■

Friday, July 5, 1946

DETROIT JEWISH CHRONICLE and The Legal Chronicle

Page Ten

REPORT FROM GERMANY

(Continued from Page 5)

snow capped Alps always in the
backgi'ound watching an Ice show.
Believe it or not, last Sunday,
I was skiing at 10,000 feet in the
Alps. Nestled in the peaks of this
highest mountain in Germany is
a sort of cup-like valley filled with
snow, a sort of crater of snow.
Hundreds of GI's, officers and
civilians were skiing with their
shirts off, bare to the waist,--

some in shorts—and me too. What
fun, what sunshine—what. a chill
when you fell in the snow.—what
a spot!
Coming down the slope in the
dusk, everybody is exhilarated and
tired. The rarefied atmosphere of
10,000 feet makes you tire easily
but with a delicious tiredness and
so the down hill ride is a sleepy
and relaxed one. The mountains

.

~

RF. MAY 1>

are even more gray as you go
down and the grass and trees are
a deeper green. The trees and val-
ley come up to meet you as if to
say "Hello, we're glad to have yon
back."
On the way home we went
through the famed city of Munich.
The birthplace of the Nazi Party.
It Is a very pretty and a pretty
much bombed out city. The mu-
seum that Hitler donated is still
intact. A beautiful, white, marbled
columned building. The triumphal
arch has been hit and is being

•

•■

1,14.4.1

Pap

fN• ItA4AMATO

&.Panhandle Contract Assures Plen

a s Agreement i ,

CRARLOTTS•SPUIRICANISMILINS. NAY' 17, 1944

ssares
ere -25 years

IN! 0 ,4"

Consumers Announces
Natural Gas Contract

n to P
Gas Storage plan
oitit an *Adequate Texas Sapp!.

(Gonsuoters Power To
Store Natural Gas
Wells

TeNas and Oklahoma
Supplement
" Gas to
,' :Michigan SnPik

er

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1111 111111011 TIMES May

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the
Ass,
by
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st:rt. e :at:1, : b l: a a tl b reig l b e ea°c ao
unto
mon ,
Pipeline C o • •
3a ,„. 11. Lee' 11 a Is'
Detroit as sis t-

troiters cannot ge
of natural gas
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City Official H d
Supply Is at an

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31 xas G t
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Gas aunt/ in Deplete('
/Empty caver n s j Q Fields of lifieh gan
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Shortage laid
io Gas Company

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wtich

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ref

birthplace of the Nazi Party, I
finally got to do. I went to Mu-
nich, I found the Beer Hall, asked
for the spot where the Nazi Party
was organized and for myself and
for all the Jews—I spat on it. I
felt so much better, I felt that 0
The famous Beer Hall, the birth- mission had been accomplished.
place of Nazism was very badly
damaged and has now been re-
ALLEE MOVES OFFICE
built. It is a very fine Red Crosa
William Colt Alice, attorney and
Club for GI's.
counsellor, specializing in the law
The one thing that I have been of taxation, state and federal, a*
wanting to do since I came to nounces the removal of his oft
Bavaria and have been near the to 2057 Penobscot Bldg.

dismantled. The colliseum for the
16 who died in the Putsch, the
martyrs of the Party is still in-
tact. The large formation ground
is intact and is very impressive
with its size. •

Co

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131 °/./d's1
.

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1)44

NATURAL GAS
FOR 25 YEARS
ASSURED HERE

coo

on Jo
I New
N))
Space Heating
1tallittions, However,
Until 1..ater In 1947

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1947
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Plenty of Gas For Your Neighbors ..

WHY NOT MORE FOR DETROIT?

HEADLINES TELL A STORY. Those reproduced above . . .
with a single exception . . . brought good news to the families
in communities surrounding Detroit and in most of the rest of
Michigan.

and storage agreement similar to that which is giving plenty of
gas to other Michigan cities, Mr. Lee is quoaed in the above
Detroit Times dispatch, as follows:

"Michigan Consolidated wants a pipe line and it
wants to create a shortage so that the Federal
Power Commission will grant it permission to go
ahead and build it.

BEGINNING IN 1947, they say, the territory served by Con-
sumers Power Company will have an abundance of rich Pan-
handle Eastern natural gas for the next quarter of a century.

THE SINGLE HEADLINE that applies to Detroit, however,
tells a different story. It says: "Shortage Laid To Gas Company"
and quotes an extremely able, well-informed public servant and
member of your city government—James H. Lee, Assistant Cor-
poration Counsel.

"The City of Detroit isn't interested in the Pan-
handle Company, and neither is it interested in
Michigan Consolidated. It is interested in getting
enough gas. That gas is available and the consum-
ers could get it shortly after Panhandle and Michi-
gan reached an agreement.

AFTER REFERRING TO the refusal of Michigan Consolidated
Gas Company to negotiate with Panhandle Eastern for a supply

"Unless they do this, there is no telling how long
the city will be without an adequate supply."

Panhandle Eastern stands ready to negotiate wiah Michigan Consolidated for a
new long-term contract which would give Detroit its full share of its enlarged
capacity . . . assure an adequate supply of natural gas to your city for decades
to come. Such an adequate supply already is assured to your sister cities in
Michigan . to your next-door neighbors. Will Detroit speak up for its share?

PANHANDLE

COMPANY

TRANSPORTING NATURAL GAS FROM

e

v'

1 -

I )

R K

•

WORLD'S GREATEST RESERVES
•

C tI I C A G 0

DF IR OIT

Ra

Panhandle Eastern
produces and trans-
ports natuial gas
from the Southwest
to the "gates" of
Detroit, where it is
sold at wholesale :o
the local gas utility
for distribution.

KANIAS

CITY

41

