Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 September 1950 — Page 16
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
* -
Laundry-Union
Teamsters Local Invites Bosses To Talk Shop Tomorrow Night
Tiff Nearing End Fall 23-30c in
Tog Prices Hook Officia
|
Slow Trade
By HAROLD H. HARTLEY, Times Business Editor
in
Hous ” Coe abs aveing ** Handling £HIZ fil of MISE: for the laundry owners and dry cleaners. ~ Keep-clean labor kicked and screamed in the headlines
=
THE LAUNDRY-UNION MELODRAMA, now playing its 18th solid month is edging toward the close of its| $22.75 A Hundred
né hasn't béen éasy 50 cents lower than yesterda
- Good, Choice Loads Bring $22.50 to
|close at the Indianapolis Stock-| yards. Trade. was slow, with most prices 50 cents off. !
reddened faces, and even tore]
up a contract. . .. |the plant, gets into action. ‘Now I learn that the inside plant will make transmiss workers have signed again. But for Cadillac-built tanks.
the dri won't hold still for EL Nash Next Week
the new deal. They're snagged. over the re- nr up. wmoTOR
‘troactive pay clause. Under the proposed contract, I am -told by Local 186 of the Teamsters, anyong who has taken a driver's job since May 1 would miss the boat on the sugar-sweet back pay. |
the calendar.
. ao = ” | TOMORROW NIGHT LOCAL 188 .has invited the laundry boys and. dry cleaners to come down to Teamsters Hall at 28 W. North ing its St. and talk the whole thing over, and Statesman try to clean it up. |Masonic Temple next Monday. No one's accepted the invite
tion.
on deck. For this is the only dates a little, if they can. contract which keeps the Dry, 3 Cleaners and Launderers cub Buckshot , from putting this important labor deal in. the bag. . { It won't be long now.
RD-119 : NCLAI NGING out a a ine. Its long on Often make an advertising doll
power, anti-kick and anti-rust. {do a 75-cent job, maybe less.
‘Ed Sering, Sinclair's branch | manager, says it's a blend which can take high temperatures and Manager,
Iring the cash register bell?
(knows.
u Young,
pressures without a “ping.” ! con ies er EE mad to, many words and pictures. improve their products since the] That's right as rain. If you
war the race for public pref-| ap 20a {you see it. But if you look at
p uch more talk two, each object gets only onewre a action of gas- half of your attention. And when oline in your cylinder block, jets an ad has 50 items in it, well, it's and lines. Corrosion and even rust a catalogue, demands more work are the targets. |by the reader.
Sinclair dug up a rust-inhibitor| And work 1s something a reader
with a cloak-and-dagger name, doesn't have to do. He turns to RD-119, which Sincl reports the comics. They're easier.
will make your engine snap into action like a pastured colt when Frank's Franklin ; JTS ; { FRANK WALKER, géneral
{agent for the Franklin Life Inpay surance Co., tells me his company the | 18 building an addition in Springfield, 111, the results of a net gain of $120 million. Cin
‘Leg Rests
WHEN MOST PEOPLE
But if they are on an expense account, they take the oozy-sott| Franklin believes in expansion pullmans. and decentralization. For examJt has always been hard for|ple, Franklin now has four offices coach-riders to sleep- sitting up,|in Indianapolis which have coneven with the tip-back reclining | tributed substantially to the comseats. pany’s growth, ; The latest wrinkle which al-| A word about decentralization, most lets you go to bed with your a big and powerful word in sellclothes on is the folding leg rest. ing of any kind. What it means You can stretch away out. {1s concentration .of selling effort,
You're almost lying down. It's smaller territories with more in-!
‘as’ ‘if you were propped up in a ve sales coverage.
hospital bed. wit idea Jars exucy new. And on enough steam behind the Loan Winds sales piston, it pays off.
| AT WASN'T LONG AGO that : : mortgage lenders were nowling Good Hunting that the government Was COM" yy; GAN'S SOFT Water peting with them. t The Service is getting ready to ride Now it's turned about. eq herd on 50,000 new customers. savings and loan boys are urg t| And where would there be betto compete with the government , hard-water hunting than in to keep the mortgage business In Indianapolis? :
private hands. Horace Russell, ., Culligan’s story is that it saves
— a= This Tom pare United $100 a year for the family, cuts
bills 70 per cent and extends tates Savings & Loan League. 'ooP ] He laid Pp cold to the New) ‘De® life of clotihng a third. York Savings & Loan League. He urged a rate of 4 to 4% Peri ho cent on mortgages so loan com-| panies can either use government facilities (FHA or VA) or make
$
Culligan story.
| McDonald, new superintendent of Early sales of good and choice, The 200 : ions §22.50 to $22.75, wirh most bids
COMPANIES lgwer than Monday's low close; are pushing their new models bulk good and choice 200 to 260 through with an anxious eye on|pounds, $22.50 to $22.75;
They've got their dough in re- $21.50 to $22.25; 120 to 160 pounds tooling. All they can do is to go|eligible at $16.50- to $18; sows, iahead with new models, even with | weak to 50 cents lower; good and| the prospect of curtailed produc- choice 300 to 500 pounds, $19.50|
Nash, for instance, is preview. ($21.25 to $21.50; over 550 pounds, redesigned Ambassador down_to $19. in Cincinnati's
Watch for the others to pop up choice 1200 pound steers at $31. formally, but I think they’ll be with new models, moving up their!
WHAT MAKES advertising
A lot of things as any ad man loads mostly good steers and ; y ® jnumerous loads good light to me. WW Ab i Ww But there are techniques that) 11 weight steers held at $29.75) a rns 0 U ed rt n
One of these is pointed out by Times advertising in his weekly bulletin. {He calls it “buckshot” merchanhave dising, littering. an ad with too
look at one object, chances are
'S. Africa Mourns
to 250-pounders brought
|going from $22.50 down.
| Hogs, 12,200; rather slow; barrows and gilts, 25 to 50 cents
later; {price sparingly; 170 to 200 pounds, |
p
to $21; choice 270 to 320 pounds, | Attending a "jubilee planning” party are (left to right) Edw
Paul Freeman, district representative for E. R. Squibb & Sons.
Key employees = of Hook Squibb & Sons, led a list of | Drugs, Inc., met last night at “jubilee planners” who talked the Severin Hotel to discuss the to employees from Hook's state- | chain’s 50th anniversary which wide stores. The anniversary will. begin in October. will be celebrated throughout Paul Freeman, Chicago, dis- various Hoosier towns with a trict representative of E. R. series of events.
About People—
Steers and heifers were less ac{tive with a load of high good and
Cattle 2150; calves 425; steers {and heifers less active; early sales about steady, but some interests bidding 25. cents or more lower; load high good and choice 1200-pound steers $31; several
\
mixed yearlings $29.50 to $30;
{to $30.50; medium shortfed and grass yearlings $25.50 to $28; little done on heifers; most offerings salable from $27.50 to $30; cows moderately active, about steady; common and medium $19 to $22; odd head good to $23;
The Same $500 Frock
It Can Cause Catty Remarks if Used All
Season, Divorce Witness Testifies
jcanners and cutters $16.50 to A woman who persists in wearing the same $3500 frock all sea($19.50; vealers active, steady; son can expect her friends to make catty remarks. . good and choice $31.50 to $33; common and medium $25 to $31; culls $17 to $24.50. Bulls firm; medium and good beef and sausage bulls, $23 to $25; odd head to $25.50.
Sheep 1650; only moderately active; few sales spring lambs near steady, but bulk of supply weak to 50 cents lower; good and choice vaions weights, $28 to $29, mostly $28.50; medium and good, $24.50 to $28; common, $20.50 to $24; slaughter ewes unchanged, medium to choice, $8 to $12,
| wood City, Cal., was given to understand in a divorce trial between Irving and Peggy Bartel, wealthy San Francisco couple. Mrs. Bartel's sister, Esther Glassman Seaman, talked about clothes from the witness stand cone. “Whose. voice Sotnded esterday, particularly about; he ony ne Mrs. Bartel should like that of the late Magician | have “if she wants to keep a Harry Houdini. : respectable position in society.” | He said he reFirst of all, she said, Mrs. Bar- céived instructel should have at least six fur tionsin his sleep coats. “I, myself, have only to arrange 2 new four,” she interjected. “But then, test last night to I do not have my sister's social Sé¢ Whether Houposition.” : dini’s spirit could Other basic items: 12 tailored Manifest itself to suits a year, one new evening the living. Usualgown per year costing $400 to|ly Houdini’s $500 or two inexpensive numbers Spirit is sumat $200 to $300 each; eight to 10 moned each year pik after-5 frocks each season costing at Hallow een, yr Blackstone e 0 m S $75 to $300 each; a dozen sum-|the day on which : mer dresses and an equal num- he died in 1926, and usually callber of hats per season; one dozen ers get no result. But because of sweaters, about 25 pair of shoes the “call,” a special test was arand 36 pair of hose. ranged in_his former, home in In answer to the judge's ques- New York. tion, Mrs. Seaman said a lady Last night, for the umpteenth could not wear the same frock in time, Houdini’'s spirit persisted in the same crowd “very many hiding in the hereafter. Six of of Field Marshal Jan Christiap|times” without being talked the dubious witnesses said the reSmuts. {about. |sults last night were “inconcluThe 80-year-old former Prime {sive.”
sounded |
Loss of Leader
Ends Peace Dream
PRETORIA, South Africa, Sept. 12 (UP)-The British Commonwealth mourned today the death
” ” ”
The seventh, a devout
s Attend J
Callahan, drug buyer, and William A. Dobson, advertising manager, all of Hook Drugs, Inc., and
At least that’s what Superior Judge Andrew Schottky of Red-|strike a blow at communism to-
Mom Seeking Wreck News Finds 2d Son Saved at Sea
Younger Boy Not ~ On Ili-Fated-Train
A mother who feared one son was a victim in yesterday's rail tragedy called Washington, D.C, to cheek his whereabouts, only to learn her other son had just been fished out of a ditched plane in the Pacific Ocean. : : s. Norman A. Redmond, 553
Par
=
W. E Twyman Rites Tomorrow
Burial Planned in Greenwood Cemetery For 25 years Walter E. Twyman worked at the Central States Canning Co. When he retired in 1946 he bought a farm, but bad health forced him to sell it a
terday’s rail crash in Ohio. Her Ta Thomas, 23, was due to return home from a visit in Vat ington yesterday and sine fea he might have been aboard the Spirit of St. Louis. ’ She called her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Alice Redmond, in Washing{ton and learned Thomas was still there and safe. “But ‘Mother,” asked her daugh-.|ter-in-law, “have you heard about Jack?” Ran Out of Fuel > Word had just been received in Washington that the Indianapolis mother's older son, 1s rg Redm commander Repay yes. avy transport/short time later. which ran out of fuel and crashed| Yesterday Mr. Twyman died at into the Pacific Ocean Sunday. |St. Francis Hospital after a brief Three hours after the crash, a illness. He was 59. Navy patrol boat rescued the sev-| Born near Cave City, Ky., Mr. en crew members including Lt. Twyman moved to a farm near Redmond. The Navy flier, a grad-|Greenwood with his parents. Sevuate’ of Cathedral High Schooliera] years later he came to Indiaand former Butler University stu-inapolis and was a resident here dent, entered the Navy in 1842.for 32 years. A member of the After his discharge he served River Avenue Baptist Church, he three months as a state police resided at 2447 Harlan St. technician, re-enlisting in Janu- Rites Tomorrow
ary, 1946. . der of the plane] Services will be at the J. C. re mission From Wilson Chapel of the Chimes at Barbers Point Naval Airfield in/1:30 p. m. tomorrow. Burial will Honolulu, be in the Greenwood Cemetery. ono Surviving are his wife, Lina; a
: : ) 3 d ter, Mrs. Life Expectancy [fen kata, ah of Indianapolis;
ard F. Roesch, president; George
The drug chain was estab‘lished in 1900 by John A. Hook. A. F. Hook, son of the founder and a vice president of the firm,
was among those at the speakers table.
OK of ‘Manifesto’
I don’t know how you measure | ithe exact life of a white shirt, or! keeps track of what they spend for soap. But that’s the
conventional loans in competition. He told the mortgage men to make long term loans so home| buyers can get from private business about the same deal the
But there must be something to it with 700,000 customers,
Big Softies
THOSE BIG DOUGHNUT tires
{with his family and was being
Minister of South Africa died at his farm home at Irene, near here, last night of a heart attack after a relapse from a bout with ipneumonia and sciatica. Gen. Smuts died without realiz{ing his most fervent dream — {permanent world peace. He was| {a lifelong Internationalist and al {leading architect-of the League of |
i
{Nations and the United Nations. Became 111 at 80
He became ill May 28, four {days after his 80th birthday. His {illness was complicated by age land overwork. Doctors com{plained they could not keep him in bed and away from politics.!
The general had finished dinner
helped to his bedroom ‘by two daughters when he was stricken.
Canadian Capers
[Spiritualist, exclaimed, “He was i th 1 had fashi here, he was here.” ve other gals had fashion “ troubles today — the 16-year-old AS “Proof” she pointed to a
lets. Th ints Pair of handcuffs, one of five Diowtie . Sintepiets cing Pon al pairs placed on a table. They were
i . y bly locked girl needs something special on OPN. All were presuma her first trip to New York. {when the test started, Cecile, Annette, Yvonne, Marie and Emilie want to buy their new HOst fo Ghost dresses when they get to New, In Lewes, England, a former York for a singing appearance in naval officer and his wife ap-Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, But Oliva pealed to spiritualist societies to Dionne, a practical French-Ca- help. them appease “Daddy the nadian, was firm and told them Poltergeist,” a bad -tempered they could pick out new outfits in ghost who refused to let them North Bay, near their home in sleep. Callendar, Ont. Arthur and Vera Evans said The girls said the stores had since one month ago Paddy has trouble supplying their needs be- been invading their bedroom, cause they want five of every- sweeping articles from the night thing. But Poppa said the girls table onto the floor and hurling would have trouble buying. five small objects around the room.
apolis Baptist Association.
of the Lynhurst Church, last night was elected president of the Permanent Council of the Indian-
Succeeds Dr. O'Donnell He succeeds Dr. G. H. O'Donnell, pastor of the Central Baptist Church, Dr. Walter Laetsch, pastor of the Garfield Church, was made vice president and Dr. Walter Hand, Church, secretary. Bridgford Honored A. J. Bridgford received tribute from the association last night as the member who has belonged to a local Baptist church the longest period. He has been a member of the Crooked Creek congregation for 61 years.
Bridges in a telegram last night that “your smear attack against the Farmers Union is in line with the “Woodruff Place|the big business plot to squeeze’ 3.8 million family farmers from agriculture.”
that Communists have won ‘“con-
Ki Farmers Union has challenged Sen. Styles Bridges (R. N. H.) to charges that the group is domi-|y" ‘ ‘nated by Communists. p
“repeat and defend” his
Fred W. Stover told Sen.
Sen. Bridges charged last week
siderable if not complete success” |ggst in taking over the National B Farmers Union. Stover as “one of the leaders of gi
He said ‘Mr. Ch
- } ; three brothers, Thurman, KewanScheduled Today Of Industrial na; Joseph, San Pedro Cal, and Indianapolis Baptists are ex- James, Indianapolis; two Sisters ‘pected to follow the example of Workers Up Mrs. Walter Surtacs, J Upton, Ka 18 million fellow churchmen and and Mrs. Dewey A. , in By Science Service napolis, and six grandchildren. day. NEW YORK, Sept. 12—Length In the busi- of life for the American wage Local Produce ness session of earners and eir families has the Indianapolis § been steadily increasing for the|, Ese—Current recelpis 5° the medium: Baptist Associa- 2 past half-century and more. i Grade B large. 30c. and Do pan tion this after- Expectation of life at birth is Poultey—Powls. 4% lbs. and over. 3c: noon in the now 67.7 years for the many mil-| 1d sacs Hic nd oeior Je 4 less Woodland Ba p- lions of industrial policy-holders| “88, No 1 oo 1 s3c: No. 3. 506. tist Church of the Metropolitan Life InsurThe Baptiste ance Co. Average lifetime among|Local Issues Manifesto” is : this large section of the industrial scheduled f o r 3 population has doubled since 5 —Sept. 12— presentation. It 1879-1889, earliest period = for|American voices the demo- pr. McGuire (which figures are available. |4TSafe Col cratic principles 8 . A for which Baptists have always THE IMPROVEMENT. in _mor‘|stood and for which they suffered tality and ROVENS and the persecution in various foreign past 40 years has been greater|Semtrsl Sova ....... countries over the years. i in the industrial population than|Com Approve, Mauiteste in the population of the United Cummins Enk pia =i: “The Manifesto” was approved States as a whole. i at the congress of the Baptist| hi t of th i | {Delta Elec com... ... World Alliance the past summer| “This achievement of the rank g in Cleveland. and file in our country,” the life}; “It states principles combating insurance statisticians point out, . communism and stands for the| has broad implications and gives) gam : 9, ‘the . free exercise of one’s mind and|2dded meaning to the phrase, ome T 8 : moral judgment,” Dr. Clive Mc-| American way of life. a la Guire, association executive sec- RR nd Oat Ee Lage ag retary said today. Farmers Union Blasts |baws® ai com. Galt TE e annual association conven- vy Indpis Water CO COM ....:.... / tion opened last night in the Bridges Red Charge le ey A” Joe 300 church and will close tomorrow| DES MOINES, Iowa, Sept. 12 efferson | National e com ... 3 12 night. : a gan & Co com . The Rev. D. J. Dunkin, pastor| DF) The president of the lowa, gi.iin
U 8 Machine Co .. wry United Telephone 5% pid Union Title
i
i i 8 i 4 i
A government offers.
{which ease our late models along! came Boo tHE Doulevards will come dn for a. "AND HE SUGGESTED that|lecture lowdown a week the mortgage leaders make Thursday when R. D. Evans of bigger loans on properties so a Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. ap-| bome “may be acquired with no pears before the Indiana Section | . cash or with little cash.” of the Society of Automotive EnBut you can write that last gineers. suggestion off, with little or no down payment. The President's with all of his background I'd peg| controls over home financing will him at no less than “Dr. Evans™| knock that for a cocked hat. He's a graduate of Ohio Univer-| Then Bill Divers, chairman of ity a graduate student and in-| “the Home Loan. Bank Board, gtructor of physics, Bowdvin Col-
| |
from}
speaking before %ha ‘Natfonalist| wondered how to credit the cash They call him “Mr. Evans,” but|COn8Tfless. Dr. Malan asked dele- received for a”parking fine. The
outfits in New York for $150, the The Evans, who said they've tried
the Communist-dominated Pro- on [ndp!
Dr. Elmer E. Fridell, New York, | oreggive. Party.”
amount foreign exchange regula- everything to get rid of the untions. permit-a.Canadian-to spend welcome spirit, asked spiritualists in the U. 8. [for new methods to adopt. | " # | They said the ghost, whom they
He is survived by his widow, Mrs: Bybelta Smuts, T8, four! daughters, a son and 16 grand-! children.
Co es | News of his death was received] Won for the Money enramed or aady appeared by Premier D. FE. Malan while| Tacoma, Wash, police today neighbor, an rs omar |
© “We were gates tn observe two minutes of | department received 1800 won, always on friendly terns. | silence in respect for his political|South Korean morey, from Pfc. 7
foe. He ordered flags to be flowr G. F. Bryant, 2d Infantry Di- u, S. Statement
at half mast today. | It was - WASHINGTON, Sept. 12 (UP)—Govern-
vision, fighting in Kcrea. . Gen. Smuts was born in the/attached to a parking ticket s- ment expenses. and receipts for the cur
flashed the yellow light at the, e, and was captain of the Malmesburg distfict of Cape Col-|8ued while he was staying in Ta- rent fiscal year through Sept. 8. comhome lenders, told them. not to! Chemical olin Service fn ODY. son of a well-to-do farmer coma. pared with a yen! ie Gear Last Year get out on a limb. . World War 1 and member of the Cape Colony # ® = Receipts 10 oa Sea Ion Snr tan-00t What he meant was that heavy He'll give the : oo Legislature. He ‘studied ‘aw in y | | {Deficit « 151,108,421 3,320.699,617 f : 2 engi 8 | - . ' .028,663, X % “Joans on inflated property prices: Tp Eive the Engineers. A lusty ‘Englana. He ‘married a eric] COS y Kiss : Bub dent 357.600.930.684 3 8.408 Tug 803) ‘might get the ‘oan companies In-|, 5 Tt FOC low-pres. (Student. Sybilla Krige, in 1897. | A wifely kiss cost him a 20-day Gold reserve . 33.576,301,648 24.647.118.44
volved in a deflation washout, with disastrous results. ;sure tire development, taking up|
|the use of fine wire cables instead | Angle Tangle |
of rayon and nylon. | FRANK OANTWELL, one of Maybe that’s what coming. He
greatest exponents of home ap-| UBDt to know.
préciation in the country, stum-(fy to MRE bled over his geometry a few days U- 5. to Give Mexico
ago. ‘Historic Battle Flags He was handing out the “Pa-| MEXICO CITY, Mex, e, 12 fade of Homes Pennants to be (UP) —The United States will rea e ground in front of turn 69 historic battle flags to ‘the omes on display all over mexico today more than 100 years
Marshal Smuts first won fame | Yorkhouse sentence, Gordon T.]
during the Boer War as a guerilla {BOIne, 30. St. Paul, Minn., com- Clearings "1. $25,673,000
INDIANAPOLIS - CLEARING Jovsk : a FT against the British. He organizea| Plained today. He sald his wife ===
essen a
foreign secretary of the American
ar ie Sherr i ihtontas 4 a w Ata du wen CT ro -_ etary — ry one Ee be Baptist Foreign Mission Society, . * 75 ve will speaic_ tonight. Dr. ana mre. LO€Al Truck Grain Prices ii, Suivi oid Charles Manley of South India| ng. 2 truck wheat. $1.92. $i 107° will speak tomorrow. ~] Jo 2 pits corn, 2 Paper Att Co 5 ps a te . - §o. 3 soybegns, $2.19. Traction Werminal 58 57 ...... 9%: ' 82'% Des Moines Dope Ring ren ividend. ee
Smashed by U.S. Agents DES MOINES, Ia. Sept. 12 (UP)—A $50,000-a-year narcotics smuggling ring was broken up by raids here and at Omaha, Neb., federal agents said today. Authorities climaxed a 10month investigation-by arresting six men here and eight at Omaha.
They were held for possible state {or federal prosecution. oo
\rue Sour Mash
5
Boer farmers tpn | kissed him, and he ran into a irmers and trained them In| arked cat. I
hit-and-run tactics, the forerun-| Howey Jud , ner of the Commandos of World! owever, Judge Andrew A. Glenn meted ou the sentence not -
War II. because of the accident but. be-
"With the signing of a peace , «+ cause Mr. Bonine pleaded guilty treaty in 1002, Marshal Smuts to driving without a license.
and Louis Botha joined forces to se & = make South Africa a self-govern-| Magician Harry Blackstone reIng partner in the British Empire. | cetved a “telephone call’ ‘from
H
town this week. {after they were captured by
Frank wanted to tell the build-| 5. : : ers at what angle to put the Aresican truops quring the Mexi-
—fiags.--He mentioned degrees; and; RAL
there he got lost. 'arrive aboard three U. 8. Air
WITHA SLIGHT TILT the flag Force planes in the care of a good | would be 20 or 25 degrees from neighbor ‘mission af Air Force, vertical. But measured from the ATMY and Navy~ officers and ground that would be—well “what |c2d€ts. They will be presented to | WOULD it be, he wanted to| President Miguel Aleman tomor-| Know. : {row on the 103d ‘anniversary of | Finally he settled the angle the Battle of Chapultepec. problem by saying, “Boys, just : do it like this.” He held a flag in the right position onthe floor. And as for how many degrees, he said he'd have to let that
LRU LR
Buti vest year. Or the next. Ad I EL RE 1! ine That GM Look > Bide
It pays to call the
MUTUAL IXIA
Dealers
. - WHEN GENERAL MOTORS CORP, leased the old FairbanksMorse building at 2060 Northwestern Ave, it didn’t look much
~The flags were scheduled to]
why we always give him all
.We Own and Offer All or Any Part Tas we
40 Shares - Fletcher Trust Company Capital Stock At $240 Per Share
changes at all.
their limited capital.
American National Bank We think it’s good
: ; . be back! Common Stock . fife a, :
At $21.50 Per Share
POLIS BOND AND SHARE CORPORATION 129 East Market Street Building «MAI |
its: Mutual Agency, Inc. 1740 North Meiidian St. bel. WAbmh 2456
L
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ERE AT MERRILL LYNCH, we've always felt that success in any business depends om satisfied customers—not immediate sales! That’s why we're never afraid to tell any investor who asks, just what we think of a particular security,
That's why our Research Department prepares “many a portfolio analysis with no recommended
And that’s why we've told any number of people to postpone investing, told them to keep their money in government bonds or the bank, to come back when they were better able to afford even moderate risks to
eo and We lose lots of sales, naturally. He But if you ever want facts, information, or help of 300 Shares
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the facts we can—the bad
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Genuine SOUR MASH Bourbon
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Beane INDIANAPOLIS 4
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TUES)
Pfc. shows tw “Phe. Nick rived yest Keystone |
»
—————
WITH completed night, Fr president agreemen will contit The ag: not only the next, s co MPe-MeK
that the ag
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Fie
“what the
8 ‘‘perpetu: proviso tha on 30 days’ This agre in July whe his majorit and resign the Pittsbu Prior to 1 under Piraf and barrel, Tribe fran the sole In of Mr, Mc] Owen J. Bu Believing Jeague clu cessfully w Jeague fa tioned pla ing agreer arranged | the Pirates “This is horses,” he tions are g ready is cc the Armed for sure w tion will be
MR. McK huddle with John Galb: Series time outlook and I fer the Indi More o
..howexer, I
- ed out, bec ng manpo offing.
Since ~ th
‘rapped ple
three million principal ow thing to do the Pirates best.- He co! “Almost Peague cl Triple-A fa tng agree: Jeague tear son 1 think “our best be (Editor's | fn 1948, rur off winner Series cham in 1950.)
MR. McK from boasti three-year mention it, bouquets at Then he . ghat 1s wo | Association ~early in J layer raid eague club The raids i Jegal, unde
