Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 December 1943 — Page 20
—— : E INDIANA SHOULD LOOK IN ITS OWN BACK YARD| wants to find something practical to do about planning] | the post-war. Southern Indiana, according to an exten-| ve survey by Purdue university, is rapidly going down hill.| That scenic region starting with Brown and Morgan| punties and running on down to the Ohio river was one of he first to be settled in the state. Population continued to ncrease until about 1880. By then more than one-third of hé rolling hills and narrow valleys had been cleared for pps and pasture. 2 Then the railroads came and with] g
: the timber mills and wood in-| dustries. Good money was made COAL HU : _ from the forests; land thus denuded |
was farmed and|
ESE STILL REMAIN
atively pro sper-| ous. That was the high point. | Since the turn of the century,
OPA, WLB and Operators |
nomic area. It WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U. P). has not beenrap-. ry. proposed new contract be- - : id enough of yee; the United Mine Workers spectacular enough to get much ..4 the nation's soft coal operators public attention. It has been one .,) raced three significant hurdles
southern Indiana Must Agree Before has gradually run. y J own 43 an woo Contract Is 0.K.’d. 18
The third of the navy's new “biggest battleships” the Wisconsin, was launched this week at the Philadelphia navy yard. It towers five stories high, displaces 52,000 tons fully loaded. Look at the workmen at her bow (arrow) for an idea how big she is.
made.” he said.
wait.
of those slow decays. today before permanent peace Farm population is no longer as 14 return to the coal fields. Big as it once was, Less acreage JS |, 4 when the following conbeing farmed; less livestock is pro- ditions are achieved, the operators Guced. Much crop land is gOINg L. ccceed in recovering their back to timber. The soll in this 0 ties from government cuscountry the great giaciers did not .. o touch is being washed away and its fertility grows less each year. Other areas, like the flat, fertile central section of Indiana, produce more economically and this competition
1. Ratification by the operators of the agreement completed Saturday by a subcommittee of U. M. W.| officials and operators.
: . ri oncessions os Jot the hj ™ ney . * iar the office. of price ad-| of the ) dnt be ministration.
3. Approval of the contract by the war labor board or acceptance by miners and operators of modifica- |"
- during economic depressions. The
other erate And BALI yon which the board night re-| helping r these re. counties: Many farms are too q mall to make a decent living. | Southerners Refuse. sel.
few big towns or cities] The first of the three barriers provide a market for appeared the easiest to overcome. farm products, Even the timber re- Two-thirds of the bituminous in- | Sources are not what they should be. dustry agreed to accept the govContinuous cutting has depleted ernment contract negotiated by | original stands so that many for- Coal Administrator Harold L. Ickes ests are.now understocked and con- and U. M. W. President John L.| tain many old, practically worthless Lewis as the basis for a new and many others which are agreement. The contract drafted commercially poor. |by the subcommitee was based on The sad state of affairs in south- the government agreement. | em Indiana affects the state as a. Ickes called representatives of all | whole, It therefore becomes a operators to a meeting next Friday state-wide problem. |to ratify the agreement. If ac- . 8 =» {cepted, the contract can be sub-|
| So MANY youths are taking war Mitted to the WLB With or without,
plant jobs that the labor depart. the support of the Southern Appa-
is planning a “gtay-in-school” Iachian’ operitors, the only major|
: i [group which Tefiused to negotiate] Ehaipa ign Sed i - the second thin the framework of the Ickes- | : 2 8 = Lewis agreement.
INFLA The southern group might con-| this LATION XN ALASKA has |inue to accept the advice of its| dinners cost $4 to | A rant | spokesman, Edward R. Burke, and $1.25 and fee Bh Jaikeuta are | Oppose the agreement but it would
quart. Waitresses are known to | meets WLB approval. Otherwise
life A
an
be expected to sign if the contract
make §15 a day. the southern operators could not : aw 8 regain their mines, Ickes has promODDS AND ENDS: The rise in ised the U. M. W. that he would
Stocks this month has made up| not release the mines of operators About $2 billion of the $3 billion lost| who refused to negotiate a new in November. . . . OPA's new ration contract based on the government okens, which were to have been! agreement. ‘ i t the size of a quarter, will be ; Smaller than a dime; they go in Seek Higher Price use Feb, 27. . . . International Har-
Louis where, after the war, it will |Ickes-Lewis agreement did so with | build a farm machinery plant em- reservations on further price inploying 3500 persons. . . . Produc- | creases by OPA. The proposed contion of those steel mesh mats which tract carries a provision making it! turn jungle into aircraft runways effective ‘only if price adjustments
« « « Tube and pipe Creased labor costs. | nufacturers are getting big or-| Stabilization Director Fred M.!
“bazooka” gun), |
‘U. 8. STATEMENT
to grant coal price increases aver- | aging 17 cents a ton, but operators | said it was inadequate and, with °F **
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13.—Those elaborate ship-launching cere- |Corp., is | monies—with diamond pins for the sponsor, flowers, bands, champagne to break over the bow of the vessel and plenty more to drink—are out, unless private shipbuilders want to foot the bill. The launthing of the | battleship Indiana proved to be the undoing of such elaborate and costly ceremonies. The navy today stated that ifs | inspectors have been instructed to keep the ceremonial costs that
any
features. nother
event.
reason
Fancy Ship Launchings Out; Indiana Party ‘Last Straw’
By ROBERT TAYLOR Times Special Writer
ceremonial
» SOFT-PEDALLING of launchings ceremonies resulted from vociferous congressional criticism of of the high cost of launching ves--sels, which once included private trains, free bars and other high-
fs that many ships are being launched. In past years, when only 10 or 12 government ships slid down the ways each year, a launching was Last month, 164 ships were Jaunched for thé maritime commission alone and, in most cases, the shipyard workers themselves didn't gather around listen to the speeches and see “her hit the water.”
can be charged against the taxpayers to $15 for any kind of vesIf the ceremonies cost more | than that, it's up to the builder. | The maritime commission said it doesn't allow the contractor to charge
costs
t
against the government and added, rather bruskly, that it wasn’t interested in launchings, but in deliveries, with steam up, ready to haul cargo.
00
to
THE MARITIME commission once allowed $500 for launching ceremonies, then cut it’ to $100
vm ore ove MARKET FOR OATS Vester has bought 375 acres near St.[to accept the principles of the | Ph
B CHICAGO, Dec. 13 (U. P.).—The | Bobbe-Merrin com" firm oats market vs wy trad- | Bobba-Merrill 44% pid ing on the Board of Trade today. uickly, are allowed to cover all the inveh q » 18 being stepped up l in | Other grains were uneven. | Hoo! At the end of the first hour wheat | Home
, | Vinson already has thor was off 4 to up !{ cent a bushel: for rocket weapons (like the y has au ey OPA | is unchanged to up 1 cent;
Nominal quotations furnished bv Indian. apolis securities dealers, Bid As Agents “Fin Corp com. ee Agents Pin Corp pid... . Belt R Stk Yds com. 2 it R Stk Pds pd... oe. cesses 4% LL {Circle Theater com EPRI ) | “ |Comwith Loan 8% ptd ......100% 103% | Delta Klee com........., 10% 13% k Fru Co com. ......... 14% 16%] T&T Pt Wayne 1% pfd 51% . {Ind & Mich Elec 19% pfd....113 116 Ind Asso Tel 5% ptd . ....... 101 108 rye up ind Hydro Elec 7% pfd mM
% to %, and barley unchanged to +
The
life of
committee. One of the measures alréady has house approval. Farin resentment among retailers, [bloc leaders said any attempt to # ou =
sidetrack the measures would lead them to call for immediate debate Grits and corn meal prices are
then eliminated such costs entirely. Nowadays, the only out siders who attend launchings are the sponsor, co-sponsor and four or five guests, and shipbuilders : knock out the props any time a craft is ready. ’ Navy launchings are similarly toned down. The date is restrict ed information until a few days before the event and attendance is as strictly limited as the navy's share of the cost. » - » THE LAUNCHING that proved to be the last straw, to congress, was that of the battleship Indiana, two years ago, attended by two special trainloads of Hoosers and marked by an elaborate hotel luncheon, “drinks on the house” and a diamond wrist watch for the sponsor, By contrast, when Mrs. Roosevelt christened the aircraft care rier “Yorktown” last spring, the ceremonies were held in comparative privacy, with only navy personnel, shipyard workers and newsmen present, The launching party ate lunch in the company cafeteria. Nowadays, even sponsors pay their own train fare, . Regardless of the curb on costs, everything built to sail the seas— including concrete barge ets christened and launch with some ceremony.
LOCAL ISSUES
P—————————————————————————————————————— I
on the
their
will carry
Ind Gen Serv 6% pfd.... Indpls P' & L §' pt Indpls P & L com *Indpls Railways com
Teereanees
Pennsylvania's
Over Veto.
“It is a critical war ma- ® a = terial and I respect it as such, I appeal for an early decision. Then I hope we can unite in securing all-out production, Food can't.”
In Senate Now
McClellan-Eastland bill 80ing up. ending ‘the $300,000,000 a year milk | feed subsidy and authorizing a|NOW may add the cost of enriching|g one-cent a quart increase in the degerminated corn meal and grits to
prospects
three.
for
Could Pass Measure
"WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U. P). —A strong administration plea for congress to reach an “early decision” on the fate of the food subsidy program coincided today with reports that the farm bloc was no ionger dead certain of enough . strength to kill subsidies and was ready to -accept a comprom The administration's to further delay was made.slear by War Food Administrator Marvin Jones, who said in a statement that *® 8 =» it must be determined quickly whether .subsidies can be used to keep down the cost of food because “the farmer needs to know now so that his production plans can be
“Food is not a political issue,”
Politics can
Senator Allen J. Ellender La.) has served notice he will ask today that the controversy over anti-subsidy legislation be left unsettled until after the holidays. But farm bloc desires for a quick settlement plus Jones’ appeal, highly problematical whether EIlender would succeed. anti-subsidy written into bills to extend the the Commodity Credit before the senate banking
left iy
legislation,
price of milk. the established maximum prices. . , The added cost will range from 13 Seek ‘Trade to 18 cents a hundred pounds. Farm state senators were confl- . & =
dent they still had enough strength to get a subsidy ban approved by the 1944 enlarged truck production congress but many conceded that program will produce 123,344 commustering | mercial motor vehicles, the war proenough votes to override an ex- duction board has announced. pected presidential veto were dim and that they therefore were ready Were: Chevrolet, 33,122; vehicles; to accept a modified program, Some of them agreed that alter, 19,683; Dodge, 10,367; General workable compromise would be for Motors, 9851; White, 4442; Mack, the administration to give up the 4505; Reo, 1594; Diamond T, 2887. price rollbacks of meat and butter in a “trade” for being allowed to continue their price support programs and transportation subsidies.
Buy De-Salters For Life Rafts
NEW YORK, Dec, 13 (U. P).— The Permutit Co, today announced receipt of an initial U. 8. navy order for “de-salting” outfits to be used on life rafts to be carried by American airmen. Individual kits, through a chemical process, provide fresh drinking water for six days. One-man life rafts will carry a single kit, while the larger, five-man. rafts
= NEW PENNSY TRACK IS PUT IN SERVICE
The Pennsylvania Railroad has placed in service 10 miles of new main track between Greenfield and Knightstown, giving -the s1 [additional double track facilities, The improvements between Green16, (fleld and Knightstown on the 1 Columbus division
railroad
ise, opposition
(D.
end of 1946, = 2 ” » October individual income hit new record of $12,775,000,000 or
said.
one-fourth of the new plant,
a right to criticize the company.” » o ~ The National Retail Dry Goods association today protested the recent action of manufacturers in extending the usual delivery period and their disposition to reduce or eliminate traditional discount terms, and warned that such moves would cause strong
A special notice to the South:
The OPA said today that millers
Manufacturers who will engage in
Included in allocations announced
Ford, 28,149; International Harves-
DEFENDS GOST OF AMAZON RUBBER
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U, P.) —| Douglas H. Allen, president of the government's Rubber Development Corp., said today that it has cost this country $1.12 a pound to pro-| duce rubber in the Amazon basin and that the corporation would spend “whatever amount may be required” to get the crude rubber this country must have to fight the war. Senator Hugh Butler (R. Neb. and others have charged that as much as $500 a pound was spent in the Amazon valley to get out rubber since Pearl Harbor. Allen said the price was relatively high (far .eastern rubber was 20 cents a pound in 1940-41) because of the heavy initial capital investment necessary. River steamers and aviation facilities had to be sup-
areas of the Amazon basin are 2000 miles from the sea, he explained. ‘He estimated that, eventual recoveries on capital expenditures and loans will reduce the average cost
Sperry Corp. has obtained $125 million credit through a “V” loan from 57 banks, extending until the
rate equal to $153 billion a year, Commerce Secretary Jesse Jones
Because there is already enough capacity for producing structural steel for present needs, Geneva {Steel Co, Provo, Utah, will not build a structural steel unit it had planned. It would have comprised
Defending The United Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Employees of America (C. I. 0.) in a $1,000,000 libe! suit filed by Montgomery Ward & Co. over a union publication, attorney Francis Heisler said that if Montgomery Ward can criticize the president and government of the U. S., a union representing the company’s workers “has
plied because the main producing|*®
2 and 3000 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOI
180. 300 pounds . 200- 220 pounds
700-1100 pounds .. 1100-1300 pounds .. Common - 700-1100 pounds
800-1000 pounds Medium —
ood ................ | Medium | Cutter and common . Canner
LAS Good (all weights) Sausage. Medium
Good to choice ..... Common and medium Cull (70 Ibs. up) ....
Feeder and Stocker Chote 500- 800 pounds 800-1050 pounds ...
0004 500- 800 pounds
Graded s—Girade
Butter—No, 1, 80c. : No. 2, 4ée
HANGERS Usable
than 75 cents a pound during the life of the contracts,
of rubber from the Amazon to wel
LOAN
Clothing, Shaiguss, Ete wr The CHICAGO co". 146 E. WASHINGTON ST. :
600- 800 pounds ......
CALVES (525) Vealers (all weights)
SHEEP AND LAMBS (3000) Yearling Weathers
LOCAL PRODUCE
a" breed “hens, 3%: Leghorn hens,
A medium, 3J8¢c; grade A small, 30¢; no grade loc
le EACH Wire Garm
On Everything! Diamonds, Watches Musical Instruments Cameras
3200 Are Held Over From Saturday; Prices Hold Firm. A total of 15500 hogs arrived at the Indianapolis stockyards today and 3200 were held over from Saturday, the food distribution ad; ministration reported.
Prices opened steady with Priday's on a few early sales. Receipts
(15,500)
rene. 1185@12
1n.1sa@n
133s
eressenas
[email protected] «.. [email protected] : 11.0012.08
.00 vers [email protected] 90 .60
. [email protected] 0132s t
i Naa Jacksonville Terminal, Louisville &
~~ Point-Free CHICAGO, Dec. 13 (U. pa
anon, Ind, president of the Indi ‘Removal of pork from the ra. tion list, if only temporary, would relieve the present glutted hog market, Schenck said.
16° RAILROADS DEFY
SSE R0ER ON NEGROES
CE HOGS
WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U. P). —Sixteen railroads and termina] companies today defied orders of the President's fair employment practice committee to halt discrimination against Negro employees. The refusal to comply was contained in a letter to the committee which charged the orders lacked constitutional authority, would violate the railway labor act, and “gravely and irreparably impair the whole war effort.” pas The: carriers control the vast bulk of traffic moving into the south,
1035011 The FEPC findings against the Slaughter Pigs : carriers and seven labor unions were Medium and Good— : (made public Nov. 18, shortly after 250- 350 pounds ............. 10.00911.25| president Roosevelt had clarified his CATTLE (2700) order setting up the committee, Choteer Steers holding that its orders were manda700- 900 pounds .. 5.25 16.28 tory and not permissive as Comp-150-1100 Pounds = : 13% n troller General Lindsay Warren had 1300-1500 pounds ... [email protected] ruled. Enforcement, however, inToa” soe pounds [email protected] vores Hvithholding of government -11 . 1 15. ntra - 800-1100 pounds 112 15.28 co cts and in the case of rail
15.50 Toads would not be very effective.
Signing the letter of response to he committee's orders were the fol-
[email protected] lowing railroads: Atlantic Coast
| Line, Atlanta Joint Terminals, Cen[tral of Georgia, Georgia Railroad,
| Nashville, Norfolk Southern, Prisco,
i 1300@14 70 | Seaboard, Southern, Chespeake -& [email protected] Ohio, Guf, Mobile & Ohio, Norfolk treseress OT *""|and Western, Illinois Central, Yazoo teevaase 115010.00/ & Mississippi Valley and Gulf & TOES 0.000115 {Ship Island. [ 9.00610.00 | eens 6.75@ 9.00 va S50a a PLAN FORT REVIEW ees snes] FOR MAJ. COLLINS ase 3a 3% A review of all troops at Ft. Har-
Cattle and Calves
[email protected] . [email protected]
serecnncssces [email protected] 800-1050 pounds ...ccoeeveees 9.25 Medium 500-1000 pounds ......c.e0.0. 8.350 9.235 Common 500- 900 pounds ......... ... 6.750 8.25 Calves (steers) Good and Chol 500-1000 pounds ............. [email protected]% Medium — - 500- 900 pounds” .. . ..... 0.00Q11.28 Calves (heifers) { Good and Choice— 500 pounds down ............ [email protected] Medium 800 pounds down ........... 8:75911.00
rison will be held tomorrow morning in honor of Maj. Gen. James L. | Collins, newly appointed command-
%| ing general of the 5th service com-
mand, who is on his first inspection trip through this area. Units will march in review at the post with Lt. Col. Wade Heavey, of the finance school, troop com-
10.25 mander,
Maj. Gen. Collins, former director of administration of the army service forces since May, assumed his new duties Dec. 2.
FRANK M. FOLSOM HEADS RCA-VICTOR
Frank M. Folsom, retiring chief
Good and chetce ............. 12.00912.75 Medium ....... ........%.0...4 [email protected] | . Ewes (shorn) Good and choice ......... vee 5:50@ 6.50) Common and medium ..... « 4.000 525 Good and choice .......... oo [email protected] Medium and good ........... 10.25@ 13.50 COMMON . .«.....oovvrnnnennss 6.25910.00
A large, 43¢c; grade
Butterfat—Ne.
OPEN ‘TIL
EVERY DAY EXCEPT FRIDAY
" UNTIL XMAS
8, 8 AM
- FRIDAY. LEON
. » ox 3;
TAILORING i] 235 Mass. Ave, 0.70 She
9P. M.
to 6 P
jE
Ickes’ support, have asked further Indpis Water ptd.............. 108 . WASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U. P.).—Gov- concessions. . Lintorn ‘Lous Su Bk oti 13 D(a ew ude ihe construction of Srnment expenses and receipts for the WLB action on the agreement N. Y. Stocks Lincoln Nat Life Ins com.. 43 4“ 8 new eastward passing siding and current fiscal year through Dec. 16 com. | ® * PR Mallory com ............ 16% 1s (extension of two westward passing pared with a year ago: will aval Silicon of an under- i. Net N Ind Pub Serv 8% pid > 102 sidings and one eastward passing : This Year Last Year |Sround travel time investigation | nC High Low pe Change Co Tom, Serv [A 112 1s [siding—all to accommodate 150 Epenses or .§ 40,219.689.318 $30,704,721, 439 | DEINE conducted by a commission | Allied Chem | 146% 148Y 1451 = 3. |Pub Serv of Ind 8%". 101%: 104': cars bridge and signal work and patobend. . 37.684.827.001 -28.251.632.669 named by President Roosevelt at Alis-Chal 36'a 36'a 36a — 4 Pub Serv of Ind com ... - 18% 17% ' Robe i MRI 1303 SR! the board's request Ame co ID RIES DRIER ll | Coan of rade. totaling 4835000, Lee 25,201,791, 022,579,151 | "quest. [Am Loco .. ? ’ po—% 4. cesses, i 2a 3.308 160.996 — Am Reg & 8 8 Si KN oh 1, | Bokely Rios be pe Mee 8 Whip He iin aie! al. 12210786416 4 545 623.048 , |Am Roll Mill .. 12% 3 ‘a. — Tt Unit 5%. ... 97 © 100 ‘ay on Vv n eastPublic Debt . 170.391'536 581 104.403 268.378 | DAILY PRICE INDEX [Am T & T .. 157% 157% 157% + Y«|Union Title com .. «B% 7 opp Ey at Dublin, Dunr ith { Res. .. 22,044.657.180 22.743 263 587 | {Am Water W 6% 6% 6% .... (van Camp Milk pfd.......... 0 vas : bs JURTGLY sl NEW YORK, Dec. 13 (U. P).— Ansconds, ..... 3a UM NW... |van Camp Milk com.......... 13 . 14 [and Centerville. These improve INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING ROUSE | Dun & Bradstreet's daily weighted Atl Refining... 26 © 36 26 — 1 : ments, costi $500,000, include NES eeeniiiiiannnnnnn.. 8 5.308.008 price index of 30 basic commodities, Bal & O pf 8% #% 8% { Et t p g sid nd aa nEirarervareerierte en ans 17,038,000 ) an | Beth Steel 7 pf 11533 115% 115%, — 3, Aigers Wins'w W RR 4%%...100 .. Dew eastward passing siding and an|38.9% compiled for United Press (1930+ Borg-Warner 38% i as — A) American Jon a crete 97 100 [extended ‘westward passing siding ee ————— . | . es YN | rican Loan 8s 46...... .., CHEMISTS TO MEET 32 average equals 100): gurtine ©0000 Stu de 3 T42 Cont Newssaper dis 431098 [at Dublin and extension of both rR Saturday ....,. ees reeveses 170.71 ns Edison pf 10274 102% 102% — JaiCh of Com Bidy Co dls 61.. 78 81 leastward and westward passing ) ons 1 \ — sl zens Ind Tel 4%s 61..... } riled Florestano of the Pitman-| Week ago ................... 170.22 Corn Prod... 85° Mi Ss — an Conse Piss ep te 81.....108 100 [sidings at Dunreith and Centerville, oore research laboratories will Month ago sevireniinsacecss 169.64 Curtiss-Wr .... 8% 8%; 853 — 1, Ind Asso Tel Co 3%s 10. loa... land will provide greater flexibility on “Dental Caries” at the Year ago 164.10 Douglas Aire . 50 9% 0' + % Indpls P.& L 3%s 70. ... 106% 100 2 i eee esesseanas 16410 pow Clem ...7137 127 127..." |indpis Railway Co Se 81 78 7g |in handling the heavily concen. |; society lunch-|1943 high (Oct. 15) eseesace, 17330 Dresser Mfg .. 28'% 28%! 28% — 3; Indpls Water Co 3'%s 68 ..... 107 109 trated passenger and freight movetomorrow at Hotel Warren 1943 low (Jan. 2) 166 gy | Edison Bros ..: 17 ) 171 i +++. | Kokomo Water Works Ss 88 108 . : . A) I i O1|Gen Electric .. 37's 36% 37!) — Y%|Kuhner Packing Co 4%s 49..100% ... |ments between Indianapolis and , - : Gen Foods .... 11a dll 4150 4 iq Morrie 8 & 10 Stores Se 80....100 103 |Richmond Gen Motors: .. 50% 80 80% .... |Muncie Water Works 8s 66. . : oe anc k B hi d S * Soodrich een 1% 41% it + 0 /N. Ind Pub Serv 3las 73...... 100% 102 — : OCK, benind-Jcenes Aid |i: enter 70 Ha Tu D1 Pun Berren of ine ava 3108 1a INCOTPOrations 4H . i ~ ohns-Man .... “ 88's + Pub Tel 4%s 85... .......... 100 10 . To Baruch Important Kant He dt 1X Jf ached vier mii SL | Th RES. Soles SN, Re Loo z | Krog - 32 A Ho- th ac Term Corp 5s 5§7........ same address; 100 shares no par value! To Baruch, Has Important Role i as i. i i =F FisaSs ini Si eu ces Bend err, a X \ . Monsanto ..... Me Ti Ma — 0 he, Assn A ASHINGTON, Dec. 13 (U. P.).—One of the men really behind the ot mein dost 1% 1% — % WAGON WHEAT wshingduie; dlsouion, Ee . . ) | . ’ airview r Of government operations todayyis John M. Hancock, prominent | Got Ho I Me kod, he close of the Chicago market! penniyivenia, No. 318 pediincio pert York businessman and financier Row helping Bernard. M. Baruch [N Y Cent ih Bn dhe oN |lede Indlanepelty napoiin; 300% shor, Forest Manor ave. pare plans for industrial adjustments and reconversion RIP --. 34 Dh 1 = Yared gn indian aie: of $100 por re *, * i Ma .....%". — 7 Hancock's Rams 8 rarely in the news, but he is one of Washington's Pan Am Alf... 31% 31} ee T te oo, T uhite oats, are mon Without pas Yajue: general ortan pe, Ta» Republican and a partner of Lehman F¥0R®Y «coven 30% 4% 2h + " bushel, and No. 2 white V. Fulkerson, Leonard L. Swarts, J ternational banking and|——————— T°" MN MN — 8 iment house of New York, v oP 1642 16% : ol a pod or erward Byes made Hancock Rem Rand < 18% 18% Bx > " Also chairman 4 a 4 Jewel Tea Co. | ar a tween the office of (2 Jie Tad .. 2% Bs 3% + Jv duction Sits ion and the war pro- Serve) are Gi jel jth Joh + x When Byrnes gave/ghill Un Ofl-. 36% 0% 3% + Basic the job of developing plans Su Sax cerrn jo; 13-14 11 Crd 0 al .. . re ok od ae uaa Baruch 8d Ou (Ind) 13% nN Ww — er| Han right-hand |8td Oil (NJ)... 54% B4Y% + % organiza tion und man, Stone & Web.. 8 8 8% .... on Director James F.'One of their few and igh rank a Tan 2k J 5 H TWA Oil pf ..100 100. 100 .... unit, primarily fine ied explained the way Baruch|un paciae. ... $3% ih 2%... with contrac. termina. | sere Ck (OEUDEE: “There GET ee bt ui Wl} Zy No division of labor based on Worth m Be Nk abo * Hancock does -essen.|Youns :: .. - same work that Baruch To ae dm Gen They to a lot of people! mw Ta: nd they listen a lot, too ~~ (19 REALTY SALES fa. othe five of North Da-\ MADE ON NORTH SI » In the last war he was in .
i
|
|
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———
|
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jill fikl
Hi
pW a
of naval] procurement, will become vice president of Radio Corp. of America Jan. 1, in charge of the R. C. A.-Victor division, which has plants in Indianapolis, Bloomington, Monticello and in the East. He will succeed George K. Throckmorton, who is retiring after many years service.
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igs
. Am, att Michi
M Pp. m. ond 8t the mort: Paul Cathed cemetery, Lo
Charles F. 1 Bilis of She
Paris, m daughter of Shoptaw, sis Mrs. Rayme Mitchell, da Mrs. Ralph 130 p. m., chapel. Prie Washington, FINNEFROOK--Clyde C,, sis! Indianapolis, North Verno Monday morn dence, 5719 °
pm F Crown Hill,
Friends Blasengym §P from 2 p. 1 Tuesday. GAILAGHER— Centennial st
Gallagher, ) Clara Lenihai passed away day, Dec. 14, W. Usher Mo a. m, St invited. Bur Friends may GEISEL—Walte, band of Dessi and M. Sgt. of Harry C. Mrs. Tlara M father of Ca away Sunda Flanner, & Bu day, 2 p.m Crown Hill, mortuary. GEPHART Tho R.'of Ashevill Redwood Cit, Gladys Pedlo ot his home, at Flanner & day, 10:30 a. GILRY Mary, John Gilby. m son and Alb Sunday. Pun at Parley fun st, Priends home. Burial GRIFFITH Ric! husband of J Howard W,, Mrs. Dortha three haif-bro passed away § eall at Tolin ect, after I ednesday, 1 the Pirst Bo New Crown.
NERBERTZ Ge
Bundsy, Dec. at Voigt Mort Tuesday, 1:3 ehurch, 3 p. cemetery. Pri
NINDS—Harry
Washington P time after 10 JONES—Charles, Koch of 324 Jones of Cini
Bervices Tues funeral home, Priends invite
MILBURN Effie of William C. Ressie Spence Mrs. Blanche Arbuckle and Lewis, Ora ar away Sunday day, 2 p. m,, church. Buri cemetery. Fr Union st, Se Monday. J. C, MILLER—Kate ( randmother
day. MOOREGiles | Saturday, age Phoebe Moore, - @ervices Tuesd W. Moore Pes welcome. Buri Mulberry, Ind.
NELSON—Floyd and Gladys. N Thorpe, Charl passed away Sa dey, 2 p. m., a Mortuary. Bur Friends may ca OEHLER—George away Sunday a Oehler and Mr of Dorothy Ar David Eider. §
p.m ent ington Park. | Chapel of the Monday. RAMSEY — May,
Pp: m. Priends i SCOTT--Malissie Mrs. Cora E Fancler, Chica
Home, Burial Cr STELTING—Clauc Rosa Steiting,
rs. i is, And Danes, Indiana,
day svaning. 8 an.”
