Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 April 1952 — Page 13
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Reveal 12,330 Persons Slain
Today «Business
Too-Easy Way Is Coming Back
During Year
WASHINGTON. Are. 21—The Federal Bureau of Investigation said today there were 1,882,160 major crimes committed in the United States last year, a 5.1 per cent increase. over 1950.
In its annual bulletin of uni’ form crime reports, the FBI said an average day in 1951 saw 5157
major crimes—34 felonious homicides, 1115 burglaries, 143 robberies, 3064 larcenies, 46 rapes, 540 auto thefts, and 215 aggravated assaults, During the year, 12,330 persons lost their lives either ' through murder or manslaughter. An additional 147,530 persons were feloniously assaulted by rapists and “potential killers.” Based on reports from 376 cities with a total population of nearly
. 48 million, the FBI said $150,136,
172 in property was stolen in 1951. The loot from the average robbery was $104, the average burglary $139, and the average auto theft $965. 92 Per Cent Cars Found More than half of the stolen property —$90,385,558 worth—was automobiles, But the FBI sald nearly 92 per cent of the stolen automobiles was recovered by police, Only 15 per cent of the stolen jewelry and currency was recovered. Auto thefts increased 15.3 per cent during 1951, larcenies 7.1 per cent, negligent manslaughter per cent, and rape 1.3 per cent. Other major crimes, such as murder, robbery, aggravated assaults, and burglary showed slight declines, Following a four year trend, crime in cities increased 5.2 per cent during 1951. Rural areas showed a five per cent increase. Arrests of males in 1951 totaled 746,055, a four .per cent increase. Arrests of females numered 85,233, an increase of 11.3 per. cent. Prior ‘arrest records were found for 61.9 per cent of the males and 45.5 per cent of the females, Persons under 21 made up 14.4 per cent, or 119,676, of all persons arrested during 1951. Arrests of persons under 18 increased 7.7 per cent in 1951 to total 37, 259. In a geographic breakdown of crime, the FBI said the New Eng-
‘land states had the lowest rates
of murder and non-negligent manslaughter, with 1.24 offenses per 100,000 inhabitants. The east south central states were highest with 1245 offenses, per 100,000 inhabitants. In burlgary and breaking-and-entering crimes, the Middle Alantic states had the lowest rate, with 218.3 offenses per 100,000 inhabiThe Pacific states were highest with 510.4 offenses per 100,000 Inhabitants. New England's robbery rate was the lowest in the natioh, and The Pacific states’ rate the highest. New England was lowest in aggravated assaults, and the South Atlantic states highest, with a rate nearly 18 times as high as in New England. The FBI's survey was based on reports from 5281 local, county, and state police agencies. It covers only local crimes and none classified as exclusively federal.
Remodeled A&P
Store to Reopen
The city’s first A & P Food Stores’ supermarket reopens tomorrow at 715 E. 38th st.; after a month of remodeling. A four-week celebration with 45 prizes for customers is planned.
Included will be a clothes dryer, home freezer, TV set, - cocker spaniel, radios, bicycles, coffee-
makers and roasters, Customers-by-car will be escorted by store attendants to the new A & P parking area adjoining the market. New ceilings, flooring, lights and automatic exit doors have been added to the 15-year-old store. A kitchenware section and Health and Beauty department bring the merchandise line to about 3500 items, The frozen foods department and general refrigeration was enlarged. John 8. Clement, 3551 Forest Manor, is manager, assisted by 40 workers.
Reds Attack Trains
SINGAPORE, Apr. 21 (UP)— Communist saboteurs derailed one train and disrupted service between Behau and Mentakab in three attacks on railways in Malaya in the past 24 hours.
MONDAY, APR. 21; 1052
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FBI Cy 5.1 Per
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Just ask for it, and you good.
and industry begins to pass its stockpile to the consumer. - Credit buying is big stuff, In the two months after the Korean outbreak, Americans went on the hook for $5 billion. Then the controls were slipped on. Next the cinch strap was
tightened. r - .
IT IS THE hard stuff that's hurt, refrigerators, vacuum sweepers, TV sets, electric gadgets for the home. Half of the $29 billion which went for washers was bought by wishers in 1950, they “wished” they had the stuff, they got it, then they “wished” they had it paid ‘fer. It became a payday load.
80 0 i I REMEMBER meeting John Otter. He's vice president of Phileco. But he’s the big guy of consumer credit, president of the foundation. And he says there are 2.5 million refrigerators standing around waiting to be bought. And the industry can click off 5.5 million more this year. But the public can buy only 4.5 million > at. the outside. That makes almost twice as many refrigerators available this year as there are people to buy them. .
o » » SOFTENING up Reg. W may not help much. If the 18-month payment period is stretched to 24, it may be hard to finance. What merchants want are no controls at all. They want to make ‘their own payment arrangements to suit their customers’ needs, and their own.
» 2 2 ABOUT THE ONLY thing which seems to be keeping Congress from burying controls when they expire June 30 is the fear prices would go through the roof with wages in hot pursuit. So look for softer controls. But earning a living won’t be any softer. Nobody has been smart enough to invent that yet.
For Man Alone I HAVE A BOOK I treasure. There’s a name on it I'd trust to the earth’s end. "It is a pocket-sized spirit-lifter by: Dr. Russell J, Humbert, DePauw University’ president, full of inspiration for men who want a faith that works. - The title is “A Man and His God.” And if you know Dr. Humbert, a two-fisted doer and talker,” you'll find this no lace-cuff edition. He has a way of getting at the hard core of what's bothering people, with the answers,
= » # I OFTEN WONDER if there is any wear-out to Dr. Humbert. He’s all over the map, by plane, telling the story of good living, good community life, and what man can do about. And the students at DePauw tell you he's “plenty all right.” I've listened closely. And I think his great personal power comes from his daring handling of the truth. He brings right out in the open, the things most of us hide,
AND WHEN “he *prin them out, they aren't so terrible any more. And free men walk back into the world unafraid. I've heard him many times. And I know this is true. And if you haven’t heard him, do, please.
A and P’s New One
I SEE WHERE R. R. Best, vice president of the A. and P. is opening up a remodeled store tomorrow at 715 E. 38th St. And if that were all there was to it, I'd stop right here. It's beautiful, to the eye, kind to the foot, a step-saver, truly a Iouthwatering tour. It is, to me at least, a treat to ithe sense of smell to enter a well. lstocked modern super-market, The blend of food scents, the coffee counter, the fruit stand, and the . bread and cookie shelves, Even soap’s scent is pleasing as you pass.
rest Manor, will be the manager. And I mention this only because I was amazed at how many peoiple- it takes to run a modern
KIDNAPED GIRL ENGAGED—Manie Ruth Shoton, 16, ff] Li
nced her ement to Army Sgt. whose ear oe idnaped last Feb. 3 by a scar-faced
Herbert Evans, 23, (right) desperado [G5
in a U.-S. Biis hpog Coupla is shown shortly after the
kidnaper released
ee JOHN 8. CLEMENT, 3551 For-|
* |Chicago '.
Harold Hartley
IT'S COMING BACK, the too-easy way. ‘ can have it, if your credit is
It will be like that when Regulation W reels to the ropes,
super.market where labor is kept at a minimum. He'll have 40. One of the biggest independent grocers in the state told me a secret about the A. & P,, and it is his competitor. He said if you take a shopping list and fill it in an A. & P. store, then. buy the same things elsewhere, you will be pleasantly surprised.
Refresher
BUTLER'S BUSINESS boys are coming back. It'll be a “campus refresher.” Dr. Clarence. Efroymson, - economics professor is the head man of the roundup, which will open its idea trading post in Atherton Center for one day, a week from tomorrow. Henry L. Porter, manager of sales promotion and training for Standard Oil of Indiana, will top off the day's get - reacquainted sessions with his talk on “Horizons Unlimited.
AND DURING the day they'll hear Dr. Simeon E, Leland, Liberal Arts dean at Northwestern University on “Our Mobilizing Economy: Problems and Outlook.” He ought to know. He's a former president of the whopping big Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago. That's just two, All day long the old grads will hear the tops in Hoosier brains. And : they'll go home as they're supposed to, refreshed.
Quick . . .
Penn, is sacking the bones left on your plate for your pooch, . + » Chevrolet has spld 750,000 Powerglides. . . . dix sees 6 million homes with clothes dryers in the next five years. . . . A New York engineering firm, Ebasco Services, claims to make gasoline from coal at 11 cents a gallon, but won't on a big scale. The plant costs too much, , . . Indiana Steél is huddling at due Apr. 26, a state roundup of Society for Metals. Ellis Arnall, OPS-man, is ready to decontrol raw 1, cattle hides, burlap, some fats, oils. They can't reach ceilings, even on tip-toe. , . . South Wind is switching from aluminum to cer-amic-coated steel for two gas wall heaters, and cutting the prices. . 4 + Admiral is giving to its TV owners free tuning strips for UHF (ultra high frequency) anytime this year. E. Kirk McKinney, president of Jefferson National Life, weekend hosted 50 general agents and representatives from five MidWest states. Two days of skull practice topped off with a banquet and swing-ding in the Washington Hotel's Sapphire Room Saturday night.
Ejector Bag
FIGURE A WAY to do it easier, and you've got it made. The latest comes from Electrolux. Its new vacuum cleaner has a bag you don’t have to empty. You remove it from the cleaner sealed, Then just throw it away, The cleaner labeled Model 60, ejects the dirt back when it’s full. Then you simply insert another bag, the ejector razor blade idea. And I think the ad line will be, “You Never See the Dirt.”
Call From Kokomo
ONE HUNDRED "FOREMEN from Kokomo will do a foot tour of P. R. Mallory & Co. tomorrow to see hw this enterprising company does things down here. Mallory’s employee relations, working conditions have an enviable record of teamwork. And that’s what foremeén are after,
” » » BUT THEY ALSO worry about production, and, whether what they make can De sold. For that answer they'll hear Mallory Vice President Harold C. Buell, He knows the score, While other industries are gagging on their production, Mallory sails right along. | Then they'll be guests at a smorgasbord, the $4 name for a buffet lunch, and you say it in Swedish. See Harold Hartley on television at 10:30 p. m. today.
Official Weather
UNITED STATES JEATHER BUREAU
The following table 8 shows | the Tempers. tire in other cities: Station High Low Atlanta 8 Boston
47 2 56 84 53 -
a 57 57 a
Cleveland Evansville ..
ndianapolis Kansas City ..
am ‘ Minneapolis-St. Paul New Orleans .... New York . Oklahoma city
Omaha . Pittsburgh . San Antonio . gin Feanclace
Local Truck Grain Prices
Truck wheat. $2.28.
with a year ago
cepts
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La Rue's Supper Club on ~.|
Pur-|Mr. Truitt said Mr, Ulrich had
RE : il. a Tew Precipitation 24 hrs. end. 7:30 a. m.. Total precipitation since Jan. Tt sear 113.38 Excess since Jan. 1 ... ny _1.05}
ss (old daughter of Charles Schrenk,
dit » lin
‘ave: Clifford, 8;
City Fight Getting
The City Purchasing Agent and the Municipal Garage Superintendent came out swinging today in the second round of their buying practice fight. Pur Agent Francis Truitt landed the first blow today after back-pedaling last week when Garage Superintendent James Ulrich hit hard. Mr. Truitt today refused to approve more than a dozen requisitions from the garage where the material ordered already had been received. He pointed out the practice is a violation of Mayor Clark's order that the purchasing agent is to do all the buying. { Mr, Ulrich had received some auto repair parts from several sunppliers, then put in requisitions.
the cart before the-horse. “The requisitions should come before getting the material,” he said. Last week Mr, Ulrich charged
Mrs. Beckett Funeral Set Tomorrow
holding Galen, 12 months or in support unless some sort of help arrives,
Purchasing Policy
, 10; Jeff : Donald, |
Hotter
Mr. Truitt had prevented him from buying tires and batteries at the best price. Mr. Truitt said the lower prices Mr. Ulrich described were for second grade tires and denied he was trying to play favorites. Mayor Clark told the Works Board, which has final authority over the garage, Mr. Truitt would do the buying for the city,
Hog Prices Here Down 25 Cents
Hogs sold 25 cents lower than Friday in trading at the Indianapolis Stockyards. Bulk choice 170-250 pounders sold at $17-17.50, Porkers weigh-
Sows were steady to strong with 300-425 pounders selling at $14.7515.50. Choice light to medium weight steers had a price range of $33.5034. A few lots of good to low choice yearlings sold at $30-32.50. A top bid of $24.50 was made on utility and commercial = cows. Vealers were selling from 50
ing 250-285 pounds sold at $16-17.!40 7
FAMILY NEEDS HELP—Mr, and Mrs. George Ressler, Wisconisco, Pa., lead their 12 children in grace before Js wl oh , 2; George, 7; Barbara, 9; Mrs. Réssler holdin Lionel, 11; Gerald, 4, and Neal, 5. The Resslers have decided to split up 0M o
Mitchell Fights Back
In Tax Lien
A former Indianapolis Jottery operator today charged the Internal Revenue Bureau with “trying to make ftself look good" by filing a $103,712 income tax Hen
against him, Glenn L, Mitchell, who formerly ran the printers’ baseball lottery here, sald the tax against him by the government is “ridicu~ lous.” The lien was filed against any property owned by Mr. Mitchell and his wife, Bue, It stated the tax is due on personal imcome for 1949 and 1950.
not “and that's what they're trying to
Mr, Mitchell sald the pool never
bureau figures indicate. He refused to say whether he was engagéd in any business, other than the lottery, accounting for any additional income, Revenue agents also refused comment.
oants to $2 higher than Friday. Jo.300; active; barrows
esas t le joer; fir choise he: Ea initia aiorad” v8; 350-333 his personal income. pou Ae iio 6140 Fh main ly He said the bureau is pro- : strong; gho ice’ 300-428, Ganon $14. Tee 1s 50, 10; over poun mainly
few 31 $18.25-15. Cattle 2200; calves 300; steers and heif-
Services for Mrs. Florence O. Beckett, Indianapolis social leader! for many years, will be held at 3 p. m. tomorrow in Flanner & Buchana Mortuary. Burial will] be in Crown Hill : Mrs. Beckett, who was 87, died yesterday in her home, 22 E. 52d 8t. Born in Ripley County, she came to Indianapolis 63 years ago. She was an 1885 graduate of Glendale Female College, Glendale, O. : Her husband, a faculty member of the former Benjamin Harrison Law School, died in July, 1944. They had been married 55 years. Mrs. Beckett was a charter member of the Women’s Department Club, Propylaeum and
No Fatalities In Sunday Traffic
Balmy, summer-like weather— the first pleasant week end in four weeks — brought thousands of Hoosiers out on the highway, but not a single fatal Sunday traffic accident was reported in the state. There was only one traffic death in Indiana yesterday, but it was d 42-year-old woman, Mar-
garet Richey, Rising Sun, iAjured in an accident Friday. State police reported three
—|fatal accidents Saturday. ” However, the pleasant: Sunday
was not completely free of tragedy. Cheryl Ann S8chrenk, 2-year- N
was instantly killed when ghe|pl fell from a wagon being pulled {by a tractor. The child's skull lwas crushed by a wagon wheel. |The accident occurred-on her father's farm near Arcola in Allen County. Another farm accident victim died yesterday in Clay County {Hospital at Brazil. Isaac F. Lints, (49, a Centerpoint farmer, was {crushed beneath a farm tractor |as he hauled rocks for a flower |garden,
Oats, 82c. . wee New No. 2 white corn, $1.70, Indpise Paint & Color 5s 64 ss New No. 2 yellow orn, $1.62, Produce [ndpls Public Loan. bs 64 : Soybeans, $2.62. ndpls Railways 6s 67 ... 61 0 4 ores Sh Serer (5d ae Tole “ v 5 alee white c; bri x why U. S. Statement Sioa: Vitel meaitm be $341 To: Kuhner Packing 48.80 'oisis 90% ooo brown mix 35-39%c¢; lesa Langsenkamp bs 48 .... «9 wosr ; mercial graded per cent: Extre fom. sper Arts Co Bs 58 ... ane a ashington Apr, 21 or) vernment | white 35-36¢; brown mix 35-38¢; ¢ nt Sprague Nevice 5s 60 . . penses eipts curren receipts cases exchanged 30-32¢c, 30-3l¢c. |Traction 1 Terminal bs 1 ‘ as 92 fiscal year nrough ho "it compar arket steady to firm for top quality; —
outlets "fa
ment; with Je ldrge retail outlet Curbing ari
Women’s Research Club, STOUKS She belonged to the Central|Amercan fates Wes ki Ave. Methodist Church. Ayrahtre: ¢ Ey = : Surviving are her son, Joe|® ae wid “5 Rand Beckett, Indianapoli= at- Be Tf Yd om pr! al torney; one daughter, Mrs. Flor-| Bopbe- We a i» ence B. Angell, Indianapolis, and Buhner Rortit liner 5% pfd « 9 pa one grandson. Shamber of Commerce eis 21% 3 Citizens Ta rer Tam | bro gi % a Commonwealth Loan 4% ota . a 88
Cont Car-Na-Var
ers generally slow: choice lightweights about steady; commercial to low choice generally bid lower; early sales weak: little done on heifers: several lots choice ight to medium weight steers, $33.50-34; few held upward to 336; few lots good to low choice yearlings, $30-32.50: odd head prime yearlings, $37; load and onehalf choice near 1250-pound steers bought to arrive at $35; two loads high goad and mostly choice near 1200 pounds bought to arrive at $33.50; cows sbout steady; utility and: commercial largely $21-24.50; odd head to $26; canners and cutters, $17-21; some weighty cutters, $21.50; bulls steady: utility and commercial, $34-27; vealers active; unevenly 50 cents-$2 higher, extreme top $2.50 higher at $38 paid sparingly; bulk choice and prime, $34.5037; commercial and good, $27-34.50; cull and au, > 26. Sheep early trade about stead amall 8 ter dk spring lambs to $ 35atter req olce wooled lambs mostly loads choice and prime pound” Sed” shorn western lambs with No. pelts $28.50: aged slaughter classes very scarce undertone lower.. -
Local Stocks and Bends
Apr. 21, 105%
orn ind Tele Bb ptd uitable Securities co table Securities of ly Finance com ly Pinance 5% fe, Corp pfd ww amilton
~Jones >
ord. aa oh
ome - Hook Dru 18%
“Ind jaso “2° 2
Stokely-Van Camp ptd _., Tanner & Co 5% % pfd , Terre Haute Malleable U 8 Machine Co United telenBone % pid. Union Tit) . “Extra dividend
Allen & Steen bo American Loan 4Y%s 58 American Security 5s 60 ,, American Loan 4's 60 Bastian Moley bs be iaevecs Batesville Tele Oo “3 . Buhner Fortilizer 0. ve Ch of Com Bide Ja 61 olumbia Club 58 . uitable Securities 8360; . Hamilton Mfg Co 5s 65
; lion inhabitants of Western Ger-
.lern ideas, many-sided interests,
..land helper.”
..|companion, not under 5 {inches.”
15% (elegant brunet, 5 feet 10 inches,
vee. |lgroomed, well-educated, lin business, war widow, complete «+-lhousehold goods, seeks successful,
Ind. 41% Ind. 25% | ind Mich £1 4% i eens #91 0 nd Telephone 48 ptd ..... M hdpls Ath Club Realty Co ves 18 pls Pow & com ee 343 35% | nd pls Pow Lt pf 95 99 nd polis Water 30m os hs n Water 4% pf .... d Pr A Water 5% pf ...108 Jeflerson National Jate com o Nip vKingan & Co pfd .. ow NM Kingan & Co com : Lincoln Nat Life ,.., 9 Lynch Corporation .... BE MOUOLY ....xsuunsovsnces 33 Marmon- Herrington: “eom’’, - 41 Mastic Asphalt’ ... | ...... bY Natl Homes com ............ 21% Natl Homes ptd . ....,... 100 Np Pub Serv com ...... 24% Pub Berv 4's pfd .... 95 pub Serv 4'4 pid .... 25% Pub Be y 4.56 pid ,... 20% Brocres aun COM ...e00s $1 Pub D Berv of Tne 8 $i Greene 29 ub Serv of Ana 3% pf ...... iD: 38 vir ter mine Fis ord 11 Bo Ind O & E © +03 2 “So Ind O & E vs % pid ....102 Stokely-Van Camp com 15%
Mr. Mitchell, however said the bureau apparently is listing some of the lottery pay-off money as
German Women Step Up Manhunt As Spring Calls
FRANKFURT, Germany, Apr. 21 (UP)—8pring brought an upsurge today in the number of German womén advertising in newspapers for male companionship. Outnumbering the opposite sex ;iby 3 million among the 48 mil-
many, the women resorted to the direct approach in such advertisements as these: “Two office girls, one ‘34 and thin and one 38 and fat, would like to spend free time with pleasant gentlemen.”
“Young woman with very mod-
ambitious, good business sense, in financial difficulties, seeks friend
“35-Year-old week-end
feet 10 J oe
seeks
“A life-loving, slim, capricious,|
early 40s, wonderful figure, welltrained
wealthy gentleman in good circumstances (will only marry if
Kathy, 3 weeks old
“It's all right to prosecute, butihe: persecute,” Mr. Mitchell said, we Mr.
had an income as big as the taxisuiting his records.
hie i adi, 4
Case
ceding as though the lottery did not pay off to winners as his rundown sheets showed, he said.
Tax officials today sald a lottery
Today Is | Home Shove
#% Question Day
By DON TEVERBAUGH » Times Real Estate Editor Today is your day to pop § tions at the Hoosier out at the Home Show. They're the men with the answers—all free, The Indianapolis Society of Architects will man the Special Days booth at the show and try to provide correct answers to your architectural problems, If you don't buy the booklet of the 50 top new home designs submitted in the 27th Annual Home Show Architectural Com-« petition, you're really missing something, If youre interested in the newest approaches to housing you'll want one of these booklets, The supply of 3000 fs now about 25 per cent gone. | " . y 1 Tonight at 8 p. m, the ne apolis Real "Estate Board will award the prizes to winners in
their scale model home buliiing Fran
contest for teen-agers. Cantwell, Home Show director, will present the awards for the adult conteat, Winners among the high school compettition are: Clyde n= haver, 3722 Robson St. a Tech. {nical High School, first 3
Ave, Technical, second and a tle for third prize of between Richard B. Wayer, 10 . patent Ave Suchet, | Plum 5 Crittenden ’ Ave. Broad Ripple High School, Adult winners are Charles
Smith, 1320 N. New inicio a student at the Roig 4 si Cincinnati, first prize % Peat, 1640 N. Talbot Ave, Pur. due Univerditys second prize, $20, and Jack E. Freeman,
operator must be able to show|
commissions, he sald. Including the those figures
period, the length of time cited the tax lein.
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But they refused to say if this a. m. breakfast facet of the tax law has been Si applied to Mr. Mitchell's case. One display
Mr, Mitchell dropped the lottery work when the new federal 10 per cent tax on gross receipts went into effect last November.
‘at the Home and 4
in at the
in
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