Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 March 1943 — Page 19
Plastic Firms Busy Working
On Home Desighs for Future
Sting, ROGER BIDROW Sian
IF THERE IS ONE INDUSTRY THAT is doing its own postwar planning, it is the construction materials industry,
Concerns in that field are alr ns to cash in on the
after the war. The current
‘that plywood can be glued together (laminated with plastic :
X
_ the P..R. Mallory Co. of Indian-|%
of
eady .embarked on advertising expected home-building boom Fortune magazine has an ex-
v ‘cellent. article on homes of the future,
A lot of this competition is strictly intra-mural. The
plastics ‘people are trying to steel and aluminum concerns, Electric's plastics department
take business away from the ete. J. H. Du Bois of General at Ft. Wayne says one of the
biggest developments of war manufacturing is the discovery
esins) at low pressures and temperatures.
‘Because of this, we have aif planes, boat hulls, gliders, pilot seats, wing sections and other war hecessities made of plywood. The same process ought to cause a revolution in home and furnie ture building after the war, Mr. Du Bois believes. And it ought to be a‘ boon: to the lumbeg industry. r#Just imagine fan all-electric pkitehen, beauti- “= fully styled and ‘Mr. Budrow © molded from “knotty pine, having all the beauty. and w of wood but the chéemical wear and resistance of the nlustics resins. Very light doors and walls, flame-proofed and insulated for sound and heat or cold; free from attack by termites and the swelling and. cracking caused by humidity and age. ” This lusty plastics draws upon cotton, hemp, rgmie grass, flax, coke, gas, air waste forest products, oat hulls, walnut shells, soy beans and skimmed milk + for its raw materials. a Du Pont has hundreds® of idens for using its war-born products in “peacetime, The latest is a window. screen ade of nylon, Irenee du Pont’s home in Cuba has had nylon screen doors for over two years now ‘and theyre still good. «Du Pont is convinced that prefabricated housing is here to stay also, but a kind of pre-fabrication that will allow flexibility in architectural ‘designs. Last night on the radio the Minnea polis-Honeywell (thermostat)
firm had some enthusiastic plugs}
for the use of the elee¢trons in post-
war living. The principle of .the|chotce—
“electric * eye” will be applied to some astonishing purposés and a good mahy ‘concerns, among ‘them
apolis, are wide awake to the big
x market possibilities ahead in. thal |130-1
field.
a I
WRIGLEY. sot: only - ithers
chicle in" Central ‘American uns gles, but “alse 18 getting rubber. Last year it sent the U. S. more rubber than any other company. Most of the 1,240,000 pounds was sent by air from Nicaragua, where 4000 tappers are employed. ; This year the chewing gum concern will operate also in Guate-. mala, Honduras and Salyador and is asking permission to work in Mexico and the Amazon region of South America. : » » »
WORRIED about the growing in-1® dustries in Canada, Australia, Ar- - gentina and Brazil? True, they are making fast progress along the lines this country followed a number of years ago, But the Alexander Hamilton Institute says no -decline in interna» tional trade should follow becauge that. Industrialization in the past has increased the country’s standard of. living, which, in turn, creates demands ‘for~ commodities Which did not. exist. hetore. : : as ¥ oDDB AND: aN “ Capacity of the steel mill at Granite: City, 111, fll. be: boosted to 300,000; tons anally by the middle of this year. . . Ten years ago hogs were selling from $3.90 to $4.15. . sh OPA says less than 1 per cent of the medt supply is put away in privatelyowned frozen food lockers. . ... To. relieve railroads bottled .beer is being shipped on barges plying the Ohio. and Mississippi rivers. . . . e OPA is formulating a Jestias . ‘tion requiring big meat packers to give independent processors .their share of meat under the quota system. .., Absenteeism is twice: as great among women as among men, a conference ‘board survey shows.
SIX DESERTS IN WORLD The world ~ contains = six large deserts—the Sahara, Gobi, Nevada, Kalahari, Tehuacan, and all of which are just. outside the torrid Zone.
ih n DE i: ”
MUTUAL AGEN
J
industries |
pared: with
| War Spendii 48 Receip!
HOG MARKET OPENS STEADY
.4652, Porkers Received At Stockyards.
more opened at, siéady prices at
the foed distribution - administration reported. The early top was $15.65 for good - to, , oholos. 200. to
235-pounders.. Ve
4652 hogs, , 850 cattle; 42 calves and 825 sheep. TY HOGS (U4 Ts) pounds ress senses pnd 60 pounds " pounds i !
pounds: paunds 3, a
120- is
po! \ irs sen i POURS go's sdvons ve
- 80. 386 pounds .siiskrecsss « 13 pounds: Ceaspwtoes
i > =a Mgm- pounds cole aies ‘Packing Sows 4p choice—
« 300 pounds ..,,. - 330 pounds .., 0- 360 pounds
154s 14.50915.55
@15.40 @15. 1
15.26 15.26
“360- 0 “dveraraeeree } 400- 450 pounds Good— 3 400- 450 pounds sepsseees 450- $9 pounds .. Mediymes -250- $80 pounds : Siaught
Medium and good 90-120 pounds. ,,....., oak
CATTLE (850) Steers
4 16 Fr
doves ts vse
[email protected] [email protected]
ses sptoposncen
S . 13.060@ 14.80
P
pounds pounds pounds pounds
PsaBNsSINL
1520816. 8.35 18,504 16.50 i
$8000 eb bes
pounds pounds pounds pounds
pons
Common~— -100-1100 pounds
seer IP Penns sesmpresdens
. 16.28
15.00016.00 18.250 16,
BPP Fane 16.50 Medium-~- i 700-1100 1100-1300
14.00 14.00
15.00 15.3
$98ssesnissn oa eanbonses
FS AEAPPNNN
Heifers
srssnsssnnss cess psettn.
engine cehasssrired
. 450015.50 rebssennnses 14.95 15.80 . [email protected] Bab 1. 0013.00
Cheice— = 800 pounds 800- ’1000 De
600- 8 800 pounds ay pounds $80 80 900 pounds .
19384004003,
wiser” of And § chain I :
Bulls (alt welghte) (Yearlings Exoluded)
"os
: [email protected] BE weenie Bases
1800 14.75 13.00 14.00
CALVES (425)
Vealers (all weights) to choice ..= , 'ommon and medium - Cull (75° lbs. up)
Feeder ¢ Stocker Cattle a Calves
‘© Steers Choice 3 :
500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds 3. Good—
300-1080 Bounds Mediup— 500-1080 pounds Common— ¥ $00- 900 pounds .......ivese. Calves (steers).
Good and Choics— Wh 500 pounds down » [email protected]
Medium §00 pounds down ....... Sie 1T. 50014. 00
Calyes (heifers)
Good and Choi 500 pounds loa. ooo 13.50014.50 aves aA A. 12.00©913.50
Medium 500 pounds down .. SHEEP AND LAMBS (525) Ewes Wheen)
Good and ehoice .... Common and choice :.
«14: 5.00
16.00
seessresugns see seS ep
ceduge sips «« [email protected] 6.50413.00
7.50
9.00 srenses {00a 7.50
Lambs (Shern)
Good and Shoice Medium. and good iv 14,00 Common .. 12.60
LOCAL PRODUCE |
ens, 3% Ibs, and over, ae Tue 23
15.75 14.00
h Ibs. and under, 23%¢; Legh
Broilers under 8 ibs., colored and Barred and aie Rock,” 29%. 3 s.. and over, colored and
Pryers d Wh ir The ie ras, 2105 heavy breed, 22c;
cocks, 16c. Esgs—Current receipt 54 ibs, and up.
Graded Eggs—Grade A large, 36¢c; grads A medium, 34c; grade A small, :
ade OE tiereiNo. 1, 50c. Buttertat—No. 17 Ave: No. - 3, 48s.
UU. 8. S. STATEMENT
— ESHNGTON: Mie Ay or roe Bye ernm Pp - cent ons year thiough March 3 com8 year .
83 888,158, 134.984 a Tor 493 48,078,870,073 Wiad 144.100
Lovers 13,420,066,189 frie
ot Datei. ver 89, 5,804 N Balance. BERL MSA 604,688 587 - 108
C8 419080,
Pible 8 Deb.
COTTON 8. STRONG Cotton can: be spun ‘so. strong that B is used Tor Siplane ‘wings, tires,
Early Top Is $15.65 Here;
“Hogs. weighing .160 pounds .or|: the Indianapolis’ stockyards today, |
alers were pid So cents wer] with a $17.50 top. Receipts included]
go
ia i848
18.00916.80]
. pags 4
ecause it is less vulnerable, has|,
&
Battle of Tank
| dor an inspection tour by the press.
demonstrate the. teamwork of two mon enemy.
toughest kind of metal to give the tanks the protection they need. ~ ‘Two years ago pigeons were the biggest worry of Pullman-Standard. For 14 years the plant was a ghost« Hke structure. Its windows were knocked out and the birds roosted in the lofts.
Their “Lease” Broken
The factory. began to manufacture tanks for the British after the
pigeons’ lease was broken. The lease’ - breaking required nightly forays into the black depths:of the structure by men who used guns fo convince the birds that ¥hey and tanks didn’t mix. Pullman-Standard shifted over to the production of American tanks when the United States entered the war, -using much armorplate and steel from the mills at neighboring Gary. “About 5500 workers now are engaged in helping to produce the General Sherman, a tank that claims-advantages over predecessors
higher velocity guns and is stream-
less of a target than some tanks. It is the most recent design of the medium tank and officials declared it has proved its worth on Tunisian plains, It is, in -tank chronology, the successor to Gréat Britain's General Grant.
After Hitler's Funeral
- Neither plant officials nor workers hazarded a guess as to what the fate of Pullman-Standard’s Ham-
{mond plant will be after the war.
One worker, hoping the industry's
5 21 50 ies history would not repeat itself, said
a simple sign on the wall of the plant voiced his sentiments if
19.00 | Pullman=-Standard couldn’t have a
peacetime role. The sign was an enlarged dismissal slip for all employees, effec
orns. | tive on the date of Hitler’s funeral.
But in the Gary armorplate their peace-time jobs . awaiting them. They will return to the kitchen and the garden‘ because more than 60 per cent of the workers at this sprawling, thunderous armorplate plant which virtually
daughters of fighting men.
mills, running the cranes and handling -the acetylene torches and: doing everything that the. hardened “men of steel” once did.
(Even ‘Landing. Mats
succeeded Rosie, the - riveter, ‘in’
mental role in:
terial. Here, and ‘a short Uistanes’ away at the Gary works of the Carnegie-
22,000 workers who are producing;
To Ksep Valuables Safe = Rent a Safe Deposit Box at
lined insofar as tanks go—making it Al
plant, most of the workers have |xres
mushroomed out of the sand dunes Ohio over night ‘are women—almost all] of them wives, sisters, mothers or |p.
"__ | Tllinois Steel Corp., they are a dom[inant part of the army of about
<
Charles Weiss of Gary applies a gauge to a red hot sheet of armor plate to test its thickness at the Gary mill of the Carnegie- -Illinois Steel plant.
Production
Ousts Former Pigeon Roost
“The army is proud of the production records of Hoosier war plants. Maj. Gen. Fred C. Wallace of ‘the fifth service command has arranged
This is the first of these reports.
By DON CARLSON United Press Staff Correspondent
HAMMOND, Ind, March 25—This city \and neighboring Gary communities at. war against a com- |’
Here is Hammond, the ‘Pullman-Standard Car Co. turns out the General Sherman tanks, formidable glants playing important roles in "American military successes in North Africa. “And a few miles away, Gary's; Armorplate €o: is producing the
Mr
not only armorplate, but the steel that is necessary for bombs, torpedoes, shell and gun casings—and even the landing mats that instantly convert Africa deserts into airfields. : Only a year-ago the site of the armorplate plant was but a section of “the lakefront which nad not ‘been gobbled up by an industrial giant. In less than five months, the armorplate that helps to make U. S. tanks the best in the world was pouring forth in’ an unending stream. : Within the fortified walls of the plant, women are winning their own private battle—the fight to. swell production with each passing day. The plant already is producing as much plate as any other plant and soon will be producing the most.
iN, Y, Stocks
Net Low Last Change 1% 155 .
os
Am Rd & SM Am Roll pn Am T & T Am Tob BB... Am Water W ,, He
B Borg-Warner ..
| Bdgpt Brass ...
Chrysler ....... Comw & 80 . Cons Edison .. Cons. Oil Corn Prod ...: Curtiss-Wr A Dome Mines “.. Dougias Airc... 86% Kodak . Bier Auto-L..,. Gen Electric... Sopgrieh Goodyea Hud Bay M& Indpls Pw. & Lt Hi gon 4 Int Nickel
Int T & Tiss a Johns-Man .... 3
Int Harvvester..
SIC ge dr dep de ie
Nat Dairy Y Central i Nobité-Sparks.
gat mt >»
They #re operating the rolling}px
South Ry pf.. Sterl Drug . Btudebaker iE
Athy. the armorplate girl,’ has {sun
wo and women play. a .funda-| sass
maintaining .the|l ‘production of this vital war, ma-
Westing. El ... 83 Wi Yel
Zenith Rad
Lo >
Ly
1A SAFE eros or
possible for
only Four “Givi Informer
Suits Have Been Filed ©. Since 1853.
© WABHINGTON, Mach 35 (U.P). ~The American with “get-rich- _ quick” dreams has for 80 years ovestonkad & real bovansa, |
The “shaft” to this lode of gold is the civil informer act. passea by congress in: Jas which makes it private citizen” to ‘sue another individusl or: ‘corpora
Ay Se
§ . tion for twice the amount involved
ina proven fraud against the goyernment. To stake the claim, he only hag to make. sure he files a suit in federal court before the government
" |does. The only other rulé of the
A fank- turret ring at the Pullman-Standard Car Co. plant at Hammond, Ind, has its “teeth” cut by Mrs. June Watkins of Ga, 2 hase husband is serving with the U. 8. coast guard.
SEEKS TO SLICE BROKERS’ ‘CUT’
War Contract Commissions Getting Too Large, Kline Charges.
sel of the house naval affairs com-
“haven’t time to count the chips,” to do something about the situation. his wife, had increased from a gross of $23376 in 1932 to $266,276 in 1642. The .eommittee has under by its chairman, Carl Vinson (D.
contract renegotiation Jaws, as are war plants.
fair retur being renflered.”
increased vigilance of ;the navy ani
WASHINGTON, March 25 (U.P). _|—Robert E, Kline Jr., general coun-
mittee, charging that war brokers were making. money so fast they
said today .it was time for congress
He told ‘the committee that the profits of one Washington man and
consideration legislation sponsored
Ga.), to make the agents subject to Just
“In other words,” Kline said in explanation of the legislation, “their excessive profits can be renegotiated downward and they will only be permitted to retain that part of their earnings which, represents i for the services actually
© Kline, said that despite “hearings on ga similar bill last year and thes
war departments, the commissions
in.
for war brokers continued to pour
“In spite of all the fanfare there
1, {N Ind Pub Serv 7%
still flourish in Washington ani throughout the country many sales agents who are receiving annuzl compensation going well into six
they will shock the conscience, not
made known,” he said. “The appalling thing is—and this
legislation—so few of them have seen the handwriting on the wall.
their own volition ‘to adjust the situation.”
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furpished by local unit bf National association of Securities Dealers. Bid Asked Agents Pin Corp com % poems Bn Corp . *Belt R Stk Yds com 46 *Belt i Bix Yds 6% pid. . re Bobbs-Merrill com s. Bobbs-Merrill 4%29% pid Circle Theater com . ve saan G6 pom Los Lown 8% pid’ caxrve 96 00. T com oT Fy Ft i 19% ‘pid. oo % pI
30 99 15 Home T& og Ind Asso ‘Tel 5 in Ind & Mich 7% pid ‘os
Indpls P & L col Indpls RIwys, ne com *Indpls Water pf Indpls Water Cla. Lincoln’ Loan Co Bh pid Lincoln Nat. Life 5 “com. . N Ind Pub Serv §%2% pid. ‘oe Ne N Ind Pub Serv'6%
P R Mallory com Progress Laundry com Pub Serv of Ind 5% pfd .
a Bros pr PIS; Oo Co 5% Carieies OB
ae com PABA NEIN INN van Camp Milk pid 48%
Van Camp Milk com ... Bonds
“ene bees
¢ Almers Wins'w W RR 4% 9%; . a
American Loan 6s § American Loan $8 Se Car D i bis ihe ol. 7 of Com 0 " tizens Ind Ta s 81. _- ol s 50 Ed Indpls P & L 3%s8 Ti 3%s 68 ......106% Kokomo Water Works 5s 58..104% Kuhner Packing Co 4%s 40 ... 98 Morris 5810 Stores 58 50
Muncie Water hap 8s 5 3%s 00 .
‘5% | Indpls Rallwa s | Indpls Water
4 Ser 2 | Pub Tel 4
46s 55 Richmond Water Wks .58 BT... 108 Trac Teup Co Corp p 58 5 “enn
*Ex-dtvia WAGON WHEAT * Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and erain Fh Ea red w thelr mer No , 2 Te. he on 2 red oats, ! c;
No. 3 yelitw corn, 93c .per bushe and No, 3 white 1,
figures—amounts so excessive that
only of this committee but the] Anfierican public when the facts are
demonstrates the necessity for the
They have done little or nothing of
game is that he split the take with the government. The mine may soon. be closed.. A bill intrgduc by Rep. Hatton Sumners (D. Tex. wipe out .¢ivil informer suits has ‘been reported favorably by the house judiciary coinmfttee and will be on the consent calendar April 5. ] Only four civil informer suits have been filed since the act was passed, one of thes: yesterday by Herman M. Cogan of Chicago against the Carnegie-Illinois. Steel '{Corp. on the basis of disclosures by the Truman committee that one of the company’s plants furnished substandard steel plates to the government, He asks more than $2,000,000 in damages. “Law Upheld Twice Only recently: a war frauds indictment totaling - more :than $1,000,000 vas expected in Kansas City. The night before the grand jury was expects ed to report, a complaint was to
of the department. But the envelope arrived emiply - in Kansas City because ‘of a mailing room error. At 5 p. m. of the day the complaint should have arrived, a Midwestern attorney flew in by plane and filed a civil informer suit in behalf of himself and two others, using the indictment 08 the basis for action, “The civil informer law was recently tested in two suits in the supreme “ court and upheld. Both suits were filed on the basis of government indictments brought after discovery of ‘alleged fraud on public - works contracts. The supreme: court ruling came Jan, 18, four days after Sumners filed his bill. The Bovernment contended in its
the discovery of the crime to step in and share the proceeds as soon
Jackson Dissented
attorney who was the most diligent in realizing the possiniiities of copyS ing the government's sleading and taking advantage of e informa- | by the government's : Indeed, if private suits may. be: Brought in these ‘cir8, Traces. hotween private counsel to be the first to put a new caption and conclusion on. the gov‘ernment’s indictment are quite within the realm of possibility.” The court, however, held that “neither the language of the statute nor its history lends any support to the contention made by . . . the government.” Justice Hugo Black wrote the majority opinion. Justice Robert R, Jackson, in a strong dissent, contended that there was nothing in the text or history
, {of the act which indicated that con- , |BTress “intended to enrich a mere
* | busybody who copies a government's indictment a8 his. own complaint’ 2: and brings to light no frauds not
“EE . already disclosed and no injury to 1; [the treasury not already in process 108’ of vindication.”
5:|GRAIN PRICES RISE ON BOARD OF TRADE!
$
CHICAGO, March 25 (U, P.), =~ Grain futures. steadied and scored minor fractional advances on the Board of Trade today after an unéven opening, In early dealings wheat was up % to 1 cent a bushel, corn unchanged at OPA levels, oats’ unchanged to up % and rye unchanged to up %. In the May options wheat was up 4 cent a bushel from the previous
78 |$145%, corn unchanged from $1.91,
oats up % from 633; and rye unchanged to up % from 87@86%¢c. SEED IS CONCENTRATE
The most concentrated form in which food can be supplied is in.
aid 31.53 per bushel for No, ? seeds; in seeds it is much more
‘concentrated than in dehydrated itoods. :
at Your Command.
opened its doors for served Indianapolis and its sur
of officers and employees alike banking connection.
| financial’ home,
Of full banking the
* Mouuts NG ce
Since 1893, when the Union Trust’ ms business, it hag 3 rounding territory faithfully and well. Thousands of customers atest ' . to the earnestness and co-operation referring. to us those requiring 8
If you, too, are Shing. Tor a 1 E your invitation: to avail’ yourselt
by
Ynion Trust. .
involving depredations
be mailed from the claims division
brief that the statute was riot passed to permit private citizens “who had contributed nothing to
Standard Oil Co. of Indiana re.
385,068, or $3.17 a share in 1041, President Edward GO. Seubert ‘said that the rubber shoitage was one of the important factors which caused the feduced earnings. LENT EE eT -A form of maintenance-of-mem bership clause for: 23,000 employees at the four plans of the Allis-Chal-mers Mfg. Co, including the la
by the war labor board. This security clause requires union members fo maintain membership’ in good standing for the duration of the contract, provided that these employees voluntarily certify in writing that they authorize union dues deductions by the company. » » ® % Alfred P. Sloan, chairman of General Motors Corp, said that approximately half of all the war contracts received by the corporation have been “farmed out” to smaller plants. He said that about $900,000,000 in 1942 war orders were sub-contracted. » 8 » William A. Atkins, viee president’ of BE. C. Atking & Co. of Indianapolis, is a member of a 26-man industrial relations policy committee of the National Association of Manufacturers. : 8 = ®& George D, Keller has quit as vice president of the Studebaker Corp. at South Bend, according to Paul G. Hoffman, president. No reason was given. » # - Amterioan Machine a ‘Foundry Co. 1042 net profit $1,132,351 or $1.13 a share vs. $1 2.00 or $1.37 in 1041. Consumers Power Ce. 12 months net income $7,585,260 vs. $9,237,071 prevoius 12 months; Feb. net income $811,008 s. $781,865 year ago. a = 2. 8 - Presidefit J. 8. Sayre of the Bendix Home Appliances Co. South Bend, said today that the company had made net profit of $1,050,116.17 bo 1942, compared to $035 ,314,54 in ds
U. 8. STEEL PROFITS SLUMP 42 MILLION
Times Special PITTSBURGH, March 25.—The
men and women, million tons of steel in 1942, an all-
the peak year of world war I.
: 1942 net earnings of $44,183, ? porte 162 ne ear Share, Againe}
Porte, Ind., plant, has been providessary
U. 8. Steel Corp., world’s largest in-|. dustrial .emipire, employer of 336,000 turned out 30
time record and 28 per cent above
as the facts had been made known as a result of the government's own prior investigation,” and added:
“The object of.the statute was not |
to give a bonanza te the person or|
14
U. 8. Steel achieved new highs in just about everything but profits last year, Chairman Irving 8. Olds disclosed today in his annual report to stockholders.”
It received for its products and
in any year in its history—$1,865,951,692,
It paid out in wages and salaries the largest sum on Tecord.78 million dollars.
It paid more than ever before for the products and services of others ~648 millions. It mined more ore, coked more coal, consumed more limestone. Every hour, 24 hours a dey last year, it moved an average of 200 fifty-ton carloads of these raw materials to supply its furnaces. Every hour, on - the average, its mills ladled 3400 tons of steel, But its profit of 72 mililon dollars was 38 per cent below. the 116 millions .of 1941. These are highlights of the’ corporation’s 41 annual. report, most elaborate “Big Steel” ever has published. ; Outside of operations, U. S. Steel had very little to say about running
ment set the prices of its products, designated materials to be made, di-
labor rates and terms of employment, “Management; in consequence, ‘while faced with an unprecedented operating task, functioned within a rigid framework as to. many policy matters,” the Jepors lamented.
services the largest. sum of money
its business last year. The govern-|.
{rected their disposal; determined its]
in|the ining index for compiled by the Indians
about seven points above the figure for January. = The “Indiana Business Rav issued by the bufesy, :
influenced by the same ©0 that have prevailed wo over the natfon—larger incomes, creased buying in anticipation rationing, capacity or near-capaei operation of war industries apd such civilian industries that ha been able to obtain raw and labor.” EAR . Department store store sales, though not the equal of December were the largest on. Tecond for February. The unexpected rationing of shoes’ caused consumers with “swollen” in comes to anticipate the probable tioning of other items of L a “Bank debits, reflecting larger xpenditures for nearly all 55. reached an all-time high in Pebrus ary,” the Review says. - “News+ paper advertising, after one: of
1042 level.”
dex were the “highest since ; peak months of 1920. 2d % Present rate of increase, farm ne ; within the next quarter should ex. ceed the level of world war §,
os
Incorporations— , Straus Securities ge. Illinois
ch d O. 1342 Consolidated. DIdE.. “India
Iantoolit Interchemical Corp., Ohio co ghange of o sent to Fred C. Ga Acme Paper 3
us, bldg., Indianapolis, < ,Inc., Indian amendment changing name i Acme Floor Coverings,
SeIporate
Do You Face Each
5
Day With Dread
Just Because You Don’t Feel Good
Maybe all you need is Haag's Liver Pi to pep you up, take away that draggy feeling and put you on. tep of the eloyds. If your liver is not secreting bile flow | the intestines as it should you lack e ie {and interest in your work, friends and plans, Don't let gas bloat you up; soyr 4 your stomach and pull you down. Take Haag’s Liver Pilly and feel TOPSI At All Haag’'s Drug Stores Two Sizes, 25¢ and 50¢
* WE BUY DIAMONDS x ‘Wolf Sussman, Inc.
239 W. WASH SI lil Established 42 Years
HOME "LOANS
1 Why bother seridis payments out ) town? Get a’ Celtie Loan and make your payments here.
e Reduce Both : Principal and Interest | ® INCLUDE Principal ‘and Interest : ¢ INCLUDE TAXES and Insurance Indienapole
No Commissions =
Comcaireo
VINGS ¢ LOAN ASSOGIATION morn |
of AN ANosiaion 23 W. OHIO ST.
=
RE - WEAVING of, MOTH BOLES-BURNT ' -
“LEON "TAILORING co.
235 Mass. Ave. LLL
5-STOR ES-IN-1 PIANGS, ORGANS : $ EG That APPLIANCES
ks
o FURNITU . RECORDS, BADIOS
120 N,. Pennsylvania o LI-S513
Ena]
Nat ings | head is less.
Bining Room Bears and rugs, ete.
"BATES STUDIO
: 2310 North Meridian
FT XRT
2s [7k 22
iid J. { ging
tia Farnitary 18
Ma DIRECTORY
Merchandise and Service
YER ELA AUTRES
|| Delaware at Walnui -- RI-1438 :
_ “Where the § Comers Meet”
