Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 February 1946 — Page 7
and
ale
pss!
away
Wanted)
an!
anteed
backed by FURS, Inc.
sania Street
right over Loew's Theater
All Higher Priced Coats
i
VEDNESDAT, FEB, 6,
EAR WEATHER ~ AIDS FARMERS
Spring Work ork Begun During
Warm Days.
Indiana farmers took:-.advantage of several fair days last week to start outside work in preparation
for spring, the Indianapolis weather |
bureau said today.in its weekly crop bulletin, Despite surface softening during above-normal temperatures, the
_ ground remained fromen to a depth
of several inches, the report said. Grains Dormant The harvesting of corn continued and is reported near completion. Other activities carried on last week included manure hauling, care of livestock, butchering, repairing machinery and cleaning premises. Winter grains are dormant and somewhat brown, the bureau stated, but are not believed to have suffered from winter killing. Fruit buds are also dormant.
Block's Appoints Adviser to Vets
Gale T. Shullenberger, recently discharged with the rank of army lieutenant, has been appointed veteran adviser in the personnel department of the Wm, H. Block Co. .
In this capacity, Mr. Shullenberger will interview all | ye 5 ing for ‘employment and reestablish former employees returning from service in new positions best ¥ fitted to their mr: Shultenberger military training and experience. He will also serve as liason between the company and federal and local veteran agencies. Mr. Shullenberger was in the army 40 months, 19 of which were overseas with the transportation
carps and infantry. He served | as administrative assistant in the | federal works agency from 1936
to 1942.
An Indianapolis resident for 20 |
years, he is a graduate of Short ridge high school and Butler university.
EXPORTS DECLINE FROM REGORD 1344!
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 (U. P)—
United States 1945 exports totaled! Good
$9,805,268,000, 31 per cent below 1044's all time record of $14,261,273,000, the census bureau an-| nounced today=« *™ The decline from 1944 was attrib! uted to a cutback in lendelease! exports, which were valued "at $5,491,652,000 in 1945, as. compared with $11,305,430,000 the year before.! Non lend-lease exports rose in
1945 to $4.313.616,000 from -$2,855,- |
843.000 in 1944. Exports in 1945 under the United | Nations relief and rehabilitation program totaled $350,000,000. General imports during the year; rose to $4.139,863,000 from $3920590,000 In 1944.
Meetings
Cashiers “Selling Dollars for Future Delivery” will be the topic of Miss Mary Hostetter when she addresses the Indianapolis chapter of Life
Agency Cashiers at a dinner Tues- | day, Feb. 12, in. the Warren hotel. |
An underwriter with the Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co, Miss Hostetter is a member of the| Women's Quarter Million Dollar
Round Table of the National Asso-!
ciation of Life Underwriters and a | charter member of the Indiana Leaders’ club made up of men and women Ie insurance salesmen,
Industrial Training Virgil Martin, general superinten- |
dent of The William H. Block Co | k
will have as his topic “How Am 1?” when he addresses the Indianapolis Industrial Training association at a dinner meeting Wednesday, Feb. 13] at the Athenaeum.
Power Engineers Boller inspection will be discussed by Willem H. McHale, Ocean Accident & Guarantee Co., before the local >chapter of the National As-| sociation of Power Engineers, at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Home Service auditorium of the Citizens’ Gas & Coke Utility.
BEGIN NEW SERVICE NEW YORK, Feb. .5
ice from New York to Paris will be inaugurated today when a T. W, A. Lockheed Constellation - takes off from LaGuardia field with 38 passengers aboard.
en ————————r
PLAN AIR NETWORK AMSTERDAM, Feb, 5 (U, P).— K. L. M. Royal Dutch Airlines today disclosed plans to establish this | year a vast alr network linking | Holland with the United Statés, West Indies, Far East, and most of the capitals of Europe.
Autos o Diamonds eo Watches ' Jewelry ® Clothing ® Radios, etc.
GET CASH IMMEDIATELY
NEST
ILLINOIS and OHIO STS.
Open (o'7 P. M.—8at. to 9 P. M.
(U. P)— 0 Direct commercial passenger serv-|
1046
| Lobraico Heads Retail Druggists |
Frank Lobrajico has been named president of the IndianMhitls Association of Retdil Drug-
-_ Lobraico, who has been © in the retail § «dr ug business here’ for “20 years, operates a store at 3342 ¢ Clifton st. ] Other officers ! elected are’ George Lanigan, vice presi. dent, and Albert C. Fritz, secretary, Mr, Fritg was elected for the 13th term.
PORKER PRICES REMAIN STEADY
Local Yards Get 3325 Hogs And 900 Cattle.
The 3325 hogs received today at the Indianapolis stockyards held to ceiling prices today, the U. S. agriculture department reported. An active and strong cattle trade regained the few early losses on] the 900 offered. The 275 calves held to steady | levels, and fat lambs among the] 2050 sheep were fully steady. |
Lobraice
Frank
GOOD TO CHOICE HOGS (3325)
- SILA 1. 25
140- . . 1 3@1uss 180- 300 ' . 300- 360 pounds. .. . Wain Medium 100- 330 pounds . ... Lo [email protected] Packing Bows Good to ce 270+ 300 ds «+ 1410 330- 400 pounds ........... 14.10 Good 400- 450 pounds ........oe0s 14.10 Medium 250- 550 pounds ........... 13.780914.00 Slaughter Pige Medium to Good-— 120 pounds . [email protected]
18.96 18.05 18.05 [email protected] | 700- 900 pounds seassess 15,50017.00 900-1100 pounds ve. 15.50017 00 1100-1300 pounds ... .. [email protected] | 1300-1500 pounds ... . 18.00917.25' | Medium - 700-1100 pounds . [email protected] | 115-13 pounds I [email protected] | Common i { 700-1100 pounds ‘ 10 [email protected] | Helters Choloe-— 600- 800 pounds = ....... 18. Zann » | 800-1000 poundy 16 50: Good ol 30 POMBE .vxsivneeess [email protected] POUDES ininernces HH nol 50 | Mediums. Maahe srnnbid umes, Commer, - aii ean 10.00Q13 50 Due tall weights) ‘ 12.95% 14 ou (Med [email protected]
8.00@@11.00 6.750 8.00
am and common { Canner
Balls all weights) | Sout. all weight) . .
13 [email protected]! Sausage— od 11.15@3 Medium . 10.50@11. 7 cuiter and common SoU 10 ou | CALVES (275) Good and choice 17,5061 18.05 Common and medium 1150@ 17.50 Sulls ... 7.50@11 Feeders and Stocker Cattie and Calves Steers | Chotce— | 600- 800 pounds 13 als 2 800-1080 pounds ... ...... 13 50@15 Ggod— | pounds .........
USES REPORTS -
JOBLESS HIKE,
13 More Areas on ‘Severe.
Unemployment” List.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6 (U. P).—~ The U. S. employment service sald today that 13 additional labor market areas reported ' “severe unems ployment” during January, largely because down. Indiana is not one of these, it stated. USES said that 31 of the 132 areas reporting were classified as having large volumes of unemployment. These areas have a total population in excess of 15,300,000. Robert C. Goodwin, USES direc tor, said the area reports did not include persons currently engaged in strikes but did take in those affected by them. Some Still Short
In addition to the reconversion slow-down, Goodwin said faster demobilization and the usual seasonal unemployment also accounted for
[1dbor surpluses.
On Feb."1 only three areas re- | mained classified as short of manpower. These were Washington D. C., Peoria, Ill, and Richmond, Va.
Schmid to Speak About Bomb Sight
“Manufacturing Tolerances Re-
quired do Connection With the | Manufacture of the Norden Bomb
Sight” ‘will be discussed by Carl | G. Schmid, chief of the maintenance
C. G. Schmid Mr. Schmid, who has been con-
nected with the departments of the Link Belt Co. Insley Manufacturing Co. and Lukas-Harold Corp, is an A 8
of the reconversion slow]
~All The
tion.
THE, INDIANAPOLIS TIMES ve Asked for. Is the Moon
Following the army's radar contact with the moon, the Federal Telephone. & Radio Corp., affiliate of the International Telephone “& Telegraph Corp. -is reported to have prepesed using the moon as a relay station in a new system of inter-continental radio communicaIdea is that high frequency radio signals, beamed at the moon, would be reflected and could be picked up at any point on the hemisphere facing the moon. This chart shows how signals might be sent from New York to Parls in 2! 214 seconds.
poe Li
TERRE HAUTE SITE ~~ OF COAL MEETING
A sound movie In technicolor on
{will feature the dinner meeting: of
Utilization society Friday in Terre Haute. The session, which marks the resumption of the group's monthly | Deb
| meetings, will be held in the Dem-
ing hotel. {
CONSERVE HOSIERY, WOMEN ARE TOLD
unless every woman voluntarily,
M. E. member, president of the |will continue at least another year,
Central Indiana chapter of the American Statistical association and secretary of the Indiana So- | ciety for Statistical Quality Oontrol.
FARM MUTUALS HOLD CONVENTION
Approximately 400 representatives
‘of 65 Indiana farm mutual insur-
ance companies will attend the 49th annual conference of the Mutual | Insurance Companies Union of Indiana to be held in the Claypool! hotel tomorrow and Priday. Major topics of discussion will be safety engineering and business de-
| velopment.
Prof. Howard Brigance. Wabash |college speech director, will address the Thursday dinner, and new officers will be elected Friday. Other speakers will include C. L.|
12 Na)30 Robideau, Lamoure, N. D., National and restaurant
Roy E. Tilles, president, Gotham | Hostery Co., warned today. Mr. Tilles said women must ration themselves to one pair a month and! refuse to pay exorbitant prices for unnamed brands in “hole-in-corner sources.” Working at about 60 per cent of capacity, the full-fashioned hosiery industry is producing around 30,000000 pairs a month as against a prewar consumer demand for 48,000,000 by he added.
ducers to resume shipments to hosiery manufacturers even though the government no longer forces ‘themto do so.
NEW FIRMS AND PARTNERSHIPS
Condenser Cleaning Service Ceo. Inr'anapolis, Ind. Commercial and industrial cleaning. John B. Kingsbury, 425 N 1ASabe; Russell H, Day, 1201 N. Wallace & G. Sales, Linden Hotel. Distributor or gas heating units. John Clindinning, Linden hotel; Harry Griffiths, Linden hotel. Belmont Lunch, 23¢ N. Belmont Carl L. Stamatkin,
Tavern 25
800. 1080 pounds ...... “ae 12 00 y tk 28 N Medium— ""|Association of Mutual Insurance|), Belmont: Earl Q. Stamathin. 300-1000 pounds 8.758103 companies; State Senator Gordon| B. & B. Auto supply Co, 3439 Carrollton 5 a S SHEEP (2050) Bubolz, Appleton, Wis: and M. J. 31%m’%nd Raiph I. Bloom. 3459 Carroll Ewes 18horn) Nicol. National Seley council, | ton. as Bre t C dQ JO nd UI pp ‘n Chicago. a Comer a, rat a Lamb Retiring officers are Fred McKee, ©. Blumer, 3053 Broadway J. L. Show Sm Brookville, sident; alter, 3540 Central ave CHioite ang costly Rad .... NN B10 presiten Harry =P. "oigy ‘Motor Mart, 2801 E. New York st au 130014 3% Cooper Sr. Indianapolis, vide presi- yued awiemobier, 8° M,_ Coren, 30% tdediur i 0! 254 Ss! % obbs, Gr Commen ani go 3.001100 gent and Mrs. Glenna Watkins, os ave. asi . a ie — } fanapolis, secretary-treasurer, . | Cox & Steck, 3224 N. Euclid ave. Rea LOCAL ISSUES pe | satate and SoBtract: ing Rey +3 a. 4 he erma v rer NEW BULB EQUALS ce: Everett J. Holloway & Co, J Park Nominal quotations rurnished b, Indi- | ave Builders and contractors, etc ere | anapohs itor dealers: y | 125 SMALL GLOBE J. Bu ohawAy Frances E. Honowas: 3110 LOOMF ELD. ave ; Thomas E. Grinslade, 4721 N | from mL B ! N: J. Bab. w.| mneliis o¢ P 3921 N. Delaware to Pups, |e Tn oot bid DE Me 12) Wesiinghouse Electric Corp. at, Te holesae distribution of flour and Amer States pid .. ...... "”% 3B {today announced the development join of od, Hows, Harty 2 Vollmer and Amer Btates ci A 33 ‘of a 1000-watt tubular bulb, with lath st Amer States cl B 33 Screw Machine Products, 132 W. st. |L 8 Ayres 4}%% pid ........ 107 113 an arc stream about twice as long! nea progucts. machine pivducts Belk R Be xan tom ol 3%. as a cigarette, which produces 60,000 5350 Washington bivd.; Ernest Miilhoiland, Belt i Stk Yds pid 80 * lumens, equal to the light cast by. sont College; Robert T. Perine, 4802 Guil- | Bovbe err ky Pe * a canopy of 125 ineandescent bulbs ‘Meta: Engineering Co. 733 K. of P Central Soya com a a3, of 40-watt size. bldg, Ronwftmous metal foundry. Ralph Circle Theater cum 63 | : . . Stahl Ankers lane. Comwith Low §% pid .... 108 ~~. a resi Oakiandan_ Sales C 0. Oklandon, Ind. { lian - oN Delta. Dace oon . rine: Wi ? Mills, Oaklandon, Ind,; Howard L. Hauser,
Delta Di Lab com 5 {r't Wayne & Jackson RR pt’ "102% Herff-Jones Co cl A pfd 1 |Home T&T Mt Wayne 7% pid 81 | Hook Drug Co com 0p | Ind Assoc. Tel Co 2 pid 51
Sh!
Ind & Mich Hies 5% pd Hon 113 Ingpls P&Lp 13 116% s P& ’ A ‘ l3on 3a Fp olls Water pla 10a Indpls Water Class A com 31 n Indpls Railways com 10 pis Nat Life com 18% Kingan & Co com... ...... 8% Kingan & Co pld A. 1 | Lincoln Loan Co 8% ofd » 99 | Lincoln Nat Life com . ...... u Ma | P R Mallory com i 38's 0 i Marmon- ala: iggson com. si... 18% 11% | Mastic Asphalt... Li... 12% 13% Natl Homes com = ....iev. Tha 74 N Ind Pub Berv 65% .......... 108%: 113% “rogiess Laundry com «20 Pub Serv of Ind 5% 107 109% Pub Berv of Ind com ........ 37 383% Ross Gear & Tool com ini 30 J ¢ 80 Ind G & E 48% ptd 1m rid Stokel$Van Camp ptd ....... 22', "an Stokely-Van Camp com ....... 34", » "a Terre Haute Malleable 834
8 Machine com ... ........ 4 United Tel Oo 8%
0 Union Title com 32 3» Bonds | American Loan 4'us 68 ..... 98 | American Loan 42s 60 0844 Bubner Pertilizer 2 54 08 Ch of Com .ld las 61 91 | { Citizens Ind Te $e 61 103 “iil umbia Club Vas Bs 80 Consol Pin 5s 56 99 Ind Assoc Tel .Co 3s 75 104° o Indpls P & L 3%. 10 107 Indpls Railways Co 5a 87 ; 95's I indpls Water Co J'us 68 U6% 108 Kuhner Packing Co 4s 54 . 100 ‘ N Ind Pub Serv 3'gs 73 106% 108 | Serv of 'nd 3%s 15 08% «110 | Pub Tel 4%s 58 00 Ire Term Corp 5s 67 98% 9% |
Williamson Ine 5s 88 os Bo ams
HAMMOND BRASS SIGNS CONTRACT {| CHICAGO, Feb. 8 (U. P.) ~The
Hammond Brass Co. Hammond, Ind., signed a contract today with |
| (©. 1. 0.) granting hourly wage in- | creases of 18% and 21% cents to 240. employees, The company was not on strike, as the union was certified wo rep-
| resent its workers only, a few weeks
'g0. This was the frst contract (ihe union has signed with Hammony | Brass.” 5 . ;
|conference for
Ll! the United Steelworkers of America|’ wid
{veloped for general commercial use.
108Y2 pt produces 60 lumens for each watt)
of electricity consumed, enabling it| {to pack the “mightiest punch of ‘practical * artificial illumination in| the world.”
THIRD CONFERENCE SET FOR EVANSVILLE
The third governmental service representatives of seven counties of the eichth con-
aressional district will be held at
Evansville’s Bosse high school Feb.
126, Governor Gates announced to-'
day. The governor will address high | school seniors of the counties at a . /morning session and will meet with |
*leivic and local representatives in the! , (afternoon. He will address a din-/
ner that night sponsored by the! Evansville chamber of commerce, Previous conferences were held in
| East Chigago and South Bend.
INCREASE FACILITIES BURBANK, Cal, Feb. 5 (U. P). --Lockheed Aircraft Corp.’s service division will have facilities for han- | dling all types and makes of air-
|craft on completion of its $950,000 | Is.
| expansion program, {announced today.
the company |
»
TRUCK WHEAT
indianapolis flour mills ano grain ele vators are paging 81 70 per oushel (ov No | rea wheat 8! grader on then merits, oats No
34 Ibs or better T8c, ‘orn, No No
anelied $1 08 ver wisher nd ven Bh 2s
White or NO 2 rea
IR. oe 13, Indianapolis, Ind. & Take Market, 661-863 N. Blake store and vegetable market, ate. Mater Bubat 3840 Park yve: Harry Frankovia, 18058 N. Delaware s nav Orait Studio, 108 3 Market [Lon aphy. Ruth M. 8 04 E AP joan Caulkins, I 3, Washington Glass Co, 1133 Boutheastern. Auto am. Charles G. Hunbert 1123 Southeas: 64nd Street “arin, 608 B. Sind st. Restaurant. Joseph F. Staten. 763 Fletcher; Leonard L. Upton, 949 Bell. Mid-State Painting & Decorating
1020
Central ave. Paint contractor, K. D, Btephens, 1020 Central; C. E. Wells, 2064 N Keystone.
Republican Veteran, 304 Pennsylvania
bldg. Newspaper, Richard PF. Eiler, 3060 N Delaware st. Sanita Chemical & Supply Co, 19 E | Beuth st. Janitor's supplies, ete. Dave
Sam Dobrowitz, 5727
Berman, 3616 Watson rd; | 5448 Brosdway; Joseph Celender, | Central a Bcrew * Machine Products Co., | 13th Manufacturing crew roducts, ete. Ernest Miilholiand.
1% w machine 6608 llege aye Triangle Oil Co. nd gasoline sales, wholesale and rétail, pry flliam C. Byers. Marott hotel. Veteran Cleaner, 1042 Woodlawn. Dry cleaning and pressing. Mr. and Mrs. Nore man F. Chance, 3319 E. Washington, Richard OG. Horscroft Co., 720 13th | Design, manufacturing and sale of ma!chinery. Ricbard G. Horscroft and Alice H. Horscroft, 720 E. 13th Clifton Electric Co., 2051 Clifton; elec. trical appliances John E Myers, 2051 Clifion; Russell R. Myers, 2051 Clifton Wilson Upholstering & Mfg. Co, RP Pox 480, Purniture upholstering ete John F. Wilson Jr. and Willlam OG. Hartman, R. R. 1, Box 480 Basement Engineering Co. Trust bldg ater’ Proofing and EXtoriOn walls. Charles A
325 Bankers basements Bumb, 370
Good Joseph Howett & Co, P. O. Box 1034. Manufacture and sale of household clean-
er, Joseph L. Howett and Jane B. How- | ott 61 Washington blvd, Joseph E. Seagram & Sons, Ino, Law-
nn county and Marion R. Schwengel, J. EK. Friel, 0 ¥ Yio 3 G. Priel, V. A. PFischel, | WwW. Wachtel. Doing business as. the 1" Hanus Kessler Co.’
i ENJOY EXTRA CONVENIENCE. ‘Bank by Mail at
AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK
AY TNDIAmArOLIY
Hengeous Dear bounty, Ind
NEW YORK, Feb. 6 (U. P.).—The| nylon and rayon hosiery shortage!
irractices a conservation program,
Mr. Tilles urged rayon yarn pro-|
ITI 73 333
U.S. STATEMENT
WABHINGTON, (0. einment expenses and recel - “for the current fiscal year through
pared
pen
‘Production of Tailor Made Coals” | War Spending i Net Cash : {the Indiana Coal Preparation and | Public Debt. 279,370,068
| Gold
Feb,
with a year ago!
Ses 30.3, 704,156 039,202,000 eficit » 605,987,411 Balance 35.356 635 005
252 Reserve 20, 184,953.9 953,032
This Yea $43,735,279, 2912 $51, Tau, 0; “s
Y —~Oov-
bh. 4 com-
LLL | Saye
EXPECTED soon |
'U. S. and Britain May Son _
4 - Tomorrow.
HAMILTON, Bermuda, Feb. ol (U.. P.).—An agreemlent covering most of the outstanding air transport problems of the United States and Britain was expected to be signed here Thursday or Friday, establishing the basis for commer cial aviation relations between the two nations, The Bermuda Civil Aviation conference, now entering its fourth week, awaited word from Washington and London before signing a bilateral agreement and a separate agreement on use of leased military bases, . U. 8. Has 0. K.
.Sir- Henry Self, chairman of the British delegation, emphasised there was no certainty London would approve the work of the conference. But his statement was regarded as
would be completed on bases, fares, routes and number of flights, On the American side there is no question of Washington approval since the four members of the eivil aeronautics board, top military advisers and high ranking state department aviation experts were here to’ work out the conference agreement,
- LOCAL PRODUCE
52,470,757 067 24 308.223, nl Sha. FOR PLANT DELIVERY 3, Wy “ ibs. 20, 19, mn "510.993 oy nom 18 springs, "mw 733,108.33: 18 bs. ne Tr } ander,
INDIANAPOLIS CLE: CLEARING MOUSE
| Dr
bo
» en
yo
1150 Pairfield ave, Ol.
Bassinettes—a wide array of styles and prices. The one pictured
$34.95
Otlers 5.95 up
~
a
| SS = —
OK
Nursery seals in maple fin: ish, with play tr & YY ane safety strap
£6.95
Others 3.95 up
ear strong frames, rubber wheels
Babny riages metal
Pold
pactly
$34.50
Others SIAS0 LJ
com-
* Terms Cheerfully Arranged
» IAT RRR § 6481000 o,, Xie ARE EA 17,920,000 | 29c; no grade,
po. [ -
baby talk... from COLONIAL
Cotton goods, lumber, finished rubber items are leaving the United States
commerce department and the joint committee pn export control insist there are good reasons.
Congo Needs Textiles
Natives of the Belgian Congo, for example, need textiles. At the same time Uncle Sam . ‘requires crude rubber. If we export some tives will sell rubber to us. The joint committee on export control ‘ (composed of representatives of the commerce und state departments, the civilian production administration and the office of price administration) decides what poods require export licenses The office of international trade of the commerce department allocates quotas and issues Lhe licenses. At present, according to John GC. Borton, director of that office's requirement and supply branch, we're exporting 8% per cent of our cote ton goods, including piece goods and fabricated garments, We're exporting 14 per cent of
cent of our nylon. Los Than Reported
our critical goods then has heen re-
| 18¢; roosters, 16¢; ducks, 6 bs, over ¢ 20e: capons % Iba ard over.
COLONIAL
our lurhber, and two-tenths of 1 per
“As a matter of fact,” Mr. Borton said, "we're exporting much less of |found that,
ported. Take lumber, for instance. Despite demands for it from other cotintries, we're shipping only one-
scarcely {1 per oent of the lumber we do ship curreng receipts, 64 (bs. to case, | i8 competitive with our own bulldgrodud sgeh, ‘Taryn 22a; We Hm. | Ing program. Most of it is special
The joint committee on export control meets twice a week. AS such meetings. it adds to or removes. items from Its “positive lst"—the poods and materials in short supply for which export licenses are
fifth as much as we did in pre-war cireumvent America’s export - years. trol regulations, which prohibited “Moreover,”; he added, “ shipment of pork to Cubs and
on the positive Tat in a hurry.
v m———y
Baby of metal, blue willy fvery Easily
2220202
with box spring. mat. tress and H o 11ywood type head board. Priced complete
$59.50
Others 54.50 wp
" =
Whether you are getting ready to welcome a little bundle from heaven . . .
or making additions to the nursery of that fast growing youngster , . . you'll
find every requirement at COLONIAL , . . for quarter of a century head-
quarters for baby furniture.
Double Talk . . . did you know that, if you select your first crib at COLONIAL
and the stork should make it a double header .. . a duplicate crib will be sent to you with the compliments of the COLONIAL FURNITURE CO.?
FINE FURNITURE :
Le owe
0 ontal
F URN rsh IRIAN ” J
Listen to Easy Aces Bvery Evening, 10:30, Station WFBM, Monday Through Friday
TU RE
*
