Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 March 1952 — Page 24
© “
usiness
io
oday bl 5 v3 Picking ‘Em, | The Big Job |
By Harold Hartley
HOW DO, YOU pick a man for a job? It is not guesswork. It has to be sure-fire. If the employer misses, his own neck is out. He has
to answer for his mistake. a A buyer in a store who misses - the target in merchandise has to which is about as old as the auanswer for his mistakes, too. It's |tomoblle itself. ca same with buying manpower." ” Ha personnel services have THESE ARE worthy causes. taken some of the risk out of the But what a spin it must be for zame of picking men. They have the collectors whose collections queer little lists of questions. Some /get bigger and bigger, trying to seem trivial. But they are tricky. keep up with the out-pouring of BE [stamps which pay honor to mile[STANC .4t stone after another. FOR INSTANCE, the biggest s thing about a man, is his Integrity.| 80 my answer is I simply don’t This means that-he shall perform collect stamps. All I ask is that as he is supposed to. If he doesn’t, [they take the ‘letter to the name he and everybody around him car lon the envelope. . get into trouble. I USED TO BE able to tell I've seen those lists of questions. | stamps by their colors. They ric the Sam. A ae ray ore, A Mircescenter is likeon , ‘Illy to ue or red, brown or in three or four differant WaYL lorchi, al colors of the brain en ey A : They can tell if a man is Xaver: rd down deep inside me there jJeliings a oy Zoollt a faint suspicion Shat the BOvV- " {ermment may he using them pothe job. They also can tell about litieally, aiming them where the his ability. votes are thickest,
2
LJ a. 9 BUT THE MOST important NO Push thing isto tell: whether he is} ,; zpoyy HAVE guessed ahout lying. [power mowers. But it remained The good jobs seek the men.|s,. john W. Love, writing for|
There's no lineup at the employ-|g .pps-Howard in Cleveland, to ment office, no row of walters |, 44 it up.
on employment office benches. Americans doing no more than
But not!
®
id .
Five Millionth Phone Turned Out
When Western ‘Electric turned | out its five millionth telephone! today, it was presented to the first employee. { G. F. Raymond, plant manager, ‘handed the milestone phone over| to Reed 8. Garrett, who accepted! {it for the employees. : | Mr. Garrett, who lives at 6969 Oak Lane, was formerly head of | the English Department, .regis-| trar and assistant headmaster at; Park 8chool, where he taught 17) years, He is. now publications
Case Transfer Angers Judge
Action Dropped In Second Court
By CARL HENN Judge Scott McDonald, Muniectpal Court 4, today branded as ‘contemptuous” the action of Chief Deputy Prosecutor Harry Riddell in transferring a case out of his court without the judge's knowledge or permission. He ordered the prosecutor's of{Jee fo Me how alidavity on Yiree were made at the Shadeland Ave. dismissed “Tuesday afternoon in P ant, Municipal Court 3, the court to] The millionth phole Same. off ' the line of the Speedway pllot which they had been transferred. o,\ in February of 1950, It .And he warned Mr. Riddell: “Ii ater went to” the home of MT. this ever happens again, there = 4 Mrs. Waldemar Karg, 1865 {will be serious consequences.” 's AFTOW "Ave ' | The defendant was Mrs. Nellie pare the Shadeland Johnson, 38, who gave her address|, out more than as 2712 Dearborn 8t. She hadi; <t year it had a {been charged with operating al \ "4 $21 million. motor vehicle while under the in- . ’ fluence of liquor, reckless driving, having no operator's license and
being drunk. Gets Nitro Shot
Arrested Feb. 17 SULLIVAN, Mar. 7 (UP)—S8ulMrs. Johnson was arrested Feb. |jyan County prospectors dropped
‘magazine, Dial Tone. The five millionth phone had nearly 5600 parts, most of which
Ave. plant telephones. payroll of
Sullivan Oil Well
Clellan. 780-foot-deep hole today in search [ Patrolman McCellan was not of ofl. |present in Municipal Court 3 Tues-| "Fred Cline, Sullivan producer, day afternoon when the affidavits estimated the well’s capacity at he had signed were dismissed on 50 barrels daily. Mr. Cline sald the prosecutor's recommendation. qt was drilled in Pennsylvania
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES. 4
supervisor and editor of the plant Martha Mclver, Paoli,
17 by Patrolman Willlam A. Mc-'g charge of nitro-glycerine into a tion. He added that a major fac-
- . it - 3 -
®
Centenarian [Hog Prices Here
‘waca Jump 25 Cents | Deaths Hit “ump 2 tents
ing at the Indianapolis Stock-
Double-Take
By BOB BARNES
Age Expectancy Up
|cluded on graded eggs. conzumer grade, : . 8B. "A" large white, 38-41'%2 cents, Mr. Robinson pointed out that|{prown mix, 36-39% cents. :
Hoosiers today can look forward white, 34-37'a cents, brown mix, 34-36%a|
3
v. 8. medium New York Lifts Ban
Judge Pro Tem George Ober wasigand, an oil producing geological|
on the bench at the time, The policeman told Judge MecDonald Mr, Riddell had told him they would be dismissed because he had made a “bad arrest.” Patrolman McClellan told the judge he had not seen Mrs. John(son driving In a reckless manner. But he believed, he sald, she was
And it is the business of a 800d | pay have to, have given the pow |OPerating her car while under the
executive to know where the... wer factories a spin. Here's good men are. He and his busi- |, r,t it's gone.
ness will rise or fall on the basis of his selection. . 8 » - AS I WRITE this, the committee of the 8tate Chamber of Commerce is huddled over the selection of a successor to Clarence Jackson. . These names are on the table. Bill Book, vice president of the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce; Jack Reich, director of membership for the State C. of C.; Dick James, head of the Hoosier Auto Club, and a late but strong entry, Marshall Abrams, manager of the Construction League. - » » AND WHO KNOWS — there may be a dark horse up the sleeve of some board member. But It surprises me that more aren't after the job. I think it will pay $15,000 a year, or more, to start. The State Chamber board is a top-flight crowd, all capable men, and they know how to pick them, 80 whatever their choice, bet on it. It will be all right,
Cameras Don't Cheer MARGARET WEBSTER, the actress-producer, once said that it takes a full house to get the best out of a cast. The same goes for basketball. It takes a full house of fans, yell-| A FEW YEARS back I had ing their lungs out, to win a game./cocktails with Walt Disney. That Part of the team Is its morale In'was when I first discovered that the stands. Mickey Mouse worked in. overat I'm getting at is that you 'g) 5. can see a basketball team on! He had done a film for Owenstelevision, but the team can't see Illinois Glass Co., putting over you. It can't hear you either. sales points with animated carCameras don't cheer. a » ~ J WHAT A TEAM needs to put on the winning touch is a ripsnorting cheering section, support from the alumni, real people, with real voices, pepping tired muscles! through. The place to enjoy a basketball game is right there, There is no! substitute. Television sees it for you, but it's a one-sided deal. And| your team needs you there. $0 see the regionals tomorrow, in person. And your team, whichever it is, will do a better job. Then there's your loyalty. You'll feel better about that, too. °
This Counts
VE i als Ad Club, PVE HAD a plece around for™, revenue agent went into the some time. It insists on being hills of Kentucky. H sald, that important. | 3.9 spjucky. e came to
It came from the Kroger Co. It|" Shack, And a small boy came
{to the. door. a side of business few Suspect “Where's your pa?” the agent
were tired, too tired to push a lawnmower. So last year they spent $93
to push it,
‘Unaccustomed As . . .
IT WILL happen to you some time, if it hasn't already.
ward in an audience, and the chairman, out of clear sky, will ask you to ‘say a few words.” At that point, most men want to crawl under their chair, or throw it at the chairman.
” » ” BUT MAXWELL DROKE, of Droke House, here in Indianap-. olis, has a little book, which is insurance against such an outrage. If looked at once in awhile, no-
a fear-frozen lip. It is “Speech Outlines for All Occasions.” It doesn’t write the speech, but it tells you what to put in them, and how to get up off your uneasy chair, and hit the apple, like William Tell.
Job for Donald D.
~ » ” NOW DONALD DUCK has a job. He is to peddle a new drink called Lime Cola, which will show up on the market soon. I don’t know if I would drink Lime Cola because Donald Duck drinks it, but I surely would look anywhere to see what Donald Duck is doing. And when I do that, I'm going to get sold on Lime Cola. I'll bet my hat.
Still Life
BEST STORY of the week was told by Zenn Kauffman, the Philip Morris man, before the
You will be sitting too far for-|
body should ever catch you with!’
toons, in color, and with lively New Castle, suffocated late yesmood music. |terday in a fire which
{ |
Kroger has a little booklet,
pocket-size. It has been handed to |, 30,000 employees, telling them to|
take part in their town, to shoulder the civic load in a community. ” n »
IT MEANS giving a lift to the
asked. “Down at the still,” oy. ; “Where's your ma?" | “She's down at the still, too.”
sald the
{ Then: the agent said, “Where's| American States
{the stil?” “I won't tell,” said the boy.
influence of Hquor, that she had
no driver's license and that she (was drunk.
v - ” | IN 1041 there were $4 million] It was on those three charges worth of power mowers sold. that Judge McDonald ordered new After 10 hard years, Americans affidavits.
Mr. Riddell told Judge Me|Donald, “I reviewed the case and it was my decision it should be
million to have a lawnmower pull | dismissed, them around, instead of having!
Challenges Transfer | Judge McDonald emphasized: “I'm not questioning Judge Ober’s decision. But Mr. Riddell had no right to transfer this case from {my court without my permission,” Mr. Riddell today told Judge {McDonald, “If I had known it would be personally offemsive to you, T wouldn't Have done it (transferred the case).”
{Mr. ‘Riddell, the court in which a case is filled has to consent to a transferral. If you wanted the charges dismissed, why couldn't the case have been taken care of yesterday morning?” “I didn’t know whether I'd be able to be here because of my [father and mother being {II Mr. Riddell sald. “I looked in here Tuesday, but your court was busy. So I took it to Judge Ober.” “This court considers your ac-
Donald said. “I might say, Mr. Riddell, if |{this_ ever happens again, there will ge serious consequences.”
Boy, 3, Suffocates in Fire
NEW CASTLE, Mar. 7 (UP)— Leslie E. Nash, 3-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. . Herschel Nash,
started {when leaking gas exploded in the (home. Leslie was asleep at the time of the fire.
Local Truck Grain Prices
Truck wheat, $32.34. Oats, 90c,
New No. 2 white corn, $1.13. ew No. 2 yellow corn, $1.63, | Soybeans, $2.17.
| |
Produce
| Esgs—FOB Cincinnati, on graded eggs: Consumer grade, A large white, 18-41%; brown mix,
Jo'ac; U. 8. medium white, Toynd i 3 34-36%3¢; wholesale 5 1
cases incipded
ommercially grad {large white, 34-36c: brown m| 4current receipts, cases exchanged, 30-. Market steady, Occasional lot qual ity, direct producer current ts a Te with bulk holding at unchs bes. Chickens — Commercially grown fryers. 30c; hens, heavy, 26-27c; hens, Rent, 1930¢: old roosters, 17-19¢. Fryer market fairly steady with of {ferings liberal, Prices
brown mix, (eo 40 per cent), extra
i
Judge McDonald replied, “Well,| |
tion contemptuous,” Judge Me-!
formation, and 12 feet of ofl sat-/to attaining an age of 68.5 years, uration was discovered. The well is located on the Bes- life expectancy was about 63 sie Riggs farm, five miles south- years. west of Graysville, in the center prevention and cure of disease,
of some 1700 acres of oil leases. particularly in cutting down the
Sentenced in Ft. Wayne rate. has been largely responsible
. for boosting the expectancy figure, Robbery-Beating
he said. FT. WAYNE, Mar. 7 (UP) —| Mr. Robinson also had some Harold Harris, 21, Ft. Wayne, | statistical advice for those who began a 10-to-25 year sentence at have reached the. century mark. the Indiana Reformatory today He said figures seem to indicate for the Feb. 20 robbery-beating of| that more centenarians die during an-Elkhart salesman. the late winter months than at Harris was found guilty late|any other time. Among the worst yesterday on charges of assault-| winter killers of the aged, Mr
in the latter's auto near here. diseases.
FRIDAY, MAR. 7, 1952 ‘| Jobs Set Record '|During February
eWASHINGTON, - Mar. 7 (UP) —The Commerce Department re-
® - = - MS. The . Four in Week today. Receipts - totaled a guwessssnnt (POTLOd vegierday that 59,752,000 hi {8000 4 § E | | persons had ‘jobs last month—the By. DICK MONTABA | . or til 4 highest February employment in Unites Press Staff Correspondent Bulk choice 170-240 pound ‘bar- ’ history. Four Hoosier centenarians dled rows and gilts were selling for The number of unemployed— within the past week, establishing $17-17.75. Choice 240-270 pound- = - y 1088.00 ag te lowest Jor Jny what 1s believed to be a new seven- ers Went for $16.25-17.25; 300-400 N a ia Deel Serious day mortality record among hun- Pound sows for $15-15.75. {| problemé“in-some areas and cer-dred-year-olds in the state. | All slaughter class cattle were \ y tain industries, Commerce Secre- | The latest to die were Mrs. about steady. A few commercial, 2 tary Charles Sawyer said the 106; Mrs.|t0 low choice yearlings and heit-| reroll so leyinent outlook is Flora Smith, Galveston, 104; W. ers were selling for $26.50-33. a He called it “proof of .the J. Walters, Battleground, 101, and Selling price for utility and com- 4 orderly fashion in which defense Samuel Keck, 100. mercial cows was $21.50-24.50. = program controls have: been carTheir Dassinz- Rowever. .b no. Vealers were weak with a spar- ried out without upsetting our er passing, however, -’y NOingly top Of $39. {reshment com- | economy.” . means represents the last of the Hoes 8000: active; uneven; mostly fully] &Chairman of (the relresiiicy eee : 13 cents higher; sows steady: bulk choice!’ * Why, I'd consider it an .as state’s vanishing elders. Indiana, tio-2ds pounds barrows and Slits 817- mittee? . «+ aor? British Author Freed thas an all-time high of 40 cen: |No. 1 and 2,18 x K pounds, choles 340s Of Ti : Drivi Chara. 1s 4-17.25; - tenarians—and that’s an official 38 pounds $15.50-16, 50; part Jonas ir ad Ipsy riving arge | astimate [100 pounds $13.35; 130140 pounds 114-13; BIRMINGHAM, England, Mar . | . » — - 3 ’ ’ . 118.75; - Lo — Verne K. Robinson, director of| Cattle 800. catven 3 HM inuhter classes | 7 (UP)—Prof. Lancelot Hoghen, t about steady on small supply; few com- author of a best-selling book on {state public health statistics, estl-| mercial to jow choles yearlings and heif- mathematics, was acquitted yes- > y ers -33; . A 8, . 3 \mated that of the state’s 4 million prime offered: Rote Mew ghoice terday of a drunken driving |population, about one in every 3350; Cianers and cutiers 51150-2180; : Shige as te Jodee BETeed 100,000 has passed the . century eligible to $29: vealors 138 00. oss with witnesses tha e always | mark, web to lower lc $1. saringiy’ uk Ml / | seemed "drunk—even ‘when ab- | Mr. Robinson said this number | mercial $36-35; culls $38 dows. oo °™" | Geena 1SOIULELY. SUDET. is steadily increasing in propor-|, Shep 100: hard encuch ofterea tor / Judge Paul Sandlands, after {tion to the state's risin opula-|119-pound native wooled lambs $20: odd hearing Prof. Hoghen testify he 8 pop ! ; ( y gulls $1820; few utility and good slaughter hadn't had a drink all day yestor in the rapid growth in popula- mr terday, said that “in every way, ftion has been the lengthening life Produce ~~" his speech, demeanor and unexpectancy. i ~— tidiness of mind,” the defendant Eggs, prices fob. Cincinnati, cases in-! ’ seemed intoxicated while, in
reality, he wasn't.
French Dancer Injured
cents; wholesale grade, commercial graded | | 40 per cent, extra large white, 34-38 cents, On Colored Oleo {whereas 10 years ago the average brown mix, 1-38 cents: current receipts, | exchanged, . steady at unchanged prices, with supplies (Only seven states still Scientific progress in the sample for fair demand
cases
(changed. Butter,
creamery premium butterfat, 72 cents, regular, 67 cents. .
30
|Recetpts light balance steady
90
In Nice Air Crash Dies
NICE, France, Mar. 7 (UP)— Margaret Delpy, 25-year-old
WASHINGTON, Mar. 7 (UP) — ban the sale of yellow oleomargarine,
-31 cents; market!
| Chickens, commercially grown fryere, . {28-29 cents: hens, heavy, 326-27 cents,, New York became the "41st French dancer and only survivor {light, 19-20 cents; old roosters, 17-19 state to lift restrictions on the of the Air France plane crash |infant and childhood mortality cents;” fryers weak at 1-2 cents decline
on vegetable spread when the legis- here Monday which killed 37 per|lature approved a bill yesterday sons died last night. ending a 66-year-old ban on the| The dancer was pulled from {sale of colored oleo. Gov. Thomas|the burning wreckage of the 4-
and
score 82 cents
U. S. Statement
ASHINGTON,
ment current “fscgl {pared | Expenses | Receipts Surplus
c Cash Balance
ing and robbing Earl Doering, 45, Robinson sald, were pulmonary ge.
expenses
Public Debt 260 Gold Reserve 23,290.477,452
with a year ago: This Year $42.700,888,804 $26,530,665,336/
34,787.28
7,913.630.549
4,394,08 ,331,83
|E; Dewey was expected to sign engine plane which crashed in a the bill promptly. {seaside olive grove here after The seven states still banning two motors failed on a take-off
ithe sale of yellow margarine are from Nice airport. IL pH to ar
mall strong dairy states: Washing-| She was injured critically and ton, Vermont, Wisconsin, Iowa, doctors said they would have had 237.481.370.413 Minnesota, South Dakota and to amputate both her legs below 930.705.076 Montana. Of this group, Washing- the knees. She died late last .111,094.884 ton is the only one in which re-rnight after having been placed in
33.015 soss0s Peal action is in prospect. lan oxygen tent.
Last Year 5,255
5,033 3,748 25
|
Balance steady. unchanged
| Butter—Creamery, 90¢, 2c.
90 score fum butterfat, T7c.
premregular, 7
Local Stocks and Bonds!
Mar, 7, 1952 | STOUKS American Loan 5%
| American States pfd Ayrshire Collieries com L 8 Ayres 4'2% pfd {Belt RR & Stk Yds
com
N “I'll give you a quarter.” Belt RR & Stk Yds pid . 63 PTA, or the Boy Scouts, the Elks “All right,” said oS boy. “Jet's Bobbs-Merriil com ow 2 os or the Masons, the Knights of|see the quarter.” - : Central Soya © sere dn, ron . bg Chan fC ere oe AY Cambug, or the Rotary Club, op *I'h give it to you when I come [Circle “Theater com SOI a9, serving on the kitchen committee back,” sald the agent. | Somoneath Loan rd Fi 88 in the church. | “I want it now,” said the boy |Gouselidated Fin 's pfd 5) : ' [Con Car-N Jar . 1 } These are the honest chores of “because you ain't comin’ back.” Cummins Ere com ihe community living. Someone has ee mem Jou Elo oid La 1o to do them, work on the Com- 1 Eastern Ind Tele 8 DIA vos. munity Chest, the Red Cross nm Official Weather Equitablg Securities Com ee st, ' “%| UNITED STATES WEATHER BUREAU |[aultabl Securities ofd ... eae for the veterans organizations. | MSY, Je Sally Finance om. “ers The stay-at-home, do-nothing, Sunrise . ... 6:10 | Sunset 5:40 | Hays Corp ofd ww De re [Precipitation 24 hrs. ending 7:30 a. m. o00| hamilton Mig Co com Tor. an nae mi Sa ER ff Be se self. {Deficlency, since Jan. 22d 33) Hook peta best when he's helping someone , The following table shows the tempera. | (nd ry ota va 5! » . else, and not for coin. | “atation : Huh LowilNd Orr & War om nN. 4, 4 o 2» ALANIS so ivteverinrenrins Aeeres 61 33 |ind Mich El oy an : 7: 9 . Boston 28 34 | [nd Telephone «8 pfd «a B6 “" I like this attitude of Kroger’s. Chicago 4 i} |indpls Ath ‘Club Realty Co... 80 . Other companies have it. And Denver 0 23 (Indpis Pow & Li pf 191 og they do it well {Evansville ...cceenevnane 8 25 |[ndlanapoiis Railways com ... 4 5 J . Bt. wayne PPP a 11 | §ndianapolts Water Som ir 3H » 18% * : ndianapolis ater 4'4 of ... 10} | Brainbow Ray Seviense 3 33 | Indianao is Water 8% pf wi - fe | 8 rson National Life com 1 12% I'D HATE TO BE a stamp col- {fim *®® 100 78 of {Kinean“a Co com "Cl 3 Abe lector. I think I'd have to add a Minneapolis-St. # 2 |tincoln Nat Life \\..000 3 room to the house. : Now York o.oiiveiess a3 {3anen, Corporation Crverees Ave . ahoma sens J , * ao ! ; The other day I bought a 3-/3%apoma Clty .. Wo | armon Herrington com ih cent stamp. It commemorated Eittsoufgh ...... #3 41 (Natl Homes com . . AY the 4-H Clubs, a noble recogni-|san Francisco . 33 a0 Natl Home ota 000000 io | tion. Then today I got a letter| Washington. D.C. .. a a NInd Pub Serv dva ped 1I1 d 6 4 a ————————— *N In u erv 4'> p cee 20% 26% from the American Automobile] INDIANAPOLIS CLEARING MOUSE |N Ind Pub Serv 4:58% pfd .. 35 = 2634] , ~o Progress Laundry com om Association. . Day's Cearings "...... coer 8 BAT2000 | oTOBTESS LAUDIES com 30% And the stamp honored the Day's Debits A I3a.000 Pub Serv of Ind Ita pf .. 85 0th year of the association, wes peste LL 189.920.0080 Tn GO & E som x a - a 80 Ind & E (8% ptd 0 ' okely-Van amp com ,. 5 Stokely-Van Camp pid . 18: é ® y ® ® - Tanner & Co 5% % pfd , Terre Haute Malleable . 13% ited’ tor Hidin © [I uni: i United THe. re 5% pid “ » nion 3s y ; % vias Mary Gillespie, “Miss Informa-|férm tne staff of her birthday. —~® I ® sonns tion” for Prosecutor Fairchild, nen it extended “heartlest greet-jAlicn & Steen 8 .-..... 38 a ¥ ngs. American urity 5s 60 . . 98 has been “indicted” for a wom- 2e « » | American Loan 4's 80 . 96 s olin rs. Gillespie pleaded “guilty”, american, Loan es 191 - an’s privilege—hiding her age. |gaying: p atesvinig Tele Co, igs 110g But it's all in fun. “I didn't know anyone even |ch of Com Bldg 4's 61 . 91 In celebration of Mrs. Gilles- knew it was my birthday. And no|golumbia Club 3-5s62 ...... 98 . Equitable Fities 5360 ..... 96 ple’s birthday yesterday, her co-|one has asked my age.” . Hamilton MfgCo5s65 . ... 99 workers served an impressive| The “indictment” was the work |[Bdplse Paint & Color 864 .. 98 “indictment” on her. It charged of John Tinder, grand jury dep- 9 Liens “gubordination of nativity: uty, and Mrs. Agatha Rhodes, The “indictment,” written on an|grand jury secretary. It named inofficial form, * "” the Is vestigator Charles Russell as the * \ 4 ”» . “formation clerk of falling #0 in-|“state witness. . . > : . .. - o
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FRIDAY Legal Notice
on day time they will read. . Invitation No Size No. 9 ag Indiana, deliver or plant vicinit
. Invitation No ‘Bise No. 7 and sDale. Indiana, Section A-l or Invitation No. No. 11 aggresa delivered on roa vicinity thereof.
Invitation No sStse No. 7 and r
J , Indiana In A or pli
Invitation No Size No, 7 d Velpen, Section C or p Invitation No. No. 63 aggrega Indiana, deliver K and L or ros vicinity thereof.
Invitation Ne Size 0, Indiana, delive Oo or plant viel Invitation No Bise No. 12 Indiana, deliver H-2 and J or 1 Invitation Nc Size No. 12 a Indiana, deliver or_plant vicinit Invitation No Size No. 12 a Indiana, deiive: LRA ant vicinity PH nvitation No Size No. 11 agg Indiana, deliver or_ plant vicinit Invitation Nc Size No. 11 a Indiana. delive C or plant vici Invitation Nc Size No. 11
A-3 and A-4 o Invitation No Size No. 11 Indiana, deliver and road 124 vicinity thereof Invitation Nc Size No. 11 =a Indiana, deliver or plant vicin Invitation No Size No. 11 a Switch, delivere or plant vicinit Inyitation Nc Size No. 11 as Indiana, delive: D and E or » Invitation Nc Size “No. 11 ¢ Indiana, deliver or plant vicinit Invitation No fize No. 9. No. F.0.B. Kentlan road 55, Sect thereof. Tnvitation No size No. 9, No. FOB. Parr, I 14. Section B Invitation No No. 9. No.
Section A and plant vicinity t Invitation No Size Ni ro road 114, vicinity thereof Tnvitation Nc 8ize No. 11 an Shelbyville, In
Don't w now an
Paymen Write
kK
New a CYCLA LEVELC
Zero-zone Freezer! the Refr Hydrators temperatu
Plus ® All po
® Famou mecha
© One-pi ® Quick
® Rayon
PRI ‘ 3,
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