The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, April 11, 1947, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
By VIRGINIA VALE
f ( T_T ARVEST of Stars” is
IT. undoubtedly the best
program of its type on the air
Other programs may come
and go, but here’s hoping it
goes on forever. James Mel
ton, its star, threw away two
careers to become a first-rate sing
er; he was tops as a popular singer
more than a decade ago, then went
into pictures. But he wanted to sing
in opera and to have just the sort of
radio assignment he has now. He
says that both times he abandoned
JAMES MELTON
one career to take a chance on an
other his wife, Marjorie, encouraged
him to go right ahead. When he
landed in New York he had just $160
—and a lot of ambition, plus the
voice that's landed him where he is
Bob Hope (“My Favorite Bru
nette” is his new picture) thought
he was used to everything in the
way of audiences; apparenUy ev
erybody who visits Hollywood wants
to see his radio show. But even Bob
was startled when four detectives
from the New York District Attor
ney’s office appeared. They’d come
out to pick up a prisoner; couldn’t
leave him, so they brought him
along!
- *
Loretta Young had to acqnire a
Swedish accent for her co-starring
role in the RKO “The Farmer’s
Daughter.” So she took lessons
from Ruth Roberts, the diction ex
pert who has been “de-accenUring”
Ingrid Bergman these last few
years. Loretta plays a Swedish
farm girl who’s thrown into the
poUtical arena and eventually into
congress. She shares stellar honors
with Joseph Gotten and Ethel Bar
rymore.
Composer-musician Sigmund Rom
berg will replace Red Skelton on
the air on NBC June 10, with “Eve
nings with Romberg.” Late next
summer he’ll be in Hollywood
again, writing additional music for
“Up in Central Park” and “Sunny
River.”
-35-
Twentieth Century - Fox’s “Cap
tain From Castile” company, on
location in Mexico, found itself in
competition with Paricutin, the
baby volcano which sprung up
about four years ago. The troupe
had to have a dry-cleaning unit on
hand, working like mad to remove
the volcanic ash which settled on
the fancy—and authentic—costumes
of Aztecs and Conquistadors alike.
*
Ton’ll see Maureen O’Sullivan
again in “The Big Clock,” with Ray
Milland and Charles Laughton; her
husband, John Farrow, directs.
She’s been in retirement from the
screen for some years—long enough
to have four children.
-35-
William Cagney, testing actors
for ‘"nie Time of Your Life,” has
set up a film library of tests of
available screen talent for the fu
ture. First tests are of his sister
Jeanne (whose last film was "Yan
kee Doodle Dandy,” with brother
Jim; since then she’s been making
a name on the stage and in radio)
and of her husband, Kim Spalding,
who’s been playing leads on Broad
way and in stock companies.
*
The sneak preview of “Copaca-
bana” held in Pasadena brought
Steve Cochran his greatest thrill
since he joined the ranks of Holly
wood’s actors. Following the pic
ture three policemen had to hold
back the fans mobbing Steve, as a
new star.
j’anny Brice, Hanley Stafford and
» "Baby Snooks Show” have been
-ned by their sponsor for three
>re years; the contracts were re
wed as Miss Brice celebrated
laby Snooks’ ” 26th birthday, and
laddy Higgins” began his 11th
ODDS AND ENDS—The Mutual
work’s planning a special broadcast
air "Babe Ruth Day" proceedings
m the ball parks on April 27. . . •
Ipb Dumke’s auditioning a new se-
i for NBC which will present ex
tant fathers on the air—called "for
hers Only." ... Robert Merrill
tws a singer who accidentally left
favorite good luck piece home, and
<e the worst performance of his ca-
r, so Merrill won’t carry any kind
talisman. ... In a chase scene for
be Imperfect Lady" Teresa Wright
ually ran two miles, before the di-
tor got jssst the takes be wanted.
Woman's World
New Techniques Are Required
For Sewing Plastic Materials
£rtta
W ITH plastic film and plastic-
coated fabrics, it’s easy to
achieve all sorts of smart effects
for the home. Using them, you can
make things that have a smart ap
pearance and are easy to clean.
With these fabrics appearing in
stripes, checks, florals and plain de
signs, you’ll find it easy to turn out
attractive curtains for the kitchen
and bath, bedspreads, shower sets,
chair covers and other household
accessories that can be kept fresh
and stainless with a swish of a
damp cloth. If they need more
attention, you can even launder
them periodically in lukewarm
suds.
Even beginners can achieve the
ultimate in thrifty home decoration
with these newest of fabrics after a
few short-cut decorating lessons at
a local sewing center. You’11 find,
too, that many of these new fabrics
come in color-coordinated arrays so
you can mix stripes, florals and
plain designs for any sewing project
you’ve set for yourself.
There are just a few things you
should remejnber when sewing on
these new fabrics. It will require
some adjusting to learn how to
stitch most efficiently, but actually
that’s an easy matter to learn even
if you’re an amateur at this sewing
business.
Adjust Sewing Machine
For Stitching
When using either plastic film or
plastic-coated fabric for such proj
ects, local sewing center instructors
recommend the use of a size 11
needle for the sewing machine.
Thread the machine with mercer
ized thread and regulate machine
for a slightly longer stitch. Light
ey
IhecMome
< }o4Am
H&pxvd&l
in WASHINGTON
By Walter Shead
WNU Correspond*!**
Designer Kiviette knows the
value not or ly of glittering se
quins bnt also of the tailored clas
sic in which a woman lives most
of her life. This one is in beige
with peplum that has pockets and
a soft silk scarf at the neck.
Plastic fabrics are ideal . . ,
tension and light pressure also are
recommended for plastic film stitch
ing.
When using plastic film for
shower curtains and matching win
dow curtains, it’s a good idea before |
cutting desired lengths to hang the
fabric over an open door with ends
oalanced evenly on both sides. You
ihen can smooth out the wrinkles
ivith the balls of the fingers or the
palm of the hand. Avoid fingernail
contact, however.
The use of weights rather than
pins on the cutting table also is a
Dig help when working with plas-
cics. You can fill small sacks with
Deans or borrow marbles from the
youngsters for this purpose.
Use a pencil to mark off heading,
aems for curtains or follow pattern
markings. Do not use tailor’s tacks
under any circumstances. You can
easily keep the pattern pieces to
gether with ordinary paper clips
and thus avoid tearing the fabric.
Tubes or rolls of wrapping paper
Dome in handy, too, for you can roll
each cut section over it in the op
posite order to the sequence on the
construction chart of the pattern,
rhis will keep pieces from becom
ing wrinkled as well as giving neat-
less and orderliness to your work.
Pinning and basting are con-.
sidered non-essential when sewing
with plastic film. Another thing,
you won’t have to turn under raw
edges as the fabric does not fray.
Always finish edges plain or
"pinked” with the pinker attach,
ment on the sewing machine.
Tips to Make
Sewing Easy
It’s easy to achieve smart deco
rator finishes such as ruffling, gath
ering and binding on these fabrics
with attachments of the sewing ma
chine such as the binder, ruffier
and gathering foot. The fine hem-
mer and edge stitcher attachments
can readily be used, also.
If the plastic film becomes soft
and moist from humidity, brush a
Look for the biggest, richest
block plaids ever imagined ...
in coats, suits and dresses. Cot
tons are a dream of color combi
nations—often five or six—plus
silk-like sheen, novelty touches
as to weave. Ton’ll love ’em!
For making shower sets.
bit of talcum powder lightly over
the edge to be inserted into the
sewing machine attachment. If the
film seems tough from cold, brush
a very thin film of oil along the
edge of the fabric with the finger
tips. One drop of oil is sufficient.
When a great deal of ruffling is
necessary, as in curtain making,
it’s advisable to pass a %-inch
strip of very fine emery cloth be
tween blades of the ruffier from
back to front, should there be any
inclination to skip gathers.
The emery cloth will provide a
gripping surface for the blades
since continued contact with plastic
film sometimes causes a waxy or
oily deposit to interfere with the
drive of the blades.
If an oily condition develops when
using plastic film, simply dust very
lightly with talcum powder. If waxi
ness appears, use emery paper on
the underside of the gathering foot.
Plain fabric binding may be used
with plastic film and this is simply
treated as in average sewing. When
plastic binding is used, cut binding
%-inch in width and insert in the
outside slot of the binder. Since
plastic film does not fray, it is not
necessary to fold the edges under
as in fabric binding.
Clever ideas for making new
iresses out of one good one in
clude different accessories such as
icarves, gloves and belts.
Even though your hats are small
this season, they should fit your
head, say the experts. The styles
particularly filling this order are
bonnets, bretons and small side
rolls.
A fashion trick which is popular
with the use of black dresses for
spring and summer is the introduc
tion of loose swinging coats to be
worn with them to give the en
semble lightness and airiness. If
you use lace or organdie trimming
with the black ensemble, point up
the simplicity, as this is the most
elegant way of showing it off.
WNU Washington Bureau.
1616 Eye St.. N. W.
Slowness of GOP Congress
Draws Sharp Criticism
Three months have passed since
the 80th congress convened, and the
Republicans still are mired down on
Doth the domestic and foreign
fronts.
They admit it .and are chafing at
criticism directed at them from
throughout the country. Most of the
critics go on the theory that the vot
ers gave the Republican congress
men a mandate to change things
quickly for the better ... on labor,
taxes, governmental expenditures,
aigh cost of living and many other
items which were made in ha«ty
ampaign promises.
Tour Hometown Reporter,
watchlhg the legislative wheels
spin into deeper and deeper
ruts of congressional inaction, is
inclined to sympathize with the
overwrought congressmen who
are, as a matter of fact, working
hard, working long hours in an
attempt to bring some order out
of the chaos, occasioned when
any change in leadership is
made in congress.
When you start to change
the' basic law of the land after
14 years, it just doesn’t hap
pen. There are many view
points. There is a routine legis
lative route which must be fol
lowed and it’s a long drawn-out
process. It takes time, and time
is what the Republicans are ask
ing for.
Your Hometown Reporter also is
Inclined to think that the criticism
which is being poured onto the Re
publicans is coming, not so much
from the rank and file voters as from
the GOP friends, those who expected
them to serve their special interests,
industrialists who wanted to slap la-
oor down in a hurry, big taxpayers
who confidently and enthusiastical
ly expected them to force through
an across-the-board 20 per cent tax
reduction, landlords who thought
they had lifted all rent controls, rail
road leaders who thought the GOP
would free them from anti-trust
laws, those who believed the story
that you could fire a million govern
ment employees and not miss them.
And then there are the New Deal
haters who wanted to see all vestige
Df New Dealism thrown out the win
dow, when the GOP leadership here
realizes that the New Deal all along
was nine-tenths common sense and
practical government and only one-
tenth idealism or plain nonsense, ac
cording to the point of view. So the
New Deal laws will not all be thrown
out.
No Real Leadership
The trouble with the new GOP
majority here, in both the upper and
lower houses of congress, is that
while they have the leaders, they
have had no real leadership. Each
of their leaders is busy running for
president, and running against the
other leaders. Senator Taft of Ohio
has set himself up as the leader of
the party in congress but it is a lead
ership always with an eye cocked on
1948. And Senator Taft, usually so
logical, so straightforward in his
thinking, has permitted his leader
ship to veer with the political winds,
and has lost face with his colleagues.
He has not won a major battle
In congress. He started out ad
vocating a $6,000,000,000 budget
cat, but finally temporized on
the $4,500,000,000 figures; he de
manded only a billion dollar
payment on the national debt
and finally compromised with a
majority of the GOP for $2,600,-
000,000; he opposed confirmation
of the Liiienthal nomination, and
he lost that fight; he lost on the
reciprocal trade agreements
when Senator Vandenberg of
Michigan cut the ground from
under him by his agreement
with President Truman, he
forecast repeal of the excise
taxes, only to be forced to vote
for their extension, the first ma
jor bill passed by the GOP con
gress.
Look to Vandenberg
He had himself named chairman
of the GOP policy committee (some
here in Washington are spelling it
police committee) and soon found a
small-sized revolt on his hands when
the 16 GOP freshmen senators, led
by Senator Baldwin of Connecticut,
forced him to take them into con
sideration in formulation of party
policies.
As a matter of fact, GOP sena
tors today are looking more toward
Senator Vandenberg as the man to
tie to rather than Senator Taft. Many
GOP congressmen and senators, so-
called isolationists, including Sen
ator Taft, are forced, before they
are ready, to declare themselves on
international questions, particularly
whether this country will take over
many British commitments, all
aimed at halting Russian expansion.
But withal, the new GOP congres
sional control may, after all, come
through—if but given sufficient time,
**■*•★♦-*-★***★-*-•*-
HOVStUOtP
MtUIOS... bjm.
•v vMvXviv.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
LESSON
Let Vegetable Chowder Be Your Spring Tonic!
(See recipe below.)'
Vegetable Tonics
Instead of dousing yourselves with
sulphur and molasses or whatever
preparation is your favorite spring
tonic, why not make a complete
change in the menu and concentrate
on vegetable dinners for spring?
The vitamin and mineral riches of
these dinners will do much for your
morale and their gay and lovely col
ors will perk up wilted appetites.
Vegetable dinners can be substan
tial if planned around a hearty main
dish. You also
can substantiate
them with a good
protein food like
eggs or add deli
cately broiled ba
con to complete
them if you want
a taste of meat.
Fried Tomatoes in Cream Gravy.
(Serves 6)
6 large, ripe tomatoes
4 tablespoons flour
114 teaspoons salt
% teaspoon pepper
4 tablespoons butter or substitute
114 cups milk
114 teaspoons granulated sugar
% teaspoon meat sauce
114 teaspoons prepared mustard
Cut tomatoes in half, crosswise.
Sprinkle with 1 tablespoon of the
flour, % teaspoon of the salt and
pepper combined. Saute in butter
until golden brown and tender on
both sides. Arrange all but two
slices on a hot platter. Stir re
maining 3 tablespoons of flour into
the butter and tomatoes left in skil
let. Add remaining salt and other
ingredients. Cook until creamy. Pour
over tomatoes and serve at once.
Stuffed Onions.
(Serves 6 to S)„
8 onions
1 cup bread crumbs
2 tablespoons tomato pulp
2 tablespoons butter
2 teaspoons parsley, chopped
2 tablespoons pimlento, chopped
2 egg yolks
14 cup cooked celery
1 teaspoon salt
Wash and peel onions. Cook until
slightly soft in boiling water. Rinse
in cold water to make firm, then
push out centers. Place onions in a
well-greased baking dish. Mix re
maining ingredients together and fill
each onion cavity with the mix
ture. Bake in a hot (400-degree)
oven, for 20 minutes.
Baked Carrot Loaf.
(Serves 6)
114 cups diced, cooked carrots
114 cups cooked or canned peas
14 cup finely chopped onion
114 tablespoons melted shortening
3 eggs, well beaten
114 cups soft bread crumbs
114 cups milk
114 1 teaspoons salt
14 teaspoon pepper
Combine all ingredients in order
given. Pour into a well-greased loaf
BrAsimm
Bake 50 to 60 > - ^
minutes in a mod
erate (350-degree)
oven or until knife
in center comes
out clean. To serve, cut in squares.
This may be served with cheese,
white or egg sauce.
LYNN SAYS:
Use Hints to Make
Housework Easier
To brighten gilt frames, take
enough flower of sulphur to give a
golden tinge and add 114 pints of
water. In this boil 4 or 5 onions for
a short time, then let cool. Strain
off liquid and, using a soft brush,
scrub gilding which needs restoring.
Do not push together shower cur
tains immediately after bathing. Let
them spread until dry or they will
mildew.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Corn and Vegetable Chowder
Wafers ‘Tropical Salad
Boston Cream Pie
Beverage
•Recipe given.
Creamed Asparagus on Toast.
(Serves 2)
1 tablespoon butter or substitute
1 tablespoon flour
1 cup milk
2 hard-cooked eggs
8 cooked asparagus tips
Melt butter, add flour and milk,
cooking and stirring until thickened.
Add sliced eggs. Place asparagus
on toast and pour sauce over all.
A chowder made with a milk base
and plenty of vegetables can also
take the place of a meaty main
dish. Serve this with a salad and
your main course will be complete.
•Corn and Vegetable Chowder.
(Serves 6 to 8)
4 slices bacon ’ ,
2 tablespoons flour
2 cups potatoes, cut in !4-lnch cubes
1 cup string beans, cut
1% cups water
2% teaspoons salt
3 cups milk
1 cup carrots, cut in strips
1 cup celery, cut In thin slices
2 tablespoons diced green onions
1 No. 2 can cream style corn
% cup smoked cheese, rolled in balls
Saute bacon in large saucepan un
til crisp. Drain on absorbent paper,
crumble when cool. Drain off all
but 2 tablespoons of the fat. Stir
flour into the fat.
Combine potatoes
and string beans
with fat and flour.
Add water and
simmer for 10
minutes. Add
salt, milk, car-
rots, celery,
green onions and
corn. Simmer for
10 to 15 minutes
more, or until the
vegetables are tender but not mushy.
Stir occasionally. Serve with cheese
balls which have been rolled in ba
con bits and dropped into hot soup.
Any remaining bacon bits may be
-added to the hot soup. Serve with
wafers or crisp crackers.
•Tropical Salad.
(Serves 6)
1 package mint gelatin
1 cup boiling water
1 cup cold water
1 apple, sliced
1 banana, sliced and diced
3 slices pineapple, diced
Add boiling water to gelatin and
stir until dissolved. Add cold water
and fruits. Pour into mold and chill,
Serve on lettuce with mayonnaise
thinned with fruit juice.
Brussels Sprouts with Mushrooms
(Serves 6)
1 qt. cooked brussels sprouts
1 cup sliced mushrooms
% cup butter
bi cup water drained from sprouts
*4 teaspoon beef extract
$4 teaspoon salt
Few grains cayenne
Saute sprouts and mushrooms
lightly in butter. Cook butter and
sugar until well browned, stirring
constantly. Add stock and stir in
sprouts and mushrooms.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Rub cut glass with a piece of lem
on to restore its luster.
Use a suds of mild soap and water
rather than oil or polish for cleaning
leather-covered furniture.
To clean white paint, rub with a
damp cloth which has been dipped
in oatmeal.
To ice cake easily, keep dipping
the knife in hot water while applying
the icing.
A lump of sugar placed on cheese
stored in the refrigerator will pre
vent its becoming mildewed.
Improved
Uniform
International
By HAROLD L. LUNDQUIST. D. D.
Of The Moody Bible Institute of Chicago.
Released by Western Newspaper Union.
Lesson for April 13
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Education; used by
permission.
THE KINGDOM ESTABLISHED
LESSON TEXT—I Samuel 9:1. 2: 11:
12, IS; 15:1, 22-26. 34. 35.
MEMORY SELECTION—Blessed is the
nation whose God is the Lord.—Psalm 33.
12.
A major crisis had come in the
history of Israel when we left them
in our study of January-March,
1946. They were ready to change
their form of government. They no
longer wanted God to rule them
directly through his representa
tives, but wanted a king like other
nations round about them.
God acceded to their request and
instructed his servant Samuel to
anoint Saul as king, and they began
that period in their history which
led to their ultimate captivity and
disgrace. We shall study together
during the next three months the
facts and factors involved in the
rise and fall of the nation of Israel.
Our lesson concerns their first
king. Saul, the son of Kish, who
promised to be a great and good
king, but who failed through dis
obedience.
I. Saul—a Cholfce Man -and God-
Chosen King (9:1, 2; 15:1).
To begin well is to be far on the
road to success. Here was a man of
excellent quality, “a choice young
man and a goodly”—in fact, there
was not among his people one who
surpassed him. What a splendid rec
ommendation for the prospective
ruler!
His physical appearance was also
attractive. That is not as great a
factor in success as some think, but
it does have a bearing on a man’*
influence over others.
Most important of all, this man
Saul was the one whom not only
the people but also the Lord had
chosen. The Lord sent Samuel
(15:1) to anoint Saul as king, and
to give him the key to success as
ruler—obedience to the voice of
God.
n. Saul—an Obedient and God-
Blessed King (11:12, 13).
The attitude of a man toward his
enemies is often the test of his
character. Bitterness, hatred, re
venge, or veiled hostility with u
purpose of ultimate destruction—
these are the common reactions of
men toward them who oppose
them.
Saul, who was not essentially dif
ferent in his own spirit (as we shall
see later), was a man after God’s
own heart in his early reign, for he
was obedient to the Lord.
Some “worthless fellows” de
spised Saul and refused to recognize
him as king. The urge of the flesh
to destroy them was aggravated by
their own unworthiness. Some
wanted to put them to death for
their disloyalty to the king, but Saul
in true kingly spirit, and recogniz
ing that he reigned by the good
grace of the Lord, decreed that
there was to be no revenge, but
rejoicing.
The story which we touch on so
briefly here is one that teaches the
eternal truth that the way of bless
ing and power is the way of obedi
ence to the laws and the will of
God.
Saul began well, but before long
his pride and self-will began to as
sert itself and he thus brought to
ruin and personal disaster that
which had begun with such promise
and blessing. There were many
such incidents, but we consider only
one. •
IH. Saul—*a Disobedient and God-
Rejected King (15:22-26, 34, 35).
God had commanded that there
must be utter destruction of the
Amalekites and their possessions—
something like the burning of a dis
ease-infested house—a wiping out
of a king and people who were con
demned of God. We may not fully
understand this act of God, but if
we know him we win not doubt that
it was in accordance with his infi
nite wisdom and love.
Sapl chose to disobey, later con
tending that it was done because of
the people, that sheep and oxen had
been spared for a sacrifice to the
Loid. Samuel cut through his hy
pocrisy and declared that God
wants obedience rather than sac
rifice. This is a lesson that many
who profess to foUow the Lord have
not learned.
The church or the individual who
denies or disregards the teaching of
God’s Word and attempts to make
up for it by sacrifices and cere
monies declares to the world that
there has been a departure from
true faith in God. Obedience is a
virtue all too rare.
Too late! What sad words—and
never sadder than when they speak
of spiritual failure. Saul talked of
repentance and prayer, but the
Lord had already rejected him as
king.
There comes a time when God’*
patience with man’s disobedience is
exhausted, and the door to further
service is closed. It i* a long, long
way to the boundary line of God’*
patience; but mark it well, there U
a boundary line!
CLASSIFIED
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building materials
USED STRIPPER Clipper concrete block
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MISCELLANEOUS
—-v
Doubleweight Enlargements
FROM ANY NEGATIVE
4x5, 15c ea. 8 for $1.0* •
5x7, 25c ea. 5 for 1.0*
8x10, 45c ea. 3 for 1.*#
If you do not have negative, sewn
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additional. Mail order to
T HIM
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%
Yoei Roll of 6 « 2 Expoaxt Hb
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Trueblood Building, Wilson, N. C.
TWIN-ENGINE CESSNA T-50 commercial
model. Cruises 160 mph at 5,000 feet. Mo
tors 40 hours since major. New constant
speed propellers and governors. New 25-
watt $1,200 Lear radio. Similar ships sell
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T. C„ Box K
40* Edward Aye. Pittsburgh 1*. Pa.
Industrial Sewing Machines
BOUGHT. SOLD. RENTED. TRADED
BERNARD BERGER
ATLANTA - - GEORGIA
PERSONAL
YOU TOO, CAN BE HAPPY. Write US
Your Problems. We’U Advise You! Per
sonal Advice. Send $1.00 with your letter.
JOHN COUBMIER. Lafayette, Lcatsian*.
POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP.
BABY CHICKS, Bloodies ted. Special AAA
Broiler CockereU. Reds, White Rocks
Eng. Legs.. B. Rocks, Wyandotte! and
~ a A_ J —I—* J “ — $4.75
Crosses, Assorted, our selection, $4.^
100. Prompt shipment. C. O. D. SUPEBIOI
CHICKS, Box 13A, Savannah, Ga.
REAL ESTATE—BUS. PROP.
FOR SALE: One 50 barrel Anglo-American
flour mill complete with cleaners, pulleys,
shaftings and belts; all in perfect condi
tion. Four 80-saw Continental gin outfit*
Complete with seed scales and 125 HJP.
General Electric motor.
JACK B. TAYLOR Pavisbof, GetorgU
SEEDS, PLANTS, ETC.
Okla. certified black diamond watermelon
seed. Also non-certified. Write or wire.
Stanley Coppock* Jr.. Cleo Springs. Okla.
'★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
For Your Future Buy
U. S. Savings Bonds
The Best Investment
Gas on Stomach
i or double your money beck
i acid causes painful, anffocat-
ind heartburn, doctors oaoaUy
prescribe the fastest-acting medicine# known for
Symptomatic relief- medicines like therein B«ll-eno
Tablets. No laxative. Bell-ana brinirs eonfort la a
jiffy or double your money back on return of bottle
to us. 25c at ail druggists.
VCbtyS"#* 7 —.
rn hum Mit* tn run w
RHEUMATISM
neuritis-lumbaqo
(KW MCNEIL'S
MAGIC
REMEDY
BRINGS BLESSED RELIEF
Lars, BatUak aw «
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0Ml till Mil 1TII1IM IT lUlwlK«qi«P*«|
StBIIL 1119 M. U*. JMIIMWH F
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WNU—7
15-47
Watch Youk
Kidneys/
Help Thefn Cleanse the Blood
of Harmful Body Waste
Your Hdnm an eonrtaatly flltarfua
WMts mutter from th, blood sOsmm. Bat
Udnoy, ooumtlmw Is* In tboir work—de
not set u Nmturo Intondod—full to ro-
movo Imparltim that, U rotulnad. may
poison th* *y*t*m and upaat tbs wM*
p.srsr.M*o« , 3s^
getting up nights, swelling, puma***
ondsr tbs syss—* feeling of nsmes
naxisty sad loss of psp and atrongth.
Other signs of kidney or bladdrrdio-
ordsr sro romstimes burning, scanty a.
arinattoL
Then should b* no doubt that I
treatment is wiser than I
Doan's Pills. Doom’s here l _
new friends for mom than forty yean.
They have a nation-wide repotstioe.
An recommended by gntofnl pomlatks
country over. Ash fear nriftssrl
DOANS PILLS