Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 November 1942 — Page 18

{figures in the steel industry, a frequent writer on economic subjects,| yew vORK. Nov. 8 (U. B)—

and a Middletown civic leader. {pun & Bradstreet’s daily weighted Mr. Verity saw Armco grow into|price index of 30 basic commodi~ one of the 10 largest steel indus-|ties, compiled for United Press tries. He was elected president of| (1930-32 average equals 100):

the company at the organization Josterday Sereveaviiniaiiing 15069 meeting in 1899. g 00000 ONIOGIORIOOIPRLILOEDS

Month Ago. Gece ececsssnnree 160.44 He frequently was referred 10 as year Ago .........iveee.ee.. 144.91 the “dean of living steel makers.”/1942 High (Oct. 1) ......... 161.45 He had sponsored many industrial] 1942 Low (Jan. 2) .......... 151.54 relations policies in the industry, rrr had been gravely ill at his home|such as the eight-hour day, group| National Fireproofing Corp. nine life insurance and mutual benefit| months ended Sept. 30 net Joss $64,«

since. He was one of the gui sanding organizations. 591 vs. net loss $15,471 last year.

DAILY PRICE INDEX

South Wonders If Industrialization by GEORGE VERITY DIES; War Will Mean Agricultural Revolution "HEADED STEEL FIRM

. MIDDLETOWN, O., Nov. 6 (U. P.). — George Matthew Verity, founder and chairman of the board of the American Rolling Mill Co., died today. He was 77 years old. Mr. Verity: was stricken with a heart ailment Wednesday night and

USINESS

Chamber of Commerce Helping Road Salesmen to Pool Rides

-By ROGER BUDROW

THE LATEST IDEA TO SPRING FROM gasoline rationing is for salesmen on the road te share their cars with other salesmen making the rounds of Indiana cities and + towns. The plan is being sponsored by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. Questionnaires and letters have been sent to wholesale and manufacturing concerns here which

-have road salesmen. — They are asked if they would be 2 ORKER PRICE S The cycle’s starting gun exploded at Pearl Harbor. It set off an eco-

interested in exchanging rides with other salesmen covering about the Receipts Bulge to 12,000; nomic race which gains momentum Schedule Top Falls

same territory and spending about the same amount with every turn of a war plant lathe. Men, and many of the To $14.40. Hog prices turned 5 to 10 cents

Workers Are Drifting From Cotton Fields Into New Factories.

5 —

Times Special

MONTGOMERY, Ala. Nov, 6.— In the deep south, war industry’s whirring wheels hum a song of revolt against king cotton. And many of his farmer courtiers like its lilt. Government officials consider its current stage an unhealthy situation, but despite all organized efforts to remedy it, many observers see king cotton’s realm gripped in a cycle that history may call “the agricultural revolution.”

OPEN EVERY MONDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT UNTIL 9 O'CLOCK

VALUES IN COVERT MATCHED UNIFORMS

might be able to do such pooling. When replies are in, a master list will be drawn up

of time with customers. So far 65 or so have replied they women, too, are leaving farms for war plants. Their magnet: More cash money in a month than they handled in a year before Jap bombs

A former city man and a former farmer frame a view of hundreds

" ‘out the arrangement between them.

t “decided to see if it might not go

giving the name of the salesman, firm, his area and Mr. Budrow the type of merchandise he sells. It will be up to -the saleman to get in touch. with >. someone else on that list and work

A carpet and a furniture sales‘men might be able to get together very well, for example. Or a grocery and a meat salesman. . The idea originated in the East. .One Chamber of Commerce executive saw a newspaper article from Boston refering to the plan and

over here too, inasmuch as gasoline ‘rationing is due soon. . 2 8 = JIMMY DOOLITTLE is being given the credit for getting the aircraft and automobile manufacturers together in the fall of

lower at the Indianapolis stockyards today as receipts bulged to 12,000 head, the agricultural marketing administration reported. Weights from 160 pounds up were a dime below yesterday's prices while lighter weights declined 5 cents. The schedule top was $14. 40 but a few sold at $14.15. Receipts included 600 cattle, 400 calves and 450 sheep.

HOGS (12,000)

140 pounds 160 pounds 180 pounds 200 pounds 220 pounds 240 pounds 270 pounds 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds Medium— 160- 200 pounds Packing Sows

Goad and Choice— 270- 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds

[email protected] [email protected] eres cases... [email protected] vie «eo [email protected] . [email protected] 14.35@ 14.45 [email protected] [email protected] .. [email protected] . [email protected]

240270-

[email protected]

[email protected] 14.35@ 14.40 14.35@ 14.40

. 1940 and working out an arrange- * ment whereby automotive firms | would make bomber parts. Both industries were jealous {and somewhat fearful of the | . other). But George Romney, di- | . rector of the Automotive. Council . for War Production, says, “under the - benign influence of affable Jimmy Doolittle” the two industries got together. It was a tougher

| 430- 500 pounds | Medium—

| Medium and Good—

360- 400 pounds i [email protected]

Good— 400- 450 pounds ..... ereess. [email protected] [email protected]

250- 350 pounds 13.65@ 14.25

Slaaghter Pigs

°

§0- 120 pounds 12.25@ 13.50

CATTLE (600)

Slaughter Cattle & Calves Steers

states Louisiana and Florida. He also has confirming agents in other southern states.

fell on Honolulu. Charles J, Brockway, Mobile county farm agent and a veteran in the Alabama extension service, has attended conferences in many parts of the South. From them he has drawn the conclusion that “unless the government does something, there is not going to be much farming next year.” Brockway from personal observation in the of Alabama, Mississippi,

evidence from farm

Farmers are going to war indus-

try jobs “in droves,” but the migration is not cenfined to tenants. Brockway says it is'a common thing for him to notice “some good old farmer” who has taken a defense job as a gaurd of special policeman, while younger farm workers become welders, painters, chinists . or employees skilled lines.

carpenters, main other

Situation Not Local Brockway has seen farmers at

work in defense plants and a few days later noticed their acreage— abandoned after being planted and worked for one time,

Reports from other states under

is qualified to speak -

scores of men whom war industry's

power resources and manpower have led to the location of defense ‘plants in practically. every section below the Mason-Dixon line. These plants have drawn workers from hundreds of miles away. A typical example is: the Ingalls shipbuilding plant, at Pascagoula, Miss., a sleepy town which three years ago had a population of about: 5000, but now has mushroomed to more than 15,000. Ingalls officials will tell anyone who asks that a great majority of their men come from the farms of Mississippi and that most of them never saw a ship until comparatively recent days. Defense plants det northern Alabama and Tennessee and these plants are manned, to a great extent, by men from the farms. Hundreds of miles away are two big shipyards in Mobile, Ala., which had a population of less than 80,000 when the 1940 census was taken. Mobile's rationing boards have issued almost 210,000 sugar cards, and most of that population increase came from neighboring Mississippi, Florida and other parts of Alabama.

wages lured from the south’s farms.

a bale for 1500 pounds of seed cot-

lint when ginned. Farmers must combat this grow-

of transportation to gins, the necessity of picking their own cotton in time needed for other vital farm chores. In addition, the war has

time in history, of the 23-year-old

rexportng Mobile Cotton exchange.

Although farm officials say that the United States and its allies can consume all products which farms can grow with adequate labor, in some sections of the South farmers declare it is useless for them to plant when they do not believe they will be able to harvest.

See Shortage Prolonged

Observers fear that the effects of the labor shortage may be prolonged. The southern ruralist has learned that there is more money in’ the big plants which they believe will be busy for years after the war, catching up on delayed manu-

ton converted into 500 pounds of =

of workers pouring out from a southern munitions plant—among them =

ing .and picking expense, scarcity =

cut off a large part of the market |§ for Southern farm products, as evi- (= denced by the closing, for the first|=

® Sanforized-Shrunk

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Finest 91/5 - oz. covert pants . .. strongly sewed and reinforced. "Sturdy Oak" heavyweight covert shirt, tailored like a shirt! Both are Sanforized-shrunk (maxi-

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a

Bs RE ARF

Labor Shortage Critical

The war-powered agricultural revolution has dealt the southern farmer one terrific clip. This is the labor shortage. It costs the average grower around $2 per 100 pounds to have his cotton picked the South’s mild climate, electricl—meaning. a picking expense of $30

SEPTEMBER INCOME | N. Y. Stocks TOPPED 10 BILLION... ....

Allied Che ve ’ - a WASHINGTON, Nov. 68 (U, P.).— anon on Income payments to Americans exceeded $10,000,000,000 for the first

Am Am Am month in history during September when volume rose 11 per cent above August and 18 per cent over the year-ago level, the U. S. department of commerce said today. September income payments totaled $10,128,000,000, lifting the annual income rate to the record thigh of $116,200,000,000. August payments were '$9,157,000,000 and the September, 1941, amount was $8,280,000,000. “While much of the September increase. was attributed to seasonal factors, such as large disbursements of dividends and interest and heavy farm marketings, the pattern of income flow during the month, as in the other months of this year, reflected the continuing transition of the nation's economy to a total war

.mum shrinkage 19). Forest Green, Oxford Gray. Shirts, 14/, to I7. Pants, waists 30 to 44; inseams, 29 to 34,

facture of products for civilian|8 needs. And farm officials believe, |= too, that many of the men who|= left the rural districts for the armed |= forces will want a fling at industrial |S jobs when the war is over; and that |S one of the big problems will be to get them back to the farms.

GRAIN FUTURES RISE ON BOARD OF TRADE

' CHICAGO, Nov. 6 (U. Py—| ‘| Grain and soybean futures strength- | ened on the Board of Trade today. ° Soybeans, virtually inactive for -some time, gained 1% cents a bushel.

At the end of the first hour,! ¢|wheat moved up ’% to 3 cent a 7. | bushel, corn up. % to 3, oats us i 5 and rye up 5% to 7. Traders evidenced small interest in the wheat market opening, but this grain firmed under commission house buying.

LOCAL ISSUES

Nominkl quotations furnished by local unit of National Association of Securities Dealers. Bid Aken Agents Fin. Corp com. Agents Fin corn oid . Belt RR Stk Yi Belt RR Stk pA % ‘1d. Bobbs-Merrill

the farm security administration’s regional office here give proof that the situation is not localized, but is, in fact, general, varying only in the distance a farm area is located from a defense plant. And it is no military secret that

and greater job than bombing ‘Tokyo, he adds. : : 2 8 = « ODDS AND ENDS: Five tons of ‘rail transportation (moving ore, ‘coke, coal, limestone and scrap) are ‘needed for every ton of steel manufactured and transported as a finished product. . . Government ‘war damage insurance now covers ‘property’ losses caused by armed :forces- on patrol in the air, sea or «Jand. . . . Apricot pits, prune ker‘nels and peach stones are being tested as substitutes for imported fats and oils, . . . The public buys more turkeys for Christmas than for Thanksgiving. There is talk that fuel oil for the 17 east‘ern states, now cut ene-third from last year’s consumption, may be! .sliced to 50 per cent because supplies are running behind. . . . A “canvas container that could haul .o0il in ordinary box cars to relieve the tankcar shortage is being tested by Santa Fe railroad.

- BIGGEST GOLD FIRM OMITS ITS DIVIDEND

~~ SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 5 (U. P.). —Directors of the Homestake Mining Co. have failed to declare the! cusual monthly dividend of 37!

pounds $15.50@ 16.75 pounds ...... resuaes [email protected] pounds [email protected] pounds .. .. [email protected]

SER ay ATE

... [email protected] eer.. [email protected] [email protected]

1300-1500 .'[email protected]%

Medium— 700-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds Common— 700-1100

A A RS oe

12.00@ 14.50 [email protected] v

pounds [email protected]

Heifers Net

Last Change —3-32

Choice— 600- 800 800-1000 Good— 600- 800 pounds ... 800-1000 pounds Medinm— ~ 500- Sn pounds ...... cesar. 11.00@ Comm 500- 900 | pounds

Cows (all weights)

High 7-16

pounds pounds ........ veers

14.75@ 15.50 [email protected]

Men’s Upjgp. Made

“HERCULES ’

OVERALLS or JACKETS I 79

Den nim, Sant or-

139

veo. [email protected] T [email protected] T

13.50 £, Am T Amr Am Anaconda Armour Ill .... Atchison Atl Refining ... Balt & Ohio... Bendix Ayn ...., Beth Steel Borden Borg-Warner. ., Bdgpt Brass ... Ches & OQ pf.. Ch ysler Comwlth & So.. Cons Edison ... Cons Oil Corn Prod Curtiss-Wr ... Douglas Airc.... Dow Poem ce... 124 Du Pont ...... 1301, East Fak ..138 Elec Auto- L veo 2993 Gen Electric... 30 Gen Foods .... g Gen Motors... Goodrich Goodyear

9.50@ 11.00

10.50@ 12.00 [email protected] 7.50@ 9.75 5.75@ 1.50

Bulls (all weights) (Yearlings Excluded)

veneraraeeay eresaea.e. [email protected]

Beef— Good Sausage— Good fant weights) Mediu Cutter nd common ....

CALVES (400)

Vealers (all weights) Good and choice ............. [email protected] Common and medium [email protected] Cull (75 lbs. up) [email protected]

Feeder & Stocker Cattle & Calves . Steers

Choice— 500- 800 pounds .. 800-1050 pounds Good— 500- 800 800-1050

11.256 12.00 [email protected] 7 [email protected]

Fine 9% oz sre shri

Toe > »

«+ [email protected] ees [email protected]

» ®

>

RE

pounds .... 11.00% 12.00

pounds 11.00(@ 12.00 |

cents a share on the stock, break-' Medtiupm |

“ing an annual dividend rate of $4.50 -per share which had been maintained since 1938, it was announced “today. Homestake Mining is the largest ‘gold producer in the United States ‘and the omission of the -dividend reflected the recent action of the war production board in ordering ‘all large gold nlines to close down to free miners for work in mines producing vitally needed copper. + E. H. Clark, president, told stock- - holders in a letter dated Oct. 10 that the company would comply with -the WPB’s order, and that as a re‘sult directors would have to great- | ‘ly reduce or discontinue dividends on the outstanding stock. He added that future dividends would be de-

, termined or omitted after careful

‘study of shutdown costs. .. The company’s mining plant, Mr. Clark" said, will be maintained in “its present condition so that operations may be resumed whenever it becomes possible.

(GOST ACCOUNTANTS T0 MEET TONIGHT

A special meeting will be held by “the Indianapolis chapter, National _ Association of Cost Accountants, at “the Lincoln hotel at 6:30 tonight. . William Blackie, controller of the «Caterpillar Co. of Peoria, Ill, will

£

3 ‘speak on “War and Accounting.”

. J. H. Frohlich of the Indianapolis] 'WPB office will outline the type_writer procurement program, dis‘cussing ways of freeing: at least 25

—-per cent of all typewriters for mil“itary and government use.

AWARD BURNS CITY JOB

CHICAGO, Nov. 6 (U. P.).—Fed-]

eral Public Housing Director Orvil . Olmsted today awarded to the *Curry’ Construction Co. of Bloom“ington, Ind., a $119,975 contract for “construction of an administration «and commercial building. at Burns City, Ind. The work must be com‘pleted in 60 calendar days.

STONE HEADS FOLLANSBEE . PITTSBURGH, Nov. 6 (U. P.).— The appointment of Lauson Stone, former vice president of Jones & : Laughlin: Steel Corp., as president .0f Follansbee Steel Corp., was announced today. -Stone succeeds W. ’T. Brownscombe, who resigned from ‘the Follansbee - because

{ i

| classes, 50 cents higher than week ago; j Strong weight cutters, $8.75; canners, $6. 50

0- 900 pounds ........ Calves (steers)

Good and Choice— 500 pounds down ...........

9.00@ 10. 00

. [email protected] Medium— 500 pounds down Calves (heifers)

Good and. Choice— 500 pounds Sova

Medium 500 pounds ao [email protected] SHEEP AND LAMBS (450)

Ewes (shorn) Good and choige

12.75@ 14.50

Good and choice

: . 14.50@14. Medium and Good i Ll

[email protected] [email protected] Yearling Wethers Good and choice

11.75@12. Medium [email protected]

[email protected]

CHICAGO LI LIVESTOCK

Hoge—Receipls, 10,000; weights over 200 lbs, 10 to 15 ve lower: lighter weights scarce, stead ood and choice 200-300 lbs., $14. Soli. 55: top, $14.60 sparingly: few good and cholce 18, -180 1lbs., $13.90 @14; sows around ents lower; good to choice 300-500 ths. Wr [email protected]; a few, $14.60; trade moderately active at_ the decline. Cattle—Receipts, 1500; calves, 400. Geuerally steady; fairly active: no good and choice steers; steer confined :o few loads medium to good grade, $12. 50@14; short load, $15.35; cows and grass heifers predominated in run in all grades both

7.25; 2 loads of Mo ntana d grade phi, cows scaling 1150 Ibs., $12.25; practical top weighty sausage bulls, $12 50: all interests buying light medium- -weight’ offerings at [email protected]; vealers steady at $15.50 down; mostly [email protected]; stock, cattle steady; medium to Sood grade getting better action at $11@12 as vs closed than strictly good and choice kind selling at $12.73@14 and better. Sheep—Receipts, 3000. Late Thursday-Z | Fat lambs mostly 15 ‘to. 25 cents higher; yearlings and ewes strong to 15 cents higher; top and bulk fat native lambs, $12.25: good yearlings, $12. [email protected]; Pag western slaughter ewes, [email protected] 4 doubles, 58-67 Ibs., white faced fodin lambs, fully steady at [email protected]; al slaughter classes, 15 to 25 cents higher; seevral lots trucked- in choice fat native lambs, $14.56: good to choice lot, s$l4@ 14.25; 1 deck choice yearlings with No. 1 pelt, $12.75; 2 double choice vearling ewes .to kiliers, $11.25; Jest choice western. slaughter ewes, $6.25

OTHER LIVESTOCK

CINCINNATI, Nov. 6 (U.. P.).—Hogs— Receipts, 3125; early sales over 160 fos. 10 to 15 cents lower; top, $14.45 paid for good and choice 180-240 1bs.; later sales and general market, 5 cents lower on weights over 160 1bs.: 25, cents lower o sows; 160-180 lbs. and 240-260 1bs., 60-280 Ibs., $14.35; 300-400 Ibs., $14.1 15; medium and good 150-160 1bs., $14.45; good grade sows, [email protected]¢ Cattle—Receipts, 650. Calves—300. Mar~ ket active to 25 cents higher; good steers and heifers, there. Li ; Sore thini p soud to $8.50; edilm baby type .50; shy = and choice baby f type calves, [email protected]; few Shoice feeder calves under 500 1bs., [email protected] common and medium beef cows, $7. Ba 9.75; good cows, [email protected]; cutter cows, $8.50 down: canners, $6.50 down; sausage buls, $11.95; few head, $11.85; common and medium bulls, $9. 50@11; good veal ers steady, out grades weak: good choise: $15@16; ora grades, $1450 ry

.Sheep—Receipts, 2100; steady;

good and choice, $15. 50418.35 clipped

$14.85;

pooled i abs with Nit 30 pelts, i arket, y, 81 d

.37-8—Coconut

‘| board of United States Rubber Co.

paid four dividends of $2.each. The and dividend is payable Dec. 18 to stock-

840 head |

basis,” the department said.

lings increased slightly in September Int Nickel ... to $1,707,000,000 and compared with!'Int T&T ..... | Kennecott ‘Kresge SS

For the! L-O- xr Glass ... 2

$1,412,000,000 in August and $1,286,000,000 in September, 1941. first nine months of 1942 income from farm marketings amounted to $10,122,000,000 compared with $7,464,000,000 during the 1941 period. All groups of farm products recorded sharp gains over 1941,

It you can manufacture any of these materials, contact the war production board, 10th floor, Circle Tower building, Indianapolis. Asterisk indicates plans and specifications are on file there.

BIDS WANTED

ARMY MISCELLANEOUS Invitation Date Bid Number ems Closes Class 52 Fire-Surfooms and heat-in-sulasing material Urgent Class 63—Tableware and ‘Water Cool-

ers rgen Class 10— Agricultural implements _ and materia u

No Class ET paints, and paint in-

"caps, attachment. plu 43-167—Valves, eites

38- ’S_Oleomargarine. Type

X18 Burners for Mercury ‘Vapor Quartz Lamps

1-1247—Housings, thermostat NSD-176—Wheels, yokes, drums-reverse-gear NSD-152— Bearings NSD-157—Covers, Reverse- GoareDram. NSD-151—Adapters, Arms, etc

U. S. RUBBER TO PAY PREFERRED DIVIDEND

NEW YORK, Nov. 5 (U. P.).—The

has declared . a dividend of $4 a share ouf ‘of 1942 earnings on the 8 per cent non-cumulative first preferred stock, the first payment this year. At their March meeting directors deferred action on future preferred dividends. Last year the company

‘holders of record Dec, 4: The company has made no common dividend disbursemen

| Hecker Prod ... | Hudson Motor .

Cash income from farm market-, Indpls Pw & Lt 12%

Mont Ward ... Nash-Kelv .., Nat Biscuit Nat Cash Reg .

t| West - Air Bke..

OV.| Woolworth

ince| ‘“B”

— f

Int Harvester., 533s

299s

Gs ed Sb ARTE STD ERE

a

-

Monsanto

po

DA

. . ae

TEs

Nat Dairy N Y Central ...

GR eee

Pan Am Airwys 21% Paramt Pict ... 173

CELE A rae

++1 Sas a

0 United Aircraft, 29%, Un Gas Imp.. 5 U 8 Rubber ... U 8 steel U 8S Steel pf.. Warner Bros.. West. Union ...

% <1ELh 61a . 28% 15% Westing El ... 97 White Mot .... 1514 eee. 28%2 Yellow Tr 14 Young Sheet. 323,

tA Fb Lr | |

321;

Complete New York stock quotations are carried daily in the final edition of The Times.

LOCAL PRODUCE

Heavy breed hens, full-feathered, 19c; Leghorn hens, 16c. pringers 12 Ibs. and over: colored, 20c; barred and white rock, 21c; cocks, 10c. Roasters, 4 lbs. and over; colored, 20c; 1c.

1 white rock, 21c; barred rocks, 2

All No. 2 pouitry. 3 cen Eggs—Current receipts I'S os. and up,

Graded Eggs—Grade A, large, 39c; grade A, medium, 37c; grade ‘a, small, 25¢; no

grade, 25¢. Butter—No. 1, bo No. 3, 460 4615c; busterfat. No. 1, No. 2, 43c. ( produce rr at In pois Tuoted by Wadley Co.)

OTHER LIVESTOCK _

‘PT. IVa Nov. 6 (U. P.).Steady cents joer; 240-380 bs. | p $14.25; 200-240 1bs., $14.15; 160-200 Ibs $14.05; 280-300 ae $14. B. 1bs., vy 05; 350-400 1 $14; -160 1bs.,: ‘$14: eg 7 130-140 1bs., $13.50;

140-150 pi TL tags, $12; le hogs, stags, ma y lambs, - $13 3%

$9.75 8 own calves, $16; ewes, $5.25 down.

net income. $1 pet onl to: $1.66

com Bobbs-Merrill 429, pf Comwlth Loan Be pid Hook Drug Co com .. Home T&T Ft Jyayne. 9% Ind Asso Tél 5% ;

pid bt P 95

Indpls RIWySs Inc. COM.,..... Indpls Water 9% pfd Indpls Water Class A com... Lincoln Loan Co 5% pfd ... Lincoln Nat Life Ins com. N. Ind Pub Serv 5% pfd.. ¥ Ind Pub Serv 6% pfd N Ind Pub Serv. 7% pfd Progress Laundry com Pub Serv of Ind 5% pid Pub Sexv of Ind Inc com Ind G&L pfd

United Tel CO 5%. ....... Van Camp Milk pfd Van Camp Milk com Bonds Algers Wins'w W RR 1%. American Loan 5s 51 . .

eseeas

4} American Loan 5s 46

9 Cent Newspapel 4%s 42-51 .. Ch of Co Co 4's 31. Citizens . Ind Tel 4%s 61 ..103 Consol Fin 6s 60

55 Richmond Water i 5s 57. 8 Trac Term Corp § _ *Ex-dividend.

U.S. STATEMENT

WASHINGTON, Nov. 6 ernment expenses and receipts current fiscal year through Nov. pared with a year ago: This Year Last Ye

for 4 com-

ar

War Sped -21,154,209,613.40 5, 162,953, 790. 4,541,499, 26. 24 Net Def.. 18,654,273,780.72 Cash Bal. 5,101,271.875.58. 2,527,176,325.02 Work. Bal. 4,338, 763,354.54 1, 770,872,668.74 Pub Debt 97,950,031,073.57 61,061, 737, 751.19

Receipts . 4,802,155,938.18

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Slearings : Debits

WAGON WHEAT

to the close of the Chicago market oy. Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $1.24 per bushel for No. 2 red wheat (other grades on thelr Hesitsh No. 3 yellow shelled corn sushel and No. 2 white eS Sora, No. 2 white cats, 46c, and No. :

dian- | oats, 46c.

Incorporations— | Haskett-Foreman pTgansit ©o., Ine Be 317

st, 3 agent, TH askett, Gtiver “ho Bend South shares Yithout par value; Thomas D: kett, ris D. .. Feldman, Walter W, an, - WF LN TriState. Garment 6 st., Evansville; agent. Ist

(U. P.).—Gov- |= the | =

Expenses $23,198,143, Joe. 96 $7,387,742,103. 5 3 2,533,707,065.64 | §

Gold Res. 23, 139, 183,877.93 22, 1181,272, 473.21 | =

og |

Men’s Sanforized-Shrunk Work Shirts swe

Other Jack

Overalls and

els at $1.49 Fd 9 and

Ea. 110

PAPE

Men’s Rockford Work Socks . . . . .

. 6 Pr.For 89

Men's 97-02. Moleskin Work Pants .

Bn . Pr. 249

Men's Whipcord Work Pants

. Pr. 1-98

Lined, Split Buckskin Work Gloves .

a oy

eo... Pr. 98

cushions to keep you

soles.

MEN’S

Shoes that are built with shock-absorbing’

from tiring. Black

elk uppers, Goodyear welt. Choice of raw-cord or. oak-tanned bend Blucher oxfords of black elk, full grained leather, plain toe. Goodyear welt construction. Sizes 6 to 12.

leather

“WEARMASTER” Work Shoes or Oxfords

9d

Sr WE, SW Ei

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BS

E. without ar

a share’ on combined class “A” and}.

mmon. stock. 349 36: