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Anderson Herald from Anderson, Indiana • 4

Publication:
Anderson Heraldi
Location:
Anderson, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 Th Andrson Herald Wednesday Jan 20 I354 William Brady quit this WEDNESDAY MORNING JANUARY 20 1954 IT he not the JOO Wednesday Radio Programs corned to New 1 York that the wife of New may ferlk ttet :1 Grand Cnwal OlHtert GM Marrtra 43 Wirard of CMrt 43 JULIEN BYER :11 Reagin Stringer Wattron Osie At ranklin I Caroline teller in IH UnriM Sood of lte 600 fcU 5 2 aged a small Kddxn of AV ft4lftal ifieSs foresaw year for heroin the barbiturates avorite dodge of the trick spe cialist who has a cash customer Hhh orty el Do bank tellers stamp win dow clerks in your post office or restaurant cashiers smile IRST when you meet them? Do they greet you first? If not don't be too critical for they have a dual role but top notch "front" men will smile even while counting money WnM luo cai Arthur Ourry Arthur OeHay $healB Gvl4a Mae CMch Out Coffee Clvte AarU Outlay Curt MeiwyH the Meppen Mvwig Muolc Miib Ml Mak MJr Mwtic Your Yew Story Tky'l land Curt Matbay LeooN Dan ti Jan Gobr Jan Garbor request for anti Communist legis ation Ike's first year In office one of great changes and educa tion Has changedji mind about "ereoplng taken on now advisers Now works harder than ever opt is enclosed Letters should be brief tod written in ink Owing to the Urge number of letters re ceived only ''few an be answer ed here No reply can be mode to fineries not conforming to in structions Address Dr William Brady 2SS El Camino South Beverly Hills Calif) Smile Habits Recently gave you the case of a girl who was rejected when she applied for a radio reception ist's job all because her face in its natural repose bad a sourpus tM a io 700 7 43 toon 1011 10 30 10 41 1100 1200 GEORGE CniTTENBERGEn Prartdanl and Mtupt HARRIET TOKER Vtea Prsldaal EUX SUCK Soertlary EDWIN A BAILEY fiuntw THERE IN BRIE IS THE assessment of the presi dent of the largest a corporation incidentally whose fortunes have a vital and direct in fluence of the prospect of every man woman and child in Anderson That assessment cites every rule of economics to show that 1954 will be another successful prosperous year The market Mr Curtice suggested may not belong to the sellers this year inasmuch as the typical buyer will spend his money on the most attractive and most widely publicized of several competing products But barmg a wave of paralytic and ungrounded fear the 12 months immediately ahead should be bright ones for every American lot 4 oo At aaal te A li 0 auuilft ill me fviriat auojcvv aicwa include: Driver Training Avice Allen Allen Betty Ballard Melania Benko Alice Boyd Eleanor Buettner Emma Camp bell Verna Carter Byron Clark Nancy Courtney Margaret Cream er a 1 Gosling Max ine Hallenbeck Violet Hamilton Aloma Holding Martha Jones Lois Killion Wanda Lynch' Mar garet McCormack Elizabeth Mudd Roberta Norris Millie Po tor Kay Rice Marina Dorth a Stanley Kathleen Dorothy Sulkey Dorothy Mary Wlshard Typing Mary Allen wood Glenna Bowerman Bowman David Davis Juanita Davis Harold Gaddis Kathryn Graf Jessie Mahan Mary Mara 00 Nrn Qft11 I 00 IllsMJ MO 1000 iioo II 30 HrtS 1200 1220 12 20 1:00 120 1:00 2 JO 2:4 3:00 1 30 3:43 4 00 I have she wears such a zoo timiwa 700 Uoiited GU1 fcpcetl Deubtt er Nothing HovM rfw ey OH Wyw Tima Lady with you in a even though you are preoccupied with another customer The typical teller tar bank has a bookkeeper outlook But he must also add the salesman's behavior to that introvertive background or he will not be of maximum bene fit to his company! or the counter man must com bine the extroversion of the salea Six Hundred to give the child an aspirin every four hours until the temperature comes down or he arrives The very suggestion that aspirin 1 or any other medicine should be given to reduce fever or elevated temperature especially in a child is unconscionable Such fever in the case of a child with cri (kree) Common Rehpiratory Infec tion is a favorable indication it shows the child is reacting norm ally To attempt to the fever with dope of any kind Is mischievous and 1 challenge any physician to justify such malprac tice The less aspirin anybody uses the better If or when you feel you must take a dose of 11 my advice is that you lie down for an hour or at least ait quietly for an hour after you take It This will guard against possible untoward effects and also favor the full analgesic (ache or pain relieving) action of the drug (Signed letters pertaining to persons! health and hygiene not to disease diagnosis or treatment Dwight Eisenhower is determined to do the best job be can but he is also determined that be will not run again WBM TV Channel WY0HHBAT A SumUao Theewt kHlw Mewy Arthur OeJfriy Woke tkh Thru bfiwAiw Walk A Mik Wall A Mik GUdereaa SPECIAL SERVICE I YOU SHOULD MISS YOUR HERALD A subscriber who fails to receive a daily copy of The Heraid shouid phone before 9 A and a copy will be sent after 9 special messenger Should your (farrier fail to deliver your Herald on Sun day go to the nearest place that sells The Herald and sign a complaint A copy will then be given to' you without charge CKeralieu eetltfhf fchoet hoiefl Pheietf Classic was auiei SDOKe sparingly mu would never insult anyone That story spread all over the United States and could not be stopped It was a great injustice to Mrs Dylan who was a very modest and charming Asked if Queen Marie of Rom ania on Oct 18 1928 described him as the handsomest man she ever had seen Whalen replied "That is an exaggeration be yond which I cannot help you Queen Marie was a charming lady and a greater dancer Helen (Mrs Vincent) Astor gave a dance in her "home and Queen Marie flipped up the rug and said: dance' I had the pleasure" Another denial of a widespread belief has to do with the power of the so' called Nazi "fifth the war Dr Louis de Jong carrying a study for the International Coun ell of Philosophic and Humanistic Studies reached the conclusion that "the German fifth column was a relatively subsidiary help to Germany military aggression In only two nations Poland and Yugoslavia did the fifth column play an important role There was no evidence that thfe vast accomplishments ascribed to the fifth column elsewhere are really imputable to American Saying: The beginning of love is the end of wisdom SHOW OUNDER DIES PARIS Madame Rasimi know as the founder of the first 1240 A SC World NW1 tovMup T1S MtHkof Chxi 30 Mvtkal Clock by Dr ueorge rr (Cspyrlsht Ik HpHm Syalicgi la HR) TV ROGRAM LISTINGS i00 iMaWatf Club 8:11 iMaWcHHOvb 30 VaHoil Club4S IfaHail Club 0 My Truo Story 9:11 My frva Stury 30 Arthur Oudiray H3 ArfoiJr Gudfray 111 3 JO 3)00 3i0 400 Arthur OuWray A lusttag MeHbaa 3iartiwoy OUbfftr Corbat Mvdt Ir Tha NlfM Haw Campvg Murder WLBC TV 1 TONIGHT Muk Ub Crby Acfhie Or Your A turn Squad Committee Monday introduced a bill to forfeit the citizenship of anyone guilty of treason or of con spiracy to overthrow1 the govern ment Reed said the bill was drafted by the Justice Deoartment and card ries out President Eubank Islea Everman Mary Hart Allee Hook Mary Jack Pau line Jones Mary Kauffman Mil dred Melton Louise Parson Pie cola Raddy Cester Samuell Nila Southard Norma Turner Lelai Wills Gladys Bealrd Mary Grum ley Velma Hill Ethel Humbles Barbara Lewellyn Nettie London! Helen Mason Betty Mcarland Marjorie Trueblood Arline Yahn ke Lampshade Making Marian Baker Jane Brown Lou Cook Doris Jackson Mary Nighbert Martha Oyler rances Paynter Evelyn Plough Mary Priest Rose RelsingerIlarriet Runyon Mar garet Smith Jew vile Jones Interior Decorating Edith Brown Geraldine Canaday Adelia Cunningham Nellie Hancock Lil lie Miller Keith Wendling Public Speaking Dorothy All man Doris Boyd Kenneth Conner Marvin ranklin Barella Gray' Zcnija Grcncions Harvey Kallen beck Samuel Hancock Charles Hartzell Bernard Hathcoat Jack Bensley Vernon Hoehn John Litz Ann Manford Katherine McCord 'Sue Mctord Chirley Mills Ralph MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Aoeiitel Pres Is entitled exclusively to for publication ot au local news prrnxea tn inis newspaper aa aU AP news dispatches Adult Evening School Classes Will Be Terminated This Weel THERE WAS ONE INAL ITEM IN Mr speech yesterday that deserves the attention of every American is one danger we must guard he declared that is psychological If those who persist in taking a pessimistic view of the future succeed in planting fear in the minds of the public those seeds of fear could take root and the result might be tHte very condition we seek to avoid confidence is difficult to measure and so its importance is not always understood But it is a key fac tor in maintaining a high level of economic activity is important because it affects plans for busi ness investment (It) also affects consumer spending more so now than ever because with oui high standi ard of living so much consumer spending is discretionary has been demonstrated time and again that when the people of this country have cash or credit plus con fidence they will purchase goods and services provided they are made sufficiently Alli fear I Debunking of the man and of the Colossus of Rhodes the latter1 being described as a "hollow sham In nthar things Grover Whalen who retired a Ollie Maizigkeit Novelette Molest month ago after 35 years as of Mario Moore Edna Schwelnfurth ficial greeter of New York denied Betty Streaty Lula Wheeler NeL that Mrs John Hylan said lie White "You said a mouthful to Cake Leia Brandcn the Queen of the Belgians on Oct burg Hazel Collins Paulyne Crow 3 1919 when she was being wel der Georganna Daniels Naomi I THAT ONE GETS JAMMED man with the carefulness of the accountant pr bookkeeper Bankers Beware Bankers go through your lobby' and watch your tellers See if they smile first or greet your custo mers first And tell me "Dr Crane my employees always smile at me" Of course (hey smile at YOU But do they smile at the custo mers? where their smiles are of most importance "Sure they smile at customers" bankers have chided me but when 1 have checked further tnt? the case find those are usually old customers of 10 or 15 years dura tion and even then the customers may speak first So notice if tellers speak first and smile first at STRANGER? or new accounts! If they then get your or ganization launched on the "Com pliment Club" Send a dime and stamped return envelope for this helpful bulletin T5en writing to Dr Cnine Mellott Ind enclose stamped self addressed envelope and a dime to cover typing or printing cost when you seek persona! advice or one of his psychologi cal chart "We have thought of thy loving kindness" Psalm 4g He'll scrawl upon a carbon sheet i This typing sure is neat" And as he passes through' his shop I notice now and then stop And say mighty fine work And ask about their sick and ill Take time to pause a tstroke the cat And do i kind little things like that Small' wonder when done and said His bus 2 iness seems to forge ahead hofe Mil Lorena JmO Vt! Wild HkM Dwm Slaw :00 SqorW Dcne Orch I II 30 wm MutH AS Orth LOOKING INTO THE UTURE TO the 12 months immediately ahead Mr Curtice reported that the proph ets of doubt were still with us he said are predictions of an economic setback" "In my he went on pessimists are mistaken again No depression is in my vision" Then in systematic fashion he proceeded to outline the reasons why the business outlook for 1954 is bright: 1 prosperity in this country is certainly not dependent on high defense expenditures never theless defense outlays must be given consideration In my opinion they will not be drastically reduced in 1954 I estimate that total government expenditures including state and local will be maintainea at about the current rate I am sure it is recognized that we are far behind with respect to schools highways hospitals and other public works at state and local 2 housing starts should exceed a million again this year and commercial building will continue at a high 3 "As for capital investment by the elim ination of the excess' profits tax will make additional funds available for modernization and expansion of fa cilities This is one of the most vital points in evalu ating The outlooklor accmtinued high Jevel ofbusiness 4 anticipate little change in the over all level of employment After allowance for seasonal trends em ployment has been stable for about three years at an average of about 65 million inducing 35 million in the armed forces I think this high level pf empToyment will continue throdgh 5 expenditures should continue substan tially at present high levels as a result of well sustained income and lower THERE IS ALWAYS THE DANGER of course that someone in Mr nationwide audience will tend to regard his optimistic predictions as empty oratory that someone will think that underneath it all Mr Cur tice and his top flight economic ad visers are as fearful about the imminence of a depression a the pessimists whose views "Mr Curtice challenged yesterday So there is extraordinary significance in the fact that General during this year and next is spend ing $1 billion on a new building program meet the needs of an expanding Some $600 million of that amount will be spent thisiycar the remainder in early 1955 Mr Curtice said yesterday "is a measure of our faith in our country ft will enable Gen eral Motors tospntinue to make its full contribution to a strong and expanding There in the most graphic possible terms is the documentation7 for Mr confidence in his own predictions about the year ahead Certainly an industry like General Motors capable as it is of obtaining the best financial and economic advice available anywhere in the would never launch upon a billion ex pansion program with a depression lurking around the comer Crim Crlma Gima ef Garttt Jullvt LeRota levlrth d'i fortm Spo'lj let oul Mory ori Case 303: 28 works as town bank "Dr Crsne hank sourpuss expression" a friend of mine recently told me 1 "Never have I seen her smile 1 in the three years she has handl ed my account "And it because she dis likes me for she doesn't smile at other customers cither you think that a bank or store or other business firm I which spends money advertising to gain new customers would at least put good aalesmeh at the windows or counters to for them? "It is inefficient to waste money bringing in new customers if your staff inside the building Thenrati7 enates them" Sourpuss Tellers People wlio for their company are the most vital work ers in the entire firm So they should smile smile smile even if their bunions are 1 killing them or a peptic ulcer feels as if it is boring a hole clear through their spine! Bank tellers post office win dow clerks cashiers and others who must keep a close account of 1 money are naturally under dou 1 ble strain or such people usually are carejul and meticulous Such work is usually the sort which intro verts choose 'BuTlntrovertT are nosoTTIteTy to be the salesman type They sel dom smile unless somebody else smiles first 1 And it because they are unfriendly No they just haven't learned the valuable asset of smil ing as a routine auntomatie pro cess OLKLORE By WUJ IAM WADE rphrr? GEVTLENESS cions rances Anderson Shorthand (beginning) Kate Campbell Paula Martin Lois Wil ley Wanda Bradford Mary Car rice Mildred Albright Juanita Adams Valrea Zion Ceramics (advanced) Mayme Drake Mary Ehle Murita Hay den Clarence Helmick Lucille Hull Alice Layton Marietta Marsh Lillian Palma Marie Alice Peart Joan Terkhorn Joan Woodruff 7 "Ceramics' (beginning) Almeda Asbury Lillie Baker Beverly Bar rett Wanda armer Martha Gray Joyce Higgins Cathryn McClung Sidney McClung Margaret Pauline Rhoda Ruth I Smith Engine Lathe Harold Anderson Jr Carol Barra tt Jack Bingaman Clarence Cash Doyle Dillon John Hammond James Justice' Albert Kailor Marland McCord Glenn Shouts Clifford Semon time to get him to make the $15 000000 food gift to East German last spring a move actually init iated by the State Department and which met with immediate suc cess Later when an old clothes rarnJn iAmericans consume twenty two Germans (he summer Mhite mlnion spirit tablets every vear? House ta Denver misplaced Chan Month? wPeek? Day? No y22 cellor Konrad Adenauers letter hour oh weH wc tjke for three weeks and the clothes dope with the dnve never get under way band acetaPilld alcohol Tw TJoAaSeiAM Kacilalazl IhlaW suu 4 iveiuviH ar IOV ucoitsivu luiru months before he made bis speech proposing the pooling of atomic energy and the speech was re written more than 20 times On foreign affairs generally Ike has switched from the China view that the must concentrate on the ar East Heiis now veering more toward Eu rope His over all policies re main the same as those laid down In the Truman administration but after all both Dulles and Eisen hower were among those appoint ed to carry those policies for ward Ike The After one year in the White House the President works harder than before Sensi tive to criticism that he is lazy he plays less golf and makes more decisions himself During early months as President Ike tried to delegate almost everything even bawled out his staff when they called him back from Burning Tree on the instruction of the Na tional Security Council to make 3 major decision on Korea The President still loses his temper still chews out his staff still likes to delegate authority It is these bursts of temper that send up his blood pressure and worry his doc tors But Ike knows that hi? entire career is now in the bal ance and is determined that the verdict rf history will be favor able In many respects he does not like the presidency wishes he had never been persuaded to run ew people realize the loneliness of living in the White House the AriSvr Golfrx (A IS Azthur I UM Arthur Gadfro iSJ Arthur Oadfray lun Tm Issued Dally and Sunday except Monday Entered Sewtnd Clasa nutter st Anderson Ind under Act ot Congress on March 1 JS85 Subscription RATE: By carrier neek SSc By mall par tb! in advance two years S1S00 one year 900 six months SS00 months S3 00 on month 1 IS Outside ot Madison and adjoin bounties in Indian and beyond Indiana year 14 00: six months I7M three months 4 Ml month SIM WlW CUatoti TOO limited 700 limited 200 limited 700 limited I The Business Outlook Is Bright ONE YEAR AGO HARLOW CURTICE the brand new president of General Motor's stood before a luncheon audience in New York and spoke about the outlook for business in 1953' There were prophets of gloom at work in the country (then predicting that 1953 lltnial am am a am 1 am a mid fTCutam mm 4 Va Wamirajm urn ma emea YVUU1U UC ailULl JCCIXe XU1 Vull a good year for business in geh the automobile industry in pa The record available today pessimists was correct 1 the first six months of Mr Curtice told another luncheon audience in New York only yes terday were unable to provide our dealers with ade quate inventories of passenger cars to enable them to obtain thebusiness tna'C was available to them Pro duction in the second half was affected by the fire which destroyed our Hydra Matic transmission plant However we sdld more automobiles in 1953 than inany other year except 1950ijTo Those tak ing a dim view of 1953 may 1 say that I wourn welcome many more years just like WASHINGTON It Is now ex setly one year since Dfight Eisen hower entered the White House a year that has been one of great education and has seen great changes Here is a thumbnail sketch of the Ike of today Ike And A year ago economic theories sounded like a National Associa tion Of Manufacturers pamphlet Now he has swung back halfway to the ideas expressed at the Street Club right after the war which soj shocked Republican backers "If lives were conscripted in Ike said at the Street Club dinner shouldn't pro fits be conscripted too? Ike is more conservative than in those immediate prewar yeara but less so than a year ago Today be believe in a complete hands off policy toward business Nor does he believe that the doc trine of states' rights so loudly proclaimed a year ago constitutes a cure all for everything Ike And Economy No longer does the President believe he can balance the budget Nor does he view government spending with anathema as he did a year ago He is willing to put his foot In government spending water as an offset to recession worries But he is a long way from taking the big spending plunge And some of (he economists around him recall that it takes a lot of spending to halt a business slide one it starts Ike has changed his mind about creeping Socialism and the Tennessee ValleyT has atreadyset aside $105000000 to start another "creeping project on the St Lawrence once the seaway nrnirct nasxr ft Cnnffres The economy bloc in the Eisenhower inability to relax the impossibil administration notably Secretary ity of obtaining privacy George Humphrey and Budget Di Though ht like his joti rector Joe Dodge still remain close friends but he doesn't I follow their advice as much as i formerly Sometimes the i between the two wings of his official family Men Around A man had little experience in civilian government is almost completely dependent on the men around him That's why it's significant that a new" flank of has moved in around the President They liberal by the Harry Hop kins standard but they are far more progressive than the big business golfing partners who used to move over from Sea Island to Agusta when Ike went to the White some wiseacres call them rather than liberals and it's true that the new flank Is passionately roneerned with upping Ike's Gal up poIT rating T7 However they include Kevin McCann president of the Defiance College Charles Moore up and coming former pub lic relations adviser to ord Mo tors Dr Arthur Burns liberal head of the Council of Economic Advisers: Jackson former publisher of ortune Magazine and the man who pqshed Ike into the atomic pool speech and Robert Cutler Boston banker who got Into the White Mouse through Justice elix rankfurter This group is unanimously anti McCarthy and unanimously opposed to the right wing GOP They are pulling Ike to get back to the middle of the road course where he once had the Sup port of many Democrat! Ike And Congress Congres sional relations is a field that greatly worries the President At first he figured he could "good members Congress thatWhite House luncheons personal conversations would keep congres smen in line Now he la a wiser man Nothing but a strong and successful policy he has be gun to realize can keep Congress with him And he still hasn't learned this completely When Sen Knowland kicked over the traces on funneling of defense or ders to4 depressed areas wfeen Sam Rayburn reacted vigorously to criticism of Democratic spend ing the President wax hurt and bewildered He still is a long way from understanding politics Veering Toward Europe Ike and oreign This is the field that Eisenhower knows best and where he is determined to'challj tp notable achievements Here he has bcm mere consistent than In domestic policy but some music hall in rance before World times so cautious that his own ad Wir I was buried Monday She visers get impatient It took 'died riday at the age of 8T (CprrljM 1 54 if Ih Jahn 9 tMIU Csu) ORTY TWO MILLION ASPIRINS good many laymen and too'ln the office when Mrs Six Hun many physicians take or give anjdred calls him to attend her child aspirin tablet as readiy or with no is to ask whether she has taken than I feel about the child's temperature Oh yes rolling a somersault If rolling a Mrs reports proudly the somersault strikes you as a silly temperature was 102 That gives idea all right This is a free the all the informa country But then I've been on the tion he needs He Instructs Mrs silly side these many years tor i roll half a dozen first thing every i morning and I roll a few more i behind my desk whenever my com 1 posing machinery gets gummed up i On three or four occasions I have taken one or two five grain aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) is To the best of my knowledge xsppirin (acetylsalicylic acid) is less dangerous than any other an algesic (pain or ache reliever) we have This is not to imply that asnirin is anile safe nr harmless Persons subject to allergy espe cially asthmatics should beware of the danger of aspirin Aspirin is aspirin no matter what shape color or size the tab let capsule or pill may be Any body may make it and market it sinnee the patent on it expired long ago Buying aspirin is like buying automobiles or television receivers I learned the hard way that a $5000 car was not nearly as good as one costing half as much and a $1900 thirty inch television receiver was not nearly as good as one costing a quarter ax much I How lightly we take aspirin one' will be answered by Dr Brady if may judge from the fact that stamped self addressed envef 1 a 4 A Downey Helen Eubank nnir A widely circulated story stated Hickman Betty Nicholas Lillian 4L zs 'au' VAfif ff TT19V ftnmc Uttirm A or made that remark in answer Scmon Leveda Shipman Sylvia spiegai Hester Towle Dorothy Williamson Elizabeth Wisehart Bookkeeping I Mildred Bon ham Hazel Campbell Mary Claw I Your BI BI room 30 2ht t4S 11m Proomf tOO PkrytauM 30 Thoafra Hi MyitiKy Thtr 00 pAd1tun'Knightttawf ibber AAc ibber Mcq lap hmii Or ch Top TWt 700 700 timitod Yu Caret Yule CoreH Yvlt Cafe! YuU Cesl Yufe Ce'oh Yuk Cofol to the queen's compliment on the New York skyline "Mrs Hyian was a lady of thr lirjl WfllCI UfllCU oaiM WufeNteU aova a'fiatj VKW was spoke sparingly and(son Auretta Caylor Thelma Col lesier juanna uavis Virginia Dun Yas LA11 CI da DC ne icrl OTnrn Mn 1 A a a tage Russel) Hughes Mary Mara LAW fatsos Martha McCabe Murrell McClure Mary McHaffey House Judiciary (OmrnilfAAt mlr AjwAAJ aionan wary Morrison Beulah uuuajr uuta nooinsqn zioneri Schoger Mona ShMv Beverly Shi mer Minnie SpeckEula Stevens Ruth Swa JuanltaTlpton Joyce Turner Novella Williamson Daisy Burns Lois Car penter Zelma Cornelius Helen THE ANDERSON HERALD Established June It IM Published By ANDERSON NEWSPAPERS INC TELEPHONE 3 5371 3 is ws $00 StrwPl 4:11 Mui Sheo 30 Hambkionto3 Haws :00 Big Jq 5: IS Sports Journal 33 Bofwtio Rawver 45 lowftil ThomcHi Moore Edith Morrow Jack Nor ris Mary Louise Norris Glen Shinabarger Mayme Sullivan Maxine Waugh Betty Whitmore Katherine Wilson Blueprint David Bron nenberg William Carpenter Kath lyn Covington Charles lanagan Emily Hancock Kent Hardy Har old Lewellyn Sherman McCrary Alfred Stephens Shellman Troyer ine Arts Palntin tk tta 2 a 1 And 1 told vnu thn that if vmi Timed xo ine ausuo maneua vain aiyrue reral subject areas lington Polly Johnson Pearl Mil mile constantly 9 1 i nsilinn nAihirw tt ill Jer Thelma Mozingo George On tan Inna lnntM t2iHa me habitual In fact yOU AOOO i atete 1 I a atea A1 v4kM I ma Waltz 50 men anfl women 'no front" for your firms should ad Or AndersOn George Beard Jack Rinmin Crrnll Rrt Rnh rt ih nn nd 11 be conrad Melvin Dixon Harry Dun ham Ernest reeman John Ham mond rancis Highwood Robert Laughlin red Miller Eugene Morgan David Norris Kenneth Prichard Albert Rich David Rick er Myron Snyder Robert Shirek Robert Utterback Lelah Wilkins Joseph Asheraft Jack Bingaman Emerson Brooks Charles Clark William Clock Mel vin Dixon Ernest reeman John Hammond Earl Hartley Charles Loser Roy Lovell red Miller William Richardson Robert Shirek Robert Utterback Law rence Wulle Drina Abel Edna Pear son Richard Wakeman Roy Par pi The Washington MERRY GO ROUND By Drew Pearjon (lek4 by Tha Ball dock Lenora Koifs Ruth Sa vage Mona Shaw Aletha Shinaberry 1 Bertha Thias Carmen Trook Mark Trook Mary Antrim Tillie Appier Eva Arnold "Bessie Banta 1 Phyllia Belangee Gretta Camp bell Dorothy Carter Bette Conner I ft wax ax I UCSti imu £VUuc UaftKinS' Alula lllil VllVC has now extended Handley Alma Hunt Mary Hunt oiaoei Mcconneu Kay Manghelll Certificates for evening classes which terminate this week have been announced by the Anderson Public Division of Adult Education Classes have been in operation for 13 weeks and (he certificate indicates successful completion Registration for the spring classes in the Evening Division will be held on Monday eb 8 and Thursday eb 11 in the high school building crrsntal in 1hl IXJi irfultc in the sev include: Certificates granted to the 204 smile without realizing it adults in the several subject areas Manon snort DorOtny Vogel Nor man wnrr THE WORRY CL Personal Health Service A mnH MflllWim IMrc £dt to ri a Ij 8 thl 4 30 OooSy 3:00 TVuf 3 43 i WtaUter 4M Vorlatr 4M tif: lUw fe43 TV Utel 74)0 I MarrM Jaaa 750 AMteWK4 3:00 llbaran 1:30 fear 7:00 1afute Tkute 7:30 valur 1000 Sattea 1000 Hw 10:41 Walter 10:33 1 te Sortte4 Aftrt'l ary 1 SumMftU Sue Mu MuU Mirw Mmk I land ef rat Wl4 Ur Mak Mirra I WHPafn Rounds Wpaam My RiiiiHI MaU Mlaq 9 amily Skftktoa Mrwt orada Gilbert tabua lavish tUI SHru Svppar Club 3 Amqrkana Speefc Marian amily Stirtam 1 Muk Rftmembar Meek JE4wwl Muffow 5 i fl.

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About Anderson Herald Archive

Pages Available:
619,366
Years Available:
1893-1987