Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 March 1952 — Page 24
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PAGE 214 _.:
——————
Steel Chiefs
By United Press | WASHINGTON, Mar. dustry members of the Wage Stabilization Board are willing to approve a 13.7-cent hourly package to cover. pay increases and fringe benefits forthe C10 United Steelworkers, it was disclosed last
19—In- chants in: the nation's
threatened Steelworkers ha sion tinge to their
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__" THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WEDNESDAY, MAR. 19, 1952
Mar,’ 19--Mer-steel mill towns reported yesterday that the strike of (LO United
‘ PIITSBURGH,
d In Pay Dispute As Strike Deadline Nears
Asserts South Asia Seeking
night. oe Informants sald industry
real-
By
I TUNED IN on a top pu the lowdown. Here it is, straight. Steel is over the hump. Paper, except brown "hags and shipping paper, 18 a drug on the market. Plenty of paperboard. Paper is so plentiful that-papér collectors are trying to discourage schools, Scouts and churches from bringing the stuff In. » ~ . | LUMBER is in good supply, nut keep an eye out against “green stuff.” Get it from a reliable source. Oil looked bad for a while, but| with the refinery strike tapered! off, it's all right now. Fats and oils are piling up. Soap people are worried. Stearic acid is the lowest since 19850. { nN» |
WIPE OUT the defense effort,
There’s Plenty, .:
hasis for gettling
y mand.for an 18, Ore 5 Y plus - fringe benefits
ost as much again, nationwide
(
Harold Hartley
rchasing agent. He gave me
Dwight Peterson, rugged-prin-
cipled head of City Securities » n . ON THE SAME page ‘is the eye-to-the-future realtor,” Paul
McCord, president of the Indlanapolls Redevelopment Commission, and his slum-leveling helper, Earle Friend, Let your eye travel up the page and you'll meet Engineer Harvey Cassady, Mayor Alex Clark and William Shannon of the Flood Control Board, n o ~ THOSE ARE the pictures, Now to the piece, a jim-dandy about] Indiana thumbing its political nose at federal welfare money. It's a story, titled “They Don't
or let it lag a littl more, and want Uncle's Money,” and how we'll be swimming in’ things 10 Hooslers figured federal ald cost
buy, but not the money with which to buy them.
more than it was worth,
ing experts. And they're not hand in Uncle Bam's pocket. wrong. | Recommend, for your self-re-| Never. 80 be guided. [spect. |
The Perfect Team I LOOK at men, listen to them, and wonder why some shoot like a meteor across the sky, and others stand still, I think I can tell when I am in the presence of a man who is on his way, long before he gets there. They throw out a beam of energy. It is In the face and the “yolce. It is a kind of confidence. They are sure-footed but never timid. They are like a big engine going somewhere, and on schedule. All . of this power lives in the magnetic presence of kindness. - ” . I'LL LIFT the curtain now. I'm talking about George Stark, prosident of Stark and Wetzel, and his industrious name-partner, Erwin Wetzel, vice president and treasurer. And Frank Stark, * (eorge’s brother, the man who
Power's Push-up THIS TOWN is hitting the juice hard. I Since the late Thirties, it has been growing industrially, like the! fuzzy-chinned adolescent with his pants crawling away from his shoetops, and his voice skidding between bass and soprano. If you want to put your finger on how fast smokestacks and payrolls have been rising, trace the upcurve of electric ‘power. nn ” .
LAST YEAR the Indianapolis Power & Light Co. took In $31,165,158. Out of this it netted about $5 million, That's good management. But what I like about the light company is its willingless to plow back money, and go on the hook for borrowed millions, to build a kind of “power security” for the town, It is spending big dough ($54 million between 1951-54) so {it
insures the quality of beef, the guardian of the quality of the raw| product. | That's the team. It's young. George is only 42. Erwin Is 54, and Frank is 46, all men in their |
prime who have arrived. But how down and try to count the work
did they do it? : n » . SOME have and others do not is “drive,” the insistent ressure to do a job better. To Press a mer is a precious asset, worth far more than a bank] balance. So they never compromise with perfection. But there's something else they know, important. They know it is easier to con-| centrate on one item than to try to sell two .dozen., It pinpoints consumer attention. ; ¢ . » . | STARK AND WETZEL knew everyone loves welners. So they set out with a skinless weiner, promoted it, and hit the top in sales. Another product which shot the! sales curve off the sheet was Duchess steaks, pure ground beet | in frozen patties, made exactly to consumer liking, no bones, all| meat, with just the right richness. | Add to this the advertising| genius of the Jim Baker Advertising Agency, plus the whole family of loyal and high-morale 8-W)
|
employees, and you've got a winning team. \ 8 8 =» : LOOK AT EACH man, through the expansions from $2300 in bor-| rowed money back in 1936, to a| growing $30 million business, and you see the team grooves together, always with its eyes and energy on you, the consumer. | Stark & Wetzel is one of the biggest success stories of our time, written in the ink of effort in a period when businesses have
(Is being fed millions to nourish
will never have to give a redfaced “no” to wage-producing plants which want to drop anchor| here. * |
» " . JUST FOR FUN, sometime, sit
electricity does for you. When you finish, look at your bill, You will be surprised at how much you get done for so little, IPL is not a philanthropy. It is a private business run for profit. But it is not being milked by management or stockholders; it
expansion.
» ” w THAT MEANS (it is getting ready to take care of you 10 or 20 years from now. And that is more than most of us are doing for ourselves.
More Work, Less Pay MEN WHO WORK late and hard to try to make a dollar are asking, “Why?” For they have discovered that a profit is without honor in the tax office. : I have the “cash register tape of the J. D. Adams Manufactur- | ing Co. It tells how much the! company took in last year.
"
More business ought to mean
better earnings. But actually J. D. To Speak Here Adams’ profit dropped $304,169,
or 32 per cent. Added business means more work for the people who have to
~ n ” SO THE venerable and respected J. D. Adams Co., conservtive, and steady as the trade winds, actually had its “company
| crease, ivacations.
un = or IT SOLD $16,297,059 worth of | SS ———————————————- road graders and other heavy * | equipment, up nearly $4 million. Detroit Ad Man
answer to the stockholders) through the board of directors. |
however, that the figure Is 00 low to serve as a practical the. union's decent wage hike that would
These sources did not represent :
the 13.7 figure as industry's final stand, They Indicated the man-
agement representatives could be expected to raise the figure some-
what. provided union representa- closing down today by banking
tives on the board make conces- blast will cost $2-million the company indicate
ijlons of their own.
Board to Vole Today
Disclosure of the figure came as Pittsburgh, begin will Glant U. 8.
Chairman Nathan FP. Feinsinger announced that the board start voting on the proposals late today just hours before the union policy committee meets to decide whether to postpone its strike deadline trom Sunday midnight to April 8.
The board's management dele- :
gation was sald to feel that 13.7 cents would be a “fair and equitable” amount for the steel industry to pay the powerful union. The industry people were sald to be thinking in terms of al
(9-cent cost of living boost plus
4 cents in fringes including 4 cents an hour for six paid holi-| days a year and seven-tenths of 1 cent for improving vacation
| Then it tells what our town 18 pay. The union, which has asked This comes straight from buy-|doing for itself without putting a eight holidays, has never received| pq ‘manager of a loan office] , Vealers were fairly active and —— metic a = pay for the holidays not worked.|in the mill-studded Monongahela St62dY With yesterday's averages. Local Stocks and Bonds
Other Figures Cited Other figures—amier discussion | which are more likely to approxi-| mate the board's final recom-
Imendation—are a 22%-cent and|gyerdue debts.
a 26-cent package. | Both of these—and their sources, was not known—would provide for 15 cents across the board and 7% cents for fringes. The differences of 3'53 cents represents the amount sought by the union to increase the spread between job rates. The steelworkers’ 1815-cent’ demand includes both elements. Secretary of Commerce Charles Sawyer said a prolonged steel strike would be “disastrous” to the mobilization program and might upset government plans to relax controls on steel later this year. Some steel plants, meanwhile, gambled that the CIO United Steel Workers would heed a new government plea to postpone their threatened walkout for the fourth time.
Huge Tonnage at Stake
At stake is some one million tons of steel which would be lost even in a two or three day shutdown. Mr. Feinsinger declined to estimate how long the board will need to draw up a package recommendation to settle the dispute. But he all but promised that the board will stay in session until it agrees to settlement recommendations. Steelworkers President Philip Murray, who also is president of the CIO, refused to give the industry any hint on whether the union will yield to Mr. Feinsinger's plea to postpone the strike deadline. Industry sources predicted that the board would make specific proposals to settle all the money issues and some noneconomic proposals. But they also forecast that it would make no proposal on the ‘union's demand for a union shop and a guaranteed annual wage. The union has demanded an average of 18'3 cent wage inwith paid holidays and
tising executive of 28 years experience, will speak at the Indianapolis Advertising Club luncheon tomorrow noon in the Warren Hotel. Mr. Little, now [ES de executive vice president of Camell-Ewald
the
This same uncertainty prompted the nation’s- steel milis to start American military aircraft propreparations for banking thei duetion 13 now running about “on furnaces. in anticipation of the schedule” at 600 to 700 planes a steeiworkers walkout month, compared ‘with Russia’s
. ‘sald,
Henry G. Little, Detroit adver-
} & U. S. Pla | « Do ne given a depre ’ Uncertainty over the -~oft-post : tnt mrs vs nia ns nee more, B@MINA RUSS for more than three months now businessmen said By United Press
meen Quiput Lags the milis to hold onto their money WASHINGTON, Mar. 19
morithly output of about 1000 planes, it was disclosed yesterday.! It is this zap that has prompted | said it complaints In Congress that U. 8.! of warplane production has tailed] ; dismally.” a: Available figures would seem to that the. situation 1s neither not as had as some Con-|
at BRressmen have painted it nor as! y/ }
et for midnight Sunday. Begin ( losing Down
Bethlehem Steel Corp. will begin the five-day task shut-down
furnaces. The
Steel, would rosy as some military and industoday. try spokesmen maintain. ~ mapping ~*~ When industry circles speak of "heing “on schedule” they are reHowever, tne merchants who ferring to production goals that sell to the steelworkers already have been revised sharply Sowe |
Jones & Laughlin also said . it cooling furnaces Htevl was
shutdown plans.
have been hit nard——even baker- Ward from the original goals of jes. A doughnut maker in the a few months ago. steel center of Homestead, Pa, _———— —— said his business has been bad for
Hog Prices Rise At Yards Here
Light and medium weight bar-| rows and gilts brought 25-50! cents more than yesterday's aver-' ages in active trading at the Indlanapolis Stockyards toddy. Choice 170-240 pound hogs sold at $16.50-17.25. Choice hogs 220 pounds down went at $17.50. Hogs weighing 240-270 pounds! averaged $16-16.75. !
weeks, A strike would be the last straw, he sald. He considered going after picket line and soup kitchen business if a walkout occurred. Hard hit were establishments selling on the installment plan and finance companies. Under the continuous threat of a loss of their pay envelopes, steelworkers have made no new commitments.
Loan Business Off
ducer Anthony Ba
° Choice and prime vealers brought| River Valley, reported his business | | Peo “x : " | $36-38; commercial and good, STOUKS
off 25 per cent. Repayments, how- $29.35 “d-90). | American’ Loan 5% ever, have been good, he said, be-| “0. 6500: opened fairly active: 25 to | American States :
cause the workers don’t want to mostly 50 cents higher. on. barrows and |,American States pfd go into a payless period with gilts; ‘later less active, part of advance | A¥rshire Collieries com
lost: early choice 170-240 pounds $16.50 | Ko& ANS Sid v2
117.25; few hundred choice Nos. one and| two 180-220 pounds 31730; later trade Dit RR & Stk Yds pid town furniture sales-|:172s down: choice 240-210 pounds 'S)o; | Bobba- Merril Soy 4% 16.75; 270-335 pounds $15.25-16.25; 120-160 |Gentral Soya © . pounds $14-15; sows about steady. choice Chamber o :
A steel man said that it might have been
‘3d Force’
ra Stk Yds com
Commerce com .. 21% 915
u
STAR OF THE FAMILY—Little Francesca Ann Bartley, 3 months old, poses for her first picture under the admiring eyes of her mother and 4-year-old sister, Melanie Jane. Mommy in this case is actress Deborah Kerr and daddy is Hollywood film pro-
rtley.
{ | By United ‘Press | NEW YORK, Mar. 19—Many leaders throughout South Asia hate both the C&fimunists and Chiang Kai-shek and are. seeking a, “third force” to liberate the Chinese mainland, Publisher
Gardner Cowles said last night, Mr. Cowles, president and editor of Look and Quick mag~ azines, spoke at a meeting of the Economic Club of New York. He discussed at length a recent visit to Japan, Korea, Formosa, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Calcutta and Manila. Other speakers were Maj. Gen, |George H. Olmsted, director of the Department of Defense's Office of Military Assistance, and [(feorge V. Allen, U. 8S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia. | Gen. Olmsted said that by this summer, Western European naltions will have doubled their de'fense expenditures since 1949. In Europe today, he said, there are more meh under arms than there were in the year before World War 11. | Cites Aid to Tito
Gen, Allen said that the U. 8, in trying to “keep Tito afloat” with financial aid to Yugoslavia, is seeking to help the non-Com-inform world develop a defense system against Soviet or Sovietinspired aggression. i: “Many leading * Chinese in {Hong Kong and the Philippines,
nited Press Teieohnto
Ross Gear & Tool
Sia Asked Schwitzer-Cummins 5% pfd ".. 17
jand generally throughout South |Asia, hate the Communists and Chiang Kai-shek equally, and are
Som x 48 * seeking a Chinese ‘third force,”
reernas So Ind G & E com avevs 1M y ." resents 3 Fond GQ & B con ots ae 3 Mr. Cowles said. But no leader 2M _., Stokely-Van Camp com. ....... 187% 15'4 of such a ‘third force’.is yet in vhennr 172 17% Stokely-Van Camp pid ....... 17! 177% sight.” ceva 101 104 Tanner &. Co 5'%2% pfd ......100 Ay teens 34 Terre Haute Malleable ........ 13 14 Sl, . g s soils 20 a 2's % . eusnes nite elephone 5% pfd ..... 97 ‘ fr [nied Toessone sn std 4 Belgians Wrangle
38'2 ~ eExtra dividend 80
Over King's Glasses
better if the strike had started 300-500 pounds around $13.75-15; few Circle Theater com . ae Allen & Steen Jan. 1 as originally scheduled. |''&3 fizens Ind Tw om B19 i 87 Lf as 88 "LL. um oy : «| Cattle 400: salves 200: steers and heifers | + t & 5 | American Loan @Yas 55 .. sensi eo . Each time there 18 a postpone- | active. strong to 50 cents higher in forced CA in 5 ta ope B® | American Securiies se « .-..| BRUSSELS, Belgium, Mar. 19 i S 0 ie 7 - fy I) esse $ ment buyers want to hold off|iight steers $34. a i ts Hn IRE Ti are ro «© Ww Bastian Moley §s 61 .... LLL wrangle by .coure om. 2100 | Batesville Tele Co 4148 . «++. |cials over whether King Badouin
’ | scattered good to choice light - until they find out how it's gotng| 35* CC IO. (6 Er thant Ita Mr Mg
he sald. “Even steers held about $31; short load good |Easte
to come out” sen jand choice under 700 pounds heifers $32: Equitable
strike on Jan. 1 would have been $21.23 50; $0 romnlereint to $25; canners | Pamlly Finance com and cutters -21.50: small supply v | Fam over by now and people would be fairly “active, steady: eholce and prime HAYS Corp
ad ecurit) mm’. though it would have been bad, a cows fairly active steady; utility mostly | Equitable Securities ota
$5 .y Indplse Paint & C
tf Com Bldg 4'4as 61
94 :**'| Equitable Securities 5s 60 917 :' Hamilton Mfg Co 5s 65
oe ***'| Indpls Public Loan 5s 64
{should be shown with or without
-99 .... first issue of Belgian stamps bear-
clor Ss 64 .. 30. ,... ling ‘his picture.
$36-38: t 38. c | Hamilton g Co com 30 : | *Indpls Railways 58 97 ....... 60% 64°! buying again. This way no one }J8-3%: top $38. commercial and “good HERIOT. "Clase Rpt BEET TR eT alld in A One group maintains that the will do anything. | “Bulls steady; utility and commercial Home T & T 8% ofd ........ 80 Ind Asso Tel3s75 . ....ece.. 91 .., young monarch should appear > $24-27.50. | Hook Drug Go COM .....e 17% 19 (Kuhner Packing 4s 50 ....... 99% ....'weaprine the § tacl oSheen 800: fat lambs active, mostly | ind Jo, at ofd .. iA 259, Langsenkamp 58 See a se rel 1 ing the spectacles since he is y 50 cents higher. good to choic tive a er com . y 5% Paper Arts Co 5s Iassesues .... always 8 Steamfitter Dives | wooled lambs $25-36 30; lity and good ind Mich Ei dV pid .'.lLL00 85 ‘ 99 Sprague Device bs 80 ....... 95 always seen in public with them . {mainly S025: load good and choice! Ind Telephone 43 bf co’ 38 Traction Terminal 58 57 ...... 90 9315 ON. The other says the heavy, 5 2 : ‘xe To Death in Denver Er loune tnten® and prime. 100 pound Lodnls Pav Ut com... 1 3.38 pomerimimed glasses wevla sll 3 s N ‘| *Indpls Pow Gham b a DENVER, Colo, Mar. 10 (UP) sues "hource” mommalis stead” +230" indlanavois fatlwads com’. 4 4 Produce ee. i : a - stpeeaentsteml ndianapolis Water com...... 3 { § n - man plngned to his death on the Poland PA Gt nly nified way i. an pingned to his death on the p * | “Indianapolis Water 5% pf ... . ..| Eggs—FOB Cincinnati, cases included on . . - oian Quits IPO {Jefferson National Life com .. 11'a 13 'graded eggs: Consumer grades, U. 8. A| While the w 1 ti d marble stairs in the rounda of the |Kingan & Co com Code en fo 38-43c ¢ 36-4015¢: | ; yangie sontinted ? 4 large white 38-42c: brown mix 36-40'ac; Belgians used stamps bearing the
!Kingan & Co pfd
U. 8 mediun white 34-38'ac:
brown mix
Colorado capitol yesterday { PARIS, M J a y. { 8, Mar. 19 (UP)—The In- Lincoln Nat Life ... 125 | 34-36! ‘holesal de, com'l, graded The man, identified as Benton trenational Police Organization Lyogh sTOiporation .. Ta 14%, 40 per cent. extra “large white 35-37c: Hien wo 2 ? ing Leoheld 11, Ye Field tarshall of St. Joseph, a announced today the resignation Marion bertineion com 330 53 brown mix ie current “receipts, cases A cated nine months ago. steamfitter at the Rocky Moun-'of Poland, its last member east|Nail tomes com .. ba. 8% Market steady at. unchanged prices: \ ’ : Natl Homes com .,.... 20! 72 | A "1 1 * tain Arsenal near Denver, of the Iron Curtain. Poland gave Natl Homes ofa - -.... 00’ 108 DD ekens® Gommercially Krown. fevers Local Truck Grain Prices crashed to his death from a third no reason. N ng dy Ag] pid . a" 96's 15-30. ey i1i8c, hess, lent Truck wheat, $2.37 | . 0 / =s0¢c; -19¢. : | Truck wheat, " floor bronze railing on the marble] ————r Laan Do IR BE ERR RR stairs near Gov, Dan Thornton's ! LIS CLEARING HOUSE progress Laundry com ...... 32% mand for heavier weights : New No. 2 white corn. $1.78. office. i Clearings CL. %11.082.000 Pub Serv of Ind com ....... 30% 31% Butter—Creamery, 90 score. 80c; prem- New No.3 yellow corn, $1.68. Debits ...... $41,110,000 Pub Serv of Ina 3% of 83 45. um butterfat 67c. regular 62c » Soybeans, $2.78. egular 62 Soyoesns § ena
It Makes Your Dollars
| this spectacles held up today the
wage” cut 32 per cent, and stillf = had to do 30 per cént more work.| How many individuals would]
actually been discouraged by-con-trols. . No man. will ever fashion a|
Co., started with Lord & Thomas
control capable of holding back!stand for
the energiés unlimited of George
that, without marching on Washington to demand a
Stark, a recognized spokesman in the industry, Erwin Wetzel, quiet, but what a mind, and Frank Stark, the man who safeguards the product. But -what all three know best, is you, and meat as you like fit.
State of Our Town
MILLIONS of people met Bill Book today. They came across him in the upper left hand corner of Page 30, in the Saturday Evening Post. But the vice president of the Chamber of Commerce wasn’t the only Mmiliar face they came across.
fairer shake?
Why Diesels? 0 FOR SOME TIME I have been looking for someone who could explain quickly the railroad shift to diesels. Then along came Paul Johnston, president of the who put it in a nutshell. He said without diesel power most railroads would have to have much higher rates or would face (1) bankruptcy, (2) government subsidies, or (3) be “nationalized.” n o ” HERE'S HOW the diesel has saved the railroads: A diesel engine with one tank
Ww, Erie
in Los Angeles | in 1919. He was active later In Dayton, O., and Cincinnati, and in 1941 was asasociated with the advertising department of Nash-Kelvinator. Since 1944 he has handled Chev-
Mr. Little
—g~HE Buick pictured here can match price tags with a lot of cars smaller in size and horsepower and win.
rolet’ advertising for Cambell- . . Ewald. But that only gives you a hint as to what SShgiot ———— a whale of a buy it is. 2doot S-pasie ? New Mexico Warned ; . ‘ : , SrA Sedan To Waich for Floods * Like costlier Buicks, it has the wide- (llustrated)
SANTA FE, N. M, Mar. 19 (UP)-—New Mexico residents living along the Rio Grande River were warned today that a record high snowfall in the mountains
On the very next page is big- of oil can do as much work as a may cause a major flood in the
time realtor George Kuhn,
Lilly & Cos C. J. Lynn, and of coal.
PARTLY CLOUDY AND CLOUDY AREAS
FY ee Hr mow & nee ays
threat could put Albuquerque, the state's largest city, under 20 feet of water.
“If we should get . . . warm
a Spring rain and a few assisting
cloudbursts, our great flood is here,” Mr. Harrington wrote in the Engineering News-Record, a |weekly McGraw-Hill publication.
ho THINKING OF
1 |
| PHONE: MArket 3501 THOMSON & MSKINNON
i BROKERS IN SECURITIES & COMMODITIES “ § EAST MARKET STREET
| BUYING STOCKS?
open view of a one-piece windshield. Optional equipment, aCCesy Prices may vary slightly In adio All prices subject 19
ining
Like costlier Buicks, it has the gleam.
10CAL DELIVERED P. FOR THE NEW 1952 BUICK SPECIAL
2928"
orles, slate «on
RICE
4 local toxes, if any, edditionol.
communities due to shipping charges. change without nofice.
ing distinction of sweepspear styling.
Like costlier Buicks, it has smart new features including
»
a husky -X-braced
side-roll stabilizers,
Hi-Poised engine mountings, Permi-
Eli steam locomotive with 12 cars area. § d a : | The warning came from E. R. fabrics and c¢ i frame, end-sway and Harrington, head of the Albu- 2 d door nm. : y querque High School science de- He *a ee ace Like all other Buicks, it has the extra
safety of new, long-lasting Wide-Band
brakes. every wheel.
Firm steering and soft coil springs for
And like all other Buicks, it has a power-
“Like all other Buicks, it has the surefooted, road-hugging, even-keeled. steadiness of the Million Dollar Ride—
0 ; : wallop, extra mileag a combination of 15 major engineering
of gasoline.
i MONARCH BUICK CO., INC.
1040 N. Meridian Street—PL aza 3341
packed Fireball 8 Engine — a high-com-pression valve-in-head that gets extra
e from every gallon
Ae
Feel Important too
So we think that you'll feel mighty important bossing around this smart. stepping smoothie.
And when you check the price we're asking against the field—we think your dollars are going to feel mighty impor. tant in buying power too.
Hadn't you better look into this soon?
Equipment, accessories, trim and mod je ' 3 els are subject without notice, eet 10 dnon
Sure true for 52
TPR automobiles are built
BUICK
will build them
COMMUNITY BUICK, INC.
57 W. 38th Street—TA Ibot 2424
WEL E Local
JOHN PA Standard Av Services 2 p. residence. Bul " MRS. PEI VIOLA) AND Carrollton An
“tomorrow at |
Church. Crem Buchanan Mo u A. EBER | Adams St, | Central “Railr ices 1:30 p. m.
W. Moore Pe in Washingto " CARL S. B
E. 46th St. | for the Indus tute of Chics service statio 8t. and Colle mer supervis gion of Gen Services. 11 Flanner & E Burial in Cro » MISS ELI 63, of 1226 C 2:30 p. m. « Bros. East Si New Crown. 2 FRANK JA 49, of 337 8S. of the Sue-} 4321 W, Was 2 p. m. tomo Askin Mortus ley Cemetery, ” JOHN H. ' Indianapolis 1 in Orlando, F former Talge in 1904. Serv
. at Aaron-Rul
Burial in Cro n MRS. ROSF Fla. Former Il side services Crown Hill Ci » GEORGE ) of Lizton, In Services 2 p. ! ton Methodist K. of P, Ceme Ed MRS. LYDI cinnati, O. F resident. Ser row at Flanne tuary. Burial
= MRS. WIL] MAY) OTTO,
ford St. Serv at Flanner & ary. Burial ir
Named Ft
FT. BENN (UP) — Maj. Young, now Infantry Divi assume comm in June.
VENETIAN CLEANING
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SPEC To All Merc! al Clothing, Dry C Variety, Gift Candy, mium Houses, chandise on counter, in the ends, goods you Get it togetherice and cash o
INLAND Oalls Made A 505 W. WA!
Come in { screen te dith’s 21’ pictures— iest ever faced ma
