The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, November 26, 1948, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C.
WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS
New Crisis Appears in Germany
As Russ Threaten Berlin Airlift;
Rent Control Extension Proposed
— ■ By Bill Schoentgea, WNU Staff Writer
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions nro oxnr.ooed In theno columns, the. nro those ol
Western Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.]
AIRLIFT:
New Crisis
Morally defeated In their efforts
to make good the blockade of Ber-
Ur, the Soviets were brewing up a
new batch of trouble tc keep Amer
ican planes out of the skies over
the German capital.
The Russian military administra
tion in Berlin charged that foreign
planes had flown illegally over the
Soviet zone of Germany and
threatened to force such planes
down if it ever happened again.
IT HAD all the earmarks of a des
perate, last-ditch attempt to keep
the U. S. airlift from succeeding
in its mission of supplying food and
fuel to Germans inside the block
aded zones.
But American officials weren’t
having any of it. In a brittle reply to
the Soviet letter. Brig. Gen. C. K.
Galley stated that if any Americans
were injured as a result of a plane’s
being forced down the full respon
sibility would rest on Soviet shoul
ders.
THE RUSSIAN letter, received
from Lt. Gen. G. S. Lukyanchenko,
chief of staff of the Soviet military
administration, asserted that “for
eign aircraft not bearing identifi
cation marks of nationality’’ had
flown over Soviet territory both
within and without the international
air corridors. ’
His missive concluded with a flat,
two-point threat of Red intentions
in the future:
1. SOVIET air patrols would force
down all unidentified aircraft over
the Soviet zone.
2. SOVIET air patrols would
force down all foreign aircraft ap
pearing over the Soviet zone out
side the limits of the air corridors
and greater Berlin.
The incident was tabbed as “the
latest crisis” in the Berlin situa
tion, but in comparison to the
other crises that have come and
gone this one appeared to be little
more than a tempest in a tea
pot. It seemed to convey the im
pression that the Russians were
losing their grip—that they couldn’t
even foment a real, hot crisis any
more.
Not that the affair was to be
taken lightly. In an atmosphere
charged with hostility it wouldn’t
take much more than the inten
tional destruction of one American
plane to touch off a serious con
flict. /
CONTROL:
On Rents
One of the promises that Presi
dent Truman made to the people
during his campaign ^toor was that
he would secure an extension of
rent controls.
And scarcely had the startling
election day passed before a con
certed rent control effort was be
ing brought under way by the Dem
ocrats. Rent Director Tighe E.
Woods announced that he would
ask the new congress not only to
extend but to strengthen the pres
ent rent control law.
HE SAID he would ask congress
to extend the rent law for 12
months past its present expiration
date, March 31, and to close what
he considers three big loopholes in
the present act.
“The shortage of rental housing
is more serious today, especially in
the smaller communities, than it
was a year ago,” he declared.
In addition to extending and
buttressing the present law. Woods
indicated that he probably would
propose that congress give him
new authority to restore controls,
or impose them for the first time,
in areas that may be boomed by
new defense activity.
These are the changes he will
ask:
1. EVICTION CONTROLS — Re
store federal control over evictions.
Now evictions are left to local
courts. The result. Woods said, is
a serious black market in rents.
2. TREBLE DAMAGES—Give the
rent director power to sue rent
violators for three times their
overcharge. Now only the tenant
can bring such suits. This means
that 'landlords usually get off with
simple repayment of the over
charge.
3. CRIMINAL SANCTIONS—Pro
vide jail terms and fines for con*
▼icted violators. This would give
the rent director a weapon to back
up his orders.
Woods was confident that the new
Democratic congress would receive
his proposals cordially, and most
sources on Capitol Hill confirmed
that belief.
LUCIUS CLOBB
On Election Polls
Lucius Clobb, elder statesman and
political polltergeist of Pawhooley
county, wore a strained expression as
be opened the frosted glass and chicken
wire door of Mayor Ryerson Bucket's
office.
, "Momin’ and a variety of congratu
lations, Rye," said he. "Mighty glad
to see you overflowin’ the same old hole
in that chair seat. That upstart Clem
Cropper that the opposition put up as
a candidate agin you run a poor race,
didn’t he?"
"You mean,” snapped Rye Bucket,
"the upstart that you were running
around the county svinding your horn
would win the election hands down?
You and your scientific barber poll.
Ha!” The mayor snorted stridently.
"Now, Rye," said Mister Clobb with
some dignity, "you shouldn’t talk like
that. I voted for you. Or l would’ve
if / hadn’t sneezed in the voting booth
and blew out the candle so l couldn't
see where 1 was making an X. Turned
out that I didn’t get an X in any one
of those danged circles."
"And what about your Xyuk) barber
poll?" yukked the mayor.
"Well, now that was what I thought
was a genuine scientific poll from
which l thought sure l could predict
the outcome of the election. 1 was so
blamed objective that l didn't ask no
body nothin’."
"Then how in the name o' Harry
could you get any opinions?"
Mister Clobb combed his whiskers
reflectively. "That’s why I called it a
barber poll,” he said. "Day after day
l set in Ebenezer Snock’s barber shop
and watched people get haircuts. I fig
ured l had a system.
"When a man come in and said to
Eb, 'Clippers all around, Eb,‘ l figgered
him for a Demmycrat. And anybody
who come in and asked to have the
sideburns left on—well, what could he
be but a Republican? I thought they’d
vote accordin' to their haircuts.
"Beauty of the system was that it
didn!t involve no subtile unknown
quantities like the quick shiftin’ of a
man’s opinion or the deep currents that
flow beneath a man’s conscious think-
in’." *
"Yeah, a beautiful system. Mister
Clobb," sighed the mayor in a more
kindly tone.' "I’m kinda sorry it didn't
work out right."
"Thanks, Rye,” murmured the elder
statesman, and his whiskers twitched.
"It was beautiful. A beautiful system."
INDICTED r
Thomas
Red - fighting Rep. J. Parnell
Thomas (R., N. V.), chairman of
th< house un-American activities
committee, was in hot water, and
it was making his neck as red as
the political complexion of any
Communist he had ever pointed a
finger at.
AFTER two months of ominous
rumblings to the effect that some
thing dire was in store for the GOP
congressman who had caused the
administration so much trouble by
shouting that the government was
employing Communists, the news
broke: Thomas was charged by a
federal grand jury of conspiring to
pad the payroll of his congressional
office.
The indictment accused Thomas
and his former secretary. Miss
Helen Campbell, of conspiring to
maintain fictitious employees in
Thomas’ office so the salaries paid
to these persons could be diverted
into Thomas’ bank account.
At his Allendale, N. J., home,
Thomas growled, "I have nothing
to say at this moment.” But he
would have an opportunity to speak
when his trial got under way,
probably in January.
Kicked Back 4
Miss Helen Campbell, ex
secretary to Rep. J. Parnell
Thomas (R., N. J.), Is in
volved with the congressman in
a federal grand jury indictment
on charges that he “induced’'
her and another employee to
“kick back” their salaries to
him.
POLLING THE VOLTS
Strides Made in Production of Electricity
While the output of electricity has
more than doubled in the past
eight years and has been rising to
new record heights for each suc
cessive month, the unit cost to con
sumers is less than before the war.
In a recapitulation of strides
made by the industry, an article
in the November issue of “Business
Comment,” bulletin of the Northern
Trust company, states that power
production during the first nine
months of 1948 was about 11 per
cent above the corresponding peri
od in 1947. Output in 1947 was 15
per cent above 19*6.
The electric power industry now
serves more than 40 million cus
tomers, contrasted with 29.1 mil
lion customers as of December 31,
1939, an increase of more than
one-third.
Woman of the Year
For “eminent achievement”
in the field of commerce and
industry, 70-year-old Dr. Lil
lian M. Gilbreth (jjgbt) was
honored by the American.
Woman’s association as the na
tion’s “Woman of the Year.”
Mrs. Fanny 8. Sweeney pre
sents the award. Dr. Gilbreth
is the mother of 12 children and
grandmother of 18.
CHINA WAR:
Panic
In Nanking, Peiping, Shanghai
and other terrorized cities along
the China coast the words on the
lips of all foreigners was “when
will the Communists come?”
And the Chinese themselves, tom
with indecision, doubts and mob
violence, were wondering the same
thing.
FOOD RIOTS and strikes flared
in Hankow, Shanghai and Nanking.
Undisciplined throngs roamed the
streets. People were trampled to
death or injured. Police fired on
the rioters. The evacuation of
Americans from China was being
carried out hastily but efficiently.
In north central China the posi
tion of the Nationalist forces was
growing worse hourly. Suchow and
Pengup were reported virtually
isolated ty Communists. The
Yangtze river was feared open to
a Red crossing that would expose
Nanking.
THE WHOLE economic structure
of the Chiang Kai-shek government
appeared to be crumbling and slid
ing into a Red ruin in the wild
melee along coastal China. Value
o the gold yuan plummeted down
ward.
The question was not only, "when
are the Communists coming?” but
“how long will the central Chinese
government last?”
This appeared to be the great,
all-consuming crisis in Chiang Kai-
shek’s decade-long struggle to
maintain a spark of life in the
Chinese republic. But the cold,
smothering wind of communism
was blowing strong.
RED TROOPS had taken control
of Manchukuo, former National
stronghold in the North, and that
victory appeared to be the key
which the Communists could use to
sweep down into the vital areas of
China itself.
For Chiang an5 his woefully weak
Nationalist government the past 11
years had been nothing but an
agonizing battle against imperial
ism—from the Japanese fascistic
b. and beginning in 1937 to the
Communist type which presents
tb current peril.
REBUILT:
By Stassen? t
In the clear, bitter post-election
light the Republican party turned
upon itself in a fury of self-
examination and didn’t like what
it saw.
MOST OF the top-level influential
party members wanted to see some
changes made, and most of them
seemed to think that Harold E.
Stassen was the man to make them.
As a result, the former governor
of Minnesota, now president of the
University of Pennsylvania, may be
assigned the job of rebuilding the
GOP for the 1952 presidential cam
paign.
STILL licking their wounds. GOP
leaders were urging the youthful
Stassen to lead a movement to
shape the party along more liberal
lines. Those party liberals were
planning to meet with Stassen for
a “brass tacks” discussion of a
party reconstruction.
Stassen was refusing to comment
on the reports that he might step
i. as general contractor for the re
construction job, but it was a
known fact that he was being
swamped with requests, many of
them from Republican bigwigs, to
undertake the task.
“I THINK the situation calls for
some reflection,” wtte the only com
ment the man who had been de
feated by Governor Dewey for the
GOP presidential nomination would
make.
One of Stassen’s promises when
he dropped out of the presidential
nomination fight at Philadelphia
last June was to work toward
strengthening “the liberal view
point within the party.”
MILLIONS DEAD:
Legally Now
The United Nations has made
public a projected world conven
tion for declaring dead the millions
of refugees, soldiers and other per
sons who disappeared between 1939
and 1945 under circumstances sug
gesting “death as a consequence of
events of war, of racial, religious,
political or national persecution.”
It is aimed to solve such prob- j
lems as inheritances, adoption of |
children and remarriages.
Released by WNU Feature*.
By INEZ GERHARD
D orothy lamour was
one of Betty Hutton’s first
friends when Betty start
ed in the movie business, a
friendship that has grown with
the years. The other day the girls
j were lunching in adjacent booths
at the Brown Derby. Dorothy and
her manager were setting guest
DOROTHY LAMOUR
stars for her radio program. Dor
othy called to ask Betty if she’d
be one; Betty called back “Can’t
think of anybody I’d rather appear
writh!" That afternoon Betty re
ceived three dozen roses from Dor
othy—just as a gesture of friend
ship.
*
With the success of "Red River”
and other super-recent westerns in
the offing, Michael Curtiz Produc
tions are reviving plans to produce
"The 49’ers.” New plans include
David Brian, now under long-term
contract to Curtiz. Brian, working
as leading man opposite Joan Craw
ford in “Flamingo Road,” should
be one of Hollywood’s brightest
stars in another year.
Tommy Bernard, who plays
"Scrapper Molloy,” newsboy, on
the Dr. Christian program, has
been named an honorary member
of the Newspaperboys’ Foundation
of America. Bernard, 13, last year
carried a paper route in Beverly
Hills.
*
Gene Autry lent Rita Hay
worth his heated trailer-dress
ing room for use during chilly
days during shooting of outdoor
scenes for “The Loves of Car
men” at Columbia Ranch. Hers
was being redecorated, but can
hardly be more comfortable
than the cowboy star’s, which
has everything—cooking facili
ties, dining nook, running wa
ter, everything but a horse!
A crash squad of four men did
nothing all day on the set of Sier
ra’s “Joan of Arc” (released by
RKO) but pick up knights who fell
down in battle scenes and couldn’t
get up by themselves because of
their heavy armor. Incidentally,
the picture's star, Ingrid Bergman,
has had a new orchid named for
her. It is mauve, with red lip and
yellow throaj, of heavy texture.
For the first time in more than
10 years of picture making, Pat
O’Brien used full make-up for “The
Boy with Green Hair,” done in
technicolor. Every morning he had
to have his hair shampooed and
curled into tight ringlets.
*
Six stars wanted the top role in
“Champion,” film version of the
Ring Lardner story, but Producer
Stanley Kramer of Screen Plays,
Inc., gave it to Kirk Douglas. The
young man won stardom through
eight pictures in three years.
*
Walter Slezak, the character
comedian, who does a fine job
in a featured role in Danny
Kaye’s “Happy Times,” has
plans. He is writing a musical
for the screen. Hopes to sell it
to Warner Bros, and direct it
for them.
*
Dick Powell spent 34 days of
shooting Arizona locations for “Sta
tion West” without a mishap. Th'n
he spent an afternoon sight-seeing.
At a lumber camp a power saw
broke and whizzed by his face.
Later a lumberjack’s axhead flew
off and narrowly missed his head.
Dick is not superstitious, but he
didn’t hang around to see if he
would be lucky a third time.
*
Radio Row folks at Toots Shoe’s
the other evening stared and then
stared again when they saw a large
sombrero with a familiar face be
neath it. The face belonged to
Arthur Godfrey. He was trying to
make his guest, Gene Autry, feel
at home.
' *
ODDS AND ENDS —Louis Hay
ward, currently appearing in Colum
bia! s "A Crooked Mile," wants to make
a film like "Ladies in Retirement" with
his former wife, Ida Lupino. That
was their last one together. . . . Alan
Young returns to the air in January
with his own show, scheduled to re
place "A Date With Jtidy,” but will
continue with the Jimmy Durante
show. . . . Herb Sheldon has made a
series of screen shorts for Universal.
. , . When Jack Carson registered for
the elections he gave his occupation as
actor and cattleman. He’s an actor, all
right—but on bis ranch be has one
lone bull calf!
Bruises on Livestock
Reduce Meat Values
High Number of Injuries
Result of Carelessness
One of the less spectacular but
nevertheless important factors con
tributing to the reduction of meal
and livestock values is the waste of
meat and lower grading.of pork
cuts because of bruising.
In view of this it is important to
the welfare of the livestock industry
and consumer alike that more care
and patience be used in handling
hogs.
Bruise tests conducted recently by
the Live Stock Sanitary Committee
at Sioux City, Iowa, on 5,708 hogs
eELLIES
Tests made on 5,708
dicate that the hams receive more
bruises than any other part of
the animal.
indicate that there are more bruises
on hams than on all other major
parts of market hogs.
When the animals are driven they
tend to turn away from the driver,
which often results in their getting
hit or kicked on the hams.
The bruise tests on the hogs
turned up a total of 902 bruised
hams, 207 bruised bellies, 146
bruised shoulders and 134 bruised
backs.
Hams are much more often
bruised on the lower part of the
cushion and shank, or collar,. ac
cording to the tests which showed
511 and 653 bruises respectively.
This indicates that hogs probably
are bruised when being driven or
sorted.
Most of the injuries are surface
bruises, and many are caused by
the driver kicking the hog or punch
ing the animal with a cane, sorting
pole, club, end gate rod or some
other handy instrument.
Some of the ham bruises are
caused by protruding nails, broken
boards, bolt heads or ends of gate
hinges in yards, alleys and load
ing chutes.
Others occur when trucks are not
flush with loading or unloading
chutes and platforms and the legs
of the hogs slip into the space be
tween the truck and the chutes,
scraping the sides of the shanks up
to the cushion of the ham.
. Dollars for Barley
For writing an essay on “How
Can We Make the Barley Crop
Bring More Dollars Per Acre?”
Bobby V. Bruegger, of Plymouth,
Wis., has been named winner in a
contest conducted among high school
students of vocational agriculture
by the Midwest Barley Improve
ment association.
Bobby, who is 15 years old, and in
his sophomore year in the Plymouth
high school, won the award, which
consists of $50 in cash, in competi
tion with hundreds of high school
students in the five Midwest states
of Wisconsin, Minnesota, North and
South Dakota, and Iowa.
As the winner of the Midwest re
gional prize, young Bruegger also
was a winner of the first Wisconsin
state prize of $25 and the Sheboygan
county prize of $5 in the contest.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Byron Brueg
ger, Bobby helps with the work of
the family’s 40-acre farm, where
the principal crops are grains and
alfalfa. He has been active in 4-H
club work for a number of years
and is a member of the Future
Farmers of America.
Poultry TB Eliminated
In One Tear With Care
Tuberculosis in chickens can bq
eradicated in one year, according
to Prof. Frank E. Mussehl of the
University of Nebraska poultry de
partment.
He advises raising chickens in
clean quarters and on clean ground,
changing the location of ,the range
every year. Eliminate or sell old
hens from the flock by June 1 of
each year unless the birds are very
high grade breeders.
★ ★★ ★★★★★★★★★★
HOUSEHOLD
Soup Makes an Easy Supper!
(See Recipes Below.)
Menu Short-Cuts
THERE’S shopping, cleaning,
baking, decorating, wrapping
Christmas p r e s-
ents and a hun
dred other things
to do these days
before Christmas.
Where does one
find time to plan and make meals?
ttow is an excellent time to put
menu short-cuts into operation.
Plan to serve soups often, not as a
first course, but as a main dish.
Serve those casseroles, too, that
whip together in no time and bake
in half an hour or so without any
watching or further attention.
Have foods that are hearty, and
make certain there’s enough for
seconds or thirds because the fam
ily will be hungry now that appe
tites have been sharpened by cold
weather.
• • *
HERE ARE some exceUent soups
which can easily take the place of
• main dish at dinner.
Navy Bean Soap
(Serves 6)
1% caps dried pea beans
2 quarts cold water
Lamb bones
2 tablespoons salt
1 clove of garlic, peeled
8 to 10 peppercorns
1 bay leaf
4 sprigs parsley
'A cup minced onion
% teaspoon pepper
X teaspoon marjoram
2 cups canned tomatoes
Pick over beans, then wash and
soak in cold water overnight.
Drain; measure liquid from beans
and add enough to make two quarts.
Add to beans with lamb bones and
salt. Tie next six ingredients in a
cloth bag and add to water and
bones. Cover, bring to a boil, then
simmer for four hours until beans
are tender. Remove bones and
spice bag, then strain soup. Mash
beans. Add any pieces of meat
which cling to bones and the to
matoes. Reheat and serve hot
• • *
SOUPS take long to cook, but, of
course, need little watching, and
thus they are such time-savers to
have for meals. Here's another de
licious, hearty soup:
Oxtail Soup
(Serves 12)
1% pounds lean beef
2 oxtails, split
5 quarts cold water
1 tablespoon salt
1 large onion, diced
M cup celery root, diced
1 tablespoon chopped parsley
2 tablespoons fat
2 tablespoons flour '
3 carrots, diced \
Cut oxtail into small pieces and
fry lightly in fat. Cube the beef and
add with oxtail to
water and salt.
Place in large
kettle, cover and
let cook slowly
for about four
hours. Add vege
tables and cook for one hour longer,
or until stock is reduced by half.
Strain. Heat fat in skillet, add flour
and brown slowly. Add one cup
of the soup and then stir into re
maining stock.
LYNN SAYS:
Now’s the Time to Get
Ready for the Holidays
If you’re buying fresh flowers,
lengthen their life by spraying liquid
wax on them. Be sure the leaves
and petals are free from water be
fore waxing.
Broken bits of cookies, rolled fine,
should be kept in jars so they will
be ready at a moment’s notice to
be rolled into a crust for pie. Use
one of the ready-mix puddings for
the filling and top with whipped
cream or meringue.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Com Chowder
Toasted Muffins Butter Jelly
Grapefruit-Pineapple Salad
Beverage
•Fig Pudding
Cream
•Recipe given
•Corn Chowder
(Serves 6)
4 cups diced potatoes
2 cups boiling water
1 2” square fat salt pork
1 large onion, sliced
1 No. 2 can kernel corn'
1 quart milk
2 teaspoons salt
% teaspoon pepper
Cut salt pork into cubes pnd
brown in a large saucepan. Add
onion and cook until tender. Add
diced potatoes and water; cover and
cook until potatoes are tender. Add
com, milk and seasonings. Heat and
serve garnished with a sprinkling
of paprika.
Leftover meats are put to good
use in these casseroles which will
make easy work for you on these
busy days before the holidays.
Noodles Neapolitan
(Serves 6)
H pound noodles, cooked
ZH cups slivered chicken or ham
1 cup milk or cream
2 eggs
1 cup buttered bread or cracker
crumbs
After noodles are cooked in
boiling, salted water, rinse and
drain them. Into a
well-greased dish,
place layers of
noodles, then
meat and repeat
until all are used.
Beat eggs, add
milk, and pour
over noodles and meat. Top with
crumbs. Bake in a moderate (350-
degree) oven for 25-30 minutes or
until browned on top.
t • • .
THE FRUIT puddings mentioned
earlier need take no longer to make
than the main dishes for the meal.
Both of these recipes for desserts
are nourishing and will be well re
ceived.
•Fig Pudding
(Serves 6)
2 eggs, beaten
1 cup sugar
3 tablespoons flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 cup walnuts, chopped
1 cup figs, chopped
Beat eggs until light, then add
sugar, silted flour and remaining
ingredients. Stir well and bake in
a buttered casserole dish in a slow
(325-degree) oven for 25 minutes.
Apricot Whip
(Serves 6)
H pound dried apricots
H cup sugar
Whites of 5 eggs
H teaspoon lemon juice
Pick over and wash fruit. Cook
in water, just enough to cover, until
soft. Remove stones and put through
strainer. Add sugar and cook five
minutes. Beat egg whites until stiff
and fold in fruit. Heap lightly in a
buttered baking dish and bake in a
slow (325-degree) oven 35 minutes.
Serve with custard sauce or cream.
Released by WNU Features.
If you’re making several different
kinds of cookies, label their tins and
jars so you can find each kind when
you want them.
Crisp cookies should not be stored
with soft ones or they will become
soggy.
Jars of cheese kept on hand will
be put to work easily, satisfying a
horde of hungry guests who just
drop in for a visit.
One fruit gelatin salad and one
molded vegetable salad are good
to have on hand for holiday week
ends for unexpected guests.
Ain’t It Sn
Mother-In-Law—A ponle fnO
of cross words.
Some men owe everything to
their mother. Others owe most
to ancle.
Pedestrians should be seen
and not hurt.
That run-down feeling is often
a consequence of jay-walking.
Pay Heed To Highway Signfl
And ‘Stick Around’ Awhile
Signs and signals are among the
biggest helps to safe driving, the
National Safety council says.
“They give drivers warning of the
dangers that lie ahead. But they
are worthless unless seen and
Obeyed. The .safe driver will fol
low these signposts:
1. Give signs, signals and mark
ings the same respect you would a
traffic officer. Here’s one place yon
may lose if you cheat.
2. Reduce speed and be on
guard when yoii see a diamond-
shaped sign (this shape carries a
warning) or a round sign (ibis sig
nifies a railroad crossing is ahead).
3. Come to a complete stop at
an eight-sided, or octagonal sign.
This shape means only one thing—
stop!
4. Know what an oblong sign
says. This shape carries regulatory
messages such as speed limit.
5. Heed the cross-buck sign at
railroad crossings. If there is a
flashes Or wig-wag, wait until it
stops operating before crossing.
There may be another train yon
can’t see.
6. Watch for the signs of life
even on familiar roads. Three-
fourths of the drivers in fatal acci
dents lived within 25 miles of
where the accident took place.
If you—like millions of others—
are pondering the Christmas pres
ent problem, a local dealer has a<
handy answer- He will have
Christmas gift cartons of cooU
mild Camel cigarettes and pound)
tins of flavorful Prince Albert 1
Smoking Tobacco. Both these
items come festively dressed for
the holiday season and make ideal
gifts for your smdkipg friends.
The Camel carton contains 200
mild, flavorful Camels, while the
Prince Albert container is chock-
full of mellow smoking joy that
has made Prince Albert the coun
try’s largest-selling tobacco. Both
gifts require a minimum of fuss,,
due to the unique space provided
for your personal Christmas greet
ings. (Adv.)
M COMMON SENSE..
proved thousand* upon
} - Jl thousands of Hmatl
ALL-VEGETABLE
LAXATIVE
SA ———■
NATURE’S REMEDY (NR) TAB
LETS—A purely vegetable laxative to
relieve constipation without the usual
griping, sickening, perturbing sensa
tions, and does not cause a rash. Try
NR—you will see the difference. Un
coated or candy coated—their action
is dependable, thorough, yet gentle as
millions of NR’s have proved. Get a
25c box and use ss directed.
FUSSY STOMACH?
RELIEF FOR ACID
INDIGESTION.
GAS AND
HEARTBURN
THE TUMMY!
Beware Coughs
Frem Commoa Cold*
That HANG ON
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the troublo
to help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
mucous membranes. Tell your druggist
to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion
with the understanding you' must like
the way it quickly allays the cough
or you are to have your money bade.
CREOMULSION
forCoiighs,ChestCol(ls,Bronchitis
«
Kidneys Must
Work Well-
For You To Feel Well
*4 how* every day, 7 days every
week, never stopping:, the kidneys filter
waste matter from the blood.
If more people were aware of how tho
kidneys must constantly remove sur
plus fluid, excess acids and other waste
matter that cannot stay in the blood
without injury to health* there would
be better understanding of whf the
whole system is upset whsn kidneys tail
to function properly.
| Burning, scanty or too frequent urina
tion sometimes warns that something
is wrong. You may suffer nagging back
ache. headaches, dizziness, rheumstiu
pains, getting up at nights, swelling.
Why not try Doan's Filial You wfli
be using a medicine recommended the
country over. Doan*a stimulate the func
tion of the kidneys and help them to
flush out poisonous waste fvom the
blood. They contain nothing harmful*
Get Doan’a today. Use with confidence*
At all drug stores.
Doans Pills