Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 November 1949 — Page 15

ment the et-finding it is only - conclude | with his 3 will be if necesnterest of ll private accept the

e realistia Truman's elfish ine very radicoal and sinion. So 'r protest, 1al result. ering and ility by aice to an 2 of gov-

ve to pay to forgotten

3 accord. grand1. Here is g frontier drow. Wils._ English.” ies today, dren re both eugenical ld be acs of family, . children, ed Ameri-

r replace.

a man or en duty to s old age, dn't be in AY.

- superior -

of Russia, ® bombers ssia from nt.—Capt. stern Air

it concept

tory rela-

and come ear Adm,

Situation when we A, ON relas

hey begin e of the solutions, UN. ~

in for vice 2 election, e.

—— ——

ed a bitter

ns.

\ir- Force's

man made olicy. His

our plans n be what werful air

o

dered Dee § 515 million at dashed

Provides frig 5 ‘With New Pry

. “The glad dog. | © PARTLY CLOUDWAND . ae eel — ae 4.10 got “© CLOUDY AREAS "companies who already have tee y/o nture |

_ to operate.

“pension tax on coal to 30 cents'man; Karl 8. Difon, former secre- slaughter classes were

* . government has promised Indiana

Coal Union Chief: ‘in Driver's = Seat; Pact Cheers All Industry

By HAROLD H. HARTLEY, Tirhes Business ‘Editor Industry got a last-minute reprieve yesterday. The steel industry had its foot on the 13th step of the strike gallows. And thousands’ ‘of other industries were hanging tb its coattails. : | For the industry it meant a new pattern, a new way of figuring! payroll expenses. For the Steelworkers-C10 it meant the victory of a long-sought principle. Who won? It's hard to fell

“ground. I stays, s0 \, 86 does - the

the equivalent.of two months pro-| EVANS WOOLLEN JR., chairduction and profit, are'glad to get man of Fletcher Trust Co.’ back in business. [3 areming ‘the meeting of the

FOTOLAST" LEGEND

. AL

Had Company Plan American Bankers Association, XANitte AREA The Bethlehem Steel Corp, Jot which he is president, at San, : : § vr. EET SNOW which broke the deadlock, al- Francisco, reminded : - we SL ; ready had a company-paid oe “Business is really a estat & v INOW SHOWERS

sion plan of its own. When it in civilization.” guaranteed workers of 25 years| He called upon bankers to live

T Wie US.PAT.OFF, COPR Ig Ew. L.A WAGNER. ALL RIGNTS RESERVED.

5 AND FLURRIES

V7 earn

{AIF tere

Halsey, Stuart {On Bond Deal =

Air Fr RR [Must Tend Bar And Be Nurses

Chicago Firm Let Off, With = Official Spanking

Halsey, Stuart & Co., Inc. Chicago investment firm, got off with

ern Indiana Public, Service Co. bonds, Proceedings against the firm had asked that it be suspended | “lor expelled from membership in! the National Association of Be Leurities Dealers, Ines or broker = dealer registration voked. The Securities & Exchange Commission ruled Sept. 21 that {the firm had manipulated the {market in" the utility bonds in violation of the law. ‘The commission

syndicate,

flat, that did the trick. nomics., - Actually it is not $100 a month| Mr. Woollen's plain Hoosier out of the company till. The| thinking appealed to the ascompany - will add enough to|Sembled bankers . (more than government Social Security to 1500). He reminded them that. give the worker $100 a month. America’s banked billions, That is.a‘different story. {longing to confident itor. Just now the maximum Social Were to be used prdently to Security benefit is about $42 a make prosperity burn faster in month but the average payments to smother its fires -when-it-get in Indiana are.about $28. That out of hand. - means that for those retiring this The ABA has: done well under. A year ‘Bethiehem would pay not the steady hand of Mr. $100 a month but somewhere pe-+and his plain man-in-the-tween $58 and $72.a month. |Lhinking. Brother bankers agreed

service or longer $100 a month truth, talk truth about =

> Hogs Dip to Lowest Level Since End of OPA Support

street olis Stockyards.

Other livestock prices suffered| The bulk of common to medium Lat

Bethilehem also looked into" the he had added something to. thei, o=roveg at» stuggish-to-only|at $18 to $22.50. A few. medium |Bubank future of Social Security, detected Understanding of banking and ba Bo active pace. |shortfeds sold at $23 to $25. Sev-| (Cloetanary .

the probable rise in government Bunkers and what they are .trybenefits which would reduce com- n§ to do. pany payments still farther. | TYNRY : Under the proposed Social Se-| Goon a JoF Mek) ho curity amendment the maximum) ge ge hy vd a ying: | per worker is $84 a month which = J a Phin rh , would leave the company only —“nger Ww ree-inch plas ie $16 a month to pay, if the law|* Shelf = attaches tothe wall. |jower prices than in: yesterday's $14. Medium to good heavy sau- om passes. And that wouldn't even) Stockings hang by toe tips. (trade. lsage bulls moved at $16 to $18.50,/5

That keeps them off towel |:* SCTALCH foe Weel industry's bank}. racks, and off the side of the

Hoosier farmers brought an |eral lots of medium to good short |

bd {yesterday to market today as a {result of falling prices. But theat $15.50 to $17 with odd head | |hog session opened slowly and bringing as much as $17,50, Com|scattered sales of barrows and/mon head brought $14 to. $15. | igilts brought weak to 25 cents Canners and cutters sold at $11 to ¥

Most good to choice 180-240-317 down.

Sunrise,

1 port prices today in the Indianap- | Two loads medium to good near| —- Woullts 1100-pound steers brought $26.50. Nun mn other

losses of 25 cents to $1 as trad- grass yearlings and heifers sold [Boston

{De oo {estimated 5000 fewer hogs than fed heifers brought $25.50 to $27. [Evansville wnt Medium to good beef cows sold p

indianapolis Miam : Minneapolis-s. Paul ... York Fh {Qiishama City ee | Pittsburgh

a Bring Top of $17 ds lwhile beef bulls sold largely at! san [Francisco _. Washington. D.C

~Neov, bo. rt dem et he 132 Sunset

otal precipitation since Jan. 1

prices dipped to the lowest few small lots of medium to good” Rect pitation 24 hrs-end. 1-30 yu : nce the end of OPA sup- lyearlings brought $27 to $28.50. oe since Jan. 1 Se

.© TODAY AND TONIGHT—Cool fall weather with very ‘little storminess and fair to to partly cloudy skies is forecast for the nation. Early tomorrow morning: the mercury from upstate New York along the Great Lakes to the o the Dakotas, Nebraska and the Rockies

Official Weather

UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU

will drop inte the 30's

se selling

{price of the bonds, and protecting its inventory. When the firm -accepted the| [SEC's interpretation” of the law |and promised “to 'conform-in-the { future, the penalty was dropped.

til Association to Buy

so-Loom for Veterans

8.58

Degree of Honor Protective Ab

e following eit Station lanta

avne rear Va t. Worth sebaveevie IB (CRY) Jc. vans

plisas Cit

ew

Antonin : =

table shows the tempera-

Low

43 “3

(sociation will hold a rummage | sale here tomorrow to raise funds {to buy a loom and weaving mate[rials for Billings, Veterans Hos-| i pital,

4

I

3» 28 25 37 2% 40 75 4 45

Fussg

‘tomorrow in a’ storeroom in 814; Indiana Ave:

Church Group Plans Dinner and Bazaar

9 3 tia is |dinn #3..p. m. Friday in the Washin,

Service will hold a turkey!

A Big Producer . tub, Bethlehem is a big producer. The others secondary to U. 8. Steel which now seems ready toi FORMER CONGRESSMAN talk settlement in earnest, ready to fall in line. They are that he will become a consultant head of big weights brought $16.to choice brought $28 to $31 Republic, Ypungstown Sheet and member of the newly al. Sow prices ranged from steady Tube Allegheny-Ludlum Steel and public « relations firm of Grant, to 25 cents lower in comparison Jones-Laughlin. [Ploeser, Dixon & Murphy with With yesterday's weak: market But don’t forget John L. Lewis. offices in Chicago. {close. Most ‘300-550-pound weights Trading in He is in a better bargaining posi-| Mr: Grant who represented the, |sold at $14.75 to $16. Choiceland yearlings tion than ever, barring Passident) Third Indiana Congressional Dis- [lightweights- sold at $16.25, while'erately active at fully 50 cents Truman's use of the Paft-Hartiey!trict in the House of Representa- 3

{pound barrows and gilts brought | : aE $16. 75 to a top of $17.25. Only a Vealérs Sluggish After Congress {few loads sold at $17.35 to $17.40.| Vealers opened sluggishly, bu Several choice head weighing (later trade was moderately active)

at $12 to $17. slaughter lambs | was only mod- |

600 Is Law. Mr. Lewis seems to have tives for five years will continue" 1SN1S 550-600 pounds brought choice native lambs brought Fy Lanne Christos. Rr? Aro. ni Th

{prices down to-$14.50. Stags were | ., s9350 hut a few sold at the steel industrry. as well as the his headquarters in South Ben nd scarce in the .market. ol dium u € Ss

coal, by the tail. Steel needs coal where he is a member of the. law, and heifer trade was| z firm of Voor, Jackson, Grant ‘rather slow, but cows and bulls -80.it seems probable that Mr. McMichael. were. traded moderately active.; AdockioF © Lewis will use his position of ad-' Other firm names are Waiter C.'Fed steer prices were weak to -good

vantage to hike his blic-paid’ ts 50 cents lower. - Other | Western yearlings with N 8 pu Ploeser. St. Louis, ex Congress- /8pO 8 “cents [Ober brongnt. 20 a hundred:

vio

to good classes 801d yedetce [largely at $20 to $22.50. Common Sal head brought $15 to $19. | Edw choice {

a Naomi Norris Malcom.

al Marimba, Vibraharp « Pupils to Give Recita

are! Robert A. Grant today announced! 200-210 pounds sold at $17.50. Odd’ at steady to $1 lower prices. Good | A marimba and vibraharp re-,

ital by pupils of Mrs. Marshall while common to medium sold at|C, Harvey, 3532 Evergreen St. $18 to $17.50. Culls sold largely will be given at 3" p. m. Sunday Olive Branch Past

Pupils participating include:

Stephen Hall, Sandra Lou Adams, Stout, Marylin Barton

zanne McLa Carol Washm

y will be assisted by Jéanne Bi

wards;

Accompanists wil “be Martha or 40 cents or whatever he thinks tary of the Ohio Chamber of Com- changed from yesterday. weight, Slaughter awes Jere | Martin Hier. Op risritia

Two short loads of mostly. good [Steady and choice: lightweights

the traffic will bear. aff merce, and Ross. Murphy. Chicago, 1050.pound steers sold at $31. A brought up to $10. The bulk of

odd head brought up to $16.50.|jower prices. The bulk of good to Wright, Gloria Martin, Naléria Phillips. Hartman and (Mrs. May. B. Miller.

Stevens, Jessie Betty Wright and Judith Harvey, olin students of rs. Ruth Gentry

Ratan Berry; plano student

jof 55 Jessie SS apBi Sanice _ My pl xno Sle of Tus ne T, 0. lia! tin, sccordion

| Street Methodist Church building. ! “4. A play titled, “The Skit.” wi {be presented following dinner.

bazaar chairman.

Luncheon Arranged

ored. at

Assistants will be Mrs. [Kate Gardner, Mrs. Nellie Safuth, (ford, Mrs. "Vina

Coleman, saann | WILLIAM D. MAHON DIES DETROIT, Nov. 1 (UP)—Wil-| {lam D. Mahon, 88, international are now. in government hands.

and President of ‘the. .Algamated. Asso-

student * of | ciation of the AFL Street, Electric a Lee! {Railway and Motor Coach “Bm. Grade A a: | {ployees {Lolita Washmuth 4 and Mrs. Lester Cox.

here last night.

re-| y

Likely i in 2 Months;

found: that while holding a substantial block] WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (UP)— of the bonds after the close of| The new farm law's first effect on 8, - Halsey;iconsumers may come in the next Stuart had engaged in over-the- two months in the form of higher

counter transactions, raising the butter prices; officials sald today. 000. TIER came the

- The sale will begin at 8:30 p. =]

The Woman's Society of Chris-| and bazaar from 5 to 7 on, will!

| Mrs. Walter Hogan Is dinner-

Noble in the Third Christian Church,|Grands Association’ will be. hona_ luncheon tomorrow

Marcia DOOD at the home of Mrs, Nellie | Mater, Judith Cox, Alice Knapp. sandra | Millous.

Hubbard and

“LONDON, Aart pwr:

esses’ for the new upcoming Brit-|

ish jet airliners must be bartenders, nurses and able to speak at least one European ‘language. | They will have to be diplomatic, trained in psychology, well-educa-ted and personable: The age TE are 23 to 27. aad

THE BRITISH Overseas Air(ways. Corporation . specifies - these,

of ‘even the most ( tails,” BOAC says.

* Butter |

First Effect of New Farm Act

But they said the law, which President Truman signed late yesterday, -probably will mean {cheaper eggs next: yéar: The new support system guaran: tee: at least one more year of Irigid- high wartime supports for {major field crops, with only a ‘| gradual tapering off of minimum support in _futiire years, It authorizes Secretary of Agri! culture Charles .F. Brannan - to Keep supports for wheat, corn, cotton, tobacco, rice. and peanuts near present levels indefinitely. Brannan on Spet , However, it also puts Mr, Bran-"® nan on the spot with priceconscious consumers and with {livestock and dairy producers. The {law gives the-secretary wide dis|cretionary- authority in setiing the| |16vel of markef price props in| 11950 for such table products rk (hogs), butter, milk, and chickens, { Since early in the war these commodities have been guaran-| teed high support under legisla ‘tion expiring Dec. 31. 1 A special provision of the new legislation, which. officials say becomes _effective immediately, may have a price bolstering effect on ‘the butter’ market before Jan. 1. The new law requires the government to charge an extra 5 per ¢ent—plus the going support price ~in selling any of its storable price support commodities back on the domestic market. About 98 million pounds of butter—or two-thirds of the na{tion's total cold storage stocks}

|

Commercial cold storage holdings |

peace, then dampened of inflation, ‘¢ iis This was the message

Woollen Jr, American Bank-. ers an official spanking from the SEC! {qualifications while announcing a and

over a bond dea! involving North. | 10-week course for stewardesses.'or the Flecher “They will learn the formulae Tryst .Co., Indi-. K- anapolis, convention the ABA here

ice Hike “&

bankers, - could look hoth backward and

president

Association, chairman

to the of

the of ‘who

It was ‘flexibility

forward that

"During the war when the gove

ernment was Jacking bus Business, Mr, Woollen ‘said,

pansion in 3946 ‘and ‘1947 when the bankers business . loans. from $9,400,000,000 to $18

billion to put business on its peace-

[time feet, he said. Controlled Credit When inflationary fires got too

hot, the banks began a voluntary .

credit control, cutting down loans

for non-productive and specula-’

and in- .

Live channels, he. said... AS 8 Fox.

{sult businesf and industrial loans

increased only $700 million . in

48. Since 1948 bank loans. have dropped $2 billion, Mr, Woollen revealed.

Mr. Woollen did a little gloom |

chasing for the bankers, “It may

be ‘later than we think’ he said,

“but our chances are also better than we think.”

pointed to. the retreat of

|socializism and authoritarian govlernments where they have been

|tried and reminded his hearers

that * ‘time is not Tunning against "He called ubon’ the bankers to “express economic truth by every act of service and evéry word of

and through every teller's wine dow,”

Amateur Movie Club Arranges Program The 12th annual showing of films by the Indianapolis Amateur Movie Club will be in the main auditorium of the World War Memorial building at 8:15 p/m. tomorrow. The. program” will include two films made by the club and home

at, or near, a record low. A butter is n selling ay Ppa ioe of cents a pound, wholesale.

to the public, with free tickets

62 being distributed by photo supply "stores. ME

counsel, from every officer's desk

movies made by individual mem‘bers. The showing will be open

With steél warming up its fur newspaperman. naces, anxious. to refill the _pipe-|

slaughter ewes, however, moved |

lines of distribution, the man to, AIR FORCE hat something. Local Issues ~._ |at $6 to $9. | watch is crafty Mr: Lewis. who mew in a quonset hut. It is the - . Se ——— ] can drain the last penny out of puff-up tent. It folds up as | See I= bak ‘Worms in Tumips any situation. He 18 in. the tight as a plastic raincoat, and | R driver’ seat again. “~.| ean be blown up with hand American rn a oli fa B, An Rocks in Beans = = | punips” In three minutes. Tt's 118 Arter shel pla wi 45-013 1m 1 OXFORD, “Miss., Nov. 1 (UP) | Free Coffee | for the’ artic and is warm as (Bel RE & & Sit Ve bid... MW (Complaining, that they have \ | toast with a dead air wall be- | Bobbs- . . found “worms in the turnips and KROGER'S, opening a new self. tWoeh layers. | Bouse: Merrli | old 41% ,Irocks “ih ‘the beans.” students at serve siipermarket tomorrow, is » Circle Theater com “the University of Mississippi toholding out a customer magnet, om isan 4% Did ;'day threatened to boycott the, sure to draw. Rubber Checks’ tas" yhas {gm 7 a8 “school’s cafeteria. Every customer who goes! INDIANA BANKERS navel nance-5.9{d. .... Bi |The. boycott was -set to begin,

through the turnstiles at the new been warned to be on the lookout onsaiigaed dnd co vig ann

(blue front) Kroger supermarket for a rubber check casher who, Bouftaple ‘securities Com w “se

at 2030 W. Washington St, will signs “Harold P. Marsh.” His fa- [Have Soro Dig wv

3 {Saturday following a mass meet....|Ing of 500 students yesterday. 103! Chancellor J. D. Williams ad-

come out with a half a pound of vorite figure is $100, favorite Home Tel & Tel ¥ igh {dressed the students and asked coffes—{ree. |bank, Farmers Trust Co., Frank- Nook Drug Jo com 3 *'them to have patience. “I've had Rodgers N. Brown, Kroger dis- lin. in led i NE Co com... [i x */good: and bad meals in the cafetrict manager, has put ‘in self-| Another check passer signs his in Ti idols FAL com irre Ra + Fi «jteria, ” he said. serve meats and refrigerated veg-' name “Richard Parr,” his favor-'indpls P & L > ati aise inp—————— etable racks. And he has-pared_ite figure, $58.80, - his tavorie fi331 ¥ ater C Co. 8 ond 1 1s "BOSTON GAS BREAKS DOWN price tags enough to make the bank the Indiana Trust Co. He ladpls W ter. 4ie% +3 0 BOSTON, Nov. 1 (UP)-—Some

A Nationa) Lite com - stamps the checks “Acme Con-| 'Binsan & & & iq. ‘

housewives look twice.

08 a1 .. 80 «3 co 8

—. Top variety wieners (Kingan's)! struction. Co.” countersigns them Lincoln Fat Life on * 1 were without gas today. after a ‘he tagged at: 10 cents a pound “C. A. Emery.” : IE a Dor on Ya, Dreakdown im the distributing | na and prime bacen 39 cents a pound,| Check-passer No. 3 uses two Mastic Aspnalt” $s Ii|system. one pound per customer; lard, names, “T. J, Keene” and “W. Nai Home pia - x we four pounds for 49 cents, an NF Tillman.” His favorite figure is ¥ iad Bud Serv Som confi fa Te. U. 'S. Statement tage cheese, 10 cents a pint $25, ‘his favorite bank the Farm- Bib Serv Aint... «18a - Kroger opening prices may make ers’ Bank and Trust Co., Knox,|brovess Laundry com” [Ill 13 * | eT or receipts. a one other price snippers take notice. Ind. "BUD Serv of tng yrotd’ LI 44s aa. |Current fiscal year ‘throusn Oct, 3 com-; x =x =» CE {Ross Gear Tool com.......... Pa an |Dared With & le Yea tn Year i a mo. . Le CROP IN. 0 Out across. AMERICAN MACHINIST, 8 Ind GiE pid 103" 108 7) Faron on. 1h it] Hl ¢ fertile Indiana plains ers| trade journal, reports Indian- |Stokely-Van Camp pfd ..... 17 18% | Daett ’ already are beginning to figure| apolis has the best-record for [oon Co Sin pid ..... Me 10 Cash Balance anh 4.663.687,447 how much and what to raise next, the number of machine tools [US Machine Gun Lie Iw ible BY IL i wii year, | _more than 20-years-old, with Unter Title Got 3%. od 5’ » . ’ IE loaks like the third bumper only 4 per cent. *Ex-dividend, crIIAXATOLIS | CLEARING FUSE oe erop in a row, wéather permitting. » A Debits © 28,819,000 The reason: Congress in its fran-| ! i = tie closing gr pegged m7 Executive VP i Local Produce supports at 90 per cent of parity, MORELY H. RINGER has Ee Ve. IBS... abd 23 That assures good p "If the been elected executive vice presi-| x aay Tox "ort, ei ops, 1c heavy public won't buy tfie farmers’ dent of the Citizens National ++: arsed goringets. 23. and Leghorn Sriiiy. crops, Uncle Sam will. {Life Insurance Co., John Wilkins, |e poss than Ne receipts, 55 ibs fo ease. Last year Uncle Sam dug down president, announced today. 2c “Grade A large. bc. Grade A me ~ in his striped pants and fished out Mr. Ringer was general man- 3 I hae 35 a8: some $60 million to support Indi- sger of Hoosier Farm Bureau, 4 Ba nos ‘apis. Wnt Prgduct 1 ana “crop prices. And with this rife from its origin in 1937 to Kuhner Packing 4550 ...... gt. [falivered at Wadley Co oultry plant) year’s bumper-eorn crop already July last year when he became 1 me 10614 = piling up, the government i on treasurer of Central Life Insur- a qt HA 4 Local Truck Grain Prices “the hook for about 20 cents a t Tu i ALS en ssne tog a ~ imminent. bushel. Government support price | ance Co. b 0s, ton s s 57 No. | red truck “wheat. $1.82 | fa No. white corn, $102 | is around $1.45, while the open No. 3 yellow co corn,. B2c

‘market price is about $1.25. Agronomists believe 3he government will have come. through fast with Sr. The!

_No._ 3 yellow Soybeans. $1.85. LEGAL NOTICES

TTT NOTICE TO BIDDERS undersigned publicly posts from

Here's Gist of Pension Pact CIO and Bethlehem Signed |: ree

farmers facilitiés for 20 million] CLEVELAND, Nov. 1 (UP)—Here are highlights of the agree-’ | araners of the City of Indiana . Bushels of corn. but the steel ment reached last night between the CIO. Steelworkers and Bethle-| |Sreeet: IndianaDOIS. 4. strike upset tie plan. hem Steel Corp. on pensions. : offices, for divers Suppiles for. manus! Indiana farmers talk against; ONE: Paid for by the-com-| “gry rhe new agreement, |i putt Ree and Fe ian of farm controls and support money pany. . based on" the last 10 years of | |i8nor and or material and equipment Hecbut. as one prominent farm econ-| TWO: Provides $100 minimum {service allows for adjustment to tery to make repairs to. schools, libra

i omist put it, “They still‘take the pension a month at 65 after 25 a ficial records: show that, on the!supplies, material and sguipment until. the ernment is subsidizing inefi-| Qualification for pension begins i. vs the highest wages. Bu 4 Dirsetor. | members will get a surprise from $4 a month for each year of 'months as the wage base, but

fds will be Foceived by the - under: checks? He fumed: “Better man- years of service, including socidl! a Joy rn ih Jeengetive ates name n sa specifica ciency.” {after 15 years of service (up to SEVEN: Heretofore the com- co the Income Tax Dept. .Profits service. has included all lost time, Fo

new and higher" wage levels, Of | ions for .the sale to the Board of such agement is the problem. The gov- security. 5 |average, the last 10 years are al- | tions. EL ROARD OP sci00 | M ISSIONERS Ofer TY Some farmers who are P25 years) and with minimum of pany has taken the. last 120 mais NEY ‘November 1. I piled up by co-ops are actuallyl: THREE: Pensions formula’ Ce. taxable as personal member In-| Total of wages for last 10 years ye u man made $200 a month. tomes. This means farmers may of service, divided by 120 months. and worked 84 months (in nM have to dig down and pay taxes) Then one per cent of this amount|jaet 10 years, instead of eM on money they never Tecelved is multiplied by the number of|mon(ps) he would receive $16,800 | but is still locked up to theiriyears of service. If this amounts a. To Btaor By 120

credit in the co-op’s bank account. [to more than the ‘minimum the ‘But the storage problem is the! [employee gets the benefit. months ejuals $140 3 month. It|

is on this basis that the present | TE ae A ‘hn FOUR: Average pensions us-|pension plan is figured. . Halo 13 Milea of Jules ___taken off their hands, They've got, 3° Bethlehem's present jis is| Under the new agreement, In-| ww Ou Tsou Le other bumper crop. Thousands around $46 h month.. The new stead of dividing the total of $18,- | poisonous ma n in your “of mechanical pickers stand idle *8resment 4800 "by 120 _months, the amount’

to Ae to a 7 _per “cent. The will now-be divided by 96 nionths; ew average, including social se-|that is, the mew agreement élim-

curity.” will be Around - $110 a jnates all absences of more than). Thus a new base to) © FIVE: Under the present plan, . ‘exercised the

waiting for cribs to be emptied

ting up nights, h) make room 4 diaginus.

eyes, an { or painful elimination sometimes . is eating Vishe with your kidneys |

:

.1250,000 Greater Boston residents |.

Sause nagging rheumatic ., a eg pains, of pep and energy. gol. i ’

BA

Keeping pace with the city’s growth has made it necessary to change our is | meter reading routes and for that rea- ‘| son your current gas bill may be somewhat delayed. The bill also may befor | . more or for less than a full month's service but if so it has been properly prorated. We regret any temporary inconvenience these changes may

cause you. Also, we have changed from a hand-delivered bill to a postcard bill which will bemailed toyou each month ~~ and which will improve our service =~ to you. Si

Thos. L. Kemp ~ General Manager

CITIZENS GAS & COKE UTILITY

v

4 Sp men ey

i

eH hai 4

RS AR

i on Be