Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 May 1945 — Page 30

* ‘Reich, but it is so, Each is

ho

°

oa

5 Wi,

! ready. Will Russia keep all extra

© ing. Collectors, investors

Business Te

By ROGER BUDROW

Allies Have No Single Plan For Ruling Occupied Reich

GERMANY, LIKE ANCIENT GAUL, iS DIVIDED

into three parts now. " It’s real

ly four, if you count the sliver

which France will rule. But in the main it will be the poli-

cies of Russia, United States

and Great Britain which will

determine Germany's immediate fate. It's surprising, after Yalta, that the allies do not have

a unified scheme for the |

to go its own way. The United States apparently will follow what is known &s the Morgenthau plan, developed by the

secretary of the treasury and ap- | *

proved by Presi-| dent Roosevelt. | With a few mod-| ifications, t h i 8 “hard” peace is being put into effect, havihg been sent as a directive by President Truman to Gen.|| Eisenhower. 4

SWITZERLAND 7 ANS

® =. 8

A

ETTIN ! BERLIN @ uray

RUSSIAN

MIAN

os a Desi . \ YUSOSLAVIA J ITALY UR

The plan denudes Germany, that part occupied by the U. S., of its heavy (warmaking) industries, including synthetis rubber, chemicals, aircraft and machine tools. . Exports and imports will be completely controlled. Reparations will extract all income above a subsistence livelihood for the Germans. Textbooks will be destroyed and new ones kept devoid of Nazi ideas. Production is to be kept to a fixed level, with any increasgs,~through . bumper crop weather or technologieal efficiency, going to speed reparation payments. Maj. Gen. Lucius Clay reportedly |; will be Gen. Eisenhower's chief assistant handling civilian affairs. And if Gen. Eisenhower should pe brought back to Washington as army chief of staff, presuming Gen. Marshall becomes top commander in the Pacific, Gen. Clay might re-

main as top American in Gesmany.|jor said, however, that the board

Bach zones different. The Rus- |; sian zone is Germany's “breadbasket”; while England has much of the factory area, and America has the sight-seeing country. Unless the three co-operate, the occupation will ‘be very difficult, There are all kinds of worries al-

German-grown food for her own hungry citizens, and let the U, 8. and Britain feed their German areas by bringing in food? Will France, should she take the Ruhr, keep the hard coal mined there, crippling the rest of Germany? Occupying Germany will be a good test of allied unity in peace-

8 &._» : “POSTAGE STAMPS are boomand speculators have pushed prices to” record highs. Stamp collectors are a serious, | polyglot bunch who talk a language of perforations, watermarks, se- |

tenant and precancels and who | chase a wanted specimen with a fanatical ‘gleam in their eye, re-| ports Investors Reader. But philately is big business, with VU. 8. sales running into hundreds of millions a year, Although only half the collection has been sold, that of Col. E. H. R. Green (son of Hetty Green of Wall Street fame) Jas brought $1,100,000. The French government realized more than $7 million when it sold the confiscated Ferrai collection in 1921-25. There are more than 700 stamp stores and shops in New York City alone. The postoffice says there are 10 million collectors in this country; its philatelic agency has sold | more than $18 million worth since 1921. " Although prices already are high, the future is good, stampmen say, because the global war has spotlighted unknown places and because big collections in Berlin, London, . Stalingrad, Tokyo and other cities have been destroyed, ~ ~ »

ODDS AND ENDS: Battery and and unions to work out their own in the Kensington district roused paint-makers are glad to hear that wage schedules, file them for WLB | from sleep by a fire,

the first shipment of a 20,000-ton | purchase of lead from Canada and

Australia is on the way. ,.. The] + frost late last week took a good | meny tomato plants in Indiana, and damaged strawberries and other fruits further, the Indianapolis] Weather Bureau's crop bulletin re-| .« + The franc has been so| inflated that high prices the] French want for wine, brandy and} perfumes keep many buyers away. | « « « In a test it was found that + 94% of the 1,070 owners of tele- | vision sets know that Gillette Safety) Razor Co. sponsors twice-weekly! boxing bouts over NBC. That's al

far better percentage than an or- |#

|

dinary radio program sponsor can get, but then Gillette has so little _ television competition. Ther are now 3609 firms flying the army- | navy “BE.”

BLOCK'S WIN TOP AD CLUB AWARD :

honors in the tndianapolis Adver- | tising club's ad-of-the-month com-

petition for April with a color news. |

paper advertisement. won a certificate in néwspaper-color classification, L. 8. Ayres & Cp. received a certificate for an entry in newspaper black and white competition, and

& Co. was awarded a cer-|

tificate in the smaller-than-half-page-space newspaper division,

WLB Will Check V Wage Cuts,

~The war labor board today assured the nation's workers that it will try to preserve the general

rates when they go back to peacetime jobs.

total weekly take-home pay will amount to as much as it did in war work.

which will arise from production cutbacks, reduction of the work week and loss of overtime and incentive pay.

formula and Taylor's remarks at a press conference yesterday appeared to indicate that the WLB will cautiously raise hourly wage rates after it is satisfied that the increased earnings will not become an inflationary pressure to run up| ge prices for scarce civilian products.

“just as alert” in preventing wage rate cuts as in preventing general raises. tempt to “hold the line” of Sept. 15, 19042, as, provided in the stabilization act under which the WLB

DETAIL ‘HOLD

LINE” POLICY

As Well as Raises. WASHINGTON, May H (U. P.).

evel of their wartime hourly wage It will not guarantee that. their

WLB Chairman George W. Tay-

is studying the - wage problems

The WLB’'s reconversion wage

Problems Fall in 3 Groups Taylor pledged the WLB to be

He ‘said the WLB will at-

controls wages.

The WLB sai “there were three |

types of wage-setting problems to { he_met immediately. In the case of a complete conversion of a plant

1 New Plane Seat

| 275 Cattle, 450 Calves Also

CRUBBE +. .vciresirneisnssns 6.50@ 7.50 ' Bulls (all weights) of — Good (all weights) ....e..c [email protected] | Sausage— | Good «es [email protected]

Catapults Pilot

DOWNEY, Cal, May 11 (U. PJ. —Consolidatéd - Vultee engineers. have developed an airplane seat which catapults the pilot out of range of the propellor when he is forced to bail out. - The seat, operated. by foot and designed ' for pusher-type aircraft, shoots the pilot forward from the cockpit and clear of the plane.

6525 PORKERS REGEIVED HERE

Arrive.

Hog policy continued to run mostly good and choice, and prices held at ceiling levels with the receipt of 6525 head. today by the Indianapolis stock yards, the war food administration said. Cattle receipts amounted to 275, and moved fairly quickly at firm] rates. Calves totaled. 450, and vealers lost most of cents from yesterday. Sheep and lambs again were quoted steady on the limited market of 75.

GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (6525)

120- 140 pounds $14 [email protected] 140- 160 pounds .. .. [email protected] 160- 180 pounds 180- 200 pounds 200- 220 pounds .

220~- 240 pounds .. 14.80 240- 270 pounds 14.80 270~- 300 pounds . 14.80 300- 330 pounds . 14.80 330- 360 pounds . 14.80 Medium—

100< 200 pounds Packing Sows Good to Choice—

270- 300 PoUNdS succvecevenes 14.05 300- 330 pounds ....peceieces 14.05 330- 360 pounds %..... seresee 14.05 360- 400 pounds ‘v.e.eee eaeave 14.05 Good— 400~- 450 pounds ..: [email protected] 450~ 550 pounds ...... serene 14.00@1405 edium-— 250+ 500 pounds .......i...es [email protected] Slaughter Pigs Medium to ‘Choice— 90- 180 pounds .......c i000 [email protected] CATTLE 275) Steers Choice— ; 700- 900 pounds .......e00s «eo [email protected]

900-1100 pounds .. 1100-1300 pounds .. 1300-1500 pounds ..

«+ [email protected] «. [email protected] . [email protected]

Good— 700~ 900 pounds v.cvevvennnes [email protected] 800-1100 pounds ...eovoveeses [email protected] 1100-1800 pounds . «+ [email protected]

1300-1500 pounds Medium 700-1100 pounds. .. 1100-1300 pounds .... Common—

[email protected]

«vs 13,50@15,00 eee [email protected]

700-1100 pounds ..........00 « 11.50@ 13.50 Heifers Choice 600- 800 pounds ...... ssansss [email protected]

800-1000 pounds ...eeeeeesess [email protected]

te- 800 pounds ...... «. [email protected]

00-1000 pounds [email protected] Medium-— : 500- 900 pounds 12.50@ 14.75 Common— 500- 900 pounds .........c0ce [email protected]

Good Mediu . . cote and ‘common

[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

. « [email protected] Cutter and common [email protected] CALVES (400)

~ Vealers (all weights)

to civilian output some or all of the key jobs will: normally remain substantially the same in job content and the rates for these. com- | mon jobs may not be changed, WLB said. They are to be used as guide|

rates for establishment of a bal-|

anced structure for the whole plant. | “This will preserve the general | level of wage rates existing in the | plant prior to conversion,” WLB said. In cases where only part of a! plant is converted from war to civilian production, no change in rates may be made for civilian jobs| which are substantially the same as the warg jobs. The rates for the civilian jobs are to be fixed in “proper balanced relationship” with | the rates for the war jobs, WLB/| ruled.

The third type of case will in-|

volve plants where there is of “sweeping change” in job content, | These rates must be fixed at the prevailing level of wages in the industry and area. ‘Work Out Own Plans’

The WLB authorized employers]

review and put them into effect] | immediately. Pay rates will not be approved {if they require an increase in the price fixed by the office of price administration unless okayed by Stabilization Director William H Davis. If the WI.B modifies the rates, the adjustments will not be retroactive. The WLB said it will continue to handle disputes over wage rates under ity established procedures. Taylor added that. labor's no-strike pledge will hold for the duration of the Japanese war in al plants, { whether producing war or civilian

| goods, His statement was indorsed by Van Bittner of the Congress of

{ Industrial Organizations and- James Brownlow of the American Federa- | Hon of Labor, their organizations’ | top membe rs of the WLB.

STEEL PRODUCTION DOWN NEW YORK, May'11 (U.

strikes and the shorter month combiney Xo force April steel production . 8. down nearly 400,000 net aura Iron & Steel institute reported today,

J. C. ELECTS PRESIDENT CHICAGO, May 11

been elected president of the U, S. {Junior Chamber. of ‘Commerce, isucceed Mearns T. Gates, roy, Wash.

P.)—Al lack of coal as a result-of the mine]

(U. P.)~ The ad also! | Henry Kearns, Pasadena, Cal, has

to Pome-

Good and choice ............

Common and Medium we | Cull

Feeder ni Stocker ‘Cattle and Calves

Steers Choice— 500-.800 pounds ,..;.... « [email protected] -1000 pounds [email protected] Good —

500-800 pounds 800-1000 pounds | Medium—

+ [email protected] 10.25@11:75

500- 1000 ) pounds Sssssssnenane [email protected] om | 500- 900 1 POUNGS ..ovreoansine 7.509 8.75 | Calves (Steers) Good and choice— | s3os 500 pounds down ........... [email protected] Medium— 500 pounds down .........r. [email protected]

| Calves (Heifers) {Good and choice—

500 pounds down ........... [email protected]% Medium— - 500 pounds down ..... 8.50910.50

SHEEP ( 5) Ewes (Shorn)

1a set of tax concessions,

But No Relief in in Sight for Individuals.

By RAYMOND LAHR United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, May 11.—The joint congressional committee on post-w#r taxation today proposed including a speed-up .of scheduled refunds totaling approximately $5,« 540,000,000, its reconversion problems. It also recommended a more liberal excess profits tax exemp-

estimated $160,000,000 in 1947 on its 1946 taxes. : But there was still “no relief in sight for the individual income taxpayer nor was business given any hope for early reductions in the existing wartime rates. Chairman Robert L. Doughton (D. N, C.), who is also chairman of the house ways 4nd means com-

I mittee, said legislation based on the report probably would be introduced

soon and hearings begun before the house committee. Rep, Harold Knutson of Minnesota, ranking Republican member of the ways and means committee and a member of the joint committee, said it had been “generally agreed that until the war with Japan is over there can’t be any general tax reduction.” 10% Credit Suggested The joint committee made one recommendation which will mean a 10 per cent cut in the 95 per cent excess profits tax paid by corporations. It proposed that

those payments may be taken currently on tax liabilities for 1944 and Jater years. It also recommended that the 10 per cent’ post-war refunds on taxes already paid be made available after next Jan. 1 instead of over a period of years following the war as the law now ¥ Ip Those

of May 1: Another recommendation called for raising the-exemption for excess profits taxes from $10,000 to $25,000.

firms particularly. The committee also suggested a speed-up of refunds resulting from carrybacks of net operating losses and of unused excess profits credits and of refunds resulting from recomputation of deductions for amortizing emergency facilities. “The proposed changes would improve the cash position of business during the period of reconversion to peacetime production,” the committee said. “Only the increase in the specific exemption would reduce ultimate tax liabilities.”

Meetings

Chemists “Pundamental Principles of Polarography” will be the subject of C. O. Gosch, Fisher Scientific Co. when he speaks at the luncheon meeting of the Indiana section of

the American Chemical society, Tuesday, May 15, at the Warren hotel. Scientech

L. BE. Grisso, district nfanager of the Dictaphone Corp. will give a demonstration talk on “Dictaphones at War,” at the noon meeting of the Scientech club in the Claypool hotel Monday.

-LOCAL ISSUES

Nominal quotations furnished by Indianapolis securities dealers:

{ Good and choice 775@ 9.00 STOCKS Bia ase ood and choice ........,.... 5a - Agerits Fin Corp cOm .c.cveees « TH Common and nels Cesane 6.00@ 1.75 | Agents Pin Corp ptd a Lo 20 L 8S Ayres 4%% pid ..ocevees Pana Good and choice .....;....... 16.00@ 16.50 | Ayrshire Col com ~.ye.s . 16% 11% Medium and good .:......... [email protected] Belt R Stk Yds com . 38 4 Common .........c.cccovev.vs t R Stk Yds ptd . i E eee eee | Bobb-aerrt yom “id le rer NGLI | Bobbs-Merrill 4%% Pp are SH PAPERS RECONVERT | | Central Soya com ih 33 35 | LONDON, May 11 (U, P.).—|Circle Theater com igensense 38 | ish’ Cemwlith Loan 5% pfd....... 05'2 | British newspapers have reconverted | peiea’ Elec com ............ss 14% 15% quickly, The Evening News in its|Electronic Lab com “RR pia. oo Sn ” ; Ft Wayne & Jackson p 2 2 “Stop Press” column today gave last Hook Drug Co. com 11% 19% | minute details on a family of three |Home T&T Pt Wayne 1% ‘pid. 51 sens *Ind Asso Tel 5% pid ........ 104% ... Ind & Mich BE 34% pid ..... 109% 113: They escaped |Indpls P & L pfd.. 13 115% down a stair. Indpls P & L com ,.. 24 Indpis Railways Som eve " i —————————————— Indpls Water p ae vies WESTINGHOUSE NAMES WELCH | °g%%, Maier Cass A com 13 oo PITTSBURGH, May 11 (U. P).| Kingan & Co pif v...vv.vees 4B —Gerard H. Welch was appointed *Lincoln Joan Co 5%% pid.. 91, 55 i Lincoln Nat Life com......... 2 assistant to the manager of the|p rR Mallory pd ....c....se. 30 - 32 | switchgear” and control division of |[P R Mallory com .,... cca. 3 | the. Westinghouse Electric & Mig. Mantis Asphalt . hai 109% Co., it was announced toddy. Pub Serv Ind 5% ....... 108! Pub Serv of Ind com 26 Progress Laundry com ...... 17 19 LOCAL PRODUCE Ross Gear & Toul com...... 25 *So Ind GEE 48% ......ceu0. 110'2 113% Stokely. Yai Samp x +] STR 13% 19% Baw breed hens, 34c. Leghorn hens, erre aute Alleablo .. iin i. U 8 Machine com .. ‘r United Tel Co 56% .... Drotiers, fryers and roasters, under 6 ’ Ibs, white and barred rocks, 28c. Union. ‘Tie com soxns old roosters, 15¢, 1 y Eggs—Current receipts, 3lc; grade A American Loan 4 a8 85. .00a0ee 97 100 arge, 34c; grade A medium and B large, | American Loan 4'2s 60 ..... 97 100 |81c: giade A small, 60; under grade, 37¢ Buhner Fertilizer 5s 54 ...... 27 oo Butter—No. 1. B80c y Butter{at—No. 3 Ch of Com Bldg 4's 61 ..... 88 ‘any 49c: No. 2. .36c. Citizens Ind Tel 4'2s 61 103 “hea ean Colymbia Club 1':s § . 80 ders Consol Fin 5s 99 wah WAGO Ww Ind Asso Tel Co Yas. 70. ...108 Tv ay N HEAT Indpls P&L 3%s sees 107 op Indpis Rallways co 53 3%. en. 92's 05% SYA8 U8. inns 7) Up to the close of the Chicago market Rl a oe 3 a“ A 101% yal today, Indianapolis flour mills and grain|N Ind Pub Serv 3%s 13 ......104 ry | elevators paid $1.67 per bushel for No. 1|N Ind Tel 4%s 55 eve 90% "ana | red wheat (other grades on their merits); | Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 73 ..... 106} .. loats, No, 2 waite 0 or No. 2 red, testing 3% Pub Tel 4%s 55 iy eave nn 100 i Ibs. or better, corn, No. 2 yellow | Trac Term Corp 5s 67 97 100

shelled, old Eo be 08 per bushel and

We Buy “Usghle. Wire Garmen Mangus $8 100 yet hundip of 1 All Over

Ti CLEANERS E

WHILE THE -REST OF

i

U. S. STATEMENT

THE TOWN SLEEPS HAAG S

WASHINGTON, May 11 (U. P) . Indianapolis Railways won’ in the|ernment expenses and receipts or Cn

wo program cldssification, Kingan | jirien fiscal year through May 9 com+4 Co. In the outdoor poster, car

pared with a year ago

@ i 125.814 10

the

This Year Last Year | Bxpenaés +8 84,261,371,702 § 79,526, 619,639 by Spend. n 302,213,082 74,147 506,534 Recel 8.381,240388 36,010 216.879

43,616,386,010 | . 11,067, aat. an

295,136,117 187,313, 38, 504 | 2, 374,361,033

ALL NIGHT DRUG STORE 22d and Meridian Sts, IS OPEN

H J Williamson Inc 5s 55... 98 rs

*Ex- divid lend

" SUSINESs | DIRECTORY _

to help industry meet

tion which would save business an|

“F

¢

In the fi

copter of

in a storm.

“Loco in effect),

the 10 per cent post-war credit on {armour & Co. 7% 7%

That proposal would benefit small Lockheed Aire

aviation history, a Sikorsky heli-

recently effected the rescue of 11 airmen marooned planes crashed wastes of Labrador. The first crack-up was that of

a RCAF Canso (PBY5A) patrol plane which iced up and crashed

uninjured in the landing, | were re-

New York Stock Quotations

fy

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES"

BIG TAX REFUND T0 AID INDUSTRY

Canvas that kept floats from freezing to ice is pulled away for the take-off,

moving emergency equipment the plane caught fire and exploded, burning several of them. By using smoke flares, a smudge fire, and signal panels made of branches laid on the snow, the attention of passing air transport command planes was attracted and two rescue planes of the RCAF flew up to the scene. They landed but both cracked up in trying to take off again. Other rescue planes flew over dropping supplies, and word was

rst event of its kind in

the U. S. coast guard helooprer.

after three

the snowy Then it was flown to Goose Bay

in

As crewmen, who were helicopter brought out

stranded men one by one,

sent to the U. S. coast guard at Floyd Bennett field, N. Y., for a

A “Flying Windmill” was dismantled and packed abroad a huge C-54 Skymaster of the ATC,

Labrador, reassembled, and flown to the scene of the crash. ~ Shuttling between the scene and a nearby frozen lake, where larger planes with skis could land, the the

STATE ALLOCATED $390,646 BY U. S.

FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1945

CHICAGO SOUTHERN GIVES SCHEDULE

The. Chicago & Southern. Al Lines announced today a tentativi flight schedule for its service be tween Detroit and Houston whic! {begins June 1. ‘| Flight 51 will leave Detroit , 8:30 a. m., (EWT), arrive here 9:51 a. m., and terminate its tri in New Orleans at 4 p. m. Flight 57 will leave Detroit 4:30 p. m, (EWT), arrive’ here & 5:38 p, m, and drrive- in Housto at 1:32 a. m. Flight 59 will leave Detroit 9 p. m. (EWT), arrive here 10:21 p. m., ahd terminaf® its fligh at Memphis at 1:38.a. m, : Flight 60 will leave Memphis 7:45, a, m., arrive. here at 10:8 a.m, and arrive in Detroit 2:33 p. m. (EWT), Flight 58 will leave Houston 9 a. m., arrive here at 4:12 p. and arrive in Detroit at 7 43 p. (EWT), Flight 4 will leave New Orlear at 10 p. m, arrive here at 4:C a. m., and arrive in Detroit 7:20 a, m. (EWT), These schedules are subject a few minutes change accordir to the results of check flights whic will begin May 15, the compar said.

Beauty Softens Sorrow « .« «

Net Penney ........ 116 ne 116 ™ Hin Low Last Change | [Eemn RB . 3 210 3 ¥ 5 | Times Washington Bureau Allis-Chal «+ 47% 41% 7% 3 i Procter & G “=: 50% 59 50 « 43! WASHINGTON, May 11. — InAm Can ...... 96% 96 96% + 2 ipullman ....... 52%, 51% 52% 4 Yai 4: . Am 32% 32% 32% + W| | Pure Ol ....... 19% © 1912" 19% = i, | diana’s share of the $15,803,181 ap- : Rad & SS 15 14% 147s “+ %a | Repub sil 933, 24% 25 3% fati d b Express Your | Am Roll Mill .. 18% 18% 35 T }¢{Reyn Tob B.. 3M 33% 4 + oy propriation provided by congress Love and § " 0 . a ind Schenl Dist . 579 57 57 ve an Am Tob B 15% 3 Bl r. “| Servel nc is 2% + ¥ bo | for lecal government loans to make in the Mert ympa a s 134 + Usigocony-Vae .... 16% _16% 163 ~— { ) Anaconda 3% 33% BW + ay (Socony-Vas .... 16h 16% 1612 ~— plans for public works amounts to Understandable Way ’ 2 Ya + Ta Std ‘Brands .., 34% 34% 34% .... $390,646 ay Atchison _ ..... 92% M4 9% 4+ UaiStd Oll Cal ... MY 43% 43% + ha ye * AY Re hy Ne Ranh Std Oil Ind ... 37a 37% 37 — la] On a5 per cent of the total con- The ALLIED x y A i “er 4 va 3 ~— : Bendig AV «Bl i Tw Bn tw Texas Co ..... 80% 531s 53% + lstruction basis, this sum would pro- FLORISTS ASSN. ee os : ent-Fox . 28% * A — 4 - Borden ....... 38 37% 8 + % 3 1. — of Indianapolis Botchari 1 Be. 1. B|0S ume. lf Sk 30 CF ia)vide for $7812020 In projects. LOWERS TELERAPHED rym Caterpillar AD sr 26, 3’ + Ja Warmer Bros. Mis WY + % Shes &,0m0.< 50 30s" 30% — Ja westing El-w.. 38% 534 33% ... " Sees +? Zenith Rad ... 39% 39% 39% : Re Douglas Airc .. 817s 80 81% Pale M R } - Gen Electric ... 42 413 2 s INCORPOR TIONS * . © TGAGE LOANS * n vee 42% 42% 42% + . : Gen Motors’ ws 635 684 60% + 4 A Farms, Residences (including FHA loans), Apartments and vevaes 1 + % ? 4 Goodyear ...... 514 5434 54% — 3| The Quality Liquors Wholesalers Corp.; .. Business Buildings. Ind Rayon ..., 47% 47a 47% + 'a Sejanout; agent, a Burks Metotal : Int Harvester . 86la- 85% 86'2 + % ares of par value; oy . ; ' Johns-Man ....113% 112% 113% + Y%/|Stark, Charles A. Scull, Neal H. Acker- Rates Amin Tomml 2 Tp Kennecott ..... 37% 37% 37% — Ys|man, Frank Mahaffey. 1 Kroger G&B . 42 “42 ens Centrucast Corp. North Manchester; Commission will be paid to qualified brokers L-O-F Glass .. 4 63'z 64 +4 3% | agent, William Wehrmeister, Laketon; 2000 ge 24%; 22%; 233, 4 1% |shares of 3100 par yale] general manuEaceeians 26% 26Y4 26% + 5 facturing and manufacture of precision Martin (Glenn) 247; 24%; 24% + ba | castings; Eben Lesh, A. W. Tripp, William x Mont Ward, $070 3% 30% © | Wenmmeister” . The State Life Insurance Company Nash-Kelv .... 213%; 20% 21 + esman inting 0., Ine., 4146 v} Nat Biscuit ... 25% 25% 25% .... Meridian st., Indianapolis; agent, Rose M.| Mortgage Loan. Department Nat Distillers .. 41 40%, 41 + % | Rahke, same address; 1000 shares of $2 STATE LIFE BUILDING NY Central ... 25' 25% 25% + J% |par value; Rose M. Rahke, Bruce BE Pess- : Ohio Oil . 18% 18% 18% + Ya|ler, Fletcuher T. Rahke 15 EAST WASHINGTON ST. - PHONE MA, 8551 Packard . . 6% 6% 6% + Ya| The Chillicothe Realty Co. Ohia cor- ; Pan Am Air ... 20% 20% 20% + ‘2 poration; withdrawal. -

Make Woodworking Your Hobby. Use DELTA 4 MOTOR-DRIVEN TOOLS Exclusively at VONNEGUT'S 120 E. Washington St.

Style f Without Extravagance

LEVINSON Your Hatter

ADA »

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0

uality a !

t is x your help bY 5 your call to B minutes:

.

A

© DEATH No’

lanspolly 1 GOLD

BERNITRL Plo. Mr. and Mr: of Lester J., M Marie BS Kiss Venprs of Arm 8, gav March |, af 194 $i ein-Limburg,

~1ce will be h

-

' S8chulta,

p. m., at the formed church Troy ave, in "Frier

CLOSE--8uda of Clarence

children, seas service assed away W aturday, 10 the daughter, Madison ave., t the Lexingto fon, Ind. Bu Friends may | time, 8hirley DAY-Roy Mo: husband of E of W. Curtis: D E. Day, passe Bervice Flanne Time later.

PONANUE- "Ma and of Iva i Cald a, m. Prayers residence, 2033 yfrom the St. I Crown Hill, F sidence any tin Pioneer club, Service, FIELDS Mts, A. Plelds, mc daughter of N\ Mrs. Mary Val away Tuesday. chanan Morty: Friends invit Park, Priends GATES Floyd Walter Gate Cecil Lee and Thursday. Fu Cord of Shetal ] day, m., may 3): at p. m. Friday. GERMAIN—Hai of Harry, Ge son cof Mack Ella. Brickert, Charley, Rube: main, passed a

© 381 Edgehill. F

dt the Westbroo Burial Floral P

\ GOLLNISOH—F

2 Memoriad

mother of F away Thursda; the J. C. Wilso 1234 Prospect Priends invite Friends may ¢ Chimes." HAGY--Elizabet Indianapolis;

Friends of the Chimes.’ HALTMEYER— A. Halitmeyer dence, 539 . a. m, age 86 ) steiner's Funer st., Saturday, mass at St. Mas 8t. Joseph cem

KEARBY—Mrs. Washington | O., mother of N away Thursda Flanner & Buc 11 a. m. Frie at the family Bunday afternc Orleans.

GOLD

KOEHLER Sgt Joan Koehler Son of Mr. an South Bend, I Johnson of Int in. Leipzig, Ge Memorial serv Assumption Ci invited. LOGAN—Dan, bara (nee | Danny Joe an

at his home, day p. m. ert W. Stirling pect st. Fung p. m, from fi vited. Burial C MoCULLOUGH old, husband Cuilough, fathe of Mrs. George late John 8. MN his home in \ Flanner & Bic p.m. Friern Ancient

GOLD

roy and Ad of Mr. and J of Katherine England, April Saturday, May church, # a. m omit flowers.

PRICE—FPrante Luther Danie passed away T Saturday, 3 p Central Chapel Floral. Park. chapel any tim SCANLING—Fr of Marie Soe Scanling, brotl E. Scanling, pa Funeral Saturd Brothers Centr st. Burial Cro at the chapel s SEANER—Frani ruff Place, e age 72 years, aner, father W. C. Seaner B m. at. Peace t. Burial Mot call at Peace ( 4 BHERIDAN—W; 8t,, beloved hi father of Renal Sherman Sher Robert Sherida Jorie Sheridan, and Mrs. An killed in actior serv -8t, Ca Mivited, (Fleas SPENCEX-Cathe of James Sp PInkstafl - and randmother oque,. Kathy daughter of NA Donald and 1 George McLea! afternoon. Fu from Shirley B 5377 B. Washi ton Park. Prie anytime after WILLIAMS—J a Hamilton, en mother of Mrs. Livingston, Mr Williams. Sery Peace Chapel, Friends are wv Park. Moore ] LOST & FO PARTY who please call ba taining billfold, able papers, glasses in case. son, 1717 W, ] or BE-4418-M.

LOST—Brown approximatel 67 near Ma MA, 0036. LOST—Lady’s r vicinity of R st. Gift from RI. 1008. LOBT — Black Theater, Mor keys, 3 special Collier, CH-T8¢ reward. LOST Pass bor identification school. , Rewm Gimber, GA-b LOST—Lady's éomtaining 2 ete; Wasson’ s 2331.

- LOST Puise

Dus DF “wicind taining money, TA-8627. Rew: BTRAYED beagle’ hound, neck from colle LOBT— Lady's cinity 12th-T ward, MA-332] OB - Lom! ring; yello TA-lbot 4445, LOBT—Fox ter female, name ward, Mrs, Ri

Columbus, Ir Cottage, on i license, other

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