Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 July 1943 — Page 21
}
FRIDAY,
yo 'Congressman Charges Navy Failed to Cancel Contract! With Standard as Ordered by Justice Department; Navy Favors Interim Agreement.
WASHINGTON, July 30
Peterson (D. Fla.) of the house public lands committee announced today that his committee would conduct a new and more thoruogh investigation of the wmavy’s Elk Hills oil contract when congress reconvenes. He made the announcement after charging that the
navy had failed to cancel its
California as ordered by the justice department and was
JUL LY 30, 1043
~ NEW ELK HILLS OIL PROBE PROMISED
IPALCO REPORT NET INCOME UP
Larger Operating Expenses! Offset Increase in
Revenue.
{ The Indianapolis Power & Light Co. today reported net income for] the year ended June 30 of $2.287,.407, a gain of $75,919 over the 1942 pefiod. . The annual report of the utility
shows that although operating rev-|
enues amounted to $16,479,304, an increase of $1,467.927, operating expenses increased $1,275,354 to total $12,532,816. Federal income taxes bulked large | in cutting net income. IPALCO paid
$1,325,762 more in such taxes in the year just ended, bringing the total]
thus paid to $3,411,292. Net for the six months June 30 was $1019.554, a gain of] 24,230 over the year-ago period. |
‘Operating revenues for this period |
amounted to $8,527,093, compared to] 7,693,336, and expenses and taxes |
came to $6,739494, compared with)
$5,995,622.
NAME NEW MANAGER FOR CAPITOL DAIRIES
WYppointment of Leonard J. Tam- | blyn, Terre Haute, as manager of | Capitol Dairies, Indianapolis unit of the Borden Co. was announced | today by Norval D. Goss, chairman of Borden's midwest division. At present, Mr. Tamblyn is manaker of Borden's Pure Milk & Ice Cream Co. at Terre Haute. In his new position he succeeds Arthur P. Holt, who resigned recently because
ended |
(U. P.).—Chairman J. Hardin
contract with Standard Oil of
still operating the Elk Hills lease under its terms. The navy’s reply, issued last night in a formal stateiment, said, “The necessary docu- | ments are now under consideration | by the parties and the department lot justice following submission on June 24 in a form which did not wholly meet justice department ap-
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Boy, That Really Tastes Good
Jubilant over the removal of rationing restrictions on coffee, executives of the Pan American Coffee
bureau and the National Coffee association drink a toast to—coffee. Aguilar of El Salvador, second vice chairman of the American bureau; Eurico Penteado of Brazil, chairman of the bureau; George C. Thierbach of San Francisco, president of the association, and Mario Camargo of Colombia, first vice chairman of the bureau.
proval.” Peterson, in his announcement of
jan investigation, said it would in-|
|volve “new SVidence yo So 2] | sonalities.” He sa e jinto “certain dara” in ye with the contract and the back-| ground of persons dealing with It since congress recessed. Informa- | ‘tion he has received, he said, has] convinced him of need for wide linvestigation by the full committee.
‘Navy Could Halt Output’
In a rapid interplay of statement and counter-statement following his| |disclosure that the disputed con- | tract is still in operation, Peterson refuted navy contentions that “a recision agreement is advisable in order to avoid loss of government oil which would result from mere [cancellation.” | “It is true,” he said, “that the] navy may receive more oil under terms of the contract than if | Standard is allowed to go ahead land pump from their own sections which would drain from the adjacent navy lands. “But under the war powers act! |the navy could stop Standards {production any time and conserve {all the oil in the field.” The balance of the navy stateiment was a simple affirmation that the navy and Standard had agreed [to rescind the contract which gives |Standard use of all navy oil pro{duced during the “next five years land exclusive rights to develop and | process all oil produced thereafter.
|
NITROGEN AVAILABLE Nitrogen again will be available in the mixed fertilizer for wheat and {other small grains that are to be]
They are (left to right)
Roberto
HOG PRICES SAG 20 T0 30 GENTS
Top for 200-210 Pounders Drops to $14.25 Here; 9575 Received.
Hog prices were down 20 to 30 cents at the Indianapolis stockyards today, the food distribution administration reported. The top! for 200-210-pound porkers sagged to $14.25. Receipts included 9575 hogs, 450! cattle, 475 calves and 1050 sheep.
HOGS (9575)
120- 140 pounds 140- 160 pounds 13.00@ 14.15 160- 180 pounds 14, ha 11 x 180- 200 pounds «....vns evens 14, 200- 220 pounds .... ne | ne i 3 220- 240 pounds . [email protected] 240- 270 pounds . . [email protected] 270- 300 pounds .. . [email protected] 300- 330 pounds ... veene [email protected] 330- 360 pounds ......ce000 woo 13.70@ 13.75 [email protected]
Medium— 160- 220 pounds Packing Sows Good to choice— 70- 300 pounds 300- 230 pounds .. 330- 360 pounds
[email protected] . [email protected] . [email protected] . [email protected]
400- 450 pounds ....ev000000n [email protected] 450- 550 pounds [email protected]
Medium— 250- 550 pounds [email protected] Slaughter Pigs Medium and Good— 90- 120 pounds CATTLE (450)
Steers
11.50@ 12.50
Choice— [email protected]
700- 900 pounds
Ad Writers, Artists Take Lead in Post-War Planning
By JOHN LOVE Times Special Writer CLEVELAND, July 30.—The hardest-working planners of the world-to-come are not, after all, in the government offices but in the advertising agencies, and there the supreme achievements in forecasting are
turned out by the artists.
Their lives are not complicated by worry over the problem the social
planners have of persuading us to adopt their programs,
experts are not bothered that way.) They just tell us what we are going to enjoy in the year 194x. We're] supposed to like it. The copywriters in the agencies are in general more conservative | than the artists. The latter capture
the eye with a hint of electronic|
power—power by wireless—but all the reader finds out is that Eitel- | McCullough of San Bruno, Cal, makes vacuum tubes but can’t tell] too much about them yet. If I were giving an award for | achievement in post-war imagination it would have to. be divided between the artists working for | Bohn Aluminum and International | Nickel.
Sketch Highway Sleeping Cars
The Bohn men envision cities of office buildings and houses in| glistening metal. Dwellings half of glass with “girders, pillars and innumerable beautifying effects made of light alloys.” One release pictures a rapid-transit train suspended from an overhead track, a device used in the much-bombed German city of Wuppertal, where planning for {ransportation was]
The airbrush
IN BRIEF—
Peters-Dalton,
Ine, of Detroit,
manufacturers of ventilating sys-|
| tems, announce the opening of their | Indianapolis office at 1412 Circle Tower bldg. =
» ”
President Roosevelt has appointled Dr. Amos E. Taylor, associated (with the bureal for 13 years, director of the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce of the department of commerce. ” ” ”
Directors of the Bethlehem Steel Co. have declared the usual dividend of $1.50 on the common stock and reported second-quarter net income equivalent to $1.67 a share, compared with $1.49 in the year-ago period. ”
2 ”
A new electric furnace which will add 65,000 tons annually to the production
of aircraft steels has |
UTILITY TO HELP POWER ‘BIG INCH
Public Service to Furnish Service for 4 of 26
Pump Stations.
Public Service Company of Indiana, Inc, has contracted with War Emergency Pipelines, Inc, to furnish electric power for four of the
26 pump stations along the 1400mile war emergency pipeline which connects the oil fields of southern Texas with eastern tidewater. WEP, a corporation made up of 11 oil companies building the line, are acting agents for the U. S. government. The corporation becomes Public Service Co.'s largest account, with service at four delivery points. Pump stations in Indiana are located at French Lick, Seymour, Princeton and Oldenburg, near Batesville. Major system improvements were required to furnish adequate service by the Indiana utility, which is the only utility along the route serving four stations.
Centrifugal Pumps . Needed
Additional pumping facilities are required for the 20-inch gasoline line which runs parallel to the “Big Inch” oil line from Little Rock, Ark, to the eastern terminal. Pumping, or “booster,” stations are spaced about 52 miles apart in the comparatively level portions of the 24inch line, with working initial pressures at each station of T00 to 750 pounds per square inch. Electric power, purchased from existing utilities, was selected to provide the pumping energy because the large capacity of the pipe line made it practically imperative that centrifugal pumps be used for boosting along the full capacity of 300,000 barrels per day. According to Public Service engineers, each pump station in the state will consume almost 30 million kilowatt hours a year on the 24-inch oil line, providing the line is operated continuously at full capacity, 300,000 barrels daily. The gasoline, or products line, will take an additional 26,000,000 kilowatt hours per year. WEP was conceived originally as a wartime emergency project to
in the East, and eastern shipping points. The long-life operation of the line, however, practically is assured by the low delivery cost in comparison to cost of delivery by oil tanker from gtlf ports.
GRAIN FUTURES FIRM ON BOARD OF TRADE
CHICAGO, July 30 (U, P)— Grain futures maintained a steady to firm tone on the Board of Trade of Trade today. At the end of the first hour wheat
alleviate the oil and gas shortage ¥.
WIBC 1070 (Mutual)
Jimmy Morgan Bill & Evalin&- - Little Jimmy Turf Bar Time
Lester Huff Lester Huff Datlce Time Superman
WFBM 1260 Fri. (CBS)
:00 Song Shop :15 Song Shop :30 Song Shop 5 The Home
Firks
New: ‘15 The "Duncans 3 Hoosiers at War 5 Gilbert Forpes
:00 I Love a Mystery 116 Secret Weapon Easy Aces Mr. Keen
Meet Corliss Arch'r Meet Corliss Arch'r
ages =i >
Ray Henle Nelson Baker Lone manger Lone Ranger
Cal Tinney Star Parade Sherlock Holmes Sherlock Holmes
Gabriel Heatter American Hero Double or Nothing Double or Nothing
John B. Hughes Baseball Baseball Baseball
Baseball Baseball Baseball Scoreboard
News & Music Don Roth George Hamilton Musical Interlude
- Playhouse Playhouse That Brewster Boy That Brewster Boy
Thanks to Yanks ‘hanks to Yanks Tiree Sisters Bill Henry
10:00 Gilbert Forbes 10:15 Joseph C. Harsch 10:30 Sandman 10:45 Sandman
11:00 Baseball Roundup 11:15 Star Parade 11:30 Benny Goodman 11:45 Benny Goodman
> dD Ld -
ve» FBRBR[(TIII | ARBD | DS dod VOUS | POoUO | NO
Ww dS oO
SATURDAY
WIRE 1430 Pri. (NBC)
Girl Marries Portia Plain Bill Front Page Farrell
Romantic Melodies Dial & Dance 10-2-4 Ranch Sydney Mason
Fred Waring World News Symphonic Swing Ralph Knox
Lucille Manners Lucille Manners All Time Hit Parade All Time Hit Parade
Waltz Time Waltz Time People Are funny People Are Funny
Tommy Riggs Tommy Riggs Bill Stern Victory Business
John Morrow, News Texas Rangers Starlight Trail Starlight Trail
Music You Want Music You Want Emil Coleman Emil Coleman
PROGRAMS
PAGE 21
ON THE RADIO
THIS EVENING
(The Indianapolis Times is not responsible for Inaccuracies im program ane nouncements caused by station changes after press time.)
WISH 1310 (Blue Network)
East Ballroom West Ballroom South Ballroom Sportsman Club
Songs You Love Dick Tracy Jack Armstrong Baseball Roundup
Navy Salute Novelette H. R. Gross Sports Roundup
Earl Godwin Parker Family Meet Your Navy Meet Your Navy
Gang Busters Gang Busters Spotlight Bands Spotlight Bands
John Vandercook Lulu & Johnny Alec Templeton Ink Spots
H. R. Gross Island Song Sports Arena Concert Master
News Service & Swing Service & Swing Service & Swing
WFBM 1260 WIBC 1070 (CBS) (Mutual)
:30 Early Birds Hebrew Christ. Hour :45 Early Birds Hebrew Christ. Hour
0 World Today Wabash Val, Folks Early Birds . | Wahash Val, Folks Hime to Shine Musical Clock ews
Stony & Wilma Lee Early Birds
Nelson Baker London Red Cross | Bandwagon Garden Gate Get Up & Go Garden Gate
Get Up & Go “9:00 Youth on Parade
Curly Baker 8 yYouth on Parade | Bill & Evalina 1:30 WAC Program Friendly House 9:45 9:43 Timely Tunes
Friendly House 10: 00 0:00 Let's Pretend Bert Julian 10:15 Let's Pretend Back to the Bible 10:30 Ration for Fashion| Back to the Bible 10:45 Ration for Fashion
Haymakers 11:00 Today's Theater News & Markets 11:15 Today's Theater | Happy Hoosiers 11:30 Hollywood Stars | Little Jimmy 11:45 Hollywood Stars
Hi Sallor 12:00 Gilbert Forbes Nelson Baker 12:15 Army Voice Farm Front 12:30 Farm Circle Farm Front 12:45 Farm Circle Jungle Jim 1:00 Wings Jamboree Prevue 1:15 Wings Jamboree Prevue 1:30 Spirit of '43 Mutual Goes Calling 1:45 Spirit of "43 Mutual Goes Calling :00 Men & Books
Palmer House Orch. Palmer Hovnse Orch. Ethel Willils Bob Chester
Paul Martell Wilson Has4{sap , WIBC Matinee Dave Minor
Navy Bulletin Board Navy Bulletin Board Navy Bulletin Board
wo Fr - 3 28=S ORD
Cows] 3 59 gp 00 [2-13 an o
F.O. B. Detroit
London Report Leatherneck Lore Calling Pan-Am. Calling Pan-Am.
Maritime Program Maritime Program Commandos
Rhythm Matinee
WIRE 1430 (NBC)
Dawn Patrol Dawn Patrol
WISH 1310 (Blue Network) Morning Mail Sons of Pioneers
News Roundup Musical Clock Musical Clock Musical Clock
Musical Clock Ralph Knox U. S. Navy Story Lady
Merry Melodies Russell Ford Babe Ruth Public Schools
News Morning Mail Morning Mail Br. Club News
Breakfast Club Breakfast Club Breakfast Club Breakfast Club
News Hymn Singer Youth & Religion Navy Music
Dramatic Sketch Dramatic Sketch Coast Guards Virginia Byrd
Fur Fashions Fur Fashions Headlines EAT-itorially
MEAT-itorially Dick Stone Wally Nehrling John Morrow
Frank Parrish Star Parade Monitor News U. 8S. Marines
U.S. Air Force Band U.S. Air Force Band Lyrics by Liza Lyrics by Liza
Yonkers Handicap Minstrel Melodies Minstrel Melodies
Not For Glory Not For Glory Three Suns Trio
Window Shopping Window Shopping Little Playhouse Little Playhouse
Music by Black Music by Black Farm and Home Farm and Home
New People's Man Queens Die Proudly Singo
News Highlights Musette Music Tommy Tucker Tommy Tucker
Van Alexander Joe Venuti George Hicks The Marshall's
Saturday Concert Saturday Concert Saturday Concert Jay Cees
Horace Heidt Horace Heidt Horace Heidt
hush Www NN
Commandos Navy Bulletin Board
M. 4:00—Girl Marries 4:15—~Portia 4:30—Plain_ Bill 4:45—Front Page Farrell 5:00—Easy Listening 5:15—Reporter-News 5:30—Lum & Abner
6:15—Normal Ruvell
Press Soldiers
WLW FRIDAY EVENING
6:30—Little Band 6:45~H. V. Kaltenborn 7:00—Noah Webster Says 7:15—Noah Webster Says 7:30AM Time Hit Parade 7:45—-All Time Hit Parade 8:00-=Waltz Time 8:15~Waltz Time 8:30—People Are Funny 8:45—People Are Funny 9:00—~Tommy Riggs
SATURDAY PROGRAMS
Horace Heidt
9:15—Tommy Riggs 9:30—Bill Stern 9:45—Coronet Little Show 10:00~N 10:15—Gregor Ziemer 10:30—~Burt Farber 10:45—Uncle Sam 11:00—~Wally Johnson 11:15-=Jan 11:30--Moon River 11:45—Moon River
ews
Savitt
A.M. 6:30—News 6:45—Boone Co. Caravan 7:00—Boone Co. Caravan 7:15—~Bradley Kincaid 93 39 Consulner 7:45--Consum 8: Oo Bradley Kincatd 8:15—Mail B 8:30—Mail Bag 8:45—My He alt h 9:00—Bradley Kincaid 9:15—8Synagogue
12:30-Your Son
10:00—Home Forum 10:15>—Home Forum 10:30—Aunt Mary 10:45—Let's Visit 11:00—Everybody’'s Farm 11:15—Everybody’'s Farm 11:30—Everybody’'s Farm 11:45—Everybody’'s Farm 12:00—Everybody’'s Farm
12:15—Everybody's Farm 3 45—Your Son at War
at War
iB C0 COLI LO BRIA ND BD pe ee
:30—~Roy Shields :45—Bluejackets 00—Dept. of 15—Joe Venuit 30—N. 45—Trading Post 00—Rhythm Matinee 15—Rhythm Matinee 30—~Minstrel Melodies 45—Minstrel Melodies 00—Horace Heidt :15—Horace Heidt :30—Horace Heidt
Labor
ews
9:30—Courtship Songs 1:00—Roy Shields 4:45—Horace Heidt
900-1100 pounds . 1100-1300 pounds .. 1300. 1500 pounds Goo 900 pounds 900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds Medium-— 700-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds Common— 700-1100 pounds
of ill health. The change is effec- |seeded this fall, say Purdue univer-
hi : 3 : s : 1:15—Roy Shields tive immediately. sity extension agronomists.
9:45-—-Hank Penny 5 ¥ #
By DAN GORDON | A TIMELY broadcast on “Can- | 4 p. m. Sunday. he Malance of the . {program will inclutle Glinka's overs ning Safety” will be featured on | ,.. 15 “Russian and Ludmilla, the weekly program of the home | Strauss’ “On the Beautiful Blue ' safety division of the Indianapolis |Danube” and Dr. Black's own “Free
Chamber of Commerce over WIRE | Fantasy” of Jerome Kern's “Or
at 9:10 a. m. tomorrow. Florence ‘Man River. Stone, assistant director of safety | for the chamber, will interview Mrs.|] AROUND THE DIAL Tonight 4 {Ruth Buel, in charge of home , . Lt. Cmdr. Robert Montgomery, ? | service for the Indianapolis Fower Chief Specialist John Carter, Lt. & Light Co. | Cmdr. Eddie Peabody and Billy de . Wolfe, stage and screen comedian, | . Frankie | ll on “Meet Your Navy,” WISH \
inadequate in the first place. |been put into full operation at the International Nickel, which also ‘South Chicago works of Carnegiefabricates metals, stays closer to | Illinois Steel Corp. earth. It expects the farmer will ® x = harness the jeep like a tractor and| Executors of the estate of the the truck driver will use the| late J. P. Morgan have agreed to walkie-talkie radio to call for help| sell 73514 shares of Dwight when he has a breakdown. Post-war| Manufacturing Co. $12.50 par coution: We shall still have break-| value capital stock to an underdowns. writing group headed by Hemp-Timken-Detroit Axle hired Lau-| hill, Noyes & Co. of New York. relle Guild, New York industrial . 8 =a designer, to sketch up highway| The P. Lorillard Co. has ansleeping cars with noses of curved nounced that it is negotiating with glass several times as large as those | Smith, Barney & Co. and Lehman of bombers. Another vehicle, the Bros. for a $25,000,000 refinancing Guild cross-country cattle hauler, |Program to retire its 7 per cent
was up % to 1% cents a bushel; oats unchanged to up %, and rye unchanged $9. up ‘i.
N. Y. Stocks
Low Last change
Allegh Corp ... ; 2'2 's Allis-Chal P .“ 37% 375 3 A 8% 8Ms 's Am Loco
13's 13%2 38 Am Roll Mill .. ET ... 108
15.25@ 16.50 [email protected] [email protected] 13.75@ 15.00 [email protected] 14.00@ 15.50
[email protected] 12.50@ 14.00
10.509 12.50
i # # # a
- bi [Symphony orchestra over WIRE al 4 a K¢
14.25@ 15.50 14.50@ 15.50
[email protected] 13.00@ 14.50
11.75@ 13.00 [email protected]
Sn. 1000 pounds Fr) # o oe 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Medium — 500- 90C pounds Common-— 500- 900 pounds . Cows (all weights)
9 9'a 3 Am 1
Am T & Am Water W .. Anaconda Arm Ii pr pf.. Atchison 6134 At! Refining .. Balt & Ohio .. Beth Steel ....
Ta
Payroll CHECKS
1, 3
yu 's SPOTLIGHT BANDS .
CASHED
Office Hours: 9 to 4 doily.
Bulls (all weights) (Yearlings excluded)
Saturday 9 to 1
PHONE FOR A LOAN
@ 4 out of 5 MORRIS PLAN Loans Made Without Endorsers. Borrow on Character, Auto or Furniture — from $75 to $500 to $1,000. Many loans completed while you wait. No credit inquiries made of friends or relatives. Take 6 weeks to make the first payment. FREE PARKING across the street in Arcade Garage for auto appraisal.
Morris Plan
Phone MArket 4455 or Come to Morris Plan 110 East Washington St.
— Anytime, Day or Night
— Cost a dime.
S East Market Street Henry Holt, Partner «
SERVING INVESTOR
ACTUAL information on securities, so essential to intelligent investing, has been supplied by us to our clients for more than thirty years. We believe you too, as an investor, will find this a useful service.
THOMSON & MfKINNON
MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
Indianapolis, Indiana Telephone: Market 3501 ‘
GLASSES
moun and TORIC lenses
MPLETE GLASSES—Call quick for this unusual offering. Modern stylish rimless glasses, complete with “Gold-Filled” finish
on CREDIT
for FAR OR NEAR VISION.
15-DAY TRIAL! ourself by 15-dar Vie risk, that this the a bargain you It not perect) st ‘after 15-day trial, jr refunded. Glasses ground on prescription,
“BACK GUARA v
Credit If Desired No Extra
Largest Opticians n America
Principals of this firm own a large optical shop and the la. gest cnain of direct-to-consumer retail optical parlors in America,
bi
CEE
[email protected] Sausa Good an weigh’sr vevvvnenn [email protected] [email protected]
CALVE: (435) Vealers (all weights)
Good to choice Common and medium . Cull (75 lbs. up)
00 ripeness.”
800-1050 pounds Good
Feeder and Stocker Cittle a Steers
Choice—
500- 800 pounds
500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds Medium— 500-1000 pounds Common— 500- 800 pounds Calves (steers)
Good ‘and Choice—
500 pounds down Medium-— 500 pounds dow Calves (heifers) Good and Choice— 500 pounds down Medium— 500 pounds down
SHEEP AND LAMBS (1050)
Ewes (shorn) Good and choice Common and choice Spring Lambs Good and choice Medium and good Common
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal guotations furnished = Indian.
apolis securities dealers. Agents Fin Corp com . ’ Agents Fin Corp pH . Beit R Stk Yds co "es Belt R Stk Yds &% pid. “eet Bobbs-Merrill com Bosbe-Merl tho pid «iiiaee rcle Theater c Sommith 1 joan 5% ; pid sheeeis Delta
sevens
“esas
aH ro Ind Gen Serv Indpis 5 8
senna seenii ld
ATH L com
sassnenee
nial: aly
f .“ Indpls Warer r Dlase A com ... Loan Co § fd .
N Ind Pub Serv 6% N Ind Pub Serv 7% pid baer oF un; Puts Serv of Ind 5% pt . .
Pub Serv of Ind com ....eeue *So Ind G & E 48 pid... Stokely ros pr pf ...eevsecins Unite CO 5% cvvevvnnars Union Title com .. Van Camp pf Van Camp
Algess Wins merican American ig News
of Com R% 3v Ctivens Ind Tel 4'2s Consol Fin
Indpls P& L Indpls Raliwiys C 3 Yai 35s 66 Water Wor s Kinner Packin 5s 50 .
ce Wider Wark oes ik Ag
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cesses senane “sasssasees
Bonds
n sss n r des 43-31 .“
sess
of Fe Pd ei 0!
«+ [email protected] « [email protected]
cease [email protected] veo [email protected]
108%
'w W RR 4 “ie w %% n
SL... 1
nd Calves
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected]
13.50@ 14.50 [email protected] 10. 011 50
ake Ya
“ee
Lo
3 In
are
101 11%
“en
104 n
17% 4
03% Week Ago........!....
1, |are not showing them. They don’t
with trailer, will be superior to most 3| motorbuses now running on the 3 highways.
‘Fresh as California Dew’
Du Pont goes a long way to advertise the place of cellophane for packaging the products that will travel by plane. “California fruits and vegetables will appear in Brooklyn as fresh as the California dew that will glisten on their
The supreme competition of the future, it appears from a survey of current paid space in newspapers and magazines, is going to lie between the devices intended to take us somewhere else and those which will make it unnecessary to go. While Consolidated Vultee Aircraft is proving no spot on the globe is more than 60 hours flying time from another spot, General Electric promises television will let you see the world without leaving the living room.
Designers Busy
Those who elect to stay where they are will have furniture of molded plywood, designed by Raymond Loewy for Durez plastics. Both Durez and Bakelite, the latter with | the help of another designer, R.| Doulton Stott, are proposing in-| terior hardware of molded phenolic resins. These are busy days for the designers. Egmont Arens talks for Monsanto Plastics of bonded plywoods which can be rolled out almost literally by the mile and formed into any shape the versatile world of industry will want. Most of the end-products the ad artists and industrial designers are dreaming up are suggestions their clients are making to other manufacturers. The makers of the materials are providing most of the imagination these days, and if the producers of the consumer goods are themselves making . drawings, they
want their them yet.
DAILY PRICE INDEX
NEW YORK, July 30 (U. P).— Dun & Bradstreet’s daily weighted price index of 30 basic commodities compiled for United Press (1930-32 average equals 100): Yesterday eb pieniiia 170.53 eeses 17043 Month ABO...........iviiees 170.69 Year Ago cesviees 19150 1943 High (April Biiiaiiie 172.40 1943 Low (Jan. 2)......... 16661
a ended
competitors to see
debentures of 1944 and repay bank loans. ” ” ” Present coffee reserves approximate. 5 million bags, over and above supplies held by the government for the armed services— one of the largest stocks ever accumulated in the history of the American coffee trade, it has been reported by George C. Thierbach, president of the National Coffee association. ” = 2 Savings ranging up to 80 per cent in use of critical materials as compared with pre-war levels have been accomplished in the war hous-
ing construction program through |;
the joint co-operation of the government and the building industry, according to John H. Blandford Jr., administrator of the national housing agency.
GITY TO BE REGULAR HELIGOPTER STATION
Times Special
Indianapolis will be one of the regular stopping points for the discharge and taking on of passengers on the Chicago-Cincinnati, Louis-|ville-Detroit and Pittsburgh-St. Louis routes of helicopter service, when it is established, according
to Mr. L. H. Ristow, general traffic 8
manager of Pennsylvania Greyhound Lines. Mr. Ristow announced the tentative list of towns and cities along the routes which will ‘be provided with the helicopter service, at the
same time filing the list of places »
to be served by his company with this new form of transportation with the civil aeronautics board in Washington. The application of Greyhound
Lines for a certificate to operate|22!2
helicopters along the same routes as the company busses now follow, was filed with the CAB several weeks ago and is scheduled to come| up for a hearing early in September,
pa...
We. Buy and Sell:
tii SER ——
417 Circle Tower -
Borden Borg-Warner .. Bdgpt Brass .
Chrysler Col & on . Cons Edis 2 Cons Vultee Alre 16'2 Corn Prod .... 59% Curtiss-Wr A.. Dome Mines .. Douglas Aire .. Dow Chem .... East Elec Auto-L ..
Gen Motors ... Goodrich Goodyear Int Harvester.. Int Nickel .
PEERRRRER REEL 0h E hh tT
| +:
Link Belt Minn Hny .... Monsanto Nash-Kelv .... Nat Biscuit ...
b:
Noblitt-Sparks. . Ohio Oil Packard Pan Am Air .. Penney Penn RR Phelps Dodge.. Procter & G . Pub Serv Pullman Pure Oil Real Silk St Jos Lead ... Sears Roebuck. Servel Inc .... Shell Un Oil . Std Brands ... Std G & B ... Std O Cal . Std Oil (Ind.). Std Oil (N. J.). Studebaker .... Co ...
Un Air Lines .. U S Gypsum .. U 8S Ind Al ... U 8 Rubber .. U S Smelt .... 54 U S Steel West Union ... Westing El .... Woolworthy «...
Zenith Rad .... 3
LOCAL PRODUCE Heavy breed hens, 24!zc¢; Leghorn hens,
Broilers, fryers and rosters, under § 1bs., 27%c. Old roosters, 16e.
JBs==Current receipts, 54 lbs. and up,
4c. Graded Eggs—Grade A large, 43¢; grad A Re pH grade A in Soe pi
Indianapolis Water Company Common Stock
Market 161; Bid, Offered at 18
Cry Securrms
Investment
1, S0c. But ‘ 49¢; No. 2. 466. fertat=to,. 3,
Corporanion
Bankers
* | Masters from the U. 8. naval train- at 7 ing station at Farragut, Ida.
30 +.
WIRE at 7.
Lucille Manner’s sing~ to- ing of “L'Amour Toujours L'Amour,”
. Madeleine Carrol in.
night, and Teddy Powell from the:
' the radio version of “Now, Voyager,”
. U. S. naval training school at the University of Chicago over WISH ‘lat 8:30 p. m.
. discussion on WIRE at 6 p. m. to-
. # »
THREE LEADING figures of radio and the films will join a vanel
morrow about how these art mediums
WFBM at
testant
8...
The wife of & Chinese fighter hero as a guest cone on John Reed King's “Double or Nothing” WIBC at 8:30 . bloom as Bill Stern’s guest, WI at 9:30.
quiz show, . Maxie Rose
5 may best be used
v, | Fight” i" Chairman James «Lawrence Fly of g§
x Disney, creator of the immortals— Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck, ‘*v. land Francis S. Harmon, executive vice chairman of the war activities 1 committee of the motion picture
| played by pianist Jose Iturbi and the * | Rochester Philharmonic orchestra,
"| world-famous pianist, will be fea-
to help insure a permanent peace. Taking part in the discussion on “For This We will be
the federal com=munications com-
mission, Walt Walt Disney
, | industry. Disney is expected to explain details about the significant new use he has found for cartoon movies in the field of education. » = ”
SERIOUS RECORDED Music Tonight . . . The first, second and
No. 3 in A niinor by Mendelssohn,
WIRE at 11:05. ” ALEXANDER BRAILOWSKY,
® =
tured soloist ‘with a rendition of Tschaikowsky's popular concerto No. 1 in B flat minor on. the first
fourth movements of the symphony |
Debits
Electric Motors For Wind Tunnel
PITTSBURGH, July 30 (U. P.). —The army's new stratosphere wind tunnel at Wright Field soon will be equipped with two 20,000horsepower electric motors, each twice as powerful as the biggest electric motors supplied to giant steel mills, The two driving units, con. structed by the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Co, will whip up a greater than 600-mile-an-hour torrent of cold air ‘to test high altitude performance of faster and more deadly fighting planes.
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, July 30 (U. P.).—Gove ernment expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through July 28 come pared with 4 Year he if Last Year
$0 200,030, 808 - $4.610,085,860 5,735,329,269 3,990,921,934 J 4 '853.957 607,646, 4,538,205,851 3,912,183,358 Cash Bal .. 8734,341,762 3,266,715,071 Working Bal. 7,971,663,038 2,504,271,613 Public Debt ..: 144,932,318,875 81,228,797,942 Gold Reserve 22,333,784,869
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings ......... vies 8 4,216,000 20,580,000
EXpénses ... War Spend... Receipts. ,... | Net Deficit...
Western Auto. Supply Co. 3 months ended June 30 net income
sponsored program of the NBC
$585,049 vs. $558,845 year ago.
Do You Want fo Get Into WAR WORK? Listen To
BRIDGEPORT BRASS} EMPLOYEES
“INDIANA AT WAR” Program 170 130 Pp; M—SAT. JULY 3 |
22,745,8532,001 |
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