Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1944 — Page 6
rived at Jamestown, Va,
‘—and containers of every sort— and better, more efficient ways of filling, shipping and handling them. At present theirs is largely and ly a war job, made essential by the shortages of steel and tin which curtailed production of cans, Many food and other products had to be packed in glass, for the domestic market and for med forces, and that necessi has stimulated the industry to record-breaking output expected, for 1944, to reach something like 14 billion bottles, and other containers. Looking forward to the postwar period, Owens-Illinois intends to consolidate and continue its gains. Glass Is More Economical
his company's executives believe that, for packing fruits, vegeiables and other foods, glass has important advantages over non-transparent materials, People like to see exactly what they're buying. Glass containers lend themselves to attractive displays in stores and look well on pantry shelves. Glass dcesn’t rust or corrode. And they're making bottles and Jars lighter, thinner, more compact, yet stronger and harder to | break. Here's a good example—a beer | bottle specially designed for over-
| * Ing busily to develop better bottles |
y Improvement in Glass-Making Aids War Effort, Home Markets
By EDWARD A. EVANS Scripps-Howard Staff Writer TOLEDO, O. June 27.—Soon after the first English colonists are in 1607, they set up a crude little plant to make glass bottles, so that the glass container industry probably is the oldest in the United States today. But it has young ideas, exemplified by what's going on in the Owens-Illinois Glass Co. Research
scientists and engineers are work-
jars |
The Libbey Glass division of Owens-Illinois is a leading maker of fine table glassware, cut glass and decorative crystal. The names, “Libbey” and “Owens”—one or both appears in the title of each of the three big companies here—are those of two Toledoans, now dead, who have become almost patron saints of the glass industry, Edward Drummond Libbey and Michael Joseph Owens. Mr, Owens’ invention of the bottle-blowing machine, 50 years ago, revolutionized the industry and aroused heated opposition from the lung-power glass blowers, who feared it would destroy jobs for human workers. However, this invention and others have so cut the cost of glassmaking and so widened the market that employment in the industry is many times larger than it was half a century ago.
C. I. 0. CHALLENGES
|
LIVING COST INDEX
WASHINGTON, June 27 (U.P).
{| —The government's cost of living
| index, compiled by the bureau of labor statistics, has again been chal-
|lenged by the Congress of Indus- | trial Organizations as an adequate measure of real rises in expenses of
| workers and their families.
'E BUY DIAMONDS
Merchandise for Car, Home and utdoors.
SAXOPHONE Instruction
INDIANA MUSIC co. / Ohio St. — FR-1184
25
Per Lesson
You Save Because We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats
C16” *18™ 21” *24™ nik CLOTHES
PEARSON'S
128 N. Penn. L1-5513
| FURNITURE @ PIANOS BAND INSTRUMENTS RECORDS @ SHEET MUSIC
{duces to a minimum fatigue and | keeps the crew members fit for any {kind of action.
Crews Have Normal Comfort Except Over Target, Boeing Says.
By MAX B. COOK Scripps-Howard Aviation Editor NEW YORK, June 27.—All future commercial airplanes will have pressurized cabins offering “sea level” comfort to passengers so that all persons ordinarily affected by altitude will feel no discomfort. This prediction came from Wellwood E. Beall, 37-year-old vice president in charge of engineering for the Boeing Aircraft Co., today as he revealed for the first time complete details of the pressurized cabins of the powerful B-29 Superfortresses which recently bombed Japan. Crews of the B-29 can fly in normal comfort to and from their targets, at altitudes in excess of 30,000 feet, as a result of the newly developed pressurized cabins. Over the target, Beall pointed out, the plane is “deflated” or “depressurized” and the crew members connect up their electrically-heated suits for warmth and don their oxygen masks. As soon as the bombs are away and the plane turns back toward its base, the cabin is quickly pressurized and the return also is made in perfect comfort. This re-
Two Destroyed
Two complete B-29's were destroyed by tests of various kinds during development of the plane, Beall revealed. They blew one plane up to determine the amount of pressure it could stand. On delivery of the first flight of B-29's to the army air forces, the side “blister” of one plane blew
turers, believes that the securities & exchange commission has over stepped its functions in declaring
aid. Gaylord, president of the Ingersoll Milling Machine Co., Rockford,
complete statistics necessary tor make such a statement are not | o> available and in the second place, | be;
il Crutches, Invalid Walkers and Posture Beds
Can Be Rented at
I pose not clear.” 1|ing to sell stock, used the same
il | position, the WOuld hisege 1 With Ying 10 Seech added.
the SEC interpretation of such
it will remain so to the end of the
3000 PORKERS RECEIVED HERE
Market Remains Steady With Top at $13.80; 3800 Held Over.
There were 8000 hogs received at the stockyards here today with 3800 held over from yesterday, it was reported by the war food administration. The market remained generally steady with the top at $13.80 on 180 to 270-pounders. Other receipts included 1625 cattle, 775 calves and 450 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (8000)
140 cessssssessss 102501108 40- 160 pounds .....co.0eee. [email protected] 160- 180 pounds « 132. r 1 pounds 3.80 po
220 pounds . 220- 240 pounds 240- 370 pounds 270- pounds . » 134 eesesssaseses 1LT8 [email protected] [email protected]
270+ 300 pounds [email protected] 00- 330 pounds «+ [email protected] 330- 360 pounds . [email protected] +o [email protected]
360- 400 pounds . G
00d 400- 450 pounds 450- 550 pounds ..... vessraes Medium— . 250- 550 pounds ............. Slaughter Pigs Medium and Good— 90- 120 poun
. [email protected] [email protected]
that all industry has plenty of working capital to convert to peace-| LV time operations without financial|Trae u
to the Ill, said that “in the first place the Sh
figures as it has assembled, is either unintelligent or done for some pur-
If an industrial corporation, try-
methods of interpreting its financial commission itself
Bonds of the United States Severmen) its Tenors and Insular Possessions,
Seas war service. It is six inches | A statement signed by C. I O. out. A waist gunner sighting CATTLE (1025) mon labor, by installing labor-saving high and it weighs six ounces. |president Philip Murray and R. J.|through an instrument leaned Crgees =~ [email protected]| machinery, Yet it holds exactly as much beer | Thomas, president’ of the United 282inst the blister and it blew out.| 9or.1100 pounds 16.50@1725| This may be deplored by the 8s old-style nine-inch bottles that | Auto Workers (C. I O.) said that|The gunner was blown through the 1190-1308 bounds -..--- -- 1870G1 28 superstitious, who believe machinery weight 12 ounces, and it's much |jiving costs rose 45.3 per cent be- hole, propelled by the inside pres-|Good— . 15 [email protected]| DFiES on depressions, but most of stronger. Its cap is made of plas- tween January, 1941, and March, | Sure: He fell several thousand feet, Ng. 900 ona t" [email protected]| those people left the hard jobs long tic. These bottles will save a 1ot |1944. The B. L. S. index shows an [Pulled his chute and landed, some- |,100-1300 pounds - + 18.3001675 ago and do not themselves expect of precious shipping space on |increase for’ that period of 22.9 per| "here. in Texas, with the instru: Meare + 13:50@1875) ¢5 return. cargo vessels. And they're made |gent. ment and without injury. He used | 700-1100 pounds ...... veirees 50@15 80 economically that, when avail- | The C, I. O, statement was a re-| DiS _Walk-around oxygen supply 100-1300 pounds ............. 157531850 able for civilian use, they can be {iteration of labor charges and fol while floating down. As a result a 700-1100 pounds ...........es [email protected] GRAIN PRICES FIRM thrown away when emptied, end- |lowed a report to the President's Metal "snood” typical of today's| ==. Heifers Ing the necessity for bottle Te- cost of living committee by three| 2ir-snoods, was used on the “blis- | “o0."500 pounds ............. [email protected] turns and deposits. economists who said the B. L. S. in- or until they oould be perfectad 98-110 BOURER conv senvrener J50001830 New Machines Being Designed |dex Was not in error more than Ba Jade safe. This, says Beall, | 600 800 pounds ............. 1433015.18 Owens ~ Hinols : three to five points as a measure. | ‘25 been accomplished. J. 00.1000 pounds ... ... [email protected]| CHICAGO, June 27 (U. P).— Nor oa Ak apes are ment of price increases but did not Holes Plugged 4500-900 pounds .. [email protected]| Wheat futures ruled firm and other Dore iz bottles for milk. for soft | Accurately measure the increase in| what happens when flak, shells or 00-7500 pounds ravri aviv. [email protected] Sains hoi Tptovly mixed on the A Df . total family expenditures. i y Cows (all weights) ard o de today. drinks, for medicines; in food machine gun bullels pierce hel, Sow 5 ve wri “At 1 a. m. Wheat was up % to % containers of many shapes and Names Hidden Factors Prestuiveee plane was described in Sutter s d ‘common cent a bushel; oats off 1% to up %; i - A and common .. ’ ’ Sines, Tae Seem apnongh oh Murray and Thomas said there Sota) I.E eall, we ji nat I oe rye unchanged to off 5%, and barley Saipan —- Bs hay were “a numer of hidden wartime|so-caliber, 20 mm. and 37 mm.|seet Balls (a1 weights) up % to quoted off 2. 3 an, aw factors servings to raise the cost of EE : ‘| "Good (all weights) «....... [email protected] hotties, aig ons eyor-belt systems |jivinon such as sales above price Pots wise pel pressurized B- |g, oge— ad § Ey wid wp Jia ceilings, failure to reflect higher-| while most of the B-20's lengthy Ey rr rsms ass rans N. Y. Stocks ing plants. The company’s pack- pions purehases by families due t0|nose jis of plexiglass, there are Cutter and Semon (115) Net . "| sappearance of low-cost items|gey High Low Close Change wv i Ring in oe from the market, and deterioration nos oy Bee at tie oe Good to ie ”y ra) [email protected] Amol Wy uz Tso ne = ee yom What ie plots belleve Is Detter Good to choice............... an ...... a i een, money for processors, grocers, and or quality. The C. I O. againyisibility, A bullet or shell takes Somman to Medlin rr Ne a an AF i 12 10% Ie + 1 charged the war labor board with consumers. i out an entire pane of glass. A| peeder and Stocker Osttle snd Calves |Am Roll M ... 16k 18% 18% + % Just now, Owens - Illinois is | TC usal to recognize actual increased bullet makes only.s small hole in Steers Th T...0% 10% 100% -- 2 conducting a nation-wide adver- Lying ous ts in yeving oh tie 2 L the plexiglass Th the metal “skin” Cen 800 pounds [email protected] Am wy 2 os = Ki : i . , / es almos alf [of th ‘h - 800 pounds .....e.. eene. 12. , naconds. ..... a a : Re ran eT ourage the the wartime increase in living|glass Ro pos will ei po SOP Folds «sven “ore Hadi Atohiman =. 000 ogre ois es I ie y » , n “ 500- 800 ds ..eceveieens. [email protected]| Atl Refin ..... 01 0}; — } may seem a trifle odd, until you Sosy Jo 8 vegm Fn te cabin fairly rapidly, Beall says,| 800-1050 pounds .....e..eer.. 11.50G12.75 Buia'L ct Nh Na: Na rl remember that coffee-jar pro- |p...-, e steel for-| while the smaller holes do not cause '$50-1000_ pounds oe.. [email protected]| Beth 84 1 pi hit hs 1% © duction has become a substantial leaks above the ability of the|comm seresstsisee. “| Borden ........ 32a 33% + 5% part of this glass company’s busi- superchargers to supply more pres-| 500- 900 ) pounds trerearrairee [email protected] Borg: Waiier a 2% 2 + ness sure. Calves (steers) Childs L3% 3 3° . Good and Chores (Weer) Childs .-...l. . JO New Owens-Illinois post-war CURTISS-WRIGHT 10 If a bullet strikes a metal sec-| 500 pounds down v..venen. [email protected] Dougie. Ale... So St 2 i plants will be located, strategi- tion and spins to the other side it|*ed nds dows ans [email protected] | Du Pont ...... 60 158% 150% + 1a ically, near the markets they're .in- RECEIVE iP A usually tears a hole about the size aves (heifers) Gen Bieri id FH 3% 33% +. % tended to serve—one in Atlanta, of two open hands. This can be Goo ans choice I Goodyear ..... 49% hu ds 4 Ga. for instance, and one in plugged with especially made pads. |yedium pre : pal Big an 41% 413 . ’ Navy ‘F wi - ce 81% 41% a y Waco, Tex—saving the cost of — A: Naw 2 will be pre-/In case holes of sufficient size to| 500 pounds down ........... [email protected] oy Bw y ne 78% ne I: % long freight shipments of empty |, o Indianapo bl ee vess of depreususize the Hage Safely: 34 SHEEP AND LAMBS (430) Komori 5 Bu 3% 32 oh: containers, = crew members have: the vidua Ewes (shorn) Kroger G & B. 35% 35% 35% + % lant fo; Good to cholece ..........eues 8.00@ 6.00] 1,- 2 2 Pioneers Who Widened Market pb r excellence in production | oxygen supplies and electric suits.|common to medium ......... 3.50@ 5.00 Fodihesd ir 3h Hi Pe + 5 of aircraft propellers. There are two sets of oxygen for LAMBS LOEW'S .,...... 7 66% 61 +1 In a quite different field, the | Robert P. Patterson, under sec-|each man, one in his fixed position|Good to choles .............. 13.00g13.50 Martin (Glens) I Be ee, company manufactures “Insulux” |retary of war, in a letter to the men|in the plane and a walk-around Sood 9.75 | Nash-Kelv rel 6a 16% 16% + % glass building blocks, widely used |and women of the propeller division, | oxygens bottle which he can use Nat Disc. aa 3s ¢ ds Zn before the war in homes, office |commended them for their patri-|when moving about the ship. Good to Choice ...er.eeeeess 13.50@1450(N ¥ C & 8 L. 27'a 21% 27% — % buildings, factories and stores, |otism and ‘remarkable production| The Boeing Stratoliner, forerun-|Medium to good ............ [email protected]| OICer FF FL te A and expected to have increasing |record.” ner of the B-17 Flying F' COMMER +vuiiesrenveiryuretee 1135 ban Ab Air.) 33% 33% 33% + % usefulness Th } ying Fortress, was Penney ........ 2% 102% 102% .... SS. ese blocks provide, Also to receive the award is the|the first commercial plane with a LOC AL ISSUES Penn RR ...... 30% 30% 30% .... in a four-inch thickness, a double | American Central Manufacturi i i i Phelps Dodge .. 23% 3313 323% + lass wall wi acturing pressurized cabin. First tests on| oo. quotations furnished by Indian. | Procter G.. 51va 571% 5812 + Ya glass wall which transmits light, | Corp., Connersville, Ind. pressurization were made by the|apolis securities dealers. Pullman ...... $8 41% 8 + WU but is not transparent, and bars - army at Wright. field, Dayton, O,, in Bid Asked| Pure Oil ...... 17% 16% 17 a heat, cold and noise. The blocks | Marmon-Herrington Co., Inc., four 1935. They used a Lockheed Electra |Asents oe rp Cora 2 reer Regn Tob B33. 32v Ber. tre made with a smooth outer jmonths ended April 30 net income) _j0-passenger plane—labeled the | Belt R Stk Yds com ........ Mu. oh Schen Din pr.100t) Mes 100s » surface, or in decorative patterns. |$130,412 or 29 cents a share. XC-35. Problem Iv Bo va pd oo. eave a iil Soc-Vacuum .. 13% 13% 13% + 4 ei ems , s solved in those ENA experiments made possible later Dobbs Mee a% pid b+ ‘a8 81d Brands .- 30% 30% 30% I A rcie eater com .. oe ha : : on on Everything! ? pressurization of the Stratoliner|Comwith Loan 6% pd ......204 1207 |Std O - 37% 31% 31 and the B-2, CR iin He wld ou ed Ye 51 om Tow *Hook Drug ¢ Co COM veveranens 13 ) . 3 i Home T&T Ft Wayne 7% pfd 51% ..-%. Tenn Corp .... 11% 11% 113% .... Diamonds, Watche Watches The B-20 pressurization is ob-| om GE FL} Wayne 16 id si ii6i4| 20th Cent-Fox 26% 26 = 26% ..... Kasical tained from the superchargers. Two [Ind Asso Tel 5% pt 06%1U 8 Rusher .. 53% 33 HB -t+ .% usical Instruments, Cameras gomplele Systems ere instalipd so{io4 Hydro Bles 7% pid ooer.. 08 96 Warner Bros | 14% ls pr Io } ase one is i *Indpls estin ...108Y wa Ouest Loon Clothing, Shotguns, Ete. another will prs 35 fapant Reed Ind P Leon” 1 York Corp Cees 11% 113% 11% + Y% Brokers i JEWELRY y All DoDI Rallvays Som } wil The CHICAGO ‘corm [iru mo ss mil be vet BS L200, | U.S. STATEMENT . - Jeft Nat Li . 18 WASHINGTON, June 37 (U. P.).—Gov146 E. WASHINGTON ST ” The cylindrical shape of the B-29 *Lincoin Loan Co 5%% pid.. ie 1% ernment expensés and receipts gor. She . yi » - igh Satly siniar to a rigid airship— Linco at, ile Jos com... $0 2 pared with-a py ago: utilized .because pressure within |EP R Mallory COM ..onvveus eer 3 . Expens Year : b aieees 308 cease 7..$91930,798. 352 $716.318,800,358 BUSINESS DIRECTORY vies ition EH SaR ee lem EH thi nto a round shape. Thus pressure |N Ind Pub Berv, Net Def. ..... 48,993,601,101 55,070,012,136 GUARANTEED within the fuselage is equalized at|bub Serv of Ind com. or. res cash i, 10.880.954.585 9,8 9.008430 ' all points, Beal] said. Progress Laundry €Om «...... 18 17 Pub. Debt L192 1116, 334 i . 96,248,508 139,9 501 4 1/7). VN 7X 2271 4 B E-W E AVIN er hd, LX B% srexrerestl 108 | Gola Rex .01'21200.746,730 |32,81.278.690 AT OUR UsuAL of MOTH HOLES-—BURNS Tniieq aol Co 3m .. 4 u ‘sg’ INDIANAPOLIS CLEA CLEARING HOUSE (TLS d 3 LEON TAILORING CO QUESTIONS BONDS Devits' nn aero SEIN (| 235 Mass Ave, = t Middle of Er Da Ei i00 : R 0 0! I ass AVE: “ino First Block SEC DECL AR ATION ERE hms Se dg one 10 LOCAL PRODUCE a A YR ve so . : Citizens Ind Tel 4%s 61 $008 108 Heavy breed h 3 DIA i / Sensational| NEW YORK, June 27 (U.P). — oo % TE > i - Rr a : MOND LOANS : SHOP Values! Ribs, Sov JEreslisns of the ou A%. Leghorn ie v4 Fresh, Timel Association of Manufac- FoOSters
. large, 34c; grade A medium, 32¢; grade A
the pay of the laborer were raised, then everybody whe thinks of himself as “above” him would expect an increase. Too many pay differentials rest on the wages of the man at the bottom. We are too highly integrated, or too set in our ways to permit such an adjustment to be made, It is easier to call the laborer by another name and pay hi mmore, and to some extent that is being done.
Don’t Plan to Return
Actually the differentials have been diminishing over the years between the unskilled man’s pay and that of the wage earner with all-round skill. Twenty years ago the skilled man usually made about 50 per cent more than the unskilled man did, at least in the metal trades. Today he makes about the same number of cents per hour additional, but the percentage has gone down. Everything possible is being done to overcome the shortage of com-
Eggs—Current receipts, 28c. Grade A small, 26c. N ade, 30c. ws oe 1 0G vi Butterfat — No. I, OSHKOSH CO. PENALIZED CHICAGO, June 21 (U. P)—
Suggests Trading Surplus
Yale
For Bases, Rights, Concessions.
WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. PJ). ~The ‘United States should barter its surplus war planes for bases, landing rights, strategic minerals| and “other considerations” in “friendly” foreign countries, a Harvard university report to the war department said today. The report, prepared at the request of the army air forces by the! Harvard Graduate School of Busi-
“ness, was made public by chairman,
James M. Murray, (D., Mont), of the senate military affairs subcommittee on war contracts. I Urging that the government take, steps now to prepare for the disposition of post-war plane surpluses, the report said the potential surplus of fighters, bombers and other tactidal aircraft was | “huge” and that the only market, of any importance would be the air forces of other friendly nations.
Air Power Balance Involved “While it might be to our na-
tional agreement limiting or pro-| hibiting international sale of com-| bat planes,” it said, barring such, agreement “our selft-interest lies
in promoting use by co-operative, foreign powers of U. S. Sutplus} tactical planes, serviced by Ameri-|
can technicians and potentially reduction.”
planes for bases and other conces-| sions rather than cash sales which might encourage smaller nations to! use their slender dollar balances to] build up armaments.” Since the] international balance of air power would be involved, it said that the] army, navy and state department! should be consulted on all deals.| Stating that the use of surplus planes before new models were available would be “an incentive . . . not a drag” to technical development, the report urged speed in planning for disposal, and recommended setting up a central disposal agency including representatives of all government agencies with interests in the aviation field,
PUBLIC * SERVICE CO.
Northern Indiana Public Service Co. has declared its quarterly dividend on preferred stock, payable July 14, 1944. This dividend is payable to stockholders of record at
is
tional interest to have an interna-|
as of U.S. i
By MARSHALL McNEIL Scripps-Howard
WASHINGTON, June 27
Staff Writer
loud Seed Wl irday Review of Lhe
erature appears another segment of the controversy over how much cil there is, and how much have we. It appears in a review by E. L. DeGolyer of the book “Oil in the
Earth’ by Wallace E. Pratt, Mr.
Pratt is a vice president of the
Standard. Oll Co. of New Jersey and a famous geologist. Mr. DeGolyer
regarded as one of the world’s outstanding geologists. Standard of New Jersey is one of the companies which vigorously op{poses the idea of the federal government embarking on any such adventure in foreign petroleum as
'the trans-Arabian pipeline proposed
| by Petroleum Administrator Ic! Mr. DeGolyer is the scientist pit {by Mr. Ickes to the Middle East to give him an independent estimate of the possible petroleum reserves in countries around the Persian gulf, including Arabia. Mr, Ickes had the oil industry with him, in demanding higher for domestic crude, he contended that our petroleum resources were dwindling, that we could not oil another war. But Mr. Ickes had the oil industry, including Standard of New Jersey, against him when
synthetically’ first from ‘natural gas, tar sands, oil shales or coal’ but eventually, unless we have meanwhile unlocked atomic energy on a usable basis, ‘we shall come to draw currently upon the ultimate source of our energy, sunlight; if not directly, then through the intermediate step of growing plants.’ ” Notes Others’ Efforts
Then Mr, DeGolyer steps in with a punch: “Your reviewer, not being a lay brother in this particular subject, is of no mind to accept so easily these conclusions even on the high authority of Wallace Pratt.” Then, in some detail, Mr, DeGolyer points out his disagreements with Mr. Pratt, coming finally to
he posed the I te Be hesl jeans (suring for us and our armed forces tthe Pratt that Am
| the great petroleum reserves of
| Arabia.
Prepared in 1941
“It was a government point that our dwindling reserves compelled) us to develop new sources abroad,” said the magazine Fortune, discussing the Arabian pipeline fight, “In| holding this argument up to ridi-| cule, the companies ridiculed their) own industry statistics as well as the case for conservation.”
placeable by new American pro-| Pratt's pieces, prepared in 1941,
as a series of lectures at the Uni-
It urged “barter” of the combat versity of Kansaas, his alma mater, |
were published as a book this year, in the midst of the Arabian pipeline controversy. In his review Mr. DeGolyer said: “If I were a layman and had just 'read this book, it would remain in my mind that “oil is a normal con{stituent of the marine sedimentary rocks all over the earth’ gnd that it ‘ls far more abundant and far more widely distributed than is generally realized,” . . . I would lean back with the complacent feeling that we Americans really had something on the ball when it came to finding oil and remember that ‘a wise oil policy for the U. S. and for the world at large would include a veritable
| crusade to develop the oil resources
of the earth’ “Fnnally, I would close the book
{with a pox on all Jeremiahs, confi-
DECLARES DIVIDEND
dent in the assurance that before our oil ‘is exhausted, we shall be;
making liquid fuels and lubricants!
have a special knack for finding oil. Of this Mr. DeGolyer says: “Your reviewer hopes that our nationals have the particular genius for discovering oil with which the author credits them, ! Possibly, at the moment, we are {more experienced than the nationlals of most other countries and, to {my mind, such pre-eminence as we may have arises out of such experi{ence and willingness to take a gamble. We cannot over look the competence of the Dutch-British group jin all parts of the world; of the British themselves in the Middle | East, in Mexico, in Russia, and in Trinidad; and of the Russians in their own land. Nor can we overlook the importance of the Swiss group of oil geologists nor of specific contributions to our own techniques such as geophysics from Germany and Hungary and electrical logging from France. Our pre-eminence, if such we have, lies in the size of our group of expeérienced oil technicians and managers and in the amount of capital which is oilminded.”
|
LARD LIMITATION AMENDED
Because lard is continuing in good supply, the war food administration has amended war food order No. 1 to permit commercial bakers to use without limitation idrd or rendered pork fat delive Fa bakers d 15, 1944, to September 30, 1944, both inclusive.
the close of business June 30, 1944. The payments will be 1% per
per cent preferred, 1!2 per cent, or $1.50 per share on the 6 per cent preferred, 13% per cent or $1.37% per share on the 54 per cent pre-
the period from June 21 to July 14, 1944, of $0.31% per share on the § per cent recently issued in connection with the Indiana Hydro Electric merger.
cent, or $1.75 per share on the 7
Ease Your Mind About WAR BONDS
and Other V ferred and an initial dividend for aluables
1
Less Than Ic a Day
| FIDELITY
123 EAST MARKET ST.
TRUST CO.
The regional war production board announced today that the Leach Co.’ of Oshkosh, Wis, has been placed on probation until Sept. 30 for violating WPB ordefs in produc-
ing 55 unauthorized dump truck] bodies,
EPAIR leaking toilets and dripping faucets at once. In a month’s
time these leaks can increase your water bill considerably—often more than double it—not to mention the waste of perhaps thousands of gallons of water, as well as:materials used in the pumping and purification of water, You may be able to fix the leaks yourself, but if not—call a plumber,
i
ny TOILET as «an occur
r———— EE
»,
“We chased
ing into the ci directions.
SCHEDULE ¢
alothing “for 4 market will be pool hotel Ju
sponsorship of Club of Indian
by Dr. Carl Check You 301 Kresge | Wash
