Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 February 1946 — Page 14
By JOHN
ry size in stock.
tire building { Given these ‘necessities, the will hit its new high It is
that many, and the
tires made in that period will go|
Sone aes nA
§ ss » =
details, but those are their expec7 tations by and large: i Firestone looks for 66 million passenger tires this year, Goodyear for 67 and Goodrich for anything up to
oka
. lion passenger tires this year after j . dealers’ stocks are reasonably filled ; . and small commercial cars are | | fixed up. { Once the production hits its peak, at more than 76 million passenger the Firestone people, think it run for a year and then drop to 61 million by 1950. E . » AUTOMOBILE production is currently expected to be million. Some forecasters here
+ put it at 6 million for 1947. Next { ' year's new cars won't be needing oun dor ut least two years, and this {* scoounts partly for the decline expected in tire production the year
following. One reason for the decline in number of tires to be turned
of the 14,500,000 passen-|
FIRESTONE, Goodrich, Goodyear and General tire people differ on|
W. LOVE Stall. Writer
» a i ON, 0, Feb. ee Sometine next ‘fall or winter a walk into a store or service station and find tires
‘the prospect as Akron’ s industrial leaders and view it.’ They assume tranquil labor relations and an uninterrupted supply of materials.
out in later years will be the imorovements now being made in the synthetic tire, with more to come when natural rubber again can be mixed with synthetic. Up to 300,000 tons of natural rubber will come in this year—from French Indo-China, Ceylon, Straits Settlements and Latin America. The Dutch plantations are still blanked out and nothing is known of Sumatra supplies, Though the allsynthetic tire is the only one the driver of a passenger car can get this year, dne company says its tire i¢ better than anything in pre-war | times. Goodyear will have rayon curd and Pirestone will unveil a new tire later on. ~ ” ” TIRE-MAKING capacity on the {passenger side has been vastly in|creased since the war, manily by |shifts from the expanded large-tire capacity. Though it is hard to estimate the increase in passenger-tire capacity, 40 per cent is the rough guess. A report for the committee for economic development forecast for 1947 a production of $849 million worth of tires and inner tube, as compared with $580 million worth in 1939, using 1939 prices in
holds. “From here on,” says Harvey S. Firestone Jr. “our output is down to a question of ability to produce.
{Except for bead wire, material are
in good supply. The return of veterans has built up the labor force and man-hour production is rising.” Still hanging over the industry are the United Rubber Workers’ demands, including the 30-hour week in place of the present .6 hours. Prospects for a strike seem to have been reduced by settlements at Ford and Chrysler.
Indiana Stocks and Bonds
Homins' anntations furnished by Indianapolis securities dealers
: STOCKS Bid Asked Hook Drug Co com ‘20% Mn Corp { Ind Assoc Tel Co 2 pfd .. Ma 9 |Ind & Mich Elec 4%% :.. 110 113% . States 25 |Indpls P & L pfd 113%; 118% 4. Amer Btates ol A + ....{Indpls P& Leom ........... 20% 30% Amer States .. | Indianapolis Water pid 105 8 Ayres a pla . 112 |(Indpls Water Class A com . . 20% . Ayshire Col 33 |Indpls Railways com ......... 19% .... 3 R 30% Jett Rat, aly COME ...uvsswiis 1 11 R ; ngan Fy area . BE a vid v... |Kingan & Co cae 9B & 2 Jneoln Tosn & 5 ofd ..... » Soys 83% n Nat e com ....... 0 Circle eater a P R Mallory com ...... ..... sve Comwith Loan 5% pf ... |Marmon- Herrington com .,.. 17% 1 Cons Fin Corp . Mastic Asphalt cee 13% 3% ¥4i Delta 17% | Natl Homes com ......... 7 a JHectonte Lab com 5% N Ind Pub Baty BO ieniinns i m 4 a! Jackson RR pf 102% 1051; | Progress Laundry com....... » Herfl.Jones Co A pid . » 1 ve..|Pub Serv of Ind 5% ......... 107 100% =s- Home T&T Mt Wayne 70% pid 51 . | Pub Serv of Ind som 37 $1 Ross Gear-& Tool vas a8 y Soha & EB an “pia ies 1 ign i ely-Van Camp pid ...... 2 sre LOCAL PRODUCE Stokely-Van Cam com x 32%: Terre Haute Malleable ...... 8% NG COM... oxsuverns 4 voi cA FOR PLANT DELIVERY United Tel Oo 5% 2 2: hi Poul os bs fe aa ag; Union Title com .......... 32 36 i bs. and over, under; 300 200; po hore Bonds goes Toosters, 2061 aera, i ibs. and ce American Loan 4%s 586 ...... 084 #' and over. 30¢: asta, r. 23 Bons 4 American Loan 4%s 60 ....... 981% Eggs: ‘current receipts, “ Bubner Fertilizer 5s 54 ...... 9 Ts 29; graded A large, 33¢; " 3 fas. Ch of Com .ldg 4%s 61 ..... 01 2 2c So edie {Citizens Ind Tel 4%s 61 103 S928 | Columbia Club 1s 88 80 ’ RT % : n 8soc Tel Co 3s 104 Lo TRUCK WHEAT Indpls P & L 3%s 70 a Vp Inds a Railways Coda dt vers SB | . ndp! ater 8 06% 108 ae Indianapolis flour mills and grain ele- | Kuhner Packing Co 4s 5¢ OT yALOTS are $1.70 per bushel for |N Ind Pub Serv 3%s 73 L.108% 108% wi. No.1 e_ » "her Sade wn thelt Pub Serv of Ind 3%s 75 . 1085 1 £7 testing 34 Ibs. or better. 00; No } Tras Term Corp won en VI yellow bushel 0 J Williamson Ine 8s 55 ... 98 ah". corn. $1.23 *Ex-dividend.
Diamonds, Watches, Cameras,
LOANS ON EVERYTHING!
CHI
146 E. WASHINGTON ST
“BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Musical Instruments
JEWELRY Co, INC.
CAG
Most Applicants Skilled,
both instances. The estimate sul
{whom there are jobs in many
9%|and salary ranges of job openings
IY lis a reliable index of classifications
....|cent were semi-skilled jobs.
on | tunities.
I JOB SEEKERS
Semi-Skilled Workers, ‘ Veterans are constituting an increasing proportion of job" seekers, [the local office of the U. 8. employment service reported today. ' Manager Thomas W. Bennett also released figures on a ple study of veterans’ skill a ages and over-all employment opportunities. Of the sampling of veterans made during the last three months, 53 per cent were classified as skilled and semi-skilled workers, Mr. Bennett said: 7% Unskilled Clerical and sales classifications claimed 13 per cent; 11 per cent were classified as inexperienced; nine per cent were considered cap able of professional or managerial work; and only seven per cent were termed unskilled However, Mr. Bennett pointed out, since a high percentage are under 40 years of age it is not surprising that the small per cent falls in the professional and managerial skill
group. : An analysis of age ranges in the sampling revealed that almost onehalf or 48 per cent of these veterans of world war II were 25 years of age or less; that 20 per cent were between 26 and 30 years; that la lesser proportion or 22 per cent were between 31 and 40, and only one per cent were over 40%vears of age.
Open to Vets Possibility of placement depends on the availability of jobs. Every effort is made to find jobs for people at their highest skill, Mr. Bennett stated. - In a similar sampling of veterans placed in jobs by the USES office it was found that skill classifications at which veterans register and skills in which veterans are placed were very similar, Employers sometimes request| “veterans only” when placing job orders with the USES office, but every job order in the office is open to veterans. The total of 2152 jobs open. in January, '46, however, was only a fourth of the total job openings available in January, 1845, when war openings alone totaled 8666. Mr. Bennett explained that this unusually low number of openings just tabulated is due to the fact that many plants are now closed as the direct result of strikes. Also a number of companies have withdrawn orders for help because. lack of materials now necessitates the laying off of regular employees as well as obviating additional hiring. This situation has resulted in an unnaturally high percentage of orders for clerical workers, for
[
plants even where job orders for production workers and unskilled labor have been entirely withdrawn. Wide Range An analysis of job classifications
available on January 31 of this year
and wage in jobs for
| veterans.
ranges
,, |agerial skills, and more than a, 33, | fourth (558) or 26 per cent called | {for clerical and sales; 354 (16 per
"lcent) service and agricultural work- |
|ers were wanted; 325 or 15 per cent | skilled workers; and 135 or six per Un-| skilled and all other openings were |
HARMON NAMED BY
named special representative here for the Franklin Life Insurance Co. of Springfield, Ill
high school coach, will be located in the Circle Tower.
Franklin Life ranked among the {company’s leading 10 last year. Two i Of the total of 2152 job openings lof the local men, Regional Manlon file at the USES office on the ager R. L. Colby and General Agent 3 |last day ot January, 176 or 8 per| Harol Schoettle, were among the 2 lcent called for professional or man- | top five in ve In personal produstion.
THORNGREN WINS
NUMBER OF POLCYHOLDERS
1300 10,000,000
1918
Wy 100000
1845
11,000,
000 $2,115
INSTITUTE OF LIFE
Seven times more Americans
own life insurance today than in
1000, as shown by” the illustration above. While the number of policyholders was increasing from 10 million to over 71 million,
the average amount owned per from see to $2175.
British Plan for Jet Transports
HAMILTON, Bermuda, Feb. 4 (U. P.).—Britain hopes to overtake American competition In global commercial aviation by getting the jump on use of jetpropelled passenger planes, qualified observer at the Bermuda aviation conference said today. Livingstone Satterthwaite, American civil air attache in London, said the British were well | advanced in development of gas turbine and jet planes. With agreement on rules and regulations of international competition about to be reached in Bermuda, the British admittedly are now in an inferior position to the Americans who long have led overseas air traffic and have better equipment. Satterthwaite said, however, the British believe they can match the Americans by putting into service huge jet transports which will travel at terrific speeds in high altitudes.
|
FRANKLIN LIFE CO,
Joseph E. Harmon ' has’ been
Mr. Harmon, former Cathedral
The Indianapolis agency of the
policyholder was also increasing
HOG MARKET . STEADY HERE
Yards Get 4700 Porkers,
And 2400 Cattle.
~TINES 3S WARY PEOPLE Now] CONSIDER NEW
LLL LIFE INSURANCE AS IN 1900
HOUSING BILL
Price-Fixing.
By NED BROOKS Scripps-Howard Staft Writer
WASHINGTON, Feb. 4—A compromise housing bill, eliminating government price-fixing and other controversial features, was laid before the house banking committee today with. solid Republican support. The new emergency measure drafted by Rep. Wolcott (R. Mich.), ranking minority member, would: 1. Establish -Housing Expediter Wilson W. Wyatt's office as an independent agency apart from the office of war mobilization and reconversion, Eliminates “Czar” 2. Give the Wyatt office all the powers it now enjoys under an executive order of President Truman, 3. Permit Mr. Wyatt to exercise full authority over allocation of materials for Rousing. 4. Legalize the veterans’ preference on new housing, now on a vol-
untary basis. Under the Wolcott version, these provisions would be eliminated
from the administration-backed bill of Rep. Patman (D. Tex): (1), Powers to impose price ceil{ings on old and new houses; (2), payment of government subsidies to {materials producers and makers of | prefabricated houses, and (3), crelation of a housing stabilization director or “czar.”
Republicans Approve ,
Would Drop Government
Chemists to Hoar H.V. Churchill
i V. Churchill, chief of the analytical division of the Aluminum Co. of America, will discuss “Modern Aspects of Analytical Chemistry” at go. the 40th anniversary meeting of the Indiana section of the American Chemical socie~ § ‘ty, Friday in § the Indianap~ olis Athletic club. ; Guests at the 2 dinner meeting will include Dr. H. Vv. Churchill H. E. Barnard, first chairman of the local section, and Alden H. Emery, general manager and secretary of the national group. Ladies’ night will also be servd at the meeting.
LILLY'S LEADS IN TAX REFUND
Local Corporation Receives | $2,239,066 From U. S. |
i Eli Lilly & Co. leads the nation’s | corporations today in federal tax re[funds for the fiscal year 1945 a | period in which the government | was spending most of its money on War weapons, | The refund totaled $2,239,065. i Three other drug firms followed the local company in refunds. They are Sharpe & Dohme, Inc. Phila-
ob=
| delphia, $1,856,744; Parke, Davis &7¥ | Rep. Wolcott said he was confi- {Co.,, Detroit, $1,610,613, and Upjohn
{dent the’ bill would have sufficient| Co., Kalamazoo, Mich:;-$1,146,074-The 4700 hogs and 575 calves sold | Democratic support for committee | The internal revenue bureau said
lat steady levels today at the In-: ®Pproval
| dianapolis stockyards, the U. 8. agri- | {culture department said. The 2400 cattle moved slowly. | | Steers and heifers lost 25 cents, and | ‘cows were weak to 25 cents off. | Sheep and lambs totaled 3475.1 Lambs lost 25 cents, while other | classifications were mostly steady,
|
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (4700)
Butchers 120- 140 pounds ........... $13.50014.25 140- 160 pounds vo. [email protected] 160- 300 pounds . 14.85 300- 330 pounds 14.85 300- 360 pounds [email protected] Medium— 160- 220 pounds ............ [email protected] Packing Sows Good to Cholice— 270- 300 pounds ............ 14.10
330- 400 pounds ...eeeeenes 14.10 G 400- 450 pounds ..... aia 14.10 Medium— 250- 660 pounds ........... 13.75014.00 [email protected] «so. 11.00018.05 ... [email protected] . veo [email protected] 1300-1500 pounds ........ eos 11.25@18. 700- 900 POURS ...eveeeeres [email protected]
900-1100 pounds .. 1100-1300 pounds .. 1300-1500 pounds .. Medium —
The 11 Republicans approved it over the week-end. The
jremainder of the committee con-
sists of 15 Democrats and one Pro-| | gressive.
The committee is attempting to!
dispose of the bill in order to start hearings tomorrow on extension of the price act.
conference Saturday, is scheduled |
as the first witness.
Meetings
Tool Engineers “Specifications and Use of Gray Iron as a Die Material” will be discussed by R. G. McElwee, iron foundry division manager for the Vanadium Corp. of America, at the meeting of the American Society of Tool Efigineers Thursday evening in the Lincoln hotel. The chapter will ‘also elect new officers.
ilots The Brightwood Pilots association will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. in the Shell auditorium, 2219 W.
INSURANGE HONOR
John L. Thorngren, Indianapolis,
asking for 604 persons or 20 .per ranked third in qualifying produc-/ \cent of the total 2162 job oppor- tion among 11 agents of the Bank-
Mostly 60-80c
2152 job openings on file as of Jan- | uary 31, shows the highest percent- |
cents to under 80 cents group, and! {orders taper off in both directions | from that range, openings, the majority unskilled, at 40 cents to under 60 cents. In the above 80 cents per hour, are 235 openings at 80 cents to We one dollar an hour; and an even | greater number, 344, at a dollar an hour and above. There are 475 cov|ering commission offers and jobs
PEARSON'S
OXYGEN THERAPY
This Equipment Can Be Rented at
While requests for workers zoom |
to the local office pyramid up, Al- |
| CASE CLOTHES '} 215 N. Senate Ave, Open 9 to 9
INDIANA MUSIC CO.
118 KE. Ohio oh =] - FR-1184
128 N, Penn. Hl HAAG'S FURNITURE PIAN BAND INE RCN 402 N. Capitol .Ave. |January '45, for the same month | RECORDS » SHEET MUSIC || Day Phone Night Phone | L1-5367 TA {than doubled to reach 69,5984 calls. ! | ———— —— | Visits from veterans of World War You Save Because We Save || II during the year, however, in- | | J | Men's Suits & Overcoats | SAXOPHONE 4 25 creased considerably beyond the | s1Q™s a5 5 ih ratio for total traflc—from 2253 In| 8 2 24 Instruction Lesson | January '45, to 16.953 in January ‘46.’
"PERFECT CIRCLE CO.
LEON Ly co. 235 Mass. Ave. '» the Middle of
Three changes in officers were | made by the board of directors of Perfect Circle Co., Hagerstown, Ind., during their recent meeting. New officers are: Lothair Teetor, chairman; Ralph Teetor, president, and Macy Teetor, vice president in charge of engineering.
OFFICERS ELECTED,
the First Block
oy Gil Go
(Authorized “Keepsake Jewelers)
|L_tos wma 57
Time to See “Your Hatter”
HARRY EVINSON
IWE Buy Diamonds
HIGHEST SASH PRICES PAID
STANLEY Jewsiry Co.
ILL & MARKET
| To continue in their présent capacities are: Daniel Teetor, vice president in charge of manufacturing; Donald Teetor’“vice president {in charge of sales, and Leslie Davis, secretary-treasurer,
MONEY LJUAND QUICKLY CONFIDENTIALLY
*
ON DIAMONDS JEWELRY, RADIOS MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS © BAMERAS
Anything! LINCOL
JEWELRY CO
WE BUY DIAMGNDS, | WATONES, JEWELRY |
LLL
On W. Washington St. ~ Across From ‘the Statehouse |
ers Life Co. of Des Moines attending the Senior Sales Training school Common and medium ... An analysis of wage ranges of the. in Chicago last week. Culls
Mr, Thorngren, a members of the
H. E. Storer agency here, produced wh age of jobs, 689, falling in the 60 $278,250 of new life insurance dur-
ing the qualifying period.
Average production of attendants’
There are 409! was $216,236.
THOMPSON FORMS
PUBLICITY FIRM
John W. Thompson, native of In-'
~ |providing room and board along dianapolis and former public relawith wages, and a few orders were tions director for the Ford Motor | listed at less than 40 cents an hour. | co. has formed John Thompson, |
| Inc., to handle-public relations, pub- |
{downward traffic or personal calls | | ticity and related services.
Mr. Thompson, whose headquar-
though a total of only 27,713 calls | ters will be in Detroit, was a mem- | were made to the loca] office during per of the editorial staff of The
Indianapolis Times before going to]
just ended in 1946 the figure more puerto “Rico to do publicity work.
RABBITS COME TO LUCKLESS HUNTER
LATROBE, Pa. (U. Hesse believes that happiness is in his own back yard. After a long, unsuccessful day of | trudging through fields and woods {for .game, Hesse came home disgusted, started to clean and oil his gun in his back yard. A rabbit | © darted by and he shot it. A second Tollowed and met the same fate.
P.).—Bill|
700-1100 pounds ............ [email protected] 2 1100-1300 Dn zAResE eRiLs [email protected] Michigan st., to discuss the con Common— stitution and by-laws as drawn up TO0-2100 OURS. eeeess [email protected] [jy the constitution committee. Choice— au ”" Harry Harrison is president of the 600- 800 nds ......c0000d 1028 . 800-1000 pounds ..... ...... 30 group. Good— 600- 800 pounds ...... eran 800-1000 pOUBAS .....ecaves. Bh aie so | T W. A, WILL BEGIN Medium— - 900 pounds .......eee0s 12, [email protected] | Common— - 900 pounds 10 0g13.50 Cows (all weights) { F i Good 21301 0] Medium .... J 00 Cutter and common T3611] The first commercial air service Canner 6.715@ 8 Bulls (al) weights) | between the U. S. and Paris will Beef— Good (all weight) ............ 13 [email protected] | begin tomorrow. we 11.15G13.0 The international division of] Medium ... .......ooccneens 10.50@11 Calier and cominon 8.50 10.50 | Transcontinental & Western Air, CALVES (375) | me. said today, through the local Vealers (all weights) office, that a 300-mile-an-hour Good and choice ... [email protected] ’ { my . [email protected] Constellation - will take off at 2|
7.50@11. Feeders and Stocker Cattle and Calves
600- 800 pounds .. ......... [email protected] 800-1060 pounds .......000.. [email protected] | Good— 500- 800 pounds .......e.... [email protected] 200. 1050 pounds ........... 12 [email protected] | edium— | Moo. 1000 pounds ! .. [email protected] SHEEP (3475) Ewes 8horn) Good and choice 8.00@ 7.50 | Common and esti 500@ 6.00 La l choice and closely ed coo. [email protected] Good and choice Lee. [email protected] Medium and good [email protected] Common [email protected]
PLANT AT HAMMOND | DOUBLES CAPACITY
HAMMOND, Ind, ¥eb. 4.—Approximately $250,000 will be spent to double the capacity of the Met|als Refining Co. at Hammond, ofjAciale said today. The firm, -a division of the Glid{den Co. manufactures iron, copper and lead powders.
U.S. STATEMENT
WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (U, P).—CGoverns ment expenses and receipts for the cur- | rent fiscal year through Jan. J1, com[pared with a year ago
This year Last Year | peat $43,456, 400, 531 $56,627,804,787 War Spending. 36,104,168,130 51,702,801, 549 Receipts 3,722,015,503 23,870,425,106
Net Defloit . 19,743,380,437 32,767,436,181 Cash Balance. 25,426,508,434 19,605,846,316 Puiblte Debt. 270,444,616,125 233,037,740,971 Reserve 20,156,402,003 20,549,724,181
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE Clearings 3 7,014,000 Debits .... + 20,473,000 000
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Principals of this firm own a large optical shop and the largest chain of direct. to-consumer retail option) branches in America.
145 N. Pennsylvania St.
|p. m. from New York's LaGuardia fleld with 36 passengers on a transAtlantic flight inaugurating air service from Washington, New York
| and Boston to Ireland and Paris.
The four-motored Lockheed ships | aré scheduled to fly the New YorkParis route in less than 17 hours. future, be extended to ChiPhiladelphia and
| “In the service will cago, Detroit, Baltimore.
Administrator Ches- | ter Bowles of OPA, who canvassed | , |the price situation at a White House
U. 8. terminal
that refunds in the 1945 fiscal year, | including those amounting to $500 jor less, came to approximately | $1,000,000,000. Only seven taxpayers received refunds in excess of $1,000,000, the treasury reported.
Artists Get Refunds Largest refund to an individual was $1,375,000 to Henry F. du Pont of Winterthur; Del. The other recipients of million dollar-plus refunds were: Brown & Williamson Tobacco | Corp., of Louisville, Ky., and Peters|burg, Va., $1,478,387; and Talon, {Inc., Meadville, Pa., $1,066,478, The list contained the names of many notables in the field of music, drama, literature and finance and others in public life, but their refunds generally were all in the lower | figures. These included movie personali-
er, Eric Blore and Canada Lee; radio star Mary Livingston; symphony orchestra conductor Sir Thomas Beecham; jazz orchestra leader Duke Ellington; violinist Mischa Elman; novelist Willa Cather. John D. Rockefeller Jr. and the late Wendell Willkie.- The Bank of England got a return of $31,645. Among the larger refunds were: Estate of Melville N. Rothschild, Chicago, $859,798; Lydia E. Pinkjue Medicide Co., Lynn, Mass, 97,716; Youngstown Steel Door Cleveland, $627,337; Wyeth, co. Philadelphia, $626,930; Glenn L. Martin Co., Middle River, Md., $638,158; Cleveland Railway Co. |Cleveland, $458,742; estate of Edith 'H. Delong, Chicagp, $493,677; estate of Henry Wilson, San Francisco, $470,408, and Bankers Farm Mortgage Co., Washington, D. C., $444,538.
|
SHIPPING 6 LINES
$500 Million Program to Put
‘WASHINGTON, Feb. 4 (U. B). American’ “steamship lines kept thei eyes on congress and the Londo Maritime conference today as the unfolded a $500,000,000 program to give the nation top billing among peacetime shipping powers.
through the National Federation of ‘American shipping (N.F. A. 8.) their plans to obtain 89 custom-bull high-speed vessels with capacity £0 15,000 passengers and 700,000 dead welght tons of cargo. In’planning their worldwide post var services, however, shippers re Revien concern over these matters firially may be laid down for dis position of the nation’s vast war time merchant marine. 2. The unsettled controversy ove. whether steamship lines will b allowed to operate passenger aid craft. 3. The outcome of the Londo! conference, scheduled to begin to day, which will berak up the unite maritime authority and presumab}’ will establish a new allied shipping pool to function in the reconstruc | tion period. Shippers said planning is difficull because they do not know on wha! terms war,built cargo ships will bd made available to themselves or t their foreign competition.
REVEAL PLANS
U. S. in Top Place. :
lines revealed
The legislative policy tha
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner § Bane
Every night Monday through Friday
WFBM—10:45 P.M.
3 DAYS SERVICE
|,
i
ties Marlene Dietrich, Jackie Coop- |
A Complete Optical Service
for the entire family. | hours Monday and Friday till 8:30 p. m.
_4ll
MEANS BETTER.
iN
ar 43¢
CLEANING
DRESS SUIT or COAT
For_ Location of Nearest Store Phone Wabash 4521
ITER ART]
Evening office
Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted for Those Who Need Them
| {
DR. H. C. FAHRBACH
302 Kahn Bldg. Meridian at Washington
Evenings by Appointment MA-0862 | °
Optometrist
oho Finch’
Tt age on he Dela
ask for Philadelphia Blend ¥
Open rsday and Saturday + evenings te ® P. . STORES IN PRINCIPAL CITIES FOUNDED 1807 meses!
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or - BLENDED WHISKY x FAMOUS SINCE 1894 \ .
CONTINENTAL DISTILLING CORPORATION, PHILADELPHIA, PA; &
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LAR
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today !
ay } 4 |
remy
47
tist college pastor at is now in | ceeded th Lynhurst | The Rev. | New York, lin college ter's degre
“school of |
a Hoosier graduate. The cou Edwin, ele Western EI who is a t tian high Joyce, a ju Wheaton, :
DRIVE GU
Judge W court toda guilty in t Horace Ed of a car 1 year-old N\ The acc 1944, on tween Bilt Judge E tence the a term of Indiana st been at. 1 the accide His atto Judge Bal This was
INVES] OF \
The cor vestigate 24-year-ol who died 3900 block The ma a few mi plained o and siste Barber, w with him,
Mr Mrs. Adalin away Mond Old. Union
Thursday n BURCKLE—
George B. father of :
a. m., age’ Grinsteiner York, Wedr
Hill cemete P Mond
CHD nd |
*Wi Burich wn Haines, U. day “mornin from Shirl
/946 N. Ilin “Genrer ‘Call at the
¥—) mother o Gertrude P
George W,. Washington day. Fune CONNOR
2 m, Friends inv
CROUCH of Viva ( the late Jo Crouch 8p Crouch in Chicago. Wednesday Brothers Washington Rev. Weidn
Henderson liam A D Funeral Tu the George Washington
DONAHUEentered | 868 years.
Friends are cemetery, aries
DOBROWI' Ruckle, | widow of Samuel J, snd Mrs, I Olshen, M: Pearl Geri ducted 2 Ruben Pur Tefllla cem
DOUGLASband of Cunninghai dianapolis, wood, brot| pissed aw day, 1 p. 1 of the Chi invited. B call at the Tuesday ne
FISCHER Vernon, |
morning, a
0 a m, W. Morris funeral ho HOLYCRO! Guiltord
Noblesville, at the ho N. New Je 1:30 p. m 1902 M Interment
