Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 April 1945 — Page 8
PR
my —
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Business
By ROGER BUDROW
THE MONON RAILROAD apparently didn’t make any |
FIGHTS SWAMP
eer ts oe RENT DIRECTOR
To Dropping and Changing - Trains.
| Local Office Gets 100 Calls A Day on Redecorating.
friends when it dropped its sleeper service between Chi- |
cago and Indianapolis and moved its 5 o'clock trains tO ting
RUSSIA BUYS FINNISH MINE
Pays Canadian Nickel Firm $20,000,000. ruling by the]
office of defense! TORONTO, April 25 (U. P).— transportation (a Russia's agreement to pay -$20,000,war ruling that 000 to International Nickel Co. of didn't give the Canada, Ltd. for its Finnish nickel Interstate Com - mine at Petsamo, fair and merce Commission or Indiana Pub-| equitable” but in the long run the lic Service Commission a chance to company protest). The ODT ruling was that the property than with the money, any train not filled to 35 per cent President and Chairman Robert C. of its capacity: during November, Stanley said today. . 1944. could be dropped. | He explained at the annual meet(Note: = The sleepers had than 35 per cent of their capacity agreed to pay Canada for trans“filled,” the Monom reported to the mniittal to the company the $ $20,000,JD, BUELLE, 5.04 ons Sarompmere, 000. i. 11, amore than 35 per cent filled—so of six years. . 3 they were not. dropped. They were, “W hen we -were -forced to leave moved to another time schedule. Finland in 1939.” Stanley. said, "it That was just the Monon's affair would have taken ah ‘additional and had nothing to do with ODT $3,500,000 and more than a year to rulings.) bring the mine into production, and The C. of C. survey brogeht some the total cost of the property would comments from puzzled business- then have been about $10,000,000, ; men who asked how the Monon| Inasmuch as the .ierritory In could have been only 35 per cent which the Petsamo mine is located
another time. The. Indianapolis: Chamber Commerce sent out a couple bo sand questionnaires . regarding the] change, got 500 back from business-| men who said they used the! Monon and'aren't| satisfied with its present service. The Monon dropped . the trains under a
IS
stewardesses. . . . Business histories | in the making include one Harry | Elmer Barnes is writing of the Ford Motpr Co. and another by John Tebbel to be published thi "fall about the Medill, Patterson ‘and "McCormick newspapers (Chicago Tribune, New York Daily News and
a chance to get rid of bothering is that in the long run our company A case in point was the mass NEWSPRINT SUPPLY ‘explain why their raises, agreed to] full (not counting Stage seats), an gyqjjaple from Canada during the cago, then set aside by new WLB from Scandinavian countries seems in the Chicago regional office along Supply Will be determined by local alone sent in 11,000 letters Paper industry advisory committee although there were a few dis- | market and be subject to.commerstand yesterday's speakers (local The outcome of the meeting, apWashington Times-Herald). . Latin American, and now owned by other war jobs is net so easy; they open its Memphis-Indianapolis-De-'at Geneva, Utah (U. S, Steel, Kai-
full when the New York Central to has been ceded to Russia, I think ~Chicago is so packed most of the that Russia's agreement is fair and time. Was &verybody counted, they equitable and should mot be wondered, or was it just too good Criticized. Nevertheless, my opinion fI with the 1 , ness? | Would. be better 0 % wath waited Possess Business Petsamo mine than with the $2 GOVERNMENT STALLING on! 000,000.” wage raises riles war workers. meeting in Cadle feberhanle Jes HOPE T0 INCREASE terday afternoon of P. & Co. workers, to hear bist n ln. | ers (C. 1. O. Electrical Workers), | | WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. in a contract made a year ago this ; odueti bd rd May, still are held up by govern-| P).—The war production ar ment bureau enmeshments. | “hoped” today that from 5 to 6 The tabernacle was practically per cent more newsprint will be attendance of 8000-plus. Workers were hs their 10- cent | second half of the year, and added raise plea was whittled to 7 cents! {that the possibility of obtaining by a regional WLB panel at Chi-| | considerable amounts of newsprint ; ; likely. Chairman George Taylor's stay UPJXEW- ; : order on all general metal-work-| Canadian pulpswood production ing rates, a ban lifted this month, | has increased, but the dominion’s which put the Mallory case back ability to increase the newsprint with 250 others. weather conditions, WPB said. Incidentally, when they were Scandinavian production will go trying to break the stay on metal- TOstly to Europe, even after the working wage rates, the Mallory Skagerrak is reopened, the newsand 700 telegrams—the C. I. O.-| Was informed. % P. A. C. technique in telling its A statement said that any availside. The no-strike pledge was re-| able pulp and paper in the Scandiaffirmed by the union yesterday, | navian countries will go to a free sertters who wanted a strike vote. | cial contracts. This, however, would Mallory employs many physically] indirectly relieve North American handicapped persons, among them supplies. deaf mutes. So they could under-| President Byrl Hamilton and International Representative - Robert Kirkwood) the deaf school furnished a translator. parently, is“to wait and see for a little longer. =" » 5 : ODDS AND ENDS—U. 8. rights Shipyards are laying off 30,000 workto the inkless pen invented by a ers a month, but shunting them te an Englishman, have ‘been pur- know the end is near and want to chased by two prominent fountain get back home to their old jobs pen manufacturers. . . . Chicago’. , . The government has three bid- & Southern Air Lines, which will ders for its $200 million steel mill troit route June 1, has hired a ser, and Colorado Fuel & Iron), but beauty specialist to give a course it is seeking more possible in beauty, style, poise, etc. to its ' tomers.
Cus-~
Glasses Fitted — “Latest Styles” — We | Invite Hard-to-Fit Eyes See Dr. Carl J. Klaiber, Opt. D.
For Accurate Eye Examinations If You Suffer Eyestrain, Headaches and Nervous % Use Our Easy Pay Plan—If You Wish &
Optical Service, 300-301 Kresge Bldg. 41 E. Wash.
Hours 9 to 12 and 2 to 5 (Call FR anklin #247). Take elevator to 3d floor.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY |
USE YOUR CREDIT at E- 8 VS GRY RE WEAVING | mioEimS
or WORN SPOTS CLOTHING COMPANY
LEON TAILORING CO. 235 Mass Ave, '» the Middle of
the First Block
131 W. Washington St.
Directly Opposite Indiana Theater
WASTE PAPER
AMERICAN PAPER
STOCK COMPANY RI-6341 320 W. Mich.
DIT |
HANGERS Ic EACH
We Buy Usable Wire Garment
Hangers at 10¢ per bundle of 10 62 Stores All Over Indianapolis
Davis CLEANERS PEARSON'S
128 N. Penn. LL 5513
FURNITURE '®¢ PIANOS B A.N D INSTRUMENTS RECORDS eo SHEET MUSIC
OXYGEN THERAPY
This Equipment Can Be Rented at
HAAG'’S 402 N. Capitol Ave.
Day Phone Night Phone LL 5367 RL 7956
- " | “would be better off” with
less ing of stockholders that Russia had |
Se SOrTelcy over RUE oA
| Repub Sti
{ Schenley
{26th Cent Fox {U 8 Rubber ... 67
Zenith Rad ... 39 ag hy
The OPA rent office here is getabout 100 telephone calls a
| settle arguments over spring housecleaning and redecorating.
“Some landlords claim that they | care of customary
cannot take maintenance work this year due
to the inability to hire competent Guter= | “Others state |
seasonal labor,” said C. R. muth, rent director. that they cannot continue the same high standards expected in the past because of material shortages. “The rent office does not try to settle the hundreds. of controver= sies,”” Mr. Gutermuth said, “but the regulation requires that rental dwellings be maintained in a man=| ner consistent with the war economy. Can't Charge Extra “Although substantial deteriora=tion is not tolerated, tenants should | not expectethe sams2 high degree of | service, replacement and. repairs as were furnished during peacetime. | “Many landlords had the practice of redecorating often, perhaps every | year. This practice existed largely because of: competitive reasons: and such frequent: decoratfon$ are not regarded. as necessary to keep accommodations in a reasonably habitable condition. Under the housing regulations a landlord may redecorate less frequently. “However, he is not permitted to charge extra for maintenance or decorating which he is obliged to furnish under the rental agreement and he will not be allowed to let the accommodations run down in such fashion as to result in a material lessening of -rental value.”
|__N. Y. Stocks
Allis-Chal Am Can Am Loco m Rad & S§ Am Roll Mill Am T&T . Am Tob B Am Water W Anaconda Armour & Co Atchison Atl Refining Bald Loco ct. . Bendix Avn Beth Steel Boraen Borg-Warner Caterpiliar T . £5} Ches & Ohio Curtiss-Wr Douglas Airc Du Pont Gen Electric Gen Motors Goodrich Goodyear Ind Rayon Int Harvester Johns-Man Kennecott Kroger G&B L-O-F Glass .. Lockheed Air .. 2 Loew's 7 Martin (Glenn) 2 {Mont Ward Nash-Kelv Nat Biscuit Nat Distillers N Y Central Ohio Oil Fackard ‘a Pan Am Air ...
Lil 040}
FL ebb LLL:
w
©
|Reyn Tob B
“pe ee 0 a = AR AP BAD AD LEE PEEE®
| Servel : Socony-Vacuum South Pac Std Bra Std Br! . ‘Std oil tInd) Std "Oil -(N. J) . | Texas Co
w
EERE RRRACARREE
U S Steel Warner Bros .
Westing EI 1342
rE
PUBLIC WELFARE LOAN ASS'N SOLD
The Indianapolis Public Welfare Loan Association, formed 33 years ago by a number- of prominent businessmen, has sold its accounts land physical assets to the newlyformed partnership, Indianapolis Public Loan Co, it was apnounced today. Partners in the new firm are Fred L. Mehaffey, Thomas Mehaffey Jr., E. K. Mehaffey, J. W., Mehaffey and E. H. Bingham Jr. Fred L. Mehaffey is president of Consolis dated Finance Corp. 111 N. Pennsylvania st., and Thomas Mehaffey r.,, is secretary-treasurer, The transaction was completed April 16. R. R, Wickes will continue as general manager and Carl MacBee as assistant manager. No changes in personnel or policies are contemplated, Fred L. Mehaffey said. Offices will remain in the Occidental building, Illinois and Washington sts,, for the present. Directors of the Indianapolis Public Welfare Loan Association, |* were Gustave A. Efroymson, William J. Mooney, P. C. Reilly, M. M. Dunbar, Henry. Langsenkamp ' Sr., Franklin Vonnegut, James A. Collins, Ralph Bamberger and Robert A. Efroymson,
DISTRIBUTORS TO GET PARTS
a! WASHINGTON, April 25 (U. P..
| —Distributoras of. farm machinery repair parts will be given preference ratings for the purchase of repair parts for farm machinery, war production board announced today.
U.S. STATEMENT |
You Save Because We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats
18° "217 24" CASE CLOTHES
215 N. Senate Ave. Open 9 to 9
SHERWIN WILLIAMS
Has a Paint for Every Purpose. COSTS LESS 1 Because It Lasts Longer.
a INEGUT'S
WE Buy Diamonds
HIGHEST a PRICES
STANLEY Jewelry Co.
113 W. WASH, Lincoln Hotel Bldg.
wisn oh
Quality and Style Without Eztravagance
LEVINSON
Your Hatter
q Net
| WASHINGTON, April 25 (U, P.).-Gov-{ernment expenses and receipts for the {current fiscal year through April 23, com- | pared with a year ago: This Year Last Year Expenses War Spend Receipts Deficit. Gash Bal
72,380,051,124 36,788,117,303 42,802,080,017 11,528,363,550 | Work Bal . 11,065,428,309 [Pub Debt .. 235554,214,661 [Gold Res .. 20,374,419,502
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE
Clearings 4,061,000 | ‘Debits 14,877, 000!
60,882 287,808
186,905,224 904 21,420,038,795 |
{day from landlords and tenants to]
*/ chairman 4 inner circle of White House advisers
. significant that Mr.
* counsel
the war and Hugh Fulton was the succeeded Mr, Ful mainspring.
{Ind & Mich
| Ame rican
$ 70.590,197,820 § 74,982,086,935 | 1
WEDNE
Death Dive—Bombs, Undropped
|
Its bombs still in the -open bomb bay, an A-26 Invader of the 9th bombardment group hurtles earthward over the .Wéstern front, the wing sheared off b& enemy flak seconds before “Bombs away!” could be achieved. : >
Hugh Fulton Worked Hard on | Probes That 'Made' Truman
By NED BROOKS § Seripps-Howard Staff Writer WASHINGTON, April -25.—A link in the chain placed Hairy S. Truman in the White House was lawyer once desciibed by the new President as “the prosecutor I could find’ . He is Hugh A. Fulten, served as cour for senate war investizating committee while Mr. Truman was its and now has joined the —mmmm™—— ——— -
events which | a young |
hitting |
plied by hardest
who for three vears sel
the
Fulton, lifted Chairman Truman to It is still uncertain where the national staiure and finally .to the President will place him, but it 15 yjce presidential nomination at the Fulton wa 1944 Chicago convention of the first men summoned to the In cross-examination. Mr. Fulton White House after Mr. Truman took could be tough or lenient. as™the his oath. occasion dictated. He proved himself The Truman-Fulton association a match for ‘John L. Lewis, the goes back to March, 1941, .when the Uniteq Mine ‘Workers chief who! Missouri senator called the then relishes the rough-and-fumble of | attorney general, Justice Robert H.| congressional interrogation. He deat Jackson, to ask him to supply & more kindly—too kindly, some sen2l for the newly organize¢ ators thought—when he got Thomcommittee as G. Corcoran, erstwhile White “I want the toughest prosecutor House intimate, on the stand. ‘Crityou have.” the senator specified recalled the Fulton-Corcoran “I have just the man,” Mr. Jack- Sip and “Tommy the Cork's” son replied. y at the justice department So - 36-year-old Hugh ulton went to work for the Truman com- He Was Efficient mitiee, retaining that post until last! Bug for most part, Hugh August, when he resigned to be- Fulton had risen in justice department esteem by his handling of the
come one of the chief advisers of the an vice president amhe Truman vice presidential cat prosecution of Howard C. Hopson, head of the billion-dollar Associ-
paign. Pearl Har was nine months : : as nine months ,ieq Gas & Electric Co. on mail charges. He also convicted
off when Mr. Fulton began digging fraud Stephen A. Paine, New York invest-
into the progress of the defense rogram—t racts for war sup- : : program—the contracts for war sup- ment broker, on charges of looting several investment trusts. Both cases |
Ss one
1C8 friend influenc
the
bor
plies, the erection of camps and cantonments, work stoppages due
to la ispufes” : i t bor disputes {was serving as chief assistant tol
iJohn T. Cahill, then U. 8S. distric: attorney ir New York. Associated with him in the Hop-Iy-inlo son case was Rydolph Halley, who nas counsel for Most senators on The rhe serat® committee. | After Mr. Truman's election tol the vice presidency, Mr, Fulton entered private law practice, meantime | while continuing as adviser to the assisted investigating group under Senator day and James M. Mead (D. N. Y.) He was born in North Baltimore, Fulton's di- O., in "1908 and ived his law fact that no report deg t U » of Michiwas ever Issued by the committee gan in joining the jus—and he wrote most of them—until tment in 1939, he : it had the unanimous support of all members, Democrats and Repub - dorf Swaine & Wood licans alike. But. the reports pulied law firm which won no punches and the Truman com- court. decision invali mittee came to be respected by all the Roosevelt administrative agencies, feared by
Fulton Was Mainspring The committee's work continued and expanded after U. S. ent
1 10-member committee were éccupied | *| with other duties; | devoted neafly to the inquiry. by a night. A tribute to plomacy
Senator Truman
all of his Mr. Fulton, staff of 25, toiled Hugh rece Was the ree at the Uni 1931. Before tice depat sociated with Cravath,
was asGers-| the New York the supreme ing the NRA
de
act of Hon,
| Cholce—
11100-1300 pounds
were assigned to him while he still} 2 ;
administra- : ? [} MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP.
1250 PORKERS
~ RECEIVED HERE
Market Is Active, Steady; Top Price $14.80, - |
The Indianapolis stock yards re- | ceived 72560 hogs today, the war food! administration reported today,” and | the top price ‘regained at the gov- | ernment ceiling of $14.80. The market was active and | steady, with other receipts including 1050 cattle, 525 calves and 10 sheep.
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS 140 pounds 160 pounds i 180 pounds ... 200 pounds ... "| 220 pounds ...i.ieienee. 240 pounds .... |
(31250) 4 oe i. 30
270 pounds .. 300 pounds ... 330 pounds ... 360 pounds um-— 200 pounds . Packing Sows to Cholce— 300 pounds 14.05 330 pounds 14.05 360 pounds .... 14.06 400. POUNAS ....si0v0evs. 14.00 450 pounds ... tenney j1.00011.208 550 pounds .........t... 14.906014.05
Me dium 250- 500 pounds [email protected] Slaughter ‘Pigs Medium. to Choice~ | 90- 180 pounds «+ [email protected] 2 CATTLE (1050) f Steers
700- 900 pounds ......... 900-3100 pounds. .,. 1100-1300 pounds .. 130041500 pounds .. ‘Good — 700- 900 pounds 900-1100 pounds
+ 16.25 @17.25 16.254017.50 |
+ 16.26@17.
vo [email protected] [email protected] 1 ‘as .e 15.004016 25 1300-1500 pounds .... . 15.00016.25 Medium— | 700-1100 pounds 1100-1300 pounds Common — 700-1100 pounds
. 13.50®14.75 | 13.50¢15.00
Choice— 600- 800 pounds we 1000 pounds | Goo an "800 pounds 800-1000 pounds | Medium — 500- 900 pounds Common — 500- 900 pounds
Cows (ab weights)
[email protected]% . [email protected]
14.50@15 50 14.75@ 15.50
[email protected] [email protected]
Good T5@ 14 38 Medium PEE 2[5@12 Cutter and common 35211 28 Canner rant W 00@ 8.25 Bulls (all weights) | Beef— '._ | Good (all weights) [email protected]| Sausage— { ER 11 Medium ‘ “sivaens 30 Cutter and common CALVES (32) Vealers (all weights) good and choice ‘. 17.50 18.00 Common and medium . 10.00@ 17.00 Cull 5.00@ 10.00
Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
Steers Choice— 500- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Gooa— 500- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds Medium— 500-1000 pgunds Common-— 500-- 900 pounds Calves (Steers) Good and cholce— 500 pounds down Medium— 500 pounds down Calves Good and choice— 500 pounds down Medium— 500 pounds down SHEEP (100) Ewes (Shorn) Good and choice Common and medinm LAMBS Good and choice Medium and £904 Common
[email protected]% [email protected]
[email protected] 10.25 11.75 &
[email protected] 7%@ 8.75
[email protected] (Heifers)
10 [email protected]% 8.50910.50
1.759 §o0o@
9.00 7.95
16.00@ 16.50 [email protected] [email protected]
LOCAL PRODUCE
Heavy breed hens, 24c. Leggorn hens,
ile. Broilers, fryers and roasters, ibs, white and barred rocks. 28c Old roosters, 15¢ Eggs—Current receipts, 3lc;, grade’ A marge, 34c; grade A medium and B large, 3lc; grade A small, Z6¢c; under grade, 27¢c Butter—No 1, 50c. Butterfat—No. 1 49c: No” 2. 36¢c "i>" |
under 5
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); cats, No 2 white or No 2 red, testing 32 Ibs. or better, 66c; corn, No. 3 yellow. shelled, old crop, $1.09 per bushel No. 2 white shelled, old crop, $1.15.
Fidel oar
TRUST ICOMPANY 123 EAST MARKET STREET
and
| Whitehill,
TH6.25@)7. 30) president of Dayar: 1& Co.
{P).~Tom M. Girdler,
Apri 19 Frost Damages Crops
FROST ON April 19 -has reportedly caused damage to tree fruits, grapes, strawberries, paragus tips and early set tomatoes, according to the Indianap- | olis weather bureau's weekly crop report. Very little corn has been planted, but the seeding of oats is nearly finished. Wheat is from 8 to 16 inches tall and much of it is jointing. Extremely southern barley is heading. Winter grain and and | pasures | are very good.
GRIFFITH IS NAMED | BY CITY MERCHANTS
Theodore B. Griffith, L. 8. Ayres & Co. president, was elected presi-
as=
. [email protected] dent of the Merchants’ Association inconsistencies”
of Indianapolis at the annual busi-
| ness meeting yes- { terday. | ceads
He sucClyde E. Whitehill, . president of BannerInc. . Donald ‘A. Morrison, president of | L. E. Morrison & Co., was elected | vice president; Edward M. Dayan, ail secretary, Mr. Griffith, . and Albert Zoller, vice presitient of Charles Mayer & Co., treasurer. Directors elected for three-year terms were Meier S. Block, vice president of the William H. Block Co.: Hugh K. Duffield, manager of Sears, Roebuck & Co.'s Indianapolis store, and Lester Greengard,
manager of Morrison's Washington
st. Corp. Murray H. Morris was reelected managef. The annual ainner meeting be at 6:30 p. m. Tuesday at Broadmoor Country club
T. M. GIRDLER, VULTEE CHAIRMAN, RESIGNS
SAN DIEGO, Cal, April 25 (U chairman, for
will the
Consolidated Vultee Aircraft nearly three and a half years, signed today. Girdler said that with Germany's defeat assured and the aircraft industry now geared to meet every production requirement, he felt that portion of his war job was finished. No successor has been chosen for Girdler, who continues as chairman of the board of Republic Steel Corp.,, the nation's third largest
re~
| steel producer.
was re-elected.
SDAY, "APRIL 2, 1043
A&P ANSWERS U.S. CHARGES
Says It Was Attacked for ‘Efficiency.’
DANVILLE, TIL Aprik-28 (U.P.). | Officials of the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. answered charges of operating as a monopoly teday | with an-assertion that the government has attacked the giant chain store concern “because it is efficient ts prices and profits are too
[ * The company's stand was contdined in a 91-page brief filed yes terday in federal court, where the A. & P. and 28 subsidiaries and officials are ‘facing charges of violat= ing the Sherman anti-trust act. The brief, pointing to “errors and in government claims, denied that the A. & P. constituted the largest retail grocery organization in the cquntry or that it controlled 13': per cent of the nation’s retail food sales, [ “A, & P. is the largest only in rétail sales, not in investment or | profit, the number of stores -or total | manufacturing operations,” the brief contended,
Controls 116-10 Per Cent
Instead of controlling 13% per cent of retail grocery sales, the facts are, the company said, that “A. & P. never did more than 11 6-10 per cent of tifé total retail food store busiand that was in 1933.” Since percentage has declined and in 1941 was seven per cent, the brief continued. In answer to a government claim that the firm's tactics were aimed at cutting prices and foreing competitors out of business, the brief credited -A. & P. with stimulating competition by “causing the old village grocer to modernize his methods.” The brief acknowledged that the company’s sales ros: from $440,000C00 in 1925 to $1,440,000,000, in 1942, but cited a 1'2 per cent drop in net profits as evidence that the benefits of increased sales were passed on to the public in the form of lower prices.
ness
then, the
Travelers Chee Checks: Safe, Convenient,
Inexpensive AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
AT INDIANAPOLIS Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
A Firestone Product |
NOT 1, NOT 2, BUT 3-INCH INSULATION
=\
$s caine ive Lode .
yi we wt inst ol
FREE INSPECTIO Williamson of MONARC 36 W. 10th St.
It Will Cost You Nothing fo Find Out About
HOME NSULATION
PAY AS LOW AS 5.00 MONTHLY
N AND ESTIMATE Furnace Div. H SALES CO. LI. 4438
those whose performance was weak. |
The work of the committee, much | of which was the work of Hugh!
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal. quotations furn anapolis securities dealers:
STOCKS
Agents Pin Corp com Agents Fn Corp pid Col com Rel R Stk Yds Belt R Stk Yd: Bobbs-Merrill com Eobbs-Merrill 4'2s pfd Central Soya com Circle Theater com .e Comwlth Loan 5% pie ‘e Delta Elec com Electronic Lab . Ft Wayne & Jackson RR pfd Hook Drug Co com Home T&T Ft; Wayne 7% pie pid
lished by Indi-
Asked |
Ayrsi ir
com
Ind Asso Te) 57% E 4'% Indpls P & L pfd Indpls P & L com Indpls Railways com Indpls Water pfd Indpls Water Class A Jef Nat Life com Kingan & Co pfd Kingan & Co com ‘Lincoln Loan Co-5' Lincoln Nat Life com P R Mallory pfd P R Mallory com N_Ind Pub Serv Pub Serv Ind 5° Pub Serv of Ind Progress Laundry Ross Gear' & Tool com So Ind G & F 48 Stokley-Van' Camp pr J 8 Machine com United Tel Co 5% Union Title com
BONDS
American Loan 5s 35 Loan 5s Buhner Fertilizer ! Ch of Com Bldg 4'; Citizens Ind Tel 4% Columbia Club 1%,s 5 Consol Pin bs 56 nd Asso Tel Co 3%s 70 .... Indpls P&L 3%s 70 Indpls Railways Co 5s 37 Indpls Water Co 3%s 68 ... Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54 N Ind Pub Serv 3'.8 73 N Ind Tel 4,8 56 Chena {Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 73 .... Pb Tel 428 55. . | frac Term Corp 5s 67 H J Williamson Inc bs 55 ‘Ex vidend »
crybodyd TV LE
EE =
Confidential @ Economical ® Part-time
BOOKKEEPING AND TAX REPORT SERVICE
A Practical Solution . of a Difficult Problem
i A.J, BRUMLEVE
ters Bldg.
L1- 9718
Oldest
146 E. WASH
i: The CHICAGO -
On Everything Diamonds, Watches
Musical Instruments, Cameras JEWELRY
“Co, Ine. INGTON ST. 4
seis Ml the party. Ice-cold, Coca-Cola is one of the good things of life that belongs
in your family refrigerator. Next time you shop, don’t forget Coca-Cola...
little moment on the sunny side of things.
Boy
How about a breather?...Have a Coca-Cola
+ OF refreshment joins the game
There's one deal in the game when everybody wins. That's when the host says Have a Coke. Everybody welcomes the moment when refreshment j joins
a C4 » “~~ an MARK REGS
| —
the drink that has made the pause that refreshes a nbdonal custom .. +a friendly
LOANS: =|
sorILED UNDER “AUTHORITY or THE COCA. COLA COMPANY A
COCA.COLA BOTTLING co. oF INDIANAPOLIS, INC.
Guiry
-the global high-sign
You naturally hear Coca Cola[aed by its friendly Shred
No Appoin Necessa
OPEN Every Night Till to P. M.
NATUR WAVES \
ALL. WO
hy C0:
Super -Spe« While Sup Last .....
Naturally An End Dull, Dra
Helen of Worth Mu
SHAMPOO an FINGER WAV Cor, Il. & W
RELIEVI
Every perso excessive gas should - get a Gas Tablets ar lief of the dis Sharp pains often due en Many suffere burning pain a called heartby times of palpit sour risings, SaERE SH ATE result from ga
Money-
Baalmann’'s especially for and discomfor sure, They cor positive guara first bottle she tion with res can supply yo directed, AL
FREIG
h
Mr. Paul E Indianapo He Ate Vola-Vin ment—No Eats Any!
Every day are overcom elimination, directed, th pound Knos Paul Edwar
“This Wond
“I am an line compan ‘some time I stipation, night, had what I. did me. Torme on my stom «entirely reli ments. I sl thing I wan herbal me worked won
