Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 March 1945 — Page 27
-By Turner
ALL RIGHT,CAROL ,
“Business
&
PAGE 21
Business Plans For More Foreign Trade =——By ROGER BUDROW
FOREIGN TRADE will be a bigger business post-war than it was pre-war, judging from plans of the government and some of our shrewdest big corporations. : Crosley Corp. in Cincinnati has had visits from big businessmen of India, Turkey and Mexico, making plans to distribute-Crosley products : in those countries. R, C. A. has formed’ an international division to go into foreign trade “with both feet” and plans to build factories abroad. How can foreign countries pay for all we want to sell them? Some have large dollar balances here, about $20 billion in all. The government export-import bank can make trade loans. Foreign countries can export more to this country. And the Bretton Woods world bank and monetary fund can provide dollar exchange. Reciprocal trading of goods is
+" looked upon as the best long-haul
method of payment. Westinghouse must think so because it has just formed an import division to buy anything from tung oil to rare wines and fine laces to help its customers.. pay for Westinghouse goods. Westinghouse feels that reciprocal trade treaties should be extended to other products and that articles requiring 100 per cent tariff protec-
»
- REGEIVED HERE|
Top Price Stays at $14.80]
Government Ceiling.
steady today as 4425 hogs were received at the Indianapolis stock-
said. Other receipts included 900 cattle, 425 calves and 775 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (4425) 120- 140 pounds $14.0041 14.50 140- 160 pounds [email protected] 160- 180 pounds . . 14.80 180+ 200 pounds 200- 220 pounds 220- 240 pounds 240- 270 pounds 270- 300 pounds .. 300- 330 pounds .... 330- 360 pounds
Medium— 160- 200 pounds Packing Sows Good to Cholce— 470- 300 pounds 300- 330 pounds 330- 360 pounds ....e0ienennn 360- 400 pounds «..ivevaannee ood 400- 450 pounds . 450- 550 pounds .... Medium 250- 500 pounds Slaughter Pigs Medium to Chojce— 90- 180 pounds FEAR CATTLE (900) Steers
ere 14,0060 14.05 + [email protected]
[email protected] + [email protected]
Choice—700- 900 900-1100 1100-1300 1300-1500 G
pounds pounds ,. pounds ... pounds .
16.25@@117.25 + 16.256017.50 16.256 17.50 [email protected]
. 14.506216.25 14.502 18,25 vos 14.75G016.25 « [email protected]
pounds .... pounds pounds pounds
11100-1300 1300-1500 | Medium— | 700-1100 pounds .... 1100-1300 pounds Common-— 700-1100. pounds
13.2560 14.50 13.500 14.75
Cholce— 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Good—
15.25@ 16.25 15.25@ 16.50
The market remained active and
es 5
ft
yards, the war food administration |
dry-cell batteries by P. R. Mallory reinforced concrete building. Con throughout the 75,000 square feet
==" New DPC:Mallory Battery Plant
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
et
This is the factory built by the government Defense Plant Corp. for the making of the tiny mercury |
& Co. Glass brick replaces windows in the dust-proof red brick and trolled humidity reduces moisture and maintains correct temperature of floor space. A second story can be added when needed. It is lo-
cated on Moore ave, behind Mallory plant 1 at 3029 E. Washington st.
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
United Press Staft Correspondent
white-haired gentleman with a
his tie, identified himself as a manufacturer of acids, boxing gloves, medicines, cheese, gelatin and tennis rackets. And a good thing, too. The chairman of the board of Wilson & | Co., one of the largest meat packers lin the world, said his company was losing money on every beefsteak it | produced. | “We are trying to keep our heads {above water,” he told -the senate |food investigating committee, “but lit's getting close to our breathing |apparatus now.” | Another two years of OPA regu~
Meat'Firm Head Advises OPA to Pray for Help
WASHINGTON, March 29. — said: Thomas E. Wilson, a handsome, |
twinkle in his eye and a pearl in|
~~ FIRM ACQUIRES
2 MORE PLANTS
Finally Senator. John H. Bank-|
head of Alabama harumphed and Adds Buildings and Land
placed in charge of the OPA.” For Expansion.
Wilson thought this over care-| p R. Mallory & Co. has acquired fully. He fingered the pearl in his|several pieces of property to procravat. He looked at his fistful | vide adaitional facilities tor its exof documents, He glanced at the!panding operations, assistants sitting beside him. Then| Additions include the Eaglesfield he announced: plant, 323 S. LaSalle st., and the “I believe I would have to g0 t0| Highway Truck Parts Corp. buildchurch first and pray for help.” |ing 1125 E. Georgia st. The latter He wasn't making a wisecrack.| wij] pe used for the manufacturing
«Mr. Wilson, tell us just what {you would do today, if you were
atives, who had been squirming on | house, |their cane bottom chairs all morn-| Negotiations are under way for ling, relaxed momentarily. purchase of a 16-acre tract adjacent OPA Should Know to the Eaglesfield building, and for ils ( 'd been running | Purchase of the land now occupied 2 ol Sd ey 4 Le began an | oy the Kerr sanitarium next to the that, if they hadn't learned what {Mallory plant at 1315 E. Washing-
He meant it. The OPA represent-|of special products, and as a ware-|
|
PLAN PRAISED
Lt. Cmdr. Paul M. Akin, USNR, { retired this month as ship's service
Labor-Management Charter oticer of the naval training schools Approved in Congress at Navy Pier, Chicago, has returned
to Indianapclis to become director WASHINGTON, - March 29 (U {of the new “Bankers’ G. I. Loan P.)—The proposed
labor-manage- | Center. ree ei The center will be established in ment charter for a. post-war a Pari. the World War Memorial building. nership” won extravagant praise to- | Its purpose is to give honorably Su Jom goyepene and CONBres=| jischarged servicemen and women The "charter set forth a set of
full benefit of the loan provision of principles drafted hy President Erie| 1° Servicemien's Teadjusyment act of 1944. fa A. Johnston of the U. S. Chamber Cmdr. Akin, a resident of Indian~ of Commerce, C.. I. O. President|, 1c axcent for time in the navy, Philip Murray and A. F. of L. Presi-| ,4i0deq Shortridge high school. dent William Green. It was greeted | jnactive duty at the conclusion in en Be 2 Srsirenve Step. of World War T, he returned to Intoward post-wa ustrial peace. : : ! - Rep. Robert Ramspeck of Georgia. dianapolis and in 1929 became ex house Democratic whip and member of the labor committee, called the agreement “one of the most important steps taken in many years.”.
inal Morris Plan Co. He remained there until 1938 when other interests purchased the company.
THURSDAY, MARCH 29,
‘PARTNERSHIP’ ~'Ex-Navy Man Will,
TOR Sr GM th Sr vi
J r ec hessiati
New G.I.Loan Center Here
ecutive vice-president of the orig- «
Lt. Cradr. Paul M. Akin
“If it is lived up to,” he said, “it will promote the welfare of the country as well as business and labor, The main thing is that there is an agreement on principles. If [they live up to the principles, they {can work out the details.” | He expressed belief that it was better for industry and labor to|),,\ remains about the same as last (draft a code “voluntarily than tol j : : have it imposed by law.” He praised | Y¢a%s agricultural statisticians at |Johnston as “the most realistic|Purdue university reported today. {businessman I've known in many} Slight changes were made last
yeni in DiS approach to this par-|e.)) when the winter wheat acreage { CL ay vin di t goal was increased by 326,000 acres, r g management! r 95 per cent. There was a 13,000-
organization, the Nationa] Associa- : : : oo tion in barley or 22 Tr tion of Manufacturers, also indorsed acre reduc ! Arley 0 pe
|the charter. N. A. M. President Ira {Mosher said, however, that it was a set ‘of “generalities on which| there is already wide agreement”| and that what the nation wanted |
to know is “what is going to be
SPRING PLANTING IS SAME AS 1944
LAFAYETTE, Ind. March 29 (U, P.).—The Hoosier spring crop out-
fall seeded. In the spring planted crops, an increase of 110,000 acres, or 8 per cent, was indicated in the oats crop, and a decrease of T1,000 or 4 per
cent, and this crop, too, is mostly!
Ceiling Covers Paper Hangers
PAPER HANGING is under OPA price control, Lloyd E. Set= ser, price specialist of the Indiana OPA district office, reminded householders today. The statement was made fole lowing complaints that customers have been told there are no ceil
ing prices on this work. Mr. Setser said the regulations include: Painters, paper hange ers, decorators, plumbers, care penters, masons, general contrac= tors, heating contractors, elece tricians, installers of roofing, side ing and insulation and other building trades.
tion are economically unsound and should not be made here but left to some other country. _ A General Motors spokesman says “The only way foreigners can pay us is by selling goods and servioes here. In addition to the things we can't produce or do not have enough of (tungsten, nickel, diamonds, tea, coffee, ‘sugar) we should also im-|® port those things which are outstanding bargains when compared to the cost of making them here.” It looks as if we have learned from the mistakes of the 1920's when we thought we could sell abroad but didn't need to take anything in exchange. » n »
SPRING—This balmy weather is a month ahead of schedule, the Indianapolis weather bureau reports. Some Hoosier wheat is already four to six inches high and in fine condition, Peach, pear, apricot and
. [email protected] lations now in force, he said, and - [email protected] | there won't be- any Wilson & Co. 13.00@ 14.75 | ‘Isn't American’ [email protected]| “We can’t keep on running our { business,” he told the senators. “We It isn’t fair. It isn't
600- 800 pounds ....... 800-1000 pounds ... Medium— 500- 900 pounds ....
Cows (all weights)
eef— Good (all weights) Sausage— Goo
~By Fred Harman
Choice— 500- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Good — 500- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds ¢..... Medium--500-1000 pounds Commo 500- 900 pounds
Calves (steers)
E THING'S WRONG, 0
CALL ON AL BURKE /
[email protected] 7.506 8.15}
Allis-Chal 0061125 Am Can 0.00@ 5A io
-—2 92, 3 321, Is 13 3 TV 161%
9%
we -
| Expenses
‘uy k company
BUILDING IN AREA | TOPS $17 MILLION
Contracts for 907° construction projects involving an expenditure of $17,040,000 were awarded in Feb-
ruary in the marketing areas of Indiana, Iowa, Wisconsin and northern Illinois and Michigan,’ the F. W. Dodge Corp. reported today. The principal activity in this area was in buildings used for manufacturing purposes. F ;
WAGON WHEAT
Up to the close of the Chicago market today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $1.67 per bushel for No, 1 red wheat (other grades on their merits); oats, No. 2 white or No. 2 red, testing 32 Ibs. or better, 69c¢c; corn, No. 2 yellow shelled, old crop $1.09% per bushel and No. 2 white shelled, old crop, $1.24%.
INCREASE Your Insurance ...LOWER Your Rate!
We will gladly explain how COINSURANCE frequently makes this possible. Check its possibilities tomorrow.
By Bushmilleg
Indpls Water pid . ......... Indpls Water Class A com .... Jeff Nat Life com Kingan & Co pfd ° Kingan & Co com .. . *Lincoln Loan Co 5%% Lincoln Nat Life com ‘PR Mallory ptd ... P. R. Mallory com “N Ind Pub Serv 57 Pub Serv Ind 5% ... Pub Serv of Ind com .. Progress Laundry com *Ross Gear & Tool com So Ind G & E 48% .. Stokely-Van Camp pr pf U8 achine com .. | United Tel Co 5% A Union Title com
EE esa EAR
BONDS American Loan 5s 51 American Loan 5s 46 Buhner Fertilizer 5s 54 .. Ch of Com Bldg 4'as 61 .. Citizens Ind Tel 4's 61 Columbia Club 2-5s
1 123%
Zenith Rad ... 37%
INCORPORATIONS:
Central Coal and Lumber Corp., Michigan City; amendment reducing par value of outstanding stock from $100 to $20 per share, West End Electric Light Co., Batesville; amendment increasing capital stock to 200 shares without par ‘value and extending life of corporation. { Pentecost Steel Erection Co. Michigan corporation; admitted to Indiana to engage in structural steel erection, machinery moving, ete. Madison Avenue Realty Corp, apolis; dissolution. Underwood, Elliott, Fisher Co., New Jersey corporation; amendment changing
done about making them work.” jE in soybean crap, the repobt A —— > ; sai by now, they were hopeless. He| The proposed charter would call] . said he thought they did know | Mallory Employees I: Get Wage Increase collective bargaining rights for la-|With only a 1 per cent decrease or| MADRID, March 29 (U. P).— figure out the remedy. He said] bor and of the right of management |47,000 acres less than last year. |!purchase by the Spanish governe 12 25@ 4.5 he'd be durned if he'd do their | : | how Cutter and common , ........ “1.15@1075| American.” {panel in Chicago yesterday approved | also would demand the preservation crease, which is 2,000 acres less. Telegraph Co.'s stock in the Spans Canner ...... 8.150 1.75 Dor room was jammed say, durn. He denounced‘the OPA’s new wage rates for more than 4500 of free enterprise and the encour-|The first returns on hay crops in- lish National Telephone Co. has i , el ry & | ment lor 5 ent { ministers, it disclosed tod: [email protected] y orters and |faised his voice at nobody. I have here by P. R. Mallory & Co. The | ment. {or 5 per cent, { ministers, it was ay. Stowers, DewsDaper rep been attending the meat hearings | increase, retroactive to May 26, 1944, . [email protected] | 41 ict tatements 9.75@ 10.50 | the many conflicting s rm hm asram— JALVES (42 about the meat shortage. One|that t un . SALYES um) I have listened so far to a couple GROCERS PLANNING Good and chofre ........... 17501800 son to see the show. Two uni- } RS Common and megium [email protected] | ¢omed cops stood at the door, The |meat, lack of. pl ave docked 2 FOK RECUNVERSION SPALL Arr arise rary a J Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves their colored © or t each other ’ : ” | questions about the black market heard them contradict each In a move to prepare the way for \130a127s | (which he said was tremendous) [and I think maybe I agree with the returning veterans, the Grocery o di 9) 10.00a11.50| called amazing). of Nebraska. | day announced a 'specific rehabilita10.25611.75 Still No Meat tion plan for the industry designed N. Y. Stocks the oratory, too, and that no mat- | Ployees and “thousands of addition- . ter what anybody said, the fact re-|al men. Low Last Change f ; - = potatoes are being planted in south- | Medium— 43 43 +!to the butcher shop for meat, She HotmCME the pish, Sesiared indus ern Indiana; and winter grains, al-| 00 pounds down 3314 finds the shelves are bare. I TS CS Ayec) OW Jeconyersion . 127% | . We're off to a good Start—and| 50 own. | 4m Roll Mil... 5 “| came the feminine echo; “Right!” duction of many new products, plus ; dll SOW. 8.50G 10.50 AT Tob B ... 69 The’ cops looked the lady's way,|the reappearance of hundreds of early a start. Killing frosts could | SHEEP AND LAMBS (115) Prati iu . ; “ do great damage. Killing frosts | Armour & Co .. %s|son’ smiled and about all I know | jobs for production men and “a ordinarily can he expected in south- | Good and choice Atchison 7 3% —..*|for certain is this: The meat short Small army of sales and merchan- =. western counties as late as April 15, ommon and medium . 6.00@ 7.75 | Bald Loco ct a 2 LAMBE JE AVR +: /7 50 meat. Like the cigaret shortage. 3 in z - ; ; N jum and good . [email protected] | Bord Jf infois in 5 aorthern Indian Hu Aqpaium Boy! Nn [email protected] | Borg Warner Remember when congress was in U.S. STATEMENT Wy . 4 : bid ia IEG * WASHINGTON, March 29 (U. P.).—Goy- : Childs . «April 16 as the average date for the eR LOCAL ISSUES rent fiscal year through March 27, com-|’ 1 . 9 + y . » 3 ci rost- i ig is. | 2 : {Douglas Aire . pared with a year ago: last killing “frost. in Indianapolis. | PLANS DISCUSSED Pont. 57 ; , his Year Lest Year frost here been as early as March,| FPOSt-War plans of Brown Forman ree. ++* | Nominal .quotations furnished by 65.806.901,075 = 63,190,519,380 Distillers Corp. of Louisville were | Sen Motors ... | Net Deficit, 38,575,694,556 36,017,853,888 Pa P | Goodrich ’ ai SI0CKS Asked | Ci0) "Bal. 15,137.310.579 16,694,912, 456 {Agents Fin Carp com ; phony peace rumors were geing-the : reyhnd Cp . 20 | Public Debt 234,488,410,997 186,852,711,650 . Wholesale uar Dealers associns ll Ri Yael . ila 1 rounds the other -day.-alt kinds of olesale Liquor ssocias Lind, Rayon Ae Co a coms 17% | Gold Reserte 20,419,340,047 31,599,730,979 Kennecott ..... 363 Sale . 1 oversee on : as gospel; the goofiest one in Wall | Kroger G&B 385, a ei mia ., | Clearings creieaieeasans $ 3,471,000 Street was to the effect that alli W. L. Lyons Brown, [cP Class -.. 367 ** yp | SoRIERL Soya com | Debits .s ++ 14,060,000 president, spoke. George R. Wright, | Loew's . "765 * | Comwith zoan 5% pid been ordered to remain in their classrooms until 5 o'clock so they|vice presiderit and director of engi-'Nash-Kely ..... Vs | Pt Wayne & Jackson RR pfd.. | Nat Biscuit ... 2315 3 eel | *Hook Drug Co com {NY Central .. 1 2: | Ind Asso Wel 5% p economic research group, is looking | Ohio Ol into the guaranteed annual wage] Phelps Dodge |. 4 : . . elps Dodge roll in Indianapolis (Allison and AN , nd y ulm Chevrolet Commercial Body was $62 Pure an Schenley Dist . million... Bob Bowes’ Sealfast Servel ne” “er -”° 3 3 : " “ta Service Station’ Selling,” a com- Bocts Pac 1 Std Brands ... 1 the prize for having the most eyestopping pin-up “art.” The | Std Oil (N J) Texac Co for the duration but Governor Gates crossed them up, as far as claring tomorrow, Good Friday, a legal holiday. So the banks will be
was wrong with the meat business ton st for recognition and preservation of| Corn remains about the same SPANISH BUY PHONE CO. and that they should be able to Sol 2 | ust: cant The - national war labor board to direct industrial operations. It Potatoes show a 5 per cent de- ment of International Telephone & + 107501235 Iu ; thinking for them. Only he didn’t] Bulls (all weight | ‘ees sev | i ; ~ldi oti 2 ! u all weights) |with meat packers, live stock operations in courtly language and | employees in seven plants operated agement of technological advance- dicate a reduction of 102,000 acres been approved by the council of 11.75G13.00 | & $ feeling confused over ) 211 Jo senajors, all feeling since they opened and I can report |amounts to seven cents an hour, *% % * % k*¥ *¥ %*¥ k*¥ * x k * *¥ *¥ *¥ * *¥ *¥ *¥ *¥ * * yealeFs (i ht her 3-year-old : Yealsty {al weights) woman Brous y of dozen experts on the subject of | oy 3300 950, enators peppered Wilson with NEW YORK, Marca 2 (U, r.).— . 1175a13.00 and OPA regulations (which he |echo of Senator Kenneth S. Wherry Manufacturers of America, Inc, toThe senator said he'd listened to! 0 take back all former regular emplum trees are blooming and leaf- i resi 1 : | Good and choice— { Net i when a housewife goes| Paul S. Willis, president, in aning out. Early vegetables are up,| “306 200 G8 down 11.35013351 mains that g 91% falfa and clovers arc looking fine. Calves (heiters) + ’a| From the far corner of the room Problems. He predicted the intro2 [email protected] | am T&T ns. a ‘we need: it. But i ho pi ars ut It Maybe loo) [Am Wate 9% % put they didn’t toss her out. Wil-]old established products, will mean Ewes (shorn) 7.75@ 9.00| At] Refining ... ; a fr e .-,, |age has been caused by a lack .of dizing men. >= fn central counties from April 20 Good and choice 16.00016.50 | Beth, Steel . re—————————— a ———. Caterpillar T .- vestigating that? Records of the past 70 years fix BROWN-FORMAN co ernment expenses and receipis for the cur- . Curtiss-Wr his Year Last Year 1] ’ i as | Only four times has the last killing | gen Henin re Indi- | War Spend. s 3. anapolis securities dealers: Receipts 33,691,060,130 30,916,682,185 | a . , } ODDS AND ENDS: When the|outlined to members of the Indiana | Goodyear { [Agente rn.0 seq - | Work. Bal. 14,374,388,085 15,932,112,886 | ® Agents Fin Corp . - . 3 {Int Harvester.. ns . tales-were made up and passed out|Uon at a meeting last night in the |Jjohns-Man ....106% *Belt R Stk Yds pfd .......... INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Indianapolis Athletic club. |L-O-F Glass ... 567 | Central Soya com ......... school children in New York had — . i i [Martin (Glenn) 243 % ‘+. % Delta El vice president, and William E. Lucas; Me ad ent 27 a [Delta Ble Som 4 wouldn't clutter up the strets. , . .| neering, also attended. t ! Fin et i {Nat Distillers . |H T&T Pt Wayne 7% pfd.. 51 The Brookings Institution, noted Y Central De rire p | Packard Pan Am Air idea. . . . General Motors’ 1944 payProcter & G .. § million, while the total G. M. payroll Repub Stl . for all of Indiana was nearly $138 Reyn Tob B.. ocony-Vac pany house organ, surely must take Std O Cal ‘s Std Oil (Ind).. banks got the legislature to pass a| ‘ : 20th Cent F law cutting bank holidays in half RY the first one is concerned, by declosed, instead of open as they planned.
—and we’ve got
STEEL PRODUCTION UP NEW YORK, March 29 (U. P.).— The magazine the Iron Age said today that although few wartime records will be set by the steel industry in March, production will hit the highest level for several months, reflecting improvement in the rail- eats JY oipis, 310; grade A
road car situation, warmer weather large, ue; grade A med:im, and B iarge. mame tb Underwood Corp 020 Peoples | i i 1c; grade A small, 26¢; under grade, 27c " “ and better operating conditions in 31% £1806 0 I. 0c. Butterfat—No 1,| Bank bldg. Indianapoiis; agent, Clarence some localities. : 4c: No. 2, 6c. C. Cunningham, 3329 Ralston, Indian-| ii : apalis; 100 shares of $50 par value; Clarence C. Cunningham, Ruth Horvath, Le-| land Rees. | Loftus Engineering - Corp., Maryland corporation; admitted to Indiana to en-! gage. in engineering and industrial fuf=| nace work, Universal Paper Products Co., corporation; admitted to,Indiana 40 manufacture and sell paper articles. | Preble Griswold, Inc., Ft. Wayne; dis-| solution. Frozen Food Locker Construction Co, Inc., Tennessee corporation; admitted to Indiana to deal in refrigeration equipment. . House and Town Shops Purchasing Co., Illinois corporation; admitted to Indiana to deal in general merchandise. Lehwood Corp., Delaware corporation; admitted to Indiana to manufacture and deal in machinery. Mishawaka Auto waka; dissolution. Greene County Farm Bureau Co-opera-tive Assn. Inc., Switz City; amendment increasing capital stock to 800 shares preferred of $25 par value and 21 shares common stock of $5 par value. 3 Fountain County rm Bureau Co-op-erative Assn., Inc., Veedersburg; amendment increasing capital stock 400 shares preferred of $100 par value and 20,000 shares common stock of $5 par value, ‘ Porter County Farm Bureau Co-opera-tive Assn, Inc. Valparaiso: amendment increasing capital stock to 1000 shares of $25 par value and 55,000 shares common stock of $5 par value, : Horton Mig. Co., Ft. Wayne; amend-
ment changing ‘capital stock to 15000 shares common of $25 par value and 500
HO PSO shares preferred of $100 par value.
BRAND iii |
Blended Whiskey 86.8 Proof To Keep Valuables Safe TA emi ~65% Grain Neutral Spirits pen a eh at | Gleimote Disileies Co. Incorporate: Lovivile, Restuky {osama wationas san |
3 1 | 0 [ YEA [NL [ol ) ae
Indpls P & L 3%s 70 Indpls Railways Co 5s 67 .... Indpls Water Co 3'2s 68 | Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54 {N Ind Pub Serv 3%s 73 .... N Ind 4'%s 55 . .e Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 73 .... Pub Tel 4las 55 . Trac Term Corp 5s 67 . H J Williamson Inc 5s 55 .... 98
*Ex-dividend
(
HIRE) LIA
MUTUAL AC INC
a century of confidence
LOCAL PRODUCE
vy breed hens, 24c. Leghorn hens, c
NCY
{PNR
Brollers, fryers and roasters, IndianIbs.,, white and barred rocks, 28
Old roosters, 15¢.
under § Cc.
in them
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THE UNION TRUST COMPANY of Indianapolis © r Eee Are
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Hit
