The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 01, 1948, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C.
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Indian Troops Invade Hyderabad,
Endanger Country’s Shaky Peace;
Russia Confuses Crisis in Berlin
By Bill Schoentgen, W^U Staff Writer
{EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of
Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and net necessarily of this newspaper.}
INVASION:
Hyderabad
Events in India were a far cry
from the days when Mohandas
Gandhi’s philosophy of passive
diplomacy prevailed among the af
fairs of that sub-continent
Indian troops, strongly supported
by armored units, had invaded the
princely state of Hyderabad (see
map) whose Moslem ruler—called
the Nizam—had refused to join with
the other Indian dominions even
though Hyderabad’s population is
predominantly Hindu.
THAT WAS THE whole story. The
Nizam and his small, compact Mos
lem court would not agree to follow
the other Indian princely states in
acceding to the Dominion of India
which was established last year.
The Nizam, often called the rich
est man in the world, and the only
surviving heir of the great Mogul
empire, wanted to rule an independ
ent hyderabad.
Whether he could have succeeded
in doing that, even if the dominion
government had not opened hostili
ties against him, is questionable.
Hyderabad is completely landlocked
and has no access to the sea except
by courtesy of the states surround
ing it All of its imports and exports,
therefore, must pass through India.
WHILE HYDERABAD might pro
fess its independence as a state,
chances are that the economic and
political conditions of actual inde
pendence never could be achieved.
Can India’s invasion of Hyderabad
be justified? Not too easily, if at all.
It was not a matter of sending a
police force into the state to quell
internal disorders. It was, apparent
ly, a deliberate act of aggression and
as such should go before the U. N.
security council for judgment.
The Last Mogul
Sir Mir Osman All Khan, some
times called the richest man in
the world, is the Nizam of Hydera
bad, land-locked princely state in
India which was attacked by
India’s dominion troops.
ful solution was getting buried deep
er and deeper.
That all this confusion was being
fostered deliberately by the Soviets
was quite evident. Their purpose
for so doing was more obscure.
THE RUSSIANS want full control
of Berlin, taking that as their im
mediate objective. Ultimately they
want to force American occupation
troops completely out of Germany,
after which Russia could take over
the great German industrial poten
tial, including the inestimably valu
able Ruhr section.
However, there might be still an
other reason for this display of So
viet diplomatic aggression which
was planned almost a year ago to
erupt this fall. t
From a practical standpoint there
was not only no need for the inva
sion but there is an actual danger
INDIA
involved. There are no linguistic or
racial differences between Hyder
abad’s Hindus and the Hindus of ad
jacent states. The boundaries of
Hyderabad are arbitrary and his
torical, not dependent upon the ge
ography of the vicinity.
INDIA MIGHT well have refrained
from pushing the issue for a year or
two, pending a peaceful settlement.
The potential danger lies in two
phases of the situation:
I. THE HYDERABAD war might
prove to be the factor that will pre
cipitate violent conflict between
Hindu and Moslem Pakistan, whose
more or less peaceful relations now
are strained and uneasy.
1. IT IS A BLOW to the British
Commonwealth, to which both India
and Pakistan still belong. With the
Russians acting the way they are,
any disturbance of the delicate bal
ance of power that still prevails in
the East could bring still another
catastrophe down upon the world.
RUSSIANS:
Fantastic
Not even the most starry-eyed
Polly ana could deny that the U. S.-
Soviet fracas over Berlin was down
right fantastic and getting more so
every day.
The whole thing simply' had
stopped making sense, even to many
of the diplomats who were embroiled
in the situation.
The Russians might be trying to
harass the western nations to the
point where the entire Berlin issue
will be dumped in the lap of the
United Nations. Once the crisis
comes under U. N. jurisdiction the
Russians might plan to use the in
evitable squabble as a pretext for
resigning from the world organiza
tion and taking their satellite states
with them.
THE EAST-WEST split into two
! opposing power spheres then would
j be complete. Moreover, the U. N.
itself probably would be reduced to
total impotency in guiding interna
tional affairs.
And the question of whether the
Soviet Union is entertaining motives
like these might be answered by
the end of the year. For the western
nations were determined that if they
didn’t get some satisfaction from
Moscow soon they would arraign
Russia before the United Nations
this fall.
COTTON:
Lift Dot Bale
With the largest cotton crop since
1937 being harvested this year. Uncle
Sam is making ready to stage a
comeback in the cotton buying busi
ness.
Of the 15,219,000 bales to come off
the land, the cotton trade estimates
that about a third will go into stor
age under federal loan.
TWENTY-ONE MILLION people
in the United States depend on cot
ton for their livelihood, and the fa :
of the cotton crop, therefore, is not
only a personal but a national con
cern.
The federal government is com
ing into the picture because cotton
prices are coming down. They have
reached 31.04 cents a pound, which
is pretty close to the support floor of
30.74 cents.
Here’s what happens:
WHEN THE COTTON grower
hauls his crop to the warehouse he
gets a receipt for it, and then he
either sells the cotton at the market
price or accepts the government’s
standing offer to lend him money
on it.
If he chooses to accept the loan,
he is paid 30.74 cents a pound on the
average—the exact price depending
on the kind and quality of the cotton.
WHAT CHANCE was there for any
logical kind of peace when, even
while western diplomats were in
Moscow attempting to work out a
formula with Soviet Foreign Minister
Molotov, the Russians in Berlin were
inciting riots, kidnapping western
sector policemen and firing on
American planes engaged in the air
lift?
One compTleation was being piled
on top of another, with the ensuing
result that any possibility of a peace-
Then he is free, for one year, to
sell the cotton for more money, pro
vided the price goes up. If he doesn’t
sell it within a year the government
becomes owner of the crop.
PROBABLE EFFECT of this oper
ation will be to keep a lot of cotton
oft the market this year, thus pre
venting the price from dropping
through the support floor. Also, it
will result in the government’s end
ing the year with several million
bales of cotton on its hands.
THICKER THAN FLIES
Russia Is Well Supplied With Manpower
Russia and the Soviet satellites
are appallingly well supplied with
manpower for military purposes, ac
cording to official estimates in Wash
ington.
In Soviet Russia alone there ex
ists a #emendous reservoir of able-
bodied men for land armies. Best
estimates indicate the existence of
175 divisions of Russian ground
force and security troops, embody
ing a total of three million men and
including about 400,000 MVD secur
ity troops.
Eight Soviet satellite states are
reputed to be able to muster a total
of about 100 divisions of 1,121,600
men. That makes a grand total of
4,121,600 soldiers in 274 divisions,
many of whom are deployed at or
near the point at which war con
ceivably could start.
\
BIG FOUR:
Or Little 14?
The U. S. government’s spectacu
lar suit against the “big four’’ meat
packing companies—Swift, Armour,
Cudahy and Wilson—promised to be
one of the biggest anti-trust actions
since President Theodore Roosevelt
said something about carrying a big
stick.
Filed by the justice department in
federal court in Chicago, the suit
asks that the four companies be
broken up into 14 separate firms.
Specifically, the U. S. wants Swift
and Armour to be carved into five
separate companies each and Wilson
and Cudahy each to be split into two
firms.
TOM CLARK, attorney general,
said in a statement: “The four de
fendants named in the complaint are
charged with suppressing competi
tion in the sale of meat and meat
products." The Sherman anti-trust
law is being invoked in the action.
Clark described the suit as “an
other in a series of cases instituted
1 by the department of justice in fur
therance of its program to free the
production and sale of food and food
products from monopolistic re
straints.”
THE PACKERS bad another story
to tell, however, with “playing poli
tics” as one of their key phrases.
Said John Holmes, president of
Swift and company: “It is significant
that the charges appear at the be
ginning of this fall’s political cam
paign. Apparently an attempt is be
ing made to shift responsibility for
inflationary price trends.
“No one can control either live
stock prices or meat prices,” Holmes
fumed.
INFRA-RED:
Frost Killer
The day—or night—of the old fas.
ioned smudge pot as the main buf
fer between plants and killing frost
may be nearing an end.
Science has taken over to come
up with a new kind of frost killer,
development of which was sponsored
by the American Iron and Steel in
stitute. ,
THE CONTRAPTION, known as
the Plymouth infra-red lamp, is in a
fair way to affect materially the
nation’s agricultural system, the in
stitute. thinks.
Reporting on the new device,'the
institute pointed out that while farm
ers will find the lamp invaluable in
saving crops during the first touches
of frost, the growing season actual
ly may be extended as techniques
for its use are developed.
Dr. Ajithur W. Farrell of Mich
igan State college, one of the men
responsible for development of the
infra-red machine, cited an exam
ple: “On September 2, 1946, to take
one example, Michigan had a two-
hour killing frost. The next frost
did not occur until October 1, a
month later. Had tomato and melor
growers been able to protect their
crops for about two hours on the
morning of September 2, they would
have had four more weeks of very
favorable growing weather. As it
was, they lost everything.
“THE FROST dispcller, made up
of sheet steel and a little ingenuity,
will put an end to some of nature’s
nonsense.”
The lamp is composed of a cir
cular piece of stainless steel, shaped
in cone-shaped steps, with an oil
burner within the framework. When
the burner is put into action, the
steel heats until it becomes cherry-
red. At this point, infra-red rays
are thrown off, spreading over the
area to be warmed, even entering
the ground in their intensity.
Headliners
IN PASADENA . . . Michae! Beal,
83, (above) received a 30-day sus
pended sentence for being drunk and
disturbing the peace after he had
propelled bis wheelchair up and
down sidewalks at a furious rate of
speed, hurling invective and profan
ity at all comers.
IN GREAT FALLS, Mont. . . . Mem
bers of the Cascade county Demo
cratic central committee voiced no
objection when Ray Wise, a Repub
lican, submitted his resignation after
being elected Democratic precinct
committeeman.
IN EAST PRAIRIE, Mo. . . . A. L.
Webb cleaned out his desk, came
across a letter his wife had given
him to mail 11 years ago, shuddered
at the possible consequences, finally
mailed the letter.
BLIMP:
Biggest Yet
Biggest blimp the U. S. navy ever
ordered and the first to be contracted
for since the war soon will be under
construction at the Goodyear Air
craft corporation in Akron, Ohio,
the U. S. navy bureau of aeronautics
has announced.
The ship will have a helium capac
ity of 825,000 cubic feet and an
empty weight of about 34,000 pounds.
It will be 324 feet long, 71 feet wide
and 92 feet high.
Little Pigs Stunted
By Worm Infestation
Tests Show Marked
Retarding of Growth
Seldom are farmers inclined to
argue with scientists, livestock
specialists and others who keep
warning that internal parasites are
harmful to swine. Occasionally,
however, a farmer will pose the
question: “How much injury is
caused by worm infestation?”
The answer to that question is
provided in tests conducted by the
bureau of animal industry to de-
Growth of this pig will be de
termined largely by number of
worms present.
termine how much the growth of
pigs is retarded by roundworms
(ascarids).
In carrying out the experiment,
the bureau used eight litter-mate
pigs eight weeks old, feeding four
of them infective roundworm eggs.
The other four, which served as
controls, received no worm eggs.
After four months all eight pigs
were weighed, killed and examined
for roundworms. None were found
in the control pigs, but the other
four harbored 109, 39, 20 and 12,
respectively.
Growth of the four pigs that had
roundworms at autopsy was less
rapid than the four controls. The
pig With 109 worms weighed 8.7
pounds less than at the time it was
fed the worm eggs; its control
litter-mate gained 96 pounds.
The pig with 39 roundworms
gained only 48 per cent as much
as its control; the dne with 20
roundworms, only 55 per cent as
much as its control. The growth
of the pig with only 12 roundworms
was not retarded very much; it
weighed nearly as much as its con
trol mate.
Research to Intensify
Winter in Meat Tests
Freezing is one of the oldest ways
of preserving meat. It is also one
of the newest, the U. S. department
of agriculture points out.
In old-time freezing there was
not much that could be done about
the process. It was a winter meth
od depending on continued cold.
A mid-winter or early-spring thaw
might spoil a meat supply intended
to last for additional weeks or
months. This was true whether
the meat was wild game brought
in by hunters or was from domestic
animals.
Modem freezing is still so new
that there is a good deal to be
teamed about it
This is the purpose of an expan
sion of studies of meat freezing and
curing made possible under the re
search and marketing act. A first
step will be to survey freezing and
curing methods now in use. Samples
of meats typical of these methods
of preservation will be assembled
and compared for quality and nutri
tive value. Next, the experimenters
will try first to duplicate, then im
prove the methods which the sur
vey and comparison work indicate
are most effective.
The bureau of animal industry
will have equipment that can im
prove on even the most severe
winter weather. It will be dble to
freeze meat at 100 degrees below
zero if that proves desirable.
Quality Cream Boosts
Returns to Dairymen
Production of high quality cream
will pay dividends to the dairymen.
A few suggestions for assuring
top production: Protect separator
from rust; rinse with chlorine solu
tion before using; wash with powder
immediately after each separation-;
cool cream immediately; separate
milk immediately after, straining;
cool cream rapidly and thoroughly
before mixjng with older cream;
keep containers covered from the
time the milk is strained into cans
until it reaches the receiving vat;
strain milk in milk room or milk
house, not in the barn; cover cans
tightly and place in cooler with cold
circulating water.
Severed Sheep Ailments
Are Caused by Worms
Several ailments of sheep, includ
ing “nodular disease,” “stomach
worm disease” and “black scours.’’
are caused by worms. Main attack
by successful sheep men, therefore,
Is directed against development or
reproduction of the offending
worms. While most of the eggs and
young worms of these parasites are
destroyed in winter, sheep must be
treated to prevent entry of worms
Into the intestinal tract.
★ ★★ ★ ★
HOVStUOlD
mimos...
Savory Fish Dishes
Appeal to Appetite,
* Are Kind to Budget
*ARE YOU LOOKING for versatile
as well as economical main dishes
these days of high
prices? Fish will
fill the bill on both
counts, and none
of the family
needs turn up his
nose at these de
lectable foods
we’v* concocted.
They’re truly de
lightful and refreshingly different.
Just be sure to have enough for
seconds.
A small inexpensive can of fish
when combined with other nutritious
ingredients such as bread, milk,
cheese and vegetables makes a
hearty and protein-rich dish that
really satisfies. Serve a salad and
light but tangy dessert and you
have the foundation for your meal.
• * •
FOR THOSE DAYS when you
have to economize but still have
something the family cheers about,
select foods from this parade of
recipes. They’re kind to the food
budget.
LYNN CHAMBERS* MENU
IJot Spiced Tomato Juice
•Tuna Puffs Lemon Garnish
Grapefruit-Orange-Greens Salad
Tiny Hot Biscuits Jelly
Beverage Ginger Baker Pears
Cookies
•Recipe given
Tuna puff uses such nourish
ing .ingredients as eggs, milk
and bread crumbs to make a
hearty and satisfying dish out
of a small can of fish. Bake it
in individual casseroles for a
colorful edging around the vege
table platter.
0
•Tuna Puffs
(Serves 6)
4 tablespoons butter
K pound sliced mushrooms
4 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon salt
Few grains cayenne
1H cups milk
4 eggs, separated
1 cup freshly grated American
cheese
1 7-ounce can flaked tuna fish
2 cups fresh bread crumbs
Melt butter in saucepan,' add
mushrooms, cover and cook five
minutes over low heat, stirring oc
casionally. Remove mushrooms.
Add flour and seasonings to butter
left in pan and blend. Gradually add.
milk. Stir and cook over lew heat
until thickened. Beat egg yolks
slightly, add some hot sauce and
blend; return to remaining sauce
and cook two minutes longer. Fold
in grated cheese. Remove from
heat. Add drained, flaked tuna and
mix thoroughly. Cool. Beat egg
whites until stiff. Fold in fish mix
ture. Pour into six large, buttered
custard cups or individual cas
seroles. Bake in a moderately slow
(325 degree) oven, 45 minutes or
until firm. Serve with lemon. For
baking in a large casserole, allow
one and one-quarter hours baking
time.
Salmon-Rice Loaf
(Serves 6)
1 1-pound can red salmon, drained
2 cups hot cooked rice, blanched
2 tablespoons butter
Juice of % lemon
3 eggs, well beaten
Salt and pepper to taste
'A cup sliced stuffed green olives
Flake the salmon, add the rice
which has been tlioroughly drained
and to which the butter has been
added. Add lemon juice, olives and
seasonings to taste. Fold in beaten
eggs. TUrn into a buttered pan into
the bottom of
which a buttered
piece of paper has
has fitted. Bake
in a moderate
(350 degree) oven
for 45 to 50 min
utes or until loaf
has cooked through completely. Un
mold and garnish With lemon slices
and parsley.
loaf that is served with a very
colorful pea sauce that complimenti
the fish loaf perfectly:
Shrimp Loaf
(Serves 6)
2 eggs
1 cup milk
3 cups soft bread crumbs
2 cups canned shrimp, cleaned
and shredded
2 tablespoons parsley,. chopped
2 tablespoons onion, chopped
H teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper
Beat eggs; combine with milk,
add bread crumbs, shrimp, parsley,
onion, salt and pepper. Mix lightly
and place in a well-oiled loaf pan.
Bake in a moderate (350 degree)
oven for 45 minutes. Serve with
broiled tomatoes and the following
sauce:
Pimiento Pea Sauce
4 tablespoons butter
4 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
2 cups milk
2 pimientos, chopped and strained
1 cup cooked green peas
Melt butter in saucepan; blend in
flour, salt, p’epper and worchester-
shire sauce. Add milk and, stirring
constantly, cook until thickened.
Fold in pimientos and peas. Servs
hot.
• • •
IF YOUR FAMILY likes crab
meat, extend it cleverly with spa
ghetti. The same
recipe also can be
made with rice in
place«fof the spa- ,
ghetti. Use one- '■
half cup uncooked
rice and cook in boiling, salted wa
ter until tender. Rinse and drain.
Crab-Spaghetti Casserole
(Serves 6)
1 9-ounce package spaghetti
1 can cream of mushroom soup
3 tablespoons butter
1 cup milk
H pound sharp America* cheese
IK cup flaked crab meat
14 teaspoon pepper
Cook spaghetti in boiling salted
water until tender. Drain. Heat
soup, add butter and milk. When
hot, remove from heat and add
cheese, saving a little of the latter
c<r
LET SHRIMPS WIGGLE into
your menu plans with this colorful'
LYNN SAYS:
Meat Stretching Tricks
Are Always Popular
When you make a meat pie with
lots of smooth, brown gravy and
vegetables, topped with light tender
biscuits, the family won’t realize
you’re stretching the meat because
the dish is so delicious.
Chopped chicken and turkey or
ham mixed with canned cream of
mushroom soup make a nice dish
when they top a platter of cooked
and fried noodles. Flavor this with
a bit of onion.
Nutritious and tasty noodles
will extend many seafoods, and
will look attractive when baked
in a casserole. With this you
need serve only a crisp fruit or
vegetable salad and an espe
cially delicious dessert to make
the meal complete. It’s a good
idea to plan a baked dessert so
that the whole meal can be pre
pared in the oven.
to sprinkle on top of casserole. Com-
.bine cheese sauce with spaghetti,
crab meat and pepper. Place in
greased shallow casserole and sprin
kle with remaining cheese. Bake in
a hot (400 degree) oven for 25 tu
30 minutes.
Salmon Rarebit
>4 pound sharp cheese
1 cup tomato puree
% teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
1 tablespoon Worcestershire sau<
2 eggs, slightly beaten
1 cup .evaporated milk
1 1-pound can salmon
Melt cheese over boiling water,
blend in tomato puree and season
ings gradually. Add eggs to milk
and stir slowly into the cheese mix
ture. Add salmon broken in large
pieces and heat for five minutes.
Serve hot on toast.
Released by WNU Features.
Stews make meat go a long
way because you can add lots of
vegetables, gravy and dumplings
to them.
One cup of tuna fish flaked com
bined with one cup of biscuit mix,
one cup of com kernels and one
half cup milk and two eggs, sepa
rated, makes a nice fritter batter
and will serve six to eight people.
Green peppers stuffed with ham,
seafood, meat or chicken extended
with macaroni make an excellent
combination for a satisfying supper
or luncheon dish.
Old Letterdrops in
Small Towns Are
On Their V/ay Out
WASHINGTON. — The old-fash
ioned peekaboo letterdrop, a special
joy of small town Americans, is on
its way out. In its stead is coming
a strictly modern device that takes
half the fun out of mailing a letter.
This wouldn’t have happened if
Gilbert Stanley Underwood hadn't
visited the Herkimer, N. Y., postof
fice.
Underwood is chief architect for
the public buildings administration,
which designs and builds federal
buildings, including postoffices. He
gave a reporter this description of
what went on at Herkimer:
“The mail had just arrived, aad
the clerks had started to sort it.
Many townspeople were waiting to
get the mail from their boxes.
“Everyone seemed to know every
one else. They, seemed to know the
clerks, too. For one man after
another would step up to the letter-
drop, push back the flap, peek
through, recognize the pants of the
nearest clerk and say:
“Hey, Joe, give me my mail—Tnx
in a hurry.”
“I never imagined the letterdrop
would be put to such use,” Under
wood sl id in amazement.
So back in Washington, Under
wood designed a letterdrop so cun
ningly beveled on the inside as to
cut off the view entirely.
And no letter can overshoot the
mail box, no matter how hard it is
popped into the slot. Each letter
just slides upward over the beveled
surface, kerplunk into the container.
You’ll find nonpeek letterdrops in
all new postofiflees, and Underwood
said they’ll gradually replace the old
slots in the other buildings.
The Herkimer letterdrop?
It’s still there, but the clerks have
covered it with canvas—to prevent
peeping and to keep letters from
sailing through the air.
Trapped Boy Sacrifices
Pants but Gains Freedom
ST. LOUIS. — Police officers
had a choice of two ways of re
leasing Harry Charleville. 10,
after he had become wedged
between crisscross girders of a
bridge here. Their way and his.
The boy told the policemen to
cut the girders that were holding
him but they had a less dramatic
way.
Before a crowd of more than
100 they removed his trousers
and soaped jus body. Half an
hour later he was freed.
Embarrassed little Harry
grabbed his trousers and scur
ried home.
Hogs Adopt ‘New Look’,
They’re Thinner and Longer
LANSING, MICH.—It shouldn’t
happen to a hog.
But the fashionable, modern
model hog is coming out with an
entirely “new look.”
Falling in line with ordinary hu
man beings, this year’s crop of
hogs will be longer and thinner
than the war models.
Naturally the hogs have nothing
to do with it.
According to W. N. McMillen,
swine specialist at Michigan State
college, hogs which the meat pack
ers and pork producers want vary
with the public demand and the
need for lard.
During the war there was a
tendency to produce short thick
hogs to meet the public demand
and the demands from government
for lard. /
Swine authorities now claim.the
trend is swinging to a longer hog
with less fat, which makes for
more plates of bacon, loins, chops
and hams.
“Stylish stout” hogs won’t stand
a chance of copping a blue ribbon
at the county fairs, McMillen said.
“Hogs with the classiest chassis
will have the appearance of a well-
fed Greyhound,” he added.
Federal Agency Warns That
Raw Fish May Cause Death
COLLEGE PARK, MD. — Don’t
feed your dog too much raw fish,
says the fish and wildlife service.
Cooked fish is okay.
The same advice goes for your
cat, your canary, even your pet
fishes. It also might apply to the
feeding of human beings wherever
dried fish is consumed. •
Recent investigations have proved
beyond doubt, the agency says, that
several varieties of raw fish contain
thiaminase, an enzyme which de
stroys thiamin, otherwise known as
vitamin B-l. A deficiency of B-l
leads to nervous disorders and often
to death.
Aluminum Shelters With Hay
Roofs Keep Cattle Cooler
EL CENTRO. CALIF.—Imperial
valley cattle raisers have been ben
efited by experiments conducted by
two animal husbandrymen in devis
ing shade shelters that make live
stock more comfortable during sum
mer months.
Four types of shelters were built
at the Meloland experiment station
by N. R. Ittner, University of Cal
ifornia, and C. F. Kelly, United
States department of agriculture.
The experts found that shelters
with aluminum and hay roofs gave
the greatest protection to the grow
ing fat cattle used in the experiment.
classified;
DEPARTMENT;
AUTOS, TRUCKS ft ACCESS.
TRUCK—1941 INTERNATIONAL 1-ton.
new cab and stake body, goodtire® and m
good condition throughout. $1,000.
RAY CARTER, Ben Hill, On. RA. 8011
BUILDING MATERIALS
1—ROCKERCRETE Automatic Vitaatin*
Concrete Block Machine with 8x8x11
pa.lets, and 8x4x16 mold and pallets.
Condition good. _
S—8x8x16 Kiasam Oscillating Concrete
Block' Machines. Air Stripping.
t—4x8x12 Klssam Vibrators with At
Air Strip
ping. Condition good.
I—5-HTP. Air Compressor.
Priced to sell. Immediate delivery. Contact
FARMERS CONCRETE PRODUCTS, Ine.
Cannon Bridge Reed
Orangeberg, Sooth Carolina. Fhoae 11S4-W
BUSINESS & INVEST. OPPOR.
LADIES—Does your church, civic organ
ization or club need money? Do as thou
sands of organizations have done already.
Sell BOWERS OLD-FASHIONED PEA
NUT CRUNCH and OLD - FASHIONED
CREAMY MINTS that will make a hit im
mediately with your friends and will bring
a steady income to your group. For details
Write EARLE S. BOWERS CO.
» Se. Water SL - Philadelphia d. Pa.
MONET GROWING EASTER Lily BulhS
50 bulblets and how I do R 81.00.
r. T. REDDOCK Fitzgerald. On.
FARM MACHINERY fc EQUIP.
TRACTOR FOB SALE
International TDR-18 No. 3902. equipped
with radiator guard, belly guard, doubte
drum cable unit and 10 ft. bulldozer. Ex-
WARD. Box 825, Phene
8362,
TD-18 INTERNATIONAL
tractor with bull-grader^hydraulic control.
B. E. SMITH
(i bull-grader, hydrau
Completely Rebuilt.
TH - Dalton, Ga
Ga.,
FARMS AND RANCHES
CANADIAN FARMS—Write os far VKKB IN-
FORMATION on farm lettlement opportunities.
Fertile foils. Reasonably priced. R. C.
Canadian Pacifit Railway. Uniat
Paul, Minn.
HELP WANTED—MEN
COPPER JEWELRY SALESMAN ,
Southeastern states. S‘ ong selling, head-
made unusual jewelry. ExceUent repeats.
State FuU Particulars.
Renoir of California, Jnc.
4577Vfe Hollywood Bonlerard
Los Angeles 17 - Calif Tala
MISCELLANEOUS
1947 CUB PA-11—Excellent condition. Li
censed until July, 1949. First $1,175.00
will buy. CaU: D. W. FRAKE8, CA. 7721
•r CR. 1580. Atlanta, Ga.
Attention Fishermen! New Blood Bait For
mula. Special ingredients attracts FISH.
Send stamp lor details. Guar. Formula $1.
Hamsway Service,316N.9th Corsicanal, Tex.
, PERSONAL
TRADE YOUR NECKTIES!
Mail us one-to-six you are tired of. We,
promptly mail you same number of beauti
fully cleaned ties received from others.
Pay mailman $1 when delivered. Natisnal
Tie Exchange, Box 4798, Miami, Flerida.
TRAVEL
40 BRAND NEW ocean-front boardwalk,
one and two-bedroom apartments. Maid,
service, now ready for vacationists. Write
or phone Renee Hotel Apartments, 245
North Ocean Ave., Daytona Boaeh, Fla.
y&L 'IjoiVcJ'UtuAJLdkuf
*lt S SajoinqA. fiontU.
JVo Longer
Constipated
"Since I made all-bran my b tefc-
fast cereal I’ve stopped taking laxa
tives I”—Mrs. V. DeBonia, Pkiiadd-
phia. Pa.
If your diet lacks bulk for normal
elimination, this
delicious cerSai
will suppy it. Eat
an ounce every
day in milk—and
drink plenty of
water. If not sat
isfied after 10
days, send the
empty carton to
the Kellogg Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich., and get double
your money bace. Order kxlloogW
all-bran today.
ASMmriKDRBSfMi
MOROLINEgp,
PEIROLEUM JELL> 1 , • a/]
WNU—7
39-tt
That Na^inq*
Backache
May Warn of Disordered
Kidney Action
Modem life with its hurry and worry;
irregular habits, improper eating and
drinking—its risk of exposure and infec
tion—throws heavy strain on the work
of the kidneys. They are apt to become
over-taxed and fail to filter excess acid
and other impurities from the life-giving
blood.
You may suffer nagging backache,
headache, dizziness, getting up nights,
leg pains, swelling—feel constantly
tired, nervous, all worn out. Other signe
of kidney or bladder disorder are some
times burning, scanty or too frequent
urination.
Try Doan't PilU. Doan** help the
kidneys to pass off harmful excess body
waste. They have had -more than half n
century of public approval. Are recom
mended by grateful users everywhere.
Atk your neighbor!
Doans Pills
/*
U .V « V/. y c U|
Vi
, rS UP
TO7° 0 (
Do your buy
ing her«and
our t o w «
grow*. Go out
of town to
trade and out
goes our town.»