Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 June 1941 — Page 17

BUSINESS

HEAVIER HOGS

RISE 5 CENTS

WIDNESTAY JUNE 11, 1

Nazi Europe Not Self-Sufficient'

WASHINGTON, June 11 (U. PJ). —The Brookings Institution, in a study of “Nazi Europe and World

TVA GOES INTO '

REVERSE GEAR

Indiana Is Trying Something New ‘In Promoting Defense Production By ROGER BUDROW ' - THE INDIANA DEFENSE COUNCIL is setting up shat its director, Clarence A. Jackson, who i® also executive

vice president of the Indiana State Chamber of Commerce, calls (with his flair for figures of speech) a “matrimonial

Trade” by Dr. Cl Lewis, to- hes aod nat 8 German-opn- Asks Consumers to Cut

trolled “would be f Europe ar ‘Down Instead of Using

gosnomisally. S611 Sule e report analysed e move- A More Electricity. By EDWARD B. SMITH

ments during 1929 and. 1937. It made no effort to forecast the outTimes Special Writer KNOXVILLE, Tenn, June 1l—

But Some Lighter Weights Are Reduced 10 Cents At Stockyards.

—- ———

HOG PRICE RANGE come of the war or the war's efReceipts | fects on the future political orJune 4 0000000000000 000000 — 6,681 ganization and administration of

June 8 ccoecesscecacacnnase 2.40 | 11,823

ireau.” And the “wedding” the Defense Council and State shamber are frying to promote is one that defense officials

Washington are very keen

«+ . Along in April the State Chamber had some Office of * Production Management officials out from Washington, among them former Governor M. Clifford Townsend. The : idea of the meeting was to explain to Indiana industrialists, | especially smaller manufacturers, how to get sub-contracts from the big corporations who had contracts directly with the Government but who wanted smaller firms to help them out by making “bits and pieces” (as the English term it) of

about.

stich things as tanks, airplanes, guns and so on.

-Thete were 42 towns represented by 300 interested persons at the me ing to see how they and their coud id in on the preparedness production i business. Two of these men got to

COST OF LIVING

Here is Flint’s machine-gun assembly line, the paris coming in by overhead conveyor on the right,

SY

the finished guns going out on the conveyor belt on the left.

.| keting Service reported.

4.657 2,000 11,888 11.889 10,508

JURE 8 ...cocosvsecnesoce. 9.58

June 7 tsessesnasuseceeceny 2.50 9.68

“000000000000 000 ce 9.70

*esect0ecant tree

Hogs weighing 260 pounds sold five cents higher at Indianapolis stockyards today while lighter weights either were unchanged from yesterday or as much as 10 cents lower, the Agricultural Mar-

Buyers for out-of-town concerns had bid 10 to 15 cents lower on all hogs but salesmen refused to sell at those prices when they saw higher prices going up at livestock markets in other cities. The top remained at $9.70 for good and choice 200 to 210-pound-

“|ers. The marketing service report-

ed 937 salable cattle were received,

Europe. A summary of the report, published today, said that if the Nazi area should be extended beyond European boundaries to include all of the Mediterranean countries except Turkey, “the economic unit would ‘be somewhat better balanced.” “But it would still have to buy large quantities of raw materials and foodstuffs from the rest of the world and to export manufactured goods in payment,” it added.

STEEL MAKERS TRY ‘MIRACLE’

OPM ‘Requests’ Them to

Unprecedented requirements © for electric power by defense industries, coupled with the severe drought in the Southeast, have thrown the policies of public-owned power sys tems in reverse gear. Here in the area where TVA has been developing its watere power program, consumers for the past eight years have been urged to use more and more electricity. There has been plenty of it, and rates are low (a little over 2 cents : a kilowatt-hour for the average domestic consumer). But suddenly this sermon of plenty has stopped; TVA, and in turn the scores of municipallyowned power distribution systems and farmers’ power-co-operatives,

are calling on their retail customers to cut down on non-essential uses. Business areas are going inte near blackouts at night, with ornamental signs turned off and show

windows dark. Every other street light is turned out. Housewives and industrial engineers are being urged to economize on current. The reason for all this is prine

talking and one discovered that his factory could

832 calves, 10,503 hogs and 271 sheep. (0

Add 10,000,000 Tons of Ingot Capacity.

By BEN WILLIAMSON Times Special Writer CLEVELAND, ‘June 1l1.—In that little matter of the Government's asking the steel industry to add

N. Y. STOCKS

By UNITED PRESS

DOW-JONES STOCK AVERAGES 30 INDUSTRIALS

RISES SLIGHTLY

order that the|lNCrease in Food Prices ag trem onal Chiefly Responsible, Allied or oy gh + Yesterday

had from the Government. ReBoard Says. 4 Note. Si oi -— i Week Ago NEW YORK, June 11 (U. P)—|Am & F Pur’ : % T.." Month Ago

MACHINE GUNS BEAT SCHEDULE:

Up

a =

Net, High Low Last Change —d— +178 -+0.30 -—0.20

sult: THe smaller . +s.4|Mechanization Steps

: Indiana manufact turer got a $1,500,000 order.

Sowa

Year Ago

: Mr. Jackson That’s what Clarence Jackson means when he says “matrimonial bureau.” The OPM has a staff in Chicago and it was thought they would put a man in Indianapolis. This hasn't happened. In the meantime, Mr. Jackson was chosen by the Governor and Defense Council and in his dual ‘capacity with the Council and State ‘Chamber is taking the matter into hand. . They are borrowing Harry Rogers from the WPA executive staff (he used to be with Continental Steel at Kokomo) to find out what the prime contractors want (those with direct ‘Government orders) and what the smaller firms are able to supply. His job will be to get the two together. A technical committee has been set up with men from such defense plants as Merz Engineering and Marmon-Herrington for down-to-earth. ideas and advice. It is still hoped -that the OPM contract division will put a man in the Indiana Defense Council office but if it can’t or won't the Indiana organization

Living costs for wage earners’ fam-

cause of a further rise in food

ence Board. The Board, a non-profit research

in May stood at 87.4 per cent of the 1923 average, an increase of .6 per|s cent over April and 26 per cent higher than in May, 1940.

per cent lower than in May, 1929. Food, largest single item in the average family budget, cost 1.5 per cent more than in April, 5.2 per cent more than in May of last year and 34.5 per cent more than at the 1933

than in the 1929 month.

B May living costs, the Board said, were 21.9 per cent above the depres- |B!

sion low in April, 1833, but were 11.7] Borde = :

Bklyn-M T Bulova W

ilies in the United States increased|4Am Loco slightly during May, principally be-|4m

prices, according to a nation-wide AD ToT gurvey conducted by the Confer- 3

mour ow wa Armstrong Ck.. 25 imal ving ts| Atchison .. =... agency, estimated that li COSIS| At Gawr pr... 30%

rysler 59% Climax Moly Co 37% col Sai A 15% Co s low, but averaged 21.4 per cent less C lu 3%

i High, 1941, 138.59; Low, 115.30.

: | Week Ago . _ {Month Ago 1 Year Ago

United Corp Unit £.

ee. |Vulvan Det .... 9

High, 1940, 152.80; Low, 111.84. 20 RAILROADS

erseanses seneesess 28.20 . 2168

Yesterday

sese0atvenoieecas

High, 1941, 29.75; Low, 26.54. High, 1940, 32.6%; Low, 22.14. 15 UTILITIES Yesterday

5 Week Ago

Month Ago eeiee 17.44

. | Year Ago

High, 1941, 20.65; Low, 16.82. High, 1940, 26.45; Low, 18.08.

Net Last Change 11-16 22

High Low . 11-16 .. 22 .. 64 9 3a Ts .. 28 . 942 24's FU,

Vanadium ...... 25% 25% 6 96

We

Ya | walworth 43% i West Auto Sup.

29%,

Manufacturing of Armaments.

By JOHN W. LOVE Times Special Writer

FLINT, Mich, June 11 ~The conveyor belt is moving, loaded with machine guns, Mass production has now been adapted successfully to these weapons, also. Long used in’ making rifles, the method is being stepped up into the heavier arms,

Astonishing speed and savings are being made here on a large order|; for machine guns. They show what can happen when modern engineering and management are brought into play a field where

2 [changes have been few or nil since

the World War. Could the sciences of production be applied in the same manner to the whole range of arms there

ability to arm far beyond the speed of any other country. Even so. the world is likely to see something as

® VVOODDDBMNM

: = pbbwensaabs © DOOVOOOVO® 2 RR8Z22335%

OS 9PeRe

Mediu 160 200 pounds test svtae ee Packing Sows Good 3d

300: 3% 330- 360

sect0ntaceee

00d 360- 400 pounds seceecescees 400- 450 pounds ...cieeceneen 450- 500 0 pounds evi0ecas nnn Medium:

» mon ooo a 322 883

mins = .

£32 S O98 999

Slaughter Pies

Medium and Good-— 90- 120 pounds

CATTLE i Slaughter Cattle & Vealers (Receipls, 987) " | Choice— 750- 900 p 900-1100 pounc

1100-1300 pound 1300-1500 noune 0

“sett ENRINN a 11.50 creeseereanns 11.50 ra e4a000g0000 1 .50

cvssacanneten 9.5 10.50 1100-1300 ) pounds cessnscaccss. [email protected]

801100 pounds weed | BI25@ 9.715 Steers, Heiters

" 80-3300 pounds

Choice—

500- 750 poun [email protected]

110,[email protected]

would be little question of America’s | Good—

500- 750 pounds

C0=500 pounds [email protected] Good Peele cnnnnn “ .

13.00 . 8|of 917,550,000.

aie

10,000,000 tons of ingot. production to its yearly capacity, permit us please to shake up a few statistics and to pour out a couple of questions. The industry figures that its capacity by the end of the year will be close to 87,550,000 tons. It's probably close up there now. Gano Dunn, the OPM’s consultant on steel, puts a slide-rule addition on that “normal” figure and holds that we'll have 91,125,000 by the start of 1942. But let’s take the industry’s figure How much steel is that? Well, it's an easy double of what Hitler has in all Germancontrolled Europe. And it's 6,000,000 more tons of capacity than we had 18 months ago when the industry, without any suggestions from the Government, began to stride at war tempo.

Dig Down Deeper

How did steel get up there—a good 7 per cent higher than the highs of 1939? Well, it enlarged

cipally the power shortage of the Aluminum Co. of America. The Aluminum Co. sheet. mill a% Alcoa, near here, is the chief producer of aluminum plate for war planes. Its present requirement is 250,000 kilowatts of power; this will be stepped up another 125,000 kw when a plant expansion program is completed early next year. Alcoa's own hydro dams have a minimum installed - capacity of only 70,000 kw; it has two smal} dams under construction that with in another year will boost facilities another 40,000 kw. Alcoa for several years has been depending on TVA for much of its prime power, and a few days ago TVA completed a fourth trans mission line costing $900,000 into the Alcoa plant. TVA has been furnishing the plant about 170,000 kw, partly from its own system and partly picked up from private power companies.

Deaths—Funerals 1 Indianapolis Times, Wednes., June 11, 1941

West Union ... 22% West Air Ble - wo] Wheel Stee] . . 24% White Rock Ve , | Willys Querind | ilson & Co Woolworth

sensational jomoriow 85 Germaiys 1150-900 rearming was yesterday. The clew | Medium is here in Flint. Here machine gun | coool Pounds «ececeusssess) parts flow like automatic parts. °

will go it alone. Rents were .2 per cent higher in g h&So 3 Is : Jan £3parument, that wil) be May than in April and 15 per cent| Som nein" on. a: A ariiza lions De it's the frst of higher than in May, 1940. The| EeaL SORET™™S 550 "its kind in the count , Board pointed out that in January, Cons Edison pf. 10042 , ry. Ibs some-| oo, = ousing costs were 40.4 per| Sons Oil ...... 6% what similar to the national draft , g 2 DEr| cons Coal 5%

tion. The men in Wash-| cent lower than at present, although £ont Bak 5 P

\ 58 ’ 9, they were 4.5 per cent : 21 ington set the policy but it’s up to|in May, 1929, Coty ; the local draft boards to get re-|higher. Crucible 8t

POUNAS ..ovveeeveees [email protected]| SOme open hearths and some blast| BAKER — Joseph C., entered into rest Youn asda . age 4 months. Son 0 | a3s@1028 furnaces, for one thing. It fixed 2 yaa, nM : UD Some plants that, weren't eco- Robert, E. : rer Walsoan SLA. Fy | tue 9.38| nomical to run before and got them Henrietta Reed, Shelbyville, Ind.. and to running again. 3a Jorster, Rome. Gi Ga. Services, Fri- “ a 12%! And then it dug at the marginal] Chapel. 030° E Michi stuff—furnaces operated only in Papers please. cop Cemetery. emergencies, capacities unheated a at a ea I'S, Zed for several years. An example would RIN ot Bd MED yD

cesses

45 . 27% « St. Burial [Shelbyville

14 sults Curtiss-Wr .... 8% . . pu | Among the Jesulls Sxpecied are LOCAL ISSUES Desre & Co .... 3% 3a more steam e ae- ac cone Hense™ program in. Indiana, ‘hy, 2h follia guasins by, on en | Butbl ploi J 1 ey oa i I I Lo Hien leaving tho Job of Assembling to. the | Zaid, on, paying 4nd selling Quotations of Eas Ki oH 130 big companies who- took the order . Stocks Bid Eng Pub 5 “ee ~ 3 3%

Erie 1 pf . from - | Agents Finance Co Inc., com. Pi : ever fine 4 Hy Or Navy or who Age nts Finance Co. Inc., pfd.. —F— It RR & Stk Yd Pair Morse 36% 38%

Be \ There’s another benefit and one 2s oo Flintkote ...... 13% 13%

“ese

1p Mortuary Naar wh hey & Richmond Cemetery, Brookville, Ind.

COMBS Ma; Marin, widow of William

500- 900 pounds One of the two AC spark plug plants of General Motors here is|Good Young Sheet ..- 30% 3h — %|caliber guns, for use in aircraft, in tanks and in the field. By midbe five small open-hearth furnaces| ric Botki d Bertha Hoff od NORTH MANCHESTER |:vi"se'ss ti proauction. oe > .......... he LEP EE Bi payroll, now at 1400 persons, will be Saif brdersiugresnsud 00 plant in Cleveland. 10th, hursd day at 3p. m. "Burial Memos 3000. # Mediuth .........o 0... ceeds 08 340 And then it scraped the dregs for Hal Park A ter. 5 rend a Weanestar LJ Same Setup at Dayton Good & Vealers CASTLE—Robert, uncle of Sheeks Re Se | 1100@11 50 | heap. At Mingo Junction, O., it|%A' er ad THe ees LAFAYETTE, June 11 (U. P).—| At Dayon, O., a new unit of Frig- | 0.30 breathed life back into a py rances Feeder and Stocker Cattle Deal Ay a Pa of Norman Little, George Welch and short time. About 900 are now _ (Recei uplica ew Castle, Pa. if reina vived a rolling mill that had been|c

Yellow Tr 14 14 14 + %|rapidly increasing its output of 50- Gutter” Bulls summer, months ahead of schedule, |, ~~ (Fesriinss excluded) svisens | ame 875|at the Otis Steel Co.’s Lakeside] 2V2y Tuesday. Funeral private, at the TEAM WINS JUDGING close to may call at | +-Cutter and’ common - 80| stuff that was ready for the scrap Common and iii A North Manchester team composed |idaire will be making the same guns plant that was nearly off the tax Robert Frieden today held the live- at work in this G. M. subsidiary. |e, ine I aay ad heen

too important to be overlooked. Foster Wheel

~ And that is that these qo ete | ¢ H

tors will be better acquainted through all these contacts so that when the war is over they may find some customers they wouldn’t have had otherwise. In the post-war | mn

Ino com oii 50 nd Asso Tel Co $5 pfd 10413 d & Mich Elec 7% pid 08 on

period, that may prove to be a very| Lincoln N good thing.

ODDS AND ENDS: American|pu

Automobile Association says 20 per cent could be cut from gasoline consumption by driving not more than 35 or 40 miles an hour, by avoiding “Jackrabbit getaways” in traffic and by proper engine adjustments. . . . Southeast cotton mills are worrying about having enough power to keep

0 na 6% 6% pfd.. Serv C f Ind 1% pid.. So Ind G&L 4. Ve Terre Haute Eee 3% pid .... Union Title Co ¢ Van Camp Milk. Std Van Camp Milk com ..... ouve Bonds American Loan 5s 51 American an 5s 46 Citizens Ind Id 4Y,:s 61 Consol Fin 5s

Harb-Walk .... Holland Furn .. 28 Homestake

. 18% 18%

88 |Gar Wood Ind.. 4% Gaylord pf Gen Am T Gen Electric’ ve

33% r .... 52% 31%

Graham-Faigs. "11-16 Gt Nor Ore 18 Greyhound cp.

«19% 19%

Ya | sheep divisions.

: =F

wdaBanaci FREER OF

18 | stock judging championship of Pur-

due University’s 23d annual 4-H

Club roundup. The Wabash County team won in the beef cattle division and “placed second in the swine, horses and

Ralph House of Arcadia , for the individual championship. The Benton County team from Otterbein, composed of Charles Conner, Robert Datzman and Al-

% bert Zink, won first place in the

crops judging contest. The Jasper County team from Rensselaer took Second and the Greene County team

CHICAGO LIVESTOCK

Hogs—Receipts, 11,000; agiive, 10 to 18 cents, higher top,’ $9.75: bulk ‘good and

Little tied with |N.

soon be doing. Two more plants in the G. M. string are making guns at Sagipay, Mich,, and at Syracuse,

Aine other plants at work on machine guns are those of Colt’s Patent Fire Arms Manufacturing Co., Savage Arms Corp. and the Rock Island Arsenal. All of them

thousands of guns a month. Until lately it was seldom the Army bought or made 500 a year.

6000 New Tools

The gun is the Browning, the basic machine gun of the American Army, invented in 1889 by John M. Browning. He was of the line of

presently will be assembling many | Madu

Medium and good .........0 +. 10.00

oice— The operation at Flint, therefdre, is| 300° 300 pounds .. an example of what Dayton will |Good—

500- 800 pounds 800-1060 pound Medium’ 500-1000 ) pounds

500- 500 © pounds .....coeuodd lo (1.15@ 8.75 Calves (steers) | Gadd and choice— | pounds down .........i.. [email protected]

setcscrccccels (I. eesetsecanelele

Good and chim” ‘Meters | 500 pounds down ............ [email protected] 500 pounds down |'[email protected]

SHEEP, LAMBS (Receipts, 271)

Lambs (spring) :

Good and choice 11.50 12.00

1} 25

18.00 78 Good and ao shor) | 5 3.75 Comm 238 3.28 ————————————————" —

0.33 | plates for ships. At Birmingham it cerdnreenidds [6.730 9.50

to take rolling pressure off a better plant that now can be turned to

took a heap of rust off a bankrupt outfit and made it a blast furnace again. Multiply these several times and that’s the way the steelmakers got up there to 103 per cent of capacity.

Shortages Loom

Now the OPM “requests” that they add something like 12 per cent beyond what they've got, a redouble of all the straining and scraping they've just gone through. . Can they do it? They've already pulled operational miracles out of their hats. They've already accomplished things that hardbitten superintendents long experienced with processes as tempermental as they

her other, t St., Annex. Funeral notice later.

ENGELKEN -~ Mary, 76 years, sister of J. A.,, John and William Henry, Mrs. Frank Gerling and Mrs. Ann Miller; grandmother at Herell J., Mary Martha and J s_E. Anderson, di at her home, g1e E. 81st St.; Tuesday. Friends may call at jhe temporar Kirby Mortu= pd N. Meridian St. nerd] Friaay, i 0 a fy the orualy, an d9a roan of Arc Church. Friends invited Taneteyvifte (Ind.) papers please copy.)

EVANS—Frank, age 74 years, husband of Laura Evans, father of Arnold Evans, brother of Mrs. Charles Johnson, Plaine fleld, passed away Tuesday gvening at Testdenie Ja N. Elder Ave. Service Fri= 10 Con Funeral Home. feinay in invited, Burial Mooresville, Ind.

EYERRDAD Christe ‘A., widow a Benja«

ad *Noel Shaw, city, aduesqay, She 8

LOCAL PRODUCE

fe June ig irk rtua. 543 E. ‘Washing«

$9.75: choice 180-270 1bs., $9.50 a9. 75; most 260- m. Burial Hope, In

I on working. . . . Standard Oil of New Shots 15) an 1

w 12 5

are complex didn’t believe possible| in.ngion Mortua a year ago. Friends’ invited.

GILTNER—Mrs. Flora C.. wife of John B and mother of Mrs. Paul Duncan, and Mrs. Harold A. Norris and sister of A,

to the close of the Chicago market y Indianapolis flour mills and Tain O Matthews of thes: ci Hammond, wr

elevators aid 93¢ per bushel for 372@38 | Ni 2, 36 ne od, whes- tother ard Ea Ht merits) feed" & 8 #42560; No. 3. Sac > B go 2 white ahelled fra

=

[email protected] good and [inventors which opened with Dr. p...o 3 choice ASOLO. under rt edkl R. J. Gatling of Spruigseld, O. FE, Ts 145 Lexho Pe hen 120 2 @9; few lights butcher kinds, ® [email protected], | Who gave to the language the word|Wwhits Backs ne Sorngers, He 04 Shee Pete, spring lambs “gat.” Pull the trigger of the mod- > Barred and White mog AL to 25 cents lower; shorn lambs ern gun and it fires 400 ‘to 600|

eghorn springers, 2 lbs. and Roek: ici 0 n steady; early sales small lot 2 Leghorn springers, 2 lbs. and over, closely orren native springer u cartridges a minute, accurately two miles. ae

Se : x Diab HE HIRE ‘ es

pet —-

Morris 5&10 Stores 5s 50

1100 Muncie Water Works 58 65....104} war) with the German chemical N Ind Pub Serv 3% Yas 89 10

WAGON WHEAT

=F

Friends invited. Friends may call at

; t for patent rights to make syn- I t [ t will We: cocks, 10c. ic Ro 2 A 000, PES Richmond W u We be 5900 104% 10 or oe oo 2.4 ost 800d and choice kinds. 81115 WR So Butter. 1 ost an -bar-| Richmon ater s 58 13 a .40; throwouts, o um / ary’, ay, 2 s 57 [email protected]: 1 Converting an automotive-parts 3elc. Butterta t--No. 0. vellow corn: No Tx divideng. al RR Ya native ewes, $4.75; bulk, o 50@4. 50, is : Ls (Farin prices quoted 1'y the Watley Co.) Buital oa. Hill.

1 by . : = ac Term Corp 5 Leh V oul of. 8s 15 |to good shorn lambs, $8.50 rel-a-year market when war started. Lell V a ‘| plant to machine-gun work was a

“vs . Mc: No. 2 white oats. Lerner Bis: vas 08 the mor

1 Cattle—Receipts 10,000; calves 850; . 8 ; A otabl tion, M D—§ ob He fe TEER EE a erate ore than 130 RUPTURE APPLIANCE MAKER er ore Cie Sa Pied

shown but fully steady market on yoali + o : : pM IL Ornstend, Jather Coming to Lincoln Hotel, Indianapolis JJ| iced Const

i 24 2 — "%|and light steers and very d others re-adapted. thousand | Jr, and ance Ls innsead. ‘ 3 grade scaling up to 1 jou 3 Be separate new tools had to be rhade. | f SATURDAY and SUNDAY, June (4-15 SYKES SERVICE, Racine, Wis.

i 200 1bs.: ote .... i = oR 167 steers. S11.75 most” stily heise 3135 | Tooling started in mid-January, the . mie ; 11.25 supply light offerings under o 39:00 first gun was delivered April 18. 17 cream very small, largely fed steer at h D og FSET pl ds ST FR uf Each 1m 8 Soot 0 Dara Aa v 5% 3 2 10 to 15 cents higher, Jory scarce i. Get Mec 'S : ’ a 2% 2% 2%

Tia fleady at $12 down [email protected] being paid] Until recently every gun barrel * x x ..,Eddie Rickenbacker

2% + freely for weighty sausage bulls: jSanners a ' Harsi u; 8 + 1e Be and cutter cows active at [email protected]. had to be rifled on a machine es gn eral notied

sis 1, oy T 5

pecially designed, on a principle as ZT = i & Ha 5 lis Ly

old as the use of power eal This spring the plants are begin-|E . : 1 ; + : ning to use a tool common in the|f: FARRE. N. hmm al) of Marjorie Ciifton, ui industry, the i :? 3 ] i & . Ray St, be $9.30: 580-200 a machine. It will rifle 20 or more] Ess 350-400" Ibs. a 5: bit \60 ea i 0.55 | barrels while the old-fashioned ma- 8 Lbs... ds $8.75; i] 130.140 1bs., $8.5 0 1801 30 Ibs, [chine is doing one. A $16,000 tool Spring lambs. 81 $13. 5; stags, #7. Calves, $11. does the work $250,000 worth of machinery used to do.

2 : Chambering of the barrel—cutDAILY PRICE INDEX ting out the hole where the cart-

OTHER LIVESTOCK

" Sioy rE Lunt dad,” aia tho. — prt 3 : OWer; gr FH Ra . Na} ju I Fibres : Bh 5 5% ...._ 1200 1bs., $9.45; 1 =180 1bs., $9 340 ; ’ EB} Nat 6 1 01

HOLDER—Reyv. James Halford Jr., age 38, beloved husband of Docia Holder, Brother : n -

ry Church, with the R boutn officiating. Burial’ don High

S—Willlam Raymond. 1550 es, "Beloved Jon Ls William ong, 1530 d Laverns Coy Hubbs, brother of Na ike Jean and Jane, depatied this life Tuiesday & Rie N rida Funers ral Hom i orthe: 2530 Station 8t. 2p. m. Friends %

BILEY—Loustia, age 51 years, Telived

WHEEL CHAIRS Why buy one? Rent one at HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE

Here's Timing for you! : : PAPER ge sia

price index of 30 basic commodities,’ compiled for United Press (1930-32

Dun & Bradstreet's daily ya has been a hand-feed job since ma-

chine guns were invented. Five barrels could be chambered in an hour. Today at Flint a special automatic

* AMERICAN PAPER

STOCK COMPANY RI-6341 320 W. Mich.

wife of J Kilev and sister of fs. Mary Rovers. and Raymond Hack of Ine dianapolis, pasicd = away uesday at resie 833 uneral Frie

14% a3 average equals 100): ay. ‘June 13th. at yo at the

Lea neral Li 9 Fora Ee Le Sart Ss m call a Buy vour Syringe 70. Wedn esday 1a ome. . or

really See Hats. NUIH. ? M M : y! h ‘beloved

Has a Pains for Every hs Because 18 Lasts Longez, $2.9 © $3.85 travkos. Carl E, po Le

VONNEGUT'S Harry i Osw a: ai’ passed ay away Rietiay are being applied to ; . and receipts Yor the

. mn LEVINSON rrmann Funeral Home. 13 {Sis 8 x, EE one “USE YOUR CREDIT at current 1 asaa Year © through J pared with a ye

Your Hatter @ Prien Pas al afte after e 3 Som : ae a foe a minuies what Weed 10 J 7 ar I cl pina ! ph oe ASE on [ake Bours WOH IND I FUR COATS

3.366, 003 215.40 " "273, 82.571. 8 FATHER'S DAY SPECIAL / ny : i GIVE “DAD” AN UNREDEEMED COMPANY NIE ati - RIT State

Tal " SCHICK RAZOR; ; $7. . W. ) ’ MoonE._ru T.. entered into rest Tu

34 Tow: : . - Directly INDIANA 313 CO. years, husband of Man NS aeksHoms \ 29-31 East OHIO St 16 =

ard 2 er LE machine chambers 40 an hour. Se i HEHE Gy Wek III HR) Mechanimtion? 16s bere, in am Phillips Pet ... 43% 43 * 3 Month ago 135.43 |ament. If the task of defense was Ps Year ago . fs Sarre 116.97|DOt so vast, some people would worry *(1941 High (June 10) ........ 137.31|about that old bogey, technological

1941 Low (Feb. 17) ......... 12303 “Methods use in dling the cylnU. S. STATEMENT

der block of an automobile motor VASHINGTON, June 11 (U. P.).-—-Gov-

SHERWIN

cee -8 Pitts Stl 6 6 Procter &G. 2 sai :

3 3 os Eo] ——

Sav, Arm new 14 Sears Foe Roebuck. . n

LL

f gir

“Jr or gps Yt

a ia Vernon, husband of h passed away in Shorthills, . J. oe ce at ihe

- on — *

Bur. ge *# Bhi HHE + DH HE 4 +

Ra = E Q

4 3 eee 20 anne BE Buchanan b ortuary. Thur: 3:3 Friends - 3 Se ty invited. Burial ih an’ ' Friends may

1 5 the mortuary, Thursday, after

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