Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 April 1944 — Page 14

SINES

“ Russian Offensive: Costs Hitler

Industrial, Agricultural Assets By ROGER BUDROW

THE GREAT RUSSIAN OFFENSIVE not only has cost

Hitler many men and much nomic loss in the east.

The loss of the Ukraine, eastern Poland and the penetration of Romania means that no jonger will the Nazis be

F

equipment but also a big eco-

able to exploit large mineral resources and agricultural lands they have controlled for nearly three years.

The Ukraine, long regarded as the bread-basket of Russia and

western Europe, is a fertile area

where great quantities of wheat, sugar beets, barley and hops are grown and whose rich pastures feed large herds of dairy and beef cattle. The Germans expected not only to feed their armies from this area but to send enough home to increase rations. The Polish territory being recaptured is rich in timber which the Nazis made into textile fibers to off- | set the shortage of cotton an wool. The Germans sent many colonists. "some of them from Holland, to these conquered areas, alloting them

land and machinery and forcing | the Russian population to work for | This spring, |

practicajly nothing. however, the Russians are again in control. Germany has reportedly enslaved

borers in this area and moved them to the reich. It obtained some manganese from the world's richest deposit at Nikopol and iron ore from Krivoi Rog, Russia's richest iron deposit and even opened some

ithe President for enforcement of four iillion farm and factory la-|

WLB DEFIED BY 3 EMPLOYERS

And Ken-Rad Cases Taken to F. D. R.

WASHINGTON, April 14 (U. P.). —Three cases involving defiant em- | ployers who have raised a new com- | pliance problem for the war labor |board today awaited action by | | President Roosevelt. | It {had referred White House within the past week, almost doubling the number involving employer defiance that have been submitted to Mr. Roosevelt since the WLB was created more than two years ago. WLB records showed four other employer cases had been referred to

board orders and nine cases involving union defiance.

Workers Strike

The third of the pending cases, involving Montgomery Ward & Co. properties at Chicago, was sent to

‘Montgomery Ward, Jenkins| |

was learned that the board | three cases to the]

. THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

»

FARM LABOR SEED

FARM PRODUCTION IN 1944 WILL REQUIRE

=~

TO RAISE MAJOR CROPS

a

Q QL

33883

BILLION N HOURS TO a QO Q00C Aa Hud BILLION

RE MAN HOURS ~

FOR FARM MAINTENA

AND OTHER WORK

NCE

O.

COLO

Siege BILLION _ MAN HOURS THIS IS EQUAL | WORKING 10 HOURS TO THE EVERY DAY FOR ONE YEA LABOR OF £100.000 MEN NE YEAR

SOURCE: OFFICE OF WAR INFORMATION

GRAPHIC BY PICK.S, N. V. cued

IN BRIEF—

CHARLES LOCKE has been been appointed Indianapolis branch manager for the Minneapolis- | {Honeywell Regulator Co. and Ed-|

|ward Clucas, who has been acting

manager, will be in charge of the;

diana and surrounding territory.

RETAIL SALES FALL—Retail | trade for the past week contracted | from the previous week which saw | heavy pre-Easter buying but the] Decrease was less than in pre-war years because of the steady high! consumer purchasing power and)

blast furnaces which weren't completely wrecked when abandoned by the Russian army. Those assets for war production are gone now, Next on the list are Poland's iron, coal and steel centers, Romania's oil wells—unless allied bombers take care of them first.

the White House late yesterday, about 36 hours after the United Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Employees Union (C. I. 0.) |

WLB decision. The decision ordered an exten-,

SEQUEL TO EGGS: After the egg glut was so widely publicized | the week before Easter, demand | picked up so much that one large grocery store chain oouldn't buy all the eggs it wanted. i Moreover, it lost $1800 during | Easter week because it had advertised eggs at a certain retail price, based on the low prices then prevailing in wholesale markets. But the wholesale price climbed rapidly and the chain was stuck with its advertised retail price.

” » ” ODDS AND ENDS: It took 1 per cent less manpower in March to | produce $1 billion worth of muni- | tions than it did in November. .

that the union’ no longer repre-| sented a majority of the employees |

Two other pending cases involved | Jenkins Brothers, Inc., Bridegport, | Conn, and the Ken-Rad Tube and |

Lamp Corp., Owensboro, Ky.

" Sought Price Relief |

Jenkins has refused to comply with a board order issued March 1| {upholding a decision of the Boston | {regional board awarding a general | {wage increase of 5 cents an hour] to the firm’s 1750 employees, who | were represented by the Mine, Mill | and Smelter Workers (C. I, O.). The |

. company insisted it could not absorb | The Nazis are building up Dr. the increase without price relief | \craft Co. plant during March when |

!demand for quality merchandise, {Dun & Bradsteet, Inc., said today.

PRICE TOO "LOW—Puget Sound

went on strike because of the com- Power & Light Co, directors regard New York, -said it was advertising’s pany’s refusal to comply with a the $90,000,000 offer for the com- | big job to make jobs by creating de-

|pany’s electric properties as “grossly inadequate,” . Frank McLaughlin,

sion of a union contract pending|president, has notified Dr. Paul J. the wage earner will look to ‘he {a new determination of the union’s Raver, administrator of the Bonne- government for help, Mr. | status. The company has contended ville power administration.

BUILD TEXTILE PLANT—Im- |

{and has challenged the validity. of Hediste construction will be started {the WLB decision in court.

vy U. S. Rubber Co. of a new tex-| [os plant at Scottsville, Va., to be financed by the Defense Plant Corp. | at an estimated cost of $2,240,000, Herbert E. Smith, U. S. Rubber’s president, announced today.

SEES STYLE : SPREE—The great- |

est style buying shlurge America has | ever seen is forecast for the post- | war period by Joseph W. Holmes,

president of United Last Co., manu- |

{facturer of shoe lasts.

BOMBER OUTPUT UP—A new record for heavy bomber production | was set at the Seattle Boeing Air-

Hjalmar. Schacht as being at odds despite a contrary ruling by the a Flying. Fortress rolled off the as-

with them, says Max Immanuel in Barron's, so the allies will deal with | him after the war; the idea is to keep war's economic booty, prepare for world war IIT, . Russia has a commission in this country trying | to arrange to buy industrial equipment and machinery. . . . The Rock | Island railroad is experimenting | with radar and other electronic de- | vices for train communication and | control. . . , The Progressive Grocer | says sales of independent food | stores rose 18 per cent in '43 while | chain sales declined 74 per cent. °|

eee eee U. S. STATEMENT WASHINGTON. April 14 (U. P.).—Government receipts and expenses for the

current vear through April 12, co Ha year pril mpared |

This Year Last Year Expenses . $72.206,710,577 $57,663,302.704 War Spend. ,. 67.241,152.388 53 100,185,196 | Receipts 32,900,215,355 15,381,843.953 | Net Def . 39.306,483,572 42.277,695.900 Cash Bal 14,345,947 511 2,513,924, 407 Work. Bal, .. 13,583.141,535 1,751,301,030 Pub. Debt, .. 186.957 063.889 120,384,743.000 | Gold Res. ... 21478,304.212 22,501,079,885 |

| | - 8 4,388,000 | . 14,906,000 '

INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings . Debits

{office of price administration. Ken-Rad had rejected a March 20 order establishing a 50 cent mini-! mum and awarding a general in-| crease of 3 cents an hour to the firm's 4000 employees, who were rep- |

| resented by the United Automobile |

| Workers (A. F. of L.). The company {insisted the minimum was too high {and that it could not obey the order |to make the new wage scale retroactive to Sept. 4, 1942,

LOCAL PRODUCE |

Heavy breed hens. 23¢; Leghorn hens,

Brotiers, tryers and roosters. under bo! ibs., 26¢ ghorn springers. 23c¢ Ola roosters. 1

26c 4 Graded Egzs Grade A large, 2jc. grade

medium. 26c; grade A small, 23¢c: no | grade. 23¢. Butler-Ne, = S0c. Buttertat — No. 1, 49¢c, No 0 dee WAGON WHEAT

Up to the close of the Chicago market | today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain | elevators paid $1.63 per bushel for No. 1) red wheat (other grades on thelr merits) No. 3 white oats, 79c, and No. 3 red oats, bushel and No. 3 white shelled corn. $1.2¢ 79¢; No 3 yellow shelled corn, $106 per

pump with shiny patent ornament.

SHOES FOR LESS

5648

Pumps, Sandals and Ties—i New Spring and

PARKING SPACE USUALLY CLOSE BY

RIGHT Jet black gabardi

OUR SPRING survey's brightest. HIT!

Stouts

ne

od Open Sat.

rn > Until 7 P. M.

ih Mon., 8:45

n a great smart collection of Summer Footwear

318-332 Mass. Ave.

Between Del. and Ala.

Eggs- Current receipts 54 Ibs and up |

{sembly lines at the rate of one an hour, the company reported today | in a war department-approved announcément. Actual production |

| figures were not disclosed but the

announcement said the output | {amounted to twice the number of | transport planes in service on all! airlines in the United States,

N.Y. Stocks |

company’s Modutrol division in In- |

| { | i

STOP DREAMING,

Give Public Post-W Post-War Facts, Speaker Asks; Contest

Winners Named. *

| Everett Smith, in his talk “Pat|tern for Survival,” at the Indian- | apolis Advertising club Thursday | urged advertisers to stop giving the {public “dream produets” and instead give them down-to-earth informa(tion on what they could buy in the "immediate post-war period. { Mr. Smith, who is research diyrector for Macfadden Publications,

mands and buying. If a high level (of employment is not maintained

Smith | said. : | « Winners in the club's Ad-of-the-Month contest for March were announced. A two-color newspaper advertisement of H. P. Wasson & | Co. was selected as the most out- | standing “on the basis of good use| of white space, dramatic illustra-| tions, and attention compelling lay- | lout.” } Giverl Certificate

A runner-up certificate was; awarded to Bozell & Jacobs, Inc.| for an advertisement for. Indiana Electric assdciation in the same] {field.: The George Binger Advertis-| ing agency received honorable men- | tion for a series of small ads pre- | pared for Kahn Tailoring Co. Keeling & Co. won first award in the direct mail field on a failing | piece prepared for Wilson Milk Co.,| {Inc., and Eli Lilly & Co. won run- | 'nerup honors with a copy of the! company house magazine, * ‘The Lilly | | Reviewer.” | An entry of American States In-| surance Co., prepared and submitted | by Roger Beane Advertising agency, |

| won first in the magazine and trade

paper competition. The Mid-States Steel & Wire Co. entry prepared | and submitted by Keeling & Co.,|

| was runnerup.

LOCAL FIRMS GIVEN ~ NEW HIRING RATES

CHICAGO, April 14 (U. P.)—Four Indianapolis, Ind.,

| granted permission by the sixth re-

| tablish new hiring rates.

| Co,

| tilizer Co.

A UR IHR

S

he CHICAGO

146 E. WASHINGTON ST.

LOAN

Oldest Loan Brokers in The the State

on Everything!

Diamonds, Watches Musical Instruments Cameras | Clothing, Shotguns, Etc. JEWELRY CO, Ine.

navy, “RY, flag. -

oat. ri

| gional war labor board today to es- | — |

The rates established call for a hiring rate of 60-cents an hour, 65! cents after 30 days, 70 cents after = | 60 days, and 75 cents after 90 days.

HONOR SCHWITZER-CUMMINS |

The. Schwitzer-Cummins Co. announced today it has been awarded the second white star for its army- |

Franklin Simon & Go. year ended. Jan. 31 net profit $13,190 vs. $157,362 previous

Winner in the outdoor poster and |

Net | High Low Last Change | Allis-Chal . 36 34's 35 car card field was the Indianapolis Am Can + 5 5. > Pbwer & Light Co.'s entry prepared | Am Rad & SS. 9% 0% 97, 1, and submitted by Central Adveroe Roll Mill aa 1a » ah \* tising agency. Runnerup in the Am Tob B 61 60% 61 same field wds Stokely-Van Camp Am Water W T's 7 la 1a Co. Anaconda 26 257s 257g — 3 : Armour & Co 34 S's 5's sy Atchison .. 87! 67 6738 5g Atl Refining .. 29% 29 29%% Is [Bald Loco ct . 19's 19's 191g — 14 Bendix Avn . 357, 37g a Beth Steel 58's 58 58 -_— Borden 30%, 30's suds Celanese 33% 33% 333, 1 Ches & Ohio... 45% 453, 45!, | Shry sler . 83's 82% 82%: — 13 {Curtiss-Wr .. 5% 5'2 5% + Ya - Douglas Airc 50 =~ 50 50° © is! Post-war plans to go into effect. {Du Pont 14400 1441 a — 3, | immediately will be made at the; | Gen ectric 57a 35% § 4+ la Gen Foods ... 42 417s 41% _ 1, second annual industrial health (Gen Motors . 57% 57% 571. — 3 conference to be held here Wednes- | Goodyear 42's 42's 421, Greyhnd Cp 209, 201; 2094 i, day and Thursday under the sponInd Rayon 35! 353 350 — 11 i i - , Int Harvester 69% 69° 6934 sorship of the Indiana State Medi Johns.Man . 88% 88: 88% 1, ‘cal association. Kroger oaB 34 100 i ‘s| More than 500 representatives L-O-F Glass MI A aan 1, of industrial management, labor, | Loew's . 6( 60%, 604 — 1 i i Marshall Pield 14's 14's 141, the medical profession and the Mont Ward 45's 9 2 —- 1 armed forces will meet to work out | Nat Biscuit 21° 21 91% TO "a program Of action for the reNet, Distillers . a. 32% 32% + % habilitation of war wounded. | . 3 a a “ea | i Onin Oil 18 18, 18 11 Industrial physicians, personnel Pan Am Air 00 300, 3; ."",, | managers and labor representatives Penney 99's 9875 99'y 1 15 from over the sthte and from surenn RR 29%, 29 20'; — 1, di ta il Phelps Dodge . 21% 21', 213, . a, rounding states will attend the ses- | Procter & G 5534 551 553 4 a proster or do on he sions, which are to be held in the Pure Oil 16! 16'« 161, — 1, auditorium of the Indiana univerBl ol 16 163 i sity school of medicine. Medical Scheniey Dist 30%, 50 503, -- s, officers from Billings general hosSoeony aouk BB. Ba Ba, '» pital, Ft. Harrison, Stout field and South Pac 205. 291, 2015 "1, Camp Atterbury, and naval medical Su Banus it 3a 30s - lalpersonnel in this area will attend. 1 3 361; : std onl Ind n 2%, 325, -. 15) Headline speaker will be Dr. Vicil of « 53! 82s 52% —_ 1 i i " | Sia Ol | a ve $n 2 tor Heiser, medical consultant to | 20th Cent-Fox . 23 231, 231, 1, the National Association of Man- { U 8 Rubber 4510 451, 451, 's ufact tho: “ | U 8 Steel 51% 511, 511, — 1, ufacturers, and author of “The | Warner Bros .. 12% 1233 123, American Doctor's Odyssey,” who | Westing El 96 96 96 — 13 Ee S& W 16 16 16 will talk on “The Value of IndusZenith _Rad 36'z 36'% 36% [trial Medical Services” at the din-

{ner meeting at the Indianapolis | Athletic club Wednesday evening. Ws Spi of Indiana indus-. who will appear on the probn are Dr. 8. L. Rankin, medical director of the Indiana Ordnance Corp, Charlestown, and Wayne

manufacturing Smith. assistant personnel director firms employing 204 workers were © !h¢ Delco-Remy division, Ander-

son.

The firms #Affected were Kings- | | bury & Co. F. 8. Royster Guano the Smith Agriculture Chem- | cal Co., and E. Rauh & Sons Fer- |

© ON ANYTHING o

Autos © Diamonds © Watches Jewelry ® Clothing ® Radios, ete.

GET CASH IMMEDIATELY

LN

Open to 7 P. M.—Sat. to 10 P. M. Open Sun. to | P. M.—Mon. to 9 F. M.

ICKES OPPOSES [7 NEW COAL ACT

Believes John L Lewis Baoks It to Further His

“Own Power.

WASHINGTON, April 14 (U.P). —Congressional sources reported today that Secretary of Interior Harold L: Ickes is opposed to the newly proposed federal bituminous coal act as a move inspired in part by John L, Lewis to further his power in the coal industry. ' : The legiglation, indorsed by Lewis’ United Mine Workers and by producers of 73 per cent of the nation’s soft coal, was introduced in the house yesterday by three Republicans and two Democrats. It follows closely the pattern of the Guffey “| coal act, allowed to expire last year, except that it provides for consum-

to the President.

AD CLUB LUB URGED

ILLINOIS AND OHIO STS. |

%

|the bill where he cannot run me,”

a member of congress paraphrased

Ickes as saying, “and he has con-

vinced the mine operators that they

would be better off with some pro-

tective regulation against price cut-| To Sa

| tne than they are with none.” Opposes Commissions The proposed commission, consist-

ing of three public members and one }

representative each of labor and industry, would be appointed by the President with senate consent. Ickes’ office said the secretary opposed removing regulation of the industry from the interior depart-

a commission. A spokesman recalled Ickes’ remark that he was “strongly opposed to all commissions because of lack of -definite responsibility” and said that the criticism was “especially pertinent” "to the coal } proposal.

PACKING FIRM SOLD

NEW YORK, April 14 (U. P.)— General Foods Corp. has completed

mington Packing Co, Woburn,

7500 Hogs Held Over Here;

7125 More Received Today]

Approximately 7500 hogs were held over at the Indianapolis stock= yards today from yesterday and 7125 more arrived this morning, the war food administration reported. The holdover, one of the largest in recent weeks, was complicated by the inability of the stockyards t6 furnish corn for feeding purposes. Prices were generally unchanged from yesterday, a 25-cent decline being made on weights under 160 pounds. The top remained at the government “floor” of $13.80. Receipts also. included 400 cattle, 525

er representation in price fixing and vests power in a five-man commission responsible not to Ickes, but

“Lewis believes that he can run a commission such as is set up by

ment and placing it in the hands of | Good—

the purchase for cash of the Wil-|

v Mass., according to Clarence Fran-| Good to choice

calves and 475 sheep. GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (7125) 120- 140 pounds ............. 11.00@11,75 140- 160 ive srt as sinnen Yn, 13.35 160- 180 pounds [email protected] 180- 200 pounds [email protected] 200- 220 pounds 13.80 .220- 240 pounds 13,80 240- 270 poun 13.80 270- 300 pounds 13.80 300- 330 pounds 13.80 Je 360 pounds 13.35 ed > 160-- 20 pounds [email protected] Packing Sows or 300 pounds - pounds .soveeeeensen [email protected] 300- 330 pounds ..eeeceeen.. [email protected] 330- 360 pounds ..eese..o.e. [email protected] 400- 350 pounds ....... 12,75@ 12.8% Coos 150 - pounds ....ee0e . [email protected] 450- 500 pounds .......e..... 12:80013.00 Medium— 250- 450 pounds ............ [email protected] Slaughter Pigs Medium nd Cho 90- 120 pounds .. .......... [email protected] .. 18.75 15.50

100 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds Good—

ealers (all weights)

+. [email protected] | Lincoln

Ind & ind Assn Te

Ind Gen dos PEL.

Inds Indpls Water pfd . Indpis ter Class ni

hn Cop com BR Sr Fin orp pie. teeevers 2

Hook Drug Co com . 18 Home Tas "nt AL i vid a dh

is P & L com . Railways com..

Ponder and Socker Caitle aad Onives 5 1

oo conde 11.50 : foo DOUDAS 1eevesssnvess 31 i i ! “Sse BERN Rene 11. frie Pounds 1reritaree: 10800480 1 “sesnseen ane oi 0 a. Pounds are [email protected] 500- 900 POURAS ............. 8.000 9.35 Good and Choice : 100-1000 pounds seereensaiane 11.76013.28 800- 900 pounds ,............ [email protected] Good and Choice 500 pounds and down ....... [email protected] pounds down ssiesees 9.25011.50 SHEEP AND LAMBS (475) Ses (shorn) Good and choi ers ame 5g 3% Common and meditin, inves PP 8.50 Medium and cholce: .......... 352 16.2. Medium * and good......... igi i]

LOCAL ISSUES

Nominal quotations furnished by Indian. apolis securities dealers,

Bla vesesssss TH

Asked

A com

[email protected] | P, R. + [email protected] . 14.75@16 . [email protected] 700-1100 pounds .....eee. Si. Jeans ‘arene 1100-1300 pounds ....... eee [email protected] mmon— : 700-1000 pounds ............ [email protected] Heifers Stokely Bros pr pf Cholce— United Tel Co § 600- 800 pounds .......... «» [email protected] | Union Title com 800-1000 pounds .....c.ees.. [email protected]| Van Camp Milk 600~ 800 Hoogiog0 CORP MIE Ds - oe 14 \ BONDS 800-1000 un esesscensess 14 pad tiie Wounds 34.00725.00 Ager) hi A ms %% .. 1 i Sa seb avanen 5 er can TaLITRY 00- 600 pounds .....s 12.00914.00 American 1 se. iB in - 900 pounds ............. [email protected] | Cen Pe Cs ah a 6 Bul Ch of Com Bldg Co 4'%s 85 Bette lis (al weights) Citizens Ind Tej ¢Has 61 -..... 108 Good (all hts) ........ On A0 A a a wa a 000d (all weights) 11.50012.5| Lor a Ne 10 Ne a G00 ...ivviirnirninrninnns [email protected] | [nopls P % L 3¥%s 90 .... mn Medium ..................., 9.75010.80| (RAPE CANTY Coe 08. 0% 10 Cutter and common ....... 8.50@ 9.75 |r vomo Water Works 5s --108 eyes Cows (all weights) * Eubner Packing Co 4s 54 . 97 100 CABREL bea a ener [email protected] | Morris 5 & 10 Stores 5s 50.. 101 raees Mediu: Fu <a Vans MER ad 10.00912.00 | Muncie Water Works 5s 66 ... Cutter and common ......... [email protected] | N Inu lrub IW inns 01 CRRNEP | iii iinn i nvuniasss 6.25@ 1.71% Naa J vs . 88 2 re of e CALVES (525) Pub Tel ates 66 .......... 1

FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1944

Joins: Mallory

John M. Smith John M. Smith, general mana-

ger of manufacturing for the R.CA.«Victor division of Radio Corp. of America, has resigned to join" P, R, Mallory & Co., Inc, as vice president in charge of. mEnufaching. Smith has been associated TT Corp, of America for the past 14 years. Prior to that he was engaged for 16 years in manufacturing activities with the incandescent lamp division of the General Electric Co., Nela Park, Cleveland.

GRAIN PRICES MOVE 2 IN NARROW RANGE

CHICAGO, April 14 (U, P).— Grain futures moved within a nar row range on the board of trade today. A dull tone prevailed with prices irregularly lower, At 11 a. m. wheat unchanged to off %; oats unchanged to off 1%; and rye off : to up %, and barley off % to up 4.

BUSINESS AT.A GLANCE

Censolidated Mining & Smelting

{ Co. of Canada, Ltd, 1943 net profit

$0,096,508 or $2.78 a share vs. $12,e 201,618 or $3.72 a share in 1942. Imperial Chemical Industries, Ltd, 1943 preliminary net income 6,685,«

pounds sterling in 1942. International Metal Industries, Ltd, 1043 net profit $811643 or

Gerninl iil [email protected] | Trae saxeseanr $2.25 a common share vs, $706,804 or | Common to medium ......... 9.50 .00 Corp {cis, chairman of the board. Cull 70 Togs py IR yranaren 6.000 3.50 US Machine © ua $1.83 a share in 1942.

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Army: and Groups Si Sel

The following ducted into t through Magjor board 5: A Arnold Mead, Mitchell, 1026 Ceds Alton st.; Charles Lloyd Jay, New Or) ray, 204 Spring st.; N. Warman ave,

N Walter 41 lam a 12 Arthur McFadden, an, 518 N. J

Board 1

The following ducted into ti Marion county I Addison Ratliff,

Muster, 1630 Harlas 1718 Laurel st.; Ps ns st.; Riley Owin John Comstock, Sharp, 1039 St. Pat 431 .8t. Paul Bt; Drive, Woodruff Pla 1509 Millis ave,; Jan pect st; Willlam ave, Mars Hill; Ed ave.; John Sauer, liam Faulconer, 18 George McKinngs, ert Hohman, Beckham, 1510" Hor

Board 11

The following ducted into through Marion 11: A Carl Wildman, 33 Hiatt, 2161 Park av 4630 Amo st; Bas Kenneth Tomay, 33: Warfield, 1901 Lamb 831 S. Laclede st.; | Ralph Varvel, 234 Brand, R. R. 3, Box 1 W. Ohi

os ave. eflield ave. N

William Bartram ave; Louis Bolande

‘Three Are Three Indianag transferred from basic training, camps are Pvis husband of Mrs. R. 3, Box 841, t Robert W. Jame: Nellie James, 11 Robert J. Townle Juanita F. Tow! st, both to Shey Prt. Marion North, st, par “Salute the S« Great Britain re With the A. in BE Teague, son of | R. R. 16, Box 4 moted to corpor SR

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