $2.81 [going into production. Air Force, RED-HEADED Jack Reich!*N Ind Pub ery 45 pfd : 3a 4d RHODIUM Wheel Balancing was: senjor member of the law.,ng Ttaly. He served in Alaska ~~ o designers for a long time couldn't hag a job on his hands. The DORA rh Ee eo BRASS Vacuum fom of MoClenan MeCisllan and took part in the atomic bomb U. S. Statement agree on the design. liked the work of Clarence A. Bub eT at ina 3% bt "| GOLD Pe Brak and Frederick. Jr, = tests at Eniwetok in 1950, SR eh toe Shortages Cited [Jackson who resigned to hecome Ross Gear & Tool com IE Ssonee! 1 ower Krqles Survivi With the 1we sors —_— _— ment expenses and receipts for ‘the cul- i {president of the American United go ;nq Gg & E com . ...... 22 23a} = CADMIUM f Handy and Pierce Surviving ) SONS , rent fiscal vear through Mar. 13. compared We're 65 per cent behind pro- Life Insurance Co. 80 4 a & E 48% pia ....101 108 (} + COPPER-NICKEL | are his wife, Mrs. Martha Corbett Nizam Talks to Mrs. FDR *'" # voor aso, ov... wast Year duction schedules for the B-47,| My informed hunch is that the |Stokely-van Camp pid ieee. 11a 1 CHROME Governors : 7 8. Sid- EXPENSES 2 5 27.462.515.108 : 3 » ! | . > : ss ney. Muncie, and. Capt. John NEW DELHI, India, Mar. 17 Boop Sosuamsst * nifsiif our only veal jet bomber. The hoard wants to keep the Jackson faistb Clusia =o © * Silverware Replated INDIANA os erDE Tv: 2 dir UP) —Th Ni ! Hr : Surplus ~~ 29A.001 335 1.108.319.6877 reason’s the same: shortage of|organization together, moving 0.8. Machine Co Tried I © Antiques Refinished Camp Atterbury; a daughter, (UP) e Nizam of Hyderabad Deficit sal a 00.368 4 423.782.1397 machine tools. lalong the same vigorous lines United Telephone 5% pfd ..... 91 : i Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Kenny; two chatted with Mrs. Eleanor Roose- Public Debt 260232631272 233 413.683.1085 we're only 25 per cent behind EB Ee ao * {Union TUE pig econ f 4 || ® Commercial Plating and Polishing | Carburetor & Brake (o. sisters, Mrs. U. G. Poland and velt Yesterday while two of fis > ; ee NG. POLST in production of the F-84 Thunder- AND SINCE Jack Reich has Alien. 3 Atetn 2" In 5 |] 917 MASS. AVE. CApitol 9088 |i 323 N. DELAWARE LI-4346 Mrs, J. Harriett Giffin. both of 70 wifes sat quietly in a corner cel pIaNaroLls CLE RING HOUSE 0 jet fighter. Indications are we’lllworked hand-in-glove with Clar-| American Loan 4's 58 ...... 91 RR ——-—— wt > Muncie, and nine grandchildren. playing with their children. Debits ail 3845.00 meot © this quarter's schedules.lence Jackson, the board wants tp} merlvan Beeurity 58 8 98 eee] : h— oo wp % But airmen in Korea aren't keen|see if he can keep the ball rolling| Bastian Moley 5s 61 a ADVERTISEMENT Batesville Tele Co 4'as . J about the Thunderjet. They say |in its present wall-oiled groove. |Buhner Pertilizer 5s 5 * ua )] THE QUICK the MIG can fly rings around! I'm not worried about Jack chor Com Bide 4 asl, " : it. Reich's ability to do it. Just give Equitable Securities be seis 14 . EASY METHGD OF The President's new goals cut him time. He'll work like a, ‘Indplss Paint. & Color Bs 64 .. 9 Reupholsiering current production schedules beaver. And work is what that