? finfl, TfpQnjn oft wprtft yfhlpff iu^i
^ _ _'_ _ . ; | t V I
~ ^ ? ' ...J
PqP -j
--' STbTT^>,000 tima of
^ steel ie 1942. While soma woridpssi
will low their jobs, defense officials
? they <*y find employ
"fPI
Semtor of ^Iste^iSf
has served notice that when the priee
s?fag bill readies the Senate, he trill
\ demand that any ceiling on Jam
products be tied directly fo*tite price
;* index on wages and labor, and that
both, of these be figyfMo and geareed!
to the coat of living."
ONE OUT OF BIGHT
. Leon Henderson* Price Adnunistza-1
tor,? says that the nation is producing I
forty-five per cent more than In 1929,
but that only one hour out ?f every
. eight is given to defense. Hitler, he
?- says, is using five out of every right
hours for military purposes ? . i I
. ... NATIONAL INCOME
The national inhume ffcr 1941 is
estimated at ninety-three or ninety
KiUvm dollars, by Leon Henderson,
Price AdmuBBtndnf, who aays that
this compares with fJSftOO,000,000 in
1949 and $70,000,009,000 in 1989. ^ I
. " STEEL
The production-of steel will be ex- I
ponded by 10,000,000 tone a year at
a cost of $1,000,000,000, under a re
cent bill increasing the borrowing
and lending power of the KFCX f v I
RUBBER r I
The Rubber Reserve Company, an
organisation set up by the Govern
ment to aecuxe adequate rubber sup
plies for the nation's defense effort,
had 166?14 tons on hand on October
11. 135,323 tons afloat and 145,664
tons awaiting shipment in foreign I
porta. 1
?ifFICJAMT
Transportation facilities will be
taxed in their utmost during the
Christmas holidays and it is expected
. * that soldiers on furfangh will have
a preferred status in securing trans'
portation. With 1,600,000 in
Army camps there wiB be a mans
exodus to get home for tha holidays.
' ^IsPriwmW '' as
tv* ?-i.- j> j - ^ , mmmV
i/ttDQiMMni tot aeiense porpo#
000,000?eighteen. per cent -higher
OCJT " 2TT^' I
their resources. (
A. s"cescil2T "* fUrwf
come" for the nation fe reported by
tfe Commerce Department, which*
raH ^^ ^ |
stiroz^t &x*2xis I x I
Bcwntry This .dktt|(6 wss brou^iit j i
4Y7\[TS^ iajwl- tt'OjJ . lT\|Y'f>OfjftT*T7 1
i- I
1Vffiiihai 'tfc i If , ..I ttfck #.A . '? nf ,' J11
.v^SMk'* ?QT ?*; -I
^, |fct jj^.JX^j-. T> nj Lj.^m 1 ___ .1 ?
I
yflMflhl- ? ? v I
" ? ? % i <? ? -iJ
''- Ji*r %? '?? -?* "r I '? ,. '? ^ I I
T)PT) ' lAKnTTf' all Wfifi laff |
^TLlf^t tK#( "^'11. j
Tftts V76T6 for thd bill and onl^ dtrht
wv*v ***v
VT> wwtA?/] Ift'^i?|t|A?}t (iy?i .,w^N * ' - ?"*
: ??_y*^ .'^ "'' ?*'<?**? " ? " ? "*' T:" > *.3Hr-? -
~'"Tt ItMB INI M?al! J"
%_' . ' I.'.? ' t , ? . .? ? . ? m ' I I
"yV" 4 **1%.T*^ fuut "A jfcsv ^7*
long way toward decreaai^
bills this winter, Indications are that J
more com silage was pot up ^
in its latest release, estimates the
' I
? . i i p 4 Pnrrtli'no Jp-n nliJli'll' 1
PMd^w
for lunch *t the Walrttalmrg
hinwi Doris Blalock, Iris Dsvis and
toririj^h hon?tai school dis
*^5tfc? Doris B^and tta scmor
S^rirS
s?m^xir'-s^wo^
t tifaftt which has flnabtod j(ts older
j Perim^^'9^7 It Maally
k- yflTI\TpQ O pp|7ji PTlfMl '"fftfr n l7?"."*"i -7 1*pHpf
[ V' ?? - ^ : '?.. {Jm't irj iji. '? ?*"--- ."?"*-> VCirv-^.' iJ-iL ?. -w ' - ?, -
,v TT|i-f niiV *^11 f HMt '*?WfkijhfJi?c"'^:jLciktiij8^:'' ^1* K^~'
:;.'-( . -. -i . . ' ? ' r
MBBBr7r?i9 -'? i MMHOHBHUI
^ 0 ^^ ^
?wwnw?p?r r ?- ?.,.. ??..??? r.?.v.r,r- -. .v r_*it*ii^!r^rii-;s^m^jsj^rs^v - ' - r-'.V- -??