Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 July 1952 — Page 16

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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1952

Compromise Is Rejected In Seizure

. By CHARLES MILLER * © Conservation officers were ordered to harvest crops planted by a Pulaski County farmer on 120 acres of disputed land after the Conservation Commission seized the land yesterday. By this action the commission served. notice to several other farmers trying to till land in Tippecanoe River State Park the same thing might happen to them. The commission seized the land bought at a public auction in 1949 by Russell Dilts, Winamac. Pulaski County officials had sold the land after the state failed to pay its share of construction costs to the Perry B. Roberts ditch and Stone ditch in the park. Fought Through Courts The case has been fought through several courts with state = - — officials contending the land was

“wrongfully sold.” About 14 : . acres as in ible los % Lozal 1001, IUE-CIO, inks a new agreement with P: R. Mallory

1949 and 1951. | Co. Watching are (seated) John J. Radigan, vice president in | Mr, Dilts appeared before the| charge of industrial relations at Mallory's; (standing, left to right): | commission yesterday with a, William Drohan, IUE-CIO field director; Mallory President Joseph

over deeds to the property in re-| turn for 50 per cent of the landlord’s share of crops raised on the land. The 1949 share is now being held in a Winamac grain elevator. “The landlord's share belongs,

Business Notes— , to the state,” Commission Chair-| man James Tucker told him.

Brighter Pictures

to the state.” “Under the circumstances, we cannot accept your proposition.” | By DON TEVERBAUGH line of TV sets, radios, refrigera-| Mr. Dilts replied, “I received) IT BEGINS TO LOOK as if we tors and ranges. the deed in 1951 and naturally have sh ed off the business . . assumed I was the owner.” |jitters img started .tugging at Fair Trade Official Cites -Court Order . frayed nerves and ulcerated tum-| Harry A. Kimbriel, El Lilly & Mr. Dilts told the commission mies last fall. {Co. executive, has been elected to he was under the impression the] Or else we're getting used 10tne steering committee of the Bucertificate gave him authority to living with our fears. 'reau of Education on Fair Trade. develop the land until a disposi-] Whichever it may be, econ0-| yr. gimpriel, vice president in| tion had been made in the case mists are coming up with brighter! p, 20 Gf marketing for the local! He also contended a court re- pictures of the future. And I g..0%.n.facturer, has been with! straining order had exempted think they're probably right. 'the firm since 1930. | him, a contention Chairman Tuck- The Chamber of Commerce of “pr..04 og 3 representative in| denied the United States, for example, = = oo * briel came! Me Tocier said. MY. Dilts cul-|reports the remainder of "52 will, "0" g4g os associate district tivated the land on the certifi-| De good—at least as good as the sales manager. In 1950 he was] te “which gave you no right/first half. Maybe better. ‘named executive director of mar-| to Aeron y Here's what the economic re. keting and last March became, Mr. Dilts said later he would Search department of the C of Cloice president, succeeding retiring

i ts: try to get an order restraining | "200 gross national product has Earl 8. Retter. | Danger Spots |

the Samission from harvesting ad from $320 billion to $340 8 erop. i e remaine “As far as I know,” he, said, [BIINOR. while prices haus ts a very One of the most dangerous “the land was legally sold.” Ireal increase in volume. \places anyone can be in is a farm. The land battle began when the nn | According to Capper’'s Farmer Conservation Department con- | CIVILIAN EMPLOYMENT is magazine, a disabling accident] tested the sale of the land. The!about the same as a year: ago— happens every 24 seconds on the Starke County Circuit Court and about 61.2 million. Unemployment farms of this nation. Nearly 1.3! state Appellate Court both uphéld|is under 1.6 million, a low figure. million persons will be injured on the department. The case is pend-| We've found that we Sa jnilatmg. hs Hiss: About 15,000 most cases, have guns and butter. | i, jg Detare tie Indians Supreme We don’t have worry about| Thirty per cent of all farm fa- ‘ Called Trespassers \civilian shortages unless the mili- talities are caused by machinery

pped up..and equipment. Another 24 per, Mr. Dilts said about 12 other ary sbi IS VEMEY sieve $260 cent are caused by livestock. Falls

deed holders in the area have| .. "o = iho first quarter of '51 account for 12 per cent, sunstroke

tried to farm the lands but have , t/7 per cent and burns and explo-| to $282 billion for this year’s first| been stopped as trespassers by {siona about 5 per cent. {three months. Personal income is y are farms so dangerous?

Park Supt. John Trapp. Several] illion annually, a! have been arrested but the UP ArOHD §Tlion since Korea. |According to the safety experts.

Pulaski County prosecutor has ®", i io general strength, the/lt’s pretty much the farmers’ atti-

refused to issue affidavits. leconomists say, will most Hkely| tude. He . Sieiess Ang Soom

Latest incident, in the case took | into 1953. place two weeks ago when & “"pov tne long run, they see/ment as be thinks he does, they

president.

| |

|

SIGNING MALLORY PACT—John M. Sullivan, president of |

I All

compromise. He offered to turn Eg Cain, and James B. Carey, Washington, IUE-CIO international [pie in June than in May.

Hoosier Farm

Hoosier farmers had their best! work opportunity in a month a hot suns dried excess moisture i farm lands during the week end ing July 5, the Weather Bureau reported today. - | The bureau and Purdue agricul-| tural statisticians said wheat com-! bining was 86 per cent finished] in the southwest, but less than) half done in the southeast. Little

combining was finished in the

north, the report said. Corn averaged 48 inches in the south, but only 30 in the north.| Oats were ripe in the south, but two weeks behind in the north. | Tomatoes in Bloom

About twosthirds of the toma-| &

toes were blooming, and corn and soybeans were growing rapidly. | Economists at Purdue said In-| diana farmers received 3 per cent less for their products in June

than in May. The June index was|

6 per cent below that of a yea ago, the survey said. | Livestock prices were 5 per cent {lower in June than in May, al [though the grain price index rose lslightly from May to June, |

hog-corn ratio, were more favor-

At Yards Here

Light and medium weight barrows and gilts sold 50 cents lower | than. yesterday. in. trading at the. Indianapolis Stockyards today. | Choice 180-240-pound hags sold] at $21.50-22. Heavier 270-300-|

| Hog Prices Down

Work Booming

feeding ratios, except the!

Crops On Disputed Pulaski County Land

|Son, the auditorium will seat about 1250 persons and will cost lan estimated $750,000. ’

| | The building houging the audi-

e ) . E. Side School [Tae | ‘torium also will contain library, music, rifle range and ROTC rooms.

In other action the board grant.

1 1 ed J, Russell Paxton, Technical Manual Auditorium Oo School music department

Also Advanced head, a leave of absence to be- - = : come temporary choral director

A resolution to double the size at University of Wisconsin,

of a public school serving the Miss Helen Sowers, Tiptan resiWindsor Village area - on thei dent and Butler University grade Northeast Side has been ap- uate, received board approval as hy, ; PROVES bY Joo Eclioo] Boas. #5 [ew elementary school art cone ‘ ; ci p <= sultant, ¥ ; : 000 to build a 12-room addition to| 9 School 89 at 5950 E, 23rd St., in| one of the fastest growing Indian-| Japolis residential areas. Census| records show a big increase in| the numebr of children' in the! . district, A i" During last night's session the board also brought Manual High| School’s auditorium a step nearer reality. Drawings for the unit, which once was dropped from building plans, got the board's approval, Designed by D. A. Bohlen &

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SECURITIES + COMMODITIES 200 CIRCLE TOWER BLDG.

i The Stock that money can’t buy!

Fhat'’s the one people ask us about all the time. The one that’s bound to go up ... that pays at least 10% on your money , .. that won't ever sell for less than you paid for it.

EASY DOES IT—Harold Heuring, Hobart, bones up on backing up. He's an ‘entry in the state Teen-Age Road-e-o held on North St. along Memorial Plaza today. On the sidelines are (left to right) Larry Berg, Hobart; Jim Klinge, 2446 Finley Ave., Indianapolis entrant from Technical High School, and Herman Kremer, | 2 Gol co-chairman . of the Road-e-o0. Seventeen teen-agers from six In- Well, that stock just doesn’t exist, diana“ cities competed today in the tests to ses who would repre= I “Wa don't have it, No broker does, ~~" sent Indiana in the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce National Road-e-0 in Washington next month.

ES

There are stocks, of course, that do offer better-than.

pound porkers had a price range! of $19.50-20.75. Sows sold steady | to about 25 cents lower, with] choice 300-400-pounders bringing! $17.50-18.50. ?

| All slaughter class cattle were 1012 Pleasant’ St.,

active. Steers and yearlings sold)

a top bid of $22.50. Choice and prime +#vealers and slaughter calves sold at $31-32. Hoes, 10,000; fairly peuve on

medium barrows and gilts; mostly 50 cents lower than Tuesday averages; heav-

stances more lower; choice 180-240 pounds $21.50-22; several hundred 190-225 pounds. $22.25: 240-270 £20.50-21.50: 0.75; near 270 pounds, $21; 120-160 pounds. £17-18: few $18.50: sows steady to about

25 cents lower: choice 300-400 pounds, | $17.50-18.50; smooth lights, $18.75; 4 { 600 pounds,

steady, _$11-12

Cattle 1000: calves 400: all slaughter 50 years. morrow in Flanner & Buchanan Mortuary... Burial, Crown Hill,

classes active; steers and yearlings strong to 50 cents higher: half-load high choice to prime near 1200-pound steers near $34; several loads good and choice 850-1100 pounds $30-32: load or so commercial and good $29.50: short load choice yearling steers 25: part load heifery cows $24: cows strong to 50 cents higher: cutter and utility cows $1 higher since Monday: bulk utility and commercial $19-22.50; canners' and eutters $1418.50; weighty cutters $19-19.50; frm; commercial and good $24-26: | head $26.50: cutter and utility $20-23.50:; calves active: steady to $1 higher; rost| sales 50 cents to fully $1 higher: .choice|

commercial |

snd prime vealers and slaughter calves of 1009 N. c

{48 years. Priet day in- Christ Temple Church. Oyrrent receipts cases exchanged, 20-32c..

31-32: commercial and good $26-30; and utility $20-25. Bheep 200: all classes scarce; noorly on early round: native slaughter spring lambs strong to t1 higher: good and choice $27-29; odd head choice to prime 330; slaughter ewes little change at $6 down.

small

INDIANAPOLIS TRAFFIC |

CASUALTIES (190 Days) { 1951 1952 Accidents ..... 4062 4102 Injured ....... 1759 ‘1792

Dead 33

sevseraan

33

Logansport National Guarq com- | trong growth factors. During the say, pany was ordered from the area gy some 19 million persons] by Mr. Trapp. A. Qeedholder had | ore added to our population and i given the unit permission to train 4, ring the present decade we'll in the area. add another 23 million. | And as our population grows, so Local Stocks and Bonds does our industry with tremen-| |dous research and new product Asked development. These factors can-

July B=

(SER pe ted American rates Glass A... 34 ....|not be overestimate A can States 4.8% ord... 4% ....| » Ayrshire Collieries com ...... 15% 16 Retires . as - fre Jia ox 101 103% | Belt & Sik Yds pid... 38 3% ®. W. Clark, assistant to the m . wah 30! bs- Merrill com". srtas i .{ general sales manager of E. C. Bune: Hertinger $% pid ot o Js Atkins & Cas Tau) Siler Central Soya crn ocal saw - Chamber of Commerce com .. 22° “xs {65 years with the Circle Theater Som fo FS ...| facturer, { Zens In el 5% i] ane i { Commonwealth Loan 4% of .. 10 84 He joined Atkins in 1887 as a|

Ya clerk In the] firm's financial department, In 1889 he was named manager of a newly opened sales office at Chattanooga. Later he| became Eastern

Car-Na-Var . xn Cummins Eng com ‘ Cummins LE 42% pid Eastern In el 5% pid Equitable Securities com EquitableSecurities pfd . Delta Electric com ..... Family Finance com ... Family Pinance §5% pid . Hays Corp pid ee Hamilton Mfg Co com .. {ler-Jones Glaze Aptd .

5% Dp

ind Gas at com Ind Mich El ate by and - Southern] n elephone o oe | indnis Ath lub Realty Go : re RE e soptalive/ *In ower % com . x % a . Indpls Pw & Lt pfd. ........ 9 = 100 So for Sopa pindianapolis Water com ... 11% 19 Mr. Clark He returned to anapolis ater P: o.] v i . (ndianapolis Water 8% td aes BE l1p01. to. devel Indianapolis 2 efferson Nationa es com .. 1190 0 develop a naraw 1 Kingan & C ahve TY 3% i Kingan & “Co “pd ot n 3 “| tributor organization. In 1913 he ncoln Nationa ife . é ' Lynch Corporation . 1 1314 was named manager of the firm's/| Th Vv P R Mallory ARR 35 37% New York office and since 1934] Sd Marmon-Herrington com .... 4% 5% of | Mastic Asphalt ......... a 3 has been special representative of | Nagi JFomes pid” nr 9, i the company with Readqusniers| ! n u TT" COM .....«i0 n Ae J y N Ind Pub Serv 4's pfd .... 93 2614 in New York.

101 U

*N Ind Pub Serv 4'3 pfd .... 25% 26" » *N Ind Pub Serv 458 pfd.... 26% 27% Progress Laundry com 0 Iw Always Two Sides Pub Serv of Ind 3'3 pfd 82 85 hile many businessmen, who | Public Serv of Ind com «31 31s A . t i and] Ross Gear & Tool com”... 4 talk loudly of frea enterprise | Schwitzer-Cumming # D! 1a a Se OEE com 21s 24. honest competition, complain) ‘80 Ind GAR 48 ptd 104, ss, about lack of consumer spending, | Stokely-Van amp com ,..... 18'3 3% ‘ i Stokely-Van Camp pfd ...... 16% 17% others are doing something about | Tanner & Co 5% % ptd 100 it | Terre Haute Maileable Fad 13% 1. 1 (nited Telephone 5% pid 0 -* They see it as a challenge to] Union Title Fash araeay 63% , . !

“"Ipare prices and accept healthy vss. cOmpetition, rather than being a «+++ warning of near term collapse of | ..../the national market. |

2 *Ex dividend. b, BONDS Allen & Steen Ba American Loan 43s 60 American Security 5s 80 American Loan 4%s 58

Batesville. Tele Co tga *:::| Those are the words of Dr. Buhner Fertilizer 8s «+» | Bdwin G. Nourse, perhaps the)

Ch of Com Blde 43s 61 Columbia Club 3-58 62 Equitable Securities 5s 60 ... i {ndpls Paint & Color 5s 64 .. 99 ndpls Public Loan 5s 84... ndpls Railways 5s 67 ... nd Limestone 4s 756 ... nd Asso Tel 35 78 {angsenkamp, 88 48 . Map ine 5%s 6 Paper Arts Co Bs inn Sprague Device Traction Termin ba *Ex Dividend

vee. nation’s top economist. |: ::: Admiral's Story . " Here's a prime example of] :! America's free enterprise system | « ++++| =—Admiral Corp. . “| The appliance manufacturer 91% started less than 20 years ago) with a mere $3400. Today it is a U. S. Statement | $40 million corporation and one of | the giants of the booming TV inWASHINGTON, June 9 (UP)-Govern- dustry. | ment expenses and receipts for the cur- The corner garage it started in|

rent flacal yea through July 7. compared with a year sgo today is replaced by 10 plants

DO. NOT CONFUSE THIS MODEL WITH OLDER MODEL

’T ane.

This Year Last Year | which employ more than 8000— Expenses... § 1.510.565.7985 § 1.044.362.4785 ; Receipts 51,193,324 736,417,562 one at Shelbyville. Surplus ..,. ... They got their big break in|

#486508 san 1939 when they bought up 10,000)

254.711.042.407 Aarvitomatie record . changers at 21.755.963,867 halt price. They then marketed | hone AAS a Em a radio-phonograph combination Dislikes Workhouse gl 0 about half the PITTSBURGH, Pa, -July 9 price of competing manufg.(UP)~William Beacon, recap-| turers. ; tured yesterday a few hours after, It made the. name Admiral a escaping the county workhouse, standout among consumers. By told police why he took leave 1941 Admiral had moved up from’

Defigit ...... 0.372.470 Cush baiance §.axq 584.778 Public debt 262.717.009.213 Gold reserve 23,347.306,008

IM. 3472

; _Without permission. 52d In the radio industry to & DEPT. T 2 { heaithy fourth spot. = | i H produces a full

“I just didn’t lk lace,” he said. y i ' "§? | Today Admiral

|» 3 : . ®

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{40 years. Services at 1:30 p. m. Crown, | strong to 50 cenis higher, Bulk priday in the J. C. Wilson Chapel | # & = utility and commercial cows had |, the Chimes, Burial, Greenwood. |

light ana!2283 Union St., former Indianapolis policeman. Services were to ler weights slow. bid fully 50 cents in-pe at 2 p.m. today in Little &

head choice | Son Funeral Home, Burial, Wash- JAMES 270-300 pounds slow, F510 s0- ington Park.

16-17.50; stags scarce; boars 918 Congress St., resident here |

335 N. East St., resident here 10 ‘years. Services and burial Thursbulls day in Albany, Ky. Produce

I would like a free home demonstration of a rebuilt ELECTRO-

average opportunities for price appreciation over the years ahead...

There are stocks that now yield 5%, 6%—even 8%

or more on your money——in dividends...

LOCAL DEATHS

MRS. JAMES BARGER, 69, of Services at 10 a. m. tomorrow in

resident here King & King Chapel. Burial, New There are stocks with a long-term record of relative

price stability,

MRS. ZORA M. TRUSLER, We could name a number of each—but we won’.

sR» {4317 E. Washington St., former 3 FN | bookkeeper, Services were to be GEORGE W. KENNEY, 61, of{ "040". 1 "today in Robert |W. Stirling Funeral Home. Burial was to be in Crown Hill, ; |

» n n { COYLE, 68, of 949 |Hosbrook St. Services 1:30 p. m. 2.8 8 ‘Friday in Peoples Funeral Home. D. AUSTEN SOMMER, 74, of Burial, New Crown.

y 8 » i HARRY LYONS, 80, 1631; Madison Ave. Greenwood, life jresident of Johnson County. i Services 2:30 p. m. in J. C, Wilson {Chapel, Grgenwood. Burial, Greenwood Cemetery.

Because the same stock is seldom suitable for twe investment objectives—let alone three!

Which stocks you should buy will depend on your situation—the risks you can afford, the rewards you seek. But if you'll tell us about those, we'll be glad to draw up a complete and detailed program showing you just what your money can buy. ; Services at 3 p.m. to-| There's no charge, no obligation, whether you're a customer or not. Simply address your letter to— 8 » »

PLEASANT M. MARCUM, 77, of CHARLES S. GALBREATH, Mgr.

MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & BEANE

Circle Tower Indianapolis 4 Tel: Market 6591

|

; 4 =u. a : x. | Eee: Jon Cinainhati = Consumers { IN es: U. 8B. arge white, -541ac; MRS. HENRY WINFREY, 72, brown mix. 50-52'¢; U. 8. medium *hite: | West St., resident here 45-48'5c¥ brown mix, 45-48'ac od Ta

| Wholesale grade (commercially Services at 1 p. m. Fri- (0 per cent): Extra large white, 19-4le.|

op quality very firm, and receipts light

Burial, Floral Park. at Sohne ies Eupand Iecelpls Hein Residents of Muncie call Operator and ask for 2-4242 and Residents : ity fully ample for slow demand. -

» = = Chay Ample Jor dow demand. ~f * ° of Terre Houte ond Richmond call Enterprise 1000 (No Toll Charge)

128-31c: red, 29-3ic; | \ - > MARTIN C. SIMS, 58, of 1427 36°30 "Noi Reavy, 17.10¢;" hens, ‘Heh,

Martindale Ave., lifetime resident. 14c: old roosters, ide.

1 i }

Local Truck Grain Prices

Wheat, $1.96. White corh, $177. Yellow corn. $1.63.

ats. Tle, _ Soybeans. $3.09.

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By LEO H. United Press | HELSINKI, J . States athletes, v about 400 whe games begin here pouring inte Hels a warning ringir that “unfriendly watching their b The first large fcan' Olympic st plane yesterday ¢ basketball and sc today were 63 r powerful, favored team.. Two more pected tomorrow urday. Avery Brunda the U, 8. Olym accompanied t and soccer grouj who sounded the behavior. ” o “THERE MAY if not hostile, watching and | those from the I Helsinki, in fact countries,” Brun athletes. The U. 8. Olyn mention any “ur tries hy name, bu “there will be c games which are

the United State that *“anti-Ameri tions of various |

be staged.” He reminded ti the U. 8. athlete in the winter gan occasionally booe: mented that “son

. ET ANTErTcAH pia)

from individuals audience for that © “While you = United ' States form, you are or said Brundage. group will be j by what you sa must all be eve ful and discreet.’

= o BRUNDAGE 1 unprecedented ste U. 8. athletes ti smoking in public foreigners will be Olympic compet: and . . . everyon continuous survei

' dividuals who hop

something that ¢

_ discredit our cou

age added, howev ban was‘ merely “not an order.” Brundage, who president of the Olympic Committ not heard of a Communist China clusion from the ( test reported in L erland, ‘where the ters are located.

North Indian

Tourney Set WARSAW, July ern Indiana St Softball Tournam here Aug. 7-10. State Softball Vic Palmer said from Gary, Rer South Bend, Pilyr Wabash and War pete. The state fir at Logansport, Al

Junior Baseb

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Ipalco 5, L. 8. Ayre ervice 35, CA 4; ianapolis Comets

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first place in th beer leagt