. . . , h - * - , *H* HoBBItl PLAIMDXALB fPfPP PPIP« Pi^i! ;:..r:-y,v JjL t ";'- Thursday, February 15,1MO Society Motes :t;J' VS; R.N. A., ATTENTION! fcwt River Valley Camp No. 3251, It. N. A., have postponed their public Card party until Tuesday evening, •ilardt 6. - - * * RIVERVIEW CAMP Riverview Camp, R. N. A. .request til) the members to be present at the Hext meeting to be held Tuesday evening, February 20. . a- • aJSVSNIRG BRID©« Mrs. Thompson entertained Ihe Evfnuaff' fc'ridpre club last Thursday evfejfisrr Mrs. C. H. Duker and <|frs. p4ul Sohwerman were awarded fhe prizes. The latter will entertain : St the next meeting on February 22. SCOUT TRAINING < OURSE ; Final preparation is being' made for vlShe training course for Scout and Cub Iteaders in Boone-McHenry distirct of the Blackhawk Area Council. This eourse, known as "Principles of Scout And Cub leadership," will be presentid at the Woodstock courthouse buildup Friday evening, February 16, ' find on every other Friday evening lentil the complete course of six sessions has been held. The interval of fwo weeks between each session is de- Signed to skippers, mates, scoutmasters. cubmasters, crew leaders and den Jhothers an opportunity to put what is learned into practice in their own unit .fcefore the discussion of the next session. Sessions will be hel<f from 7:80 to 9:30 p. m. The course will be under the direction of Leon J. Lundahl, Council Chairman of the Leadership Training committee. Dwain Murphy, Field Executive in Boon^-McHenrv district, . #nll assist. M. L. Schoenholtz of Mcfienry will be a Patrol Leader forthe course. • • • LEGION OF MOTHERS All members of the National Le- e'on of the Mothers of America, of cHenry County, will be interested to know that Mrs. N. Bourelle, county ihairman, has appointed her county executive committee. Mrs. Albert Vales has accepted the office of county vice-chairman. Mrs. Vales has held many different offices in several church sodalities and clubs, and is well-known in McHenry and surrounding towns. The office of county executive sectetary has been accepted by Mrs. ; fVank Beatty of McColium Lake. At me time, she held office and was very Active in the American Legion Auxiliary. Mrs. Bourelle urges all members who have received their ballots and have not sent them back to headquarters in Chicago should do so at once; there is no money connected in doing so. Also, Mrs. Bourelle has learned that some of the members do not understand the purpose of forming Sentry Posts. Here is an exDlanation: Each post in the National Legion of Mothers will consist of seven members, one acting as a Sentry mothef. loosely linked together in the councils which are composed of a number of Sentry Posts and all actively recruiting new members. Hie National Legion of the Mothers of America is a non-profit, non-political, non-partisan organization. Its purpose is threefold and is as follows: ; i 1. To oppose the use of Amer- - ican troops for any purpose other than the defense of the United States against armed attack. 2. To support a strong campaign for adequate national defense. 3. To oppose all subversive ' groups, whose object is the de- . struction of the American form of government. Anv woman who is an American citizen and is of voting ace is eligible to ioin. To become a member of the ^Mothers' Legion <v>sts nothing -- no •dues or fee* of cnv kind. To work lor it is to keen AmerW-> v©™ f--^ wholesale slaughter, to onpose foreign influences. ?nd to preserve the form of government that has brought peace to the nation. Those wfshiner to become members should do «o at once by getting in touch with their county chairman, Mrs. N. Bourelle. McHenrv, 111., either hv letter or by telephoning McHenry 665-W12. MRS. N. BOURELLEi NEIGHBORHOOD CLUB The Neigborhohd club met Friday night with Mrs. C. H. Duker. Mrs. Mabel Johnson, Mrs. Cofa Bassett and Mrs. F. G. Schreiner were awarded the prizes. Hie next meeting will be held with Mrs. Peter M. Justen. ' • , O. E. Su At the meeting of the Order of the Eastern Star last Monday evening, plans were made for a public party to be held after the next meeting of the order on February 26. ' k EIGHT YEARS OLD Julia, little daughter of Ifrs. Eleanor Foley, celebrated her eighth birthday Sunday afternoon by entertaining a group of her little relatives and friends. They enjoyed a variety of games and were especially delighted with the tasty lunch, the large birthday cake and the ice cream. The little hostess graciously thanked her guests for their lovely gifts. • • * WEDDING ANNIVERSARY On Sunday, February 11, Mr. and Mrs. John N. Schmitt, who reside two miles north of Johnsburg: on the Ringwood Chapel road, celebrated the twentieth anniversary of their marriage. About forty relatives and friends brought them gifts and wished them many happy returns of the day. A large group played cards during the afternoon and were then served a lovely supper. The celebration continued through th& evening also. Mr. and Mrs. Schmitt were married at Johnsburg by Father Weber, Out of town guests were Mrs. Nick Bertrang and son and daughter, of Aurora; Miss Catherine Schmitt and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Landreth of Chicago. . * . "j r v-v MOTHERS? CLUB The monthly meeting of the Mothers' club was held in the new home of Mrs. Peter M. Justen Friday afternoon. Mrs. A. I, Froehlich, Mrs. Chas. Pich, Mrs. Clarence Martin and Mrs. Peter Doherty were assistant hostesses. About sixty-pve members and their friends heard an interesting lecture on music and English by Miss Lucia Rose Rausch of the Community High school. The guests also heard a lovely musical program. Miss Adele Froehlich, accompanied by Mrs. Carl Weber at the piano, gave a few vocal selections. Warren Jones also rendered a vocal solos, accompanied by Mrs. Charles W. Goodell. A string ensemble played a couple of nieces: WianWn Jozies at the cello and Gordon-,Sfcholle, Roman Schmitt and Paul Shadle, violinists, composed the group. Paul Baum, accompanied by his mother, gave a selection on the bass horn. Mrs. Charles Goodell spoke a few words on the Waukegan Symphony orchestra which is to appear at the Community High school in April. • , After the meetjfng the. hostesses served a delicious lunch. ,, Announcement of the next meeting wOL be made later. MRS. NINA CONN FOUND DEAD OAS-iruULfaj 00H DOROTHY GRAY SPECIAL DRY-SKIN MIXTURE REGULAR $2-25 SIZE LIMITED TIME |oo Imu than half-pricm on thisfamous night cream for dry skin. * Richly lubricating. Helps smooth away flakiness/'weather" linos Induced by cold wind, steam hear. Leaves skin feeling, ~ looking, smooth and supple. Buy several fare for winter now! Bolger's Drug Store Phone 40 - Bow and Arrow Hunter At 30 yards with bow and arrow-- too close to be comfortable--Charles ("Tex") Stone of Dallas has bagged one of the largest mountain lions ever killed in Texas. Stone uses the risky, ancient weapon because an arrow, he says, does less damage to museum specimens and that is what he stalks. Tanned, slender, partly bald and 39 years old, Stone estimates he has killed 400 wild animals in Africa, South America, India, Australia, Mexico and the United States since 1920. All were shot at a range of less than 35 yards. He bagged a male mountain lion that weighed 220 pounds in the Fort Davis mountains. Towers of Silence The tower of silence is the name applied to structures built by the Parsees for the disposal of their dead. They are towers about 40 feet high called dakhmas. Below the top of the wall is built a floor of iron grating and upon this the bodies are placed until by exposure to the elements and birds of prey the flesh is entirely removed from the bones and they fall into a pit below. Titanic's Memorial On the banks of the Potomac river in Washington, D. C., stands the Titanic memorial, sculptured by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, in tribute to the men who responded with their lives to the cry of "Women and children first" on board the sinking Titanic. It was donated in 1927 by the Women's Titanic Memorial association. Apple Pie for Rubinoft Mrs. Oliver Johnson of Helena, Mont., recalled that what Violinist Rubinoff particularly liked when she was a vocalist with his orchestra was apple pie. So when Mrs. Johnson greeted Rubinoff in Helena recently she carried with her a thick, juicy appie pie. "Wonderful, wpn-J eCen'aUo^ed* to ftTh derful, said the violinist. „ Trainer Bites Dog; Says 1ft Effective WALTHA.M, MASS. -- "Man bites dog" may be news to most people, but not to Joseph Lawlor, 32. A dog trainer, he bites dogs as part of his training technique. Lawlor's theory is that a retaliatory bite quickly teaches a dog how it feels when that same dog has bitten someone. Boatman Keeps Eye On Bridge Workers Detailed to Rescue Anyone Who Should Fall. Fish Poisoning One of the symptoms of fish poisoning in a human being is the reversed sensory impressions received when contacting cold objects, says Collier's. A cool metal railing feels warm to the hand, while ice cream feels so hot to the mouth that the eater instinctively blows upon it. Broad Poultry Market The American poultry farmer's best customer is the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea company, which last year reported purchases of 40,000,- 000 pounds of chicken and 90,000,000 dozen eggs, equal to xtwo-thirds of a dozen for each man, woman and child in the country. First Use of Thimbles Thimbles are said to have been found at Herculaneum and were used by the Chinese at a very early period. Their invention in Europe is traditionally ascribed to Nicholas van Benschoten of Amsterdam in the Seventeenth century. Television 'Make-Up' Actors' make-up has changed constantly since the inception of television. About 1930 the actors painted their faces white and their lips black, but the present make-up is very similar to that used in the mpvies. Mrs. Nina Conn, 52 year old widow of Howard J. Coim, was found dead' in the kitchen of her home at Elgin Friday morning, a victim of asphyxiation by gas which was escaping from burners of the gas stove. Mrs. Conn had never fully recovered from a near nervous breakdown which she suffered when'her husband, wellknown Elgin funeral director, died of a heart attack a few years ago. This condition was aggravated by injuries and shock which she suffered last June when an Elgin City Lines Inc. bus in which she was a passenger, was struck and overturned by an automobile at Elgin. It is believed Mrs1. Conn became despondent over her illness. Her son, H. Colby Conn, telephoned his mother J|r#jay morning and when he failed^ to ppeejve any answer, he drove to the residence. He found the doors locked and no footprints leading away from the house. Mr. Conn gained entrance' through an unlocked widow and found his mother dead. She was slumped over the kitchen table in the gas filled kitchen. She had apparently been dead since sometime the night before. The body was removed to Conn A Gustafson funeral home where a coroner's jury returned a verdict of suicidal asnhyvintion by gas while des pondent over ill health and the death of her husband. Mrs. Conn was born near McHenry May 22, 1887, a daughter of Wallace and Loretta Colby. She resided in Woodstock for twenty years before going to Elgin in 1929. She was a member of the First Congregational church and Circle I of the Woman's Guild of the church. She also was a member of Samaritan Rebekah lodge, 120,' and the Fidelity Life association of which she served as lodge correspondent. (Besides the 'son, H. Colby Conn, she is survived by a sister, Mrs. I. P. Creech of Detroit, Mich.; a niece, Mrs. Clifford Erickson of Lake Geneva, Wis., and a nephew, Donald Creech of Detroit, Mich. Funeral services were held at l:3f Monday afternoon at Conn & Gustafson funeral home. The Rev. Alexand er Milmine officiated. Interment was in Bluff City cemetery. Poodle's Moniker A small poodle probably has the longest and most cryptic name of any dog in Boston. A woman brought the pup into a police station to get a license for "Joy Barker- Snozzle Drop-Kelley." Something Wrong Stanley Gronski, age 44, Springfield, Mass., was convicted of drunkenness after a policeman testified he was walking along East Main street at two a. m.--tearing up $5 bills. ST. LOUIS.--Every day for the last six months Ben Dudley, a weather-beaten, 42-year-old lifeguard, has rowed out into the Mississippi river. For eight hours each of those days he has sat in his anchored boat, staring up at the Eads bridge and watching painters go about their work, like small spiders in the web of cables, beams and braces. Dudley keeps his eye on the workmen, because he gets paid for it. If one of them should fall, Dudley is there to fish him out- So far none has fallen. Three paint brushes have been dropped the 100-odd feet from the bridge to the river, and Dudley has retrieved each one. Once he pulled out the body of a woman, after the workmen called his attention to it. He tied a rope to the dress and towed the body to shore. Otherwise, Dudley says, it's pretty dull. "I just sit and twitch from one side to the other," he says. "I'm I have to keep my mind on what I'm doing." Although he is not an expert swimmer and has never had a chance to fish a workman out of the water, Dudley says he is confident he can do it. He keeps two gallon cans ready to throw out to keep afloat anyone who should be hapless enough to fall frojn the bridge. Those would be of little help, however, because if a man fell from the bridge to the water he'd be in no condition to help himself, Dudley says. Crews on trains crossing the bridge are getting to know him, Dudley says, and they throw him a piece of coal as a greeting when they pass overhead. River pilots are becoming friendly, too. "They used to kick up rollers," Dudley exclaims. "But now they turn the rear of their boats away as they come toward me, sending the rollers toward the shore. There is some kind of law that says if you turn a man over in his boat you got to go after him. "Yep, I get pretty tired of looking at that bridge, the power pjjint and the excursion boat all th^ume," he says. "But you sure have lots of time to think." ' Australian Canned Flowers Dr. J. S. Turner, a professor' at the University of Melbourne in Australia, according to the American Magazine, has devised a method of canning flowers. Origin of 'Adirondack** The Adirondacks, mountainous district of northern New York, takes its name from the Mohawk word "ratirontaks," meaning "they eat trees." Canada's War Steps Registration of women for war service, if the need arises, is in progress at 60 polls throughout the province of Manitoba, Canada. Paint Helps Sales Seeking to improve distribution of its open bed springs a firm did them in silver aluminum paint. Sales jumped 25 per cent. Mrs. Fred Rogers and Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Reihansperger and son, Herbert, were among those from McHenry who saw "Gone With the Wind" at Waukegan last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schaefer left Mrs;, John Bolger and daughter, last week to spend a month ot six Mercedes, of Woods cock called on relaweeks in and around Miami, Fla. tlves here Sunday. Miss Lillian Vales and Albert Vales, _ Mrs. Ada Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Jr., of Chicago, were weekend guests Smith, Elgin, were the guests in the Albert Vales, Sr., home. relatives here Sunday evening. Sunday gu«t. in the John Phalin ^ iT home were Mr. .nd Mrs. Harry Ander- ' rrt0"1" son, Mr. and Mrs. James Mahoney and *d McHenry Girl, 19, Watches Long Trap Line on Lonely Isle KODIAK, ALASKA.--Miss Patricia ("Pat") Haracich, 19-year-old University of California at Los Angeles co-ed, uses a direct approach for the problem of getting a fox fur. Instead of buying then in Hollywood, today she is on a lonely Aleutian island, trapping for.es in partnership with her father, Edward L. Haracich, Kiska island rancher. She covers a 20-mile trap line, sleeping at night in a "barabara"-- a native shelter made cf driftwood and thatched with pod. Miss Haracich, who was to have enrolled as a sophomore at U. C. L. A. this year, is a capable marksman and knows her way around Alaskan wilds as well as Hollywood boulevard. When she was only 15 she ob-' tained 20 foxes on Adak island and this year expects to equal or better that performance. Until she returns to the United States next spring, her only contact with the states will bet a small radio. Miss Haracich is studying naviga tion in college and hopes spme day to sail a boat to Alaska. 1, son, Jimmy, and Mrs. Howard Phalin of Chicago. Howard Phalin is on a month's business trip to California. George Vales of Chicago arrived Monday to spend a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vales. Miss Jean Macy of Chicago was a weekend guest of Norine Bourelle of tendedX McColium Lake. tended the Lumb«rmen Mr. and Mrs. Fred Huff and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson and her sisert, Mrs. Harry Alexander of Hebron, were Elgin visitors last Wednesday! Marshall Bacon of DesPlaines spent the weekend at his home here. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Covalt, Sr., enjoyed a few days at the Stevens hotel in Chicago last week where they attended the Lumbermen's convention. Miss Audrey Rothermel of DeKalb was a caller in the home of her par- Mrs. Jacob N. Justen of Waukegan at- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W Rothertended the funeral of Mrs. Eva mel, Tuesday evening Streetz at Johnsburg Thursday. Mrs. Harry Durland, Mrs. George Mr. and Afrs. Robert Ulrich and Stilling, Mrs. Betty Nielsen, Mrs. daughter, Virginia, of Oak Park were Floyd Covalt and Mrs. T. H. Bell hi g Sunday guests in the home of Mrs. attended the Friday evening perform- Nellie Bacon. Mrs. Ulrich and Vir- ance of "Gone With the Wind" at ginia remained for a few days' visit. Waukegan. Miss Beatrice Lane of Joliet was a Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferwerda, who weekend guest of Miss Helen Stevens, have been spending the winter in Cals- Donald Doherty, who was a patient fornia, are enroute home. at the Wloodstock hospital, returned Mrs. Anna Barron, a former teacher to the home of his parents, Mr. and in the McHenry public grade school Mrs. Paul Doherty, Saturday. He h«d who has been an instructor of English been recuperating in the home of his ""d mathematics in the high school of grandmother, Mrs. John Bolger. at her home town, Ridgeway, Wis. the Woodstock, for some time previous to past three years, has resigned her his return home. position to accept one as a supervisor. and Mrs. L. B. Murphy, Sr.. of ing teacher in the school at Dodge- Chicago, were guests of Dr. and Mrs. ville, Iowa county, Wisconsin. L. B. Murphy, Jr., Sunday. Mrs. C. W. Klontz and Mrs. Harry Miss Maxine Bacon of Chicago spent Durland enjoyed a luncheon of the the weekend at her home in West Mc- Clarke Mothers' club which was held Henry. at the home of Mrs. Charles Mondi at Miss Sylvia Fivder enjoyed the Oak Park Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. weekend in her home at Janesville, Mondi is a girlhood chum of Mrs. Wis. Mrs. Ha"*v Lawrence of Chicago, Mr. and Mr*. HsroM pi»^Hi daughter, Monica, of Lake Villa. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner and children and Allen Warner of Elerin. were Sundav guests of Mrs. Mollie Givens. Mr. and Mrs. P. V. Dieter and Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Kobsa, son, Irvin, daughter, Phyllis Ann, of Chicago, were guests in the Ben Diets home this weekend. , Mr. and Mrs. Carl Courier and children of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bacon and children of Crystal Lake were Sunday guests of Mrs. Nellie Bacon. Mrs. Simon Stoffel. daughters, Lena and Clara, and Miss Mayme Buss were visitors in Racine, Wis., Sunday where thev called on the former's relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Carey, Mr. and Klontz. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Covalt, 'jr., spent last week at the Edgewater Beach hotel in Chicago while Mr. Covalt was taking the manager's course being offered at the Johns-Manville school. Miss Helen Pries of 22 Maple ave.. Waukegan, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Pries of McHenry, recently was awarded $1,500 in government savings bonds, the second grand prize in the Wlaukegan Post's $10,000 subscription contest. She had a grand total of 19,401,500 points. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Owen spent last Thursday and Friday at Milwaukee, Wis., on a business trip. They also saw the movie "Gone With the Wind" at that city. At the "Winter Ice Fun" sponsored by the Alemite Recreation club at Crystal Lake Saturday afternoon and evening, Miss Rosa Popp and Will Funk of McHenry were awarded prizes in the various skating races. Mr. and Mrs. William Young of HI* gin visited relatives here Sunday. "* Mrs. Robert Sutton of Richmond spent Wednesday with her sister, am; George Lindsay. LAST Rl^BS SATURDAY FOR WILLIAM R. Mrs. Katharine Schneider received the sad news of the of William R. Marsh, who died suddenly in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on February 6. Because of his poor health. Mr. Marsh and his wife wegs. spending the winter in that city. He leaves to mourn, his wife, Mrf» Dorothy Marsh, a daughter, Mrs. M. J. McCabe. and a granddaughter, Patricia McCabe, all of Chicago. late home is at 7061 N. Damen Chicago. Funeral services were held Satmv day afternoon from the chapel at 5601 N. Ashland avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Marsh were summer residents at McHenry many years agOw They were intimate friends of Mrs- Katherine Schneider and family. 'J5* - Growing Caster Beans Texas Technological college is ; perimentmg with the growing of --1 i a tor beans, of which 65,000,000 are imported to the U. S. i for castor oil manufacture. Wondefful bargains at AlthofTs Niner Sale, now going on. <4 • The prescription ts familiar to every school child. But have you ever considered just what it actually stands for? The prescription you hold is emblematic of a lifetime of professional skill and service. Emblematic, too, of your health and happiness, or that of one whom you hold near and dear. Take no chances with that pre scription! Bring it to a prescription pharmacy, where you may be assured it will be filled precisely as your Doctor directs. BOlAgK'S DRUG STOSS Tricky Language To be able to read an onffnary newspaper, a Japanese must know approximately 5,000 language characters. •, ' Carnegie Librarian Andrew Carnegie established 2,811 libraries throughout the world. In this country he gave 1,946 libraries. Sling shooting Farmer Drops His Blackbirds WICHITA FALLS, TEXAS. Thanks to a couple: of old-fashioneel slingshots, Farmer Virgin Jone$t saved his maize crops from the blackbirds while neighbors all around him were losing theirs. Jones rigged up the slingshots £o*° himself and son, Billy Ray, sevetfc years old, when swarms of blackbirds ueKCcndcu cn their fields. Mrs. Jones and two children were the "ammunition train," keep* ing cloth bags filled with pebbles and relaying them to the "artillerymen." For four weeks they patrolled the field almost from dawn to dark* keeping the blackbirds on the move. Finally the discouraged birds left. „ • Behave in Pompeii Tro Romans apparently believed in frankness. On the walls of a banquet hall excavated in Pompeii, Italy, are painted certain instructions to guests as to their behavior, and inviting them to go home if they cannot abide by the "regulations." - Nursery-Room Hint Pictures for children's rooms can be made washable by covering them with white shellac. Strength of Tea A pound of tea makes from 150 to DO cups, depending on the strength eslred. Most Expensive Jewel When large, brilliant and flawless, the emerald is the costliest of gems. Loftiest Active Volcano Mount Cotopaxi in Ecuador is the loftiest active volcano in the world, the- eievatiea ,l*ing IS,613 feet. Tailor Bird's Habits The tailor bird incloses its nest within a large leaf, which it sews together at the edge with its slender bill. The nest is made of plant down, fine grass and hair sewed together with bits of silk or wool threads or with vegetable fiber, for which the bird searches most diligently. - 19 Buy your Baby Chicks at the Farmers Mill, the Home of Good Chicks, flume*. . «B-tf-p8 Speeding Driver Asserts Town Wasn't Recognized BARONS, ALTA.--^Residents of this town are smarting under the unconscious irony of a Calgary motorist who recently was caught driving through here at 40 miles an hour. Gordon W. Withell was fined $10 in the local police court. "Frankly, I wasn't sure I was in Barons," said Withell. •*!*#• never been there before." --: ^ » Paris Vitamin Bar -r Ranks of American bars tarPara, already reaching from the Bastille to the swank purlieus of the Porte Dauphine, have a new addition--the vitamin bar. It serves tomato cobblers and potassium dips. There's an iron cocktail for pale people, many mixes for the non-lean, and numerous drinks generally in the cause of beauty. Wall paper bargains kt AlthofTs Hdw%. during sal*/ >* g 8#»p8 C:;. itits'.:- how much PER P0 model illustrated is the Buick Special model 4/ Jour-door touring «/ w*t. Mtck' jrkitt frry/ one of the lowest costs-perany car on the market. AUTOMOBILE engineers talk a lot about car weight -- and with good reason. And M0wk«rt else will yon find valve-in-head power, all-coil springing, torque*tube steadiness and Buick's plussage in accessories at the figures that apply to the SPECIAL. They know that riding qualities Ml with enough road weight to iiold you steady on your course--they know that weight is often another measure of size -- above all, they know that weight means substance, strength, durability. So if a litde extra money is keeping you out of a Buick, take an other look at those dollars. So it s interesting to note that this trim Buick SPECIAL gives you more weight per dollar than almost a other car you can bu They buy more car to gin with. More size more substance. They buy some six dozen new 1940 features, in^lud? ing many an "extra. And you'll get most of them back in longer life and higher trade-in value -- not toiiiention your fun With all ifs husky straight eight power--power that's like velvet because engines are balanced after assembly -- with all its room, and style, and comfort -- this Buick still has * Transportation baud fp rtit tatei, uatt tnd Ucal Uxt* (if 0*y), tptitnti tfuipmtnl Htlp Safety itnwrin -- extra. Prices Dim Ytmr LigMu Wit* Pmukm IMPUI Of OINIKA1 MOTORS VAUN SEE YOUR NEAREST BUICK DEALER • &L . -4-