Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 June 1942 — Page 24

FRIDAY, JUNE 19, 1942 Aluminum Bottleneck

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

NEW YORK STOCKS

By UNITED PRESS

am DOW-JONES STOCK AVERAGES Hen ot oe

—he 80 INDUSTRIALS vous Gas Lt . 137% 8 wl 6% 8 Yesterday .......c.c.oco0i00. 105.90 —0.50 Waukesha Mot. 131 3"

3 Eisen . .. 20 135 1212... [Week Are ....iciiiiniiinn. 10807 Went Ba'Bi a’ a3

Adam “ee Addressoarbn . : 312 $ 1, | Month Ago ......ciieieien. 99.18 —0.54 WPa P

. 1 Pp Assia Jue 2's Year Ago —1.29| West Auto Sup 16

Wartime Poses Problems for|a . . ww 33% Prospective Security Buyer Ans fadis ""is8i:

Amerada bei’ i“ 24% 1 ; is By ROGER BUDROW fm fine ote: Shas : 3, rese Yesterday . IN THE TWO YEARS SINCE DUNKIRK, the average|Am Cabiea® . 1 "yp Wek 880... stock has climbed steadily on the big London market. The|4 Th ald, Hoth tow. oa, ee British did not dump their holdings when London was A High, 1941, 30.88; low, 21.25. Jellow Tr op dle (li blitzed nor when Singapore fell. Prices have improved|a 1 UTHITIES £00 enn mad. Bo despite increased taxes and wartime restrictions on trading. 13 Inasmuch as this country seems to follow the British |a war pattern with a two-year time lag, Gerald St. George Walker, formerly London branch manager for a New York stock exchange firm, believes the stock market will react the

same way in this country. The London exchange is running Am. Viscose 0! S p= ar i a au the

PAGE 24

Net Last Change

West Union ... 24 West Air Bke.. Westing El Wheel Steel

High, 1942, 114.22; low, 92.92. High, 1941, 133.59; low, 106.34. 20 RAILROADS

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~—0.14| Woolworth ... 27'%

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Month ARO ..iccvvnvnnsrenes ‘ ol Year ABO ...c.iiiviinveins . —0.27 High, 1942, 14.94; low, 10.58. High, 1941, 20.65; low, 13.51. ; ww BY ERIE DIVIDEND

i 3 L NEW YORK, June 19 (U. P.).— 1342 ®| Erie Railroad Co. enlivened the| i stock market today when directors| declared a dividend of 50 cents al. 2 share on common stock and certificates of beneficial interest. Erie , stocks turned active and strong in tan otherwise irregularly lower list. |; The Erie dividend is the first ever |¥: paid by any Erie company on com= mon stock in the 76 years of exi pt Ba 3 y ® istence. Erie common rose to 6, 3 ‘ SRE HV Gnied up %: the certificates 5%, up %, Like a pioture of a big lumberyard is this photo of millions of pounds of aluminum alloy sheet for and the preferred 353%, up %. Other airplane manufacture, boxed and ready for shipment in the vast Tennessee works of the Aluminum Co. rails were mostly lower. of America. Steels, motors, aircrafts, coppers, mercantile and chemical issues were : easier.

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along to the “continuous mill” where it is rolled, like a window |shade, for easy handling. Build Stockpile Better duck in your seat now as the giant cranes swing the coils above your car toward the annealing furnaces. Up to this point the alu= minum has been hot while it was being shaped. neali the finely-powdered, whiteish “ore” | in *po et gs ir The exact size of this gargantuan|from which aluminum is refined, is will roll it still tninner

factory is a military secret, yet it|obtained by chemical processes from Steer your car deftly between

By TOM WOLF Times Special Writer KNOXVILLE, Tenn. June 19.—In the shadow of the Great Smoky mountains, on rich rolling land, which for years has been synonymous (with agriculture, America is winning the battle of industrial production. On the red clay of a leveled-off hilltop, the Aluminum Co. of America has built a gigantic new plant which has smashed, for the present, at least, the bottleneck in aluminum production.

Size a Secret

Roger Budrow

'Icicles Sprouted In Hell Today’

NEW YORK, June 19 (U. P). —"Icicles sprouted in hell today.” That comment was issued by officials of the Erie Railroad Co. today when its board of directors declared a dividend of 50 cents a

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at only about 25 per cent of its | Am Woolen pf.. 3 { 5 ciee,, ‘iis 3 13.32 TT pre-war level. But air raids have PRICE ON i fnsconds vi. oi / g ~~ WR Fond ae BH, Nu caused only a slight loss of business Armour Nl .... 2% i 3 s|Norf & West... 152'a 152!a 152 - . Armour Ill pr pf 53%, Fou 9 1h alts 3 one day only. Taxes and tradallel the British experience. If we Vealers Steady. Mr. Walker be- H | Barnsdall ’ ee og prices were generally steady y lieves it is prob- p g | Bath Ir Wks ... : : s 33 | Beth Steel frain from getting panicky, just as | ministration reported. | Boeing. 2 Air the British did. The top remained at $1445 for | Bot 8 Stores i= .e : Vealers were unchanged with a $14! Briges Mig .... } worthwhile noting that Thomas M. 8 $ ristel My Receipts included 7540 hogs, 263 Burroughs ot: looked at the long-range prospects cattle, 314 calves and 438 sheep. Butler Bros pf. | p pects. Mr. Foristall believes Stokely Bros. | last and was most interested in its new $1 prior preference stock. Hi ..... Foristall is concerned about their) Packing Sows future because of competition from | Good and Choice— portation. In discussion the secur -| 360- 400 pounds FI : ties of Indiana Service wy Cond 0 pounds ... [email protected] |Clev El Dim pf.108

and even the blitz Armstrong Ck.. 26% 35 4 3 3% 2 bombing itself Soom or. Sgt s|No Amn Ava... 10 0 halted trading for Atchison 327% Northwest Airl. 10 10 Atl C Line ,... 8 6% ing restrictions in . this country par- Top Remains at $14.45 as 7540 Porkers Arrive; have any severe i y S, & military defeat Bangor & Ar able that U. S. in- at the Indianapolis stockyards to- | Barak N Big ‘a : al | Bendis ‘ vestors will re- day, the agricultural marketing ad- | Ben Ind 1 Loan - 1 B 5 3 ” = =” 3 Sank a r en “ee {good to choice 200 to 220-pounders.| Bor rg-Warner IN THIS CONNECTION it is | Bdgpt Brass et n -< | top Bucy rus Brie .. Foristall, who conducts an investors Bucyrus E 7 pf. column in the Wall Street Journal. | ‘ . Byron Jackson. of three Indiana corporations, not just the short-term or war pros- & Co. (the big food packers) will | net a larger profit this year than| Although the traction companies enjoy booming business now, Mr. Sm sounds autos and other forms of fr | 305: 30 pounds i ) 400- 450 pounds ... sesrte 65% 13.75 Climax Moly Co 33% (which serves Ft. Wayne) and the § %- ue ys os [email protected], Coca-Cola 78a

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the “retrogressing traction industry.”| 250- 500 pounds ; Slaughter Pigs

Medium and Good— 90- 120 pounds

CATTLE (263) Slaughter Cattle & Calves Com Cred cv pf aid

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gy & 8 THE SALES BOOM SAGS

Sales of retail stores in Indiana (measured in dollars) were 5 per | Steers Som ny Jr. cent lower last month than they | 538-50 » pounds . ..8135 5! Comuith 8 sh ok were in May last year, or about 1108: 13% b pounds 13 500 i HEE 20% the same as this April. ! Gond— " | Gon dircratt. Ih Indianapolis sales in May were | 930-1100 bonds ©.oiii iii 13500130] Con: She 8, off 11 per cent from a year ago, |}130-1300 bounds : 30! Sen: 131 off 5 per cent from April. Figures | areqium— ORS are those of the commerce de- |, [30 1300 pounds ++ 11.308 123 Ge garment. : 8 4 RT 1100 1 pounds 10.00@11. ol B ODDS AND ENDS: Cuba has put] Chote. Scr Heifers & Mixed oh price ceilings on 20 items, including A Bounds .....cces eee [email protected] 1 | Coty

rice and beans, basis of the average 300- 750 pounds ............. Cuban's diet. , . . McIntyre Porcu-! chotce— Heifers pine Mines, Ltd, (gold mining) is 30: 800 pounds @13.00 Curtiss Wr

ub b a Good- | Curt “Pub pr ‘pf 1312 7ing tro I S tors. having trouble finding prospecto hoi [Sons of 6

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il Savage Arms .. 113 11%

Schenley Dist .. Lg 16's

8| Sears Roebuck . 3 531%

Servel Inc 3 7% Sharon Stl .... Shattuck ...... Shell Un Oil .. Silver King ....

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share on the common stock and ended a 76-year drought for the road's common stockholders. The last payment received by Erie common stock was a dividend of 4 per cent paid by the predecessor company, Erie Railway, in 1866. Company officials appeared as dazed as the common stockholders at the surprise dividend announcement and issued a hurried statement to assure the public that there was no mistake. “Wall street tradition was shattered today,” the statement said, “and brokers were dazedly groping for reliable replacements for the immemorial dictums: “‘When Erie common pays a dividend there'll be icicles in hell,’ and ‘three things are certain— death, taxes and no dividends for Erie common. ”

WHEAT AND SOYBEAN FUTURES HOLD FIRM

CHICAGO, June 19 (U. P.).Wheat and soybean futures ruled steady to firm in early dealings on the board of trade today. Other grains continued fractionally weak. Wheat was unchanged to 4 cent & bushel higher at the end of the

will give the enemy anything but comfort to ponder these generalities:

So vast is this plant that foremen scoot between operations in small cars. So vast is this plant that in just one stage of its fabrication, the aluminum travels a straight line down a continuous strip mill more than a quarter of a mile long. So vast is this plant that, from pig to product, aluminum travels three miles under its roof. A little over a year ago this site was just another grassy hilltop of the Tennessee Valley. Plans for the plant, built as part of the Aluminum Co.’s $215,000,000 self-financed war expansion program, were first discussed in November, 1940. A year and a quarter later the giant overhead cranes within the factory were starting the first huge ingots of aluminum rolling through the fabricated mills. Here in one building, watching aluminum pig become aluminum sheet, you can see the united nations marching to victory. The tough, lightweight metal that is here kneaded and pounded into shape is building the planes and ships that will dictate the armistice.

Pigs Made Nearby

The aluminum pig itself is produced in a nearby plant. “Alumina,”

bauxite in the earth’s crust. In huge electric furnaces, called “reduction pots,” the alumina is broken by an electrolytic process into its component parts, aluminum and oxygen, by means of a molten cryolite bath through which a powerful electric current passes. The oxygen is burned off, and the aluminum is poured into pigs. The pig is shipped to the mammoth new plant. Now hop into a midget car and follow the path of this pig inside the factory as it is melted and cooled, squashed and squeezed, cut and trimmed into fighting weight. First it is melted for pouring into ingots. You have to step on the gas now to keep pace as the huge overhead crane hurries the ingots to the soaking pits. Swing the auto around a corner and you're looking straight down the “hot strip line.” Youll drive’ more than six city blocks straight down the bowels of this factory before you get to the end of the line.

An overhead crane hauls the ingot from the soaking pit to the line. Now, screeching and clattering down this rolling mill, squeezed under 7,000,000 pounds pressure, the metal snakes out from the eightfoot ingot into a strip nearly a tenth of a mile long. Even in your car it is hard to keep pace toward the end of the line, as the thin sheet hisses

rows of giant machines which rep= resent the best of American engie neering genius. Watch more overe head cranes, more rolling mills, cute ting, stretching, pressing, heating, cooling. At last the sheet is ready for inspection and shipment. Your car's speedometer shows you've driven nearly three miles. At the end of the drive you see, packed and ready for shipping, a sizable stockpile of finished sheet. None is sent out except by army ore ders. The existence of this stocke pile is visual proof that the alumie num bottleneck, in sheet fabricate ing, at least, is not now existent. Such is the size of one of the monster new plants in which America is fashioning the weapons for democracy’s arsenal. This plant is not yet producing at even nearcapacity. For it was built ahead of schedule, and the new governmentfinanced feeder plants now being built are not yet ready to supply it with pig. When it is running at top speed, perhaps by year’s end, the Aluminum Company will be producing aluminum at a rate of fifty times as fast as it did before 1939. Even that is not all. The ends of this roughly U-shaped plant look unfinished. They are. They were closed off with sheets of corrugated sheet steel, easy to tear down for future expansion.

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first hour; corn was 1% to 4 lower; oats unchanged to off !i; rye un-

| cnaneed to ott 1, ud sovbeans =| Germans in Control of New

9s higher,

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790- 900 pounds « « « The 0.6 per cent decrease in| 5p0- 300 pounds [email protected] Cutler Ham ... 13% living costs in Anderson, Ind. and | Gos 200 pounds 256 10.50 | —D— New Orleans during April was the! ; : “USSU! Decca Ree Ine... le : es ng = x | Deere & Co .. 22% largest in any city, according to : | Deisel WG Conference board figures. . , . Chi-| cyt: div and cor cago has had to adopt a permit | Canner ces : | Doehler D Cast plan limiting grain shipments to] (Yearlings excluded) Dome Mines .. its overflowing elevators, just as In-| Beet— Douglas Aire .. i " { Dow Chem .... dianapolis has done . Two Penn-! {Du Pont ...... sylvania state college professors | Good Du Pont pf .... want the government to look into Cutter and common getting gasoline from coal, even CALVES (438) though it is more expensive than | Yaius (all weights)

fr tr th won Good and choi om petroleum, so there won't be Common and medium Ra i

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agreement provides that up to 51 per cent of the shares may be ceded —with government permission to

French Chemical Trust| “smn

AWARD VIGO CONTRACT red wheat (other graues on their merits).

No 1 yelox. “te Seed corn dh ; VICHY, June 19 (U. P.).—~The Vichy government by official decree], WASHINGTON, June 18.— Both IT RC oni oF mmglist immune from French Do rporate law and practically) gepartment that engineering con= The decree ratified a Franco-German commercial agreement signed tract “in excess of $3,000,000” has NEW YORK, June 19 (U. P).— last Dec. 18 under which I. G. Farbenindustrie assumed control of three! been awarded for the Vigo ordnance Dun & Bradstreet’s daily weighted Dig rn chiomiesl i nd consolidated them into a new trust|plant to Ford, Bacon & Davis, New price index of 30 basic commodities, The companies — Kuhlmann dy simb] CLES York City. Construction under sucompiled for United Press (1930-32 chemical Co, Ste. Denie Dye &| co oy simple vote of the board. vision of army engineers, Louise Tans 100): . Chemical Manufacturing Co, and |°f directors. Ta | ville, Ky., office. SLerday .............vv... 185.07) ot Clair du Rhone Dye & Chemical] The agreement gives “Francolor Week ago .................. 15450 Manufacturing Co. — will have a extremely broad powers and frees

Sr ABO .vvveinveniienies 156.82) combined capitalization of 800,000,-(it from any legal restrictions nor-! car ago

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WAGON WHEAT Up to the close of the Chicago Market today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $108 per bushel for No. 2

Bnion Carb Un El Mo 41% 'bi103. il Cal ....

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DAILY PRICE INDEX

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LOW RENT OFFICES All Outside, Light, Modern

264 872

1942 high (May 9) .... 158.34

into 80,000 shares of 10,000 francs

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Rooms, $25 Up

THE INDIANA TRUST BLDG.

MA. 1441 Cor. Virginia Ave. and E. Wash. St.

Offers and Sales Made Only to Residents of the State of Indiana

$500,000 U. S. Machine Corporation 5% First Mortgage Convertible Sinking Fund Bonds

Maturing July 1, 1952

Hook Dru apolis, quoted by Wadley

Home T. a Fr Ft Fine a pfa.. ———a—————— OTHER LIVESTOCK

0 Haves Mfg .. i 4 y . Ind Asso Ie, 5% p cenene 90 CINCINNATI; June 19 (U. P.).—Ho mg

Hecker Prod ... & Mich 7% oy Sua jot Hydro Elec 7% .. Reoein®s 2850, over 160 Ibs. 5 ie hi under 160 lbs. and sows steady; F305 aid for rd Prd choice 180-275 Hy 3 75-300 1lbs., $14.4 300-400 1bs., $14. i P J \ n ! ve 160-180 1bs., $14. 0%: medium_ and se 33 3 4 f ive 150-160 1bs., $13.85; J 150 lbs. $1 % ’ } : rood grade sows, $12.25@13. attle—Receipts, 450; Calves—Receipts, 300. Steady on steers and heifers, su ply limited. Yearling, I i ifer $12.50@13; common and and heifers, $10. Wo. 75: Meet cows 15 r ? cents lower; common and medium Fos. Int Business M125 21 0 .e [email protected]; good men fed ars $10@10 Int Harvester .. 462 i i - bulls Steady: common and medium Ba s| Van Camp Milk p id 50 cents lower, $0.25@11; top sausage balls van Camp Milk COM ..evvevee $11.2511.40; vealers steady, top, $14; B good and choice $12.50@14: common and Int Silver onas | , $10@12: culls, $9.50 dow: Int T&T. Algers Wins'w w RR. Ss. oie ge Sheep—Receipts, 500, active, Interest payable semi-annually on the first days of

HREDS or TL He SR Rg UR : 97 andi. choice © SoRIMRELs, rl og #top January and July, the first coupon to be payable January E fas 1, 1043. Denominations $1,000 and $500.

a repetition of the rubber mess. . . .|Cull 00@ 9. Eng b Stockholders of Standard Oil Co. of} Feeder & Stocker Cattle & Calves Erie Nebraska who thought Standard|cnetce. Steus : i i | 500-800 pour inestatienns ae Oil of Indiana paid them too little] 300-308, TOMEAS --.v:oveee 1230@1TY| Evans Prod . i © " when it bought the Nebraska con- Good " 4 11.66 [10815 2 : : a QUNGS .cvcevvennes . . : , % , cern in 1939, got a court ruling giv-| £30-103 bounds ...irsiiss HOGI S Reinen 2, ON r Linh Leaf T. i a a ing them $9.07 a share more. Orig-| "GETS pounds ..........e. 10.50@107 Flintkote ...... iis i ER al Vin : : 4 + " Of : st- pf ..123%2 3 3 + 33 1 inally they were paid $17.50. Common pounds [email protected] Gar Wood Ind. 2% I: Vanadium .... 15% e Va-Caro Ch 2 Calves (Steers) go Ssume..., 3 . A PAPER CUP MAKERS |S&'isiess 12.50815.00| Son Eeegiic ..- 8% a sounds dewn S015.00 Fen Rgods 7 1942 low (Jan. 2) ..... 51.54| each. “et -— or es. i WORK AT CAPACITY] °® pounds oe telierny’ TR PRN gen Br : He Hu puja Brs no uu ; This stock, however, will have| While stipulating that 49 per cent | van T .s 3 a : : : " vo ; 5 , _|ce0d ana chotce— Gen 5.8 % | werren Br. lit oi its 18 LOCAL PRODUCE only limited voting power and the of the stock must always be held ‘" EW a RK, une . P)— 00, pounds down veess [email protected]) SER 20 's| Warren Br pf . ls 24% 24° 5 i Hiettathorsd: UI capital may be increased or de-|by the three French companies, the @ nations paper cup and con- 500 nds down [email protected] Gen T / HE Ly eavy bree ens, full-feathere Ti%e, tainer industry currently is operat-| <yEEp AND LAMBS (314) |Sihe Ses sat 4% st ii LOCAL ISSUES “rollers, 3 Ib and over: colored. 20 i d i - q . re) Glidden white and barred rock, 2le; cocks, llc. ne Sou a oa: with Evis shotes L183 . SERIAR). CHOLEHIONE. IIe by 169%) peSbringers, 3 Ibs. and oer: colored, 22c; } i Y A T al| barre white roc abou per cent of its production Geod and choice ; 00] Good i ET init of National Association of Secunities| All No. 2 poultry 3 cents less. going to the armed forces or to the Commen and 4. 5.00 Goonies, pf... J > 4| Dealer Stocks Bid Eggs—Current receipts, 54 lbs. and up, war industries to protect the health! Shorn Lambs Goth Hos p ; * % | Good and choice i . . Belt RR Stk Yds €OM «eeeeses 51 Graded Eggs—Grade A, large, 30c: grade of workers, a survey by the Cup and | Medium and good | Graham_Paige : Be ei vos Pd «oreuu BY A “medium, 29c; grade A small, 26¢. no Container Institute disclosed today. Closely sort ted Spring Lambs & Norn pt Bohbse pean 3th, pfd "lil . 43 grade, Je. 1, 39@39%ec: No. 2, 37%@ op rcle eater com .... J h d er 3 38c; butterfat, No. 1, 35¢; No. 2, 32¢. 2 ost and goed ..... “assne Co. hour shifts and most of them have] had to acquire additional space, the survey showed.

EXCHANGE HEAD RESIGNS

CLEVELAND, June 13 (U. P).— : H Ri. The president of the Cleveland Househa ou

ARSENAL DIVIDEND Stock Exchange, David S. Skall, will |ijud & Man Bt Hud Bay M&

Arsenal Building and Loan asso-|enter officer training school next|gudson Motor. ciation has declared its semi-annual{week at Miami Beach, it was andividend, at the rate of 32 per cent{nounced today. He has resigned | II! Central _.... 53% per year, Leyes July 1. the presidency of the exchange. &

DAR NNN NNN NN ATR Only A FEW MILES TO MICHIGAN “Vacation Land” Jones & Lgh... s 51. +. | medium, 1061450; culls, ‘$8 down; fat d Tel 4%s 61 an ewes, $6 d

\ 08 ' n NN ta Keep fit! Enjoy the unique variety of Michigan’s vacation Im r i" ol Fin 58 50 veoss OT 0 I ® Tsine ‘55.103 06 ] iy; 2 220- 240 os

Pub Progress Laundr HA Pub Serv of nds

Dated July 1, 1942

springers, $15.75 and better; common and

' The Indiana Trust Company, Indianapolis, Indiana, Trustee

attractions—Great Lakes beaches, thousands of inland lakes, N\\ | Kan C Sou .. , quiet camp sites, resorts, and ideal facilities for all types of \\ Kayser Jul .... 8% > so. T&T Ft Wayne bs 43...103 1-20 land and water sports: Air-conditioned climate. SAVE Kennecott ..... : Ind A Yas 70... 103 26 YOUR TIRES! Regularly scheduled air, bus, rzil or A transportation will bring you to Michigan economically, 313.70 331 quickly and comfortably. oy NoNaL : i tgs 49... 97" 0d R * a "$13.25; stags. $11.50; calyes, igg 8 8 Tres (NOE 8 .50; Ss 5 “yearlings, $10.50@

FAMOUS IRISH HILLS

The famous Irish Hills in Lenawee County, Michigan, are known as Lone Star Ce America’s “Little Bit 0’ Heaven.” Closely resembling old Erin with its \ | Lieose Ww Bis, reen, rolling hills it is largely populated by Doble of Irish descent. \ j Lorillard ated on route U.S. 112, this is one of the typically beautiful sections | of Southeastern Michigan.

Security: These bonds are secured by a first mortgage on certain real estate, machinery, equipment and personal property located in the City of Lebanon, Indiana, and by the assignment of certain life insurance policies. These bonds are convertible into fhe $1 par value common stock of the company at the rate of 80 sHares of such stock for each $1,000 principal amount of bonds.

Price: 100% and Accrued Interest

The above is merely a brief outline of certain information contained in the offering circular, which circular sets forth important information not outlined or indicated herein, and should be read prior to any purchase of these bonds. Copies of the circular may be obtained from the undersigned.

Laclede G .....

arb Loekna Atreratt 1

1 4%s 5 Richmond Water Works 55 57. 1%, Trac Term Corp 5s *Ex-Dividend.

U. S. STATEMENT promi yA

TON, June 19 (U. P.).—Gova expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Tone 17 compared with a year ago:

Expenses. $30,910.141.160.67 $12,159. 153. 805 66 easily you can become a 66,81 Receit { . 10.178 38 :381.343.9 03 home Cv a di1143. : , rect - reduction mortgage Work Bai ‘ 080. 8 ) ; plan oo calls for rent- he ub Debt 74 monthly payments, an Gold Res. 22720.462,331.43 brings you to free-and-clear Cua TArOLIS CLE: CLEARING HOUSE home ownership YEARS rh 8 3,113,000 SOONER. No charge for SAFE DEPOSIT

«2 14,150 AR : mortgage applications. To it BOXES

Buy U. S. War Savings Bonds Here TRUST SCOMPANY 128 EAST MARKET STREET ab ITE IRIEL

19 EA ST JAARRET STREEr

\ arehall * artin (Glenn) 183; t 22%;

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NEW SOUTHEASTERN *MICHIGAN-

VACATION BOOK Send 4c postage now for Nash

this beautiful newgillustrat- | Not Auto Fis of ed book about Michigan. [Nat Biscuit WRITE DEPT. Not Sane: N 18 Nat Dairy on Nat Distiliers ECS MICHIGAN

A AND CESS ER ASSOCIATION

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City Secorrries CORPORATION

Incorporated 1924

INDIANAPOLIS

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417 CIRCLE TOWER LI ncoln 5535

June 16, 1942

Send Nog

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