Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1944 — Page 8
Cw
»
Manpower
.
3 ABOUT A YEAR AGO THE STEEL INDUSTRY was bordered to go on a 48-hour w
turing industry to do so. Steel executives publicly crease absenteeism because it
earnings through the time and one-half overtime, which, of course, was the big reason they objected to the order. They also mentioned “fatigue”
The war manpower commission on the other hand Ba pate ICE HOGS (3030) 28 claimed turnover of workers would be reduced and, further, | }3- 15 Bounds I He that it would be easier to hire additional workers because| 300: 33 Pounds pi the take-home pay would be larger, 3m. pounds % 1380 What has happened? The WMC} 300- 330 pounds vvsrmrnrrs I0I8 gays absenteeism has not mereasen,] 330- 360 0 pounds esvssescesses 11.50@118 8s the steel companies said it would, N Ww NUTT DOUDES +r eevvsess vee [email protected] and it admits] Packing Sows . that its own) Good to Choice— WARIS - 270- 300 pounds .. vee 10. . hopes _ghout, Ye 300- 330 pounds .. ees [email protected] Sueine Jurmover 330- 360 pounds .. vee 10.70910.85 and e Jo. 400 POUNAS .ceevescersss [email protected] did ry come pi 400. 40 pounds teres etes ss pi either, But those pounds .. « 10. . Medium— points were noth-| W LB Orders ors Chicago Plant seam EI ing more than Slaughter Pigs “sales talk” by To Extends Its Union Me ds Good [email protected] both sides, and] = Aa..s...2a UT nme asey can be over- Contract. CATTLE (850) looked Coo- oot a [email protected] het, on pur on ASHINTTON, June 7 (U. Pm Te ie sogie 1s nn e government today appeared 1100-1300 pounds 1 pues of ie bonger Tk has | moving toward a new showdown |Gaeq ov Pounds 15.50910.%5 Po } "| with Montgomery Ward & Co., fol-| 700- 900 pounds [email protected] The answer definitely is yes. - 900-1100 pounds 15 [email protected]
Steel mill employment fell from 691,000 in March last year to 665,000 in January this year, as no replace- |
f ments were made for those draf fted| its seizure by the government last
or quitting, but production was not| hampered. The work week increased from 43.5 hours in April a year ago to 46.6 hours in December. | If the 43.5-hour average week had been in effect in December, 48,000 more workers than were then employed would have been needed to
work the number of man-hours put!
tn during that month,
o ” o STOCK of Ayrshire Patoka Col-|
lieries Corp. large Indiana coal mining concern, was bought by “insiders” or company officials early in April, the SEC report shows. Buyers were Albert N. Campbell,
50 shares, making 400 he owns; {power not granted to him by conshares, | gress and denied him by the con1200 stitution he was sworn to uphold shares, making 4300; P. F. Goodrich | and defend.” Corp., 100 shares, making 5700; Wil-| He also charged that congress had
Pierre PF. Goodrich, 40 making 1300; Engineers, Inc,
liam P. McCool, 100 shares, making! 100; and Patoka Coal Co. 1056 shares; making 27,800 in all, ” » ” BUSINESS ABROAD— Large rice hoards are reportedly rotting in Burma because the Japs lack’ shipping; neighboring Malaya has an acute food shortage. Australia .is making 3 million gallons of motor fuel a year from wheat. To beat the volcanic dust which is hard on allied airplane engines, grass seed has been planted in Italy by low-altitude spraying.
The official French cost-of-living |
index is up nearly 300% since 1939. - ” ” ODDS AND ENDS: Suffolk Downs race track paid a $9 dividend this year, against $7 last year... . The biggest syndicate of securities dealers ever formed in New York, 466 strong, will undertake to sell $600 million or more of war bonds there in the fifth drive opening Monday. ..+ « The Jefferson Boat & Machine Co. of Jeffersonville, Ind, won 3d place in the shipbwiigig safety contest of the National Safety council. « » « Talk that many British works of art have been shipped to U. S for sale is exaggerated, the British Board of Trade says; since 1940! when export licenses were imposed, shipments have averaged 3000 a year. , .. Esquire, Inc., the magazine] publisher; earned $1,300,000 in its fiscal yer ending March 31,
TiS
Some 48-Hour Week Fears Disproved
| recting the firm's Chicago plant to | extend a union contract containing
|
| troversial provision, including main{tenance of membership,
{ jurisdiction over his firm because
charged that President Roosevelt, in
Saved in Steel Industry;
eek, the first urban manufac-
predicted that it would nwould boost their employees’
creased
Prices also incl
from 48 hours’ work.
lowing a war labor board order diMedium—
the same disputed provisions that led Heo. 1 April. Company Chairman Sewell L. Avery, declined immediate comment on the new WLB order. But the|Good— fact that it involved the same con-
Choice—
Medium— indicated that Avery may again refuse to comply. The Ward executive told the com- [Goo --- mittee in his first day of testimony that the WLB did not have legal
Common
Canner .
Beef— it was not a war industry. And he
Sausage— Good Medium
ordering the seizure, Cutter
“usurped a
Culls ...
| done a poor job in legislating to settle labor disputes.
Business Off 50 Per Cent
“What it has done,” he said, “it has done hastily and done badly?’ He said the WLB “must be destroyed if it doesn't act with some integrity” and alleged that it and other agencies “have been kept under political control and their practices have brought contempt from those with whom they deal.” He said the company suffered a loss of 50 per cent in business when the public learned that the government was in charge of the Chicago plant. The WLB's actiop~in ordering an extension of the old Ward contract with its employees—members of the Retail, Wholesale and Mail Order Employees of America (C, I. ©.)— came on a vote of eight to one, Two industry members voted with the majority and one, H, B. Horton, dissented. Acting WLB Chairman George W. Taylor said in a statement that the order conformed with board custom and with the “normal prac-
Choice—
Medium-—
Common—
Good and
Medium—
Good and Medium—
Medium
Common
Nominal
Belt R Stk Yds com .,.senoos "40? tice of employers and unions tO|Beit R Stk Yds pId aeeesess 83 -| preserve the status quo . . » pend- Bobbs-Merrill com . seeee 8
ing the seftlement of disputes as to { what the new contract should be.”
SSR pseernarasticu AO Hook Dru W. F. Hall Printing Co. fiscal year |
| ended March net profit $1,031,761 or $2.66 a common share vs. $1,102,000 or $2.84 previous fiscal year.
Ind Asso
Ind Gen
*Ind p & L com .. ........ *Indpls Railways com........ Indpls Water pfd ... ......... Cee on on Everything! *Indpls Water PCiass A com... 17% 19 Jeff Nat Lite com ..... A 17 Diamond iamonds. Watches Lincoln Loan Co 5':% pfd... 93 97 $y Lincoln Nat Life Ins com.... 38'3 42% R R Mallory 42% pfd ....... 26% 28Y. Musical Instruments, Cameras Ji. = Muilory com 000000 2a 28 ceevas 2 51, N Ind Pub Serv 67% pfd...... 105 107 Clothing, Shotguns, Ete. N Ind Pub Serv 7 Dinas ous & *Pub Serv of Ind 5%.......0. 104% 107% Proters The CHICAC( JEWELRY *Pub Serv of Ind com... 17° 181 the State H C ne Togress undry Com ...ceee 1413 16%; “ * So Ind G & E 487% . 103 108 146 E. WASHINGTON ST lokeip Brow Br pL ge . . United Tel Co 5% . 97 . Union Title com . 24 27 mre - Van Camp Milk pf ... 100, LLL Van Camp‘ Milk com ...,.... 21 ..... . BONDS Algers Wins'w RR 4%2% ..... 100 ..... American Loan 5s 81 .... 97 100 | American Loan 5s 46 ........ 99 101 WASTE WE Bu iamonds Cltizens Ind Tel dias 61.0 1108 108 F 11 WMP RBIY IIIMAOARNRANAEe | Citizens Ind Tel 4'2s8 61 ...... 3 A y D d Consol Pin 58 Sot cee... 96100 . Ind Asso Tel Co 3158 0° crease 108 Co. P APER HIGHEST CASH PRICES Indpls P & L 3% 10 ...... 106% 108% £ PAID Indpls Railway, Co 5s o eras Te 5 ndpls Water Co 3l2s cease 10 09 AMERICAN PAPER STANLEY Jewelry Co. ||xoromo water works 5s 34108" STOCK COMPANY 113 W. Wash. ° Lincoln Hotel Bldg. | Morris 5-& 10 Stores 5s 50....101 ..... , Muncie Water Works 5s 66 ...105 ..... RI-6341 320 W. Mich, N Ind Pub Serv 3s en. 1 “wy . PREFS Et N Ind Tel 4%s 55 ...... 88 —— mom mm—— | i | in ] (1) ) | | IAS Pub Sers of Ind 3Ves Ti N EB Pub Tel 4%s 55 . . 10 0. N , ; Richmond Water Wis ‘5s §7...105 Lo ASKIN & MARINE 7 ¢ Trac Term Corp 58 57 ....... 88 91 U 8 Machine Corp. 5s 52...... 99 102
Good Ulothes, Easy Credig 127 W. Washington $t.
RR A |
SHERWIN WILLIAMS
Haz a Paint for Every Purpose, COSTS LESS Because Tt Lasts Longer
VONNEGUT’S
U
ernment
You Save Because We Save || 72rd ¥it
Men's Suits & Overcoats
Expenses
[RE-WEAVING
of MOTH HOLES—BURNS or WORN SPOTS
LEON TAILORING ¢O. 235 Mass Ave, Io the Middle of
the First Block
Clearings Debits ..
Jd USE YO! UR CREDIT at
Heavy
Ibs., 29c.
OXYGEN THERAPY
This Equipment Can Be Rented st HAAG'S ALL-NIGHT Drug Store
LIGHTWEIGHT FELTS
for early summer
HARRY LEVI
Your Hatter
and Meridian Sts,
We Buy Usable Wire Garment Hangers at 10¢ per bundle of 10 62 D . :
RISES TO 3200
8925 More Received Here Today; Prices Are
The number of hogs held over at the Indianapolis
8925 more arrived today, the war food administration reported.
and 125 sheep.
1100-1300 pounds 1300-1390 pounds
700-1100 pounds ... 1100- 130 pounds ..
700-1100 pounds 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds
600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds
500- 900 pounds ... 500- 900 pounds
Good (all weights)
Good to choice Common to medium
Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves Steers 500- 800 pounds .... 800-1050 pounds ....
500- 800 pounds .... 800-1050 pounds ..ee.
500-1000 pounds 500- 900 pounds .
500 pounds down
500 pounds down
500 pounds down 500 pounds down SHEEP AND LAMBS (125)
Good to choice......, Common to medium...
Good to choice Good to medium ....
Good to choice Medium to good
LOCAL ISSUES
apolis securities dealers,
Agents Fin Corp com ..e.e.ee Agents Pin Corp pfd
Bobbs-Merrill 427 prd.. Circle Theater com Comwlth Loan 5% pd. Delta Elec com
Home T&T Ft Wayne 77 ‘pd. Ind & Mich Elec 7% 1
Ind Hydro Elec 77% Indpls P & L pfd ;
. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, June 7 (U. P.).—Gov-
current fiscal year through June §, com-
War Spending 80,503,586,014
$ 75 $8 75 $ 5 $ 75 }| Receipts ..... 38,091,973,577 17.846,141,713 | Net Deficit .. 48.111,316,566 53,052,204,248 | Cash Balance 3s. 895,552 12,187,452,677 CASE CLOTHES | Working Bal.. %,273,062,576 11,424,795,414 Public Debt 188.462.271 536 140.279 312 671 215 N. Senate Ave. Open 9 t0 9 | Gold Reserve 21,262,321,088 22,426,910,322
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE
LOCAL PRODUCE
e. Broilers, fryers and roosters, Ya dey 6
old roosters, lac Butter—No. 1, 49¢c; No. 2, 46c.
HOLDOVER
Unchanged.
stockyards into 3200 last night while
were unchanged. Receipts uded 850 cattle, 850 calves
TO CHOICE
13.50@ 15.50 [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected]
tesersenee eos [email protected] . . [email protected]
« [email protected] [email protected]
EERE EEERRET RY
Cows (all weights)
Bulls (all weights) reeeenes [email protected] . [email protected]
[email protected] 1.25@ 9.75
CALVES
(850) Vealers (all weights)
oo [email protected] . 12.50614.00
11.50@12 ee 11. 50@13. 50
veseasestnees [email protected] .. [email protected] Calves. (steers) Choice reese iran 13.009 15.00 Erareeverse [email protected] Calves (heifers) Choice eres ennans 12.250 14.50 skeerrnnense [email protected]
Ewes (shorn)
4.00@ 5.50
[email protected] .. [email protected] erresairerarrarenea [email protected]
SPRING LAMBS
[email protected] . [email protected] 10.50@ 13.25
quotations furnished by Indianne Asked
“ssasane
107 tecarevsren ane 124 13% g Co com 15' 17% 51%
pid Tel 57, pid .. pid
Serv
expenses and receipts fer the ba year ago: This Year. Last Year. $86,203,327,793 $70,901,809,261 65,647,395,043
breed hens, 30¢; Leghorm hens,
Leghorn springers,
50e. Butterfat—No, 1,
s.50@ 6.50 helium at home. Helium was found
;|A. Moffett and a‘ few other naval -|non-rigid airships, ‘|ever, came back after Pearl Harbor
.-|than-air a new lease on life,
.| hope that the rigid airship, which
this time for the United States.
: commercial ships.
. | perimented with by inexperienced . | personnel learning the job. We had
.| perience a real basis for success.
-| has produced improved metals and
-{new aircraft construction technique
By MAX B. COOK NEA Staff Writer NEW YORK, June 7.—The once=proud rigid airship is on its way back to play an all-important part in post-war global commercial aviation. Its pioneer - backers, now more enthusiastic than ever, are doing something about it. If they win— and it looks like they will—the United States will have something no other nation can have in the air. The answer to that one is helium— non-explosive and safe. We have practically all of it, and in tre= : mendous quantities. i Today, in the files of the civil air |
application for 41633 miles of foreign routes using dirigibles of 10,000,000 cubic feet helium capacity.
authority in Washington, rests an =
The application, filed by United p
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Dirigible Enthusiasts Plan Fleet of World's +Lorgest
Washington to Buenos Aires, Are gentina, via Rio de Janeiro; Washington to Calcutta, India, via Dakar, Capetown and Zanzibar; Washington to Moscow via Glasgow; Washington to Brisbane, Aus-
Chungking and Darwin. One company, planning to fly all
ship yet « built and successfully flown. R. C. Phillips Jr., vice president of the company, who filed the application, requests a certificate to carry ‘passengers, property and mail.” This correspondent sought out Rear Adm. C. E. Rosendahl, the nation's foremost rigid airship proponent and expert, who almost sin-gle-handedly has advocated rigid airships for years.
For Global Flight
“The rigid airship,” said Adm. Rosendahl, “will come back to place this nation undeniably at the top of global air service. In transoceanic fields, it will augment the very necessary and vital heavier-than-air service to a degree that cannot be overlooked in either the present or the post-war picture. Lighter-than-air advocates need have no fight with the proven heavier-than-air industry. It is simply a case of utilizing every possible proven form of commercial air carrier, and we need 50| not wait for peacetime, we could be using them in this war.” The destruction "of the luxury airship Hindenburg by hydrogen fire at Lakehurst, N. J.,, on May 6, 1937, to many seemed the death knell of large rigid airships. Germany, unable to obtain helium from the United States and unwilling to continue using the highly inflammable hydrogen, laid up the Graf Zeppelin and suspended airship service while searching for
in Germany—at least enough to run the one large airship successor to the Hindenburg, then ready to go into service. But the war struck before Germany could exploit her own helium supply. , Loss of the Shenandoah, Akron and Macon also had dampened the ardor of even some rigid airship advocates. The limited government program spark-plugged by the farseeing late Rear Admiral William
personnel, bogged down. The small “blimps,” how-
to various duties in the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacific, and gave lighter-
Solve Problems
Adm, Rosendahl and a few others have retained increasing belief and
they insist has basically proved itself, would again fly the oceans—
“It must be remembered,” said
doah, Akron and Macon were not They were mili-
tary operated and ex-
ships
much to learn and we did learn a great deal—yes, through trial and error if you wish to call it that. If we resume the job before remaining pioneers turn irrevocably to other interests, we shall find their ex-
“Besides science
this basig experience, through war stimulation materials, better power plants and —all readily applicable to rigid airships. “The last 10 years have witnessed mare fundamental progress in clari- | fication of basic airship design problems than all the years before. Important and extensive aerodynamic model investigations were carried on by scientists in modern laboratories, including tests of a| huge model airship section. A complete airship model was thoroughly tested with an ingenious method of measuring stresses. “The result is that problems of basic airship design have now been solved to a hitherto unexpected degree of refinement, and on a more accurate basis than is now available for any other aircraft.
Greatly Superior
“Stated briefly, past airships comparatively were “model T's.’ With the improvements that can
Ease Your Mind About WAR. BONDS and Other Valuables :
now be put into their design, con-
tralia, via Los Angeles, Honolulu, |
the oceans and serve the united na- | tions! And it has selected airships [* = of 10,000,000 cubic feet each, or a | 9| third larger than the largest air- |
Adm. Rosendahl, “that the Shenan- |—
Nations. Airships Inc, Munsey j building, Washington, asks for these rather amazing Toutes:
pan
large airships will be greatly superior aircraft.”
Thumbing through reams of vital
statistics, Adm. Rosendahl produced rather startling factual arguments in favor of rigid airships. They are aimed to prove, among other things:
1. That “based on actual performance of comparable contemporary types in transoceanic service, the airship would excel the flying boat
SUGGESTS USE OF INDUSTRY GROUPS
TORONTO, Ontario, June 7 (U. P.).—The post-war use of industry
government in a “middle course” between free enterprise and “state socialism” was advocated today by D. P. Morgan, director of the chemicals bureau of the U. S. war pro=
advisory committees to work with A
American flag.
alded flying boat.
duction board, The American official said that the nearly 100 chemical advisory | committees now consulting with | WPB “constitute a very real factor) in the successful co-operation between government and the chemical industry in the war program.” “Similarly, under peacetime con- | ditions, insofar as it is possible un- | der our anti-trust laws, the industry advisory committee, it is believed, could serve industry and government with the greatest possible | advantage both for business and for | the public interest,” he said
ELECTRICITY OUTPUT REDUCED BY HOLIDAY
NEW YORK, June 7 (U. P.).— Electricity production in the holiday week ended June 3 dropped to 4,144 490,000 kilowatt hours, the low est level for any week since last July 10 when production aggregated 3,919,398,000 kilowatt hours, a report by the Edison Electric institute disclosed today. The latest week's figure, however, represents an increase of 5.6 per
hours produced in the corresponding 1943 week. In the previous week this year output totaled 4,291,750,-
cent over a year before,
Hi Allis-Chal ot 111 Am Can 90%, Am Loco .. 170 Am Rad & SS 10's Am Roll Mill... 14 Am T&T 16074 m Wat W 1 pf 88 Anaconda .. ... 25% Armour & Co... 5'; Atchison ...... 65% Atl Refining ... 32 Bald Loco ct .. 20 Ben Ind Loan.. 183% Borden co. 317g Borg-Warner , 18 Caterpillar T .. 48%, Ches & Ohio .. 45! Chile Cop 2'2 Curtiss-Wr .... 47% | Douglas Airc .. 47 Lu Pont ...151 | Gen Electric .. 36! | Goodrich ...... 491 | Goodyear AP 470 Greyhound Cp. 207, Ind Rayon co. 40 (Int Harvester . 75% | L-O-F Glass ... 497g | Loew's . 63% Martin Glenn , 17% Nash-Kelv .... 1474 {Nat Biscuit ... 21's t Distillers .. 35% IN" Y Central .. 173 {Oliver Farm Eq 52 | Packard ideas 5 Pan Am Air .. 317% Phelps Dodge . 2l'a Procter & G 56% { Pullman 43%, {Pure Oil ...... 16% | Repub StI .... 17% Reyn Tob B 307s Servel Inc .... 183% South Pac .... 29% Std Brands ... 30% Su 2 Cal ..... 37% Std Oil (Ind) . 337s | Std Oil (NJ) . 57% Tenn Corp 11 20th Cent-Fox. 24% U 8 Rubber ... 48's U 8 Steel ..... 52% Warner Bros.. 12% Westing El 100° York Corp 10% Zonite ........ 5%
nounced today.
| Ky.
Mr.
in reliability, schedule-keeping, safety and economy of operation.” 2. That facilities and personnel are now largely available for handling a fleet of such ships under the
3. That their cost, both in construction and operation, on a basis of comparative performance, would prove less than in the case of other types, such as even the widely-har-
N.Y. Stocks
Ne Last Change 111 vee 90% 167s 10 137s 160%, 88 25% 5%
SERLIIN ese
I
“1 - = 1 i
peel
I+:
CI
w - & + -
CH
B. & 0. NAMES AXTON T. P. Axton has been appointed 58 Western cattle agricultural agent here for the Bal-| . . . | cent over the 3,925,893,000 kilowatt timore & Ohio railroad, it- was an-| Axton, graduated form Purdue in 1941, has| been manager of the Wildwood 000 kilowatt hours a gain of 7.6 per Stock & Orchard farm, Prospect,
Diagram shows how vital war cargo, including jeeps, trucks, supplies, could be swiftly transported. struction and operation, today’s
N.Y. Stock Seat Sells at $60,000
NEW YORK, June 7 (U.
P.)—
A membership on the New York
Stock Exchange
sold today at
$60,000, the highest price to be paid in more than four years, The transaction was the second of two reported, the first being sold for $58,000, up $5000 over the last previous sale reported late yesterday. The $60,000 price was the highest paid since Dec, 29,
1939.
Wheat Beginning to Turn _In Southern Counties; Oats Improve.
crop is planted, the Indianapolis weather bureau's weekly crop report stated today. : “Good stands are reported generally and cultivation is in progress.
“| The sowing of soybeans continued
very active and also the planting of potatoes and gardens and the set ting of tomatoes. “Many gardens and truck crops are late and are in fair condition, but where planted early they are very good to excellent. Fruits range from poor to very good strawberries are ripening in northern counties and early cherries in central and southern counties. “Wheat continued to grow rapidly and heavy stalk is reported generally; the crop is heading in
improved i Te Sula in fair to good condition, much of it is small; a little is reported heading,
FOUNDED 1913
THOMSON & M¢KINNON
SECURITIES « COMMODITIES
S East Market Street Phone: MArket 3501
1
11 Wall Sereer, New York Branches in 32 Cicies
_ Write for our weekly Stock Swevey
Members Now York Stock Exchange ond othef
==
who |
HORIZONTAL 1,6 Pictured sports star 12 Pass on 13 Talking bird 14 Dined 15 Space 16 Bridge 19 Made a sale 20 Cognomen 24 Auricle
| 25 Gallon (abbr.)
26 Change 29 Gale
+ 31 New York
(abbr.)
{ 32 On account
(abbr.) 33 Shovel 36 Pastime 40 Lubricant 41 Drone bee 42 Tidy 44 Prepare for publication 47 Golf devices
| 48 Icelandic saga
50 Rowing stick 52 He is a baseball em 34 Reject 57 Not present
* VERTICAL 1 Senior (abbr.) 2 Tellurium (symbol) 3 Enthusiastic ardor 4 Tub
BALL PLAYER
5 Organs of sight . 6 Jewel 7 Spikenard 8 Before 9 Persia 10 Behold! 11 Lieutenant (abbr.) 16 Ocean 17 Friend 18 Skill 21 Past 22 Spoil 23 Tree 27 Finish 28 Grain
rod i ERE ETH Aye 29 Distress signal 44 Paradise ? 30 Strike lightly 45 Short lance 33 Male offspring 46 Throw
34 Pastry 47 Honest 35 Winglike part y Color 37 Lyric poem . Likely 38 Fish eggs - Father 39 Transposes 53 Pound (abbr) (abbr.) 55 Musical note
43 Beverages
56 Near 2)
i
A ili
...or keeping youth happy at home Keeping young folks happy at home is mostly a matter of having a house in which they and their friends feel welcome: So don’t forget Coca-Cola... it’s always a big attraction for the young crowd. It says better than words, Come on over to our house... we're glad to see you. Be sure there's “Coke? in your
icebox: There's no more cordial invitation, nor one more tefreshing, than the three simple words : 1 : Have “Coke”.
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY or Th coca-cola COMPANY BY
CocA-coLA BOTTLING CO.
Have a Coca-Cola= Come on over | §Y]
Three-fourths of Indiana's com
Wanted! ‘Women V Hard of
To make this simp! Gest. If you are ter Bothered by ringing, | Bue to hardened or co: Ourine
that ‘so many say ha Bear well again. You after making this sim money back at ne Ear Drops tod and 8nd drug stores ever stores every
For Ther
Two-piece print one-piece stripec this spectacular blues, greens, pin
MillerBargain |
45 E. W/
quick kills a
Sea food i for you. An odors ify product c« miracle st fresh gree unpleasan freshens | stuffy cl
~ alr-wick is e up wick. Ne costs only unratione hardware,
Sairwick deodor! - protected by ~ Seeman Broth:
