Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 February 1943 — Page 21

BUSINESS

Government Wants "Soybeans Now;

Bottleneck in Processing Broken

THERE ARE ABOUT EIGHT MILLION BUSHELS of soybeans stored on Indiana farms. ¥ neck in soybean processing plants, these beans couldn't be crushed into oil all at once last fall so the government set price ceilings starting from $1.60 a bushel in January, going

up a penny each month to $1.66 in June.

“This encouraged farmers to wait until they got better prices and eased the bottleneck. But now ¢otton mills, copra (coconut hull) mills and peanut mills are taking soybeans

PORK MARKET TURNS LOWER

15-Cent Decline Followed By Later Weakness in Heavy Weights.

Hog prices opened 15 cenfs lower at the Indianapolis stockyards today than yesterday's prices od weights above 160 pounds, the 1dod distri administration Lighter weights were Later in the day weights from 250 pounds up sold 20 YW 25 cents below

yesterday’s prices. The top was $15.75 for good -to choice 200 to

to crush so the government wants the farmers to bring them in. That is what yesterday's announcement of a $1.66 ceiling means. It will pay now what it had intended to pay in June. Indiana farmers thus will get an additicnal $320,000 if they

market their soy-|

beans now. The AAA esti.mates there are 800,000 bushels of soybeans still unharvested in this ‘state. The weather and lack of machinery are blamed. It figures Mr. Budiow rat sbout half of the crop will be harvested and the yield of that half will be about half the normal yield, having been damaged by winter weather. Thus about 200,000 bushels of soybeans are yet to come in. 2 = GAMBLING ON VICTORY. The Dutch have always been great speculators, but the Nazis clamped ceilings on securities prices in Holland after the allied invasion of North Africa. 37 That hasn’t stopped the Dutch, however. They now buy warrants which entitles them to buy—at higher than ceiling prices—stocks whose value to Dutch traders would depend entirely on an axis defeat. And there’s reportedly a good business in these warrants

2

Because of the bottle-

By THOMAS L. STOKES Times, Special Writer WASHINGTON, Feb. 23.—Charles E. Wilson, now the war production boards No. 1 man under Donald Nelson and in charge of “the works,” is ‘almost a perfect embodiment of the Horatio Alger hero. He came out of that rosy era when a youngster could work hard, go to school at night, save . his money and in time become president of the company. But he has gone a step farther than the Alger type. For not only did he rise from office boy—at the age of 12 in a General Electric sub-

bution

225-pounders.

HOGS

Good to choice— 120- 140 pounds 140- 160 pounds 160- 180 pounds

240- 270 pounds .. 270- 300 pounds es. 300- 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds

Good to choice— 270- 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds ee.

..360- 450 pounds ...

(8325)

220- 240 pounds ~ :

evegencse

Packing Sows

reported. hanged.

Receipts included 8325 hogs, 2050 cattle, 500 calves and 650 sheep.

sidiary inyNew York City—to become president of General Electric two years ago, but he was called here by President Roosevelt to work on national problems.

top production men. He was talked of for a war job long before he was summoned here a few months back to become WPB vice chairman in charge of production scheduling. His initial assignment was to get up production of escort vessels, airplanes and merchant shipping. It was a tough one. He is getting results. ; So it was not surprising a few days ago when, out of Chairman Donald Nelson's reshuffling of the top command of WPB, Charlie Wilson emerged as his No. 1 man. The dual control which he had shared with Ferdinand Eberstadt, vicechairman in charge of flow of raw materials, was ended.. Mr. Eberstadt stepped out, leaving Mr. Wilson in sole command. Now he has his opportunity, for he has full responsibility. It is no easy road. The issue which elevated him and retired Mr. Eberstadt still does not appear to be settled finally—the conflict between

39 WPB, on one hand, and the army

and navy, on the other, in which Mr. Eberstadt was the champion of the services. A practical industrialist; Mr. Wilson is somewhat irked by the fuss-

.60./ing and feuding here, according to

at Amsterdam.

360- 400 pounds .... .: 15.00

00cc0on

15.15

# 2 8

F. C. KROEGER, head of General Motors’ Allison division, sold 922|M of his shares of G. M. common stock in December, bringing down his holdings to 12,188 shares, according to SEC’s report on trading by corporation officials. Mr. Kroeger was listed as having 236 more shares ‘of . the common through G. M. Shares, Inc., and 91 shares of the preferred stock. Ww. C. Richardson, of Indianapolis Power & Light Co., bought 100 .Shares of the common stock of that utility. J. S. Sturgeon of Ft. Wayne Jbought 500 common shares, doubling his holdings in the Magnavox Co. of that city. John B. Stokely sold 600 shares of Stokely Bros. prior preference stock. * The National Silver Co. of New . York city bought 9983 shares of the , common stock of Ontario Manufacturing Co. of Muncie, silverplate firm, bringing the New York firm’s holdings up to 30,878 shares.

TAX LOANS 4 out of 5 MORRIS PLAN Loans Made Without Endorsers

PHONE FOR A LOAN —MARKET 4455

° Borrow on Character, Auto or Furniture —from $75 to $500 to $1,000. + * Take 6 weiks to make the first payment. ®* Many loans completed while you wait. ® No credit inquiries of friends or relatives ® FREE PARKING across the street in Arcade Garage for auto appraisal. ‘ASK FOR MR. COOTS

Morris Plan

SUEY ER SRA RL RRA}

4 |

Western Electrics

| Cholce—.

Good— P 500- 800 pounds

Good—

400- 450 pounds ooo S50. pounds

rea 250 pounds

Medium to Good— 90- 120 pounds

Choice— 700- 900 900-1100 1100-1300 1300-1500 Good— 900 po

see

1100-1300 pounds .. 1300-1500 pounds

Medium-—

700-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds Common—

600- 800 pounds . 800-1000 pounds Good— 600- 800 800-1100

oe

pounds pounds

edium—= > 900 pounds mmon— ' Coo- 80 pounds

XX

(Yearlings Beef— Be

Ee a (all weights) Sod jum

Choice—

500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds . 800-1050 pounds

Medium

Common 500- 900 ) pounds

Good and Choice—

Medium: 500 Fl down

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

Common and choice

Medium and good .

exclusive feature IP

INTRO =

unwanted noise

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Try, the Audiphone!_ A [free audiometric test enabl 'us to ‘recommend the {model “best for you JjWe ‘suggest, you ‘call’; .at’your earliest conven diene? No obligation | incurred

CLI r8 18) [918] HEARING AIDS

a | Cent N f BELLTELEPHONES RES]

2 : AUDIPHONE CO. of INDIANA, Inc.

LL 5098 /

Ta Fe Stk Yd

ib 1t RR Stk. Yas 8% vid. Joes 53

~~ {ind & Mich oo eohac; d Hydro Elec 7% ...

LOCAL

Nominal unit -of N

Bn gor co

pid

Ind Asso Te

Li Co Linsoln Naf Life

P R Mallo n¢ [n In

Tel Van Camp Milk

ess ssesscede sst0eee

.. ‘Slaughter Pigs

700-900-1100 pounds ....

700-1100 pounds ..... Heifers

ssesecoesese 12.25

500 pounds down .....

down ssecessoee

[email protected] CATTLE (2050) Slaughter Cattle & Calves Steers

[email protected] « 15.75 15.75

000000 cse

esee®antee sev ssn seeecsaces e00e00ssee

eebocsnvces

«18.5

ci eesessase JB 14.75

[email protected] [email protected]

seessccens

cows (all “weights)

Bulls (all weights)

Excluded)

12.50

vatessseine 11.300 rans

[email protected]| A special provision of $100,000 was |Am

Calves (steers)

14.50 14.50 14.50 [email protected]

@18. 15.75 15.75

[email protected] [email protected]

[email protected]

16.50 16.50 [email protected]

13. uy 50 0@14 .50

11.50913.50

15.50 15.50

[email protected] erevess [email protected] [email protected] .50 .50

. [email protected] . [email protected] 1

13.25

his friends, since his whole interest 5 [lies in getting a job doe. He is in 2 | deep earnest. Mr. Wilson is friendly to meet, easy-going, informal, yet frank and direct. He knows also that the world has changed as he has grown older. He is listed among those progressives in the top ranks of American industry who have a social consciousness. In a speech long before Pearl Harbor, in January, 1941, he said: “The world, our nation: included, is passing through what history may, later record as the second stage of a revolutionary movement of the masses—a movement born during

INDIANA FIRM NETS $469,177

American Central Profits Four Times Greater Than in ’41.

American Central Manufacturing Corp. of Connersville, Ind. today reported its profits last year were more than four times as large as in 1941,

The company, which makes wings

Cutter and common ..... bt [email protected] | for bombers and other planes, variCALVES (500)

Vealers (all weights)

ous aircraft parts and bodies for jeeps and trailers, had a net profit

3 after all charges of $469,177, equiva-

Feeder & Stocker Cattle & Calves Steers

13.75 13.50

12.50 12.25

[email protected]

Calves (heifem)

« [email protected]

[email protected] SHEEP AND LAMBS (650)

Ewes (shorn) Good and choice

7.50@ 3

wsesssess 8.000 7 _ Lambs Good and choice

wesesee 1 15@16. 50 [email protected] vs [email protected]

. 15,50@ 14, 35a15. 25 12.00@14

+33 [email protected] [email protected]

ISSUES

se essen

26 ‘Comwlth - Loan 5% old ‘asyaee 87 Hook PH 12% Home T ah Warne 1% "pid. 3% 1d. Toeaten 1

9 0!

Maye

d Pub Serv 8 hi Ye N ¥ he Pub Serv. o pid. i N Ind Pub Serv 1% pHa 208 :

uotations furnishel by Jocal | ~Association of Securi

d Asked COM ceocoes ar

.50 (to

lent after preferred dividends to $1.54 a share .on the common stock. This compares with $115,338 or 38 cents per share for 1941.

Sales in the year ended Nov. 30 were $10,513,000 or nearly three

500-1000 ) pounds svessasessss [email protected]| times as large as the previous year.

made for contingencies and depreciation and amortization amounted

[email protected] | ¢, £177,526 against $133,692 in 1941.

Provision for federal taxes was $1,365,000, after taking credit for a post-war refund of excess profits taxes estimated at $21,200.

Pay Up Dividends

Accumulated dividends on the preferred stock from June 1, 1940, Dec.” 31, 1941, amounting to $3.16%5 per share, were paid February, 1942, and the regular quarterly dividend of 50 cents per share has been paid since that time. Dividends

$1,259,000, an increase of $563,000,

erations and from $151,000 through the sale of 175,557 shares of the | corporation’s common stock against! o outstanding options at $15 per|y

|share, and net proceeds of $64,000

realized from the sale of 19,939 shares of Aviation Corp. stock.

a 31 per cent interest in the Steril-

: ‘lin exchange for 13,750 shares of

common stock and options to buy 6875 additional shares at $5 each,

have been exercised. Sterilseat cause of materials priorities . but

5 period. ”»

nv

5% pid. ie: 94 a oi 1

§ Sion oF pio’ 18 8 ®sscesse Co 8% fo ieeiee 98 - g Union Title o ME PI aero don Ven Camp Milk com ....ee... 13 14

Bonds

e . ee fpr on.

| receives a $2 it : en

Find New Way to

CHICAGO, Feb. 23 (U. P.).— The DX Crystal Corp. borrowed the bank night idea from the neighborhood movie and increased its war production 25 per cent by cutting down absenteeism. Maurice McLean and Louis Patla, owners of the firm, hit upon the idea two weeks ago. Draw- - ings are held daily, for both day and night shifts. Payroll numbers of employes are placed in a fishbowl and a ‘number is drawn. The winner $25 war bond, but only

“Charlie” Wilson has long been : recognized as one of the nation’s|

of 70 cents per share were paid on)In .00| the common stock. Working capital on Nev. 30 was|Int

provided mainly by profits from op- |;

NY

The. company, which had owned |

seat Corp., completed the purchase! ge of which options on 4430 shares|3oa

'|.Corp. has suspended - business be-|5 remains “an asset for the post-war 3 Timk

- Cut Absenteeism

C. E. Wilson:

world war I and likely to last, with intermittent armistices of one kind and another, for two or three decades more. . . . “The ardent aim of the millions of heroic common people in Britain, first to defend themselves against the dictators and finally to destroy them, arises basically from the deep-held desire to insure for their masses and for their fellow men in other lands a much larger measure of economic freedom and security than ' the conventional capitalistic and imperalistic system has previously provided. . . . “The aim of the majority of the American people , . has been substantially that of the revolutionaries . . . the private-enterprise system is faced with two alternatives. “Either private decisions will be made and enforced by public-spirit-ed leaders in finance, industry, commerce, labor and agriculture, or public decisions will be made and enforced by the government of the whole people for the whole people.” Mr. Wilson derives the energy he displays here from a physique which he developed in his earlier days as an amateur boxer and as a boxing instructor. He is in the heavyweight class—broad-shouldered, well-built, and over 6 feet. He keeps in trim by walking, and he may be seen striding down Washington streets early in the morning and late in the evening. He walks half of the five miles between his hotel and his office in the morning and at night, his chauffeur picking him up halfway. His job is with him most of his waking hours. He does not go in much for “society,” but he sees many people at night—at dinner, and afterwards in his apartment—

U. S. to Lease Farm Land of Newport

About 11,258 acres of land bought by the government for the Wabash river ordnante. works at Newport, Ind., will be leased for farming this summer, it was announced today. R. E. Evans of the land acquisition office at Terre Haute is in charge. Leases will be for one year for cash, payable quarterly or annually in advance. The government wants all the land leased by March 1. Some.of the land may be sold later on. Due to curtailment in plans for the ordnance works, not as much land is now needed as was thought at’first.

N. Y. Stocks

Net Low " Last Change Allee hn go PD ee.: ¥ 1 7, ed Chem ... 1% 4 AlliseChal 31 isle 1 ! gs Am Am Rag & SS 1% Am Roll Mill .. 12% Am T & T ...14

++i ae

SN EEE Ress was Ow $

Anaconda ... Armour II .... Atchison pf .. “3 Atl Refining . Balt & Ohio . Bendix Avan ... Steel .... Borden Borg-Warner ..

Pld: 4: +t tr

ic

ope 1

Curtiss-Wr .. 8 Dome Mines .,. Douglas’ Aire . Elec Auto-L .. Gen Electric .. Goodrich pf ...

Goodyear Hudson Motor

EE E+

Central .. 13% Nash-Kon eves 1% Nat Biscuit “ve

dA LEE ELE

Republic stl. Sears . Roebuck. rvel Inc

PrabEE LLIFD LL

I+; pees wed ree

FHI HE st

FFFREES

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

WAGON WHEAT Ry a of Cee market

Career of Charles E. Wilson Puts Even Heroes of Horatio Alger in the Shade

to discuss problems connected with his work and to build up his information. : He spends his week-ends at his New York home with his wife. The wilsons have no children. Mrs. wilson is active in social work in New York, particularly with dn’ orphanage. Mr. Wilson is fond of deep-sea fishing, and used to get off to Florida to enjoy it. But not any more. His last trip to Florida was in December, 1941, He had been there two days when the Japs struck at Pearl Harbor. He rushed back to New York. In his office hours Mr. Wilson is not the orderly type with a precise engagement list, clicked off regularly to the minute, nor a pusher of bells. There is an informal atmosphere about his office that sometimes borders on the chaotic, as he devotes himself to the numerour problems that arise, sometimes out of a clear sky. But he gets a lot of work done. He is usually at his office by 8:30, and he leaves around 6:30 or 7. Mr. Wilson started his career in the Sprague electrical works, a G. E. subsidiary, where he began as an office boy. His father, who died when he was 3, was Irish, and a bookbinder. His mother was English. The family lived in New York City’s west side, Where he was born in 1886. He went about his iaies in the Sprague works in an atmosphere buoyant with promise for an expanding America. The United States had emerged from the Span-ih-American war cocky and confident, a newly powerful figure in the family of nations. Everything and anything was possible. The nation had a light in its eye and a song in its soul. The boy's eyes were opened to the possibilities, for. he worked among the contrivances that were to make possible the power age. He grew up with the age. He was curious and energetic. He went to work, after his apprenticeship as an office boy, as a day laborer in the factory, and at night he studied accounting. At 20 he was production manager of the Sprague works, and at 21, he was assistant superintendent. On his $20-a-week salary he married Elizabeth Maisch. In time he was put in charge of branch plants and got valuable

idly growing business—production, engineering, sales. Five years ago he moved into New York as execuIn January, 1940, he swas selected to step into the presidency when Gerard Swope retired.

plete.

Would Have Allowed State To Join 12 Others in

Conservation Pact.

The house yesterday killed a bill which would have permitted Indiana to join with 12 other oil-pro-

1ducing states in the interstate com-

pact to conserve oil and gas. A motion to indefinitely postpone the measurue for the balance of the session, introduced by Rep. Elmer C. Weller (R. Dale), was adopted by a voice vote over the objection of Rep. Matthew E. Welsh (D. Vincennes). The proposal, backed by the department of conservation, provided that the governor, or his appointee, represent the state on the interstate commission which investigates and makes recommendations concerning the conservation and the prevention of physical waste of the oil and gas reserves of the various states.

COMMONWEALTH C0. '42 PROFIT DECLINES

Government restrictions on consumer credit curtailed the business of Commonwealth Loan Co. of Indianapolis last year and President R. C. Aufderheide told stockholders that the ruling will adversely affect the company’s volume this year. Profits of the company, which

is | makes small loans of $300 or less 4 |and has 64 offices in 38 cities in the

Midwest, continued the decline of

3 the two years. Net income was

$798,671 in 1942 compared with $070,632 in 1941 and $1,001,356 in 1940. ud number of borrowers increased during 1942 over the previous year, in-

dicating that the average loan was

smaller in amount. He said the draft did not affect any considerable number of the company’s customers

made are to married persons with dependents or are employed in essential industries. Mr. Aufderheide added that “war demands upon the country’s manpower could, of course, change the picture.” Operating revenue, interest collected on installment notes, rose from $3,912,936 in 1941 to $4,290,087 last year. Compensation of officers

398 to $1,046,546; advertising, rents, taxes and other expenses rose from $032,566 to $912,459; provision for losses was increased from $464,645 to $750,490. Net operating income was $1,720,757 in 1941 and $1,780,940 last year. Provision for federal income taxes rose from $445,000 to $473,000 and excess profit taxes from

$315,000 to $513,000.

OTHER LIVESTOCK

WAYNE, Feb. 3 (U. P. =H ents lower; 160-200 lbs on. 5%; 4: 300Slo 250-

22s he Hid 225-250 Ibs, 15.28: 280 14.555 130-140

250.100 Jos, 1% ne sid 1 0 Ibs...

experience in all phases of the rap-| tive vice president of the company.)

The Horatio Alger cycle was com-

DIL-SAVING BILL KILLED IN HOUSE|

"ON THE RADIO TONIGHT

UNDER SECRETARY OF WAR ‘Robert Patterson, speaking from Pittsburgh, will deliver a special address tonight which will be on WIBC at 7:15 o'clock. The subject of the speech, which will be a broadcast over the entire .Mutual net- 3 work, will be “Report on the War.” Edrly evening programs on stations WISH and WFBM will bé partly of the raz-zle-dazzle variety What with “Jumping” Guest Star George Jess sel at “Duffy's” on WISH at 7:30 Patterson o'clock, and Gracie Allen trying to bludgeon Bob “Bazooka” Burns into| 1

marrying a shoeless gal from his|;

native Van Buren, on WFBM at 8 o'clock, it would be hard to guess which offering will be the daffiest. The crowd at “Duffy’s” will also include Joan Edwards, the songstress; Dale Carnegie, who will try to teach “Duffy” how to make friends and influence people without ‘bribing them; Peter van Steeden’s orchestra, and “Miss Duffy,” “Finnegan” and “Eddie.” " There will be two Burnses on the program with Gracie, also two men from Arkansas. George Burns will be there because his reputation has been questioned and Bob will be dragged in to settle the argument. The other Arkansan is Jimmy Cash, who will sing the ballad, “Rose Ann of Charing Cross,” aided by Paul Whiteman’ s orchestra. 2 ” ”

THRILLERS AND CHILLERS alternate with the dinnertime hilarity bills. “The Beast With Five Fingers” is scheduled for “Horror, Inc.” on WISH at 6:15 o'clock to start off the evening’s spooky business. . . . Eva Le Gallienne will be the narrator of the eerie tale. W. PF. Harvey, who wrote “The Beast With Five Fingers,” will hear his macabre masterpiece performed. High over the blood-stained walls of an ancient haunted castle in Dorset, England, two men step out on the wings ready to parachute into the night—and into: the “Lights Out” tale which ‘Arch Oboler will tell on WFBM at 7 o'clock. “They Met at Dorset” is the title of this shiverdrama, which concerns the reckless mission of two Nazi officers pledged to rescue: Rudolph Hess ‘from his English captors. This “Lights Out” yarn was suggested by Oboler’s visit to Borley manor in Dorset, famous as the most haunted castle in Britain and plunged into re-

“Famous Jury Trials,” on WISH at 8. o'clock, will recreate scenes from the courtroom where Fritz Weber was tried 4 on a charge of HEE hiding Gérman Fitzgerald = prisoners who escaped from Canada. Weber denied any connection with treasonable activities, but - his German-born stepson turned up evidence which brought about his indictment and trial, “Suspense” returns to New York tonight after several weeks in Hollywood and will be on WFBM at 8:30 o'clock. The play will be an original drama by John Dickson Carr and Geraldine Fitzgerald of the movies will have the principal role. The story concerns a young woms

LOCAL PRODUCE

‘Heavy breed hens, 3% lbs. and over, 26c; hens, 3% lbs. and under, 23c; Leghorn hens, 23c. Broilers, 2% lbs. and over, colored, 26c; white and barred rock, 27c; Leghorns, 22¢.

Roasters, 4 lbs. and over, colored, 27c; white and barred rock, 28c. Stags: Leghorns, 2lc; heavy breed, 22c. Cocks, 16c.

Eggi~Ourrens receipts, 54 Ibs. and up

Graded gs—-CGrade A, large, 35¢c; grade A, medium, 33c; grade A, small, 25¢c:

33048%0; No. = 46@ ies butterfat, No. 1, 46¢c; No. 43c. (Prices on produce delivered at? Indianapolis quoted by Wadley C

U. S. STATEMENT

WASHINGTON, Feb. 23 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Feb. 20 compared with a year ag

Last Y $4 088, sal, #58 3s 144, 543, 457 i 399,476,1 22 12,004,343, 679 . ,508,619 - 5,324,392,791 . 36, 878,531,338 10,746,196,034 Gash bal i 0 2 22,762 * 3,457,334,258 ‘Worle. . 115,432525 - 1,697,402,106 Pub. doe 1516, 325,443 66,423,840,218 | Gold res.. ,643, 545,463 22,712,992,453

Expenses. . War Spend. . Regelpte t Def

217 veer 22

INDIANAPOLIS ‘CLEARING HOUSE

Clearings ...ocsescesasse. sense. $ 4,406,000 Debits 12,941,000

Speaks Tonight oh Say

Mr. Aufderheide noted that the

isasmuch as a majority of the loans|

and employees increased from $990,- | -

8

William G. Power 7. . stresses’ safety.

Wartime safety measures to conserve industrial manpower will be stressed in a talk by William’ G. Power at a meeting tonight at Ipalco

‘hall, 16th and Alabama sts.

Mr. Power is affiliated with the Chevrolet sales organization 15 years. EE To : So-OpstaIOE With | the Indianapolis Sales il, |

oon? WWD! 3333] aRD aenchen |

(The Indianapolis Times is nouncements caused by station changes af

~ WFBM 1260 (CBS)

4:00 Madeleine Carroll i Service Stars 4:

WIBO 1070 (Mutual) Music Interlude unshine Girls Sunshine Girls Turf Bar Time

‘Cocktail Time Cocktail Time Jack Armstrong Capt. Midnight Fulton Lewis Jr. rts Slants Sky Host Sky Host

Are U a Genius? Bernie

Pop Tim Edwin C. Hill John B. Kennedy bert For!

BE Hour

Melody Hour |.

THIS EVENING

not Jesporsible lor inaccuracies in Program ate

press WIRE 1430 (NBC)

-

WISH 1310 (Blue Network) Sea Hound 4 ' Sportsmen Chu Club

Girl Marries Portia Plain : | Front = Farrell Romantic Melodies Dial & nce Dial & Dance ick Reed"

Terry & tes

Dance Time

R. Gross Meet the Band

Concert Orch, : Hone I Symphonic Swing | H. Tee Bross

{ | Ralph Knox News

Singing Sam War Report Drama Drama

Jabra] Heatter

pac Murder Clinic Murder Clinic’

John B. Hughes Ar

se! Starlight Sinatta News

Lights Gut Lights Out

uspense uspense Jazz Laboratory Jazz Laboratory Bert Wilson ‘5 Frazier Hunt

858 EN 583 sans] Sa S868

-

Johnny Presenta Johnny Presents Horace Heidt Horace Heidt

Battle of Sexes ‘Battle of Sexes

Fibber Moise Fibber McGee Bob Hope Bob Hope

Red Skelton Red Skelton

Jury Trials Jury Trials

otlight Bands = Spotlight Bands. : Raymond G. Swing Gracie Nields Pad %

ports Roun Sports pane +3

0:00 Gilbert Forbes 1 15 World Today 0:30 Sandman 10:45 Sandman

Jack Ream Farm Credit Star Parade

, |Southland Singing

John Morrow Music You Like Starlight Trail Starlight Trail

Sports Roundup _ jad Songs Harrison Show 43 Harrison Show

Uncle Sam " Eatie Son Howard old Reframe

~ WEDNESDAY

11:00 Strikes & Spares 11:18 Night Watch 11:30 Uncle Sam 11:45 Del Courtney

Music You Wan} Music You Roy Shield Roy Shield

PROGRAMS

Service & Swing

WFBM 1260 (CBS)

30 Early Birds 45 oe Bi rds

WIBC 1070 (Mutual) Little Jimmy Little Jimmy

WIRE 1430 WISH 1310 (NBC) (Blue Network)

For Service Men Morning Reveille

Dawn Patrol Dawn Patrol

00 News 15 cH Birds Linda Lou 23 Zarly Birds Judy. Perkins Utah Trailers

World News Musical Clock Musical Clock Musical Clock

New Morning Mafl Morning Mail News

58) £8:

= With Music Mrs. Farrell Mrs. Parrell Movieland

Yalan Lady Stories Honeymoon H Hill Bachelor's Child'n

News 5 Second Husband :30 Bright Horizons 10:45 Aunt Jenny

11:00 Kate Smith 11:15 Big Sister 11:30 Helen Trent 11:45 Our Gal Sunday

12:00 Gilbert Forbes = 12:15 Ma Perkins 12:30 Farm News 12:45 Farm Circle

1:00 Dr. Malone 1:15 Joyce Jordan 1:30 Love & Learn 45 Goldbergs

2 David Harum Sing Along School of the Ale School of the Air

New. Wheeler Mission Rhythm & Song - Rhythm & Song,

00 Madeleine Carroll 15 Service Stars 30 Are U a Genius? 45 Ben Bern

News Roundup Get Up & G Bandwagon Get Up & Go

Mel Steele Mel Steele : Friendly House Friendly House

Musical Interiude Ethel R. Willitts Charlie Cook Everson Byways

Ranch Hands Howard Carlson Little Jimmy Hi Sallor!

oo

[=4 oo,

6: 6: 1: 7: 7: 7: 8: 8: 8: 8: 9: 9: 9: 9: 10: 10: 10

mo Bem | san

News Hoosier Farmer Strictly Personal Farmer's Digest

Song Birds Song Birds Pioneer Sons Pioneer Sons

Sunshine Special Sunshine Special

Utah Trailers

Harpo & Tiny Harpo & Tiny Hoosier Home Jimmy Dickens

Music Interlude Sunshine Girls Sunshine Girls Turf Bar Time

1. 2: 2:1 2: 2: 3: 3: 3: 3: 4: 4: 4: 4:

Brea

Breakfast Clu Breakfast Club

Breakfa

Musical Clock Morning News Shopping School Shopping School

Merry Melodies The O'Neills

Neus sin Baby er ute Gene & Glenn

Breakfast at Sardi’s Breakfast at Sard’ Jack Baker Al & Lee Reiser

Sons of Democracy Console Pictures Farm & Home Farm & Home

Baukhage People’s Man

Helpmate Lone Journey

Road of Life Vic & Sade Snow Village David Harum

Piano Twins Poultry School

Headlines EATitorially Livestock Farm and Home

Wally Nehrling Joann Morrow

Music Medley Linda’s Love Hearts in Harmony Editor's Daughter

Mary Marlin Ma Dorking

Pepper You Right to Happiness)

Backstage Wife Stella Dallas Lorenzo Jones Widder Brown

Girl Marries

Portia Plain Bill Front Page, F Farrell

Stella Unger Morton Downey

My True Story Ted Malone

“EF” Award

Broadway

Sea Hound Hop Harrigan

Sportiman clus

WLW TUESDAY PROGRAMS

Pl 4:0 4: 4:

M. - 0—Girl Marries 15~—Portia 30—Plain Bill

4:45—Front Page Farrel:

5:00—News Reporter

: :30—Dinah Shore

6:45—H. V. Kaltenborn 9: :15—Johnny Presents

7:30—~Horace Heidt 7:45—Horace Heidt

9:15—=Bob Hope 9:30—Red Skelton 9:45—Red Skelton 10:00—Arthur Re! 10:15~Background 11:30—Burt Farber

» 00—Batt! :15—Battle 8 30 Pier 8:45—

5:15—Uncle Sam 5:30—Lum & Abner 5:45—Lowell Thomas 6:00—Fred Waring 6:15—Carroll Aleote

WEDNESDAY

10:156—=Vi: & 10: 30-Bnow 10:456—Dav

M. %: 30—News-Weather 5: :45—Revellle Roundup :00—Time to Shine 7 :15—Carroll D. Alcott 7:30=Col. Cumquate 1: 8 Qonsumers

8:15—L os s Love 8:30—Beautiful wife 8: S§—aunt Jenny 9:00—New 9: 18—The ® o'Netlls 9:30—Sweet River + Tass Journey

8 8 #8 ; an suspected by her fiance of having poisoned three husbands. william Spier is ‘producer and John Dietz directs the series. - 88 ” s SWING VS. THE CLASSICS will be the spectacle provided in the “Battle of the Sexes” quiz program on WIRE at 8 o'clock. Fingering the argument for the classicists will be Sari Biro, pianist; Sylvia Marlowe, harpsichordist, and Jane Courtland, pianist. The men who make the jive when not being quizzed are Blue Barron, Bob Allen

1: :15—Lonely

Fibber McG Bob Hope

10:00—Road of Life

d Harum 11: So—Baners Daughter 11:15—~Ma Per tins 11:30-—-News-Farm 11:45~Farm Hour. 2: 00—Farm Hour

M. 13: 15—Farm Hour

Light of Wo

of Sexes of Sexes McGee ee

10:45—Chick Malthe 11:00—~Gardner ) 11:15—Gardner Benedict 11:30—~Moon River : 11:45—Moon River

‘PROGRAMS

3: :30—Guiding ‘Light :45=--Church

al

Sade Village

3:30 3:45—~Widder Brown 4:00—Girl Ma 4:15—-Portia 4:30—Plain Bill 4:45—Front Page Farrell

Women 8 8 8

Al Jolson returns to the hits that made him famous on the Jolsone Wooley period, WFBM at 7:30 . o'clock. Among his offerings will be “For Me and My Gal” and Rocka= bye My Baby.” Carol Bruce, ace companied by Ray Bloch’s orchestra, will sing “That Ole Black Magic.” Beginning at 11:30 o'clock, WIRE will have the last half-hour of the Roy Shield classical music program. = Michael Stewart, basso, will be guest star and will sing “Dornio Sol Nel Manto Rega” from Verdi's: “Don Carlos,” and “When I Have Sung My Songs.” There will also be some

and Stan Kenton.

Scrap Official

PITTSBURGH, Feb. 23 (U. P.

iron and steel scrap, charged in a

In a statement to the WMI board of directors, Moise, retired Pittsburgh industrialist, declared that WPB directives setting maximum prices for reclamation of scrap, limiting the WMI to those projects selected by the WPB and restricting projects to certain geographical areas had reduced the WMI’s business to a “trickle.” “The WPB insists upon retaining the exclusive right to initiate scrap projects ‘for War Materials, Inc. Yet has failed completely in doing so,” Moise said. “It has only given WMI about 140,000 tons of scrap

recovery projects, which is a small

lighter selections on this program.

Claims WPB

'Spends Money for Nothing’

)—B. C. Moise, president of War

Materials, Inc., government sponsored corporation for the collection of

statement today that war produce

tion board interference with his agency had reduced it to a Skeleton organization “to spend the taxpayers’ money for nothing.”

fraction of the 5,000,000-ton program which WMI, at the request of the WPB, was created and has = been organized to fulfill.” Moise said that the most recent directive of the WPB, issued in February, provided for cancellation of existing contracts, “even if paye = ments have to be made to the con«' % tractors to induce such cancella= tion.” d “This means that WMI is now fo pay government money for the pur- 2 pose of not getting scrap, instead of for the p of obta : It also means the reduction of tc a standby organization with skeleton stafl continuing on the payroll, to spend the taxpayers’ money for nothing. If and whem = the WPB recognizes the need for

scrap, such a skeleton organization will be of no value.”

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“ALL RISKS’

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