The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, December 17, 1943, Image 3

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"USE IT UP" • Casite drives out motor sludge—frees gummy valves and rings—Jbeeps .your motor peppy, clean and free run* niug. A Casite tunt-up costs very little, takes but a few minutes. Sold by car dealers, garages and service stations evtry where on a Double-Your- Money-Back Guarantee. Try it today. '.x- m fruarantee YOU ARE THE JUDGE Add Casif* to crankcas* and run through carburetor according to in structions, then drive your cor 100 miles or for 60 days, whichever is first. If not convinced that Casite gives you bfctter and smoother performance, you get double your money back by filling out the guar antee certificate and mailing it to The Casite Corporation, Hastings, Michigan. Maximum refund will be $1.30 per pint, which is twice the nationally advertised price of Casite. DISTIIBUTED BY Scott's Auto Supply THE NEWBERRY BUN WHEN THE LATE prime minister of England, Neville Chinnberlain, returned home from a conference with Hitler which sanctioned the dis- memberment of Chechoslovakia, and brought with the famous "peace in our time" message, a few people were not fooled. It was the prelude to war. Justice and the government of a great nation had bowed under the threat of brute force. A day of reckoning was inevitable. Those who criticized the course of Britain in those dark days can now observe a parallel right here in our own country, relative to our domes tic affairs. For years our govern ment has failed to squarely face in flation and labor problems, just as Britain failed to face the growing might of Hitler. Our government, after a long record of silent encour- agement of labor lawlessness, dele gated to a single agency, the War Labor Board, the responsibility of restraining labor organizations that had learned the effectiveness of brute force—strikes. How closely this parallels the action of the Brit ish government, when after years of bungling it expected one man to stop WELLS Theatre THURSDAY THE LEOPARD MAN Dennis O’Keefe and Margo ADDED—Selected Shorts Mat. 9-25c Night 9-30c FRIDAY and SATURDAY CHARLES STARRETT in HAIL TO THE RANGERS THREE STOOGES Comedy and the Secret Service In Darkest Africa Admission 9 , -25c All Day MONDAY and TUESDAY A Man of Iron THE KANSAN Richard Dix and Jane Wyatt ADDED—News and Short Mat. 9-25c Night 9-30c WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY PRISON MUTINY Joan Woodbury, and Jack LaRue Also Selected Shorts Mat. 9-25c Night 9-30c OPERA HOUSE SATURDAY WAGONS WESTWARD Chester Morris and Buck Jones Also BATMAN and COMEDY Admission 9c-20c all day FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1943 a roaring tiger, with an umbrella. The War Labor Board could rot item the tide. The coal minera struck and compelled the government to seise the coal mines and give in to their wage demands. In the expe diency of the moment, the rights of the coal mine owners were sacrificed, even as the rights of small nations were sacrificed at the whim of Hit ler. The War Labor Board confirmed a "peace in our time" wage contract made under threat of force with which the government was unpre pared to cope. In approving the con tract, the industry members of the WLB warned: “We know that the circumstances of the last several months have raised around this con tract many far-reaching questions of government policy. These larger questions of government policy, the solution of which unhappily has been too long deferred, will now, we hope, be faced and solved.” One public member of the War Labor Board, Wayne L. Morse, dis sented from the position the Board took with the comment that: “It is contrary to sound public policy for the War Labor Board to approve this agreement, which was negotiated un der the duress of a strike.’ Here again our temporizing with tyranny ominously parallels that of England in her dark days when a few coura geous souls bucked the tide of popu lar sentiment—when peace at any price “in our time” was more valued than the maintenance of justice and national integrity. Mrs. Wilson Moore and small daughter, Barbara, of Walterboro, are visiting Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Moore at their home in the Mount Bethel-Garmany section. Miss Ila Mae Suber and her mother Mrs. G. W. Suber of Silverstreet were shoppers in the city Saturday. FDR ±a4jA.: Originally we asked for 10 percent in bonds; now we need considerably more.