Mr. Rubenstein. Then it must be the same outfit.
Mr. Griffin. Who were the people who ran it?
Mr. Rubenstein. One fellow was a nice guy and I still see him occasionally in Chicago, Oscar Fishbein, he is president of the firm, I believe, and I still believe he is still in business.
Mr. Griffin. How about the G.T. & I.T. Drake Co.?
Mr. Rubenstein. That was in 1950.
Mr. Griffin. 1952.
Mr. Rubenstein. 1952. I bought a suburban carryall from a friend of mine by the name of Harry King.
Mr. Griffin. Carryall or carryout?
Mr. Rubenstein. Carryall. It is called a suburban carryall. It is a car that is designed to carry all, with glass all around it, and it looked like a small truck where the doors opened up in back like this so you could load and unload easily. I saw an ad in the paper, this Drake outfit, the restaurant outfit, $100 a week, and $100 a week in 1952, gentlemen, is a lot of money.
So, here is how it worked. I delivered, unloaded, and loaded food items for, they paid me $60 a week and $40 for the car expense that was $100 a week. It was a hard job but I took it because it paid well. That was it.