Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1941 — Page 8
PACE 8
cussing living expenses.
Those who believe it is true are due for a shock when they read the Labor Department's latest report. | more to live here than in the averags large city, the de-
‘partment says. Living expenses that cost $100 (on an average between 1935 and 1939) cost Indianapolis residents $102 when the survey was taken Dec. 15, 1940. The increase in the average of 33 large cities had gone up only 70 cents (to $100.70) instead $2
For every $100 Indianapolis spent on food in those four years (1935-1939) that ! -food now costs i $98.80 compared Roger Budrow | "3720 in the gverage city. For every $100 spent on clothing, the cost (on Dec. 135) was $102.50 compared to $101.60 in the average city. ' Rent is where Indianapolis costs aire most above the average. For ¢very $100 spent on rent in the four previous years, Indianapolis was spending $111.30 by Dec. ‘15 compared to $104.90 in the average city. Fuel, electricity and ice expenses amounted to $100 on Dec. 15, the same as the average between 1935 and 1939. Housefurnishings cost $99.7 compared to $100.40 in the average city. . And miscellaneous items amounted to $101.50 compared to $101.80 on the average.
“. 2 8 NEW ON THE MARKET:
A new adding machine gives i group totals and grand totals at J the same time on two registers.|:
You can add as well as subtract in either register. | You can now buy fluorescent lamps in a 6-watt 9-inch size and in a 100-watt 60-inch size. | Makers of a soda fountain draft arm claim it will put 30 per cent more carbonation in the soft drink, making it like a bott led beverage in
this respect. ” » »
| THE GOVERNMENT is paying for and will own the equipment that
(Curtiss-Wright is installing in the Good
old Marmon factory here to make ‘airplane propellers, according’ to |Pederal Loan Administrator Jesse /H. Jones. The Defense Plant Corp. [leases the equipment to the manu{facturer. The same situation is true ‘of Bendix Aviation Corp.'s 10
SIN ¥ J L § 1 Living Expenses Here Above the Average, Labor Department Says
By ROGER BUDROW
“YES, BUT OF COURSE IT DOESN'T COST as much * to live in Indianapolis as in a good many other cities.” You have heard that remark many times [when people were dis-
Medium and Good 90- 190
1 t—
i
It costs
PRICES ON HOGS INCREASED HERE
Top Rises to $8.50 as 3832 Porkers Arrive at Stockyards.
Another light run of hogs at Indianapolis stockyards today, reported [4 at 3832 head, found prices unevenly steady to 25 cents higher, the Agricultural Marketing Service reported. Weights from 160 to 225 pounds were 15 to 25 cents higher than yesterday, the full quarter being paid for a substantial percentage of the hogs by out-of-town packers.
Heavier hogs were generally 15 cents | 4
higher while weights unde: - 160
pounds were unchanged from yes-|Am
terday. The top reached $8.50 in sales of 220 to 225-pound hogs. Prices for packing sows rose to mostly 10 cents higher than yesterday,
HOG PRICE RANGE leceipts | $8 7,95 lL siceseevensnnncees] 8:85 resssePuacens rans 8,30
Barrows and J(llis 0 Choice—
corerded.$
2 Pm 3 Soaponyy
= 92 939 8 NOY OdI wT AO Owen
Slaughter Pigs
» 3
CATTLE
/million dollar airplane parts plant at South Bend. | The report also reveals the Re‘construction Finance Corp. has
jane Roscoe Turner Aeronautical | joo. 1300
1300- 1300 - reirepal. 13s
5. Good + 15.00
Aviation
Bald Loco ob.s « 15 Sus’. 1388
Col Broadcast B 19%
oty se Crown Cork ... 241 Crn Ck cup iww. 00|Cub-Am 8 . Curtis Pub ....
an hour.
° High! Low
Ba TT ea Naa
>
Allies Ch bal Aina B Cem.... Airlines ...
ee
an
HDR me Lo
00 a
Mbit SEEEESE
Ee aR aE
—- Asem =X
= a A sans WB G0 <I Qn oJ 00 Wp TUT TD UT Oe - 2 @ o
Atlas Corp .... 1 Atlas Pdr ves mn .e a
oe
7 113%; 4%
a
wt
Ill
Fal
oR Uww Na
9a ad
I
Borg Warner . Briggs Mfg .... Bklyn U Gas .. Jucyrus-Erie .. 1 dd Mfg ..... 3urlington M. Burroughs .... Byers, A
14
Cal Packin
a) BR
Celatex
Hired
— BEN A
DIC DO = Oy bet G3 pt 2S WRAL WRONDD
—
Sit
Climax Moly Co 28 ! Cluett Peab 311; Cluett Peab pf. 143
tp CO Cor » . .
| Cont Mo Slaughter Cattle & Vealers (Receipts, 635) { Steers C
41
Cutler-Ham
13.00
poo 900 .. vob die 10.50 . 13.25]
0-1100 . 10.75
$60,000 to build the airplane [1300-1500 -- i: 1100013
oor an, at Municipal Airport; | $13,720 to buy two training planes; {loaned the New Albany Machine Manufacturing Co. $19,600 to complete orders for casting units and ‘| blending drums; and Purdue Uni- | versity Airport $6000 to buy a train-
| ing plane, i : ” ” ”
ODDS AND ENDS: | metal trade quarters believe. & | priorities board has been set up for | mine, aluminum, copper and brass Sl | but hasn't been put in operation ye: “Fey the OPM of the Defense Com- | shission. . . . Monarch Tool Co. Vice President Fred C. Dull says 75 milli- | meter shells are being “roughed out” - | 19 times faster than during the | World war. . . .That block of 3,018,-
639 common shares of Libby, Mc-| Neill ‘& Libby stock offered for sale |C%
yesterday was one of the largest blocks ever offered in the open
market, represent 83% of the com-
pany’s stock which Swift & Co. had
held but was ordered by Court to|S
sell. . . American banking and ‘brokerage houses are being urged by the Royal Netherlands Legation in Washington to" ignore demands from German-occupied Netherlands for information regarding “blocked” accounts of Dutch corporations and nationals held in this country,
HANKINS PROMOTED
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 30 (U. P.). -—F. W. Hankins, assistant vice president in charge of motive power of the Pennsylvania Railroad, has been named assistant vice president in charge of opera-
Common
Chotde—
M Informed Commun —
200 . ) Rho ou iiierees he [email protected] 1160-1300 9 [email protected]
750-1100 [email protected]
Choide
500- 750 7.50@ 8.75
Goodj—
500-/ 750 Heifers
cescecstiecenepans 11,[email protected] [email protected] 8.50@ 9.75 T00@ 8.50
®0sencescsossovapine
®ecsbssecqecssionine
500- 900 ........
Good ......... Medi m ad ER | Br an Cutter a common
\
Bee fae
Goad and choice oY Sonimon a1 and medium’ .
Feeder and Stocker Cattle + Steers (Receipts, 409)
[email protected] oie. [email protected]
[email protected] 8. Te 10.25
sssesscccesrinseses
Calves (steers) Good and Stoica
It. Eng Johns pf . g Pub 8S .... Basit Bldg .... 1
I 8.50@ 9.00 Inter 7.50@ 8.50 Int Bu
+ H0d@1sn {Davison Chem
East Alf Lines-. 28] Eaton . Mi Elec Hy 37 a n
aioe
Firestone T ... 17 4 Plintkote Food Mach Freept Sulphur.
Gamewell Co .. 21%
Electric .. 33° BA ,.. J Motors .. 43° Motors pf, 13 Y Gen Aut Adv 3 Ref.
Graham Paige L154
Grand Un weis.th
Hack wat pf A 1,
B11 1938 123% co 1100, 110%
58 58
al... oo 1 17
Int H ov 500 dow vi «+ 10.00 1.
[email protected] (Calves, helt : Géod and choice— i
) I 00 down 2.00210.75
iu 500 wn ' 7.50@ 9.00 SHEEP, LAMBS (Receipts, 4062)
Gbod and choice 310.25@ 10.60 Medium and good 9.25@ 10.00 Common 8.00@ 9.00 Yearling Wethers 8.75- 9.25
Ghod and choice Medium 7.715- 8.75 Ewes (wooled) oot and choice 4.75@ 6.50
FOREIGN EXCHANGE:
ORK, Jan. 30 (U. P.).—Followig are noon cable rates po major cur- : a & C England (pound) .. 84.08% Bs Ne ne. OHAr) oieesee 3 ra iv
yen oh Bn (peso)
3.50 4.50 | Li
Kroger G & B.. 23%
is .. 363% aN Nat Auto Fibres (6% Nat Aviation .. | Yi) Nat Biscuit ... 7% 17%
: | Nat Dair, i3% 13%
FRACTURE BEDS Can Be Rented at the New HAAG’'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE 22nd and Meridian
B OUTFIITEES TO 8 MEN, WOMEN- and CHILDREN
HE MODERN oma STORE
129 W. Wash, 43a Ineats:
IR b a EFITTED | Women's
LEON TAILORING CO.
235 Mass. Ave. Kamber suits : SL di ici
ITN: Moni
IIIA [IRR BRANCH
36 E. WASHINGTON ST
Is Opposite Us. Our Fanon: Fes Quality
HOSIERY Relvmrae aslo Tae 69 MILLER-WOHL. cO. 45 E. Wash. R1-2230
Colonial Thrifty Savings Accounts are Insured iby Government’ Agency up tc. $5,000.
Colonial **'ii: 3 aon
Association
Member Federal Savings & Load Insurance Coraparition 28 South Illineis St,
SAY IT WITH FLOWERS
From
A
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRIN(; RESULTS.
Allied Florist Association of Indiana
Nat Distillers .. © 227, Nat Pwr & Lt . 6% 63,
Net List Change
— % Lyne
~
Railroad. The cars are made of
sscescbeccce cscs
High (1940-41), 18. 80; Low, 111.84. High (1939), 155.92; Lew, 121.44. 2 RAILROADS
®essscsecsscnnnee
Month AO ...cocoqeveieneas
escceccgoenes
sevsacsrecsse
sessssvssggetnigee
High (1940-41), 26.45; Low, High (1980), 27.10; Low, 20.71.
. 145.28
28.72 20.48 28.08 30.58
High (1940-41), 32.0%; Low, 22.14. High (1939), 35.80; ‘Low, 24.14. 13 UTILITIES
®esscsgesescancene
19.94 20.27 19.86 24.61 18.08.
4 Am . 7 |No Amer 5% ot $i
Site" Elev pf ....101
. G0 G8 AO haps
Ib
5, ...13-18 °° . - 15% 18% 1%
0 Willys ‘Overiand 2%
Hog ip is mostly 35e hi on clo:
steers and ooriin S, lower, mostly 10@15¢ per demand extremely Rapiow w ad 8 Jarge kill ki lore ae with 8 Finkiing
at “bes: best
buying very Sparing
slow, 2 dependable action with weight y sasha >
New Manager
C. C. Coogan, former resident manager of Hotel McCurdy at Evansville ind Hotel Nelson at Rockford, “11, has béen named resident ms nager of Hotel Warren here. Glenn F. Warren is
High Low 5% 8%
15%
10 18% 16% 9% 9Y,
i bt 41% 4% 45
~ .
5
~
i N Bs a OB a
. 22% ny . 88%
64%
ae Ye s 114% 114% ;
Er Ve 3 20%
9515 98%;
teel . 27%, 27% of. 132 2%, 13215 Mot 15
41,
. 32%
“. 30 Worthing pr pf 58
. 14% 11 [4 LY,
ae to sell
but only loads sold at to $9.50; dressed beef market still very Sia ish, all other classes steady
Net Last Change
2 Bonwwe 3 aw
Caras WOW FEF
G0 C0 BOE pated hd bbadit i
Ce A a
GF oPerestaERes
14% 11% 37
aE LIVESTOCK
ts, 10.000; active, 15 ton d full ad.40; bulk 180.250 ane Hg 150 be. [email protected];
; 450 down, «17.65; heavier elanis largely $7.2 ipts, 4000; calves, > 300: fed siow, barely steady
smooth
Sndraily $7.
off;
bulls, however,
y $9G10 with Food and choice year ing mn Sky ww to $11 eipts, 11,000; losed slow k good to choice down, 310 [email protected]: top, $10. 061b fall shorn lambs, $10@ Ss ; deck good
LR sales lignter ; sows. 25 cents higher; , and choice 200-250-
or ewes on offer early. and
(U.
Jan. 30 P Age 310-230 1bs.. 60-190 lbs. Ss: S50. 375 Ibs, $7.80;
¥ a 5 i va 1bs., $7.60; 00-35 1bs., . 45; 325- 450" Sno $7.30: oh .30; 150-4 0 he Ty .30; i
nh
late Wednesday steady to fed Western 103 “Ibs. load 1
85;
omze LIVESTOCK
ar. Jan. 30 (U. P.).—Hogs— otal, 1725; Hotdovers,
weights,
e, 500; Enodis active and about steady; edium to good 615 lbs., $10: others low: occasional
choice lambs, salable
1.88
lk eave, Lie Jam
lt s , |Central Ind 8% 3%.
iis
=F
s Inc
+1: =
— Na
LEE TLL
7 Expenses . . |Gross_Def..
Several four-car streamlined electric interurban trains are soon to be placed on the regular ChicagoMilwaukee run ly Chicago, North Shore & Milwaukee run at 85 miles :n hour although each train’s power of 1000 horsepower
N. Y. STOCKS
By UNITED PRESS
DOW-JONES STOCK AVERAGES 30 INDUSTRIALS sessrsnnnenerinsve 126.00 Week AZO cecevsenccncccicen 128.34 Month AZO ..cccceccscsnse.. 130.37
high tensile steel, can produce a speed of 100° miles
STOCKS DROP ON HITLER THREAT
'|Losses Range to More Than
$1 as Apprehension Is Heightened.
NEW. YORK, Jan, 30 (U. P.).— Stocks reacted ‘to losses ranging to more than a point today on heightened apprehension over the international situation. The list opened irregularly lower after yesterday's severe shakeout, rallied briefly around noon and then dropped to new lows on the movement following Adolf Hitler's declaration that American help to Britain will be torpedoed. U. S. Steel and Bethlehem both dropped a full point each after early resistance. Chrysler and Gen-
2leral Motors sold off fractionally. « |American Air Lines, » | Locomotive
American preferred, American Woolen preferred and General Steel Castings preferred sold off 2 to 3 points each. Losses of a point and more were suffered by American Car & Foundry preferred, Allied Chemical, du Pont, Kennecott, Loew’s, Safeway Stores, Youngstown Sheet & Tube and U. S. Smelting. Rails moved fractionally lower despite a better than seasonal rise;
sin carloadings last week. Utilities
were softer, although United Gas Improvements scored a small gain.
LOCAL | ISSUES
The following ® ifdianapolis Bond & vy VEoTD. gy oe repre=sent actual prics = offerjngs. but ray indicate the oximate market level based on buying ane selling quotations of recent transactions.
t Agents Fmance Corp com.. Belt R RR & Stk Yds com .... 84 Belt RR_& d
gomwith Jozn
BY Gas Ind Hiro dpls P&L com Indpis P&L 5747 To Did ndpls Water 5% Jape, Nat Life 2d com. Ind Pub Serv 5 Ve % pid Serv
Van Camp Van Camp American Loan 53 61. erican Loan 6s 56. fan Pin. 5s Citizens Ind Tel os ..103 Home T Pt ne Nes 193
Way Crabb-Reynolds- Taylor 5s 42.. one T&T Way oe
nd na Ko gu Pac Morris 6810 Stores 6s Muncie Water Works 5s 65... Nat Silk Hostery 5s 42 . N Ind Pub Serv id 69
Tel Co 4's ve Riehmond Water Wks 5s 87... orp 58 57
2 Trac Term Corp Ex-divid
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the
? | current fiscal year through Jan. 28, com-
pared with a year L230: Year
Receipts
, 104, 906, 30.75 Customs .. =~ 188, 071.335. 1535.44 9.777,940.80 INDIANAPOLIS S CLEARING Hpusy
| Debit 7,111,000
FOOD PRICES
CHICAGO, Jan. 30 (U. BR LyApries.-
3 Michigan Jonathans, bu., [email protected]. Cel~
ale Michigan squares, doc, 3 $1. Tomatoes exican lugs, 32.9003. Texas, bu., 65@ iow a ors nia, crates, $1. 3061. 40. Carro alifornia, crates, 32 60@3. Lettuce—California, crates, $3.25@3 {a essee, bu 1.2 sacks)—Illinois Je ows, Yellows, 65@75c; Wisconsin 80c: Indiana Yellow 75¢; Ngites, 8 Hh 15; Colorado Sweet Spanish,
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy hens, 12c; bareback hens, Leghorn hens, 8¢: bareback Leghorn hens, 7c: Barred and White Rock springers, 13c; other colored heavy breed springers, 2c; Leghorn Sprugers, 0 barebac spring-
roosters, Sore oeqe. 17 17c; Ine eggs. Indiana Ro. ‘eggs, 12c; no
c utter—No. 1, 33@33%c; No. the: butterfat, No. 0. goouniry | plekup prices auoted Co.
¢ Wadley
and knew what to do for it. Nowadays we have many polite words for it, meaning the same. thing, but when we'are listless, have bilious spells, bad breath and gas pains with sluggish intestinal action we still use ADLERIKA, the product Grandma found best 40 years ago. Take home a bottle of ADLERIKA today and
try it. At st’s. HOOK DRUG CO.
GUARANTEED
1) 17 lA
AT OUR USUAL chop PRICES CERRY ILL.
148d =
on Everything!
Diamonds, Watches, Autos, Cameras, | Clothing, Shotguns, Ete.
JEWELRY ~ CO, Ine.
|goula, Miss.
CARGO VESSELS
T0 BE WELDED
Shipyards Will Be Quiet Without Clatter of Riveters.
By JOHN W. LOVE Times Special Writer CLEVELAND, Jan. 30—No .clatter of riveters will be heard around the shipyards working on the 200 cargo carriers under the new Government vessel program, or very little clatter. Gone, or nearly so, will be that song of the air hammers on cherry-hot steel, not unlike that of the cicada in August, but thousands of times magnified. For the 200 ships will be practically all welded. And so will be the 60 ships the British have contracted for. The joints will be melted together, not sewn. The effects of this shift from riveting to welding in ships will be felt all the way back to the design of the vessels themselves, and even upon the layout and construction of shipyards. The builders expect to get such speed they will need fewer ways.
First Built in 1937
Not a great deal of fabrication is likely to be undertaken at a distance from the yards. The movement is rather the other way, except possibly in the procurement of boilers. For their boilers and engines, the British are likely to come to the Middle West for some of the work. In 1937 the Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Co. built the first allwelded seagoing tanker at its yard at Chester, Pa., and following that work it completed seven others and 10 large cargo - vessels, the latter more than 85 per cent welded. First large all-welded cargo vessel was launched this year by the Ingalls Shipbuilding Corp. at PascaThe same company put together some 20 hulls with the welding process last year and was recently completing eight cargo ships, Speed Is Important
The shortage of riveters with shipyard experience had something to do with the decision in favor of welding. Even so, the’ demand for welders experienced on heavy plate work will probably test the supply in the seacoast cities. . Speed was the first consideration, however. Welds of the size required for merchant ships are made in one pass at speeds of 25 to 30 inches a minute, according to T. M. Jackson of Sun Shipbuilding in an article in the October Metal Progress. Steel magazine recently had an article by A. J. Grassick of Ingalls Shipbuilding, which told how the Pascagoula yard was prefabricating plates into ship sections weighing
ha up to 35 tons and then hoisting
them into place.
DAILY PRICE INDEX
NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (U. P.)— Dun & Bradstreet’s daily weighted
2 |price index of 30 basic commodities,
compiled for United Press. (1930-32 average equals 100): Yesterday .......ce0sca0eees Week AS0 ......... e00in 00, 124.1710 MODth AZ0 %..encevesesss.... 1540889 ¥ear AZO .... .is.uesieeay. 119.63 1940-41 High (Jan. 9, 1941) 125.21. 1940-41 Low (Aug. 19) 112.42,
..123.39
WAGON WHEAT
Indianapolis grain elevators are payin for wheat, 80c, subject to marke
grades en w No. 4 new yellow shell corn, w No. 4 white shelled corn, 68c; a white oats, 32c.
Your Federal
taxpayers.
names of all their empl
of $800 or more in 1940; and if
as single. These returns should be filed
tion, Washington, D. C.
delinquency.
filing returns.
All types of compensation,
taxpayer.
paid in whole or in part for his income.
taxpayer,
taxpayer is reporting on the cash
en their merits. Cash
When to Report Income From Salaries, Wages and Other Sources.
Salaried persons and wage earners whose income is derived from personal services form the largest number of Federal income This year this army of taxpayers will be greatly increased. Those who paid an income tax for 1939 have gotten tae forms for the 1940 income tax return through the mails. In order’ that none may escape filing the return, employers are required to report on Form 1099, accompanied by transmittal Form, 1096, the ees, to whom, if single, they made payments
marital statis of the employee is unknown, he must be reported
the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, Returns Distribution Sec-
The law contemplates that every individual, if single, or if married but not living with spouse, whose gross income for 1940 was $800 or more, must file an income tax return. Excuses for not doing so do not relieve the delinquent from responsibility for the
Neither the President of the United States, nor the Vice President, nor Federal Judges, nor Members of Congress are exempt from
» »
statute, should be incorporated in the gross income return of the A minister of the Gospel, for instance, must report all fees he receives—for funerals, for masses, for baptisms, for marriages, and for other like services. fees, and commissions, all bonuses, tips, prizes, awards, retiring allowances for past services, honorariums, and other forms of compensation are rated as part of one’s income.
money, the fair market value of the thing taken must be Teporied-1s
Compensation credited to the account of or set apart for' a without any substantial limitation or restriction, and which may be drawn upon by him af any time, is subject to tax for the year during which so credited or set apart, although not then actually reduced to possession. . during the year 1939, or even prior thereto, but’ the compensation was not received, or made unqualifiedly subject to demand by the taxpayer until 1940, the entire amount is taxable in 1940, when the
which is the basis used by most individuals in reporting net income.
Income Tax
married, $2000 or more. If the
on or before Feb. 15, 1941, with
» unless specifically excluded by
In addition to salaries, wages, If a person is services by anything other than
If the services were rendered
receipts and disbursements basis,
WHEAT PRICES RISE AFTER SLOW START
CHICAGO, Jan. 30. (U, Pw Wheat futures on the Board of Trade had a moment of easiness at the outset but developed a firm tone
subsequently on scattered buying credited to milling interests and moderate resting absorption around 821% cents for the May delivery. Other grains were steady. At the end of the first hour wheat was unchanged to up %¢, May 7c. Corn was unchanged to up 1c; oats off lac; rye unchanged te up %c and soy beans unchanged to up ec.
Incorporations
Service Concrete, Corp. 701 8. Sharkey St., Muncie; agent Howar| 4 H. Hoffman, 1205. Meeker Ave. Muncie; 1000 shares no ar value; manufacture. hd 1] concrete; Howard H. Hoffman, Frances M. Hoffman, Ralph BE. Fullhart. Gleason's Home Made Pies, Southeastern Ave., Indiana Leonidas D. Gleason, Route Jadianapolic; ike: shares without par value; bakery busin idas D. Gleason, Major K. Gleason, Bernard A. Massmann.
Blocher-Carlile, Inc., Scottsburg: agent Bourke Blocher, Scottsburg: 60 s $50 par value; automobile and garage business: Bourke Blocher, Max Carlile, Zelma Blocher, Charles E. Carlile. Elkhart Tool & Die, Inc., 2314 Ave.. Elkhart; agent, Albert’ W. McDonaid, same address; 100 shares of $100 par value; manufacturing tools and ee trailer parts and musical instruments, lawn 5 er; Albert W. McDonald, Mildred W ald, James L. Harman, Amos Lumber Corp., change of stent to Theo. J. Miller, Greensburg, E. A. Shriner Sr. and E. A. Shriner Jr,, Boswell; registration of advertising glogax, | 4 “Best by Test’'—Class 48: hybrid seed c Clarence R. Humphreys, Jasonville; r io tration of trademark brand, ‘Honey Bread” ass 45; foods and ingredi a of
Inc., 1017
Hermitage Country Club, Monticello; amendment. changing name to Sportsman
Thex T05E.,
Warship Brings Gold Shipment
NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (U, P.), = Banking quarters disclosed today that the U. 8. cruiser Louisville has delivered a $200,000,000 consignment of gold from the Union of South Africa to the New York Assay Of fice. The gold arrived here last week, Since it did not go to the New York Federal Reserve Bank, it is under= stood that it will either enter the national monetary stocks or ‘be taken over by the Treasury's Stabilization Fund, rather than be bela under earmark for South Africa Delivery of the metal aboard the Louisville marked the second time since the start of the war that a United States warship has been used to Sonyey foreign gold to this country Last June the cruiser Vincennes brought a cargo of about $250,000,000 in gold from Europe, presumably a part of the French monetary ree serves.
MISSOURI PACIFIC ORDERS 18 ENGINES
ST. LOUIS, Jan. 30 (U, P,).—The Missouri Pacific Railroad today awarded contracts for $4,338,000 worth of new rolling stock, cover ing both freight and passenger equipment. The orders comprised 18 Diesel~ electric switching locomotives, 1200 steel hopper cars, 70 steel cement cars, two steel well flat cars and one streamlined rail-motor pase
Club.
senger car.
When you're tired and ing so refreshing as
ment it always brings.
refreshes with ice-cold’
throughout the ‘day, make it the Po. that
When you’ve played hard...pause and
thirsty, there's nothan ice-cold bottle of
Coca-Cola. You can taste its'quality and feel the happy after-sense of complete refresh-
So when you pouse
1
DI TEI HERNE!
oa CSR IY 188,
a
vou TASTE ITS QUALITY
SBMA Dts BIN
ow
Bella v9
PAR GU OR VIER Sh ©
