Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 October 1944 — Page 6
SINESS
Worst - Inflation of ‘World War | Lame In Months After Armistice|§s
. A NEW YORK DEPARTMENT STORE ADVERTISED
some “two-way stretch” was mobbed.
girdles the other day.
If thati is a sample, perhaps Price Administrator Chester Bowles is right in his belief that the greatest inflationary _ pressure will come four to six months after the German
defeat. The life insurance companies point out that the peak of inflation the last time came after the war, in 1920, Prices rose twice as fast after the armistice as during the war, There were 3600 strikes in 1919 as the cost of living soared. “Higher prices brought wage increases, which brought further demands for wage .increases, and so Mr. Budrow on,” reports the life insurance bulletin. 2 “But the time stabilization efforts were begun, reckless spending, speculation, strikes and widespread hoarding combined to form a situation that would have required Hersulean efforts to overcome.”
WLB SEEKS TO
Asks FDR for Authority Over Wage Rates in Firms
© Reconverting.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (U, P). —The war loan board will ask President Roosevelt in its wage stabilization report for authority to establish wage rates in industries reconverting from war to covilian production, it was learned today. The request for broadening the WLB’s authority in dealing with reconversion wage adjustments, it was understood, consitutes one part
EXTEND POWERS
The place|#
Britain and Russia.
s Manufacturin
# 2 LJ
Dominion Now Ranks Fourth Among Industrial Nations
(First of a Series)
By S. BURTON HEATH NEA Staff Writer
OTTAWA, Oct. 16.—This second world war has {ransformed Canada into one of the great industrial nations. Assuming that the end of the war will leave German and Japanese industry-at low ebb, the dominion will return to peace in fourth place, surpassed only by the U. 8. Great
ESTIMATE RISES]
| 1 606,000
This picture tells a story of Canada’s owiiE productive might. Here are the vast freight yards of a Canadian port, with hundreds of cars loaded with shipments for overseas allies.
PRICES ON HOGS ARE UNCHANGED
Top Holds at $14.80 Here; : 9800 Porkers Received. Hog prices were unchanged at
hil;
Bushels Is
Now Forecast. for State Crop.
Times Special LAFAYETTE, Oct. 16.—The Oct. 1 estimate of the Indiana corn crop forecasts 171,606,000 bushels or 37 bushels per acre, a .5 bushel increase over the last month's prediction of 169,287,000 bushels, according to the Purdue university market news service and the U, 8. bureau of agricultural economics. The reported condition of pastures shows a rise from 43 to 62 per cent’of normal. The yield per acre of soybean hay is estimated at 1.15 tons, of lespedeza hay at .85 tons and of cowpea hay at 1.06 tons. The season yield of alfalfa hay is 155 tons per acre, and of clover and timothy hay, 1.20 tons per acre. Soybeans for beans are reported at 16 bushels per acre, the same as last months report. Cowpeas at 7.5 bushels per acre are better than expected earlier,
cluded 13,103,000 bushels of corn, 8,553,000 bushels of wheat, 24,059,000 bushels of oats and 406,000 bushels
| walter o. Teufel, general super- | road’s southwestern . division, with
On Oct. 1, farm grain stocks in-
Aid Promoted,
intendent of the Peunsylvania railBas: been | an»
the western region with * head- Walter O. Teufel
quarters in Chicago. Morton 8. Smith, superintendent at Loganspor, succeeds Mr. Newell.
4 MILLION TO LOSE WAR JOBS—AYRES
CLEVELAND, Oct. 16 (U. P.)—A total of 4,000,000 workers, now making ships and airplanes, will lose their jobs after the war, ‘Brig. Gen Leonard P, Ayres, vice president of the Cleveland Trust Co. said today. Gen. Ayres, in'a monthly business bulletin, said that “no very serious employment readjustments will be required in about half of our economy , . . though manufacturing
CARTEL EL poLicy
Foreign’ Policy A Association “Wants U. S. to Modify Opposition.
permit them to operate in the post« war period under close supervision
, |of an international economic trie bunal, the Foreign Policy assocla-
tion said today.
5
make it easier to achieve agreements on world trade and fe P avert a “dog-eat-dog” struggle for power in the post-war era.
Britishers, it added, “are convinced that cartels are not a negation of the competitive economy, but rise
‘| inevitably out of it.” McClellan wrote that the task |
of reorganizing and reconstructing world trade “obviously calls for international action and that an international economic tribunal te supervise cartels was “at the very least essential” He urged that
WASHINGTON, Oét. 16 (U. PJ, ~The U. 8. should modify its oppo sition to cartel agreements and
Such a policy, the association | said in a report by Grant 8. MecClellan of its research staff, would
Many nations do not share U. 8, views that cartels should be abolished, the association said, and warned that this country must tem= per its ‘attack” on them. Many
Kanks V Aach
| (Continues Fro
{losin
out of the idor out of Aacher \ ‘northeast of
Now Many. Ww
FALSE With
» ee teet 2 x & of the six-point preliminary report In 1038 Canada appears to have been jn either eighth or ninthiy.o y,giananclis stockyards today of soybeans. poses. very Sifeuls problems. Vatlous Sedity Sontruis and gr x wabbling. PAST QUICK-FROZEN bakery goods,| Which WLB public members are | place. While France and Ttaly|gin the top remaining at $14.80 Potato Yield Gains hay resell, sup Dpcen he said, | cartels: be Seon ji publicity by nt powder has no { ready for the oven, went over like | Preparing for submission tomorrow [were being ruined, and Germanyigo, gooq to choice 120 to 240| Increased estimated production of . By well over 50 per ) agp OF: Jotung. BD:
hot-cakes in an experiment at Chicago, Deep Freeze Corp. claims. Pies, muffins and rolls were bestsellers. The company says a pie could be kept a year without hurting taste or quality. o ” »
LIBERATED EUROPE’'S leftish tendencies ‘give the jitters to American concerns with factories there. One may wait a while before reopening its plant. Dutch businessmen say we should pay ne attention to underground clamor there for economic changes, insist Holland will be a hot-bed of capitalism in a pink Europe. They want us to lend them funds. » » » ODDS AND ENDS: The Ford plant in Paris was bombed to rubble by*the British some time ago—on information supplied by Ford officials in this country. . , . A new cosmetic on the market is painted on teeth like nail polish, to brighten them; doesn’t stick to store teeth. . . . When ODT Director Johnson coniplained the airlines were doing too much advertising, they replied they have 298 planes on scheduled flights now, against only 165 right after the army sitioned planes. , , . The civil nautics authority believes that ex- . fighter pilots should pass severe tests before doing any commercial flying. . . . Golf ball makers are ex- - perimenting with synthetic rubber, but haven't said yet how it works.
WESTERN’ UNION co. OFFERS 49, ISSUES
NEW YORK, Oct. 18 (U.P.).— The executive committee bf the Western Union Telegraph Co. has made effective the offer of its four per cent debentures in exchange for stock of six leased telegraph companies which have long been a part of the system, President A. N. Williams has announced. The offer, which was made Aug. 3, in a move to insure the stockholder of the six companies against future liability for accrued income taxes assessed against their companies, was contingent upon acceptance by the stickholders and any necessary approval by the New York Public Service commission.
Zr rE ECE
SEYMOUR)
ASKIN & MARINE STORE
AR ETL LET Ss
to the labor and industry members. It is the only point on which the WLB has agreed to make specific recommendations to the President. Other points to be covered by the report include the relationship of wages to the cost of living, nature and extent of alleged wage inequities created by changes in the cost of lving since Jan. 1, 1941, inequities under the war bracket system and the nature of the mest pressing reconversion wage problems, Quarrel Expected
A bitter labor-industry quarrel is expected over the public members’ findings on the cost of living. The WLB has refused to make any recommendations to the President on changing the Little Steel wage stabilization formula, and labor industry members are aware that the findings sent to the White House may in themselves contsitute a recommendation. It is now believed, however, that Mr. Roosevelt will take no action on ‘the issue of breaking of Little Steel formula until after the elec. tion.
-|{AMERICAN TOBACCO ITO OFFER 39% ISSUE
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 16 (U.P.). —A registration statement covering a proposed issue of $100,000,000 American Tobacco Co, five-year 3 per cent debentures, due Oct. 185,
ties and exchange commission. It is expected that the issue, which is to be used primarily to finance the purchase of the com-
of leaf tobaccos, will be underwritten by a nation-wide group of 148 underwriters’ headed by Morgan, Stanley & Co. The contemplated offering date is Oct. 26.
CULTISTS LOSE VOTE PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 16 (U.P). —The registration commission has revealed that 74 followers of Father Divine would be unable to vote at the November election because they signed their spiritual g designation to registration slips instead of their Christian names and surnames,
R. V. MONTIETH TO SPEAK R. V. Montieth, General Motors Allison division, will speak on “The Preparation of Spectrographically Pure Silver Plating Solution” at the luncheon meeting of the Indiana section of the American Chemical
Warren hotel.
Oldest Loan Brokers in the State
LOANS
The CHICAG
146 E. WASHINGTON ST.
on on_Everything! ]
Diamonds, amonds, Watches Musical Instruments, Cameras Clothing, Shotguns, Ete. "JEWELRY Co, Ine.
PEARSON'S
FURNITURE e PIANOS BAND INSTRUMENTS RECORDS e SHEET MUSIC
|
BRYA NALS
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
USE YOUR Sata at SINGS!
CLOTHING COMPANY
131 W. Washington St.
Directly Opposite indians Theater
GE AN)
WE Buy Diamonds
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
STANLEY Jewelry Co.
Lincoln Hote! Bidg.
of MOTH HOLES—BURNS
smn —— ® New Lightweight Felts for Early FALL ... HARRY LEVINSON
YOUR HATTER
A
CHICAGO, Oct.
16
WHEAT, RYE PRICES | LEAD BRISK RISE
(U. P)—|
substantial gains after a mixed opening onthe Board of Trade to-
Wheat and rye futures rallied to
1969, has been filed with the securi- $
pany’s projected larger inventories N
society, to be held tomorrow at the|
day. slumped.
cent a bushel;
off % cent.
of as much as 1%
the upturn.
High Allis-Chl cv pf 18% Am Loco Am Rad & § 8 tits Am Roll Mill .. 15% Am T & T-... 163! Am Tob B .... Am Water W .,, Anaconda Afmour & Co . Atchison ...... Atl Refining .“ Bald Loco ct .. Ben Ind Loan . Bein Steel ....
68%
“ee Bn Rayo . 30 Int Horvootor, 80%s Johns-Man , 01 Kennecott L-O-F Gl . Lockheed Air .. 21% Martin (Glenn) 20 Nash-Kelv ,... 16% at Biscuit . | 23% Nat Distillers. . 35% N Y Central .. 18% Oliver Corp .. Packard . Pan Am Air... Penney .....s.. Penn RR ..... 30 Phelps Dodge... Procter & G... Pullinah sense Pure Oi} ...... Depub oy Se | n Tob
Er) Inc ..... Socony-Vacuum 12% South Pac &.. 30% Std Brands ... 3% 8td O Cal .... Std Oil (Ind) . re td Oil (N J) 55% Senn Corp .... 11% 20th Cent Fox 25% U 8S Rubber ... 49% U 8 Steel « 587% Warner Bros ,. 12%: Westing. El ....107% Zenith Rad ... 41%
ceann
Agents Fin Belt R Stk Yds com.
Bobbs-Merrill 4%: pd. Central Soya com Circle Theater c Comwlith Loan 5% pd’. Delta Elec com Hook Drug Co, com
*Ind Asso 2 5% p: Ind Gen Serv Indpls P & L pid ...
Indpls Water pfd
P R Mallory 4% % .. P R Mallory com ,...
Progress Laundry com
Union Title
American Loan 5s § American
428 Richmond Water Ji Trac Term Corp Bs U 8 Macht rp on
25
Per
SAXOPHONE INSTRUCTION
$
chine *Ex-dividend.
cents
Low 114%
1632
41
COIp COM.cuseses TH Agents Fin Corp pid ..
. cesses
62 Home T&T Ft. Warne 1% ptd a it
Indpls Railways com ...
Rose Gear & Tool com sees
At mid-session other grains
At 11 a. m. wheat was up 2 to 3% corn unchanged to off 3 cent; oats off 3% to % cent; rve up % to 1 cent, and barley
Rye led a brisk rally with gains
on short-
covering, Prospects of an increased cash demand for this grain aided
N. Y. Stocks
Net Last Change 114% 213, Ya 11% == % 15% eee
Va
68%
[+4012 0: Ey
I;
IE belt
141:
tHE
Pl
» military types A vehicles.
|and Italy were building toward |their own downfalls, Canada tripled ther own output of manufactured ones. oday, the dominion is turning ey more aluminum than the entire world did in peacetime. Her steel output has tripled. She is providing 20 per cent more copper, lead nickel an dzinc than before the war. Her electricity output is up more than 20 per cent. And she is utilizing those and other raw materials to make products that were non-existent, or insignificant, up here until recently.
270 Ships A Year
Where less than a thousand workmen used to make 40 planes a year, now more than 120,000 men and women are turning out aircraft at the rate of 4400 a year. Between the two world wars the dominion did not build a single sea-going vessel. But thus far this yéar she has launched such ships at the rate of 270 a year, including 10,000-ton freighters, good enough for post-war world freighting, at the rate of 100 a year,
a year under U. S. licenses. In 1942 (the rate of output has dropped a bit now because of shift
‘1./to more difficult types) she made
204,500 trucks, tanks and other
of self-propelled
Investment Soars It would be possible to go down
+ithe line with similar contrasts — chemicals, communication and sig- {Good i nal equipment, synthetic’ rubber, »|radios ‘and radar, all sorts of ma-
chinery and textiles and other
s, | manufactured goods.
Through 1943 the Canadian government had invested $1,381,000,000
‘alin war plants of which more than
$755,000,000 was spent to expand
A the dominion’s factory facilities. Government experts estimate that t|private capital put up another|CWs “a1 $300,000,000 to $350,000,000.
Since the entire capitalization of Canadian ‘industry in 1939
it can be seen, without
'% elaboration, how important an ad"s, | ditional $1,100,000,000 has made to .., (the dominion’s capacity to manu-
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by anapolis securities dealers.
Bid
facture usable commodities out of its enormous wealth of natural resources, Up to mid-1940 employment in Canadian industry never had
tural payrolls. Postwar Problem The amazing mushrooming of in-
4 | dustry which these figures indicate
Indpls Water Class A com.... 11%
Algers Wins'w RR gu %. wtese 300
‘lity available;
‘ledge;
*!has created for Canada a post-war
problem similar to that of U. 8. Most of the planes are made in factories constructed for that purpose and not, as in the U. 8, in converted automobile plants. There will be relatively little use for the
#llarge shipbuilding establishments. 7. | Power plants are not particularly , {adaptable.
But, on the whole, there will be an enormous productive capacplus ambition and imagination and technical knowl plus raw materials galore; plus a labor pool of around a million men and women who have become accustomed to Substantial weekly pay checks and who can be expected to clamor for chances to
pounders, ° Receipts included 1875 cattle, 1200 calves, 9800 hogs and 1800 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (9800) Ja 140 pounds ...ee..ieecee 14.80"
all tree fruits shows the following: Apples in commercial counties, 1,340,000 bushels; pears 154,000 bushels; grapes, 2600 tons, and peaches, 674,000 bushels.
40- 180 pounds .. 160: 180 pounds . 200
Canadian factories used to make |Medtum- =| about 17,600 automobiles and trucks
» {amounted to slightly under $3,650,-|Good— 000,000,
reached 1,300,000. In October of|Megiio +++ 11943 approximately 1,875,000 men ‘land women were on non-agricul-
330- 360 pounds ... Medium— 160- 200 pounds .............
Packing Sows Good to Choice— 30. 300 pounds .... 330 pounds .. 30. 360 pounds . 360- 400 pounds
sewane [email protected] eves [email protected] vee [email protected] eessnnscsnses 14.00014.05 Good 400- 450 pounds 450- 650 pounds Medium — 250- 550 pounds . . Slaughter Pigs Medium to choice— 90- 120 pounds CATTLE A875) Steers
ssecssetsntee
14.00014.05 [email protected]
+ 1250013.75
Choice 700- 908 pounds 900-1000 pounds ...... wanes 1100-1300 pounds ..... seannes 1300-1500 pounds .
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected] « [email protected]
esate.
800 pounds ...eses 900-1100 pounds .. 1100-1300 pounds .,. 1300-1500 pounds ...
[email protected] «ee [email protected] veo [email protected] vs [email protected]
m-700-1100 pounds .... 1100-1300 pounds ,..e.... Common - 700-1100 pounds ......... ae
[email protected] [email protected]
tees
Choice 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 Good— 600- 800 pounds .. 800-1000 pounds Medium— - 500- 900 pounds Common— 500- 900 POURAS ....civsvinni Cows (all weights)
10. 50@12. 25
veo 18.25 «. 15.50
16.50 18.7%
pounds ....uvee.
+. 14.00915.25 [email protected]
sesssanasannn
EE EE
4. 75@ 6.25 Bulls (all weights)
Beef Good (an) weights) [email protected] Sausag: [email protected] « 195@ 8.50 6.00@ 7.78
esseensan
“srevene
CALVES. (1200)
Vealers (all weights) Good to choice
Exvisaesnvnens [email protected]
Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves Steers Cholce— 800- 800 pounds
cesasven ease 11.50Q18.75 800-1050 pounds
essssesseese [email protected]
vee. [email protected] . [email protected]
8.75@10.% 7.50@ 8.7%
500- 800 pounds ... 800-1000 pounds ... Medium 500- 1060 ) pounds “es Comm 500- 900 pounds ..........0. Calves
Good and Choice— 500 pounds down Medium— 500 pounds down Calves Good and Choice— poun
[email protected]% 9.00011.38
sesvteevuene
500 pounds down ........... 7 SHEEP AND LAMBS (1800) Ewes (shorn) Good to choice ............... Common to medium ......... LAMBS Good "and choice ........ irene Medium and good Common
LOCAL PRODUCE Heavy breed hens, 22. Leghorn hens,
Broilers, fryers and roaster, b Ibs., white .and barred rocks, cole ored springers, 23c; leghorn inten. ale. Old roosters, ldc. 30c. - Grade A
large, 40c; grade A med iu, 36; grade : small, 26c. No grade, 30c. i 1, 50c. Butterfat—No, 1, 0.
under
WAGON WHEAT
Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $1.60 per bushel for No, 1 red wheat (other grades on their merits); oats, No. 2 white or No. 2 red, testing 32 Ibs. or better, 64c; corn No. 2 yellow shelled, old crop, $1. 09% per bushel, and No. 2 white shelled. old crop, $1.2¢%. ——————————————
Hayes Industries, Inc., fiscal year ended July 31 net profit $817,323 or $2.45 a share vs. $648,106 or
*lwork in factories after the war.
. 90 $3.....
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, Oct. 18 (U. P)
a
$1.95 previous year.
Integrity of purpose
ar. Hiye
Potato yield is now indicated as 80 bushels per acre and sweet potatoes as 100 bushels, a 10 bushels gain for each above last month, Through September, 800,000 cows were milked, producing 384 pounds each for a total of 307,000,000 pounds of milk. An estimated 10,625,00 laying hens in September produced 1,071000 eggs per 100 hens, or a total of 114,000,000 eggs. Both number and rate of lay are lower than last year, with production down 5 per cent.
T0 HEAR HILGEDAG
Raymond W. Hilgedag, income tax expert ang legal editor of the Insurance Research and Review Service, will address the October luncheon meeting of the Sigma Delta Kappa, national legal fraternity alumni chapter, to be held tomorrow at the Claypool hotel His subject will be “Tax Problems in Estate Planning.” Huber Patton, alumni chapter president, will preside over the meeting which will announce the committee for nomination officers and directors for 1945.
Masonite Corp., year to Aug. 31 net profit $1,173,585 or $1.69 a share vs. $1,256,355 or $2.04 previous fiscal
SIGMA DELTA KAPPA
cent during the war years, and niost of the new-comers are making things not used in peacetime. “Much current discussion of the problems of post-war employment seems to assume that industry must supply jobs for all who want them, and those who so argue seem to identify industry with manufacturing . . .forgetting that manufacturing will have td release about four million employee's after the war.”
MALLORY DECLARES STOCK DIVIDEND
P. R. Mallory & Co., Inc., has declared a common stock dividend of 40 cents per share, payable on Dec. 9, stockholders of record Nov, 28, 1944, the company has announced. Also declared was the quarterly dividend No. 5 on 4% per cent cumulative convertible - preferred stock, par value $25 per share, payable on Jan. 1, 1945, to stockholders of record Dec. 19, 1044.
SALES EXECUTIVES TO MEET James A. Thorson of Cleveland will speak on “Streamlining Sales to meet the Present Challenge to Sales Management” at the Indianapolis Sales Executives council dinner meeting tonight at the Indianapolis Athletic club.
INDUSTRIAL FORUM TO MEET The American Industrial Forum will hold its monthly meeting next
the tribunal.
91.5% Oppose Air Monopoly
WASHINGTON, Oct. 168 (U. P.) — Industrial management is opposed to a “chosen instrument” in the operation of international transpor« tation, the publication Modern Industry reported today. Asked “Should U. S. overseas airlines be operated by a single come pany?”¢#91.5 per cent of those ques= tioned in the magazine poll opposed singlé company operation and 83 per cent favored it.
EVANSVILLE UTILITY
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 18 (U. P). —An application of Southern Ine diana Gas & Electric Co., Evansville, Ind., to reduce the stated value of 400.000 shares of no par value common stock from $5,500,000 to $3,335,844, today was approved by the securtiies and exchange come mission. The $2,164356 difference will be designated as special capital surplus in accordance with an order of the Indiana public service commission.
DISCUSS SAVING COAL Managers and maintenance su-
housing projects In nine Midwest
Wednesday at 6:45 p. m. at the Central Christian church, Ft. Wayne
and Delaware sts.
dens tomorrow and Wednesday in the first of six conferences on how {to save coal.
entire history. From overland
is being asked to
The lita Po
Los Angeles-Long Beach
War has given the Los Angeles area the greatest assignment in its
thousands of troops and tons of war materiel to its ports of embarkation, and to its factories come constant carloads of raw material to be turned into finished products. With the superhuman load it
Angeles geographically fortunate in having accessible the splendid
<4
train * Loaded Angeles.
come tens of
yard facilities,
carry, isn’t Los
rt Area of
of Los Angeles and Long Beach? Located along “The Route to Tokyo,” Santa Fe brings train aftee
And Santa Fe—through greater
ment and traffic controls —is now ready to haul more and longer trains into this important area. These greater facilities, built in time of war, will stand ready to serve an even greater Los Angeles
for War” into Los
new freight equip.
cuts Sock VALUE
perintendents operating public war | states will meet at Lockfield Gare
t's alkaline (non-a dor” denture breatl
n't Stan
| Too strenuous dietis
rom stomach distre digestion, heartburr ‘aused by excess acic or quel relief. Ov . 25¢ box e. our SIA irs OUBLE MO!
CHILDREN
Re pres
IPINE
us Vora
| Simple 1 | Thousands Hard of
| Thanks to an easy many thousands. wh arily Sth tened now
is always - remembered,
Shy Bother
Lesson
INDIANA MUSIC CO. 115 E. Ohio St, = FR. 1184
ernment expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through Oct. 14, compared with a year ago: This Year Last Year Expenses ....$27,564, oa? 5 $25,304,547,423 War Spending 24,908,424 23,536,387,763 Receipts 11,457, 652, o 11,192,674,403 Net Defleit.... 16,106,434,692 14,201,872,030 Cash Balance. 12,676,676,144 18, 3%, 282,879 11,913,698. 670 17,7 577,550 211,295,440,005 165, for 395,140 + 20,728,498,234 22,155,204, 438 INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE ‘aeseassshans ed, 6,261,000 » 2 +168,000
sess laverarang sees
BANKERS ELECT SELECMAN, NEW YORK, : Oct. 18 (U.P) .— Kk Merle E. Seleeman, deputy manager oi R } AL on Lb of the American Bankers. As50Cia~ Sh sia tion, has been appointed secretary Shh of ‘the association, but will continue HT (H) as deputy manager of the trust. hdl gli division and as director of public
or WORN SPOTS
| LEON TAILORING CO. «| 235 Mass. Ave; 1 Middle of
OXYGEN THERAPY This Equipment Can Be Rented at HAAG'S 402 N. Capitol Ave. Dison . [MgktEhine
facilities of the excellent ports in time of peace.
E A
EE 1
SANTA FE SYSTEM LINES
“ALONG THE ROUTE T° Tokyo"
You Save Because We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats
18" 21° 247
CASE CLOTHES . 215 N. Senate Ave. Open 9 to 9
Working 8al.. Public DL Gold Rese
|
