Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 June 1952 — Page 28
PAGE tS
Slashed Bill Approved by 230 To 115
By United Press WASHINGTON, June 6—The! House approved the compromise $6,447,730,750 foreign aid
tual money.
115 with one member voting “pres-| ent.” The measure, which already has ¢ heen trimmed nearly $1.5 billion below President Truman's original request, now goes to the Senate for the final congressional ap-
White House. Called Fair Settlement
Chairman James P. Richards (D. 8. C.) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee called the bill a “fair settlement of differences”
the House and Senate. But Rep. John M, Vorys (D. 0.), a member of the committés and a leader in the House economy blog,
trim, foreign aid. In programs of this kind, ConERT eRs 's thé expenditures and another Sant viding the actual money.
amount, Breakdown of Figures The compromise legislation
authorizes $6,431,240,.750 In milltary and ecomomic aid to other free nations plus $16,481,000 for the internationsl children’s fund. . Mr, Truman contended his full request was needed to prevent the ‘spread’ of communism. Only a fow Hous before the House vote,
harp- esl Sta» ndefense goals.
Local Underwriter Wins LIMI Diploma
The Purdue University Life Insurance Marketing Institute diploma has been awarded to Richard ¥. Daniel of Indianapolis, Hal Nutt, director of the institute announced today, i Formal presentation of this diploma was made by Ruasell IJ. Simpson, president of the Indianapolis Association of Life Underwriting at the regular monthly meeting of the association today at the Spink Arms Hotel, Mr. Daniel, special representative of the John Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co., becomes one of 400 men in the nation who are graduates of LIMI at Purdue.
Local Stocks and Bonds
6 elt RR & Stk Yds com ..... 3 8 Ayres an ptd .. -Merill ~Merrill an pid’ nner Fertilizer §% ofd #
pro-| 8 gram yesterday but Republicans} indicated they will seek further cuts when Congress considers an-| other measure to provide the ac-|
| 9 The roll call vote was 230 to
proval that will send it to the]
between the versions approved by,
sald the authorization was “only the first chapter” in the drive to!
i
| CUTE NUMBER—Ann Garnier, Miss Indiana the | number that won a 1952 Ford for Mrs.
Adams
ins, who placed third and seco
one bill authorizing" ways beauty contest.
rp e.
., last night. The car was given away by the East Washington Street Merchants Association, and Miss Indianapolis had as her assistants Miss Betty Wilson (left) and Miss Paula Dee Hawk-
Of Striking Air Workers
By United Press
immediately yesterday
the airlingé said.
| Idlewild.
lis, reaches for THER.
ois Bolton, 2734
trip from their
nd to Miss Garnier in last Satur- rl a
> .
economy aidvoeates have’ Thusip iness Noles—
chances to try and Tedwos the
This Year the Jobs Are Out Grad-Hunting
| By DON TEVERBAUGH
A EA WH) rm — in
-
{jobs in sympathy.
{ NEW YORK, June 6 — The {Transport Workers Union (CIO) ‘ordered striking American Afrlines employees to return to work without settlement of the grievance which idled more than 1000 non-flying personnel and forced cancellation of at least 17 scheduled flights,
More than 1000 workers at New York and Chicago airports were off their jobs during the 24-hour {strike in sympathy with demands of 95 employees who had asked pay for travel time made necessary by their transfer from the closed Newark Airport to New {York International Airport at
The company said TWU Vice President James ¥. Horst, In charge of the union’s Air Transport Division, advised it that the workers had been directed tod re-
A company spokesman said “no commitments” had been made to | the 95 workers who had asked to! be paid for the two-hour round Newark area
The company had notified the ‘union that it would file suit for (damages for breach of contract {if the workers @id not return. Thirteen flights out of LaGuar'dia Afrport Pwere cancelled be-| Click Jr. |cause of the strike. Four flights
om Canter le 2 Top Bid $21.75 On Light Hogs
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES -
A-BLAST WITNESS among froops who with
5s
hese se ‘Indianapolis..G members .of the fst Th an om blast at the i, me Energy grounds, May 25. Shown (left to right, front row) Pfc. Richard Markle, row) Pfc. Oliver Sieving, Cel Norman Betzler, Cpl. Carl Elrod, Pfc. Harry Landers; (rear) Pfc, Walter |»
‘House OK'’s Compromise $6 Billion Foreign Aid P Order Return
Cpl. Leon Yonder, [center |diana,
FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1952
rogram
‘Seeks to Keep Child
| Away From Roberto
HOLLYWOOD, June § (UP)— Dr. Peter Lindstrom was expect. ed to resume testifying today ire i another round in his court fight { ‘with his former wife, actress In|gria Bergman, over custody of their 13-year-old daughter, Pia. | - Dr. Lindstrom, who is baftling to prevent the Nttle girl from | being “exposed” to Miss Berg|man'’s present husband, Italian film producer Roberto Rossellini, if Pia visits her mothér in Fu-
rope = this summer, underwent cross examination throughout most of yesterday's session. He stood pat on his vow that he will fight any attempt to send Pia to Italy to visit Miss Bergiman and said he feared the child might be used by Mr. Rossellini {for “a lot of publicity.”
GIVE A SUNBEAM SHAVEMASTER
6 & W DRUGS
3102 E. WASHINGTON
|Legal Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Local Truck Grain Prices|n, le i today at the In-
A top bid of $21.75 was made] |utility and commercial “han
p 25; not enough weight barrows and test trade, nominally steady
BUSINESS is unrolling the plush carpet for this year’ s Jruck wheat, $2.01.
Demand for business grads is! heavy in all fields. But those with accounting, Insurance or| management training are at the top of the list. Male business graduates with a|
{B.S. degree are offered an aver-
age starting salary of $310 per imonth-—-some as high as $700.
an average of $235 per month as a starter. There's a big push for elementary school teachers, also. The grads can just about call their shots, teach in nearly any town they prefer.- Pay ranges from $335 to $400 per month. ' °
back isn't in any greater demand than the young graduate trained in pure science research. Job offering for physicists outnumber
./the applicants 10 to one.
And this is one year that the young lawyer won't be starving.
{Nearly every graduating member -jof the IU
class already has a
tral Soys . . mbet of Commarce ‘som’ ode ® Theater com cone 48 I ing Ter o® ofd ... H0, Co: ealth Loan + .
Dd Mich £1 ¢%% prd Ln Telephone 4.8 Mtinis Ath Club Re ) wv & oom .
“Job or Is © 4
sidering offers.
Paint Pushers
WHILE SALES are causing | * anxious moments for many busi,/nessmen, the Glidden Co. is rack“ing up what looks like its third
+o. [straight record month of sales.
A. D. Duncan, vice president of
<v+.|the company’s paint and varnish “#4 | division, + /sales—the highest in history
says Glidden's March have been topped in April by 9.7| per cent. And May looks like another bell ringer, In Detroit, where paychecks have been on the lean side this year, Glidden sales in April were!
::..|102.5 per cent over a year ago.
prawn 5
gg F
Te i: 3 03%
Kai F gS FF
} wane |
i
=
And here, a branch opened only | last November has set a record sales volume every succeedingiit month, reports manager W., G Wickham. Getting the big play is Glidden's new 100 per cent rubber base BSpred Satin, with house; paints a close second. The rubber base paint has real-
{ly scored. It's tough enough to
scrub with gritty cleanser — ;jcountless times, And it comes in a color range of 180 hues.
Steel Talk ‘im
THE story making the rounds in- Washington today is the steel
"|strike was within a half-hour of| «settlement.
And then the Supreme Court
handed down its historic decision. | Harry had called representa- ing about the new power steer-
tives of both sides to the White! {House, the story goes, and had!
' told them to reach an agreement |
. |by Monday, or he'd fix terms that |
J atom would like.
And now we'll have to worry
vite about face-saving on both sides. five months of ‘52.
lcrop of college grads. And this is one year the youngsters can afford to be choosy—they're in big demand. | SovoemsaCabes, It used to be, come , Eraduation time, you Lp a gloss U. S. Statement
But the women are being offered! |
» » “ AN ALL-AMERICAN quarter-
So "No. 2 white corn, $176 { ellow corn, $1 86.
2 Tie
Harold . Hartley, The Times
{Cash balance | from all his friends through Public debt | the mail. His regular column, Gold reserve
SS paTGION, ne 5 Tr : fiscal year through June 4, EE
| dtanapolis Btockyards. | Selling prices ‘on hogs weigh-
50-75 cents over yesterday. Light
_|18.50. Choice 300-400 pound sows | oka MII
was in
choice “850 pound heros” were dition t
25h Sia dls pit am.on brought bids of $18-22. Bulk good ter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward H 23.296.094.828 21.756.671
|-~Today in Business” will be resumed upon his return,
Back in Yaiving
Produce -
| 138-4214¢; U. brown mix 35-39'5¢c
extra large, changed 29-32¢
{ __Chickens~—-Commercially grown i |27-28¢: hens, heavy 20-23c, 18-16¢c; old roosters 15-160.
and demand fair few fancy hens at 24c. samery, 90 mium i 50c, regular, Bde
| Miss Proesch
"NEW OFFICERS of the Industrial Training Association of In|dlana will be installed at the next regular monthly meeting, 6:30 . m, Monday in. the Marott Hotel. Guest of honor will be Dr. Herman L. Shibler, superintendent of | city schools. He'll speak on “The {Three Level Bridge.” New officers for ’52 are: C. P.| Robertson, of Stokely~Van Camp, Ino., president; Robert Stockment, {U, 8. Naval Ordnance Plant, vice (president; Miss Dorothy Proesch, iL. 8B, Ayres & Co., treasurer, and Edward C. Susat, Purdue Univer sity Indianapolis Center, secre-| tary. It will be the final meeting of | {the summer.
Employment Facts |
STRIKES in the steel and oll| industries, coupled with rainy weather, reduced expected job| openings the last week in May, ! the Indiana Employment Security Division reported. { The wet weather {looked-for farm work. The total of 255¢ new non-| farm jobs was about 200 under|?} {the previous week, but about the {Same as a year ago. Job applications dropped 246: to 4041, but unemployment ¢laims jcame up a little -to 22.582, as|§ compared to 21,411 for the week! previous,
Mr. Robertson
“bumped”
‘Quickies ~
WILLIAM G. WARD and GOR- | DON E. WILSON are new partmers in a CPA office at 108 E.| Washington St. BUIOK DEALERS are buzs-'
ling which will be optional in the ‘Super series this month. 8 NATIONAL SHIRT SHOPS, INC., sales are up to a plus 17.8) |per cent over May a year ago ; {and up 13.5 per cent for the first
Egss—FOB Cincinnati, consumer grade U. S. A large white 40-44'4c, brown mix |stances medium white 35-40%c; {Bounds 320.31;
Wholesale grade, commercial r cent | 120-180 pounds $17.50-18.50; sows 25-50 rent I~ 10 per vent | cents lower; choice 300-400 pounds $17.25Good quality steady to|18-35, few $18.50 | firm. Prices unchanged to le higher. hens, light |
Fryers barely steady. Offering liberal |p balance steady with 123.50; commercial al scarce, few $24-25; b
score, Tie;
cents lower; 170-240 pounds 321- formation devel 21.25; odd load 2150: top $31.75; over tion veloped. pounds fully 50 cents. in-!
270-300 pounds $19-20;
7s 25; big weights down to $16. | Hattie 00. calves 300: load and one-halt| After surgery, $34.50: - slaughter steers lers scarce, steady: cows steady: ners and cutt $18-22; utility cows
cutter to commercial $22- 26.50; |
pre- | vealers moderately active, steady:® bulk! good to prime 332-36; odd head $36.50; Cubator with oxygen.
‘Death Race’ Child 0 ‘ing pver 250 pounds were down Hos Operation;
120-160. pounders sold at Femicondition Serious CHICAGO, June 6. (UP)—Little;.
ET foc tis emis omc apes emeena a Se ra ak TS con / Ing Ov;, filed In Federal ‘Court in Houston, Tex., a statement the | money was “wrongfully included”
3 \ “serions™ rious” -eonay following a delicate]
The child developed a d lower; choice 240-270 phragmatic hernia shortly after down to $18.35: birth Sunday, forcing the stom-| ach into her heart cavity and 400-600 pounds $16.50- threatening to halt her heartbeat. ! hospital at-|COme. fryers | high cholos_ 300-pound. helfers bought «4 tendants termed her condition as! 3 can- “serious,” but added her “post-/here by District Attorney Mar-|loaded into State 5 /operative outlook was favorable. » shall Hanley, who plans to pre- No. 708: 2600 Ly The child was placed in an in- sent it to the Federal grand jury|Si= No. Ry deffvared on Hoad” S05.
ouUrsYILLE,
lEx-Local Brewer
Indisna i Bec any class to Denies Tax Debts SE a Siclnity theret,
were | Notice ‘is hereby given sealed ‘bide . for the of mae ving terials will be recetved by the Chairman i pa. at his” of office. (03 No pe A Pg 1] "ai witch, time time i) A Pube opened and Sond, sive No 5 and 11 AS p58. Cone verse, n Road 513,
Dand E or
Aggregate; F.0.B. Dugger,
A former Indianapolis brewery Indians asiivered on Road 189, Section perator from whom the govern- E ment wants $500,000 in back in-
plant vicinity mavitatlon No. 698: 1800 to 1900 tons, 0.
Mvered, ‘on Hosd. 3ib, Section
|come taxes and penalties has de-|A or rg vicinity
bill.
. But today the "sob is out looking] {3 THOR MEO. nig bought to arrive at $34.50. coo foryou. At least that's the word - Editor, is ill i Ma. jExbenses : 390.045 Ta 182 ne. ph Slaughter steers and heifers" were jjfo. two hour operation a save Buoy] .{Srom, Flacement officials at Indi-| Lo out - Hl be wi) to hear | Surplus 7362112.37 101009065 scarce, Canner and cutter cows| The 6-day-old infant, daugh- as part of his personal income.
./The money actually belonged to to prime vealers sold at $32-36.Sallows, was rushed to Children's the brewery, he said. Hogs 8500; slow, uneverr: limited early Memorial Hospital yesterday by|
Invitati sales Tay" cunts ower later. (rads ambulance when an internal mal-| Bardin made similar state- on Ee By.
{ments to reporters when the {a brewery investigation was re-|!%; Secon TOF
opened earlier this year.
Lawrence P, Bardin, who onge|
nied in writing that he owes the|e a "Na 's" un 13 Asstesater FOB. Tei on
Bisze No. and stadt, Indians delivered tion B or plant vicinity 704: No. 9 and 13 8 TE
SET
tory Naud hi da
The Internal Revenue Bureaugestion es y Ts is trying to collect the money as|gJovitation No. 708: 5000 fo Sones ~ and 1 at plants taxes owed by Bardin on 1946 in iets of inte into State o Eokerty, Blants Invitation No. 707: 3500 to fons
Ithis fall,
The case is now being studied size No. 7 Aggresate; fu
ks at plant a 3100 tons.
Section ant Touttation No. 709: 1800 %o 2000_tons. Size No. 9 and 11 fversd 5 F.O.B. Wheatland, Indiana del on Road 241. thereof.
Section Saat violates sive No.” ® No. Sb: 4100 to Ra
and wood delivered at
t New Albany, ana. ‘Asphait Frodtot Ri: or - To vitation fe 3; a pW 0. national parts; oat of slarect
Street. SE asrd
. x seiled bids Noti is h 1 for the purchase in towing wing mate rials will be received by the
the State Pehwas Sak gd ha time they be seks, vt
rie $25, 02, S20 en:
on Bl or t ney iogaity vitation 2300 to ) dons. Bize No. 9, and a Aggregate; F.OB. El. nora, Indiana delivered on Road 58, Bec~ tion D or plant Kt the hareot, Invitation No. to 2000 Xx tons, Size No. 2 5 srosate
® aly Ss and lopded Hd dons, Size andjana andjans
TTR mm 0. - dora, Indiana delivered on Road 233, or plant vicinity thereof
+ No. 7 tons, Rize No. 1; gate; ros. Te) ty, d 37, Section > oF there.
900 to 1000 ton | Sm 11 Augiogals: ¥.0.B. Bryant, Tne ang delivere n RB 67, Section 8 or plant vicinity Invitat Hon No. B03; "300 to 500 tons, Bize No. 11, “A" Bituminous Coated Agegate farnis hed and loaded in State rucks at Vendor's plant vi¢inity of South , Indiana. No. : 300 tons Bituminous H and 100
at Vendor's plant vieinity of Mun-
* dnvitation, up. eration 200 bans. 2 Ba ur plant vicinity eof Mishawaka, mn Bids fer be submitted wpon standard 8TA RISHWAY COMMISION INDIANA 8A C. HADDEN, Chairman NOTICE TO ROAD CONTRACTORS given that sepled construction of
Tocelved by ‘the ChAPmen on at
a oom Foire 8. (1) 3.360 1s miles 20 appr ly
Bb am pee go
ect 5% ER Lior tl
18 Bogin, the corporation
Ben 12 8 {gm mam on
vo. Swain
; sap. from 2 "the Moon Rated
liege Ave. Contract RS-3487— bituminous pA Bids, ace invited o or surfacing on following:
_ " ed a Soe of
Ne
on - A AD "® 2 gra Sia
an jec 0) SP tds lige ports
FRIDAY
Gives Deleg
Browns Neutral
Rep, Chai The Times “t for nor agai gene Pulliam to the Repul
vention. “I'm not : I'm not in 1 the guy and “I'm favor gate if it c hurting son haven't tried I'm not pro anyone at t except Geor ernor.” Mr. Brown tion was co: sent his. yie emphasis in he was mo! he is. He said B ington corr proached hir sible support reported, bu not told him to be ‘a delé he had disc Indiana con The Time curate report this further position. Mr attend the week.
Awaits
After 8
In Kore
FALLS C (UP)—John eight month: waiting for | Army . offi Mr. Thomas was lost, Hi: received her Army, sent ] “keep him g Army advan
wi Cs al SI, qin
Mr. Thom RET owes h . plus leave p: ters for a tot
MR. THO! hitches in ti age of 17 { authorities Later, he w: back to duty 1951. While he red tape, M back to worl this time wil servation Se
Work for t Federal Job, ture, is pacl vital to you.
Join the ETI BEY LIL 350,000 CLIT IATL big, won
