Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 December 1951 — Page 13

friendship with his success. Anms to have been ough the Boviet lotov to Stalin,

ttwald adherent, remlin, No matn minlster, Gotts of communicay deputy Joreign wed or arrested. nly that Beria's ast, eclipsed, but ore emphasis on ty regularity,

ry managers acrather than their appears now, is ries are going to \e coconuts, and heathen, ing confirmation the Communist s publicly repritrying to compel , or lose his job. 4, will be judged ical performance.

seech

many Canadians speakers had to hem.

House itself, this -

party lines. But sion, critics could

sion by Revenue eaks for CBC in

," said McCann, the air which it have permitted.” dent body, CBC or its major exsupposed to give strong hint that | future,

with these conMcGann, “there

tators ought to it to say nothing + or offensive to bilities. might very well

pensive or abusive of the four radio ample, talked of in terms which 1 peoples should Russell argued raditional taboos

ssion which radio see aired again

s who spoke for en Mr. McCann's protagonists of n-Christian mor1 the future,

1g Pe

ne International

onal Bank ($1.2

ign aid problem, which American al. The long-run excess of Ameri-

| to the need for can exports and

ca's foreign cusaying with their goods they. buy. eved by cutting spending more by buying more Mr. Reed thinks y to bring good

aren

s legislation say against segregalet things work time for things need every friend member Indiana

spaper headlines 'orse of Oregon) ate and criticizes E. Capehart (R.

roud of machines 1y man who tries Harvard U. prof.

It

ment of Defense \y specifications ’ balls and cliptoe nails. Sen. or (D. Md.) had n time stopping patriots from rials of war" to hina. The year ill was notable: among states-

nt the price. of ches to 95 cents. lette (D. Iowa), ilk only, investith why the price ed so high, It's a pound. » »

. MAN a tax colme a fighting

unsters went to

Lamar Caudle, f fine linguistic h as: A pretty , And, Caudle up

me out that the ghting of the Christmas tree telegraph. key is ‘ways has been. am running out just getting a nless something these last few more year-end

-

Truman Plea

* original stand, the President was

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 26,1951 ___

| Steel Strike Peace H

CIO Leader Acts After

PITTSBURGH, Dec. 26 (UP)— CIO President Philip Murray's decision to recall his steel union's top policy makers for two meetings here Thursday raised hopes yesterday that a scheduled New Year's Day strike of 650,000 steel workers may be called off. Mr. Murray scheduled meetings of the United Steelworkers Union's 36-man& executive board and its 170-memniber wage policy committee following an appeal from President Truman for uninterrupted steel production and the President's strong hint that he would use whatever the law allows to avert a strike costly to the nation’s defense effort. The Wage Policy Committee most probably will hear a recommendation from Mr. Murray ‘to withdraw: the order for a New Year's Day strike and argue its demands for an 181; cents an hour wage increase before the Wage Sabilization Board.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Pg

©

5 _ PAGE 13

opus Rise As Murray Recalls. Aids

a]

al

Murray Silent

Mr. Murray yesterday would not. comment on the Thursday meetings, But since there has | been no wage offer from steel | producers, observers pointed out, the only logical reason for recalling the union’s policy makers was | ‘to reconsider its strike order. “The pressure was on the union.) It can either agree to submit the contract dispute to the WSB, as a number of basic steel producers already have done, or it can stand by its decision not to work without a contract. Should the union stick to its|

believed intent on invoking the Taft-Hartley law and seeking an 80-day court injunction against a walkout.

Observers Optimistic Observers were optimistic, how-

ever, the union would heed the & it had|,

President's plea, since stated “previously it has a strong case and believes it can marshal

facts and figures to prove in-| dustry could absorb a wage in| crease without straining price controls. Washington observers believed the wage board could legally approve most of the union demands] under existing procédures, and! price officials have indicated they .feel the industry doesn't need price hikes to cover a wage in-| crease. . However, the industry has said | repeatedly it would not increase wages without a compensating hike in steél prices. If the union’s strike call is allowed to stand, production would have to be halted Dec. 28, for the furnaces to be banked and cooled by New" Year's Day. A strike would cause a loss of 2 milion tons of raw steel a week, more than half of which is going for defense needs.

Hog Prices Up At Yards Here

Early sales of light and me-

"|Christmas. They skid down the, 2 8

STARTING SOMETHING—Harold Russell, who lost both hands in the last war, lights cigarettes ~ for the girls of the chorus at a night club in Paris. Russell was in the French capital with Korean Lh paevdepm visiting the United Nations General Assembly.

.|loaded freight trucks, according

Tow Firm Claims Union

Interference

Union interference with the

Service, Inc., 2425 Lafayette, Rd. Harold Cloud, Blue & White

ing activities for more than a month. , “They wouldn't let us tow any trutks unless our wrecker drivers belonged to the union,” Mr. Cloud said. “It's hurting our business.”

Operates Heavy Wreckers

Blue & White owns six heavy duty wreckers, the only ones in Indianapolis capable of handling

to Mr. Cloud. He said shop stewards at Federal Express, Inc.; Yellow Transit Freight Lines, Inc.; Ellis Trucking Co. Inc;

towing businéss was charged to-| | day by the head of Blue & White |

president, said stewards of Local | 135, International Brotherhood of |! Teamsters, AFL, have been im-j Jpeding truck towing and wreck-

Ziffrin Truck Lines, Inc, and others have enforced a ban on| non-union wrecker drivers. “I have two union men who had cards when they came to] work here, and kept them,” Mr. Cloud said. “But they aren't always ‘available when ,I need them." The ban apparently is part of a| recent union campaign designed | to organize.drivers in local servlice and parts firms supplying the unionized truck freight lines.

Denied by Union

Today «Business =

Prices Tumble, Sweet cined Low ms WORDS which stir the,

Dr. Alexanderson was moving |fast. By May of 1930 he had a [picture seven feet square in a! | Schenectady theater. | The doctor is quite modest. » A Wd | “What will this mean in the! J wars of the future when a staff) wif By aro Hart ey |Ometr can see the enemy through | : e television eyes of his scouting] NOW IS THE TIME to cash in, for a real reason. |planes or when they can send a You've got the stores over a barrel. And you can thank, "Cri = 0 cee the target| the snow-and-ice-maker, land be steered by radio up to the Christmas buying was in full stride, until last week. ‘moment it hits?” Then it happened. Aisles thinned. 2 # a $2 » People tried to do it by phone. But, IF YOU CAN use your gifts at HE'S RETIRED, this

that wasn’t enough. all, I suggest that you keep them. | ican Marconi.” But like the rest)

So today the stores have teed Then you'll not be likely to have rain Who live Meir work Pe - your - memor lay tricks upon ory every Ry. off with keep-warm merchandise, yp p "And here’s his big thought, o

just what the doctor ordered. And!YOU. wise shoppers were down in the If you got handkerchiefs and 0 remember. ages atte ready-to-wear departments, peel- you wanted socks, and you make pleture Bnguage are & erent, | {ing off their Christmas bucks for the exchange, you may find YOUr-| 4) ing eVerVwWhere. ys the same {marked down price tags. |self mentioning the socks you got! y 2 TV Doing?

rn # in exchange, instead of the hand-| ‘How’ s TELEVISION DEALERS were

He | dodges the spotlight and points | to such names as Nipkow, Zqory-|

! { kin and Farnsworth. |

IN ONE STORE, it was hard to kerchiefs. And that makes faces believe. People were actually redder than Santa’s coat. crowded around the Christmas ornament table, buying for next Clean year at ridiculous prices. | RALPH . BROUGHMAN Wwho|,,in¢ This is the week of the bigiruns five-and-tens in Beech Grove, Hoosier homecoming. Sons and and Greenwood, is quick with ap-| ldaughters, fathers and mothers preciation. |Christmas, business hummed. are huddled under the family] Last week when the snow was Small screen owners traded in roof, : | deep in Beech Grove he saw the for bigger screens and new own- # =x = {sidewalks cleaned in the business/ers joined the electronic. world AND THEY DON'T sit around district in a jiffy. Next day the/©f see-and-hear. and look at the tree the day after| streets were cleaned. At the end of last week the| market softened. But they. knew IT MADE him feel good to see| they were nowhere near the mar-| the little town, sitting at the edge Ket's end. . of the s w f prawling big town, do its| TODAY,

sidewalk to the bus stop, shop, | have lunch downtown, and come home and brag a little about the

bargains they got. iob .That's pure Americana, the i Tg ne

= s - according to Harry

dium-weight barrows and gilts at the Indianapolis Stockyards were active and 25 cents to 50 cents above Monday's prices. However,! most of the early advance was lost and trade became slow in|

|

way we do it in Indiana. And I people drove downtown in Beech Only TV station, reported 200,000

Suppose they do the same else-| Grove. From there on they had sets in range of his Channel Six ~—Deo. 26— : ! dry walking. beam. ASTOCKS Bid , Asked Bul if ou aih clogely in the" And asked Indianapolis citi-| Demand for screen time is| Arian Boma ® oni next couple of weeks, you'll save zens driving out Beech Grove ahead of supply. WFBM will | American, States he {6%

{a wad of cash, buying those yay

cards. workers refuse to load or unload

cent” of his employees might be-

{bombing plane without a man on stations, 20 service trucks and a

“Amer- |

Destroyed by Fire il

But in the weeks approaching]

too. Bitner Jr. manager of the town’ sILocal Stocks andl Bonds

“If they could do it, why MOVe peak evening A rates up to|L 8 Axres 4ia% ptd 0.1. 100

Officials of Local 135 deny any campaign, but admit shop stewards have been checking drivers |of trucks coming to the terminals, to see if they have paid-up union If they haven't, AFL dock

ithe trucks. Mr. Cloud said “Maybe 10 per

long in the Teamsters Union, but claimed the rest had no reason for affiliation. “We have an appliance store, a tire recapping shop, four filling

{plant to can our motor oil,” he ‘said. “I don’t see why all those |people should belong to the {Teamsters Union.”

‘Two Nearby Homes

COUNCIL BLUFFS, Ia., Dec. 26 | (UP)—Two Council Bluffs fami|lies, living within six blocks of |each other, were burned out of |their homes yesterday in holiday

|fires that swept both structures. [acknowledges that there

| Asst. Fire Chief R. M. Figgins |said the home of Ambrose Culp

|surprised. They know they are in was gutted by flames that started, a market which has a saturation when the kitchen oil stove flared number of parking meters thecities.

uP. Mrs. Culp said she was cook-|

turned, it was in flames, The home of Roberta Hearts, near the Culp home, was destroyed |by fire shortly afterward when a blaze broke out in the attic. Mrs. Hearst told firemen she saw

{smoke outside the house and went parking meters has turned the

to investigate. Her husband and |children were in the house at the (time.

| where potential transit riders can

‘(ticularly in the congested busi-

‘‘luse for which they were intended

ONE MAN LIVED—Cecil Sanders, onl found alive among the 119 dead after the No. 2 at West Frankfort, Ill., takes a smoke in a hospital.

“man rescue crews

+ |—Henry

last in Orient Mine .|

Boy Secret Job Held By Grunewald

WASHINGTON, Dee. 26 (UP) W. (the Dutchman) Grunewald, “mystery man” of the |House tax scandal investigation. (held a $22.22-a-day “highly con|fidential” job with the Allen Proplerty Office in World War II, it was disclosed yesterday. The office of Sen Alexander Wiley (.Wis. told newsmen that civil service records show that Mr. Grunewald was employed as “special assistant and adviser” to Leo Crowley, then alien property

custodian, from Jan, 12, 1942, after Feb, 27, 1943. Mr. Wiley’'s aids said Mr.

Grunewald had a civil servic rating of CAF-15 and was authorized to speak for the alien Rrop: erty custodiad at -meetings o stockholders and directors - o companies seized by this govern{ment from their pre-war enem)

owners. Mr. Grunewald was ‘responsiblr lonly to Mr. Crowley, they said

City Transit Chief Slaps

By IRVING LEIBOWITZ

system -doesn't taxes the utility has to pay or the increasing number of parking meters the city has installed in downtown Indianapolis. As a matter of fact, W. Marshall Dale, president of Indianapolis- Railways, thinks he could give the city better transit service and put the utility on a sound financial basis if the company's taxes were cut and the parking meters eliminated. Writing in the November issue of Bus Transportation, a trade magazine, Mr. Dale observed: “There is no reason for the multiplicity of taxes imposed upon our (transit) industry. The investors in.the transit business are getting tired of playing Santa Claus to a lot of people, including the tax collector.” Hints at Fare Limit Further increases in the fares produce more revenue, Mr. Dale said, “but scares away a lot of the business,” hinting, perhaps, that the transportation industry is a point beyond which fares cannot be raised. Mr. Dale hit at the mounting

city is inStalling, particularly in

ing the family’s holiday dinner|the downtown business district. and left the room. When she re-| He opposes them for two reasons manipulation and impose upon |—because they contribute to con-|the taxpayers a levy to support|2 o' oek B: gested traffic and because Rall-/a losing proposition even though

Taxes, Parking Meters

[Indianapolis transit situation, Mr. | The boss of the city’s transit Dale observed that “if it weren't| like all of the|for the state, city and county agencies, many transit companies now op-| erating at a loss would be able]

to show a reasonable profit.”

Mr, Dale pointed out that Indianapolis Railways paid out nearly half a million in {pa

|and could make ‘‘highly confiden [tial investigations’ of alien prop erty office procedures and in the |firms which had been seized. | They added that Wiley ha: asked Assistant Genéral Harol L Baynton, the present alien prop lerty custodian, to disclose jus |what corporations Mr. Grune: and jus: how he exercised his powers, So far, they said, the informaition _has not been received. Mr Wiley has waged a running batti: with -the Alien Property Office

last year Iwhich administers the huge com

nies taken over from Germal

taxes, excluding federal inceme|and Japanese ailens at the star

tax, on operating revenues of $8.3) lof World War .i.

million.

Serves as Presenting the transit indus-|

“Tax Collector’

He has sai the office has become a ‘‘supe’ {gravy train” for certain individu |als.

try’s case against taxes, Mr. Dale Produce

wrote:

“Why should we still burdened with ridiculous company these taxes in its bus fare and cases exchange, act as the tax collecting agency.|; “The answer is to take the transit companies out of the tax collecting business not only by eliminating many forms of taxes, sharply highe levied but also by reducing the | Ditsin amount.” While Mr.

all kinds taxes? The is forced to

be! oh of | 54'2c: Brown mix, 52-541ac: transit y include per

. Dale specifically ane Buttertat. T0c; regular calls for a subsidy for transit companies, he rejects the idea of

Eggs — Prices FOB Cincinnati: Co Wty grades U. 8 1a white 5 white, 46-47% A brown m wholesale gr cent), pd brown mix,

HE ge grow! over pounds,

nds, ahd un 3 aah ds, ~33 s. heavy, night H hen roosters, : -1 ide. | Market ovtaig, 41 in 33c. ror io Oot point cost. No turkey ery, 90 jeore,

repor 8les mq

egal Notices.

public ownership of transit com-

panies, such as the one in New York, Chicago, Detroit and ote fhe

“To advocate public ownership) 8x. operation is to invite political 0 such other business

[ways would get more patrons if many of them never use it.”

the city banned downtown park|ing. “The installation of additional

|streets in our downtown business section into huge parking lanes

now drive their automobiles and park for 20 to 30 cents per day,” he wrote. Takes Traffic Lanes “Until principal streets, par-

ness area, are restored to the

{things the stores got stuck with c4uldn’t we?” |about $700 an hou : seeds. all weights. {in the last week at prices which We! [be able to fill th a end su wen Bel BE & i yds ofd .... 34 :..:| (the free movement of traffic and Cattle and calves were holding ,,"\ "ow "0 V's Sil il e demand. cBobbs-Merrill pid 4% 72 ..|not for the dead storage of priactive, Steers and heifers were T s Silver Milestone 4 2 3 Chamber “of Coniercs ‘oom. 42 9 |vate automobiles) and a better strong and selling at 25 to 50 Don’t Take It Back | TELEVISION is 25 years old,| BEST QUALIFIED guessers be-|Clrcie Theater com <4 understanding is gained by the cents more than on Monday. noi and beginning to act like a man, lieve it will be close to 1953 before, Com Loan 4 pid pfd....... 48° BU%| 0 hlie on how transit can relieve Vealers were very active. tare on oh Se ihe, Back in its faint beginnings, the town has its second station. |Coneo(a'ee, VE, P1 6 ,ltrafic congestion by moving a Native lambs held steady with a e 5% e 3 eside he it is not easy to put your finger Plenty of people want to go into Cummins Eng om ny %. |greater number of people within Monday's best prices. Slaughter = you BY es Hg scarfs, on the who. But a few names TV in Indianapolis. And that Betta 1s 181, /one vehicle, the problem will not ewes remained unchanged. pa Some nine else stand out. makes dragged-out hearings, eats| Eastern +81 ----|be completely solved.” Hoss, 7000; choice 170-230-pound bar. r there might be something One is the wizard of General up time. uitab, - 04 :...| With a pointed reference to the | re ! Cut Bagh ister trade. a Yse Jou wanted more than what Electric. He is Dr. E. F. W. As to who'll get -the second pany findit tg | weights slow; most advance lost: early |Alexanderson, who has been|license here, the guessers give a Ham, oor : i 170-230 pounds = $19.75-$20; several lots!" There will be some exchanging! 8 Hamilton 3 On Part of Tin Nes. and § <Th-30 Rounds. 320.10.2 38 100 ynuch, Besatse when you ox. clocking off an average of one|slight edge to WISH. Lo cv 0% ly Yy established: lished; 130-160 nds steady at $16 change a" Zift of Someone ¢ls's patent every seven weeks for 2, k kA b Hook Dr 5 Village Observes Yule years. ackson’s Jo Jo Akzo 5 . pend, St 8 Seb non Ie pen choice for a gift of "your own’ Earl Wiederrecht General Eiec-| p ROMISED ‘to k ‘Ind Gas % | RODANTHE, N. C. Dec. 26 LCHH8 1400, calves 100: active: steers|choice, you have lost something. tric Supply sales manager, tells|, © Ff ROMISED to keep you upjing Mich EI 4% % |(UP)—Christmas came yesterday cents Higher; good and choice 850-1100 4 ¥ a Ime that D (to date on who would get the Indots AB Club x e at on Dec. 16, 1926, Dr.| { 4 to only a part of this tiny village pou eers = $31.50-34.50; choice mixed| pn, |big, hustling job of Clarence A, Indpls om 36% ! steers x, POr8 fers $35; “commercial to good HE GIFT which came all tis- |Alexanderson had a workable| *Indpls = w & Lt pf 95 nestled a mile and a half out in native steers $27-831; good and choice|sued ig whaf the Poth {Jackson, executive vice president| India Railways com 5% ative Sie 18 oo I He ater: Coteau ePother person system of revolving mirrors which| the werful Indiana State indianapolis Water com {s%a|the Atlantic ocean on North 40d, commercial $22.50-24.50; odd head to) wanted you to have, and his oricould transmit a TV image on a .-'G po ate! Indianapolis Water 4% » 1% [Carolina's outer banks. to prime §39-40; commercial and good $35-|her careful selection. {screen. «9. Jefferson National x} 12 Some of the younger generation A] Steady, utility and commercial, And that is what you lose when| 2% » Guesses are no good at this “hoy d Christ ger § D 25 “Sheep, 300: native lambs active. steady|you exchange it for something] OTHER GIANTS were Dr. Al. Point. And mentioning names yincoin National Life ui |S eve Hamas on. dec. with nday.s best prides; choice to g| for the first time this year. But | simply embarrasses the people Lynch Corporation 14% prime; 431-3180: wood and choice, $30-31:| else. And Christmas becomes a len B. Du Mont and—Lee De Forest, Marmon Herrington com 6 old timers cl to their ancient cull and utliity, $22-28: slaughter ewes barter, which it should never be. Theirs is a different story, but who own them. But this is how| Mastic Asphalt 6Ya* $m ug 2X an unchanged; few cull to choice, 3-1. It 37100 ever be. | |there is a parallel. 2 Ul the new boss of the C. of C. will po Homes 18° 11% custom of celebrating it on be chosen, N Ind 9% Epiphany Eve, Jan. 5. Fl Answer to Previous Puzzle Ls Arte Famer, disteiputor for} ye ta | N 1nd . ie ~41*| Even the oldest residents Country's ag ARTE he IE ISIE UIE ie iin iy the first * SOMETIME early In January|N Ind Pub Serv 4.56% pid. 33 _3415/aren’t sure where they got the went ye from Stati Waaaram, {the executive committee of the Brovress Lands com ir gga 3Mloustom of observing their Christ-| § Imitated |Passaic. N. J. I on i on chamber will sit down together. Jub b Bery of 7 som Bh 3 mas 11 days late. They think it HORIZONTAL 6Get up iy i works. in Passe or ba a Then President Harold MeMur-| Boss q Bim ions id # "../may be a holdover from a Euro-| ‘ = 3 EET - ar- aes uk 1LiDubioes 7 This country = LAR Ti |38y -ick), made the first commer- he tay, R sommities Y 80 Ind S&F £3% vd 511108 10 iu pean atom, soared re ger a in Mealy THR IS] cia receivers. . When that committee reports. | Stokely VAL Qamp ‘Som 1872 18|dinavian sailor. ! Bow sligh RE | You'll have the name. And it will| Tanner & Co_§ . 1 % 30 Wadies bird 9 Hateful 5 oe B DR. ALEXANDERSON pe solid, no guessing. 13 TS Machin fiat Bu 4 12 ladidas 10 Greek stave {oka ifferent route. On Jan. 13, Tuy | Untied Telephone 8% pid 1. 10ut of the Air Age 11 Pile : 1928, he gave the first public dem-| ~ CRENCE Jackson will not| °*Ex-dividend. ~~~ °° pee 15 Stakes 18 W onstration, and on May 10, 1928,/ NDS Krypton, ‘a rare gas used in orms , try to name his successor. And Allen & Steen 8s ... ....... seer 17 Underworld ' 18 Compass point television became a regular part A en vB ++*| television tubes, is obtained from Pp : you can see why. He has several| American Semity bs 00... 00. 9 io h though ithe -19 Snakes 4 of the pga of WGY in Sche- runners-up in his organization. +e 3 a ih re ba ! oug some Tounh article 30 Pastest nectady. Three months later he let B .+100 aes cubic feet of air are 5 Ren achieved the first remote Pickup, handle pt aloce, + , Committee 2 8% iiilrequired to yield one cubic foot Ate 25 French cake {live stuff away from the station. | He'll answer questions. But at i . :=::lof this gas. 31 Bone » 32 Imposing | hre frst play by TV was “The no time will he say, “This is my fiamile n Mfg Co 58 hey bi n h 33 Army unit |Queen’s Messenger, Sept. 11, poy.” Indpls Paint & Color 8s 84... IU. S. Statement N fevers Closed 1928. i. He is making a clear break {4° iamastons 5s, 91 > % WASHINGTON. Due 3 Rend and won't try to run the C. of C. frieutres TON, UP) -=Qovera. | 27Go by IN APRIL of 1929, it happened. with his left hand when he be- Kiba? packed 3 ... oy Jl. rent Tos faar roar thous oh Bec. Ba |The cathode ray tube took the comes president of the American Baper Arts Co 8s 88° nd oY Ta ao Pronoun [place of the revolving disc. It was United Life I rague Device 58 60 9 als 3 nies tea 0 Direction (sb) a — nited Life Insurance Co. __|Traction Terminal ssst'i "i! 03 a" (Regelptd’ Ei "a He i its i] 31 Dow h Clea DIANAPOLIS CLEARING HOUSE oo, Jd . a 3 Bows DRE ue vied rest ra len liet, 248 11438 BY 37 hie 34 Comfort \ —— | 31 Bago A WE BUY AND SELL . | 38 Busoni JEFFERSON NATIONAL LIFE 3 ; Sitver INSURANCE CO. fy Sa) COMMON STOCK 47 Beak 4 | Current Quotation 2 Atiautive 10% Bid Offered ot 12 $1 Hotel attendant $3 Later 88 's PAGTLE CLOUDY AND 2 CLONDY ARIAS - # 4 rargeas’ ¢ VERTICAL &D seatteaty wie 3 Consteietion ar "RE ve 3 ply ' yD 7// 2 ly Fr To WGuseaTors com 19hT (Bw 4} WANED ML Ww1s Msiovs Ne rr 5 Lr a Ev) - i » . Lf : io | Hm x

m 5 a pr AE Riba sw irginia Avenue, ww Nr of PP oi | indlafie on Tuesday, the 8th day of 1852, at 3 o'clock P. M. Tor the. elec of Directors snd ter the transactic as prope \1y come before sald ean 8 ' pol will he oven. am 11 o'clock A. M, unt

fui iNorang x of Roos arrer,

Henry A. 26, 1951

! Indianspolis, Indians, D

r

CHRISTMAS CLUB IS OPEN

4.0 5 0 000 ss e0 0’

At Fletcher Trust there are different plans to fit

every budget:

$ 2 every two weeks gives you $ 50

4 every two weeks gives you 6 every two weeks gives you 10 every two weeks gives you

100 150 250

Open your club account at any of our 14 citywide offices listed below. You only have to make deposits at two-week intervals—and you can deposit at any Fletcher Trust office in town. A check will be mailed to you December 1.

* This: your sve than 12,000 persons received Christmas Club checks from

N. W. Corner Pennsylvania and Market Sts.

708 E. Sixty-third Street 3001 N. lilinois Street 20 W. Sixteenth Street 1125 S. Meridian Street 1533 Rooseveit Avenue 2122 E. Tenth Street 6000 E. Tenth Street

: $501 £. Washington Street : 2506 E. Washington Street : 500 E. Washington Street 474 W. Washington Streef - 1233 Oliver Avenue : 2600 W. Michigan Street

{

MEMBER FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM MEMBER FEOERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION