Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 May 1952 — Page 21
| that you eath your
Cc 3 ansunssnsined
naneuvering, ncerning the States in tHe Is impossible late a clear sion on this
t in the ine 1all minority ly within the in the Conaid down by s duty is to es check the for the good le interest of es check the roup, which promote the of the Con~ s hinge and 1 itself was
teel workers ract because ate. By govtrained from this way they n with which stice, and censure loing irreparcontempt for ates that the uld lead to at the presthe strength s are forever communism ve that they this.
PE A PRG TE TH HE OA DE DRY GE HET OWE, a “I'am almost blind, but I still Was that no “major” relaxation
tle field will mill - owners rful political gard for the ily interested ¥uman. Mud own twisted
der to honor *
as President, on. The Conrvitude. The uch measure. favor of the
rs would not , of steel, the”
action in the revent a. colunist opposin to him by promote the
has reached ire not likely channel their nd deceiving ill some day
eh St., Otty
'he Times on ave to agree trolleys and ours. I don’t urn in to Inave to believe » crowded, I n, the trolleys e rush period.
’
ins knows the roved transit ion, and that nd just where Indianapolis any improved would be only always been, iders of any fare increases s, who would y?
With Indiangetting perition “passing vhat will the * three years p-round going rything. pelius Ave.
man i
preme Court >
ed in a vacumous decision, Pine, would
» TICAL interTY month of on state po18—13 Repubemocratie. h of the conSs are to be state conven1blicans and
nost cases be hdidates. And hat they will of power over ready elected n state pri-
£0
‘will be a top of a fourth down, or, A a third, and not over 36 months farmers in Wisconsin are buying potatoes at $5 a ton to feed their
THURSDAY, MAY 8 1952
a
Not All Like Long Credit
¢ By Harold Hartley.
4
BUYING GOT another shot in its well-punctured arm. And the credit serum flowed into flabby sales muscles/effect” on sales or prices of autoReserve Board unchained consumer)
when the Federal buying.
It means that anyone can |
buy anything on any terms he long shot. There are plenty more
can make with the seller., from outside the union combine. cars to major appliances or a8 8 furniture.
New car terms will probably gaining as in steel
slower-movers may go to 30! they want.
months. » ” » IN USED CARS anything can individual transportation. and will hapen. There will be That's your car.
some “No Down Payment” sell- sy ing. But the safe rule probably Down the Drain
to pay. The dropping of Regulation W hogs. on a trial basis did not please all retailers.
Some do not like the long cred- dved to remove them from human ft business. It coaxes in poOr use a year ago. But they should risks, and ties up their working have been all @ ne long ago. eapital, unless they have a strong san finance company hook-up.
2 2 = to say. And it sank in.
ONE BIG CAR dealer said, “I She said: wonder if it is healthy? Credit would stop trying to ‘out-Russia
terms on cars could get so low|Russia, may be we could get back duires Leave
be renting the car. The only dif- prices alorie and the housewives : Tas a =. : R coe SE HH COEF SOUFCES)
‘Charges-Huge Lobby Pushes Fair Trade Bill
that the ‘buyer’ actually mightito American standards.
ing the taxes.” Another whistled, and “They go from one extreme to drain.” the other. Now we've got fo get hold of the finance companies The Bell and see what they will do.”
And a third in smile-words have, said, “That's a break. There's al- ,.¢ supposed to. ways a little patch of blue some-
gas strike settled.” lin the air. 2 un = rr » » THE USED CAR market pop INSTANCE, T heard a stirred to life after a sad winter. woman say she couldn't get That's where easy credit does its wajted on in a department store biggest job. as the day gnded. She said some But the rule is that the more a of the clerks ‘start knocking off man puts into a purchase, the 15:-minutes before the bell, and better he takes care of it. the customer gets little encourIf he gets it with little or no agement. money down, he sometimes gets This isn’t generally true. But careless, then carless, but not un- if it happened once, that's too til he has dented fenders. And he often.
doesn’t mind chipping the enamel 2 x ; on the washer, stove or refriger- A CUSTOMER is the Jost imoesn’'t own. portant asset a store has. e is stor Be 4 o a = better than money in the bank.
For she means more money in THE NEXT ITEM on. long : ) credit terms is long interest. It the'bank—and in the payroll.
WHAT THE oil workers are really after is industry-wide bar-
settle around one-third down and|automobiles. Then ee wa ok 24 months to pay. Some of thelenough power to get the money
For, when, and if, that happens they will have a strangle hold on
WOMAN READER says
That doesn’t sound right, unless it's those “purple potatoes,”
BUT SHE HAD something else
said, can see America going down the
I CAN'T MAKE my ears be- eral Reserve Board is “considerThey hear things they are ing” . modifying the present re-
] But sometimes there's a little payment on homes in the $25,000where—if they only can get the cood in the remark left drifting|and-up bracket.
digs into buying power. For instance, a man who buys a car on long terms, could buy a car and small refrigerator on the same amount of cash, if he had the benefit of the interest he paid on the car. What the Féderal Reserve wanted is to loosen the log jam of goods, mostly heavy appliances, some of the slower-mov-ing cars and the clogged used car lots. But the key to consumer credit was, in most instances, not the finance companies, but the banks from which they borrow. And the banks are sure to play it close to the belt. They have to handle depositors’ money carefully. And they do. » » » EVERYONE HAD something to say. Some said it's “election year politics.” Another said the political “apple-polishing has already started.” = ” ” BUT THE ONE who has more to say than anyone else hasn't had time to speak. He is the customer. If he decides to spend instead of save, as he has been doing, buying will get a dizzy whirl. If he just sits tight and blinks, and thinks and thinks—and does not grab the easier credit terms ~we'll be just™as deép in the overproduction stew as ever.
But it probably won't be as bad as that. A big used car dealer, after a
long, sickish winter, grinned and said, “Watch ‘em go.’
What It's About
Isn't it awful the way those
cil workers shut off our gasoline just because they money?” That's how one Johnny Q. puts it. But he. was only partly right.
The bil workers are shooting for
bigger stakes than a pay raise, but the pay raise is part of it. ” » » WHAT THEY are really after is to get a solid grip on the distribution of oil products, and
that means the gas line to your
automobile.
I am told that about 22 unions have locked arms in the march on the refiners. But that's not ‘all
of the oil workers unions, by a
PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS
COPR.1952 EDW. L.A.WAGNER ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
"
ee Coa
want more | Walter L
On the Button
YOU CAN'T STOP people from thinking. It would be a terrible
world if you could.
It is the touch of spontaneous fun, the dreamed-up stuff, which u cream and glossy cherry on the sundae of
puts the whipped
life.
5 » »
HERE'S AN example.
bounce.
Mr. Hammond's nickname is
“Ike.” So the sales force got a batch of “I Like Ike” buttons, and put on a bubbling sales campaign. But, they explained, “That wasn't election, that was selection. For we do ‘like Ike'.”
MARRIAGE LICENSES
Emmett. McGinley. 25, 502 E. 27th: Betty Openbriar. 20, 1102 N. Lindwoed. Robert A. Ward, 21, Indianapolis; Jean Jordan, 23, 306 E. 10th.
Paul Smith, 20, 2309 Martindale; Dorothy Glenn, 20, 2309 Martindale Byron R. Rodarmel, 2q, U. §. Army: Alma B. Norsell, 20, 613 N. Keystone. Orville Dillahay, 42.° 1619 N. Temple: Ethel Lucas, 31, 920 N. Oakland. Woodrow Jones, 39, 1606 Spann; Helen Davis, 37, #52 N. Kealing. James H. Shannon, 51, 3726 N. Meridian: Katharine Puckett, 41, 5750 Broadway « Terrace, Donald G Burke, 24, Jadiagapolis; Katherine Sherlock, 23. 7777 Washington, Kenneth Lovelett, 41, U, 8. Army; Goldie Cameron, 56, 514 E. 20th. David—P. Miller, 30, 3924 LaSalle; Carol Lovell. 22, 3914 N. Adams. Fred Harmon, 42, 1348 8. Chester; Ruby Spencer, 37, 601'2 N. Illinois. David G. Riley, 20, U. 8. Air Force: Margaret Feely, 18, 637 Berkley Rd. Robert G. Arnold, 21, 1412 Waldemere; Ruby Woehlecke, 24, 1412 Waldemere.
Homer E. Higdon, 49, 2040 Graham; Ger-
trude Meyers, 49, 2040 Graham. Wilbur J, Riedy Jr, 23, U. 8. Navy; Anne P. Bkelley, 21, 950 N. Gray. Downham, 22, Merita Mace, 21, 3407 Forest Manor. Muse A. Stringfellow Jr., 31, Schenectady, N ; - Evelyn J. Freeman, 29, Hot Springs, Ar .. Richard Alighwood Sr., 22, 4020 E. Minnesota® Ruth A. Britton, 27, 2201 N Pennsylvania.
DIVORCE SUITS FILED
Alexander vs, Gladys El; Athena vs
Gerald Helton: Shirley vs. Daniel Buhr:
Kathryn vs. Richard Miller: Nellie vs
Ralph Young: William vs. Mary Batley: | P Mildred vs. ,Willfam Campbell: Hannah Tommy vs. Opal Muse:
vs. Durant Turner
0. E. Hammond, New York Life general agent, was out of town for a few days. And an alert mind in his office caught an idea on the
Logansport; .
2 PTT ANT
Today#Business Builders Push
(Officials Say ,
‘Action Not Likely Soon
By United Press
WASHINGTON, May 8—Gov-|
ernment economists predicted to-
day that removal of installment ™
buying controls will have “little
pliances.
They said the Federal Reserve
{Board's decision to suspend Regu-|
lation W was based on the belief|
that consumers will not go on a credit-buying binge, but will con-| tinue to pick and choose as they| have been doing in the face of! high prices and plentiful goods. | The ¥no boom’ forecast from!
federal experts ran directly coun- '
ter to the optimistic expectations
of many manufacturers and deal-|
ers, who have blamed credit controls for their sagging sales.
Buyers Respond f 4
The initial public reaction also
tended to belie the government: predictions. Buyers flocked to new, | and used car lots in many cities soon after the suspension was an-| |
nounced late yesterday. Newspapers here and elsewhere blossomed out in full-page ad-| vertisements of automobiles and |appliances with ‘no down payment—up to 24 months to pay.” | Encouraged by the suspension
dustry prepared to redouble iis]
stiff down payments on houses. . i) But the word from administra-|
of the housing credit rules is in sight. May Help Top Bracket
Informea sources said the Fed-
| |
quirement of a 50 per cent down
But board economists told reporters that the situation in the, housing field is “completely dif-| ferent” from the sagging market which prompted the board to lift controls on installment buying of cars, TV sets and appliances. They said there is already a|
| |
mobiles, TV sets and home ap
“
_THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Fight T
x
STERLING AWARD-—Marc J. Wolf (left), Indianapolis businessman and officer of Variety Clubs International for the past 12 | years, accepts a sterling silver six-shooter from Ben Goffstein, hief Barker for Tent 39, Las Vegas, during the clubs’ convention of Regulation W, the building in-| there. The organization gave Mr. Wolf a new special title, International Main Guy, in appreciation of his service to the clubs. The “If the government Attack on the Federal Reserve! title makes him top man in the organization for life, and without Board's Regulation X, which re-| successor. :
Rail Seizure
By United Press
Rep. Emanuel Celler (D.|
IN. Y.) charged today that| “swarms of lobbyists” are/in the Capital cost 28 cents in bringing pressure on House mem-| Maryland and 25 cents in Virginia,
bers to pass a so-called fair he said.
trade bill that would cost con-|
House prepared to vote on the! Editorial, Page 20
| He also said he bought a fifth] sumers “a billion dollars a year."|0f Whisky for $3.25 in the District |
He made the charge as the/ Wich cost him $4.32 in Maryland.
INDIANAPOL Clearings ..
“boom” in housing, and the gov-|hotiy disputed legislation, spon- Debits
ernment is not anxious to stimu-| late further demands on the limited supply of building ma-, terials. Congressional leaders expressed) pleasure at the lifting of Regu-| lation. W, but declined to predict) whether the House and Senate| will go along with the reserve board's request that it be given “stand-by authority” to reimpose| the controls if necessary.
Produce |
Ezgs—FOB Cincinnati—Consumers grade 8. A large white 40-43'%¢c: brown mix 37-40'2c; U.8 brown mix 35-39'z¢ commercial graded 40 per cent. large white 35-36c; brown mix 35-36c¢:| current receipts Cases exch. 20-30c. | Good - quality graded eg about steady poor quality and current receipts very, weak and offerings refused. Only good; quality current receipts wanted. Chickens—Commercially grown 22-24c; hens heavy 20-24c; hens light 15-18c: old roosters. 15-18¢ Market very weak. Purchases curbed to need and offerings refused. Prices gen-| erally lower on bulk of old hens and roosters large processor of poultry and current receipts, eggs out of the market and causing some of the weakness.
Wholesale grade
Butter—Creamery, 90 score T4c;, prem-| fum butterfat 6lc'a Regular 56c.
CLUBS Indianapolis Kiwanis Meeting noon tomorrow in Chateau Room, Hotel Clay-| pool. Dr. Maynard K. Hine, dean, Indiana University School of Dentistry,| will talk on “The Progress of Dentistry.” |
IN INDIANAPOLIS |
BIRTHS BOYS At St. Francis — Gene. Beulah Shelley Bill. Marguerite Copeland: Bernard.
Marilyn Wayman: Joseph, Anne Blazek; James, Nina Goins At General—Ronald, 8ylvia Tatum, At Coleman—Hubert, Bette Gassin: Anthony, Helen Lawrence; Wayne, Patricia
Morgan, At Methodist—Robert, Dorine Frederick; Bernard, Elaine Langlotz; Earl, Kath-
1 medium white 35-41l3c: provide for Extra ‘name-brand” products to ente
sored by Rep. John A, McGuire (D. Conn.). oT Mr. Celler conceded that the House probably would approve| the measure, but said he hopes it| will be defeated in the Senate or! killed by a presidential veto.
The legislation would over- Local Stocks
turn a ruling handed down by the Supreme Court last year, and! restore the effectiveness of “fair, trade” laws on the books of 45! states.
Provide for Pacts |
Generally speaking, these laws!
|same bottle of aspirin cost him! The brotherhoods will claim in WASHINGTON, May 8— 46 cents in Washington, and 59|the appeal that seizure of the
cents in Maryland or Virginia. A laxative that cost 19 cents
IS CLEARING HOUSE : : soo MASTS The unions said that if the Ap-
Local Truck Grain Prices
Truck wheat, $2.22. . 82¢
Oats,
New No, New No. 2 Soybeans,
white corn, $1
ellow corn, §1' 37s
13. 85.
manufacturers of |;
STOUKS
~May 8, 195%
American Loan 5% American States Class A .... | American States 4.8% pfd ... jAyreiive Collieries com .....
Ayres 442% pfd
Belt RR & Stk Yds com ...,. Belt RR & Stk Yds oid .. Bobbs-Merrill com | Bobbs-Metrili 4%% .fd .... | Buhner Fertilizer 5% vid .... r | Central Soya
Chamber of Commerce com .. 2
into price-fixing agreements with |Gircle Theater com
one or more retailers in each!
state. The minimum retail price ont
tryers, thus fixed becomes binding on all Cummins Eng 4!2% ptd Delta Elec com .. A Emit A i Qu e Securities c X c tre. and other backers gouiiadle Securities ofd of the legislation told the House Family finance com Pamils Pinance 8% ofd ...... Hays Corp pfd a Haminen Mie Co dom i Ven ‘ , HerfI-Jones ass A sens “predatory price - cutting” Home 1 4 1 n% na Hook Dru Co com ces *Ind Asso Tel $2 pid “ee IInd Asso .Tel $250 pfd .. as Water com . ich El 4%% pfd ind Telephone 4.8 29 rene {ndpl= Ath Club Re: Co nd Pow & Lt com
other retailers in the state.
yesterday that it is needed to pro-
tect small independent retailers H
from tactics by big chain and depart-| ment stores.
They denied that “fair trade” ing a
laws cost consumers any more] in the long run than free com-| petition in retail prices. They! said dealers who advertise cut.
tizens Inn Ter 8% ofq Commonwealth Loan 4% ar-Na-Var mins Eng com
Ly
ndpls Pow & Lt pf cone tan nd lis Water som _.... ndianapolis Water 4, of .... #9 ndianapols Water 5% pf .,.108
rate prices on name-brand goods|isflerson National Life som
make up the loss by charging more on. other items. Tells of Shopping Tour
Products which are “fairtraded” include a large portion of
pliances, equipment.
jewelry and sports|
N
Pub
Kingan & Lincoln Natl Life | Lynch Corporation . [PR M | Marmon-Herringtonscom ..... | Mastic Asnhalt FRAP Natl Homes com Negi Homo old {N Ind Pub Serv com the nation’s drugs, electrical ap-|N Ind Pub Serv 4% pfd =~... . Ind Pub Serv 4'a pfd ... |N Ind Pub Serv 4.56 pfd The only areas not |Frogress Laundry com e of" covered by fair trade laws are pu Serv of Ind 304 pf & [o6l eom
erine Murphy: Russell, Eunice South-|Vermont, Missouri, Texas and the' Ross ‘iea
worth: Robert. Virginia 'Deerwester; Charles. Ruth Alsman |
At St. Vincent's—Ted, Janice Chadwick;
James, Betty Chitwood; Regis, Rosella, Stevons At Home—Thomas. Stella Adams, 1621
Ketcham 8t.; Virgil, Mabel Hyde, 517 N, Bell St.; Harold, Bernice Bennett,
1540 Bridse St. = |as evidence that the consumer BONDS At St. Franeis—Glenn, Jeanette Beyer. |“gets a rooking under so-called iflen & Steen sa ...... At General—Joseph, Mary Farris, American Loan 4%s 60 ......
At Coleman— Emerson, Edna Duncan: Donald, Betty Kinnick; Murray, Eve-| lyn Steele At Methodist—James, Betty Jean Samuel, Viola Binninger; Charles, Dorothy Partlow At St. Vinocent’s—Charles. Gloria Miller: L.. Ann Tence: Arthur, Aileen Jugs; Richard, Elizabeth Gauchat, At Home—William, Virginia _Stieneker, 2063 Park Ave: Raymond, Hazel Martin, 830 N. New Jersey St: Edward. Alice Jayne. 1142 §. West St.; Danial, Betty Carrick, 506 W. 31st St.
DEATHS
Tempie Taylor, 48, at 1209 Deloss, myocarditis. Mamie Baker, 78, at 217 N, Holmes, cardiovascular. Mary Bryson, 86, at 315 E. 36th, cerebral apoplexy. Thamer Doughtery, .55, at Long, .carcinomatosis | Willlam Ham, 71, at Veterans, carcinoma ete Grabungica, 71, at 520 E. Vermont, ! carcinoma, Nana Jones, 55. at 810 N. Tuxedo, coronary occlusion
Howard vs. Rosemary Randall: Barbara pea ry Potter, 86, at 43 8 Ritter, cerebral
vs. Robert Hendricks: Mary vs
. James | “apoplexy.
Durham; Ada vs Chester Lock: Joseph ' yuija " Steenberger, 75, at 1730 Fletcher.
vs. Ella Campos: Katherine vs. Wilbur
Brooks: Joan vs. John Brummett: G
Russell _vs Lois Hart: Eula vs. Porter
cardiovascular {Edward Traub, 66, at General, myocardial infarction,
Albey: Earl vs. Dorothy Trueblood: Opal Thomas L. Wright, #5, at General, arterivs. Kenneth Jacobs, i
osclerotic heart.
ASEECTED AREA
six to eight weeks.
District of Columbia.
{House a shopping basket filled 1 Sturm Ave.; Charles, Betty Prazer, 415 with aspirin, razor blades, laxa-|finited Telsnhona 5% ofa . tives and other drug store items|U
fair trade.”
|to pay prices averaging 25 per
lof Columbia. : Mr. Celler sajd he paid 15 cents
in the Capital fof a hypodermic
needle that cost 23 cents in Mary-
{land and 20 cents in Virginia. The,
| Buhner
nion . Title
allory
*Kingan & Copfd ........... Co com .........
Schwitzer-Cummins 5'a pf Bo Ind G & Mr, Celler yesterday showed the §iokely-yan Camo com .. anner & Co 5%% pto .. erre Haute Malleable
E com “s
*Extra dividend
He said h t shopping for American Loan 4%s 0 e sa e went shopping for American Loan 44s . Bastian Mol bs 61 .e Beall; 10 name-brand products and had Batesville Tels Go 4%s .. Partilizer 5s ‘ Ch of Com Bldg 4s 61 cent more in Maryland and 17 per golymbia Sub. 3-5 20 cent more in Virginia than the gamilton Mig Co 5s 65
same items cost in the District! |
ndplse Paint & Cclor bs 64 .. ndan's Puhlie loan Se 64 an {Indpls: Railways. 5s 87 Ind Limestone 4s 78 ........ |dnd Asso Tel 3s 15 I anesenkamp 5s. 48 ’ Maplehurst fr. inc S5%s 61 . {Paper Arts Co 5s 58 ........ Sprague Device 5s 30 ares Traction Terminal Ss §7
nd Bonds surrounding
o Ease Housing
PAGE 21
Terms
May Face Court Test
By United Press WASHINGTON, May 8 (UP)
| ow
a
Railroad union leaders sald yes- ; 5
terday they will try to challenge President Truman's seizure of the railroads in the Supreme Court at the same time the high bench considers the steel seizure issue. The chiefs of three railroad
brotherhoods ‘-—— the Conductors, &
Firemen and Engineers -- sald they hoped to take their case to the court next Monday--the day
steel company and government §
attorneys are scheduled to argue the steel case. The move was announced as the carriers and the unions continued to make progress in their three-year dispute, indicating a settlement might come ‘“sometime this week ¢énd.” The talks were guided by Acting Defense Mobilizer John R. Steelman in his White House offices.
Seized in 1950
The railroads were seized by _
President Truman in August,
SCHOOLING FOR UHF—Ready for the switchover, these
top flight Crosle tuner can be quickly attached to
officials show how the ultra high freq
Crosley sets. At the left is
Ritter, sales manager of the Appliance Division of the Capital Paper Co.; (center) Harry McCullough, sales manager for Crosley,
Cincinnati and (right) Kenneth Capital Paper Co.
Somers, TV sales manager for
nationwide, surike. by the conaue. Hog Prices Here Strong to Higher
tors. and another brotherhood, the trainmen. The trainmen have since settled their dispute.
Hogs sold strong to instances
of 15 to 25 cents higher than yes-
The three unions staged walk- terday in trading at the Indian-
'outs last March against the New| &polis Stockyards. |: Choice 170-250 pounders sold at! f ghee 100; supply comp
York Central and the government
won a temporary injunction in|$19.75-20.25. Those weighing 250the courts blocking the strike, |200 pounds sold at $18.75-20. Sows The unions said yesterday they sold steady, mostly $15-17 for 550
will file notice of appeal against |the injunction and ask a stay of Cincinnati.
|
(Supreme Court, union attorneys|
pounds down,
Scattered sales of good to
the order in Appeals Court. in.choles. light to-medium wolght incinnati : steers were at $31-33. Utility and In order to get the case to the commercial
steers and heifers brought bids of $25.50-30. Utility
/plan to ask the Appeal Court to/and commercial cows sold at $22-
| waive its purisdiction and send it directly to the higher court.
roads was {llegal. The railroads dsy average were taken over by the Army} under terms of a 1916 War Pow- |X 50ers Transportation Act, which the ie pounds 411.
|government says is allied to the {present emergency.
May Get Case Friday
The steel seizure was made un{der the inherent powers of the
peals Court grants their request, the Supreme Court should get the |case on Friday. Union attorneys believe they may be allowed to argue the rail seizure at the same time the steel seizure case is argued on Monday. Despite the air of optimism the White House talks, negotiators on both sides
26.50. Vealers were very active, closing $1 higher than yesterday.
Hoss i rather active; light to medi. um weight barrows MA silfe instances 15-35 cents higher
teady strong: ole 1 0-350. a : i ral hundred head choice ostly Roo Pou s down § 35-20. i oads
pounds 3 75-20; few a uniform hi elding near nds - higher; cholce 20-180 u $15.50-17: sows steady, mastly §15-17 3 ounds down. Cattle i calves ; steer trade ning rather slow: scattered sales to choice 1} hi jo medium $31.33; Joad choles medium held around $34; utility and com-
mercial steers and heifers $25.50-30; cows fairly active, firm: utility and clal
RS | President, not under any Specific] pvmmnnmnanann INTRODUCTORY OFFER SAAAAAPAPIINIY lact. £2
For Lovely Tresses—"BUY VITA-RAY" PHONE AT-1406
Prove Disellls
122 E. OHIO ST.
Ike Goes to Denmark
NS SE I SRS AR TE SO EE
an Wednes-
cows $23.26.50: canners and cutters main. ir ecis, buy TE pups capimere it 5: vealers active: i
slostoy $
- 3! very i 3 bv ood Be y BRED Uo
nd #
shorn native lambs: t steady of 126.50 for near B85-pound ghts carry. ing No. 3 and No. 7 skins: few good and choles native wooled skin $236: slaughter AWeS Scarce.
COPENHAGEN, Denmark, May 8 (UP)~—~Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower arrived here by plane from Paris today on a farewell visit to Scandinavian members of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization. :
[I R— MORRISONS
Indiana’s Foremost
Apparel Shop 20 W. Washington St.
6TH FLOOR
i
a
Ble Ashes "11951, when the carriers and the 17% unions also yere near agreement. | 3815! © The negotiators also met with “reer 83% members of the National Media-| 33%|rules which would go into by ~|effect when the yard workers | 50 Liki 1 which is expected to be provided | in any new contract. . | the shelves for
sean
41l2/the Patagonian coast, it was re-| 102 | ported today. |
warned that the discussions could |“blow up” as they did in April,
All Operators Are Licensed These permanents are greatly reduced in price because wa are advertising for the Vita-Ray Supply
|tion Board to iron out working|
{went on the 40-hour work week| Co
15% ATT hy mesthy Joan ‘ * 4 y wav- ... |Blast Kills 6 on Ship 14 sin ii. | BUENOS ‘AIRES, Argentina,| only natural creamy
May 8 (UP)—A boiler room ex-|
and hair structure,
Therefore, our solutions are fresh and have not set on
{mgredients whieh nourieh the hair and
|plosion has killed six crewmen of are extremely bene‘the Argentine freighter Rio San-| 18%|ta Cruz in the south Atlantic off
ficial to the scalp
It you had wave after wave that washed and faded away try . . .
"Vita-Ray"
At a price you can afford fo pay
$3.75 »
You may have “Vita-Ray” in machine, machineless; or cold wave, in loose natural, medium or firm curls. All of these waves will give you the beauty lift you are looking for.
Specialists in Poodle Cuts!
? .
© Stark & Wetzel
it Sponsors New Trophy
for 500 MILE RACE!
Outstanding NEW Driver Te Be Honored Each Year
among those competing in their first 500 Mile Race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, will receive a trophy in recognition of his performance in racing's biggest event. Leading sports editors and sports directors of Indianapolis newspapers, radio stations and press services will serve on a committee to choose the winner
wis) Starting this year, the outstanding race driver,
Mayor Urges Support For Hospital Program
Mayor Clark issued a plea today for help for the one out of six persons here who needs hospital |care but mhist wait as long as two |months to get it.
| In a proclamation urging ob|[servance of National Hospital ‘Day Monday, the Mayor called for support of the Indianapolis Hospital Development Association. The Association now’ is sel. ing funds for construction of a {new hospital on Ritter Ave. be{tween 13th and 16th Sts.
| Mayor Clark declared 1000 are
waiting for hospital care in In--while. approximately.
|dianapolis 4750 are already being cared for.
“This Is Not Good’
| “That's the waiting list today,” he said. “It was the same yesterday and will be the same tomorrow. It means that for every {five persons. in our hospitals [there is another person waiting Ito get in. Sometimes they wait This is not good.” ; The lack of hospital®beds, the
on our community.”
“The health and welfare of Inunderlies the entire
‘dianapolis
" MAYOR CLARK—"Help for
the one .in six wha must wait."
|satisfactory hospital care is nec‘essary for the preservation and promotion of his health.” 1 Mayor Clark's app al is base Mayor. declared, “is a reflection on a major plank, in his cam- ’ paign platform last Fall.
1 d
of the trophy.
a fine, NEW MEAT TREAT!
Stark & Wetzel introduces another new product in the ready-to-serve luncheon meat line. It's Stark & Wesel Trophy Loat. ..3 meat treat tatadds move vgriet goodness to your low-cost Bl & Wetzel Meals, Get some at your Stark & Wetzel dealer's today!
\ 9 A
uy
* Indianapolis’ most interesting ar “happiness and well-being of our women's section is a part of _ people,” he said.’ “Adequate and Sunday Times.
‘ Ds
Jase
oY LOAF
g.l/ 4
0%, LJ
QA~IG | 0) OA 20
