Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1945 — Page 12
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Historical Motor -Scrapbook Brings Nostalgic Memories of the Old Days
By ROGE
. A GOOD MANY HOOS kick out of Floyd Tlymer’s
R “BUDROW : IERS WILL GET a nostalgic
“Historical Motor Scrapbook.” |
Clymer is a=Los Angeles automobile dealer whose hobby is collecting old photographs, advertisements from’ old maga-
gines and newspapers,
cap and goggles and linen du He published one scrapbook, which was so successful’ that he| - put out a second, edition and has) others, specializing on electric, cycle | and steam cars, coming out, 100 The second edition is full of different makes
and practically anything connected with the early days of the automobile, the days of the visored
sters.
5300 PORKERS RECEIVED HERE:
Theis fo Leave
Edward ¥. Theis, who came to Indianapolis in 1942 to manage the Curtiss-Wright propeller plant, is leaving Feb. 1 to become: vice president in charge of refrigerator pro- ’ duction for Philco Corp. in Philadelphia. : Mr. Theis was works manager of Philco’s refrig- | erator division before coming here. He. returns as vice president in charge of refrigerator produc-
tion. George L. Lang g)00eeding Mr. Theis as manager of the propeller plant will be George L. Lang, assistant plant manager since Jan-
f some peo- : uary, 1943. os » Prices Are Unchanged at Mr. Theis also headed the L.
ple probably never heard of. New makes came thick | and fast in those | pioneering days) —and more than| 2200 in all have been brought out.
$14.80 Government Ceiling. The war food administration reported light market receipts here |
G. S. Spring Clutch Corp, a recently - purchased subsidiary. WwW. W. Gleeson, ii general production manager of Curtiss - Wright's
But a lot of the names will sound today, as sales continued active and | propeller division, §
familiar. “Just why Indiana lost out to Michigan as the center of the nation's automobile - industry is a question which has always both-
ered us, but we certainly were mak- nogs 600 cattle, 475 calves and 2550] Mr.
ing automobiles back in the old days, | For instance, the “Scrapbook” re- | prints an advertisement from “The. Horseless Age” of July, 1911, in which the Ideal Motor Car Co. of Indianapolis boasted that ils first Stutz, built by Harry C. Stutz ‘from the ground up in five short weeks,” won the Speedway 500-mile race in| 442 minutes. “Duplicates for $2000.” Ea 2 x | EVEN BEFORE that, in 1906, Nor-| dyke & Marmon was advertising (in| the deceased Munsey’'s magazine) its four-cylinder air-cooled car for)
$2500 (four passengers) and $3000 Medium-— ws iG
(five passengers). Another ad in. Munsey's (circa 1904) offers the Pope Waverley Electric, made in Indianapolis, looking!
as much like a regular horse buggy | Choi*—
as possible, |
1100-1300 pOUNGAS sesesoavnane et it a : Late in 1920, Duesenberg was urg-|1300-1500 pounds .+. [email protected] | Indpis Water pid :
ing dealers to sign up for sales ter- |G
ritories for its new “Eight-in-a-|
Row” which had just come in first, |;300-1500 pounds
second, third and fourth in the Medium—
Uniontown race. i1
The Marion company, also of In-|Common—
¥
dianapolis, was bragging in 1912 that
Medium to Choice—
unchanged. Choice hogs of 160 to]
400 pounds are still bringing ceiling | price of $14.80. | Receipts were estimated at 5300]
sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (5300) | 160180 220240- 27 270 330Medium— . 160- 220 pounds Packing Good to Choice 270- 300 pounds . 300- 330 pounds . 330- 360 pounds .. 360- 400 pounds .... Good— 400- 450 pounds ....e 14.00@ 14.05 450- 550 pounds .evese. peeven 14.009 14.05 |
114.80 0
{ 13.25@ 14.60 |
Sows
. 14.08 14.05 oe. 14.05 | . 14.05 |
50- 500 pourds 12.75@ 13.90 Slaughter Pigs J 90- 180 pounds . [email protected] CATTLE (660) {
00- 900 pounds ....eeceecee.
[email protected] 900-1100 pounds 7
15.75@ 17.00
00d— 700- 900 pounds ...eees 900-1100 unds
700-1100 pounds 100-1300 pounds
700-1100 ‘pounds
it had 9000 satisfied customers. The | choice—
Premier Motor Manufacturing Co.
in 1905, offered a runabout for $1250. Good—
edium— UP AT SOUTH BEND, Stude-| 500-300 pounds
baker had gone from making farm | wagons to carriages and then
autos . and was selling a two-|Medium aie airs {Cutter and common ..
cylinder, 15-horsepower chaine- | driven job in dark green or dark| blue wood for $1350 in 1805. Apperson Bros. of Kokomo guaranteed their racy-looking “Jack Rabbit” would do 75 miles an hour. It was patterned after the entry in ‘the Vanderbilt Cup race, was made
. of Krupp nickel steel “thoughout; {Good and -enoice == Sofi and medium
and set anybody back $5000, quite a bit for 1907. That same year the Buckeye Manufacturing Co. at
Anderson was making the Lambert |Choice—
“Friction Flyer.” For only $950, in 1910, you could get an Empire Twenty, made by Empire Motor Co. of Indianapolis, “a sweet running roadster for two.” : And then there was that phenomenal car, the Reeves “Sextoauto,” made in Columbus, Ind, with two wheels forward and four aft, a curious-looking affair whose makers claimed “tire trouble and] expense actually reduced.”
» ” ~ THE FIRST DE SOTO was built in 1913 at Auburn, Ind., by DeSoto, not Chrysler. In the same year, W. H. McIntyre Co., also of Auburn, introduced his Cyclecar which did
not go over and soon was*forgotten. Flashy disc wheels were sported (in 1921) by the Davis, made over at Richmond. Haynes of Kokomo, back in 1905, had a major selling point—“it runs almost in silence.”
And the Crow-Elkhart had 10 mod-|Allis-Chal
|
els to choose from.
[Am There are a lot of names now|Am | Am {Am y “ | Am Eas 1 os | Am .
almost niemories—the air-cooled Franklin, Stoddard-Dayton, Colt, Maxwell, Rambler, Cole, Oakland
800-1000 pounds ....eeeesaes Good:
Common +... ci sesanensanes
800 pounds eeres [email protected]
600-800-1100 pounds ersens 600- 800 pounds ...
stesssrans 3330014 50 800-1000 pounds
sasesesnsssesr 15.50814.15 «+ [email protected] | [email protected] |
0. 30 1 sesseresens 500- 900 pounds : Cows | . [email protected] . [email protected] [email protected] |
Canner 6.25@ 17.50
Beef —
Good (all weights) ...eeeees [email protected]
[email protected] 9.25@ 10.50 CALVES (475) a Yealeri (all weights) : 4 17.00 [email protected] eit 6.00@ 9.00 Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves Steers
500- 800 pounds ...... eases [email protected]
. [email protected] . [email protected]
500- 800 pounds .
1.50@ 8.75
500 pounds down ..........
Calves (heifers) Good and choice— 500 pounds down .. Medium— 500 pounds down [email protected] | SHEEP AND LAMBS (2550) Ewes (shorn) Good and choice Common and medium LAMBS Good and choice Medium and good ....i.. Pines
625@ 7.50] 4.50@ 6.25
15.25@ 16.00 13.00@ 15.00 10.75@ 12.76
N. Y. Stocks
. 15.75@ 17.00 | Indpi Freeves Indpls Water Class A com.... 32 .. [email protected] | Jeff Nat Life com .... cedars 14.00@ 15.75 | *Kingan & Co pid..
- 8 et [email protected] | Kingan & Co com. ‘naan 1300-1300 pounds {0412 00 | Lincoln Loan Co 5%2% |
iN ver 10.00@ 12:00
13.25@ 14.75 | gi okely-Van Camp pr pf .
(all weights) | B
Caldwell, N. J, becomes vice pres= ident and general manager of that subsidiary. F Thels, 8 \ native of law. W. W. Gleeson renceburg, Ind, has been production manager for the Maxwell Bris-
and then factory manager of the
To Become Philc
Curtiss-Wright
xecutive 1v Premier Motor Car Co. of Indianapolis, ’ After serving as works manager of a truck manufacturing company in Binghamton, N. Y., he was factory manager {for Servel, Inc, Evansville refrigerator concern, later becoming general production manager. In 1937 he returned to Indianapolis as works manager for the Fair-banks-Morse ‘Co.'s home appliance division. He became works manager for Philco’s refrigerator division when it bought the FairbanksMorse refrigerator rights. A testimonial dinner will be given Tuesday at Hotel Lincoln by plant executives. Mr. Lang, a native of Brooklyn, N. Y,, is a graduate of Pratt Institute and was with the Splitdorf | Electric Co. of Newark, N. J, 19 lyears. He was associated with a | thermostatic control manufacturing {concern and an electrical motor | manufacturing firm before joining | Curtis-Wright's propeller division in June, 1939, at the Clifton, N. J, |plant. He later was at the Caldwell plant. Mr. Lang came to Indianapolis in { March, 1941, playing a major. role {in making the machine layout and | beginning production of propeller | parts. In January, 1942, he became | manufacturing superintendent and a year later assistant plant mana-
ger. Mr. Gleeson has been with Cur-tiss-Wright since 1936. A native of Detroit, he was on the U. 8. S.
$14.00814 30 | coe Motor Co., later U. S. Motors, | Alabama in world war 1, joining U|iater becoming production manager | Studebaker after the war and re-
}
maining with it unfil 1936.
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by anapolis secu dealers. STOCKS
rities
Agents Fin Corp com Agents Fin Corp pid cenenne ves} Ayrshire Col com . or Beit R Stk Yds com .. Bobbs-Merrili com Belt R- Stk Yds pt . Bobbs-Merrill 4%. ptd entral Soya com .e Circle Theater ccm Comwlth Loan 5% Delta Elec com Electronic Lab com Hook Drug Co com :.. ...... 17 Home T&T Pt Wayne 7% pid. 51 *Ind Asso Tel 5% pfd jes
*Lincoln Nat Life com
. [email protected]/P R Mallory 412% «...... Tn . [email protected](P R Mallory com
Ind Pub Serv 5% _ Pub Serv Ind 5% Sy eae 108% Pub Serv of Ind COM .eievvse 207%, Progress Laundry com Ross Gear & Too: com .. *So Ind G & E 487%
United Tel Co. 5% . Union Title com ......eeee BONDS Algers Wins'w RR 42% American Loan 5s 51 .. American Loan 58 46 .. uhner Fertilizer 55 54 Ch of Com Bldg 4'as 61 Citizens Ind Tel 4%s 61 .. Columbia Club 5s . Consol Fin 5s 30 . Ind Asso Tel Co Bale .
Bulls (all weights) |Indpls P & L 3%s 17
Indpls Railways Co 5s 67 . Indpls Water Co 3%28 68 .... Kuhner Packing Co 48 54 .... Ind Pub Serv 3%s 73 ....104 Ind Tel 4%2% 55 Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 73 Pub Tel 4%s 55 .. ae Trac Term Corp 5s 67.. U_8 Machine Corp 5s 53 . sEx-dividend
WPB T0 LIMIT WORK IN GROUP II AREAS
WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (U. PJ).
[email protected]|—The war production board moved
today to conserve manpower and prevent a log-jam of war contracts in cities with acute labor shortages by setting itself up as a traffic cop in placement of all army and navy orders over $100,000. WPB Chief J. A. Krug’'s program, expected to go ints effect Feb. 1, establishes WPB as final authority over military building activity in the 72 acute labor areas, designated as group I regions. Krug’s plan also further curtails manufacture of civilian goods under the near-dead spot -authorization plan by exiending the ban on its use to another 75 cities in the group 11, or potentially short labor areas. Use of the plan is already prohibited in the Group 1 areas and some
Net Low Last Change 40% 41 —- a 207% 81 28's 21% 12% 12% 16's le | 162g 3s |
Am Can Loco
+! Anaconda
Hupmobile, Moon, Paige, Ricken {Armour & Co..
backer, Chalmers, etc. Incidentally, Clymers predicts that
after the war is over.
NEW FIRMS AND PARTNERSHIPS
Ralph B. Roberts, Public relations and advertising counsel Ralph B. Roberts and Marie M. Roberts, 8510 N. Pennsylvania; Wawasee Cafe, 231 E 16th st. RestauJant and tavern; Clyde W, Youse and Romains Youse, 149 Berkley rd |
Frits Stein, 226 N, Jefferson st.
INCORPORATIONS
providing for perpetual corporate . iy pe! porate exist
United Co-operatives, Inc, Indianapolis; | Pan Am Air ... 32°
fisluton, . P. Kelly & Co, Bluffton, dissolution. Pred C. eeman, Indianapolis; registration of trade-mark “Silent Way” with design of sailboat, class 4: abrasive detergent and polishing materials, ’ Little Betty Mining Corp., Indianapolis; amendment changing address of principal office and agent to 303 Merchants Nationa] bank bldg. Terre Haute, Ind. and desigLating Robert G. Nunn its resident agent. Hoviand-Leslie Co., Illinois corporation; amendment of articles of incorporation. Ohio Valley Liquors, Ine., 108 W. Main #t., New Albany: agent, Albert PF, Hess, 1302 State st, New Albany: 100 shares of 100 par value; Albert P. Hess, Brooks A. napel, Thomas E. Lancaster. Lebanofi Business Men's : Rshanon: artic'es accepting provisions of
ation Act of 1929; 130 shares ot $200 par value. Wi
LOCAL PRODUCE
g 0 A *
rs, 160.
iy
At Bald someone ‘will bring out a light, |gers 10d, Loan, steam automobile within three years |Borden ‘ee Borg-Warner . 38’ 31 38 's | | Caterpillar T.. y ¥ — 10 Ches & Ohio... § 1 Yel Childs “re } . | Curtiss-Wr .... © 5 + . Douglas Aire .. 69’ Gen Electric .., 3 Gen Foods .... | Gen Motors ,.. 370 N. Meridian at. | Sonrich ina «Greyhound Cp.. ? Int Harvester .. JohnggMan Kennecott | L-O-F Glass Apex Food Market, 111 E. 22d st. Grocery. [1 ooprecd Alrett 2 | Marshall Pid . Martin (Glenn) Mont {Nash-Kelv ..,., N ‘es {Nat Distillers . Ossian State Bank, Ossian; amendment N Y Conia... Ohio Oll «.uiv us
. 20 Realty Co.
Atchison .....
L Refining 3 Loco ct.. i
Steel
+44
+44 1444
ba Vs % | ) : | 5 |
| Ya | ‘a
+444
Ward ... 80
4
at Biscuit w | . 8, | .
4:
Ye | Packard tan aeee k¥ 33 Val Peoney ... ....108 108 Va Penn RR ...... 34%; ! 343 : Phelps Dodge .. : 26% Procter & G .. 57% Pullman . 487 Pure Ofl ....... 17% Repub StI ...." 20 y 20 Reyn Tob B ... 32% Schenley Dist .. 42'3 Bervel Inc ... 20%a Socony-Vacuum. 156% Bouth Pac 40% Jd Brands .... 30! 30%, Std O Cal .... 39a Sid Oil (Ind) . 36% Std Oil (N J) . 57% Texas Co ..... 53%
7 i Bteel +... 30% 50% Bo Warner Bros .. 14 A 137% esting El ....118% 118% Zenith Rad ... 38% 38%
+4
ne 3] Vs is Va | hi
Ve he bn Ya
Ta ba
Fit r EEE AEE
Ya
wh - WAGON WHEAT
Up to the closes of the Chie market today, Indianapolis flour milly vd ei elevators paid $1.67 per bushel for No. 1 merits); oats No. 2 white or No. 3 red, wheat (other grades on their 42 lbs. or better, 69¢; corn, No. 2 * shelled, - old , $1,009 per and No. 3 white , erop,
8) 1% 8
cities in Group IIL Under the new controls, the WPB
contract—either prime or sub—over $100,060 before a local manufacturer
PENNSY MAKES HISTORY PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 26 (U. P.). —Pennsylvania Railroad, the na-
that its gross revenues in 1944 créssed the $1 billion mark for the first time in history.
BUSINESS IN ‘44 UP 20 PER CENT
Indiana University Review ‘Says Much Due to "Higher Prices."
Indiana business closed 1944 with
_|retail trade approximately 20 per .lcent ahead of 1943, the Iadiana "| Business Review, monthly publica-
tioh of Indiana university's bureau of business, reported today. There was a slight decline in December retail trade as holiday
_ | business expanded less than usual
The gain, for the most part, was
-ldue to higher prices and not to
110'2 | 1934 |
physical volume expansion, the Review said. Newpaper advertising, bank debits. and retail trade finished up well
**-lahead of the previous year's clos--}ing. :*'lin December than «++ |since February.
Bank debits ranked higher in any month
Christmas Shopping
Retail trade, although larger in
.. {December than November, did not ‘.’|make the usual peace-time increase.
Much holiday buying, normally
_|done in December, was probably
carried on earlier. Incomplete figures from the department of conimerce indicate a wide gap between
cal -turnover of merchandise. . The Review said that coal production in tonnage was larger in December than in November, but due to high November production, the final month increase was. far below normal. Coal production hit the highest figure since 1920. The Indiana rate ‘of expansion for 1944 was more than twice that of the en- | tire U. 8S. Manufacturing employ m e n t {dropped 10 per cent from a year ago. Payrolls were 5 per cent below {last year's figure. Steel production {in December was the best since January,
Meetings
Chemical Society
The regular weekly luncheon of {the American Chemical society will {be held at the Warren hotel, Tues-
**1, | production urgency committee in day. F. J. Ludzack of city sanita's |the local area must_approve a war | tion department will speak on topic
| ISetentech Clb
John G. Dyer, local representative of TWA, will speak to the Scientech
of “Domestic and Industrial Waste Treatment in Indianapolis.”
o at tion's largest carrier, disclosed today | club at a meeting Monday noon in
the Claypool hotel. He will discuss | Avision, Past, Present and Fu-
ture.”
| Senate Startled by Power They Have Doled Out to RFC
By Scripps-Howard Newspapers WASHINGTON, Jan, 26.—The most startling fact that has come out
branch without appreciating fully Some of them listened almos (D. Ga.) spent 55 minutes reeling, and special authorizations granted the Reconstruction Finance Corp. and its subsidiaries, The payoff came when Mr. Jones answering a question by Senator Bailey (D. N. C.) as to his lending
iv | powers as RFC boss, said calmly: | “To make loans in any amount,
{for any length of time, at any rate |of interest, to anybody.”
Senators Couldn't Believe The senators seemed unbelieving.
somethifig of a shock.
purchases strategic the senate banking
4p
te There was plenty of evidence that ‘1% | Such powers had heen granted only because Jesse Jones had been RFC boss, but even so it was plainly ‘wéuld be “20 millions here and 20
Mr. Jones himself told how, in’ 1940, special “powers. had = been sought to allow the RFC to make|ine moochers are. tin, rubber amd other
a. of the current Jesse Jones-Heury Wallace feuding for a lot of senators pais that for years they've been granting huge powers to the executive
how great these powers are. t incredulously as’ Senator George off a list of the dozens of separate
committee finished with the legis lation, “it had everything in it.” “It had too much authority,” he 'said. “It frightened me,”
Wanted Safeguards
Mr. Jones said he had urged putting in safeguards—certain approvals by the President. But he added that he thought now there was too much authority in the powers granted and that he “felt so at the time.” .” When war plants were being financed, he said, Lt. Gen. William
millions there.” “If you know where there's sugar,” he said, “that's where the flies are. Where ~the. money is—ihat's where They're not all
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
HITS PRE-ELECTION RAISES AT RICHMOND
WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (U. P). —The United Electrical’ Workers (C., 1. 0.) charged today at a national labor relations board hearing that the Crowley Co., Richmond, Ind,, had made “an extraordinarily large number of merit wage increases just prior to a collective bargaining election at the plant in order to influence the result.” The union objected to NLRB certification of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers (A. F. of L.) which attained a majority %of the votes cast. The U. E. W.-C. I. O. said 290 increases were
'Privateer' H
Wallop
FRIDAY, JAN. 2, 1945
|CAPITAL TO $100,000
The Madison Avenue State Bank directors approved a measure yesterday to double the $50,000 capital of the bank, Five hundred new stock shares of $100 par value, will be offered to present stock holders according to number of shares already owned, When the bank first opened in 1926, capital was $25,000. It was doubled in 1940. With the present
{ |increase, the bank will have a sur
plus of $30,000, and reserves and undivided profits. of $30,000. Total resources reach a little more than
the course of dollar sales and Jphysi-|
8. Knudsen would call up and it]
$3,700,000.
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, Jan. 38 (U. P.).—Gove ernment expenses and receipts .for the current fiscal-year through Jan. 24 come pared with a vear ago: This Year Last Year Expenses .... $54,102,083,000.851,160,447,835 War Spending 49,459,5672,349 Receipts sev 2004
made iif*the three months immediately preceding the election in contrast to the normal rate of 10 a month, The U. E. W.-C. 1. O. told NLRB member Gerard Reilly, presiding, that the NLRB examiner had refused to, allow submission of this
ions pectin to me woton | FLETCHER SAVING RENAMES OFFICERS
sult. He said the NLRB has never ruled on whether an objection to an election result may be amended| Directors and officers of Fletcher and no cases have been litigated on | Avenue Savings & Loan ‘association were re-elected at .their 54th annual meeting yesterday.
this principle. Charles R. Yoke is president; Ed-
a wei : A
Above is first photo released of the Privateer, new navy search plane officially tagged the PB4Y-2. Able to range over 1500 miles from base, unescorted, and return, it can attack the enethy as well as defend itsolf. It carries a dozen 50-cal. guns in six turrets, can: stay aloft 20 hours and has a top speed of over 250 mph.
ward H. Parry and Hadley E. Green, vice presidents; John K. Parry, sec- 4 retary; Ralph D. Day, assiStant sec- | Net" Buticit * 31138 500810 23/5 retary; Alden G. Overbeck, auditor, | Cash Balance. 19,936,060, 645 and Herman W. Kothe, attorney. [ponte bent 233 335 070 819 Directors are Mr. Kothe, Edward |Gold Reserve. 20,571,144,644 Parry and John Parry, John C. Uhl, Frank Dunlop, Mr. Green and Mr. Yoke.
21,028,024,8
. INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Cloarings ....creou0nee Shnsauunrsr § 4,546,000 Debits eran aR Ara hy 17,342,000
vc Gee Yaueliy Company
18 N. Illinois Claypool Hotel Bldg.
2 Dee makes this marvelous Whigs
The NLRB took the matter under advisement.
offer to emphasize its policy of always presenting the most outstanding values in town. Take advantage of this TODAY!
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rch oh chido hhh hhh hh hhh
I TT Oe
