Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1945 — Page 6

"THE . INDIANAPOLIS, TIMES

wil We Be As Arivious to ‘Buy| “Rter the War As We Think Now? TranspoMtation-

By ROGER BUDROW. = rhimemmmmnie

“who: get shocked every now

“as. rosy

WE iy PERENNIAL OPTIMISTS |

don't turn out to Take the ahs

thing vou would like to buy abulated, these answers show | ~that 1,500,000 families want to buy $7 billion worth of new homes six | months after the war ends; 6,000,000 families $700 million worth of | holgsehiola. Sool anc

ae _— Ro - 300,000,000 worth of new cars, etc, ‘It’s ea sy to thinkof things to buy, espe cially] ~when._vou have a good job and money in bank, credit is good. But— "Who is doing the saying? bulk is by

The those who had the saving

habit before the war—and who early today after it had destroyed The union has: contended that most |

don't spend foolishly How much is in available cash? “Bince 1939 abouf. $100 billion has been saved, we're told. But it's not"all ready cash. Much went toward life insurance and pensions; much toward paying off

mortgages and all kinds of debts in- |

curred in less prosperous times. Then there is the psychological factor. If people are confident of good times ahead, they'll spend. If it looks like rough sailing after, the war, they'll hang onto every. nickel. ‘Better not take too much boom for granted, tJ s » CIGARET DOPE: The army and navy have contracted for 26 billion smokes to be .delivered in

the | and your | A fire, estimated to have caused up~|and imposed another obstacleto the

and then because the facts as -our wishful thinking.

wers we give to that now -popular- question: “If “the war should end. tomorrow, what is the OMe stocks, and the lack of imports for|

most?”

BALL PLANT FIRE UNDER CONTROL

$500, 000 Darftage Believed i Las In No. 1 Unit AU MURCIS,

MUNCIE, Ind., Jan. 3 (U PIw=|

| wards of $500,000 damage atthe] |Ball. Brothers Co. No. 1 packing| plant, was brought under control

la group of sheet metal Buildings. About two-thirds of Muncie's fire department force ¢f 60 men fought the flames from 10 o'clock last night | to keep the conflagration confined | {to the packing plant. None was) reported hurt. : ‘Tons of cardboard boxes, paper and other material, including machinery used in packing glassware, were destroyed.

main two-story buildings caved in| under the intense heat. The plant cafeteria, where the fire was believed to have originated, and the machine shop were destroyed. Fire Chief Archie McCabe said

: tile Workers has complained that

The packing plant covers an area | of about two hlocks, and one of the

FRANCE FACES TEXTILE LAGK

a May Cause Industry

Curtailment,

PARIS, “Jan. 3 (U. P).—The French textile industry because of German appropriation of reserve

| i |

four years; approached the point of sigs down as 1945 began. A lack of “shipping has prevented the arrival of planned imports during the fall and winter months, and {a reliable survey shows that the ins {dustry is now operating at’ ~only {about. one-tenth of capacity. Even

{if cotton. and wool were to begin|™

{arriving immediately, nine months would be required, it was said, before workers could be reassembled and the wheels begin turning. full ispeed. The ‘National Federation of Tex

the government has added to the woes and hardships-of-its members;

ultimate resumption of textile man|ufactures by. stopping unemploy~ iment - benefits to textile: workers living in rural and village areas. [6f the workers live in such areas. | Shipping Causes Slump Here are a few figures on the po-

sition of the French industry: French mills before the war con{sumed 270,000 long tons of cotton | Vearly. The government set up an | importation plan, envisaging . the delivery in France of 133,000 long tons of cotton by June; 1945, but with only five months to go,ynone | has been received because .of the! lack of shipping. French civilian I'eonsumption of cotton goods in 1938 was 220,000 long tons. The government planned to im- | port 35,000 tons of wool by June, 1945, of which- 10,000 tons were to arrive before February. - The shipbut

Plenty of ‘Weigh’ to This Askar

“Hpound -hogs dropped to $14.65,

nit : on onl When a huge aircraft carrier drops her mudhook there's. one whale of a splash—and the comparative size of the sailors and the anchor in this photo tells you why. They're cleaning rust, barnacles and other marine growths off anchor of flagship of navy carrier force in port after long Stretch in the. Pacfiie. ;

TELEGRAPHERS' Soe Shemp UNIONS BATTLE» 270% °

imes Spcias NLRB Election This Week.

TTE, Jan. | oan Prifogle, Franklin county Develops Communistic Issue.

farmer, who is well beyond his 70th birthday, was today declared winner of the 1944 soybean yield contest in Indiana with a produc= tion of 47.3 bushels per acre. This is the official contest spon= sored by the Indiana Corn Grow=-

4500 PORKERS

Prices "Dip 10 to 15_Cents| With: Top Sales at. $14, 65. :

The local ‘livestock™ marKet was active today. with hogs selling 10 to 15 cents lower than yesterday. About 4500 hogs were stranded here from yesterday's sales due to| an embargo © declared by railroads+ on porker shipments eastward. This | was due to storm conditions there, the war food administration re-| ported. The top prices for 160 to Receipts were estimated at 1500 hogs, 1900 cattle, 800 calves and 2300 sheep. Re

Simp GOOD TO CHOICEHOGS (1500) 120- 140 pounds $13.25 13.75 140+ 160 pounds “33.7640 14 60, 160-3180 pounds” 146000 14.65" 180- 200 pounds .. ov 14.606014.65 200 22¢ pounds vo 14.606014.68 220- 240 pounds * + [email protected] 240- 270 pounds. 14.5040 14.65 270- 300 pounds ~"300= 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds Medium - 160- 220 pounds ',........ s Packing Sows Good to Cho'ce—

I HARTA AS 14.4070 14.45

. 12.75@ 14.60 |

«+ 13.95@ 14.00 +. 13.90% 14.00 « 13.90@ 14.00 13.904 14.00

pounds . pounds . pounds

13.9014.00 + [email protected]

[email protected]%

pounds pounds ...

“Slaughter Pigs Medium to Choive— 90- 120 pounds CATTLE" 1900)

Steers | [email protected] | 16:50@ 17.50 16.50@ 17:50

[email protected]

Cl.oice— 700- 90. poundas 900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds ood— . 700-° 900 pounds 900-1100 . pounds 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds Medium — 700-1100 pounds 1100-1300 “pounds Colnmone * 700-1100 pounds

+ 14.006216.50 «+ 14.006216.50 + [email protected] [email protected] |

11.25@ 14.00 | 11.25@14, 0

“325011. 25]

Cholce— 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds

[email protected] sevrnne saeess 15 [email protected]

STRANDED HERE

14.50 14.55 | .

sxisgesanenras 16 50@ 17:05 ¥ |

a A ho]

| WEDNESDAY, IAN. 3, , 108

Toil Tov Will Need

"Mending Before If Is Used

. (Second of ‘Three Articles)

By ROGER_W.

W. STUART

Scripps-Howard Staff Writer " WASHINGTON, Jan..3.~Whatever problems lie ahead in the matt of disposing of America's vast accumulation of ‘surplus war g00¢

“Uncle Sam is, in one respect at least, starting off his time on a bett#

footing than at the end of world war I.

* Already a single agency, the surplus property administration, been created to handle the sale and distribution of the plants;

equipment and land whose total value will approach ‘100 billion dollars. Se It was two-and a half years after the 1918 armistice before a_comparable office was established. Meanwhile, every department in the government had been selling goods in arly way it chose and to whomever it pleased, ofttimes with bad results, Pending the swearing-in of Robert A. Hurley of Connecticut and Lt. Col. Edward Heller of" California, two of the three members who will serve on the new surplus property board, a fempofary. administrator has-been ~named==Mason “Britto; formerly vice president of McGrawHill Publications in New Yerk. It is possible that Mr. Hurley and Col. Heller will- not-organize their

|office until~the third member—ex-

pected to be silver-haired Senator Guy M. Gillette, - Iowa lame duck— is appointed by President Roosevelt early in January. He has not been named yet' because of a rule “prohibiting a sitting senator from taking an office created by congress during his term.

As for - the -appointments, there were loud protests when the President sent.the names of Mr. Hurley and Col. Heller to the senate, and | there was a noisy battle before that | body approved them. Business men. with broad backgrognds, it was agreed, were needed for board members. But apparently Mr, ‘Hurley. qualifies chiefly on the | ground that he. is a Democratic national committeethan and a friend | of Harry Hopkins. Cal. Heller, a San Francisco financier, is~the husband of a Democratic national‘committeewoman from California.

act are already being discussed. . Meanwhile, here are some of things that will -have to be 80k one way or another: & 1. War plants -valued at mo} than $20 billion, of which aA quarters represents public: inv i ment. Since much of this is § specialized facilities (aircraft estal lishments a third, shipyards a thh explosive = manufacturing * ano large segment) probably not mo ‘than 30 per cent can be used f¢ non-military purposes. oy Non-durable consumers 800d Such “a8 shoes, Blankets, dr bandages, ‘clothing and foodstuff Much of these things, of course, afl overseas. - The’ suggestion has b made that ¥t ‘be turned over to~ united nations relief and rehabili tion administration as part of United States’ $1,500,000,000 cor tribution to the relief agency.

Should Surplus Be Frowen

3. Machine tools. The total vaiy of these items is difficult to. est! mate, but it is generally agreed thi in little more than three years’ tin] America has manufactured as muc| as would ordinarily take 15 yea| to produce. ‘Seventy-five per ¢ perhaps, could be used by civiliz industry, and_ vocational schod could make- use of a large portio] perhaps 15 per cent. Aside from all this, however, t biggest type of problem the boa will have to face concerns a géner policy of disposal timing-—wheth to freeze certain commodities for |

“ AEE EB bt PRD LY, ng

[time (and if so, how long?) so as T'prevent

destroying. markets fd

fervous, res a He a aun, 1

» functional peri dio disturbances— Start at once~t 1 Vegetable ho

ig p Dia, Tos.

annoying dist bothing he ton: on 0 SHIGRIANT Su

elps ibe build up up Pup rea ollow A direct

YDIA E. PINK

Gorgeou Tur Gi Long-Wearing

Seal-Dyed CONEY

Tax Included * Easiest - Possible

Terms

Pay as Little as 8 1” a Week! After Usual ‘Down Payment Ce ——

Super-Grade Striped Coney

FUR COATS $6995

Others “at $89.95 and $90.98 Tax Included

|ping positions—seems . likely, By Scripps-Howard Newspapers [textile workers complain that thé! Ngpw YORK. Jan. 3.—A showbottom available for bringing the gown battle has developed between wool is_an old, slow sulphur boat | the anti-Communist . Commercial

600- 800 POUNAS ...osesses 2 [email protected] 800-1100 pounds ., \ 13.25@15:50

Mediu 500- 900 ) poundss [email protected] [email protected]

the January-March quarter this’ year, which is between 30 and 35 per cent of all production.

ordinary producers. Some would have all surph | goods disposed. of as quickly possible while ‘purchasing power still high and the total effect o© the market “correspondingly” Io Others contend this would be d! astrous; > These are a few of the overs decisions the board must make.

Tomorrow: The First Policy.

ers’ association in which the yield of two or more acres is weighed by judges representing the association: . Mr, Prifogle won ih competition with 100 Indiana farmers, the largest enrollment in the history of the contest.

Common 500- 900 ) poufids Cows (all weights) : 11.25@ 13.00 ’ 10.00@ 11.25 [email protected] 5.50@ 7.00

" cence Cutter‘and common ... Capper

"Bulls (all weights) 12:[email protected] [email protected]

[email protected] 8 [email protected]

pounds pounds ....

[email protected] oo | u 7%@13.0

pounds

Communism Claimed pounds- ...

AT INDIANAPOLIS

NATIONAL baw

A POOR

FURNACE

WASTES

+ + + 1 +"

[I=

o PICK UF Lie - INSPECTION

To the tion ci

your. f

IEE and ESTIMATE

a 2 Our expert workmen service all makes WILLIAMSON and only the best of materials are used.

We u —_—SRNACES Prices based on materials used, plus labor. Indi- | -

Williamson Furnace Div. of MONARCH SALES CO. 1021-3 N. lilinois St. ~~ RI-3344

11 i

a iw

PEER pL

Ww

De Fi

36% 108

Bl i Aa satas aso

So glad vole back...Have a Coca-Cola

BB ae Famed a

. a “pid. 4

49% Pub Serv Ind 5% , | Pub Serv of Ind com

| Progress Laundry com

rt

52% -$2'% 147% 1247,

+ ——

++ 8 ia Ra

| American Loan 5s 486+. ..... Gets Promotion | Buhner Fertilizer 5s -54.... y {Ch of Com Bldg 4'28°81°....., » Citizens Ind Tel _4Vis 61 . { Consol Fin 5s 50 R. M. Gray, former resident of OS e80 To Co 3%s 10 0." Indianapolis, has been appointed | tndp'e Plot, 34s 70 : opt { Indpis. Rallways Co bs ‘iy advertising-sales promotion man= 4nd pls Water Co 3128 68 ager of the Standard -Oil Co, of [Kokomo Water Wks 55 58 ..

[Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54 New Jersey, the ww : {Mun:'e Water. Wks 5s 65..... 34 y 3 IN Ind Pub Serv 3Vas 73 1 Standare 0 ] \ | [N Ind Tel 4'zs 58 0 0 ennsyi- i vania, and the Pichmiond Water Wks 5s BT.. “> | Trac Term Corp bs 67 . %. :+U 8 Machine Corp 5s 53 ....,. 4 “ _*Ex- dividend

8. Butter—No. 1, 50c. Butterfay=No.

Senator Gillette, of course, is first but that all had escaped. To make it worse on civilians, now being readied in an Italian port | Telegraphers’” Union (A. F. of L.) semblance band happened late last year when 65 | ppe fore the war turned out 3000 tons 2| Communist, to decide the driog} few here are optimistic enough to S18 ; ORDERS MICHIGAN r 13 -salaried clerical workers here PENNSYLVANIA oil men pooh-|lower- ed [150 tons of linen thread.a month | ployees of the-entire telegraph in CALVES: (500) trary, informed observers generally ri pleted wells in Pennsylvania. | Living costs for this -group were, = hint is Slowing which suis (65 week [email protected] Curtiss-Wr approximately 2,000,000 utility users. committee ‘on intdrnal trade and salers and retailers. James Kitchen, 5630 Ind Rayon -. . a Ye | curing the ering called to aid in se g | cree and a court suit is still pending. | | plants corporatidn %tablished. in and heating supplies and general mer- | Kroger G &B. Avresitire—-Con--eom in Rg 5509 N. Pennsylvania st. [Martin . (Glenn) petitioned the NLRB for the current; u;,, rest of Bobbs-Merrill 4'z pid . E Tvart Manufacturing Co., Jndianapots. | | Nat Distillers | . Delta Elét coi {adopting a rule that cuts the voting | Rubber stamps and ‘marking devices. Pan Am Ar 1 Ind Asso Tel 5% pid . {Procter & G .. 114, | the ~ 60,000 -workers involved, the| Indpls Railways com S.- & 8. Service Shop. 2875 Clifton t.{ ey Tob B.. 311 -¥s|Ringan_& Co pfd . "| contributed. by various: “national chusetts. Beauty culture. John South Pac P R'Mallory 42% Sexson, 520 E. 36th, = [Std OU (N J). 2|to aid-the A. C. A. in the election. —————————————— [U8 Steel. .... 6214 J | tive, ' responsible organization, de= LOCAL PRODUCE United Tel Co 5% ' I springers, 24c American Loan 5s 51... NATIONAL BANK C ALL small, 29¢c; no grade, 40c; No, 3, 3 ‘ie um? | the condition of .all national barks Up to the close of the Chicago marke!

that a night shift of several hun-| and last a politician, being a midd} ed men were at work in the plant, | ; edred me a p of-the-road Democrat. But he is! popular in congress and undoubtedly | me cigaret-makers didn't fill all , ; Some. sia contracts, and are try- LIVING : GOSTS RISE and is too slow to move in escorted | ‘andthe ©. 1-0. American Com- tions with the legislative body. ing to make up now. That's what | CONVOYS, {munications Association, the leader- Although the, board has (n| : On linen goods, French mills be-| [ship of which is predominately: pro- 3 theory) sufficient authority to act,| nt of production was goin 0 h PER CENT JERE | Beet : ign "oo oo. ' month; last year this output|g,iis of some 60.000 key workers. Good (all weights) think that the prospects are for a ® = Living costs of wage earners -and | dropped to 1800 tons monthly andy In a national labor relations board | swift and smooth handling of the . inow these mills are receiving just'oiection the preference of the em- Cutter and common °. immense disposal job. On the conpooh the prediction of a Washing- rose 0.5 per cent from Out to! for their looms. French linen out- |g, ctv of the country: will be de- Vealery (all weights) [have the somewhat cynical opinion ton columnist that Russian oil will Boyembed the No Rope Jodus ali put is linked with conditions in|. ooo | [ood and choice 175021850 that troubles by the score are cer- | : > - r e : . ommon aud 0 be imported by U. S, stored in de- Conference board repor Y: |Belgium where the flax usually is The election which runs this week | LANSING. Mich. “dan. yh cul”. . ed i Lg 00! al bo tog Hie agency—everr as| er and Stocker Cattle an ves | they dogged those in similar capaci- | r cenit’ higher in November jy x { Rusia ‘can, spare the ofl, pene for the’ et month the Lack Silk Imports | workers of the merged Postal Tele- | lq The publ Serv je commision 2 Cholce— | ties last time. ; not enough tanker space available a Veh 4 i |graph and Western Union com-|day ordere igan Be ele- | 300- 800 For one thing, congress, in passand “cheap Russian ofl would con-| Pre ote 32 | As for silk, despiie.all French ei panies in some 5000 localities. pione Co. 1g”Teduce its 1544 rates| Hic10 % ing the law creating the board and taminate” our - oil deposits, the| Food rose 0.8 per cent, clothing 3| forts. at scriculture, home produc- 3 by $3,500,000° with the option to dis--500- 800 10 00m 30! providing for disposal of property Pennsylvanians say. per cent, fuel and light 35 per i. never exceeded 30 tons of raw | count that amount on January, 1945, | 800-1000 «+ 1025@11. ®|and plants under its jurisdiction, a ee x 2 = Sen houstiursishings Ia per cent gy a year. Gone with the wind| =, Comin was ols or retuna the sum to cus 300-1000 pounds nd bi left innumerable questions un- : and suncries per cen |are yesteryear's average imports of | tomers immediately. mon — ¢ atisVered. | ODDS AND ENDS: P.R. Mallory} gompared. with January, 1939. 00 tons annually. prought into the open af 3 Jmajors The order was the fifth to come S00: 90 DO aa”. TOD Clarifyi is having a contest to see who has ; acl 0 : factor in the election by the laste dood and ‘eb " | arifying ‘amendments to the] : Be " i Floost of living here In November Was| "wy, yeep running even, al. one !minute resignation of Charles A ffom the commission in the iast two 500 tls sien 11.250 13 25 | jm : . been most “wronged by his or heriqgg per cent higher. tenth’ of capacity, French textile in-| oR l'N ork months, ordering utility rate re-|Medime : ;. plant badge photo; winners get free t to. pro-| Ba aunias, who headed New «| ductions. totalin than $18-| 500 pounds down 900Q11.35| j dustries have had fo turn to Pro-|y ..; 45 Jargest A. C.-A. unit, g more Calves (heifers) studio ones. . .. Which brings to terial, continuing B © 000,000 for approximately 3,000, 000 Good and Chofce— i min ker cessing ersatz materia its inception in 1940. Whefi Mr. jovq and (ROCs th.osaia gs) d the story that, one War Wor toc gy: d wh Germans | | customers of five large public. utili- po a | (not at Mallory’'s) wore Hitler's the trend started when | Bardunias quit he charged, that the Medium— nd Ty's} olized natural raw materials. du- | ties operating in Michigan. 50 pounds down 8 50810 50 | his bad ver five Net | MONOP | “Commniunist = octopus as gradu i Picture: on his Es oO 3s Last Change Land furnished the mills cellulose) .)y «engulfed the rion. Three| The decree followed lengthy pub- SHEEP 3%) lAMSE (90) months before anyone noticed N. 1, | pulp-in- replacement. fic f the’C. 1. O. local lic hearings for Michigan Bell! { ood and en yes (shorn) 5.500 8.75 . . The army is shipping used tire Am Tap other officers of the and choice a | Am + Yi néd, ki like | Which “opposed--the rate reduction.) Common and medium 4.009 5.50! casings to Europe, because ,0of the am Rad & 8812 11% ert Qutrageous Prices Asked Pave also resist making | Although company officials admilted| Good and ebotie. B | severe shortage there. . . . Douglas) ih 's| The four-year cessation of wool, |S ar8es. [that 1944 excess profits taxes should Medium end good [email protected] | Afreraft prodused 1/8th of all cum: Any 4, |cottorr and silk imports speaks for | Jose) Ser Ac 3 P resident amount to $4,851,000, they contendea| “°=™°%_ [email protected], A i 1swerin ese C ee ————————— { bat planes made in U. S. last year. 27% THC iz itself in token operation of mills, 2% gn ans ee 8 ny that a reduction in rates would fur- | . . . Consolidated-Vultee is making|Armour & Co .. - d rices such as $200 for a and ins{#a a ther redure-net earnings .of 548) MURRAY- ROBINSON 14 different types of planes, ranging | Atchiscn : %|and in p claims, that Mr. Bardunias and the yDes Of p » Atl Refining ... | man's suit; $55 for, a lady’s slip and | f had threatened to| Pr cent which is already below the B from the-gmall liaison plane to the Bald Se 1 $25 for a girl's pullover sweater. wh ot = Re 2 probit average of 99 per cent for 1321 ILL IS ATTACKED new B-32, the Dominator. Beth Steel .... } ra] Driblet manufacturing of textiles] SEmDL to “prove ¥ | leading manufacturers. NEW YORK, Jan 3 (U. P.).—The Tr . ‘ea i - | Borg-Warner .. now going on is. for the benefit of The leadership of the union has| Previously, the commission Or-lcnamper of Commerce of the NEW FIRMS AND i Thi g cost | the French military ‘forces and fof | a long record of sctivity in Com=| |dered rate reductions for Detroit| gota of New: York today attacked var 78 PARTNERSHIPS Childs . 47 civilians bombed and shelled ¢ out’ of | nunist fronts, ranging from Mr. | Edison Co., Consumers Power €9. the ‘Murray-Robinson bill to create Tie + 1 “|their homes by the war. fi A he “White House Michigan Consolidated Gas Co. and , ca) business corporation as Douglas Aire : : Fd vefore the|Selly’s picketing the : OUSE | rfichigan Associated Telephone Co. oP Du Pont .....156% 155% 156% + | It will be a long time be as a member-of the American peace 8 “grand scheme of subsidizing small Checker Flag Grill 1438 N. Capitol ave | Gen Electric .. 4 ? 's| French people can spam dress as bilizati dur] th eriod of | The reductions for those four! business of every variety.” Restaurant. Joseph PF. Tague, 3148 N./ Gen Foods ... 53 mobilization, during the Pp firms totaled $15,000,000 and affscted as Harding st.; Walter C. Tague, 3144 N.'Gen Motors 'y they please. the Nazi-Soviet pact, to membership A report drawn by the chamber Harding st. Goodrich: ..... * 54! 541 . — in the FEree Browder congress by .| Goodyear . > 2 i sept ~ oy Hovey Bertice, 53 = Mic. Greyhound Cp LOCAL ISSUES Josephine Timms, A..C. A. secre- | Tiree BL ible fife a5tend Jo scoop improvements declared the bill, 46 BS Ln Nominal quotations lurnisies by |tary-tréasurer. This was a io ow Edison op d the de- | P® be “a drastic and vast extension of st . ans 1 irities e - EE ixtributing Co., $34 W. Washing. | Johns-Man . AS SE TONKS pose: the activities of the smfhller war ton st. Wholesale hardware, plumbing Kennecoit Asked | release of Communist leader Earl . 703 N. Illincls|L-O-F Glass | Agents Fin Corp Com sett 490 29 | Browder from Atlanta prison. 1042 to mobilize productive facilities | ME hen, oop’ N Ss Topkhoed aueli 1 Agenty Pin Gorp pid... 18%] Originally, the A. F. of L. union INDIANAPOL'S CLEARING HOUSE | "0 manufacturers he hte) Lolla Cohen, 1711 N. Illinois st.; K. F. [Loe 7 Belt R Stk Yds com 40 Cleiringn '... «..0 .iivaunarinss a 320.00) terest of war” | Bobbs-Merrill Leom ice, 2875 Clifton st.|M | ; dah a 2 Radi Seri 2646 N. on 8 | Nash- Kely Belt R Stk Yds pid ‘| election. However, William Green, | ing s ; {Nat Biscuit Central Soya com -. AF. of L president -has since proMachine shop. "Rollin H. Stewart, 3202 ks SR Circle Tntater oom dl tested to the board -against its ua Stamp Works SLE Ohio. | Suckers FS EisctIOnIC Lab oO .: +54 5% into seven specified units, instead | fer, 2934 Mad {Hoog Drug Co com... x ion-wide basis. | Tomas Fon. 9 np Drug| henner 2 Home T&T Ft Wayne 1% : | of having it on g eid 0 by of | ghore, William E. Lucas, 4524 Wentworth Phelps Dodge .. Ind & Mich E pid 2: 107! In its attempt to win N. Indpis P & L p “es ; x De Besigning engmecring, planning. and Ture. ON Indpls P & 1 com 20%) AC. A. has been able to secure con- | consulting. O: Fluharty, 69 °N. Dear- Repun Stl Indpls Water pfd age ..| siderable support from the C. I. OF ‘y, | Indple Water Ciass A com’ tans + | Thousands of -dollars. have. teen Elseirical repair. Robert L. Snyder Jr., ReNERIay Dist . igen Nat Life com 1 170 t n : Ruby Lee Beauty Salon, 437 Massa- | S0cony-Vacuum | Singan 4 Co oom Sm lo 1. O. unions. fa oe 2) 0. tad ” R erts and Eva Roberts, 437 Me eaattuneten Std Brands ..., 3% {Lin .Nat Life com . ..| In addition, Philip Murray, presi- * Indjanapolis Ice & Fuel Co., 225 E. Jowa, | Std O Cal... a 8%2| dent of the-C. I. O. has gone all out Ice and fuel. J. B. Sexson and Nellie Sud» “Oil (Ind). “PR Mallogy Som. “ 2 4|*N Ind Pub Serv 5% . Broadway Brokerage Co., 5750 Broadway. | Tews co Yor " He has sent a letter to each of-the Mnehandisie Harry Barrett, 5750 Broad. VO 8 Rubber. + " | voters, calling for their suppaes Sor, Ross Gear & Tool com “it | . Warner Bros .. 14a So Ind a BE 8% > the A. C. A.; because “it is an eflec |e E El 1247, Stokely Bros pr pf . Re: inte “Uni t voted wholeheartedly to ‘the: Inleprs..giavy breed hens, 23c. Leghorg hens, F He Union Title SO ONDS : ests of the people.” I ns Aa DATs Tenn Hie: he ormer OOSIer [users wingw vr san consol ave - Old roosters, 14c. a EES+, Current Receinie moh Jfrads. Al | WASHINGTON, Jan. 3 (U.P.).Arge, 44c; grade A medium, 49c; grade | | Comptroller of the Currency Pre: 'lton Delano today issued a call fol | as of Dec, 30, 1944, WAGON WHEAY, rite today, Indianapolis flour ollie ahd Fra) «eof elevat id $1.67.D0ksdjs hel or No | ' rat oar grades on their merits) oats, No. 2 white or No. 2 red, testing i?

Hurry... “Hurry! Hurry! -10-DAY SERVICE

ON GUARANTEED

WATCH REPAIRING

A Work Guaranteed | Year!

RITE! S.

Dress u

ibs. or better, 64c;. corn, No. 2 yellow ~| shelled, old -crop, $1.09% per bushel, and No. 2 white shelled, “old” “erop. SL24%

tub Serv of Ind 3's 3 Pub: Tel 4'2- 55 Co. of PennsylOil . Co, estou — 3 fr

THE UNION TRUST COMPANY

Sept. 21, 1004, 1893 of Indianapolis 1945

smart,

— Mr. Gray grad- Heavyw

uated from Arsenal Technical

he | ‘tory tes high school in ou i |

oo. Or offering a soldier the comforts of home HOME! There's no place like it. And nobody knows ir better than a fight. ing: man back on furlough. Ice-cold Coca-Cola is ope of the comforts of home everybody welcomes. “That's why frosty bottles of Coke belong in ‘your . home refrigerator. At the words Have 4 Goks; refreshment joins the party”

to make it gayer, brighter. The good old American custom of the pause that °

Safe De oil. ie Travel and Foreign 2 WE WEL P gn refreshes is spreading in Many lands around the Biches Suhel of our COME YOU.TO USE THESE FRIENDLY SERVICES |]. | iendly bomerwavs, iit ln 120 E. MARKET STREET, : i Branch—1225 Kentuckf Avenue : : : sortie unbie aurHomirY. or THE COCA-COLA’ courant 1 Sl FLRY,

| LINCOLN STATE. PiEns Member—Federal | Deposit Insurance Copan cocA-coLA BOTTLING co. oF INDIANAPOLIS, INC.

exclusivi 1922, He is the R. M. Gray".

son of Albert R. Gray, founder’ of Gray, Gribben. | ang: Gray jewelry firm, He at- . tended Culver Military academy, , Indiana university, DePauw uni- | versity, and the University of Texas. He and his wife, the former Alice E. Eberhardt of Indian« apolis, now live in Petham, N, Y.

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