xt7p8c9r350z https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7p8c9r350z/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19530807  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, August  7, 1953 text The Kentucky Kernel, August  7, 1953 1953 2013 true xt7p8c9r350z section xt7p8c9r350z UK Coaching Clinic Opens Thursday
Five Top
Mentors
Will Lead
Five of the nation's top coaches of
basketball and football will be
featured in UK's annual coaching
clinic, which will open Thursday in
Memorial Coliseum.
Highlights of the three-da- y
clinic
will be the
Basketball
?ame at 6 p.m., CST, and the
football game at 7:30 p.m, set
for Saturday night.
tilts,
Tickets for the two
between selected teams of East and
West high school players, are on
sale in the Coliseum ticket office
x.
and at Gra
Each ticket will
oe i- -,
au DasKeioau seats wiu De
reserved, all football tickets will be
general admission. Proceeds will go
to a permanent fund toward tha
compensation of high school athletes
who suffer serious injuries
For the clinic, 145 advance registrations have been made from Ken
tucky, 14 other states and Canada
A total of nearly 500 is expected,
zi.cn xiuuu said, wilii reg- istrations from Kentucky high school
coaches making up the late num
bers.
Visiting basketball coach will be
John Bunn, head of the cage sport
at Springfield. Mass.. College the
school noted as the birthplace of
basketball. He is past president of
the National Association of Basket- All-St-

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bringing about changes in rules
credited with speeding up the game
and increasing its popularity. A 10- letter athlete at the University of
Kansas, Coach Bunn has coached
on both tne east and west coasts
during a long career.
Two stellar grid coaches will par- ticipate in the clinic sessions,
Clarence (Rippipt Munn. head coach
of the national champion Michigan
Rlatp Snnrtars as nurnftl fnnthflll'l
-coach of the year" last season,
Much of Munn's spectacular success
in the grid world is attributed to
his development of one of the most
complex offensive systems in modem
IoolDau-- An nff snoot of the sinele.
ihe, Munn style incorporates
double- elements of the split-T,

wineed-- T
and other forma- tions.
Ray Eliot, veteran football chief
at the University of Illinois, has
headed the fighting Illini for ten
years. Besides producing two west
em Conference titlists and a like
number of Rose Bowl championship
outfits, he has fielded teams in
four other years which were con- tenders until final eames of the
season..
StronelV featured in the Clinic. Of
course, will be UK's own nationally
known head coaches.
Adolph Rupp, "Man in the Brown
Suit," is widely credited with doing
more than any other modem cage
mentor to make basketball a na- tional spectator sport. With his 23rd
year as headmaster of the Wildcat
brigade behind him. Coach Rupp

University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky, Friday, August 7, 1953

v

Mann

The
Kentucky I&OTllIKBfl
VOL. XLIV

AJ d)

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hall fViarhps nnH was influential in wine.

NO. 38

ran
gime

rW1

f

Eliot

Bryant

rp- -

lnnk hark nn a
of unparalleled

twn-rWar- ip

newly-promine-

nt

flankman has guided UK elevens to
four major bowls and a conference
title. He also has inaugurated a
unique recruiting policy drastically
limiting
selection of
athletes.
Assistant UK coaches helping with
the discussions and lectures will in- elude Harry Lancaster, basketball,
and Ermal Allen, Clarence Under- wood, Jim Owens, Phil Cutchin,
Jerry Claiborne and Pat James,
football.
out-of-st-

School Year Events
Include Sports, Speakers

The 89th group of new UK freshmen will arrive for orientation activities on Monday, Sept. 14. Old
students will report Thursday, Sept.
17, for a three-da- y
registration and
classification period.
Classwork will begin on Monday,
Sept. 21.
The fall semester will run through
Jan. 29. broken only by a four-da- y
Thanksgiving vacation and the usChristmas holiday.
ual two-weIf a slight upward trend predicted
by national studies holds true, UK's
first semester registration figure will
be slightly under 6,000. Registrar
Richard L. Tuthill has noted.
UK's first football game of the
season will be against the Texas
A and M Aggies on Saturday night,
Sept. 19. at Stoll Field.
Already booked for the season
concert and lecture series, to which
UK students will be admitted by ID
cards, are the Guarde Republican
Band of Paris. France; DePaur Infantry Chorus; Trygve Lie; World
Affairs Council and Panel ; Men and
Boys Choir of St. Paul's Cathedral,
London; Town Meeting of the Air;
St. Louis Symphony; Whittemore
and Lowe, duo pianists; New York
Philharmonic Orchestra; Fred Waring and his Pennsylvanians, and
Lily Pons.
Five outstanding speakers in the
ek

'Figaro' Continues
At Guignol Theater
audiences have
marked the first two performsummer opera,
ances of the
"Marriage of Figaro," at the
Guignol Theater.
Tickets are still available at
the box office for performances
tonight and tomorrow night at 7
Near-capaci- ty

o'clock. CST.

The fourth annual opera workshop presentation, in
translation, is a costume
presentation in three settings.

social sciences will be presented in
the Blazer Lecture series. Already
signed are Oran J. Hale, Institute
of Public Affairs, University of Virginia; Turner Catledge, managing
editor of the New York Times, and
Ben Thomas, Abraham Lincoln Association, Springfield. 111.

Newmanites Plan

Party Tonight
Newman Club members will hold
swimming party tonight at a
farm on the Russell Cave Pike.
President Martin Ginocchio said
the group would leave from behind
the Student Union at 5:30 p.m.,
CST. The party would be the main
social event for the summer group,
he added.
a

Kyian Distribution
Times Are Listed
Kentuckians for 1953 August
graduates will be available next
week in the main office, first
floor, of the Journalism Building, Mrs. Mary Anne Good, secretary, said today.
Others who have not picked
up their yearbooks can get them
at this time, she noted, but no
books will be given out without
receipts from the comptroller's
office or the Kyian sales.
The office will be open from 2
to 4 p.m., CST, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, and from
9 a.m. to 12 noon on Thursday,
Friday and Saturday. Books not
picked up by noon Saturday,
Aug. 15, will not be available
again until Oct. 1.

Dr. Robert F. Poole, president of
College, will deliver the
principal address at Summer School
commencement exercises at 7 p.m.,
CST, Friday,, Aug. 14, in Memorial

him after, the Mt. Sterling man told
police, he was forced at gunpoint to
drive it from Lexington to Jessamine county.
The automobile was recovered
Wednesday afternoon in Somerset.
Richardson told city police the
unidentified robber forced his way
into the car about 2 a.m. Wednesday as he was stopped at Main St.
and the Esplanade.
After forcing his way into the
car, Richardson said, the gunman
Upon
ordered him to Nicholasville.
reaching Nicholasville, Richardson
was ordered to continue driving
south on Highway 27.
About two miles out of Nicholas

turn onto the Wilmore road. After

about six miles on the Wilmore
road, he said, the gunman ordered
him to stop, climb over a fence and
lie down in a field.
Richardson said his companion
tore off his polo shirt and undershirt and tied his hands and feet
with them. Before leaving, he said,
the robber told him his car would
be left on Main street in Nicholasville.

Freeing himself, Richardson made
his way to a nearby house where he
obtained a ride into Nicholasville
and contacted Jessamine county
and state police.
Richardson said he made repeat

All-St-

ar

recipients and will introduce the
speaker. The charge to graduates
will be given by Dr. M. M. White,
dean of the College of Arts and Sci-

ences.
Dr. Poole holds a B.S. degree from
The South Carolina educator will Clemson and M.S. and Ph.D. despeak on "The Importance of Sound grees from Rutgers University. His
Educational Principles."
honorary degrees include a D.Sc.
More than 300 seniors and grad- from Clemson, an LL.D. from the
uate students will be awarded de- University of South Carolina and a
grees at the commencement cere- Litt.D. degree from Furman Univermony, the registrar's office has re- sity.
ported. Of this number approxiPrincipal posts held by the commately 150 will receive graduate mencement speaker before he asdegrees.
sumed the Clemson presidency were
University President H. L. Dono- those of associate plant patholosist
van will confer degrees upon the at the New Jersey Agricultural Ex
Coliseum.

Free Band Concert
Set For Tuesday
free band concert will be given
6:30 p.m., CST, Tuesday in Woodland Park by the Lexington MuA

at

sicians Association band.
Turner W. Gregg will conduct the
program, provided by a grant from
the Music Performance Trust Funds,
and sponsored by Local 554, American Federation of Musicians.

Student Is Holdup Victim
Conrad Richardson, summer ville, Richardson said, he was orschool student who plays a feature dered to stop at a filling station.
role in the summer opera this week, The gunman, he said, whistled and,
was the victim of a holdup after receiving no answer, ordered him
dress rehearsal of the presentation to drive on.
A few miles farther on, RichardTuesday night.
His automobile was stolen from son said, the bandit ordered him to

Rupp.' basketball:
nm Bunn'
basketball; 2:30 p.m., Allen, funda- mentals for offensive hks- - a so
p.m., Claiborne, fundamentals for
defensive secondary,
Aug. 15, 7 a.m., Bunn, basketball;
8 a.m.. Rupp, basketball" 9 am
a'jn"
Lancaster,
10
basketball;
Munn, football- - 12:30 D.m Eliot'
football; 2 p.m., Bryant. Kentucky
offense; 3 p.m., Kentucky staff,
questions and answers; 6 pjn. and'
7:30 p.m.,
games.

Clemson Prexy Will Give
Commencement Address
Clemson

1953-5- 4

The clinic schedule, with all times

success that CST, is:
has made him the nation's winning- Aug. 13, 7 a.m., Bryant, Kentucky
est cage coach. He has a record of defenses; 8:30 ajn., Eliot, football;
471 victories against 82 losses a 10 a.m., Owens, end play funda- winning average of better than 85 mentals; 12:30 p.m., Munn, foot- per cent.
ball; 2 p.m., Eliot, football; 3:30 p.m.,
Paul (Bear) Bryant, pioneering Underwood, tackle play; 4:30 p.m.,
director of the
James, guard play; 7 p.m., Cutchin,
grid Wildcats, is regarded generally scouting and use of movies; 8 p.m.,
as one of the nation's outstanding football training movie,
collegiate mentors. In seven sea- Aug. 14, 7:15 a.m.. Munn. football:
sons, the vniithfiil fnrmpr Alnhamo a a m nimn hi,otk.n. lo.'on -

ed attempts to talk the bandit out
of robbing him, with no success. "He
seemed bent," he said, "on taking
the car."
The gunman's conversation. Richardson said, was mostly incoherent,
and consisted chiefly of
answers. "He mumbled to himself a
great deal," he said.
Richardson said the man held the
gun on him constantly during the
drive.
The man, Richardson said, made
no attempt to rob him of a diamond
ring, which he removed and slipped
into a watch pocket, and $19, which
he took from his billfold and stuck
in his sock.
Richardson said the man drank
frequently from a bottle during the
ride.
Police said the car was found, apparently abandoned but still in run
ning condition, on a Somerset street.
le

periment Station and professor and
plant pathologist at North Carolina
State College.
Dr. Riley Montgomery, president
of the College of the Bible, Lexington, will give both the invocation
and benediction at the ceremony.
Two vocal selections will be presented by the Summer School Chorus.
These numbers are "How Lovely Is
Thy Dwelling Place" by Bach and
"Hallelujah, Amen" by Handel.
Members of the audience will Join
with the chorus in the singing of
the Alma Mater and the national
anthem to close the exercise.

Reception Set
For Author,
Dr. A.L. Crabb
Dr. A. L. Crabb of Nashville,
Tenn., author of the recently published novel, "Home to Kentucky,"
will be honored at a reception to
be held tonight at Ashland, home
of Henry Clay, by UK and the
Henry Clay Foundation.
Scheduled from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
at the East Main street shrine, the
reception will be open to the public.
"Home to Kentucky" is a historical
fiction work based on the life of
Henry Clay, and Lexington is the
setting for a great part of the novel.
Dr. Crabb, a native Kentuckian,
has been professor of education at
George Peabody College for Teachers in Nashville since 1927. His son,
Alfred Crabb Jr., is a UK instructor
in English.

* THE KENTUCKY

Pace 2

Advice To Graduates

It's A Big Jump
From Halls of Ivy
"Advice to Graduates," an editorial in the Cleveland Plain Dealer,
may appeal to you as much as it appealed to me.
"It is a big jump from the halls
of ivy," reflected the Plain Dealer
editorialist, "to the world in which
men have to live and work and
compete with other men, to the
day they die.
"The world isnt as pretty as a college campus; sometimes it is downright ugly and, for most men, there
are no doting parents to pay the
bills or pat a guy on the back. He
must sink or swim alone.
"For the graduate who is willing
to keep his mouth shut until he
knows what he is talking about;
who is willing to work until the
sweat literally and figuratively runs
down his back; who can develop
patience without losing his spirit;
who can bear to listen to an opposite
point of view without blowing his

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DR. H. H. FINE
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TYPEWRITERS. ADDING
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Fri-S-

Friday, August 7, 1953

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CONOmONtO COMFORT!

CwHmm

'Shooting Star9
Display To Start

What may be the best display of
meteors, or shooting stars, in several
years will begin Sunday night and
continue for several weeks.
Dr. H. H. Downing, professor of
stack; who can realize that the mathematics and astronomy, said
world has changed and that men this week that the moon will be
must get along together or perish dark during the meteor period,
together; who can take personal causing the shooting stars to show
sorrow bravely; who can bury dead up brilliantly. A bright moon has
dreams and forget them for such interfered with observation of the
a man the future will not be too shower for the past few years, he
tough." Ed Sullivan, "little Old noted.
The display should be at its best
New York."
Aug. 11 and 12, Dr. Downing said.
with the best show offered from
about 10 p.m. until 2 a.m.
Pasture Plowing Ends
Just how many meteors will be
Three-Yea- r
Experiment
observed can not be predicted, but
"sometimes as many as 50 or 60 an
The plowing up of pasture land hour" have appeared, he stated.
on the Experiment Station farm
The August meteor concentration
along the Nicholas ville road ends a is called the Perseid group, because
three-yeexperiment with grass it appears to be coming from the
and legume combinations. Dr. D. W. constellation Perseus. In the early
Seath, head of the dairy section, part of the evening, it will appear
said this week. The plots were used in the eastern sky. but will shift
' higher and be almost overhead at
for dairy cow grazing.
'midnight, according to Dr. Down

KENTUCKY TYPEWRITER
COOU A

KERNEL

124 N. Lime

MARCH

Dial

Lexington, Ky.

Janice Rul

The astronomer noted that most
of the meteors are tiny pieces of
matter, made brilliant by the friction generated when they strike the
earth's surface at speeds something
like 25 miles per second.
'The earth's atmosphere protects
us from the meteors by burning
most or them out before they reach
the ground." he said.
'If it weren't for that, we would
be perforated by falling particles before very long."
The meteors are usually 50 or 60
miles high when we see them. Dr.
Downing reported, adding that most
of them burn out very quickly, with
the larger ones lasting the longest,
and a very few reaching the ground.

;M

v

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY
Entered at
Kentucky,
the
Published

the Post Office at Lexington,
as second class matter under
Act of March 3, 1879.
weekly during school except
holidays and exams.
Dolly SnlUvent
Louis DeRosett,
Jack Royce

.
Editor
Managing Editors

88

$1,000 EASY
We are looking for an agent to tell
nationally advertised drawing instruments to entering freshmen this fall.
Very high commissions. Write
SLS. MGR.

FINEST

The Week

Off

The Kentucky Kernel

CAMPUS AGENT WANTED

FOR THE

COLONEL

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ENGINEERING
SUPPLY CO.
P. O. Box 114
Canal Street Station
New York City 13, N. Y.

JOHNNY ON THE SFOT!

IN
REFRESHMENT

m
1

-

w

:.-

The Stirrup Cup proudly presents Charles Dana
pre-mfrom Hazard, as Colonel of
the Week-Dais a member of Pershing Rifles and the Army
ROTC rifle team, and captain of the varsity rifle team.
He was named outstanding freshman cadet in ROTC.
At ceremonies held this spring this sharpshooter was
awarded a Longines watch as National Smallbore Intercollegiate Champion, and a gold belt buckle for second place in the Army Smallbore Championship competition. He also received a trophy for the highest
average in ROTC rifle firing. His overall standing
is 12.
For these achievements, the Stirrup Cup is happy to
invite Dana to enjoy any two of its many delicious
meals.

Combs, junior in

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TRY

Now Sewing Daily
NOON AND EVENING MEALS

:45 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.

11

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820

S. Limestone St.

High St. and Cochran

944 Winchester Rd.

That's me your State Farm agent
.l
i.:
uavc uwii. a tu .Tk
wucu yuu L
115".
there when you need me to give

you a fair claim settlement and last,
efficient service. My company actually pays a claim at the rate of one
every 15 seconds of every working
day! That's how speedy our claim
service is!
Yet 'Sate Fari rates are remarkably low! Let's talk it over. Come
in or give me a ring!
James D. Burks
498 Longview Drive
Lexington,
Phone

Ky.

STIRRUP CUP
RESTAURANT
AIR CONDITIONED
MAIN ST. AT ASHLAND

* THE

Friday, August 7, 1953
LITTLE

KENTUCKY

KERNEL

Wenninger, both of Lexington; Sue
Wetherby, Frankfort, Nancye Lou
Ballard, Harrodsburg, and Sally
Trimble, Russellville.
Pictured as escorts for the coeds are four UK men students, Don
Mackey and Doug McCullough, both
of Lexington; and Paul Bollinger
and Brian Taylor, both of Louisville.
The photographs were taken last
spring, when two staff members of
the magazine visited the campus.

Five UK Coeds
Model For Mile

Grid Ducats
Available,
Hodges Says

MAN ON CAMPUS

Page 3

Five UK coeds appear in the
August issue of Mademoiselle magazine as models for current fall
fashions.
Featured in the special "college"
are still available at issue are Lucille Mills and Anne
Some tickets
Coliseum for all UK home footthe
ball games this fall, Harvey Hodges,
athletic ticket sales manager, has
announced.
Only a few bleacher seats remain
for the Tennessee tilt. For the
Florida and Texas A and M scraps,
stadium seats between the
Chevy-Chos- e
Shopping Center
Ashland
line and the end zone of the concrete stands are available, and for
UP TO
with
SOAP FREE
the remaining three games
Memphis State, Villanova and Mis- Triple-Rim- Damp Dried
Washed
9I
sissippi State
stadium seats from
Additional Charge for Drying
to the end zone are
line
the
on sale.
Thursday
8 to
8 to S
to 9
Monday
All regular season books have been
Friday
Tuesday
8 to 5
8 to 5 6 to 9
special books are available
sold, but
Saturday
Wednesday
8 to 5
8 to 12 noon
with stadium seats for five games
DIAL
877 E. HIGH ST.
and a place In the bleachers for the
Tennessee fracas.
A number of fans want to get "on
the list" through purchase of such
a season ticket this year so they'll
qualify as a priority buyer for next
year's sale of season books, Mr.
Hodges explained.

I

Self Service Laundry
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"Do this paper over how do you expect me to give you an 'A' grade
on a paper that isnt neat?"

DINE AND
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On Your
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near Student Union,
containing valuable Items and Identification. Ruby Simpson, Murray, Ky. If
found, return to Kernel Business Office.
LOST

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Reward.

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Sells
New and
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TEXT BOOKS

-

PRESCRIPTIONS
WILL DUNN DRUG CO.

35

Any Past Year Available
Official University of Kentucky Ring made
especially to suit your individual specifications. Set with synthetic Spinel, Ruby or
Genuine Black Onyx. Any year-dat- e
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Across from Mo in Exit
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to apply on the following

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* KERNEL

THE KENTUCKY

Page 4

With The Alumni

A.N.Prewitt,'5 l,Coaches
Winning Post Netters
Second Lt. Alfred N. Prewitt. UK
Mt. Sterling, was coach of the
winning basketball team in this sea- son's play at Port Bragg, N. C.
"51,

'Figaro' Continues At Guignol

Fourteen Grads
Pass Bar Exams
Fourteen

UK graduates

Friday, August 7, 1953

Kentucky Cleaners

of the

College of Law were among 41 applicants who scored satisfactory

grades in the state bar examinations
in Frankfort recently.
They are Norma B. Adams, George
W. Allf, Charles N. Carnes, William
Phil Sutterfield. '44, Louisville D. Compton, Patrick H. Dickinson,
WHAS sportscaster, has been nam- - Leland B. Franks, Charles M. Hale,
ed a Kentucky Colonel on the staff Lee Hardesty, James H. Hoge Jr.,
of Gov. Lawrence Wetherby.
Laramie L. Leatherman, Herman E.
Leick, William A. Rice, Asa M.
Barbara Hickey. '53, has been Rouse and William S. Tribell.
named assistant to the director of
public relations at Morehead State

SUMMER DRY CLEANING

pi

BETTER

CLEANING

James D. Burks, 53, and Mrs.
Burks returned to Lexington last
week from Bloomington, 111., where
they were guests of the State Farm College.
Insurance Company for a two-da- y
Mary Jo Humpston, who did
seminar.
graduate work at UK. has been
Versailles, named cafeteria director at More-hea- d
Forrest P. Cox,
State College.
Four campus buildings Scott
has been commissioned a second assistant dietician at She was an
the Student Street Barracks, the Training
lieutenant in the AF reserve and Union commons during the 1952-5- 3
School, Service Building and heatwarded his pilot wings.
school year.
ing plant were without electric
power for several hours Wednesday
Read Holland, '53, Fulton, Ky., night after a transformer "blew
will sail for Britain on Sept. 17. He
p.m. for causes not yet
will study at Sheffield, England, this out" at 6:36
year under a Fulbright graduate determined. A fuse box at the Service Building also blew up.
scholarship.
Power was restored about 11 p.m.
Rodney M. Hayes Jr., now doing
graduate work toward the MS degree in biology, has been named instructor in biology and chemistry
at Transylvania College. Mr. Hayes
has worked as a chemist in the feed
and fertilizer department of the
Agricultural Experiment Station.

Power Difficulties
Darken Buildings

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See
Mr. Michler

Warren Display
Has Manuscript

Midhler Florist
417

E.

Maxwell Dial

An exhibit featuring the original
manuscript of Robert Penn Warren's
to
narrative onpoem, "Brother first
display on the
Dragons," is
floor of the University's Margaret I.
King library.
The work is a long narrative poem
using the New Madrid earthquake,
which occurred in Kentucky in 1811,
as its setting. Warren is a native of
Todd county and is considered by
many critics as the greatest contemporary Kentucky author.
Included in the exhibit is the
galley proof and a printed partial
version of the poem which appeared
last winter in the Kenyon Review,
as well as the final manuscript and
a copy of the book, published by
Random House.

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Chesterfield Quality Highest
15
higher than its nearest com- petitor and 31 higher than the
average of the five other leading
brands... based on recent chemical
analyses giving an index of good
quality for the country's six leading
cigarette brands. The index of good
1uality table a ratio of high sugar
to low nicotine

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shows Chesterfield

quality highest.

DANCE TO THE MUSIC OF

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SATURDAY
Hb Piana and Hit Orchestra

9-- 7

C.B.SJ.

CLUB HOUSE FOR RENT EVERY
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effects to
nose, throat and sinuses from
No adverse

smoking Chesterfield.
From the report of a medical spe- cialist who has been giving a group
of Chesterfield smokers regular
examinations every two months

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for well over a year.

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