The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 10, 1947, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C.
How to Write Letters
For Every Occasion
VtTTER
RITINQ
WINTT
tJOLIDAYS ahead mean gifts
A ** and gifts mean thank - you
notes, written promptly and sin
cerely. For a personal touch, men
tion the article received and how
you will use it.
For instance. “That lovely blouse is
perfect with my new suit. How did you
ever guess I wanted it?”
Sample thank-you notes along with busi
ness letters, love letters and many others
are included in our Reader Service book
let No. 27.
Send 25 cents in coin for “How to Write
Letters For All Occasions” to Weekly
Newspaper Service, 243 West 17th Street,
New York 11. New York. Print name, ad
dress with zone, booklet title and No. 27
How Sluggish Folks
Get Happy Relief
WHEN CONSTIPATION makes you feel
punk as the dickens, brings on stomach
upset, sour taste, gassy discomfort,
take Dr. Caldwell’s famous medicine
to quickly pull the trigger on lazy “in
nards”, and help you feel bright and
chipper again.
DR. CALDWELL'S is the wonderful sen
na laxative contained in good old Syrup
Pepsin to make it so easy to take.
MANY DOCTORS use pepsin prepara
tions in prescriptions to make the medi
cine more palatable and agreeable to
take. So be sure your laxative is con
tained in Syrup Pepsin.
INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL'S—the fa
vorite of millions for 50 years, and feel
that wholesome relief from constipa
tion. Even finicky children love it
CAUTION: Use only as directed.
DR. CALDWELLS
SENNA LAXATIVE
CONTAINED M gYRUP PEPSIN
6 Ways to Comfort
with skilfully medicated
Resinol
See how efficiently this soothing,
widely used ointment relieves the
itching, smarting irritation of
1— Dry Eczema
2— Common Rashes
3— Simple Piles
4— Chafing
5— Minor Bums
6— Pimples (externallycaused)
Buy today from any druggist. Use freely.
So'd at Local Stores
WOSIO J PtOOVCTS CO . SpcncA no
COLDS
LIQUID MEDICINE IS BETTER
Get split-second relief of Cold Miseries with 666
the largest selling Liquid Cold Preparation in the U. S.
* LIQUID
COLD PREPARATION
Caution Us* only as directed
KICIAfC that makes folks
■Vt WW O sleep all night!
Thousands now sleep undisturbed because of
the news that their being awakened night after
xiierht miaht be from hlnrblrr .l .
Pills usually allay wiimn z* noura. since blad
der irritation is so prevalent and Foley Pills so
potent, Foley Pills must benefit you within 24
hours or DOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK.
Make 24-hour test. Get Foley Pills from drug-
llONEY BACK' 1 ' 011 ° r r,OUBLE YolJa
change to CALOX
for the italic effect
on your smile
Efficient Calox works tico
tears:
1 Helps remove film... bring out
all the natural lustre of your
smile.
2 A special ingredient in Calox
encourages regular massage..*
which has a tonic effect on gums
helps makes them firm and
rosy.Tone up your smile...with
Calox!
Mode in famous McKesson laboratories,
Ii3 years of pharmaceutical know-how
General Assembly Gets Under Way
DDT Is Not Always
Harmful to Animals
Absorption or Licking
Toxicity Overplayed
When DDT fly sprays first be
came available for farm buildings
and livestock, there was consider
able talk about sprayed animals be
ing poisoned from absorption
through the skin, or from licking
one another, or licking the walls of
buildings to which DDT had been
applied.
Evidence, however, indicates the
danger of toxicity to animals has
been overplayed. For instance, in
Missouri last summer, a cow drank
half a tubful of DDT bam spray
while the farmer was tinkering with
his sprayer and getting ready to
spray his bam. The cow suffered
no bad effects.
At West Virginia university last
year the dairy department threw
caution to the wind and put 32
pounds of 50 per cent DDT powder
in 100 gallons of water — then
sprayed cows with it. That figures
out about 16 per cent for DDT. Most
recommendations to date have been
under 1 per cent for DDT water
sprays on animals. “There were
absolutely no harmful results’’ the
head of the dairy department re
ported. The DDT controlled flies,
too. The spray was put on in May,
and there were no flies on the cows
until the qjiddle of August.
Dehoming Instruments
Spread Common Disease
A cattle disease known as ana-
plasmosis has gained a serious foot
hold in the United
States and is more
prevalent than most
folks realize.
It is a febrile, in
fectious, protozoan
disease that may be
chronic or acute. It
attacks older ani
mals mostly. Aver-
age mortality
ranges from 30 to
50 per cent of ani
mals affected. Clinical symptoms
are similar to tick fever.
Treatment is still in the experi
mental stage. The disease probably
is spread by insect bites. Many
cases coming to the attention of bu
reau of animal industry investiga
tors have followed mechanical de
horning when too little or no atten
tion had been given to disinfecting
instruments.
If calves have horn buttons re
moved when young, by means of
chemical dehorning fluid, the dan
ger of spreading the disease by de
horning tools is eliminated.
U. N. Delegates Convene
At Town Hall of the World
Baukhage
This Land of Ours
Must Now Be Saved
One of the greatest costs of the
war, to America, was the depletion
of her soil. Demands for increased
production, forcing of land without
returning necessary food, shortage
of fertilizer and the lack of labor to
properly plant soil protecting crops
has resulted in erosion and barren
soil in hundreds of thousands of
acres of land.
Dried Sweet Potatoes
Prove Excellent Food
Sweet potatoes prepared for feed
by slicing and sun drying were com
pared with cracked No. 3 yellow
:orn in a series of digestion and
litrogen balance trials with steers
ind lambs by Oklahoma experiment
itation. On the basis of total'di-
’estible nutrient content the dried
iweet potatoes had 92.3 per cent the
/alue of No. 3 corn. Nitrogen re-
ention by steers and lambs was
practically the same.
By BAUKHAGE
News Analyst and Commentator.
WASHINGTON.—At the opening of the current session of
the United Nations general assembly I made the usual rounds
greeting friends from far corners of the earth whom these
meetings bring together. Two converged upon me and one
of them began to discourse on the fact that we three were be
coming conference veterans.
He started to say “. . . . let’s see how many is it, there was the first
Quebec, then the second Quebec. ...” But the other man interrupted him
and remarked gently: “Oh, no, it goes further back than that. This is my
forty-fourth. Remember there was a League of Nations, too?”
The younger man stopped. Of ^
course, his gray haired colleague
was right. "And you still believe,”
the younger man asked earnestly,
"that some day they’ll work?”
“Certainly,” was the reply. And it
was made with such simple sincer
ity that we "youngsters” felt a little
reproved.
The next day 1 walked to a rail
way station across the beautiful
Flushing Mead
ows in the twi
light, the scent of
new-mown grass
all about us, with
one of those prod
igies, an “instant
translator.” She
was one of the fe
male of the spe
cies who are
quite as efficient
as the males. But
it was not her
feminine charm
which attracted
me, if such were
to be discovered.
I tried to ask her a little about her
work, my first question being:
"Isn’t it interesting?”
"Interesting? Oh, for a while,”
she answered, “but one would like
to get around a little more. I have
been here since spring. I’d like to
get back to the Orient and—other
places.”
I mentioned that we had had
simultaneous translation at
Nuernberg. “Oh, 1 was there,”
she said, “and always cold. One
could never get warm, any
where.” I agreed. “And,” she
added, “I went there direct
from India.”
I tried to get some observation
from her on the idea behind these
conferences and their effort to bring
about world understanding and
world peace. “Do you think that
they are worthwhile?” I asked.
(We’re always asking that, hope
fully if a little wistfully.)
“Oh, yes,” she replied quickly,
they are much better than none at
all, much. But I feel that the men
here do not really wish to make
sacrifices to have peace. The men
in their own governments do not
wish them to make enough conces
sions to rob the officials in the dif
ferent governments of their own
power. And so the beautiful words
they use are only rationalization.
They express idealistic thoughts, but
when it comes to acting to imple
ment them, they do not wish to go
that far. They already have satis
fied that feeling they know they
should have, to do the right thing.
Then they do not have to do it. Just
as all of us rationalize our own mis
conduct.”
That gave me a pause.
It also gave me some hope for
this session for I believe that the
powers of the assembly wHl be
strengthened so that they can
enforce what the people want.
The fine words and idealistic
plans will have more force if
the permanent committee of the
assembly on peace and security,
which Secretary of State Mar
shall proposed, is created. It
will be in session all the time.
Its voice, unmuffled by the over
use of the stultifying veto, will
be heard continuously; not
merely when the assembly itself
is in session.
There is no word which properly
translates “democracy” in Russian.
When using the term the Russians
merely give the English word its
Russian form. But what a gulf be
tween their meaning and ours. Lib
erty of the individual is not implied
at all in the Russian concept.
Indeed, many people have
said there is no real desire for
liberty on the part of the mod
ern Russian generation. And yet
they constantly describe their
conntry and their satellites as
“democracies.”
There was a good deal of elec
tioneering before and during the
close battle over the election for the
presidency of the assembly. At first
the American delegation had intend
ed to vote for Oswaldo Aranha of
Brazil. He is an old and staunch
friend of the United States. But he
felt that Brazil had had enough
honors at the recent conference in
Rio, that he had served one term
before and that it would be best not
to run. He said he didn’t want the
job. So our delegates pledged for
Evatt of Australia, who was exceed
ingly anxious to be elected. But the
Latin-Americans would have none of
it They demanded Aranha run. The
contest narrowed to him and Evatt.
This put Russia on the spot. Latin-
America wants to liberalize the
veto, Evatt would tear it to pieces.
And the veto is the Russian pet. But
the United States was for Evatt so
Russia voted for Aranha and he
The Russian delegation went
into a huddle on the floor. The
Russian stooges had to be told
just how to vote. And who should
be the man who ran around,
taking orders—or shall we say
suggestions—from the Russian
delegation to the various groups,
Albania, Poland and the others
under the Russian thumb?
It was Sarge M. Koudtiavtsev, a
member of the staff of advisors to
the Russian delegation. That name
didn’t mean much to me but I was
reminded by Paul Ward of the Bal
timore Sun, who always has a sharp
eye out for such matters, that this
active gentleman was the man
named as the “architect” of the
Russian spy system, in the report on
the plot to obtain official secrets
from the Canadian government.
Two women are exceedingly popu
lar at the assembly meetings and
their popularity seems to grow. One
is Mrs. Pandit Nehru, wife of the
Indian leader, and one is Mrs. Elea
nor Roosevelt. They are both active
Word* Contain
Great Significance
Words still are making trouble, as
they always have. It isn’t what we
say so much as what people think
we mean. For instance, there was a
long discussion of the word “im
pinge,” on the second day of the as
sembly meeting. This was just the
English meaning, discussed among
English-speaking reporters. Secre
tary Marshall had said this new per
manent committee of the assembly
would not “impinge” on the security
counciL The great argument about
the committee has been that it was
intended to by-pass the security
council itself, and thus duck the
veto.
If the English-speaking report
ers weren’t quite sure how far
yon go, or don’t go, when you
“impinge,” it’s no wonder there
was confusion when it was
translated into half a dozen
other languages.
It was the translation of one word
which nearly caused a revolution in
Korea and made the work of the
American commission there infi
nitely more difficult. It also has af
fected the whole course of action by
the assembly on Korea. It was the
word “trusteeship.”
MRS. PANDIT NEHRU
and intelligent. Mrs. Pandit (last
names come first in India, as in
many other countries) has been
named ambassador to Russia by her
new government.
I couldn’t help thinking, consider
ing the recent emancipation of wom
en in India that Mrs. Pandit was
more like Mrs. Roosevelt, than Mrs.
Roosevelt herself, when you con
sider the unconventionality of both
judged by the standards of their
respective older generations.
FIGHTING POLIO FROM THE AIR ... If, as many medical research
ers believe, flies are responsible for carrying polio, the practice of
spraying fly-breeding areas from helicopters may become an important
factor in preventing spread of the disease. Here, helicopter sprays
DDT powder on dumps in Buffalo, N. ¥.
NEWS REVIEW
Conserve Food: Truman;
U.N. Adopts Agenda
FOOD PLANS:
Conservation
It wasn’t hard for President Tru
man to figure out: Europe is in des
perate need of food from the U. S..
but the U. S. will leave itself wide
open for even greater price spiral
ling if it boosts its exports much
higher.
The answer, he told a special press
conference, is food conservation by
all Americans. It is not a matter of
eating any less, he said, but of
wasting less.
In line with that, he announced
the setting up of a citizens food com
mittee to develop a food conserva
tion program in the nation. Charles
Luckman of Cambridge, Mass., pres
ident of Lever Brothers, was named
president.
Regarding Europe, Mr. Truman
said the food and fuel situation there
is too critical to allow time for de
tailed study. Thus, apparently in an
emergency frame of mind, the Presi
dent called together congressional
leaders to discuss possible steps
that could be taken immediately to
aid the starving continent.
If possible, he said, he would not
call a special session of congress
if stop-gap aid for Europe could
be pushed through without resort
ing to that step.
Americans could start preparing
for a heavy barrage of food con
servation propaganda.
TOUGH AGENDA:
No Dodging
United Nations general assembly
proved at least one thing in the first
week of its current session—it isn’t
going to dodge any issues.
After riotous preliminary sessions
in which they heard the U. S. and
Russia flay each other verbally and
U. N. Secretary General Trygve Lie
call for an end to feuding, the dele
gates voted doggedly to take on the
entire list of tough, almost insoluble
problems standing as a barrier to
world accord.
Among the items admitted to the
agenda were the partition of Pales
tine, peace in the Balkans, independ
ence of Korea and Marshall’s pro
posal to reorganize U. N. machinery
to hold a tighter rein on the turbu
lent peace.
Soviet delegate Andrei Vishinsky’s
resolution calling on member na
tions to take criminal action against
warmongering propagandists was
whole-heartedly admitted to debate,
probably because it will provide a
chance to mull over the concept of
freedom of the press.
ABSOLVED:
Hirohito
Even while five high-*anking Jap
anese army and navy officers were
being hanged by the neck in pay
ment for their crimes of cannibal
ism, torture and murder of U. S.
prisoners. Emperor Hirohito was be
ing publicly absolved of any respon
sibility for the Pacific war by the
chief U. S. war crimes prosecutor.
Joseph B. Kennan told the inter
national war crimes tribunal that
“The prosecution believes the people
in the dock are really responsible
for this war. If there had been any
one else, they would be in the dock
too.”
«-
IN CAMDEN, N. J. . . . Joseph
Valentino, hailed into court for be
laboring March McGhee, 22, on the
jaw, explained apologetically to the
judge that he thought Miss McGhee
was his wife, got 10 days.
tN HOUSTON . . . Lt. Gen. Ira C.
Eaker, former deputy commanding
general of U. S. air forces, retired,
readjusted himself to civilian life by
taking a job as vice president of
Hughes Tool company.
IN HAMILTON, ONT. ... Mrs.
Marshall Lounsbury, no aft author
ity, bought an oil painting at an
auction for “a song,” later discov
ered it was "Palm Sunday Morn
ing” by 19th century master Cali-
sano, valued at $20,000.
IN PITTSBURGH . . . City Coun
cilman E. J. Leonard, longtime ad
vocate of sidewalk repair, cited the
danger of increased spills as a re
sult of a combination of the new
long skirts, high heels and broken
pavements, frightened the city coun
cil into passing a ruling that all
walks be repaired immediately.
ELEANOR:
An Old Note
“Dear Sumner — This Eisler
case seems a hard nut to crack.
What do you suggest? Sincerely,
E. R.”
That, Sumner Welles, former un
dersecretary of state, told the house
committee on un-American activi
ties, was a note he received from
Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt in 1939 when
the then first lady was interested In
obtaining an open hearing on the
passport application of one Hanns
Eisler, Austrian refugee from Hit
ler.
The note, an almost forgotten me
mento of the prewar era, was hailed
resoundingly in newspapers across
the land because Hanns Eisler was
Mrs. Roosevelt
Hanns Eisler
accused of being a Communist. He
is the brother of Gerhart Eisler, No.
1 agent of the Kremlin in the U. S.
Eisler and his wife finally were
issued visas in Mexico City to cover
their entrance into this country. He
has taken out naturalization papers
and is a song-writer in Hollywood.
In 1926, Eisler told the committee,
he had applied for membership in
the German Communist party, but
had dropped out. A department of
labor report made in 1938 said of
him: “The evidence establishes pre
ponderantly that Hanns Eisler is a
Communist.”
Mrs. Roosevelt’s attitude toward
the affair was lackadaisical. The
note to Welles on behalf of Eisler
was strictl? routine, she said, add
ing that she neither knew Eisler nor
remembered the note.
SIX BILLION A YEAR
Farm Co-ops Do Huse Trade
It volume of trade is any indica
tion, America’s farm cooperatives
are establishing themselves ever
more firmly as a significant force
in the realm of agriculture.
In the 1945-46 marketing year,
farm cooperatives, with more than
five million individual farmers par
ticipating, did a record six billion
dollar business, according to an
estimate by the farm credit admi
nistration of the department of agri
culture.
(The FCA report came at a time
when a house small business sub
committee was investigating any
possible advantages the co-ops might
have over other business because
•f the fact that they are tax-exempt
and private enterprises are not.)
Leading in dollar volume of trade
were some 2,256 grain cooperatives
which handled 1.45 billion dollars
worth of business during the year
cohered by the report. Dairy mar
keting associations previously were
the leading organizations in the co
op field.
The record business of all types
represents a 400-million-dollar In
crease above the cooperative vol
ume in the 1944-45 marketing year,
FCA reported. It was emphasized,
however, that “part of this increase
is undoubtedly due to the rise in
prices of products farmers sell and
of supplies that farmers buy.”
Minnesota again led all states in
the number of farm cooperatives,
1,352 of them reporting member
ships totalling 506,000 farmers. Illi
nois was second in membership
with 485,000, while Wisconsin was
second in the number of associa
tions with 1,002, most of them dairy
groups.
In dollar volume, the huge Cali
fornia cooperatives led the field
with 652 million dollars, while Min
nesota was second with 477 million
dollars.
Grains, dry beans and rice mar
keting cooperatives accounted for
2,256 associations, 536,000 members
( and 1.49 billions in dollar volume
to take first place for the year
among commodity groupings.
Refugee Girls Find
Happiness in Canada
Many of Them Are Employed
In Rayon Spinning Mill.
ST. GEORGES, QUE.—One hun
dred European girls, who were
transported from displaced persons
camps in Germany to this little
French-speaking town in Quebec,
seem happy in their work in a ray
on spinning mill here. Socially they
stick pretty much to themselves.
Reaction to importation of the
girls, who began work at 25 cents
an hour, has been heard in Canada
and elsewhere. Some labor leaders
criticized the organizer of the
scheme, Ludger Dionne, owner of
the spinning mill and liberal mem
ber of parliament for Beauce, for
the low wage being paid the girls.
At the same time, criticism of the
government, as having no uniform
immigration policy, was heard.
Dionne, however, has said that the
girls—flown here from Frankfort at
a cost of about $500 each—were be
ing lodged and fed at an unusually
low rate of $6 a week. The girls,
who are under a not too rigid two-
year contract recently received
their first raise—to 30 cents an hour.
All the girls are Roman Catholics
and Polish except foi a few Yugo
slavs, two Russians and a Lithu
anian. A few speak good English,
an additional few can make them
selves understood, while two speak
passable French. The language dif
ficulty was seen as the major reason
they mix little with the people of
this town of 10,000, which is about
65 miles south of Quebec city.
Anne Gaizutyte commented: “I
have no time for boy friends. I like
to stay home and read—I have so
much to learn.”
She is 22 and a former university
chemistry student.
The girls, although lacking in in
dustrial experience, are found to be
“good workers and quick to learn.”
Dionne said they were not throwing
other girls out of work—he could
still take an additional 50 girls in
his plant if he could get them.
There has been no great comment
from other employers.
Although at first townsfolk weren’t
too keen about arrival of the group.
Mayor Kenneth Pozer of St. Georges
West said: “The girls are received
here sympathetically—just as well
as any family. They are well
liked.”
Submarine Spots Flier,
Saves Him After Crash
NEW LONDON, CONN.—Ris
ing to the surface as soon as its
periscope had shown a pilot, who
had dropped into the sea, the sub
marine Finback rescued the flier
and aided in the salvaging of
his small plane.
The pilot, Godfrey J. Lapalme,
was picked up on Long Island
sound, about 10 miles south of
Saybrook, and transported to the
submarine base here, where his
condition was reported as good.
The plane was hoisted aboard
the auxiliary mine layer Spig,
which had answered the subma
rine’s radio giving the aircraft's
position.
Creeping Doll Looks
Just Like Real Baby
A n ADORABLE little creeping j
doll that looks like a aealj
baby. She wears a diaper tmO af
simple one-piece garment. The
inch body is made of soft cotton.
• • •
To obtain complete cutting pattern. (
inishing directions, color chart lor €MP*|
broidering face of the * Creej
Doll’* (Pattern No. 5323) send '
coin, your name, address and
number.
Due to an unusually large demaad tmd
current conditions, slightly more ttane Ss,
required in filling orders for a few ni fee;
most popular patterns. ,
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLRWOfe*
530 South Wells St. Chieage 7, ML
Enclose 20 cents for PattewL
No
Name-
Address.
Why
Best Known
HOME REMEDY TO REUEVE
IZAlnCcOUGHING
Will? DISTRESS
Only Vicks VapoRub gives yon this
special Penetrating-Stimulating
action when you rub it on throat,
chest and back at bedtime:—
It penetmtes to upper bronchial
tubes with special medicinal vapors.
It stimuuites chest and back surfaces
like a warming poultice. And It
keeps working for _ _ _ ^ __ .
hours-even m# Q C (49
while you sleep) ▼ vaporu*
Grandma
SPEAKIN , ...
Federal Revenue Is Set
, At 39 Billion Dollars
WASHINGTON. — Complete data
issued by the bureau of internal rev
enue disclosed that federal revenues
for the 1947 fiscal year ending last
June 30 totaled $39,108,385,742.
This was a drop of $1,563,711,256
from the $40,672,096,998 in the previ
ous 12 months, principally reflecting
repeal of the excess profits tax.
Corporation income taxes collect
ed for the 1947 fiscal period totaled
$6,055,095,929, a rise of 30.5 per cent
over the 1946 figure of $4,639,949*84.
Excess profits collections, however,
fell off more than 55 per cent
from $7,913,617,921 in the 1946 fiscal
year to $3,621,362,751 in the latest
period.
They’re Not Gold Bricks
But They Bring $1 Each
MARION, ALA.—Fire blackened
bricks are selling for $1 each in
Marion.
Lightning caused a fire recently 1
which destroyed Jewitt hall on the
campus of the Judso* Baptist Col
lege for Girls here.
The fire had no sooner cooled than
alumnae of Judson were busy selling
bricks from the razed building at $1
each. The money will go to replace
the destroyed building. Judson girls
throughout the South are purchas
ing bricks.
The bricks were hand molded in
1888 when another fire had destroyed
the previous Jewitt hall. Many Jud
son girls helped make the bricks.
Dry Ice ‘Brings’ Rainfall,
But Wrong City Gets Benefit
ANADARKO, OKLA.—Dry Chick-
asha, Okla., residents pondered the
wayward ways of Oklahoma weath
er after rain which had been “in
tended” for them fell in nearby
Anadarko.
Three Chickasha men. Son King,
Gordon Jones and Claude Welch,
dumped 105 pounds of dry ice into a
cTbud 13,500 feet over Chickasha,
hoping to make it rain in that city.
It rained all right, but by the time
the dry ice had “worked,” the cloud
was over Anadarko, 19 miles west,
and Anadarko enjoyed a half inch
shower. Chickasha stayed dry.
SOME FOLKS seem to ferget
that you can’t spill essence oC
happiness on others witboot get-
tin’ a drop on yourself.
35 paid Mary Wldeman, St. OMr. !£*•
Jbr*
PERSNICKETY? Why shore T
am. ’Specially when it comes to
margarine. I always want top
quality. That’s why I always
pick the package that says
“Table-Grade.” Nu-Maid Table-
Grade Margarine’s made ’spe
cially ter the table! And that’s
fer me!
Jao
THE ONLY PERSON I know
who gets much out • of life by
running other folks down is the
elevator boy.*
J*'
THE MAKIN’S of sweet, fresh
vegetables is the seasonin’ you
put into ’em. If you use Nu-Maid
ye’re sure to have a good tastin’
dish, ’cuz Nu-Maid tastes good
to start with.
Jr*
will be paid upon publica
tion to the first contributor of
each accepted saying or idea for
“Grandma Speakin’.” Address
Nu-Maid Margarine, Cincinnati
2, Ohio.
Table-Grade
MARGARINE
JO SOOTHE ITCH
RASH OR TETTER
Quickly apply soothing and com
forting GRAYS OINTMENT with
its wholesome antiseptics and na
ture aiding medication. Nothing else
like it—nothing so comforting—or
pleasant for externally caused skill
troubles. 35c. Get a package today.
IT’S NICE TO KNOW
What goes on in your
community. That**
why this newspaper
brings you
LOCAL NEWS