Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 April 1944 — Page 7
01, 1044
wis five-man urnament got he survived the play and will j round Satur-
scoring tial week-end 2896, Herff1 Scott 2803, Falls City 2741. hell-Scott was olling 258, 241, first 700 series irnament com- } Ripple alleys. ek-end doubles d by the bowlSturm’'s were: hollin 647, and 00; Men’s han-
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week-end. -
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i
By
a hen. 8 year |
oe
4
MONDAY, APRIL 4, no
- STATE BUSINESS LITTLE CHANGED
Industrial Employment Still
Declining, I. U. Reports.
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind. April 24.— Business in Indiana in March was practically unchanged from the previous month because of the widespread adjustments in the produce tion of war materials, Indiana university business analysts explain in the Indiana Business Review, monthly publication of the I. U. bureau of business research. Such advances as were made were confined largely to the field of distribution and did not extend generally to production, or agricultural income. The review points out that coal production, stimulated ‘by the opening of navigation on the Great Lakes, was the largest In nearly 20 years. Manufacturing employment, which has been declining slowly for several months, made a further recession in March. The I. U. business publication gives several reasons for the drop in industrial employment. “The production of war materials on the
whole has been becoming: con-|’
stantly more efficient, and it has been estimated that the output per worker is now about 40 per. cent
Je r LE =
_ many a HOW Ge 3
— in satisfactory quantities, and “has|
permitted the shifting of production facilities to other products of immediate necessity to the armed forces. Shifting production from one product to another in many instances has necessitated some rearrangement of production facilities, and has resulted in temporary reduction in employment. The shift in production has been under way for several months, but the effect on employment was more noticeable in| March than in any previous month. |
Sales Show Gain
would satisty hiti and also skirt ; came forth with the startling idea of cutting”
FOR OUR NAVY
FOR OUR ARMY
SOURCE: U.S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT; WAR PRODUCTION
oe ® CRAPRIC BY PICKS, 0. V.
Do Miners Eat 15 Minutes?
the United Mine Workers was.
pertod from 30 to 15 minutes. The amputated 15 minutes was to be metamorphosed Into working time, to be paid for at overtime] rates. Figuring it that way, the wage settlement offered the coal
Mr. Lewis had originally demanded. Mr. Ickes agreed to it on behalf of the government, which was then in charge of nearly all the country’s! 15,000 coal mines.
how the miners could get along with only 15 minutes for the emptying of their lunch pails.
“Industrial payrolls declined much
So this writer, equipped with a
Their Lunch in Nobody Knows
By FRED W. PERKINS. Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
PAGETON, W. Va, April 24.—When- Harold .L. Ickes and John L.
Lewis were tied up in a knot several months ago on how the boss of frou thet
get a wage settlement that ites Steet Yo ila, som
apparent that Mr. Simmons was an expert rumindter. By the time he got going on the rest of the sandwich, the stop watch showed 4:32.
| disappeared. There appeared to be several more |
+ {atone which might
miners almost all the $2-a-day raise | 1 was 6:08 when the last morsel!
{ Everybody understands that sup- | plies of replacement parts must be {larger in war than in peace, but
{ larger? Why as much as 70 times
SPARE PARTS ARE PILING UP
Excessive Supply for War . Machines Viewed as Necessary Evil,
By JOHN W. LOVE Scripps-Howard Staff Writer CLEVELAND, 0. April 24.—<The old one about the loss of a king- | dom because of a shortage of horse- | shoe nails in the supply depot was | just. a story to point up the prob- | lem of parts supply in the days be- | fore mechanized warfare. Every little while somebody in | the parts business in the Cleveland- | Detroit area, the focus of that trade, | menticns the tremendous size of | the orders for-spare parts the pro- | curement officers have been placing. | These mentions sometimes take the | form of gripes.
why so much larger? Why, in some instances, 20, 30, even 50 times
larger than the supplies of parts in certain similar categories in Ger-
, THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES °
SOURCE: U. 5. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
INCOME IN TWO WARS
INDEX 1910-14 NON-AGRICULTURAL
PIR CAPITA 100
AGRICULTURAL
Bi» [oT all GRAPHIC BY PICKS. NN. 2
Income payments more than doubled since the outbreak of world war II, but consumer expenditures increased only about 50 per cent. Most of the difference between income and expenditures have gone into savings, which increased from 4.0 billions of dollars in 1940 to
37.7 billions in 1943.
=
SHEET AND TIN MILL|oo0-men hours among: more than ‘SETS SAFETY RECORD.
GARY, Ind. (U. P.).—The Gary | sheet and tin mill of the Carnegie-| Illinois Steel Co. has operated at peen trained by the company to fill
high speed in war production since | vacancies left by experienced men Feb. 2, 1942, for a total of 30,000,-| departing for the armed services.
PACE ka
employees without a single fatality, setting a new safety record, arthounced plant officials. The employees include more than 1200 new men and women who have
many?
Bereavement brings an extra burden of expense for which the fomily too often is ill prepared. Harry W. Moore's After-Service Budget Plan provides a conven-
Many Reasons Given
When figures of that caliber.are used, we begin to understand the problems of logistics in spare parts themselves: have
delayed the invasion-of’ | nent. There are many reasons the parts requirements are so huge. Each set! of reasons become the multiplier of every other set. Take the first group of reasons, one which’ had its beginning three {and four years ago. In motor trucks {this country had several kinds of
\sandwiches in the bucket, plus an| good models, and their producers
apple and other unidentified items, {and at this rate it seemed certain |
‘in 15 minutes. was alert to see if the wage agree-| ment would be violated.
{ But Mr. Simmons didn't eat any ment parts for each model.
less than employment ina ma jority stop watch, has been conducting more—not just then,
of instances, Notwithstanding the] drop in employment during the! month; and a record volume of)
some pesearch into the subject, the field of inquiry being the inside of ‘a coal mine here,
i federal income tax payments, re- Reaches for Bucket } 130. 140 PONDS, 2rceiiaissany $]0 13811 08 tail sales made one of the largest conceament, returned, sat down, je OR xt 3 vue parts. on 160- 100 pounds — Hes 90 gains in months. While the rise in| The first specimen under analysis and took another chew of tobacco. wnoin, 133: 20% Pounds » 13 [email protected] retail sales was influen p Simm ol] 220- 240 pounds ... 13.80 nies - A | ned § ut 4 Be pil = hin {Total elapsed time for the opera Distance a Factor 240. 370 Doe 13.80 once ONoOPoIouUs. a er | t min secon pounds . x nificant that the increase in sales Pe h H tion, 7 utes and 47 ds. Now niultiply all these and simi- 300- 330 pounds ... 12.90 was as large as it was” jand reputedly a heavy eater. ef “Why don't you eat the rest of lar ratics by another set of figures, 5. 36 360 pounds ,.. 12.75 The review says that according to Was discerned, in the rays of the your lunch?” inquired your investi- | those made necessary by the danger| 160- 220 POUNAS ..e..orreiann 10.00012.75 the department of commerce, retail electric light on the cap of your gator, who saw his research sus-/of losses by submarine and in sales in March were more than 25 investigator, to be reaching for his pended without definite conclusion. combat. 12.15812.35 per cent larger than in February. lunch bucket. | “Aw, that's all I want now,” ex-| The third multiplier is distance. 130120 and about 12 per cent above a! Mr, Simmons, member of a load- plained Mr. Simmons. “Might take The Germans had to move their ~, 12.05@ 12.20 year ago. Advertising was consid- | ing machine crew which at the mo-|a bite or two next time we're wait- spare parts a few hundred miles! (00. 450 pounds ............. 12. 00@ 12.15 erably larger than in February be- ment was idle and waiting for cars in’ for cars.” lat the most-—and the distance grows| 450- 500 pounds ....... veers [email protected] cause of the war bond drive, did to be brought up for its product,! This turned out to be the pat-j less. Ours have to travel thousands I pounds naa sant 11.006 12.00 not make the usual March increase. was sitting on some mine timbers. tern of eating inside the coal mines. of miles, and at a slower rate. Slaughter Pigs + Farm prices, according to I. U./The stop watch showed that from The men eat at no specified time, | Finally there is the multiplier of | Midum and Go a 7.15@ 10.75 business publication, were but the time when the urge to eat but when they feel like it and the model change. Each time a military CATTLE (19%) slightly higher than in , manifested itself, to the instant he situation is favorable. In all in-/campaign showed up weaknesses in|chotce— Steers but marketings of livestock and began to unscrew the top of his side operations there are waiting a vehicle or a weapon it had to be o- 00 DUDS «t3nisperanes 1 grain products were considerably lunch bucket, the elapsed time was Periods when a man can eat if revised, with more complications in 1100-1300 pounds le TE ymaller than a month ago, and 35 seconds. h2 has a mind to do so. the spares. - pounds ...... tresees Iarm income undoubtedly was less! Approximately 25 of these seconds! ‘Laway, Boss” said a big black] Must Risk Critici Coo 900 POUNAS ..ovvnsensess [email protected] $1 March than in February. {were used by Mr. Simmons going to Man with teeth so white they daz-| Wenn Do Doi ey a —————————————— {and returning from the hideout in Zled in the rays of my miner's’ All thése factors snowballed the 11300-1500 PORES ...vvrerenne [email protected] TOWN HAS DEBT OF Ta he had placed his bucket, and | light, “I eats what I wants when parts orders. One building in Texas 1100-1100. pounds 12 [email protected] seconds were required for Mr. I wants it. Never heard of any is said to have 167,000 bins, each | 1100-1300 pounds 12.75@ 14.78 $1. 19 ON ITS BOOKS Pn to meditate on and finally other way.” holding a different kind of part. mn cats viral .. [email protected] dispose of his chew of tobacco. Of] That's the miner. manner of eat- There's an establishment it Eng- Heifers WOODSTOCK, N. H. (U. P).— course, his meditation may have ing since anybody remembers. No- land which has 320,000 bins. Coo 300 pound [email protected] The town fathers of Woodstock been on some other subject, but ft body in the business expected the] Commercial efficiency as the parts| soo-1000 pounds | ...rmemner. 14.756 15.50 aren't worrying about local financial- seemed to be about what he had. 13-minute arrangement to change trade knew it was out. The supplies CD poms [email protected] problems these days. Recent figures better do with his quid. {it. Everybody took that as just part had to be piled up in some in-| 33571000 pounds ..ooereeerr, [email protected] show the town has a net indebted-| Staris to Ruminate |of the Lewis way of getting around stances beyond the ability of office 2500-600 pounds [email protected] ness of only $1.19. {the Little Steel formula. As to Systems to keep track of them. In|common. Lob orrrreesssss -1813. Sp ——————————— qe ne 33 Seo gone, Mr. whether the men use more or less the Paine gi island has to have| 500- 900 pounds resus [email protected] ’ immons took the top sandwich |time in their lunch periods, nobody complete sets of parts for as many Bulls (all weights) HER THUMB’S NOT from his bucket—apparently a ham | knows. The operators appear not to Planes and as many kinds of planes | Gooa (an Weights) .e....... 12:[email protected] one. Slowly and methodically he!care, and certainly the miners 25 are likely to land there. Sausage— SO HEAVY, MAYBE [CC SY Someone md ans don't. | One of the high probabilities at| Neawm "17 oe CAMDEN, 8. C. (U. P.).~One of half the sandwich, the elapsed time /the end of this war will be the pub-| Cutter and common ....... the most popular spots in Camden was 2:51 minutes. Mr. Simmons did [lic investigations of over-supplies of | Cows (all weights) these days is a grocery store which not immediately begin on the second N Y Stocks parts. Tremendous unused In- Sjoaaum ~~ 00lTTIITIIIIU 1173013.50 sports a woman butcher—Mrs. J. half, but started in to ruminate. He * * ventories will come ‘to light, But Cutt ee and common 773Q 8.75 H. Ardis, whose husband is over- was thinking about something. As ) Net (there's no help for it. To be short *°°®F -u- c ALVES Po 8.35@ 1.13 seas with the armed forces. the seconds ticked away it became, py ol LastChanit a firing pin or an axle shaft or a Vealers (all weights) |Am Can .. .. 84% 83's 83% — “| transmission gear might result in|geoa to choles... BUSINESS D IRECTORY [SE 3 3 50 Tar ie the procuremens Col 10 oa. 3 Eb Am Roll Mill .. 13% 13%, 13% — , the war risks the procurement ’ Am T&T 18% 174 187 = people must take is that of criticism| "oe ** " esd Caires . 613 — ! Am Water W.. 6% 6% 3 — 1 after the Wars Chotee~ 'S |! Q E- . WEAVING Anaconda D253, 25% 25ly — | 500- 800 pounds ........ . [email protected] mour & Co.. § 5 . $00-1050 POUDAS ..ocevivscay. 11.50013.00 PEA RSON A Reni 881 8 « = LOCAL ISSUES Ny 1 s0@ 1180 128 N. Penn. LI-5513 | of MOTH ROLES—BURNS Bald Loco ct. . 19%s t BTU Nominal quotations furnished by Indian- . veil 105001150 : or. WORN SPOTS Ie on "ae HN 10% 18a — a apolis securities dealers. 7 Tdi FURNITURE & niANOSL] LEON TAILORING G0, Ji3ch Steel 3m sin stu — alo cop eo Bid ASKed) oomon Lh reese 033G10.80 ’ i ‘e Le 308 $ — 1 } M eovevees TH oon _- BD onDy + DoTEUMENTSY 235 MASS. AVE, "5 the Miadle ot | Borg-Warner. J" Ba 1g | Agents Fin Corp pid ....oein 20 .... 900 pounds ......... eee 8.00@ 9.3 RECORDS e SHEET MUSIC |! the First Block (Celanese eee. 33M 31% 31% _ ar¢Belt R Stk Yds com ......... 361 40% Calves (steers) Ches & Oh 44% 4% ay — 1, | Belt R Stk Yds pid .... §3 «+7. Good and Cholce— ——— Chrysler ...... 81 80% 5, — 1, | Bodbs-Merrill com ..... ha ..... " o |p Tt Ir 8% 80% — | BO Merrill duh fd a2, 200-1000 pounds eres 11.75013.28 i Douglas Alre .. 48% a. apst of | Circle Theater com ........ 3 4 - ou Save because we ve | aL 13% 0% 48% % | Comwith Loan 8% pfd | 103 $00- 900 pounds ... [email protected] ‘| Men's Suits & Overcoats |Qen Hectic 35% 38% M3" U2 Delta Eee com .........00 000 NY 13% Calves (heifers) SIR SEQ $917 SHAT {Gen Foods ....41 4 4 's| Home ToT 7 Wayne 5% pid’ pi if Ce ps len wi [email protected] 167 *18” "21" 24% [ence ih ie de Du ERSTE SEY dimmed vangns d . 1 1 14 n 580 Tel 8% pid ........ L 0! poun OWN ............ 2 . CASE CLOTHES Grea Cp lan Pu Ba I % 1188 Bdrm Xie To ptd LL 33 SHEEP AND LAMBS (100) 3 a 5 ‘ he 215 N. Senate Ave, Open 9 to 9 | int Haves Bn Uh us + Ewes (shorn) jE an .... 80% 89's 83's e| Tae Balas aia IN. Sod A choke oi eee 31339 ennecett 31 301; 30% — Wii a Water ptid oll a Um ieee . ii ER TR " EN EOF Glass an Ee | Indpls Water Clas & com. 17% 19 | Medium and ehotce .......... [email protected] 3 § 14 | | | | INS Lockheed Alrc.. 16 53 15% — Jel Nat Life co «18 17 [Medium and good............ [email protected] SAXOPHONE «25 TY [Ee CR CL CR See $00@1i35 p ? pp 1 .. { Lincoin Nat Life Ins com..... [RIT SE [ate] Nash. Kely on 3 2% 24 Zia PR Mallory 444% pid T— Instructions in the State Nat Bo Bh Wh ak — Re ai pid LL ‘103 Up to the close of the Chicago market IN DIA NA 31! R Hi] NY Central 1% 174 Ih = x { oN Ind Pub See o pid. 10s today, Indianapalis flour ills and grin FN 8, ? —-— » n ery 1% ..... ev ul! INDIANA MUSIC " 112 East WASHINGTON St y Dackar Alp. oe 34 nT En Sere St ma le 18% 17 fed phew” other § grades 4 N their merits). 115 E. Ohio St.—FR-1184 FEY \ ' : pa Sod + JE 29% 29 2% — 3h Iv of Ind COM. vveneens 0. white oats, 78c, and No. r oa Lo 29N 287 1 — | Progr Launa ili 18 {7¢, No. 3 yell helled corn, $1.08 Phelps Dodge .. 20% Na 35% = Sond G & Ei 8% we 10 05 bushel and No. 2 white shelled corn, $126 USE YOUR CREDIT at |i,” © 5° 3 3 (GAT Sei on fh DRY So me Ts RENT OFFICES Il} Sok IVUN VNEVII al Pullman ....... gly - 81 Ur e Q o Ihe ~ Pure Ofl '.....16 1512 13% — 3 | Union Title 2 : All outside, light 3 Republic St .. 163% 161 4h = | Va Camp Mik pt... ™ an U. S. STATEMENT modern rooms, \ RN NES! Reyn Tob B .. 30 20% 30 + 13 Van Camp Milk com ......... 3 WASHINGTON, April 24 (U. P.).—GovAV, NN 19 N Schenley Dist .107'% 107s 1074 — 3 | BON ns ernment expenses and receipts for the $25 up. lS oie HE EE DN es wine whe ape |S Te ten Aad 1 com THE INDIANA TRUST BLDG. TAR | Soith Pac .... 251 33. je in American Loan Ss 51... 97 ino (P TR eis Ye Last ¥ Std Brands Toa ama 21h — TriAmerican Loan 8546 0 1098 101 |peoonea $74.767.184.203 0.78, 739.057 131 W. Washington St. Std 0 Cal I. 3° 33s dss J iy Cent Newspapers 4his M4-81..101 ...|War Spend . §3.090,014748 33,047533.534 Direeti td O (Ind) ... 32% 331. 37 = . R .... 33.868.544,132 13.708.082.043 Uy Smestie indians Toomer joi; Onna: Bit Be Iw + 3 Citizens Soe Tel Vn 6 108 Nort 'Ber [I d0moa edna 43978.204103 Texas Co .... 48% 48% 48% — lu|ind Asse Tel Co diss #0... 100 Cash Bal... 12.930,391.816 8.736,356,938 20th Cent-Fox : 22% 23 22 — 3 Indpls P & L 3%s 70 109 ‘| Work. Bail. 121167.384.682° 7973731430 In . 5 U 8 Rubber ... 43% 43% 42% — % | Indpls Railway Co Bs 67 ..... go |Fub. Debt ..186,968,808,388 128,474,208.476 WE Buy iamonds . Wanita Sle 30 34 — | Indpis Water Co das 88 oI. 107is 108 |O0ld Res... JLMOLIONI ARLETST mnsT asm pices Ry tad WL TY Westing EI © 9413 94° MN — Nl |Kubner Packing Cots 58.03 it | . INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE FE Young 8 & W. 14% 14% - 14% — iy] ubner Packing Co 45 3¢ el CIMAYINGS ..vveveesnnrsiennsnes 4,409,000 STANLEY Jewelry Co. LINCOLN STATE PAWNERS Zenith Rad ... 35% 35'% 38% = Y Muncie Water Works 8a 66 | 108 ears BODIES... ive idesR it fanaa 16,421,000 n u ory 3893 eau. in 103% . i N Ind Tel 4338 85 .......... . 113 W. Wash, Lincoln Hotei B1ag. J | COR CAPITOL & ‘Wash. sr. 200-MILE TRIP OF Pub Serv of In Tod a 9.0000 106 108% Incorporations el 4108 88... in 100 1 Mono & Co, Inc.. 108 8. Pennsylvani WAC PROVES FUTILE Frere Water Wks Ss 87 . 0 9. st, ndianapoils: rity Max M. yi boi { Trac Term Corp 90 |130 E. Washington st., Indianapolis; 1000 SPRING | IAM | ND LOANS U 8 Machine Corp, 5s 82. 102 [shares without par value; manufacturing . WE MAXTON, N. C. (U. P.).—It was| °‘Ex-dividend Sud_desiing in fur garments and oe STYLES BUY DIAMONDS . a tough break for Pvt. Carlotte LOCAL PROD Yetta Monohsson, Miriam Lubow! : : ; ’ Ames of Walkerville, Mich, mem- YUCE wo Magnavos Co,, Inc, ht Bueter " . e ne; a Richard 'ConNow Ready b | I Sussman. Inc. ber of the women’s army corps de-|, Heavy breed hens 3c; Leghorn nema, nor rime wddress 1 share of $100 par \ + - - value to manufacture n elecHARRY LEVINSON WASH ach ent ” the Laurinburg-Max-| Broflers, fryers and 4 roosters. under &(VLC mechanical 4nd" slecitical prod: Hatter my a base, #5 to Chay Sd 36 Lefhorn rs, on. Nets: Richard, A, 5 Come nnor, Frank Frei mes made a . EO Cues) Tekin, 1 fe, 14 w. ’ 26¢c. ——————————————— lotte, N. C., 100 miles away, on pay 5 Grad s—Grade § args Nev grade] JOHNSON TO SPEAK OXYGEN THERAPY |day and bought a supply of swariky meds, i grade A 80| Arthur P. Johnson, agency manThis Equipment Can Be Rented at sweaters and slacks. - Next day an Butier—io. Ch 800. Butterley - No L|ager of the Great-West Life As-| HAAG'S VDE front mol ar el {surance Co. at Detroit, will ‘address |. . general X
Had Enough He replaced iop on bucket, car-
ried bucket to original place ,of | {makes of engines and each needs! bh
| were already tooled to turn them |largest—17, 800—since January
fout., The procurement agencies did
They took | {what was on the market, and so {they had to take sets of replace- | Same | in tank engines. We had no stand-| ard tank engine. Ordnance grabbed | what it could find, and the result) {is our medium tanks have four |
ets
17,800 PORKERS
Heavy Run Is Largest Since. January; Prices Off 25 Cents.
Hog receipts at the Indianapolis stockyards today swelled to the and {prices dropped 25 cents, with the
Everybody has been wondering | Mr. Simmons would not get through | Rot have time to standardize, or | exception of those weights supYour investigator | thought they didn't.
ported by the govenment, the war food administration reported. Prices for sows slumped 40 cents. There were 500 hogs held over from | | Saturday. {cluded 1975 cattle, 625 calves and 100 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (17,800)
‘RECEIVED-HERE:
Price for Hay Hits $50 a Ton
EE ae
AEA
a v i 24 (U. P)— Hay prices have skyrocketéd in the Denver area, with bailed hay reported selling at $50 a ton in many retail feed stores and loose hay in stacks close to highways was reported today to be selling at 837 a ton. The soaring prices were blamed to recent heavy snows, which isolated farm hay supplies in water-soaked fields at the height of the lambing and calving season.
Receipts today also in- |
NEW DEVICE CUTS STATIC FROM MOTOR
TOLEDO, April 24 (U. P)— A war-developed technique called
{ “spark suppression” which elimi-
nates radio interference from the engines of mechanized weapons, promises vastly superior short-wave radio reception for post-war America, Delmar G. Roos, vice president of Willys-Overland Motors, Inc. said today. The new technique has been in effective operation for more than a year on tanks'#jeeps and halftracks, Roos disclosed. Previously, it was difficult to transmit or pick up dispatches on certain short-wave bands, especially when these vehicles were traveling in convoy or close battle formation, because of the radio interference emanating from their electrical equipment. Elimination of radio interference on all cars and trucks through legislation within a period of five to seven years would release a vast number of short-wave bands previously denied the public, Roos stated. This would clear the way for infinitely better auto and home radio reception, he said.
GRAIN PRICES TURN
PEACE 2050 E MICHIGAN
MIXED AT CHICAGO
CHICAGO, April 24 (U. py!
{ 10. a: 3 Grain futures turned irregular after [email protected] 5 steady to firm opening on the
board of trade today. At 11 a. m. wheat unchanged to! up 5%; oats up = to i: rye off *
ito 4%, and barley off li.
Rye led the decline in markets
13 30g.) in dull trading with prices off one!
{cent a bushel in deferred contracts. Traders preferred to act cautiously pending news of the expected invasion.
ient method of spreading the entire cost over a period of months.
ST. = CHERRY 6020 NL
GROUNDED SIDEWALLS
A B Cc of Hanging and Taking Care of Wallpaper
FER YARD—None Higher
CHAPEL
Plain painted walls look onfinished = DECORATE economically with up-to-date WALLPAPER
SUNFAST
6 rer nowL
WHEN PURCHASED IN PROPORTION WITH BORDER
By 4
GET YOUR COPY NOW
BORDERS 3:¢-5¢
N. DELAWARE
5000 Cars Junked Eve by Wartime STOP and G0
many
‘than pre-war stock. 2 your Shell Dealer
wartime, most ot your driving is stop-and-go: And
“less driving‘ means less care, partiodarty for seemingly minor parts like the radiator hose. : But they have the wrong idea! It's time «not use—that deteriorates rubber; And besides—today’s reclaimed rubber hose requires much more frequent attention
Iy
people figure
to help your car Sho Jou she
Take care of your radiator hose
exact condition of your hose : : the leaks, if any. Watch him squeeze the hose between his thumb and finger to test “pep” return; Check it yourself.
- Your Shell Dealer inspects your radise tor hose as part of his regular Shellubrication routine. It’s just oneof3Ssestsina serv. ice designed to offset the wear of wartime stop-and-godriving—
last the duration. |
Day
out-
