Harriettc Hammer Walker
Editor and Publisher
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier a Week—10c
By Mail, .$4.00 Per Year
Entered as second class matter
at the poStofFice at Asheboro, N.
C., under the Act of March S,
1879..
Member Associated Press
The Associated Press is ex- j
clusively entitled to the U3e for 1
publication of all news dispatch- !
es credited to it or not other
wise credited to tin’s paper and ;
also the local news published j
herein
All rights of publication of
special dispatches nerein arc
also reserved.
Foreign Representatives:
Pr'-ovt Griffith & Brunson, Inc.
Member of North Carolina
Press Association
The Daily Courier
Established 1870
Phone 144
1891
William C. Hammer
1980
Published Daily, except
Monday and Saturday
FRIDAY', DECEMBER 10. 1987
THE GIF]
fi
I.
'HEX all through the hous:"
was title of the most lovely
picture ir. Vogue today. A green
and neutral wall made a back
ground for a holiday table with
holly-berry-red chairs, trio red
glasses, red roses, Christmas greens
in graceful festoons—and a lovely
picture. Who wouldn’t love to go
to-such a home at Christmas-time!
All through the year many of us
work 'with very unromantic tools
and rather unormantic places,
but at Christmas every grown-up
reverts to a little child, whether h ?
admits it or not, and loves the gla
mor of it all. For those who toil
and often make sacrifices during
the entire year, what could be nicer
than to “take Christmas” by visit
ing friends, accepting and dispens
ing hospitality.
In the good old days, people kept
ouen house at Christmas-time and
friend communed with friend in the
good (dd-fashioned way. A spirit
of neighbor]iness prevailed that
Tasted throughout the ye%\ Meet
ing about the Yule board, sitting in
front of the Yule^log and just tak
ing t'mc to be human being shou'd
be the lot of even newspaper folk
at Christmas. Business folk would
not resort to such cut-throat com
pet’t’on if old-time Christmas cus
toms were revived.
A f'w years ago, the Christmas
card habit became sort of bad—
entirely too widespread and g:fts
vraw exchanged that meant, little
s-i-rp awnnmng. Both have their
place. and Christmas would be a
time without either, or both.
But the gift of friendship cannot be
ppwhesad with money and is the
o"ift that should be ex
piinno.f^i at, the season when the
wwM (,cUohvnted the birthday of the
Greatest Gift.
W'th Other Editors!
A TWO FISTED MOUSE
A mouse has threatened the foun
dat;on of a modern state—a very
special mouse, to be sure, but still
a mouse. Yugoslavia has deported
Miolcev Mouse because of his sub
versive antics in the newspaper Po
lit'ea. Mickey, it appears, was get
ting involved in affairs of state,
and his popularity was driving his
comic strip foes to cabals, juntas
and other Revolutionary devices.
Yugoslavian censors began to see
M!ckey as a one-mouse revolution
disseminating dangerous ideas. No
word has been received to indicate
whether or not Donald Duck, Pluto
and Horace Horsecollar have also
been exiled a3 bomb-throwing plot
ters.
M:ckey, with such press notices
as these, may transform the world's
concept of a mouse. To be mouse
like may come to suggest ferocious
ness and the courage of a lion. The
Yugoslavian censor may have
“turned earth’s surface rough” for
Mirkey but not even a Hollywood
mouse can expect Green Pastures
and Parmesan Fields all the time.
Mickey has demonstrated that a
mouse can cast a shadow as large
as an elephant. But he has re
tained at least one tradition of the
mouse—he has more than one hole
to hia abode, and if Yugoslavia
plugs one of them, there are thou
sands more where he will run no
risk of deportation on the grounds
of subversive activity.—Christian
Science-Monitor.
Berkeley, Calif. —AT)—Because
California'holda 88 per cent of the
world’s dried prune crops this year,
the Prune Prorate program has
been set up to distribute them. The
organization will give special at
tention to encouraging exports and
diverting some of the crop into re
Washington
0ay Book
By PRESTON GROVER
\\ ashington—The Japanese are
likely to be rebuffed by the United
States once more very soon— and
they will be left with little oppor
tunity for official recourse.
Best sources indicate that
Hawaii will be denied the privi
lege of statehood. The reason
given here in off-the-recbhl- con
versations. is that there are so
many Japanese there.
Immediately after the regular
session last summer a party of
senators and representatives left
for Hawaii to go once .again into
, the question :p¥ isTamT ; ninthhobtk'
They took along wives arid dreigfi
! tors', and expenses were paid IVohi
1 a $'11,000 appropriation by the
I Hawaiian legislature.
I As in 1035 during a similar in
jurin', they took voluminous tosti
1 mony and came back with impres
sions something like these:
The island population of 385,000
justifies statehood, since that
makes it about as largo as sev
eral smaller states of the union.
I It biult morale to give self-gov
ernment to a people.
The populace is capable of stable
self-government under state
hood
1 Japanese Lead
Bin—here is how it stack- up:
Estimated Population 385,090
Japanese. 150.000
Hawaiian . .. 22,090
Chinese . 28,000
Filipino .........__ . 35,000
Portguese, White Ameri
cans and other Cau
casians .. 80.000
The balance is made up of vari
ous mixtures of Asians, Havaiian.
and Caucasians,
Now of these 150,000 Japanese,
app’vximately 110,000 are Ha
waiian born, and therefore Amer
ican citizens. The Yankee popula
tion is probably well under 50,000,
sharply outnumbered by the Japa
nese
Off The Record
As one member of the com
mittee explained it (not for
quotation), as long as Hawaii re
mains ' a territory its governor is
appointed-in Washington. Its dele
gates to- eongre. s have restricted '
influence. If statehood should be ,
granted, the state would elect its
own governor and send senators
and representatives to congress.
As to the committee’s report,
one member said: “The jury is
still out.”
But another added: "The verdict
is in."
One senator is still chuckling
at Democratic leaders who, claimed
they knew to a man just how
every Democratic member was
going to vote late last session on
who would he majority leader,
Harrison or Barkley. Behind
closed doors each senator was
given a slip of paper on which to
write the name of his choice.
Said the senator: “I saw one
man who was counted on for a
Barkley vote dot an ‘I’. There is
no ‘I’ in Barkley.”
It’s Odd
But It’s Science
By Howard W. B'akeslee
(.P> Science Editor
— ■ ----
By Howard W. Blakesiet*
(OP) Science Editor)
Philadelphia. — Scientists aio
using sound as a scalpel to cut out
I of typhoid fever vaccine the impuri
ties that cause unpleasant after
effects.
The sound scalpel tears apart
the bodies of typhoid germs. This
is done by placing the germs in a
solution and passing through it.
high-pitched, wkistling sounds.
One substance separated in this
way from the germs is typhoid
“virulence antigen.” This antigen,
a protein, is the stuff that makes
typhoid vaccine. The sound yields
pure antigen. Chemical extraction,
the usual way of obtaining the
antigen, leaves impurities which
have been blamed for after-effects
of typhoid vaccination.
Experiments with pure sound
made antigen are under way at the
Johnson Foundation and the de
partment of biology of the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania. Rabbits and
other animals have beefi given
“massive” doses of the virulence
antigen, much more than would be
needed to protect a®«inst typhoid.
In no case have tTiese huge doses
been followed by serious reactions.
Constitution Neglects
Movit Quorums
Washington —CP)—For the edu
cation of his colleagues Senator
Tom Connally of Texas has gone
to considerable trouble to- define
the word “quorum.”
“The Constitution requires the
presence of a quorum”, Connally
shouted irritably, as he addressed
rows of empty seats.
“That does not mean a quorum
down fi*,the dining room, that does
not mean a quorum down at the
picture show, that does not mean
a quorum over in the office build
ings it means a quorum here, on
the floor of the Senate,” he roared.
But still no one came in.
.
I
SANTA and the
WHITE FOX
i
By SiRrid Arne
The story thus far:. None of Son
ia's friends can help him rescue
Helga, the doll, from the dangerous
white fox. But then something un
j expected happens.
—
Chapter 11
The Sailor Doll
| As Santa and all hi? friends sat
and wondered how to save Helga
from the white fox, something
strange happened. The toyshop
door opened and in flew a little lady
no taller than a teaspoon. She
Tiad a tiny, bright star tied high up^
on her soft brown hair and her eyes
were very blue.
She flew to the arm of • Santa’s
chair and smiled up at him.
“Good,” said Santa, “I’ve been
wishin g for you.”
"Ye.?, 1 ’heard you wishing,” said
the fairy. “So I came. 1 know
what the trouble is.”
“Dear me, yes,” said Santa.
“Have you any ideas?”
The little lady—and i’ll tell you
who she was: she was the Queen
of Fairies—twirled on her toes jmd
laughed so gayly that even Santa,
worried as lie was, grinned sheep
ishly.
“Santa, you’re a dear,” said the
Fairy Queen. “You hake a doll of
the North, and then you expect hc-r
to be a simple little toy.”
“What do you mean ?”
“You heard her say she wanted
io go to sea,” said the fairy. “She’ll
never no a Christmas gift.”
Song of the Sea Shell
Sant a, frowned a minute, and
then said, “Maybe you’re right.”
The fairy smiled up at the ced
ing, and from the spot at which
Hoiidav Candv Can Be
Rolled at Home Party
By Mrs. Alexander George
( B Feature Service Writer
Cherished recipes for holiday
cookies and confections are handed
through generations in many fam
ilies.
Modern shops are full of allur
ing sweets but home-made goodies
have :> special Christmasy touch. If
you're going to make some sweets
yourself, begin at least two weeks
ahead of the holiday season. Many
delicacies need to “ripen.” a little
to be at their best. And not a few
boxes will have to be mailed.
Candied Containers
As soon as your confections and
cookies are thoroughly cooled
after cooking put them into air
tight boxes, and store them in the
coldest part of the cupboard or
pantry. (The refrigerator is usual
ly too cold.)
Candied grapefruits make tasty j
'containers for confections. Use
.grapefruit halves from which the
pulp has been removed. Wash
them put them in a kettle and
cover them with cold water, so it
comes four inches above the level
of the rinds. Add half a teaspoon
ful of salt for each four cups of
water. Cover the kettle and sim
I raer the halves for an hour, chang
ing the water three times to re
move any bitter flavor.
Then measure two cups of gran
ulated sugar and one cup of water
for each halves. Boil sugar and
water together three minutes and
J hen put the rinds into this syrup.
Simmer about 30 minutes or until
the rinds are well candied. Re
move the rinds and sprinkle them
with granulated sugar. Let them
cool, then heap them full with as
sorted confections.
How To Salt Nuts
Candied raisins, prunes, apri
cots dates and currants make fine
fillers for box corners. Prepare
l them by mixing two cups of gran
I ulated sugar, one cup of water and
one teaspoon each of cinnamon,
cloves and nutmeg. Boil the in
gredients together four minutes,
‘hen add two cups of fruit. Cook
slowly until a fine threat forms
whet; some of the syrup is poured
from a spoon. Pour into a shallow
nan and, when slightly cool, sprin
kle with confectioner’s sugar.
You will need salted nuts for
dividing lines or comer fillers in
boxe Sprinkle a cup of blanched
nuts in a thin laver over a shallow
nan Add one tablespoon of olive
oil or butter. Bake slowly and stir
frequently with a fork until the
nuts are evenly browned. (About
20 minutes.) Then sprinkle half
ai teaspoonful of salt, while warm,
npt< a cloth. Wipe off surplus salt
and fat. Store them in air-tight
lars. If they need refreshing later,
heat them five minutes in a mod
eratc oven.
To blanch nuta, eover a cupful
with boiling water. Put a lid over
them and, alter five inmates, re
move the brown skins with your
fingers. Then dry them five min
utes or so in a slow oven.
Dipping Mixtures
Stuff dates, prunes or figs with
cream candies or fudges, peanut
butter, cheese, toasted nuts, can
died fruit* or coconut. Then roll
some in plain or toasted coconut,
granulated or brown sugar or
chopped nuts. Dip others in melted
fondant or chocolate. (Dried
prunes must we washed well and
steamed for 15 minutes before
they are ready for stuffing.)
Keep chocolate or fondant for
dipping over hot—not boiling—
water.
, If your fondant is too thick, thin
I it with cream. But if your dipping
she looked in the rafters there fell
a small rope ladder down which
scrambled a pert sailor doll. He
was brown as a maple leaf in the
fall, and his wavy yellow hair had
red lights in it. His shoulders were
good and square, and he wore a
sailor’s white shirt and some blue
dOngarecs. He grinned mischiev
ously and reached into his pocket
for a tiny sea shell. He listened to
it a minute, looked surprised and
put it back in his pocket.
Santa simply couldn’t control his
curiosity.
“What is it?” said Santa.
“Would you like to hear?” asked
the sailor.
“Certainly, certainly,” said San
ta, and he listened very closely.
This is what the sea shell said:
Who is it that combs his hair with
a tree,
Who is it you hear but cannot see ?
“It’s Dangerous” j
Santa looked puzzled and stared
questioningly at the sailor. But the
sailor only smiled. “Come now,”
said Santa. “What’s the answer?"
“Let me go looH for Helga?”
asked the sailor.
“"ikes, but why do you want to
go?” asked Santa. “It’s danger
ous.”
“That’s the very reason,” said
the sailor. “And the answer to the
sea shell’s question is this: it’s the
wind. He combs his hair with a
tree, and you can hear him but you
can’t see him.”
Santa threw back his head and
shouted with laughter.
“I guess your trip is going to be
more dangerous for the white cox
than for you,” he said. “We'll hc-lp
you get started tomorrow.”
chocolate needs thinning, melt into
it a fed shavings of paraffin. Never
let water get into dipping choco
late; it stiffens the mixture.
To soften fondant wrap it in a j
damp cloth and, after an hour,
knead it with your hands and
shape it for dipping. (Fudges may
also be shaped into balls and
dipped.) Place bits of candied
fruits, coconut and nuts in the
centers of several of the balls—as
surprises.
Double decker fudges and fon
dants make unusual treats. Put a
layer of white fudge in a shallow,
buttered pan and cover it with a
layer of penorfhe or chocolate
fudge. When it is firm cut it into
ears. Put a layer of nuts, chopped
candied fruits, marshmallows or
coconut in between for triple deck
ers.
Christmas Coconut Snowballs
(Makes Two Dozen)
1 2-3 cups sifted cake flour
1 1-2 teaspoons double-acting
baking powder
1-3 cup butter or other shorten
ing
1 cup granulated sugar
2 eggs, well beaten
1-2 cup milk
1 teaspoon lemon or vanilla ex
tract
1 can moist, sweetened poconut
Sift flonr once. Measure. Add
baking powder and sift together
three times. Cream butter thor
oughly. Add sugar gradually and
cream together Until light and
fluffy. Add eggs, then flour, al
ternating with milk, a small amount
at a time, and beating after each
addition until smooth. Add flavor
ing. Turn into greased cupcake
pans, filling them two-thirds full.
Bake in moderate oven (375 degrees
F.) 20 minutes, or until done. Cool.
Cove)- each cake with seven-minute
frosting and sprinkle thickly with
moist, sweetened coconut. Arrangc
on large platter and insert a small
: twig of evergreen or candle holder
with tiny red candle in each cake.
(Light candles just before serving.)
Seven-Minute Frosting
2 egg whites, unbeaten
1 1-2 cups granulated sugar
5 tablespoons water
11-2 teaspoons light corn syrup
1 teaspoon vanilla
Ccnabine egg whites, sugar, wa
ter, and com syrup in top of double
boiler beating with rotary egg
heater until thoroughly mixed.
Place over rapidly boiling water.
Beat constantly with rotary egg
beater and cook for seven minutes,
or until frosting will stand in peaks.
Remove from boiling water. Add
j vannilla and beat until thick enough
to spread.
‘Wandering: Ranch’
Gets Permanent Home
Tonopah, Nev. —(Jtt—They still
have a hard time running accurate
surveyor’s lines in this sparsely
settled country. For years a dis
pute has been going on as to
whether the big Potts ranch is in
Nye county or Lander county.
The latest court decision is in
tended to give the ranch a perma
nent home in Nye county and to
place its $16,000 assessment on the
tax rolls. Lander also was ordered
to pay Nye $2,$66 for taxes alleged
to have been illegally collected.
‘Bobby’ For Jamaica
Kingston, Jamaica —UP>—An
English “bobby” will be imported
to tiie West Indian port in the
Canibbean sea. He will instruct
the local constabulary in the “ins
and outs'* of directing traffic.
MANHATTAN
By GEORGE TUCKER
New York—A stage manager of
one of tae oner a companies tells of
| two of his divas who are carrying
I on a feud with one another. It ap
pears that one of his warblers, in
I a flirtatious mood, carried off the
boy friend of the other.
The jilted one immediately favor
ed her more successful confrere
with a blistering dressing-down,
calling her 50 different kinds of
Judas and warning her to keep out
of her path thereafter. It was a
ringing denunciation, replete with
acrimonious invective and leaving*
the atmosphere quite decidedly sul
phurous and blue.
Finally she ended on a note which
was a masterpiece of rebellious
whimsy: ‘'And you can find some
one else to lend your curling irons
to after this, too!” she screamed.
William A. Brady, one of the
veteran and more successful
producers hereabouts, received a
lot of enthusiastic comment after
his ialk on the radio the other
night. The husband of Grace
George, whose career has been as
chock-full of adventure as four
Sax-Rohmer hovels, related many
exciting moments in his theatrical
and sporting hey-day, such as the
time he presented Helen Hayes in
a play one night and managed the
late Jim Corbett in a prize fight
the next.
However, as he humorously re
called, his most thrilling achieve
ment came at the age of nine. De
voted to the theater even at that
age, he was seated in “peanut
heaven”, which means the upper
balcony, one' night, and from that
distance succeeded in throwing a
marble through the bass drum in
the orchestra pit. That, he says,
gave him his greatest thrill.
It isn’t generally known that
John Golden, another eminent
producer with a fund of anecdotal
reminiscences that would start*'
even Bob Burns, has plied the
trade of a brick layer in his car
reer. Yet, it is true. In addition to
accepting packages from Irish hod
carriers, ho has been a lawyer, a
song writer, an inventor and a
comic-strip artist. His most notable
achievement on Tin Pan alley was
the hit, “Poor Butterfly”, which he
wrote in collaboration with Ray
Hubbell, and on another occasion
he wrote a song in collaboration
with Woodrow Wilson.
Professor Golden’s latest con
tribution to the theatrical stage is
one of the town’s three smash hits,
“Susan iinij God”. He aims to
throw* four others into rehearsal
between now and February.
f Subway stations have long been
jpopular as indoor retreats for
homeless men, especially during
winter However, they are not
Warm in winter. These subterran
ean enclosures often are colder than
the air on the street levels.
Literary
Guidepost
By JOHN SELBY
“The Theater In A Changing Eu
rope”, by Thomas H. Dickinson;
(Holt: $5).
Those of us who c!o not read
the literature of the theater from
a specialist’s viewpoint must have
been convinced of its poverty. It is
practically impossible, these days,
to find anything written about the
theatre which considers the subject
“in the round.”
There are plenty of arty maga
zines which fill space with pictures
and paradoxes which can only be
understood if you have seen the
very latest play. There are the
review columns which strain the
new plays through the mind of a
man who goes to the theater every
night all season—even worse than
doing a book a day. And there are
Variety and its sisters, large and
email, in which the theater be
comes “show business.”
Now there is a general book
which can be understood by the
layman, and which is authoritative
as well. It is compiled and partly
written by Thomas H. Dickinson,
and it is called “The Theater in
a Changing Europe.” Dr. Dickin
son has 16 collaborators, and be
fore the reader lias finished, he
has read a reasonably extended
article on the state of the Euro
pean theater in each country
Theatre Menu
SUNSET
Today
Barbara Stanwyck and Her
bert Marshall in “Breakfast For
Two”. Sportlight, “Rhythnr Of
The Game.” Traveltalk, “Chile
Land Of Charm”. Pathe News.
Saturday
William Boyd and George
Hayea in “North Of The Rio
Grande.” Blue Mountain Ran
gers—On the stage. Charlie Mc
’ Carthy arnd Edgar Bergen in
“All American Drawback.” Ser
ial, “Secret Agent” No. 6. Serial,
“Painted Stallion” No. 10.
CAPITOL
Friday ft Saturday
Joan Blondell and Pat O’Brien
in “Back In Circulation.” Para
mount News. Screen Song,
"Magic On Broodway." _
where there fa " atheater""worth
writing about—Bulgaria and Rou
nianin as well as the ubiquitous#
Russia and the theater of France,
Germany and Spain.
Dr. Dickinson has done the in
troduction with eminent sanity.
He insists that instead of viewing
the theater in the light of one of.;
its component parts, it must be
seen as a whole—“of all the arts ,,
he writes, “the theater lies most;
near to the motivating heart, the
dynamic imperatives which .op
erating beyond reason, in a legion
of implacable but mysterious will,
are driving society on a path it
cannot forsec.”
This may be too broad a state
ment; the theater certainly is in ,
America still a matter pf exploit- |
ing amusement, and one socially
conscious play a year, in the con
mercial theater, is a good average.
Just the same, it is a thought, and
long searching by this department
has failed to find as much thought
in writing on theatrical matters as
exists in, for example, the field of
music or literature, or even paint-,
ing.
Dr. Dickinson’s book is long,
reasonable well illustrated and'
the average of writing ability
among the contributors is high
enough to serve their purpose.
Bragg Is Best In j
First Season i
(■By the (.!“> Feature Serv ice
Huntington, W. Va. — Nelson
Bragg', one of the nation’s leading
kickers of points after touchdown,
never had made a conversion until
this season.
Bragg, 185-pound regular guard
on Marshall college’s Buckeye con
ference championship eleven, found
experience was not essential and
proceeded to boot 21 points from
placement out of 22 tries in regular
scheduled games.
He probably would have rolled
up a larger total, but ihe Herd
thundered over its combined oppo
sition 297 points to ID and Bragg
had a lot of rest on the bench.
Coached by Cam Henderson to
“keep your eye on that pumpkin, ’
Bragg, stands with his leit foot
planted and his kicking foot back
eliminating a step.
His only miss of the year came
against Ohio university when he
was taken off the bench in spite
of a severe injury to his right leg.
He was inserted again after Mar
shall. ’s second touchdown and pla:e
kicked a perfect goal to give the
Herd a 13-13 the and preserve its
undefeated record.
Bragg, a Berkley, W. Va., boy,
has another year of competition.
The Colorado river aqueduct, now
under construction, will bring wa
ter .242 miles across the daesrt to
Los Angeles and surrounding cities.
Buick Reports ■
Sales Progress
Flint, Mich., Dec. 10.—<.T>—W. F.
Hufstader, general sale3 manage’',
announced today that domestic re
tail deliveries of Buick motpr cars
during the first twenty da^t cf
November totaled 13,411 units, com
paring with 10,402 units in the first
twenty days of the preceding
month, a gain of 2,919 acrs or 27.
82 per cent, and with 12,025 in the
corresponding period of Novem
ber, 1930, a gain of 1,386 cars or
11.52 pet cent.
During the second ten days this
month, Mr . Hufstader said, 6,635
Buick cars were delivered at retail
in the United States compared with
5,752 irr the corresponding period
of October, a gain of 883 cars or
75.35 per cent.
He added that in the period from
November 1, through the 23rd,
Buick registrations in the Detroit
area were the second largest in
the county, and that a similar posi
tion is being maintained in other
large markets.
Eagle Loses Battle
With Six Men
Sheridan, Wy,o. —UP)—It took
six men to capture the eagle Dr.
I. P. Hayes wounded near here.
The doctor was hunting pheas
ants when he saw the eagle and
shot twice at it. The bird fell,
stunned, but was up on his f0
tryirp- to ran whe«-Di\ i|gy
his five hunting companions
tool.' him.
They tied his and wim
brought him to the Sheridan
“But it was a Job holdin,
down until we could"pet a r<
him’, the men said.
How much fertilizer can he
fitably applied t» cotton is dial
ed in Experiment Station Bu]
No. 313 now available fri
charge on application to the
cultural editor at State collee.
sbiiset p$r]
SATURDAY
WM. BOYD in ]
“NORmOPTHE
RIO GRANDE” J
Extra! Stage Act! I
‘Bllue Mountain Rangers
CAPITOL '5,7
TODAY — SATURDAY V
Joan Blondell
Pat O’Brien
“Back in Circulation”
FEED IT
STRAIGHT
FEED W5TH
GRAIN
PUSWlA
PURINA
HOC*
JW|Hi
^SilKIhrPMse
\ A THEN you feed your
W Bag, you can be suri
milk for suckling pigs. Co
Chow or Hog Falena now!
Asheboro, N; €,
ivftrt jin
*** 5*
nli
*ith
°CC8SS(
Iook the whole length of Motor Car Row,
_j and you won’t find a car anywhere
that offers you what this stunning new
Buick does.
No other car, for instance, has its Dyna
flash engine, squeezing more useful
power out of every drop of gasoline you
bum.
No other car has Torque-Free Springing
—or can match the smoothness-with
safety this new coil-spring rear suspen
sion provides.
No other car combines such features as
Silent Zone Body Mounting, Valve*in
Head efficiency,Torque-Tube Drive,Tip
toe Hydraulic Brakes, Knee-Action com
fort and safety—in a package so big and
handsome.
All that plainly says “Better buy Buiek!”
But just by way of completing the story,
we’d like to point out this:
The Buick special is the lowest-priced
straight-eight of its size on the market. At
least two sixes carry higher lift prices, and
others are priced so close that a dollar or
two a week covers the difference.
.Take the stunning four-door sedeto shown
here. It’s sixteen and a half feet long, has
107 horsepower under its hood, and it’s
yours complete with standard accessories
for only $1023, delivered at Flint, Mich.
We don’t think you’ll find its match any
where on Motor Car Row. We’re sure
you won’t for the money!
South
Ashebor*