Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1943 — Page 14
"PAGE 14
. BUSINESS
Sicily’s Location More Important Economically Than Its Few Assets
MONDAY, JULY 19, 1943
NEW TAX FORM BEING PREPARED
‘About Thirteen Million Must File Declaration by Sept. 15.
WASHINGTON, July 19 (U. P.). | —Internal revenue officials estimatled today that about 13,000,000 tax- | payers will have to file returns Sept. { 15, and in many cases make a quar|terly income tax payment despite ‘the new 20 per cent withholding [tax on wages and salaries. But for most of these 13,000,000 the Sept. 15 payments wont bes | nearly as large as previous quarter(1y installments, The payments will [amount to roughly the difference between one-fourth of the tax lia[bility on 1943 income and the | amount collected through the with- | holding tax in July, August and September, The whole job of getting the pay- | as-you-go tax plan into operation is | the greatest administrative task tie | government has undertaken, reve- | nue bureau officials said. 1 As part of that job the bureau is; | now preparing forms on which the | 13,000,000 will have to file on Sept. [15 declarations of 1943's estimated | income, These forms will be mailed —by Sept. 1, officials hope—to all of the 38,000,000 persons on the income tax rolls. It will be up to the individual to determine whether he must file an estimate and make a payment Sept, 15. =
How Tax Is Figured The Sept. 15 estimates of 1943 income are required by law from single persons receiving more than $2700 and married persons receiving more than $3500 a year from wages and salaries subject to the Construction withholding tax and from all persons who have income of $100 a | year or more from sources not suh- | ject to withholding. Farmers, however, do not need to file their esti« mates until Dee. 15. The withholding tax is sufficient
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES War Boosts Indiana Income
| Promoted
INCREASE 1939-1942
WW Ue Sov. ZZZ60% 70% BH 50% -60% [_]70% 8 sve
Ray F. Ellis
Ray F. Ellis has been promoted to assistant general sales manager of E. C. Atkins & Co.'s industrial, mill and export sales de= partments, it was announced today. He will assist K. W, Atkins, vice president and general sales manager. Mr. Ellis joined the Indianapolis saw manufacturing firm in 1914 and has been ‘assistant to G. W. Dunnington, hardware sales manager, and later assistant to E. 8 Norvell, industrial sales manager. Mr. Ellis became industrial sales manager in 1934 when Mr. Norveil was appointed to the company's New York branch managership.
LOCAL BUILDING FIRM FORMED
WPB Plans Expansion at Evansville Steam Plant.
WASHINGTON, July 19 (U. P.) — The war production board today announced plans to boost the nation’s, power capacity by approximately 500,000 kilowatts for 1945 opera- |
War has rearranged incomes, as this chart from Business Week shows, Indiana is among the states with a 70 per cent increase in income payments between 1939 and 1942. Manufacturing and construction payrolls in Indiana rose from 3519 million in 1939 to $1192 million in 1942, government payrolls from $125 million to $185 million, farm operators’ net income from $132 million te $335 million and all others from $913 million to $1191 million.
| {
tions. The new program, announced by J. A. Krug, director of the WPB office of war utilities, will include: 1. Installation of Grand Coulee unit 7. adding 108,000 kilowatts rated capacity to the great hydro-elec-tric development in the Pacific Northwest, 2. Addition of approximately 100, - 000 kilowatts in existing Tennessee Valley stations. 3. A 20000-kilowatt steam-power addition to the San Antonio, Tex, municipal plant,
“We closed the |
t s
|
a
13.625 hoes, and 1125
HOGS (13,M))
pounds pounds pounds pounds pounds pounds
140 160 180 200 220 240
[email protected] | 12.756 14.00 | [email protected] |
HATCH is supposed to be the height of wishful thinking. | Ruhr valley's war factories or the Ukraine's rich farmland predominately an oranges, wines] make good pas-| mines. Sicily produces more than materials and they've probably hit the food-loving Italians most push the island's economic assets as Syna Moreover, Sicilian air- - JI0314.05
By ROGER BUDROW | COUNTING YOUR CHICKENS BEFORE THEY | Be that as it may, perhaps you would be interested to know | Just what good Sicily can be to the allies, when we do capture all of it. It would be more to the point to ask how much of a loss it will be to the axis. It certainly isn’t important as the but it has some value, Conquest of Sicily will mean an- * : ' other step in the war of attrition, another tightening of the belt in Europe. Sicily is | agricultural prov- | 1S STEPPED U ince. It's chief food- as stuffs for export are olives, lemons, and tomato paste. | It also grows beans and wheat, | but there isn't] enough rain to ture so livestock raising, with the exception of sheep and goats, doesn't amount to much. Most important, you might think at first glance, are the sulphur one-tenth of the worla's sulphur supply and no doubt it has heen! used in axis war production. But the Nazis, before the war broke out, built up a big reserve of such basic : stretched those supplies more than we do in this country. Other Sicilian products include asphalt, pumice, amber, sponges ‘and fish. The latter will prokably because Sicilian waters furnish nearly third of Italy's annual catch. When Sicily is under allied control, we will gain advantages that into the background, however. Our shipping situation will be vastly improved by practically clearing the Mediterranean of axis threats, at least as far as Egypt if not as far fields can base bombers that can begin smashing at war production in the hitherto unscathed industrial areas of Austria, Hungary and Albania,
Amended Estimate | The Sept. 15 declarations will show estimated income for the year, They also will show the tax install ments paid March 15 and June 15: and the estimated amount being withheld in the last six months of {the year, If the total of these (amounts does not appear to be enough to cover the entire 1943 l income tax, the individual must pay tHe difference in two installments.
13.55613.65 | [email protected] civieanivs ie 19.95018.95 ing Sows n =” » SEWING MACHINES that melt instead of stitch are being designed for the big post-war markets in plastics.
Celanese Corp. has an invention in which the steel needle of
[email protected] 12.70@ 12.90
. . ’ To Bring ‘Equality, “Big Inch” oil pipeline at Phoenix- | t0-60 days a larger share of the night, said completion of “Big! portation flexibility.” He plans to | would get a little more gasoline and | much effect on driving restrictions {aroused by Ickes’ statement was oe ——— WIRE — . — — proposal. F ti ing No F arm Auctioneering No Fun, |H0G PRICES DIP Rep. Fred A. Hartley Jr, (R. N. J.), | program for the relief of the shortKerr, farm broker, said today. “I've had as many as 70 people draw “We want action and we want i | now,” their money: others hope to move| Jones said city buyers will spend Hog prices declined unevenly at portation facilities are available to : “ y . . . more gasoline and less gas from up as high as 100 per cent above! They'll spend more money for ported. Concern Headed by 4 An additional boiler for the “ ow ; 4 ; A . forcing the ban on pleasure driving war | “They will pay as high as $259 100 pounds were 5 to 15 conts lower, ; to pay only the normal income tax kilowatts for thé Evansville. Ind. ican Automobile association which ing-Construction Corp. with offices business, like bakeries, restaurants on to manage them for wages." 1625 cattle, 375 calves St. Petersburg, Fla.. steam plant of neva show place, sold to a restau-! filed a statement with Price Ad- James E. Loer, Indianapolis, sec- sources than wages and salaries, rant man, who stocked it with 10.- | | 130 the Gulf Power Co. 240. abuses: they make possible the Steeg & Associates, engineering | : - . [tons of milk a month from the farm. | Medivm-— mary power over every out-of-state man is secretary-treasurer of Cen“How many acres have vou got to | 300- 330 pounds 12.65@ 12.85 of Air War - [email protected]| Gpincident with these statements engineering and construction busi- : . | 400- 450 pounds slump in rye of more than 2 cents
Ickes Says. ville, Pa., today symbolizes Petrole- | available gasoline for the East. Inch” would make it possible to re- | recommend an equalized rationing Midwest and Southwest states less. | lin the East. | echoed by the petroleum industry | Hartley Objects Everyone Too Anxious to Buy |INEVENLY HERE © oie sect morta“ : age is being considered,” Hartley “Most of our buyers run war Dames out of a hat to buy a tractor Hartley said. “If Mr. I to their farms later and commute.” More money and don't mind losing the Indianapoils stock yards today bring it to the East, and now. The ; " : “ rai ; y Washington.” three years ago. he said, and up farm help too,” he said. That Weights from 160 to 225 pounds Jacksonville, Fla, municipal plant, Henry Steeg. which will increase capacity by 15,a month for a man to manage their The $14 top was on good to choice and the first bracket surtax. Thus steam plant of the Southern ndi- PuSiness. lke bakeries called the OPA’s enforcement pro- at 120 E. Market st. persons with net taxable income of and produce houses,” he said. | sheep, * the Florida Power Corp. ministrator Prentiss M. Brown, say- retary; and Ray A. Hyman of would not be on a current basis 000 chickens and 150 head of cattle. 0270 ; Z by - a BOMBER TIRES 270- 300 harassment of motorists on an un- firm. Mr, Lloyd is president of A candy company was reported to —— GRAIN PRIGES SAG; Bo pony | ac | and out-of-town motorist and they tral Excavators and Mr. Loer is a sell?” asked McKerr. “How much an acre—what taxes do you pay— | 330- 380 pounds 450- 550 e Ngan cane a new warning from the pe-|ness, specializing in waterworks i A0=- 58 Jpounas 2. @ 12. . ou % st, [ s y sew 3 a bushel and indications that a Times Special Medium— troleum war council—saying that|systems, sewers and sewage disposal price ceiling may be imposed on
what was your milk check last month—have you got a complete inventory? Okay, I'll be right over. |
§ i ' ' y | Completion of ‘Big Inch’| WASHINGTON, July 19 (U. P).| | —welding of the last joint in the | um Administrator Harold L. Ickes’ promise to recommend within 30Ickes, in a statement Saturday | J : | lease tank cars and provide “trans- | program, under which Easterners | The change, however, will not have | | The mild degree of optimism | | war council which endorsed gi Not so enthusiastic was the group of Eastern congressmen headed by | to relieve Eastern shortages, “We begin to see signs that our CHICAGO, July 19 (U. P.).—War he added quickly. workers may be buying diamonds, school in 1927.” . as reported by jewelers, but their| ‘‘At one sale Chester White brood Top Falls to $14 as 13,625 said, but then accused Ickes of bosses are buying farms, George Mc- sows brought $208 a head,” he said. . “stalling.” Porkers Arrive at | : ckes bw plants.” he said. “Some of them are |at the OPA ceiling price. Machinery Stockyards. | will allocate 50,000 barrels of addilooking for a sound place to invest Sells to the limit every time.” tional petroleum for the East, trans- | ; 4 iat first if it looks like a good long- with the top falling to $14, the People of the East coast are fed up : : Farm prices in some Midwest al : tet pibiraks : with excuses and alibis. They want Engineering - areas near metropolitan centers are | Me investment, food distribution administration re- Ss 3 E g ee g . : kes tough competition for were 10 to 20 cents below Friday's | Calls OPA ‘Gestapo’ | about 25 per cent in general. in the na . : Whe , . : : =~ +n Hartley also accused officials en-| biggest land boom since the last farmers looking for hired hands. prices while weights from 225 to e 000 kilowatts. of being “a lot of Gestapo agents’! Henry B. Steeg today announced "5. An additional unit of 20000 Were beginning fo get lots of farms Plenty of farmers have 200 to 210-pounders. | ==4 Hare supported Vy the Amer. the corporation of the Engineer. inquiries from people in the food (lq their farms, and stayed right| Receipts included ana Gas & Electric Co gram a “new and dangerous course.”| Mr, Steeg is president; Robert V. more than $2000 above exemptions, 6. A 25.000-kilowatt unit for the One farm formerly a Lake Ge-| AAA President Thomas P. Henry Lloyd of Knox, vice president; and those with income from other | 120. 1407. A 20.000-kilowatt steam plant 18 ing that OPA s enforcement pro- Logansport, treasurer. unless they continued to make quarat Pensacola, Fla. to be built by he said. A pie company bought 270 200- gram opens the way to “widespread, Mr. Steeg is head of Henry B. terly payments. acres and will use at least 150 gal- 3303: 330 precedented scale; they give local Central Excavators, Inc., of Loganshave bought 7000 acres. | police and local ration boards sum- port, general contractors, Mr, HyThe phone rang. ‘Cord Program Enlarged to | Good to cholce— | 270- 300 pounds p t bdication of power partner of Mr. Stee M Incr N d represent, an a N . Steeg. HOG CEILING TALKED eet ¢ eased ee 3 ) 3 by the nationai OPA office. , . The company will take general | 360- 400 pounds NEW YORK, July 19 (U.P).—A When were the buildings put up— | 3ned— WILMINGTON, Del, 250- 550 pounds . [email protected] | although oil transportation difficul- plants, road and paving, major Confronted with the
July 19.—|
need
Slaughter Pigs
m and Good— | ties are being met at last, an alarm- | earth moving projects and housing
. N Ind Tel 4'as 55 .
: hogs featured trading in major farm an ordinary sewing machine is
“These are the questions city buy-
for Mediu | 0
- 120 pounds
replaced with a nichrome wire and a silver contact spring replaces the shuttle. An electric current connects the wire and spring, thus “welding” the plastic fabric where it is pierced by the heated wire. R. C. A. has a similar method except it uses radio-frequency current. These inventions are faster than present processes,
SEC's REPORT on stock transactions by officers of directors of corporations revea's that John J. O’Brien of South Bend sold 4200 shares of the stock he held in South Bend Lathe works, reducing his holdings to 9800 shares. . .. Lyle S. Moore of | Newport, Tenn. sold 452 shares of his Stokely Bros. common stock, leaving 1793, and 200 of the preferred, leaving 2034. John J. Kronenberg bought 1250 shares of Wayne Knitting Mills’ (Ft, Wayne) common stock, while John S. Pillsbury of Minneapolis gave 800 shares to his children, leaving him with R533.
ODDS AND ENDS: Du Pont is hopefully predicting that the army's plastic raincoat (fabric with synthetic resin coating) will eventually dethrone the rubberized raincoat, even after the peace permits rubber imports. Goodyear has completed its third tire plant in South | America; the one in Peru was built in less than a year. Cessna Aircraft claims it already has nearlv 1000 orders for its “family” plane: “orders” are “ear-marked” bonds, héwever, . Chinese chemists are making a crude oil and gasoline substitute from old pine tree stumps. . flton institute says the increase in farmers’ income is more than offset by operating expenses.
”
LOCAL ISSUES |
Nominal quotations furnished by Indianapolis securities dealers, Bid Asked
Agents Fin Corp com Ta Agents Fin Corp pfd * 3a Belt R Stk Yds com ........., 486 Belt R Stk Yds 6%; pfd Bobbs-Merrill com . Bobbs-Merrill 452, pf Circle Theater com Comwlith Loan 57% pfd Delta Elec com . : Hook Drug Co com .. Home T&T Ft Wayne 77% pf Ind & Mich Elec 77% pfd *Ind Asso Tel 57, pfd ......... Ind Hydro Elec 7% Ind Gen Serv 67% Indpls P & L 5% % Indpls P & L com Indpls Railways com Indpls Water pf ............. Indpls Water Class A com ... Lincoln Loan Co 5!5 pid ...,.. Lincoln Nat Life In. com os N Ind Pub Serv 5'27% pfd .... N Ind Pub Serv 67 N Ind Pub Serv 7° FP R Mallory com Progress Laundry com Pub Serv of Ind 57% pf .... Pub Berv of Ind com .... *So Ind G & E 48 pfd ... Btokely Bros pr pf United Tel Co 57% Union Title com . Van Camp Milk pfd Van Camp Milk com Bonds
Algers Wins'w W RR 427% ... American Loan 5s 51 American Loan 5s 46 Cent Newspaper 42s 42-31 ... Ch of Com Bldg Co 415s 51 ... Citizens Ind Tel 4's 61 Consol Fin 5s 60 cuomme tare bi Ind Asso Tel Co 32s 70 Jndpls P & L 3's 70 ........ Indpls Railways Co 5s 67 ..... Indpls Water Co 3's 66 . .. Kokomo Water Works 5s 58 | Kuhner Packing Co 413s 49 ; Morris 5 & 10 Stores 5s 50 .... Muncie Water Works 55 68 .. N Ind Pub Serv 33is 69
$13
15
104
16
17%
92
2012 14: 17%
100 1
14
100 101
82 106 100 109% kid 110 101 101 108 84 Pub Serv of Ind 3%
104 b Tel 46s 35 101 | Wat »
ers ask,” he explained. cash on the line, but they want to! know what they're getting. This man values his land at $250 an acre without the buildings, machinery or stock. It'll run about $150,000. If he wants cash, we'll get it for him.” Carey M. Jones, auctioneer for McKerr, commented briefiy: “Auctioneering isn’t what it used, to be—we had some fun then. Now there isn't anything for sale that doesn't bring a good price.” Jones said he ought to know, that
commodities today. A week-end accumulation of receipts at terminal markets and stop loss selling depressed rye futures as much as 2's cents a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, Rye sold 1% to 17 cents a bushel lower. Favorabhle crop news from the spring wheat areas caused wheat to sell 's to 3: cent lower, Oats were 3: to 1; cent lower. A ceiling on hogs, around $14.75 a hundredweight, an extended li-! censing system for slaughterers, and extension of the present $13.75 federal support price were discussed as probable features of a government plan to get more lightweight hogs and greater quantities of corn to market. In the Chicago stockyards, heavy receipts at western points, caused prices to drop 5 to 10 cents. Top price, $13.90 a hundredweight, was off 10 cents.
the old Jones National School of Auctioneering. “I'm not looking for a free ride,
, U. S. STATEMENT WASHINGTON, July 18 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the | current fiscal year through July 18 com- | pared with a yvear ago: I This Year 3.653,389 3,306,360 , 1,151,289.831 "76,784 2,502,100,024 2,249,135 67 10,111,098,489 4,189 380,
Last Year ,856 $2.671,606,209
\ | Incorporations Expevses .....% !War spending. . Harlow Feed Stores, Inc, 217 8. Carter Receipts st., Seymour; agent, BE. G. Harlow, North Net deficit .. Park dr., Seymour; 500 shares having par Cash balance value of $100 each; Ephraim G. Harlow, Work. balance Christine B. Harlow, F. F. Buhner. Public debt The Celotex Corp.. Delaware corpora- Gold reserve tion; filing of certified copy of amendment The Louis C. Huesmann Indianapolis: dissolution. Midland Battery Corp, dissolution,
144,162,889,294 80,532.937,80
. 22,357,108,7968 22,742,509,
INDIANAPOLIR CLEARING
Indianapolis; | Clearings Debits
HOUSE
hh
Building Industry Favors Post-War FHA, Survey Finds
Times Special | “These expressions of praise were
NEW YORK. July 19.—Leaders tamnered by tical of the building industry overwhelm- pe ‘ “ any shsfh Chives) ingly favor continuation of the COMMents” the magazine pointed
FHA after the war, the Architec- Out. “The most often
repeated
day in publishing the results of a red tape, and too little authority in|
special survey in its July issue. | The survey was conducted by the loan offices. A major gripe was
|questionnaire among members of the delay in processing applications {the National Association of Home even before WPB and NHA help to, i
Builders and the Mortgage Bankers’ jam the works. ‘Thirty to Association of America, presidents days’ processing time, especial and mortgage loan managers of jareas without local FHA offices, has leading life insurance companies. not been unusual. and selected lists of bankers,| “Other criticisms included: evaluarealtors, savings and loan execu- tions always lag behind building tives, lumber dealers, and building costs; quality construction is not material and equipment manufac- sufficiently encouraged; new sub-
sixty ly in
113; turers.” Out of a total of more than division development has been dis-| 22 couraged because the elaborate re-!
600 leaders surveyed, only wanted to see FHA abolished. quirements of the land-planning “The poll revealed that FHA is division have not been taken into widely regarded as the best of the account in final land valuations: Forum
Architectural explained. regulations issued by national of-
“Through FHA. persons of small ficers unfamiliar with local condi- |
means were able to acquire reason- tions. (ably priced, well-built homes with-| “The responses to specific ques‘out the expense and risk of a sec- tions on policy naturally reflected ond mortgage By making avail- economic interests and political (able a steady flow of building funds, philosophies,” the publication said. it revitalized a badly erippled in- “The builders, realtors, dealers and dustry. ‘manufacturers are in favor of meas“The FHA has established mini- ures that would stimulate new home ‘mum building standards which af- {construction such as a continuance {forded a measure of protection too: an accumulative 10 per cent down [the honest builder against the un- payment, low interest rates, 25-year fair practices of the homelegger. Its mortgages, insurance of commercial ‘contributions to mortgage banking buildings and farms. were scientific appraisals, the in-| “The lending institutions are convaluable long-term amortization cerned chiefly with setting up {loans and land inspection standards. |of the depression that followed the “Its insurance record is impres- unbridled building in the "20s. They ‘sive. As of April 30th, over a mil- favor 15-to-20-year loans, larger lion loans insured under title 203, down payments, higher interest designed for peacstime operations, rates and reserve for maintenance. ‘were on FHA's hooks, 3766 prop- They oppose the insurance of com|erties taken vver have heen sold. |munity and commercial structures nly 167 pro (title 203) jand farms on the grounds that
“They'll pay |
he helped train 3000 auctioneers in!
+ ’
,279 2,248,412,861 |
| 460 | ras : 9,348, 422,924 3.426,943 539 rubber companies so that they could | Common and medium .......
improved construction brakes that would prevent repetition |g
stronger tires to support the steadily | increasing loads in bombers and other military planes, the army has turned once more to nylon, which packs strength in a space.
The nylon cord tire program, which has been proceeding on a small scale, is now ordered to be materially enlarged. The first quantity shipment of high strength nylon yarn is sched- | uled to go from the Du Pont company’s plant to six tire and rubber companies before the end of this month. Shipments are to increase until the total by the end of the year reaches three quarters of a {million pounds of yarn. Four dozen of the first nylon tires |were sent for test to Wright field, {the army air forces’ research and testing base in Ohio, and placed on bombers of the type giving the! {greatest tire trouble. A number of | planes ordered to the Pacific war) zone were equipped with nylons. | Since that time small amounts of! yarn have been going to each of five
small
144 acquire established manufacturing ©u
techniques.
Foundaiion, |! | i
No Bulk Added |
¢ 800-1050 pounds
As America's aerial offensive stepped up, it became apparent to
| officers at Wright field that larger
loads had to be carried. More bombe had to go into bombers. In| some cases more guns or heavier, ones were to be placed in fighters. Larger cargoes were scheduled for cargo planes. Heavier loads ordinarily mean tires of larger dimensions. But these could not be in-, stalled without redesigning the landing gear and the recesses into
. Alexander Ham- tural Forum magazine revealed to- charges: too much politics, too much which the wheels retract in fight, Common and
The problem thus was to obtain more strength without adding to the bulk of the tire. and nylon proved the answer to the problem. Some of the first nylon cord tires | will be for the tail wheels, which | ‘are very important when a plane is carrying a heavy load.
J FTC ORDER AFFECTS ~ CHICAGO FIRM'S ADS
WASHINGTON, July 19 (U. P.).— The Dearborn Supply Co. of Chicago today was ordered by the fed‘eral trade commission to cease dis-
|
1% ° New Deal housing agencies,” the local officials adhere too rigidly to semination of advertisements of one
‘of its products which “fail to reveal [the harmful consequences that may result from the indiscriminate use of the preparation.” Such advertisement need only contain the statement, “Caution: Use only as directed,” if the direc tions on the labels or in the labeling contain similar warnings, the order provided.
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens. 24!zc; Leghorn hens
c. Broilers, fryers and roasters, under ’ Ibs., 27%zc. i Old roosters, 16c. ‘ | Eggs—Current receipts, 54 lbs. and up |
Graded Eggs—Grade A large, 40c; grade 7c; grade A small, 26c; no
1. 50c Butterfat—No.
B hs 49¢c; No. 2. 46¢
WAGON WHEAT
Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and Fretn| Je § 1. bushel for No. 1
| 500 pounds down ..
E (1623)
CATTL Steers
now devaloping.
N. Y. Stocks Net Last Change 2% — a 161 12 41%, 15 102 15%2 157% R 28'%
Choice— | 700- 900 pounds 15.00@ 16.60 15.00@ 16.25 15.25@ 16.50
[email protected] | 430 oe | Allegh Corp . [email protected] | Ajjied Chem [email protected] Allis-Chal
13.00014.00| Am Roc’ a ‘8 13.00214.00 Am Roll Mil Am T & ‘ [email protected] Am Water W | Anaconda ..... | mn .... 1111813 75 | Atchison Sales [email protected] | At] Refining .. Balt & Ohio . [email protected] | Beth Steel 13.15@ 14.75
Borden Sis Borg-Werner [email protected] [email protected]
Bdgpt Brass a [email protected] | Cons Edison Rulls (all weights) | Dome Mines Firestone T ... Goodyear .
900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds Jdood— 700- 300 pounds 900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds Medium — 700-1100 peunds 1100-1300 pounds Common - 700-1100 pounds
High 3 +. 161 . 413% 15 8.
10%% 137% 8
Low 27% 161
153%
Cholce— 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Good600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Medium— 500- 900 pounds Common - 500- 200 pounds Caws
| Armour
(all weights) on . Good ‘i Medium . dha Cutter and common .... Canner
Ta 8% Ta 1 : 13.25% 14.00 Sausage— Good (all weights) Medium ‘ Cutter and common .. CALVES (575) Vealers (all weights) Good to choice
Ches & Ohio .. Chrysler .. Cmwith Edis . [email protected]! Cons Vultee Air [email protected] | Cora Prod 7.00@ 8.25 Curtiss-Wr A .. ings d | Douglas Aire .. (Yearlings Excluded) | Dou 88 Elec Auto-L ... Freept-Sulphur. Gen Electric ... Goodrich
[email protected] [email protected] 9.25% 10.50
Gt North 2 : Gt West Sug Greyhound Cp . Grumm Air E. 11 (75 Ibs. up) ‘ .. [email protected] (Ind Rayon ... Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves | Int Harvester . Steers Int Nickel int T&T ... 13.50@ 14.50 Minn Hny ..... 13.25@ 14.25 Nash-Kelv Nat Cash Reg 12.75@ 13.50 | Nat Dairy ..... + [email protected] N Y Central ... | Ohio Oil ‘e . [email protected] | Packard tees Pan Am Air ... 40 9.25@ 11.50 | Penney 9 § (Pes RR ..... . | Phelps Dodge .. Procter & G .. 36 | Pub Serv ‘ 10.50913.30| Bullman
[email protected] [email protected]
Choice 500- 800 pounds
Good500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds Medium— 500-1000 pounds Common500- 900 pounds . Liha Calves (steers) Good and Choice— . 13.75% 15.00 Medium — 500 pounds down .. Calves Good and Choice— RAO ........ 500 pounds down ............ [email protected] | 8t Jos Lead ... 3 Medium — | Sears Roebuck . 500 pounds down ............ [email protected]| Servel Inc ... SHEEP AND LAMBS (1125) | Shel Un Oil .. 2 Ewes (shorn) Std & & BE... Good and choice 6.00@ 7.00/Std O fal cana choice ... 4.30@ 6.00 td Oil Ind .. Spring Lambe
td Oil N J... Good and choice . [email protected] | gue EHARer ..-- Medium and good [email protected]| Prt &£.Co .... Common coarseness 100001018 gy Air Lines .. lus Gypsum. U 8 Rubber .. U 8 Steel
West Union Westing El
(heifers)
£ £ 8 8 1
TWO NAMED TO HEAD | TOWNSHIP DEFENSE |Wesiwa:en
| | Yell » ie Joe H. Niesse and Henry J. Schnit- | Young Sheet “
zius today became co-directors of |Z" Rad the township organization and] training of the Marion county ci-| visian defense counci. { The appointments were made by | William E. Munk, county director. Both were serving as members of | the advisory staff of the county
1
group. {
~ GLASSES on CREDIT
Complete New York stock quotations are carried daily in the final edition of The Times.
COMPLETE GLASSES—Call quick for this unusual offering. Modern stylish rimless glasses, complete with “Gold-Filled” finish mounting and TORIC lenses for FAR OR NEAR VISION.
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Credit If Desired No Extra Charge
* workers of the Ford Willow
|Lux Laundry|
. [email protected] ing shortage of gasoline itself is projects.
Officers of the company have been
engaged recently on the Kingsbury
housing project near La Porte at Charlestown, the Knox and Walkerton husing projects and the one completed at La Porte. At present they are engaged in the construction of the Willow Run townsite near Ypsilanti, Mich., for Run bomber plant.
LOCAL INSURANCE OFFICIAL IN SCHOOL
Grant O, Q. Johnson, local man-
* ager of the Mutual Life Insurance
Co. of New York is attending a
* school in life insurance manage-
‘ment being held in Chicago. by the Life Insurance Sales Re-
group discussion nferences,
The two week's school, being held |
One installment is due Sept. 15 and one on Dec. 15. The taxpayer is permitted to make an amended estimate of his 194: income on Dec. 15, if he finds b that time that his September estimate was incorrect, But if his cot rected estimate is not 80 per cent accurate he will be subject to a 6 per cent penalty when the 1943 account, is finally adjusted on March 15, 1944, Tne bureau is already swamped with work, Four thousand employ-
| ees were added to take care of the
victory tax deductions and a great.
many more will be needed by Sept. 1 when the big job on “pay-as-you-go" will start. The office of the rollector of internal revenue now has 1 24,000 employees. Officials estimated that 100,000,000 statements of tax witholdings bv employers will be received in a year
“search bureau of Hartford, Conn., and these will have to be checked '4 | includes classes,
against the returns and declarations of the taxpayers.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Merchandise and Service
You Save Because We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats
S167 “187 “217 24" CASE CLOTHES
215 N. Senate Ave, Open 9 to 9
WHILE THE REST OF THE TOWN SLEEPS HAAG’'S ALL-NIGHT DRUG STORE
22d and Meridian IS OPEN
RE- WEAVING]
of MOTH HOLES—BURNT or WORN SPOTS LEON TAILORING CO. 235 Mass Ave. In the Middle of
the First Block
Make Woodworking Your Hobby. DELTA MOTOR DRIVEN TOOLS Exclusively at
VONNEGUT’S 120 E. Washington St.
Use
SAXOPHONE § Instruction
115 E. Ohio St.—FR-1184
25
Per Lesson
MOSKING CLOTHING COMPANY
«131 W, Washington St. Directly Opposite Indiana Theater
FUR COAT STORAGE Phone
FRanklin 258 SB 00
ror Ronded Messenger
MARILYN FURS
ured 2 E. OHIO ST. he
$50
OPEN
MONDAYS AND FRIDAYS
UNTIL 9 P. M.
Pearson:
128 North Pennsylvania ee LI-5513
for Better Service
Phone BR. 5461
hr————— |
LEVINSON
V4 \ az’, STRAW HATS “The coolest taing
(38 / , Sha under the sun.” $19 $908 - | and 2
THREE STORES
AJ Y : r “+ TR COAT | PATS Largest Selection A TEN Lie
INDIANA FUR CO.
112 East WASHINGTON St
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. || IT WILL GET QUICK RESULTS |
Clothing on Credit
SEYMOUR’S
i141 W. Washington St.
WE Buy Diamonds
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
A
’
Y
USE YOUR CREDIT at
