Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 May 1952 — Page 11
i} 4
rum
that you leath your
testesisnenet 1
6 rreevenRERRenRey
ngs Bryan, a state under i to the Feded by Wood- | t was that it ds of a few ople serfs of
rough the efress and was foreever. I v years later ther it would rere had been AS Any reason To prove his y case of the as built that
ee the worst rer was Presepression for
se of a letter er thinks we em. I do not t. to say that with any ecowar to bring hat has hapsrnment took ous countries n the govern-
1e money capnation of its adually took ame way that e taken over The bankers nan Empire "he politicians d the bankers the greatest our own free« fterned after
cians, tried to ts civilization England and ye world with er ‘set.
started after ople claim it ard socialism ngland to pay ld war,
ecame a totuntry became ncidentally, I the difference England and All other namy are going getting worse two-thirds of p to England. at under the deal and the going to hap- , paupers—all uts from the becoming se
nadian dollar hey while to$1.01. in our
os for fear, corruption of my own pre1 power, that . money capiomy: will? col ations in fhe
erre Haute.
vances made arises though es.
windows, are he wind, and irectly in the
r, many folks n_a crowded | and uneasy. ordering new th a different y sort of wind 10se used on
. H. 8,, City. |
num’
a resolution at it was not e to work inP52 at 1950 fon members ing without a an, 1 of this ast raise was ir on Dec. 1,
» : in, coupled as ment of a top as taken to 8 the steel inthin a reasonto grant the lations, it will original de-
he convention feel that the | of the 8uthe question of President 2 of the steel y much to do of the case. ointed out, the nd the union have to sign contract, relecision handhigh court.
they believe, 1 point in con« in their presended animaa strong feel- - 3 should be ywdown with- » outcome » :
" &
MONDAY, MAY 19, 1952
*
i
Consumption Drop Cuts
Total Take
By United Press WASHINGTON, May 19—The| government's higher tax on whisky is having a reverse ef-| fect. . It's cutting doWwn—instead of increasing—revenue. : The apparent reason is that| many persons have turned to beer or wine—or to.bootleggers— rather than buy whisky at the|
{ | |
|
higher prices.
The government figured that We
consumption of legal whesky would drop when the-tax on distilled spirits was raised from $9 to $10.50 a gallon last November. But it thought the. higher tax would just about offset smaller consumption. The Bureau of Internal Revenue had estimated that consumption
would fall from 194 million gal-|
lons in fiscal 1951 to 169 million gallons in this fiscal year. At the same time, it figured that the liquor tax would yield $1,683,000,000, compared with actual collections of $1,746,005,581 in fiscal 1951. Estimate is Short
From present indications, how-| ever, the bureau is going to be!
the!
ADDS ANOTHER HONOR—IU student, John P. Ward.
Marion Blind Student
|
Gets $6300
Times State Service BLOOMINGTON, May 19 —! John P. Ward, 22-year-old stu-|
|
Higher Whisky Tax Bo
®
Scholarship
in the Roger Williams Fellowship |
of the First Baptist Church. His new scholarship will give
about $150 million short on its dent from Marion, who has been him $2100 for each of the next
estimate of whisky revenue.’ In the first nine months of this fiscal year—which ends June 30— the government collected only $1,218,000,000 on about 125 million! gallons of distilled spirits. The best guess now is that the tax will yield slightly more than| $300 million in the last three| months of this fiscal year to put! the annual revenue at about $1,520,000,000 from whisky. ! The higher tax has not only put| a crimp in federal income but has| also cut heavily into the revenues of the 46 states and the District
blind since birth, has been] awarded the $6300 Root-Tilden scholarship to the New .York Uni-| versity School of Law.
“He is a remarkable student-— one young men I've ever known,” said | Indiana University Dean of Stu-| dents Raymond L. Shoemaker of | the honor student.’ | Mr. Ward's latest award is the climax to other recognitions which read like an index to campus honor societies.
Holds- Scholarship He is a member of Phi Beta
f
of Columbia where the sale of Kappa, served a term as chief whisky is legal. ; justice of the IU Student Supreme The states did not raise their Court, serves on the board of taxes—averaging $1.66 a gallon Faculty-Student Relations Com—when the federal government mittee, belongs to the Blue Key, boosted its excise tax last No-/Sphinx Club and Pi Sigma Alpha. vember. Thus. the reduced sales He holds a William Lowe Bryan are beginning to hurt them even Scholarship, has been a national more. {officer of Alpha Pi Alpha social The higher tax also has had fraternity and throughout his its repercussions in ‘the whisky|four years at IU has been active! industry, which has been thrown
three years while he earns his LL. B. degree. During summers he plans to return to the IU
campus to work for a Ph. D. in/were demanding that the con-
government. He'll receive his
of the most outstanding A.B. in that subject next month. after six months.
Plans Law Practice
_The honor student uses neither a cane or seeing eye dog to make his way about the campus. On meeting people, he memorizes the sound of their voice for a few minutes. On the next meeting he
{will be able to identify them by
name. He is the second oldest of six children. In 1948 he -graduated from the Indiana School for the Blind. His ambition is to teach, practice law or do specialized social work. “He should have no trouble doing all three at once, on the basis of his work here,” one of his professors remarked.
"tity be shielded, pleaded:
Later a school bus dropped off
into a slump as a result of buiging warehouse supplies and consumer resistance to higher prices. Whisky production in March fell to 15 million gallons, compared with 35,340,000 gallons in March last year, and more than
9000 distillery workers were. job-
less. | Bonded warehouses around the country are bursting with a reo ord total of more than 940 mil-| lion gallons. But at the same time sales by wholesalers ran, about 20 per cent below the com-| parable 1951 figures in the first three months of this year.
3 Hurt as 29 Freight
Cars Jump Track SAWYER, Mich., May 19 (UP) | —A string of 29 cars in the middle of a 107-car Chesapeake & Ohio freight train left the tracks and piled up three deep last night | in a section of the business district of this community. State police said one car was knocked off the tracks when rammed by a panel truck at a crossing a mile north of here. They said the train dragged the damaged car until it hit a switch, causing the derailment. Two occupants of the truck, Ronald Sonnenberg, 16, Sawyer, | and Starr Brightbill, 15, of New Troy, Mich., were injured seriously. A third occupant, Shirley Trapp, was not seriously hurt. None of the train's crew was injured.
Thousands
- By FRED FRIES Ten thousand Hoosier Catho-
lics braved 45-degree temperatures
and threatening skies to participate in a giant Holy Name rally yesterday at Victory Field. It marked the second year in a row the annual religious demonstration, sponsored by the Catholic Archdiocesan Holy Name Union, has been plagued by bad weather. Rain last year held the attendance to 8000. The Rt. Rev. Ignatius Esser, 0.8.B,, abbot of St. Meinrad’s Abbey in Spencer County, was the speaker for the occasion. He spoke on the rally theme:
“Strengthen Family Life to save
the Nation.”
One of the largest religious parades in Indianapolis history preceded the rally proper. In-| cluded in the line of march were 3000 Holy Name men, priests; acolytes and Boy Scouts from the | various parishes in the arch-| diocese. | Scattered through the parade were four “separate bands. The banner-studded procession was a colorful sight against the leaden sky as it moved down tree-lined Riverside Drive from the assem-
For Holy Name Rally
{in the grandstand were enter-
|
Turn Out
bly area a mile north of Victory Field. :
Musical Program During the parade, worshippers
tained with § musical program which included drills by the St. Mary's Marching Band, New Albany, and the St. Vincent de Paul Bugle Corps, Bedford; singing by the Columbians, Knights of Columbus choral group, and organ
music by Edward Krieger.
Also participating in the parade, besides the New Albany and Bedford bands, were the Cathe-
Man Held
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
omerangs
@
Appears Likely
By United Press i i DENVER, May 19-—Nationwide| |settlement of the walkout of 90,000 oil workers appeared in sight today as sporadic reports of contract settlements kept coming in from across the ‘country.
However, O. A. Knight, presi{dent of the CIO Oil Workers {Union, the ‘largest involved, indicated it would be some time be-| {fore all the plant-by-plant nego-| tiations were completed. | Asked if the strike was nearing lan end, he said, “It all depends
lon the attitude of the companies.”
Another union spokesman com-| {mented ‘that ‘settlement is in|
{sight—and has been ever since the ammoth egg Industry today. ink and waterproofing for dry
‘And I found we're turning out flies and fish lines. 60 billion eggs a year, mostly in| . y ~The lid was the 15.cent celling|the | THE LUNCH the board put on the wage in- chickens loaf. crease the oil workers could getland call it moulting.
|WSB (Wage Stabilization Board) put the lid on.”
early last week, | Delaying Factor
sponsored move to limit reopening of contracts for renegotiation
AFL, and independent unions [tracts be subject to renegotiation
However, the crucial test-—the CI0-Sinclair Oil Co. national con-
cals would be in and tallied.
their ballots late yesterday was at Hammond, Ind., where 1000 workers are on strike. Two other
the new contract—at Sinclair, Wyo., and Marcus Hook, Pa. Outcome of the Sinclair contract, hailed last week as the first [major advance in settlement of the strike, will depend on voting by all 30 locals negotiating with {the company.
In State Park Vandal Case
By United Press VERSAILLES, May
19 —|
County Jail here today on an!
open charge in connection with an act of vandalism at Versailles State Park. Rickard was arrested by state police following investigation of a Friday night visit to the park by vandals who tossed hundreds of thousands of nails on roads, bridle trails and a field trial] course, A 2000-acre section of the park!
dral and Sacred Heart Central bands from Indianapolis. Elmer Steffen directed the mass singing of the National Anthem as a special firemen’s color ‘guard raised the flag in centerfield. Standing on the steps of the flower-banked altar, the Rev. Fr. Joseph Brokhage, pastor of St. Leonard's Church, Terre Haute, led the rosary. Meanwhile, high school girls from St. John's, St. Mary's, St. Agnes and Sacred Heart Central Academies “acted out the joyful mysteries in colorful tableaux. ‘Make World Better’
White-plumed Knights of St. John and Fourth Degree Knights
‘Help Me Find a Ho me,’ 5 Columbus, in full-dress regalia,
Pleads Sick
By DONNA MIKELS A. mother stricken with cancer, whose family faces eviction and possible separation, today turned to “anyone with a heart” for help. The failing 53-year-old cancer victim, who asked that her iden-
“Help me find a home for my family so I can face whatever comes knowing . they'll be together.”
‘Time Running Out’
‘The mother said she made her public plea because “every other way has failed and time is running out.” The mother of five, including four children still in school, recently underwent surgery for cancer of the bladder. After five weeks on the “critical” list she rallied and was sent home. But another blow fell. City Health authorities condemned the ramshackle West Side tenement where the family lives. Now the entire “X" family faces eviction. If they cannot find a home, they may be separated-—the mother, father and four children aged 16, 11, 7 and 6. Another teen-aged son is serving with the Marines in the Pacific.
Kept Family Together “No matter what has happened to us we've always kept our family together,” said the tired, workworn woman in a faded print dress. “This is a neighborhood where kids go bad but we've never had a child in court, never in any trouble. I have fine chil-
dren. “1 don’t know what's ahead for
me. But I wouldn't be afraid if I could only get us moved, get a home somewhere decent where they'd be all right if .. >
Quiets Younger Children Her voice trailed off. Just then her two youngest, a boy and a girl ran in from school.
the 11-year-old who has been ill with rheumatic fever since early The oldest boy, 16, helped quiet
/
Mother
the younger children while their mother talked. Later she sent them out of the room. There are things a mother doesn’t like to talk about in front of her children. She moved closer to me and explained: “John (the oldest) whispered to me. He's afraid you'll use our names. \ “The kids are ashamed of where we live- I'm ashamed of it myself but it’s a roof over our heads. I wouldn’t want anything in the paper that would make them feel bad. “I've wanted to find something, | even before they condemned it. But you just can’t find a place where they'll take children for what we can pay.”
Soon the children came back | into the room that serves as a living room, dining room and kitchen. There's no yard outside, nothing but bare sidewalk, and the oldest boy couldn't keep them settled. : Mrs. “X"” explained that they were forced to take the apartment several years back. At the time Mr, “X” became ill and lost the job he'd worked at 30 years. It was only recently he recovered enough to pass a physical test| and get a job. é | “Then we were going to get out, of here,” recalled the mother. “But I started getting sick. I put off going to the hospital for two! or three months, I guess I was afraid I had cancer. I always thought if anyone told me I had it, I might as well be dead. But I guess when it comes you just face it.” School authorities praise Mrs. “X"” as a “strong” mother who has tried hard to rear her family. Illness and poverty have dogged them, but she continues to rise above it—sending them to school and to church each Sunday scrubbed and patched. “A good woman , . ."” and “a deserving family,” school. and social workers agree. Bur soc far it hasn't helped find a hcme for the woman who wants to see her family settled so “I can stop being afraid.”
oe
flanked the altar as Abbot Esser delivered his address. . “Resolve to make the world better,” he told his listeners, “by
making your own family better.”
He stressed the importance of good family life as a basis for our national well-being. “Just as we need good bricks and mortar to make a good building,” the Abbot said, “so also we need good families to make a strong society and a strong nation.” The rally closed with solemn benediction and the mass singing of “Holy God, We Praise Thy Name.” T
Son in Front Lines, But Father Phones Him
WITH THE 25TH INFANTRY DIVISION IN KOREA, May 19 (UP)—Lt. Evan C, Goldenberg, San Francisco, while directing artillery fire in Korea, grabbed up his ringing service telephone and received the surprise of his. life to hear a voice say, “This is Tokyo calling.” It was his father, Zado Goldenberg, a silk scarf manuracturer who had come to Tokyo on business. The father in Tokyo and the son in a forward observation post had a pleasant, 3-minute chat. The Army is still trying to figure out ‘how Goldenberg senior managed it.
Modern Robinson Crusoe Likes Snakes, Goats
ROME, May 19 (UP)—A Dan-/lege Ave, was robbed of $28 at furs, feathers, grass. seed, paper
ish film expedition reported today it had found a modern Robinson
Crusoe living on desolate Monte Albert Trattner, 52, of 241
Carlo Island. Members said the hermit, a 25-year-old Italian who identified himself only as “Arturo,” had lived there two years, eating fourfoot snakes, mountain goats and occasionally an octopus.
Shirley’s in Hospital WASHINGTON, May 19 (UP)
was closed indefinitely by conservation officials to protect visi[tors and animals from possible injury. The picnic and camp grounds in tHe 5200-acre park remained open, but visitors were warned to take care along back roads. Robert Hoover, publicity director for the department, said the closed area is used for training hunting dogs under the supervision of the Indiana Field Trial Association. Col. Millard Davis, director of the Enforcement Division, said Rickard had been ejected from the area several times because he was training animals at the state park on a commercial basis. Conservation officers patroling the area Friday night came upon a truck suspected of being used
Oil Settlement
jaround 90 cents a dozen,
[subsidies on eggs. frozen ones, He said one of the principal de- bought nearly 13 billion since {as laying factors in the way of final 1046, settlement was the com pany-peddled them abroad. {now down to its last 5 billion | pounds, no trick at all to get rid for one year. Most of the 22 CIO, of them.
inclair locals have voted against dairy buyer, Ed Holman in CinSin oca ¥ ag cinnati.- And he told me the gov-
ernment is still buying five million “school won't affect price much, They never get back into the stores.
Carpenter, president of the Institute of American Poultry Industries up in Chicago, said the industry figured egg production so
fine that it even takes growth of population, at about
George W. Rickard, Versailles, a a letter from the American Meat dog trainer, was held in Ripley Institute telling me where meat
You Eggs
GET A PENCIL. Make a
Each time you eat an egg, make a mark. And by the end of the year you ought to have 409 marks.
Sometimes the marks go
are cheap. But when they get| you can put your pencil away. I GOT MY NOSE
into the
the fall the
They refeather,’ i
spring. In
The government dropped its .The dried and I mean. It has
stored them in caves,
And it's
. = = { WHEN THE government stops
{supporting - any price, production] drops. running ahead of supply, prices, go up.
Later with demand
It happened in potatoes. And
tract — will be known sometime; have cause to believe it will] today. The national union head- happen next winter in eggs. Some quarters in Denver said all the of the hatcheries which turn out 10,000 votes from its Sinclair lo- the layers already have closed. {Farmers A key local whose strikers cast profitable with the price of feed where it is.
think eggs won't be
. I FIRST talked with Kroger’s
lunch” But that
Then the big egg man, Dr. Cliff
in the
.4 million a year,
- ~ . 3 " BEING AN egg salesman, hel If was 1905. - reminded me that even when eggs get right up there, dancing around the 90-cent mark they're still, by the pound a better buy than red meat.
And in a day or two, I'll have
has it on eggs as food. .
. «=» ! MY BIG CHEER is on the government going out of the surplus egg business. - © I'd like to see the government get out of all business, and stay out.
Century of Speed
IT'S A NATURAL, Race Day and engineering.
That's why the Indiana Section ’ Hos
of the Society of Automative En-
gineers, has rounded up 100 years| oh
of racing experience for its Fri-
day night speech trials at the
Athenaeum. Here's the lineup: Lee Oldfield, Tom Milton, Johnnie Parsons and Frank Kurtis are booked to spill the inside in a four-tongued talk treat called “Racing Confidential.”
» - » PARSONS, MILTON and Oldfield are headline names. But that fellow Frank Kurtis, you don’t know so well, He’s the nation’s foremost authority on chassis design, streamlining and suspension. He's built some 30-odd race! entries since World War IL | Bob Jackson, Perfect Circle's, sales manager, will toastmaster
to strew the nails about the park. The chased it, but the driver got away when nails punctured the tires of their car. Hoover said it would be some time before the arta could be cleared. He said one keg contains about 160,000 nails, and several kegs were emptied.
Tough Thugs Get $118
Strong-arm methods were favoréd by thugs who got $118 in four week-end robberies here, police were told. Homer Johnson, 26, of 704 Virginia Ave., found lying on the lobby floor in police headquarters, said six young men beat and kicked him, dragged him across railroad tracks and robbed him of $40. ? : Mr. Johnson met the six in an| E. Washington 8t. tavern, he told detectives. He took a cab to the police station, then col-| lapsed. Mr, Johnson was treated at General Hospital, * then | leased. i George C. Young, 28 Los Angeles, said six youths beat and robbed him of $10 at New York St. and Wallace Ave. Marvin A. brunnemer, 26, of| 134 W. Arizona St, reported an unidentified man slugged and robbed him of $40 at Kentucky Ave, and Maryland St. | Cline Knauer, 48, of 2545 Col-|
Epon at Illinois and Georgia! Sts.
Hendricks Place, a United Cab driver, was beaten on the West Side by three men he had picked up at the bus station. He ran before they could rob him. Mr.| Trattner was released after treat{ment at General Hospital.
Swallow This | “PANMUNJOM, May 19 (UP)—|
—Shirley Temple recuperated to- The swallows of Panmunjom are, day at Bethesda (Md.) Naval not counting on a quick Korean i Hospital from an attack of pleur- truce. A pair of them began isy which developed about a week building a fiest today in the pipe after the birth of a son on Apr. of an unused stove in the Allied
the party. The dinner will start at 7 p. m.,, if they can get the boys away from the bar.
Pink or Green
FOREIGN TRADE to most ‘is vague. It's like doing business with a pink or green spot on the map on the other side of the world. This being World Trade Week, and since a. good - many bucks hereabouts come from abroad, I ought to explain we cam use a few. more paying customers from the other side. :
» w =" PERCY SIMMONS, importer of African mahogany, came in to tell me about it. A pink-cheeked Englishman with academic look, he figured me for an Englishman, too, on account of Hartley's Marmalade, made in Liverpool. I'm Scotch, Irish, German, English, etc. He told me about the World Trade eating-meeting at noon Wednesday in Hotel Lincoln which will bear down, for a change, on Scandinavian trade.
® = = KRISTOFFER ODDSEN JR,
representative of the Norwegian]
Council, and Mogens Edsberg, Danish vice consul in Chicago, will be down to tell what their countries have to sell. The list surprised me. I knew about Danish beer. I had some in Colon, Panama, last February. “a. 8 Ww BUT ADD to that canned hams, frozen fish, brisling sardines, licorice, fruit’ wines, raw hides,
products, string and twine, silver,
————
OXYGEN THERAPY
nBusiness
Eat 409 a Year
Harold Hartley
a
n The Revenue D
©
PAGE 11
Young Democrats Elect Jack Wood President
Times State Service CONNERSVILLE, May 190 — [Jack Wood, Shelbyville, was |elected district president of the
© |10th District Young Democrats at’
la reorganization meeting hers: yesterday, lea Approximately 1256 district |delegates elected Mr, Wood, who:
/is Shelby County Young Demo=
‘crat prexy. He is a student at the. {Indiana University Law School lin Indianapolis and js employed: |by the State Highway Commis
chart on the kitchen wall. |
vi
up faster. That's when eggs
porcelain, china, stainless steel,
| sian,
Other officers elected yere: Mrs,
lle,
{Jean Renfro, New Castle, vite" president; Jerry Lewis, McCords- ] secretary, and James Lg 0 | Burks, Connersville, treasurer.
diesels, furniture, sugar coloring, DR. RALPH SOCKMAN— (for gravy, too), white drawing Tops IMA program,
local Stncks and Bonds
N. Y. Pastor
get-ac-quainted affair, a sort of course
May 19, 1952.
4.8%
STOUKS Bld Asked American Loan a% : American States Class A American States
| pid | | » Avrshire Collleries com ...... 16} Will Address [ii 8%. 8 we A 1
in economic geography with two RL tk os com 3 ive Scandinavian salesmen doing the! ana Robbe: Merril sam se Hw a «Me teaching, . i IMA Session Buhner Fertiliser 8% ote oi. 01 5H I think it well worth attending] Sata YR inieros eon” This 3 just to hear how the other coun-| py Ralph W. Sockman, pastor Sifele Theater com PORN | 14 : { . . ' | Miivane "ne eam pn make a living. And these ,¢ Cprigt Church, New York City, Commonwealth Loan 4% nfd. 81%
countries don't quibble with us
will address the fourth Spring In-| Cummins Eng com te eaken much, Theyre our friends. dustrial Conference of the Indi- Ra ti. a veer ‘ | ’ ana Manufacturers’ Association gauitable Securities row 11tt Uncle Jeff at French Lick Friday night. gout a oid lili MARTHA, the manicurist, told| Tne IMA session this year wilij Family Pinance sa ofa oes: me about her Uncle Jeff, {be devoted to training and public, Hauer Mh She is Martha Winegar Who rejations with Dr. Paul J. Mun-|"%7J00¢ |
touches up fingertips in Wally
Cont Car-N
educator, ook Drug Co com
a-Var
die, leading Industrial Hook Drug Co eom = ......i. Waugh's Hume-Mansur barber|,q key TE speaker. ind afin? rela’ Bh on shop. And her “Uncle Jeff” was| popert Emerick, regional pub-| ind Mich & ews pra. 0. really her grandmother's thirdiy. relations manager of General|indon ain Bios ‘dealt co 1 1 husband, named—all the Way—inoiors will talk Friday morning [2 Pow & Lt com ...... 4 Thomas Jefidmaon Johnson, and a ganagement forum will be|jindisnaclis Water com =... 17) » ; held Saturday morning. {indianapolis Water 5% of ...108 ©... MARTHA'S ing off to new ay 13 3 Zhaving 08 @ Dr. Sockman is widely known ox ara Hatton) Lite on Hi 3 . : as minister of the National Ra-|¥inean & Co com ... ering her things together she Lincoln Natl Life .... 24 came across “Uncle Jeff's” ex- dio Pulpit, He is a director of Lyne Sotperation ‘ee : {ghty| the ~Hall.of- fame for Famous Marmon-Herrington com pane book. And he lived mighty) ericans. His supject will be Ne shalt... > He noted such things as “sox,| Date With Destiny!” wi Pub serv Ta 10 cents” “beer, 10 i » and ————————————— yd Pik Sev 4% “one pound of butter, 35 cents.” Franchot Seeks N Ind Pup Sery 4.94 0 His washing was 30 cents, lunch . pibgSery of dy fom . 20 ents, a pound of coffee 25 Divorce as Babs Sohwitter-Cummins 30% od. 1% cents. SoInd G&Ecom ....... L310 29% ‘ ' Wi BoInd GAEL Not ‘1 : I TAKE IT “Uncle Jeff" lived Elopes : ith Neal iol oy an amp com it We pretty well, treated himself to a HOLLYWOOD, May 19 (UP)-| Tanner & Co $14 pf 1 snifter almost .every day — but|{Franchot Tone goes to a divorce Boat TE a loabley gh 14 those days were a lot different. court to lose Barbara Payton to-|Ongp JVs, Liye. xe dpi I looked at the date in the front day while she and his long-time ol rival, Tom Neal, pack their bags sien & Steen sa = coo. 88 wens . to slip off to Europe: American EY 58,80 +r3e. 93. avr The blond with the convertible \marican oan hs evra 3100 wens mind won't be in court when the Batesving Pole’ co. s ebiel Leah . . heer . $23 Is To Bad actor seeks his uncontested, rou-(ch of Blu, dhs 81 » p ‘ [tine divorce of grounds of men- i an Se i oh [tal cruelty. . Mig es... 908 vas On Hogs Here Miss Payton, her attorney, Mil- fuse a Pintle Loan a o A top bid of $23 was made on ton Golden, explained, was busy|iniPls Raflwavs Ss 87 ........ 88 _.* bulk choice 170-240-pound hogs|getting ready to fly to Europe to|ind Ass Teles =“... o aay in trading at the Indianapolis/appear in a movie and Stage maplehurst fr. tne. S%s 61. 91 1.0 Stockyards today. |what may be the final act in|Reper Arts Cosess = _.. 0. g3 Io Heavier 240-285-pound barrows Hollywood's dizziest love triangle. Traction Terminal 5's 57 .(... 88% 91% and gilts sold at $21.50-22.50, Big| The attorney sald Mr. Neal \ weights sold down to $19.25. Sows had a picture commitment in Eu- Cleath Yk
were about steady, with choice|rope, too. Close friends predicted
300-400 pounders selling at $17.75-|the couple would tie the knot 18.50. without waiting for an inter-
Several loads of choice 900-{locutory decree to become final 1100-pound steers sold at $33.50-|In a year.
Indianapolis’ most interesting
women’s section is a part of your Sunday Times.
34.50. Utility and commercial cows had a price range of $22.5027. Choice and prime vealers had
a top bid of $37.50.
8600; opened moderately active, Iater less active; some bids weak to cepts lower; early butk choice 170-240 pounds $32.50-23; 240-285 d 32 50 - 23.50: 285 - 325
One of Mr. Tone's attorneys, Lewis Clarke, promised the actor would shed Miss Payton on testi-
STOP y>
mony that would be tame com- and pared to other acts in the Tone-Payton-Neal drama. GO! RA
“Adultery won’t be m ntioned,” the attorney added. “The testimony will just be routine.”
With Our Sales and Servicel
$31. i bh down to unds t ole 75-18.50;
Brake and Carburetor
mainly $17.50-19: ou 300 pound $18.75-10; 400- nds $16.75-18. Cattle 1700, calves 306; slaughter classes in good demand; early sales steers steady fuk ng prices generally higher; several oads choice 900-1100-pound steers $33.5034.50; load or so held around Jao, ew sales commercial and good mostly - weights $29.50-33: little done on heifers;
cows opened strong; utility and commercial mainly $22.50-27; canners and cutters §$18$22.50; bulls about steady: commercial and good $26.50-28; some hela above $38: vealers active, fully steady: choice a prime 133-31: few $37.50; omimerch ® $30.35: utility around $27-
Sheep 100; small supply native lambs and sheep: about steady: several head choice spring lambs $28; utility and good old crop wooled lambs $35; culls down to 320: few good heavy shorn ewes §§;
w package mixed bucks and ewes $10,
Vice Squad Arrests
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Two Men in Raids
The police vice squad reported}; two arrests today. | George Alexander, 29, of 1305 Bates St., was charged with selling beer on Sunday at that address. Harold Walkup, 53, was|| charged with possession of gaming equipment (baseball pool tickets) at 224 Indiana Ave. early today.
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