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The Orlando Sentinel from Orlando, Florida • Page 9
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The Orlando Sentinel du lieu suivant : Orlando, Florida • Page 9

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Orlando, Florida
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Saturday, April 2, 1960 Orlando Sentinel Kittinger Capt. Joseph W. Kittinger, air force officer who holds a 76,000 feet parachute jump from a gondola record, was reunited with his family yesterday at McCoy Air Force Base. Kittinger flew in from Wright terson AFB, Ohio, in a T-33 jet trainer Returns Home for the area toastmasters' speech contest to be held at the McCoy Officers' Club tonight. He will be speaker for the evening.

Shown (left to right) are Capt. Kittinger, Joseph W. Kittinger and Jack Kittinger, brother. Kittinger's family resides in the Orlando area. PREVUE OF I U.S.

WEATHER BUREAU FORECAST TO 7:00 P.M. EST BOSTON NEW YORK WARMER DENVER WARMER SAN FRANCISCO NANS AS FT.WORTH HIGHEST TEMPERATURES and CLOUD FORECAST 70 WEATHER FOTOCAST SHOWERS ERE SNOW 4 THUNDER RAIN STORMS FREEZING RAIN OR SLEET COPR EDW. A WAGNER DISTRIBUTED BY UNITED Storm Moves East An extensive system of low presure moving eastward out of the nation's mid-section will be the major disturbance on today's weather map. Under the influence of this storm, rain and showers are likely to cover most of the area east of the Mississippi, except for the extreme Southeast and Northern New England. Snow or snow mixed with rain may develop in and around the Great Lakes region and in the upper Mississippi Valley.

Rain and showers also are scheduled for the Northwest. Elsewhere, generally fair 'It will turn a bit warmer North and Middle Atlantic invades the Midwest. (UPI Tallahassee Ares Geinesville Oriende Lakeland Middle ORLANDO-LAKELAND, UPPER EAST COAST, MIDDLE EAST COAST, SOUTHWEST COAST, EVERGLADES Partly cloudy with widely scattered afternoon or evening showers. High 82-87. Southeast and south winds 12-18 m.p.h.

TALLAHASSEE Cloudy with occasional thunderstorms. High 76-80. Southeast and south winds 12-18 m.p.h. GAINESVILLE, UPPER EAST COAST Considerable cloudiness with occasional thunderstorms. High 78-82.

Southeast and south winds 12-18 m.p.h, LOWER EAST COAST, KEYS Fair and warm. High in mid-80s. Southeast and south winds 12-18 m.p.h. MARINE FORECAST Jacksonville through the Folrida straits: Southeast to south winds 17-23 m.p.h. Considerable cloudiness with widely scattered showers over north portion, becoming more numerous during day.

Partly cloudy elsewhere, with a few showers near shore during afternoon and evening. Eastern Gulf: Southeast to south winds, Increasing to 17-28 m.p,h. over north portion, and 12-20 m.p.h. over south portion. Considerable cloudiness with occasional showers over extreme north portion, and partly cloudy elsewhere.

with a few showers over central tion. READINGS AT 5 p.m. yesterday: Barorneter 29.97 humidity 74 wind ESE 10 m.p.h.; precipitation .03. ORLANDO PRECIPITATION 1960 '59 Avg Record Year January 1.49 2.78 2.05 6.44 '48 February 5.64 4.55 2.05 5.64 March 7.69 3.26 7.69 April 4.91 2.96 6.18 May 4.44 4.02 8.58 June 7.95 7.85 11.61 July 8.02 7.70 14.51 August 6.77 6.87 15.19 September 8.33 7.15 15.87 October 5.97 3.91 14.51 '50 November December 1.37 .99 2.09 1.32 4,30 4.86 '51 '50 I weather should prevail. over the West and in the States, while cooler air Telephoto) LOCAL TEMPERATURES High 85 Low 60 Precipitation .16 am 64 9 am 73 5 pm am 62 10 arn 77 6 Nm am 61 11 am 80 7 pm am 61 12 84 8 pm am pm 82 pm am 61 2 pm 83 10 pm am 62 3 pm 78 11 p.m..

am 69 pm 76 12 Albany Alpena Amarillo Apal'cola Atlanta Atlantic Baltimore Birm'ham Bismarck Boise Boston Buffalo Burl'ton Hat'ras Charleston Charlotte Chat'n'ga Chicago Cincin'ti Cleveland Columbus Dallas Denver D' Moines Detroit Duluth Ft. Myers Fresno Houston Indi polis Jacks'ville Kansas C' TEMPERATURES ELSEWHERE Prec. Prec. 40 36 .02 Key West 85 76 34 27 Knoxville 77 40 Rock 79 55 72 69 Angeles 86 59 49 Louisville 45 48 Memphis 80 59 43 Meridian 83 49 80 47 Miami B' 82 74 Milwaukee 40 31 53 33 St.Paul 45 34 42 .35 Mobile 74 55 40 .04 Montg'ry 83 52 34 31 .14 Montreal 38 33 64 73 53 Nashville Orleans 76 53 79 76 New York 64 46 78 Norfolk Phila'phia 65 68 45 50 70 43 Phoenix 83 54 50 32 Pittsb'gh 54 39 60 43 Portland 43 38 73 Richmond 71 40 48 St. Louis 74 45 55 40 Anton 84 63 43 32 San Fran 63 52 32 23 Savannah 83 47 88 68 Seattle 56 43 68 55 Tal'ha'see 80 47 76 63 Tampa 86 64 Wash'ton 68 W.P.B'ch 86 64 Wilm'ton 71 8-Day Battle For Life Fails BOSTON (UPI) An eightday battle for life ended just before dawn yesterday when por-20-year-old Philip Demers died of burns after a record 100 pints of blood.

Demers suffered burns over 80 pet. of his body eight days ago when the gasoline tank of an old automobile exploded while he was working on it with an acetylene torch. CHECK WITH GEORGE STUART 133 EAST ROBINSON ORLANDO, FLA. PHONE GA 5-4511 NOT ONLY YOUR OFFICE SUPPLIER, BUT ALSO YOUR OFFICE ADVISER WILL BE CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY, APRIL 2 FOR OUR SEMI-ANNUAL INVENTORY OPEN AS USUAL MONDAY MORNING Obituaries MRS. MINNIE RESSIE HORNE, 76, Martel, died Thurs- day.

Mrs. Horne was born in Beaulahville, N. C. and had lived at Martel for 56 years. She was a Baptist.

Surviving are her sons, Jack, M. T. Martel; Ray, Ocala; I daughter, Miss Leslie L. Horne, Martel; three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. Roberts Funeral Home, Ocala, is in charge.

MRS. DORIS G. LYNCH, 51, of 214 Elizabeth Melbourne, died Thursday. Born at Fair Haven, she came to South Brevard seven years ago from White Plains, N. Y.

She was professor of nursing education at the University of Miami. Survivors include her husband, Cornelius P. Lynch, Melbourne, and brother, Richard Griffith, Orlando. Brownie Funeral Home, Melbourne, is in charge. MR.

ROSCOE CARL HUNT, 65, a winter resident of Eustis for the past four months, died in Eustis Thursday. He was born. at Freedom, Ohio, and his home at Wayland, Ohio, for the past 30 years. A retired postmaster, he was a veteran of World War He was a member of the community Church of Wayland and the Masonic Lodge of Garrettsville, Ohio. He is survived by his wife Mrs.

Myrle Hunt, Wayland; son, Robert Carl Hunt, Columbus, Ohio; daughter, Mrs. Marion Hunt King, Akron, Ohio; sister, Mrs. Mary Thompson Freedom, and five grandchildren. The body will be sent to Freedom services and burial. Zeller, Kennedy and Hamlin Funeral Home, Eustis is in charge.

MR. EDWARD EVANS BARBER, 64, Kissimmee Park, died at his home Friday. Mr. Barber was a native and lifelong resident of Osceola County and was a citrus grower. He is survived by a brother, Fritz Barber, Kissimmee; Park; sisters, Mrs.

Hilda Dunham and Mrs. Sally Gulbrunson, both of Arkansas, Mrs. Alice Lanier, Vero Beach, and Mrs. Louise Thomas, Kissimmee Park. Grissom Funeral Home, Kissimmee, is in charge.

mee, died Thursday. A native of Ohio, she moved to Kissimmee three years ago. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Kissim" mee. Surviving are her husband, Sumner Kissimmee; a son, William Lostine, and a Cletus 'o. Noggle, Toledo, Ohio.

Riedel Funeral Home, Kissimmee, is in charge. MRS. OCIE ELLEN SPOHN, 67, Orange Gardens, Kissim- DAVID WAYNE ENOCHS, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert H.

Enochs, 1406 Altaloma died Friday. Surviving besides the parents are a brother, William and the grandparents. Mr. and Mrs. T.

R. Grimes, Bridgeport, W. Va. and Mr. and Mrs.

R. L. Mallernee, Hialeah, Fla. Carey Hand Funeral Home is in charge. MR.

JAMES KRUMHANSL, 69, 1310 Eastin died Friday. He to Orlando in 1955 from Shaker Heights, Ohio. Surviving are wife, sons, James Ithaca, N. Robert San Juan, P. sisters, Anne, Frances, Orlando.

Fairchild Funeral Home is in charge. MR. LEVI H. JOHNSON, 85, a winter resident of Leesburg several years, died Friday. He had been in Leesburg for a week, coming from Greenfield, Ind.

He was a member of the Friends Church in Indiana. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Ivory M. Johnson, Leesburg; three daughters, Mrs. Helen E.

Nokes, Muncie, Mrs. Harriet Willson, Krollings Prarie, and Mrs. Martha J. Leiper, Leesburg. Page-Theus Funeral Home, Leesburg, is in charge.

MRS. HALLA A. JOHNSON, St. Cloud, died Friday. Mrs.

Johnson spent her early life at Marietta, Ohio, where she was graduated from Marietta College. She was married in 1897 to the Rev. Frend I Johnson, who survives, and devoted her life to specializing foreign missionary work of the Woman's Socety of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Eiselstein, Fisk Journigan Funeral Home, St. Cloud, is in charge.

MRS. LINDA G. SHUTTLEWORTH, 80, Vero Beach, died Friday. Mrs. Shuttleworth moved here HOUSE OF FLOWERS GA 5-1610 475 N.

Orange Ave. Thoughtful Select CHi emorial Hark May Be Its Own Downfall Cancer Yields New Chemical LOUISVILLE (P) of a super-potent chemical apparently existing only in cancer cells was reported yesterday. It may provide an Achille's heel attack against cancer, leading to drugs or even a vaccine which kills cancer cells but not normal ones. The chemical, named toxohormone, now seems to be one of the first differences detected between cancerous and normal cells. If this difference can be exploited, it means cancers could be hit in a weak spot or Achilles' heel.

ISOLATION AND studies of toxohormone were described at the close of an American Cancer Society seminar for science writers by Dr. A. Clark Griffin and Dr. K. Yunoki of M.D.

Ander- four years ago from St. Louis, her birthplace. She was a member of the Episcopal Church at St. Louis. She is survived by a son, Frank, Vero Beach; sister, Miss Mary Higgins and a brother, Earl, St.

Louis. Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday from the Floyd Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Dr. Frederick K.

Stamm officiating. Burial will be at St. Louis. INFANT JAMES FRANKLIN WILSON, a son of Mr. and Mrs.

Roy F. Wilson of Paisley, died in Eustis Friday. Besides his parents, he is survived by a sister, Brenda Faye Wilson, Paisley; paternal grandmother, Mrs. Hazel Johns, Cleveland, and maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Chester Mysinger, DeLand. Zeller, Kennedy and Hamlin Funeral Home, Eustis, is in charge. Funeral Notices AUSLEY. MR. PAUL COURTNEY Funeral services for Mr.

Paul Courtney Ausley, 56, 1994 Palm Lane, Orlando, who died Thursday in a local hospital, will be held Saturday 11:00 a.m. at the Fairchild Chapel with Dr. John Anderson officiating, assisted by Rev Luther Price. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, he moved to Orlando in 1953 from Washington, D. C.

He was a member of the First Presbyterian Church, a graduate of Auburn University, and Post graduate of Johns Hopkins University. Mr. Ausley worked in the sales department of Potash Company of America. Surviving are: wife, Mrs. Sara Ausley, Orlando; two sons.

Paul C. Ausley attending the Naval Academy, Arnold Ausley, student of University of two brothers, George Ausley, Washington, D. Joseph Ausley, Birmingham, two sisters, Mrs. T. T.

McLemore, Charlotte, N. Mrs. N. A. O'Hara, Wichita Falls, Texas.

Family requests: No Flowers. Fairchild Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements. BOLAND. MR. BENJAMIN F.

FUneral services for Mr. Beniamin F. Boland, 85, 317 East Jackson who died Thursday, will be held in the Carey Hand Chapel Saturday at 4:00 p.m. with the Rev. E.

J. Pendergrass officiating. Interment will follow in Greenwood cemetery. Mr. Boland came to Orlando in 1919 from Tallahassee.

He was a member of the First Methodist Church. Survivors include his wife. Mrs. Ida H. Boland; a daughter, Mrs.

Kathleen Barber, Orlando; brother, C. M. Boland, Lakeland, five grandchildren, Michael Barber, Charles, James and Don E. Matthews, Orlando, and Mrs. Keith Austin, Los Angeles; also three gerat grandchil- FBI Agent New Union Monitor son Hospital, Houston, Tex.

Dr. Yunoki, a physician trained in biochemistry, is on leave from Kagoshima Medical School, Kagoshima, Japan. At present, it can only be speculated whether toxohormone can bring effective new attacks on cancer, said Dr. Griffin, a biochemist. One fraction or factor in toxohormone human has been found and only in cancers not in normal tissues, he said.

Eight different types of human cancers have been checked so far. IT IS SO potent that one 25 millionth of an ounce is active in a test system used, to measure potency. Drs. Griffin and Yunoki have just broken it down further into four parts, one or dren. Manuel, Charles Pallbearers Gisler, Walter Tyler, Ibe Frank 0.

P. Duggar Jr. John Newman Funeral and Bill Arrington. Carey Hand Home is in charge of arrangements. is in charge.

Funeral services for Mr. Hugh A. McMCALLISTER, MR. HUGH ALBERT Allister, 78, 2831 Mulford, Winter Park, who died Thursday in a local hospital, will be held Saturday 2:00 p.m. the Fairchild Chapel with Rev.

Oswald Delgado officiating. Interment will be at later date. Born in Canada, he moved to Winter Park in 1956 from Cleveland, Ohio, he was retired sales executive for the Erie Railroad and assistant to the president of the Erie Railroad, Mr. McAllister attended the First Baptist Church in Shaker Heights, Ohio, and was member of the Winter Park Golf Club and former member of the Winter Park University Club. Surviving are his wife, Mrs.

Ruby H. McAllister, two daughters, Mrs. Stewart Sedwick, Newport News, Miss Mary Louise McAllister, Winter Park, one son, Hoyt A. Allister, Shaker Heights, Ohio, two brothers, William McAllister, Plymouth, Michigan, Howard McAllister, Pasadena, California, one sister, Mrs. Ed Come, Lansing, Michigan and four grandchildren.

Fairchild Funeral Home in charge of arrangements. JOHNSON, services for MRS. Mrs. HALLA Halle Johnson, 711 Lakeshore St. will Cloud.

be held who at died p.m. Sunday in the St. Cloud Friday at her home. Methodist Church. Interment will be Ohio, in at Oak a date Grove to be announced later.

SiselCemetery, Delaware, stein. Fisk Journigan Funeral Home, RAYMER, DONALD RECTOR Funeral services for Mr. Donald Rector Raymer, 66, 618 N. Lakemont Avenue, Winter Park, who died Wednesday, will be held Saturday at 3:30 p.m. from the Cox-Parker Funeral Home Chapel with the Reverend Caxton Doggett officiating.

He is survived by his wife. Mrs. Vivian A. Raymer, two daughters, Mrs. Geraldine Pearson, Grand Rapids, Michigan, Miss Dorothy Raymer, Winter Park, one son Donald G.

Raymer, Springfield, Illinois, two brothers, Robert G. Raymer, lands, Kenneth J. Raymer, Benton Harbor, Michigan, one sister, Miss Helen Raymer, Benton Harbor, Michigan and six grandchildren. Interment will be in Glenhaven Memorial Park. Cox-Parker Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.

SJOSTROM, MR. F. L. HAROLD FU neral services for Mr. F.

L. Harold Siostrom, 70, 415 S. Orlando Avenue, Winter Park, who died Wednesday, will be held Saturday at 2:00 from the Chapel of Cox-Parker Funeral Home with the Reverend Joseph D. Parkman officiating. Interment at a later date.

The family requests that flowers please be omitted. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Pauline S. Siostrom, one son, Wallace R. Siosfrom, E.

Syracuse, N. one daughter, Miss Barbara Siostrom of Winter Park and one sister, Mrs. Lilias Basset, S. Hadley, Mass. Cox-Parker FUneral Home is in charge of arrangements.

SPOHN, services MRS. for OCIE Mrs. Ocie ELLEN Funeral 67, Orange Garden, Kissimmee, who died Thursday in a Kissimmee hospital, will be held at 2 p.m. Monday in the Chapel of Riedel Funeral Home, Kissimmee, with the Rev. VanEtten, pastor of the First Presby- of which maye be active in 25 billionths of an ounce.

These parts protein. Whether toxohormone is true hormone is not yet clear, Dr. Griffin said. It may be a cause of anemia which often comes in cancer TOXOHORMONE has long been but never purified this way, or found to exist apparently only in cancer tissue. A presumption is it is produced by the cancers themselves.

While its significance is not yet known, it might prove useful in diagnosing cancers, Dr. Griffin said. If it is unique and specific for cancer cells, there are possibilities of creating drugs to counteract it, or making antibodies against it which would seek out and hit only cancer cells. terian Church, officiating. Interment will be in Osceola Memory, Gardens, under direction of Funeral Home, Kissimmee.

The family of Alvin (Mike) Robinson wishes thanks to to their express many their friends gratitude for all their thoughtful kindnesses during this time of bereavement. Mrs. Nina B. Robinson IN MEMORIAM In loving memory of my husband our father, H. V.

Horton, who passed away 2 years ago. April 2d, sadly missed by all of us. Mrs. H. Horton Mrs.

Owen Mrs. M. Collier Evan C. Horton And Grandsons Flight Record Machines Urged WASHINGTON (UPI) The Federal Aviation Agency proposed yesterday all jet-powered airliners be equipped with indestructible flight recorders to help solve mysterious crashes. Such devices, which record on a strip of aluminum or steel foil a plane's altitude, speed, vertical acceleration and heading from takeoff to landing, already are required on pure jet transports.

The FAA proposal would make them mandatory on the turboprops as well. DIVINE PSYCHOTHERAPY NEW YORK UP) Noted theologian Dr. Paul J. Tillich told a meeting of the Academy of Religion and Mental Health that psychotherapy has helped bring back to Christianity "the doctrine of the Divine acceptance of man." SCOUTS TO GIVE MEG $12,000 LONDON (P) Girl Scouts of the British Commonwealth are trying to collect a million British pennies to give Princess Margaret on her wedding day, May 6. A check for the amount is planned.

WASHINGTON (A) An FBI agent who has been investigating Teamsters Union Boss James R. Hoffa yesterday was named a court monitor over Hoffa's Teamsters Union. Terence F. McShane, $2, New York City FBI agent, was appointed by U. S.

Dist. Judge F. Dickinson Letts. He was immediately sworn in as one of the three monitors charged with supervising a Teamsters corruption cleanup. MCSHANE was nominated to the post by former monitor Godfrey I P.

Schmidt in Schmidt's capacity as attorney for dissident rank and file Teamsters members. Those union members obtained the present arrangement under which Hoffa and other Teamsters leaders are serving provisionally in union office under monitor supervision. At the same time, the court announced refusal to accept the resignation of Daniel B. Maher, Washington attorney, as the Teamster representative on the three-man monitor group. This blocked a move by Hoffa to put William E.

Bufalino, attorney and Teamsters Union leader from Detroit, on the monitor group as Maher's successor. Maher submitted a resignation recently, pleading poor health. BUFALINO has been under concentrated fire from the Senate rackets investigating committe which inquired into Teamsters affairs. Judge Letts disclosed that he had written Maher saying the court doesn't feel Maher's resignation can be accepted at this time. The judge also wrote Hoffa that since there is no vacancy in Maher's post there is no need to consider Hoffa's nomination of Bufalino.

McShane succeeds Lawrence T. Smith, New York attorney fired earlier this week by Letts when Smith refused to quit at the judge's request. Ike Counted As Census Gets Start WASHINGTON (P) Pres. Eisenhower was enumerated yesterday and is now being reduced to a series of dots on a piece of paper. If this sounds gruesome, it doesn't hurt a bit.

It's all part of the once-a-decade national census that began yesterday. Everyone winds up as a series of dots which are microfilmed and fed through an electronic brain. BY NEXT December the brain will tell how many people there are in the U. S. Later on it will provide detailed statistics on how they live and work.

A full complement of 000 census takers, or enumerators, began their door-todoor visits early yesterday morning. The only major. hitches came in flooded sections of the Midwest and East. The Census Bureau said the count in many of these areas will be delayed. TWO HIGH ranking enumerators-Census Dir.

Robert Burgess and Dist. Supervisor Louis Alexis -showed up at the White House soon after breakfast and collected the required information about the nation's first family. Eisenhower talked to them in his office and observed that this was the first time he ever had met a census taker. He said the army must have counted him during his military days. Sun And Moon Sun rises at 6:15 a.m.

and sets 6:43 p.m. March 13 March 20 March 27 April 4 Full 3d New 1st TIDES High Low a.m. p.m. a.m. p.m.

DAYTONA BEACH Saturday 12:01 5:46 5:52 Sunday, 12:26 1:17 12:51 1:47 6:38 7:36 5:45 7:46 Tuesday 2:13 2:46 8:33 8:48 NEW SMYRNA BEACH Saturday 12:06 5:51 Sunday 12:31 12:56 6:43 5:57 Monday 1:22 1:52 7:41 7:51 Tuesday 2:18 2:51 8:38 8:53 PORT CANAVERAL Saturday 11:28 5:33 Sunday 12:12 12:21 6:26 6:43 Monday 1:09 1:22 7:25 6:43 Tuesday 2:08 2:26 8:26 8:45 COCOA BEACH Saturday 12:21 6:06 6:12 Sunday 12:46 1:11 6:58 7:05 Monday 1:37 2:07 7:56 8:06 Tuesday 2:33 3:06 8:53 9:08 MELBOURNE BEACH Saturday 11:38 5:43 5:59 Sunday 12:22 12:31 6:36 6:53 Monday 1:19 1:32 7:35 7:53 Tuesday 2:18 2:36 8:36 8:55 SEBASTIAN INLET Saturday 12:04 12:26 6:11 6:17 Sunday 12:51 1:16 7:03 7:10 Monday 1:2 2:12 8:01 8:11 2:38 3:11 8:58 9:13 VERO BEACH Saturday 12:05 6:06 6:22 Sunday 12:49 12:58 6:59 7:16 Monday 1:46 1:59 7:58 8:16 Tuesday 2:45 3:03 8:59 9:18 FORT PIERCE INLET Saturday 11:55 5:56 6:12 Sunday 12:39 12:48 6.49 7:06 Monday 1:36 1:49 7:48 8:06 Tuesday 2:35 2:53 8:49 9:08 GLEN HAVEN Memorial Park The Most Beautiful Garden Cemetery Mausoleum REDS GET NEW PRESS MILAN UP A Milan industrialist says he is making a $2 million rotogravure printing unit for Russia's Communist Party newspaper Pravda. He says it will have 28 presses, 6 folders, electronic registers, inking controls and will print and automatically assemble 150,000, medium-size magazines an hour. STAR SENTINEL WANT AD ORDER-GRAM Please run the following ad for. days beginning enclose in full payment! NAME STREET ADDRESS OR RTE. NO.

CITY OR TOWN PHONE. Write your complete ad make 1 line. Minimum address or phone number your ad, the cost for the line on which the last word below. PLEASE PRINT! charge is for 3 lines. in the ad.

When you have number of days wanted is of your ad is written. PLEASE PRINT ONE WORD TO EACH Five 5-letter words Remember to put your completed writing at the end of the First Word Here 1 Line MAIL TO: Sentinel-Star Want Ads, 633 N. Orange, Orlando, Fla. SAVE MONEY! Order your ad on the economical and 7 day rate. Gives your ad longer to do the job and cost is less too! COST COST COST 3 Consec- 7 Consec- Day utive Days utive Days Lines Sunday Lines 1.82 Lines 2.43 Lines 3.04 Lines 3.65 7 Lines 4.26 Lines 4.86 Lines 5.47 10 Lines 6.08 11 Lines 6.69 12 Lines 7.30 Daily 1.54 3.33 6.98 2.05 4.45 9.31 2.57 5.56 11.64 3.08 6.67 13.97 3.59 7.78 16.29 4.10 8.89 18.62 4.62 10.00 20.95 5.13 11.12 23.28 5.64 12.23 25.60 6.16 13.34 27.93 3 Line Minimum Charge.

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