Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 May 1945 — Page 7
MONDAY MAY WaMS + THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
Ary s New Jet Plane’ Is ‘World's Fastest ar FREIGHT SHIFTS Kaiser o , Build
Business | m ING STAR’ i Ships in China? ; ti Jopas Bower fo Wage War ® 007 ; : a ar age 10 WEST COAST! Ps her
) | / » correspondent of the Is Being Slashed to Pieces Bubble canopy : he yi rr pelts a Ehang Wu
By ROGER BUDROW Lo i rs G8 ail i ‘Railroads Say “Say Th Can Dt ar Plants Returning to Peace :
. she will, But many people also said that Germany would || o. visibility | : ; Le EE iti bie Ear ’ - "By Scripps-Howar ewspapers i €. YBy Seripp Haws 4 spApers quit when she new the al ya lost—but she didw't. WASHINGTON, May 14—The was co-operating with a Chinese | oh Soletiond. 14-—Labor : pr e in ; that Japan A a | huge East-to-West.turnabout of war naviation company and Was |, ions ang industrialists with whom In us keeps hoping that Japan soon : § ; transport that comes with the shift ready to help feopen navigation | he citles to rubbl bese dot - : y " of the war to the Pacific throws | lines between China and the U.S. | they deal have a chance today Is ‘her ¢ rubble; as was done in \ a ; = 4 h chall at the nation's = dq | start doing their own settling o Germany, and General Electric “turbo-jet a tough challenge Liaiser was said to be intereste
: : ‘- ; western railroads, and they've! in a Yangtze river and irriga- |affairs which for three years have d that continued | ; i i _ : ePgine can be replaced spent a billion dollars on their{ tion project drawn up by the [peer under close governmental Shie oy " struggle only will | in fifteen Minutes lines to get ready for it. : U. 8. bureau of reclamation and : " : Church, * ; inicredse the 3 : ; ¢ :
: vasta They've laid thousands of tiles which, if developed, would be the pervision. a achusetts : o sation : i» % of new track across desert and | largest hydro-electric develop= i Big a Sfmt oy se = 4 i i a ¥ mountain, built bridges and tres-| ment in the ‘World. ; : - strengthen . the Could It Be to Change Her i : : . OST tles, cut down grades and elim-| ~ fgree of success in reaching peace
v : Fp § - Ww ful labor-management agreements Sntecls she Yui Mind on Poland? : {Wing loading less} inated curves, added all the Rew | lin the limited field now thrown : 1 than that of the locomotives and cars available ma WP W will inf further removal . WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. B).—| 40d oN terials would build. joven uence further
average fighter ek Sole we that More big lend-lease cufs, including ght Rail officidls believe today that,
' — wa diy, _ Tr —— : ry rr ste chance for athich i " J ; =X ? } given a sufficient labor force, they | EXCESSIVE BUYING » ron’s sees Japan's a slash of nearly 50 per cent in U. 8. : : _ can lay down on the West coast | | nearly All, industey managers and w ASHINGTON, May 14 (U. Py __ | many labon leaders, particularly in
JAPAN WILL GIVE UP SOON, some say. Perhaps % { give pilot clear ; wr Keep Ports Filled. | pulls 5 shipyard in China aftér Fe Goods ‘On Their own.’ |
position as hope- |war aid to Britain, were in prospect] i | i : | Just about all the ports can handle. | less. There are 100 million Jap- today following curtailment of the : of fuselage as The preponderant run of traffic | The war production board planned | the American Federation. of Labor, ! anese and Koreans. The Japs will hulk of this country’s $300,000,000 a eh in the West always has been from | today to investigate industries th at | Dave been. asking almost: since the fight to the death but not the|month shipments to Russia, § a ©» | West to East, and rail lines. were|hoard material ‘and violate WPB|DAtional war labor board began Koreans. Against that number are| At the same time some top U. 8. built to fit this pattern. For x-|regulations through excessive buying. clamping on controls soon after its
the all : reation following Pearl Harbof. U.s ed oy a = iiion Koi gitielals Jere 2a 1 deters ie Above Is a Popular Science artist’s conception, based on facts released by the war department, of the ainple, ig Te oo Ja To protect the vast majority of o-. 5 2 w : . 8. ast | lend-lease . . a . ‘ avies s eastward. Th et Own Wage Scales 25 to 40 million in the British do- |Soviet Union might figure in relax army’s sensational new jet-propelled fighter plane, the Lockheed P-80, known as the “Shooting Star.” Hailed { patriotic firms from those few, that
: ; } . lightest loads westward. But war | ht heard terial, WPB will : minions and colonies, 40 million |ing the stalemate on the Polish situ- as the fastest pursuit ship in the world, its exact speed is stilt a security secret, but the plane was especially has reversed this movement and| migh a r = e ) The field in hich WLB now French and 20 million French designed for speeds approaching that of sound--around 800 miles per hour. It is powered by a turbo-jet “move strongly against violators” i vo. sown the bars is restricted ench (ation. built by Alli d oth i t 1a’ ful ai the rail lines have had to make 8 john D, Small, WPB chief of staff! . colonials and 9 million Dutch and| Tho .| engine y son and others, described as the world’s most powerful aircraft motor. The P-80 was n t ugh the Russian curtailment) _, t tests f is § duct} t the Lockh lot of changes to meet it. { annonhced. to the determination of wage rates colonials. Add to that some 200|assertedly was based solely on the given secret tests for over a year, and now is in production at the Lockheed plant, Burbank, Cal, and at oun ; § ¢ million Chinese. And Russia might | fact that Russia is no longer a fight- North American Aviation, Kansas City. Many Single=Track Lines | Violators wil be punished by in plants resuming production o Jump in the Pacific fight. « ing ally, it was said to demonstate Many rail lines run up to hel OE withholding. allocations of | civilian goods. The war dislocated
: : Sn ials. The most glaring vio- i d A Aside from .the human resources, a willingness on this country’s part ; | Rucky mountains, but only seven mater their pay scales. The needs of con= there are the material weapons of [to be “tough.” This, it was feit, . - N. Y. Stocks | Jations. will probably lead to crim- version, the board said, “call for
pierce the Rockies to go on through! war. Japan's pre-war iron .and|might further convince Soviet Mar- inal action by the WPB compliance
: | the Great Basin and over the Sier- division. {establishment of wage scales by the mi te 0 a 2 MINIMUM WAGE is: | RECEIVED HERE sth Sha. ov ih ie, 72, 2 PD 75 chia rie . not yie - | Allis. are the a Fe, Southern Pacific, of the U., 8. conciliation service could have been trebled, what is|gard to Poland. Am Dan... | noynced that manufacturers are t : hat against 100 million tons in Wants Credit Am |
Union Pacific, Western Pacific, |; yu allowed to display experimen. |When requested by the parties) U. 8. and anpther 100..million in land Milwaukee. {1axation of this WPB order allows ernment agency.
‘Great Northern, Northern Pacific] iq) models of new products. Re-|rather than by direction of a gov= other allied countif? "Russia is anxious to win recog- Supports P Pane: Move to Am 158 188 3% + | Hoas. Cattle and h The far western lines were pre-| However, the guiding hand of What is left of the:5% million nition for the Soviet-sponsored Po- po opp nun W.. 4 00S, Sheep ihe" ding of Siyiing Jom or
ip — dominantly single-track lines, but i t lighters to hi government is not completely reton pre-war Jap mershant marine? lish government now installed in Make 65¢ Law Now | Atchison... FR iy Price$ Are Steady. |many. of them have now double- | ee = 3 13 vase moved. - The agreements must be ‘The allied world now has some 70 Warsaw, while Britain and the U. 8. : {At} Refining. .. 33° i | tracked long sections of their right- | ; {reviewed | and approved by regional
million tons in merchant ships to|are insisting that the government WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P.).|Bald Loco ct .. 28% ° 2812 28% .... Hog prices remained at the $14.80) of-way. Also, they have tripled the! | boards of industry commissions,
{B dix A aan 5 ¥ane haul nien and weapons to Japan| must first be reorganized in line Ped 5 +=" 1, ceiling in the slightly curtailed‘mar- | total mileage of so-called central-| tracks or ‘sidings spaced at certain| =o UC ol corp Sational. seboup, - 3 “ » may be officially modified if Bottom of the sea. We are knock~| It Was pointed out that while Sanizations said foday that elimina | ES om $s Ti stockyards today, the war-food ad-|enables much faster handling of |COmvination of-traln “meets” so alg way be oficially Childs A : 4 zation policy. The oil, rubber and tin resources tion, Russia is anxious to receive|“postwar challenge 1” and 8dvo- | Curtiss Wr Shy gy: Cattle were mostly steady on re-| ynder this control, men. at a (forced into sidings while other Dr... W. Taylor, WLB of captured areas are in the pro-|post-war credits from this countryi.teq a minimum hourly wage of Bu Fon AlYS « 80 — Pa feipts of 1800, while vealers were| central control desk autématically | trains pass. The old system of tel- George y 87% cents for American workers. |Gen Electric .. : : receive information on movement| donment 8f wage controls must be of raw - materials and food are|chinery with which to rebuild Rus- The C..1 O. in.a new pamphlet | Gupdrich . 1 ferent than last week's close. of trains over a lengthy stretob of | {more cumbersome. ADD het fually. left no doubt threatened as sea lanes are cut. sian industry. This country's readi- threw its support behind a resolu- | ns I Rayon x+y GOOD TO CHOICE Hogs (6173) road, ‘perhaps 70 or 80 miles, witk ! I that return to competition and free tion by Senator Claude Pepper (D.|Johns-Man .... «vss | 130- 140 pounds $14.00G14.50, every single train’s position at every . WAGON WHEAT collective bargaining is the aim. the question is: How long will it|promptly and without hesitation thy dnigepiniia Ban UE IEGEE 1. | 140,260 pounds 143061480 moment, shown on an electric map. | dared of ears, Based be before if makes sense to Japan| Was seen as a hint to Russia to| —o0' 040 to 65 cents an hour, | Lockheed Airc. | 180- 200 pounds .,.. Tr. 14.80 The cofitrol desk sets ‘the signals|, UP to the.clase of the Chicago market|,, yjews of more radical schools of Loew | 220- 240 pounds . 4 and throws the switches over this | elevators paid 31.67 Der bushel for fo, J thought, that government wage cons ° x = » lor face difficulty with the post-war are now below the 87%-cent level {Mont Ward .. 59% 83 | 240- 270 pounds ... lk . | whole stretch. fed wise! (other grades on their merits); | i 1c” should bee extended indefie SOUR NOTES on sugar: The | financing problem. that it would be politically impos- | IN Bowl a8 a 3 .... | 300- 330 pounds GL This enables the dispatchers, on ibs. or better, 64c; corn, No. 2 hoe {nitely into peacetime and possibly .. 413, ; 330- 360 d i4. is caused by the drought in the [make an announcement. on Russian | Sie to reach that point in one Si Central... 2 ri. hounds 80 |a_single- track line with passing|Xq 3 white shelled. oid crop, $1.12. | become | pera u 0 0! e 40- t i Packing. Sows 1} creasing leakage to black market | Disclosure ofthe sharp cut gr] The 40 Ee an mu 1 no ag Er AF +1 * Good to Cholce— and fading hopes for sugar from |lend-lease to Russia was made Sat- | | Penn RR 34] 20- 300 pounds ’* | 330- 360 pounds Europe is crying for more. istrator Leo T. Crowley. He said |, will approve or order minimum Pullman an Jad Rico are much smaller for countries still fighting Japan or | : | Servel Inc 3 EY % .... 7] 250-500 pounds ............. [email protected] than expected.. Cuba refused to [those where lend-lease would aid lis what a worker would have to Sccony-Vae ; os 0. J : sell U. §. both the 1945 and 1946 redeployment of American armed {Std Brands .... To? Ned to Chole dN. Gg : ” crops for 3.10 cents a pound, sell- | forces. make $1752 a year. That is the sud Oil Cal ... : 3 | 90-180 pounas : Haqu : a re " {the WPA t0 be necessary to main- 2S : en Steers i higher e will y 8 Co ; : . | oe oie be asked’ again This is in line with the lend-|tain the average American family | 20th Cent. Fox . oe | 00 900 [email protected]
The Jap navy apparently is at thé|with the Yalta agreement. i ket of 6175 head at the Indianapolis ized traffic control—C. T. C. — which | distances, to provide for a closer ing out aircraft plants by the dogen,|lend-lease is strictly a war opera- tion of substandard wages Was Ches & Ohio .. 50% 30% 50% ..+. | ministration reported. [rue in heavy trafSc' areas. (that less time is lost by trains they go outside the wartime stabilicess of being taken away. Imports|to enable her to buy American ma- P Beoti | unchanged. Sheep were little dif-| | ephones and train orders was much | Chairman, pointing out that abanyon All this makes sense to us. But|ness to cut lend-lease shipments | Kennecott 2 1 4 . 140- 160 pounds - je | 200- 220 ds. today. Indiamapolis flour mills and in i ® meet other allied nations half-way explaining that “so many workers Martin (Glenn) 5 Pe 5 ! 270- 300. pounds No. 2 white or No.- 2 red, testin tightening of rations (25% cut) | President Truman is expected to {Nat Distillers | shelled. old crop, $1.09 per bushel and 100- 200 pounds - 13.25@ 14.80 - Caribbean, world sugar bowl, in- |lend-lease shortly. ard : F—— Ve 270- 300° pounds . the Philippines this year. And |urday by Foreign Economic Admin- jo 1,006 of wage stabilization Brocter & G .. ot =, | 360. 400 pounds ..: : ; Crops now being harvested In ‘new shipments to Europe” had| | Rapub Stl pe. I , i | "400- 450 pounds [email protected] : {wages of 55 cents an hour. IR " v, | 450- 550 pounds oor [email protected] ar Sana Deminge, Haih aid | Geer: halted except, those destined | The 87% cents, the C. I. O. said, | Schentey "Dist. 3714 1, | Medium— a boo ; Slaughter Pigs " . earn for: 2000 hours annually to South Pac .... ting Std Oil eT 2 ing only the ‘45, indica . tish Shipments Cut | minimum income once estimated by | gt Qi The --- 2% : Ta a | CATTLE (1800) 1
poun nds : A a jd ”" i fay ; : 12! 900-1100 pounds vie 16,[email protected] k It looks now that the Philip- lease act which provides for the of four persons, the union said. us Steel 86 ® Ys | 1100-1300 A [email protected] | : 5 WN 4 CE H NDS pines, because of Jap re transfer- of goods and suppliesifor| The ©. I. O. reported that even" “i"8 :- + be 1300-1500 pounds | 1 11180 Ro
te sugar mills, won't be able to |WAT purposes only. Tt is expected [with three years of ‘wartime pros- Coo 900 pound 15.00@16:35
send much sugar before 1947. that .lend-lease to’ some other perity, 60 per cent, or 16,700,000 4 ANS RE T 900-1100 pounds [email protected] | $ TA Rr hy smaller nations who were at war wage earners, get less than 87% 13001300 pound: ie .. [email protected] | ni : too! : with Germany but have not de- cents. It said -the list included kg 3 ; ‘ : ODDS AND ENDS: Already |.areq war on Japan will also be Workers in retail trade, service o- [JEPARTMENT T Ks is Bounds 130g13) there are 168 organizations for vets terminated. |dustries, insurance, finance, real | Cote of this war, but 400,000 of the 1,500,- tate.- 700- "1100 pounds coreraaens [email protected] | 000 di ged thus tar have joined FEA officials said other big re- es ate,” transportation, public utili-| WASHINGTON, May 14 (U. P). Heifers the ge Legion. About 200| Adjustments in the lend-lease pro- ties, communication, wholesale trade | —The federal trade commission has| Gio “560 pounds 15.5003400 vets organizations sprang up after|STam were in prospect, including a [and manufacturing. ordered Associated Merchandising| 800-1000 pounds [email protected] | the other war; only 20 survived. . . cut of nearly one-half in shipments i Corp., New York, and 21 member de- Soo 8 : [email protected] Travelers took seriously the warn- to Britain. 1 LOCAL ISSUES : partment stores doing a $425,000,000- Medium WRENS ings to avoid San Francisco during While the announcement spoke _-{a=year business to discontinue a re- , [email protected] j = S the. seeurity conference. there are |OnlY Of “shipments to Europe, it| Nomina quotstions furnished oy av. | D0. System whereby, the commis-| Coma ned bi That's YOUR FUTURE, YOU 7e Hoiding vacant hotel rooms there for the|Yas learned that the stoppage also |anapolis securities dealers: sion said, the stores have been ob- Cows an weights) , ; , first time in many months. . . . The applied to Pacific shipments bound STOCKS Bia Asked taining merchandise at prices less|Good ... cine. 13.95@14 | § 3 2 Buy War Bonds for Keeps! Red Cross shortly will close down |f0T/Russia except for ships already |Agents Pin Corp com ...... wh _...|than those charged competitors. Medium réseieer IIS] ; J 231 Shin
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. Cutter and common .......... [email protected] | H& prisoner-of-war pac 08 cen-\ ‘route, some of which are nearly fants Ru Lop PIE .qaaeani. 20 Through the corporation, the FTC |Canner ... xiv renne S018
ters; the unco-operative Japasicaded, and certain additional goods |Asrshire Col on. 3 171; | Said, the stores act collectively to| - Bulls (all weights) stymie plans lor ‘sending relief v7 bound for Russia through Seattle. | Bei R St oo Ho 3 pe] special discounts on pur-| Good (all weights) ......... [email protected] tions to the 12.000 to 15.000 Ameri=| These last shipments were under- | | Bobba-Mertt}” com. th hase: Hod commission found that| SG008= 1 1sgige0 cans held by Japs. . .. Some people | stood to include supplies for the im- | conse) Soya com | a 8 3. {2°0 per cent-of all the mer-| Medium : .. 10.50711.75 : may get telephones within a year, | portant Russian Trans-Siberia rafl- Circle Theater com '...0...... 8 |chandise handled by these stores is| Cutter and sommen Lin 2091050 | the A. T. & T. says, bus if we invade (Way. All other supplies Originally Delta ies, com > % ln Jai; one Sutoush the AMe. Vealers (all weights) China, requiring the setting up of a destined for ‘the Soviet Union are;fecironio & Jacko HE td 3% Ores ate SUX, Baer & Pul- 5000 and choter ............ communications system, it could be | being held on railroad sidings and Hook rk Shou pfd. & 83% ler Co, St. Louis; Joseph Horne Co.,| Common and medium ........ five years before ihe telephone coms {at ports pending a general lend- [fome T 1°"... (Pittsburgh; Abraham &: Strauss OW _.- ih } pany catches. up with demand, lease review. ” 3% Dia ~104 oi Inc; Brooklyn; L. 8. Ayres & Co. eeder and Stocker Oanitle and ol ves f
chiefly in areas where more tele- Indpls P &.L pfa 2 115 |Indianaoplis; Bloomingdale Bros. cnoice—
When you buy a War Bond it means 4 namber of things<war Indpls L & L com. .
+ 3 Inc, New York; the Herzfeld-Phil-| 500- 800 po 50@12.%8 | . : . : x TREASURY FORDE oF N81 Phones Wueans More Sentral ofios indpls Vater ota We 1 lyinson Co, Milwaukee; Bullock's, | (00000 Pounds .oiove.l 18@13. time prosperity carried over ito peace—the means to buy 2 home, To a ea ons o| lc—Will have to be installed. . . .|Jex"Nas Lifs com. con. -18 jy-|Inc. Los Angeles; Burdine's, Inc.| 500-800 a ol 10.0011, or to start a business, perhaps! Money tucked away in bonds 1045-47, and Others Concerned: * equipment — cables, - switchboards, | fd ....|Miami; the ‘Dayton Co, Min-|uMedium seen A ‘ : or : z : : oki bitc notice 1s hereby given that wlll plastic plywood floors ‘dre being | Lincoln Loan Co i 's | neapolis; «the Emporium-Capwell | 300-1000 pounds 0 | means peace of mind for you—insurance against inflation, too! 47_ dated Septerfiber 16, 1935, are hereby Lincoln Nat Life com 493 Co. San Francisco and Oakland; | “800. 900 | AER
sted for t-war homes. , , . In- / pounds ......8. 0.0 called for redemption on September 15, | 18 for post-war homes In + | Wm. Pilene’s Sons Co., Boston; B. Calves (Steers)
1945, on which date Interest on such bonds | flation fn France: Women’s cotton | N Mas roti Forman Co., Rochester, N. Y.; J, L.| Good and choice—
will cease.
2. Holders of These bonds may, in o. and rayon summer dresses in the | * qe)» 40 {?| Hudson Co. Detroit; Hutzler Bros 500 pound + 1125@13:05 | Buy You rs Now
vance of the redemption date, be offere Ol ; . | Medium— 2 the privilege of exchdnging all or any|less expensive Champs Plysees | ¢ ieenas 11 % | Co., Baltimore; the F. & R. Lazarus] 500 pounds down 9.00011.28 | part of their called bonds for other| R i “ |& Co, Columbus, O.; the Rike- , Calves (Heifers) interest-bearing obligations of the United | SNOpPs have $40 to $60 price tags. 110% % | Kumler Co., Dayton, O.; the John Good and ‘choice— States, in which event public notice will Stokely-Van Camp pr pf .... " Bates Ohn| 800 pounds down ........... [email protected] hereafter be given and an official circular Terre Haute Malleabls 7 Shillito Co., Cincinnati; Strawbridge
Medium— governing the. exchange offering will ve | (VEYSRCIVERTICER SCT ©. 5 "Co 57 .-.:|& Clothier, Philadelphia; the Wm.| " "" “Suxes ase) el Hang on fo your Bonds—
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I “enn SHEEP (350 3. Full information regarding ethe pres- h J : Union Title com "| Taylor Son & Co., Cleveland; Thal- 3
tati d 3 : Good 5 00 | A ! Chek seacmpios under Shs cal wil ‘e | % _ |himer Bros. inc, Richmond, Va. Sidi’ ie" adn gt 5 Give 'em a chance to grow! found in Department Circular No, 666, i AY)S. | American Loan ais IH “re g {and-R-H White-Co., Boston... 1... } dated Sly 21, 1941. cd / . hl » i aig ————————————————— 1 5
Henry Morgenthau Jr, | [70 PE *] DEN ertiaer oo 4 rg YR NEW JOB FOR DUKE? fon sl} : a . el Em ‘ : = i” Triasuny NA the Treasury. [CTE ay hE oe 8 | DETROIT, May 14 (V. P.)~The and choice ... a7) : : . Washington, May 14, 1048. ole ee - 8 ....| Detroit Free Press said in a apecial BRERA Wine wil come ihe now tov DAYS Eo poe Rl. Cri, shins month RThere and back : 4 ax Theses rdi0 ose U. S. STATEMENT FILTERED WANS BETTE i LEANING ’ 5 Mah maT and receipts tor eu toda _ LOCAL PRODUCE | |r vii Sitges ar yi ! y: PLAIN 1-PC, | he 73.006.345.287 iy ; Call an Essien Expediter to find out how to
4 \ yy , x pA breed bens, 340. Leghorn bets, 1 y and et [ R E ; : tie. ecel iia 38.59 1.48 A 36, 118, N : 5 i FCT : wv ga. i get there, transact our business, ©
: Re nd b 022,297, 000.300 7 ; oi ; S UIT or Ne do 12 ba? Sarre Working bal. 8: i 3.401 a 250 8 LA home again—the same day. Arranging those [COAT mba BC
trent receipts, fie, grade A Gold reserve 20361986484 21,374,548448 | : k : short, essential trips is a ‘specialty with any {ia i, ike: under § d Bet Xi CANDIANAPOLIS "CLEARINGS poss y prAn 0 Eastern Expediter. We: No. 366. learin L989, % -— 5 ] FELT HAT . = a - | When gou must travel...call
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