Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1946 — Page 6
SER i
Butler, 1. U; Are Named By ‘Insurance Firm.
The American United Life Insurance Co. Indianapolis, today announced establishment of an annual $3000 scholarship fund to be divided equally between Butler and Indiana universities. The fund, the first of its kind, will pe used for insurance scholarships which will become available next fall for students of at least junior standing majoring in life insurance and interested and qualified to enter the marketing and service branch of the business. Students will not be required to enter the employment of any life insurance company upon graduation, according to George A. Bangs, president of the firm.
Experiment With W hite Sidewalls
Times Special AKRON, O., March 25—White sidewall passenger car tires, one of the peace-time luxuries that fell by the wayside after Pearl Harbor, are being made again in Akion—but they are strictly experimental. Manufacturers have been authorized by the government to use a small amount of synthetic rubber each month to develop this type of a casing, something that has never been tried before with man-made rubber. When commercial production of white sidewalls will be permitted is'a question that no one in the industry is ready to answer.
right, 1946, by The Indianapolis Times bd Chicago Daily News, Inc. ———————————
AD FIRM HEAD DIES OF HEART ATTACK
Times Special OMAHA, Neb, March 25.—Leo B. Bozell, one of the owners of Bozell & Jacobs advertising agency that has a branch office in Indianapolis, died yesterday morning from a heart attack. bi Mr. Bozell who was 59, established the agency in 1922 in collaboration with Morris E. Jacobs. The agen’y also has offices in Dallas, Houston, Shreveport and Seattle. .
LOCAL ISSUES | A apres os, we PENS OFFICE HERE Agent rp com . | . O td 19 20 sine 8 © eda B¥% 2B | SET, oF AFTER DISCHARGE Amer Stal el B vase 33 L 8 Ayres 4%% pfd.........107% 111% Ayr QOME ivsnnnursren 29 32% «© é2 | of medicine at 3315 E. 10th st, "|December, 1943, and served Deita 18% | England, France, Belgium, Holland
‘RR ptd td
ral -Lab com . Pt Wayne & Jockson 102% He:ff-Jones Co cl A 11% Home T&T Ft Wayne 7% pfd 851 *Hook Drug Cocom . . .... 22
SCHOLARSHIPS
®
on AE eT mee Vv
a i 5
Take a look at the new Fuller house—all-metal, mass produced unit Beech Aircraft Corp. is ready to
produce under license of Inventer R. Buckmaster Fuller. It's semi-spherical, mainly aluminum (weighs
only four tons assembled on the site), has an over- all ventilator (see fin on top) and is designed to sell for about $6500 on a ready-to-live-in basis,
Othman
noises. don't want to wake up.
The Beech Aircraft Corp. is tooling up in its Wichita, Kans., factory to turn out 50,000 two bedroom, two bath houses of aluminum and plastic next year. They've got air-conditioning, dish-washing machines, built-
STATE BANKERS SET
MEETING MAY 16, 17
The Indiana Bankers association will hold its 49th annual convention May 16 and 17 in the Claypool hotel. Otto N. Frenzel, Merchants National bank president and immediate past president of the association, heads the program committee. He is assisted by Theodore F. Graliker, Decatur; Thomas G. Wilson, Marion; Ira PF. Wilcox, New Albany, and Herbert C. Morrison, Crawfordsville, Charles H. Buesching, Ft. Wayne, is association president.
Asks for Silen
He Dreams of Future House
By FREDERICK C. OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON, March 25.—Do not pinch me. I'm dreaming about my dymaxion house of the future and I
ce as
Or make loud
in vacuum cleaning systems, electric garbage choperoos, and other things to make you blink, including a price tag of $6500, delivered, erected, and guaranteed. I'm drooling. For brickmasons, take warning; there'll be no $14-a-day jobs involved in building the circular house, first projected in 1927 by R. Buckminster Fuller, redesigned by him and redesigned again over the years, and now making folks like my bride and me goggle-eyed. Fuller Houses, Inc, and tic wu=| plane company opened their first showing of a scale model in the congressional room of the old-fash-joned Willard hotel. One of my fel-
ADVERTISING NEWS—
AD MEN AWAIT AGENGY EXPERT
Former Indianapolis Man to Speak Thursday.
Robert F. G. Copeland, Detroit manager for Kudner Agency, Inc, and account executive on Buick, will be the speaker at the weekly meeting of the Advertising Club of Indianapolis at the Lincoln hotel
low reporters was so impressed he ordered a house for delivery next
spring. termites, no ashes, no paint.
No That got him. He put his name on
[the dotted line. I fidgeted on a gold- |
{legged chair while Inventor "Fuller {told about the house that's shaped like a merry-go-round, built like
Jerome E. Holman Jr, now on |an airplane, and serviced like an
-lopened his office for the practice gets plugged or the lights w work, the mechanic rushes over and | year. Dr. Holman entered the army in| fixes it free. All you do, accor in [to Fuller, is sit there, feeling smug. Gents with square houses made
108% | and Germany: He held the rank of {of plaster and lumber and such of start | era
| captain,
VERAGE
| terminal leave from the army, has|automobile, The idea is, if the drain on't | Kudner Agency,
| obsolete stuff, you better
He is a member of the Indianap- | thinking about bargain sales. Fuller {olis Medical society and the Indiana thinks you haven't a chance. He is a citizen, round in snape years and who, and dynamically balanced, 'lke his| years, was in charge of public rela-
(houses. His white hair and mus-
|
“Script Tease,” which recently ap- | peared in Liberty Mr. Copeland entered | tising agency i |
Inc.,
CP. Fisken advertising directo the Chevrolet division of Gen
|who has been with Chevrolet during
| tions for Chevrolet.
the adver- | Receipts field with Erwin- | Wasey in New York early in 1935 | and came to Detroit as manager for later that He is the current president ding | of the Adcraft Club of Detroit.
1 Motors since 1334, has resigned. His successor is Charles J. French, 10 the war
T To FE ? an
Cs THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ____ This May Be Tomorrow's Home !
HOG MARKET AT
Steers, Heifers and Lambs Are Steady.
Steers and heifer trade rounded
while fat lambs looked steady on paper in the fact of somewhat less attractive killing quality.
4 GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (5400)
1100-1300 pounds mmon — 700-1100 pounds
Choice 600- 800 pounds 800-1000 pounds
Feeders and Stocker Cattle and Calves
Gold Reserve 20,233.918,039 20,451,172,118}
Clearings Debits
GEILING LEVELS
This Year Last Year Expense $50,559,399,.281 $70.465,333,078 tev cai War Spend. 40,705,686,440. 64.150,871,085 Ky. said 31.354.520.928 31 930.595.320 Net Deficit 19.204 864,352 = 38.534.737.247 | Cash Bal 23.669.408296 15,249.075,360 | Public Debt 276.620.522 745 234.607,554,803
Meetings
Office Managers Barrett B. Klopfer, Dayton, O. will talk on “The Office as a Source of Profit” at the dinner of the National Office Mapagement associatioh Wednesday at the Riley hotel Mr. Klopfer, who is office manager for the Standard Register Co., has been with that firm for 22 years.
out largely steady in the face of stronger asking prifes. Hogs ‘and Managers : : 9 calves still sold up to ceiling levels| - Dr. Donald A. Laird, psychologist, writer and inventor; will discuss
“Human Relations and Production” before the Society for the Advancement of Management at 8 p. m. Wednesday in the Lincoln hotel. Born a Hoosier, Dr, Laird has held professorships at six colleges and is the author of 19 books and the inventor of the somnokinetograph for the study of]
LOCAL PLANT WINS 4TH SAFETY PRIZE
For the fourth time in eight yéars, the Indianapolis plant of U. 8S. Rubber Co. has won the President's prize in the company-wide
| safety contest, officials announced
were won in 1938,
. 1575@1725 1939 and 1944. The plant set a
it
Butchers 120- 140 pounds [email protected] it 3% sown “RE - pounds . 14. i i 300- 830 pounds . 14.85 universities, 330- 360 pounds ......e..... [email protected] Medium—' . 160- 220 pounds a toy [email protected] acking Sows 2 Good to Cholce— sleep 270- 300 pounds. ...g....i... 14.10 330- 400 pounds ....iieipnen 14.10 Good— 400- 450 pounds ............ 14.10 Medium— 250- 550 pounds i =k ie 1273910.00; aughter Ie) Medtunr~to ‘Good~ | 90- 120 pounds [email protected] CATTLE (1800) Steers Choice— 700- 900, pounds [email protected] 900-1100 pounds [email protected] 1100-1300 pounds er. [email protected] 1300-1500 pounds . [email protected] oe 90 - 900 pounds . [email protected] | , | 900-1100 pounis ......asess.. [email protected]] today. ions | 1100-1300 pounds ............ [email protected]| Previous prizes | 1300-1500 pounds ......e Medium - 700-1100 pounds ....... aioe [email protected] | Company
record when was
[email protected] | awarded the top prize for the fourth!
time.
Directors of the local safety pro-| [email protected] Sram are John E. Cady, factory and Chicago on tessssaene. [email protected] manager; C. G. Browm, industrial] [email protected] | Felations manager, and G. C. Brown, |
LA PORTE EDITOR RESIGNS POSITION
LA PORTE, Ind. March 25 (U. resignation of Cy R. Parker as managing editor of- the Herald-Argus newspaper was an-
| nounced yesterday. Mr. Parker had | regulations, the federal trade com-
held the position 18 years. City Editor Forbes Julian was named to succeed Mr. Parker, and James L. McDonald was elevated to Mr. Julian's former posi-
Good~ 600- 800 pounds ......eever. | 800-1000 pounds. ...... « [email protected] | safety director. Medium— | 500- 900 pounds ...... weiden [email protected] | Common - : | 500- 900 pounds ............ [email protected] | Cows (all weights) { ROG00B aiirnris vierarriiae . [email protected]| Medium ' Fesnsvrasaan [email protected] | Cutter and commo [email protected] | Canner .. : ‘ 7.00@ 8.50; Bulls (all weights) | Beet Good (all weight) ....... 13.5014.25 Sausage— P.).—Th CHOBE «sinus vivennesrsinnne [email protected] | Medium . corres. [email protected] Cutter and common .. [email protected] | CALVES (625) Good and choice [email protected] | Common and medium . [email protected] Culls [email protected]
Mr. Parker said that he was leaving the newspaper business to become a representative of a life insurance company. He will remain
"FARM AGENCIES TO
OUTLINE PROGRAMS
The 1946 programs of Indiana agricultural agencies will be outlined
to directors of ten Indiana -produc- |
tion credit associations at a meeting Wednesday in the Lincoln hotel. F. L. Kerr, president of the Pro-
Thursday noon. Choice— reporter M : land § 600- 800 pounds [email protected] p r. Copeland is 25 ue pounds . [email protected] i 700d— tion. 3 native of 500- 800. pounds [email protected] ndianapolis, his 300.1050 POUNGE ‘seresnessees [email protected] i Medium— . father having 500-1000 pounds .. [email protected] been city editor Choice and closely sorted .... 15.75 of The Indiana SHEEP (835) i Ewes (Shorn) in La Porte. | Daily Times at Good and choice ...... [email protected] the time of his Common and medium .. §.00@ 700] birth, He has Choi d cl Topi d [email protected] 3 oice and closely sorte rena 3 . worked in the § G00d and CHOICE ....c.rvsnss [email protected] editorial depart- fo" Medium and good ............ 13 aH io OR c.essnane eesesanerian of WS ments ot He Mr. Copeland papers = wauke® Detroit, New York, Chicago u. 5 STATEMENT |and Tampa, and is presently & CON-| o, qunGron March 25 (U. P.) — tributor to various magazines. | Government expenses and receipts for | ch i % i the current fiscal year through March 21 | Typical of his contributions is iii with 8 yr aot
{duction Credit Corp of Louisville,
that representatives of the state extension service, soil conservation service, rural electrification and the agricultural adjustment agency would explain new
VOGUE THEATER PLANS ADDITION
House ‘Will Seat 1400 After. Enlargement.
Plans for enlargement of the Vogue theater, College ave. and 63d st. were -announced today by Carl Niesse, owner, and W. A. Brennan, Inc, realty firm. An addition to the theater will be constructed directly north of the present building and will increase the - seating capdecity to approximately 1400. The addition will carry out the theater's present architectural de|sign. in a motif of glazed terra cotta. Plans were drawn by Eric G. Steinbeck, Chicago architect.
Age
MONDAY, MARCH '%5, 1946
Railroad Will Aid U.S. Food Effort
The Wabash Railroad will take an active part in the nation’s food conservation, program, the In dianapolis office said today. The road will discontinue to use of toast as a garniture with meat, poultry, eggs and other entrees, and the practice of trim ming toast and sandwich crusts will pe halted.
Other steps include the use of potatoes in place of wheat and rice garnitures, the substitution of fruits and other desserts for pastries and cakes, the use of | alternates for wheat eereal wherever possible and the elimi. nation of wheat cakes on breakfast menus.
Roads Will Start * Through Service
Times Special BALTIMORE, Md., March 25. —The Baltimore & Ohio Rail road today announced plans to join the Santa Fe in establishing | transcontinental passenger serv- | ice between Washington and Los Angeles on March 31. | Effective that date, the B. & O. will inaugurate through bed-room-roomette sleeping car service daily between Washington its all-Pullman “Capital Limited” for connec~ tion with the Santa Fe's “Chief” operating between Chicago and Los Angeles.
VOCATIONAL GROUP T0 HEAR ADRIANCE |
E. H. Adriance, Eli Lilly & Co. personnel research department manager, will be guest speaker at the dinner meeting of the Central Indiana branch of the National Vo- | cational Guidance association Wed|nesday in the ¥M:O-A— Reports on the Regional conference at Cincinnati this week alse will be given by delegates. Douglass Brown, director of guidance of Columbus high school, is president, and Mrs. Margaret Rogofsky, Howe high school, is see retary of the Central branch.
HOME BUILDING UP IN EASTERN STATES
NEW YORK, March 25 —Residential building mounted steadily in the 37 states east of the Rockies 'in February, F. W. Dodge Corp, fact-finding organization’ for the mission said today. | construction industry, said today. More than 900 groups—more than| The month's dollar-volume twice the number of any time in | amounted to $102,079,000 which was the past 20 years—have contacted | the highest peacetime February the commission regarding safe- | residential total since 1929. guards against unfair practices. The volume was 14 per cent high. Among the major industries rep-|* than in January, the firm ree resented in these groups are the ported, and 426 per cent higher wholesale drug, wholesale confec- | than a year ago.
y : , Nonresidential construction in. ;. construction equipment and | . ig iru equip {creased 1 per cent over January,
Henry Miller, head of the com- | EE 130 per cent over
mission's trade practices conference |
unit, said that “most businessmen | generally welcome the chance for Listen ts “BUSINESS HIGHLIGHTS”
{all to start from scratch with a by Merrill Lynch, Perce. Fenner § Beans
{ fair set of rules.” Every night Monday through Friday
WFBM—10:45 P.M
|
1900 GROUPS SEEK "TRADE REGULATIONS
WASHINGTON, March 25 (U. P.) —Renewed competition and de- | velopment of new products in the | post-war markets have prompted
{many industries to seek fair trade
|STATE FOOD PLANT BOUGHT { Times Special { | NEW YORK, March 25-—Sardik Food Products Corp. has purchased | a plant at Shirley, Ind, |
i
from | Standard Brands, Inc. It has also bought Indiana properties of the] ‘Middletown Canneries and the! {Kirklin Canning Co. The prop-|
® r
INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE programs to aid farmers and im- [erties specialize in the production - eR 18.855 060 | PrOve farms, homes and incomes. {of tomato products of all types. | w
Suppose you could walk into a meeting in the big “Governors
You
Room” on the sixth floor of the New York Stock Exchange building and talk with the 25 men who form the Board of Governors of this Exchange.
!
would meet men from all parts of the country. Some are
was a short
100 i N Ind Pub Serv 3%s 73 ..... 106% 108% : ib ch hd 3%s 5 Joby 110-- | savings bonds s Pel Ea aan wi y Trac Term Corp 5s 67 vais 38 0 {January level J ilismsen 10a 3 88 ...- .... |R. Maxfield, Ex-di U. 8. savings
LOCAL PRODUCE
PRICES FOR PLANT DELIVERY
Douy Bs Ibs. and over, 22c; s orns, sprin, 4 i ibs. and over, 22c; under, 200, ras said. 18¢; 6c; ducks, 5 Ibs. and over, | January sa 20c; light, 15¢; geese, 20c; capons, §& lbs. and over, ; under,
commendable
Eg 30c; graded eggs, A large, 32c; A medium, 20c; no grade, 27¢.
TRUCK WHEAT
Indianapolis flour mills and grain ele- 000 as the yators are paying $1.73 per bushel for|down in its No. wheat (other grades on their
No, 2 white or No. 2 Jomtin Ey u ota, A corn, No, 2 elled, $1. r bushel No. white shelled corn, $136, ne 9
the Federal closed today,
SMALL ACCQUNT
J An eA a... 1 113% ec Fee ) { » i Indole P& Lpfd . .. ..112 14 |State Medical association, I Som ord Nn Rs 32 | wc Cn - ater ‘Class A com..., 31 2 mmapis Water cine "com. 31 3 | $552 IS A Je Nat Life com . no iw 1 Kingan COM covssnsnnes Kingan & Co ptd ............ v% 101%
is WASHINGTON, March 25 71% | P.).—Is your bank account around |is efficient, like his house, it doesn't % | $5512 That is the average fonthose | need any fringe to make it pretty. {of $5000 or less in banks covered by |
“FEBRUARY U. S. BOND SALES $15,103,389
Despite the fact
bank holidays, the total sale of U S.|
The $15,103,389
that work stoppage and unemployment was at its worst, Mr, Maxfield |
30¢ 22. 1 v YH NE Pr 'r AIC: Current reatipta” se Ios: to case, MONEY IN CIRCULATION ‘LESS | | WASHINGTON, March 25
'tache are clipped closely, because |he does not believe in extraneous (U. | decorations. He figures If a thing]
that February “ums, the heaters, the delumidifiers |
month and had two
was very close to the , according to Orville | touch a button. state director of the| I must report that a house glist- | bonds division. sales were also
in the face of the fact |l00ks peculiar, Fuller
get used to the looks; he says you'll|
les totaled $15,800,000 water from. the garden hose.
American public pockets for cash
dug and the inside doors—hold tight to! again—don't open, they
Reserve system dis- house
— (Why we're in" Washington,’
RANSURANCE B
'NDIANAPOLIS |
| Herman Wolf, president of the cou-
{ities know what we've got.” I still say, don't-'wake me. Not until the new day actually get, here
OARD
fair practices in Insurance since 1903.
0
© An organjzation of the leading agents of Indianapolis . . . cooperating in the support
of right principles and pledged to uphold
| NO WHALE OIL IN OLEO WASHINGTON-—No whale oil is
AFFILIATED
X AR . certain other countries.
» © NAL ( Se———— a
H L
| Ad club secretary, has been chosen chairman of the club’s “On to Mil- | waukee” committee to stimulate at- | tendance at the annual convention
chinery which makes things tick, together with the National Associasuch .as the ventilators, the vac-|tion of Better Business bureaus.
It is
and—hold tight—the hidden draw-/in-Advertising movement launched ers that slide up from somewhere some 30 years ago, of which Merle with your winter clothes wien you Sidener, {one of the founders. Good advertising, says ‘he stateening like a B-29 and built in the ment, (1) shape of an over-sized mushroom | consumer and help him buy more says you'll] intelligently.” | 3" sun really appreciate it when time comes | misstatement of facts as well as {to clean up the exterior. You don’t! possible deception through implica{do it with paint brushes. You use|
ton
The windows are plastic. Let them and without {P.).—Money .in circulati d (U./down and plastic fly screen auto-' It uses only testimonials of compe$57.000.000 dus] on ropped matically slides into piace. The] tent witnesses.” ri uring the week ended baths are “deluxe, the frout door!
March 20 to a total of $27.889,000,- 1ooks like it came off an airplane ally accepted standards of good
| taste.
fold, like the basis of the merits of the prodmeet federal income tax payments, an accordion. So much for the uct or than by the disparagement of com“And maybe you'd like to know peting goods sald | tices that are offensive or annoying,
¥ (4)
jcern. “We're not here to ask thc |nomie responsibility to help reduce government for anything. We just distribution costs and its social recame in to let the housing author-' sponsibility in serving
or | : 3 i claims which cannot be met in full
Gy
. (Speedy) Ross, Indianapolis
an outgrowth of the Truth-
local -agency head, was
. aims to inform the
tells the truth, avoiding
omission It makes no
further qualification
. conforms to the generIt seeks public acceptance on service
advertised rather
It tries to avoid prac-
“
. recognizes both its eco-
the public
interest.”
{ PIPE HELIUM 9% MILES {- WASHINGTON .—A 90-mile he[Hum gas pipeline from Shiprock to
Gallup, N. M., {used in the United States in mak- | pounds of pressure per square inch; | ing margarine, although large quan-'it is equipped with automatic cut{tities are used for this purpose in off valves to save most of the gas
operates at 2000
(in the line in case of a leakage.
NEW CARS Plus
© MORE ACCIDENTS
CO equal HIGHER PREMIU: 5
I. A
HN EERE
wl
RT
BUSINESS PROPERTY ONLY~ Management ~ Leasing Selling Appraising Mortgage Loans Insurance
EW RHIRN|
Aon CEE
Ee vrirrseyee go] : | Has More Space sing Federation of N Ind Pub Serv 5% ..... i 108% 1131, | the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. | He made his house round ENE the Advert ho A i ern rauk Laundry com ...... 20% | The size of accounts in the $5000- : : y S€|{ America to De held in Milwaukee Pub Serv of Ind 5% ........ 1043) 106% : A a circular wall encloses more space May 26-29. Lou Young and Larry Pub Serv of Ind com LU, 441, (810000 range remained static at . a eo i Tie *Ross Gear & Tool com .. 33 labout $6600 from 1841 to 1045 lian a square one © he same Sogard, club president and vice So Ind G & 8 48% pid .. 114 i “Us length. Furthermore he said it's president, respectively, will be con-Stokely-Van Camp pf .... 213, 229, There was a decrease in the larger _ - d wl he ey ! " 2 : Stokely-Van Camp com ..... #9 Mlaccounts. Those in the. $10000-| “HOnSer and whai he nhéeGed Was vention delegates. | y “Terre Haute Malleabls .. 84 9 > : strength; his house weighs only! eon 3 U8 Machine com... ...... 3% 4 ($25,000 class dropped 2 per cent ; . estateme of advertising p United Tel Co 5% . ...... ” to $14.863 and there Ww CE ‘four tons complete. He said this A restatement ertising Union Title com ... ..i...0. 33% *{ cent io: ot . oy NS t ) PET compares with 150 tons for houses principles has recently been unani- , tude $153.264 — El & a “0 puilt brick by brick. mously adopted by the executive ; Losn + reanns ees J, -r xceedir . \ American Loan te 8 eres ” eves | $25,000 8 The whole business rests on a board of the A.F.A. The state- b our ] Fertilizer 3s 08 ye hollow steel mast anchored in the| ment was drawn up by.a committee y * ground, Inside the mast is the ma- | of advertising leaders in all fields
Board of Governors
1. Hold Your U. S. War Bonds. Don’t let anyone talk you into cashing them. Be wary of “get-rich-quick’ schemes. Extravagant prom-
ijses are a poor substitute for the :
safety and guaranteed return of your War Bonds.
4. Beware of Tips, Rumors, Impulses. There is NO quick
way to wealth, either on this Ex-
change or anywhere else. Watch out for so-called “inside information” and predictions starting with “They say.” Ask yourself . . .“ Even if there were an ‘inside,’ why should I- be asked in? And who are these mysterious ‘they’?”
‘partners in Exchange firms in New York and some are from other cities—Hartford, Richmond, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Chicago, Detroit, San Francisco. Two of these Governors are
not in the securities business. ..they are elected as
atives of the general public. Together, these men establish the rules for the conduct of this
represent
national market place . . . the world’s greatest free market. And together, they represent a broad, solid investment background .+.a cross-section of experience from all over the country.
Wouldn't their advice on a sound course of investment be
invaluable if you could get it? You can get it. In answer to the question, “What advice would you give to the average investor?” here is a summary
of their ‘oint opinion
a
2. Buy U. S. Savings Bonds. They are identical with Series “E” War Bonds and both are the world’s best investments... backed by the full resources of the United States Government . . . returning $4 at maturity for every $3 you invest.
5. Avoid Unnecessary Risk by getting facts on which to base your judgment. Otherwise you should
stay out of the market. Risk is always
present in buying or selliag se‘curities or any other form of property ... but facts can eliminate needless risk.
3. Get the Facts about any security before you act. Facts are available. Every company whose securities are listed on this Exchange has agreed to make available essential information which you can use to make informed decisions
This advice by the Board of Governors of the New York Stock Exchange is underscored by the President of this Exchange: ‘Free markets are open to all, as they should be, but access to them should not be abused. Those who are unable to judge intrinsic values, or are unwilling to obtain the facts to judge these values, or cannot afford the risks involved, should stay out of this market. Instead they should put their available money in U. S. Savings Bonds.”
«
MONDAY
I Requie
Jan
Requiem ma James William S. State st. w 10 a. m. tomor church. Burial cemetery. An honor st high’ school, th day in City hc illness. He was St. Patrick’s ch Survivors ar and Mrs. Edw a brother, Edw a sister, Bert} ternal grandn Commiskey, all his maternal .gr Mrs, J. E. Har
AMANDA HAR Services for } Hunt, a residen 40 years, were 1:30 p. m. toda chanan mortus Marion Smith, Avenue Metho was to be in ! at Plainfield. Mrs. Hunt, Saturday in | Meridian st. Survivors ar Mrs. L. H. Ob Calvert and Mi all of Indiana Thomas Wood grandchildren children.
THOMAS E. A.
Services are ¢ today in the ome for Thon former Indiana Rev. Fr. Edwir
None Beiter : Kn
Rush Re Sufferel Rheuma
Thousands of su pains due to rheur peuralgia and neurit their discovery of | found a quick-actis telieves those exha: pains. NORITO is t —really works fast. the joy of relief fror face and sleep in ORITO under thi very first three dos in to your satisfa refunded. Don’t sufi and get NORITO o — .
(OVER 100 SOLD! SI!
PERIO
Lydia E. Pink pound DOES periodie pain functional pe! also relieves ac nervous, crank ture. Taken Compound hel against such d stomachic toni
SHOE
HEEL LIFT
LEATHE HALF SOLES
Please Call Shoes W Promised
for
FASTEST I
: WHILE -Y« McC 17 E. %
HELP fo
Simple Te relieve
Don't confuse s some strange sort usually means d upset and embar by this stubborn hope. Thousand Nelore Preparatio
deaden itching= —speed the, heal
infection. You, way to a clear sk find out! Go te
Trial size of M Economy size at .you're not deligh to work to clear you Double Your Nelore will not s Nelorg Preparati
