Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 April 1943 — Page 17
War Forces Standard Oil of Indiana To Find New Ways to Carry Products
-————eeemBy ROGER BUDROW
. STANDARD OIL OF INDIANA SPENT a busy year, judging from .its annual report out today. But in spite of rationing, the big concern didn’t do badly.
Argun $55 million is most to m _ dient of TNT).
Rationing cut gasoline and naphtha sales more than 6 per cent, but this was almost made up in other items, such as fuel for planes, tanks, PT boats, halftracks, trucks and jeeps; fuel oils for battleships; special oils for recoil mechanism of guns, etc. Biggest changes were in the transportation field. By using those 5000gallon tank trucks instead of railroad tank cars, Mr, Budrow the company released 5465 tank cars to haul gasoline and other fuel to the East coast. The company now hauls its
supplies around the Midwest with| cussion of the operation of water
* less than one-third of the tank cars it used formerly. River towboats
f it the company’s own money. This included, plants e high octane ‘aviation gasoline and toulene (ingre-
being spent on new plants,
WATER EXPERTS TO MEET HERE
State Group 10; to Begin is Discussion Tomorrow
At Antlers Hotel.
- The Indiana section of the American Water Works association, in co-operation withthe Indiana State Board of Health, will hold its 36th annual two-day meeting beginning tomorrow at the Antlers hotel. The program will include a dis-
utilities under wartime conditions
Navy Minesweeper Hits the Waves
‘THE INDIANAPOLI
PAGE 17
The U. S. ‘S.. Lance, one of the navy’s fast-growing fleet of minesweepers, takes to the water with a mighty splash at the Anierican:shipyards, Lorain, O. The ship was launched sideways.
Ship Shortage to Continue
For Duration, Land Warns
NEW YORK, April 28 (U. P.).—Admiral Emory S. Land, U. S.
maritime commission chairman, told the 31st annual U. S. Chamber of Commerce meeting today the united nations “are short of ships”
SMALLER BOND BUYERS COUNT
Germany Knows How Not
PRICES ON HOGS]
ARE UNCHANGED
Porker Market Is Steady at Local Stockyards; Top Is $14.75. The hog market was steady and
Porkers brought a top of $14.75. Receipts included 8900 hogs, 750 cattle, 550 calves and 300 sheep.
38) x [email protected] [email protected]
. 14.60
14.65
[email protected] [email protected]
. [email protected] . [email protected] [email protected]
1100-1300 pounds - ; [email protected]
1300-1500 pounds ..coscecoses
Good— T700- 900 pounds .....eceeee.: [email protected]
ET process 18 especially to fashion small magnets
60 breakers that form a vital link in
Guns Are Fashi
Scripps-Howard
The process is known technically in putting iron in the form of a fine powder, a powder as soft to the touch as talcum powder, into a die or mold that has the shape of the desired product. By a combination of pressure and heat, the separate powder grains are welded together into the finished article. Westinghouse Electric & Manu-
that go into the electric circuit
the electrical installations of war plants and naval vessels. Obviously, the Westinghouse technique represents a considerable advance over anything that Pharaoh’s
idea is essentially the same, Egyptians Knew How The ancient Egyptians for the most part depended upon metals that were easily melted or updn those that were found in nearly pure form and so could easily be heated
and beaten into desired form. Undoubtedly the first iron they used was meteoric iron found in nearly
blacksmiths ever did, but the basic].
oned From
Powder 'Soft' as Talcum
By DAVID DIETZ
Science Writer
The technique by which the ancient Egyptians made swords and spears and arrows of iron has been brought up to date to help America win world war II. Only this time it is being used to produce gears, bears ings and thousands of small parts that go into tanks, guns, fighter and bomber planes, destroyers and cruisers,
as “powder metallurgy.” It consists
“sponge” of iron powder. Then they hammered this hot sponge until all the particles were welded into a tough mass. Iron continued to be made by that method until late in the 13th century when the first cast iron was made. During the middle ages many ade vances were made in powder metals lurgy and it is interesting to note that it continues to this day to be the method for producing metallie tungsten from tungsten ores. Withe out it, there would be no filaments for the familiar incandescent bulbs,
« Particles Are Welded
In making magnets at the Wests inghouse plants, Metallurgist P. R, Kalisher explains, the powdered iron is first placed in the die. A plunger operated by a hydraulic press then squeezes the powder until the pare ticles are welded to each other. The magnet now has the desired shape but it is still too weak to be serviceable. It is next placed in a furnace which contains an atmose phere of hydrogen. Ordinary air
and restrictions and several papers outlining the most recent developments in the field of water treatment and engineering design. | Mayor Tyndall will speak at the luncheon meeting tomorrow and William A. Hanley, chief engineer at Eli Lilly & Co., will address the convention tomorrow night, when the Fuller Award for meritorious
« [email protected] [email protected] «+ [email protected]
[email protected] sesesesseses [email protected]
and Great Lakes tankers helped make up for this loss. Pipelines also moved a great amount of products. The pipeline from the Whiting refineries to the northwest edge of Indianapolis came in mighty handy by delivering 8000 barrels of gasoline a day here and then over to Zionsville where
900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds .. 1300-1500 pounds ...
and that ship production still “should come first in this war of transportation.” “The answer to the axis challenge for control of the seas must continue to come in ever-swelling volume from our shipyards,” he said, ; Denying axis claims that U-boats had sunk 30,400,000 gross tons of allied merchant ships, Land said ‘he
pure form. Apparently the Egyptians learned the art of dealing with iron from another ancient people, the Hittites, the first ironmongers on any large scale. The Hittites had no furnace that would melt iron. In fact, none existed until the 13th century, The trick of the Hittites was to
could not be used because the oxye gen in it would oxidize the iron. In this furnace the magnet is heated at a temperature below the melting point of iron but sufficiently, high to bring about the complete welding of the particles of iron inte a tough and unified structure, One value of the technique is tha$
To Finance a War;
Failed in ’18.
By JOHN LOVE Times Special Writer
In doing what ie could to snag the war loan campaign the Berlin
Medium 700-1100 pounds 100.1300 ) pounds
CHio-1100 , pounds
experts “are .on another fishing expedition.” He said America had stepped up its merchant shipping production 4000 per cent in five years. “Given
Heifers Chot
pounds [email protected] 800-1000 POUNAS .cccevssccce
this gasoline was put in another|
pipeline that goes to the east. The company collected 13 per cent of the scrap rubber in the nationwide collection last year, lost 3824 employees to the armed services, paid 42 million dollars in faxes and had net earnings of $2.89 a share against $3.17 the year before. ; 2 os ” 4 TWELVE LOCAL CONCERNS * have won the army-navy “E,” ac"cording to a Chamber of Com_merce compilation. They are P.
services in the water industry will be presented. ’
tendent of purification with the local water company_.and now secretary of the national association of water utilities, will be ‘the speaker at the Friday luncheon.
ing speakers:
E. C. Atkins Co.; W. C. Shoemaker, manager, Richmond Water Works
Harry E. Jordan, former superin-
The program includes the follow=
Naval Man to Speak C. E. Wood, personnel director,
war ~ began, ships,” he added. ment, we will be short of ships as long as the war lasts.”
was able to affirm Prime Minister Churchill’s recent statement that the united - nations “have greater merchant tonnage in service today than they had a year ago.”
“In affirming it let me add we
are still as we have been since the definitely * short of “In my judg-
Land refused to reveal how many
tons of shipping had been lost, charging that the German naval
the steel and essential manpower we can produce approximately 2000 merchant ships a year,” he said, adding that America now was producing more ships than all of the rest of the nations of the world combined. Adm. Ernest J. King, commander-in-chief of the U. S. fleet, told the chamber last night that the submarine menace could be brought under control within four to six months by a co-ordinated program 'of bombing axis submarine yards and bases.
radio would naturally think of telling Americans to “let the banks buy the loan and let them keep it.” No German would suppose the vigor of our effort in the field could be
affected immediately by the man-|Medt
rer in which the government’s securities were taken up, but the German radio does put it’s finger on the spot where weakness could best be exploited by an enemy. We could not be defeated on the fighting fronts right away by a neglect on the part of the public to buy its proper share of the war
Good— g00- 300 pounds tessnssestne 800-. poun 20esssensene Medi
um-— 500- 900 pounds 8808000000000 Common-— 500- 800 pounds Cows (all weights)
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected] 9.00@11,
7.75 Bulls (all weights) (Yearlings Excluded)
Good 9.00 Beef— . [email protected] ausage— Good (all weights) ...eeeeee.. [email protected] Medium 11. M
CALVES (550) Jealors (all weights)
Good to c 15:30 16.00
heat the “red earth” that is iron ore or iron oxide in a charcoal fur-
parts made by this p 5S require practically no m g to finish
nace until it became a metallic
them.
# No Critical U.
S. Materials
Going to Canada—Nelson
WASHINGTON, April 28 (U, P.) —War Production Board Chairman Donald M. Nelson said today that construction of the Canadian Shipe shaw power project of the Aluminum Co. of Canada, Ltd, has inter fered in no way with the development of the United States power 1190| program.
Comm Cull (75 lbs. Feeder and hooker G Cattle alt ‘Calves
00-300 ds 800-1050 Bounds 500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds Medium— 500-1000 pounds Common— 500- 900 pounds Calves (steers) Good and Choice— pounds d
own ... an 500 pounds down Calves (heifers) Good and Choice— 500 pounds down ...sece.... 14.00015.00 Medium— 500 pounds down 13.50914.00 SHEEP AND LAMBS (300) Ewes (shorn) Good and choice Common and choice
R. Mallory, Stickle Steam Specialties, Whittington Pump, American Bearing, Allison, Eli Lilly, Electronic Laboratories, Schwitger - Cummins,” Stewart - Warner, Packard Manufacturing, Stokely Bros. and Holcomb & Hoke, f tJ ” ABOUT PLASTICS: Lithographic printing, plates, once made of .aluminum and zine, are now being made of polyvinyl alcohol resin. Lucite is used for artificial eyes and contact lenses. Nylon sutures have been used by surgeons working on blitz victims in England. ” 2 .8
BRIDGEPORT BRASS profiis
Corp.; Professor C. H. Lawshe, Purdue university; C. K. Calvert, superintendent, Indianapolis Water Co.;; N. E. Gunderson, president, Layne-Northern Co.; C. E. Bechert, state engineer, state department of conservation, and W. W. Hagan, geologist, state conservation department. A. E. Griffin, technical department, Wallace & Tiernan Co.: J. L. ‘Quinn Jr. Indiana state board of health; F. A. Schaefer, Public Service Co. of Indiana; L. S. Finch, principal assistant engineer, Indianapolis Water Co.; Lt. Cmdr. J. H. A. Brahtz, U. S. navy; Col. Richard Lieber, chairman, National Conference on State Parks, and R.
bonds, but the bond campaign could itself fail for that reason and the results of the failure might be felt in Europe next winter. The Germans know how a. war could be financed by the banks without much help from the public, for they did most of the financing of the first world war in that manner. Theirs was about the poorest big fiscal job in that war, unless it was Austria’s or Russia's, and they all paid for it afterward. Germany had counted on repaying the bank “(loans from indemnities laid on — %|Prance, England and Russia, and — % when this became impossible the — 1, |8roundwork was laid for the great 1% | inflation which followed the armis2''y, | tice. Next to destroying our armies
Nelson made public a letter to Rep. John M. Coffee (D. Wash.) who had asked Nelson how much material had been diverted from Grand snd pointed out Shay anntal copper Coulee Dam units, the Keswick Dam por y ho ga ae boi in California and other American copper to that country. . + Cofe
anadian project on Prujgets io tie gan in 3 Proje fee had asked Nelson whether cope “You are apparently under the Per was being Shipped to Shipshud impression that the Shipshaw power While it was denied for the Nase sena-New York transmission line,
project has been carried through Plane Makers Told
at the expense of our own power program,” Nelson said. “This is I ’ Not to ‘Daydream WASHINGTON, April 28 (U,
distinctly not the case. No AmerP.).—The president of Pennsyle
ican project has been turned down, delayed or halted to make way for Shipshaw. vania Central Airlines pinched the aviation industry last night to wake it from “impractical daye
N. Y. Stocks
Net Low Last Change 1% 1% 156% 157 33% 33% 9% 19% 174% 174% 8% 8% 166 166 13% 13% 145% 145% 54%: 54% 1% 28% 5 7% 2444 8%. 62% 26 32%
GRAIN PRICES FIRM ON BOARD OF TRADE
CHICAGO, April 28 (U. P.). — Grain futures, spurred by strength in wheat, firmed on the Board of Trade today. At the end of the first hour, wheat was up % to 1 cent a bushel; corn unchanged at OPA levels; oats up % to 3%, and rye up % to %. Buying of wheat futures by brokers with milling connection firmed the market at the opening. Eastern trade circles reported that overnight a leading Dallas chain baker bought J. Kryter, vice president, Esterline-|gq large quantity of Southwestern Angus Co. flour,
secs escnee 14.50Q@ 15.50 0es00essesee 1420010.98
e0% 00000 vane 13. e145 50 [email protected]
esessessses 13.
High Allegh Corp . 13% Allied Chem ...157 Allis-Chal ..... 33% Am Can ....... 19% Am Can pf Am Rad & S 8. Am R & SS pf.166 Am Roll Mill ... 13%
+ % -_— Y% + % -_ % -_ Y% -_% -— Ya -— Ya + Ya
sesssscssces [email protected] ssssscsecss. [email protected] . [email protected] 13.00014.50
Am Water W .. 8 Anaconda
Atchison pf ... Atl Refining.... Balt & Ohio.... Beth Steel ... Borden
“No materials or equipment intended for American power projects have been diverted to Shipshaw. In fact, most of the materials and
ce Medium and good
go down as output goes up. Barn- . ings in the first three months this year were $363,943 against $472,045 last year. But the shell-case manufacturer has a $159,500 postwar refund coming from the taxes paid in the first quarter this year. : 2 8 = . ODDS AND ENDS: Lend-lease ships are hauling back vodka from Russia; it substitutes for gin, . . A big power plant in Buenos Aires is built to burn corn instead of coal, if necessary. . . . Apparently stock traders are sticking by the old adage: “Never sell on strike news”; coal strike threats haven't caused mucH unloading of stocks. . . . 40 per cent of Willow Run’s workers now are women. . . . Machine tool makers, who see business dwindling . soon, are turning to turbines, air‘plane parts, diesel engine parts and ordnance.
TIME SCHEDULE OF RAILROAD CHANGED
The Illinois Central railroad announces the following changes in their Effingham, Bloomington and Indianapolis passenger service effective Monday, April 26th. Train No. 334 will leave Effing‘ham at 5:30 a. m., Bloomington at 10:10 a. m. and arrive at Indianapolis at 12:01 p. m. instead of 1:10
Pp. m., No. 833 will depart from Indian-
E. F. Kinney, chairman; H, W. Nie-| meyer, Horstman, secretary-treasurer, all of Indianapolis; Marion, C. K. Calvert, director of the American Water Works association representing the state.
| LABOR COMMITTEE
cently appointed by James Strickland, director of the OPA Indianapolis district, has formulated preliminary plans for a public forum | pu on war price rationing and price control to be hold at 7:45 p. m. May 13 in Tomlinson hall,
rationing office; Dr. Gerald E. Warren, acting district price executive, and members of the staffs of the rationing and price control divisions will give a summary of the ‘progress of rationing and price control.
Walter Frisbie, C. I. O. representa~ | 1 tive; Alex Gordon and Carl Livingston of the Brotherhood of I.ocomotive Engineers and Curtis Nicholson, United Mine Workers.
Officers of the Indiana section are|_
vice chairman; Herman
P. H. Reardon, A
assistant secretary; and|pg
The labor advisory committee reD.|{
Kenneth M. Kunkel of the district
Members of the committee are
MILK PRICE SET The uniform price to be paid pro-
anapolis securities dealers.
Indpls RIwYS Joe com ..
PLANS OPA MEETING :
Indbls Wate:
Cltizens Ing 1 Te n 5s 1 Tg Asso Tel Eo. tis 70 <eo...106 Indpls P & L 3%s 70 Indpis Raflwaye Co 5s ~ seve Fo
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by Indie
Bid gents Pin Corp com .... %
elt R Stk Yds 6% ptd . obbs-Merrill com .
Bobbs-Merrill 43% pid ...... 40 Circle Theater com ‘
e T Ft Wayne 7% pid. 50% nd ® sso Tel 5% p 7% cesessoce,s ‘ee eens) Y2 % sseenreenll]
Indpls Water Class A com. Lincoln Loan Co 5 fd .
P com .. *So Ind G&E 4.8 pfd ......
a 15%
tokely Bros pr pfc J co & Go 5% 1. essecsee 95
United Tel
Union Title Van Camp Milk pfd Van Camp Milk com .....
Bonds Algers Wins'w W RE W%. coe 99 American Loan jad . . 96 American Loan 5s Cent Newspaper os 43-51.
Bldg Co 4s 51... en i 4% § 0
ieee 106%
Indpls Water Co 3'%s 68
Kokomo Water Works Gs 58..104%
Kuhner Packing Co 4%s 50... 28 forris 5810 Stores 5s 50
Munele Water Works 5s 6 .
Ind Pub. Serv 3%s 69
rp 58 S. Machine G Corp. 5s ‘53. ‘sEx-dividend.
Asked
1 os. 88Y2
‘82 106 100
Bdgpt Brass .... Chrysler Comwlth & So.. Cons Edison ... Cons Oil Corn Prod Curtiss-Wr A .. 2 Dome Mines .. Douglas Aire .. Fast Kodak .. Elec Auto-L ... Gen Electric ... Gen Motors ..
a 11% © 12% %
8 26%
Indpls P & oe 15%
Int Fasvester.. Int Nickel .. Int T&T Johns-Man Kennecott
Y Central +1 Ohio Oil
108% Swif
8 108% 101 101 109 80 107%
- 101
100
Woolworth .... 36 Yellow Tr .... 18% Young Sheet . Zenith Rad .. 20%
% Ya %
FLL I+:
(BE BE
Fares Rsrsres Rare
LELLLI+T EL E+1:
Complete New York
in the field, the Germans would probably most like to push us through the same kind of inflation they experienced.
To Prevent Inflation
The banks could be made to take the entire amount of the war loan, and’ if they did not buy it all the federal reserve system could take the rest. The treasury would have no trouble in getting rid of the bonds if that were all there is to it. But either of these methods would be practically the same as printing the money, and that final step
=| would probably flow from the other % two.
In buying treasury securities the banks just credit the treasury with
¢|the amount of the purchase, and
this increases the deposits of the
«| bank by that amount. The treasury
writes checks against its deposit and when these checks are deposit-
1,| ed the money goes into other check-
ing accounts. Thus the whole mass of deposits grows and grows, and the turnover of these ever-increas-ing amounts of credit leads to inflation of prices as truly as printed money would. This is why the campaign is directed at the individual buyer. For the government to be forced inte inflationary methods of financing the war might lead to such rapid increases in prices that actual production of munitions would be slowed down. The public would be harried by so many individual wor-
Common Lambs (Shorn) Good and choice Medium and good Common
COMMERGIAL FOOD RATION HEAD NAMED
Commercial food rationing for the entire country will be handled by a food panel headed by Kenneth V. Hughes, it was announced today by Alex L. Taggart, Marion county rationing administrator. William E, Mick will be chief clerk. Headquarters of the panel will be in the World War Memorial which
county rationing administration and War Price and Rationing Board 49-1, Rationing of foods for families and individuals will continue to be taken care of by the various rationing boards of the county, each board serving those living in its rationing district. Commercial food rationing includes institutional rationing, such as restaurants, lunch stands, factory, canteens, churches, clubs and whole-) salers and retailers and industrial rationing such as bakeries and confectioneries—in fact all food rationing, except that for families and individuals, “Concentration of commercial food rationing into one panel will make
is also the headquarters for the);
equipment for the project were sup=plied by Canadian sources.” Nelson said there was no relation-
5 | ship between the halting of Amer-
ican power projects scheduled for completion in 1944 and later years and the continuance of Ship8haw. Nelson told Coffee that no shafts on forgings originally intended for Grand Coulee have been diverted to Shipshaw; that no materials originally ordered for projects in this country have been or are being diverted to Canada; that the vast majority of materials and equipment for the project was supplied from Canadian sources. Nelson said that “as a practical matter” this country has supplied
no copper for the Canadian plant
dreaming” about its post-war toe morrow and told it to burn the midnight oil on concrete plans for the future. The airline executive, C. Bedell Monro, characterized current dise cussions of post-bellum expansion of aviation as a “sign that the - industry is already quarreling over the scraps before the dinner has ever been brought to the dinner table.” He spoke to the National Aeronautical association, saying that “the air transport industry has : not yet formulated a constructive post-war program, being largely occupied with internecine disputes and self-seeking activities.”
3c 5c
LIL 5919
Living Rooms, Dining Rooms, Bedrooms, Kitchens
10¢ COR. DELAWARE & OHIO STS.
PER ROLL
LI. 5019
15¢
Merchandise
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
and Service
You Save Because We Save | Men's Suits & Overcoats
SHERWIN WILLIAMS
-apolis at 3 p. m. instead of 2 p. m, arrive at Bloomington at 4:48 p. m. .and Effingham at 9:30 p. m.
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens 3% Ibs. and over,
ducers for milk meeting requirements of the Indianapolis board of health for the first half of April has been set at $3.46 per hundredweight for milk containing 4 per cent but=terfat, f. o. b. distributor’s plant.
for uniformity in the interpretation of the regulations and should work to the advantage of all commercial users,” Mr. Taggart said.
‘stock quotationg/are carried daily in the final edition of The Times.
ries that the whole of the home front might disintegrate’ This very thing happened in the confederacy and the daily evidence of decay had its share in the collapse of morale.
16” * 18” *21™ *24%| CASE CLOTHES
215 N. Senate Ave, Open 9to 9
Has A Paint for Ever se. COSTS Lusk
WAGON WHEAT : Up to the close ) the Chicago market today, Indainapolis ‘flour and grain elevators paid $1.52 per bushel for No. 1 joes on thelr merits), No. 7 ¥hits oats, 0. 2 red cats, 60c; 3 yellow Shenied Nod 97¢ per he and No. 2 white shelled corn, $1. ne.
red wheat (other
050s 3% lbs. and under, 238%2¢ Leghorns, Broilers under 8 lbs., colored and Barred ny . Rock, 20%. overs colored and Ba a oe Ber he heavy breed, 22c; Eais—current receipts, 54 lbs. and up,
s--Grade A Suge, 36c; grade A medium, ; grade small, 25¢ grade,
30. Butter—No. or 50c. Butterfat—No. - 890¢ No. 2, 46
investment Study Pays
Graded a
Lamps Dry Paint in Four Minutes
This is why it is so important that the ordinary saver buy all he can of the war bonds.
V. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, April 28 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through April 26 compared with a year 28%:
Expen $60, His 907 $2541 Ls, 360. 756 War Spending 56, 039. 513,527 1 Receipts 16,036,758,743 ; Net Deficit... 44.799,190,604 Cash Balance. 11,224,303,496 Work. Balance 10,461,672,870 Public Debt ..131,922,876,048 3
MEAT PRODUCTS OF STATE GO TO ALLIES
During the month of March the food distribution administration acquired fro; diana 2,151,500 pounds of pork meat products, 69,926 pounds
3 of miscellaneous meats and 1,131,650
pounds of lard for shipments to the fighting armies and civilians of the
064,56 united nations overseas.
The report, announced by D..E. Smith, assistant regional adminis-
issn trator, also showed purchases by the
——————————————————————————————— G. M. ENGINEER TO SPEAK M. R. Harris, plant engineer for the Chevrolet Commercial Body division, General Motors Corp. will speak on “A Preventive Maintenance Plan” at a meeting of the
Electric League of Indianapolis at]
6:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Athenaeum, Michigan st. and Massachusetts ave,
Coca-Cola Bottling Co. (St. Louis)
1942 net income $522,920 or $121 a share vs. $712,007 or $1.65 in 1941.
federal agency of 440,000 pounds of dried skim milk, 180,000 pounds of American cheese, 1,221,515 pounds of dried whole eggs, 75,500 pounds of edible tallow and 726 cases of cereal foods.
SPEAKS ON PLASTICS Robert IL. Davis, plastics sales engineer for General Electric Co. here, will discuss “Plastics—Present, Past and Post-War Possibilities” at
LEON “TAILORING CO. 235 Mass. Ave. .: rio. sees
of First Block
HIGHEST CASH "PRICES PAID
STANLEY Jewelry Go Co.
113. W. Wash. Lincoln H
IM IE NIAY A FUR ATS Largest St de c Shon in the
INDIANA LT; CO.
112 East WASHINGTON St
PAPER AMERICAN PAPER
STOCK COMPANY RI-6341 320 W. Mich
USE YOUR CREDIT at TVA bi 9 [318 INES
CLOTHIN( COMPANY
"WHEEL CHAIRS - Why buy one? Rent one at HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT
DRUG STORE 22d and Meridian
ASKIN & MARINE |
Good Clothes, Easy Credit 121 W. Washington St. ‘Spring Now Ready
3” e's
