Indianapolis Times, Volume 39, Number 139, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 October 1927 — Page 14
PAGE 14
STOCKS STRONG AT MARKET IN OPENINGTODAY Statement of Cabinet Adds Strength to Market; Carries Over at Opening.
Average Stock Prices
Average of twentv industrials Tuesday was 187.32, up .51. Average of twenty rails was 139.3fi, up .30 Average of forty bonds was 98.68, up .05. Bu United Pres* NEW YORK, Oct. 19.—Strength induced by favorable indications in business as told to President Coolidge by his cabinet carried over into today’s early stock market. Practically -the entire list opened fractionally higher, and immediately proceeded to gather additional momentum. Both Steel and General Motors were firm and fractionally higher. Railroad shares continued quiet, but prices displayed strength; rubber irrues moved higher; motors were steady; Mercantile shares gained, and a few special issues soared. New Pool Anew pool is said to have charge of operations in Radio Corporation. The stock added more than a point to its five-point gain Tuesday. The issue was selling at 74, anew record. American Linseed rose IV* to 56%, anew record. Houston spurted 2% to 172%, while other oils were holding around Tuesday’s last prices. Philadelphia Company opened at 118% up 3% from Tuesday’s last price which in turn was 8% points above the preceding day. Later it rose to 119, anew high. Coolidge Expression Wider dissemination of President Coolidge’s expression of confidence regarding business conditions brought large buying orders from interior ponits overnight. This demand carried industrial leaders to new highs on the recovery and steel common, American Can and General Motors advanced. Radio Corporation was taken in large blocks, pushing into new high ground for the year. Buying of Radio war; mostly long-pull accumulation for the account of important financial interests. Heavy at Noon Stocks continued heavy around noon. Special pressure was concentrated on Steel common due to the reduction in operations to 65% per cent against 68 per cent a week ago. This decrease was discouraging because it came at a time when most authorities in the steel trade were looking for a seasonal expansion of production. Steel’s lack of rallying power had a depressing influence on the other industrial leaders and new lows on the movement were reached in various issues of this class. Dodge preferred was a weak feature of the automobile group, declining to new low ground for the year at 56%. This stock’s decline aroused fears regarding the safety of the dividend rate of $7 a year.
Banks and Exchange
INDIANAPOLIS STATEMENT Indianapolis bank clearings today were $3,815,000. Debits were $8,305,000. FOREIGN EXCHANGE Pjl Unttrd Prrst NEW YORK. Oct. 19.—Foreign exchange opened steady Demand sterling $4.86 9-16, pp 10 1-16: francs. 3.9214 c; lira. 5.4614 c; Belga, 13.92 c; marks. 23.88'/2C. up .OOVi. LIBERTY BONDS BU Vi’ltvl Pn-Ks NEW YORK. Oct. 19.—Liberty 3*/aS opened at 101.16. up 2; 2d 4145. 100.2. un- ' changed; 4th 4'As, 103.28. off 2.
Produce fi/larkets
Butter (wholesale price) No. 1, 48® 31c; No. 2, 45® 48c; packing stock, 25@ 27c Butterfat (buying prices)—47@4Bc lb. Eggs—Strictly fresh. delivered at Indianapolis. 3940 c. Poultry (buying prices)—Hens. 18@20c, Leghorn hens. 13® 15c; Leghorn springs. 13 (*lsc; springs. 18® 20c; roosters. 10@12c: turkeys, hens. 20® 25c; young toms, 20® 25c- old toms. 15® 20c: ducks, 12@15c; geese. 8®10c; guineas, young. 50c; old, 35c. Cheese (wholesale seliin gprices, per pound)—American loaf. 35®.38c; pimento loaf. 37® 40c; brick loaf. 35@38c; Swiss, No 1 43® 46c: No. 2. 39@43c; imported Swiss.' 60©62c; Wisconsin flat, mild and sharp. 30® 32c; print cream. 31c; flat daisy 29® 31c; longhorns, 29 VA® 31 Vic; New York limberger. 32@35c; Wisconsin limberger, 28©32c AND S * Oct. 19.—Butter—Extras in tub lots. 50 Vi® 52‘Ac; firsts. 44 1 / 2 @45'/ 2 c; seconds. 40©41c; packing stock, 28c. Eggs —Extras, 52c; extra firsts. 49c; firsts, 43c; ordinary. 34c; pullet firsts. 24c. Poultry--fowls, 350/ 26c; Leghorn fowls, 15® 16c; heavy springers. 23® 26c; Leghorn springers. 22® 23c: cocks, 16® 17c; ducks, 22®23c. Potatoes—Maine. 150-Ib. sacks, $3.25: Ohio, New York and Michigan. $3.10®3.25; Idaho Bakers. 150-lb. sacks, russets, $2.75; rurals. $2.35® 2.50; Colorado Brown Beauties, $2.35® 2.50; home grown, bushel basket, $1.25® 1.35. OUTLINE SHORTRIDGE’S CORNER STONE RITES Program at New Building to Be Held Next Week. Plans for laying of the cornerstone of the new Shortrldge High School at Thirty-Fourth and Meridian Sts., are being made by Superintendent Charles L. Miller. Miller expects to hold the ceremony next week. A tentative program for the event has been arranged. It will start at 2:10 p. m. with a concert by the Shortridge Band. George Buck, principal, will preside. Speakers will include Superintendent Miller, J. Edwin Kopf, the architect; Dr. Herbert T. Wagner, representating the class of 1903, and James Howard Otto, ’2B, representing the student body. * Emmett A. Rice, representing the high school faculty, will deposit the archives. Theodore F. Vonnegut, school board president, will lay the comer stone. Corner Stone Placed Bv Timm Rnccial MUNCIE, Ind., Oct. 19.—The cornerstone of the Ball Memorial Hospital, on the grounds of Ball Teachers College, was laid today. Mortar was spread by Mrs. Edmund v Burke Ball, widow of one of the brothers who provided the money for the hospital and various other a benevolences here.
New York Stocks
~Bt Thomson ft McKinnon'
Railroads— Prev. High. Low. 12 p.m. close. Atchison 189% ... 187 189% Atl Coast Line..l93 ... 192'/2 l92Va B& O 119% ... *llß% 11914 Can Pacific 193-I ... 190% 192% C & O ..211% ... 207 Vi 210'/2 C& N W 92% ... 91% 93 C R & P 105% 105 105 Del & Hud 193 ... 190 UlVs Del & Lack 131 Erie 69 67% 67% bd% Erie Ist pfd 61% ... 61% 61 % Grt Nor pfd 99% 99 99% 99Ya Lehigh Valley .. 103 ... 103 103 K C South 64 ... 62 63% L & N 152 ... 151 152 MK & T 44% 44% 44% 44% Mo Pac pfd .... 109 107% 107% 108 N Y Central ..'.163% ... 161 163 NY NH & H ... 54% ... 53 53% Nor Pacific 96% 95 95 96 Nor & West ....187 ... 187 188% Pere Mara 130 Pennsy 66% 66 66% 66% Reading 113% ... 113 113% Southern 132% ... 131% 132 Vs Southern Pac ..122% 121% 122 121% St Paul 16% ... 16% 16% St Paul pfd ....30% ... 29% 30% St L & S W 79% St L & S F 111% Union Pacific ..191 ... 189 190 Wabash 72% 71 71% 71% Wabash pfd .... 96% 95% 96 96 Rubbers— Ajax 8 ... 8 8% Fisk 17% 16% 17 16 Vi Goodrich 80 78 Vs 78% 79% Goodyear 60 59% 60 60% Kelly-Spgfld .... 28% 27 27% 27% U S Rfctoer ... 55% 53% 55 53% Equipments— Amer C & F ... 99% ... 99 100 Amer Loco ....104 ... 104 105% Am Stl Fd 49% ... 49% 49’% Baldw Loco 249% ... 249 249 Gen Electric ..133 ... 128% 132% Lima 61 N Y Air Brk... 40% ... 40% 40% Pres Stl Car ..70% ... 69% 69% Pullman 79% ... 78% 79% Wsth A B 44% ... 43% 44% Wsth piec 83% 81% 81% 82% Steels— Bet hie 55 54 54 55 Colo Fuel 82% ... 80 80% Crucible 84% 83% 83% 84% Gulf St Stl 41 Inland Steel .... 52 ... 51% 51% Phil RC & 1.... 39% ... 39& 39% Rep Steel 62'% ... 62Vi 61 Sl-Shef 121 U S Steel 145% 142% 142% 144% Alloy 26% ... 26% 26% Vanadium 53% ... 53 53% Motors— Amer Bosch ... ... 22% Chandler 19’/s ... 19% 19% Chrysler 54% ... 83% 54% Con Motors .... 9% ... 9% 9% Dodge 14% ... 13% 14% Gabriel 37% 36% 37 36% Gen Motors ....137 ... 132% 136% Hudson 71% ... 67% 71 ,n 15% ... 15 15% Mack 106% ... 101% 105% Mar Par 17% Moon 6% ... 6% 6Vi Nash 87% 85% 86 87% Packard 48% 48% 48% 48% Peerless ........ 22% ... 22 22% Pierce Arr 9Vi Studebkr 55% ... 53% 55% Stew War 70% 68% 69% 70'A Timken 119 ... 116% 119 Willys-Over 14% ... 14% 14% White Motors ... 38% ... 37% 38% Mining— , „ Amer Smelt ....165% ... 163 165% Anaconda 47 ... 46% 47 Cer De Pas 63 ... 62% 63 Inspir 17% ... 17% 17% Int Nic 68% ... 66% 68Vi Kennec 73% ... 72% 73% Magma 45% ... 44% 45% Tex GSc Sul 74% ... 72% 74 U S Smelt 38 At°Ref"*. ... , 114,, Cal Pete 20 Vi 20 Vi 20% 20% Freep Tex 90% ... 88 89% Houston 172% ... 169 169% Indpend Oil .... 20% 20% 20% 20% Marland Oil ... 32% 32% 32% 32% Mid Cont Pete.. 26% ... 25% 25% Lago 32% ... 32 32% Pan-Amer Pete B 40% ... 48 48Vi Pro and Refg .. 26'/s ... 26 26% Phil Pete . 39 ... 38% 39 Union Oil 43% 43% 43% 43 Pure Oil 25% 25 25% 25% Royal Dutch 46 Shell 25 ... 25 25 Sinclair 15% 15% 15% 15V4 Skeilv 26% 26% 26 Vi 25% SO Os Cal .... 53% 53 53% 53V4 S O of N J 39% ... 38% 39 SOof N Y 30% ... 30% 30% Texas Cos 50% 50 50 50 Trans Pete 8 ... 7% 7% White Eagle 22 Industrials— Ad Rumelv 9 ... 9 9 Allis Chalmers.. 114% ... 114% 114 Allied Chem 153% 148% 149% 153% Armour A 9% ... 9% 9% Apicr Can 65% 64 64 65 Amer H and L 11% Am H and L pf 61 Am Safety R ... 59% ... 58% 58 Amer Wool .... 21% ...- 21% 21% Amer L'nseed ... 57 ... 55 55% Coca Cols, 123% Cont Can 77 ... 76% 76% Cert Prods 51 % Dev Chem 37% ... 36% 37% Dupont 334 330 332 334 “i Famous Players 109 ... 107% 108% General Asphalt 83% 81% 82 32% Int C Engr 46% ... 46% 47 Int Paper 65% 63% 64 64% Int Harv 217 ... 214 215% May Dp St 87 ... 85 87 Mont Ward 81% ... *O% 87 Nat Lead 118 ... 118 117 Owen Bottle ... 81 ... 80% 80% Radio 74 71% 72 72% Real Sil: 23 '/■> Rem Type 26% ... 25% 26% Sears Roebuck.. 75% 73 73 741/4 United Drg 188 ... 187 188% Univ Pipe 26% ... 26% 27 USC IP 208 ... 2008 210 U S In A1 73% ... 73% 73% Woolworth 183% 180% 180% 183 Utilities— Am T & T 181 180% 181 180% Am Express 166'1 Am W W 62 61% 62 61% Brklyn Man .. 60% 60 60% 59% Col Gs &El 90% ... 89% 96% Cons Gas 116 ... 114%. 115% Interboro 37% 38 37 37Vi No Am Cos 61 ... 60% 60% Peoples G 1553/. Phila Cos 119 ... 116 115 S Gas & E 1.... 62% ... 62 62 V/est Union ... .. ... ... 159% Shipping— Am In Corp 52 Am S & C 3% Atlantic G ... 35% ... 34% 335% In M Mpfd 3734 United Fr 139 ... 139 139' Foods— Am Sugar 82 80% 81% 81% A B Sugar 17Vi ... V 17% 17% Austin N 5% Beech N 68% 66 66% 66% Calif Pkg 65% Corn Prods ... 58% ... 58 58 Cuba C pfd 31% Cuba A Sug... 21% ... 21% 21% Fleischmann ... 63% 62% 62% 62% Jewel Tea 72 Nat Biscuit ....145 ... 145 144% Punta Ale 32% 32% 332% 32% Postum 116 114% 115 115% W~~Bk B 30% 29 29% 30% Tobaccos— Am Suma 65 64 64% 65’/ Am Tob 149 Am T B 150% 150 150 149% Cons Cigars 78% Gen Cigars ... 69% 68% 69 69 Liggett 122% ... 122% 122% Lorillard 36 ... 35% 36 R J Rev 148% ... 148% 147% Tob P B 94Vi ... 94% 95 U Cig Stor.... 34% .;. 34% 34% Schulte R S ... 52% ... 52% 52%
In the Cotton Market
(By Thomson & McKinnon) NEW YORK. Oct. 17.—1 t seems strange thing to say of a market, which shows a net decline for the day that it was strong, but thats the way cotton looked to me Tuesday. The balance between trade buying and southern selling Is about level. As the movement is due to grow less and less, such buying should Increase and the selling decrease.
Local Wagon Wheat
Local grain elevators are paying $1.27 for No. 2 red wheat. Other grades are purchased on their merits. SOUTHERN ROADS WANT LAKE RATES REDUCED Railways Would Reduce Lake Cargo Coal Rates. ! Bu United Press The interstate commerce commission today set Nov. 16 for hearing of a proposal of southern railroads to reduce rates on lake cargo coal shipments 20 cents a ton from Kentucky, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia mines to lake ports. A hearing also will be held on the same subject at the Hotel Nicollet, Minneapolis, on Nov. 29. Southern railroads proposed the reduction to offset a differential granted by the commission to Ohio and Pennsylvania coal fields on lake cargo shipments to the same destinations. Tariffs scheduling the new rates from the South were suspended by the commission pending the results of the hearings.
ALL LIVESTOCK SHARE GENERAL DROPATYARDS Hogs Down 25 Cents; Vealers 50 Cents Lower; Sheep 25 Cents Off. —Hog Price Range— Oct. Bulk Top. Receipts. 12. [email protected] 12.10 4,500 13. [email protected] 12.10 8,000 14. 11.25® 12.00 12.00 8,000 15. [email protected] 12.15 3,000 17. 11.90® 12.00 12.00 4,000 18. [email protected] 12.15 5,500 19. 11.50011.70 11.85 6.000 Every division of the Indianapolis livestock market experienced a decline today, cattle suffering the least. Hogs were down 25 cents to a top of $11.85 on the hundredweight. About 6,000 were brought to the yards with 1,305 holdovers added to the fresh run. The Chicago market opened slow, with heavy hogs scarce. There were, few early sales in the medium to good classes. About 15,000 were received. Hog Price Range Pigs were $8.75 @10.25 and animals weighing 130-160 pounds were [email protected]. Medium weight material suffered worst in the drop, 160-200-pound material going at $11.25@ 11.60. Animals in the 200-250-pound class were [email protected] and heavy meat material weighing 250 pounds upward was down to $11.50011.85. A steady to lower tone governed cattle prices, beef steers selling for $11.50@ 13.50 and best cows for $12.50@13. Low cutters and cutter cows were unchanged at [email protected] and bulk stock and feeder steers were slightly up at $7.25@9. About 700 were received. ' Calves Down 50 Cents Best vealers were 50 cents lower at $15.50@16, white heavy calves were unchanged at $6.50@10. About 700 were received. Top fat lambs were $13.25 and bulk fat lambs were lower at $12.50 @l3. Bulk cull lambs were $7.50 @lO and fat ewes were unchanged - at [email protected]. Approximately 1,100 were iruthe pens. —Hogs— Receipts. 6.000; market lower. 90-130 lbs $ 8.75® 10.25 130-160 lbs [email protected] 160-200 lbs 11.25® 11.60 200-250 lbs [email protected] 250 lbs 11.50® 11.05 -CattleReceipts. 1,200; market steady to lower. Beef steers $11.50®13.50 Beef cows 6.50® 8.50 Low cutters and cutter cows.. 4.25® 5.50 Bulk Stocker and feeder steers 7.25® 9.00 —Calves— Receipts, 700; market lower. Best vealers $15.50016.00 Heavy calves 6.50® 10.00 —Sheep and Lambs— Receipts, 1,100; market lower. Top fat lambs [email protected] Bulk fat lambs 13.25 Bulk cull lambs 7.50® 10.00 Fat ewes 4.50® 6.50 Other Livestock '^CHICAGO,™Oct 19.—Cattle—Receipts. 11,000; grain-fed sleers 15@20c higher; active at advance: other killing kinds mostly steady; vealers 25@15c lower; sl2 25 paid for 1,428-lb. steers; numerous loads. $15.50016.50; Stockers and feeders scarce: better grades fully steady; others slow; light bulls weak; weightier kinds scarce, steady; most vealers, $13,500)14; best to packers, $14.50; few to outsiders up to sls. Sheep—Receipts, 12,000; fat lambs opening slow: few early sales and bids fully steady. 150 25c higher on good share of native offerings; early sales native lambs. $13.25; asking around $13.50 for numerous loads; selected kinds held around *13.75; choice westerns held at sl4; good to choice offerings eligible at $13.85; few 100-120-lb. buck lambs. sll® 11.50; culls. SIOO 10 50; sheep steady: choice fat ewes. [email protected]: good kinds, $5.50@6; feeding lambs active, strong; bulk. $13.75014.25; Tuesday’s top fat rangers. sl4. Hogs (soft or oily hogs and roasting pigs excluded) —Receipts, 15.000: market mostly steady to 25c lower; heavyweight 250-350-lb. medium to choice, $10.15011.75; medium weight. 200-250-lb. medium to choice. $11.10011.75; lightweight. 160-200-lb. common to choice. $10.65011.60; light lights. 130-160-lb. common to choice, $9.25011.15; packing sows, smooth and rough, [email protected]; slaughter pigs, 90-130-lb. medium to choice, [email protected]. Pit Times S'necial LOUISVILLE. Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts, I, market 15c lower; tops. $11.50. Cattle—Receipts. 200: market steady. Calves —Receipts. 300; market steady; good to choice. $12.50014.50; medium to good, $8.50010.50; outs, $8.50 down. Sheep—Receipts. 100; market steady; top lambs, $11.50@12; seconds. $60)7; sheep, $305. Bu United Press CINCINNATI. Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts, 4.000; holdovers, 1,026: market uneven, steady to 25c down; 250-350 lbs., $11,250’ 12; 200-250 lbs., $11,850)12; 180-200 lbs.', $11,250)12; 130-160 lbs., [email protected]; 90130 lbs., sß® 10.25; packing sows, $9.75® 10.50. Cattle—Receipts, 600; calves, receipts. 350; market steady; beef steers. $9 @12.75: light yearling steers and heifers, s7® 12.50; beef cows. $608.25; low cutter and cutter cows, $4.5005.50; vealers. sl2® 16; heavy calves, $100)13.50; bulk stock and feeder steers, [email protected]. Sheep Receipts, 060: market, lambs 25®50c lower; top fat lambs, $13.75; bulk fat lambs. sll ®13.50: bulk cull lambs, s7@9; bulk fat ewes, s4® 6. Bu United Press TOLEDO. Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts, 400; market 10@15c lower: heavies. $11011.25: mediums. $11,500)11.75; Yorkers. $11.40® 11. good pigs, $10.50® 10.75. Cattle — Receipts, light; market slow; calves, receipts light: market slow. Sheep and lambs—Receipts light; market slow. Rn United Press PITTSBURGH. Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts, I. market active, steadv to 15c down: 250-350 lbs., [email protected];; 200-250 lbs., sl2 @12.10: 160-200 lbs., $12012.10; 130-160 lbs.. $U.25®12; 90-130 lbs.. $1101.25; packing sows. $10.25@11. Cattle—Receipts, none; calves, receipts 100; market steady; beef steers, $10.50® 12.25: vealers. $14.500 17.50. Sheep—Receipts. 6,000; market steadv; top fat lambs. $14.25: bulk fat lambs, $12.50® 14.25; bulk cull lambs. SBOIO. Bv United Press EAST BUFFALO, Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts, 2,200; holdovers, 1.393; market steady to 15c up; 250-350 lbs., $11.25@ 12.25; 200-250 lbs.. $11.25012.25; 16Q-200 lbs.. [email protected]; 130-160 lbs.. $11.25® 11. 90-130 lbs.. $11011.50; packing sows, [email protected]. Cattle—Receipts. 300; calves; receipts 250; market steady, calves steady; vealers, [email protected]. Sheep—Receipts. 1.400: market steady; top fat lambs, sl4; bulk cull lambS $10011; bulk fat ewes, [email protected]. Bit United Press EAST ST. LOUIS. Oct. 19.—Hogs—Receipts. 9.000: holdovers. 4.856; market, steadv: 250-350 lbs.. $11011.75; 200-250 lbs.. $11.40011.75; 160-200 lbs.. $11,150 11.60: 130-160 lbs.. $10.50011.35 : 90-130 lbs.. [email protected]; packing sows. $10.25011. Cattle—Receipts 4.500: calves, receipts, 2.000: market, steers, slow: beef steers, slo@ 14.75: light yearling and heifers. SBO 10.50; beef cows. $607.25: low cutter and cutter cows. $4.50 05: vealers, $15.75; heavy calves. S7O 9; bulk stock and feeder steers. $709. Sheep—Receipts. 1.200; market. steady; top fat lambs. sl3: bulk fat lambs. 512.75@13: bulk cull lambs. $8.50; bulk fat ewes. [email protected]. BREAKFAST IS PLANNED Teachers’ Research Group to Discuss Weighty Problems. Big problems will be breakfast food for those attending the educational research breakfast Friday morning at the Lincoln. The breakfast is one of the sidelights of the State Teachers’ Convention. Problems to be discussed are teacher training and school finance. The educational research group was fonnulated Sept. 3, and certain prominent school problems assigned to various committees to report from time to time. ! j.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Commission Row
PRICE TO RETAILERS FRUITS Apples—Box apples: Jonathans, $3,250 3.50; Delicious, [email protected]. Barrel apples: Jonathans, $6.5008: Grimes, $7. Basket apples (40-lb. basket): Jonathans. s2@ 2.75; Grimes, $2.75; W. Banana, $3; Lowells, $2- Delicious, $3.25®4; cooking apples, $1.75. Bananas—s@6c lb. Berries—Cranberries, [email protected] one-half bbl. Casabas—California, $2.75 crate. Cocoanuts—Jamaica, $6.50 per 100: $2 per 25. Grapefruit—Florida, $5.5005.75 crate. Grapes—California Tokays, $1.750 2 per ing; lMlchgan Concord. 70® 12c 12 quarts; Ladvflngers. $2.75 25-lb. lug. Honeydew Melons —California, $2.50 crt. Lemons—California. $11.50012.50 crate. Limes—Jamaica. $3 per 100. Oranges—California, $5.2509 crate. Peaches—California, $2.75 boi:. Pears—New York Bartletts, !:3 a bu.; California Bartlets. $4.25. Persimmons—lndiana. $3.50 crate. Pomegranates—California. $3.5) crate. Prunes—ltalian. $2 one-half bu. Quinces —Michigan. $3.50 bu. VEGETABLES Bean—Stringless, $2.50 bu.; H. O. lima, 350 40c lbs.; Kentucky Wonders, $2.25 bu. Beets—H. G., $1.35 bu.; 30c doz. Cabbage—H. G., 2%@3c lb. Carrotts—H. G.. 35c doz.; buik, 75c@$l bu. Cauliflower—Colorado, $1.75 crate. Celery—Michigan. Highball, 75c@$l crt.: Michigan. 35 0 50c bunch; sl® 1.25 flat crate; rough. $3 crate. Celery Cabbage—sl doz. Corn —H. G., 25030 c doz. Cucumbers—Hothouse. $101.50 doz. Eggplant—H. 0.. $1.5002 doz. Endive—4oc doz. Garlic—California. 15c lb. Kale—H. G.. 75c bu. _ _ Lettuce—California. head. [email protected] crate; H. G. leaf, 75c 15 lbs. Mangoes—H. G.. $1.25® 1.50 bu. Onions—Spanish, $2.25®2.50 crate; Indiana or Ohio yellow, $1.25@2 cwt.; picking. 75c 10 lbs. Parsley—H. G., 35c per dozen. Peppers—Finger, 75c five lbs. Potatoes—Michigan. $3.25 150 lbs.; Idahoes. $2.50 110 lbs.; Red River Early Ohios, $2.50 120 lbs.; Minnesota whites $2.35 150 lbs.; Minnesota Ohios, $2.3$ 150 lbs. Radishes—H. G.. white. 35c; red, 35c; H. G. buttons, 40 0 50c doz. Rutabagas—sl.7s per bu. Spinach—H. G.. 90c bu. Squash—Hubbard. $3 bbl.; white summer. $1.25 bu. Sweet Potatoes—Red Stars, $3 bbl.; Indiana Jerseys. $1.75 bu. Tomatoes—H. G.. 50c 15 lbs.; $1.2501.50 bu. Turnips—H. G.. $1 bu. OYSTERS Standards—s2.4o gal.
Indianapolis Stocks
—Oct. 19— —Stocks— Bid. Ask. Amer Central Life 600 Amer Creosoting Cos pfd 101% 105 Belt R R com 67 69 Belt R R pfd 58 Cent Ind Power Cos pfd 91% 95 Cities Service Cos com 51 % ... Cities Service Cos pfd 94% ... Citizens Gas Cos com 56% 58 Citizens Gas Cos pfd 106 Commonwealth Loan Cos pfd...100 ... Equitable Securities Cos com.. 51 ... Hook Drug Cos com 30 ... Indiana Hotel com (Claypool). 125 Indiana Hotel pfd 101 Indiana Service Corp pfd 84 Indianapolis Gas com 61 ... Indpls & Northewestern pfd... 52% ... Indpls P Sc L 6%s pfd 100% 101% Indpls P St L 7s pfd 101 102% Inapis Pub Wei Ln Assn 47% ... Indianapolis St Ry pfd 36 39 Indpls Water Cos pfcf 103 Inapls Water Wks Sec Cc 98 Interstate P S pr lien pfd 101% ... Interstate P S 6s pfa 84 Merchants Pub Util pfd 100 North In Pub Service pfd 97 ... Progress Laundry com Rauh Fertilizer pfd 50 ... Real Silk Hosiery pfd 85 T H I & E com .v.. 1 T H I & E pfd 24 T H Trac Sc Lt Cos pfd 91% 95 Union Trac of Ind co m % Union Trac of Ind Ist pfd.. .. 2 Union Trac of Ind 2d pfd % Union Title Cos com 85 Van Camp Pack Cos pfd 15 Van Camp Prod Ist pfd 96 100 Van Camp Prod 2d pfd 100 —Bank Stocks— Aetna Trust and Sav Cos 118 ... Bankers Trust Cos 140 City Trust Cos 150 ... Continental National 120 ... Farmers Trust Cos 240 Fidelity Trust Cos 162 ' ... Fletcl.er American 175 ... Fletcher SaV and Trust Cos 280 Indiana National Bank 262 270 Indiana Trust Cos 232 Livestock Ex Bank 161 Marlon County Bank 216 ... Merchants Nat Bank 32? Peoples State Bank 225 Security Trust Cos 275 State Savings and Trust 100 Union Trust Company 465 Wash Bank and Trust Cos 162% ... —Bonds— Belt R R and Stockyards 45... 90 Broad Ripple 55...'. 80% 82 Central Indiana Cent Ind Power Cos ul 103 Chi S Bend & N Ind 5s 5 Citizens Gas Cos 5s 103% ... Citizens St R R 5s 87 89 Gary St Ry 5s 89% 91% Home T&TofFt W6s 103%, ... Indiana Hotel 5s 100 Indpls Northern 5s 18% 20% Ind Ry and Lt 5s 95 Ind Service Corp 4>s 93 Ind Union Trac 5s J 3 Indpls Col & South 6s 99 101 Indpls Gas Cos 5s 101 Indpls & Martinsville 6s 81% ... Indpls Northern 5s 18 20 Indpls & Northwestern 55.... 81% ... Indpls Power and Lt Cos 55.... 98% 99% Indpls St Ry 4s 68 67% Indpls Trac & Term 5s 95% 96% Indpls Union Rv 6s 101 Indols Water 5%s 104 104% Indpls Water Ist 5s 99 Indpls Water 4%s 97% ... Indpls Water Wk Sec Cos 65... 99 ... Interstate Pub S 6s 104 Interstate Pub SBs 6%s 105% ... N Ind Pub Serv Cos 5s 98 ... T H I & E 5s 89% ... T H Trac and Light 5s 99 Union Trac of Ind 6s 14 17% •Ex-dividend. —Liberty Bonds—--Ist 3%s 101.32 101.58 Ist 4%s 103.10 103.30 2d 4Vis 100.00 100.10 3d 4Vis 100.70 100.90 4th 4%s 103.86 103.94 US Tr 4%s 113.84 114.08 U STr 4s 103.90 109.12 U S Tr 3%s 105.90 106.12 US Tr 3%s 99.96 100.10 U S Tr 3Vis 101.42 101.62 JURY REPORT NEAR Another Councilman Called ' for Questioning. Prosecutors today made efforts to take another city councilman before the Marion County grand jury. Efforts to serve a subpoena on him failed, and it is believed he will be called Thursday. His name was withheld. Councilman O. Ray Albertson, ma jority faction member, has testified before the jury five times. A report may be forthcoming this week, prosecutors said. Special Prosecutors John W. Holtzman and Emsley W. Johrison, retained when the second probe grand jury was discharged in April, are expected to end their work when the report is made. John J. Bugler, grocer, TwentyFifth and Delaware Sts., who had difficulty in getting a corner at Rd. and Broadway zoned for business so he could build upon it, was before the jury for twenty minutes this morning. He was followed by Thomas Riley, a private detective; E. Cooper Zaring, real estate operator with offices in th& Illinois Bldg., and Claude Brillhart, Indiana Asphalt Paving Company president.
In the Sugar Market
(By Thomson St McKinnon) NEW YORK. Oct. 17.—There is considerable disappointment over the non-action of the Cuban Government on its restriction program. Some private advices to the trade late Tuesday said there was a probability of further delay until the Government received from the mills as to whether thev preses to commence grinding on the 10th or lfth of January. In the meantime the mArket tax both raws and i.urtures is marling time.
GRAIN FUTURES DROP SHARPLY TO NEW LOWS Favorable Canadian Weather, Low Foreign Prices Send Wheat Down. Bu United Press CHICAGO, Oct. 19.—Under great pressure of liquidation, corn and wheat futures again dropped sharply at today’s session on the Chicago board of trade. Wheat and deferred deliveries of corn were at new low marks late In the day. Lower Liverpool cables and continued reports of favorable Canadian weather, gave the wheat market a weak tone at the opening. The decline continued until a late hour in the session, when a rally developed. Receipts were one car, and cash wheat was 1 cent lower. Chicago Grain Table . —Oct. 19WHEAT— Prev. High. Low. 12:00. close. Dec 1.27% 1.25% 1.26% 1.27% March 1.30% 1.28% 1.29% 1.30% May 1.32% 1.31% 1.31% 1.32*8 CORN— Dec 84% .83 \ .83% .84% March 87% .86 V® .87V, .88 May 90 % .89 % .89% .90% OATS— Dec .45% .45% .45% .45% March 48 .47% .47 % .48 May ........ .48% .48% .48% .49 RYE— Dec. 96% .95% .96 .96% March 98% .98 .98% .98% May 99 .98% .99 1.00% LARD— Oct 12.47 12.45 12.47 12.50 Jan 12.62 12.77 12.82 12.82 May 13.10 13.07 13.10 13.12 July 13.27 r:bs— Oct 12.25
SET HOSPITAL OPENING DATE Public to Inspect William H. Coleman Unit. Formal public opening of the William H. Coleman Hospital for Women, anew teaching unit of the Indiana University School of Medicine, will be at 2 o’clock Thursday afternoon. Dr. S. E. Smith, provost of the university, announces. Dr. Palmer Findley of Omaha, president of the American Obstetrical Association, will be the principal speaker. Presentation of the hospital to the trustees of Indiana University will be made by Dr. Smith at request of the donors, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Coleman, Indianapolis, and the acceptance will be by James W. Fesler, president of the trustees. A memorial tablet to Mrs. Suemma Co’eman Atkins, daughter of the donors, in whose memory the hospital was erected and equipped at a cost of more tharf $350,000, will be unveiled by her son, Coleman Atkins. Following the program the hospital will be open for inspection until 6 p. m., and from 7 to 9 p. m. The building has a frontage of 205 feet on W. Michigan St., immediately West of the Robert W. Long Hospital. It is four stories high, with a basement. The bed capacity is sixty-four, exclusive of nurseries. It will be used exclusively for women, chiefly lying-in patients. Medical and nursing service will be under the Indiana University School of Medicine and School of Nursing teaching staffs. COMPETE IN AIR SONGCONTEST State Audition for Men on WKBF Tonight. Young men singers will compete at 8:15 p. m. today over WKBF, Hoosier Athletic Club station, in the Iftdiana State singing contest in connection with the Atwater Kent Foundation’s national radio audition to discover talented voices. Those who won district contests and will compete tonight: Charles Oeffler. Jasonville: Ambrose Elliott. Connersville; Chesteen Kerdall, Greencastle: R. Elson Clore. Veedersburg; Stanley Baker'' Columbus; Claude Smith. South Bend: Eugene Miller, Petersburg; George Weigle, Jasper; Kenneth J. Warren. Marshall: Tllman Hadlev. Hadlev: Norman Link. Ft. Wavne;..Howard Blankenbaker. Shelbyville, and Joseph Perrlne. Indianapolis. Winners will receive 40 per cent of their votes from a local board of judges and 60 per cent from radio listeners. Judges are: Miss Anna May Johnson. Mrs. Leo Rappaport. Miss Ida Belle Sweenle, Franklin Taylor. De Witt Talbert. Cheston L. Heath. B. F. Swarthout. Miss Lorle Krull. Miss Maude Delbridge. Elmer Steffen and George Kadel. Women participating in Tuesday night’s contests were: Miss Mina Sweeten. Bloomington; Miss Carolyn Gauld. Connersville: Miss Margaret Dennis, Crawfordsville; Miss Frances Pearce. Columbus: Miss Lucille Cressler. Elkhart; Miss Eyleen English. Spurgeon: Miss Ruth Tollev Merton. Oakland Cltv: Miss Lois M. Grant. Valparaiso; Miss Genevieve N. Irwin. Rensselaer; Miss Eleanor Sawln. Rockville' Miss Laßua Schmidt. Ft. Wayne; Miss Laura Spurlln. Shelbvville: Miss Connie Hester. Elwood; Miss Ada E. P.upp. Upland: Miss Oeorgianna Kienlv. Lafayette: Miss Margaret Yourgans. Evansville, and Miss Ocie Higgins. Indianapolis. AMEND ARSENAL PLANS School Board to Ask for Bids on High School Extension. Amended plans and specifications for two wings of the unit one building at Arsenal Technical High School were approved and Business Director Ure M. Frazer instructed to advertise for bids by the school board Tuesday. Radical changes were made in the plans, with permission of the board, in order to reduce the cost of the building without destroying its efficiency. Changes Included elimination of gabled roofs, which would conform with other buildings on the grounds.
Guilty
>!■ C jBP \
Mrs. Dorothea Walser, 17, Fairmount, mother of a 7-months-old daughter, was found guilty in Circuit Court at Marion Tuesday of the poison death last May of her cousin, Clifford Cox, 14.
THE CITY IN BRIEF
THURSDAY EVENTS Indiana State Teachers Association convention; sectional meetings morning and afternoon; general meeting by districts, Cadle Tabernacle. 4 p. m.; general meeting. Cadle Tabernacle. 7:30 p. in. Indiana State League of Nursing Education convention, citv hospital, all day. Indiana Jobbing Confectioners meeting. Severin. 10 a. m. Advertising Club luncheon. Spink-Arms. Real Estate Board luncheon. Chamber of Commerce. / Indiana Section American Chemical Society. luncheon. Severin. Retail Credit Men’s Association, luncheon. Chamber of Commerce. Traffic Club luncheon, Severin Loyal Knights of the Round Table luneneoja Lincoln. American Business Club luncheon, Columbia Club. Sigma Nu luncheon. Board of Trade. Sigma Chi luncheon. Chamber of Commerce. Indianapolis Employment Bureau annual dinner, Columbia Club, 6 p. m. Indianapolis Association Credit Men, dinner. Chamber of Commerce. 6:15 p. m. Central Normal CoUege dinner. Guaranty Cafeteria. 7:30 p. m. Indianapolis Federation of Community Civic Clubs conference. Chamber of Commerce. 8 p. m. _ Northwood Christian Church, fellowship dinner. 8:30 p. m. Capitol Avenue M. E. Church Calendar Club meeting, church chapel. 7:45 p. m. Police have been asked to Search for 'Clarence Martin Smith, 19, Rushville. Ind., who left his home Tuesday, according to his father, James Smith, for Indianapolis. The boy had ambitions to join the Navy, his father said. A three-story $90,000 garage is being planned by the Test Realty Company for erection at 1452-54 N. Pennsylvania St. A lease under negotiation calls for $240,000 to be paid in twenty years. Four radio qutfits valued at $250 were stolen from a shed at the home of Edward Newel, 5120 Madison Ave., police were told today. Cigarets, candy and chewing gum worth sl2 were stolen by thieves who Tuesday night broke a plate glass window In a confectionery at 1301 Bates St., Martin Mullen, proprietor, told police today. Miss Louise Keown, 19, of 1523 Churchman Ave., and Fred Powell, 40, of 2647 Manker Ave., were injured when a car, driven by Miss Keown, collided with another driven by Sam Imbler, 52, of 617 N. Illinois St., at Market and Noble Sts. today. Miss Keown received body bruises and lacerations and was unconscious until revived by police. Powell was injured about the head. At a smoker tonight at new Cathedral High School", Notre DameIndianapolis Club members will lay plans for attending the annual Notre Dame-Indiana University football game Saturday at B’oomington. L. J. Reach is president. Funeral services for Charles E. Clark, 55, a painter, who was found dead near White River between Oliver and Kentucky Ave. bridges Monday, will be held at St. John’s church Thursday at 2 p. m. Burial will be in Holy Cross cemetery. Clark has no relatives here. Andrew M. Schwab, 60, of 123 W. Twelfth St., was taken to city hospital with cuts and bruises when he was struck by an auto driven by George Larrison, 25, of R. R. 4, Box 494, at Fletcher Ave. and East St. Harold Green of Cleveland, Ohio, advertising representative of the National Lamp Works, will speak at the Advertising Club luncheon at the Spink-Arms, Thursday. Indianapolis Jews will be represented at a Nation-wide constructive relief conference of the $25,008*000 United Jewish Campaign and the American : Jewish joint distribution committee in Chicago, Saturday and Sunday, by Rabbi Morris M. Feuerlicht, George W. Rabinoff, S. E. Rauh and Louis J. Borinstein. More than 400 leading Jews in the United States will attend. Lawrence Y. Sheridan, landscape architect, will speak on "The Future Development of Our Indiana World War Memorial Plaza,” at the Real Etate Board luncheon at the Chamber of Commerce Thursday. “Old Wine in New Bottles” will be the subject.of Attorney Lloyd D. Claycombe at the Traffic Club luncheon at the Severin Thursday. A rubbish fire in the basement of the Indiana Pythian Bldg., Pennsylvania St. and Massachusetts Ave., Tuesday night, caused damage Intimated at SIOO. Frank Lake, 45, of Alexandria, seriously injured in an auto accident near his home Saturday; died at Robert Long hospital Tuesday of a fractured skull. He was brought to the hospital unconscious and did not revive. Coroner Keever sent the body to Alexandria. Sunday Island, in the Pacific, is said to be the tallest mountain in the world. •It rises 2,000 feet out of five miles of water, making ite height nearly 30,000 feet.
RUSS RAILWAYS STRANGE BLEND OFOLD, NEW Strong Executive is Getting Results; Oil Situation is Improved. This Is the filth of a series on presentday conditions in Russia by Jerome Davis, a member of the faculty of the Yale University Divinity School, who has spent the summer in Russia as special correspondent for The Times and NEA Service. BY JEROME DAVIS MOSCOW, Oct. 19.—Nowhere are the effects of the national planning scheme adopted by the Communists more evident than in the £aku regian. This territory, known as the “Russian Klondike” because of the liquid wealth poured forth by its countless oil wells, is utterly unlike the Baku of czarist days. In the old days of free competition there was duplication of wells and fearful waste. Today the new wells are arranged in regular order and at the precise distance apart to give the maximum quantity of oil. Workers Better Off Workers’ conditions are improved. Huors are shorter, vacations are longer, pay is higher and living conditions are much better. The oil trust is building hundreds of o and three-family homes for workers. Russia’s transportation just now is a strange Jumble of the modern and the ancient, the ultra-efficient and the down-at-the-heel, illequipped relic of the past. There are three airplane companies which operate over long distances in a most efficient manner As they fly over the country they pas sover primitive bullock carts on the country roads—carts Just like those used in the days of Peter the great. Improve Rail Lines The railroads are below their prewar status, yet much is being done to improve them. Credit for improvements rests on the shoulders of Rudzatak, people’s commissar of transportation. Rudzatak, at 40. is an interesting man. He comes from a peasant background, was a professional Communist agitator under the czar, and spent ten years in the czar’s jails—yet he is one of the ablest commissars in Russia. He has the railroads running efficiently and on time. The best modern conveniences can be had on all through expresses. I would prefer a coupe on a Russian railway carriage to a Pullman section in America. Yet Rudzatak admits that much remains to be done before the railroads will be functioning as they should. Russian railroads under the czar were only equipped with light European locomotives and the roadbed was inferior. Russia is now trying to substitute heavy locomotives along American lines. The average engine today is pulling 40 mr cent more cars than in 1913. This change has necessitated relaying some 10,000 miles of track. After talking with Rudzatak one comes away feeling that the problems and needs of a railroad executive in Soviet Russia are not so different from that of a railroad executive in the United States. Everything which Rudzatak Is trying to do might have been the aim of McAdoo when he was director general of railroads. (Copyright, 1927. NEA Servlye. Inc.) Next: Russia and China. • Births Bots Bert and Mary Hargis. 761 N. Belmont Leon and Minnie Herald. 2901 Newton nli 1 ? “"J* Virginia Hoover. 1211 Sturm. John and Corr ne Kemp. 922 W. Tenth view ank and Thelma Kurrasch. 70 N. Bellpltn < i y >nd Tessae Andrews, Christian Hotni?a! R ° y >nl Lora Bula ’ chrlstlan HospitaaVld * nd Lorena Mann * Christian HosGirls Otto and Alma Walker. 885% Virginia George and Ada Sennhauser. Methodist Hospital. •JSSSph and A*nes. York. 1729 E. Tabor. William and Pauline Woodward. 4158 Bertha. Thomas and Margie Carter. 3101 Blvd. Place. \ Hobart and Eulalia Robinson, 803 Keystone. Howard and Mary Townsley. 1740 Spann. , Grant and Cerilda Collins. 422 N. Bradley. Ralph and Mary Lovell, Christian Hospital. - Frank and Aletha Glover, Christian Hospital. Ralph and Fern Hooten, Christian Hospital. Deaths L. Mitchell McDaniel. 71. 940 E. Fortieth. angina pectoris. James Oliver Dycus. 2217 Lexington, whooping cough. Charles Dugan, 52. citv hospital, lobar pneumonia. John H. Oliver. 68. St. Vincent Hospital, cerebral hemorrhage. Herman Ernest, 76. 333 E. Orange, cerebral hemorrhage. William Nichols. 49. 626 Indiana, chronic myocarditis. . Dennis Lyons. 58. 1234 Linden, accidental. Mnmleßrowr, 53. 1319 Collins, acute cardiac dilatation. Mary Ann Berllng, 31, city hospital, accidental. Joe c °e, 81. city hospital, chronic mvoco rditis. T"*~c x nßram . 74, 110 Geisendorf, carcinoma. .. M. Dallas. 39. city hospital, accniental. der?tal Karet Dalla *’ 40 ’ e,ty hospital, acciAndrew Johnson 67. 1864 N. Pennsylva2.‘2-, “fi 11 * , car diac dilatation, cldental Merriman. 33. city hospital, accld?nu? ret Pauley ’ JB ’ c,ty hospital, acm^"K a * ner - 67 ’ 4 E ' Palmer - chronic oiffceWfett. Vlncent H ° s - Building Permits SSOo rS ' Georfire ’ alter atlons. &il2 N. College. Bridges Realty Company, dwelling and Ra 4 a ?l’ 1904 w - Wyoming. 81.600. n, ty _C°mpa ny . dwelling and garage. 2004 W. Wyoming. $1 600 Bridges Realty Company, dwelling and g a rage. 1860 W. Wyoming. $1,600. ®I ld * e ?„£ c i ty Jtempany. dwelling and garage. 1928 W. Wyoming. $1 600 $7 T 2OO J- Hart ’ Kara * e ’ J - 414 - 50 W. Sixteenth. Event James garage. 1325 W. ThirtyFirst, $255. Dr Boyd, furnace, 585# Ouilford, S3BB $250 hn A ' Stewart ' furnace. 3022 Station, C. W. Sharp, garage. 1322 N. Gale. $175. Roy W. Evans, reroof. 2510 Southeastern. $250. Nick Budack. garage, 1224-26 Nordyke. S2OO. John Gillespie, porch. 438 N. Decrborn. $350. McKee Manufacturing Company, addle tlop, northeast corner McPherson and Twenty-Eighth. $1,500. ' W. B. Hauger. garage. 138 N. Capitol, $250. A. Hudson, reroof. 1640 Pletcher, $27. Edward H. Trlmpe. garage. 2151 Webb. S2OO. Charles Shafer, garage, 3119 Garfield, $255. F. M. Bochmin. garage. 2137 Webb. sl7s. Coy Hicks, porch, 1437 Kappes. SBOO. Cirri'* Bruos, garage. 1018 Virginia, SI,OOO. -
OCT. 19, 1927
Death Notices BAKER. ELIZABETH (BETTY) JANE Daughter of Prank P. and Rebecca J. Baker, passed awav Tuesday. Oct. 18. 1927, at the Methodist Hospital. Funeral at the residence. 1635 Woodlawn Ave.. Friday, 2 p. m. Friends invited. Funeral Directora W. T. BLASENGYM Main office. 2226 shelbv St * Drexei 3570. UNDERTAK ERB. f.DelawSr*™ B LI. mt. KRIEOER. WM. E. FUNERAL DIRECTOR 1402 N Illinois St. Main 1154. Rea- Bel 8888-R I. George Grinstemer Funeral director. 523 E Market. Main 1)908 J C. WIL80N: funeral parlors, ambulance service and modern automotive eaulDment Dr 0321 and Dr 0322 BERT 8. GADD. 2130 PROSPECT ST PREXEL 8307. Lost and Found
ARTICLES found on Indianapolis street care yesterday
1 PURSE S PAIRS GLOVES 1 LUNCH BUCKET 1 PACKAGE Main 2737 BEADS; lost between 33th and N. Meridian or 38th near N. Pennsylvania. Ran. 1948. Reward. DOG; red Irish setter, white breast, at Edgewood. S. P. 148-M L Reward. HOUND; red bone; about a l ,a ft. high, light brown. 8 mo’s. old. black spot on center of tall, tip of tall white, throat white, 3 rear paws white. Drex. 7765-W. Lin 6356. 1746 Tabor. Reward. MALLET, wooden; lost; old family relic; on N. Drexel or E. New York. Call Drexel 4978, between 8 and 5. POCKETBOOK; brown leather; containing pictures of dead son; lost between new Tabernacle and 39th St., east side street. Reward. Hum. 3043. POLICE dog, undersize female; address engraved on collar. Irv. 3448. I RUG. 9x13, from machine northeast oi ■city. MR. KNOLL. Maln 0419. Reward. SORORITY pin; Alpha Chi Omega: pearled Q-guard: Sat, night. Rew. Main 1397. WRIST watch, lady's, white gdld. link band: lost Saturday at Courthouse or on Prospect car. Reward. Drex. 1338. You Read the Want Ads— Have vou tried to use them? It's easy—Call Main 3500. Ask for an Ad Taker. * ~ ante —IVt ate WANTED HOUSE TO HOUSE CANVASSERS, EITHER MEN OR WOMEN; GOOD LEGITIMATE LINE, LLBERAL COMMISSION. WRITE P. O. BOX 227, GIVING AGE, EXPERIE N C E, REFERENCES AND TELEPHONE NUMBER. FIVE young men needed to fill vacancies caused by promotion. We can only use men Interested In advancement. Pleasant work, short hours, big pay. Neatness Is an asset In our business. For Interview see MR. WYETH. Rm. 438, 134 K. Market St. CABINET MAKERS; experienced on store fixture work. None other need apply. AETNA CABINET CO . 321 W. M ary land. help I 'Van'eri female TEN neat appearing young women for unusual selling proposition. In city; salary and commission. Call after 7 this evening, SOUTH SIDE CITIZEN, Room 5. Sanderi Bldg. 1103 Prospect. Situations Wanted Male YOUNG MARRIED MAN; WISHES POSITION WITH GROWING CONCERN; WITH CHANCE FOR ADVANCEMENT; 4 YEARS SnLES EXPERIENCE. REFERENCE3. ADDRESS BOX B 300 TIMES. MECHANIC and electrician, 14 years' experience: can furnish good references; on heavy duty or general garage work. Call Rl’ev 6679 and ask for "Red,” COLORED man wants tanltor work; city references Har. 0480-W. PORTER, Louse man. Janitor; 10 years* experience. Lin. 8610. x want AD3 BRINO BUSINESS Situations Wanted Fei.xule THOROUGHLY experienced bookkeeperstenographer wants position; will leave City. Mrs. McElhaney, 1050 Mills Ave. Phone, Drex. 7820 Ring 3. CURTAINS and draperies to launder. Mrs. J. LUTZ, Main 0150, . NEAT Colored girl wants work by day or week. Wash. 0547. CARE of children In my home by day or hour. Har. 3698-W. COLORED GIRL wants day or week work. Ch. 1938. LAUNDRY or half-day work; cleaning or coofclngT Lin. 9253. HOUSEKEEPER; reliable; for elderly prople preferred: refer. Box B 318. Times. CLEANING BY THI DAY. Lin. 7109. You Read the Want Ads— Have vou tried to use them? It's easy—Call Main 3500. Ask for an Ad Taker. Special Notices ART GIFT SHOP. ARTICLES OF ART AND NEEDLE WORK FOE SALE: MARVELOUS BED SPREAD AND MANY OTHER ARTICLES. HUM. 3488. OVERCOAT and hat cleaned. 81.90; men's or women's: called for and delivered BERLING CLEANERS. Lin. 5030. 339 Ni Delaware, 6127 E. Washington. MASQUERADE outfits made to meas. this wk . $1 up. Coats relined. |3 up. Rl. 6815. Castle Oown Bhop. Rm. 217, 230 E. Ohio. FIRBT CLASS DRESSMAKING: price reasonable, 3231 Capitol. Ran. 1)397. TIMES WANT ADS BRINO BUBINEB9 Instructions CENTRAL BEAUTY COLLEOE. Our graduates pass State examinations easily. 303 Odd Fellow Bldg. Ms 571 and 6o9__ Business Announcements RUG. 9x12. THOROUGHLY CLEANED. 83? 3-PIECE OVERSTUFFED SUI*T E ' CLEANED AND MOTHS DESTROYED. 815. SUPERIOR RUO CLEANERS. HE. 4462. PLUMBING FIXTURES Ws save you money. INDIANAPOLIS PLUMBING SUPPLY CO,. 125 N. Alabama, Lin. 5788. BORNMAN TRANSFER CO. CH~5571. SATISFACTORY MOVINO BERVICE. EXCAVATING UNDER HOUSES Carpenter, cement, brick work DR 0738. FEATHERS bought, sold and renovated; feather mattresses and pll'ows made. a. F. BURKLE. 418 Mass. Main 1428 FIREBOWLS for all furnaces; repairs for all stoves. MODEL STOVE REPAIR CO. 650 F. Wash. Main -6703. PAPERHANOING. painting estimates freeT work guaranteed 3 years Ch. 6046 or Ch. 3273. __i PAPERHANGINO. cleaning: samples paper f.-r.-|-nerl' S3 50 roll, Ch. 0318 PAPER hanging; Inside painting; estimates free. Wash. 4934. • I WASH WINDOWS AND WALLS: CLEAN! SHELLAC AND POLISH HARDWOOD FLOORS. RI 3260. Rooms for Rent ALA., N.. 2338: 2 lovely turn, rms , private modern home, garage opt. Har. 4879-J. ALA. N . 1226; nicely film, outside rms.; steem heat: p'entv het water. Lin. 8681. CAPITOL. N„ 2114; No. Si attractively turn- front rm.. mod, Ran. 2538. COLLEGE at 63d: nicely furnished room to lady. Hum. 1883. DEL.. N„ 1809; large front rm.. couple or 2 girls, prlv. family, bus line, garage ont. Har. 1964. NEW JERSEY, N.. 126; front mTHarge and clean; 1 block city market; 1 block car line; 84 week. NORTH; newly furn. attractive rm„ modern. private home privileges: gentleman. garage. Wash. 1867. OHIO. 1819 E.: modern rm., private. horn* privileges; Ideal for couple: gar near. __ ORANGE. 1901: turn. - sleeping room: private home. PARK Ave.; pleasant rm. for young man; good home; references. Ran. 0303. ST. JCE.E., 17: Apt. 1; nicely furn.; goo3 heat: waiting distance. Lin. 506}, At. JOE. E.. 17; Apt. 4; lovely high-class rm.: prt. apt.: walking distance. LI. 9415. WINTHROP. 3800: nice warm rm.- private, modern home. Wash. 1521. lITTI. E.. 2IH; 2 nicely furnished rms.fall modem: men only. Lin. 4138, ■ IjTH, tti. 3)4: attractive, large front rm.'; else single rm.: city heat. Lin. 8724. 19TH, .424; large front rm.; modern, private home; gentleman.
