Word: tolls
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...since a new currency would be necessary. A picture of Dean Bundy, however, could adorn the one dollar bill, Master Perkins the five, and John R. Thompson on the hundred. The thousand would remain bland until someone donates a new theatre. The revenue problem would be solved by a toll road on Mass. Avenue, a sales tax on the Bick, the Waldorf, Elsie's and Cahaly's, and a Casino to be instituted in Memorial Hall...
...foolproof pay phone, nearly every college boy knew how to make it disgorge a tinkling stream of nickels. Last week Illinois Bell Telephone Co. ruefully explained another game that costs it as much as $400,000 annually: the free call, in which by various stratagems thousands of callers in toll booths and at home use the phone company's wires without ever paying a cent. At Bell's urging, the Illinois State Commerce Commission last week adopted a regulation allowing the phone company to refuse service to anyone caught ducking the charges for calls...
...Carload on Wednesday. Even worse, says Illinois Bell, are the companies that use the no-toll long distance call to transact business. Some produce firms, collection agencies and manufacturers are among the offenders, costing the telephone company untold revenue every year. A fruit company in California may call its distributor in Chicago, and ask for "Mr. Brown." Translated, the words mean that it has a carload of seedless grapefruit at $2 a case. The answer, "Sorry, Mr. Brown is in Portland," means, "Fine, send a car load for Wednesday delivery...
...rush to superhighways, some roadmen failed to give sufficient consideration to the fact that toll roads will pay only under quite specific conditions. The Pennsylvania Turnpike (which cost less to build because it followed the half-finished roadbed of Andrew Carnegie's old South Penn Railroad) has been a huge success because it is by far the best route through rough country. The New Jersey Turnpike has boomed because it serves an area of crushingly concentrated traffic. When such important factors are missing, toll roads...
...result of the red light, turnpike bonds were sliding downward last week, and proponents of new toll roads were taking another look. Most traffic engineers now think that the majority of toll roads in existence and under construction will survive, but they are not optimistic about new routes. In Washington Bureau of Public Roads officials say that there are few places left in the U.S. where toll roads would be financially practical. As if to illustrate the point, private investors in Texas (where the impossible is often considered likely) have all but abandoned a plan to build a toll road...