Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1945 — Page 7
Do - d
team for the ng and boxing
, tussle against, 1t is for twa d Ali All he
sixth annus infantile pas y Matchmaker Hercules A. OJ 2 fund. Serve As Mase) + the programy announce th ] ens at 8:30. "razier ttraction is . Paul Frazier, urly Denton, a ill, Md. ‘They seorge Carson
Jocal _ feather J
r rounds as do
Tee, Toca Né=- |
included, are 30 for reserved jeneral admise
Posts ecord
1. 22 (U, P.), = Angeles, today etitive course x under par 64 won the $5000
'nament. His jer par the 73
khorse, out of jumped to a ace tie at 64 e next winter io, next Friday
in yesterday's Byron Nelson, golf money~winner of last open,
0 67's
he end gf the , put together] + par, for the! nds for a total!
nal 64 over the | ry club course! e morning. ] dmore, Okla., place with a ne golfers who | 1oney included ville, Ind., nampion, with -a' te, Akron, O.
s Meet
0 22 (U, P= tween Heavy. | { Detroit and } mont, Pa. ab] arden Friday reek’s national , is the first | bout. of -1945.
MONDAY, JAN, 22, 1945 _
BUSINESS
* Five Economic Faotahs Aid
Von Rundstedt’s Offensive
aban
-By ROGER BUDROW
APPARENTLY GERMANY WASN'T HIT AS HARD we thought, after reading about the bombing of oil fields L nd refineries, railroad bridges and trains and huntreds
f rwar plants. J : ; || Marshall von Rundstetd's offen plan to stiffen that tq five years e, which is now being. pushed] in California, two in San Franck, was possible, despite all the| cisco. : [ amage the allies had inflicted, for five economic reasons, according to Paul Wohl of Barron’s. It was a limited comeback requiring relatively little fuel, The Nazis had lost oil fields 4hey held “in .:Romania, Poland and |
od. ODDS” AND ENDS: Despite its
Public Service Co. of Indiana earned about $1.90 a common share, against $1.93 in 1043. . . . All the 400,000 com~ mon shares of Southern Indiana Gas - & Electric Co, which are owned “by+<Commonweaith & South-~ ern Corp., are to be distributed to stockholders of C. & 8, in the reorganization of that tility holding company. . Philadelphia stores
on limiting m men’s suits one to a
| customer. - TAdIgHAPoIs aepart=|-
— rR G-DORRROE IR scanty. But by denVying civilians hy gasoline, by using railroads and | o,, although "January “promotion [hrse-drawn vehicles to supply both | les” are almosh non-existent. » .. ions as much as possible, and bY | x4 100 gre cutting their rates, not ie 10-week lull] preceding the drive, Veo much because they are comhe high command was able to save | peting Jor business, but because they hough fuel from the German re. { want to keep their profits tax Hnerles still functioning to make | bracket and thus convince the civil ie offensive possible. | aeronautics Board it should not cut cont production had been stepped | 4ir_mai] rates from §0 cents to 32 ih, not so much in the western | nants a ton-mile, They hope, by | hr, Saar and Aachen areas but|.,iting passenger rates, to hold on
‘meny store sales Th the week end=
the east, Silesia, Poland, and|g g higher air-mail rate than the Czechoslovakia. Bombing didn’t) AB proposes. hther coal mining much, The coal a basis for the synthetic oil. The railroads of Germany were N. Y- Stocks ill hauling passengers and goods Hihen we entered Germany, despite . Net e way our airmen sharpshoot at High 1 Last Change Ter That is explained by | Allis. “Chal .<2e 30% non he fact that as we move closer to} Am Loco 20% 4 26% Hermany, the enemy's railroad mile- | A R6,* Ss. 12 13% I is shortened and thus needs
-
Am T&T... ; 163% Am Tob B . 68 Am Water W . 8% Anaconda \ 30% Armour & So . 3 3% Atchison cais 8 mm Atl Refining ... : Bald Loco ct .. 253 Ben Ind Loan . Beth Steel .... Borden HE Borg- -Warner ' Caterpillar T . Ches & Ohio .. Childs : Curtiss-Wr Douglas Aire Du Pont ars Gen Electric . Cen Foods ..: Gen Motors ... Goodrich Goodyear Greyhound Cp Ind Rayon . Int Harvester. . Kennecott Kroger G & B. L-O-F Glass Lockheed Airc Loew's “. Martin Diens) 3 Mont Ward, .” Nash-Kelv Nat Biscuit Nat Distillers . 3 N Y Central... Ohio Oil Packard Pan Am Alr. Penn RR : Phelps Dodge. .
Am Roll Mill wer locomotives and less rolling Hock. As was learned by England, Milroad repairs are made quickly. Another factor is that heavy inMistries in eastern Germany have bt been pounded by heavy bomb. He, as has the western Ruhr. The Hussians are close enough but have i ided only communication centers. br a while the allies shuttlepmbed oil centers,” using Italian hd Russian bases until the RusHans denied the use of her airfields } Britain and U. 8. A request for thses in Hungary also was turned ibwn by Russia. we are still bombing from Italy | t can’t reach the blast furnaces hd steel mills of eastern Germany hess Superfortresses are used and hey are in the Pacific. Maybe the fFeferential treatment of the “easttn Ruhr” is due to Stalin's hope i liberating industries of Silesia, bland and Czechoslovakia unfathed, as a member of the Lublin bvernmeént intimated. The allied air raids on German) procter & G... fdustry have been neutralized | Pullman bmewhat by a system of decentral- BY led production. Airplane parts, for lkample, are made in small plants hd homes scattered over a wide Fea with several plants making he same part. If one is knocked it, production is not halted. The heat Heinkel works at Oranienlirg, north of Berlin, assembled in i vast underground factory .parts fade in hundreds of other places. i These five are only temporary livantages, Mr. Wohl believes. ince Germany loses the Ruhr, the ack of her war effort will be oken. ;
A rtiifrcd
Fy
+111:
SEE
Schenley Dist . Servel Inc Soc-Vacuum South Pac .... J Std Brands .. Std O Cal . Std Oil (Ind) . 38 Btd Oil (NJ) . Texas Co ! 20th Cent Fox . U 8 Rubber U 8 Steel a2 Werner Bros | Westing El ‘ 119% Zenith Rad ... 38 31%
LOCAL PRODUCE . Laghorm hens,
Seti bet ing:
Heavy breed hens, Mec.
<a
rate reductions and higher taxes,
ing Jan, 13 were 11% over a year STAY ATO! J
a » » | Chalce
smi oa
Radiophoto above, from Stockholm, is the first photo received in this ooutizy o of the ‘Swedish air force’s newest fighter plane, which is a radical departure: from conventional types. boom model with retractable tricycle landing gear, it gives the pilot greater visibility by having the motor at his back. It is a “pusher” type, with propeller at rear between tail booms.
_ THE INDIANAPOEIS TI) [ES : Swed? New Plane Has Lots “of Push |
CIVILIAN WONT SUFFER IN 1945
Despite Wereased Demand Of War, There Won't Be |
By JOHN W. LOVE scripps-Howard Stat, Writer l WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.-—~Where does the civilian get off in 1945, the | home-front guy, in the face of the | steeply yising demand for war pro- | duction? - Now that we're starting the war over again, supplywise, returning to the output total of 1943 but more steeply than before, the clvilian| population as a whole is not going | to be much worse off than in 1944. As a whole, that is. In dollar figures we are again go- |
i
A
A dow-wing, twin«
PORKER PRICES
Eli Lilly & Co.
At Local Yards $14.80 Is Top.
Hog prices held at the $14.80 ceiling at ‘the Indianapolis stockyards in active trading today, the war food administration reported. Receipts included 6500 hogs, 2600 cattle, 800 calves and 2000 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (6500)
12¢.- 140 pound- $14.006214 50 140- 160 pounds 14 Sa ie20 14.
330- 360 pounds Medium
160- 220 pounds
Packing ‘Sows
Good to Choice— 270- 300 300- 330 330- 360 360- 400 Good— 400- 450 450- 550 Medium — 250- 500 pounds . Slaughter Pigs
Medium to Choice— 0- 180 pounds
CATTLE (2600)
14.00@ 14.06 . [email protected]
pounds pounds ....
» 18.00011.00 ..¥ [email protected] te. 16.00017.28 . 16.25@1728
pounds . pounds .
1360-1500 pounds ...
«+. [email protected] ' Bn 16.00 16.00 1 8@1638
pounds . pounds . pounds . pounds
1100-1300 1300-1500 Medium « | 700-1100 pounds ....ceev0e 11100-1300 pounds ....
common - 700-1100 pounds
. nus: [email protected]
. [email protected] | «+ 14,50015.78 1335Q14 78
. [email protected] . [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected]
600- 800 pounds ..,. 800-1100 pounds ....
shaven
Cows (all weights)
Cutter ane common’ Canner
‘Bulls all weights) weights)
Beef—
Good (all
#1 Sausage—
.. [email protected] .. [email protected] [email protected] |
"Medium “ Cutter and common CALVES (800) | Vealers (all weights) Good and choice . 18 5001100] Common and medjum . . [email protected] Cull ey 6.00@ 9 Pecder and Stocker G Cattle and Usives
Ch
olee— 500-81 800 . 11.50
5 | regular monthly dinner meeting of
; 3.2 [email protected] luncheon meeting of the Indianapo-
50 | Agents Fin Corp pfd
cluded:
Under the will of Ella Floris (estate).
WASHINGTON, Jan. 22 (U. P.).—Income tax refunds for the 1944. | . | fiscal year for Indiana, announced by the treasury department, in6500 Hogs 0s Ae Received : George A. Ball, Muncie, $17,819.45 (income). James A. Barnes, donor, Logansport, $14,838.98 (gift). Central Indiana Power Co., Indianapolis, $26,070.34 (income), Citizens National bank, Evansville, $11,374.21 (income). Hoosier Iron Works, Kokomo, $6,146.53 (excess profits). Mead Johnson & Co., Evansville, $6,068.62 ( distilled spirits). Eli Lilly & Co., Indianapolis, $512,758.11 (distilled spirits). Josiah K. Lilly, Indianapolis, $37,358.85 (income). Ruth B. Lilly, Indianapolis, $204,016.77 (income), Messenger Corp., Auburn, $14,892.21 (income). Noll, Noll & Berghoff, Ft. Wayne, $26,940.37 (distilled spiries Pitman-Moore Co., Indianapolis, $16,496.63 (distilled spirits), Quaker Maid Co., Terre Haute, $120,504.01 (distilled spirits). Real Silk Hosiery Mills, Inc,, Indianapolis,’$17,417.12 (income). Estate of Don Carl Spangler, Jefférsonville, $12,332.01 (income). Ruth Lilly Van Riper, Indianapolis, $38,539.84 (income). Wesson Co., Indianapolis, $41,428.93 (carriers).
= ling to have more goods and services | than in any peacetime year in his- | tory. But people around the war | production board raise a cautioning | finger whenever _ total ‘dollars are |
Leads State
Red Ball Fires Trucks ~~ «Pull Food, Fuel fo | Front
By Seripps- ~Howard Newspapers WITH U. S. FORCES IN BELGIUM, Jan. 22.—The veteran Red Ball Express drivers are at it agan. v “They've chang route, but not their job, or their objective. Instead of driving theity trucks from Cherbourg to Paris and beyond,
| they pow drive from Antwerp to forward areas, carting thousands of
Many Shortages.
tons of vital materials to the fighting forces. Their 10-ton trucks’ no longer) bear the ‘insignia of the famous enemy, rushing food and sninitions |Red Ball. Instead they ride the|hundreds of miles away from the ABC highway, which stretches; {Cherbourg area. {across ancient cobblestones, modern! ‘The Red Ball, inaugurated two concrete and war-pounded dirt days after Paris’ liberation, carried from the big Beigium port to ad- at its peak 7728 tons of supplies {vance depots. {daily from Normandy alone. The Trucks Roll Under Fire (bulk of SRipments was food and | gaso The army's original Red Ball Ex-| Communications officers heére press, from the Normandy beach- [sive much of the credit for ex|heads * through St. Lo, winding, |ppitation of the break-through of | climbing and descending into the yy. § “armies in the St. Lo area to {heart of France, operated under the men who operated this truck the highest pressure before thelline As the armies bolted for|channel ports were cleared of the|ward the Red Ball stretched like a —— rubber band until the short haul from Normandy to Brittany had
Ponnsy Boosts lexpanded into a three-day journey
include & Jot or] repair work, professional insurance and that kind of
| services. fees, thing. Goods Slightly Reduced
But taking dollar . figures for | whatever they do mean, though {Chairman J. A. Krug of the WPB | has on the books or being scheduled {$64,000,000,000 of war production this year, this vast assignment is not expected to reduce by more than a few billions’ worth the | amount of goods and services avail-| able for the rest of the esccnomy. “In hard goods,” says A. C. C.| Hill Jr., deputy vice chairman for | civilian requirements, “production | will be at about the same level as! last year, but there will be’ some shortages. “In soft goods, probably ‘a decline from 1944. The army is tak{ing larger quantities of textile
Workman, Indianapolis, $13,922.68
Local Yortings |
Office Management The monthly meeting of the National Office Management association will be held Wednesday at the Riley hotel. Dr. Bivin S. Eyster, of Indiana university school of business, will speak on job analysis and classifications.
Controllers
Ralph L. Swingley, chief accountant of the Indianapolis Water Co, will speak on “Job Rating” at the
the Indianapolis Control of the Controllers Institute of America at 6 |p. m. Wednesday in Hotel Lincoln.
Life Underwriters Arthur F. Priebe of Rockford, Ill,
and The Netherlands plan ‘a second |
tempt to outline a post-war program
NATIONS WILL HOLD
"| products. These have to come out wf civilian supplies where they can't be made up.
Children, Workers Considered “Within - these declining totals
RUBBER DISCUSSION some lines of production will inWASHINGTON, Jan. 22 (U. P.. | crease. We are emphasizing three —The United States, Great Britain |things now-—children’s needs; the requirements of working people at {the working places — gloves and iwork clothing—and the essentials lof people with low and moderate incomes. “There will probably have to be cutbacks in the luxuries.” Mr. Hill, who has been in charge {of civilian requirements in the absence in Europe of William V. Elliott, says it i= hard to convince people that many of them are getting far more than they used to get. Diapers, for example: ‘There were 24 diapers per child born in 1939, compared with 44 last year. But the purchasing power of mil-
rubber conference- soon in an at-
of world rubber production and use, it was learned. today.” The state department is giving] intensive study to the subject of commodity agreements, and major attention will be focused soon on plans for an international agreement on cotton as well as on rubber, Cotton discussions would involve several countries. In addition to the U. 8, the chief cotton growers
| promoted to general .manager of
_lover roads | Dock-marked with bomb “Paul F “Feucht: craters apd UNrough towns smoiders ing ‘with the ashes of battles not [yet quite finished.
ABC Line Born
The addition of the port of Antio |WErp to the allied supply chain, has now given birth to the ABC {line, named for the fact that | American, British and Cagadian | convoys use the route, hauling sup- | plies to the three allied armies. ’ Like the old Red Ball, ABC driv{ers take their~loaded 25-foot-bed | trailers to forward depots over oneway routes, and return on a different course, thus adding to the ¢ (speed and the size of deliveries. . | ABC drivers find their new route P. E. Feucht |" tter condition than the roads {they drove in France, but it's {tougher in other ways. For: exam- | ple, they daily face the ordeal of | ly ing bombs. Here, as on the route | trom Normandy to Paris, they ex-
PARTNERSHIPS perience long hours in the driver's
Tndianapolls Tool & Die Co. 1126 N. seat, operating both by night and
if and building of De TN 2 | day. ROUBLE.
Former. Indianapolis railroad official, Paul E. Feucht, has been
Pennsylvania Railroad western | region with offiices in Chicago. Mr. Feucht succeeds Harry L. Nancarrow, who will manage the eastern region. A native of Indiana polis and graduate of Purdue, Mr. Feucht served as general superintendent here from 1939.st0 1942.
NEW FIRMS AND
Tourneau 35 Washington bivd.; W. H.| Schnielzel, 2120 E. Kessler blvd. American Labor, 1000 Lemcke bldg. Pub-! lishing monthly inbes newspaper. Harold Fritzpatrick, 90” N. Alabama st.
INCORPORATIONS
Gallaher and Speck Construction Co., | Illinois corporation; admitted to Indiana to engage in contracting and construction business The Weatherhead Co., Ohio corporation; | a'nendment of articles of incorporation. Butler Brothers, Illinois corporation; statement of resolution establishing series | of stock adopted by board of directors. The Hammond Lubmer Co., Hammond; | amendment reducing par value of stock | from $100 to $80 per share | DeLong Subscription Agency, Inc.; Lafa-| ette; amendment providing tor perpetual | existence. Link - Belt Co., Illinois corporation; statement of redemption and cancellation | of shrves of capital stock. Askin-Beverly Dress Sheps, York = corporation; amendment number of diruciors. - - Kentland Investment Co., Inc. Kentland; | 1000 shares of $10 par ‘calue; Harry Al
Inc., New changing
are China, Russia, Brazil, Peru, Egypt and India. tion is different. The U. 8S. intends to go ahead| Despite the shortages, there is|
Mexico, lions is higher now, and distribu-
associate general agent for Penn Mutual Life Insurance Co., will discuss “What Is a Good Life Insurance Program?” at . Thursday's
lis Associate of Life Underwriters in “Hotel Lincoln.
LOCAL ISSUES
Nomina! quotations furnished by | anapolis securities dealers.
STOCKS Agents Fin Corp com
Ayrshire .Co com Belt R Stk Yds com Bobbs-Merrili com Belt. R Stk Yds pf ....
“land agreed upon a ‘program of .in-|
"| rubber plantatiohs + | Asia .are recaptured from the Jap-
with earlier plans for seeking in~ino prospect that the public will ternational commodity agreements have to get down to anything like despite the difficulties it has en-|the bedrock levels of subsistence countered wtih the Anglo-Ameri- outlined early in the war. Our can oil agreement, which was sent!productive mechanism has been back to the state department for|capable of far greater output than revision after running into industry |anybody suspected. opposition... Representatives of the U. S., Great Britain and The Neth- Alcobo! Production Drops erlands held exploratory discussions! In a few respects, it is true, we on rubber last August in London|/have returned to the production levels envisioned in 1943—in distilled spirits most of the time, in cigarets in practical effect on the public, in radios,.clocks and watches, | tires and tubes, but the volume of goods taken as a whole is not only
tense studies, especially with a view to avoiding chaos when the crude in southeast
anese;
|
Reinhart, Ralph Bower, Cecile Bower, Loughry Grain Co., Inc., Idaville, agent, | {Maynard Loughry, Monticello; 1000 shares | without par value; William N. Loughry, Maynard A. Loughry, L. Chester Ty] Hoosier Leather Co., Inc.,, 503 W. Ohio st., Terre Haute; agent, J. W. Pinkston, | Tame address; 100 shares of $100 par] 3 E Sutherland, M. E. Flanafan, | Mm E Heinrich
CELEBRATES CENTENNIAL | NEW YORK, Jan. 22 (U. P.).— Johnson & = Higgins, insurance | brokerage firm, today celebrated its | centennial—the first firm of its | | type to reach the 100-year-mark.
BLADE AT ANY PRICE
18 for 25¢
| ©1944, CONSOLIDATED RAZOR BLADE CO. INC,
GLASSES
pounds }-1050 pounds Good— 50¢ 80( ued m
on. 900 POURAE ....0.000+0s Calves Good and choice— 500 pounds down . Medium— 500 pounds down Calves | Good and cholce— i 500 pounds down Medium — 500 pounds down SHEEP AND Ewes Good” and choice ad areis Common and medium ........ LAMBS
12.1%
1c. Broilers, fryers and roasters, under § 13.00
{bs., white and barred roeks, Old roosters, 15c¢. ' ” - E Eggs—Current receipts, jc; grade \arge, 40c; grade A medium, 38c; grade A small; 29¢; no grade 35¢ Butter—No L 50¢. 49c; No. 2, 36¢.
“Celotex Corp. year ended Oct. 31 get earnings $562,276 or 53 cents a share vs. $530,199 or 54 cents previous year.
- 3130 far greater than was anticipated | sasstaee vers Sobbs Jer 4
Gu rhe com BLOOMINGTON - BANK SR En woot ot sey = Es
down = Scientific Eye Examination Delta Elec com | e circumstance which keeps Electronic Lab com WILL SERVE DEPOT ,,.c amount of goods available so D high in the inability of our ocean | 7. as. e ar y
Hook Drug Co co shipping to transport great quan-| OPTOMETRIST
Home T Pt Worne % ‘pid. n pid 105 tities of civilian goods to the lib-| OFFICES— First Foor Mezzanine
bs- 11 4% fd : | SAN FRANCISCO doesn’t fn- A aa
lend to feed Johnny-come-lately war workers who may find themIves jobless when peace comes. iits present law says a worker, to iget relief, must have lived in California three years and in San Francisco one year. Now they H
: oh on Everything! ! Diamonds, Watches HN Musical Instruments, Cameras Clothing, Shotguns, Ete.
Oldest Loan The CHICAG JEWELRY
Brokers in Co., tne. 146 E. WASHINGTON ST.
"BUSINESS DIRECTORY | PEARSON *S | WE Buy Diamonds
128 N. Penn, LI-5518 HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
pa Nb nermomenrs || STANLEY Jewelry Co.
B A N D INSTRUMENTS 113 W. Wash, Lincoln Hotel Bldg.
| .RECORDS ¢ SHEET MUSIC FUR COATS
TE AN AL aa in the State
INDIANA FUR CO.
112 East WASHINGTON St.
Quality and Style Without Kztravagance: LEVINSON in Your Hatter OXYGEN THERAPY
This Equipment Can Re Rented of
HAAG'S
ves 100001180 © [email protected] 8.15010.00 1.60@ 8.78
Butteriai- No, 1, Times Special
107% CRANE, Ind. Jan. 22.—Plans to 115 (extend banking facilities by the 1% | pirst National bank of Bloomington ...ito the U. 8. naval ammunition **|depot. here, were announced today by Capt. L. L. Hunter, commandling officer of the depot. Approved by the navy and treasury departments, the Bloomington bank operation will go into effect slabout Feb. 1, and will include a -**| banking office and a mobile unit.
[email protected] In : g erated countries, harsh as are the
living conditions there. a For such reasons the civilian| j | economy is expected this year to] {come out in volume abaut as high | as last year's or between 95 and| OFFICE HOURS \ 100 billions. Compare this with | Daily 9:45a m. to 5:45 p. m 1929, when the level was 83 bil- | Monday 12:15 to 9 p. m. lions, or with 1933, at about 50 : billions. {
Indpls Railways com [udbis Water pfd Indpls Water Jeff Nat Life com ..... Kingan & Oo pfd Hn a CS Bm sw ld... Lincoln an Co % pid... ... B.50010.80 1incoln Nat Life com ........ LAMBS (2000) p R Mallory 442% P allory com {shorn) N Ind Pub Serv 5% . Pub Serv Ind 5% Pub Serv of Ind com...... . Progress Lavngry com oss Gear 001 com .. 13 3861430 So Ind G & EB, 4.8% . [email protected] | Btokely-Van Cafup pr PE sess United Tel Co. 5% .. een u. 8: STATEMENT Union Title com ees Winew RR ih% merican Loan 56s 51 ...... WASHINGTON, Jan. 33 (U. P.)—Gov- | American Loan 85 46 ernment expenses and receipts for the! Bubner Fertilizer 5s 54 current fiscal year through Jan. 19, com- |Ch of Com Bldg 4'zs 61 d with. a year ago: Citizens Ind Tel 4Yys 61 This Year Columbia Club 5s ... $53,139,006,601 Consol Fin 5s 50 . 48,404,268,754 Ind Asso Tel Co Fi “70° Receipts . 21,859,553,057 Indpls P & L 3% Net Deficit. . 31,260,543,043 Bdbls Railways Co 7» u wee 87 Indpls Water Co 3%s 68 ,. Cash Balance 20,060,019,976 Kuh Pack Work. Bal... 19,207,117,876 uliner Packing Co 45 34 ©. Public Debt ..233,164,629,369 Gold Res.... 20,571,738,337
(heifers)
10.50012.75 AN ™
48 wes WASHINGTON SPRREs
Good and choice Media aud goog Comm
— —
os FINE
BONDS
SINCE IS@89"”
Last Year $50,045,734,905 46,615,713,794 22,036,603,356 28,000,129,400 10,187,705,008 9,424,947,174 171,116,637,044 21,038,278,528
Expenses War Spend
“SMOOTH FLYING S0 FAR, BILLI”
“YEP, WE'RE OVER KENTUCKY NOW, WHERE THAT SMOOTH BOND & LILLARD COMES FROM!"
Ind Pub Serv, 3%s 73 , N Ind Tel 4%% 55 Pub Serv of Ind 3s w Pub Tel 4%s . .e Trac Term ho 5s 61 U 8 Machine Corp 5s 53 .
WAGON WHEAT
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings Debits
“ 15,074,000
Up to the close of the Chicago market MAY CURTAIL CROPS | todss. Indianapolis flour mills and rain slevavors pad $1 i” per bushel for No r whea! {ot BUENOS AIRES, Jan. 22 (U, P.), merits; oats No. 3 white or No er —Argentina’s extended drought has| yellow shelled, on aron”" or oni Xe 3 created fears that the wheat, bar- Fashel. and No. 3 white + shelled, old erop, ley and linseed crops’ will be poor, while the early corn crop may prove CHILDREN'S C0 a total loss, grain quarters said to- LDS day. Light scattered rains fell at some places in the interior yesterday, out there was no immediate prospect
of heavy downpours which are needed to stop deterioration.
SAXOPHONE Instruction
q.25
Per Lesson
INDIANA MUSIC CO,
115 E. Ohio St.—FR. 1184
\
of soTy HOL HOLES + BURNS
LEON TAILORING C0.
1236 Mass. Ave. 3.0 Head’
; You Save Because We Save ‘Men's Suits & Overcoats
SRB 9s Eh 18 el ‘24 402 N. Capitol Ave.
E BOYS OVER THERE STILL NEED MUNITIONS CASE CLOTHES Oag Phone Night Phone
1215 N. Senate Ave. Open 9 to 9 -5361 1.7956 i / A ——— - ; Gy A Make Woodworking Your Hobby. Use — YOUR ( SREws at BK ” DELTA ' | MOTOR DRIVEN TOOLS : Exclusively at VONNEGUT’S 120 E. Washington St
THe
CINE BA
S50 UNLESS Your TRIP IS ESSENTIAL, GIVE _ THE WAR WORKERS THE RUSH HOUR RIGHT-OF-WAY BY RIDING THE BUSES >) AND TROLLEYS BEYWEEN 10 ANM.AND 4 AM. OR AFTER TAM.
CLOTHING
rlyd | LEIA
|
ASKIN & MARINE STORE
hin
