Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 June 1945 — Page 6
PAGP 8
BUSINESS tw a
SEES TARIFFS AS
And (mports Will Be Only Way" “for Those “Foreign Countries tos Repay Us.
2 By JOHN W. LOVE Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
ments bill in the senate. "If the bill loses there, o
hopes for enduring peace. to extend and broaden the]
ing wars. The connection is not
the people of this country would demand of the Re-
and steady today at
of 11,000 head,
It's a pity the administration has not put back of the trade agree-
” on receipts ‘of 875. ments bill the same propaganda
Sheep and lambs
= 2 »
BUT, UNLESS. we reduce tariffs
CALVES (875)
* THREAT T0 PEACE
the Indian-’ apolis stockyards. with the receipt the war food admin-
Vealers showed no price changes
amounted t
(ALLIES NEARING | RUBBER SUPPLY.
Within 350 Miles of Goal in East Indies.
Believes U. S. Exports Will Be Bought With or Loans! june 12 (U. P..—Allied troops for
'MOROTAI, Netherlands Indies, the first time in .the war are re-
capturing a rubber-producing island. They are within 350 miles and 90 | days of returning Dutch East Indies | naval rubber to the world market. The 350 miles is the" distance be-
WASHIN \GTON, June 12.—The omens are reported t 0} tween the current amphibious op= be unfavorable to the passage of the reciprocal ie agree-| lerations of the American: navy * has to _be amended by dropping off the provision for aa) further cuts in tariffs, we probably ought to modify our Supporters of the Doughton bill
and Australian assault ‘troops on Labuan and Tarakan in North Borneo and the important rubber producing slands around Bamndjermasin to the south. The 90 days is the estimated time the Dutéh will require after capture
in commercial the next six
rubber to the U. S. quantities within
From the start, they
Sumatra
submarine blockade. 0 Shipping Impossible
had difficulty shipping rubber and oil from Javas and Borneo to Japan be-
| |
|
f district to ar p . power to, of the Bandjermasin ] State department.s ! ower 5 § "MARKET STAYS | harvest and ship the first rubber make these agreements are) crop not being sensational when they May Get Rubber Soon relate the bill to our search for ACTIVE, STEADY The two equations mean that means of prevent- prospect for shipment of natural
too direct, but it 11 ,000 Hot, 1600 Cattle months definitely are bright. is there, and fit’ As far as can be “ascertained | could only be Are Received. here. the Japanese reaped no real spelled out often | benefit from the capture of this enough perhaps | The hog market remained ,active!rich, teeming section of the globe
i
publicans in the istration said. cause of American submarines. senate that they Cattle totaled 1600 and were Gen Douglas MacArthur's recapvield in their an- John W. Love | i0141v more active than on Mon- ture of Luzon and Admiral Chester cient and partisan stand and &C-|ga.o and were mainly steady to! W. Nimitz's ‘invasion of Okinawa cept the bill. strong. made the situation worse, With
land-based aircraft reinforcing the
synthetic, 400,000 tons natural and the remainder open to competition
Suenles Soles Solve Many Dealers’ Shortage Problems
ROSELLEN CALLAHAN
NEA Staff Correspondent
S
machine tools, wares and hundreds of other items,
a
PE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Here is a U. S. ‘Bargain Basement’
Eo
Typical of surplus goods “bargain basements” is this room display-
ing- a variety of housewares. halls.
+
By NEW YORK.
sales, mant
urplus property
Dealers and ifacturers who
mine of hard-to-get merchandise.
have
industrial and structural steel, have found
sted chemicals, general housethese countrywide sales
exhaus
These utensils formerly served in mess
June 12.—Thousands of shrewd American busiiessmen are beating & path to the world's biggest bargain basement—Uncle Sam's
their sources
“teontrol extension
for rected OPA after Oct.
—— costs. plus their
SENATE PASSES. OPA EXTENSION
Rider Slips By.
— Administration leaders looked | hopefully to the house today to kill | a senate amendment to the price act which they called “ridiculous” and ary.” The amendment was a neth 8. Wherry Henrik Shipstead
(R. Neb. (R. Minn)
and
year OPA extension late yesterday. | It would, outlaw any price ceiling which failed to give farmers a “rea-| sonable profit” on any agricultural commodity. Johnston Testifies
ident Eric A. Johnston, testifying before the house banking committee today, urged ‘extension of the price control act without amendment but with a policy statement “recognizing the need of profits” all commodities. Another amendment,
er Alben W. Barkley of Kentucky in’ a compromise move, would guarantee “profitable” price ceilings for meat -slaugliterers and packers. I nassed 36 to 31 Set Double Standard offered by Sena(R. O.) was rewould have di1 to fix prices on which all processors and manuproduction margin over
ps
An amendment |tor Robert. A. Taft | jected 41 to 26. It
facturers could recover
1939
There -are no under-the-countet gaods which it cannot use. this sur- | profit.
U. S. Chamber of Commerce Pres- |
|
Farmers Reasonable Profit’
WASHINGTON, “June 12. (U. P.).|
“inflation- |
“rider.” | slipped through by Senators Ken- |
just before. the senate approved a one-|
| |
|
on |
- dle the annual
Use Stock Cars To Move Wheat |
CHICAGO, June 1% (U. P).—= Plans to put gondplas, stock and refrigerator. cars into emergency use to haul'a bumper wheat crop,
were _ announced: today by J. J. Mahoney, superintendent of transportation for the Santa Fe railway. :
He said that 200 ‘gondolas dre being fitted with ‘steel roofs for long hauls, and that more than 600 other open-topped gondolas will be used for short hauls.” Wal needs have kept the western roads from reserving their usual 20,000 to 30,000 cars to hangrain movement, he explained.
SEES WHEAT CROP
T0 BE BIGGEST YET
WASHINGTON, June 12 (U P.)The agriculture department told a hungry world today that this year™s combined _spring and winter U, 8S. wheat crop promises to be the highest. in history—1,085,000,000 bushels. The department estimated the winter wheat yield at 797.255.000
introduced | bushels as compared with only 764,earlier by Senate Democratic Lead-|073,000 last year.
It forecast a spring
wheat crop of 287397000 ‘bushels which, while substantially lower than 1944's 314.574.000 bushels, is
enough to push the over-all total up to a new record Persistent rain over a large area of the country contributed to reduction in crop prospects and to delays in the preparation of land and planting operations. Drought developed locally and threatened to spread in the Southwest: Dry
weather persisted in the extreme Southeast. Even under these handicaps, the
department said, farmers have made astonishing progress in planting and replanting £rops.
COURT UPSETS IC.
INTRASTATE RULING,
P.)—-|
WASHINGTON, The aside. interstate commerce commis-
June 12°(U
supreme court vesterday. set
sion orders requiring four southern
states to increase intrastate coach
fares 33's per cent.
North Carolina appealed the orsuit the
der in a separate after state supreme court refused to annul
the order. Kentucky, Tennessee and Alabama joined in another appeal from a Kentucky federal district
court ruling ih favor of ICC
TUESDAY, JUNE 1
Sts.
4 (D. Mont),
2, 1945
SEVEN ZONING * REQUESTS OK y
City Board Derles Six Other Petitions.
ie
The city zoning board has ape< | proved. seven and denied six peti{tions for variances to the zoning lordinance. | At vesterday's {lowing petitions Paul I. Brandt, | houses at
hearing, the fol were approved: to build two single 61st and Pennsylvania Rollin R. Stewart, to operate a machine shop at 23-25 8. Dear= born st.; Arthur Waggoner, to oper ate an automobile repair shop -at 3704 Northwestern ave.; George IB. { Anderson, to park and occupy a trailer at 2820 N. Sherman dr.; Mrs, Leona L. Miller, to Soevals a beauty shop at 1048 N. Hamiltoh ave, Grants Two Others * Others granted were: Ruth R. Adams, to operate a beauty shop at 941 N. Rural st, and George Sadlier and Bertha Wurster, to operate a gasoline filling station at Michigan st. and. Belle Vieu pl. Variances. - denied were: Fred O'Neill, to ‘operate’ a riding stable at 1605 S. Illinois st.; Floyd W, (Caldwell, to erect a building for as|sembling race car frames at 4514 Kingsley dr.; R. O. Mitchum, to store equipment in the rear of 4317 E. 12th st.; ¥mery A. Joslin, to erect a garage addition in the rear of {1302 cruft st.; Winifred M. and Es= {tella E. Ryan, to erect an addition ito a store building at Washington st. and Linwood ave, and General Outdoor Advertising Co., Inc, to erect four advertising signs at 551= 559 Fairfield ave.
{ |
SENATORS IN PALESTINE JERUSALEM, June 12 (U, P). = [A four-man U. 8. senatorial mission led by Senator Burton K. Wheeler has arrived in Palestine to survey American military transport and communications facilities,
or r—
NEW FIRMS AND PARTNERSHIPS Distributing Co., 401 Mane
B. Offenhauer; Clark, 401
C. & © hattan Cosmetics. 1166 W. 32nd; Charles B. Manhattan Lenzite Terminal ment for
Indians treats engines,
Co. of Indiana, 216 Warehouse Gasoline internal combustion Carl G. Brecht, 4404 Del-Park Louisville, Ky A-H Elect ro Coustic Laboratories. 1800 8, Arlingtol Repair electronic equipment, F Heathco 750 N. Emerson; C. M. Ault, R. R. 9, Box 818 B. & B. Sales
igeration George
Illinois stk, 1002 8,
350-61 8 Ross,
Meridian. Ree Zelda® Epstein,
Bell. lijuor Store, 210 N tail package liquor store 1145 Broadway
. D. & R. Cafeteria. 4915 N. Pennsylvania The ICC order handed down in Restaurant. Roy Scotten and Donna May. ‘1044, directed the four states,A: Scotten, 2029 E. 62d st fo increase their toach fares 1oriyciorihes Fir 1 Shop. $17 E New ' . HEA ald ial 4 or st Electrical appliances and gene intrastate passengers from 1.65 cents repairs. Hartwell A. Ward. 933 W, A passes : le. tl Richard Fansler, 3337 Robson st. a mile to 22 -cenis _a mile, 1e J. Plerce Cummings Printing,” 34 Jacke amount charged interstate passen- $00 place Commercial printing Pierce E. Cummings. 4044 s gers Wedding BS ie & Service. Beech Grove, ctice 10 1 cre the Ind Auto sales and service. Thelma L, Justice Hugo L Black ad the de iy Copier ave supreme court decisions. in both Economy Grocery, 7137 N. Pershing, ; ~ i ¢ nvestj- Grocery and meat market. L. H. Kimball, cases. He said ICC failed to investi- 5-0 poi ching gate whether or not the present Beacon Institute, 2351 Carroliton ave, Educati on L. L. Castetter, 2351 Care
rates are reasonable
roliton
pigeons separated from mates die—
for pets.
Army booklets on how
Bonds of the United States Government,
Its Territories and Insular Possessions
Municipal and Corporate Securities
: * 2 Real Estate Bonds, ond, Brefured Stocks
Indianapolis Bond and Share Corp. 8. War Bonds and Sams i
Good as Yealers (all Wein) od16.50 between the two to train them were included in the it y i + 00! an choice LG 5 ee . to the point where we can import Z70¢ “HC i medium 9 0015 50 sale. more than we export, we cannot col- cull 5.006 900 To. keep “would-be purchasers fect on the loans. A failure now] Jeo" a0 Stacker. Uattle aud Calve LOCAL ISSUES posted, a “Buyer's Guide for SurChoice Steers lus Property” booklet was pr or within a few years to lower the | 500- 800 pounds : [email protected] | Nomina) quotations fed by Indi (D> 000% £} was pre- ’ 1 It i he defaud ( 20-1050 pounds . vooeeen 1300@1500) anapolis securities dealers pared, which tells what agency sel i Ss fo Q0 - wT 5 tariffs will resiit in the default O/C" oungs ............ 11.50913.00 STOCKS Bid Asked What type of goods. It can be ha of the loans. Such a.default would | 300.1030 POURS ....oreesnes HII | Arete Fin Corp com 7 for 10 cents by writing the Le ey i J . Medium— Agent in pf 14 2 ~ be the fourth great failure within! 500-1000 pounds ........ 1000@1150 |L S Ayres 4'27 pid 104 tendent of Docuinents U. 8. Govc ¥ A C i mmon-— rsnire ( com 16% 17% In 1+ P our lifetime. First the war debt.! 300- 900 pounds 8.50@1000 ‘Belt R Stk Yds com a7 17% ernment Printing Office. 3 Stk Yds then must of the postwar. loans, CALVES (Steers) Belt Ste Yds pid >4 22 =n 1 + > VFS > 110 t then lend-lease—though the lend- Good and choice Se ooils? : 4% PH oh PLANES ARE high on the R. F 500 pounds “down . [email protected] 1 f a + request list vr . a yt lease balance probably will be main- Medium— om 33 C. request list. For the most part » ly forgiven 500 pounds down NPRM Pp 14 prices are fixed. You can buy a » : Calves (Heifers) 1 COL ‘dl rE Defaults on such a scale would Good snd thoite. : . Dao bid ait + PT..19 for around $875, depending convince us we could not go on i Boundt down 13 50@ 15.50 Rook Drug ge wou. ra 17 + ON mileage and condition; a lending. We would cut it off, as| "5, pourids down [email protected] Tel 5% pf ; 4 glider for- from $350 to $875, dewe did in 1928 and 1925. We would " h E 43% ptd 109 . i a bring on a new depression, if we SHEEP (Sh L pid 113 116, pending on the number of places: he go EY Press ; a” a Ewes (Shorn) L com 23 25 four and five passenger Cessnas for 1 NS ‘ALG SC GO an hot 5( 7.50 lwavs ¢ 18 - ; g gral (Good and. choice 8.50 A ro Si from $3900 to $8500. Piper Cubs, we've heen talking about. Other Common and medium ).00% 6.99 Pa . : s Water Class A com 19% 0 however, are sold on a bid basis countries would again have to adopt Lambs (Shorn) Jat Life com 15 . ; i . 1 4 Good and choice 14 00@ 14.00 “Kingan & Co pfd 74 7 All a would-be purchaser has to the nationalistic policies which 1 13.175 1 f poi i Medium and good 12.00 13 15 ingan & Co com i'n t’3 do to buy one is to prove he is a helpesi to bring on the late war in Common 10.506112.00 | “Lincoln Loan Co 5' pid 9 102 : i ee J Lincoln Nat Life com $1 3 itizen, go to the field. make a ses Europe. The setting would be there E : . I ] P R Mallory pfd . 30 31 lection, pay the purchase price and for a new war, and that’'war might P R Mallory com y 0 0 : . ew Mastic Asphalt an B's a fly the plane from the field to his well be over what would have come N Ind Pub Serv 5 108 110% | home to be known as “the American ques- th Serv ‘Ind 5 var -106 8 : : > Pub Serv. of Ind com ant. When the war or navy departtion,” the probes of the richest a: ted 5 : 4 . “Pi ogress Laundry com 17 19 ment (or any other government nation of all, which was throwing Gear & Toot com 2 aganoy; a ye a’ SUID] of : Ro 1 1d GA&E 4.8 1 agency) finds it has a s Plus 0 ts we t X - ry 3 - : p ") i eigh won but making it im- C. William Maibucher was elected -Van Camp pr pf 1944 2015 possible for other countries .to avoid A aute Malleable 64 7 periodic collap se president of the Indianapolis Board ag ine com 214 Ll og é d el Co 5% 99 eer —rtme | of Trade at a meeting yesterday. e com 27 : 2 sib 3 » 5 &: | Albert O. Deluse will serve as vice BONDS ¥ | Amer n Loan 4 55 98 100 i | president, and George F. Butturff as American Loan 4.5 60 98 100 Sa Buhner Fertilizer 5s 54 91 INCREA { treasurer, Ch of Com Bldg 4':s 61 90 Members of the governing com- C s Ind Tel 4'2s 61 103 . . \ » 113 6 2 a ce mittee elected were ~ Edwin K. ¢, 6 8% Your Insuran ’ Shepperd. John P. Frenzel Jr, W. Ind Co 3 0 108 All Types of A. Brennan, Howard W. Harris, [dps R ; 1 ” METAL MOULDINGS y 111 14118 J Springer ndpls Ww Y 68 07 LOWER wa i Aung Au D, Sper, | I Paci is 54 99 and Sink Rims for . O. A. Wilkinson, Edgar H. Evans, N°mnd pub Sen 104 Your Kitchen Cabinets v Rate! Edwin F. = Winslow J Martin Ind Tei» 2: 3a r FREE ODELIVERY! . Antrim. Ottis M. Earle. and H, D. pub Tel 4 halls 100 . our 1 Bsa. es ne Y wo | Jordan Linoleum Co. The committee will meet July 2 Hd Wditamson Inc bs 33 98 07 W Wash St. Opposite Statehnuse We will gladly explain for -organization and appointment — - - - oie oe one BUSINESS DIRECT how COINSURANCE | — frequently makes this bw LOCAL PRODUCE En . PE R SON ' You Save Because We Save A A ‘ possible. Check its Heavy breed hens 26's Leghorn 4 Men's Suits & Overcoats roilers fryers anc nasters inaer 2 » & 4 .e : i le | Ibs... white and barred rocks. 30¢ 1:8 N Penn. LI-5513 $ 3 S 15 5 a5 | possibilities tomorrow. | Old. roosters, 15¢ St STR 4D ’ { | Eggs-—Current receipt 130 grade A FURNITURE e PIANOS | large 38¢ grade A medium 34c, No B ANVY INSTRUMENTS CASE CLOTHES. (orage, a2c FE ertatono, 1] BECORDS o SHEET MUSIC || 215 N. senate Ave. Open 8 to 9 || 49c: No. 2, 36¢ - . - ’ J. MUTUA Le vi 4 Indianapolis flour mills and grain ele | of MOTH HOL ES - hg RNS a OAS . yators are paying $1 70 per bushel for Na OR WORN. SPOT AT OUR USUAL ho / 1 red wheat (other grades on thelr merits), | Pl IT y L oats. No. 2 white or No 2 red, testing 32| LEON TAILORING co. Low PRICES abash 2430 Ibs or better, 66¢c. corn, No 3 yellow, | In the Middle of 73 shelled old crop -8$1.10 pai bushel, and No oN 3 white 1 corn old crop, $1.23 235 Mass. Ave. the - First Block
SAXOPHONE - § BIE lf Instruction Pohl
‘INDIANA MUSIC CO.
"115 E. Ohio St. —Fr. 1184
HANGERS Ic EACH
SWe' Buy Usable Wire Garment
2 Hangers at 10c per bundle of 10 #2 Stores All Over Indianapolis
an
pe mg a. a
i TTI L |
I Grutehes, Inyalid Walkers nd Posture Beds -
Can Be Renled at
| HAAG'S
402 North Capitol Ave, 0
"DIAMOND LOANS|
WE BUY DIAMONDS
and part of the same pressure itigng oa4 and were quotable steady. ae he Jabanes deals and no favored customers. plus is declared to one-of the selling | Although the house is “expected has used in behalf of the Bretton For a long time, the Japanese a,y,ne who can establish his legiti- agencies to spurn the Wherry-Shipstead Woods agreements. | GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (11,000) | imported rubber only from the macy as an authorized dealer, man- “Goods are declared as and where | amendment, approved by the sen- . 4 8 1%0- 189 Pounds . 3H wal SH strsiis Settiomense rather hey from ufacturer, wholesaler or retailer can they are” says Bruce Reynolds of ate 37 to 29. it Was Yerofitiived. =3 WE PROPOSE’ to export large 4 160- pounds UP eens 115091480 The Netherlands Indies, because iy ppd buy, the department of commerce's of-|a powerful bargaining weapon for tities of goods. The late Presi j dear "3% d 13.25@ 14. ey Could. bring cargoes tloger 1 Several agencies have been fice of property in New OPA. 0pPONeNtS.nnsnnaanty £ 1 . - 6 ounds ....... . 25 75 - : aR Ss alk f triplin ’ Packing Sows : Japan by the I the| named to-sell surpluses. Most buy-}york. avoid placing any| . It = would establish A. double dent Roosevelt talked of tripling) ood to Choice Shine coast before loadir them On|. deal with the R. F. C. which further load on the already over | standard for figuring agricultural our foreign trade. No doubt we Fn. 400 pounds ....e.ee..eo 14.05 on a “ t Oki- dispenses capital and producers’ ‘burdened transportation system, the prices—the present parity formula shall make large loans. These will Coo 550 DOUNAS + orreleiasrs 14.05 —_— Tain leap Sop ee ot Sa goods such as planes, machine tools, | goods normally remain where they used to maintain the normal rela- | make possible the exports. One can Medion 0 ds [email protected] hawa § possinie we : ‘metals “and production equipment; are until sold.” |tion between industrial and agri- : : : - 350 pounds ... kha tion of two dozen air fields less| . ity the department of com- . 7 |cultural commodities and a new jot down $12,000,000,000 in foreign . Slaughter Pigs than 400 miles from China and di- ; : : . Medium to Good— merce, which handles consumers IF A DEALER is interested In cost-plus system. loans which already have been men- “go. 126 pounds ..... [email protected] | rectly between. Japan and her rich. oo oi o0ino fr finger _ splints S d ‘S idicul ? .Ind i Kes it tantalizingly | [Lo0S ranging rom linger SPINS p,ving mattresses, kitchenware Seeme, o Ridiculous’ ! ATTY : wr rizes akes ant Ingly 2 DIL, ’ nat, tioned. CATTLE (1600) Senn Io BO ar 8x anv | © coffee pots. terilizers. W abbarel br sich.) Barkley said that the only hope SS : all - 3 o faring ¢ ar Fr 3 . We shall lend a lot of money, no Choice Steers a p P ¥ 1 8 SLer) heel anng ap) now is that the provision will be > . 700-900 pounds 16.25@17 50 quantity of oil, ‘rubber, quinine, he would write to the office in his ; doubt of that. Our businessmen and! 900-1100 pounds .......... je par i tin, tobacco. bauxite and kopak NO MATTER how . strange the . otf stricken esher in the house or in wh ox ss. 1100-1300 pounds .....escees 25@ 17.58 ) : : or . . area—there are 11 regional offices . labor officials and others will insist 1300-1500 pounds ............ 16 5017 75 fron the territory she still occupies. item, - there's usually a purchaser. fi a Ne Countraand sk to be put sonference between the two cham : : : Good~- : y - ers we lend money, in public loans and 700- 900 pounds cove 15 00G0 16 25 Plantations Not Damaged Confronted with shortages, Amer- .. the mailing list of the Surplus The proposal had seemed “sn - private loans. .In addition we shall}, 300-1300 Be ran 12 eai825 Rubber is the most valuable crop, ican’ businessmen have bought and Reporter itemizes availible ridiculous nobody thought it was probably put up large quantities 1300-1500 pounds ....... 15 25@1850 with -exports amounting to $170.-' converted OCD helmets into ornate 80ods. worthwhile to debate it,” he said of money for the two Bretlon| 70.1100 pounds «......:.. [email protected]| 000,000 in the last pre-war year flower pot stands: small sized men’s “The majority of sales afe by in explanatiton of the amendment's Woods banks. This money will be 1100-1500 pounds ........ 13 3215.35 | plantations were not damaged by pot stands. sm: sealed bid” explains Mr. -Reyholds. | surprise passage. He called it “far om - - & tO Wh v's riding breect . : § § S§ . e ¢ “exported in the form of -goods, not | 700-1100 pounds CC 117s@i37s the Japanese. according to word Pants into Womens riding breeches. l.yt 5 dealer in our afea sees an item more inflationary” than any other monev. We. can hardly export choice— Heifers £33 et reaching here from the 150,000! three-fingered mittens into five-'in the Surplus Reporter he wants. |attempted curbs and said it would - 0 pounds 525716 715 . . 3 \ - . 3 maney -in any form except as gold Sho oon povnss Ct 13 [email protected] Dutch still interned on the occu- fingered gloves: bayonets into!he sends for a bid form on which “create chaos in the administration or goods or payment for services. Good- oghds 14. 50m1525 pied island hunting knives: spurs into book- he enters the price he wants to pay of price ceilings.” . Probably most of the lending Will] z5571000 pounds ttt [email protected] The impaet upon the United ends: rejected bandages into ladies’ and sends it to our office.” — $ Medium — States syn ic rubber BEY Vi FAR Ciel ver Janning sales, th IRISH OPEN SHIPPING be done in the form of goods. dedium- poids 12. 50@1478 States synthetic rubber industry .qer pads: stirrup pumps into However, planning sales, the 0 3 We shall lend billions and Wwe'. mon of the expected reapparance this .ooi.pie sprayers agency synchronizes ale; so that!! MONTREAL, June I (UJ. PYshall be owed billions. But we can 500- 900 pounds 11.00@1250 | year of natural rubber iN COM= mir ooot ons de on " : buvers can make a circuit tour of Irish Shipping, Ltd. in a move to 2 ; Cows (all weights) : : Biggest headache was the sale of no more expect to he paid back in good 13. 00@1475 | mercial quantities is a subject of 10,000 homing pigeon Before a the depots where rs are located. open post-war trade a wit , el . < Medium . 11.00@13:00 | h s 3 , } 5 BEOS. £ i . 5 money than WE ola sRperL m= A ad Safiion [email protected] Sues interest among the free purchaser could be found the flock Enough, i is sllowed between Cenage, today snout the es port money. e rest o 1d canner ... 1.00Q 8 had increased to 15,000. They were each sale to travel to these points tablishment of a shipping company can pay something in gold and. in Beet u ini fal welsh) 25@ 14.25 The best estimates are that the finally bought by a store which sold and examine the goods before the here to handle shipments of wheat services, but most of the loans will 8g. WEIRALS), «+ manure "| United States will require 900.800, .~. pairs—commerce depart- deadline for sealed bids. and general cargo. y id in goods—if they| Good . [email protected]| tons of rubber annually rt SE 2 have to be repaid in g yi Medium ..... ou.ievreias [email protected] | ___ fw 0 y after the ment insisted on this because are repaid. Cutter and common 8.50@1075 | war, of which 100,000 tons must be
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Suggestion to Remember .. . When dining -
out,
Philadelphia : :
"blend of unforgettable character and flavour,
FAMOUS
hiladelphia
Vy 27 VL Whisky
SINCE 1894
= 1 2 Lt Ld Ld) died idl did tl da TA TeX AX Rg PY f Lg ol Lh betes St Ladd ld dal d Ta Tar |
or entertaining at home, remember
: The Heritage Whisky.
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TUESDA
‘Mrs. FP
Services for | who had been s circles, will be Nandor Fruchte Fox at 2 p. n “Aaron-Ruben fi will be in Unit Mrs. Dorfmai yesterday in he
bama st. She Samuel Dorfma eler. 4
A resident years, she was] Jewish Home fc ber of the O. .E 8, the Women ani th zation, She founded shop, had bee: the ladies’ auxi Avenue congre member of the association aux Survivors hesi a son, Jack, an Rego Thon, bot
JOHN P. BELL Services and (Jack) Bell, a 1 Bell & Bell, af yards, will be in Oakland City at the Kregelo home here after Mr. Bell, who heart gttack as | automobile on terday. He live st. A native of had resided in I 25 years. Survivors are sister, Mrs, D. anapolis, and hi Martinsville; a Kilrain, Atlantic nephew, flight o ter, in England.
JOSIAH H., HI Josiah H. Hi: ican war veterai his home, 512 W would have beer A retired pain in Somerset, K 1ere 27 vears ag ber of the Morr church and Ww amp No. 84, U elerans, Surviving him
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A END
