Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1944 — Page 10
BUSINE CORN VARIES G. I. Joe Abroad Is Good Advertiser HE ; i rt : 5 dq POOR 10 600D Pn os BS id i , BS = ; =A Borer Damage Is Slight; G.LIOEISA WaLKIE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Some Being Cut :
because of the way he advertises American-made products, | For Silos. | according to reports from the fronts. The condition of the corn crop
House Hopes to Be Ready . For Amendments
Tomorrow. WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (U. P).
| & He wears the best clothes, is a walking arsenal of fine
weapons and goes the late John
D. Rockefeller one better]
| py giving away candy, cigarets and chewing gum in the §
is reported as varying from poor to good, according” to the weekly crop bulletin of the Indianapolis weather bureau. Corn borer damage is said to be generally slight but in limited areas severe damage is re-
-—Reconversion problems. received full attention in congress today as the house continued debate on the George demobilization bill and sen-ate-house conferees began seeking agreement on legislation to guide disposal of some $100,000,000,000 in
surplus property. The house arranged fo meet an hour earlier than usual in a move to conclude general debate on the George bill by nightfall and to begin tomorrow the consideration of amendments. One of these was expected to be more liberal substitute theasure by Rep. John M. Dingell ° (D. Mich.) providing federal unemployment compensation standara with top payments of $25 weekly. The George bill leaves standards to the individual states, Conferees on the surplus property legislation, seven from the senate and five from the house, were expected to require several weeks to settle the three dozen or so points of difference between the b6-page bill passed by the senate and the 26 page measure adopted by the house, One of the principal differences was the senate’s proposal for an eight-man administrative board and the house preference for a single ad'ministrator with broad discretionary {power to carry out many of the [tasks which the senate specified in | writing. House debate centered on ihe {issue of federal or state standards
ported. Some corn is being cut for silo
Late hay is being harvested and the crop is reported as short, Pastures are improving and some are now in fair condition. Fall plowing continues. Ground is being prepared for wheat. Tomatoes, sweet corn and peaches are being picked. The tomato crop lis mostly fair. Soybeans are in fair to good condition with some being cut for hay.
- Perry W. Lesh Perry W. Lesh, head of the C. P. Lesh Paper Co. and Community Fund president, has been elected president of the board of managers of Crown Hill cemetery, succeeding J, J. Daniels, it was announced today. Mr, Lesh was first vice presi dent last year and has been a member of the 30-man board of corporators since 1934.
Acme Telepioio
Tomorrow's Job—
PERN ONLY
Long or Short Siyle
LOOK!
® A Guara ®
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (7830)
120- 140 pounds ....... senses 140- 160 pounds . on 160- 180 pounds 180- 200 pounds
17.00@17.
. [email protected] Borg-Warner
Caterpillar T.. Ch .- Cees Child 34 « 1, | order-taking.
freehanded way peculiar to Americans. | Our quartermaster department is | ghipping macaroni, spaghetti and "noodles even to Italy. The English py reportedly have become fond of ! y our pressed : meats. And the ERMED FAUL : jeep— A story in the | 3 army publication,’ S " gig Stars and Stripes, d ns ent .. 8 recently described Charge 150 Nor € : the soldier's af-| i fection for his Back for Repairs at jeep and then . | went on to say:| Remington Rand. { On a trial run at Ft. Belvoir, this bulldozer, equipped with » new armored cab, lumbers forward, push- Gardens are poor to fair. Tobacco “The fighting \ (U. Pog ahead of it 10 leave a smooth surface in its wake. The armored cab, with an electric fan to |is mostly fair. The onion crop is 1 WASHINGTON. Aug. 30 ing earth ah Frenchman feels te war investigating| keep the driver cool, makes possible operation under fire with a minimum of danger. smaller than last year. The potato * the same way —The Senae - t| — crop is reported as poor and the about the jeep, and so does the committee was told yesterday that) apple crop small. Clover seed is reticent British Tommy, and the... of approximately 300 highly | 1850 PORKERS being harvested. pint-sized Idan curke and Ue secret Norden bomb sights made by | 4 a ——— vew Zealand Kiwi, an - . ol | : ; i . re and the Italians, and the Poles the Remington Rand plant at El Mass Markets, Advertising ‘Rains Delay Apples W. C. Griffith was named first and ' even the Germans, who will mira, N. Y,, in the summer of 1943, Rais in She southern third of vice president, Benjamin D. Hitz discard their not-so-sturdy VOIKS-ihad to be sent back to the manu- d | i lI h O f f . |Indiana have delayed the harvest William M. Rookwood Ds wagon for a jeep any time they, oi rer for extensive repair or cor- rge fo / {an e I g u pu SRA of Jonathan apples but exports of Wiliam M, Bogewend; vepauied can get it. Probably the 5th amy . between 5000 to 10,000 bushels are| WT We soldier who feels most intense about © ' 0 Smoot By EDWARD A. EVANS Market Steady With Top expected from Knox county the reappo: superini Goumier.| Lt. Cmdr. H. Massie Smoot. ER 1 this der.| tendent of the’ cemetery and the jeep is the Moroccan Goumier.| ava] officer in charge of the Rem- Scripps-Howard Staff Writer At $14 80 120-240 last of this week and a consider-| board secretray . You can always see him Taciif fl Uoond plant, told the com-| - NEW YORK. Aug. 30.—How soon after the change-over from wer 08 on ’ aie, Yoliwe SI utility grade {19% “nr. Daniels, president for the along as fast as the eon wih mittee that the plant shipped 300 production will American industry be able to employ productive labor Weights t ® Jmesnnes area ex Jack: bi past” two years. was elected as earns his Sac © wind and sights to the Norden firm during on the scale necessary to insure an “adventure in prosperity”? , oy oe 30 Lae. Purdue versity) one of the seven-man board his pigtail Sys " bie face.” {June, July and August, 1943. of | Distribution holds the answer to that question, believes Fenton B. The hog market was steady at marke Wi vee. Elberta] Which also includ Bowman | sn almost-lau p ecutive who these, he said, 150 were SO unsatis- | Turck, co-author with William E. Hill of “Scientific Methods of Dis-| : a EE gl on i! Elder, August Bohl and the {for jobless benefits and methods of Az adver She E re came factory that they had to be Sent! tribution” and chairman of an American Society of Mechanical Engineers | ‘he Indianapolis stockyards go his . - 4 gos © | four officers, |promoting full employment after spent. two Wioithe nl eer G. 1 back to Elmira for correction, | ‘committee named to study the the war food administration re- Ae a ok i” Tove the war. r 7 s N ot . i : i : | Dack very re ; ability But the while those which were retained | lover-all relationship of distribution! ported. The top was $14.80 on 120 | oad a Rn tous os ave) While backers of Dingell's federal Joas advertising vit But the SE ing ne worden GRAIN FUTURES EASY fo our economy. romani yellow globe onions avaiable this QTIINERANER SEES , |v prepared sor a oar nant wien a + it mi .l . “War has created the markjet = : . a ‘ however, “thal it might be vel for Inspectors “Incompetent” "for a ’ production that has given| Receipts included 7850 hogs, 1075 Potato harvest is still limited in sain Moa Agi pilin ye American, Busines Bk Vi] i ON CHICAGO MARKET almost total employment,” says cattle, 850 calves and 2250 sheep. |ROrthern Indiana but Whitley and DOUBLE CAR OUTPU ‘mittee’ version of the senate-ap-optimistic over prospects for tre Smoot also testified that the . Mr. Turck. “There was a time Stether counties have truckloads| as oy re Senale ay i the consumers 5 il “ - . . n ! Vv { eorg JR Groat Britain ae al-| navy's inspectors were “incompe CHICAGO, Aug. 30 (U. P.).— when we could market anything pralepe en good) SOUTH BEND, Ind, Aug. 30 safeguard for state's rights and the ways produced these goods or se- tent” and had to be released. He Grain futures displayed an easier our factories could make. Now Thank on ay! (U. P)—Paul G. Hoffman, Stude- answer to “defeatist” proposals for cured them in large measure from said he had protested against theiritrend on the Board of Trade today. Production methods fate Yoon mw Haute market. Red beets, sweet baker Corp. president, said today CTE Bs, other parts of the British empire, employment at the time but was Wheat held relatively steady. = Znproved Sow er nd € 80Y"| 200. 220 pounds peppers and hot peppers also are that passenger automobiles would! a gees. oA ho : t pie Be and that situation may prevail! id of them until it| At 11 a. m. wheat up 's to off 11s thing we can market—and we can; 220- 240 pounds available in Marion count De i main high in the home front picture h unable 35 get 7d 0 1, ta Ts. rye -( 340- 370 pounds y. be rolling ‘off the plant's assembly | ; again very soon after the war Is that they were passing Cents 8 bushel, oats off '» to 7x, rye make vastly more than we are pre-| go. 30p pounds Truck lots of watermelons and 8 Pp Y was made by Sen. Ferguson (R. ended.” was Shown & y 'off 1% to up % and barley off 3%. pared to market. 30- Be Sounds ws 1408 cantaloupes are still available in La line here within six months after |Mich.), who said he had been "re- « = =» sights later discovered to be faulty. sr ———————— Bring Orders to Factory Medium— Grange and Jackson counties, Germany surrenders, on a produc- | Jably informed” that Nelson wouid LIFTING THE BLACKOUT and| Committee Counsel Rudolph Hal- 160- 220 POUNAS .co.cerenceee [email protected] tion schedule double that of pre-war | succeed James F. Byrnes as War disbanding the home guard which ley sought by questioning to show N. Y. Stock Ss “There is only one way to create a Packing Sows z Fh | mobilization director upon Nelson's was formed as a last prop against that the sights were So fe C0 ’ ' , |and sustain’ jobs—bring orders in-| 7%" 300 pounds ..veseessees 14:[email protected] Ton Litter Hoffman said the plant, which return from China. invasion are expected to be two| “that they could have been -dam- High Low Last ee to the factories. Employment than il now makes airplane engines on al! At his news conference later, Mr, topics discussed when parliament aged in Shipman) from Remington Allis-chl ev pt 114% 14% 114% vl gro ws from orders. Jeb. 400 pounds ... [email protected] C lub fo Meet { government contract, would disaon- Reuseiel: giderionped Ween bie reassembles. Rand to Norden.’ S8mool 8am Loco“ 197 “ C00 450 DORMS +veveeesesses 14.00014.08 | tinue that type of manufacture. Tgun «parliament will have to be firm! ting that they could have been Pul iam Rad & § § 12% We cant depend entirely on| 40- 430 pounds .....ooo0es 13001408) The ninth annual Ton Litter | He also promised that Stude-|%3S considerable speculation as and watchful” writes George V, jou of adjustment, insisted how-|Am Roll Mill . 13% production. Production without Medium. is .. [email protected]| show will be held tomorrow at the [baker would have jobs for all re- the possibility of such White House Ormsby in the Wall Street Journal's ever that in many cases the pars an Ew ou «lorders may create jobs today, but Slaughter Pigs Indianapolis Unfon stockyards, it |turned servicemen employed at the action. Some Suariers Jee Ht fue London cable, “for after five years|in the sight did not meet specifi-| ™ "ee ‘gr 'alit will do worse than fail to sus-|Medium to choice was announced by John W. {plant at the time they were caileq | President i closing to oo ps 8 Sureaugttic contr) Dre is 9,80005, 50 sights sent |Aichison 0. 88 *|iain jobs tomorrow and the day| °° PU Schwab, eiieision vestook spe- ile sEIVice. fe tendency to continue regulation for| “Weren't those 150 sighls senijg CL after. It will actually destroy CATTLE )1075) cialist from Purdue university who | Doubling of production for civilian | P&T MAansHIP. regulation’ sake.” Sounds & ale! back to Remungion R 10 Punish [Ben ind Leen. Crow's Cholce— is state leader of the Ton Litter {manufacture would entail expansion : a [that concern,” Halley asked Beth Steel .... tomorrow's jobs. 700- 900 pounds U S. STATEMENT familiar, “I would say By that did put Borden 3 «Orders on the essential post-| 900-1100 pounds ... ng and in active charge of the [of plant facilities, require the addi- WASHINGTON Aug. 30 (U.P). Gove yy ’ : 1100-1300 pounds ... show. tion of machinery and tools and the . 4 receipts for the T y le will require more thanjjjg- ds ... ) ! ernment expenses and receipts for TO ENCOURAGE building of Jue a Mutgen Wor Remington war sca Riv will call for 33007500 pounds ) A total of 247 head of hogs |expansion of supply channels for current Sueal your Hon Aug. 28, comhotels, Brazil is granting 10 years | an : nook plied, Curtiss-Wr .... 35 : retrial t nd 700- 900 pounds ..eouiieencns have been entered in the show {parts and accessories, providing em" This Y Last Year en a wallop i Ali. pn ar 1100-1300 Paige which is conducted co-operatively |ployment for 14,500 to 15,000 men Expenses $15,177,680,704 $14,027,301 664 In the next five years. In large punish Remington Rand?” Halley 3, Ton. i:::'3 :|expanding markets at least 30 10|,55° 50 Jounas 1111110 ees by the extension department of |and L | War Spending 13.827,300.850 13,00.067. 108
cities, every room must have a | insisted. en Blectrie private bath; in interior towns, | “The purpose at least one bath for every two
rooms. said. /
Gen Mills .
Goodrich ...... was to get good |Goodric 5
Goodyear
bomb sights for the navy,” Smoot Greyhound Cp. n
ayon .... Int Harvester..
. | Johns-Man | Kennecott Lo | Kroger G & B. 3f L-O-F Glass .. f Lockheed Aircer Li 's 6.
Z {Nat Biscult .... Nat Distillers, 3 N Y Central ..
+44
Pure Oil ...... Republic 8tl .. Reyn Tob B .. 1
Pht bE EEE
Warner Bros . Westing El... York Corp .... Zenith Rad ... 43
-
FFE EE
+ -
42%
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by Ind anapolis securities dealers,
7 Agenis Fin Corp com..., Z |Agents Pin Corp pfd.
7 Z Belt R Stk Yds com..
for BETTER ROADS
We might rightfully call our highways “Victory Roads”"—they have contributed immensely to the progress of the war—thousands of tons of materials and supplies and thousands upon thousands of war workers have traveled our highways daily, but, it is TIME NOW’ to think of the future and plan for Post War Habilitation of—these “Highways.
Now is the time to build ECONOMY plus SAFETY into Post War Planning . .. Kentucky Rock Asphalt has the most nonskid pavement surface. Its durability and low upkeep cost has proven itself most economical in 27 States.
It’s Even Safe When It's
It Does Not Wrinkle With Age
LSA BRIN ASPHAI
__ | Bobbs-Merrill 4% ptd....
Belt R 8tk Yds pfd... Bobbs-Merrill com .
Circle Theater com......e. Comwith Loan 5% pfd. Delta Elec com Hook Drug Co com..... Home T&T Pt. Wayne Ind & Mich Elec 7% pfd Ind Asso Tel 5% e!
Z |Indpls Water pfd Z| *Indpls Water Class A com.,.. Jeff Nat Life com
7/// | Lincoln Loan Co 5%% ptd....
Lin Nat Life com P R Mallory 4%%.. *P R Mallory com ..
Progress Laundry com. S80 Ind G & F 48%..... Stokely Bros pr pf.....
Uniofa Title com BO
Algers Wins’'w RR 4%% American Loan 5s 51 American Loan 5s 46 Ch of Com Bldg 4's Citizens Ind Te
51 4'as 61
Indpls P & L 3%s 70... Indpls Railways Co 5s 67 Indpls Water Co 3's 68 1 Kokomo Water Wks 5s 58... Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54.... Muncie Water Works 5s 66... N Ind Pub Serv 3's 73 N Ind Tel 4%s B55.... Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 73.. Pub Tel 4'28 § Richmond Water Wks bs 57... Trac Jeri Corp 8s 57 8! U 8 Machine Corp 5s 52..,... *Ex-dividend.
Greenfield Banking Co, amendment Increasing capital to
Article 3
* FINE SHOE _
REPAIRING EXPERT WORKMAN SHIP—IST CLASS MATERIALS!
WHILEYOU-
: eB ~% The ALPS
SHOE REBUILDERS
Courthouse.
+ = Xa
pe a
SEE
Asked €SSes.
Greenfield; 1000 shares of $100 par value, and amending
40 per cent greater than before the war. “Industry must wake up fast to
+this distribution job. It may take ‘la year to develop a new product market or to reconvert from a * market upset or radically changed by the war.” Mr. Turck believes there is too much tendency in industry to wait for Washington to supply the answers to post-war problems. Taxes, labor policies, physical reconver-
terials, are all important, but he
be giving major attention to" its own job of distribution engineering. “It can’t be done by the old rule-of-thumb methods which persist in so many places,” he says. “We must appraise all the factors which affect the flow of manufactured products from factory to user, as precisely as the production man measures his materials, designs his machines, and controls his manufacturing operations. “Production advances have run I- {clear away from distributive procMany believe that blame for the dark days of 1932 can be ‘{laid directly at the door of a limping distribution system which was
»
oN es ®
Ope ee
"not prepared to bring in the orders
to maintain the jobs. Distribution at Fault
“Productive efficiency has moved forward 10 years in three years of .|war, while distribution has been ,lon a holiday, with buyers for almost anything at almost any price. When ithe war ends our distribution system, as it is today, won't be able ,|to handle our stepped-up production
29'2 | horsepower.
“It is necessary to start engineering of distribution, just as produc.|tion has been engineered. The techniques for doing it exist—but we can’t afford 30 years to put them :|into operation. We can ill afford . leven 30 weeks.” Contending that mo scientific attack has ever before been made on the over-all problem of distribution, Mr. Turck points out: Eliminate Duplication “There has been much agitation by social reformers for lowering distribution costs by cutting out "| advertising or eliminating middle--|men. The net -result of such destructive methods is to decrease distribution and increase costs. You .lcan't create the mass markets necessary to high-level employment without mass advertising and adequate wholesaling. “The engineering attack on distribution problems by eliminating unn ry duplication and waste, will make possible a huge “increase in the volume of goods sold. “It. was the use of engineering techniques in production that en-
higher wage rates at the same time hit was producing goods at progressively lower cost. This paradox
is ‘a more potent factor in the American high standard of living
circumstances of
sion of plants, availability of ma- |
is convinced that industry should |
abled industry to pay progressively’
of the manufacturing age probably],
than all our natursl resourdes and
Medium— 700-1100 pounds © [email protected]
1100-1300 pounds ...«... eetnne 12.25@ 15.25
Common— 700-1100 pounds [email protected]%
Choice
Purdue university, the Belt railroad and Stockyards Co. of Indianapolis, Indianapolis Livestock Exchange and member firms, and
, per cent. Producers’ Commission associa-
£00- 800 pounds [email protected] 800-1100 pounds .....e seseens [email protected]
Coos 800 ds [email protected] - un evestainsenne . J os cresenssrisen [email protected]
800-1000 pounds Medium— 500- 900 POUNAS veceeccsesss. 11.00014.50 [email protected]
[email protected]% 6.75910.00
Bulls (all weights) Beef— Good (all weights) ..
9.502 10.50 8.00@ 9.50 6.00@ 8.00
Good
CALVES (850)
Vealers (all weights) Good to choice vo. 15.009 15.50 Common to medium ve. [email protected] Culls . ... 8.000 9.00 Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves Steers
Choice 500- 800 POUNAS .cooesevescss [email protected] 800-1050 pounds eee [email protected] d:
Good— 500- 800 pounds .ecesecsecsss 10.00810.50 800-1000 pounds .,eessececces 102591175
esisesssnsees [email protected]
. 7.50@ 8.75 Calves (steers) Good and Choice— 500 pounds down .. Medium 500 pounds down “ Calves (heifers)
Good and Choice 500 pounds dOWR e...c.e.... y 10.50913.75
[email protected] [email protected]
SHEEP AND LAMBS (2230)
Ewes (shorn) Good to tholce ommon to medium . Co. ¢ SPRING LAMBS Good to choice . Medium to good ' Common
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens, 22¢. Leghorn hens, Broflers, fryers and roasters, under § Ibs, white and barred rocks, 27¢; col. ored springers, 25c; leghorn apringers, 23¢. Old roosters, lic. " ot ge receipts, 0c, Grade A arge ic; grade medium, 36¢; grade A smal, 26c. og grade. He. PE r — No. c. Butterfat — No. 49¢; No. 2, 36c. 3
WAGON WHEAT
Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $1.48 per bushel for No, 1 red wheat (other grades on their merits); oats, No. 2 white or No. 3 red, testing 32 Ibs. or better, 73¢c. No. § yellow shelled corn, $1.06 per bushel, and No. 3 white shelled corn, $1.24.
= ovo 1s == THOMSON & MSKINNON.
SECURITIES « COMMODITIES
5 East Market Street Phone: MArket 3501
11 Wall Street, New York Branches in 32 Cities .
Write for our weekly Stock Survey
*
0
tion.
MARION COUNTY , SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATIONS
HEADLINES
HELPING TO PROTECT
370 worth of War Bonds since 1941.
CIATION—FIRST.
THE MARION COUNTY
at
Arsenal Bldg. & Loan Assn. Atkins Sav. & Loan Assn. Better Homes Sav. & Loan Assn. Celtic Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. Colonial Sav. & Loan Assn. First Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. Fletcher Ave. Sav. & Loan Assn. Indiana Sav. & Invest. Co.
RE
and women, Hoffman said. Hoffman also disagreed with belief of some persons that the cost | working Bal of automobiles would rise 25 to 30! Public Debt He said that the Stuiebaker officials planned to hold down | the cost of their cars to a minimum. pepits
.. 4.472.828.8687 4.561.813.8508 . 10,704. 851.837 0.461.688.1568 6,713 404.847
{ Receipts he | Net fictt M18 nash Balance 18.180,115.139 17.417 249 840 § 050.800,381 211.098.940,087 147,807.404,438 Gold Reserve. 20,046.144.433 22,202,693,009
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings
‘HOME FRONT.
$1 1,226,700.00 LOANS
To 4,774 Marion County Homeowners in the 12 Months Ending July 30, 1944
$26,967,370.00
Held for Investment or Sold to the Public Since the First War Bond Drive in 1941
IN. WAR BONDS
SERVING MARION COUNTY HOMEOWNERS . . . AND
ALL AMERICAN HOMES
Your local saving and loan associations continue to be the leading source of aid to Marion County families who purchase homes, repair and modernize their homes or who convert their existing out-of-town held mortages to a more convenient, local association home loan.
In addition these Marion County associations have purchased or sold $26,967,«
For a Home Loan, a War Bond, a Savings Account—SEE A LOCAL ASSO-
SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATIONS
Insurance Sav. & Loan Assn. Peoples Mutual Sav. & Loan Assn. ~ Prospect Sav. & Loan Assn. Railroadmen'’s Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. . Shelby St. Fed. Sav. & Loan Assn. _ Standard Sav. & Loan Assn. Turner Bldg. & Sav. Assn.
Union Federal Sav. & Loan Assn.
The daily on clothes fatal. Ci gentle S: gets dowr of the fa color-dulli clothes lo newer, Ww Crown. | 1923 tods
Silk ai Wome Wome Men’s coat
