Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1943 — Page 20
- steel industr) hasn't been idk
lighter types of ‘steel and alloys. Steels won't give up without a big struggle. Nor will copper, lead and gine, which also are among the older, intrenched metals, Perhaps Af they can’t beat the new materials, they should follow the old technic of “joining 'em.” Thus we may see products. which would combine metals, plastics and plywood. Sn competition won't be limited * fo just metals. New brands of vita- - gnins; the sulfa drugs and the latest miracle drug, penicillin, will give older medical: remedies sévicus-comv} ' petition. Paper sud paperboard manufacturers have developed
~ in certain uses, Well-known, of
x »
“to a level.to compete with natural uber
yeady. Cotton, silk and wool are
wallboard -and - insulating materials.
. one and his brother. The-imovie
the auto industry. battles will affect the hold-
of stockholders, undoubtedly our
if i ll
i |
E uv E. g g
EF it '
I i}
! ih:
or contemplated authornew production of pascars of any make. . , . Lane
) are about $5 million
_ American republic . Which is so short of small change
+ Pullman-Standard Car Manu-
which has been making M-4 Was. converted recently to produc tion. of artillery carriages: for 155 mm. and eight-inch guns and 240 mm. howitzers, and it was done in less than one week.
Incorporations
a Materials Corp, 238th and Bran. #8, Marion; agent, L. C. Bookout,
N. An Pt. Wayne: 5,000] 7 par value: to nici
without deal all kinds of m
a. H "3 Corp., 322 Enpire t, 0 K, Orit
RS hathite Jools, Pa nd Orit i
is Coal Co., Ine. . ndlnapol.
par value.
Sent to Yards.
Another large run of hogs at mel Indianapolis stockyards today se prices down 20 to E ; ay. rs oa a '| distribu struggle they don't mean the ordinary ported. ‘of toothpaste vs. toothpaste or cigaret vs. cigamean steel vs. aluminum and aluminum or mag- . plastics and plastics vs. rubber. These battles
~big- industry -against -another-in which the ought to be in on the. winnings.
ZEA, & P. DENIED 2 *COORTREVEW © =
Must Stand nd Trial on U. AE Indictment Charging
Restraint of Trade.
WASHINGTON, Nov, 9 (U. P.).— The New York Great Atlantic &| Pacific Tea Co. today was denied a
supreme court review of an indictment charging A. & P. with controlling a large part of this country’s food markets through monopo- | listic and- restraint of trade prac-|1 tices. The case will revert to the court for trial of the charges. : pou -“The-government instituted -action| Rei Bounds in the northern
the anti-trust battle, informed persons exl struggles after the war. The cards are
Weights under 160 pounds declined 25 to 50 cents while prices on sows were 25 cents under yester-| day's. Today's top was $13.60 for| good to choice 225 to 250Receipts Included 15,000 hogs, 2775 cattle, 525 calves and 1726 sheep,
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (15,000) .
120+ "=~ 140="160" pounds. -- pounds”
but has developed
To increase interest in the production of life belts for American soldiers at the Akron plant of the General Tire & Rubber Co. girls in the department have knit themselves red, white and blue sweaters of siars and stripes. Two of them are shown at their work.
iH Redo’ $ Unexplored Wave Lengths.
day Be Utilized
By Science Service . " WASHINGTON, Nov. 9.—~Radio’s dark continent, an abesgiored zone of frequencies that ranges from the present upper limit far up to an estimated “top-of 30 million kilocycles, will be the subject of a conference of government and commercial radio groups to be held here Nov, 17, at the offices of the federal communications commission. Nayy, army and gover civil Seperoments: and bureaus will be represented through
IN BRIEF—
Individuals planning” to" build homes after the war will spend an average of $7,140.25 per unit, com6.00@ 8.50 pared with $5983.82 expended for that purposé before the war, the P. iW. Dodge Corp., said today, judgwong from. questionnaires sent - to 10,752 prospective post-war home builders in the 37 states east of the RoeRy mountains. :
(against A. & P. district federal court of Texas. ir 47-page indictment was returned EE ak Pioiiels Whisk charging A. & P., the largest food "handling chain in the United: States, | Chotce— will be synthetic vs. natural | With. destroying competition from a battle that will depend independent grocers, meat dealers upon tariff rates as much as the and small local food chains through © ability of the synthetic rubber price wars and unfair buying prac-| ‘manufacturers -to-bring- costs -down | tices. ‘Named jn the indictment were 11 subsidiaries of the A, & P. chain | Good In the textile -field, carpetition ang 18 Andividunis as olticers or Sine between indus employees of the vast organization. ees Beles is under way ai A. & P. contested the indictment menaced by growing rayon produc-|by demurrers. These were sustained | 4 500d - tion and even newer synthetic fibers|on Feb. 15, this year, by the disjuch as nylon, vinilyte and glass. |trict court, cord instead of cotton cord|appealed to the fifth circuit éourt southern congressmen of appedls where the demurrers were thrown out-—-and- the . indict : abrica housing, w.i ment upheld, Pre ed WilY ne The indictment is vague and inis looking for big post-war business. definite, A. & P. contended in askThé trandportation field is another ing the supreme court to review case. © Here we have new light, [the circuit court's ruling. Further, | streamlined trains being designéd, A. & P..argued, the allegations are air routes planned. by nearly everys|s0 general. that. a defense against | Med them cannot be perfected. <The-justioe-departimnent contended |. 00_peu {that “the allowance of A. &. Psi 8 Sppeal would put off the defendants | irial—already delayed one year— and thatthe indictment is correct G00 ana. cutee because it specifies overt acts by|Medium— selling food below cost to injure
"| GRAIN PRICES DROP ON BOARD OF TRAX
‘CHICAGO, Nov. § (U. P).—Grain|
futures sagged with wheat holding | A barely steady on the Board of Trade
Te-1100 Jounds ervenee [Tre
600- “800 pounds .,..eeess
~interdepartmental cofrmittee: “private Industiies| through the Radio: Technical PlanCutter and Common trrerenres Itisa rich endowment of opporawaits partition among the many users of radio waves, From extra-long to ultrashort, the total span ranges from 10 kilocycles at the bottom fo 30 million kilocycles at the top. All familiar broadcasting today is done in channels carved out of one very narrow band, with a total width of only 1050 kilocycles. Since the ‘ordinary broadcastirig station 1s allocated a ch#nel of just 10 kilocycles, this would seem to promise an immense number: of possible channels="theoretically 30 ‘million divided by 10, or three million Age Signane Wavelengths rn
but the government Cutter and common’ LL re CL
ig all’ weights)
choice Common and media’ .e a 8.00@ Pose: Cattle and Calves Steers
500- oi 800 pounte seers ie ae
Postal revenues for a 12-month period have exceeded $1,000,000,000 | for the first tine ih history. For the 12 months ending Sept. 30, | postal revenues were $1,008,000,000.]8 During the same period expendltures were $94,000,000,
: Difficult to Minh . 1. However, as the engineers work upward into’ higher and higher frequencies, the waves become increasingly difficult to manage, 50)
U. S. Rubber Co. today had in mass production “vibeston,” a material composed principally of as{bestos and used successfully Semdening sound and vibration in
SHEEP AND LAMBS (1723)
from infringing on each ritory, How wide a cl have to be at, say, 15
ood and choice "....... savas 10
- Exports from’ the’ U. 8. for the first nine montHs of this year were 14 per cent greater than for the ea | entire 12 months of 1942, the census ‘bureau reported today. Total value was $9,197,000,000 compared with] + | $8, 036,000,000 for all u 1942,
not at present pr
LOCAL ISSUES
is tied up with the war and hence must not be talked
: Furthermore, a 10-kilocycle channel is nowhere nearly enough for some of the other uses which the radio public wants. Frequency-mod-« ulated radio, at present used by only a few stations, requires a channel several times that wide, And for one single television station,” the absolute minimum is 6000 kilocycles. It is easy to foresee, then, that there will be a good desl of hungry’ pushing and shoving when the slict ting .of the “rich radio-wave pie %| begins. Big though it is, there will ee be nowhere nearly enough to give u|everybody as wide a slice as he thinks he ‘must have to be happy; .... {the ‘more so since essential non1 [commercial users, such as navy, army, civil aviation, the weather 4 bureau, etc, must necessarily be 14| served first, not to mention the non= i [communication uses of radio in food sterilization, may, | terials testing and other fields which red
Ye Al the end of the first Hour wheat | Bobbs-Mersil ; : + WA Off - 1 10 up Lyicent a hi , done. agencies 118 employers to deny 4 (off to employee
In “the December options wheat | was unchanged to off ? bushel from the previous $1.56; @ 156%; oats off 4 to TT%e; rye off % to% from $1.11% and barley offered at 4, Off }% from the ‘previous
Local wid
Larry. Parsons, city deputy: cop-| Union ‘Title troller, will speak on “Preparation wh of Municipal Budgets” at the meet- ~ and unable to get new coins, has{ing of the Indianapolis control of made the U. 8. dime legal tender.|the Controllers Institute of Amer. | Amer
ica, 6:30 p. m. tomorrow at Hotel facturing Cos plant at Hammond, | Lincoln.
Indpls. P & L 5% pid . Indpls P & L com ... Tndon Balwiys “om,
Lincoln Nat Life I com .. v . vers 168 N Ind Pub Serv $i; pid eer | N nd Pub Serv 6%
Be ‘ Pub Serv of Ind 5%. ‘pt Bub Serv 3, Joa oo oe
z
's sales this year thus far
[a Bros pr ‘pt as United Tel co 8% eorione
t & O 5 Beth Steel 7 pt. 11613
C. M. Ripley of the General Elec- |1 tric Co. will speak on “Power for i War” at the Lion's chib luncheon tomorrow at the Claypool hotel. a —— i ———
Because ofthe immensity and . complexity of the problems involved, the forthcoming conference is en3 visaged by Chairman James Lawrence Fly only as an initial phase. " 24 The technical representatives of the ._|various interested groups are ex- % | pected to get together, orient themselves, and plan studies necessary in preparation for future meetings.
—————————————————— U: S. STATEMENT WASHINGTON, No 9? (U. P).—Coveroment expenses RE pared with a year
Kokomo Water Works 6s 68.. Cons V1 Alre he 0" | Kuhher Packing Co 4'%s 49 .
| Morris 5 & 10 Stores 5c 60 ..100
Up to the close of the Chicago market! today, Indianapolis tiour mills an Fie Yasots paid $1.57 per bushel for rades on thelr merits). 9c, and No.3 3 red oats,
ed #c r 0. 3 white shelled © corn, Se
5 {Pub Serv of ina Wes N...... thas 1 1! Richmond Water Wie | Ss 1. uU. 8 Mashing a 5s 83 .. Broo dividend.
idle Proposes U. S. Lend
~ Money for Reconversion i
i WASHINGTON, Nov. 9 (U, P.).—Altorney General Francis Biddf to- | N anism whereby the government would peacetime economy of any enterprise oh
tary affairs subcommittee that this would: |B terprise. of any financial pressure in’ reconver- bub
Gen Electric , 34% wees 401
‘ote; LC. > Bapkout, George W. Ane
war
agen s 1,000 shares without par
Ear)
be
TL: l404: 1 a
capital stock to
s ¥
proposed creation of meéch: loans for reconversion to “seriously embarrassed by the He told a senate mill 1. Relieve private en sion which might arise while await ing settlement of final claims under war contracts, or subcontracts, 2. Permit the Procurement
2
-
Wark, 1307,304, Public Debt. 169,332,760. 3 ,332,760,352
a. -
FeisEer
INDIANAPOLIS CLEA CLEARING HOUSE er BAe bid
LOCAL PRODUCE
breed bens 230; Leghorn nen.
Ee ——
EE i tw. .vaa wy
- ad
[dae
of subcontractors — by amounts owing from prime contractors, ‘as this would require awaiting deter- | Serys mination of disputed rights between private individuals, ‘The. test, he ,(5ald, should be limited to whether the. concern had contracts terminated, orders canceled, within a relatively short time after hostilities are terminated.
THIEL + 40 41
sponses
=ouE. BECeY FE EE FEF £5 errr SEE
- >
Rr Arr Ad A 0s Butterfar—-No 1
& .-
haul
gaa gon
within.”
degrees.
building.”
vee and After the War LEARN AN
- Mirerait Trade
BIG Wages—STEADY Work
rebace NOW to hold down one of of fie hig 1
You ands ble
vp
i
AVIATION | INSTITUTE Ph.BE-5005
Af & For Details
|) [rieronautical ((
SRE OR I —INDIANAPOLI!
ings would appear at nigh terns glowing outside from the life
Deaths—Funerals indianapolis Times, Tuesday, Nov, 0, 1943
BALDWIN—Thomas Lincoln in, loved husband of Mary Rosalie Baiawn and father of Harr: B..
Lost and Found
LOST—Brown leather bilifold eontainin money “a pital. or” Line papers, Rcmiy os ©
Windows Could ‘Rell Up
For windows, according to Dow, “transparent areas may roll screens, opened simply by rollOr these transpar“lent surfaces may be thin tanks with some solution that
TOST—P Baldwin and E. Blanch Burnette and 7S a Mabel R. Lawrence, + Jesse Baldwin, Dussed gd Saturday,
ing them up.
won LIRR Wein oos Réward, BL-0635,
IE il : 2
Help Wanted
$5 REWARD For os lost . downtown,
changes color. or crystallizes as the -yaries;
temperature - producing - a Wall” that “is perfectly leur fo temperature down to 60 degrees while below that temperature it becomes a beautiful crystal pattern, then goes back Into solution when the -temperature
GENERAL Joussw
BENNER Roberta Sunios, beloved iia. of ‘tures, soca) iy
, mother of Mrs. Helen Mitchum ; (endiather of Cpl large . U. 8m Tot down, Friday nt CO-2778.
apron on North Meridian purest Thursday night. MA-3318.
- | LOST suede purse contains ring. Riverside a Reward. GA-7008.
Schools & Instructions. A
11, at Moore & Kirk Irvin ton E. Washin
“Thus, we may have a wall that simply by its appearance may tell us the “outside temperatures. Firther this chemical -wall- might aid in the heating and cooling of our
vited. Friends Hay call ”» the Toes:
Doolittle of Chicago, | : illam . Woodward of Tallahassee, Fla. ‘passed away Friday in| -
chanan, Time late er.
COFFIN~—Berley, of Manchester, Mich., be« loved husband of Hazel, father of Pfc. arion - J. - Coffin, stepfather of Ropelt and Helen Punches, ke Drothes of Mrs. J
Lam under ge aon.
Help Wanted—Female
AGE - LIMIT — Waitresses with counter and grill experience; $25 a week; 6 days. Apply 43 W. St. _St. Clair, between 9-4, ~ 2 NIGHT WAITRESS ESSES
ET “Mar Lunch, —BE-0TIT,
.Because of ‘elastic properties, Dow said, plastics offer a solution to the problem of contraction and expansion of building materials from moisture and temperature.
Suggests Plastic Floors
With translucent - and transparent -walls-and roofs, Dow declared, everything that goes into a building; ‘such-as-wiring -and-- plumbing; {- will be visible. /
Burial Washington Park, | ted. Friends may call at the after 7 p.m. Tuesday.
8ON—John H., husband of - Emma “and father of Mrs. Stace
an mortuary, Thurs-
day, 10 a. m. Friends Buchanan crematory. Please omit flowers. Friends may call at mortuar
. age EN “father of Raymond Keller, Mrs. Bv hart, 3 Mrs, Cine Snider “and Miss a Ra Kites
Suider. and great-grandfather pe Kaine assed away Mohd ay 8. m. an. iends.-may:- eall
pars -seateest_sert § and colors. We should 320 W. Washington St. .Cafeteria Counter Girls
: hI Guaranty "Caistrin, 30 N. Gsritan. CANDY | Dl PPERS Immediate openings. Ex-
perienced only. Employmen office, 7th Floor, *Y
ear, Franklin, In KOLLE--George winlam, 136 8. New York rtment 6, husband
be just right for dancing and others so soft that they would be comfortable to sit on.” ‘Other features envisioned byl to Dow included the use of plastics in textile surfaces such as draperies, rich plastic paints in many colors, and -even plastic . tems complete with insecticides.
Plastics ‘Not Panacea’
Discussing the field of synthetic| “Ropers Tubber contrasted with natural rubber and the plastics, Dinsmore derclared- that -“it- has-been - demonstrated by bitter experience that there is a wide fleld of use where only rubber properties will do, and where plastic properties do not serve the purpose.” It would be foolish, he added, “to expect a separation of the field of application of plastics and rubbers. The most that can be expected is a substantial separation of the two extremes. In the intermediate territory rubber goods-for-merly made from bighiy-louged, degraded, or hard-vulcanized rubbers, may be made from the’ intermediate rubber-plastics and do aly more effective job. flooring, industrial molded are among the kinds of articles whiclr may first be affected.” Bailey told “the industry , that “plastics are not the general panacea for all structural difficulties which many people seem to believe. In their proper place, ‘they will stand supreme, must be carefully chosen to conform to the pliysical and chemical
‘ednesday, 2 p. m. mation at "Planner & Buchanan crema-
MARTIN Beatrice, ri of Join
Lieu Emma Allison. a sister of son ang Marie Dunham, Paine oY
: Hall Setigid, blossom re 68 yea beloved a of tee ol Sud and Mrs.
Irving. Hill Shape, me BE. Washington P. : ail at the a apel atter s p. m. Tues-
= Win H.Block Co.
THAMBER MAI ‘COMPTOMETER OPERATOR
§/,-DAY ye
Mary, age Ruechel and mother of Dorothy, Helen,. Ruth and Mary Joan and sister of Willlam Daniuten,
Pp. Mm. Grace -. Lutheran church, -comer of N. Holmes wie and W, New York st. Friends may d Askin Funeral Home, 310 W. Washington st, after 5 p. m. Tuesday, Burial Concordia cemetery,
SMITH~-Paul J., husband of Joan, son of Mr Josephine Stuy brother of Miz. ICE AND FUEL 2000 Northwestern ave, COUNTER GIRL WITH dion, sud in sis Jun GAFETERIA EXPERIENCE 8S. Peter and Paul Cathedral. interent $24—Paramount |
ELCOME—Mrs, Pearl M., am N. Me- ,| - ridian, wife of Colonel: Earl H. Welcome | Tidian and mother of -Miss Earl Welcome | ™ _.¢
; tempo rary or permanent * Here's a“chance fo earn some extra Astat money,
nk Jather oh Mirice Louise Wiegand, Lou
but application Dotty Lou fond EL Snares Someta:
“Plastics will never completely
Ea 30 a. ns
BiGARY STEEL HEAD GIVEN PROMOTION
PITTSBURGH, Nov. 9 (U.P).—1 $1), M. Darbaker has been
ALIN BAM WIP M.
BE..088C888.8
Fis:
S€% Hs FF HHH 1]
ee
“The army, navy, etc, will ‘be making the settlements of war con-
Steady empl to operate m: easy work. for overtime day, 40-hour
A]
OENTRA
Gl
For Ms Dry Cle
Excelsior 89 N. Ne
600l Excellent Joby sea Sood te ~ INDIANAPOL
