Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 December 1942 — Page 24

“HITS WAR R STRIDE

i Harbor Anniversary ‘Finds Plants Past ‘Tooling Up’ ‘Stage ;and Facing Speeded Production

~~ To Avenge.

Jap Attack.

= By ROGER BUDROW

| ince Pearl Harbor a giant war industry center has| mushroomed in Indianapolis and the corn fields and pastures

that fringe the city. | Conservatively, at least sper here on new factories.

100 million dollars has been Many more have been spent

in: converting already-built factories to war production. It has been a year of hard work, headaches and con-

isis for industry, yet all fealt 2 that the coming year promises only more of the

manpower problem is building up to the critical stage. More wome: are being put on production lines | yut the big influx of women

. into nn wotory work is yet to come.

“Already some munitions contracts here have been canceled and the buildin: of one ordnance plant

halted by the dictates of military

strategy, As the war picture changes, more of this is inevitable.

+ Qperate ‘Hand-to-Mouth’

. Some plants have operated practically on a *“haund-to-mouth” basis regarding supplies. Stricter control over the supplies is a foregone cinclusion. “A’ number of companies have feen forced out of business because material has been diverted from _civilian to war work. The prospect is that more of them will lose out ‘in the coming year. And vet, looking back on what has be: accomplished since that Sunday 3 year ago, there is no reason to halieve that the “impossible” catinot he done. ‘Six lige war plants have been built 2rd put in operation. Of these the Allison airplane engine plant southwest of the city is the largest, costing around 50 million dollars.. It was built in record time. | * Not £21 from it is the big Bridgeport Braids plant where brass shell

'%\ cases aro turned out. So far: 18

rn, dollars has been allocated it. | “On the opposite side of the city 1s. « the hig Lukas-Harold project, costing, roughly, 12 million dollars, to make the famed Norden bombsight. I | the city itself are the new Curtiss-Wright propeller factory, the R. C. A. plant on the east side, and (he E. C. Atkins Fall Creek ordnance plant, where work is being temporarily suspended.

a Goh iracts Total Billion

Since t ne war began an estimated billion d颥ars in contracts has been given thie and other war plants

tim norr:al times the city’s indus-

ies employ some 50,000 persons. such emoloyment is now at the $0,000. Managem-ats of the war plants|M

mick and still going up. Gio

HOG PRICES UP

Top Is $13.75 Locally as 11,000 Porkers Arrive At Stockyards.

Hog prices advanced 10 to 15 cents at- the Indianapolis stockyards today, lifting the top to $13.75, the agricultural marketing administration reported. The 15-cent gain was oi weights above 160 pounds. Receipts included 11,000 hogs, 2200 cattle, 500 calves and 3000 sheep.

HOGS (11,000)

120- 140 pounds 140- 1€0 pounds 160

240-270 pounds .... 270- 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds

330- 360 pounds . [email protected]

Medium— 160- 220 pounds [email protected] Packing Sows Good to Choice— 300 [email protected] [email protected] oo. [email protected] 360-400 i vee [email protected] Good— ’ 400- 450 pounds ... 450- 500 pounas Medium 250- 550 pounds Slaughter Pigs Medium to Good— 90- 120 pounds CATTLE (2200)

Slaughter Cattle & Calves Steers

veeses [email protected] .. [email protected]

[email protected]

[email protected]

Choice— 700- 900 pounds 900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds .... 1300-1500 pounds ....

Good—

16.75 16.75

. 15.50 vesrsies 15.50

. [email protected] vee 143081530 «eo [email protected]

1310-1500 [email protected]

Médium— 700-1100 POUDeE ses 30 Tue pounds

sesscsnencee

esesssees [email protected] [email protected]

tsessesssene

Ci00-1100 pounds . [email protected]

Choice—

600- 800 poun 800-1000 pounds Good600- 800 pounds .... 800-1000 pounds .

Medinm— 500- 900 pounds ... Common — 500- 900 pounds

Cows (all weights)

. 14.50

. 15.50 «ee 14.50

15.50

13.50 13.50

14.50 14.50

. [email protected] [email protected]

ediu voluntarily agreed to stop “pirat-|canner

ing” lab¢r from each other, although nist were desperately in need of riore workers, because the inevitable result was to slow proAuction ai a whole. 5 The wer production board - has grown fre a single office tucked away in the Circle Tower building to the poiit where it occupies the

whole 10t1 floor and other offices|&

scattered taroughout the building. . The office of price administration has taken over the major part of the Murat Temple.

2 © Autoriobile Row Empty

‘There have been business casualtes. “Automobile row” now is a e of | empty buildings or ones ed with 211 kinds of merchandise and a fer cars. The Hilgemeier meat packing plant was squeezed out by price ceilings and converted to cold storage. The Chapman- , Price steel mill was closed down.

Many + suc to store war supplies. ned and professional - men have been |1lled upon by the govapaitny help in the war proa ¢ ie, A. W. S. Herrington, ven flew | (> India at the president's lest. The town has grown usec. to seeing purchasing agents fro foreign countries and young mer from abroad learning how to sei ‘ice on the front war products. m: nufactured here. "Most of | hush nowa: ays. The public isn’t . pérmitted 10 inspect the new industries noi does it hear about improvements, ‘elng made in war pro-| ducts.

‘The “tool 1g up” stage has been passed. Fri a now on it, is work more v rk until industry supthe ar is necessary to avenge | ') 1041. !

DAILY PRICE INDEX ~NEW YO: {K, Dec. 7. (U. P.)— Dun’ ‘& Bra iitreet’s daily weighted |S yrice index 1] compiled foi United Press (1930-32 average equi: Is 100): Saturday ol P0e00cORIRIOORIOONS 162.50 ‘Week Ago « pecscscsscsncene 160.55 th Ago: , §eesssscesresces 160.91 LBB0 +4. fravesirensveres: 14893 High Gohe , 55) “vane esse 162.50 ‘Low (Je. t. 2) sesecsences 151.541

gnAL y G STORY CHRISTMAS

slaces were turned into}

good he real work is hush-| aro

80 basic commodities, | No.

Bulls (all weights) (Yearlings Excluded)

+. [email protected] Sausage— Good Gu weights). . . [email protected] Medium ................ «eo. [email protected] Medlin and common [email protected]

CALVES (500)

Vealers (all weights) Good and choice .0

Cull (75 lbs. up) Feeder & Stocker Cattle & Calves Steers

Choice— 500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds Good— 500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds Medium— 500-1000 pounds Common— 500- 900. pounds Calves (steers) Good and Choice— 500 pounds di Medium 500 pounds down Calves (heifers) Goo and Fung

seseesnssens [email protected] [email protected]

sses00300ee

sssesssssess [email protected] «. [email protected]

[email protected] [email protected]

[email protected] [email protected]

“Seco ann

[email protected] [email protected]

SHEEP AND LAMBS (3000)

Ewes (shorn) Sood and choice ommon and choice Lambs Good and choice Medium and good Comm: [email protected] Yearling Wethers Good [email protected]

nd choice f ; Medi [email protected]

CHICAGO LIVESTOCK

Hogs—Receipts, 19,000; active, 10 to 15 cents higher than Fridey’s aeviage on all Nolants and sows; $004 and Soles 200-300 1bs., '[email protected]; top, $18.70; 160-180 1bs., eligible 200300 1b, sows,

3 uD Ives, 1700; choice fed .steers and yearlings strong; all other grades slow, steady; all buying JHtorests worked very cautiously resisting higher asking prices because cof sharply uced receipts; bulk steers, $13.25@16; rh top, $1 .50 on weighty steers, .and $16.40 on light yearlings; choice to prime weighty steers held above $17; Bt steady to strong, best $15.50; buik, $12 @14; cows weak, supply Lal Se larger; cutters $9 down; most beef cows, $9. @12; bulls steady at $12.50 down: vealers unchanged, [email protected]; stock cattle steady; medium to good grades still popular , at [email protected]; mostly $15.50 down on choice western calves. Sheep—9000; fat lambs opening steady; several loads and lots fed westerns an native lambs, [email protected]; but strictly good and choice kind .held higher or above ye hy Fr to choice clipped lambs, @15.25; a few sumnyer oy oy is: n loads ood. to choice handvweight yearlings, $14.50; good ewes, common to bedium kind, $6

[email protected] [email protected]

WAGON WHEAT

Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $1.28 pér bushel for No. 2 red wheat (other grades on their merits. No. 2 whit® oats, 46c, and No. 2 red oats,

46¢c; No. 3 yellow corn, 78c per bushel and Wo. 3 white corn, 98c¢. pe

Chapter 13—Santa

VOU CAN TELL OUR

Sr. nen

10 T0 15 GENTS|

00 lower with the top $14 for 8

Paul V. McNutt

tor.

_ dency.

Mr. (Wickard’s climb to prominence has been even faster. county, near Camden, to go to the Indiana senate. He resigned shortly to go to Washington in the agriculture department, became secretary of agriculture when Henry Wallace stepped up to the vice presi-

Claude R. Wickard

Two Hoosiers, appointed by President Roosevelt during the week-end, will direct two of the most important posts of wartime government. Paul V. McNutt was named chief of manpower and Claude R. Wickard was named food administrator. Mr. McNutt s formerly school, governor of Indiana, high commissioner to on and recently federal security adminis-

dean of Indiana university’s law

Ten years ago he left his farm in Carroll

IMORE RATIONING| SEEN NEXT YEAR =

| Point System Predicted by|A= =

Begun fo

By PAUL V. McNUTT Chairman, U. 8S. War Manpower Commission WASHINGTON, Dec. 7.—Never in any previous war has the nation approached the bottom of the manpower barrel. Never, therefore, has it been necessary to develop a plan for making use of every hour of every worker’s. time. The figures which tell the story of American manpower are impressive. When the Japs struck at Pearl Harbor there were barely seven million persons in war industries. Since then more than ten million

75| have been added, bringing the total]:

to 17,500,000. At the same time more than 4,500,000 men have been brought into the military forces. The number in civilian industry has dropped steadily. Needs to Increase

This has meant dislocation. Many communities have felt the pinch. But the manpower shoe has hardly begun to pinch. What we have done so far has been the easiest part of the job. , For example: In this last year we have absorbed about 1,400,000 of the unemployed.: About 300,000 persons who were self-employed. We have taken about 1,400, 000 from the farms. To obtain the workers we will need in coming months we will have no pool of unemployed to draw on and it would be most unwise to draw increasing. numbers from the farms. Where, then, will we get the additional millions we will need for war industries and for the military forces? * The answers as worked out by the war manpower commission must be adapted to the conditions of each} community. But if the employers and workers of each community will use the war manpower commission’s U. S. employment service and its industrial training facilities the problem can be solved.

OTHER LIVESTOCK

CINNAT1, Dec. 7 (U. P. 8s, 5475; active; weights Ver 5550 higher than Saturday and late ; light weights and sows steady; Monday's top, $13.70 for good and Saas 160-300 lbs. weights; 300-40 0 1bs., $13.55; medium and good, 150-160 1bs., $13; good grade sows, $12.25 3@12 -Receipts, 175; calves, receipts, 400; butcher heifers closed little more active than early Mond if but § Setierally abc 25¢ - good choice lot; several lots medium to i Retters, [email protected]; steers generally steady, supply limited; good steers in low lots absent; odd bunches, $13.50@14; most common and medium steers, $10.50@13. a5 cows and bulls, steady; top bulls, $12.5 most common and medium cows, sais 10.50; canners and cutters, $6@$9; vealers steady, top $16; very few on sale, Sheep—Receipts, ’300: fat Tobe fully steady; goca kinds, $15@16; choice lambs absent, but believed salable higher; {fat slaughter ewes, $5.50 do 50 down.

FT. WAYNE, Dec. 7 (U. P.).—Hogs— 10 cents HES of 160-200 1bs., $13.55; 240 Re -300 1bsl, $13.35; 300$13. 25; 50-160 1bs., $13.35; 140150 eu $13.10; 130-140 1bs., $12.85; 100130 1bs., $12.60. $13; stags, $11.25; male hi

Roughs, $9.50 down; calves, $16; lambs, $15. 5: ewes, $6 down.

VACUUM CLEANERS RELEASED FOR SALE

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 (U. P.)— The war production board today released for sale to the general public

) o—

00-

d|40,000 domestic vacuum cleaners,

frozen in the hands of manufacturers and private brand sellers since Ct. 24. The cleaners are in addition to those released from stocks of retailers and wholesale distributors on Nov. 21. Approximately 145,000 domestic vacuum cleaners remain frozen as a reserve for requirements of the army, navy and other governnient, agencies. ;

Is Homeward Bound

'Manpower Shoe Has Hardly

Pinch’'=M'Nutt

Among the actions which must be taken are (a) the use of more than 3,500,000 additional women; (b) the breakdown of discrimination against Negroes, the aged, the handicapped, and other minority groups; (c) the transfer of workers, especially skilled workers, from civilian “industry to war industry. These will actually add workers to the labor force. In Baltimore, Buffalo, Akron, San Diego, and other communities area war manpower committees, representative of management and labor, are obtaining these results through voluntary action. To keep needed miners on their jobs and needed workers on dairy and livestock farms employment stabilization plans have been developed, Voluntary agreements have checked pirating in some degree. But by legislation or by stretching executive war powers to the utmost, action’ must be taken which will insure enough workers in the right jobs on time.

GRAIN PRICES RISE

ON BOARD OF TRADE =

CHICAGO, Dec. 7 (U. P.).—Grain futures firmed on the board of trade today in small volume trade pending developments from Washington on the revised parity measure. "Wheat was up % to. % cent a bushel in early dealings from Saturday’s close or $1.273:@1.27'%. corn

Lup 1 to 3% from the previous 87%,

oats up % to % from the previous 517% and rye up % to 3% from 70@ 70%. Soybeans were inactive. On OPA spokesman said relief for millers from the flour ceiling squeeze will be in effect by Jan. 1.

AXIS STEEL ALLOY SUPPLY THREATENED

NEW YORK, Dec. 7 (U. P.).—The s— | heavy united nations’ bombing attacks on axis plants and transportation facilities in Europe appear to be interfering seriously with the enemy’s supply of alloy materials needed to make precision alloy steels of modern warfare, the American Iron & Steel institute said today. Although the axis plants probably can obtain adequate tonnages of iron ore and coal for their operations, a recent study indicates “that Germany has available in continental Europe only about onethird of the manganese, less than half of the chromium and a mere 10 per cent of the nickel needed to keep pace with the United States in producing alloy steels, ” the institute asserted. For the balance of its needs, the institute said, Germany must import the alloy materials from deposits which fall “within a 1000-mile bombing range of London, Moscow, or Alexandria.”

WLB CHARGES WARD DELAYS SIGNING

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 (U. P.).— Sewell Avery, president of Montgomery Ward & Co. has heen requested by the national war labor board to appear here Dec. 7 to sign a contract with the union representing employees of the company. The NLRB order was contained in a telegram sent to Mr. Avery last night and which charged Montgomery Ward & Co. of delaying

signing of the union contract,

—By Hal Cochran

LABOR SHORTAGE AREAS INCREASE

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 (U. P.).— War Manpower Chief Paul V. McNutt today issued a revised list of 270 industrial areas where labor shortages or surpluses exist. An original ist of 227 areas was issued on Oct. 20 as a guide for awarding - war contracts to communities that best could handle them with the available labor supply. . The list now includes all cities with populations of 50,000 or more and smaller cities where 5000 or more workers must be added to the local labor force to meet peak production demands. In the new list Gary and Terre Haute were among the areas where a labor shortage now exists. Connersville was removed from the list of cities where labor. shortages are anticipated but Indianapolis, Ft. Wayne and Richmond were left on. Kokomo and Lafayette were removed from the list of areas where labor surpluses are expected but Muncie was continued on that list.

LOCAL PRODUCE

Heavy breed hens, full-feathered, 19¢; Leghorn hens, 16c. Springers 1% lbs. and cver: colored, 20c; barred and white rock, 2ic; cocks, 10c. Roasters, 4 ibs. and over; colored, 20c; white rock, Sie barred Jacks, He All No. 2 poultry y, 3 cents less Eggs—Current receipts 54 lbs. "and up,

, Graded Eggs—Grade A, large, 39c; grade A, Medium, 37c; grade A, small, 5c; ro

gigas, 5c. So —No. 1, i No. 2, 460 4600, butterfat, No. 1, 46c; No. 43c (Prices on produce delivered at Indien. apolis quoted by Wadley Co.)

FUNNY BUSINESS

’ mais, or oe tg “w . ied 200 V0 00 ' iv, . tay oo V0...

~~

” iti anes Wray 0 , 16

“It’s his first

Henderson; Articles to Be Standardized.

By LEON HENDERSON Director, Office of Price Administration

civilians, the first year of the war has outlined clearly the part which we at home must play to help win. Everyone would like to know what

bring, and while we are in the of-

stacked away in our files, the shape of things to come for civilians might be outlined something like this: You may look for more rationing in 1943. I do not merely mean an

to an increasing number of articles. I mean new rationing techniques, such as a system of point rationing which will be applied to meats when meat rationing starts this winter.

Cost to Be Reduced

You may look for more simplification and standardization of the things you can buy. There are iwo

simplification. First, they will allow you to get the maximum number of articles from a limited supply of materials and labor. Second, they reduce the actual costs of manufacture and the costs of the finished products to ycu. We already have some “Victory” models—bicycles, for example. But there may be Victory models in women’s stockings or in food. Despite everything business can do to reduce costs of operation, they will rise in some instances. Wherever it is humanly possible, those costs must be absorbed by industry. At the moment, industry is making sufficient profits to permit that absorption in a great many cases.

Federal Action Needed

Ih cases where the “squeeze” of increased costs is so great as to hinder production of the things you must have to maintain life, the government must do one of three things: First, it can permit ceiling prices

out our industrial structure. Second, it can simply turn its back and allow the industry to go out of business. Third, it can assist industry— as the government is now doing —to hold down costs by standardization and simplification, or it can subsidize.

U. S. STATEMENT

YA RING TON Dec. 7 1: P.) .—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Cc. > compared with a yea SE:

This .$29, 5 561, 555. 10 § 03 341, 030. 068. 83 6,729,837,867.57 3,098,776,6217.23 6,187,604,471.30 2,216,840,9170.68 -1,459,448,017.78 61,514,801,186.68 22,770,699,651.01

Expen. War Spd. 27,172,357,401.36 .. 5.327,944,912.94

Pub. Dbt.103.413,897,410.57 Gold Res 22,7943,167,720.29

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE

Clearings $ 4,026,000 Debit; 11,917,000

A072, 08, Wi, BY NI

jump.”

THIS CURIOUS WORLD

THE STEM JAMMED THROUGH THE SPOKES AND LOCKED THE FRONT WHEEL.

By William Ferguson

WASHINGTON, Dec. 17. — For|

fice of price administration have no| IndplsP&Lt crystal ball nor any secret plans nt Nickel

extension of our present methods pax

basic reasons for standardizing the|Swift & Co

N. Y. Stocks

High Allegh Corp .... 3.32 a 25% Am” ox

Low Last change 9-32 3a ee 24%

72%

ig 178

12834

4 ;

Tan 5%

A

Atl Refining . Balt & Ohio.... 3V Bendix Avn 84 Beth Bisel vouve AR

the second year of the war wil Goodyear

T&T Kaufmann pf.. Kinney Nash-Kelv .... Nat Sisemt oe at Cash Reg.. Nat Dairy .... NY Central ... } 1

RR ° 22 Philips Pet se Procter & G... 4 Pullma

SHLIELL +1

Rand Republi St... Sears Rosbuck erve ol jocony- Vacauin. uth Pac

[+1 1+:

Tenn Corp . United Aircraft “es 4 Un Gas Imp pI 102%. 10; Warner Bros . 7 ... 35% oo 14% wine 8

13% 29% 12%, . 29% . 171%

Woolworth ... Yellow Tr Youn, Rad .

+ Zenit T

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

LOCAL ISSUES

Nominal quotations furnished by local fn, of National Association of Securities alers d

om Belt RR Stk Yds 6% pid Bobbs-Merrill com .......... oe Bobbs-Merrill a pid. Circle Theater co Comwlth Leda ox pid...... Hook Drug, Go 12Y, Home T&T Ft Wayne 7% pid. 51 Ind Asso Tel 5% p 95 In h 7%

to rise and spiral upward through- In

Indpls Water *Indpls Water Folase A com.. Lincol Lincol N Ind Pub Serv 5% % N Ind Pub Serv 6% pid. N Ind Pub Serv 1% pfd.. Pavgtess Laundry com. Pub Serv of Ind 5% pld’. Pub 8erv of Ind com. be So Ind G&L 4.8 pid. Cassar dora. BY United Tel Co 5%. . Van Camp Milk ptd.. cosh Van Camp Milk com. ..ev0e0e

Bonds

Algers Wins'w W RB 4%%.. American Loan 58 § American Loan 5s 4 Cent Newipape tse 42-5 Ch of Com Bldg Co 428 HI Citizens Ind Tel 4's 61 ... Consol Fin 58 60 Drab). Rede Tor 48 30s me T&T e 6s 43.,

107% 81 % 108% 101 101 i) 109% 101

Ind

Kuhner Packing Co 4%s 49. Morris 5&10 Stores > by Muncie Water Works N Ind Pub Serv 3 N Ind Tel 4's 5s Pub Serv of Ind 4s 69 Pub Tel 46s 56

Richmond Water a 5s 87.. Trac Term Corp § *Ex-dividend.

NOBLITT-SPARKS DIVIDEND

Directors of Noblitt-Sparks Industries, Inc., of Columbus, Ind., today ordered a dividend of 50 cents a share on the capital stock, bringing 1942 payments to $2 a share compared with $3.50 in 1941, The divident is payable Dec. 28 to holders

o|in that rate of increase.” o referred to the gain of 3 per cent in October, 4 per cent in September, .|8 per cent in August, 10 per cent

ARMS wre ‘DISAPPOINTING’

October Plane Production Fell Five Per Cent,

Nelson Reveals. WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 (U, P.).—

35 | War Production Board Chairman

Donald M. Nelson, emphasizing the need of greater production in the second year of war, today reported that arms output in October was “disap g.” Ove production increased only 3 per cent over September, the low« est monthly increase this year, he

*!said. He gave the following box . | score for major categories in Octo~

ber: Airplanes, down 5 per cent; mere

»| chant vessels, down 10 per cent,

although remaining ahead of schedule; ordnance, up 3 per cent; naval

;|and army vessels, up 4 per centj s|other munitions up 9 per cent, | Output of machine tools was a 2 | bright spot, increasing 8.3 per cent =| for a new high.

Nelson’s fifth war production re

*| port emphasized that “we have not

yet reached the point where we can afford so marked a decline He

in July, and 12 per cent in June. Still Exceeds Axis Despite the poor October showe

s| ing, Nelson said American produca | tion currently exceeds that of all

the axis combined. -His estimates show the comparae

* (tive standing of two important wap

weapons as: 1941 1942 Airplanes 14,000 49,000 Merchant Ships. .1,640,000 8,200,000 tons tons

Nelson said that ordnance proe duction probably would be more than six times that of 1941; naval ship production almost three times greater than last year. There are no comparable 1941 figures for them, However, from July 1, 1940 to Dee, 31, 1941 production of tanks and are tillery totaled 4000 pieces, compared with 32,000 in 1942, and in the same period 850 large anti-aircraft guns were turned out compared with 17,000 this year. Nelson held that improper sched uling, over which he recently

largely responsible for the October slump. Nelson retrieved supervisory powers over scheduling last week after a prolonged fight, but under the compromise agreement the armed services will continue to do the scheduling of production.

EMPLOYMENT HITS ANOTHER NEW HIGH

WASHINGTON, Dec. 7 (U. P.).— Secretary of Labor Frances Perking reported today that the number of nonagricultural workers reached a new record during the month ending Oct. 15, totaling 38,555,000. This was an increase of 207,000 over the previous month and 2,500,000 over October, 1941. The greatest gain in employment in the past year was in manufacturing, she said, with civilian government employment increasing by 1,211,000. The largest decline during the year was in trade, where governs ment restrictions and curtailed stocks reduced employment by 391,000 workers, Construction ems ploymnet also detreased by 115,000 and mining by 87,000, she said.

Western Newspaper Union year to June 30 net profit $150,621 vs. $92,« 905 in the preceding year; sales

- |of record Dec. 14.

"USE YOUR CREDIT at VITO SHINES

CLOTHING COMPANY

131 W. Washington St. Directly Opposite Indiana Theater

WHILE THE REST OF

THE TOWN SLEEPS HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE

22d and. Meridian IS OPEN

$8,616,343 vs. $7,876,829,

of Moth HOLES—BURNT r WORN SPOTS

LEON TAILORING CO

235 Mass Ave. Rg sn SAXOPHONE

Instruction 1= 1 INDIANA MUSIC co.

115 E. Ohio St. — FR-1184

a —— a ———— You Save Becausé We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats

16” ‘18° 21° 24

CASE CLOTH ES

215 N. Senate — — to 9

WE Buy Diamonds

HIGHEST aoe PRICES

STANLEY Jewelry Co. Co.

113 W. Wash. Lincoln H

100% FUR FELT HATS 7

Clothing on Credit

SEYMOUR’S

141 W. Washington St.

YOUR HATTER

OPEN MONDAYS AND - FRIDAYS

UNTIL S P. M..

Peardon3,

128 North Pennsylvania : L1-5518

for’ t BUY A fp 4 DEFENSE I Ey

Hise J; a

LOANS THE INDIANA Jus eo.

{i

SAVE on FURS

of QUALITY

RIT, 2440 N. MERIDIAN

TIRE LIFE EXTENSION

GOODYEAR

~ Service Store Delaware at Walnut RI-1436

aul Bf 1 (OATS

i i lect

LITA Fin Hi}

clashed with the armed services, was

)

fs