Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 April 1952 — Page 41
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Section Four A
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Real Estate .... gre 4142, 56 | Business —. sa aiiieie ee 4 Scale Model Home .....u...56"
Real Estate
- - gh SUNDAY, APRIL 6, 1952 -
PAGE 41 Classified ....vvaerenes 43-88
w) Jobs Hunting J 1952 Grads
By Harold Hartley
a
CAMPUSES ARE CROWDED. But they aren't all! students. Some are older. Graying men with hopeful eyes, |
alluring smiles.
It is industry’s manhunt, out to bag top-grade students
with good pay, quick Promotions. u« = = Three of the biggest education] mills, Indiana University, Purdue nappen without taking notice. and Notre Dame say there are
technical graduate, 'flair for sports models. So ChrysSome top-raters in the class-ijer went all the way. It had’ its rooms have a choice of 12 to 15 C-200 built in Genoa, Italy, and jobs, {freighted in ' with motordom’s . » » TOP PAY averages out around $300 a month with a bachelor's, IT WAS Chrysler's second exdegree, $50 more for a master’s, perimental car. The first was the and from $500 up for a doctor's K-310, and that “K”, I suspect degree. stands for “Keller” long-time The heaviest pull is from president, now chairman of the chemistry. Bidding are such board. glants as Du Pont, Monsanto, | ne .200 which is supposed to and Dow Chemical, But the re- rofjeet what cars are going to fineries, who are learning to 6 ike, long, low with a soft make much more than oil and ‘black top and stands, with top gas, are in there bidding ,p jess than five feet from the furiously. pavement, And the rubber companies, penders fade into body lines. such as Goodrich and General, Wheels are wire, the spare is which are setting up big time hidden. chemical divisions to work ini 4» =» synthetics and plastics, have added their pull to the creweut| giqn't load it up with eye manpower market. ling gadgets. It stuck to useful8.8.8 iness, as Chrysler always does. AT IU, J. D. Snider, placement! The, only European touch, I boss, said industry is pushing could ‘tab, was the tachometer, harder this year than last. Chem- counting engine revolutions per ists get the top bids, but account- Minute.
ing and management are not far! Something Americans behind. {have felt they needed.
Even the girls wha become fop- ¢ ’ flight secretaries are pulling down | Back to Earth $50 to $65 a week before they've! STORES HAVE MADE a distaken a line of private dictation. covery. It's where the big Thurs-
2 x =» iday night business AT PURDUE, Lynn Cason, from.
never
placement director, rated the stu-| Friday has been weakenodi}
dent hunt in two classes, both/ And the executive I talked with heavy. : (didn’t believe the week, measured First, mechanical or industrial from end to end, was really benengineering, and two, electrical, efiiting much.
chemical or metallurgical. | But Thursday night shopping
Then he added, “Don’t forget pag kept climbing. In one store
aeronautical engineers. The de- it has taken Saturday's measure, mand is far ahead of the supply.” leveled off in figures with the traHe hag a class of about 1000 ditional big day. graduates with from 3000 to 5000!
% " - FJ jobs waiting for them, Ww ; . { OMEN’S clothing is moving. It puts the student in a sweet Children’s clothing is moving
spot. ‘He can choose. And most of them take the big, secure jobs with “name companies” with ete ties, furnishings and sions. of the scramble up the Strangely, gift departments are ladder to the big desk ‘in the humming. Nice little things, not corner office. on the. top floor, always too useful, but nice to labeled “President.” ’ ‘have. These are selling. ss =» = 2 = = WILLIAM R. DOOLEY, who, oNE MERCHANT said about does the student placing at Notre Easter, “When we average out Dame, gave the same. story of March and April this year against
y March and April last year, we'll industry's hunger for engineers ... tn. first good look at sales
with offers for bachelor’s degrees, levels. We know they’ll be down and no experience, as high asa little.” $400 | “We've got to work harder he { to sell. There's a change in the Students won’t have to 100k jing, Look at Washington. The hard for jobs. And, as in the president got himself off the case at IU, 60 per cent are eligible hook. Then Charles Wilson for Army service. Some com-! quit, Néxt Newbold Morris got panies, badly in need of men, by- fired. Then Howard McGrath, pass this, and take a chance that! who fired him, got fired, too.” the men will work while they can, | “The whole thing’s busting up. learn “the business, then come “And we are in the lohg, slow back after they do their turn in slide out of inflation’s clouds, uniform, back to earth.” # » »
{] BUT THE Poor LAWYERS Old Ham Week who want to start out in private] practice are having it as tough | bought by the ton. as ever, unless they have a father,|
uncle or brother with a shingle Started, except that everybody's out {supposed to eat ham on Easter $ Sunday. There's one exception. If they , There's plenty of it, ready and have a technical background, they waiting. And I think in both its
are grabbed up for patents, and shape, and the way it will be
the-like. ~ kicked around this week, will reThere won't be ‘much ‘shoe mind you of a football. leather, or seats of pants worn | ono out in waiting rooms this year, pur RUY H er : J : AM carefully. by Industry's fledglings looking When you pay the full: price, you
for jobs. ; |alw . ’ It's the other way: around. Plays set the pest, Ane that's
Industry's almost holding them Most food prices are saggi T) | : ng. by the fail of their graduation Ay except ar It's reg gowns to make sure they don’t ups in price in two weeks, And get away, that has added 6 cents to a 10-
Chrysler's C-200 pound package.
What did it was Agriculture THE HIGH-FASHION studios|on the oo ANMan’s bad guess sugar’ quota. of the auto companies, are turning out dream cars in profusion. Borden's Bucks Teamed with the designets are the engineers who are out-gadget-| ing themselves, and putting milked.” enough power under hoods to pull a freight car. a GM first stepped out with its chine. slick Le Sabre which looked like
AS A STATE, we're But it pays.
CHRYSLER didn’t let all this
| Chrysler had noticed designers from three to five jobs for every were leaning heavily on Europe's
mh boi cui! Everybody Is Looking at Your Front Door
| CHRYSLER'S boast is that it -catch- |
is coming
{faster., And the men are sprucing §
i THIS IS THE TIME hams are |
Nobody knows exactly how it!
being The Borden Co. sat down with batch of cancelled checks and politon Ave.: 4713 Stratford Ave.; irdn them through the adding ma-|
It found that it had spent $13- Ralston Ave.
Today «Business 38th St. Project Meets With Opposition
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[uid FOREST PARK VILLAGE—Two-hundred and twenty walk-up apartments to be built in landscaped project.
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THE RANCHO--Attractive entrance of the ranch home of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Geer, 444 E, Arden Dr.
How’s your home's front door Early American, or Colonial front appeal? Does it hang a welcome door, But that’s as it should be, ign on your house? |For that also is the top choice of sig y oe {architecture in this area. : hi An attractive front entrance) mpat front door of yours is a | COLONIAL—Hoosier favorite is the front door of the M. will do that and more, according big challenge. It can and should W. Manion home at 5132 N. New Jersey St. to the architects. And they express the warmth of your home a . SkSiiag should Know. land your own good taste. It is
They're the big eye-stoppers, p
f { i
| “front door must ‘blend in har- much, moniously with thé home’s design. |
Sometimes they don't and then
TE ———————— they are an eye-stopper of « Home Show other kind. the first and. last oO : i Its
i thing a visitor to your home no- Hines Iv tices is the front door, the experts e og® ? say. They look for it immeatately | fi 4 b upon reaching your house. And Cc ivi ies r watch it closely behind them | og ig dingy y { The 1952 Home Show will not Doors score heavily with first|lack for activities by its memand last impressions in the minds ber organizations, which repreof house guests because of this. /sent many segments of the city's You've noticed the house down civic and building groups, anthe street. It stands out ahead of | nounced Albert L. Maillard, all the others and you've often|chairman of the Home Show woncered why. Chances are it's | Public Education Committee, this
the front entrance. You've prob- | week. ably never noticed it, except as a Opening day has .been desigpart of the whole. It complements nated as Marion County Resithe house, as it should. {dential Builders Day. Opening And you've probably seen many | ceremonies Apr. 18 will be held of the misfits, too. They make the at 5:00 p. m. After the ceremonies, houses look aver balanced, gro-| the builders will sponsor the antesque, nual Home Show banquet at The big favorite here is the 7:00 p. m, at the Woman's Buildr— eee | HE. LOUIS Moller, Bob Mason and
FHA Mortgage Picture Bright [atte at Thels atm! Home Shaw
The GI mortgage loan program luncheon held at. the show In the is ery dead duck, but the out-{landscaped forecourt of the is a yory G “House for Moderns.” Clarence J. ar : Waoerner of Truscon Steel is the mortgages is considerably bright-| council president, er than a year ago, a Detroit! cpamper of Commerce Day is mortgage expert told Indianapolis Apr, 20, The chamber plans to realtors Thursday. show motion pictures at the show.
Speaking before the Real Estate
| f i | 1 | l
{ | { | |
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|Albert Thompson are cochair-
| men. | Apr. 19, the Producers Council
STRICTLY MODERN—The home of Dr. David Tavel, 6943 Central Ave.
Sa look for FHA and conventional
: John Max Runs North Siders For Assembly :
Report Sales of | On a platform of home rule and reduced taxation for property owners, - Realtor John Max of Board, Robert H, Pe 15 Properties
p i "3 i of the Detroit Mortgage Co {Broad Ripples SRInjaisnine tof termed the VA home loan as . the Republican Worst possible investment” in the candidate f 6 r current mortgage market. He saw The Associated North Side Refaltors this week reported sale of 15 properties worth a total of ($208,700.00, according to Chair-
State Representative from Dist, per cent loans during man Guy F. Boyd. The sales:
11. year. Bruce Savage Co.—5114 Car-|
Society of Architects, AIA. Apr. 22 is Garden (Club Day
the next Central West District of Indiana
*“When the gross income tax : was passed it velop three times. the activity of Especially attractive
loan market would probably de.for Moderns.” Apr. 23 ig Electric League Day 9 . was supposed to 1951. burden from the|industries and for commercial director, . backs of proper- building, he said.
ty owners,” Mr. Mr. Max Max
4809 Central Ave, and 6002
the breath of speed, a bullet with 795 236 in Indiana last year. And Robert FE. Walker—Lot 7 Ar-tinued to increase and property would have to sharpen their sales model house,
at was $4.4 million than it un loaded here the year before. » » »
with its X-P-300, same thing! Buickized. {
o | THAT TELLS you something. FORD WASN'T loafing. A Wnts is rapidly becoming a dairy
months ago it unveiled its “Fifty-| ciate X" which was to show® what! . the designers were thinking about. * Packard just a week ago took p the wraps off its sports smoothie, lots of zip, narrowed down to|
{Show conk.
orden bucks, who cares?
Hear Harold Hartley with
look as if it would bore a holé in| “The Human Side of Business” | © | on WISH at 8
the wind. p. m. today.
BORN IN ITALY—This is Chrysier's new C-200, long hood, ; ire wheels, smooth as a caramel cookie. 4 :
eo
And that's why I was sad {to see the International Dairy Winthrop Ave, and 3915 Guil- of Residential Appraisers and the government
But so long as we get those
lowners are still carrying more techniques. But Mr. Pease added det than their share.” that the buying public has still W. L. Bridges & Son—Lot 840" 'y,. " aray has been in realty got plenty in ‘the “proverbial Forest Manor, and 5825 N. Rural work here since 1925 and is a sock,” and must be “sold.” St. member of the Indianapolis Real The outlook for mortgage Haynes Realty. Service—4355 Estate Board, the Associated money, generally, is good, h
North Side Realtors, the Society However, issuance of 3 pe bonds, ag rumored,
the direction of Marshall A Abrams, will be held Apr. 25.
* " r cent of Commerce,
{
an exceptional opportunity to im-lying (itm, William Joern & Sons, |
ear} {tect’s Day. FE. E. Simmons, Len- 66.3 years, se, 8 t : ase, presiden vox & Matthews, is president of about six years longer. “the the Indianapolis section, Indiana it is expected that the expectancy these insured loans total only
no sign of improvement for the 4 honoring the Garden Clubs of the
However, he predicted the FHA style show in front of the “House
10 The league is headed By Albert | relieve the tax lenders today are loans to smallér Maillard, president and managing the nation, are gatung older, Our February, the trend of real estate
Indianapolis Real Estate Board the number of children has not! The large downpayments for pay will be held Apr. 24 and fea- quite doubled. Experts say we]
said. = “In- homes are here to stay, he told tyres the board's annual Home may expect more than 20 million \stead, property taxes have con- the realtors and warned that they ghow luncheon in front of the persons over 85 years by 1975.
Construction League Day, under How to house this continually|
The, Landscape Association of growing
a
$2.2 Million Apartment
Scheduled for 1953
An attractive 220-unit park living features including fire. apartment development, complete places,” picnic tables and play with picnig grounds and outside areas, are planned around a scen= play areas, will be built just east ic little creek which crosses the of the Meadowbrook .apartments tract, : on 38th 8t, if the City Plan. Com-- The apartments, primarily two mission approves Apr, 14. bedroom units, will offer about But there are objections, most. 760 feet of floor area. Paul Cripe, ly from property owners of the designing engineer, said. One bed» surrounding areas, However, the room models offer about 600 feet tract of land along 38th St. was Of living area, Refrigerators and zoned for multiple family struc- ranges are to be included, Rehts, tures before its annexation to the undetermined as yet, will compare city, More than 1100 units of With those of similar existing such construction have already units, Mr, Markun said. been approved for this area, All City Utilities
Developer Louis Markun said’ t the project, if approved, will not When completed the projec
begin until 1953, although ground Will include all city services and work on the site will start im- utilities. The buildings will be mediately. ‘heated by gas furnaces. Costs $2.2 Million Mr. Markun with his wife and Cost of the project is estimated son have developed several othes at $2.2 million and construction of large housing propects here ine
ithe 20 buildings included will be cluding Brookville Village and
of stone and brick. A Colonial Maple Road Village. They also design with columned porches will built numerous GI homes at Ivan ‘be used, Each building will house hoe Heights. . : ‘11 apartments, { Mrs, Markun, a former mem» | The tract, one of the most at- ber of the City Park itractive in the city, includes many to keep the tract as much like old beech, maple and oak trees, park as possible and hopes {These will be saved, so far as label trees on the 8ij-acre possible, the builders say. Outdoor | with their proper bo
i372
Home Is Where The City Is
By DON TEVERBAUGH ; 3 §
oe
NEVER BEFORE have there heen so many
people in the world—and one of the big reasons is housing,
‘That's what the Society of Residential Appraisers were
told this week by an expert, People today are dissatisfied, not because there is more misery One of the big i
in the world, but because they . know more about how other these changes a Scie of neigh ple are living. And the grass 18 aid Mr. Rhamatine, rest, greener in the other fellow's And this’ same disinterest in backyard. administration nd enforcement Speaking before the local AD- of safety and health ordinances
praisers group, A. W, Rhamstine, : { executive of ‘a large land plan-/\% Puliding our slums eon inually,
from the Individual to the imstitutional type. a
From a financing standpoint,
prove the lasting beauty of your| cpjcago, presented some interest - architects say, But the stylish home-—and it won't cost very ng ag th pie 4 conclusions. methods employed by public hous-
ing. administrators are actual abandonment of principles of sound financing which require a
There have been some giant changes in the use of ph in the last century, We have anged (i. rat ; y . from a nation of farms into a a ha and Sense vation {nation of urban dwellers. In 1800 period, he 85 per cent of the nation's a
‘ atio AN BO TRIE Hy amazingly, It's changing, too, As - ob : ; |a nation. we are getting older,|®cis DY $1000 per unit, Mr. Rh a
{stine sald, i {living longer, producing fewer : $ ‘children, It will take plannnig to Old (Mac) Donnell 1
solve our problems, : Lo Here are some of the facts: JUST LIKE the chap in the ol In 1850 our population, accord- folk song, Harry Donnell, ling to Mr. Rhamstine, was 150.69 salesman of Jack C. Carr, 1 million and by 1051 it had been had a farm, ro lincreased by another 2.55 million.| But unlike the man in the s Between 1040 and 1950 19 mil-[ (Old MacDonald) Mr, Don {lion persons were added to our sold the farm quick. And for the | population, owner, L. Dewey Burham, he came | Each month, he said, our popu- up with a sales figure of $115,000. lation is increased by an amount| This js $485 per acre for the | equal to that of a city the size of 238.acre White County farm. You {Des Moihes or Hartford, o probably read about it last week nn {in The Times, But what we didn't | ONE BASIC CAUSE of our 80- know then was that this price ela] unrest has been a 38-fold was the highest ever paid for increase in our nation's popula-iacreage in White County. tion between 1790 and 1950. And Now Harry Donnell has three by 1960, he added, it will have more big farms to sell and exreached a total of 169 million. |farmer Burham has the time to | Warllest records of birth rates run for Congress on the Demos are 55 per 1000. In 1950 birth cratic ticket in the 2d Congress rates slipped to 24.1 per 1000, but sional District, ' marriages had jumped to 1,675,000. From 1940 to 1950 the population Vets Good Risks increased 14.2 per ent, but house-, THE HOOSIER/GI is a pretty holds soared 25 per cent, {sound fellow to invest in--partice |" Mortality rates tumbled from ularly when he's buying a home, 21.7 per 1000 in 1865 to 9.5 jn 1950./- Of the 56,365 home loans ape Life expectancy for males climbed proved in Indiana by the VA only
ir Dit )
Apr. 21 has been named Archi- from 1850's 38.3 years to 1850's 191 have tumbled. These loans
Tor the ladies it was represent a principal of $263.66 Ry 1960 million, while claims paid on
will reach 89.8 for men and 77 3171.561—a mortality rate of vears for women. labout 00085 of 1 per cent. Today only 34 per cent of our That's pretty hard to top. nation's people are under 20 years o PRIA ——
Activities include a breakfast and. 35 per cent are in the 20-64 age Real Estate
bracket and 31 per cent over 65. and that's a 66 per cent increase
’ . in this last bracket.since 1930. Bonds Rising (| This means we, the people of| Again, as in' January and population over 65 has increased pond prices, as measured by the eight times the 1870 figure, but| A mott-Baker Realty Bond Price Averages last month was upward. For March the increase in the Amott-Baker 40 Bond Index was 8 per cent ag compared with a 1 per cent gain in February and January. Results for the first vy. #3 {quarter of this year reflect an HOME OWNERSHIP is at an|increase of 2.7 per cent over aver-
And there's a‘ big challenge.|
./growing number of old people? |
Apr. 26 will witness activities 411 time high in the nation, Mr, age prices at the close of 1951. e said, again conducted by the Chamber Rhamstine
said, but financing: On Mar, 31, the average price have {llustrated a of a $1000 bond stood at $885--trend toward that of a new high—as compared with
conditions
use. Ownership is slowly passingi31, 1951.
{ford Ave. Broad Ripple Businessmen’'s As- could chew deeply into the money Indianapolis, Thomas Hobbs pres- multi-family, Industrial or public $879 on Feb. 20 and $861 on Dea Ford Woods & Co.—3620 Grant !gociation. supply. ident, will feature Apr, 27. |Ave., co-operating broker Wayne — Mm eee tress EE —— |Whiffing. ‘
Fred T. Hill Co.—8063 Broad-| | iway; 3701-03 N. Rural St, co{operating broker William Bridges. | Hall-Hottel Co.—8226 Parker § |Ave, ; | | Gerdenich Co.—3119 -W. 61st St. A. H. M. Graves, Inc.—3708 Hillside Ave.
ssa pss
Brokers Join
Membership in the National Inistitute of Real Estate Brokers rose to 10,224 with the recent en{roliment of 86 new members in 27 !states and the District of Colum-| |bia, Eugene C. Fretz, Knoxville, |Tenn., “institute president, re-
SPEEDWAY —This modern St. was sold for builder Ernest Barrett by McConnell & Clark, realtors. New owner is Mri.
WILLIAMS CREEK—This two-bedroom rancho at 220 E. 82d ported today. The only local new| St. was sold recently for J. M. Barnes by Realtor Ethel Bromert, member is E. F, Hopit. New owner is James E. Rebyrivon,
eo . -
2
Wilson. It has oil heat. *
frame’ two-bedroom home with attached garage at 1104 Auburn
. fv
