Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 December 1944 — Page 39

PAGE

~By Williams

By Fred Harman

EAT MY. BRAINS b> OUTA THEM

*

FRIDAY, DEC. 15, CR i

BuTsiviss

“Life on the ‘Other Side of the

Counter’ Has Its Troubles, Too

—e"B} ROGER BUDROW

IF" YOUR EGO GETS RUFFLED BY SOME discourtesy, real or fancied, while shopping, before you write the store to “tell them off.” just consider what | what it's like on the

other side of the counter. In this month's Nation's Business, a lady clerk says her piece—and she’s got a lot on her side, too, For example, rationing has made an event of shoe buying. So the customers take a long time deciding — and then often announce they've ~ forgotten to bring their shoe coupons along! “Most shoe salesmen work on commission,” "Mr writes Lida C. . Budrow peck. “Would your angelic disposition hold out after three customers in a row pulled that one?” “Qr try this: Every woman in the land should know that costume Jewelry is taxed. Apparently the news hasn't gotten around .to all of them, because one salesgirl told me:. ‘You'd be shocked at the number of women who come in, select

" say a pairvofh earrings and when I

tell them the price say, “Tax. . what tax?” Then they indignantly put the earrings down and walk away.’ “She overheard a customer, the mother of an army son, “bewailing his going, his hardships, his absence.. I happen to know that the woman waiting on her has a hus band who is a war casualty, her son is missing and she is behind that counter because she wants to serve in some capacity. Quiet and composed, she made no comment.” The vice president of one store had a complaint from a customer who said the hosiery clerk told her to shut up. He investigated, found a well-mannered, eapable clerk with a good record. She said: “I've had a backache that's driven me almost crazy all day long. I shouldn't have come in at all, but our buyer's so short of help she rieeds me. - This customer, who should know better, had taken half an hour of my time making a small purchase: while describing in every detail every ill she’s had in the past year. . . . I just couldn't stand it another minute!” “Formerly in many shops, stock girls and boys kept things like sweaters, blouses, coats and dresses accurately arranged. Now there are no stockkeepers, The salespeople arrange their wares as best they can. The customer comes along, pulls out. sizes and styles, pays little attention to returning things to proper bins and racks and thereby adds much to the general confusion. “If they would only put things back where they found them,’ one clerk in a sports shop bemoaned. *You have no idea the time it takes to find things again. We hunt, the customer waits and is annoyed and everybody is irked.’ “Maybe the salesperson who said, ‘Don’t you know there's 4 war on?’ meant to be helpful—not rude. You may have acted as though you didn't know.” » ® .

A Few $38 Notes: J. D. Adéms Manufacturing Co. here has set up a profit-sharing and retirement plan for employees, with payments at retirement when 65 or upon death, and earlier in cases of prolonged sickness or total disability. There are 384 employees sharing in 1943 earnings and more this year. In New York today, 18,570 shares of Stokely-Van Camp common stock were sold quickly at $11.25 a share, in a special offering. They weren't local holdings, it was reported here; probably was some of the sotck exchanged recently when Stokely-Van Camp acquired two food packing concerns in Ohio and Michigan. » . . HERE'S WHY the war produc tion picture sometimes seems eonfusing-Although Detroit war plants say they need 20,000 men, they are turning away women, . . Republic Aviation’s plants at Farmingdale, N, Y,, and Evansville, Ind, have returned to a 58-hour week to meet army's P-47 schedules . . A $23 million cutback has been made in produc-

tion of machine guns for army planes. . . Pullman-Standard plans to step up production of artillery pieces and shells at its plant next month, trebling some items such as 81 mm. mortars, » . nr

ODDS AND ENDS: A “thermal-

CONCRETE-IRON

COLUMN PRAISED

Strength and Light-Weight

Characteristics Aid “In ‘Construction.

By Science Service: EVANSTON, Ill.—A new ‘type of structural column of concrete and steel, developed here in the technological institute of Northwestern university for use in high buildings and long-span arch bridges, has light weight and great strengtht, and probably will be used widely in the

future in place of more costly steel |

columns. .

It is' a ‘type of reinforced concrete compression unit, with about 15]

per cent by volume of steel and 85)

per cent by volume of concrete, which is about as heavy as aluminum and strongef than solid structural steel. The column consists of extremely high - strength coficrete wrapped about with a ‘high-strength spiral steel wire, which is always under

tension, to form a -core, which" is |S?

then covered with a fireproofing concrete. An eight-inch core with two inches of fireproofing concrete covering will take a safe load of 1,000,000 pounds, it is claimed. In laboratory tests it carried a load of 2,500,000 pounds, and at this load the elastic limit of the steel had not been reached. The new type of structural column was developed under the direction of George A. Maney, chairman of the university's department of civil engineering, in a program of findIng new materials to meet critical needs sponsored by the war productian board.

AUSTRALIA SEEKS AMERICAN PLANTS

LOS ANGELES, Dec. 15 (U. P.). —Frank Goldberg, representative of the Australian ministry of information, ‘was here today to interest Americans in settling in Australia and American industry in establishing branch factories there after the war, Goldberg said several branch factories were started before the war and pointed out that lend-lease machinery would be useful for this purpose in the immediate post-war period.

INSURANCE AGENCY CONVENES AT I, A.C.

A conference of the Fitzhugh Traylor agency of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the U. S began today with a luncheon at the Indianapolis Athletic club. Luncheon speakers were Jack Taylor, of the Louisville agency, and Ivan Ricks of Chicago. The evening dinner will be attended by delegates and their wives. Paul Speicher, president of Insurance Research and Review, will speak.

Breakfast tomorrow morning will|

close the conference. - Ralph O. York, Indianapolis district manager, .is in charge of convention arrangements,

Chemical Society

The American Chemical society's Indiana section will meet Tuesday at the Warren hotel for its weekly luncheon. Dr. A. E. Focke of Diamond Chain Co, will speak on “The Fundamentals of Heat Treating,” illu strating his talk with slides and a demonstration,

N. Y. Stocks

Net Last Change | §

IFEW PRICES UP | ON HOG MARKET

‘|controlled labor front but German

7700 Porkers Arrive Here; 200 to 240-Pounders Bring $14.35.

Local hog prices were unchanged to 10 cents higher on a fairly active market today, the war food administration said. A top price of $14.35 was paid for load choice 200 to 240-pound porkers, Livestock = receipts totaled 7700 (hogs, 650 cattle, 575 calves and 1700

sheep. *

| GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (7700)

1.9- 140 poinds 12.25@ 12.78 140- 160 pounds .. 12.760 14.15 160~ 180 pounds .. . 1415@ 14.20 180- 200 pounds .. . 14.200 14,30 200- 220 pounds . 14.25014.35 220- 240 pounds . 14.256014.35 | | 40- 270 pounds 14.200 14.2 70- 300 pounds 14.15 14.2, 30C- 330 pounds 14.15... 330- 360 pounds 14.15 Medium

160- 220 pounds

Packing Sows Cood to Cho'ce— 270- 300 pounds .... 300~ 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds .. 360- 400 pounds .. | Good- { 400- 450 pounds | 450- 550 pounds Medium 350- 500 pounds ..... ....... Slaughter Pigs Medium to Choice~

[email protected]

13.65 13.75 |

vo. [email protected] | « 13.55@w 13.70

[email protected] | 13.404¢13.60

[email protected]

90- 120 pounds 9.00913.00 CATTLE (650) { Cl.oice— Steers ; 700- 900 pounds ... .......... 16.25@ 17.25 | | 900-116) pounds .. . 16.25 17.50 | 1100-1309 pounds .. 16.25@ 17. 50 | | 1300-1500 poungs 16.25@ 17. 50 | Good ~ | T00- 800 pounds ............. 13.504 16.25 | 900-1100 pound 13.50@ 16.25 1100-1300 pounds . © 13.5061 16.25 1300-1509 pounds . 13.75@ 16.25 Medium 100-1100 pounds 11.0013 50 | 1100-1300 pounds 11.006113.50 Colamon— 700-1100 pounds “............. [email protected] Heifers Choice— : : 600- 800 pounds ............. 15.006 16.25 300. 1000 pounds ......e00000. [email protected]

600- 800 pounds

ceeersesineas 13.004 15.00 800-1000 pounds ......ee000.. [email protected] Medium —

ol 900 pounds 500- 900 1 pounds

9.50@13 00 8.00@ 9.50

Good ........ .......... [email protected] Medium . .... ... ....... [email protected] Cutter | and common .......... 6.75@ 9.50 CanDner ..............cccvviinn. 5.00@ 6.75 Bulls (all weichts) Beef— Good (all weights) ......... [email protected] Sausage— GOO .....0.ciiireiiienneen [email protected] Medittm ..........c0o00000004 [email protected] Cutter and common 7.50@ 9.50

CALVES (575) Vealers (all weights) Good and choice ............. [email protected] Comiron to wedinm 10.006 16.90 Culls ) 6.00@ 9.50 Feeder and Stocker © ‘Cattle and Calves

Choice— 300- 300 pos nas cresserennns J 30a117 - uUnds ...io0000n0. [email protected] Good~- ¢ 800-1000 pounds 1025G11.75 + TL IETID [email protected] Medium— * 500-1000 pounds ............ [email protected] Common— 500- 900 pounds ............ 7.50@ 8.75

ds Calves (steers) Good and Ehoice— . 11.25913.25 “aienan 091.5} Calves (heifers) Good and Choice

500 pounds down ........... [email protected] | Medium —

$00 pounds down [email protected]

SHEEP AND LAMBS (1700) Ewes hora)

Good and chotce .. 5.00@ 6.25 Medium and good . 3.250 5.00 LAMBS Good and choice ............. [email protected] Medium and good Terernsrange 10.75 gl 2 Common ..................... 8.25@10

IKE’ WILL ALLOW UNIONS IN GERMANY

The allied military government in ‘Germany will dissolve the Nazi-

workers will be permitted to form democratic trade unions, a proclamation issued in the name of Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower told the German people today. The proclamation, 12th in a series explaining AMG plans in Germany, was broadcast to Germany and reported by the FCC. “All forms of free economic _asso‘ciation and eombination among] workers will he permitted, provided | they do not assume any political or militaristic complexion,” the proclamation said.

G. 0. P, HAS SURPLUS CHICAGO, Dec. 15 (U. P.).—For the first time in Republican party history, there is a post-presidential-election surplus. James S. Kemper, chairman of the G. O. P. finance committee, credits the party with $350,000 in surplus campaign funds.

de BR i

13.65@13 ol :

General view of Fontana Dam showing mammoth concrete walls slowly refrigerated to guard them against cracking under the stress The natural heat generated in this great mass of concrete normally would require a half century to completely cool and would weaken the structure, according to York Corp. engineers

set up by their own heat.

who designed the soiling equipme;

FLOWER GROWERS New Navy Beam END PARLEY TODAY

Members of the Indiana Horti-|

cultural. society today will conclude their two-day convention at the Hotel Severin with a talk by Mon-| roe McCown of the war food administration.

Wabash, vice president, and K, T.| Fawcett, secretary-treasurer.

The board of directors includes]

Meredith Reed of Vincennes, Fred| of 300 automobiles if they could Bolton of ' Linton and Laurenz| all be put together,” Keller said. | Development of special machiné ery and application of Chrysler's peacetime method of metal pol- |u

Greene of Lafayette.

Seven growers won “quality plus” |

medals, indicating the production of crops of which more than 90 per | cent will grade U. S. L are: V. V. Clark of Bristol, reliring president; L. .V. Doud & Son of Wabash, R. W. Gregory of Moores- | ville, ‘the Simpson-Orchard Co. of | Vincennes, W, J. Teel of Owensville, Floyd Jacoby of Plymouth and Martin Davis of Daleville. A, silver medal was presented to Roy Tuttle of uitle of Craenfeld.

SATRIITE TOWNS

URGED FOR LONDON

< LONDON, Dec. 15 (U. P.).—Reorganization of Greater London to

raccommodate 10,500,000 population,

* including 1,000,000 outer areas and|

in a new planning report on post-| war London. The report was made by Prof.

|Patrick Abercrombie, private con-

sultant, as a supplement to plans

izing London. Abercrombie recommended building eight to 10 satellite towns outside present London — complete cities each with its own facilities and with population limited to 60,000 each. He said these should please womenfolk who objected to being “decentralized” when such things as shopping facilities were unsatisfactory. The report envisaged four main London “belts” with an area of 2717 square miles and within a radius

{of 35 miles from Charing Cross in

central London. Those areas would be designated a8 inner urban, suburban, “green belt” and an outer county ring. The “green belt” would be devoted largely to recreational facilities where Londoners could get away | from the grayness of the city. In 1938, London had some 6,250,000 population in an area of 2509 square miles,

The CHICAGO STORE

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Dam Refrigerated for Safely -

it.

~Hght

ishing has cut the cost of the reWinners | flectors by 50 per cent and ‘at the time manufacturing time has been stepped up 40 per cent reflectivity creased 15 per cent, the statement

same

and

said.

Agents Fin Corp com Agents Fin Corp pfd..... Ayreshire Coll com Belt R Stk Yds com.

Bobbs-Merrill 4% pra v Central Soya com . Circle Theater com *Comwith Loan 5% pid .... *Delta Elec com . *Electronic Lab com Hook Drug Co com Home T&T Ft Wayne 7% td Ind Asso Tel 57% pfd ... ‘Ind’ & Mich Indpls P & L pfd . { Indpls P & L com “satellite towns,” was urged today | Indpls Railways com

"PAGE. »

Goes 20 Miles

| DETROIT, Dec. 15 (U. P)., —= Chrysler Corp. engineers have developed and the company has produced in farge quantities re- | flectors for U, 8. Navy searchlights capable of throwing a 30,-

000,000-candlepower beam of light The convention yesterday chose| a distance of 20 miles, K. T. Kel-

David Simpson of Vincennes presi- | ler, president, informed stockholddent of the society, L. J. Doud of ers today. So powerful is the new Navy | searchlight that it exceeds the “developed by the headlights

LOCAL ISSUES

Neminal quotations furnished oy anapolis securities dealers.

El pfd

dpls Water pfd

| Indpls Water Class A com. . [Jerr Nat Life com. . Kingan & Co pfd Kingan & Co com Lincoln Loan Co 5%% ptd Lin Nat Life com ee 4 P R Mallory 4%%

begun before the war for re-organ-|®

So Stokely

Amer!

tndpis P&L 3

N Ind Tel

| today,

{ elevators paid $1.67 per bushel for No.

| 1bs

R Mallory com .. N Ind Pub Serv 5% Pub Serv Ind 5% Pub Serv of Ind com Progress Laundry com .. *Ross Gear & Tool com . Ind G & BE 48% ..... Bros pr pf United Tel Co 5% Union Title com

IND! Algers Wins'w RR th. American Loan bs

bs Ch of Com Bldg 4's 61 Citizens Ind Tel Consol Fin 5s [nd Asso Tel go Sas “10.

or better, shelled, old crop, No. 2 white shelled, old crop,

seasons

coven

vere} Indpls Railways A bs 61. eee [ndpls Water Co 3'%n 68 Kokomo Water Wks 6s 88..... 106% Kuhner Packin 09 Muncie Water N Ind Pub Serv 3%s 73.. 48 65 Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 7. Pub Tel 4%s 65 Richmond Water Wks 5s 7. | Trac Term Corp 517 Ces U 8 Machine Corp 5s 52..... *Ex-dividend.

WAGON WHEAT

s4c! corn, No. $1.00%

Up to the close of tne Chicago market | Indianapolis flour mills and grain 1 : red wheat (other grades on their merits), oats, No. 2 white or, No, 2 red, testing 3]

A 146 E. Washington St. . . . .Established Nearly 50 Years

d Open Saturday & Mon. Night Until 9 Clock |

efficiency in-

nd Asked |

13Ve 0 |

2 yellow { per bushel, and | 81.24%.

High Low Allis-Chal .. ¥% 39 + Y% Am Can ...... a 90% + if An Loco 28 27% + % How's + Wi : All-Leathor, Toh JACKETS -— WY or a =~ Ww + %ig + hie

# sniffer” has been developed to help | 30¢

glider pilots to know which way to|Chilcs

turn to get into warm upcurrents. to make plastics from corn, one of its biggest crops. . . The com« merce department reports that Ger-

wh man exporters are selling quanti. ind’ Rayo

ties of tanned and dyed rat tails,

in Balkan markets, where they're Kennecott used as wrist-watch straps. A|<ORS

tanned ratskin is much like ordinary kidskin, they say. . . B. P. Goodrich Co. claims that gloves of

synthetic rubber a= better than |Nas those made of natural rubber. . .

Carnegie Institute scientists are

working on a strain of hemp which |}

doesn’t contain the narcotic marihuana.

WESTERN BUYS. AIRSHIPS NEW YORK, Dec. 15 (U. P.).—

Western Air Lines today announced

it had signed a contract with Doug.

Argentina is hunting ways | Du

Crates

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9

Men's Brand New All-Wool

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Men's Wool and Woolmix

SWEATERS $7%.. $5.95

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- uo

OPEN SATURDAY Meny "TIL ’ jJreLoek,

Board Appointed to Seftle Union and Company

Differences.

WASHINGTON, Dec.’ 15 (U.,P» — A threatened strike on the Seaboard ¢ Airline Railway,’ serving coast states from Florida to Virginia, checked today after President Roosevelt invoked emergency mediation machinery provided in the Railway Labor Act. The President, acting a few hours after a strike call was issued for noon today by the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen, appointed an emergency threeman board to inquire into the dispute and report back to him.in 30 days. Under the Railway Labor Act, appointment of an emergency board has the effect of restraining the union fram carrying ouf the strike until 30 days after the receives the report. D. B. Robertson, president of the brotherhood, announced the strike {call last night. He said it was in| |protest against the railroads al|leged efforts to “coerce and influence” workers to join another (union, [tive engineers, Seaboard General Manager J. C

six east

was

the two brotherhoods. He expressed | any adjustment made ° ner prescribed by the law.”

SNOW SHEETS HAY MARKET NEW YORK, Dec. 15 (U. P.).—

[ers were unable to quote because of the practical suspension of

nows up-state,

year ended Sept. | $2.2 22 a common share or $1.61 previous year.

Back the Invasion

Take Up to 6 MONTHS TO PAY

ARVIN

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Annee anna =

Slick Tires Are Dangerous

PRESIDENT NPS Con Spring 80 RAILWAY STRIE

Far Behind?

By Science Service CHICAGO, Ill, Dec. 15.—A special -coil’ spring, and a shock absorber, i§ ‘the basis of a' new sus-pension-type tractor seat which will take all the jolts out of riding the farm “tractor over rough plowed land and ease.the work of the driver. It may perhaps decrease the high degree of kidney ang skeletal disorders among farmers blamed on the all-day-long tractor jafring. The new tractor seat was developed here by the Monroe Auto Equipment Co., which developed and has made thousands of seats for war tanks, The coil spring is placed directly under the driver's seat, and the triple-action hydraulic £hock absorber at theerear. The absorber is similar to those commonly used in automobiles, Together the two devices give stability that enables the driver to stay level while the tractor bobs over rough ground, The construction of the new device is simple and inexpensive, and it can be installed, on all

President |

the brotherhood of locomo- |

{the company’s readiness to accept | ‘in the man-'!

makes of tractors. It can also be applied to truck seats.

OVERGRAZED WEST MAY BE RETURFED

By Science Service WASHINGTON, Dec. and better

now depleted {overgrazing and drought.

{hybridization is aescribed

states Dr.

{of plant biology.

15.—Bigger bluegrass stands will Wroton sald the issue was strictly [some day wave over range lands in po “pressure” in the sale and that a Jurisdictional argument between the west,

{of the new kinds of grasses through | in the {new yearbook of the Carnegie In-| {stitute of Washington; first copie _of which were presented to the in- | Quotations in the hay market were stitutions trustees here today by temporarily withdrawn today. Sell- President Vannevar Bush. One of the species used in the ar- new hybrids is a giant grass, reach% rivals following the recent heavy ing a height of 6 feet, that grows Receipts were ex-|in parts of the Pacific Northwest. pected to continue negligible untii| Crossed with the more conventional 1 transportation conditions improve, Kinds of bluegrass, it contributes Brotiers, fryers and roasters, under § mt something of its size and rapidity | ibs. 3 Liquid Carbonic Corp. net profit of growth, besides other desirable, 30 $1,747,401 or characteristics, vs. $1,300,935 Spoehr,

H A. ara chairman of the division small, ie ho

WNCA PROBE NEARING ING CLOSE

E J. Noble's oble’s Testimony -

Will End Hearing on

‘Pressure’ Sale.

WASHINGTON, Dec. 15 0. P). —A congressional investigation of the alleged “forced”. sale of New

an end today with Edward J. Noble, undersecretary of commerce under Harry Hopkins and now head of ‘the Blue Network, as the star witness, The investigation started months ago when Donald Flamm, former station owner, charged that he sold she station to Noble for $400,00 less than he should have received under threat that his failure to sell would cost him his broadcasting license. After a five-hour session yester|day, four of which were spent with’ I'nomas G. Corcoran, former presi[dential adviser, Chairman Clarence F. Lea (D. Cal) of the comffiittee |investigating the federal communications commission, said the WMCA hearings * would end after Noble's testimony. Wari charged the deal had greased from the White boi aby He said he had been led to believe thai if he did not sell |{WMCA, Noble, as an administration official, could bring about the cancellation of his. FCC license. Noble has asserted that there was

through the purchase price of $850,000 was Creation more than the station was worth.

| FLORIDA CROPS FROZEN

JACKSONVILLE, Fla, Dec. 15 | (U. P..—All tender vegetables in the Everglades area of southern Florida were killed by this mbrming's cold, reports from state farmers’ markets indicated today, | and other.produce was damaged.

LOCAL PRODUCE

Heavy breed hens, 23c. Leghorn hens,

white and barred rocks, 8c; coled springers, 23¢. leghorn springers, 21e. Old roosters; l4c Tecate, S6¢;

We a7 ~Current grade ade A medium, 39¢; grade i rade, 36c. . 50e, PR er ra

Roce hie Co:

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HARRISON THERMOSTATS

ror all cars, as low S| 00

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