Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 December 1942 — Page 17
BUSINESS
By ROGER BUDROW-
THREE ORE BOATS D
week, They were the last ones to come down from the { Mesabi iron ranges rear Lake Superior. on the Great Lakes two days earlier than last year. But in spite of that more ore has been brought down this year than
ever before.
That is partly due to the fact that the government (office of defense transportation) ordered much coal and grain shipped by rail this summer, releasing space on the ore
boats for iron ore.
As a result the Gary and South|:
Chicago steel mills have the great. est ore stockpile in history to carry them through the winter. They also have enough scrap to do them for a while. And they are relining the blast furnaces in record time to get them in production. All in all, they are for a recordbreaking winter. Some of the sheet and tin Mr. Budrow is around Gary are expected to be put back into production also. One of the “war babies” in the steel district, the big armor plate plant at Gary, is going to be finished also. Along with the Fall Creek ordnance plant to be soperated by E. C. Atkins & Co. here, work at this giant project has been halted temporarily while war production schedules were readjusted to fit the changing picture of the war. However, the fate of some large tank armor plants to be operated by Continental Roll and Steel Foundry at East Chicago, now 85 per cent completed, is still in the balance, » ”» » THERE ARE RUMORS in Washington that Gary will get a synthetic rubber plant after all At least, Gary has been proposed to Rubber Administrator William Jeffers as a site for one of the new plants. Gary was to have a giant synthetic rubber plant, but it was cancelled. It was to have utilized petroleum. The new plan is a combination grain and petroleum alcohol plant, 8» =
ODDS AND ENDS: Armour is packing a new meat (“cvinya '* tushunka,” made of pork, lard, salt, pepper, onion and one bay leaf) for the Red army, not for U. S. .,., A plant used for drying rayon has been converted to dehydrating vegetables. . . . Railroad profits this year will be the best since 1929. . «+ » The sapodilla tree, whose sap makes the chicle base for chewing gum, takes 30 years to produce, can
be tapped only once in six years,| Debit
which is one reason the gum-mak-ers can’t keep ‘up with increasing demand.
WAGON WHEAT
Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and Fail elevators paid $1.33 per bushel for No. 2 . red ¥ heat (other grades on their meriie).
ready]
pared with a Jar 280:
Gary Stee Mills Set for A Record-Breaking Winter
OCKED AT GARY late last
Winter closed in
FARM AID FOR
ALLIES GROWS
Nettleton Reports on AMA Purchases in State Since March, 41.
Indiana farmers and processors have contributed much to the war effort of the united nations since the U. 8S. undertook in March, 1941, to supply needed foods to nations at war with the axis, according to a report of Paul H. Nettleton, state supervisor of the agricultural marketing administration's distribution branch. Since March 15, 1941, AMA purchases from Indiana processing plants included about 23,100,000 pounds of American cheese and dried skim milk; 1,822,000 cases of evaporated milk; 11,347,320 pounds of dried eggs which is equivalent to more than 34 million dozen shell eggs; more than 80 million pounds of pork products; 15,280,000 pounds of -corn starch and large quantities of canned and dehydrated foods. Included in the purchases were 83,800 bushels of apples for distribution to school lunch programs. Additional large quantities of In-
diana farm products were acquired L
in terminal markets in adjoining states, Mr. The AMA is buying commodities
at a rate of more than $5,000,000 N
daily and more than 552 million pounds of foodstuffs and other commodities were delivered for shipment to allied nations in September.
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, Dec. 14 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Dec, 11 com-
Thi Last Yi Expenses 2 Hg Ste 158. 92 $9,890,214, oT 7 54 W. Spend. 0,683.8 7,163 70,683.55 Receipt ie: .
y cave 73.73 | Studebaker ...
07,879.5! 1645, Gold Res 22, 743, 838, 112.03 2; 114, 819, 1649.02
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE $ 5,472,000
COLGATE TO PAY BONUS JERSEY CITY, N. J., Dec. 14 (U. P.) —Directors of the Colgate-Palm-olive-Peet Co. have voted a bonus of one week’s pay to all employees not on a regular commission or bonus plan and who completed at least one
y
No. 2 white oats, 46c, and No. 2 red oa 46¢c; No. 3 yellow corn, 78¢ per bushel oats; No. 3 white corn, 98c.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD
FISH
THAT LIVE IN D
' MUST BE ABLE 10 STOP QU
AND SPECIES [FOUND LIVING
3 SIDEWAYS.
4
(CIT CITB 2
A SERVICE, ING. | L.
coe AEC US. PAT OFF.
Ta Q 2 ols
NN >
NN
8 For PERMANENT PEACE, ) KEEP ON SCRAPPINGS? Says Y / SYLVIA PLUSHNICK- ; Gronks Sew ¥o <.
$i2-4
year’s work on Dec. 1, it was announced today.
By William Ferguson
Nettleton pointed out.|Y
Po
Eliminates Double-Heading
N. Y. Stocks
Net Low dash Change 4 .
High Allegh Corp .. % Allied Chem 139% 138%
x ve / i
+
Ya Ya Anaconda . Armour Ill ... Atchison Atl Refining ... Balt & Ohio . Bendix Ayn re
Ye %
PH
3 . Va Ys % Borg-Warner . 2 Bdgpt Brass ; .
&
A+: ++ a
#
& ‘ea Cons Edison .. Cons Oil Corn Prod ... Curtiss-Wr .... Dome Mines ... Douglas Aire .. East Kodak ... Elec Auto-L .... Gen Electric . Goodrich Goodyear Hecker Prod ... Hudson oMtor . Indpls Pw&Lt . Int Harvester . Int Nickel Int T&T Johns-Man ....
$1+HEEE | ESSEEsEs
Pen & Ford ... Penn RR Phillips Pet ... Procter & G ..
1
50% 9% oe 14% vee 26%2 veo 44Y, 7
4 5% Swift & Co.... 21% Timk-D Ax .... 37% Dajted Air .... 24% US Rub 1 pf.. 97% U S Steel pf ...109 Warner Bros .
and .... Ropublie St. Sears Roebuck .
— Y
Y a A
5 + %
I
Woolworth Yellow Tr .... Young Sheet ... Zenith Rad ....
—-Y + Y
Complete New York stock quotations are carried daily in the final edition of The Times.
LOCAL ISSUES Dealers. Asked [EN Be Belt RR Stk Yds Pi Bobbe-Merrill 416% Bid. .nsns 40 100 Hook Dru Hom
Nominal unit of National Association hy Securities Agents Fin Corp com. ose Agents Fin Co! pd. . cesses vss 30 Belt RR Stk Yds 8% oid. essse 52 Bobbs-Merrill co Circle Theater com..... . Comwlth iO 5% pid...cocuus 2 8 '&T Ft Ind a Tel Yay Ind & Mich 7% %
*Indpls P & L 5% pfd Indpls P&L com ...... cesses 10% Indpls Rlwys, Inc, €OM....s.c. 15% Indpls Water pf . Indpls- Water Class A com.... 15 0 5% pf
Pub Serv Rvs pfd.. - Pub Serv 6% pfd....
| N Ind Pub Serv 7% % Pid. .
TROPICAL.
4
Oldest Loan Brokers in the State
146 E. WASH
SANTA'S VICTORY CHRISTMAS b TVE FINISHED MY | TENTH ET”
LOANS
The CHICAG
on ~ on Everything! |
Diamonds, Watches, Musical Instruments, Cameras Clothing, Shotguns, Etc.
JEWELRY » Ine.
Progress Laundry com Pub Serv of Ind 5% ¢ Dd. sevens Bup Serv of jna . Ind G&H 4.8 fd... essence 84 United Tel Co 5%. . Union Title com Van Camp Milk pfd... Van Camp Milk com. Bonds
Algers Wins'w W RR 4% %... American n 5s . American Toon 5 4 ne Gent Newspap his, "42°51 .. h of Ci re 4,8 5i.. Gitisens. “Ind Tel Ce el... 20 Consol Fin §s 60 Holds Taylor 4s 3. Wa; Ba 43..
3Va Indole Railway Co 8s 6 Indpls Water Co 3%s 5 Kokomo Water Works 5s 58...104% EKuhner Packing Co 4%s 49... 98 Morris 5&10 res 5s 50. ....
Trac *Ex-dividend.
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens, full-featherd, 20c; Leghorn hens, 17c. ringers 1% lbs. and over: colored, 21c; barred end white rock, 22¢c; cocks, 1c. Koasters, 4 lbs. and over; colored, 1c; white rovks, 23¢; barred rocks, 32c. All No. 3 poultry, 3 cents less. rrent receipts 54 Ibs. and up,
Graded Eggs—Grade A, large, 39c; grade A, medium, 37c; grade A, small, 35¢; ro
grade, 25e. utter—No. 1, slamye; No 3 350 wis, buttentat, No. 46c; No. 2, 43c. Prices on produce p cB RR OP quoted by Wadley Co.)
Continetal Air Lines, Inc. year ended June 30 net income $55,834
INGTON ST.
vs. net loss $35,366 previous year.
Chapter 19—In the Cardboard Shop
4| Good—
’ Medium to Good—
% | 1300-1500 pounds ..
Good uotations furnished by local | Medium
JIA
More than 100 feet long, weighing more than a million pounds, this new steam locomotive (and a twin) have been put on the Pennsylvania railroad’s Harrisburg to Chicago run ‘to avoid double-head-ing heavy passenger trains. Ordered 17 months before Pearl Harbor from Baldwin Locomotive Works,
the engine was designed by Raymond Loewy.
HOG PRICES UP «| 25 T0 30 GENTS
Top Advances to $14.25 at Local Stockyards; 9500 Received.
Hog prices rose 25 to 30 cents at the Indianapolis stockyards today, the agricultural marketing administration reported. Weights over 160 pounds made the 30-cent gain while lighter weights were up 25 cents from Saturday. The top was $14.25 for good to choice 160 to 200-pounders. Receipts included 9500 hogs, 1600 cattle, 450 calves and 3500 sheep.
HOGS (9500) 120- 140 pounds
14. 25@14. 25 . 4 [email protected] 4. 14.25 14151420 . [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
, | Medium—
160- 220 pounds Packing Sows Good to Choice— 270- 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds ... 330- 360 pounds .. 360- 400 pounds
. [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
400- 450 pounds 450- 500 pounds
Medium— 250- 550 pounds
Slaughter Pigs
[email protected] [email protected]
®ssesscsnnne
“esse etOrrane
90- 120 pounds
CATLE (1600) Slaughter Cattle & Calves
Steers Choice 700- 900 pounds ....... ssesee 900-1100 pounds ..se.eoseese 1100-1300 pounds ...
[email protected] B 3 [email protected] .50
. 18: 25@16. 3
Good— 700- 900 pounds 900-1100 pounds ...ssiese 1100-1300 pounds .. 1300-1500 pounds Medium—" 700-1100 pounds . 1100-1509 pounds . Com 700-1100 ) pounds
cssscesseesss [email protected]
sso sasessvscse
14.00
13902 14.00 [email protected]
15.25
Choice— 600- 800 pounds ......s. 800-1000 pounds .... Good--600- 800 pounds ... 800-1000 pounds ....eee0c00e0 Medinm— 500- 900 pounds Common500- 900 pounds Cows (all weight 10.50
[email protected] . [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] 12.00 Cutter and common .....es.. a
Bulls (all weights) (Yearlings Excluded)
essscsscssccscnes [email protected]
«. [email protected] oe [email protected] 9.00 .25
Bost
Bin oe
CALVES (450) Vealers (all weights)
Good and choice Common and medium ....... Cull (75 lbs. up) Feeder & Stocker Cattle & Calves Steers
[email protected] [email protected]
12.50 12.2%
Choice— 500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds Good— 500- 800 pounds 800-1080 pounds Medium—
11.50 11.25
[email protected] [email protected]
Calves (steers)
Good and Choices 500 pounds down Medium 500 pounds down Calves (heifers)
Good and Choice— 500 pounds dOWR escccesecss
Medium— 500 pounds down . [email protected]
SHEEP AND LAMBS + Ewes (shorn) Good and choice ..... Sarees Common and choice ... Lambs Good and choice .....oeeveee Medium and g00d ...eecvevee 1
[email protected] [email protected]
‘Yearling Wethers
Sood & and choice .....sec0c0n 14.00 f 12.50
DAILY PRICE INDEX
NEW YORK, Dec. 14 (U. P.).— Dun & Bradstreet’s daily weighted price index of 30 basic commodities, compiled for United Press (1930-32 average equals 100): Saturday .....csescsssecesss 163.61 Week ABO ..coesvensansesesss 162:66 Month A800 ..ieececevcsees. 160.46 Year AGO ....cccnecesesecess 140.93 1942 High (Dec. 12) ........ 163.61 1942 Low (Jan. 2) .......c... 151.54
13.75
U. 8. Petroleum Co. 10 months ended Oct. 31 net income $44,684 or 4 cents a share vs. $66,105 or 6 cents
year ago.
—By Hal Cochran
i ciety, holding its annual convention
vena ves. [email protected]]
: economics and statistics depart-
JL B\
Unions Oppose Lid On Tool, Die Wage
DETROIT, Dec. 14 (U.P.).—Organized labor here today opposed a war labor board order prescribing
50,000 tool and- die workers in the six-county Detroit area. . The board fixed maximum rates of $1775 an hour for tool and die! makers in jobbing shops and $1.60 an hour for such workers in manufacturing plants. Rates were made effective as of Oct, 23. No minimum rates were established. Immediate opposition to the order came from the United Automobile Workers (C. I. 0.) and the Society of Tool and Die Craftsmen of America. The U. A, W-C. I. O. said it would seek renewal of discussions with the W, L. B, to _include minimum rates in the order. The Tool and Die Craftsmen’s So-
here, voted unanimously to oppose the order. J. J. Griffin, president of the group, said the order would result in strikes and slowdowns whicn the union “would be unable to handle” Some tool and die makers, he said, were making “as
maximum wage rates for more than|
much as $2.25 and $2.50 an hour.”
INDIANA FARM INDEX LOWER
3.2 Points Compared With Oct. 15.
LAFAYETTE, Ind, Dec. 14 (U. P.).—Indiana’s farm commodity price index dropped 3.2 points Nov. 15 as compared with Oct. 15, according to a report issued today by the Purdue university agricultural
ment. . The index is based on 1910-14 as 100. The Nov, 15 index was 161.3. The U. S. wholesale price index and the index of prices paid by farmers gained a point during the same period. The Indiana index of the purchasing power dropped three points. All hay, potatoes, apples, horses, calves, sheep, lambs, chickens, eggs and wool showed a rise in price. Corn, wheat and hogs showed a decrease, and there was no change in oats, rye, cattle and butter. Following is a comparison of actual Indiana farm prices: Nov. 15, 1942 Nov. 15, 1941 ..$ 18 $
1.00
Commodity Corn, bushel ... k Wheat, bushel esses 1 Oats, bushel . Rye, bushel All hay, ton ......ee Potatoes, bushel ....
=
Calves, cwt. Sheep, cwt. . Jamba, SWE,
on “1h, ...
~ ooano3
BEEBE5 28832248
. . or —-
Invitation
Date Bid Number Closes
ARMY 5936-52-12-16-42—Drawing ink ...
§937-8-2-12-17-42—Office pins, computine machine paper, teletype paper, 1
43-217—Fresh beef, lamb; veal, etc., for Veterans Admini stration, Marion Indian 18
6712—Qil hose, steam hose, pneumatic hose, gasoline hose
6714—Bar Sopper, | copper tubing, brass rods, sheet
TD raed . paper napkins. . 6715—Horizontal duplex water pumps. bolle badminon rack:
X-94—Infra .red lains and radiant heat units and accessories 29
43-221—Heavy cotton flannel, laundry Beis, cotton sheeting, flatwork ironer
43- 220_suiphure acid, silicate of soda or Veterans Adm., on, Ind.... 30 ST matches
saucers, aL ay sauce aes,” et rig . 30
ASSOCIATION ELECTS TURNER
Col. Roscoe Turner, president of the Roscoe Turner Aeronautical
Corp. here, has been elected first vice president of the National Aviation Training association. He was second vice president last year. At
Purdue Reports Decline of ||
HOLIDAY TRADE
AT NEW HGH
Ley Items in Demand; Stores Worry About Replacement.
NEW YORK, Dec. 14 U. P).— This year’s Christmas buying in the more than a million retail stores outside the food and heavy goods fields will reach a new all-time record well above $6,500,000,000, or about 17 per cent above last year, according to a United Press survey. Forecasts differ widely in various sections of the country, but the biggest sales gains are being predicted for key defense centers. That the buying wave is not interfering with war financing plans is apparent from the fact that the big December victory loan drive is bringing in subscriptions at a record rate. Even with this patriotic competition, merchants throughout the county expect the final two weeks of the Christmas season to break all former records in unit and dollar volume and in store attendance. Gaining momentum steadily since Thanksgiving day, the rush of shoppers really hit its stride last week when one ‘big New York department store reported an unprecedented crowd of 250,000 persons in a single day.
Jewelers Busy
Retailers attribute about half this year’s expected sales gain to price increases recorded before ‘the OPA ceilings were imposed, but they agree that a definite trend toward Dbetter-quality standard merchandise and luxuries is playing an important part in their 1942 boom. : Jewelry counters are handling a land-office business with little prospect of obtaining adequate replacements, since imports have been curtailed sharply and many domestic manufacturers have long since converted their plants to war work. Furs and higher-priced clothing are meeting an enormously increased demand that is causing a serious strain on wholesalers’ replacement ability, and the same situation is reported from many centers on sheets,. pillowcases and towels, all of which are being bought heavily by army, navy and lendlease authorities. Toys, always the number-one item
Egg-nog mix in the special Christmas containers,
Bridgman Dairy Co., Inec., today began distribution to grocery and
drug stores of its egg-nog mix, one of the city's favorite Christmas beverages. Egg-nog mix will be sold in A & P supermarkets, independent grocery stores and in retail drug outlets this year. The mix contains cream, milk, sugar, egg and rum flavoring and is distributed in quart safety-sealed containers. All dairy products used are pasteurized.
\
Chemists to Hear Lilly Co. Official
A new electrical method for separating complex mixtures eof proteins will be described at the American Chemical society luncheon at Hotel Severin tomorrow. The speaker will be Dr. W. W. Davis of El Lilly & Co.'s research laboratories. Mr. Davis will describe the study of proteins by electrophoresis, 8 method which depends upon motion of the protein molecules. This method can be used both to separate the different proteins in a complex mixture and to determine the relative quantity of .each. It is being used in the study of toxins, anti-toxins and serums, enzymes, protein poisons and drugs and at the present in the study of human blood plasma.
= ws AMERICAN AIRLINES
RETAINS SCHEDULES
Retention of all its passenger,
30{ mail and express schedules to accommodate heavy civilian and mili-|
tary travel has been announced by American Airlines, Ine. Frank Bodwell, ‘raffic manager of America here,. said that the
28 | company’s program for the season
continues to call for three daily
30| trips between Indianapolis ard Chi-
cago and two flights daily to Washington and’ New York with connections to ' important industrial GET TWO BONUSES SPRINGFIELD, Mass, Dec. 12 (U. P) —Employees of Package Machinery Co. will receive ‘more than
the association's third annua) con-
| Grain Futures Are Irregular
CHICAGO, Dec. 14 (U. P)— Wheat and rye futures held steady] to firm, and corn and oats steady to fractionally weaker on the Board of Trade today. Soybeans were inactive. In early dealings wheat was unchanged to up % cent a bushel, corn unchanged to off % cent, oats unchanged to off 3 cent and rye up. % cent: / In the December options wheat was up 1% cent from the previous $1.31%; corn off % cent from Saturday’s 873%c, oats off 4 cent from 51%c, and rye up % cent on a quoted T0%ca from the previous 695:c. Wheat continued firm, reaching new high levels under -a moderate amount of commission house and local buying. Cash houses liquidated on the advance.
Two Indiana War Plants to Get 'E'
Two Indiana war plants today were included in a list of 43 companies to receive the joint armynavy: “E” for outstanding performance on war work. They were the Kingsbury ordnance plant operated by Todd & Brown at La Porte, and the Pull-man-Standard Car Manufacturing Co. at Hammond.
General Shoe Corp. and subsidiaries year ended Oct. 31 net income $1,023373 or $1.57 a common share vs. $1,064,151 or $1.63 previous year,
on the Christmas store shelf, are following the trend of the times, with Santa Claus doing a big business in Tommy guns, tanks, airplanes, anti-aircraft guns and other “weapons.” The toy departments, however, have been hard hit by military priorities on metal, with the result that metal electric trains, roller skates, doll carriages and scooters are vanishing rapidly. Stores are replacing them as far as possible with plastics. Faced with a business that many retailers describe as “too good,” in that they expect more than a little difficulty in getting fresh supplies for their January trade, the retail industry has been hit by still another war problem—that of finding enough store clerks to handle
17 FOOD ITEMS
T0 COST MORE
OPA Permits Wholesalers And Retailers to Pass On Increases.
—The office of price administration
tailers to pass on to the consumer price increases in 17 additional grocery products. The items are those
in which wholesalers and retailers have been squeezed by price in. ‘creases allowed manufacturers. ; The list includes: Various canned fruits and berries, frozen fruits, berries and vegetables, fruit preserves, jams and jellies, apple butter, canned shrimp, domestic canned crabmeat, canned apples, apple sauce, apple juice, vinegar cured herring, canned boned chicken and turkey, maple sugar, blended maple syrup, fountain fruits, egg noodles,
in filled or topped biscuits and crackers, fig bars, peanut candy and honey (extracted). Other OPA action: 3 Announced plans to offset increased costs of material and labor in the manufacture of women’s, girls’ and children’s garments for next spring and summer by strict ° control . over garment makers’ mark-ups and selling prices. OPA hopes that its plan will make it possible for the shopper next spring to pay subtsantially the - same price as in the spring of 1942 for comparable quality in coats, dresses, blouses and other outer ap- -
parel. Cut Price of Bananas
Announced dollars and cents maximum for mine timber, industrial blocking and railroad ties in 15 western states. : Reduced “excessive March prices” for bananas for Importers and wholesalers, but jt made no promise that the order would assure con- - sumers any increase in the limited ' supply now reaching this country. OPA said abnormal conditions which have cut banana imports to 25 per cent of normal have not’ changed, but by establishing a series of fair maximum prices for importer, the auction market and the wholesaler it hopes to promote the
through normal channels at rea-
the Christmas rush.
GREAT LAKES ORE BOATS SET RECORD
WASHINGTON, Dec. 14 (U. P.) — Defense Transportation Director Joseph B. Eastman announced today that 1942 iron ore movement on the Great Lakes exceed by 577,000 tons the war production board’s goal of 91,500,000 tons. The last ore carirer of the season cleared the upper lakes Dec. 9 with a cargo which will bring the season’s total to 92,077,000 tons, 149] per cent above the previous record high of 80,116,000 tons established last year. Eastman reported that lake shipments of coal so far this season totaled 49,005,481 tons, as compared with 50,911,389 tons last year. Grain traffic totalled 94224,000 tons, against 118,190,000 tons last year. The reduced traffic of coal and grain
resulted largely from ODT’s steps to ‘make more cargo space available for the movement of iron ore,
HAN
Fireproof uN isheus inci Rvas eo DRAP
Here's a tip, Santa!
JL a et 3 he Sheustuuss |
sonable prices.
WESTERN AUTO co. SHOWS ‘WAR TIRE’:
. A new “war tire” is now being . displayed at Western Auto stores, : according to J. I. Liebert, manager
‘lof the storé at 363 N. Illinois st.
Made four-ply of the same heavy cuty cord fabric used on pre-war tires, the “war tire” is full size, having been cured in first-line
molds. % :
| [FTE FIRST fi CHRISTMAS AFTER
That first Christmas after you're gone fave you provided for it? n INCOME PLAN will guarantee that there will be MONEY to brighten that Christmas for your family.
© LAN will as age,
ill assure happy A for y Investigate this, INGOME PLAN
Indianapois Life Insurance Company
Over $127,000,000 of Insurance in Force Fanart 3, Raub A. Leroy Portteus President Vice-President IEA YA PA PAK pI Pa Pa!
® Sanitary Pouring Li ® No Bottle Wash P ® No Bottle Return ® Lass Storage Space
Sold by your neighborhood . grocer and A&P Food Stores
‘Put an OVERCOAT On Your Chilly House— A Rock Wool Overcoat CAPITOL ROCK WOOL CO.
Phone HU. 4252
—
STORING PACKING MOVING
OF YOUR
»
RAPERIES ¢ OHINA eo BRIC-A-BRAC Phones: RI 743¢; Evenings, MA. 52323
SHOPPERS!
The trolleys and buses are jammed during rush hours. Ride between MM a m and 4 p. m. You'll be more comfortable.
WASHINGTON, Dec. 14 (U.P),
today permitted wholesalers andre=
tamales, tortillas, potato chips, rais-
The °
distribution of available supplies *
