Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 March 1945 — Page 7
his cause ' disturbances rvous, jittery, red —-at such elay—try this
oe
H i 4
E. Pinkham's
0 relieve such
Such periodio §
\ying nervous, this nature, 8 great timee
the food t in tissue build-up nt. able the lature ine petite. alertness have tese rought to at it gets SS Tonic day...at 9.8. Coy’
CHIC HEALTH |
| WEDNESDAY, MARCH
od
14,1045
Business
:Scores in 'Objective Burma' ry By ROGER BUDROW -— THIS IS NOT A MOVIE REVIEW "but just a note for posterity on how, during the great war, a war factory hard up for help to make a really super war item, put on a free
show starring that war item and an actor who “wows” ithe ladies, thereby getting. the latter]
ito sign up for half a day's work lat the war plant. Pretty slick, oe |, .
sponsored a private showing of
Mallory's Dry Cell Battery
wl
“Objective Burma” at Keith's theater, inviting Mallory employees (“See how vital your job is!”) and
Last night P. R. Mallory & Co. /
EEL HE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ___ Know What It Is? — A |
Jeep!
M. Sgt. Merrill L. Reed, Muncie, Ind, is among seven enlisted men
of an ordnance repair outfit responsible for a jeep that is masquerading as a miniature peacetime pleasure car somewhere near the Siegfried
line,
It took six weeks’ work during spare time to produce this version
bothers who would help recruit 1000 Firm Representaitves. Kept of the war's most taiked-about vehicle.
more workers to make that miraculous tiny battery which powers walkie-talkies, { handie - talkies, mine detectors and can take the
Out of France, Says
Stoneman. By. WILLIAM Hi STONEMAN
Times Foreign Correspondent LONDON, March 1l4.—~American Bol, Ne opis) business Arms are being given what 3 ordinary batter- | they consider a first-class run- » es. __. around by French bureaucrats, and The movie is 10 he Uy, S. government has been be shown later at | given the same treatment when it
lhe Indiana where Mallory’'s will ave an employment booth in the
| has tried to intervene.
obby to sign up workers for full| ‘Since last autumn, approximately ime work or for the' “housewife 50 American concerns. have atLhift” (7 a. m. to noon, qr 12:45 to | tempted to send. representatives to 5:45 p. m.) | France, in most cases in an effort | This department's favorite war| to sort out the tangled affairs of show so far was the documentary|the offices or factories which they story, “Fighting Lady,” depicting maintained in France before the hattles of an aircraft carrier and war, All these representatives, ts brood of planes. |whether of American or British | But "Objective Burma” is another | nationality, have been given letters nighty good one. No phony love from the American embassy in Lonstory, just plain grisly war that| don to the local French consul gen-
nakes even Errol Flynn look rug-
eral certifying that ‘they were going
red. It certainly convinces a person to France on business which would hat walkie-talkies and other com-| “serve the national interests” of nunications devices are the life-|the United States. slood of ‘an army. | Until very-recently, only about 10 Incidentally, a few other Indian- | of the 50 had been given French \polis companies could well “point|yisas and many have been waiting vith pride” at some of their prod-|unsuccessfully since last November, acts. El Lilly workers, for example,| It appears that the French convould notice that our fighters in | sul general has to submit the appli3urma are constantly made to take cations to the French foreign office, itabrine tablets to. ward off ma- | which, in turn, consults the French aria. {ministry concerned, which, in turn, And Real Silk Hoslery Mills work=| consults the local. Prench- reprers would see how parachutes ‘are|sentative of the firm which ‘wishes 1sed not only for paratrooper land-|t, send a representative to France. ngs but to supply them with food what American business men would ind ammunition when plane land- ike to know is, why the French ngs are impossible. {consul general cannot accept the s 2 8 word of the American embassy in THE WINNAH ! Jahon When it Shaye representa- . {tive of an American firm. The Big Three decided at Yalta British firms seem to have had hat Germany's war-making ability| 4 jot better luck with the French. s to be drastically curbed by rigid Under a special arrangement, which sontrol of her industry. Her days the British have with the French,
s a big manufacturing nation and |20Y British business man who is
: equipped with: a letter from the v world economic power appear to British foreign office stating that )e over tyen.
his journey to France is in the naIn 1937 Germany shipped $2 bi}- tional interest is given a visa withjon in exports, ina fleet of 2400 out consulting Paris. nerchant ships. -Much of it was! The American embassy in Lohdon yutomdbiles ($82 million), chem-| does not give a letter to any Tom, feals ($138 million), "optical goods Dick or Harry who wants. io go to $468 million) and machinery ($310 Frifice. People who are recommillion). {mended to the French consul genGermany's light, fast Opel auto eral are serious citizens with imrave Chevrolet and Ford a fast race portant work to do. American busin Europe and South America. Du|ness men feel that as citizens of a ont’s stiffest competition for the country which continues to behave ‘oreign chemical market came from generously toward France, they . G. Farben. ‘have both an explanation and .bet- , Germany's commercial competi- ter treatment due them, fast. ors really have a tremendous stake, Copyright, 1945, ‘by The Indianapolis Times n her downfall. a * and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
. we | WALLACE'S new committee to» ook into ways for’ helping small yusiness is a puzzler i xt 4 .i Agents Fin Corp com........ .h For one thing, the first its mem Aes Fi Corb oi
y ; ; Ayshire Col com ders knew about J was when the JYERIZE EOL TC
; i , Belt R..§ik Vis ‘e 1ewspapers carried “the story of Be bene As] i 164 : Bobbs-Merrill 4';
intments. ¢ heir appo Central Soya com 3 34 them Circle Theater com
For another, are~ any of - > . { res? | Comwith Loan 57, pfd 108 eally in small business themselves? les” Bop AO 0 ook them over—Detroit Edison|Eiectronic Lab com “ine SUED 6 ” : ” Pt Wayne & Jackson: RR pfd. &¢ So. (Prentiss Brown), U. 8. Cham-| yw "nie "co com pa. 2 ser of Commerce (Eric A. John- | Homie Té1 Ry Jaype 1% pfd {In 88 2% “. “es ston), Federal Reserve Board of ind a Mich E pid. Jovernors (Ernest G. Draper), Me. | lnapls PEL 2 Jraw-HYl Publishing Co. (Stacy! *Indpls Railways’ com > & Tati | Indpls Water pfd rae ah May), First National Bank of St. Indpis Water Class A com.... _ouis (John W. Snyder) and Jones fous Nat Life com............ 1 / & C ¥ Lamson Machine Co. (Ralph E. ginal & © Bf Flanders). {Lincain Loan Ca B15¢ : ' | Lincoln Nat Life com First National Bank of Chicago p R Maliory pfd Edward E. Brown) apparently did|P R Mallory com... ot want to be on the committee, Pub Serv Ind 5%. .... Bs uk | Pub Serv of Ind tom ldn't reply to Wallace. It could | (pr cress Laundry com 1ave been politics or “the press of | Ross Gear & Tool Gomer ins n 4.8%. ther business.” Then again Per= | giokely-van Camp pr pi.. 1aps Mr. Brown knows a small busi- | Jnjied ot Co 57% un e . jess when he sees it, and his bank Ry ttle Um sn't one of them.
s 8 =» . ODDS AND ENDS: Santa Fe "allroad hears that it gets a good >uild-up in the new movie, “The Jarvey Girls.” “Premium ncome exceeded $3,600,000 — an i ncrease of more than $224,000— N'Ind Pub Serv Nem 10twithstiending a lower AVErage | pub Serv" of Ind} 3s 73 ‘ate “level produced by a gencral| Te: Term Corp RL ‘eduction in fire insurance rates,” | U 5 Maciine Corp 8s 52... jays the annual report of the Grain X end. dealers National--Mutual Fire Insurance Co. of Indianapolis, Could ALS. STATEMENT ower rates-have had anything to do with that increased business?| wasHINGTON, March 14 (U. P)—-Gov- . + The Hays office (actually|ernment expenses’ and receipts for the current fiscal year through March 11 compared with a year ago.
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by Indianapolis securities dealers.
STOCKS Bid Asked
0 17% 40";
Algers Win'w RR 4'2%:. American Loan 5s 51... American Loan 5s 46 Buhner Fertilizér 6s 54 ....... Ch of Com Bldg 4's 61...... § Citizens Ind Tel 4%s 61 Columbia Club 2-6s Consol Fin 5s 56
Indpls Railways Co 5s 67 Indpls Water Co 325 68
Viotion Picture Producers & Disributors of America) is still try- This Year ng to get Eric A. Johnston, U. 8. Expenies ire $81.287,018:137 “hamber of Commerce president, Receipts” tng 30.134.039. 183 0 come in as ald to aging Hoosier | Net Deficit .. 38,562,058 879 Cash Bal . 15,574,722, Will H. Hays, czar for 23 years; Working 1 Bal, Iai sod 300 . ublie bt ,259,321,978 Says ies an 310000 Gold Reserve. 320 453,445,744 etter to WPB's' “Gloom Division”; 't found its way to that unit which Searing i $ 5,828,000 1ae charge of the brownout. . :
MEAT OUTPUT DOWN __ LOCAL PRODUCE i 10 MILLION POUNDS uc*" preed hens, 24c. Leghorn tens.
Broilers, fryers and roasters, under o CHICAGO, March 14 (U. P.).—, rocks oe. + Meat production in federally inpected plants decreased about 3 r cent for the week ended March 10, the war food administration said Loday. The reduction reflected a t in the slaughter of hogs and Cattle. ; | Total output for the week was 277 million pounds, which was 10 million | elevators paid & ess than in the preceding week (®d Wheat (other gr nd 83 million pounds less than in ibs. or...oe: er - 69. corresponding week of last year.
Last Year $63,585,779,511 59,508,388,904 26,218,931,155 37,366,837,206
16,205,235,813 187,494,558,049
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE
Eggs—Current receipts, 3le; grade A large, 34c; grade A medium, ae; grade A iter Ng L306. Buttartat—Na. utter : u a 490; No. 2, 3de. iy
WAGON WHEAT
Up to the close of the Chicago mar today, Indianapolis flour mills 167 per tor
corn. No 3 valow
" |rubber-sealed openings only at the
. lon and an exterior coating of syn-
. {operation of, thé" plane, even when
A Allis-Chal
‘Am ‘| Am
| Am é& T . vers | AM Jo | Am «+ | Anaconda «33 33 +... |Armour & Co ; «++ | Atchison ‘a ssvs | Atl Refining ... 34 +++ | Bald Loco ct . 29 «++ | Bendix Avn ... «| Beth Steel ... 74'4 + Ye
+ | Curtiss-Wr .. 6% *++« | Douglas Aire Du Pi
16,968,013,760 | N
21,669,899,051 P
td O. Cd .... Vi8td Oil iInd).,
Rl 0d a, SR
United Press Sta
rimmed eyeglasses and gnawed the
AIRCRAFT LAND IN CROSSWINDS |
British and Americans Use Special Gear, CAA
Reveals.
WASHINGTON, March 14 (U.| P.) —British and American airmen abroad are experimenting successfully with special landing gear enabling planes to land in crosswinds. This was revealed today in testimony of civil aeronautics association officials made public by the house appropriations committee. CAA Administrator Theodore F. Wright said the U. S. should immediately begin to develop such landing gear for post-war use. It would reduce greatly, he said, the construction costs of airports; because landing strips would not have to run in so many directions. Experimental gear used in England permits the pilot to align his wheels with the runway while keepihg his craft headed into the wind.
Panties, Hens and Big City ~ Slickers Make Mayor Weep
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
ft Correspondent
WASHINGTON, March 14.—Fiorello LaGuardia removed his horn-| {ime for one thing. ear pieces, first one and then the | formation they contain is. always other, He fiddled with the gold bands on the three cigars in his breast | available at the agency. pocket. Then, so help me, he made faces.
{WHY PAY MONEY, FOR NOTHING?
oe
$20,000 Reports Can Be Had by Phone Calls,
Manasco Says.
WASHINGTON, March 14 (U, P.). —The whole thing, says Rep. Carter Manasco (D. Ala), boils down to this: Would you pay $20,000 for something you can get for nothing? The house committee on executive expenditures, of which Manasco is chairman, says it wouldn't and that congress shouldn't. So it urged the. house yesterday to approve a bill by Rep. John J. Cochran (D, Mo.), to abolish 64 reports which executive agencies of. the government must send to congress each year. Manasco said the reports were just a waste of time, manpower and plenty of the taxpayers’ money.
Reports Pile High “Why, I've got a pile of reports on my desk that high,” he said, indicating a spot about a yard above the floor. “And nobody will ever read them. We haven't got the And the in-
All you have to do is call up and ask.”
4
77
. 5 fot wider y . Z ot / / 3 ’ XN 4 / J Zz ow iw yy
7 7
So Quick . + +. 80 Easy . . . So Effective
GARDEN
por
Firestone WALL-TONE
The Wonder Paint
GARDEN
‘The mayor of New York had some dope for the senate about small-
sized panties, the non-co-operativeness of hens, and other subjects as| of the Jot is the annual report of
In. Manasco's opinion, the “prize”
interesting. Here he was, stymied. | the public printer, Its current edi- : Some coal mine owners were tell- | tion is 200 pages long, he said, and ing the banking and currency com- | jt posts the taxpayers a cool $20,000. mittee about their troubles with| «ang the funny part of it is that the OPA. ‘His Honor had to sit the public printer has the same inthere behind ’em until they fin-| formation up-to-date and available ished. He blinked his eyes. He , 5 a]) through the year,” he said. wrinkled his nose. He.scrooged his|" pere are some of the other relips. | ports the committee thinks con-
Attracts Attention gress could just as well do without.
The senators soon were watching, | fascinated, when they should have |
“Century-0ld Laws 1. The passenger list report. Con-
Reg. 25¢ Package Burpee's SUPER " GIANT ZINNIA SEEDS Free War Garden Book con-
tains 28 pages of complete, scientific information on
2.79 ..
® Woshoble! ® Dries in One Hourl ® One Coat Covers/ ® No ““Painty” Odorl ® Beautiful Pastel Colors!
® Just Roll or Brush kt Onl
been worrying about the profits of | gress in 1819 passed a law requiring the coal miners. This lasted an | the state department to give it anhour. Then Chairman Robert F.|nually a list of all persons “arriv-| Wagner apologized to the Little ing in the United States from a| Flower for keeping him waiting. | foreign country.” | “That's all right,” said LaGuardia.| 2. The Indian report. The interior “It was very restful.” | department is required to reveal the You may have read his testimony | financial condition of all Indian in the news columns; I want to tell | tribes which have benefited through | you about the emotion he put into|federal Indian legislation. his statement on panties. He had 3. The customs and seaman re-| tears in his voice when he men- port. An act passed in 1799 compels | tioned the word. [the state department to give a de-| “If a little pair of panties for a tailed list of all funds collected at| small child costs 75 cents” the U. 8. customs houses and a list of mayor said, with pain visible all|all seamen registered in American!
the care and cultivation of a successful garden.
WY Ta YY
EXTRA VALUE
WalTone covers almost any interior surface. You can finish
& whole
room in a few hours’
time. This Spring use Wall-Tone. 7
Screen Hangers ..cccvveeees d@
Corner Irons ......%.¢evvve 4@
Y a RE
over his face, “and if shoes cost $4 or $5, then the low-salary family is up against it. We're really up against it.” y He said he certainly hoped .the OPA delivered cheap panties, as promised, spme time this summer. Meantime, he said, he was urging
Landings have been made, it was said, against crosswinds of 60 miles an hour. *
his citizens to darn their old ones.
i Ornery Hens
The mayor switched the subject ornery hens, took off his eve-
| to FLIERS’ COVERALLS | glasses for the benefit of a photog- : rapber and without missing a word,
said that since hens won't standard10 REDUCE SHOCK ize the size of eggs, the OPA ought
to make the grocers sell 'em by the
| AKRON, O. March 14 (U. P).— pound.
Development: of a new one-piece coverall made of nylon and synthetic rubber to protect American airmen forced down in icy seas was announced today by the B. FP. Goodrich Co. The anti-exposure suit was designed in collaboration with tech nicians of the Air Technical service at Wright field, Dayton, Oo. It includes built-in . shoes, has’ neck and wrists and weighs only three pounds, C. W. Leguillon, man-
He, also said the OPA made a bad bobble paying subsidies on eggs after the farmers sold 'em. Who got the subsidies? The middlemen, LaGuardia answered himself. He added that he had 300 detectives investigating black markets, said they were doing a job, and gulped when Senator Theodore F. Green of Rhode Island interrupted: “But Mr. Mayor, a lady from your own city testified before this committee only last week that if a shopper in line at the butcher's even questions a-price 'she is apt to ‘be
|ager of Goodrich’s machine and {process development department, | said. | Leguillon said the suit is
{pected to save many lives because
The Little Flower said all she
ex- had to do was phone him, or one
of his-assistants. He said his price
”
{“the extreme shoek-@nd exposure cops were -doing their best, but
lin forced plunges into icy waters hazards | slicker,
{are among the greatest {faced by fliers, often causing death |
in a few minutes.” | market with his badge on his chest,” around April 1 because of the tre-|73 A parka-like hood fits tightly his honor explained. “He observes! mendous demands of war industries. 78 -- |around the face, protecting the ears, | the clerk sell a lady a fat hen at Ii peacetime the season normally ‘|The suit has two inner plies.of ny- the OPA ceiling price. Then the opened April 15, the date insurance % | butcher turns to the lady and says, became effective, and closed Nov. 30, | (‘By the way, Mrs. Jones,’ you OWe when insurance expired. |
thetic rubber, but is so flexible as| to not interfere with an airman’s
| worn over his regular flying togs. i
N. Y. Stocks
: t High 43's 43% . 93% 93%, Loco 33%, 33 Rad & 8 8 133, 13% Roll Mill . 18'2 18% i ...162% 162 Ya 1% 10's 97% 10
Am Can {
Am
Tob B
3 in + nl ab de Water W .. A
To 84%
7%
521% f 5 by
Borden 35%
Borg=Warner . 39% ! Caterpillar T Ta . 68% ont «vs. 162Y Gen Electric ..
4%
‘| Gen Foods ... 41
Gen Motors Goodrich Goodyear .. Greyhound Cp. Int Harvester . \Vohns-Man Kennecott . 38 Kroger G & B. 39" L-O-F Glass .. Lockheed Airer. Loew's 1 Martin (Glenn) 26'% Mont Ward... Nash-Kely . Nat Biscuit ... Nat Distillers .
.. 66 . 58%; « B5%
24%
» 2 Ya 1 .| » enney 1 Ya
tHE le
Penn R-R ..., Phelps Dodge . 2 Procter & G Pullman Pure Oil Repub StI . .. Reyn Tob B ... Schenley Dist . Servel Inc ....
rE
Ya Ya Va 5 =
THEE +
Std Oil (N J).. 60%
+++
e os / Zenith Rad .. 30Y2
_ INCORPORATIONS
30's
The Aluminum Window Corp., New York
ation; admitted to In ans o t San Co., Ing, In fanapous; Eo wen ag + See. 130 8 GE, Fahy Co, “ine, TnGinapelt;|
Ex
"i oy 1%
«| years. ’
PINE BALM
that ‘the city slickers were getiing
“Say our man is ‘in a poultry
Mrs. She
me $1.10 from last week.’ ‘Jones says, ‘Oh yes, I. forgot.’ reaches in her purse and pays.
Watch Your Step “And what is our man going to do in a case like ‘that? What are
we going to do?” The mayor said he didn't know
Ne Last Change | what he was going to do, but that to agree among themselves on_a + vlhe would think about it and most % | certainly ‘would do something.
Of that there is no doubt. Mrs.
1s | Jones, you better watch your step. 3 |
Club Will Hear
Kamman on Ads
ve tai Fredric Kamman of Cincinnati, rr yCatery + 50% I 4 vice president of Roy S. Durstine,
Inc., will discuss “Shirt Sleeves for Post-war Advertising A Copy” "at the meeting of the Indianapolis Advertising club tomorrow hoon at the Indianapolis Athletic club. E. H. Niebrand, president, will preside. The speaker has ie § been in advertis‘o ing work , since Mr. Kamman 1915. Before joining the Durstine organization a year ago he was with Fuller, Smith & Ross as an account executive and vice president. In his present ca~ pacity he serves the Crosley Corp,
_ | Trailmobile Co. and the « Philip
Ya |
Carey ‘Manufacturing Co.
mobbed by the people behind her.” |
| ports. | | 4. The forest report. The agricul-| tural department is required to give| {an annual rgport on the progress |ofs all work on “forest roads and trails,” including the names and | salaries of all workers employed.
SHIPPING ON LAKES WILL OPEN APRIL 1
go fleet will get underway April 1 to start the 1945 movement of critical war materials that are scheduled to
announced today.
over the Great Lakes on April 1, the ice committee of the Lake Carriers
new icebreaker Mackinaw would head the facilities necessary to open shipping lanes in spite of blockades reported at some . points to “be
imated requirements - for iron ore,|
coal, grain and limestone, as pre- | 7 tpared by the committee and issued | 7 through its lake vessel commniittee, | 74
officials said.’ - i During the last three years, the shipping season has been starting
COAL MEN DISAGREE
ON ANSWER TO UMW
WASHINGTON, March #4 (U.| {P.).— Coal producers have failed]
complete reply to the United Mine Workers’ 18 new contract demands, it was disclosed today. The producers’ answer was to have been presented to John L. Lewis and other U. M. W. negotiators today. But in a three-day meeting which ended a little after | last midnight, the operators couid | not achieve unanimity on. various issues. Some were willing to go further than others, it was said, toward meeting some of ¢the union demands. The -present . minerbperator contract .expires in 17 days, Because of their failure, the | operators decided to talk over certain of the demands with the union {again in today's session. |
‘BLACK SEA SPEEDS ~ RUSSIAN WAR AID
WASHINGTON, March 14 (U.P).| —Shipments of lend-lease aid to Rus sia has been ‘greatly” speeded up by routing supplies by way of the Black sea, the foreign economic ad- | ministration reported today: The old route involved sending the supplies to Persian Gulf ports] where they were sent by rail to the’ Soviet Union. °
NAMED BY AMERICAN A. H. Kipfer, former station man-
‘lager for American Airlines at Wier |
Cook municipal airport, has been
» \,
THE VOLATILE RUB Poe Vapors Wing Quick Rell rom Distress of
named manager of operations. He| has been with the airline here eight
TRUCK
Immediate Delivery
CLEVELAND, March 14 (U. P.).— | Vessels of the Great Lakes bulk car-|%
reach-a combines tormage greater Zi than the all-time record set last| ZZ year, the Lake Carriers association | 7
In agreeing to start navigation | 4
association was given assurance by |Z} the U. S. coast guard that the huge, |%
heavier than last season. Za An early start of shipping is es-|%8 sential to permit meeting the esti- |Z
Screen Door Handles ....cv J@ Screen Patches ............23e@ Cellar Window Sets ........16e
White globe with clear Screen Enamel .........pint 39¢
erystal bottom. Large enough for 100 watt bulb.
«
A Two-in-One Value!
HANDY HELPERS to Save Time an
Self-Polishing FLOOR WAX
Simply pour on and spread. We - rubbing necessary, Dries in twenty minutes. Plats. .....3%
1.98 eu Quarts... .b8¢ Cream FURNITURE POLISH Spread on and wipe it dry. Cleans 39e Me
a» poitshes. A real work saver! SOLVENTOL Melts Dirt - A ‘woriderful help for extra dirty, : greasy surfaces. Actually melts dirt! 60° 3 Sixty-Four ‘OuRee. corearsnsss 1.00 wu
STEP STOOL 35.99
The seat lifts back and-there’s a. handy. liftle flight of steps Back is shaped -for complete comfort when sitting. White enameled.
Smooth, Closely
oe
PRAIN PIPE CLEANER Quick acting for opening and cleaning clogged drains. Convenient easy to-use flake form. : 23 Toilet Bowl Cleaner. coves 38
Woven
FABRIC PRY CLEANER
For cleaning clothing, furniture, car : interiors. No disagreeable oder. 8c Imported Willow CLOTHESBASKET
2.98
A basket for years of wear. Reinforced top and bottom.
Extra Large Size.....3.49
LIQUID MOTHPROOFER
Protect precious woolens against moth damage. Odorless, aeninflammable, safe, sure! Pint Spray ssssessssessssssssclie
IG)
49¢ =
WE LOAN YOU TIRES WHILE WE RECAP YOURS!
Firestone FACTORY-METHOD RECAPPING
Free inspection! Prompt service! Drive in today— your tires may be at the danger point! 6.70 6.00.16 NO RATION CERTIFICATE NEEDED v A retail outlet must not sell at prices higher t" 1 those allowed by OPA™ CEILING PRICES: Price Regulations. The suggested selling priccs in this ad may not be charged by a retailer listed in this ad, if his ceiling price on any item is below the advertised price. OPEN A CHARGE ACCOUNT OR iF YOU PREFER, USE OUR CONVENIENT BUDGET PLAN
FIRESTONE STORES 502 N. Delaware—LI, 1346 202 N, llinois—LI. 2578 MONARCH SALES CO. MT. JACKSON TIRE. 815 E, 63rd St.,—BR. 9597 AND BATTERY SHOP / 823 E. Washington—FR. 3202 ° 3413 W. Washington—BE. 4448 LOU MOORE'S SPEEDWAY STORE. ..526 N. Delaware... Ll. 82 Fountain Square Home and Auto Supply .. 1052 Virginia Ave . . MA, 0790 Beech Grove Home and Auto Supply—506-508 Main St., Beech Grov
OTHER FIRESTONE STORES LOCATED IN ANDERSON, BLOOMINGTON,
COLUMBUS, CRAWFORDSVILLE, NOBLESVILLE AND SHELBYVILLE, IND, Listen to the Voice of Firestone Every Monday BE Fooning over N.C
