Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 June 1945 — Page 7
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Here Is Toled o—To
Big Scale Model of "Dream City" Cost $250,000 and Required 2!/2° Years' Work to Complete. o
TOLEDO, June 27 (U. P.).—A 61-foot wooden model illustrating a plan for a new Toledo will be displayed here for the first time July 4, the Toledo Tomorrow committee revealed today. : ; .From a’ theoretical height of 6000 feet, observers will see “Toledo Tomorrow” a gleaming, orderly city parted by blue waters of the Maumee river and interlaced with super-highways, bow " The dream city is built to a scale of one foot to 100 feet. It rep= Jresents an area about 14 miles in diameter through the heart of “Toledo, : ~Minlature shapes dot the model, showing location of homes, schools, churches, parks, hospitals, office buildings, warehouses, ports, xail yards and heavy industry. , ” n ~ WORKING UNDER sponsorship of the Toledo Tomorrow committee—a group of progressive civic leade r§—four designers plotted the future city. Norman Bel Geddes collaborated with air expert Maj. Alexander De Seversky, highway planner Earle Andrews and railroad expert Col. Henry M. Waite, who died before &eeing the completed model. After two and a half years’ research, these planners produced a city of beauty, convenience, efficiency and safety, In their “Toledo Tomorrow” all arteries of transportation will merge in the city’s heart—a vast alrport. Trains, busses, automobiles and planes will converge on its union terminal. Trains will enter_under- ~ ground, discharge passengers and “surface at the city’s outskirts. » » » :
PLANE PASSENGERS will wait in a huge underground lounge, then ride an elevator to the apron of the airport. The airport itself was designed to accommodate jetpropelled planes. Super-highways in this dream city are regarded as borders to separate residential areas. Each area is treated as a separate com-
munity © with its own churches and schools. All areas will be gccessible via the express highways but inside the areas a system of local roads will serve the residents. Andrews planned a ‘suhken super-highway through the heart of the city, which by-passes local traffic and connects with express highways direct to Cleveland and Detroit.
» » » THE UNDERGROUND through way eliminates traffic lights and other obstacles to rapid passage. It leaves Toledo's future business section to shoppers and workers. who will have ample parking space. The model allocates heavy industry to sites along the banks of the Maumee river, accessible to shipping, railroads and motor freight. Lake steamers will be _ shunted into modern docks in Maumee bay, where the river meets Lake Erie. City planners said they did not expect Toledo to be razed and rebuilt, but rather tailored to their plan little by little within the next 50 years. The planners made no attempt to estimate the cost of the project.
Hog Market Stays Active; 950 Cattle Are
The hog market stayed active and steady today at the Indianapolis stockyards, the war food admin-
stores,
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (4125) 120- 140 pounds [email protected] 140- 160 pounds 160 pounds up 14.80 Medium—
. 12.75@14 00
. [email protected] . [email protected]% . [email protected] 7. [email protected] . [email protected] . [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected]
11.75@13 75 |
[email protected] « [email protected]
| [email protected] . [email protected]
. [email protected] [email protected]
pounds pounds
Received
Sad
This is an aerial view of Toledo today. Many landmarks will rema do not include complete Nn down of the present city.
0
day
a
”-
_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
nd T omorro
¥
in in the “new” city, plans for which |
*
, JTRUNAN 0. K.'S CAB SELECTION
Aviation Services Speculate On Routes. WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P)
—President Truman, before leaving {for the West Coast, informally ap-
“| proved civil aeronautics board selec-
tion of Pan American Airways, American Export - Airlines . and Transcontinental and Western Air tocfly TransAtlantic air routes, it was learned on excellent authority | today. But this ambitious plan to cap-
' {ture for. America a major share of
alr commerce on the world’s richest
at least postponed unless the President chooses not to await settlement of a controversy on air policy {now developing ingcongress. May Be Five Routes
|
routes may have to be modified or
-
Willow Run's Last SAYS NAZI. y
Liberator Is Built
DETROIT, June 27 Willow Run's ' last bomber, its 8685th, will be completed at the Ford bomber plant Thursday, just one -year to the day from the date the 5000th Liberator was built, and only two years and 10 months after the first one was finished.
(U. P..—
REPORT LIGHT STATE CROPS
‘Cool Weather Also Delays Harvesting.
LAFAYETTE, Ind, June 27 (U. P.).—Purdue university reported to-
1 Liberator | | {
” FIRMS “HIDDEN
Markham Urges Property
Be Held for Claims.
WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P). ~Germany launched a “tarnung” or camouflage campaign to help German firms in the U. 8. conceal their activities shortly after war broke out in Europe, James E. Markham, alien | property custodian, revealed today. Disclosing the plan on the basis {of information just received from | Germany, Markham urged the government to keep without compensation to the owners all property m1 this country seized frome Germans {and Japanese. s ? “The net proceeds of the property {will be .available for the claims {which the government has against {Germany and ‘Japan or for any
day .that some Indiana fruit and|gther purpose which congress may
Ra
This is an aerial view of Toledo in 1970, according to engineers’ plans. Maumee river is at the right and the airport is at bottom center. This scale model cost $250.000,
|—The prosecution; in the govern-
1450@ 14.80 MeNt anti-trust suit against the {Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co. today
(grappled wtih the problem of obcome to Danville. court he was having trouble pro-
portation difficulties. Federal Judge ‘Walter C. Lindley
[email protected] | suggested that the department of
priorities for witnesses.
sessions already. heid, special efforts to produce witnesses.
DIESEL-ELECTRIC LINE OPERATE
(U. P.)—The New York, Susque-
nation to be so equipped.
CHEESE MAN TO ADVISE
CALVES (500) Vealers (all Good and choice .
weights) Common and medium .....
. 15.506 16.00 [email protected] 5.00@ 9.00
Feeder and Stocker Cattle and Calves
Steers pounds pounds
Cull
[email protected] [email protected] pounds ..... avetans [email protected] pounds ...ieceeee0. [email protected] 500-1000 pounds [email protected]
Common [email protected]
Calves amounted to 500 and|Good 90- 120 pounds .. 1300-1500 pounds 700- 900 pounds ...,.. FT. WAYNE, Ind, June 27 (U. 1100-1300 pounds eral manager of the plant. Mc-800-1000 pounds poration and 11 others on charges of (all weights) [email protected] Bo Knightstown, Knightstown: agent, Paul ton Act of 1929; 250 shares of $100 par 706 Guaranty bldg. Real estate, Roberta Turner, gen-
istration reported. Active trade in the cattle alley “jg'"P= pounds [email protected] practically assured a good clear- Packing Sows i Good to Choice— ance of the 950 received. hr Arion vealers sold weak to 50 cents lower. SN Sse pounds Sheep and lambs showed no| 250- 550 pounds. +..:...... quotable change. Slaughter Pigs Medium to Good— y CATTLE (050) Choice 700- 900 pounds 900-1100 pounds T 1100-1300 pounds I Good— 1350-1100 pounds . 0-130 unds ... P.).—Farl A. Munger, president of 1300-1500 Dr He i - edium— Durham Manufacturing Co. an 700-1100 pounds nounced late yesterday that E. M. Common— McCracken has been appointed to 700-1100 pounds succeed Dewitt C. Brown as gen- Cholea600- 800 pounds Cracken has been assistant plant Good— superintendent of the aviation di- S00. 300 vision of the Studebaker Corp. here | Medium... ¥ for the past four years. Brown was indicted with the cordefrauding the government by pro- |& : : Bug duction of imperfect war materials, | Cutter and common [email protected] Canner 6.75@ 17.75 Beef Bulls (all weights) NEW FIRMS AND Good PARTNERSHIPS 1200G13..5 . [email protected] | [email protected] | Goodman's Department Store, Inc. of Thorpe, Rishville; 300 shares without par Yalue; Abraham Goodman, Voyd Kuntz Paul Thorpe. 8ink & Edwards, Indianapolis; articles Accepting provisions of General Corporavalue, Boonville Security Corp., Boonville: 200 f $100 par value; Orpheus O. Joseph M. Pinch, William H. br. 130 East Washington Co., eral partner, 918 Shelby st. William T. Mathews and Jackiel W, Joseph, trustees (Jane M. Schloss, donor), Robert EI Bchloss Trust No. 4; William T. Mathews and Jackiel W. Joseph, trustee (William
500- 900 pounds CALVES (Steers) Good and choice— 500 pounds down Meaium— 500 pounds down
Calves (Heifers) Good and choice— 500 pounds down Medium— 500 pounds down SHEEP (300) Ewes (Shorn) , | Good and choice. . 6.00@ 7.00 Common and medium .....-. 4.50@ 6.00] This Year st Year BS (Spring) Expenses ...$98,032,712,688 $91,920,796,352 | Good and choice War Spending 88,228,775,925 85,564.171.970 | Medium and good Receipts 45,165,920,210 42,937,167,601 | Common (Net Deficit... 52,866,701,476 48,993,601. 101 Cash Balance 23,030,021,978 10,980,054 586 Working Bal, 22,267,066,007 10,218,116.983 Public Debt. 256,200,804,171 192,196,248.508 Gold Reserve. 20,363,113,144 21,300,746,720
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE
. Schloss, donor), Robert Eli Schloss Trust No. 5; Willlam T. Mathews and Jackiel W. Joseph, trustees (Jane M. Schloss, donor), Thomas Harry Schloss Trust No. 16, 1156 Consolidated bldg.
U. S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P.).—Government expenses and receipts for the eurrent fiscal year through June 25 compared with a year ago: Last Y
[email protected] [email protected]
[email protected] [email protected] [email protected]
BUSINESS LIBRARY ON NEW SCHEDULE
The business branch of the Indianapolis public library will be open from 8:30 a. m. to 5 p. m. every week day through the summer except Saturday when it will close at 1 p. m., Miss Ethel Cleland, branch librarian, announced today. | The summer schedule will continue | through September 29,
LOCAL PRODUCE
All breed hens, 27c. Broilers, fryers and roosters under § ibs, white and barred rocks, 30%e. All No 3 stock, 26%. Old “roosters, 20%e. Eggs—Current receipts, 33c; grade A
expected to become one of several n {advisers on the reorganization of |
the agriculture department under the new secretary, Clinton P. Anderson, it was learned today.
INCORPORATIONS
Indiana Central Airways, Inc., Marion; ameridment increasing capital stock to 5000 shares of $100 par value. Byrd-Olinger Motors, Inc., st., Huntington; agent, B. C. Byrd, same address; 250 shares of $100 par value; Bufora C. Byrd, Raymond W. Olinger, Homer 0X
Railway Engineering Corp., 1725 N Meridian st., apt. 17, Indianapolis; agent, Walter B. Hauger, same address: 10,000
637 Warren
shares without par value; Walter B. Hauger, Thomas M. Lawson, William E. Mook. Cruikshank's Auto Service, Inc., 2035 Broadway, Gary; agent, Claude Cruik« shank, same address; 10 shares without ar value; Claude Cruikshank, Eva E. Cruikshank, Ruth Powell Jasper County Farm Bureau Co-Opera-tive Association, Inc., Rensselaer; increase
of capital stock to $500,000, divided into |
6000 shares of preferred stock of $25 par value; 60,000 shares voting common stock of 85 par value and 10,000 shares of nonvoting common stock of $5 par value. Carrier Contracting Corp., Illinois corporation; admitted to Indiana to sell and install alr conditioning and related equipment, Herb-Craft Health Products, Inc., State road 130 at Center st., Valparaiso; agent, Florence E. Wheeler, 704 Lytle st., Valpa-, raiso; 1000 shares without par value; Anita Rose E. Klosky, Florence E, Wheel. er, Theresa C. Huhm. Agricultural Chemical Co., Inec., 19 Linrolnway, Valparaiso; agent, Bruce Borum, 7 Napoleon st, Valparaiso; 40 shares of $100 par value; wholesale and retail fer tilizer business; Bruce Borum, Claude H. Barr, C. C. Deck South Bend Gasoline Equipment Corp, 106 W. Garst st, ; agent, William FP. Seltzer, Milburn blvd. Mishawaka 1000 without par value: Francis FP. Arenz, William FP. Seltzer, Wilbur A. Smith.
arge, 30c; grade A medium, 38¢; No rade, 32¢. Butter—No, 1, ‘S0e. Buttertat—No. | : No. 3, 36¢
WAGON WHEAT
Indianapolis flour mills and grain eles ators are paying $1.84 per bushel for 1 red wheat (other grades on their uerits); oats, No. 2 white or No. 2 red, esting 33 'bs ar wetter, 87¢c, corn, No. 3 ellow, ansiod tia crop, $1.10 per bushel, a No. 3 w te, she corn, old crop,
LL
© ON ANYTHING »
Autos ® Diamonds ® Watches Jewelry © Clothing © Radios, ete
GET CASH IMMEDIATELY
fc
come
THE PEOPLES
: “Member Federal Deposit t01P. M-Sat to 10 P.M ik 4 5 fa ey v iL Vl ei
iad
Quickly Obtained Loans—No Red Tape for , ._ Taxes; Down Paymént on Property, Auto Purchase, Medical and Other Bill
—The. Friendly Bank—
Pelix T. ‘McWhirter, founder
po 130 E. Market St.
BUY WAR BONDS
If You Want a LOW COST
Mirren lil. PERSONAL
to “Peoples State”
STATE BANK _
Insurance Corporation
TRAVEL PRIORITIES | 3 NEEDED FOR TRIAL see 82% ot
: 17 DANVILLE, Ind., June 27 (U, P.),|*Belt R Stk Yds com ........ ° 39%
taining priorities so subpenaed wit- | Electronic Lab com nesses can get travel reservations to|*Hook Drug Co com
: . *1 Earl Jinkinson, special assistant 10 | *Ind the U. 8. attorney general, told the ‘Indpls P & L pid
3 i le 7g ducing witnesses because of trans- | Indpls Water ptd
{ *Lincoln Loan Co 5'2% pid... 101 justice be asked to obtair travel | Lincoln Nat Life com 52 Lindley |p r said that if the case was important | Mastic enough to rate the two months of pup Serv ind 5% -.... it deserved Pub Serv of Ind com ........ 27 29
|*So Ind GRE 48% Fa | *Stokely-Van Camp pr pf
hanna & Western railroad operated [ch ‘ fully on Diesel-electric locomotives |Citizens Ind Tel 4las 61 today—the first railroad line in the|Consol Fin 5
WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P)). (N Ind Pub Serv 3'as 73 —E. W. Guamnitz, head of the Na- | pyp tional Cheese Institute, Chicago, is Pub Tel 4is 55
LOCAL ISSUES
STOCKS
Asked
Ayrshire Col com 17 | *Belt- R Stk Yds pfd Bobbs-Merrill com | *Bobbs-Merrill 4%% pfd.... Central Soya com . ie | Circle Theater com sins | *Comwlth Loan 5% pid . | Delta Elec com
Pt Wayne & Jackson RR pf 51a 38 4 Home TT Ft Wayne 7% pfd 51 “3 i d Asso Tel 5% pfd hi is 111% 115%
& Mich E 4'2 pfd.....
Indpls P & L com *Indpls Railways com ; 19
vob ndpls Water Class A com .. jel Nat Life com evil . Kingan & Co'pfd ............ 7 77 | Kingan & Co com
54% R Mallory pfd . 32 Mallory com .. . 3134 Asphalt . 10%2 Pub Serv 3% il
Frogress Laundry com 17 19 ‘Ross Gear & "ool com
20%2 | Terre Haute Malicable 7 0.8 Machine com ............ .rwie United Tel Co (% .. Union Title com Pe BONDS
SCHENECTADY, N. Y., June 27 American Loan 4's 55 .
American Loan "4'2s 60 .. 100 Buhner Pertilizer 5s 54 .. FRET of Com Bldg 42s 61 “ea
Columbia Club 12 5s 87% 5.58 .... vees Ind Asso Tel Co 3%s 70 ..... Indpls P I 3%s8 70 ..:....,....10 . Indpls Railways Co: 5s 57 ... ; 95 Indpis Water Co os 68 Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54
Ind Tel 4'%s 55 Serv of .Ind 3%s 73
Trae Term Corp 58 67 100 J Williamson Ine 5s 55 ‘
55,000-TIRE QUOTA 1S SET FOR JULY
The office of price administration announced today that 55,000 tires would be available next month for B and C gasolire ration card holders in Indiana. Joe R. Rimstidt, state OPA tire rationing officer, said that the supply would be insufficient to furnish all motorists now were on file.
Ya!
whose applications |
CANADA RESTRICTS
|
U.S. MEAT BUYERS
| OTTAWA, June 27 (U. P.).—Ex-
: | ports of dressed and live poultry : tite 4 38 {and meat from Canada to the U. 8./A two-thirds majority is necessary
108 | without an export permit will be |
| Finance Minister J. L. Ilsley an{nounced today. |
| “Since chickens and meat were put under export permit at the cus-
26% (toms port of Windsor on May 23,| a
[there has been an increase in
-| American consumer purchases at {other «| Isley said.
Canadian customs ports,” The placing of chickens under ex{port permit, he said, has been un|dertaken to insure filling the con|tract for 30,000,000 pounds of |chicken to feed the U. S. armed | forces.
‘ Regarding export control of meat,
| Ilsley said Canada is committed to | ship all surplus meat to the United
| Kingdom and other European coun-
| tries for emergency relief.
‘NEW BANK SOUGHT BY 5 KOKOMO MEN
KOKOMO, Ind., June 27 (U. P.. —Application for a charter for a {new bank to be organized in this
....|city was filed today by five Kokomo
businessmen. Capitalized at $225,000, the institution was expected to be opened by the end of the year. Signing the charter application were H. O. Davis, real estate opera=[tor; John E. Fell, attorney; Dowell E. Shirley, business executive: L. T. Boyd, insurance executive, and Les [A. Conradt. There has been only one bank in Kokomo since 1931 when three institutions were closed during the depression.
MEAT OUTPUT LESS
CHICAGO, June 27 (U. P.).—Production of federally inspected meat dropped 1,000,000 pounds last week | to 283,000,000 pounds, the war food administration said today.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
RE-WEAVING
of MOTH HOLES —~ BURNS or WORN
SPOTS LEON TAILORING CO. 235 Mass Ave. ro iaiees!
|
——— Se ————— Quality and
the First Block SIs
HANGERS Ic EACH
=We Buy Usable Wire Garment = Hangers at 10¢ per bundle of 10 62 Stores All Over Indianapolis
Davis CLEANERS
SHERWIN WILLIAMS Has a Paint for Eve
Purpuse. Because [t Lasts Longer
VONNEGUT’S
Style Without Kxtravagance
LEVINSON
PEARSON'S
FURNITURE e P1ANOS B A N U INSTRUMENTS RECORDS eo SHEET MUSIC
You Save Because We Save Men's Suits & Overcoats $ | 8g" 2 § a5 24" CASE CLOTHES
215 N. Senate Ave. Open 9 to 9
EE ————— WE Buy Diamonds
HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID
STANLEY Jewelry Co.
3 W WASH. Lincoln Hotel Bldg
EE —
_USE YOUR CREDIT at \ AVG AE VATE =! MIODHEINS
CLOTHING COMPANY 131 WwW. Ww St
Your Hatter
Cuergbodyd CREDIT IS OK
LTA
ASKIN & MARINE STORE 141 W Wachir
aton St
OXYGEN THERAPY This Equipment Can Be Renied at HAAG'S 402 N. Capitol Ave. Wr mR
! ; §
Directly Opposite Indiana Theater
PERSONAL
“Fidelity eo
LOANS TRUST ICOMPANY
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORP
WE BUY DIAMONDS
Old Gold, Watches, Dental Gold Sliver, Antique & Costume Jewelry . The Older Your Jewelry ie the M We Pay
ore ! x BARON JEWELRY .00, G
Fellow 1-83 N. Penn. St. round floor, . Penn. & Wash. sts.
vegetable crop yields were lighter! than usual and that the harvesting | of others would be delayed because | of cool spring weather.
| Under the plan as now written aviation sources speculated there ‘might be as many as five routes, roughly divided among "the carriers 'as follows: | 1. To Scandinavia via New Found{land, Greenland and Iceland—|in southern counties, and that the { American Export. |crop was lighter than normal. | "2, To northern Europe and pos-| |sibly Moscow via London—Ameri- | cennes area were dropping rapidly |can Export. [from trees, and a Mght crop was 3. To India via London, Paris, | forecast. Marketing was expected eastern Europe and Cairo—Pan|to total 3000 to 4000 bushels each American. {for Transparents and Dutchess va- | 4. To Cairo via Ireland, possibly | rieties, the report said. |London, central Europe and Greece| Cantaloupes will mature two ~T. W. A. | weeks later than usual, by mid-July, 5. To Rome via Portugal, Spain|and sweet corn shipments expected and southern France—Pan Ameri-|i5 pe three weeks later than nore
jcan., Pan American already flies|mq) beginning the latter part of | most of this route. tJaly. Most likely American terminals | Shipments of greenhouse toma|would be New York, Chicago, De- toes from Marion county declined, | troit, Washington and Boston, it Was hut cabbage marketing opened in | said.
tension service said that the raspberry harvest was being completed
areas. The cabbage was reported
lof high quality. SENATE T0 REOPEN | Sour cherries .and snap beans
are due on the market from Terre | F TION OF FEPC Haute area late this week and early | next, the report said. ;
WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P.).| {—The senate prepared to tackle to- | Floods Halt
day the question pf a reprieve for Farm Work. ithe President's fair employment |
|
{practice committee. Flood waters
cover was ready to offer a motion to sus- arm work is almost at a standstill pend the rules to allow an amend- i many areas, the Indianapolis
{ment restoring the FEPC appropria- | Weather Bureau's weekly crop re-|
i ia ti in | t said today. tion to the war appropriation bill POT ) : irectl the floor.| Much of the first cutting of aljlo be brougint directly to uis i falfa was lost because of the rain.
for rules suspension. :
| ; i The report said soybean planting [were hopeful that the necessary 1S Practically completed and that ‘two-thirds majority would be lack- OMe Wheat is being cut in southing. |ern Indiana. Oats are heading and Le { some barley and rye are being com- { EVANS IN CAPITAL | bined in the south, { Albert O. Evans, manager of the! A ——C————_— Indianapolis WPB office, is attend- LUMBER OUTPUT OFF ing a WPB meeting in Washingten| WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P.). that will last through Friday to|—April lumber output fell 1.2 per discuss re-employment, small busi- |cent from March because of unness aid and other reconversion|favorable weather and the manproblems, the. local office reported | power shortage, the war production today. board reported today.
roi pera «2a Se SS es X eH
{ |
been in the process of formation by the
thoroughfares. Asphalt.
The university”s agricultural ex-|
Transparent apples in the Vin- |
much of] | Senator Dennis Chavez (D. N. M.) | southern Indiana farm land and |
Many cornfields are grassy, need-| Southern Democrats who have ID€ cultivation, and much has been 13. .| prohibited after 12:01 a. m. today, threatened to “talk until Christmas” 9rowned out. |
determine,” he declared. Began in 1939 Markham said that German firms {in this country, realizing that the |U. 8. might be drawn into the war, | begin in 1939 a campaign to “cloak” {their activities, aided by the German government. This was done, he said, by “sell|ing” German-owned stock in an | American company to non-Germans |at a price which was only a small {part of its value. At the same time the nominal owner gave the Germans an option to repurchase at the same low price. In other cases the sale was ap- ( parently bona fide, but the German {government retained control through |contracts with the American com- | pany. | Altogether, Markham said, the | ownership of about 60 German firms lin the U. S. was “cloaked.” The - {firms included General Aniline &
|the Indianapolis and Terre Haute | Film : Corp, American Potash &
{ Chemical Co., Schering Corp., Amerlican Bosch Corp. E. Leitz, Inc, |General Dyestuff Corp. and Amer- | ican Wine Co. Seized 195 Firms His office has seized German in‘terests in 195 business firms. Total net worth of the companies amount to $164,000,000. German interests totaled $116,500,000. Of the 195 enterprises, Markham said, 117 are being liquidated and {sold piecemeal “since they serve no {useful purpose in the American economy.” The remaining’ 78 will {be sold to Americans; eight ‘have been sold already. Great care is being taken to see that they don't fall into German hands again as was the case after the last war. Markham raid German parent firms made their American subsidiaries dependent upon them by carrying on all the necessary research in Germany and training only a few of the men in the Amer{ican firms,
APPLE PRICE LOWERED WASHINGTON, June 27 (U. P.). —The office of price administration has lowered shipping point ceiling prices for the 1945 apple crop by 8 cents to $3.45 a standard bushel for the period lasting from now un
Down through the ages, Kentucky Rock Asphalt has
greatest of all
chemists, Mother Nature. Yes, we are proud of the fact that this famous paving material comes from the greatest developed deposits in the entire world. It is silica sand impregnated with native asphalt by nature's own forces. The resiliency deadens the sound and shock of traffic, developing a surface with a minimum of noise and greatly reduces the shock and vibration caused by heavy vehicles. Mother Nature has certainly been kind, in giving up this treasure to make of our streets and highways quiet, beautiful, smooth and economical There is only ONE Kentucky Rock
Kentucky Rock AspHALT INSTITUTE
