Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 August 1938 — Page 12

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Text of Willis’ Sp

-t

The text of the address by ‘Raymond Willis, Republican senatorial nominee, at the

Capehart Farm rally Satur-|

day at Washington follows:

This meeting here today, with all of its tents, its bunting and its music, is—in one sense—a stockholders’ meeting. You—all of you, as well as all of the other citizens of this nation—are the stockholders in a great corporation—the United States of America! Insofar as you are concerned, it is the greatest, the most important corporation in the world. It has, through its charter, the Constitution, guaranteed to pay you—all of you—certain dividends. Unless it is successful, unless it is operated as a business should be operated, you will receive " no dividends. What are those dividends? Well, folks, I am a humble man. I have lived in a small city all of my life. I don’t suppose that I can enumerate gli of those dividends for you. There are other men here— more metropolitan than I, citizens of the world, in fact—I don't think that they can enumerate all of those dividends, either. But here are some of those dividénds—dividends to which you, as stockholders in this enterprise, are entitled: Your daily bread—which includes a little better type of bread than the people of other nations are accustomed to receive. The American standard of living— which is a little better standard of living than the most of the people of this world are accustomed to re-

ceive, : The right to worship God in your own way—which isn’t permitted to all of the other people of the world. The right to protection and peace —which certainly isn’t part of the lives of all of the other people of the world. The right to independence of thought—politically and otherwise, which certainly is not permitted to the people of most other nations. The right to possess property and to have that property guarded against confiscation by outlaws of any sort. All of these things have been summarized in one brief phrase: “The right to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Now, remember that I said that all of you—and all of the people of this nation—are the stockholders in this corporation. They are entitled to these dividends.

MANAGEMENT FAILED’

If the management of the corporation is successful, all persons are entitled to expect them. Yet I ¥enture to say that not one of you within the sound of my voice—not one—enjoys all of the dividends to which he is entitled. For instance, does each one of you have all of the bread he and his family need? Does each one of you enjoy what has come to be known as the American standard of living? Does each one of you enjoy peace: and security? Does each one of you enjoy independence of thought and action? Does each one of you enjoy the possession of property without danger of confiscation through unjust taxes or unfair conditions? Oh, I know that each one of you enjoys one or more of these things. But does each one of you possess all of them? The opportunity to possess them is pledged to you, you know, under the corporation charter—the Constitution. And the present management promised you that it would fulfill that charter. It promised you all of these things —more abundantly than ever before. The “more abundant . life,” they called it. Yet today, six years after the management made its promises, who among you can truthfully say that the promises have been fulfilled and that his or her mind is at peace? I know your answer. It is my answer, too! The answer is “not one!” od Very well, then! The management of your corporation has failed! If you operate a farm, and if your hired man fails to function, what do you do? If you operate a restaurant and one of your waitresses fails to serve the customer, what do you do? You fire the unworthy employee, do yon not? All right. You and I—all of the people of this country—are the employers of the executives who run this country. We know that they have failed to perform in accordance with their promises. I leave the conclusion to you.

CLAIMS EVILS REMAIN

The comparison that I am making is obvious. We are facing exactly that condition in Washington today. Six years ago we hired a manager who promised to do certain things. Those promises never have been kept. He chats beautfiully around the fireside in the evening —but the country is still ill! And now he says that he is not to blame. He wants to change the system. He is not only trying to persuade you to change the system. He is trying to MAKE you change the system. The hired man is becoming the boss. hs ’'s+a dangerous system in anybusiness.

Six years ago, President Roosevelt charged that the evils in this country were the result of mismanagement. Today the same evils exist— tremendously magnified! Now he says that they are not the fault of mismanagement. The entire system was wrong, he says. He says this corporation of which I have been speaking is a failure. He wants it scrapped. He wants it thrown into receivership—and he wants to be the receiver. Even a receiver is supposed to be subject to court orders. He doesn’t even want the courts to supervise the operation of the receivership. I am one of the stockholders. I object to that.

Folks, there is one principle to which I firmly adhere—namely, I oppose any action, direct or indirect, that would curtail the freedom, independence or prestige of the Supreme Court of this land.

Because of my adherence to that principle, I have always opposed and will always oppose hereafter, any individual or any group of individuals committed to a course of action that is calculated fo impair the balance of governmental powers and to place in jeopardy basic American rights. I will never be a party to any plan that would place the control of the judiciary into the hands of the executive or legislative branch of our Government. No man, no matter how sincere he may be, can convince me that all of

the powers of Government are safe in his hands alone!

QUOTES FARMER

Here is something that I wish to read to you. I wish particularly to call the attention of the farmers in this audience to this statement because it was written by a farmer. This farmer was so far-sighted, so keen of perception, that although these words were spoken almost a century and a half ago, they sound as though they might have been spoken today—so closely do they apply to our present situation. I quote: > “Towards the preservation of your government and the preservation of your present happy state, it is requisite, not only that you steadily discountenance irregular oppositions to its acknowledged authority but also that you resist with care the spirit of innovation upon its principles,” however specious the pretexts. One method of assault may be to effect, in the forms of the Constitution, alterations which will impair the energy of the system, and thus to undermine what cannot be directly overthrown. . . . The disorders and miseries which result gradually incline the minds of men to seek security and repose in the absolute powers of an individual; and sooner or later the chief of some prevailing faction, more able or more fortunate than his competitors, turns his disposition to the purposes of his own elevation on the ruins of public liberty.” Ladies and gentlemen, that man whom I quoted—that farmer—was the first president of the United States who ever refused a third term in the White House—George Washington! “And 1 say this to you: As long as the American people remain a free people, no man, I care not who he is, will ever be elected President of this country for a third term— and that goes for Franklin Delano Roosevelt.” ;

RECALLS ‘PURGE

In no less a manner am I jealous of the rights, functions and privileges of the legislative branch of the Government of the United States. The Congress of the United States was created that the people might have a voice in government, and. the executive is expected to suggest—not to command. Yet we witness a “purge” today—an attack upon Senators and Congressmen all up and down the land. Why? For one reason only. They have declined to obey the will of one man. Congress and the Senate are costly bodies to maintain. I believe that we could hire Charlie McCarthy and Skinny Dugan, those interesting echoes of Edgar Bergen, far more cheaply than we can pay 96 U. S. Senators and hundreds of Congressmen. No matter how amusing the antics of these ventriloquist’s dummies are, I do.not believe the people of this nation want echoes in the Senate and Congress any more than I believe that the people want men in either House of Congress who know of evils and dishonesty in Government and who fail to expose the perpetrators. I spoke a moment ago of hired men who seek to become bosses— and, in almost the same breath I mentioned them together in that manner. If there is any one class of people who have had experience with this hired man in Washington who is trying to run the farm, it is the farmers of this Middle West of ours—the Middle West with its broad plains and rich farm lands— the Bread Basket of the“mation. Casually the other day I picked up a magazine. Now, when I pick up a newspaper or a magazine, it is a natural thing for me to turn to market prices. At any rate, I read this paragraph: “Aug. 11, after sinking steadily for more than a month, the cash price of corn—the country’s most valuable ‘crop—hit 51 cents a bush8 i icago, lowest price since

HITS NEW DEAL STATISTICS

I pulled a little card out of my pocket—a little white card which said that corn imports into the United States had increased from 347,000 bushels in 1932—the last year of the last Republican administration—to 86,000,000 bushels in 1937. Somehow, I wondered whether this 51-cent corn and this tremendous increase in corn imports had any connection I said to myself: “Ray, you are not the only man in the United States who does not know how to solve the farm problem—but you have one advantage over these fellows in Washington: You know that you don’t know. They don’t know either—but they don’t know that they don’t know.” :

But before I had finished shaving, I told Ray Willis one thing more: “If that—51-cent corm and huge increases in imports—is what reciprocal trade treaties do to the farmer in the corn belt, we don't want any more of ’em.”

But enough of statistics! Whenever I quote statistics I am reminded of the fact that under the present administration, statistics have been so twisted, so distorted, that I hesitate to quote any official figure. We do know that the New Deal has killed our hogs and bought vast quantities of ham, bacon and lard from other countries. We do know that the New Deal killed our cattle and bought butter from Denmark and beef from Argentine. : We do know that the New Deal plowed under our cotton and that cotton planting was at once vastly increased in India, China, Egypt and Brazil. All of that, you may say, happened under the old AAA which was scrapped by the U. S. Supreme Court. F Well, in answer to that, I shall have to revert to my magazine article, which was taken from a nationally circulated publication: “Faced with this situation,” it says, referring to 51-cent corn, “and lacking catch-phrase ideas—ever normal granary, parity payments, etc.—to fall back on, the New Deal seems to have no choice but to settle down to consolidating its

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present program and selling it to the farmer. This program is basically the same one outlined in the original AAA. The almost religjous fervor with which many farmers greeted the old AAA has died. Instead, annoyance at

administra-| tive red tape and tactless local adr

ministration, and dissatisfaction with sharp acreage restrictions, along with low prices, all make the Farm New Deal today more unpopular than it ever has been.” .

‘ADMIT THE TRUTH’

For the sake of argument, we will admit that the intentions behind ethis farm and reciprocal trade treaty program were excellent. It has failed. Now, don’t you think it is about time that this crowd of mahogany desk farmers who never cleaned a stable and never milked & cow should admit thelr ignorance and turn the job over to some REAL farmers—who can be called into service by men who are sufficiently honest to admit that they don't know and who are willing to seek the advice of men who do know? It has been said that one of the most prominent industrialists in this nation today knows little of economics or business administration —but he has the intelligence to know that he doesn’t know and he has employed the best brains of this nation to assist him. Getting back to business administration of the nation, once more, don’t you think that it is about time that we emulated his example? We must admit the truth—no matter how unfortunate that truth may seem to be—no matter how much we may regret that truth, We may as well admit, then, that always there has been a sense of rivalry between the city and the country. We regret it—but it is so. Neither has understood the problems of the other, ; When we speak of huge increases in agricultural imports as a result of reciprocal trade treaties and of low prices, the city or town dweller is all too prone to say: “Well, what of it? That is the farmer’s worry —not mine! I'll take advantage of these low prices.” That is a natural attitude. Unfortunately, the farmer has the same attitude. I am going to show you something that illustrates my point perfectly. I have used the illustration before—but I can see no harm in repeating it. (Unwraps guards and ledger plates from brown paper sack and takes Gefman-made in right hand, American-made in left hand.) In my right hand, I am holding a piece of equipment known as a guard with ledger plate attached for a mowing machine. It was made in a foreign land—a German city. It was shipped to a seaport. It was loaded on a ship and was sent to the United States. It was unloaded from the ship here and it was

shipped to Indiana. After all of that,

it was sold to me for 17 cents. In my left hand, I am holding exactly the same piece of equipment, made in an American factory by American labor. It sells for 35 cents. I bought it. I know. Your farmer says: “Well, what of it? The American manufacturer is making too much money from that piece of equipment.”

COMPARES STANDARDS

I know that some of you may find it hard to believe—but that isn't true. Two standards of living are in-

volved in the production of these bits

of mechanical equipment. One is the American standard of living—with the workman living in a little modern bungalow, driving his own automobile, going to the movies once or twice a week, taking a ride in the country on a hot night. The other is an entirely different standard of living—with the workman riding to his job on a tram-car, on a bicycle or “walking, working for wages that mean black bread and cheese, with no hope for the future,

With no real hope for advancement,

a bare existence with none of the luxuries that have become a part of the American standard. Folks, you have a choice before you: y This nation can, and ultimately will, if this condition continues, reduce American labor to the level of foreign labor. Or, by proper safe-guards of American labor on the farm and in the factory, American labor can be maintained at an American standard of living. The choice is yours. You are the stockholders in a corporation. It is your duty_to say how its business should be conducted. I ask you to remember this: The same-reciprocal treaties that have been responsible for tremendous incrases in imports of farm. products also are responsible for tremendous increases in the products of foreign factories, products made by men who live in a manner different from that

to which you have become accus-

tomed. : Prosperity of the farmer and the factory worker is based on an exchange. It is barter, stepped up in keeping with our times. American laboring men do not exchange this bit of machinery, or a suit of cloth-

‘| ing, or a pair of overalls or shoes,

directly for farm produce. The farmer does not exchange his corn and his hogs and his beef directly for the products of the factories. But it is barter, just the same. With the

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‘ENRICHES OTHERS"

Now, if the farmer buys his machinery in Europe, his money goes over there, doesn’t it? And if the American laboring man buys canned beef and hams from other countries his money goes to those countries, doesn’t it? All ‘of this enriches the laboring man and the farmer of other lands —not ours! X What eventually happens to the American market? Isn't it destroyed by its selfishness? Folks, I favor laws that will protect the American laboring man on the farm and in the factory. No

{ man, no matter how sincere he may

be, no matter how pleasant his voice, no matter how logical his argument, can convince me that we have those protective laws now.

We have been told—not once but

‘often—that one-third of our popu-

lation is ill-fed and ill-clothed. Six years ago that statement could be made in an accusing tone. Responk sibility was charged to mismanagement. A new manager was elected to take charge of your business. Today that same new manager is making the same assertion— that one-third of our population is ill-fed and ill-clothed. What a confession to make—after fiz years of opportunity to correct t! Does this perverted theory of crop curtailment and huge imports from other lands under a system of reciprocal trade treaties have.anything to do with the failure? Personally, I think it does, . If that is true, then the management of your corporation is bad! And while we are discussing this system of reciprocal trade treaties, which certainly is a part of our policy on foreign relations, I should like to say that I am among the large number of Americans who today experience grave concern in consequence of the efforts being

made, by adroit diplomatic maneu-.

vering, to contrive indirectly an involvement in European intrigue, which the American people have successfully resisted when the effort has been made along direct lines. I am flatly opposed to any entanglement of this country in European politics through adherence to

either the League of Nations or that.

League bureau known as the World Court. I am opposed to intervention in Old World affairs in any form; and I recognize that entanglement is no less disastrous when it is piously rationalized as a “collective security.” I favor a strong national defense. It is my belief, however, that each national defense appropriation should be carefully studied to make sure that the equipment for which the appropriation is intended is actually for use in defense, not for the purpose of burning our paws by pulling the hot chestnuts of other nations out of the fire. : Reverting again to our system of reciprocal trade treaties, I wish to emphasize that we can have no strong, secure national independence unless we reverse these freetrade trends that have been set into motion by. the present administration—scretly negotiated treaties without approval of Congress, in which the Constitution vested the tariff-making function.

Perhaps if some of thesé policies were reversed—if adequate laws were enacted to protect American labor, if the constant attacks upon business were to cease, if men in business were to be regarded as human beings rather than as malignant cancers—there would be less need for the constant expenditures for relief that have apparently become a permanent fixture during the last six years. During these last six years, there has been an almost constant effort to arouse what is called “class feeling.” Has .it ever occurred to you that there is a legend that fits this situation admirably? A citizen of ancient days had several sons. Lying upon his death bed, he called them together and handed each of them a bundle of sticks, securely tied together. He instructed ‘them to attempt to break the bundles. Each tried and failed. Then he told them to untie the cords and break the sticks singly. They found that they could break the sticks with ease,

‘he has made or created ‘with the labor of :his hands for

once they were’ separated. ‘The moral, of course, is: “Divide and |fact. . Conquer.” There has been an al-| Iama most constant effort to create a business great gulf between the lahoring man or employee ‘and’ the business man ard the professional man during these last six years. °° Yet, I say to you that ‘both the laboring man and the’ businessman are working toward the same end— mutual prosperity, safety and hap-| piness. The businessman must depend upon the power of labor for his Dusit. Labos must depend upon the money vi from wages for a living. Working together along these lines, they have made this nation the strongest and most ‘prosperous in the world. Divided, they can be broken easily—as easily. as the single sticks that the old man handed to his sons.

working man as well as 8

wants. | :

DISCUSSES SECURITY

More than any other one thing, he wants security—security of job, security for old-age. We have come to call it “Social Security.” The present system, as administrated, is not “Social Security”; it is “Politi-

the New Deal bosses. The working men of this country accepted the social security program in good faith. To this day, there are many who do not realize that the money that the Government takes out of each week's wages does not actually go into a fund to provide for them when they are jobless. They do not realize that this money that is collected from them and their employers is spent in current operating expenses of Government. They do not realize that the New Deal which constantly spends more than it collectd in the form of taxes, “borrows” your money and spends it without your consent. And they do not realize that, before they can receive it back again in old-age and unemployment benefits, it must be recollected in the form of taxes. They. do not realize that it will be paid twice— once as social security reserves and once as taxes. I am utterly opposed to this type .of tion:

‘QUERIES ‘STOCKHOLDERS’

Neither is prospering under the. present arrangement. The laboring men—or many of them—are earning mere pittances in such activities as the WPA or, other alphabetical agencies when they should be given—and earnestly want—the opportunities to work at real jobs that will give them and their families the food and homes and little, lukuries that have become a part of the American Standard of Living. The businessman is failing— his factories standing vacant, his machinery silent for the lack of the very purchasing power that these en, employed properly, would pro- €. \ 4 Is this successful operation of your corporation—the greatest corporation in the world—the United States of America?

You are the stockholders. It is your business. You should decide. Today there is even a tendency to believe that business depressions are encouraged in order that men may be compelled to work; for the WPA and other alphabetical agencies so that, robbed of their independence, they may be more amendable to political suggestions as election time approaches. Color is lent to this theory by the tremendous increases in relief and made-work expenditures as the time to go to the polls nears. Irrespective of the cost, all of us will have to recognize that so long as there are people who are willing to work and unable to find employ= ment in private industry, relief work must be provided. I believe, however, that the bureaucrats of the New Deal have misjudged the American working man. They have assumed that he WANTS to work for $40 or $50 a month instead of from $35 to $50 a week. In times of stress, he accepted the WPA and other agencies of similar type as a welcome relief from a more dangerous and trying condition—but he was told that they ,were emergency measures. - After six years, he has discovered that they are permanent under the present jsystem—and the steps that he welcomid as emergencies have become painful and obnoxious as permanent programs. The New Deal officials who have hoped for political control through

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I am in favor of social security. But I do believe that it should be operated on a pay-as-you go basis and not used to build a political machine. ) : I said in the beginning that this was your business—that you are the stockholders in a giant corporation —that if you were dissatisfied with the management of that corporation, you should change managers. I warned you that the hired man was becoming the boss. If each of you has peace of mind —if each of you has everything that he actually needs—not wants, mind you, but what he needs—if each of you has security of present and future, then your management is a success. : But if you lack these things— peace of mind, happiness, security of present and future—don’t be deluded into sacrificing your personal and political freedom in the futile hope of obtaining them. If you lack these things, the management of your corporation is bad. You should change 1T. Sait

place on your board of directors— the U. S. Senate, the upper house of congress,

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1230 Prospect St. Florists & Monuments

DR-0321 DR-0322

Delaware Flower Shop 2922 N. DELAWARE. TA-316

Lost and Found 7

LOST—Near Prospect and State St., small air of black and white Beagle hounds. ward. 1133 Evison. DR-5749-J. LOST—Thur. night, vicinity 49th and Cornelius, two lady's dresses, rolled, tied together. Owner needs. Reward. CH-1744. LADY'S WRIST WATCH—White gold, in rest room Canteen. Keepsake, please return. Reward. LI-0221. LOST. August 12, 2 diamond solitaire rings: 1 diamond dinner ring: reward. BR-4305

evenings. LOST—Black and white Boston hat red L laid, vicinity

harness. Reward. 2348 Englis _ Morris and East. Reward. 502 E. Morris.

-

T—Man’s trousers, gray

DIES GOLD ELGIN WRIST WATCH, cord bracelet. Reward. Call LI-2361. LOST—Scottie dog. black, Child's | pet. Reward. HA-0373-W. 8

Help Wanted—Female

Sudisne iste Gyolopmens

30 WAITRESSES; table and counter; 2030; temp, Open. Cook, short order, 25-45; exp.; night work, $12. : 148 E. Market.

NO FEE CHARGED Notice: White Bean Pickers

25 White bean pickers in and around Haughville. Meet AL BUTCHER'S truck Tuesday. 6:30 a. m., West 10th and Warman Ave.

WHITE country girl, 18-20; general house- * work: cook, stay nights. References. 4355 Carrolton

WOMAN for light housework, Call at 418 N. New Jersey.

HOTEL MAID wanted at 859 W. Washington. $4 per week.

Times want ads get results at lowest

want ad word rate in the city. Phone RI. 5551. Bill will be sent later. 9

Help Wanted—Male

wages $3.

rponheman og ELECTRICAL repairman; exp. on all make stoves and washing machines n NTER and sandwich man; temp..Open 148 E. Market.

NO FEE CHARGED

ABLE MAN to distribute samples, randle coffee route. Up to $45 first week. Automobile given as bonus. Write ALBERT MILLS. 4620 Monmouth, Cincinnati, O.

Schools & Instructions 12

THIS ad and $65 will give Somplete beauty training, Start now. Royal Beauty Academy. 401 Roosevelt Bldg.

Lessons $1.00 ana $1.50. VOCAL Call LI-4287 for appointment.

13

Personal Services T-R-U-S-S-E-S for Ruptur

es Fittin uaranteed. - SAVER TRUSSES,

clusive Agents. -0338. E. | H. E. FRAUER CO. 456 E. Washington.

TS. ~

JOIN OUR FUR CLUB SACKS, BROS. 308-8-10 INDIANA AVE. TEARS, HOLES, BURNS “Eevoven INDIANA WEAVING CO. LI1-9674 ae EMY ROY or Kresge Bldg. M RS

WEISSMAN_MOTO Sb Clan. Phone: Day LI-3511. Nigbt, CH-5243.

Facial, Shampoo an

Haircut, Complete Permanent shampoo st INTERNATIONAL. 2d FI 229 N. Penn.

HAIR DYE CoC eA TIONAL

BEAUTY SCHOOL. 229 N. Penn.. 2d floor. AD worth $10 on beauty Co Roos) Beautv Bad 401 Roosevelt RI-1250. APSHOT ENLARGEMENTS-Size 5x7 or SIExI0, 25c. Mail orders filled; send film, coin. PLOWMAN, 407 Roosevelt Bldg.

BRIDES, new vails, complete $5 up. Platt Studios. 407 Roosevelt Bldg. : RACHEL

MILLER'S barber shop: haircuts, 35¢c: ~haves. 25c. 560 Mass. rs. 11-6698. AIRCUT, 00. wave, all 3 _25c. HAUT ai aad. 401 Roosevelt Bldg. (Alteration Specialist) TERATIONS. ladies en’s_ Karmen AL repair vress. veline. Re

MEYER O. JACOBS

212-214 E. 16th St. TA-6667. (Auto Glass Installed) rt installation ou walt. Shatterproof and 2 ality ork ‘and Service ince 1926 ASH. ST. GLASS Co., 1122 Southeast'n L1-4077—Day, night : (Auto Repairing). JETTS GARAGE otor ai , body, ne re 811 N. Tale . bott. LI-0973. ; a

dtr

. (Beauty Shop) OE Be SOBs Dmiiase. L204 (Body and Fender Repairing) Fenders 226 N. Ala.

m. 3

alks, 8 100! years expeguaran CH-55

(Contracting)

sinks and other excavating, cement work;

Brick. pointing, rebuilding s, concrete w rience.

TA-6056-8 | {

DR. O. O. CARTER rhe New plates made. aise teeth repaired. INNI

Milton Johnson, Artist. Connie Rosemond Gospel singer open for engagements—Rates reasonable. . Call Connie Rosemond, LI. 9909 or ii 914 Wilkins St., Detroit,

(Coach Lines)

CENTRAL Swallow Coach Lines, 1207 8. Meridian. DR-2476. Chartered service.

(Contractors—Cement)

CARL GLESING, 4315 College. BE-4775, Cement floors, walks, steps, driveways, ,

(Crushed Stone) DR-0577 ities ark "on = (Furnace Repairing)

CLEANING, $1 and up; Jepairs reasonable; Shsroush Jnspection without cost. HAe

VICTOR FURNACES, Stokers, Oil Burners. Furnaces cleaned, Jpaired. HALL-NEAL - FURNACE CO. LI-4576. FURNACES, registers vacuum cleaned; 7

rooms, .00. Repair all makes. Guare anteed. Free estimates. LI-0061.

(Lightning Protection) LIGHTNING

anteed. BE-4813.

rods installed, serviced; guare . J. HUMES, 1418 S. Belmont.

(Mattresses) MA’ comf! ATTemsgEs, sony Eero RI-6695. - Since 1886. - ~ ' (Painting) ag Wg MR TR . Tr gil S: Re r rep. 2. estimates. (Painting—Paperhanging) PAINTING AND PARERHANGING ESe TE H.Sa5 DAY OF NIGHT, = (Paper Cleaning) PAINT washing, floor waxing, painting, window Sleaniug, janitor service, NORTHSIDE C. AKERS, TA-33032. (Paperhanging) AP! GING «= Cleani steaming? neat kK. Free est . - BN Shik, ELI ORIEN (Parking Lots) PARKING LOT—All day. 5c. Northwesh corner Missouri, Maryland. 30c weekly ! Come in, let's fill this lot up. (Plastering)

PLASTERING—New and old work. od work JOB GiHBs, Lis A (Radio Service)

7129. Eddy Radio Service, L1-7273

(Refrigeration)

SALTER. J. A, 3623 E. Michigan. IR-72 Complete radio and refrigeration Servis,

(Roofing) old roofs like new. Good, Jooling cement. Guarant leaks for 10 gears. No coal-tar. TA-3902. 3162 Kenwood. ‘(Roofing and Siding) S CONSTRUCTION CO.

., BE-03068 —- Guaranteed Roofing, Siding. Remodeling, Psinting. Workmen full ured.

(Rug and Fur Cleaning)

to. HE-S575 Fir chiha hol Galies

(Rugs Made to Order) UFF tlle ru ade f Flee exif cleaned ‘and deed 5s. “AoTVE RUG NERS. HA-3636 62.152 subscribers every day in Marion County alone to read your want ad in The es. sults at lowest word rate in the city Phone RI 8581.

Farms—Suburban

NORTHEAST—FIVE-ROOM Room for bath, breakfast furnace, ° elect. pum $300. 2

&

i

20 = er, jar. $2 fois o£ lawn] CH. 5% A. 26 mi. northwest: 6-rm. house, elect., “terms, | down. : 125 A, west of Mooresville, bldgs., $650 down. TA-4286. JOHN D. CASE. . 3510 N. Penn.

3 mi. 80, MOL on. 2 aye 2 A. ground, wooded: $1650. wi UFF, OLIVER H.

One acre, session at once. Shadeland.

WARREN AUTO | 30% foie

os Indiana. | 65 A., 20 mile Northeast: go0 : 1) per AY “TA-4286. ages 510 N. Penn. “THE FARM nel EAT Ey mhurss tion. Owner. RI-1