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Wausau Daily Herald from Wausau, Wisconsin • 12

Location:
Wausau, Wisconsin
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12
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WAl'SAU DAILY RECORD-HERALD. WAUSAU, WISCONSIN TUESDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 19, 1952 PAGE TWELVE FENWOOD MBS HARVrV I'KTRICK Mrs. Alvin Karau and son, Dorchester, Mr. and Mrs. William Marquardt and children, Faye and! NEW YORK STOCK PRICES Quotations as of 1 o'clock (Wausau iimt).

CourUsy Raymond J. Plunkett Company I Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Bauman Donald, Mr. and Mrs.

Hugo Bobert and son. Brant, Verona, spent the and son, Lowell, Mr. and Mrs. Clin- neck. end with Mailman's parents, ton Passow, Mr.

and Mrs. Arthur! Mr and Mrs, Edwin Bauman. Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence I Management and Labor Fight Discrimination By nWK.IIT R.

(.. PAI.MKR President, General Cable Corporation two loada pnnie 1.400 lb. ateen 37.00: most choice to low-prima ateera and yearUnm 31.00-38 75; load Coloradoa 37 00; commercial to low-choice ateeri 27 40-32 75; tlx loddf mixed commercial and good 1 lb. 29 load Hol-iem down to 27 00; choice to low-prime ag 2 31.50-34.75; eeral loads high-la cnoice and prime heifere held above 35 50; bulk utility and commercial cowf 20 75 8 7 24.00: cannera and cuttera 17.00-20 50; util-77 2 uy and commercial bulla 25 50-28 50; odd 48 2 head to 29 00; good bulli 28 good 50 1 to prime vea.cn 37.00-39 00; few light 62 7 aa low aa 15 00. figure following representa Penny Penn Pepl I'helpa Dodge Philip Mor Phihpt Pure Oil Mr and Mrs Willard Wiesman Otto and Mr.

and Mrs. Harold Abbott entertained at a dance Saturday Totch, Wausau, and Mr. and Mrs.jxi ch.m evening at the Poplar Tree ball- Harold Haneman, Marshfield, t-; Dye 09 4 38 498 12114 for Mrs. Am cn RCA 24 2 Salable aheep 2.500; no slaughter lambt Every industrial plant, large or small, mirrors the U-n- room honor of their fifth wed- tended funeral services and the prejudices of its particular recion and locality. i anniversary.

Carl Marquardt at St. and the prejudices of its particular region and locality John's Lu- Am sions I'lYirilnvore anil iininn wYiit trv arrwctlv tn hrnk Mr. and Mrs. Arthur rtehC ineran muitii, iunui ritrn, neu-iAm Pow 23 sold; asking 23 cents or more higher, or around 28.50 for good to prime 95-106 lb. wonted lambs and above 27.00 or comparable grade clipped offerings; other classes about steady; utility to choice mixed weight slaughter ewes 11.30-14.50; few oddlota Repub Stl 41 8 Seara 54 1 Sinclair 43 1 Socony Vac 37 Southern Co 13 4 South Pac S2 5 Southern SO 4 Spiegel 7 throuch the crust of prejudice are Often enough stymied by Town of Wicn.

enter, a.ned relatives nesday afternoon. The Rev Harold Am resistance down the line, in the rank and ft.e of their per- tbr'rt Charlotte. The guest of honor re- Dirks. Henry Weber, Martin Fan- Even during the war, when man- of ifts dre, Clarence Hamann and Paulus Armour Anti-Pollution Budget Grows APPLETON More money than ever it going Into co-operative research during 1952 to cut isconsin sulphite stream pollution, it was announced today. The annual report of the Sulphite Pulp Manufacturers' Research League shows that has been budgeted for 19S2.

This is $9,500 more than the League spent during 1951. L'se of Money Summarizing the financial affairs of the League during its first 12 years of operation, In his report as president J. M. Conway Informs the member mills how their research money totalling $930,200 in this period has been spread among different projects. Throughout the years the League has devoted to studying the yeast process for treating sulphite liquor, to evaporating and burning the liquor, $327,662 to research projects conducted for the League by universities and other Institutions cov 7 power was one onne critical nouic- eel mat we must sec a danurr re-, Hoppenworth.

CanUnan 45 El Auto-Lit 4 Gen Fooda 43 7 .50 5 Goodrich MS Goodyear 44 3 Gt Northn Pf 4 Greyhound 11 Homettake 35 7 Hudson Mtr 13 I 56 2 Inland 40 1 Inup Copper 15 7 Int Harv 33 1 Int Nick Can 45 I 115 Johm-Manv 4 Kennecntt 83 1 Kimberly-Clark 4 LU). 3 Libby Mc.V at 8 5 McGraw Electric 5 4 Marathon 25 3 Marahall Field 35.1 Mawimte 29 Mondak Vt 23 4 M'ont Ward 2 1 Nmh-Kelv 18 7 Nat Cont 13 4 Nat Bic 30 I Nat Dairy Si 5 Natl Steel 47 I New Kng Elec 12 4 NYC RR 183 No Am Avia 18.1 North Pac 65 4 Ohio Oil 58S Oweni Glau si Packard 44 Param Pic 27 necks, mere were wnue worKers lore we can see through it. Mr anf Mr, darnel Mueller. lo i a I i i i I SiUTl I'll Ht fit Oft it If wii rl a I I Vti 1 1 Rcndlx wno reneiieo againsi snaring meir scores or plants across our lanu vis ted here Sunday. anil fri.n at tniir hnmp Snnrl.iV stl 74 10 I SOS 40 7 SO 43 S3 1 44 33 5 worx oencnes wun uiac worKers.

nave oeen smart enounn io casn in It is a microcosm of the commu-lon the dividends available to them evening in honor of the birthday nitv of which it is a part. Yet'fhmnoh th. lahnr manaeement Mrs Wrick. Sheephead was Many local people attended the Borden military funeral services for Pfc. Kdwin Mueller at St.

John's Lu-c Square a 2 St Brands 24 4 St Oil Cal 51 4 St Oil Ind St Oil 75.4 Sterling Drug 404 Sludebaker 32 5 Swift 32 2 Texaa Co 5-3 Timken Axle i.i Un Carbide 58 3 Vn Pac 58 3 Un Air Llnea 29.7 L'n Aircraft 30 2 Rubber 77 4 Stl 39 2 41.4 Weat Elec 33 4, Woolworth 43.3; thcran Church, Town of there are few leaders in labor and projects dividends of the human management who do not feel an spirit and dividends in better effi- I MM uni f) played and prizes were awarded Mrs. Erick Werner, Mrs Henry Viegut, Mrs. William Marquardt, Mrs. Adolph Bornow.ski, Carl Mar ihursday. ine Kev.

j. h. Kohoerg Chi NW 15 1 Chi Rl Pac 52 obligation to rid their communities aency of plant operation. officiated. GRAIN MARKET r.RAI.V MARKETS CHICAGO Gram pushed ahead near the close of today's board of trade Local dealers were fairly heavy buyers of wheat, especially In the March contract which was up more than a cent at times.

Feed grains followed the lead of wheat in a modest manner, but soybeans were inclined to lag a The late rally gave the market the best tone of the day. A mid-morning rally had little follow through, and before the closing buying pricea had sagged back to around the day's low. Preliminary estimated receipts of grain in carlots: Wheat 21, corn 160, oats 63, rye 5, barley 30 and soybeans 22. At the finish wheat was to 2Ls higher than yesterday'a close, March Corn was as to higher, March fl.ElH-Oats were to higher, March Hl'i-'t. Rye was to 1 cent higher, March Soybeans were to higher, March and lard was 10 to .23 cents a hundred pounds lower.

March $12.82. of the bigotry which breeds these tensions. Chrysler 70S Col Gas It EItc 15 Com Edis 32 3 Con Ed is 34 Corn Oas SO Cont Can 44 1 Corn Prod 70 Wright t.t quardt, Henry Weber and Herman -w. Krampien. Lunch was served.

MeatleSS Dinners Guests included Mr and Mrs WU- por Vegetarians liam Marquardt and children, Faye 3 ROGAN (Continued from page 1) tins issued and 73 broadcasts do litftrfkH nr nrnnnrprl Stock Aeeragea Induitriala 3.31 Ralli 1.23 Utilities .31 Volume 1190 M. and Donald, and Mr. and Mrs. Clin-! SINGAPORE -The Malayan Curt Works Both Ways Fortunately, the inter-relation between industry and community works both ways. On the one hand, what labor and management can do in a given plant Is limited by conditions outside.

On the other 57 86.3 vegetarian aocieiy nas scneauiea a uivrs nesumr i nervier- i rwill- mi. an, mis. "i "ire mummy uimier-meeuiiK. bi wmtn ik- Rogan followed his statistical No. 2-inch 3.7S-3.0O..8O score IB) fresh 86.

89 score IC) Iresh horst and son, james, verona no meat will be served. other pncei unchanged Hi CHICAGO DAiar I Cheese 190,111, steady, prices unchang- The non-meat-eaters also have CHICAGO HP Butter strong; receipts services performed during his Mr and Mrs Untiet many year' agncul- Me fhurlo. iriiia. ill I ami jiia. 111:111 uuiici.

antttnrnn mat. dAoiuinn innv in. mnnw vnart oi linart t1 tha utfrlplll. aiinuuiivu uvviaiuii as head of the laii.iou; wholesale selling prices to one lo lIlc pUSMUU1y sianum an e-cent a pound higher; 93 score AA 84.75; hand, every advance in their own plant helps to improve conditions 'outside. With this in mind, a unique project was launched in 1949 by the LIVESTOCK and daughter, Karen, hicago, vetretarian restaurant in A S4 90 and SB 83 5 cars: 80 He dwe.

at length upon his or-. ni- a it. thn 1 ms: ss sas. mw incatxire. ro Eggs firm; receipts wholesale MILWAI'KEE LIVESTOCK MARKETS AT A GLANCE NEW YORK UP) Stocks Lower; selling pressure dents list.

Bonds Lower; rails under pressure. Cotton Uneven: rallies rimi flnprj4 ganization ol the waratnon county Kroening home Quality Milk Improvement Asso-, Mr and Mfs Gordon Hoitman'4 A I CTPFFT THHAY elation with its present 40 dairy vUi(cd Frank Marth at st Mary's! IUUAI 'National Conference of Christians land Jews. The organization brought Together a representative assort selling prices unchanged to a cent MILWAUKEE UP) Hoga 1,200 lower: dozen higher; U. S. extraa 35-M; U.

S.i001 to choice middle weight butcbera mediums 33-34: U. 8. standards 33; cur- 17 W-7S; strong weight butchers IB M-rent receipts 30.5: dirties 29 checks 29. 17 prime heavy butchers 15.50-18.00; Live poultry: steady to firm. Receipts 1' 50-1600 medium weight sows l.SM coops; FOB paving pricea unchanged 14 30-15 00; heavy sows 13.75-14.00; stags except on heavy hens cent 1 boars 10.00-11.00.

NEW YORK Unrelieved selling plant members, his long participa- Hospital, Wausau, Friday Dressure prices sharply today 11(111 111 IIIC tfLIVC hedging. Mrs. Otto Moltman has returned ihe stock market ering these and other fields, and $232,354 to other projects. As an in- stance of "other projects," Conway cited the trickling filter method of treatment, in which $41,369 had to be invested over a five-year period before pilot plant results proved that it was not practical. Formed in 1939 The League was organized in 1939 for the single purpose of reducing stream pollution from spent sulphite liquor, its annual report discloses.

It was formed by twelve companies operating fourteen sulphite mills, all but one of these in Wisconsin. The members support the League's research by assessing themselves according to their year's sulphite pulp production. "Each year the members have ment of people drawn from a single industrial plant. They were encour- aorf tn talk ahniit 4hir racial and which now has 60 per cent of the' snendine several davs mor. 3 l0WCT ouuide; heavy hen.

26 5-30 light alter (iiiiunij; st.mii uays wuu tnc with a few more volatile 22.23- 11 11 ui nations farmers enrolled, crop hep brother-in-law and sister, Mr.u.u. dropping -more, steel. udSta'a? a a pound rplicrinu. with production programs, the organiza M. r.rohrlnl ot motors managed to resist we most severe CHICAGO: Wheat Steady to strong at close professional buying.

Corn Firm at close advanced with wheat light exports. Oats Steady to firm advanced with wheat. Soybeans Closed on rise, elevator huv- lute candor. l'on a 'armcrs' protest in 1938 CHICAGO POTATOES CHICAGO (m (USDAl Potatoes: arrivals 302. on track 465; total U.

8. shipments A10; supplies moderate; demand fair; market about steady: track sales. mat Drougnt over zuv.uuu acres 01 aim rn.c. effects of the decline. SaU.

I The volume of business expanded well Mr ami Mrs IWist-ar anrl ahov vMe ihe decline and came r. ana Mrs. cruras Missar ana mn 1BOo.ooo share, for the children, Diana, Leon and day. Yesterday's total was a very low a I a a I. 1 i a.

r. me Marathn County land under a feeling that there was nojcra, programs and many other ac. to undertake of this ing. carlots: Idaho russets washed utilities spent the week end with need a project tivities. Hogs 13 to 23 cents lower; top $18.15.

Cattle Unevenly strong to 25 cents lower. and Mrs. John Mis- parents, Mr More than 1 million tons of lime ada Standard Oil INJI, American Cyanamld, Dow Chemical, Texas American Smelting. U. Rubber.

sar kind. They thought that the employes had no problems of human relations and that they seemed to sludge have gone on Marathon Harry Erickson, Mr. and Mrs J. I. Case, Boeing, Admiral and i Radio Corp.

County farms, Rogan Bessemer, Mr. and Mrs be working together harmoniously. since he launched the oroeram af-'n 1 v. s. government bonds were a little The employes thought that it was chulm, nrmaviuc, an, aim lower i ln, over counter market.

voted whatever funds the mills' technical directors recommend as scientifically desirable," Conway i.attiB ateauy; liters, yearlings ana heifers, prime 35 choice 33.00-34.00; food 30.00-32.00; commercial 26.00-2800; dairy bred heifers, commercial 25.00-27.00; utility 21 commercial cows 21.00-22.00; utility 19.5O-21.0O; cutters 18.00-10.50; canners 15 bulls, commercial 25.00-26.00; utility 20.00-2i.00. Calves 1.800; steady; prime selections 26.00-37.00; bulk of vealers utility to choice 25.00-35.00; throwouts 20.00 down. Sheep 100; steady; good choice native lambs 26.50-27.50; fair to medium lambs 20.00-25.00; yearlings 20.00-25; light ewes, culls, bucks 13.00 downward. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (Pi (USDA 1 Salable hogs hogs 14.000; generally uneven; barrows and gilts 13 to fully 23 cent lower than Monday's average; active at decline; average cost of barrows and gilts at new low since May, 1950; sows mostly 25 cent lower; bulk 180-220 lb. 17 around 200 head 200-210 lb.

weight 18.15 to order buyers; packer purchases 17.75 down: most choice 230-240 lb. 17 250-270 lb. 16.75-17.10: 280-325 lb. 16.00-16.65; few lots around 350-360 lb. ctol ow 400 lb.

and lees 13JIO.1S.00; mostly 15.25 and above; 400-300 lb. 14.00-13.25; occasional heavier sows 14.00 and below. Salable cattle S.000; salable calves 300; slaughter steers and heifers slow; steers steady to weak; heifers weak to 23 cents lower; cow moderately active, steady to strong; bulls uneven, mostly ntadv ari. just another crazy idea of manage PRODUCE ment, and though they did not un atated in his report. "The assess ici uiaiuvci tii mic nine value jui- merly wasted.

listed other imposing statistics on the fertilizer program in various mineral types. The assistance of his office, Ro ments voted upon themselves by stock, as a preservative for grass sileage and other possible uses. Asks Red Cross Support Co-operation of the board mem-mcrs in assisting in the organiza- CHEESE MARKETS MADISON ifv-The federal-state news service today reported Wiscon derstand the need for it (thinking of themselves, as we air do, as very acceptable people), they were willing to go along on the basis Mil; Wisconsin Chippewas s4.14: LCL: Idaho russeta IS 66. utilities 14.76; Colorado McClures IS.25-26; Wyoming triumphs $9.32: new stock. Florida 50 lb.

sacks triumphs $3.13. Street sales according to basis of sale per 100 Colorado McClures Idaho russeta Minnesota-North Dakota triumphs Wisconsin round whites per 90 lb. Maine katahdlna 12 40-30; new stock: Florida 90 lb. sacks NEW YORK DAIRY NEW YOHK vn Wholesale eggs were higher today. Eggs 21.818.

firm. New York spot quotations, based largely on exchange trading, follow; Mixed colors: Fancy heavyweights extra 1 large 36.li, extra 1 medium 35, pulleta 33. standards large 34-35. current receipts, rehsndled 34-34'4. dlrtiea 33-34, checks 33-33 S.

Butter 763,131. firm. Wholesale prices on bulk cartons. Creamery, higher than 82 score (AA) the member mills for 1952 will sup port a higher budget than ever be sin Amerlcsn cheese market about gan declared, went into far reach WAUSAU MARKETS SELLING PRICES IN STORES Produce Creamery butter, per pound 87-93e Eggs, ungraded, per pound 18a Eggs, ungraded, per dozen 33c Eggs, grade A large, per dozen 3e Brick Cheese, per pound 85a American Cheese, per pound 53-59e Potatoes, per peck 69-78e Patent wheat flour, per 50 lb. Feed Per Hundredweight Purt bran 4.00 Standard middlings 4.10 Corn $.80 Corn and oat feed 3.80 Cornmeal 4.00 Dried skim milk 11.00 Bone meal, per cwt (.50 Ground oats 3.10 Meat scraps 7.00 steamed bone meal 6.80 Whole oats, per bushel 1.00 Oyster Shell, per 50 pounds .71 ing programs of crop improvement tion of a county-wide unit to spon- fore.

The 1952 research budget is $147,000, which is $9,500 more than steady; demand fair to good. Selling prices, state assembly points, LCL; single daisies 42-424; longhoma 42V-44V; that it was a lark the amount spent during 1951." square prints 4J'4-43: midget -4SVs. The project changed this attitude. As an experimental project it was staged at the Perth Am- MILWAUKEE PRODUCE MILWAUKEE Produce butter ex traa eggs A large Cabbage new Callfomla-Artlona large in potatoes, oats, barley and other sor the drive of the American Red grains, herd improvement and oth- Cross was asked by Neal Roth-er activities over the long period 'man, Wausau, county drive chair-of years. man.

Answers to Critics Pointing out that the county It was obvious, as the long Cross office had given assist-al, supplementary report contin-ance to more than 2'000 tied th Bnoan wa iservicemen in 1951, Rothman said Local Radio Station Seeks TV Channel crates 4 25-so; Texas 4.00-23; crate Tex boy. New Jersey, plant of the General Cable Corp. Perth Amboy is an ail-American community. It in as 2.50-75 50-lb. sacks 2 00-25; Florida Vt crate 2.50-73: red 5.00-29.

Onion 50-lb. sacks Western Spanish closed weak; vealers strong; two loads WSAU has filed an application seed 3 Inch and up 4.75-5.00; Minnesota fresh M'i cents. 81 score A fresh mostly prima lb. steers for a commercial television station cludes Americans of nearly every color, creed and national background. It Is a mixture if there here, according to an Associated that increasing numbers of county men are being inducted into ser critics but he made no mention of them.

His opening statement that ever was one. The group selected for the project included representa vice and declared that the office activities are certain to increase. tives of management and trade unions, foremen and benchhands, Negroes and whites, Catholics, Pro Presa report from Washington, D. C. The application, filed yesterday with the Federal Communications Commission, seeks Channel 7.

Television licenses have been frozen by the commission, but reports Indicate the freeze will be lifted March 15. testants and Jews, native-born and foreign-born. Ten Sessions The project consisted of 10 sessions, with a guest "resource" per "The work with the servicemen is in addition to the normal activities of the Red Cross," he said. Rothman announced the county goal and said that John Von Gnech-ten, Wausau, Is chairman of the rural areas in the drive. George Schaefer, a member of the board from the Town of Maine, was seated for the session in place of Earl Witter, the chairman.

Witter is a patient at Memorial Hospital following a heart attack. John Tomek of WSAU said the he was giving more detail than usual also indicated, some board members said later, that he felt some of the critics had not taken the time to read his annual reports on file at the Courthouse. The retiring county agent stressed the importance of the work of the Soil Conservation Service in the county, pointing out that Marathon led all state counties in the soil terrace mileage. The county adopted the program, he pointed out, through the adoption of a resolution submitted by him in 1941. Rogan revealed that experiments are now ln progress at the Marathon Corp.

plant in Rothschild to son and about 30 plant people aame tower now used by the radio taking part. Within the limits of station would be used for TV common decency, no holds were broadcasting. barred in the attempt to isolate and The Rib Mountain Radio Co. has made application for a TV license identify the bacteria of mutual pre judice and Interracial myths, and on the same channel. The press service also reported The invocation was given by the Rev.

W. H. Ortwein, pastor of St. then to examine the pesky creatures under the microscope of frank Victor J. Tebesco asked permission Paul's Evangelical Church here.

discussion. We termed it a "pilot to assign the license of WKLJ, Following this morning's session, project" In the study and cure of Sparta, to the Sparta-Tomah Broad the board adjourned until tomor- use spent waste liquor from paper- bias casting Co. mill operations in feeding live-row morning at 10 o'clock. When the unreasoned antagon isms were brought into the open, Herman the Fish Is a Sucker for Psychology CLAREMONT, Calif. Wt Her man, a common, lun-of the aquar somehow they seemed The assumptions of whites about! Negroes and vice versa, of Christians about Jews and vice versa, turned out in most cases to be not only misinformation but plain silli ness.

In our case the first real taste of success came when we found among our personnel a new spirit of co-operation with other employes and with the management. Tensions seemed to ease up Somehow production records took on a new personalized Interest, scrap figures improved, grievances did not come up so often. The undertaking had the merit that it was a specific, tangible, practical effort In a domain where generalizations and noble cliches so ium goldfish, has succumbed to psychology, or perhaps it's Joyce Gammon. Joyce, a Tomona College senior, has Herman literally eating out of her hand. Using her lessons on response patterns and stimuli, she taught Herman to swim through a set of rings.

She would give him a squirt of food from an eyedrop-per when he went through the rings, but Herman soon got to sucking the eyedropper dry, so Joyce made him come up and nibble from her fingers. "He performs belter when he has an audience," Joyce says, "and No Place for a Heaw ml joften serve as a substitute for concrete action; where fine words sometimes cover up inertia and ifear. The pilot project demonstrat- when there isn't enough food in my hand, he gets angry and nibble my fingers." GENUINE 54" CABINET SINK Today's Business Mirror Lions Share of U.S. Oil Earnings Is Re-Invested .95 You'd find it out, in a mile or so, even if we failed to tell you. But we think it's best if we tell you now you must treat the accelerator with special respect when you drive the Golden Anniversary Cadillac! Down under the hood of this gorgeous car is the most powerful engine ever used in standard American production.

So take it easy wherever you drive. Don't use that power to bolt away when the light turns green and other cars have their ways to make in the traffic lanes beside you. And never use it for unnecessary speed, or for dominating the highway. Use it, instead, for the thing it was put there for use it to give you that easy, floating, comforting ridewhich can come only when your engine is "loafing," and most of its power is in luxurious reserve use it to give you that "shot ahead" when an opening shows in the traffic line or when your safety calls for a blast of power use it for a thrilling sense of mastery over car and time and space use it, in short, for happiness and luxury and for adding satisfaction to every mile you drive. As you would expect, this amazing performance is but one of the wonderful virtues that have been added to the Golden Anniversary Cadillac.

There is marvelous new beauty inside and outside. There is a wholly new type of power steering-available as optional equipment at extra cost. And there are literally scores of refinements and improvements of vital importance. For its "year of years," Cadillac has certainly built its "car of cars." Come in and see it whether you feel you are ready for a Cadillac or not. It's an inspiration to inspect it and an experience to drive it.

But if you do drive it, please remember it's no place for a heavy foot! By SAM DAWSON NEW YORK UP Shareholders in American oil companies have been kicking in voluntarily or not large and growing sums for the expansion of their industry. This comes about through the policy of the oil company manage by 30 major oil companies, which comprise about two-thirds of American oil industry. From 1934 through 1938 the 30 companies retained 42.9 per cent of net income. But during the years of 1944 through 1948 the amount retained totalled 64.6 per cent. And in 1950 it was still 60.6 per cent.

Total Earnings Over the 17 years of the study, he 30 companies had combined earnings of 25 billion dollars. They I reinvested about 19V4 billion dollars in property, plant and equip-jment and gave the shareholders 5Vi billion dollars. Chock tvorf Mt tfit IwNfts: 1. Built of steel to ltt lifetime 2. One-piece, id-reitln porcelain-enimel top 1 Four-inch badt-epketi 4.

Impressed soap retainer 5. Fluted, no-tto dralnboardt ft. Swinging mulnf-faueet with metal rwndfea 7. Big, deep, no-splash bowl ft. Crumb-cup strainer, aany to clean S.

Ht-twka enamel catena finish. Inside and out 10. 11. Four free-swtnoinj doors. Insulated and sourtd-deadened 11 Concealed hmoea and posfflvt-aetlnf torpedo catches 13.

Two drawers, wide, dean and spacious (one partitioned for cutlery). Chroma rnrdwar throuqhout 14. Drawers open eaMhr, quietly on brasa runners (no sticking.) 15. Receded toe and knea apace for worsting east When questioned by stockholders at their annual meetings, oil com ments which the stockholders re-elect to reinvest the lion's share of the industry's earnings in expanding the oil business. Over recent years a smaller percentage of profits has been paid out in dividends.

Steady Growth This is the outstanding economic characteristic of the petroleum industry, according to two bankers-Frederick G. Coqueron and Joseph E. Pogue of the Petroleum department of the Chase National Bank of New York. And the lion's share has grown steadily through years 1934 to 1950, the bankers report today at a meeting of the petroleum branch of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. In 1951 many oil companies in SMALL DOWN PAYMENT Take 78 Weeks to Pay APPLIANCE 0 av mull i pi a pany executives cite the great 'growth of the petroleum industry and its incessant need for cash to expand to meet increasing consumer demand.

Being bankers, Coqueron and Poque note that while the 30 companies were keeping 10' billion dollars of their own profits, during the 17 years, they were selling only 800 million dollars worth of new-common and preferred stock, and borrowing less than 5 billion dol THI CO. EGGEBRECHT MOTOR SALES, INC. 810 Third Street Phone 6225 creased their dividend payments to stockholders. But their profits grew in 1951 also. fcTie bankers note the trend toward increased retention of earnings Corner Third Jackson Srs.

Ph. 4787 i lars. They borrowed that total from banks, public and insurance companies, in that order. A 711.

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