Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 March 1948 — Page 33
= | FRIDAY.
24% oes dh de soe adesessNsvssnsswes,
.
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498
colored eyeions in gold to 12,
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1 broadcloth ed skirt and pink. Sizes
...19.95
th attractive 100% Wool zes 10 to 14.
...16.95 n Girl collar easted styles powder blue.
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12 Injured in_Elevator '! NEW YORK, Mar. 26 (UP)— Three of the 12 occupants of an elevator car were injured seriously last night
Watch for the GRAND OPENING of SABLOSKY’S EW
N NARDWARE & APPLIANCE
when a cable!
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _
Steer, Heifer Trade Steady, In Dull Stockyard Session
Steer and heifer trade looked
5G. 8
— &* -
snapped and sent the car plum- steady to 50 cents or more IOWeT| ‘goor 800 pounds .......cssss L . SRANCH 2nd meting eight floors in the New 2t the Indianapolis Stockyards) 800-1000 pounds -..... csruen naohe 2. 38 Pog, About Ap York Daily Mirror Building. ©” * dull session this MOTrNINg.| "600- 800 pounds «i.....essss 27.501 «BJ MASSACHUSETTS AVE. } ci h 8.|Vealers held to steady prices in| 800-1000 pounds’....essssss ad tie 5B i prings at the base of the shaft oderatel ive trad | Medium— { wit ... cushioned the car's fall a moderately active trade. 500- 900 POUDME oc oscesvsnsy. 2050825.50) Lon an gE ee ‘+ | Fat lambs looked steady con-| Common ww 2% 2% L 900000 B0R0cc0ccescsescrssee, sidering improved quality. Hog w (All Weights) a R § » prices moved mostly 50 CeDIS|GooE .....oovuvreeusbinnren | .. ne "ne . higher than yesterday. reg EO Re i 1 19.90 18 " ° — ETA IMI fave yaw wanes an TE 1 16.00 1 1% —Mar. 26— Sells . % 3 : 120.5000 To CHOICE HOGS G3) .g| Sect Hes - 1 DAS: . corres . .50@ 30.59 errr veen . ‘ad od Bounce 3 fats Govd_uah weights) 23.0003¢.00 82 ® | 1%. 200 pounds 23.0033 50 Soium 11 1T III Thaogune Th% ise J + | Bb Ho bounds | J 5ga g|Cuter and common 14.0021.00! i i e | 240- 270 pounds .. . [email protected] CALVES (2%) “ou : | 276- 300 pounds .. © [email protected]|Good ee te : ; EXPERT ® | 300- 330 pounds 19.506 19.75 | Common to medium .. ...... 14.00G:25.50 TCH REPAIRS . [email protected] | Culls (75 pounds up) ........ 10.00G14.00 WA : 165061975) Feeder ane Stocuer Cattle aod Caives SPEEDY ” 500- 500 DOURGS ...eeveseeee SLOOQEI00 ’ * 1400918.50 Good—~ SERVICE : 113081830] 50% 300 0ounts .....oveeee. 2800G2LOS All ES . 11508 18.00| 500-1000 DOUDAS «s.vvsrssenss 105001200] REPAIRED . | 400- 450 pounds .....eeseaes [email protected] 500- 900 pounds ............. 12.00Q18.50 650 POURS «..ceveuer.s 16.50@ 17.50 ® IMedium— Good to choice— e | 250- 550 pounds ces ee [email protected]) 500 pounds down .......... 21.00@24¢.00 o | Slaughter Pigs p— o | 90-120 pounds _...... ~... [email protected]| 500 pounds snd down ...... [email protected]¢ . CATTLE (425) { Calves (Heifer 300d to cnolce— ® lonooe.. Steers | 390 pounds and 4ows ....... 20.50Q13.50 ® | 700- 900 A o..eeenenes 38.00@ 32.00] ¢ eo | 900-1100 pounds ....... el go) S00 pounds ND ant 314002030 DIAMONDS —WATCHES—APPLIANCES »- 11100-1300 pounds. ........ + [email protected]} Lambe ) 19 E. MARKET ST. ® , 700- 800 pounds ............ 25.00G28.00 | Choice closely sorted.......«. 32.00 } ia $ he Circle ® 900-1100 pounds ............ 26.00028.50| Good to CDOIC® ............. [email protected] Between Pennsylvan E t. and the Cire o 1100-1300 pounds ...1l.lllll [email protected] Medium to GOOd ...nrsoest 19.00 Irvington Branch, 5511 E. Washington ® | 700-1100 pounds ..... . SL SOGEISNOICOIOB sus vans ix corns gubeee [email protected] . . | 1100-1300 PONDS © earrinennis 23.00@36 00 the Eves Ribs ~ gi oad Good a 08 © i. isnvnnn O d C01 E0000 00000000000000 0000000 700-1100 pounds ............ [email protected]. Common and medium . 130@ 9.00
YOU are the most important factor in the nation’s petroleum supply situation today—you, the home owner—you, - the car owner «and all you others who use dur products on the farm, in industry, and in providing essential services for the country. WE of the oil industry want to be able to continue to meet your demands. They are demands dictated by your desire to continue enjoying the highest standard of living ever attained by any people . . . in any country... at any time. But your demands for fuel oil and gasoline have increased to the point that not all of them can be satisfied —in spite of the greatest production in all history. Fuel Oil and Gasoline are products of the same refining process, Today, with all of our facilities operating at capacity, to increase the production of one of these products it Is necessary to decrease the production of the other.
Last summer Standard Oil and others publicly forecast the a ing tight ly situation and started allocating gasoline deliveries to their customers. As the fall season arrived, fuel oil supplies also were allocated in our endeavor to meet your demands. Through the winter, customers were asked to accept deliveries which only partially filled their tanks. You were asked to conserve fuel oil in every way possible. _By such voluntary measures, serious difficulties have been averted! The fact that widespread hardship has ligen staved off is due to the industry’s effective emergency measures and to your helpful cooperation. The situation was improved also by the completion of some projects in the industry’s continuing program for bringing supply up to demand. Everything that could be done to increase the supply has been and is being done.
We of the Standard Oil Company have been and are expanding our facilities. We are developing new oil fields, bringing in new wells. We are building new pipelines, new refinery units. Expenditures for such purposes for the past two years have been more than twice our earnings. . Meanwhile, as summer approaches, the demand for gasoline steadily increases. And this year, as now foreseen, _ there will not be as much gasoline as the public wants. Looking ahead to next winter, there's no use in blinking at the facts — fuel oil will continue in short supply.
In this situation, the Standard Oil Company has’ established a far-reaching program that recognizes the year round need of all its customers for gasoline and for fuel oil. The program is this: For obvious reasons the Government's vast fuel requirements for military purposes must and will be met.
There is a limit to the number of home owners we can supply with heating oils. That limit has been reached. There is a limit, also, to the number of industrial firms and institutions, such as churches, hospitals, and schools, which we can supply’ with heating oils. That limit has been reached, too. America must be fed. So our farmer customers must have first call among civilians for the supplies needed to operate their power machinery. However, the farmer also will need to conserve. He should run his equipment % ellicientlflas possible. As a uger of heating oil, he —
'
on't want this, do you “Todkp's desing Sudesh ll vation dinanii
like all other home owner customers — will receive his fair share of available supplies.
Our customers in industry and in transportation, who supply services necessary to the national economy, should have their fair share of available supplies. But these customers should keep their equipment in good sgcrating arder and conserve in every way possible. Our customers, such as schools, colleges, hospitals, public buildings and the like, who contribute so importantly to health and well-being, should have their fair share of available supplies. But these customers, too, should conserve in every way they can.
The balance of our supplies will be distributed equitably
among our agents and dealers to meet the needs of both
home owners and the motoring public. This is Standard Oil’s program for meeting the problem. The situation demands your continued voluntary cooperation. How much more serious conditions are to become depends largely on YOU. Until continuing industry efforts can bring supply up to demand, it’s up to every American ... to save oil . . . to save gasoline!
What You Can Do To Help
GASOLINE 1. Eliminate unnecessary driving. Organize car pools. .
Drive at moderate speeds. Reduction from 60 to 40 M.P.H. will save about 299.
2.
3. Avoid “jack rabbit” starts and prolonged low-gear operation. 4. Keep your car in efficient operating condition. 5. Keep your tires properly inflated. - FUEL OIL Te
Have your tank filled next summer to provide more storage against next winter's demands. .
Check your oil-heating equipment to assure proper operation, economical fuel consumption.
’ If you are building a new home or any other structure-— church, hospital, factory or the like — you should not plan to use oil heat unless you can arrange an assured. source of supply. . If you have out-moded; badly worn, inefficient Si-busning equipment, replace it with equipment new, modern design.
2.
3
i
Make sure your house is ready for winter. Check the insulation. Equip your house with storm windows.
SERVICE
STANDARD OIL COMPANY ©, (INDIANA)
Corp ‘5s *Ex-divideno or ex-intarest
U. S. Statement
(UP)—Govern-
, Mar. 26 and
32,835,324,105 7,163,005,5656 Y 4,769,402,112 6,482,874,004 878 234 Gold Reserve 23,135,293,714
Local Produce "PRICES FOR PLANT DELIVERF Poultry—1948 springers and broile 35¢; horn springers, 24c; cocks an ibs. an ovet, 2c;
i I snd “Leghorns, Ne) poul-
ess than No. 1. tterfat—No. 1, 76c; No. 2, The 40c; grade A (HW ga he ; eo e, 4c; grade 40c; . e B large, 38¢c; grade 33¢; dirties and checks, 30c.
bil ES Truck Grain Mar 25—Indianapolis flour mills and rain elevators are paying $2.26 shel for No. 2 red truck wheat; nd
yellow corn, $2.10 per corn, $2.30; new No. 2 oats, $1.16;
to case, medium, B small,
ug
[REN
i i
|
]
soybeans, 14 per cent moisture, $3.35.
BRITE 7 CU. FT.
[43
EVERY PHI LCO REFRIGERATOR CARRIES A 5-YEAR WARRANTY 1948 PHILCO REFRIGERATORS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
[Keeper Not Sure
Of Hippo's Sex CHICAGO, Mar. 26 (UP)— Brookfield Zoo officials watched a new born hippopotamus splash in a shallow pool today and wondered whethen they should name it after its father or its mother. The new arrival, seventh baby of the =zoo's 3500-pound hippopotamus, was born last night. But keepers will not be able to determine its sex until it emerges
from the tank in which it was born.
FBI Estimates 1,665,110 Serious Crimes in 1947 WASHINGTON, Mar. 26 (UP) —There was one serious crime committed every 18.9 seconds in this country last year, according to the FBI's annual report. The law enforcement agency said crime fell off slightly in 1947
OODLVENT i! ALUMINUM AWNING
© Year Round L1-3377
The FBI estimated that 1,665,-§ © 601 N. Penn. St.
|
With Pump
C1 J)
930 N. MERIDIAN ST.
rd
3 % DELIVERS
Your Own Weekly Terms
THOR “N:® WASHER
® Thor Agitator Ac- ® Thor Electro Rinse; tion washes clean without friction or Sudsss: soap it~ jose WAL. than a minute; removes all scum and soap when washing is done; no spilling, no wet, messy floor.
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® White Porcelain “Enamel Tub; easy to clean; takes big family size washings.
SAME TERMS ON THOR GLADIRONS
«)
AIR
(CL FTE Saturday to 6:30 P. M
/ errant : SR SE
PHILCO
ANGIE
{ f fo
vi
y 2 / /
PHILCO 780
refrigerator that Compartment with covered Crisper,
economical Philco
Y3ONMERIDIAN ST.
At the lowest price level . , . a full 7 cu. #. - © space. Extra equipment includes Frozen Food tray shelf that holds three ice trays, glass
glass Defrost Tray, Automatic Interior Light,
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
fits in minimum kitchen
separate Fast-Freezing ice
Ser Your Own WE EKLY HS
large Vegetable Bin and
Super-Power System. '
OPEN UNTILL P.M
P.M
