Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1945 — Page 6
Business
Marmon-Herrington* Chairman Sees Big
Post-War Demand for Trucks and Busses
By ROGER BUDROW ™
A. W. S. HERRINGTON, board chairman of Marmon-
Herrington, Indianapolis tank and truck-making firm, believes that “almost 100% of the nation’s trucks and busses
must be replaced when the war is over.” Civilian trucks and busses have ——
been pushed the limit during the war, reports Investor's reacer. BJT AMERI . Loads pnd mileage have soared, | i : maintenance iy MUST EAT, T00!
. sparé parts have Byrnes Puts Brakes to Big-
dropped. A bus which ordinarily | lasts more than | six. years, now wheezes into the , in four. y Junk yard in four | Hearted Food Shipments loads, big truckowners grab any Abroad. Darvs svailable, By LYLE C. WILSON SI) ob sania); United Press Staff Correspondent keep another on the road. The re-| WASHINGTON, March 12.—The sult is that since 1941 more than administration begins today to apI million trucks and busses have|Ply tight controls to some bigleft the road, leaving four million at hearted officials who had forgotpresent, a seven-year low, ten that Americans must eat, too. Will the thousands of military That is the simplest explanation trucks spoil the post-war marKet? of the order announced last night No, most of them are too expensive |by War Mobilization Director for peacetime ‘use. Others will be |James F. Byrnes. His order will coleft on the world’s far-flung battle. | ordinate shipment of all food and | fronts for one reason or another, | goods—other than for military pur- | transportation costs back to U. S., | poses—to foreign countries. It cov- | for one thing. Marmon-Herrington has .a $15 | meet a serious over-draft-on our | million backlog of military orders |food supply. : now. ‘But ‘of the post-war, Mr. The order, also, is to conserve the Herrington says: “The outlook for American economy for such recon- | new passenger cars is good; the version of industry-as may be posprospects for new trucks and for | sible after Germany quits. Byrnes new busses are terrific.” set up a committee headed by Leo 8 T. Crowley, foreign economic wid ministrator, with powers to impose PAYING THE BILL limits on gifts or sale of food or | Cluett, Peabody - & Co. maker other material to liberated and of “Arrow” shirts, gets the bulk of fother ‘hungry millions throughout its fncome from royalties from its) the world. “Sanforizing” process of Pre-| po toangrol Military ghirinking, used by other clothing $s manufacturers. The committee will not have Little Flemington, N. J., is the authority to interfere with military legal home of many big corpora- | requisitions. But the committee will | tions which are incorporated in| be advised fully and at all times of | New Jersey because of its free-and-| What the army and navy require easy corporations laws and who|and where they want it sent. | have legal (but not actual) head-| Byrnes ordered establishment of | guarters in Flemington because its | “priority of need” among all of our tax rate (43c per $100) is so low. | Overseas programs for shipment of Flemington is so prosperous that [all ‘kinds of material. other New Jersey cities, with much | The United Press was informed, higher rates, are trying to get cut however, that the order was rein on the deal also. | quired only because of overdrafts by , nn | overly-generous officials upon our o .___|over-all food supply. He reminded ENGLAND'S FAMOUS Chinaware| 0 concerned that they must re-| manufacturers discovered before the | ais : | war- that they couldn’t compete in | member that “aid in occupied enemy |
rice with Japan and Czecho- countries may be provided under DR ie {existing law only to the extent re-
Now their costs are even higher | Uired in the wake of battle.” | so quite a few plan to abandon | Must Attend Meetings the making of EBeaper diss 2a If further legislation is needed, a Th . Ione en Lo wily | Crowley's committee is directed to I many | Fecommend it. Other - committee
: {members are: Assistant Secretary countries and. that the Czechs will Will L. Clayton, state department; get the. business Japanese dish
| Capt. G. Conway, war shipping admanufacturers had. - - | ministration; J. A. Krug, war pros 8-8 x -|duction board;: Lt. Gen. Brehon| ODD8 AND ENDS: Newsprint Somervell, war department; Judge prices, which went up $8 a ton in|Marvin Jones, war food adminis1943, may go up $3 more; trade |tration; Capt. L. H. Strauss, navy | sources say OPA is willing. . . .|department. . The west coast, once the nation’s| The capital rates it as a good and worst labor shortage area, may steely-eyed committee which. will even have some unemployment by know the difference between urgent “summer, as shipbuilding” is slowed | necessities’ and sympathetic, opendown, a WPB survey shows... , -| handed generosity. Byrnes inThe agriculture department is | structed committee members that telling returning veterans to rent | they were not to delegate their farms, instead of buying them now, authority. Instead, he ordered them . until prices come back down. . . ./to attend all committee meetings Link-Belt Co. had $3,264,000 profit | personally when in the city. last year, or $431 a share vs.| After military and wake-of-battle $4.39 in 1943. . . . The government requirements are met, the interests Bonneville power administration |of American civilians evidently will hopes to have 25,000 homes in the have an even break with those of Pacific Northwest heated by elec- the admittedly hungry people tricity from the huge Columbia abroad river project by 1950 + 11 the war. in Europe ends by mid-
summer, those who. say the army BRITAIN IS PUSHING has been over-buying will be right,| observes the Wall Street Journal; | if V-E day doesn’t come until wi SALES IN ARGENTINA
then the present army policy of | buying big quantities of arms to| BUENOS AIRES, March 12 (U be sure of having enough will turn P.).—Argentina is being offered by out to be right. | British heavy equipment firms un-
les limited “supplies of steam boilers, FORD WILL MAKE structural steel and railway equip- : ment for immediate or early delivWEASEL CARRIER ery, the commercial magazine Economic Survey reported today. SOUTH BEND, Ind, March 12 This report coincides with other (U. P.) —Studebaker Corp. Board unconfirmed verisons that ArgenChairman H. S. Vance announced His Siete a Huars aifeady have : purchased-- ritish-built - locomotoday that Ford Motor Co. in tives but no details concerning deDetroit would begin production of |jjvery have been disclosed. Weasels, a track-laying personnel; The British Chamber of and cargo carrier, on July 1. Manufacturing and engineering specifications will be made available held in Argentina prior to 1939. by the Studebaker company, Vance said, and Studebaker engines will] NEW CROSLEY AUTO ENGINE be supplied for the Ford Weasgls.| CINCINNATI, March 12 (U. P.).— An increase in Weasel produc- | Powell Crosley Jr., president of the
¥
local
tion at the Studebaker plant will|Crosley Corp. today foresaw a post- |
begin April 1 and heavy duty mili- |war use in’ automobiles for the tary trucks will be turned out at a “new, lightweight engine” developed 15 per cent greater rate. {as part of the company’s: war work
"
Commerce tecently has been very J active, preparing a drive to regain; in the post-war the rich market it K
Sure looks like a lot of cars in
the gas tanks of many times that number to hold the gas load carThe Superforts carry some #000 gallons, the
ried by a-B-29 bomber.
ers. everything but was issued to| equivalent of a medium-sized railroad tank cdr or 369
mobile gas tanks.
McKellar Is ot It Again,
Wants Hold
WASHINGTON, today The contestants: Tennessee Valley Authority
March 12 (U.
The 76-year-old dean of the senate, who tries {operations directly to the congressional purse strings, 1s going to try
it again. And the first shot of the 1945 campaign is expected today, when the senate begins consideration of the independent offices appropriation bil McKellar has announced that he! will introduce an amendment. requiring TVA to turn in all its receipts to the federal treasury. The senate appropriations. committee changed the house-approved bill to knock out a provision allowing. TVA to continue’ operating on a revolving fund of its own receipts, without going back-~to congress for extra money. At the same time, it raised TVA's appropriation. McKellar, is expected to argue that those changes make his amendment a necessity, A similar amengment was approved by the senate last year, but was thrown out in conference at the insistence of the- house. The same fate was believed likely to overtake it this year.
<
WASSON COLOR AD WINS CLUB HONORS
A color newspaper advertisement of H. P. Wasson & Co. was selected ad-of-the-month winner {6f Febru-ary-in the Indianapolis Advertising ciub’s advertising contest. Winners in the various classifications were awarded certificates at the club's meeting Thursday in the Indianapolis Athletic club. | H. P. Wasson Co. also was awarded a certificate in the full-page black and white newspaper division. Bozell & Jacobs advertising agency was awarded a certificate in the classification for newspaper entries than half-page ' space size for its client, Public Service Co. of Indiana, Inc Keeling & Co. won honors in three classifications: Radio spot announcements, consumer magazine and trade paper divisions for the Casite Corp., American Thermos Bottle Co, and Hasting Piston Rings Indianapolis Engraving awarded top honors in mail competition piece prepared
of less
Co. was the direct with a mailing for Wayne Body Works: and: an entry. of StokelyVan Camp, Inc, won inh the car card, outdoor and display classification g
INCORPORATIONS |
ron Works, Inc., 17021 Bend; agent, J 1000 shares. no ture and sell metal i furniture and novelties 1 C. Kohen, Clifford B Ine, ‘118° W agent, Amos A , Kendallville; 250 alu Clarence E. BotBotchuck, Charles M. Zook Ballast Conditioning Cprp., corporat admitted to Indi1.gage in cleaning of stone baland between railroad tracks and road maintenance equipment Stale Bank of Whiting, Whiting: amendment increasing authorized capital stock to 1500 shares of $108 par value
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TIAL
"Need Gas, Brother 2:
a renewal of one. of Washington's most persistent feuds. Senator Kenneth
. A Ac Twin,
{county
{of the Massachusetts Institute of
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES __- DESUARD SAYS QUTPUT IS CUT
Blames Union ‘Resistance’ To Management for ‘Lag in Engines.
DETROIT, March 12 (U, P).— An" army officer testified today that union “resistance” to Packard Motor Car Co. management cut production of ' aircraft engines as much as 24 per cent. The testimony was given the senate war investigating committee by Lt. Col. Raymond Anthony, army air force representative at the plant where members of the committee found a worker asleep and noted many other idle. Anthony testified under examination by Senator Ferguson, (R. Mich) member, Anthony told the committee that army-audited floor reports on use of labor at Packard showed that idleness ranged from 17 to 19 per cent of time for the last 18 months. He said the condition was reported “almost weekly” to the management. “What has packard done?” Ferguson asked. Reports 75 Strikes ‘They set up their joint labormanagement time study,” Anthony replied. ~ ” “Has this been effective?” “Well,” the army officer asserted,
direct Homer a committee
the bottom_photo, but it would take
| explanation, made by union lead-
average auto- | ‘manggement is meeting a. great l deal of resistance from a Sonsider-1 ff lable number«of stewards.” | Another referred to United Auto-| mobile Workers: (C. I. 0.) union leaders within the plant. | ; “The stewards,” Anthony conf TVA P tinuéd, “are interested in keeping | 0 S urse i. men from being overworked. | > {They are not interested in seeing| that the men do work all of their | {alloted time.” | Anthony said- that his .records| showed 75 strikes at Packard in 1944 | and eight in" 1945, He defined | [strikes as work stoppages lasting | {more than 15 minutes. Didn't Make Study Ferguson referred to notes on his | desk and remarked that war labor board records showed that there were but two Packard strikes thus|
P.)—The may sound
gun
McKellar (D. Tenn.) vs. the
each year to tie TVA
Meetings
Fine Company | far this year
Two - motion picture, “Mainten-| - . ; P “Nevertheless,” Anthony said. “I
ance of Piping’ and “Tailor Made] Valves.” will be shown at a meet- | ave reported eight to my superior
ing of the Crane Co. and the Na-|Ofcer yn tional Association of Engineers at|{ M. F. Macauley, testifying as a the Y. M. C. A. at 7:30 p. m, Packard production expert, said Thursday, March 15. The public is that although Packard was producinvited. {ing only 76_per cent of the engine anions output-scheduled under its cost plus Pension Trusts |fixed fee army contract, production {of marine engines for the navy was| “Pension Trusts” will be the sub-|.+ gg per cent of schedule. ject of an all-day meeting con-| pergiison demanded an explana- | ducted by Milton Elrod Jr., local {jon i attorney, at the Columbia club,| «wei1” MaCauley said. “union | Thursday, March 15. The meeting! cowards wouldn't ‘let us in the will be under the auspices of Danfpgis.Royce (department) for two W. Flickinger, general agent, John! aq..e Hancock Mutual Life Insurance Co. | «what do you mean?” Ferguson ! La | demanded. Hardware Dealers | “The stewards orfiered our time assistant’. Marion study man out of the department, county gricultural agent, will! and so he got out to avoid trouble.” speak at the meeting of the In-| “What do you mean trouble?” dianapolis Retail Hardware Deal-| “Well, he'd be thrown out bodily ers’ association, Wednesday, March or there'd be a strike.”
ns m., at McKenzie Hard- GUIDE LAMP BUILDS. ITS 500,000TH GUN
Hay Drying forum | “ ANDERSON, Ind. March 12 (U.
Farmers interested “in modern’ P.).—General Motors Corp.'s Guide methods of drying hay will have an Lamp division here recently deopportunity to interview R. C.ilivered to the U. S. ordndnce:-de-Shipman, Purdue department of partment its 500000th M-3 subagricultural engineering, at the machine gun, which fires bullets at
| the army and navy “E” award.
“Mich. and Mitchell (D., Wash.),
agricultural agent’s office the rate of 450 a minute, it was anWednesday afternoon, March 14.! nounced today. The new methods permit the hay! The .gun, known as the “ment] to be"put into*the mow soon -after chopper’..a§..well as ‘brief case cutting and the drying to be done howitzer” and ‘chatterbox,’ has] in the mow where the hay is stored. proved itself an effective weapon in ” hand-to-hand, guerrilla and combat fighting, according to reports from
100th. Anniversary
the battle fronts. elebrating the 100th anniversary i erating | Benen Sy The M-3 can be taken apart and ance Co "W. Oliver Cust genera] packed into a package of lunch-box | EY a size, the company said, and will fire | agent for Indiana, and his asso# : . one bullet with the snap of the] ciates, will be hosts at a luncheon; . : ; } at the Columbia club Saturday rigger. It is the only sub-mackine) — : ws ow a tu March 17, for about 70 policy hold- gun 7 onder manufacture for the
ers, including those holding’ the 25| armed Jorces:
oldest and 25 newest policies in Indiana.
| “going to happen afterwards.
| have turned attention repeatedly
MANPOWER ' PROBE . . . By Charles T. Lucey
Detroit's Slogans Inspiring— But They Haven't Béen Enough
DETROIT, Mich, March 12.— Detroit is plastered with posters -and fine slogans and patriotic appeals to help win the war—all the inspiring mottoes and - catch phrases turned out by Washington. : Ld But .it hasn't been enough, { » 5 hs ory Bening, load . That's one. of the facts that | keeps sifting through the mass of conflicting ' evidence being gathered by the senate war investigating committee in this boiling center of war production. In the minds of thousands of workers there's something more fundamental involved than just slogans. Security — that's the word for it. This isn't a charge fired at workers by labor baiters. It's an
better procurement methods and improvkd scheduling of waf ore ders by Washington so there's an assurance of no interruptions in available work. Today the senators are trying
| one war plant where about 200 | are employed and, 45 minutes be- _ fore quitting time, found just one man working. One was asleep on a conveyor line. The rest, according to Senator Ferguson, were loafing. .
“Problem of Employers”
The senator, citing this ineci- ® dent to Mr. Reuther, pressed him as. to why the U. A. W, did not take action in such cases. Mr, Reuther said the union wasn't organized to detend the rights of men to loaf but that the situation cited by the senators was a problem: of management responsibility. He said if there were labormanagement committees there would be machinery for stopping such happenings. But management is very hot under the collar about that. It says the unjons are attempting to muscle in on management's affairs.
N.-Y. Stocks
High Low
ers themselves as one of the fac- | tors for the failure to get top | production despite appeals from battle commanders for more munitions. These workers have sons at the front. too. . Walter Reuther, vice president of the United ‘Automobile Workers, told the senators how a Lansing plant, working on a 20-millimeter anti-aircraft gun, had stepped up production tremendously at government urging. It turned out much more than had been scheduled for it, won
Two months later it went from seven days a week down to five days and then down to three days. Workers thus were penalized, the union leader argued, for all-out production. Workers know that, of course. A’ job finished quickly may mean a job folded up for lack of more contracts, .lack of materials or some other cause. Workers are worried now over what's to happen when the. vast flood of war : .. 35! 35! pfdduction ends. EE er 7 Ni: Mara “Fajlure to plan now for full |Ches & Ohio .. 5 1's 51% + la employment after the war is re- : of : Fr. sponsible more than any other single factor for the loss to war production of hundreds of -thou-
Net Last Change 43'; + + 923, — V4 32'; 137s 4 Yn 18% Bs Am 5 : 163 + a Am Tob B . 72 Am Water W LEA Anaconda ) Armour & Co .. Atchison yeaa At] Refining ...
Allis-Chal Am Can ...... |Am Loco wn |Am Rad & 88 {Am Roll Mill TT ...
| Bendix Avn- ... 3 517 52'a 1 {Beth Stec! 3 33 131; Borden
Chi Curtiss-Wr Du Pont | Gen Electric {Gen Foods .... Gen Motors ... . Gocdrich sands of workers in Detroit and |Goodyenar
other critical areas,” Mr. Reuther Greyhound Cp . 1
nt. Harvester said. Johns-Man
Kennecott “is {u=O-F Glass { Luckheed Aire . Loew's : 1 Martin (Glenn) Mont Ward 5 Nash-Kelv ..... Jat Biscuit Nat Distillers {NY Central . {Ohio Oil | Packard vars iPan Am Afr . Penney .e Penn RR . Phelps Dodge .. Proctor & G . Pullman Pure Oil
Hears of Slowdowns
Completion of a job has always meant “hitting .the-pavement,” he said, in arguing that insecurity is one of the important factors in retarding full mobilization of manpower, Matthew Smith, national secretary of the-Mechanics Educational Society, an independent union which has figured in numerous
| war-time strikes, cynically listed |Repub st
“ Reyn Tob B as a bar to top production, “the ped
apparent inability of government |Servel inc spokesmen to sell the war to the | Seely. Vas eee average worker and, worse still, to [Std Brands . ‘explain the attractions ofan early -/8'q 9 Gal ---: peace ” Std Oil NJ ... TC y wrk nn Texas Co Our average Detroit worker, 20th Cent Pox he said; “with acute memories of ps Rubber ‘ 8 tee . k 832 the long depression, remembers Warner Bros... 14% «141% 14% peace as a time when the job |Westing El ....125% 1253, 125% is Zenith Rad -.... 6% 68'2 62 would fizzle and he would join the | : ? miserable unemployed army. “The ever-present unholy fear of a return te this unhappy condition is retarding production in this area by at least 10 per gent.”
563,
: - swore 8000TH B-24 BY FORD | DETROIT, March 12 The 8000th four-engined B-24 Liberator bomber will roll off assem-
He told Senators James M.: Mead ibly lines at the Ford Motor Co. at
Willow Run plant this week. The (D.. N.Y), Homer Perguson (R., | plane ‘represents two and one-hisid running the investigation, that | year's production the average war worker pays | tribute to winning the war, but |
he is apprehensive about what's
Senator Ferguson asked William Cushman, war. manpower commission area director, whether | he had heard reports that when | factory men hear a war contract may be terminating, they slow down so as to stretch work until they get a new contract. Mr. Cushman.‘said he had— that he thought there was such a tendency. Various remedies are proposed. Senators Mead and Ferguson
MT. Aurthur B. Ellenwood, who was| in charge of the building of the Lukas-Harold bombsight factory, will speak on “The Construction of the Naval Ordnance Plant” at the
meeting of the Indiana Association
Technology at 6:30 p. m. at the Apex Grill, Wednesday, March 21. Officers for the coming year will also be elected at this meeting.
Real Estate Board
Farm Day will be observed by the | Indianapolis Real Estate board at its meeting Thursday noon, March 15, in the Washington hotel.” L. E. Hoffman, associate director of the agricultural extension of Purdue university, will speak on “Indiana Agriculture in 1945.” : !
Chemical Society George J. Smith of-the-Ofd -Quaker company, will talk on “The Story of Whisky” at the luncheon meet- | ing of the Indiana Section of the| in the | Warren hotel, tomorrow noon. :
Rotary. Club
“Ten Years Before Pearl Harbor” will. be the subject of Robert C. Wallace, vice president of MarmonHerrington, Inc., when he speaks at | the Rotary club meeting tomorrow at 12:15 p. m. in the Riley room of the Claypool hotel. ]
U. S. STATEMENT
WAKHINGTON, March 12 (U’ P).— Govesnment “expenses and receipts for the current fiscal year through March, compared with a year ago: oo" This Year Expenses. $66,710,846,379 War spend'g 61,078 758,624 Receipts . 28,546,770,194 Nei deficit 38,164,075,685 Cath balance 15,029,081 714 Working bal. 15,167,064 992 Public. debt 235,236,355, 564 Gold reserve 20,454,182,509
Last Year $62:849,302,071 58,879,734,228 25,944 424,176 37,003,956,744 117.457.985.802 16,605,208,137 .187.426,850 857 21.660,920,166
- . INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE CIearINES sos vonvisivis Loo 8 5,167,000 orsgaans 13,719,000
seen
When the answer is “BUY”
—where is the money?
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CE The INDIANA TRUST - COMPANY
OTTO N PRENZEL Maids Allied with
THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK s=olc=—"0 : rs ‘cA eplots :
FEDERAL DEPOSIT : val INSURANCE CORPORATION : ‘
Mo I | MERIT SHOE STORES |
They visited a department in |
- . 31% + 1. |
Va } . sl Bald Loco ct . 24 287 § % ‘ 4
(U. P)—
(IT, STILL ESSENTIAL
THAT ALL AVAILABLE
CH ay MOVING YO THE
INDIANAPOLI
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
PEARSON 'S
FURNITURE © PIANOS B A N D INSTRUMENTS RECORDS © SHEET MUSIC
“MONDAY, MARCH 12, 1045 1
‘TIGER TAMERS’
“Royal Tigers’ on Western Front.
DETROIT, March 12 (U. P.),~= Approximately 250 T-26 General
went into action on the Western front last month, it was disclosed | here today.
In a letter to President C. E. Wile § | son of General Motors Corp., whose i | Fisher Body division is producing § {the 45-ton tank, Maj. Gen, L. H. } Campbell said the heretofore secret §
weapon “has proved itself extreme=
ly efficient” in combating the Nazi |
| Royal Tiger tank. Campbell,
recently
weapon.” He added that they need
the “maximum number in the least |
possible time,” The T-26—renamed the
them—are equipped with high vee
locity 90-millimeter guns, torsion provide § greater speed and maneuverability, § |extra-heavy armor, and a newly | Ford mo= §
suspension springs that
| designed eight-cylinder
| tor.
NEW FIRMS AND PARTNERSHIPS
Carl's Cleaners, 853 E. 52d st. Dry cleane &
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work John Gordon Bennett
Income Tax Returns
Competent Assistance Moderate Cost Come In Any Time
A. J. BRUMLEVE
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT _
217 Underwriters Bldg." ~ LL 9710 :
NOW IN ACTION
on what they think is a need for 250 New Tanks Meet Nazis
Pershing tanks—America’'s mightie lest and newest armored vehicles— J
chief of army orde | nance, sald American tank forces | indicating dissatisfaction * with other U. 8. tanks “are enthue | siastic about all features of the new
“Tiger : Tamer” by war workers who build
Maryland ’ Floyd Q,
Political" organization ¥ i 216 Lincoln 1, | hotel; Will H. Adams. 3970 Winthrop
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MONDAY Joseph To Be |
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