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[ip ae a ee "a Ee 8 4 = SES Fat fal Hh 3:4}! ! gir + iF? cit mh 7 eteiea iit : PN ; < - aa = ba hill i at Beh e1se73 ne Hi Ae THE TTT eu ial 2 Ea Begg Pe eet A ea AE ie UT S| ey eee Unie teal & Ht ah: Hi eel SS es L aee | iets attest e awe € Lo ie: cipeqieet oll Ua iter HE Tun 4 Wg < aH Heap TE Hen pent its ie 5 |\SsES 825 Sse a i: bali lit lat a Matlalae te S esas riletiaalls EvLGE.d) Stu sitesi! a ; > oe annie esHdatuadstilis bl oy aj rity th init i Ine We ine a 2 ef ae Hua it HM | | QD l=pey Mm 22h uly tii | i nie TH SS i ii i : al | as S sed tre ils HF HF iil title & HULA URE al : (@) qa) | 4 | 2 < ME Ht Hiteth H ut THE rE Ze |S Beal ps td 7 lip e vPaps|e ad bili ins rE uth Fis < ¢ 6, 2 = : 2B: Hy Hi Ta Letitit Eu AE Al | Be absentia ae ATE f Met fel | 3 S | liar fr?) 3 aP% ny 6333 iy} af iis ; i T sie s Hi i! i daft ait [ “a fm |e see g2huue Ul ie it ae : Lit (\Seit: i ella! ae Ef et | 8 ETE Seek: at dt tn alt i fb Baill cys dante = Al idolt it |S Sila amit i oa Be Ba ie i ill © [5 Sew | HS = eet be alltel a ‘an tant se HT i me ON ein |S Ba ee in uy aetna gee ais = A ec al BS ad gall ila il Sat i Hage i a0 eS f ey! | Bea 2. ofarlell tity tutte |B p alitiel site| St ‘a * = AW Ss. air - - - te flat 35 se sHevasd a +t 1: | By Os Gn BRIE Bes Wifi ieee BS Si aml TF His ap ; 2 ; & 3 Ba TALL iit Hit! tis 4 Tay tH z sil Scare fills] mrt m naa # fe 2s 2S ji il eal te pe ality a : 8113) Sal: a ut li Pa ee nee = heen) | Ef BSH lie i Hf Ny ditt Hh Teel bE i ce ii 4 \\- : 5 Va Ss =F 1 sii} - ‘ ab ris je | Se 22 Pei i eon a Hi 931 il i a 4 — gm Sil: hill arity | i ee te EF aa ; Lee F Hil ee di ie ta dae Se ry ee ee Hee tap aa fy zg Ou Beagcercetes fives fit 8; | s fo egg ghead-26 gee: hE WN fig : AL Elytye “4 iti] G ly es CE a re ia Mise a Sin ELH ia de fa BRD $3 S38 Hin edit ually rE Cosest iss GEEGAUGE S's Sager An sie ag, =| ™ = BAGSaRSS FERSSS . | | : Sess wri Board of Education Boosts Salaries of All Teachers, Cuts Years to Maximum BIRMINGHAM — A teacher's Included in the $2,394,320.31 bud- get for 195455 approved was an increase of $419.031 in salaries over if ' 7 FE fi] i if " 5 4 : i t aevE i dt Hi be “Our Lerd Jesus Christ,” and — 2 * s ” Coritrary to its title. the Supper Qub of First Presbyterian Church | will not include dinner at its meet- ing at 7:45 tonight. The group will found not guilty on a drunk driv- | continue its World Adventure se-|ing charge Monday in Justice! ! PONTTAC @leudy and 6 38 te %. y with rain Hkety tate ’. _ 38 te 4%. Nerthwest te west winds If te 14 miles an hour be coming west te southwest Wednesday. Teday in Pontiac —— temperature preceding @ a.m | At 6 am: Wind direction’ southwest. | gets Tuesday at 6:47 p.m. | Ties Wednesday at 6°29 a.m. | Moon rises y at 11:18 Moon sets Wednesday p.m ate 3lam | di a oe Ht i ries, with Earl Brink's color movie burial in Roseland Park Cemetery. Meules died in Cleveland, are pend- Manley Bailey Funeral Joseph Lindsay Bedard and Mrs. 1470 Hood Born March 10 in Highland Perk, the baby dled euddenty Mos Postmaster Job Rep. Dondero Reports Appointment Is Sure; Fowler Appeal Denied BIRMINGHAM—Rep. George A. Dondero (R-Royal Oak) said in ice Commission in Washington has appeal filed Cc. to lay out the trict as rapidly as possible, pro- viding them with working figures | to be presented to a committee of | Property owners in the area. j —_— Jury Acquits Driver Accused of Drunkenness BIRMINGHAM—Thomas Kaiser, , of 1335 Humphrey St., was Court by a jury of three men and three women. j Associate Justice of the Peace John Emery Jr. allowed as evi- dence Intoximeter findings. The In- toximeter is a device which mea- Local Truck Driver in Fatal Accident GMC Truck and Coach AP Wirephote | SUCKED FROM B23 — Staff Sgt. Claude Trahan, 28, of Bur- lington, Vt., was sucked from a B-29 flying an Air Force training mission 19,000 feet over the Gulf j of Mexico Monday. The plastic | blister broke loose and Trahan was [pees out by the windstream. When last seen, his chute had not lopened. He is listed officially as| 7 missing. He was stationed at Ran- dolph Air Force Base in Texas. | | | David Brown Hears of Mother's Death Word has been received here of the death of Mrs. David (Isa- bella) Brown, %, mother of David L. Brown, former manager of the southeast division of Consumers Power Co. of Michigan. Mrs. Brown, a pioneer of Sault Ste. Marie, died at her home in Detroit Monday. Born at Sailor’s Encampment on Ex-Road Aides Get New Posts Five Transferred From Right - of -Way Division | to Millard Department LANSING WW — Five former em- ployes of the State Highway De- partment right-of-way division in the Lansing office today were transferred out of the department. Highway Commissioner Charles M. Ziegler said that James M. Kane, former division director; Edward Kremer, Don Toaz and | Neebish Island Sept. 8, 1856, she | | was the eldest child of Anthony | ; and Edith Rains Adams. She mar- | ried the late David Brown in| |kane, Wash., and James A. of} | Jackson; three daughters, Mrs. , de-| Rosetta Van Every of Detroit, hasn't been able to line up a —>-—— aces Arraignment ‘in Market Breakin Lewis was unable to furnish | Steps Up Production After dropping to lows of 1,706 and 1,708 in the weeks ending Feb. |13 and Féb. 20. GMC Truck and |Coach Division has stepped up | Production to a weekly average of | 1,970 units during the past five weeks. ' Ward's Automotive Reports said | Burgiors Loot Clubhouse HOLLAND w—Burgiars smashed | Open a safe in the Moose Lodge | clubhouse over the weekend and fled with $1,100 in cash. GOP Chiefs Discuss M’Carthy’s Position _THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 238, 1054 MRS. E. E. BLACKSTONE Church Leader Dies in Pontiac Monday Mrs, Elmer E. (Lottie S.) Black- jean f circles until failing health her activities. A 4 (Continued From Page One) turn the hearings into ring circus.” N. Pontiac tavern. Bowling Alley Burglars Get 30 Day Jail Sentence In Oakland County Circuit Court } Monday, James A. Robtoy, 18, of Birmingham, and Clement Berger. years probation and fined $150 court costs by Judge H. Russel Holland. The pair had pleaded guilty March 15, to breaking and enter- ing. They admitted a March 8 breakin of a bowling alley in Roch- ester. art f | of Pontiac, truck, He | Witten oe —— CONFIDENT — the New Mexico Democrat's seat final vote on the matter late today . ‘Ppe rev et etc edeane whnt vase Dennis. Chavez (D-NM) . | Ellender (D-La)* (left)-sit with arms over ¢ach other's shoulders after’ Senate debate started on & recommendation to oust Chaves “TT Font Nie eat because of a 1952 New Mexico ballot dispute. Demo- ‘ erats say they will have the votes to defeat the resolution to declare a ar t , amt = = and Sen. Allen yt ee Germany Set fo Recruit Army 150,000 Volunteers Will Form Cadre to Train : i rf “= egise ab Local Air Force Man Termed Security Risk (Continued From Page One) »| munists, only what the Air Force teaches me.” | It was reported that proceed- jings against Sgt. Aulisio were | “During 1940, at or near Flint, }you signed a petition declaring Mrs. George (Esoline) Jurney. your intention to organize the Com- | 7, died in Stillwater, Wis. Sunday. Born in Canada June 18, 1876, Besides her husband she is sur- vived by a son, Delmar V. Cote Plains: two daughters lis, and Mrs. Dora Chandler, of Also are four sisters and a brother, -Herman John Philip LaBarge John Philip LaBarge, 41, of 3322 Rd. died at his Monday at 8 p.m. after an iliness of two years. Born in Pontiac Oct. 31, 1912, he | ™#! home. Also surviving are three brothers and three sisters, Sherwood, Louis, Syrill and Mrs. Virginia Mirovsky of Pontiac, Mrs. Norene Steele of Clarkston and Mrs. Shirley Dixon of Waterford. Rosary service will be Wednes- day at 9 p.m, in the Kirkby Fu- neral Home. Funeral will be Thurs- day at 9 am. from St. Michael Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Evelyn 1. Riley Mrs. Evelyn I. Riley, 72, died suddenly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charies Lane, 110 Crescent Rd., with whom she lived. Born in Farmintgon Aug. 5, 1881. she had resided in Pontiac \ years and was last employed in the cafeteria at Pontiac Motor Pontiac. vacant, The Senate may — » ‘ * munist Party and requesting the close and continuing association with persons, who are reported to have | | Party, or closely affiliated there- | Aulisio: your mother, Viola | Aulisio, and your brother, Quincy | been claimed he had been denied nor- | promotion. reserve airman, fought dismissal | | as a security risk and won. He | was accused of with his father and a sister, claimed ‘by the Air Force to have Com- munist sympathies. and who my friends were,” she stated. “I knew Bill is coming out of the service with a heavy heart — he had planned to make the service his career. New I don’t know whether he will even re turn home after this,” Mrs. Aa- liste said. Sgt. Aulisio, who entered service in 1942 and served in the Pacific campaign during World War il, reenlisted in 194 after discharge in 1945. His wife, Lucille, 28, who also was questioned during the Air Force probe, and two sons, Mi- chael, 7, and Quincy, 5, are living with Sgt. Aulisio near the Texas Air Force base. the * | | Mrs. Aulisio admitted that she | 2 Teenagers Draw fe oe R z ry ij } 3 iE f i f i i i SA F ae) ; E i ef Pint ES 5 » echt HRLEE 3 H f Hl A cite i iE Ay 5 y ‘Sylvan Lake Call Water Supply Meet iat nt it : ii i g E ail BAKER & HANSEN Richard H, DeWits \” CREME MOST EFFECTIVE WAY OF CONFERRING A | FAVOR 1S CONDESCENDING TO ACCEPT ONE” —tte Walter Scott pee THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, | Fire Sale! Cash and Carry Masonite and White Pine Lumber. Everything goes at special rates per item. Each item figured and priced af the yard only. | |. NO PHONE ORDERS PLEASE! Army Tightens Security Rules New Order Requires Officers to Sign Oath sible infiltration by subversives. Hands Tied? Because You Lack a High School Diploma You can get one at HOME in your spare time. If you are 16 or over and have left school, write for interesting free bookiet—tells you how! School, P.O. Box 24, Kensington Branch, Detroit 24. PPS American Please send me Free Lessons and 55-Page Bulletin on Request. ~ OJIBWABITTERS HELPED ME WHEN |! GAVE IT A FAIR TRIAL | “Four years ago I tried O-JIB-WA for a couple of days -and quit. aay ve it a fair trial, and am amazed ths quad venues 5 soul ” says Mr. Charles Whipple, 161 igan. } Commissioned, Warrant | . WASHINGTON w — The Army | | has tightened its lines against pos- | It has issued a new order re- | quiring all commissioned and war- | rant officers to sign fresh loyalty | certificates and eetting up ma- } }of 60 barrels an hour | depth was not disclosed. chinery designed to prevent de- | | Jays in handling cases of officers | who either refuse to sign these | documents or plead protection of | Boom on at Morley as Drillers Strike Oil | MORLEY ® — An oil | ery has made this Mecosta County village a boom town. Oil operators biding for leases began jamming the place after a wildcat discovery well drilled in Saturday night on the farm of Alfred Kohn just north of the Me- costa-Montcalm county line. M’Ciure Oil Co., owner of the well, shut it doWn Monday noon. Members of the drilling crew said it had been flowing at the rate Drilling Up to last night, leases had been taken for a radius of three miles | from the discovery well. 23, 1954 | Little froverss L i? : oD By to Get $175,000 Addition PETOSKEY ® — Plans for con- struction of a $175,000 addition to Little Traverse Hospital here to be used by doctors and for clinical services were announced Monday. The site covers land adjoining the hospital given by Dr. and Mrs. Dean C. Burns of Petoskey and the Burns Foundation. The hospital addition, providing 14,400 square feet of floor area; calts for 14 con- sultation rooms, a waiting room and business office “ Italy Feels Quake VERONA, Italy w—Light earth tremors were felt in this northern Italian city earty today._No dam- age was reported. to answer questions it asks. The new directive, disclosed by the Army yesterday, was issued Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, Army chief of staff. > s = It states at one point that Sec- | retary of the Army Stevens ‘‘does | not consider it consistent’’ with na- | tional security to keep in military | service anyone who refuses to say | whether he has been a member of the Communist party or any subversive group. Pe rons was no doubt that new | rder grew out of the case of Maj. | Irving Peress, a New York dentist who was promoted and honorably | | discharged over the protest of Sen. | McCarthy (R-Wis), who said Per- | ess was a “Fifth Amendment Com- munist’’ and should be court-mar- | tialed. Peress, who refused under oath td testify on alleged Commu- nist connections, later said in a public statemerit that McCarthy's | charges were ‘‘nonsense.”’ | Told of the new order, McCarthy | commented to newsmen that in “It was about ten years ago | general it “sounds like a fine the Fifth Amendment in refusing | March 11 under the signature of | that I first began to notice the|read the true testimonials about | idea,"" but he said he wants to stiffness and soreness of arthritis|OJIB-WA BITTERS and reason- | study it before jmaying more. in my back. It\ed that if it helped others so | gradually be-\greatly, it should help me. I) came worse un-| bought another bottle and re. til I was fore-|solved that this time I would ed to walk alljreally give it a chance, After stooped over.|two weeks I wasn’t bothered with Lots of times|gas on my stomach and in a) I couldn't even|month, I knew that OJIBWA | get wp the was helping my arthritis. It help- | stairs. Besides|ed my back so much that I really | The certificate, revised Feb. 1, this, I suffered) get around fine now and stomach is much like the one in effect a lot with myjtrouble and sleepless nights are | before, but it includes an updated The order. ters promotion, dec- oration, commendation, reassign- ment, separation or ordering to active duty of any person who does not fill out the preseribed loyalty certificate, pending final action in | the case. andithings of the past. bothered I believe that there is though G STORES in ae everything’ and st I hed! TI TIAC, PRICE DRUG in OXFORD, thought nothing| KINSON’S Then I began tol DRUG in HOLLY. My wife was with gas and sour | general's subversive list. stomach, and it paiped her also. | I lacked con-| second and that I'm all better now” Available at SIMMS, W list of organizations on the attorney The new. order follows a direc- nothing | tive Stevens put out a month ago better than O-JIB-WA BITTERS. declaring that refusal to sign or I am so glad that I gave it a complete a loyalty certificate is considered enough of a basis to mark an officer as a security James A. Garfield was nomi- jmated for President on the 36th ' palllot. , AGAINST REDS—Rev. John A. | Hutchinson, ° a . Williams. . College religious professor, tells the House Un-American Activities Committee in Washington that since 1938 he has preached, lectured and spoken out strongly elsewhere against the Communist Party. He was ques- tioned about alleged Communist front activities in Baltimore in the 1930s. Police Seek Firebug Near Grand Rapids GRAND RAPIDS w — The fire- bug known as “The Torch’’ struck again Monday, setting a blaze in suburban Godwin Heights, an area with no water supply system. Deputy sheriffs said the firebug has set 10 fires in the area during the past three weeks. They are in- — arson in the Monday ' a firemen controlled the flames just before a portable water supply gave out, but not before the fire had destroyed a car and caused $4,000 damages. Donald Shook, Godwin Heights fire chief, said the fire began in an attached garage and carried into the house. The 10 other fires |caused minor damage to homes | and business places in the area. | Sen. Ferguson Proposes National Women’s Days | WASHINGTON Wh — Sen. Fer- guson (R-Mich) proposed that each Aug. 2% be designated “Amer- ican Womeri’'s Day." | voters become eligible at the | polls, every year, Ferguson said in a resolution yesterday. The resolution would authorize the President to issue an annual proclamation displaying the flag on all government buildings. eo ee ee ne ee ae See The Great New 1954 PACKARDS The Cars That Are Setting The Style Trend Pacxarp’s advanced contour : styling means more car for your money lines, gar fortably now... more money for yourcar when fenders and low hood... is setting the Packard . , os oe trend in automotive design today. It's dignity, ) in style—a new concept of design a functional beauty that gives you . pioneered and perfected by Packard. greater visibility front and back, puts . skin deep you in a position to drive more com- , more relaxed. It's so typically . - with a look of quality, character advanced me | | PACKARD CLIPPER... Fine Car Quality ALA Popular Price More BEAUTY, more, See tee cage lige. sooncus eed oot ) | cers , MAZUREK ao -“VREELAND- BROS.” -.. 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[ET PTR WROUGHT IRON Smoking Stand Regular $4.98 = t oF ‘ Britain Strikes Jamaican Reds Police Seize Papers in -Lightning Raids on 2 Left-Wing Centers KINGSTON, Jamaica #—Britain cranked up an anti-Red drive in a third Caribbean colony today after seizing documents in lightning raids on two lefi-wing centers in this West Indies island capital. | Following crackdowns on alleged ‘ommunists in British Guiana and British Honduras on the Amer- fcan continental mainland, author ities yesterday swooped down here | Jamaican labor | * on the home of leader Ferdinand Christofer Smith, assistant secretary of the Commu- ‘nist-dominated World Federation; of Trade Unions. and on the of- fices ofthe left-wing People's Edu- | ~ cational Organization. a s * Police said documents they seized in Smith's home identified organization Smith, president of the Red-tinged Jamaica Federation of Trade Un- | ions (JFTU), was purged in 1948 leader in the United States CIO National Maritime Un- the grounds of Communist He was permitted to leave the United States “voluntarily” in 1951 | ta.avoid deportation on charges of | subversion and being an undesir- | able alien. * * « The police said the documents take in his home yesterday also | contained the names of Iron Cur- tain organizations having contact with the JFTU. British measures against Reds in their Western Hemisphere pos- STV WA TV Re le asi ats. . ;? LIFE’S faithful * LITTLE “Spot - TRAILS—Fishing pole at his side, this young resident of Salford, upon shoulder, with England hed —- to catch a few | Hddlers in Buile Hill Park there. But iU. S. Sees Red Pressure (Mditor’s Mote The vext phase of thé col? war between the free anc Communist Worlds wij) likely be fought im the field of commerce in formation en the shape that battic might take is slowly coming to light This is the first of three articies de fiming the issues involved in the problem of East-West By FRANK O'BRIEN Washington «—An official 1: port being quietly circulated within sessions started last year with the | the Départment of Commerce says ouster of leftist Prime Minister ; Soviet Russia can be expected to Chedi Jagan and his peoples) Progressive party government in British Guiana Police Arrest Students in Small Trieste Riot ROME «#—Riot police broke up a student demonstration today de- manding the return cf Trieste to Italy. About 100 of the youths were marched off to police headquar ters.” Reinforcements of riot police gathered around the US.) Embassy but the demonstrators were scat. tered before they reached it. pressure the West in coming months’ for “a return to normal trade relations." Since mid-1%3 Russia has been carrying on what apparently is a pretiminary effort to soften up Western busi n of imexhaustible trade with the Communist world’s 800 million subjects. In the eyes of many Western merchants those 0 mil- lion subjects—underfed, underclad underhoused. underequipped and underserviced—represent a tempt ing market Ever since the Communist grab of Czechoslovakia in 1948, but in creasingly after the start of the WIth Visions— Korean War in 1950. a bi and fantastically complicated system has. been worked out under US guidance and prodding to keep Russia and her Communist sate! lites from getting strategic goods Strategic goods may include al- most anything. if in undue quan tity. But emphasis is upon scarce or specifically military materials and products, like atomic mater- ials, explosives, weapons. harden ing alloys, planes, etc * . * Most Western nations have agreed upon a list of things to be denied Russia. Thousands of items long, this list is kept by the US Departments of Commerce US aid to other Western nations is largely conditioned upon _ strict Observance of the trade bounds set by this list Here is an outline. in the Com merce Department report, of what may be expected from Russia if its drive to pry open the doors of East-West trade continues 1. Offers to buy heavily from industries loaded with = # Ef & ra] . ae) ‘ 7 — a - = BE 1 AT. BP eres < TRUCKS surpluses THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1954 to attention. Cnited Press Phete Spot has other ideas as a stray oat takes his eye, and the “fisher- man” is forced to use every method of persuasion to bring the for ‘Normal’ World Trade This already started in offers— rejected at jeast on a cash basis— to soak up some of this nation’s | government-owned surplus butter | and cottonseed oil s > 7 2 Offers to buy heavily where purchases might relieve unem The shipbuilding indus be a target in this ployment try might country 3. Increased offers to buy food! processing machinery, farm ma chinery and production machines for consumer goods. This would bolster Russia's backward food and consumer goods industries in line with the new Seviet tegime's ; promise to raise the level of Soviet living {4 Some offers, at least, to sell “hard goods’’—mining machinery, construction steel, automobiles and | the like—to back a recent Moscow nomic development . * . 5 Readiness to pay for Soviet purch hases in gold where re the bal : “Built in Pontiac by Pontiac People” , Gee Coal Co.—30th Anniversary DAVE GEE SAYS: March, Marks ‘Their 30th Anniversary Building a business on quality is sound. We not anly were very particular to secure only the better quality fuel for our customers, we selected GMC Trucks to deliver our fuel. De- | pendable delivery is a must in our business.” Pictured Above Are Two of Six GMCs recently delivered by Wilson GMC GMC TRUCKS SOLD. AND SERVICED BY an WILSON GMC CO. 77 East Huron 809 S. Woodward FE 2-9203 . FE 4-4531 | | Nations Decide Fugifive's Fate Columbia, Peru Agree on Dealing With Famed Political Refugee | CARACAS, Venezuela — The 10th Inter-American Conferencé paused in its lengthy discussions of | economic problems today to learn the outcome of the five-year dis- pute over Latin America’s most | famous political _refugee—Victor | Raul Haya de la Torre of Peru./ Peru, who would like to try him as a criminal, and Colombia, in whose Lima embassy he has been sheltered since January 19. agreed on his future yesterday in talks at Bogota. Colombian For- eign Minister Evaristo Sourdis planned to announce their decision to the conference today. . . * Unofficial reports from Bogota said the two nations had agreed to turn Haya de la Torre over to either the Chilean or Uruguayan embassies in Lima and that Peru then would let him leave Lima for exile in one of those countries. | Haya, ‘year-old leader of | Peru's outlawed Apra party, took | refuge in the Colombia Embassy | after an unsuccessful revolution in 1948. The Peruvian government re- fused to give him safe conduct oat at Gs combed, cotestinn al was a common criminal. Colombia refused to give him up, classify- ing him as a political refugee en- dog | titled to the asylum Latin-Ameri- | can countries traditionally extend dr rey die on the outs politically with home governments. Haya has — ge al as a virtual prisoner in the) | embassy ial _ ance of trade does not pay the | Because e hie case. agreement on conditions of political asylum As usual with Soviet plans. there | has become one of the major is- seem to be several objectives here | sues of the current conference. Al- Some apparently even conflict, ready the conference has decided | such as offers to buy productior that the country extending sanctu- equipment while offering to se) ary has the right to determine production equipment. But they all fit into an over-all design of expansion abroad while | in the ute between Colombia _ consolidating at home. Gapute Does Everything Right, but Gets No Soda Pop ST. LOUIS # — Oscar Fuwell, | thirsting for a cold-drink, dropped | the CIO have decided to hold up a nickel into a red box on a wall | final approval of a no-raiding pact | at City Hospital yesterday, en with the AFL until more AFL un- | a lever and waited. fomtcery No soda pop came out but short: | nounced yesterday by CIO Presi- ly firemen rushed in with hoses dent Walter P. Reuther after a, claim of “willingness to help al) | and upraised axes. He was re- meeting of the CIO Executive | countries promote internal eco- leased after explaining his error. | Board | whether the fugitive is entitled to it. This was one of the main points hes Peru. ClO Holds Up Decision on ‘No-Raiding’ Pact NEW YORK uh — Top leaders of | jons promise to go along with the. The decision was an we You Are Protected in the Best Wey... Some states limit funeral costs to the ability of the immediate family to pay. The standard of living is in some locations the measure of th: cost of the turiéral service. In our community you are protected by the ethical standards of our profession, and the high character of the Funeral Director You are assured of » fair and reasonable cost for the services of the Donelson- johns Funeral Home 102 E. Buren St. Ph. FE 4-8284 You Can’t Fortell when or how someone clas- sified as “ " may be Comprehensive personal lia- bility Insurance costs only $8.00 per year for the ever- age home. Kenneth G HEMPSTEAD RANCE Es | “Many of our customers are GMC employees and we are very proud | of the careful workmanship and fine craftsmanship that goes into | the manufacture of this fine Pontiac product.” REFRESHMENTS A Useful Gift for Each Family! “~~ et oe we Rept ap ae Oe OPEN HOUSE From 7 Until 9 P. M. You are cordially invited to attend our Tonight, Wednesday and Thursday March 23 - 24-25 THOMAS ECONOMY FURNITURE CO. 361 S. Saginaw Street DOOR PRIZES “ot : af * THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1954 | Douglas Safari to Resume Hike. Justice Trying to Win! Fight Against Proposed Parkway FORT FREDERICK, Md. ®— 228 vaste 82 bas ifs = Siz i? 83 OM | : Z : because they got a late start from the Woodmont Rod and Gun Cub, where they spent the previous night. They planned to start at a.m., two hours earlier today, riding the truck back to Ernstville and walking from there. The hike resulted from a chal- se lenge by the outdoors-loving justice | *@*nst communism to Fe 4 5 s : 7 B ( ——_ a —_—~ —— ~—- ~~ a ~—_—eo —_— ad —— ~~ tf JAPAN ~~ om entised - $ous Ea=Pecitic Oc5eea—= 2 en ATES PPIN Te z rf el @ f if PHILIPPINES ANCHOR DEFENSE CHAIN—| battling Red aggression. Far East and how the U. Philippine Islands to bolster its defense pattern | According to military tacticians, if the Communists in Asia. Not two Washington editorial writ-| American air and naval facilities growing in | bases may be the nearest ones left from which anti- had favored a plan to| the western Pacific defense chain, but a strategic | Communist fighters can be supported. would mar the area’s natural | beauties and invited them to come | Actress Ordered to Bed with him and see. They ac- | ers who construct a federal parkway along} supply center is also being developed for nations route ——<4_ HOLLYWOOD w—Actress Terry | | treatment of a virus infection. She the United States is Mount Whit- | Moore’s physician has ordered her collapsed at her home yeste day. ney in California, 14, 35 feet Insert map shows portion | Above Newsmap shows strategic situation in the | of the Philippine Islands where facilities are now | S. is planning to use the | being rapidly expanded by U. S. military forces. | only are! move farther into southeast Asia, these Philippine | | to stay in bed for two weeks for! The highest mountain peak in | || There are three possible deci- Stenography Applicants sions: cancellation of the deporta- | | tion proceedings, finding Haymes | deportable or finding him not de- | positions with the Navy Depart- | | | portable. If deportation is ordered | Haymes would have 15 days in | which to file an appeal with the | Immigration Board | That procedure would take 60 to 90 days and thereafter, if the de- cision was still against him he could appeal to the federal courts. ment in Washington, D. C.. will be | interviewed and tested in room | _| 419, New Federal Building, De- | troit, from 9 to 5 on weekdays and | on Saturdays and evenings by ap- | pointment, it was announced to- day by Chief Alan D. Simonsen, | ONE QUALITY Dry Cleaning HOUR CLEANERS 26 Best Huron Strest | the day they’‘re brought into... ¢ | a KE VER PA EVEN . : 4 orea St | starting a short time after praye Haymes Deportation er rain were recited in churches ill Undecided No Contract thro roughout the state. About Geneva Parley st Friday, Archbishop Edwi Decision to Be Told | tax try, artmater eae ssoun w — Foren siniter I Necessary fr my ; g Pyun Yung Tai said today South Sunday in all Catholic churches A ‘ ; LOS ANGELES ® — Dick throughout. the predominately | Kore® is “satisfied” with Ameri- | Haymes learns today if he is ta.be | Catholic state. The began anid can assurances of a joint walkout deported to Argentina for illegal day night in’ the hn pertion | from the Geneva conference if it 3 | So-entry inte the United States. | of the state and reached the ‘ast | Woves “ultless at the end of $0 Call T. The crooner was notified by) side, hardest hit by the drought, | %#¥*- . . oday | Herman-R. Landon, district direc- | last night. However, South Korea has aot G Oil Ce | tor of the U. S. immigration ser- | yet decided whether it will attend regory | vice, that he will be advised of py Seay _ the April 26 conference, Pyun told Hi 94 East Welton Bivd. ’ a to Interview Test ews conference. He said h | the government's decision. iP ’ we heilhodad Seat athsaS alg as = gerd } government is studying other as- Phone FE 5-6141 surances ,g|VeR tt by the Stenographers seeking civilian States gaescoecscsssse se | Federal Old Age : Survivors Insurance | |head of Navy recruiting in Pon- YSoctal Security Funeral Home ‘Prayers Bring |““ The positions, tinder federal civil Burial All | ; |service, pay $2,950 to $3.175 per urial Allowance 1 Rain to Parched year and carry an automatic sal- i’ : : 79 ° ary increase of $80 yearly. Room ump sum of. three times your ; ‘New Mexico |reservations are guaranteed upon — eee ‘. on pat no Oakland ALBUQUERQUE i — A gentle, | arrival in Washington. Applicant = | soaking, blessed rain on | must be at least 18 years old at a to your monthly payments, Ave. parched New Mexico yesterday, | the tif time ae they sta start w work. | é eee ne If there is no widow or widower Pontiac iit | the person who paid the burial expenses can be repaid up to the | amount of the lump sum. DRY CLEANED, | | Soplize | ee “=. PRESSED i} == 7" > OL pte : and ready to wear jj oe e eee ee ee eee = - Only the Price Tag Tells You iced Car! Pontiae is a Low The good news on the price tag is the only evidence you'll find that Pontiac is priced near the very lowest. In length, luxury, appearance and performance, it is deliberately designed to compete with the very finest. And here is the happy result! You get every pride-promoting quality when you buy a Pontiac. Impressive size, distinguished beauty, luxu- rious interiors and masterful performance give you the certain knowledge that all eyes approve your choice. You get all the things that mean so much in extra personal satisfaction, too. Wonderfully DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR YOU CANT BEAT A PONTIAC | ~SKEEGO SALES & SERVICE, Ine. roomy comfort, a smooth, road-leveling ride, superb handling ease and instant response give you every pleasure of fine-car ownership. ® And you also get this tremendous plus—engi- neering and manufacturing so fine and sound PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE Corporation General Motors 65 Dat. Clemens ‘St, Péstine hy Iatehigae that Pontiac is world-famous for dependability. You buy enduring pleasure when you buy a Pontiac—years and years of smooth, quiet and remarkably economical miles. It is the most.worry-free car on the road. Total all that, add the fact of Pontiac’s close-to-the- lowest price tag, and this answer comes up: Here’s all you've ever wanted for the least you'll ever pay. Come in soon to see and drive the car that challenges beth the finest and the lowest-priced! PONTIAC’S SUPERLATIVE QUALITY is instantly appar- ent when you open the wide doors. The finest nylon and leather give the: spacious bodies the beauty, comfort and distinction of a perfectly appointed living room, as dem- onstrated by the Custom interior above. An exceptionally wide selection of colors and fabrics lets you style your Pontiac exactly to your particular taste. COMMUNITY MOTOR SALES, Ine. DUAL-RANGE HYDRA-MATIC DRIVE, teamed with Pontiac’s mightiest engine, de- livers thrilling town and country performance with peak economy. For added driving pleas ure, Power Brakes, Power Steering, Comfort- Control Seat, Electric Window Lifts and Air Conditioning are also available as optional equipment at remarkably low extra cost. 223 Main Street, Rochester, Michigan ~~ EDW. D. D. WHIPPLE PONTIAC SALES Rah tae SARA DAE Kc RES y, 1 a ANDERSON, Inc. 280 North Park Bivd.Lake Orion, Michigan ~ _ SUPERIOR AUTO COMPANY, Ine, 3 18 - oe er ae Oe ies: DON'T MISS DAVE GARROWAY — EVERY FRIDAY 8 P. M. — WWJ-TV — CHANNEL 4 rapa Bie fr - i" * re 7 peo ‘ “ a —— ‘ 4 % j « ai - os ’ . J : ’ 3 i Pp ————_—-——_-—--- -» a M atl ©: is ser Fe irs A en rae veinneTr non SES + oe a prea oe eo RE CPE EES — a > ; B vans ae 4 . ° a te ¥ 4 ae a \ mane? - oF Mn ea : % J 4 f ~~" * Sage ‘ + oe : - . " a ee Ns US cfs \ ence igre _ \ J 2 —_ oe % ee eS en ee ee ie RAE ee a a es ipa f--— 7” Sa \. = = THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1954 | = ‘Win adel wk hes On, bald eagle as a national emblem, | oldest national emblems, used asserting that the bird is lazy, Benjamin Franklin objected to the! He suggested the wild turkey. ) IMPORT PURCHASE and SALE | 92 DAYS ONLY Exceptionally Large 6-DIAMOND DUETTE SAVE $40! pe. 39° No Money Down '— No Charge for Credit Reg. $79.95! You get full purchase value ($79.50) for your dia- mond when you trode it in for a larger diamond anytime in the future. 108 NORTH SAGINAW | some 5,000 years ago. In America,|a thief, a coward, and a bully. Hal Boyle Says: | Nobody Wants a Remedy NEW YORK @ — Don't know A last clinker of winter in your eye, and while you are grumpily paw- ing it out a warm sun pats you | ® ee ‘there, would happen if they threw a spit- ball at thetr secretary. They have a secret yearning to open the win- dow and sail paper airplanes down ©0 the heads of rangers. : The cop on he oe pleds along and suddenly finds himself dream- go barefoot. He looks down at his shoes, as if he had half a mind to pull them off. In tenement windows winter quilts are hung out to be aired. Housewives lean out and call to | there is something stirring within | him that won't let him keep still. * * s Little boys get out their bean- shooters and set out to ambush the | Rheumatic twinges slowly free the bones of old folks, and they lose the envy of better-off neigh- bors who spent the winter in Florida. “Pneumonia weather,” they say wisely, when the first rains turn the landscape sodden. In the suburbs a husband opens | his front door to get the morning | | scampering across the lawn. He | grins, steps out to look at the lawn | and growls, “oh, no, not. crabgrass | classes are William Mogk, Anthony | | already!” ; | in silver polish. . ing of the days when he used to! to Control Spring Fever In @ nearby pond papa frog and | ? | mama frog are conducting an am.- | phibious romance. Soon the pond | . | will be full of little tadpoles, all anxious, for some unknown reason, | to grow up to be big frogs ond bem of the puddle. In the heart of every tree and | bush a whisper grows down to the | "| roots and out to each branch. Sud- | denly the sleepy buds begin to break open like popcorn, and the | brown woods swim in a green mist a deepening surf of leaves. Everything in nature all at once | is busting its buttons, trying to, grow as tall as the sun. At night | the moon and stars seem nearer | and brighter, as if a celestial | housewife had newly dipped them | * Life has a dreamy quality for the | yy.) Tace of man. The bank teller | ripples a stack of $100 bills in his hands and wohders what it is like in Tahiti. The blood is a crying bugle in the veins, and the stern voice of duty is drowned out by a big fat. yaw-w-w-w-wn. Work is for horses and tractors. A man feels like peeling off his | past’ and going for a swim in coral seas far away. . ; far, far away... with Miss Jones, the file clerk. Or maybe her grandmother. Don't know what's -wrong with - everybody. But if it’s spring fever doc, don't give us any wonder drug to cure it. It's a wonderful disease. this lotus virus, and the best medi- cine of the year. Three Children Die las Blaze Hits Home uu Fi Peel i f parents were working. A fourth child tumbled through a window to safety. Dead were Dorothy, 14; Brenda Bernice, 2; and Robert Lewis, 7 |gan’s Legislature in session months. Charles, 7, escaped with- | out injury An explosion of a bottled gas to. Visit State Legislature Some 100 Lincoln Junior High School students will watch Michi- Wednesday as part of theif ninth grade civic studies. The students will board char- | accompanying the three civic | Pizza and Sidney C. Jones. tj! vou THOVeHT' THe ‘Rocket’ was @naar SEFORM «+ < @ Be Sure to Drive this ‘54 ! i ee ml i oo ft’s America’s most talked-about carl What a personality—end what « performer! This sensational new Oldemobile Super “88” is not only the most stunning car that ever stole the show—it's the most thrilling, willing car that ever took to the road! Come slip behind its dramatic, panoramic wind- shield! Tingle to the breath-taking power of its record-breaking new “Rocket” Engine! Relax im the effortless security of its Safety Power Steering*! Savor the solid luxury of its road-hugging ride! Here in visibility, maneuverability, readability you've always dreamed feet ee . with an “88”! a seat ead SEL AND DRIVE IT AT YOUR OLDSMOBILE DEALER'S 280. S. Saginaw — rome m ns, ane 28—yeaDemy AwAEDS» P SO tone - GO Low :- SO LOVELY SO LIVELV OLDPDSMOB! im JEROME MOTOR ‘SALES co. 7 : ‘St... Pontiac, Mich. : Seper “08” 2-Deer Sedan. A General Mater: Velve. Optional at extra cost. tered buses for Lansing at| | paper and sees two baby rabbits | 9:30 a. m. Wednesday and return | home about 5:30 p. m. Teachers | E. R. Ellison Used Car Manager *100,000.0 Stock Reduction Sale WE HAVE THE CAR YOU WANT AT THE PRICE YOU WANT TO PAY! Just Look at These Bargains-- 63 CADILLAC pn aly Td hydramatic, radio, heater, power Save $1000.00 om this beautiful car. Super 88, hydramatic, radio, heater, like new, only 53 OLDSMOBILE 88 It's spotiess 563 OLDS HOLIDAY COUPE . 52 PONTIAC f 2495 ==" "62 CADILLAC @ Club C 2 tone, hydra- 53 BUICK SPECIAL - Riviera Coupe, radie, heater. Beautiful blue finish, white walls. Imagine only Custom Holiday coupe, hydra- matic, radie, heater, 2-tone with white walls. Spotless, only 52 MERCURY Custem Monterey Sedan, mer- comatic. Real sharp. 63 FORD 2-Deer Sedan. This § has radio and heater. Spotiess, only matie and ether extras—way below market. Tudor. radie, heater and hydra- only 1795 1: sma $1495 1995 S51 PONTIAC Chieftain § Ti@er-Sedan,’ one own- er and spotless throughout. Only 50 OLDSMOBILE 88 4-Deer Sedan, radie, heater, Convertible spert coupe, redie, heater, hyGramatte, throughout. 795 ‘Big Trade on Your Present Car! quae ein 1095 “48 Olds $995 Custem 98 Sedan, only "49 Ford "47 Chevrolet Tudor anda, only 3345 Club Coupe, enly ‘47 Olds “46 ha pane CHOOSE YOUR OWN TERMS Through Credit Union, Bank or Finance Company ‘ss YEROME ~OLDS-CADILLAC Cass at bie ee a | Look for the Bright Spot — NEW. CARS — See a ee 145 95 7 the sensationa! low mail-order price. Order § today! KRUSE NURSERIES, Dept. 43419 Bieemingten, Tl. | O22 ter %1 OS8 fee @ eer we Kure | Pint Tr BOETEES .. crvcccesereeeeseenee « ceceee | money when “s how we can offer these t top-quality Rhedoden- @ron shrubs at the unbelievable price ef only 2 for $1 or & for $2 In em you'll be thrilled cascades colorful blooms. And for 365 days foliage turns Ham oper g oy ft. shrubs, tdeat = ping. Choice color assortment. You must return this ad to claim _ — LS — i —_- ———_ OE —— = EGG WITH A PAST—Count Eigil Knuth (left) of Denmark, famous Greenland explorer, and Capt. Peter Freuchen, Arctic ex- plorer,-sample a 1,000 year-old-egg at the recent 50th anniversary of the Explorers Clubs celebrated in New York. The menu consisted FUNERAL HOME 110 WESSEN ST. * PHONE FE 3-7374 Ambulance Service et Any Hour of 150 dishes, such as wild boar stomachs, Smoky Mountain raccoon, fried termites and alligator eggs. Lowell Thomas was one of the speakers at the dinner. Bob Considine Says: Polar Ice Cools Highballs for Old Explorers’ Toast NEW YORK (INS)—People . | pers. Then Comdr. Houot said: places ... things... * B Lowell Thomas, no slouch him. | Black as hell, self at the exploring game, called | fe te ee by to the center of the dais (at the | the McCarthy-Cohn vs. Sou |Explorers Club anniversary din- | 5 ner) two great men of the Arctic. | One was spry 88-year-old Mat- | thew Henson, Washington, D. C., . .-! ficers seemed to confer in whis- hearing must have taken heart if they heard Eari Godwin, vet- eran Washington reporter, on the radio Sunday. Negro who was the only man to go | Gaukler Storage Co. 9 Orchard Lake Ave. ‘Ven 0.8 Magheape fie | i Servee> fe) wm Tow Community to the North Pole with Peary. The | Godwin reviewed another Senate other was big, bearded. one-legged "vestigation that was raging three Peter Freuchen, a great Dane. decades ago. In all, that particular investigation lasted eight years. They toasted each other in Es- | sent a Cabinet officer and a multi- kimo. As they did so they held | mijlionairey to prison and made the strangest Scotch highballs | and broke a score of reputations. ever seen. The ice that cooled | 1: 41) started with a letter to-Sen | Kendrick of Wyoming from a con- stituent who complained that drillers from the Sinclair Company | had moved into the Teapot Dome flown to New | dent Wilson had ordered set aside Air Force trans- | a8 a Naval oil reserve. It was not service, and it looked clearer |a raid by Sinclair. Their papers the—domesticated ice cubes | were in perfect order. in the bucket on our table. Preliminary inqui showed Freuchen once was stoical | . KA that the Elk Hills (Calif.) re enough to amputate his own leg! serve had been leased at the when it was bothering him on an | same time to Pen-American Pe- Arctic expedition. But the other | ‘ctimen Cex ete bo &. night he did something that fur- | . ther endeared him to fellow club| The nation learned that Sercre- members. He poked a muscular ‘@ry of Navy Denby had turned ‘finger into his scotch and flipped | over the reserves to the supervi- out the hard-won T-3 ice. sion of Secretary of Interior Albert Why Suffer _Bleting Fes ate amared Messy ointments sup- injections. Take a tabie- of the new pleasant, harmiess . RECTORAL, after meals and at bedtime Gives fast amazing re- soreness and irritation disappear. ome faflure or return of bieeding has ever been reported where directions were followed. Get a bottle of REC- J-V; . Mall- Luttrell Phar- & Jones; Dunseith; Quality; Keego Harbor; Drayton Plains; Avubera Heights. De not accept anything else. Fall, who in turn bad leased them. “| drink it without ice,” said | fe man whe has lived mest of |." was revealed that Fall's New his fife amidst the stuff. |look of affluence. He testified he had borrowed $100,000 from Edward At the same dinner, Lt. Comdr. | R. McLean, Washington publisher, Georges Houot and Lt. Pierre-| but it was brought out that the |Henri Willm, who set an all-time loan had been made by Doheny |record Feb. 15 by sending their; Fall and Sinclair weht to prison. sub to a depth of 13,284 feet, were Doheny was acquitted. asked by toastmaster Thomas to| The present business is small | step to the microphone potatoes by comparison. Men of science and exploration ———EEe———_ |from all over the country leaned The tourist season in Germany |forward to absorb the scientific in 1953 proved the best in her his- answer. to Lowell's question of tory and included 4,000,000 visi-| *‘How was it down there?” tors from outside Germany, an in- The two young French naval of- crease of 27.8 per cent. U WHEN Be there ss You can still share in the pleasure “Tou can eal for only of happy moments with the 4 family. Talk to them tonight by CHICAGO. sss. les., 88 telephone. Make a Long Distance NEW YORK ...........1.00 call. The service is fast: The cost Statice todtaten cote afer SF. Bt. - . Sundey for, utes = ari is surprisingly low. ~ __tee, Federal Excise Tax not included. When you call, remember to call by number. It's faster. YOU'RE MILES AWAY with a Long Distance call MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE. COMPANY ww | (Wyo.) fields which former Presi- | Mexico ranch took on a sudden | | Saucer Story Denied by AF Debunks Report About of ° | “The others probably d Outer-Space Material | expisined it our knowledge physics was greater,” he said. | ; _ | ‘“There are many things about the | man today termed without basis’ 1, that science still doesn't un- an assertion that the Air Force | derstand.” has recovered bunks ut ® Chemical Plant Fire Kills 2Men Monday ion, he said, | “given enough factual data” every “flying saucer’ re-| port over the last six years could be explained: in natural, earthly,| CHICAGO w — Two men were! missed the probation violation | nonsensational terms. killed yesterday in a fire and a? “We don’t think the so-called series of explosions which des-| saucers come from outer space or manufacturing | from a foreign government,” the weyed & chemical spokesman said. * * *& _ | one million dollars. | Bill Nash, a Pan American) The explosions sent black smoke World Airways pilot, told the .14 names billowing 100 feet into ¥ i jation Assn. re- Greater Miami Aviation the air from the one-story, 500-foot cently he was convinced that “the Air Force has collected hardware long building housing the Pelron | | Corp, in suburban Lyons. from outer .space.”’ “I do not, believe the Air Force One worker, Robert Friedel, 29, cares to make all its findings pub-| perished in the fire while another, | lic so long &s the United States is Lester Heavrin, 35, died of in-/ threatened by unfriendly powers,’’| juries several hours later. Nash said. Nash was quoted as having re- termined. ported sighting unidentified ob- jects while flying from New York to Miami on a date not specified. . . * Three in One Family He said he and his crew saw Leave Mark at School six objects, later joined by two| CHEYBOYGAN uw — Mrs, Pearl others, and the lights from them | Dittman’s three children have left were ‘'20 times brighter than those their mark at Cheboygan High of Norfolk and Newport News," | School. Carleton is now a medical Va., near where the alleged sight-| doctor and a first lieutenant in the | ing was made. | Army Medical Corps. He was) “From their maneuvers, there | valedictorian in the 1$5 class. is no doubt in my mind these ob- | His sister, Joyce, was last year’s jects were controlled by intelligent | salutatorian and little sister Shar- | plant. Damage was estimated at | ty Cause of the fire was not de-| 407 beings,”’ he said, “When you have | on will be salutatorian this June. “THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, MARCH 23, 1954 . Law Catches U p With Violator — 28 Years Later DETROIT w — After 28 years the law caught up with John Cusa- probation May 27, 1926, and or- dered to pay a $165 debt to a jeweler. The record showed he never paid it, but neither was any- thing ever done about it. Recently he applied for a job in a public building. A routine civil service check turned up bis record. i Yesterday Judge Frank G. Schemanske, learning Cusamano had been a good citizen ever since his transgression and the jewelry firm was no loriger interested, dis- charge. - But the court insisted on one gesture from Cusamano. He was ordered to contribute $50 to chari- Civil Defense Exercise Set for Whole Nation WASHINGTON ® —~ A nation- wide civil defense exercise, fea- turning mock atomic attacks on 42 selected critica] target areas, was announced for June 1415 by the Civil Defense Administration to ‘Operation Alert,’’. designed. to disclose weaknesses and improve efficiency of civil defense organi- zations at all levels, will involve all 48 states, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Alaska and the 10 provinces of ure _ , ow eo nw & > fs o oe ee = & /. } vat Wager ea = > ~ Dante your way popularity | | ARTHUR | MURRAY'S © Don't let good times pass you by any longer. Come in to Arthur Murray's and let one of his ex- perts show you the shortcut to popularity. You'll find learning the Arthur Murray Way is quick and easy even for beginners. So come in now. Be all set for the gayest season ever. Studios open from 10 A.M. to 10 P.M. daily. ARTHUR MURRAY STUDIO 25 E. Lewrence St. Phone FE 2-0244 ear = Greatest Development — in Brewing Since Repeal! NOW G —~ a ae * For more than 20 years brewers have been striving to brew a light, dry beer that’s low in sugar and starch, yet still retains its fine, full flavor. Now this has been accomplished by Goebel’s great new Frost-Finishing process! This important contribution to brew- ing, the result of years of research by Goebel scientists, reduces sugar and starch content to a minimum while, at the same time, it actually improves the flavor. flavor peak. you get finer OEBEL IS FROST-FINISHED FOR FINER FLAVOR FROST-FINISHED for Finer Flavor area Perfected in Goebel’s great research laboratories Frost-Finishing is two additional brew- ing steps. Twice, before it is bottled, the temperature of the beer is suddenly / plunged to points close to freezing. © This sudden reduction in temperature | removes excess sugars and starches, and allows the beer to reach its true Try a glass of today’s Goebel, scon— “frosty dry” flavor be- cause it’s Frost-Finished. 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