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PUBLIC HOUSING SAFETY RECORD IS MADE KNOWN Record Has Led to Substantial Rate Reduction on Fire Coverages. Washington, D. C. (ILNS).—A con spicuously favorable safety record has been established by public housing in the United States and this record has led to substantial rate reduction on liability and fire coverages on blanket insurance policies covering occupied projects, Nathan Straus, administrator of the United States Housing Author ity, said here. "Safety starts on the drawing board," Administrator Straus said, "and the attention given this element at the very start of public housing projects means a constantly decreas ing number of accidents." Even little things are not over looked. Since undersized baseball dia monds have shown themselves partic ularly conducive to accidents, they are eliminated from recreational areas. Downspouts are placed so that they won't your water, which might freeze, over sidewalks. Open joints in side walks, in which high heels might catch, are avoided, as are slick floor finishes and highly reflective paint for wall surfaces. Planning Saves Lives "In a study of accidents over a two year period in 44 occupied projects it has been shown that there were only 244 in 20,000 homes. This shows con clusively that planning for safety saves both money and lives," Straus said. Accidents on the projects, which I were built by the PWA Housing Di vision and are now under USHA su pervision, have been so few that in surance rates have been cut drastic ally. The National Casualty Rating U Organization announced public lia bility rates 50 per cent lower than manual rates formerly applicable on USHA projects. After the projects in New York State had been in operation two and one-half years, a further ex perience credit reduced manual rates by another 52.9 per cent. Fire and windstorm rates have come in for substantial downward modifica tion due to the excellence of construc tion. In two Southern cities projects have successfully withstood the dam aging effect of hurricanes. Loss Ratios Down Loss ratios, instead of running to the normal 50 per cent of the premium dollar, have been running well under 15 per cent of the premium dollar. In the checkup, eight of the 44 projects reported no accidents, and 244 accidents of all kinds were listed for the 36 projects. They range all the Oriental Cream O O U A U O gives a touch of satis* faction. Recaptures that soft, tender skin of youth. IfrXu, fUiK, Aauhfi, AND 'PUDDINGS AND P!CK1£S AND WHEN AlKA-$ftTZ£fl FROM ONE WHO *5 WlSt/j CHEESE AND PIES V-% UPSET STOMACH YOU suffer from Acid Indigestion, Heartburn. Sour Stomach, Gas in Stomach— BE WISE—TRY ALKA-SELTZER Don'* wait until you have an Upset Stomach before you take Alka-Seltzer Try it for Pain Re lief the next time you have a Headache. Cold. Simple Neuralgia. •Morning After" o Muscuiai Pains At your Drug Store by the glass and in packages for home use ROBERT INDIANAPOLIS, I n d. "Unfin ished business" is on the books as an extra bonus for the fans when Wilbur Shaw and Rex Mays meet again in the 500-mile race at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on May 30. Shaw, three-time winner of the great speed meet, ran off with first place last year but a lot of fans weren't satisfied that Shaw was the best in the field. Some believed that Mays, the California go-devil, would have beaten out Shaw had not a drizzle slowed the i-ace down for 125 miles and prevented a last-stage bat tie between the two. The duel is expected to be finished this year. No driver in the game has a heavier foot than Mays. He is one of the best pilots. But he drive way from a splinter under a fingernail to property damage caused by a hur ricane. Fortunately, almost all the acci dents reported resulted in only minor injuries. Scratches, bruises, black eyes, and sprains predominate. Only two fatalities were reported (both due to outside causes): one an automobile accident, the other a fall from a ladder. USHA projects, built with the ad vantage of experience gained on PWA projects, will show an even lower num ber of accidents, it is believed, as measures are being taken to eliminate every possibility of accidents. POLL PLACES CHOSEN FOR 3-A WHEAT VOTE Location of polls for casting of votes in the wheat marketing refer endum in the 13 Butler County town ships Saturday were announced this week by John M. Roll, chairman of the Butler County Agricultural Ad justment Administration Committee, as follows: Fairfield, Bobmeyer school Hanover, Hanover school Lemon, H. M. Page garage, Amanda Liberty, Liberty Township House Madison, Township House, West Middletown Milford, Collinsville school Morgan, Township House, Okeana Oxford, Township House, Oxford Reily, Town Hall, Reily Ross, Venice Pavilion St. Clair, Township House, Overpeck Union, Township House, West Chester, and Wayne, Township House, Jackson burg. Read The Press. Quickly Relieves, Edgar K. Wagner FUNERAL DIRECTOR G. MORTUARY Formerly THE C. W. GATH CO. FTTNF.RAL DIRECTORS Ambulance Service Chairs and Tables Rented Phone 35 17 So. Street Travel Sickness Momersifls TAYLOR SHAW AND MAYS HAVE UNFINISHED BUSINESS' TO SETTLE IN INDIANAPOLIS W MAY 30 Stuart Chase, writer of the pam phlet, says that a statistical bull's-eye was achieved in predicting the result of the 1940 census. "Four years ago," Chase points out, "the experts made varying estimates of the population. ... Of these esti mates they chose the two most prob able—about 700,000 apart. ... In the middle, splitting the difference „. lies the figure 131,650,000.... Out of the census hoppers came the figure 131,669,275. "Say the total population is a tar get. In the middle the predictors paint a bull's-eye, about 1/200th of the width of the target. The census enumerators hit the bull's-eye less than l/35th of its width off the center!" By applying the same methods, Chase declares, the future population of the United States can be predicted with considerable accuracy. It is esti mated that our population will reach a peak of between 140. and 150 million around 1970. After that, it will begin to fall. "It is a superstition," Chase adds, "to believe that mere size itself is good or that constant growth is a blessing. Maturity gives us THE BUTLER COUNTY PRESS hard, spai.ng his motor nothing and himself less. No one goes into the turns with greater abandon and no one shows more daring on the straightaways. Last year, just as in previous years, he was just about the hottest thing on the track in qualifying rounds. He won the pole position for the start and he was confident that his car had the stuff to step away from the field. He took the lead early in the race and even when Shaw snatched it away he felt confident that when it came to a two-man battle in the final stages he would be the victor. And then, with Shaw leading by two laps, it began to rain. Out came the yellow flag telling the drivers not to better their positions. That went on for 125 miles, with Mays fuming im patiently. And that was how the Industrial and other changes affect ing wage-earners which may be ex pected as a result of the present slow ing-up in the growth of the population of the United States are discussed in terestingly in "What the New Census Means," fifty-sixth in the series of popular, factual 10-cent pamphlets published by the Public Affairs Com mittee, New York. COMMENT ON WORLD EVENTS Zettler Names Aid For $9,500 Campaign Members of the special gifts com mittee for a campaign June 9-12 for $9,500 as Hamilton's part in the United Service Organization program were announced this week by George Zett ler, chairman, as William Beckett, Don I'itton, C. L. Gebhart, Lucian Kahn, William P. Griesmer, M. E. Kellogg, 1'titer E. Rentschler, David M. Silver, Earl Thompson, Alexander Thomson, Jr., and F. K. Vaughn. They will start with a kick-off dinner June 9, to be followed by a report luncheon June 11 and will be concluded with a report dinner June 13, Judge P. P. Boli, gen eral chairman, announced. Two AFL Unions Sign Up Kellogg Switchboard Co. Chicago, 111.—The International As sociation of Machinists and the In ternational Brotherhood of Electrical Workers won a victory, after a long struggle, for recognition at the Kel W /V3X f.?)- race ended. Mays never did get a chance to battle it out with Shaw. Shaw won the race for the third time, joining Lou Meyer as the only three-time winner in history. Mays was second, the first time in six tries he ever completed the race, although he has been the fastest qualifier three of those six times. Mays feels that circumstance cheated him of victory and he intends to go all out for the winner's pot of gold this time. While Mays has his plans, Shaw, the Dapper Dan of the track, a true champ, has before him the golden opportunity of becoming the first four-time winner in the history of the Indianapolis "500." Needless to say, both men will be out there gun ning for all they're worth to realize their respective ambitions. time to concentrate on the problems of consuming rather than everlast ingly hustling to produce more and more. For the first time in our na tional history, we can think about quality rather than quantity. "In schools, at any rate, the next generation of children should have a better break than the past one. Where overcrowding has been a problem, pupils can now have enough desk room in smaller classes, unless budgets arc too drastically reduced. "Certain industries will feel the shift in population more than others. Milk is one of them. Children consume 50 per cent more milk than adults. Manufacturers of many articles fm children—clothing, perambulators, bi cycles, toys—should prepare for a slackening demand. "Industries catering to the aged will be stimulated. Makers of gol clubs will do a brisker business than makers of tennis rackets. Publisher who lose in the text-book department, may be able to expand their genera! trade department older people like i read. Churches may gain members also cults of various kinds. Pet shops dealers in hearing aids, makers ol canes, lenses, spectacle frames, an among the businesses which may In expected to thrive. These forecasts sound frivolous, but they may be a serious matter for the manufacture! concerned." And, the author might have addei the predicted changes will in all prul ability be an even more serious matlei for the workers concerned. logg Switchboard and Supply Com pany here. A settlement brought about by th National Defense Mediation Board in cluded a signed agreement with tin unions, a ten per cent wage increase vacations with pay and other gains, the terms being subject to ratification by the union members. AFL Agreement Signed By 4 Charleston Firms Charleston, S. C.—The L. D. Lon Company, the Dawson Engineering Company, the Simons-Myrant Com pany and the Charleston Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company have signed agreements with the A. F. of L. union covering their employes, thus abolish ing a non-union policy that had en dured for 20 years. Organized laboi in Charleston assisted the interna tional representatives of the A. F. of L. unions in negotiating the agree ments. Advertise in The Press. LINIC FINDS ACTIVE TUBERCULOSIS CASES Three more cases of active tuber culosis were discovered at the tuber culosis clinic Friday morning at Mercy Hospital. "Each week," said Dr. J. A. Schaal, Cincinnati, phthisiologist at the clinic, brings us new cases of tuberculosis, and each new case brings us a little nearer our goal: the control of tuber culosis in Butler County. It is only by finding the already active cases of this disease—those who are now infecting others with whom they come into con tact—that we can ever hope to reach this goal." The tuberculosis clinic will be held on Thursday morning of this week, May 29th, due to the holiday falling on Friday, the regular clinic day. Trade Classes Opened Forty-four youths attended fii*st classes conducted Monday in the Na tional Youth Administration Voca tional Training School, located on Chestnut Street. Robert Schuster, recently named su perintendent, was in charge of enroll ment. He was assisted by C. W. White, sehool superintendent, and Mrs. Mil dred T. Schwab. Poppy Sale Nets $675 Poppy sales conducted here Satur day netted $675.53, a check-up early this week revealed. The sale con ducted by the Campbell Gard Post, Veterans of Foreign Wars, realized 324.52 and the sale conducted by the luxiliary of the Frank Durwin Post, American Legion, $351. Camden Council To Receive Sfew HicJs On Light Honds Camden, Ohio.—New bids will be eceived by the Camden council on June 16th for the purchase of $111,600 of electric light and power jirst mort gage revenue bonds. The bonds are being sold for the construction and equipment of Cam den's municipal light and power proj ect, overwhelmingly favored by Cam den voters at a special election held on April 8th. BILL KILLED THREE TIMES Columbus, Ohio. H. B. 144, so called anti-barmaid bill authored by Representative Henry F. Cordes (R., Cincinnati) was thumbed down by a 9-to-3 vote of the House Liquor Con trol Committee during this session of the Legislature. This makes the third time in as many years that a bill to ban barmaids has been defeated. To Represent County Twelve persons will represent But ler County at the state convention of township trustees and clerks, June 15-18, at Cedar Point, it was indicated at a meeting of the county association Monday in the Butler County Court house. Carl Siegel, Poasttown, presi dent, and A. L. Buck, West Chester, secretary, who were in charge of Mon day's meeting, will head the local dele gation. Mrs. Brown: "Whenever I'm In the dumps, I get myself a new hat." Mrs. Jones: "I was wondering where you got them." BUY V CHECK YOUR PRINTING NEEDS THEN CALL THE Nonpareil Printing Co. FOR COMPLETE PRINTING SERVICE! 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MILES N E V I N E Letter Heads Trade Checks Bill Heads Direct Mail Advertising Statements Post Cards Invoices Hand Bills Duplicate, Triplicate, Posters Quadruplet Forms Sale Hills Business Cards Envelope Enclosures Window Cards Pamphlets Show Cards Catalogues For Sale Cards Magazines For Rent Cards Programs No Hunting and Constitutions and By-Laws Trespassing Signs Ping-Pong Sheets Furnished Room Cards Milk Route Books Admission Tickets Wedding Invitations lioll Tickets Wedding Announcements Combination Tickets Social Security Pay Envelopes Numbered Tickets Labels Raflle Tickets Advertising Book Matches Cardboard Checks Padding Aluminum Checks Stitching Brass Checks Punchinig Bank Checks Round-Cornering Return Bottle Checks Die-Cutting FOR ALL KINDS OF PRINTING, CALL NONPAREIL PRINTING CO. 326 Market St. Phone 1296 Hamilton Ohio