Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 June 1945 — Page 7
1945 y. lev ce
|
(UU. P).— ner,.SenaChandler, rk with a the major Ip readjust ) the best p post-war
very influlayers red \ services in in the
New =~ York ly for the e had not his United t that: he e duties in sor to the 5. four each les and four appointed id Chandler full control ball players efore going |
use woundthroughout
med ntor
l.,.June 5.— McDaniel, nthall coach will succeed as Indiana tling coach Athletic Diannounced
rom Indiana N.C. A A itles in 1935 the Big Ten While atgh school he high school hampion for ll-state hon-
ed at high xdndria and Marion two h of {ootball anized wrese at Marion
it. Paul DP. M.
teservations 38
7]
f DINGS
s for abinets ERY!
ite Statehouse
- U D
————
Ty Cameras, ents THING!
EWELRY ;0., INC. A
RY
se We Save ‘Overcoats
24" )THES
Open 9 to ¥
Ce)
id Walkers ¢ Beds |
EE —— LLU
¢ EACH ire Garment bundle of 10
- »
| Busines
Jet-Propel
TUESDAY, JUNE 5,198. - a
5
led Autos May Be in Next|
-
COURT UPSETS “ATKINS NS RULING
Speedway Race, Rickenbacker. Believes!
By ROGER BUDROW — 7
JET-PROPELLED AUTOS MAY BE SEEN in the next 500-mile race’at the Speedway, Eddie Rickenbacker, famous aviator and Speedway president, believes. It is known that automotive engineers are trying to apply jet propulsion, now being used fighter aircraft,
in fast to. on-the-road vehicles. One engineer has said that jet propulsion in {ts present state of development would + be hazardous to trafic on highways but that it might be tamed, possibly combined with the regular reciprocating engine. Exhaust gases of the gasoline reciprocating engine, energy. now wasted, could be utilized to power the jet's tur bine, it was suggested. Eddie also expects a good many of the racers will whirl around the oval on synthetic rubber tires. He poipfs out that Wilbur Shaw, three-time winner of the classic, who works for Firestone now, went around the track recently at 100 miles an hour on synthetics which “took it" well. Another surprising factor of the | next. race, Eddie believes, will be the performance of more powerful gasoline developed for wartime uses in airplanes. The president of Eastern Airlines | also figures there is more than a| 50-50 chance that the race will be held next year, from the looks of | our progress in the Pacific, “When the last event took place in 1941,” he said, “many felt that racing saga which began in 1911 had closed. Now there is widespread sentiment urging its restoration as soon as national security
Mr, Rickenbacker
will permit. . ...
“Coming as it will on the crest of numerous new factors introduced to meet wartime needs, the race should prove one of ‘the greatest boons ever offered to the automotive industry. mechanical innovations which will be exploited in the cars. Also, I believe there will be the largest and fastest field, with attendance well over the 100,000 mark.”
= un o INDIA'S NATIONALISTS who! long have wanted an Indian-con-
trolled auto industry soon will get it.| the Hindu fam-|
Birla Bros., Ltd., ily concern which controls 10 per cent of India’s sugar production, 4 per cent of India’s cotton piece goods. production and many other financial and industrial enterprises,
has formed Hindustant Motors Ltd.,| with $12 million capital. Their “Hin-|
dustan Ten" will be a copy of the British Morris’ Ten, made. by Nuffield's Morris Motors Ltd. It will be assembled of Nuffield-macde parts| until in"a few years it will be-all= Inf dian mgde. Nuffield will collect royalties, continue to export cars and trucks to India, where he sold 12,000 autos a year pre-war,
The Hindustan Ten will be a four-| ‘geater light car selling. around $500
compared to nearly $1000 for-a Ford pre-war, There are reports that
~ Birla is negotiating also with South
Bend's Studebaker Corp. Both Ford | and General Motors already have| assembly plants in Bombay, . = n ww 3 ONE DEPOT for Chicago was the object of a bi#l introduced into the Illinois legislature. Chicago has six railroad stations near its Loop, but only the Union and North Western are less than 40 years old. The other four are antiques and transferring from one station to another is a bother to travelers, But the railroads, caught flatfooted, got going quickly and a substitute bill calling for a 18months’ study of the ‘possibility of building a publicly-owned ter-
minal will be made, That puts |
off any action for a while.
5 o » AUTO COMPANIES are getting
80 many applications from would-
be dealers, who want to get in on |
the post-war buying rush, that| they're sending form-letter re-| fusals. - Chevrolet alone has had
10,000 applications. But wartime casualties among old-timer dealers were unexpectedly light, so few newcomers are getting dealerships. The independents (Graham-Paige, Packard, etc.) have a bigger percentage of openings than the Big Three—Ford, General Motors and Chrysler.
5 ~ » THE LONG-HERALDED fountain pen having a ball- ~bearing | point, invented by a Hungarian, will | soon be going to the armed forces then civilians, = Eversharp Eberhard Faber have obtained licenses from the Eterpen Co. of Buenos Aires to make the pen. The full-sized pen will have a!
A ——
{(NCREASE Your Insurance ...LOWER Your Rate! © We will gladly explain 1 how COINSURANCE frequently makes this
possible. Check its possibilities tomorrow.
|
»
rr GRAIN DEALERS
By this, I mean the
Lord |
and |
M'QUAY-NORRIS
Shortage of Bearings Brings $350,000 Enlargement.
A $350,000 éxpansion to increase
dertaken by McQuay-Norris Manu- | facturing Co, 1781 Massachusetts | ave, The Defense Plant Corp. is providing $215,000 of the total. The expansion, third since the war start ed, will add 18,000 square feet of floor space and necessitate hiring 200 more workers, ‘Ray F. Crom, vice president and general manager of the local plant, said. The expansion, one of three in the nation, is needed, despite many war contract cutbacks following the German collapse, because t short{age of bearings is still acute, Mr.
| {Crom said.
Requirements still Large
The national bearing requirements are still large, Mr. Crom said, {because the navy is ~ontinuing its {large construction program and at the same time needs many spare | parts for repairs to ships damaged | in the Pacific war. Also, the army | is bringing 700,000 trucks back from | | Europe to be repaired and the auto-| mobile industry is resuming civilian manufacture. The McQuary-Norris plant makes
|
in internal combustion engines. Its war product is virtually the same as the product turned out for the past 22 years.
New Yorker on
Stokely Board
Thomas F. Staley, membeg f | Reynolds & Co New York n- | vestment bankers and members New
“of the York Stock EXxchange, has been elected a director of | Stokely- V an Camp, Inc, Indianapolis - food | packing concern, according to announce- | ment by-W. B. Stokely Jr., presi- { dent: Mr. Staley has just been re- | leased from the army air forces | where he served as a lieutenant
| colonel for three years.
SWIFT GO, WORKER ~ GRANTED INCREASE
WASHINGTON, June 5 (U. P.).— The war labor board teday ap-, proved, with one modification, a master agreement providing hourly | wage increases for more than 12000 employees in 11 plants of Swift. & | Co., Chicago.meat packers. : The agreement was negotiated between the company and the Independent “National Brotherhood of x Packinghouse Workers. It provides an average wage increase of 2% cents an hour for time spent changing inte work clothes, plus 50 cents a week for purchase of necessary special work clothes.
T. F. Staley
| replaceable cartridge with enough {of a special, dry-writing; viscous ink fér 50 hours of writing; smaller | ones half that much. Colors will! be permanent and washable and | can be written on cloth or on paper | urder water,
EXPANDING HERE
production of bearings is being un- |
the sleeve-type friction bearing used |
Guards’ Sariaiing Rights,
To Be. Reconsidered.
The supreme court has directed | lower courts to reconsider three | cases involving -a controversy over the union labor rights of armytrained ‘guards protecting war
{ plants, among thém E. C. Atkins|
& Co. of Indianapolis, The lower courts were ordered to re-examine the cases in the light of the fact that the guards involved were demilitarized after the suits were begun. The question arose.after the na- | tional labor relations board ordered |three war manufacturers to bar- | gain with unions representing the guards, known as auxiliary military | police. The sixth and seventh | circuit courts of appeal refused to inforce orders .against the com{panies involved. The board held [that the guards were “employees” | under the Wagner act and therefore were an appropriate bargaining unit, Had Same Needs The suits directly concerned | guards working at Jones & Laughlin Steel Corps/s Otis works i Cleveland, Federal Motor Truck Co.,
fo
Detroit, and E. C. Atkins & Co. Indianapolis The seventh _circuit court set
aside the board's order in the AtKins- case on the grounds that the guards were not “employees” under the act. - The sixth circuit court, ruling on the guards at the other | two companies, conceded that they| | were = “employees,” ‘but said the {NLRB orders were against ‘public | policy in time of war.” t— The yboard contended that the guards)’ although militarized, were carried on the companies’ regular
enn and had the same needs)
in general as other employees.
168 FOREIGN FARM
WORKERS ARRIVE
Times Special LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 5—The {arrival of 168 foreign agricultural | workers last week increased the state's foreign workers to 606. J. B. {Kohlmeyer, Purdue university, state | supervisor for emergency farm la{bor, said today. | The new group includes Jamaicans and will be allocated among ‘state farm communities as follows: Peru, 60; Elwood, Anderson, Tipton and Marion, 20 each; Plainville and Noblesville, Rochester, Approximately 1200 foreign work(ers will be brought to Indiana durs ing the peak of the tomato harvest, Mr. Kohlmeyer said, and requests for 3500 prisoners of war have been
made to meet the farm labor short- |
age.
‘MAKING OF FARM MACHINERY 0; K.’D
WASHINGTON, June 5 (U..P.). —The war {removed restrictions from the man|ufacture of farm machinery -— a month ahead of schedule.
terial on hand and any.they can
aotein without WPB assistance to
e machinery above quota, the! dis said.
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, June 5 (U. P.).—Government expenses - and receipts for the furrent fiscal year through June 3, compared with a year ago This Year Last Year Expenses $ 01.131,441,561 § 85,476,422,305 War Spend 82.542 470,200 79,820,712,316 Receipts 40 618,356,726 37,965,277.179 Net Deficit 50 513.084 335 47,511,107.475 Cash Ba 9.787 094,096 8.684 421,962 Work. Bal 9.024,145,391 7.921,592,391
Public Debt 240,460. 891 996
188,318,279.373 Gold Reserve 20,268 604.253
21.263,649,673 INDIANAPOLIS \ CLEARING HOUSE
ClearingS V. cues innenssscranrasss $4, 9614, noo DOE sovrsrivisneiiivtanne ss 17,987,000 Heavy breed hens, 26'%e. Leghorn hens 25%. Broilers, fryers and roasters under § {1bs., white and barred rocks, 30c. Old roosters, 15¢ g8s—Current, receipts, 32¢c; grade A | large, 36c. grade A medium, 32¢ No | grade, 30c. | Bufter—No. 1, "80¢e. Butterfat—No. 1 | 49¢c. No. 2, 360 Tir
Future of U.S.
Plants in West Is Debated :
By JOHN
-Owned Steel
A grips. Howard Staff Writer . CLEVELAND, June 5.—Practical steel men in the East are having trouble reaching clear ideas of the future of the western steel indus
{near Los Angeles. here it is thought of more as a struggle with economics. Bank of | America interests have promised to |see to the raising of $60,000,000 to {enable him to buy the works from |
. | the Reconstruction Finance Corp.
new try, overburdened as it is these. days by politics and public relations.
10 each, and eight to | {1100-1300 pounds
~{ 800-1000 poiunds
production board has |
Manufacturers now may use ma- | Be¢i—
Cabinet Bound?
os
SR:
Washington = observers predict that Judge Sherman Minton of the U. 8. courts of appeals, Chicago, will be President Truman's next cabinet selection, either as secretary of war or secretary of the interior... Minton is a former New Deal senator from Indiana and has a military background. |
9525 PORKERS RECEIVED HERE
Market
Continues Active
And Steady.
Hog values remained steady today, even on another liberal run of
{ 9525 at the Indianapolis stock yards,
| the war food administration said, | Cattle trade was conducted on a | steady basis with receipts amount-
ing to 1350. Remember Vealers totaled 825. Prices were FATHER'S {steady with most interests buying DAY Sheep and lambs, amounting to June 17th 200, showed no quotable price change. GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (9525) 120- 140 pounds 14.80 140- 160 pounds 14.80
160 pounds up Medium 160- 220 pounds
Packing Sows Good to Choice
270« 400 pounds ...eveeeress 14.06 Good— 400- 550 pounds ..c.eeeeaees. 14.08 Medium=— 250- 530 pounds ........000n 12.753 14.00 Slaughter Pigs Medium to Good— 90- 120 pounds .... ........ [email protected] CATTLE (1350) Steers Choice— { 700- 900 pounds .........ee.. [email protected] 900-1100 pounds ....ec0i0venn 16.50@ 17.60 1100-1300 pounds .e.vciivssess ¢ 304 @® 373 7% U 1300-1500 pounds ...eesevsse.. @17.75 - 50015 Team 700- 900 pounds .. . [email protected] | 900-1100 pounds . [email protected]
15.25@16 50 . [email protected]
1300-1500 pounds Medium —
700-1100 pounds .e.coevvenses [email protected] 1100-1300 pounds ...... senrens [email protected] Common — 700-1100 pounds ........e000. [email protected] Heifers Choice 600- 800 pounds ........e004. [email protected] 800-1000 pounds ...ceveveness [email protected] Good 3 600- B00 pourds : 14 50@ 18.50
Medium 500- 900 pounds Common— 500- 800 pounds
Cows (all weights)
. [email protected] [email protected]
S008 .. .: Mediun . Cutter and common .. Canner .
{ Bulls “all ‘weizhts) 13.25@ @14.25
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected] 7.00@ 8.25
Good (all weights)
Sausage— Good Sievers Yelrantsence [email protected] EE Medium... ives [email protected]
|
Cutter and common . [email protected]
CALVES (825) | Vealers (all weights)
Gdod and choice ’ . [email protected] {Common and medium ...... 9.00@ 15.50 {cull “ts 5.00@ 9.00 Feeder and "Stocker ‘Cattle and Calves Cholce— : 500- 800 pounds 13.00@ 14.50 800-1050 pounds . [email protected]
Good—
500- 800 pounds .....eeeveeee [email protected] 800-1050 pounds «s.... rena [email protected] Medium — S00. 1000. pounds ‘.i.iz2.ueennnss [email protected]
mon — “500- 900 pounds : Calves (Steers) Good and choice— 500 pounds down : .
14.00915.75 Medium
500 pounds uown + [email protected] | Calves (Heifers) | Good and choice 3 500 pounds down ............ [email protected] | edium— SOWR. ina [email protected]
pH: pounds SHEEP (200) Ewes (Shorn) GFood and choice ............ Common and medium “iy Lambs (Shorn) Good and choice ..
6.00@ 17.00 4.500 @ 6.00
. 14.00D14.50 Medium and ond. . . [email protected] Common . [email protected]
LOCAL ISSUES
Nominal quotations furnished by Indi. anapolis securities dealers
STOCKS Bid Asked Agents Pin Corp com Hh . Agents Fin Corp pid 20 8. Ayres. 4:% pfd | Ayrshire. Col com 174% y [Belt R Btk Yds com ... hn W. LOVE | Belt R Stk Yds ptd i | Bobbs- «Merrill com | Bobbs-Merrill 4% % pld ‘Central Boya com .... 3% Circle Theater com.. ‘iy Comwlith Loan 5% ptd 108 f | Detta Bes com ...::..esese 15% ng backed by California financi eople in his | Electronic Lab’ com 5%, Henry Kaiser is being ed by 5 a} peop S| py Wayne & Jackson RR pid. MA {effort to retain control of the government-built Fontana steel plant | Hook Drug Co com 19% es des “ ’ Home T&T Ft Wayne To % oid 5 “ee California dispatches d cribe it as a fight.’ but *Ind Asso Tel 8% ptd NH [*Ind & Mich E 4%4% pid ....100 111% ) 1 is now operating for the govern-|{ndpls D & Lpfd ...... Hh eth ment.’ Likewise wil] Colorado Fuel|‘Indpls Rallways com .. 18 ee Indpls Water ptd 05 & Iron and Kaiser, There may be | Indpls Water Class A com... 19% .. others. Jeff Nat Life com ........... 18 1 | : . *Kingan & Co pfd ............ i] ‘iy Sale Prices Important Kingan & Co com a
#| Nobody who isn't up on such|
matters as western pride and re-| gionalism can begin to understand Rocky Mounfain and Pacific steel, though he may have every statistic on western ore and coal, freight rates, plant investment, operating costs and pre-war markets...
Before the war, the -western|
but the same states usually bought 3,500,000 tons, The. balance came! from mills in the East, Today and for post-war “the. pic- |
This extra capacity, plus the prob-| ability that mills in Texas,
{who's to get the new western mills,
and at ‘what prices,
dependents will“ be. holding catds | when the ‘government’ opens the
Columb
Has In Cullopsin thes
the prewar freight rates even South and East will still be in com- |R. F. C. made a present of the plant | pon. or «ihe ag °° n. petition, make it important to guess |to somebody. » |
Several big corporations and in-|ties, according to- one survey, and
The Fontana mill, which Kaiser | wants most, cost about $110,000,1000, | the Gepeva mill $206,000,000. Each | will need $35,000,000 or more of additional investment before it can be made an all-around supplier of |civilian' markets. The R. F. C,, owner of both, will.
| Picture Reversed {have much to say as to the future u (of western steel merely by setting |
{the sale prices. If it holds out for!
:| states had plants capable of produc- its investment, the question of. com- | an. Lo ing 2,000,000 tons of steel ®a year, petition with eastern mills is set: Amer can Loan 4%s 85 .
{tléd—there won't be any.
If, on the other hand, the gov- a
ernment. scales ‘down the prices ‘to where. it ¢an be sure the plants will |
| ture is ‘reversed, The West now | {run, it may. have to go pretty low. has mills of: 4,600,000 tons capacity. Some steel men believe the Utah | Indpl* Water Co 3s 68
plant could not be operated under |y if the
{
The recipient would, have to’ add $50,000,000 worth of finishing facili-
pay $12 a ton on its shipments to Los Angeles and San Francisco un-
rediiced the freight for, on go steel | Jig
*Lincoln Loan Co sia % ‘pid’. | Lincoln Nat Life com . P R Mallory pfd .. *P R Mallory com ... Mastic Asphait aus N Ind Pub Serv 5% ......... Pub Serv Ing 39%. -c.veaivan Pub Serv of nd com . , Progress Laundry com ...
Btokely«Van Camp pr pt’ Terie Haute Malleabls ..
Machine com ......... ‘Inited Tel Co 5% Union Title com .........., BONDS 100 | merican Loan 4)as 100
0 ine | Buhner Fertilizer bs 54
of Com Bldg 4%s 61. .
Citizens’ Lod Tel 43s 61 . vl Columbia Cn 1% Bs .. 87% | Consol Mn tres) nd Asso ao > 3i48 70 . A a | Indpis Pl 3%s n 101 sess] Indpls Raflways Cb 8s i 2 954
{Kuhns Packing Co 4s 54 Ind Pub Serv 3's n N Ind Tel 4's 58
el 55 ’ Ts erm Corp 8s 61 .. H J Willkam=on Inc 3s 58
“haan
*Ex-dividend is
‘WAGON WHEAT
game. U.S. 5.3, which owns the less freight ‘rates were revised. pills Rs 40d Sala um IT Railroads
aying $1.70 rE ar i.
Fie ee ig
ier [email protected]°
THE INDIANAPOL. 18 TIMES
| PAGE LG
U.S, SUPREME COURT
RULES AGAINST SEC
NEW YORK, June 5 The U. 8 supreme court -has upheld the right of stofkholders td challenge orders of the securities and’ exchange commission affecting their companies, _. Wall: Street accepted the decision, which affirmed an earlier ruling of | the second court of appeals, as “indicating the trend of current politi- | cal thinking,” according to one informed source... It may eventually mean less power for SEC, in the opinion of some analysts. The order was handed down in +the suit of Samuel Okin, owner of 9000 common shares of ' Electric [Bond & Share Co., for a review of |the commission's approval of a plan for refunding of a $30,000,000 debt jowed E. B.. 8, by. its subsidiary, {American & Foreign Power Co., Inc. {Okin had charged the plan was det|rimental to stockholders of E. B. S
FURNITURE ' SHOWS “DROPPED
CHICAGO, June 5 (U. P.).—~The| American Furniture Mart and the Merchandise Mart announced day that the summer furniture and home furnishings markets will | eliminated this season
”n
Men’s Slack
SUITS
$398
Made of poplin cloth in blue
and tan: long or short sleeves. Sizes 28 to 34. Our ceiling price $5.00
Sizes
(U. PJ).
to- |
be |
6
Girls’ Smart Sheer
Free Parking — Just Across the Street
NTN
360 W.MWMALHINGTON $7T,
For Men. of Action
Sport STR stdray yet with a perfection of line you'll wear anywhere with confident ease. Of fine Rivercrest cloth in plain blue and brown; or fancy-stripes:—Sizes 30 to 44. -
Star Store, Street Floor
Another Big Shipment of Children’s
RATION-FREE
OXFORDS
For Boys or Girls: a hew ship- . ment of these good wearing
Better Gas Possible Soon, | Standard Oil Head Says
Some improvement in the quality of gasoline foy eivilians should | be possible soon, Dr! Robert E. Wilson, hoard chairman of Standard Oil
Co. of Indiana, told. the Indianapolis Technical Societies council: lune h=| | found,
eon: meeting at- the Indianapolis Athletic club today. While the recently-announced increase in gasoline rations may, be
| Dr: Wilson said, there is still a| reasonable prospect that the gov- | ernment before lorig may bE able to release for civilian: use more
expected to continue at least great as it was before V-E day. Dr. {Wilson said. ‘On that account, | lead to. make tetra-ethyl lead, the home-owners dependent on oil for most vital constituent of high heat can expect no substantial inoctane gasoline, and other highicrease in their allotments of dis~ | quality constituents. : © tillate fuels and kerosene’ before Dr." Wilson, who became chief V-J day. . executive of the oil company this, The American oil industry now is January, said tremendous quantities producing and refining more than of gasoline. soon will be flowing a million barrels per day more across the Pacific for the war than it did in 1942. The armed against the Japs, thought it willl forces in the past have taken all i not be possible forthe armed forrces the increase and another 700 000 to use as much fuel as they re- barrels a’ day from the civilian quired for both the European and economy. Japanese wars. He did not think The first post-war year will not military demands will increase to, see gasoline demand as great as béthe poirit “that any part of the re-|fore the war because of the short. cent increase will have to be taken away.
Since the stepping up of the war
as
——————————————————————
it ; 1 oder St. Moritz Restaurant, 109 N. Pennwith Japan will involve continued sylvania st: Restaurant. Willian Zoo: full use of naval and transport ves-!3234 Ruckle st.: John Prattas Hotel Mil-
sels, the military need of fuel oil is'};: ©f0r®e Gersilis, 806 E. Washington
[about all the Quantitative -relief civilians’ can ‘expect before .V-J day,
age of a six to seven million cars, | Dr. Wilson predicted. i
P. 0. SEEKS NEW WEST SIDE oT
new , West - Indianapolis poste office sub-station will be. opened as soon as suitable quarters ares . the postoffice department announced today. : : The present station, 1218 Reise
ner st, is too small, an official postoffice spokesman said. A. five or’ 10-year lease will be considered on any property offered that meets requirements. Approxis
mately 2600 square -feet first floor and 500 square feet basement space
are required, should” be
and the location ° within reasonable dis»
tance. of West Indianapolis busie ness centers. The postoffice leases on: practically the same’ terms as any commercial entefprise,” the . official said. Fae Interested property owners
Should write H. C. Rumble, poste office inspector, Cincinnati 1, O. i ner information is availble at
{the main postoffice or the Reisner
st. station,
JOINS METAL TREATERS
2
The Metallurgical Service Cd. 1010 E.. Michigan st.,; has joinad the Metal Treating institute, &
trade organization.
Team-Mates!
$298
Sport Shirts
Shirts cut to allow a man freedom; two-way collars
=
Sport Slacks
Cool and pretty are these cotton pinafores of good quality seersucker, floral prints and sheers. Strap or ruffled shoulders. Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14. :
The out.-door girl will enjoy the comfort of these nicely tailored shorts with pleats and buttondown- back. Sizes 7 to 14.
Boys’ Summer
SLACKS
7
* Sanforized washable slacks in striped patterns. Also Plain blue and brown. Sizes 6 to: 368. 1
: SCR
One and twoto fit a man's neck with piece swim suits; comfort and style. Plain Ae 3 plain or floral or fancy checks. Sizes "ZF w-apPrints; fine ma- C small, medium and large. <= terials of rayon
and rayon jersey knit. Sizes 2 to 6 7 to. 16.
Girls PINAFORES
s149
to $4.49.
Girls’ SHORTS
$00
to $2.59
Toddlers’ Sun Suits
Sunshine for health! Sun suits or pinafores for afternoon
nlay. Cotton prints, seersuckers in stripe, check - and floral paltern Sizes 1103 -fo $2.25
Star Store, Second Floor
Dresses
39
to $3.00
Pretty dresses of dimities and lawns in smart style; lace and embroidery trimming. Cool and dainty. Sizes 1 to 3, 3 to 6x.
Children's SWIM SUITS
or Pinafores
$s] 29
98
PAIR
Pretty New Summer
BLOUSES
- $318 to £35.95
Summer sheers crepes and Several new Just arrived. White, pastel colors ‘and fashionable prints, Tatlored or dressy models to choose from. Sizes 32 to 38 and 40 to 46.
soft rayon spun rayons
styles have
- Just in Time for Vacation
Women's Beautiful
RAYON NIGHT. GOWNS
5398
to $5.95
a frtniniacaIBENRNOaREBIDRLETEIn RN. | SH EAR EE AAA A RRA RL ER OH RE RR HHIHNRHaRN NL :
BAAS RAST Sd A A ETT SOTA Te Lo Tg Tg
ni Stare, Street Floor
RATION FREE OXFORDS
of simulated leather with
_ serviceable cord soles, in
brown. While a limited number of pairs last. :
Pra
ar he Stree Poor a
Printed satins and crepes, also solitl colors. Tailored and fancy trimmed Styles in an excellent variety, Sizes 34 to 10. Also 2 few extra sizes. -
; rE
