Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1944 — Page 6
AT PEAK OF WAR
‘year; in fact, it was the highest for
PAGE 6
STATE BUSINESS
I. U. Reports Its Index for November Advanced 10 Points .
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Dec. 26.— The preliminary index for Indiana Husiness during November rose more than 10 points, thereby establishing a new wartime peak for business in|
Indiana. This was reported today in the Indiana Business Review released today by the I. U. husiness bureau, The previous peak since Pearl Harbor was last February when the index rose to 103 per cent above normal. “Many factors combined to expand business in the state in November,” the publication says, “most of which were related to the
increase in the rate of war goods production and_the sixth war lpan | campaign. Another cOHntributing factor was the absence of the usual | peace-time decline in distribution | and production in November.
Trade Increased
“This year because of the increasing needs of the armed forces, | production of many kinds of goods rose in November in ‘¢ontrast to the usual reduction in output. Also, | because of full employment and high earnings, retail trade continued to expand over October, a condition which does not prevail in| peace time.
“Industrial employment and pay- | merce: here comes Texas industry—making itself at home on the range. Gold reserve.. 20,646,038,967
cand ibs Tt
in the oil region,
Symbolic of industrial growth in Texas is this new cycling plant The Lone Star state's wealth of natural resources
is an important factor in the movement of industrial plants to this
vast region.
The world's largest. oil butadiene plant is located at
Port Neches, processing petroleum for synthetic rubber.
By JOHN O'ROURKE NEA Correspondeng GALVESTON, Dec. 26.—Glve way, please, you chambers of com-
rolls declined from the October | Astonishing changes have taken place in Texas during the last few
ON LEND-LEASE
N. A. M. Says WL S. Unwilling to Send Industrial Equipment.
le
failed so far to sign its fourth]
| The N. A. M. intimated that it a
lend-lease large amounts of indus- | trial equipment which the United |o
tracts run out.
News said, Russia requested large] amounts of industrial equipment under the fourth protocol and the U.| 8. offered to fill a limited amount e act which permits outright sale. ly more than 10 weeks ago, but no answer has been received, the News sald.
U.S. STATEMENT |b
WASHINGTON, Dec ernment experMes and receipts for the 0 current fiscal year through Dec. 22, com-| pared” with a year Ago: This Year
Last Year
{Cash balance
Expenses .. $46,183.720,672 $43,163,677,600 War spending. 42,082,256,680 40,183,185,147 a Receipts 19,253,769,104 18,327,357,069 Net deficit 26,029,951,088 24,836,319,381
22,547,681,377 21,784,784 877 231,519,120,510
12,357,015,500 11,594,270,865 | 169,797,759,744 22,003,949,942
Working bal Public debt
) LEARI! 8 level, although stepped-up de-|y.ars The Lone Star state now makes ships, tires, airplanes, fabrics CloanaeANATOLIS ¢ or * ING tt 000 s mands for heavy artillery and |,.q4 potteries. Bote friend:
munitions more than offset the reduced need for other types of mili-
tary goods. Employment in the retail trades, however, increased during the month. In normal
times, the trend of employment and payrolls in November is downward.”
Coal Sets Record
The review explained that because of the urgent need for war production, caused by the events of the European conflict, the demand for steel was -the strongest since late -last summer. Output in the Chicago district, which has been consistently high for many months, rose slightly above the
There is a veneer of cowboy h
WEATHER CUTS
Prices Rebound to Ceilings
At Local Yards as 4200 Arrive.
nn
October volume, “Coal production, while slightly lower than during the preceding month, was 16 per cent above the production in November of last
any November since 1926. Receipts of livestock at principal markets in the state were about 2 per cent larger than during the previous month, although they were about 1 per eent less than in November of last year Bank debits rose about 2 per ,ecent compared to the preceding month. This was: largely a result of the sixth war loan campaign since ordinarily bank debits decline in November. Newspaper advertising, which was seasonally higher than during any previous month this year, showed the largest volume for any November on record.
N. Y. Stocks
Icy roads and zero weather cut | down hog receipts at the Indian-| apolis stockyards today and pushed | prices baek to the government ceil- |
ers.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (4200) - 140 pounds 160 pounds 180 pounds ... 200 pounds . 00- 220 240 270 - 300
pounds . pounds pounds .... pounds pounds pounds .....ceenicnn
pounds Packing Sows Cood to Cho'ce~ 270- 300 pounds .
Prices on hogs were 20 to 30 cen over Saturday's, rebounding to the $14.80 ceiling for 160 to 400-pound-
. 12.156 13 25 13.25@ 14.80
... |ical's
4 14.00@ 14.05
" [enterprises Great new plants,
| tremendous airfields, sprawling hos- |
{garnished with the native touch; Indiana and lower Michigan sales | it pro {15-7allon hats, loud shirts, cordial manager for Magnavox Co., radio- | 1945.
Igrecters with iron hand-shakes and | phonograph division, G. H. Smith, | been with {whisky before breakfast. ®
| But underneath is something far |different. . Many of these vast new Texas industrial plants are subsidiaries of industries whosé natural |home has always been considered elsewhere. It is outside money moving to Texas. And in certain
cases the new plant may in time]
{overshadow the parent. ' Reason
ings, the war food" administration ®'® plenty high-powered. It Is reported. | simply because the pressure of By 11 o'clock only 4200 hogs haa economics and the war have arrived. Other receipts included |SPeeded the dispersal of certain 1500 cattle, 500 calves and 1000 industries away from congested sheep. areas and toward the source of
‘that Texas,
the raw materials, Plant Builds Town
tremendous
build and run the place.
the-future
at local color that overlays these new
is not the higher magnetic powers of boosters deep in the heart of Texas, although they
ts the required materials. It happens bigger than England | and Wales combined, has a lot of ° (raw materials and a lot of space. [In certain cases it has been easier to move a population than to move
Such is the case of Dow Chem- . magnesium ‘**|p'ants at Freeport, near Galveston. ...|A whole town was Built up here to ‘ [take care of the people needed to *[email protected] Near it Is the equally world-of-styrene plant of the
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
SOVIETS BALK: [Change in Withholding Tax
than your last one in December. larger, but for molt workers it will be smaller. represent a change in the withholding tax, approved by the President May 29 but not effective until January 1. : @ ;
under a section of the.lend-lease| week instead of the old $4.60.
table) man's employer will hold back $7.40 they stopped at that point.
y
STOP-NUT BAN
Is Ahead for the New Year| “T0 BE LIFTED
: ; By 8. BURTON HEATH NEA Staff Writer
NEW YORK, Dec. 26.—Your first pay. in January will be different
In a few instances it may be slightly
The difference will
, The new withholding rate is intended to cover the entire income tax
WASHINGTON, Dec, 26 (U. P.).—lon wages and salaries up to $5000 | The National Association of Manu- a facturers said today that Russia had it does come fairly
year. It can hardly be exact, but close. In’ genral, on typical wage grades, the
i |withholding after January 1 will lend-lease agreement with the U. 8.|taxe out d trifle more than the
ctual tax shown by the tables for
was because the Soviets wanted to those wage scales. For example, a single man with-.
ut dependents, earning $35 a week
States was unwilling to send them.|the year around, will owe $260 on In its publication N. A. M. News his 1045 wages if he files the with-
the association said top government holding receipt and lets the governofficials ‘were predicting Russian ment figure his tax. Under this withdrawal from al] lend-lease year's withholding rates, his em-
agreements after the present con- ployer will have held back only {3239.20, and this man will have to According to foreign economic ad- pay the difference, or $20.80, on minjstration officials, the N. A. M./ March 15.
New Rates Effective
Under. the new rates this man's mployer will hold back $5.10 a At ear's end, he will have paid $265.20
A contract was sent to Moscow against a tax of $260, and can claim a refund of $5.20
Or consider a married man with
no dependents except his wife and a wage of $55 a week.
This year is employer withheld $6.20 a week,
26 (U. P.).—Gov-| Or $322.40 in all, which lacked $55.60
f covering his tax (taken from the of $378. Next year that
week. At the end of the year,
refund of $6.80.
paid his tax by $46.20, for which he must apply and wait. Next year | the deduction will be only $5.60, or $2901.20 for the year. If he uses the tax table, he will owe $5.80 on March 15.
Method Is Accurate
These three examples typify the fact that the new withholdings, whether .they fake slightly more or slightly less than the actual tax computed by the table, come much closer to keeping the taxpayers accurately paid-up “than the 1944 withholding rates did. The withholdings are designed to be reasonably accurate only up to $5000. For those who earn more than that, the withholdings wily be increased but they still will leave increasingly large amounts that will have to be paid in a lump sum at the end of the year. Nobody questioned that the above-$5000 taxpayer should have the right to pay as he earns. But by the time {they had worked out tables up to [$5000 a year, congress and “the [treasury seemed to feel that they
{had done enough work for 1944, so
They did not neglect, however, to
instead of having to pay $5560 in imake all tax delinquencies payable a lump sum, the worker can claim [in a lump sum, on the theory that
[the great bulk of the voting tax-
The worker whose withholding is | payers are in the under-$5000 class,
everal dependents. For illustrajon, let's take a married man with
three children, or other dependents
going to be’lower is the one with and won't have to pay much with
| their returns—so why worry about |the rest?
| In any event, if you notice that
BETIKOFER DIRECTS SALES [in addition to his wife. He earns your tax withholding is up or down FT. WAYNE, Ind., Dec. 26.—Rob- $75 a week. His income tax taken a few cents, or even a dollar or so |pitals and encampments, are all ert D. Betikofer has been appointed | from the table for 1944 is $297, and a week, don’t assume that your em-
bably will be tHe same for ployer's bookkeeepr has made a This year his employer has mistake. holding $6.60 a week, or will be the new pay-as-you-earn
The chances are that it
national sales manager, said today.'$343.20, so that he now has over- rates taking effect.
before it goes
GOES BY RAIL
to sea
300- 330 AS oiirinenn 14.00 14.08 a . . 1 | 330- 360 prey 4 hb rhE prea 13 984 14 0s | Monsanto Chemical Co. - Styrene is Allis-chal Jr a 3 m4 8 400 pounds .....eeieenne 13.90G14.05| another constituent of synthetic Am lot 304 244 0 417400 450 pounds .....e.iiine. 12.804114.00 | rubber, among other things. AcAm Ton Sai dat Bont JJ50. 300 DOURAS: >» vvvessse cur [email protected] | tyally, the stuff can be altered to Am T&T .....164% 1864's 164% + 4) "350. 500 pounds . [email protected] | make most anything from a glass. Am Tob B ... 65 64% 64's — 14 Slaughter Pigs - ro Am Water W.. 8% 8% 8% — “Wafpyaqaud vo Choice like plastic to a gum. Anaconda <2 28 C3 + el Te0."130 pounds 100001250] In other cases, the industry has Armour & Co.. 6'% 64 ly — M . ’ fo Atchison 8 82% 82% =v | erotce CATTLE (1300) selected a town for its geographic ald Tans. We me 23%... ‘| 00- 900 pounds ...... 16506 11.28 location—because it was near the Bem Ind Loan los 1 10% - h J%-110 pounds Ceriarenas 1630011 50 raw source—and built a plant. Ext t — . pounds .....eeeneees Q Borden ...... 33% 33% 33% + 1a|1300-1500 pounds ....ces..s... 16 30¢ 17.05 | Perts teach the new skill to the Pore. Warner, 34 nA Wh 2" Goo 500 a 13.756 16.50 existing population. Such is Gena r r . | 700- ounds ... ee 156 £ ’ Ches '& Ohio. $1 = 49% 49% — 1a| 900-1100 Da "1378416 50 eral Tire company's new tire plant Curtiss-Wr .... 5% 8% 5% ee 1100. 1300 pounds . . 3.33418 3 at Waco, which was opened with Deuglas Aire .. 69) 60° 69°! “+ 1300-1500 pounds ....eeeevinnn « . : 4 Pon 8 1 13, F 1 700-1100 d 1125 os 7% AP Prapriate rng FR vl mods M en Electric .. 38% 38 38 — 700+ pounds ....oeeeeeen 5413.75 | Wi S Ago. S - : 1.4; : : Gen Poods -... ay 4% av + Mh 1100-1300 Pounds «.....eevonee 112301375 | armistice job cost $6,000,000 and will odern shipbuilding is mainly the n otors 63% 6 a3 — Comnmon— oe * * ’ Greyhound Cp. 23% 23 23 = V¥| 700-1100 pounds ..........e.0 [email protected] | turn out 3000 tires a day. Hat Corp A. 1% 1% Th ee assembly of countless parts brought to maw Lm ae wae These. are. ghynthetic tires, of ' ° ’ nt Harvester. 80' . Ya — Yl 600- 800 pounds ............. [email protected] ese are synthetic tires, i . . . fohns-Man 183% 103% 195 - 14 200-1000 pounds .....ieeieens [email protected] | poutse; and since the latest de the shipyards by rail from distant points. Kroger G&B .. 361 38 ~~ 38%... | 600- 800 pounds ............. [email protected] | velopmenits in synthetics indicate Yockheed ar 20% 20 . 20% - " Joo. 100 pounds ..ieeennnnine 13.26@ 15.50 | that such tires are about as good . . Loew's .. .... 78% 75 78 .... | 500. 900 pounds ....... cee [email protected] | AS prewar types, at least for pas- A "flat top" requires about Martin _ (Glenn) 25's 25% 28% — N|common Akr ight as well rn BE BEES ESE eT ea onsen cer MT ER A ey 3 ne -" Cows (all weights) “7 |get used to the idea a : : : AS L ee % r , 3 . " , Mt ers 1h iN i “ agfgoos TIN 1013 in the tire business for keeps For 28,500 tons of steel, including turbines, Jentral.. A 2 cove [pa ag tlm saat ’ » Ohio OU 1 174 £171 =y Cutter and common .......... SIMIE08 Svervihing needed Thre. or oll boilers, plates, semi-fabricated Packard . .... BY Bly BY ... anner -... ........ 8.50@ 6.78 [thetic tire is right there, practically y P ) Pm Ar. 1003, 10003 + 1a| Beet Bus 1a WaNIAM) squirting out of the ground. Not : enney ee “+ - . . Penn RR 33ve 2% 33 — 1s] Good (all weights) ......... 11.00@12 50 | only ‘Texas, but neighboring states, structures, anchors, chains, pipe and Phelps Dodge. 3 8 20% + 8a list y. [email protected]| 88 far as is economically pracrocter 4 Ta The = 1p W0O0QA . ........ ioooede Pullman ...... 7 MWe = 1} Medium . [email protected] |ticable, will get their tires from t. Fire Gil Iw ie ded Ti] cutter and common "| 1808 9.0 | nis plant ee innumerable other parts; also cu 19 19 — 8 LVES (! his . Revo Tob B 31% 3 3 -— la d and Yeslery an weigh) als 00 As factories move closer to their h ds of f £1 ber f henley ist.. 38 4 Te == 1} ood and choice Cereerires 004 Schentey Dist. 3 BH — mmen te medi la 0g 1.50 raw materials and are bullt to thousands of feet of lumber for Bocony. Vacuum 13% 13% 1314 — Ye CVI dor nb Becdin Cave wd 580 take care of the nation's needs on ‘os \ — cher ® A . . Sid Brands 314 i 2a 1 a Steers a regional basis, Texas is certain . shoring, scaffolding and deck work. 8td O Cal . 38 3% 37% + Ya |Cholce— to grow as an industrial state. Sud oi nds . 1% Bie 33% - 1 X0- 0 pounds Veevsvaaeea iu Le mt eee About 202 miles of I cabl t { , 857 55 8 — . unas oe. Serene Texas Co .. .. 4814 48% 484 — 13] Good LOCAL ISSUES ou lles of metal cable § 3 Rubber . 5 5 81 — ta 3%. Sve pounds reertees “ese Jo. na Nominal quobtations furnished by . t . 58" 58'% — - u ee I : Warner Bros. 13 13% 1314 + io] Medium— anapolia securities dealers. alone add up to 288,900 pounds. Nesting Hl ik 1 1% —- 13 J0-1009 pounds ......oeenees [email protected] en) a “ “ , . OmMmOn Agents Fin Corp com ....eoees ‘ coy : . fa THT 800- 900 pounds . .......... 1800 8.18|Agents Pin Corp pid And into the ship's communication BUSINESS AT GLANCE [ogg amd crgier Arne ol ‘Be s com. 500 pounds down . 11.35013.35{ Bobbs-Merrill com .. } Medium -= BObt Mer system go 975 telephones, enough for By UXNITZD PRESS 500 pounds down .. «oo 9.00011.38 | *Bobbs-Merrill 4% pfd F. E. Myers & Bros. Co. fiscal year | good and Chater Tore Circle. Theater COM :..4eeees . an average town of 5,000 people. ended Oct. 31 net income $700,673 or 200 pounds down .. . [email protected] y Somwith Loan 8% pid.. " $3.50 a share vs. $570,851 or $2.85 a! 500 pour *Delta Elec con ........ceeves u oh ’ “. pounds down 8 [email protected] | *Electronic Lab com beasans 8% share previous fiscal year. SHEEP AND LAMBS (1000) *Hook Drug Co com 16% 18% It takes more than 1,000 freight cars to: Good and chome™® IOI) 0G 0.751 1d Atec Te) 39 pid Teal an C © “ v . h Crean ans Leh . . . Dayton Rubber Manufacturing Co. | S070 MG Che, ooo 3788 550] *Ind & Mich E pid..... Jos 10 haul the material for an aircraft carrier. year ended Oct. 31 net profit $781,- . 3 th sindpis P & 1 pid... iY 3 { Jood ROICe +o. iinvinies A5@15 I s ; com ... al, 2 DE BA mye gr VS. | Medium and Ro ‘a . HE HE tndpls Railways Jom . tls ‘as / 99 a share previous Common vireriresaesses. [email protected] | Indpls Water seanas “ has : hip by.th d fisc Indpls Water Class A com .... 18% .... Multiply that shi ousands al year. WAGON WHEAY Jet Nat Life com | LL ABT PY Py Houston Lighting & Power Co. 12], UP to the close of the Chicago market Kingan & © i yaviisaty 3 : buil fi val d * 12{15day, Indianapolis flour mills and grain (Ean & Co €om oo td. of others being built for naval an mule viet Nov. 30 net income ciyrators' paid $1.61 per bushel for Ro. J, Liueoln lash Co SW% pid.. a 8 bv ,930,714 or $4.94 a common share eat (other grades on their merits): (ep R Mallory 449% «..oovees 28% . oats, No. 2 white or No. 3 red, testing 33 9 — wha VS. $3,114,702 or $5.60 a share pre-|ibs. or better, 4c; corn, No. 2 yellow |N tnd tub Sere 5% ooorsese. 20 cargo service—and you can see what vious 12 months. thelied. ld crop, 81.00% ber bushel and |pPyo Serv Ind 8% ...... 109 X : A % a tremendous job the railroads do ihe bd Kemet Sl nu “ee . . * n, Z Stokely Bros pr pf ....ves ees 119% 18% 0 help build our war fleet. des United Tel Co 8% sunesenen n aes Bonds of the United States Government, Bim Te oom OND i T Algers whey RR jn . 10 we ’ 2 t American an “es “as “ee its érritories and Insular Possessions American Loan 4 48 (11111108 11 BUY UNITED STATES - 0 om s “hans ee . . Citizens Ind Tel 4%s 61 ......103 es WAR BONDS AND STAMPS Municipal and Corporate. Securities. Consol PI Ss 80... ..seeees 88 ; : ‘ 107 ' od: Real Estate Bonds and Preferred Stocks 5 BUY U, 8 WAR BONDS AND STAMPS = . re RR fen ¢ : lism
bs 52 “hanes
>
~ PENNSYIVANIA
a
“lo.
But SEC Has Not Passed on Information Filed by Company.
PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 26 (U. P.). —The securities and exchange commission, lifting its trading ban tomorrow on the common stock of the
Elastic Stop-Nut Corp of America, announced today that it has not
v
‘| passed on information it has gottep
from the company or from its investigation of the. firm's financial structure. . The-ban was invoked Nov. 29, a rfew hours after the suicide of William T. Hedlund, Elastic president. The investigation, under adjournment until Jan. 2, was prompted by Hedlund’s death and rumors concerning the. company’s financial structure and dealings.
Big Loss Shown
Amendments filed by the firm include financial statements which reflect net sales for the six-months period up to May 31, 1934, of $23,089,627 and net sales for the eleven
reported, after provisions for federal income and excess profits taxes for the two respective periods is $1,025,516 and $1,152,477. Unfilled orders declined from $25,798,600 on Dec. 1, 1943, to $5,418,000 on Oct. 31, 1944. Operating losses for K August, September and October, after taxes, were $134,000, $35,000 and $37,000, respectively, Losses in the sale of a
also reflected. The company stated that additional shell fuse contracts are being
which, if secured, will defer any de-
of its Lincoln, Neb., plant until they are completed. Production of selflocking nuts for the month of October was shown to be approxi-
_ TUESDAY, DEC. 26, 1944
COMMISSION VETOES CAPITAL TRANSIT BID
"PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 26 (U. P). ~The securities and exchange commission refused to approve the single bid which Capital Transit Co., Washington, D. C,, had accepted from 24 underwriters headed by Alex Brown & Sons, Baltimore, for offering its $12,500,000 principal amount of first and refunding mortgage bonds, ! The price was 97% cents which the underwriters would reoffer to the public at $1. The public offering had been scheduled for yesterday but was postponed indefinitely. “We are not satisfied that come petitive conditions were maintained or that the price to the company and the underwriters’ spread are {proper,” the ~ commission said, “therefore, we cannot release the jurisdiction which has been reserved or approve the price and spread.”
average rate of production for the fiscal year of 1943. Production of samples and arrangements for marketing a selfanchoring nail proceeded until September, the company states, when it
months up to Oct. 31, 1944, of $35,- |
discussed with the war department
cision with respect to the disposal
mately 23 per cent of the monthly
was informed that a conflicting {patent had been issued. After un{successful negotiations with the patentee, it was decided to abandon ithe original self-anchoring nail and
182,512. The amount of net income | ro0eed with 8 new and improved
'self-anchoring nail. A patent was {applied for Dec, 15. The amendments disclose also | that R. Miles. Warner, director of {the company, resigned on Nov. 22 ‘and that Harry K. Werst, vice presi{dent in charge of manufacturing, {and Walter J. Dreves, vice president |and comptroller, have infgrmed the {company of their intentions to re-
$3,362,387 inventory for $195,653 is sign effective Jan. 31 and March 1,
respectively.
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens, 23c. Leghorn hens,
under §
19¢c. Brotlers, fryers and roasters, 118 37c; leg-
{11s.. white and barred rocks, {horn springers, 24c. Olid roosters, 14c. Eggs - Current receipts, large, 44c; grade A mediu small, 29¢; no grade, 3 Butter—No 50¢. {48c: No 2. 36¢c
36c; grade A . 390; grade A
Butterfat—No. 1,
'
ht $ Serving the Nation ASN ed he rnd Fr
I f
304 bow go thi i forthe Comat
pe .
*
TUESDA
APPRO MAI Pleasant 8 Corner | To (
"The southea Run blvd. and recommended proposed new at the school The recomm by the buildir board of scho The. plot, wt acres, is with homes of 90 p now attending in one: mile o homes.
Park B
. The closene field and Garf out by the con of the site. T said that the proved the ch The park cx port said, hav the parkway and construct Pleasant run, The report re ration of veh
traffic and th
to the school of Madison av hazards. The report Conkle, chair baugh, A. B. Gaughey.
HIROHITC IN ‘CR
By U Emperor Hi today that th tering the “er He exhortec jects to “int unity” and co for “crushing The message imperial rescr: session of th Japanese. Dom
LONDON, D Tokyo said toc war office has pointment of the Japanese tion failed to The shift m the loss of n the Philippine failure of Jape off Superfortes anese homelal
LEYTE N M’ARTHU
ALLIEI Philippines, D Douglas Ma wearing his 1 beaten out of lection of Fil] tralian silver ¢
- aides.
The word been promote eral of the a problem. No five stars in a ere. A Filipino si township was | up job, and in the new badge down, and in up with two designating M
HUNT NA
-ON LOOS
PHOENIX, —Federal age today combed for 19 Germ: still at large break Saturda Col. William officer of Pap camp, sald I only six of th had been cap fact the cam Phoenix and desert, ‘with r the vicinity.
FUNERAL
FOR FR
DETROIT, neral arrangen today for foi Murphy, 46, % last night a fi stricken with his home. Murphy, wh ernor under ( Waggoner, wa graft conspira time of his fessed to the
BRITAIN IKE M
LONDON, | liable sources Dwight D. Eis the honorary of Britain, Such a rap honorary be United cept an actua government, The grantin baton to Eises come from tl proval of the
REPORT C!
