The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 15, 1948, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C.
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
Western Allies Place Berlin Issue
Before U.N. as Negotiations Fail;
Two Unions Barred From A-Plants
-By Bill Schoentgen, WNU Staff Writer-
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinion, nro oxpremed In thoe eolnmno. the, nro thooo o«
Wo,twn Newspaper Union’* now, snnlrsi, and n,t n,ee,,,rllr ot thl. newspsper.)
‘BLACK FURY’:
Peace Threat
There was no war in sight, yet the
East-West situation was starkly dan
gerous.
It was dangerous lor the United
States, Great Britain, France and
Sussia—and for the United Nations
which now had to thrust its hands
into the tangled skein of diplomatic
threads and try to straighten out
the snarls.
PRACTICALLY no optimism ex
isted among U. N. delegations in
Paris. There was no reason for
any.
The United States, Britain and
France had broken off negotiations
with Russia over blockaded Berlin
and referred the issue to the U. N.
security council as a threat to
peace.
No hint of appeasement appeared
in the western nations’ attitude.
They said thej- would reserve to
themselves the full right to take
whatever measures were necessary
to maintain their position in Berlin
while referring the case to the U. N.
BRITISH FOREIGN Secretary
Emest Bevin told the U. N. general
assembly that Russia would be to
blame if a “black fury,” the incal
culable disaster of atomic war,”
■trikes the world.
Immediate cause of this inflamed
condition in Europe was the blatant
bad faith exercised by the. Soviets
during the 58-day series of talks in
Moscow between the three western
ambassadors and Stalin and Molo
tov.
After the three ambassadors,
Smith of the U. S., Roberts of Eng
land and Chataigneau of France,
had left the Soviet capital the west
ern allies made public a 24,000-word
“white paper” charging the Rus
sians with welching on a secret
agreement by Stalin to lift the Ber
lin blockade.
WHEN THE western nations dis
covered the disillusioning fact that
Russia was literally trying to pull a
fast one in order to gain control of
Berlin, further direct negotiation
was patently useless. Thus, the is
sue was turned over to the security
council.
Not that anyone hoped the security
council would be able to take any
effective action. The Russian veto
probably would nullify any efforts it
might make.
MOTIVES:
Russian
Washington believes the crisis
centering in Berlin will continue at
fever pitch at least until next spring
—provided it does not explode into
total war before then.
It is a bad outlook, of course,
from the U. S. viewpoint. But for
the Russians the coming six months
loom as a golden opportunity to ex
pand their power in Europe and
throughout the world.
THEY WILL be able to do this,
they believe, because American ef
forts and sentiment will be divided
and weakened by the election cam
paign.
Official Soviet attitude is that
American leaders will be so im
mersed in domestic affairs that, they
will be able to give only a fraction
Futility Unlimited
These are the three western
ambassadors to Russia who en
gaged in six weeks of rigorous
but unavailing diplomatic fenc
ing with Soviet Foreign Minister
V. M. Molotov on the subject of
Germany and the Berlin block
ade. They were able to accom
plish nothing and finally left Mos
cow to report to the heads of their
respective governments. Left to
right are: Yves Chataigneau,
France; Walter Bedell Smith, U.
8., and Frank Roberts, Great
Britain.
Bill Colltttor
Russia, the only nation that has
not closed its lend-lease account
with the U. S., has been asked to
pay up pronto.
The state department, in o new
note, called upon the Soviets to re
sume negotiations for settling its
long overdue lend-lease account of
11 billion dollars.
News of the action was kept se
cret fer two weeks for fear of up
setting the delicate Berlin discus-
of their time to consideration of in
ternational developments.
That’s why the Russians are try
ing to shoot the works now. It is
why they saw fit to make the virtu
ally impossible demand for control
of all traffic—land, air and water—
between Berlin and western Ger
many as one of the conditions for
lifting the blockade which has
throttled the German capital since
June.
WHAT IS IT the Russians want sfl
badly that they are willing to risk
an atomic war to get?
Briefly, they want to get the U. S.
out of Europe, and that means
nothing else but that they want to
control Europe themselves.
The Kremlin, some time ago, re
jected a proposal that Russia and
the western allies stabilize their
military and political positions
roughly along the lines that existed
immediately after the war.
ACCORDING TO the Russian plan
for domination of Europe, that ar
rangement would be no good be
cause the Soviets fear the West
would gain and they would lose too
much.
With American help, western Eu
rope could consolidate and strength
en its position and possibly prosper
to the extent that Russia’s situation
in the East would be endangered.
Moreover, the Soviet satellites, influ
enced by a free and thriving West,
would be difficult to control.
IN THE RUSSIAN mind it fol
lows, then, that America must be
driven out, the European recovery
program destroyed and the whole
of Europe reduced to such a state
of disorder and poverty that it would
be unable to resist Russian de<
mands. *
ANYTHING NEW'—
Cooler Crisis
HOTTEST QUESTION of the
month in Washington for a while
was not “Who will win the elec
tion?” It was not “Will we get into
war?"
It was a question of who ordered
96 gleaming, new 1948 model I re
frigerators installed in the offices
of every one of the United States
senators.
Government workers were busily
engaged in clamping the refriger
ators to the office floors (at an esti
mated cost of well above $10,000)
before anybody thought to ask who
had conceived this ingenious
scheme.
THE PROJECT called for mov
ing refrigerators into the offices of
senators who never before had had
them and putting new ones into
those senatorial sanctums that al
ready wer# equipped with old ones.
It was a clear case of higher
standards of living for solons.
Senate appropriations committee
staff-members denied they had ap
proved any appropriation for sena
torial refrigerators, said further
more that there was no record of
any such appropriation.
RANKING NEXT to* the riddle of
who put the refrigerators there was
the question of why a senator should
need a refrigerator in the first
place.
Somebody said maybe they were
intended to replace the pigeonhole
as convenient spots to keep legisla
tion proposed by the President on
ice.
NO ATOMS:
Two Unions
Mortally afraid of skulduggery at
the atomic crossroads, the govern
ment has acted to bar unions whose
officers refuse to take the non-Com-
munist oath from its atom bomb
plants.
SPECIFICALLY, the atomic en
ergy commission issued an order
telling two CIO unions to keep out
of atomic installations — the CIO
United Electric Workers and the
CIO United Public Workers.
The action came on the heels of
congressional charges that a net
work of Soviet spy rings tried dur
ing the war to dig up atomic se
crets for Moscow.
Also, the atomic energy commis
sion said, other unions from now on
will be recognized officially as qual
ified to work in atom plants only if
they can qualify for certification by
the national labor relations board.
Said David E. Lilienthal, chair
man of the commission, all atomic
energy facilities must be operated
“in a manner best calculated to as
sure that those who participate in
the program are loyal to the United
States.
ACTUALLY. UNION activity in
all atomic plants, with the excep
tion of the one at Oak Ridge, has
been curtailed sharply since the
atomic bomb project was launched.
Nevertheless, a number of unions
have tried to keep active in the
hope that the curbs on union organi
zational work would be eased in the
future.
A congressional committee had
heard testimony from a self-de
scribed former Communist that the
United Electrical Workers was “the
largest Communist - dominated or
ganization in the United States."
Rose Bushed
No one has yet counted up all
the "Tokyo Roses,” but it seems
like there’s one behind every
bush. Latest of these is Califor
nia-born Mrs. Iva Togury D’Aqui
no, whom the U. S. government
charges with being one of Japan’s
most ardent wartime radio propa
gandists. She was brought here
to stand trial for treason.
WHIZ:
Rocket Plane
It wasn’t the sort of subject that
Stuart Symington cared to be very
specific about, but the air secretary
did hint in an Air Force association
speech that the U.S. X-l rocket-pow
ered research plane might have
blasted through the air at a speed
of from 860 to 1,000 miles an hour.
SYMINGTON MADE this star
tling semi-disclosure in an off-hand
manner. Enumerating achieve
ments by the air force during the
past year, he made mention of “an
airplane flying hundreds of miles
faster than the speed of sound,
which is 760 miles per hour at sea
level.”
AS ORIGINALLY designed, the
X-l was supposed to reach a speed
of ,1,107 miles an hour at 40,000
feet altitude and 1,700 miles an
hour at 80,000 feet.
AS FAR AS is known, only two
X-l type planes now are in opera
tion by the government—one by the
air force and the other by the na
tional advisory committee for aero
nautics.
Five other X-l models are on or
der, and a new and drastically dif
ferent design, the X-4, is awaiting
trial flight.
BIG LIFT:
To Berlin
Despite the smug Russian belief
that Berlin could not be supplied
from the air, the American air lift
to the blockaded German capital
has been spectacularly successful.
DURING THE first 90 days of the
great aerial portage American
transport planes flew more than
200,000 tons of food, fuel and medi
cine into Berlin since the Soviets
clamped or. their blockade in mid-
June.
Air force headquarters at Wies
baden said its planes had flown
more than 15 million miles, through
good weather and bad, along the
narrow air corridors from the west
ern zone of Germany to keep the
heart of Berlin’s isolated western
sector beating.
IN THE FIRST 90 days 28,846
flights were made, with the air
cargo including 125,608 tons of coal,
68,142 tons of food and 7,748 tons
of other necessary items.
A typical 24-hour period in the air
lift has about 400 flights carrying
more than 3,000 tons of supplies into
the besieged city.
EXPORTS:
Up or Down?
Predictions by the department of
agriculture that U. S. grain exports
during the current crop year may
top last year’s record by nearly
four million tons was expected to
give rise to a cabinet tiff over how
much grain should be shipped over
seas.
There are two schools of thought.
Charles F. Brannon, secretary of
agriculture, favors increasing ex
ports to prevent possible surpluses
in the U. S. that might lead to an
expensive price support program.
SECRETARY OF Commerce
Charles W. Sawyer, on the other
hand, insists that grain shipments
should be cut to a minimum in or
der to keep food prifes down in this
country. He argues, also, that Eu
rope would be better off to use ifc
dollars for industrial machinery
rather than food.
According to the agriculture de
partment, the world’s big exporting
countries probably will have about
W per cent more grain to spare this
y£kr than in 1947-48 when exports
topped 34.6 million tons.
THE DEPARTMENT added that
the U. S. “is again likely to pro
vide nearly half of the total world
trade.”
Last year the United States ex
ported slightly more than 15 million
tons—nearly 44 per cent of all the
grain exported.
PEARY:
Left a Note
A United States expedition to the
Arctic last summer found documents
left there in 1905 by Rear Adm.
Robert E. Peary, discoverer of the
North Pole, a recent state depart
ment announcement has disclosed.
The brief report contained no ex
planatory details. It said: “As is
usual on northern expeditions,
Peary’s notes found in the cairn
were replaced by appropriate docu
ments.” ,
Don't Overstock the
Pond If You Want
Excellent Fishing
AMES, IOWA — Don’t put too
many fish in your farm pond if you
want good fishing.
That is the advice given by Ken
neth Carlander, fishery expert of
Iowa State college.
Carlander, in cooperation with
the state conservation commission
and the United States wildlife serv
ice, conducted studies in which a
sampling was made of Iowa’s esti
mated 10,000 farm ponds.
Most common cause of poor fish
ing, he found, was overstocking.
Some ponds were discovered to
be too shallow, some too small
and others generally not suited for
fish.
Carlander recommended a pond
of one acre, from 10 to 12 feet
deep, as probably the most satis
factory.
He advised limiting the stock
to 100 fingerling large mouth bass
and 1,000 blue gill flngerlings per
acre in rich ponds. More than that
is overstocking, he said, and even
that number is too great for ponds
that are not fertilized.
The bass will feed on the blue
gills and keep their numbers down,
Carlander said.
He added hsking may be started
after the first spanning. To pro
vide balanced growth, catch and
take home as many fish as possi
ble but don’t exceed the legal lim
its, he advised.
Eager Beaver Evens Score
With Juvenile Campers
NEWBURGH, N, Y. — John
Orth, director of the Trailside
museum at Bear mountain, tells
a story about a beaver and
some boys.
Each night the beaver depos
ited a pile of sticks on a lake
dock near a boys’ camp, he re
lates. Each morning the boys
used the sticks for their camp
fires.
That went on for some time,
until one morning the boys
looked for the expected pile of
sticks, only to find their dock
floating out in the lake.
The beaver took his revenge
by gnawing away the pilings
under the dock.
Mother of Four Gets Degree
After 13 Years of Study
PITTSBURGH. — Thirteen years
of night school study, sandwiched
between babytending, housework
and cooking, paid off for dark
haired Mrs. Virginia Geary. She
finally got her college diploma.
The 32-year-old mother of four
children graduated from Duquesne
university’s school of commerce
with a bachelor of science degree.
One of the proudest spectators
at the graduation was her four-
year-old son, Kevin. The U-month-
old twin girls and Mark, eight,
stayed at home.
“Mark said he’d rather stay
home and play tiddledywinks,” his
mother explained.
Mrs. Geary, who started as a
stenographer, started to the Du
quesne night school in 1935. She
had completed two years of work
when she met and married a young
law student, Martin Geary.
Her husband, now a successful
lawyer, did the baby-sitting at
night so his wife could attend
classes.
Doctor Reports Carving at
Lake Is 20,000 Years Old
SANTA FE, N. M.—Dr. Helmuth
de Terra reports that a carving,
found on the shores of Mexico’s
prehistoric Lake Texcoco, is about
20,8(10 years old.
That is about 10,000 years older
than the Tepexpan man whose dis
covery won international recogni
tion for the 48-year-old Viking fund
anthropologist.
The carving, one and a half
inches long, was cut from an ele
phant molar. It is now at the Mexi
can national museum in Mexico
City.
It was brought to de Terra by an
excavator in a sand pit near the
site where de Terra found the
Tepexpan man.
He said the carving might have
been the right foot of a statue or an
amulet used in healing ceremonies.
“Whatever its use," he said, “it
is interesting and heretofore un
known, first that man lived as early
as 20,000 years ago on this conti
nent, and second that early man
had a good deal higher culture than
before supposed.”
Excavations Begin on Site
Of Prehistoric Village
CARTAJtO, PORTUGAL.—Exca
vations have begun on the site
where traces of a prehistoric
bronze age settlement were found
some years ago. The site is at Vila
Nova Sao Pedro, - where it is pre
sumed the village was destroyed
by fire about 1700 B. C.
Excavations in 1947 showed that
in the center of the village there
must have been a granary, far
charred grains still existed. Silex
arrows also were found.
Under the layer of ashes many
valuable archeological objects were
found, such as polished stone hatch
ets, rounded hammers, sickles,
blades, charred bones and buttons.
CollegeProfessor
Studies Slang
Of Tough Thugs
LOUISVILLE, KY.—Who would
think the study of fish off the Grand
Banks of Newfoundland would bring
a man fame as a specialist in the
slang of criminals?
That was the chain reaction set
off when David W. Maurer, fresh
out of college, took a job prying
into the migration habits of deep
sea fish nlong the North Atlantic
coast. It was in 1929, the heyday
of bootleggers and rum-running.
Rum fleets were active around
the Grand . Banks.
Maurer became interested in the
peculiar jargon of the rum fleet
crews. One thing led to another
until the erstwhile fish student,
now Dr. Maurer of the University
of Louisville English department,
is widely known for his articles and
lectures on criminal argot.
Maurer insists he is not an
"authority" or “expert” in this
field. He' says there isn’t any
such thing. However, it is doubt
ful whether any other scholar in
the United States has such a large
vocabulary of underworld lingo.
Also, there probably are few uni
versity professors with as many
contacts among pickpockets, safe
crackers and confidence men.
Reasons for His Study
Why bother with such uncultivat
ed language? That’s a logical ques
tion which Maurer often is asked.
“In the first place,” the profes
sor explains, “it’s a part of the
English language. Leaving it un
studied would be like leaving a
part of the world unmapped.”
Second, he says, criminal argots
feed the larfguage constantly with
new words. Few of us realize how
many words and expressions now
used in polite society were coined
by criminal groups.
The expression, "pass the buck,”
seems to have started’among card
players of American pioneer days.
Maurer says the best information
he can get suggests that a knife
with a buckhom handle sometimes
was laid before each player in
turn to indicate who was dealer.
Other Expressions
We call a close friend a "side
kick.” Maurer explains that to a
pickpocket it means a side pocket
of an overcoat. Hence the term is
used for someone who is always
by one’s side.
Maurer points out that terms
that have become obsolete in lit
erature often survive in under
world lingo. From there they some
times are reintroduced into every
day speech.
Take the word “phoney,” for in
stance. Maurer still is working on
it. but he believes it came from
an old Irish word, “flanne." Eight
eenth century London crooks pro
nounced it “fawny.” They ^used it
to mean a lead ring plated with
gold, later any false jewelry and
finally anything not what it seems.
The spelling "phoney,” came into
use in this country after 1900, ap
parently by a connection in the
criminal’s mind or ear with the
word “phoney,” for telephone.
Money Returned to Loser
With Nearly $200 Profit
READING, PA.—Money may not
grow on trees, but Martin Boyer
is convinced it sometimes springs
from nowhere.
Boyer, treasurer of a knitting
mill bowling team, placed a cigar
box containing $6(|p on the running
board of his car while preparing
to drive to a New Jersey resort.
Then he forgot the box and drove
off. The box fell off the running
board right in front of the knit
ting mill where Boyer works.
Boyer didn’t discover his loss
until he reached the shore and
telephoned Police Chief Raymond
Miller. Meanwhile, other knitting
mill employees reported the license
number of a motorist they saw
pick up the box.
Boyer and Chief Miller went to
the motorist’s home and recovered
the box, which now contained—
not $600 but $719.40. An additional
$77 was turned in by knitting mill
workers who said they found the
money. ,
No one could explain the extra
$196.40.
Mother, 38, Bears Her 22nd
Child in Atlanta Hospital
ATLANTA, GA — A 38-year-old
Atlanta woman proudly exhibited
her 22nd child in Atlanta hos
pital.
Mrs. Maude Ethel Pope named
the new baby, a boy, Daniel Mar
tin Pope after the attending phy
sician.
She says this is her last child,
explaining:
“Twenty-two children for a 38-
year-old woman is enough.”
Mrs. Pope said “about 10” of her
22 children are still living.
Mrs. Pope made news when she
went to the city hospital for
“treatment.” She told doctors she
had been working too hard dig
ging a well at her house.
It developed that Mrs. Pope not
only dug a well but built “enough
of a house for us to live in.” She
commented from her hospital bed:
“As soon as I’m able to get up
and about. I’m going to finish the
house.”
Families Enjoy Variety in Desserts!
{Ste Recipes Below)
Dessert Patterns
“MY FAMILY CAN enjoy the
same meat and vegetable dishes,"
says a homemaker, “but they real
ly want variety in their desserts.
It’s hard to keep enough good, easy
to make things on hand to satisfy
them.”
Well, our hunger patterns are
usually satisfied by the time we get
to the “frosting”
of the meal, and
we all like some
thing special. We
may want to sav-
or the main
course, but we
like surprises for
desserts.
The woman who is busy with many
household duties might like to skip
dessert just because she can’t think
of something new, or because des
serts are a bit too complicated to
prepare, or so she thinks. How about
some easy but sure to be good des
serts for family or company din
ners?
• , •
YOU’LL WANT to choose a light,
fluffy gelatin or fruit dessert when
the meal’s been substantial. If, on
the other hand, the meal has been
a hurry-up affair then give the folks
a nice, rich, baked dessert which
will really stick to the ribs. Above
all, make them picture pretty, gay,
colorful and breath-takingly good
like those in the column today.
Cranberry Log
H cop sifted cake flour
H teaspoon baking powder
Vt teaspoon salt
3 egg yolks
3 egg whites
14 teaspoon cream ot tartar
H cup sugar.
Beat egg whites until frothy. Add
cream of tartar and beat stiff. Add
% cup sugar and beat until points
are formed. Add remaining sugar to
egg yolks ard beat until thick and
light colored. Fold carefully into egg
white mixture. Then fold in sifted
dry ingredients. Pour into a shallow
pan, 9 by 12 inches, which has been
greased and lined with waxed paper.
Bake 20-25 minutes at 350 degrees.
Have ready a strip of waxed paper
cut about 15 inches longer than the
cake. Sprinkle thickly with powdered
sugar the section on which the cake
will be turned. Roll up 15 inches of
paper to form a thin roller which
will make center for the rolled cake.
When cake has baked, turn out
on powdered sugar. Remove paper
from cake. Then,
mv// starting with roll-
'''rZft, er, roll up cake
'v, like a jelly roll.
Cool.
Unroll cake
when cool and
spread with soft
ened cream
cheese and reroll tightly.
Cherry Cream Pudding
(Serves 6-8)
6 eggs, separated
VA cups sugar
H cup boiling water
1 cup sifted cake flour
1 teaspoon cream of tartar
Vi teaspoon vanilla
H teaspoon almond extract
Slowly jioil sugar and water until
it threads when dropped from the
end of a spoon. Beat the whites stiff.
Pour hot syrup over whites slowly,
and beat until cool. Beat egg yolks
until thick and lemon-colored and
blend in egg white mixture. Add
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Swiss Steak with Brown Gravy
Baked Potatoes
Green Peas with Onion
Tossed Vegetable Salad
Rolls Beverage
•Orange Spanish Cream
Cookies
•Recipe Given.
flavorings, then sifted dry ingredi
ents. Bake in an ungreased tube
pan in a moderate (350 degrees)
oven until golden and done, about
one hour. Cool and fill center with
one can (No. 1) of black, pitted
cherries which have been folded in
two cups sweetened whipped cream.
Molded Rice Pudding
(Serves 6-8)
2 cups cooked rice
1 No. 2H size can apricots
2 tablespoons gelatin m
H cup cold water
2 slices pineapple, ent up
1 cup whipping cream
2 tablespoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Add the juice from the can ot
apricots to the cooked rice. Stir over
a-low flame until rice has absorbed
the juice. Soak gelatin in cold wa 1
ter. Stir into hot rice. Add all ez- I
cept a few apricots (saved for gai-
nish) which have been rubbed
through a sieve. Mix in pineapple.
Mix lightly so as not to mash the
rice. When mixture begins to set,
add whipped cream which has been
mixed with sugar and vanilla. Pour
into a cold rinsed mold and allow
to chill. Turn out onto platter and
garnish with apricot halves and ad
ditional whipped cream, if desired.
, , ,
HERE ARE EASY variations of
an unflavored gel
atine i-nd orange
juice dessert. Sj
You also may
use any other
fruit juice you
prefer to unlock
even more pos
sibilities for you.
Basic Clear Orange Gelatine
(Serves 4)
1 envelope unflavored gelatine
% cup cold orange Juice
1% cups hot orange juice
% cup sugar
% teaspoon salt
Soften gelatine in cold orange
juice. Add hot orange juice, sugar
*>nd salt; stir until dissolved. Pour
into molds and chill until firm.
ORANGE WHIP: Use basic recipe
with following change. Chill gela
tine mixture until slightly thicker
than unbeaten egg whites; beat with
rotary beater until light *and fluffy.
Turn into molds and chill until
firm.
•ORANGE SPANISH CREAM: Use
basic recipe with following changes.
Soften gelatine in one cup cold milk
in top of double boiler. Place over
boiling water. Add sugar and salt
and stir until gelatine and sugar
are dissolved. Beat two egg yolks
slightly. Pour a small amount of
the hot mixture over egg yolks. Re
turn to double boiler and cook over
hot, not boiling, water, stirring con
stantly until mixture coats the
spoon. Remove from heat; cooL
Stir in three-quarter cup cold orange
juice; chill until thickened. Beat
two egg whites until stiff. Fold in
gelatine mixture and chill until firm
in mold.
Released by WNU Features.
LYNN SAYS: I
Provide Hot, Hearty
Meals on Cold Days
Give pork chops a new and dif
ferent flavor by breading them, and
then baking in tomato juice with
slices of lemon.
All fruit salads may be made to
appear richer when made with fruit
flavored gelatin and sieved cottage
cheese, and then molded.
If you’re afraid that dinner won’t
fill appetites well enough, add a
hot cream soup or chowder to the
menu. •
Serve hot breads with plenty of
sweetened spreads such as jam,
jelly, marmalade or fruit butters
to add calories to otherwise slender
meals.
Ham, broccoli and cheese baked
in ramekins provide a tasty and
nourishing cold weather main dish.
Use a cream sauce to bind all in
gredients together.
The addition of chopped eggs to
salad dressings for vegetable or
main dish salads is an excellent
way of getting your daily quota of
this fine protein food.
building materials
SUPPLY DEALERS ,ni PLUMBERS
We deliver Concrete Drain Tile 4 ,r Xia •
Truck Load Lots.
feERBT A PERCY, Palien, G*. Phene 1
BUSINESS & INVEST, oppon,
BE INDEPENDENT
START YOUR OWN BUSINESS
with a
SAKRY ICE CREAM
FROSTED MALTED MILK
and
CUSTARD MACHINE
DEALERS WANTED!
KENNYMACK INDUSTRIES
617 So. Oregon Ato„ Tampa, Fla.
NEIGHBORHOOD MARKET with floe
room house attached and duplex aptn. eaa
tide street, comer lot in best seetton ot
town. Home and security in one invent*
ment. City of 6,000 and growing fast.
$20,000 includes market
r. B. DAVIS. Vldalia, Ga.
DOGS. CATS. PETS, ETC.
FOR SALE—SIX DALMATIAN PUPPIES,
13 week, old: of the very heat breeding in ,
lie South. Paper, furnished. Writ. |
nr. B. SPEARMAN - Seelal Ctrale. On.
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT
FOR SALE—35-h.p. Frick locomotive type
boiler, integral firebox with water Injector
and stack In good condition. Can be in
spected at Callaway Mills Company, Pin.
view Plant, Manchester, Ga. Phone M «
call E. H. WHITE, Fh. 3384. CALLAWAY
MILLS COMPANY, LaQrange, Geargta,
FARM MACHINERY & EQUIP, i
ONE BRAND NEW Irrigation outfit; «ria|
irrigate two acre, at the time, alao one
Hammer Mill and one brand new half-ton
feed mixer: all three of theae ara real
p^f^MEADOWS* 17 - Vldalia, Oeergin
FARMS AND RANCHES
CANADIAN FARNS-Wrh. ■» f^jSSS.'
FORMATION on fin, i.Ulfeeit MjKjtnnmjJl.
Futile eolle. ReMoaeblj rrleeL B. t Bwjwlh.
Canadian racist Rallvaj. Unis, Butian M.
Paul. Minn.
T
HELP WANTED—MEN, WOMEN
EITPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
In Cut a. Central and South America. Good
pay; xcellent working conditions. Infor-
matloi on Travel A Jobs, $1.00.
MOORE - 3001 Lae, Mantee, In.
MISCELLANEOUS
CLEAN.'1840 TAYLORCRAFT S JSS
1946 EriCOUPE 12$
1946 PIPER J-3 CUB MS
1945 P. T. 19 FAIRCHILD a S5§
1947 SUPER CRUISER ■ ■ • • -IMS
SOUTHEASTERN AIR SERVICE, INC.
P. O. Box 71*
Municipal Airport, Atlanta, Ca. 1171.
CONCORD NURSING HOME,
INp.
This Institution changed ownership
Aug. 1, 1948. It la now under con
stant medical supervision and compe
tent personnel. A physical examine-
tion is made of each patient entering
this InstitutloiTWmd once each month
thereafter. We specialize In the care
of the aged and infirm.
WRITE BOX 1100 OR .
PHONE 5112, CONCORD, N. C./
for information.
STRAWBERRY PLANTS. —_
Klondyke and Blakemore. 100 for $3.0..
500 for $5.00; 1,000 for $8.00 postpaid. John
Lightfoot and Son, Birehweod, Team.
CABIN CRUISER—*6'
Steelcraft, 1947 model, with reduction
gears. Excellent condition. Price $3,300,
WILLIAM H. WILLETT
State Arsenal Pier, St. AagasUae, FleriSa
PLANER — NEWMAN HEAVY DUTY,
been completely rebuilt with ball hearings.
JARRELL MACHINE SHOP. CaU 4-7700 er
write J. P. GODWIN, Rt. 0, Bex ZOO Y.
Charlotte, North Carolina.
YOUR INSURANCE POLICIES are among
e ur most valuable possessions. Do you
ow and fully understand what they
mean? Mail any type of Insurance policy
and $3 ‘ 3 us and you will receive a full
explanation In common everyday language.
INSURANCE BRIEFS, In,.
P.O. Drawer 3471 - Orland#, Fie.
AIRPLANES
1 AERONCA CHIEF ... 280 hour, total
Just relicensed. Always hangared.
Invest in Your Country—
Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!
DOUBLE FILTERED
FOR EXTRA
QIUUTY
•PURITY
P" P r| TT.
MOROLINE
Pb T ROLE U M JELLY
10 other rub acts faster hi
BEWITCHING EYES
Long, coplus curled eyelashes can be
obtained with
GRETA CREAM
Black, blue, brbwn, green and natural;
It is due to this cream of ricinus and
aroma blooms the beautiful eyelashes
of the Cuban women. Instructions with
the product. It lasts over 6 months.
COUPON
Peres y del Maso. P. O. Box #218$.
Havana, Caba.
Enclosed money order for $1.50 for a
far of GRETA CREAM, delivered at
this locality.
Color
Name ?•••••••
Street
rstv.
WNU—7
41—48
rt’S-t*'*
Monsy spsnt at
horns pays com-
munity divi-
dsnds. Monsy
spsnt away is a