Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 April 1945 — Page 9
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)20.E. New York IR-0022 Victor | IR. MCLAGLEN |
Comedy a SIDE’ CT
garet O’Brien
ST. LOUIS” ||
srt Subjects
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MOMEN Ek SWEETHEART
OPEN 6:18 resa Wright BROWN"
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~Late News
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any money last year.
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RE Business Difficulties Solved in Getting
’ Midwest-Built Ships Down to Sea By ROGER BUDROW
MOST SHIPS BUILT DURING THE WAR have "been launched at shipyards on the Atlantic, Pacific and Gulf coasts. But several hundred ships and barges have been built in the shipyards on the Great Lakes and rivers in the Midwest. . «
Although building a ship in this dry-land country naturally excites
per cent of our national shipbuilding has been done In this area whereas three times that much has been contributed to the ship- | 1 building program | in the form of | steel plates, ma- | sine engines, parts | and equipment | from Midwest plants. How to get the | ships out to sea was a poser for | a time early in the war. The St. Lawrence river locks limit passage to vessels under 269 feet long. Moreover, ships launched at Great | Lakes yards couldn't be moved down | the St. Lawrence from December |
TR
~ President Signs
_—
In signing the lend-lease extension act, President Truman produced a historical novelgy . . . for his name appeared on the bill twice. The President signed it originally as presiding officer of the senate, and again as President. Witnessing the signature are, left to right, Rep. Charles A. Eaton, Senator Tom Connally, Oscar Cox, general counsel of the FEA; Leo T. Crowley, FEA administraor, and Secretary of state Edward | Stettinius,
A RN I OO HN A IR OT EA SAAN SES A i 0 AIAN Es fn
'SEAWOLF" LAG
Vultee Says 800C 8000 Changes
Made in-Plans.
ALLENTOWN, Pa; SJ April ‘18 (U P.) .—Harry Woodhead, “president of
Consolidated-Viiltee Aircraft Corp. today labeled as “unfair” charges
+ | by Rep. Walter C. Ploeser (R. Mo,).
that poor management at the company’s Allentown plant cost the government $40,000,000 in the past two years. Woodhead, in a statement yesterday, answered criticism by Ploeser after the house appropriations committee was told the navy spent $44,242,026 at the Allentown plant since January, 1943. Over that period, 27 Seawolf torpedo bombers were delivered to the navy. Many Changes Made He said that .moré than 8000
Delivering ships through the | Chicago drainage canal linking | Lake Michigan with the Illinois | river which flows into the Missis- | sippi had some barrers, too. Bridges! over the drainage canal were too low and the normal nine-foot Illinois river channel too shallow to
let large ocean-going ships through. GULF OF. MEXICO
Trade Treaty Debate Clue
By JOHN W. LOVE
Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
So they removed masts from the ships and took on enough ballast to clear, the bridges, The shallow| A ~vuessusntumimin ll on river channel difficulty involved principally the sterns of the ships
which were weighted down with) heavy engines and other machinery | FORD WORKER
So air-filled steel drums, serving as| pontoons, were used to lift the aft] 20,000 at Willow Run Hit; Wire Truman.
é CONTRAGTS VALUED OVER 100 MILLION DOLLARS
‘section of the ship, Masts removed at Chicago are| put on at New Orleans and pon-| toons are taken off there and sent | back to Rockport where they are put on another ship starting down the shallow river. The landing barges built at] Evansville, down on the Ohio river, | YPSILANTI. Mich, April 18 (U. aced no such difficulties, | PiTwerts til od Willow Run Building ships on the Great|X”)-— Twenty thousa ov Lakes is not too new. Ore carriers, | workers who face layoffs within tankers, car ‘ferries and pleasure] {four months because of a govern-| craft have been built in the past. ment decision to stop production on| But it took war to push the busi-ig o4 1iherator bombers today a ness to boom-time propqrtions. y \ . on pealed. to President Truman THEY'RE TELLING this story |KeCP the plant operating. on Bill Green: The A. F. of L. | In Detroit, the war manpower chief walked into a swank ban- commission announced that the Yuet the C. * 0. Ju Having in | petroit area, including Willow Run, e er hotel in Washington. 3 Labor Secretary Perkins rushed has been reclassified from group 1]
up to congratulate him on his | (acute labor shortage area) to “wonderful gesture.” ‘Then he group 2. caught on—he was in the wrong | Edward Cushman, state director
{of the WMC, said the change in classification means that new war or essential eivilan contracts, i which might have been withheld ODDS AND ENDS: A Purdue because of the tightness of the university extension specialist in|labor situation, may be awarded in| poultry is named M. V. Flock. .|the area. Britishers want headquarters “for | The workers’ appeal was tele- | the post-war world security league graphed to Truman by. Brendan in Washington or some U. S. city | Sexton, president of local 50, United because we will be the pivotal power Auto Workers (C.I.0.). Sexton and congressmen would ‘be -more, {said that, he and. other officers of sympathetic “with an’ organization; (the; Jomal® xw ag Aeaving today, * for. centered on our own instead of for-| Milwaukee, ‘Where they will confer eign soll. . , ; A big Chicago depart-|with international officers on ‘the! ment store got this note: “Here is| Willow Run situation. the money for.the white goods I| In announcing that bomber took from your store yesterday. I manufacture would be discontinued! would not stand in line all morning | lat Willow Run by August, the army| to pay for it.” . . . Indianapolis! air forces said yesterday that inWater Co. stockholders wouldn't | yestigation is being made into know, from reading President H. S.|possibility of using the big plant | Schutt's two-page message in the for production of annual report if the utility made needs. No mention | was made of profit except inthe page of figures called the income | statement. Was it a secret?
hotel! Whereupon he unchecked his hat and coat and dashed on for his meeting at the Mayflower.
SEES BUILDIN G AC TIVITY
NEW YORK, April 17 (U. P.).— | Civilian construction contracts ag-| re ——— | gregating more than $11,000,000 DIRECTORS RENAMED have been signed by the Turner! All 10 of the directors of the In-| Construction Co. during the past dianapolis Power & Light Co. were! six months, the company announced | re-elected at the annual stockholders meeting yesterday, the company
announced a {ity after the war.
QLOANS
On Everything Diamonds, Wate Watches
Musical nstraments, Can Instruments, Cameras Clothing, Shotguns, Ete.
“wa¥ The CHICAGO “C5
146 E. WASHINGTON ST.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY WE Buy Diamonds
MIGHEST CASR PRICES PAID
STANLEY Jewelry Co.
113 W. WASH. Lincoln Hotel Bldg.
OXYGEN THERAPY
This Equipment Cap Be Rented at
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Day Phone Night Phone LI. 5387 RL 7956
You Save Because We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats
8” 21" ‘4” CASE CLOTHES
215 N. Seats Ave. Open 9 to 9 USE YOUR CREDIT at « VIED RSH INN ES
CLOTHING COMPANY
131 W, Washington St. Directly Ovposite Indiana Theater
Quality and
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Style 128 N. Penn. LL 5513 ; Without FURNITURE © PIANOS ET AAON BAND INSTRUMENTS VIN RECORDS © SHEET MUSIC Tour Hate
————————————— 00 ® Economical @ Part-time pa hig
Practical Solution % or » Difficult Problem
JA J.BRUMLEVE I
{ RE-WEAVING
of nore ous - BURNS SPOTS
LEON TAILORING co.
235 Mass Ave. in the Middle ot
the First Block 21 7 Underwrit ters Bldg,
SHERWIN WILLIAMS
Has »
ITFUR COATS pi \ ’ Largest Selection
State
18] Lhe
other aircraft, _
today, in predicting’ an unprece-| dented period of construction activ-|
To U.S. Co-operative Ideas
WASHINGTON, April 18—For what is likely to be the first reall test of how far this country is willing to go in international co-operation |
on the economic side, watch the forthcoming debate on the reciprocal
.. trade agreements, Are we willing to add freer trade to prospective lgans, international|
banks and understandings on ComImOnsTes and cartels? The sargurmyent starts today, w the house ways and meins com- | RAINS BRING RIVER mittee opens its hearings on” the | Doughton bill to extend the author | | ity to make trade agreements unde: the 1934 act, known as the Cordell | Hull program, The act expires June 12, unless renewed. the lower White river and in the The Doughton bill would project | | Wabash river at Mt. Carmel and + the authority three years and hake |below because of the 3-inch rain- | it possible for the President to!fall in the southern part of the |
reach agreements ‘and countries 0 state during the latter part of the | | p | lower American duties on imporls|week, the Indianapolis weather bu- |
by 50 per cent from their present | reau’s weekly report stated today. levels, A number of tariff schedules " Rainfall averaged .75 inch in the have already been reduced by 50 northern, and 1.5 inches in the cenper cent in the last 11 years, and sO tral part 6f the state. these could be cut to 25 per cent tures ranged from 80 degrees to al lof what they were under the Haw- little below 40 degrees. Hey- Shoot act. The rains helped to get early | From the administration's stand- gardens well started, the report !point, the bill is an integral part said: Much of the wheat crop ‘is of the great international program from 8 to 12 inches tall, ang its for post-war rebuilding. Included general condition and that of all on the political side, are the peace | {winter grains is mostly-very good to settlements and- world security or- excellent, according to the report. ganization, and. on the economic -
ee Bt, Mors sgomer; GATES PROMISES TO LIFT RESTRICTIONS
obligations, an” international con-| ference on obstacles to trade, and| CONNERSVILLE, Ind. April 18| (U. P).~—Praise for the accomplish-
the lowering of tariff barriers. The| Doughton bill would lower tariff! ments of the 1945 Indiana general assembly and a promise to lift all
barirers, provided new agreements | | possible governmental
| were negotiated under it. It makes possible freer trade.
i | Bid Asked Are Agreementd Tratgt [10% Wink, SCs, und man gps po BR Bp oc The difficulty the supporters of d ed ETOUDS In (ae Sta'e were, Ag : rehire Col oF aha re 17% the bill will in have to overcome voiced by Governor Gates last night. | Belt. R Stk Yds com . 401; e bill will again e to ove | ; | Gates spoke before ‘a combined Beit R Sth Yds pfd a is the contention that the agree- s-Merri)'. com tna % .._ meeting of the Connersville Rotary, | Robb Merrill 412s pid . ments are treaties, and as such re- Lions and Kiwis ela H id | Central Soya com vas 234i quire consent of the senate. that the legi ro s i 5 d Eo ircle Theater com .... i We now .have. trade agreements the S4tHF ge 8 oh, ‘ane ou Sy Fomwiih In 8 Ju Pla ‘ i 108 under the act With “27 countges— ooo Br a een Sqn in | Electronic Lab com 5 5% J | lone with Czechoslovakia was sus-| °c "U8 EDages y hone Hook Drug Co tom. RR pa. 17% iy Ve |pended. They include most of the y ana. T&T Ft Wayne 7% ptd. 51 | He cited the joint Federal- -State ‘ind. Asso Tel 5% pfd ...... 04% principal countries, but they remain & Mich E 41 td 10 112 | { flood control program, the new pub- ind & Mich h% PH ..oor 110 {to Be made with China, Spain, Por-| llic heaMn law a 1 1945 Ind L P&L Pu 13% 3s | tugal, Denmark, Norway and Russia. | C 2ws, and severa DS erway Om susksuits 27 statutes which he said would place|jngpls Railways tom .....y.. 17 (We already have a commercial Yndiang ult [ndbls Water pid £ 1% » | - r Clas m agreement with Russia.) Most of on fers Spriem Te i Flore Sori a Nat “Lite ase : com «“ 1 3) Latin America is covered, 5 Te an In any other state 0 Kinga oS. pe Ys About 60 per cent of the dutiabie ie 3. “Lincoln Joan Co 5'2% pid . 97 . > . ' i Lincoln Nat Life com 50 52 list of American goods has had LABOR UPSET OVER EE Halley po 321, reductions and two-thirds of thesc IP R Mallory com 314 cuts were for 50 per cent. Assistant N Ind Pub Serv 5% Ye J . {Pub Serv Ind 5% Secretary of State William L. Clay- SAN FRANCISCO ROL {Pub Serv of Ind com ...... 24%, By ton estimates that duties have been| WASHINGTON, April 18 (U. P.). progress on ri 3 cut about a third, over-all. Bargain- | —American labor is said to be upset |*so Ind G&E 4.8% .. ....... 110% 113 ing power under the act has been because it is not being allowed to TL Caney » pt..... 8 1% fhised up with Canada and the act as adviser to the U, S. delega- | United Tel Co 5% ........... 99 united kingdom; our best foreign tion to the San Francisco confer-|Union Title com boves 3 customers. ence. a Loan 5s 51 100 | These countries have in turn | Officials of both the A. F. of L.|American Loan 5s 46 ....... 100 imade cuts in tariffs and other|and C. I O. point out that as ad- |B eT bt vou. 81 {concessions satisfactory” to the | visers of the recent Inter-American Citizens Ind Tel 41% 61 .....108 . state and commerce departments Mexico City conference labor repre- Sclumbia Sup 1 “3 a 3 lon American goods. When reduc- | sentatives Joined in the daily! Ei Jose Tel Co 3a 204. 108 mn ' “ok 7 {tions are made by either country policy-making meetings. | Indpls Rilwaye Co os 67 91% [in the agreements they are given| They will be only “consultants” |Indpls Water Co 3's 68 107% [to other countri t ticall fat San PF . { Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54 .. . 99 | untries automatically un-|a rancisco, whielx des (IN Ind Pub Serv 3's 73 104 |der the most favored-nation prac-|them from similar awh ZBriT Ind, Yel 438 88 vic vd 1a tice. Thus American duties tend in ish and Russian labor groups will | By el 4'zs 55 " 100 0 ’ ac¥Term O®rp 5567 98 101 general to decline. have spokesmen serving ‘within | T H a Williamson Inc 8s. 35 98 oy
Supporters of the trade-agree-|their delegations. ments principle usually take as their| C. I. O. President Philip Murray | fundamental argument that unless| Will be his group's consultant at Americans can buy goods widely in|San Francisco. The A, F. of L.|
tries cant pay what they owe us|Sentative. or buy our products, Ce a ——————— Goods we buy abroad orovidel PLASTIC YARN DEVELOPED foreigners most of the dollars they] NEW YORK, April 17 (U. P.).— use to buy our goods or repay loans.| The development of plexon, a new For this reason the proposals to Plastic yarn said to have a strong extend billions in new American | resistance to chemicals and fire, was| loans involve questions of tariff re- announced today by Freydberg ductions in this EG Brgs.-Strauss, Inc;
FORT PRODUCTION cuT
“Fidelity 2 oa LOS ANGELES, April 17 (U, P).| i re i BOXES —The Southern California aircraft | industry TRUST ICOMPANY |i". "ins Soeiuicd 5 50 ber 123 EAST KET STREET
Fortresses within the next 60 days | in compliance with war department | orders,
INCORPORATIONS
Stewart-Wright, Inc. Andersonyamend- | ment changing address to’ 3321 E. 10th | st., Indianapolis, and Thnpg number | of directors to five.
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP
on
Wallpaper
Makes the Room
UP TO FLOOD STAGE
Flood stages were maintained in yorsh plants in Allento in Allentown
changes in the plane's design and
! | material, including a power plan re-
vision, were made since the contract | first was let. Woodhead said that the money spent could not be charged to the two planes delivered in 1944, or those delivered since. Instead, he (said; it shuld be apportioned to the {1100 Seawolves ordered for delivery |by the end of 1045. “There is only one way to figure the final cost of each plane,” Woodhead said, “and that-is to wait until {all have been produced.” The Allentown plant, he said, met its ff production schedule in the |past three months. By June 1, | Woodhead said, 70 per cent of all {assembly required to proddce 500 [planes would be completed. | Woodhead said that Ploeser’s | statement at the navy budget hear|ing was “the result of the old thing lof a little ' knowledge being a jesngeraus thing.” The Consolidated president said is $37,830,000 of the money spent [was used for cooling, raw materials and supplies, engineering, materials 2 Sub contractors and the conon of the Mack Mfg. Co. and
SAYS ARMY \RMY REVISES R. R. CAR PROGRAM
NEW YORK, April 18. (U.P.).— The U.- 8. army reportedly has re-
| vised its program on freight car
Tempera-~ |
| equipment for foreign’ use, the mag- | azine The Iron Age disclosed today. The program, the publication said, {now stands at some 10,000 cars of various types for Belgium, 38,250 for France and 6000 for India. - ———— ee
PACKARD FOREMAN VOTE DETROIT, April 17 (U. P.).— Approximately 1100 Packard Motor
Car Co. foremen voted today in an|
| eleetion to decide whether they will
restrictions |anapolis securitiog | dealers:
the world's markets, foreign coun-|has not yet announced its repre-|
| {
|
be represented in collective basgaining by an independent labor organ- | ization, the Foreman'’s Association |
of America. |G
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by Indi-
*Ex-dividend
U. S. STATEMENT
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings
© ON ANYTHING o
Autos ® Diamonds ® Watches Jewelry. ® Clothing ® Radios, ete
GET CASH IMMEDIATELY
ILLINOIS and OHIO STS,
Open to 7 P. M.—Sat. to 10 P. M.
Sa
++| 500 pounds down
+] tos.,
wg pol
Stokely . sks = 250 P,
Foreigners to Work Here
Approximately 250 imported laborers, including prisoners of war, | will be employed by Stokely -Van Camp, Inc. from May 4 to frost be-| cause of the labor shortage, a company spokesman said today. From a contingent of 67 MeXican nationals due to arrive in Indiana about April 21, Stokely-Van Camp’ has been allocated 20 agricultural workers, according to J. B. Kohlmeyer of Purdue university, state! e—————————— = | supervisor of emergency farm labor | At the present time, 55 Barbados 1525 PORKERS { natives are employed at the Stckelys t Van Camp plant on S. East st., and the company has requested 100 more British West Indies nationals. A total of 60 Mexican nationais has been requested as agricultural workers for the Indianapolis area’ "on | | private farms with which StokelyTop Price Remains $14.80, 3," Comp has contracts | u. S. Ceiling. Prisoners of .war will be used for | agricultural work, the : company | The Indianapolis stockyards toe | |said, and the number needed will day received 7525 hogs, the war Vary from 40 to 100 inthe period food administration said. Top price jrrou May 1 to frost. = remained at the government ceiling | Foreign workers will livé in of $14.80. | quarters owned or rented by StokeAlso received were 1000 cattle, 450 !y-Van Camp. Prisoners will tive calves and 125 sheep. |In army camps and will be under The market was active and steady. | military supervision. In the past, | the company said, one guard was | assigned to every 10 prisoners.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (1523)
i
120-140 podids . pristine Plant is Largest Canner « 1600 pOUNAas oii ( : i I pounds na: im The Indianapolis plant of Stoke180- 200 pounds ........eev.. | ly-Van Camp, Inc, is the largest 200- 220 pounds .... i . : - ounds ..... single canner of type C rations for fa: 310 pound | 40- 270 pounds ..... ; S fr Zoe 300 TOUCH rraseressees | the armed forces. These rations in 300- 330 pounds ....,vvr. | clude meat and beans, and corned
ey 36 pounds
Meo 200 pounds Packing Sows Good’ to Cholce—
{beef hash. Mr. Kohlmeyer said that an ad-| ditional group of approximately 700| foreign agricultural workers will be!
eign workers is scheduled to be dehy 3018 3 livered to the state about August 1 oa to assist with the tomato harvest,
15.0062 16.25 15,000 16.25 | Mr. Kohlmeyer said. eee eee ee
ACCIDENT POLICIES
Good— 00- 800 pounds 900-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds 1300-1500 pounds Medium — 700-1100 pounds ... 1100-1300 pounds Common —
vey [email protected] 13.50@15 0
800-1000 pounds Good~— 600- 800 pounds ... 800-1000 pounds Medium— 500« 900 pounds Common— 500- 900 pounds
Cows Aan weights)
13.55G1650| p ) _ Connecticut Genéral Life In-| 1 0aiss 50 {surance Co. has liberalized its reg-| | ular accident policies to include un-| 13.00914.75 | der its aviation coverage all normal [email protected] | Passenger hazards without additional charge, the company announced
Good ws 12.75@14 H today. Me fum ten [email protected] Cutter and common ......... 8.25011.28| For the first time, according to Canner . 7.009 8.25
| Prazer B. Wilde, president, passen- | | gers on private and non-scheduled | . 13,[email protected] | | commercial flights will be covered
Bulls (all weights) eef— ‘Good (all weights)
S€usage— ag a le 11.75@13. 00 | Without extra premiums within! Medium 10.754011.75 | North America in licensed aircraft
.. Cutter and common 9.50@w10
CALVES (4050) Vealers (all weights) | Good and choice Common and medium Cull .
1 0f U. 8. registry operated by licensed | pilots, and also in world-wide travel! 17.004 17.50 | on regularly scheduled trips in pas10 ne 1 2 senger planes owned and operated by incorporated passenger airlines. |
270- 300 pounds ............. 14.08 300- 330 pounds 14.05 distributed between May 10 and} 30- 360 pounds 14.05 i { 380- 400 pounds 14.05 June 1 in Vigo, Rush, Putnam,| Good ols ‘abl igal arom, Knox, Blackford, Tipton, - pounds .....oiiunss. @ | 480- 550 pounds .........eo.. [email protected]| Grant, Miami, Randolph, Benton, Medi yy unas 13 5015.90} (Laporte, Elkhart, Madison, Steuy Slaughter Pigs. | ben, Noble, Clinton, Delaware, GibMedium to Choice— : |son, Henry, Hamilton and Fulton 90- 180 aE Cea 11.258 13.75 | counties. Small groups will be as- : Steors |signed to localities where labor Cholee_ o | shortage is acute and where hous- - pounds . . [email protected] 900-1100 pounds | 16.2517 50 | INE facilities are adequate. 1100-1300 pounds .. ... [email protected] | Another group of about 500 for-1300-1500 pounds ... .. [email protected] |
700-1100 pounds -..........04. [email protected] | a COVER ‘AIR TRAVEL 600- 800° pounds [email protected] | HARTFORD, Conn. April 18 (U.|-
T0 BOSS MA -
Says™ His Department Is
Logical One.
WASHINGTON, April 18: ¢U. PJ). —Interior Secretary Harold L. Ickes told a senate subcommittee today that his agency was the los} cal coe 'ordinator of all government departe ments operating in ‘the Missoutl | valley region. Ickes appeared to testify in conte
{nection with the Murray bill te
(establish a Missouri Valley Authori~ ty to co-ordinate development of power, navigation, irrigation and farming in the vast areas drained by the Missouri river. ; Government agencies how dealing with those functions in the area ine
clude the army: engineers and the interior department bureaus of re clamation, Indian affairs and mines, Ickes' testimony followed sassers tions yesterday by labor representatives of the area: that one central authority, operating with a three man governing body similar to TVA, would offer an escape from “the curse of bureaucracy.”
Your Savings Insured By Agency of U. 8 Govt ~ “Up ta $5,000 We .Have Made Our
113th Dividend Payment On Savings Accounts
BUY WAR BONDS AND STAMPS
UNION FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSN. -
-147 dr 160 E. MARKET I-14 +
Gross Income and Real Estate
TAX LOANS
“Peoples State” Personal Loan Dept.
Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves | i Cash Amount 12 Choice— .| G.E IDEAS BRING $106,667 You oa | mentors 500- 800° pounds - 11.50@13 75] ’ : Réceive Repay | Payments $00-1000 POUNEE - ccrsnesrersss T0130) General Motors employees in In-. 100.00 107.38 2.96 1000~ 3 od | 500- 800 POUNAS +1vsvossans- [email protected] dlanapolis plants were paid $106,667 150.00 161.29 15.44 2350-1000 pounds tersveviaiin [email protected] | in ar Bonds and stamps by G. M 7200.00 215.08 17.92 500-1000 POUNAS «v.vevenerens 8.75@10,00 | lin 1944 for suggestions submitted | Pd Was: | 2.40 Common— {under the suggestion plan. Out of 300.00 | © 322.50 26.8% 500- 900 pounds. .. 7.50@ 8.75] : To — a — Caves (Steass) |6963 suggestions submitted, 1833 or 330.00 3M 3136 |Good and choice— [26.3 per cent were accepted. The! in my 25 " { lv ; | Medme > down 1125@13 * average award was $58.19. nn | 500 pounds down Ru .. [email protected]| ie t Calves (Hei ers) : 2 {Good and choice— A Key to Prompt Action
[email protected] | [email protected]
{ Medium—
| 500 pounds down .. | : _ SHEEP 1123) { Ewes (Shorn) ‘Good and choice
Efficiency —
A Checking Acconnt at
Common and medinm 6.00@ 7.75 Cams AMERICAN Good and choice. .... [email protected] Medium and good ........... 13.15@ 15.15 NATIONAL BANK
| Common [email protected] ||
WAGON WHEAT
-AT INDIANAPOLIS Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
THE PEOPLES STATE BANK
130 E. Market
Federal Deposit Insurance * Corporation
Member
Up to the close of the Chicago market today. Indianapolis flour mills and grain elevators paid $1.67 per bushel for No red wheat (other grades on their merits); oats No 2 white or No 2 red, testing 32 ~ Ibs or better, 69c;, corn, No 2 vellow shelled old crop $109% per bushel and | No 2 white shelled, old crop. $1.24%.
| LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens, 24c. Leghorn hens,
—-
=
PAS
We Close Wedn
c. Broilers, fryers and roasters,. under 3 white and barred rocks, 28c. Old roosters, 15e. Egge—Current receipts, 3lc; grade Al large, 34c; grade A medium and B large, | |31c; grade A small. 26c; under grade, 37e. Butter—No 1, 50c. Butterfat—No. 1.4 - 49¢c: No 2 36¢ \
"BRING IN THE "ENTIRE FAMILY
KNOW the Condition of Your Fam. lly's Eyes. Prevention of Eyestrain Will Save a World of ’ Trouble
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Charge Accounts Invited Hundreds of garments to ; Du Pont Paint select from! SERVICE STORE It you really Wash want a bar
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