FINANCIAL STATEMENT, NOVEMBER, 1917 RECEIPTS The financial statement is closed regularly on the last day of each month. Financial Secretaries will please have their reports at headquarters on or before the 30th day of each month. The following shows all moneys received from October 31, 1917, to November 30, 1917. member should check this statement and note if remittances made are properly credited. tances received from November 30, 1917, to December 31, 1917, will appear in next report. Each All remit 62 51.30 1.50 149 4.50 10.00 325 6.00 150 131.40 50.00 64 45.40 1.50 151 109.10 65 45.50 5.00 152 7.50 8.40 237 65.20 238 23.20 230 231 10.80 326 233 19.45 1.00 328 18.60 419 234 13.10 329 9.20 1.30 420 331 4.50 1.00 421 332 12.10 239 333 23.70 60.80 3.20 240 335 6.90 17.70 241 57.50 336 4.20 426 10.50 242 104.00 25.00 337 4.25 427 516 11.70 2.10 1.10 245 3.90 338 16.20 428 26.60 5.00 519 26.00 2.80 15.90 246 68.60 3.75 339 7.80 3.95 430 65.20 4.30 5.00 247 26.50 340 15.80 431 8.80 4.75 248 28.80 5.25 341 119.90 432 15.90 250 42.00 2.50 345 216.20 2.10 4.15 251 8.10 346 15.90 1.00 408 31.25 2.80 498 56.50 5.00 499 230.10 500 10.80 501 3.60 .85 502 47.80 2.28 2.75 503 13.80 504 16.90 505 16.00 506 2.70 NOTE. The total receipts with the exception of receipts for special funds, which are applied direct, or from sale of supplies, which are applied to the Supply Fund, or in making good protested checks, which are credited to the General Fund, are divided among the remaining funds as follows: General Fund, 12% per cent.; Journal Fund, 12% per cent.; Organizing Fund, 10 per cent.; Defense Fund, 15 per cent.; Death and Disability Fund, 50 per cent. Auto Painting is Profitable You OU can make much more money this fall and winter painting automobiles, trucks and wagons than you can painting houses. Many house painters are doing it. There are no idle weeks without paydays. Any good painter can quickly learn this work and only enough capital is required to buy a few tools and materials. You can get more jobs than you can possibly handle at from $35.00 to $150.00 and there is mighty little competition. Tools, materials and methods needed to do fine work after a little practice are fully described and illustrated in the new book Automobile Painting, by F. N. Vanderwalker. Every important fact fact and little detail about the work is covered specifically in simple language. It is substantially bound ir '-th with heavy covors. Size 51⁄2 x 7. J9 Pages, 36 Illustrations. Price $1.50, Postpaid. Sent C. O. D. for part payment of 25c. Money refunded if book is not satisfactory. THE TEXT BOOK CO. 12129 Eggleston Ave., Chicago, III. GENERAL RECAPITULATION. Expenditures -$ 62,388.81 6,909.80 -$55,479.01 Expenditures -$192,080.55 21,261.57 $170,818.98 THE PAINTER AND HIS HOME -$170,818.98 Ah! Home, sweet home, how sweet that name? His work complete, he seeks no fame, He works with vim, he does his best, As all his mates agree Hope cheers him on, God does the rest, An honest heart has he. No evil thought pollutes his mind, His toll performed sustains mankind, From morn to eve from day to day, No malice there to taint his mind, Nor greed to cloud his way. The union code is his defense, And the wrinkled brow has told, No work for him-he's not alone, In a world that's harsh and cold. The younger man will take his place, In the battle front of life, For he who one time set the pace, Is no longer in the strife. A painter's home or other means, Must replace the home of yore, Where numbered years and varied scenes, Recall the trials he bore. With hope and cheer we still survive, Sec., Local Union No. 201. |