The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 18, 1949, Image 3
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-WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS-
Wins Film Award
JAPAN:
Reds Answered
The Russians had an answer to
what would happen If they ever
moved on Japan, i
Gen. Douglas MacArthur, in a
•pedal interview, declared that be
did not expect any attack upon
Japan by the Russians, but if that
occurred, "we,” meaning the
United States, “should certainly de
fend her.”
THE ENTIRE IDEA of a Rus-
DENTURES:
Save Life
In Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario,
George Hatfield put the barrel of a
32 calibre rifle in his mouth and
pulled the trigger.
The bullet ran around the inside
of his false teeth, came out his
mouth.
Dr. J. E. Grimby, who treated
Hatfield for a cut tongue, said the
aun was alive because:
The bullet was 10 years old.
The false teeth were in its way.
Truman Threatens to Take Battle
On Legislative Program to People;
MacArthur Sees No Russian Attach
« EDITOR’S NOTE: When opinions are expressed in these columns, they are those of
extern Newspaper Union’s news analysts and not necessarily of this newspaper.)
TRUMAN:
All Aboard!
President Truman, who obvious
ly regards himself as the “man
with a mandate," was tossing some
not too subtle threats toward con
gressmen inhospitable to his legis
lative proposals.
Keep fooling with me, he said, in
effect, and I’U hit the old stump
again—and you know what that
means.
The President meant that if con
gress didn't set about soon enact
ing into law the pledges he made
to the people during the November
campaign, he’d hit the trail again
and take the issue to the people—
the way Franklin D. Roosevelt used
to do.
MR. TRUMAN apparently felt
that by so doing he could whip pub
lic sentiment up to such a pitch
that congress would be forced to go
along with his program, or else
face possible defeat in the 1950
elections.
Not having the vocal equipment
of his predecessor, who could get
desired results with his “fireside
chats," Mr. Truman would have to
climb aboard a train if he wanted
to influence the masses.
Strangely enough, congress didn’t
seem unduly perturbed at the
President's threat. Things went
along in congressional procedure
about as usual, with Republicans
charging that the 81st congress is
also a “do nothing” congress,
while Democratic members were
inviting comparison with the “do
nothing" 80th congress.
IT WAS READILY evident that
Mr. Truman was needled by lack
of congressional action on his pro
gram. Reiterating his campaign
pledges of last fall, in which he de
clared the central issue was the
"welfare of all the people," Mr,
Truman asserted that lobbyists,
pressure groups, and controlled edi
torial pages, columnists and com
mentators were offering deter
mined opposition to his legislative
program.
"All we have on our side,” he
said, "is the people.”
Pointing out that he found on his
campaign tour that the people of
the nation are concerned about
their government, Mr. Truman
termed that concern a “fine thing.'
"I propose to do all I can to help
it along,” he added. Then he hurled
the threat: “In fact, I may even
get on the train again and make an
other tour around the country to
tell the people how their govern'
ment is getting on."
INFLATION:
Has Two Faces
Observers purportedly on the “in
side” of things in Washington re
gard approval of the congressional
committee on the economic report
—Mr. Truman’s proposal for con
trols to ward off inflation—as lip
service only and argue that none
of the committee expect the pro
posal to win congressional favor.
It was said the favorable com
mittee report was made only to
“save face” for the President as
he seeks to implement the pledges
he made in his election campaign.
THE COMMITTEE vote, which
will send the measure to the floor
of congress, was 7 to 4 for approve',
and that came only after the pro
posals of the President had been
toned down.
Critics of the Truman plan say
it poses the unique theory that the
country is in the midst of an in
flation and deflation period at the
same time—a condition admittedly
difficult of comprehension.
They assert, too, that it would
give dangerous controls to the
President at a time when they ac
tually are not needed.
One commentator observed that
if any members of the committee
considering the proposal had had
any idea it would be enacted by the
congress, it would have been killed
completely before it ever got to the
floor of the house or senate.
Virginia Wave, Cathedral
films’ star, receives the annual
award as the best actress of re
ligious films from the American
association of religious film dis
tributors for her work in the film,
“Simon Peter, Fisherman,” in
which she portrayed Concordia.
sian attack on Japan held a bizarre
aspect. With the U.S. as chief oc
cupation force, how could the
Soviets launch an attack of the
Japanese without, in effect, making
war on the United States?
But, General MacArthur evident
ly held the subject serious enough
to comment about it.
“In case of another war, we do
not want Japan to fight,” Mac
Arthur said. "Japan’s role is to bo
the Switzerland of the Pacific,” he
explained.
THEN HE MADE a telling point
in speculation of a Russian attack
on Japan:
“Even if the Soviet government
had aggressive intentions toward
Japan, Russia would be incapable
of carrying them out unless she
could secure mastery of the air and
either had a far Eastern fleet of
her own or possessed the means of
neutralizing any action by our fleet.
“Russia could not obtain air pre
dominance,” he went on. “On
Okinawa I had constructed at the
end of the war 25 airfields with
the capacity to dispatch B-29’s,
then our largest bombers, on 3,500
missions a day. The whole of east
ern Asia from Singapore to Vladi
vostok would lie within range of
those machines.”
HE DID NOT point out that with
development of the bombing arm
of the air force since the war, even
farther distances for bombing pur
poses could be covered by present-
day missile carriers.
Of the function of Japan in the
American strategy of defense, Mac
Arthur said:
“We never intended to use Japan
as an ally. All we want her to do
is remain neutral.”
FEWER JOBS:
For White Collars
There are many fewer “white col
lar” job openings than a year ago
in most U. S. cities, but high grade
personnel is still in demand. The
volume of job-seekers, particularly
men, is up all the way from ten per
cent to as much as 300 per cent, but
a heavy majority of the applicants
are below-standard material and
there is little market for them.
This is the tenor of reports from
106 private employment agencies in
42 principal cities from coast to
coast, surveyed by the family eco-
: nomics bureau of Northwestern Na-
! tional Life Insurance company.
THE “WEEDING OUT” process
is now on in full swing, agency ex
ecutives report, as employers prune
down working forces to eliminate
the lazy, the inefficient, the chronic
absentees and the chronically tardy,
“who don’t realize that the wartime
gravy-train has rumbled to a stop,
and the era of competition is back.”
The biggest drop has occurred in
jobs for untrained and junior office
help, particularly male, the survey
finds. But there is still a nation
wide demand for salesmen and
sales promotion personnel, and, in
most cities, for accountants and
other technically trained men.
MOST AGENCIES report that sal
aries are the same or slightly better
than last year for experienced or
trained personnel, but that employ
ment requirements are stiffer, em
ployers interview more candidates
per job, and check their qualifica
tions much more thoroughly. 1
The great majority of employers
dealt with are uncertain as to the
future, agencies report, but opti
mists slightly outnumber pessimists.
Most employers feel that pre-war
competition is here again, and with
it the immediate necessity of trim
ming costs and sharpening effi
ciency at every possible corner. The
prevailing attitude is that good busi
ness can be had by means of in
creased efforts, if pending legisla
tion does not turn out too unfavora
bly; many concerns are reported as
marking time on their future pro
grams until they can see how the
new tax program and labor law
shape up.
Answers Critics
UNIVERSE:
No Limits?
Since the first man lifted his
head and gazed in puzzled awe at
a star-studded sky, mankind has
been trying to discover the secrets
of the universe.
To that end, the huge, 200-inch
Palomar mountain telescope was
built and put into operation.
But the telescope’s first contribu
tion to the sum of man’s knowledge
of the universe served only to deep
en the mystery.
Astronomers using it found that
there is no outer edge to the uni
verse of stars, and the look they
took was twice as far as man has
ever looked before.
The astronomers got some pic
tures of nebulae a billion light-
years distant and spaced about a
million light-years apart. Each one
is a world of stars, like the Milky
Way. The star worlds are about
uniformly spread up to the previ
ous limits of sight, about a half
billion light years.
THE NEXT STUDY will be to
find whether there is any thinning
of the celestial families as sight is
extended outward.
One stunning fact the discovery
brought home was that there is
more than one star for every hu
man being who ever lived. Nearly
every star family, or nebulae, con
tains more than a hundred million
individual stars.
Now it is science concurring in
the psalm: “The heavens declare
the glory of God, and the firma
ment showeth His handiwork . .
Phone Aid Advances
A bouse subcommittee has ap
proved a bill to let the government
make loans for a vast expansion ot l
telephone service to farm areas.
The unanimous action came after
the committee had adopted amend
ments aimed at protecting existing
telephone companies and encourag
ing the development of rural tele
phones by private industry.
The bill authorizes REA to make
35-year loans at 2 per cent interest.
Former Gov. Mon C. Wallgren,
Washington, nominated by Pres
ident Truman to head the na
tional security resources board,
denies critics’ charges at com
mittee hearing. He was accused
of being "soft toward commun
ism.” He branded the charges
“ridiculous and silly.”
WAR TALK:
Little Ease-up
There was little ease-up in the
talk of possible war.
War rumors were still flying, the
latest reporting that the Russians
had strengthened their garrisons
along the Soviet-Norwegian border.
A “well-informed” Finnish source
was credited with the report.
The informant said the Russian
troops had come from the Mur
mansk area. While not estimating
the number involved, he said the
troop movements had been observed
and apparently were in connection
with the stand taken by Norway on
the north Atlantic defense treaty.
THE INFORMANT said there
were no indications of similar troop
movements along the Finnish bor
der.
Norway and Russia now have a
short common frontier in the far
north. The frontier was established
when the Petsamo region of Fin
land was ceded to the Soviet union
under terms of the Russo-Finnish
peace treaty.
The Soviet union recently pro
posed to Norway that both nations
sign a non-aggression pact. Norway
has made it clear she will not en
ter into such a treaty Instead, Nor
way appeared disposed to cast its
fortunes with countries in the pro
posed north Atlantic treaty—The
United States, Canada, Britain,
France, the Netherlands, Luxem
bourg and Belgium.
SLOWDOWN:
Banned By Court
The supreme court has upheld a
Wisconsin ban on the slowdown as
a union tactic in a dispute with man
agement.
By a 5-4 vote, it sustained a state
law which prohibits any concerted
efforts by workers to interfere with
production except by going on
strike.
The specific action Involved was
a series of unannounced work stop
pages.
Scholar Who Dared
Death Three Weeks
Learns Old Secret
i TEHERAN.—An American profes
sor, who dared death every day for
three weeks, said he had learned
the secret of the inscriptions Per
sian King Darius had carved on
Mount Bisitun 2,400 years ago.
Prof. George Cameron of the Uni-
I versify of Michigan and the Ameri
can School of Oriental Research
copied the rock carvings by means
, of a rubber compound. He did his
work suspended 194 feet from a
mountain ledge and 100 feet above
the rocky ground just east of Ker
in anshah in western Iran. Some-
j times his son, Thomas. 15, went up
; with him on the scaffold and helped
“The story of Darius’ life now
appears with remarkable clarity,”
Mr. Cameron said. “I know now
the secret of four huge columns of
the inscriptions, which have not
been read befoVe because they were
in an inaccessible spot. The full
secret, however, is one that 1 shall
not divulge until I have had fur
ther time for study.”
The Bisitun inscriptions, in three
languages, are ranked as the most
famous antiquity of the kind in
western Asia.
I
II Churches Too Comfy,
Congregation May Sleep
CARLISLE. ENGLAND.—The
chancellor of the diocese of Car
lisle says he is against proposals
to disperse the immemorial
gloom and dampness of English
churches. He says it might en
courage naps during sermons. A
consistory court recently consi
dered a proposal to install lights
and a heating system in the
church at Gilsland.
“If the heat in a church be
comes excessive people might go
to sleep durng the sermon, or at
least have an excuse for doing
so,” said Chancellor II. H. King.
“Also, we don’t want theatrical
lighting in churches.” The chan
cellor also disapproved install-
i n g electrical heating tubes
under pews.
The whole project was tabled
for reconsideration. Cumberland
mists will continue to invade the
Gilsland church on frosty Sun
day mornings. •
Male Shoppers Rated Best
By Girl Clerics in Stores
NEW YORK. — The department
store girls wear their prettiest
smiles for the shopping man, but
they don’t want to take all his
money, Mrs. Lorraine Frankland
says.
"We try to sell him something
within what we judge would be
his wife’s price limit,” she ex
plained. If he spends too much his
wife will bring it back anyway and
be mad at the store for selling it to
him, she figures. Mrs. Frankland is
the head personal shopper at Lord
and Taylor’s department store.
To figure that price list limit,
Mrs. Frankland says she starts out
low and works all the way up, mak
ing a mental note of the point he
starts perspiring. Then she goes
back and "encourages” him to buy
below the boiling point.
What the girls really love about
the men shoppers, Mrs. Frankland
said, is they make up their minds
so fast.
The average man, shopping for
his wife and maybe his mother or
daughter, spends about $50 all told,
Mrs. Frankland said.
And not one in 500 of them buys
black underwear, she said.
Chicago Found To Have
More Taxicabs Per Capita
CHICAGO.—The nation's capital
has more licensed taxicabs per cit
izen than any other city in the land,
although New York has the greatest
□umber of licensed cabs, according
to the International City Managers
Association.
The association, citing figures
compiled by the American Taxicab
Association, reported today that
there were 9,024 cabs to serve the
estimated 987,000 citizens of the
District of Columbia, a ratio of one
cab for every 109 Washington resi
dents.
New Orleans was said to have the
second highest ratio of cabs to cit
izens among thirty-nine of the
larger United States cities, with
one cab per 466 persons, or 1,500
cabs for its 700,000 inhabitants.
Boston was rated third, with 505
citizens per cab, and Louisville
fourth, with a 531-to-l ratio.
New York was fifth, having 11,814
licensed cabs, or one to every 658 of
its estimated 7,783,000 population.
Greater Cleveland (Cuyahoga
County) ranked last, with a ratio of
2,601 persons to one cab.
Mrs. FDR to Devote Life
To Furtherance of U. N.
PARIS.—Mrs. Franklin D. Roose
velt plans to devote the rest of her
active life to the United Nations
as "the best hope we have for
peace.”
“We may slide into war,” she
said, “but we must support the
United Nations. It may yet save
civilization from the terrible set
back of another war.”
Mrs. Roosevelt is chairman of
the United Nations eighteen -nation
Human Rights Commission, which
will seek next year to draft a human
rights treaty legally enforcing those
rights.
SCRIPTURE: Mark 8:7-11. 30-44; Luka
11:1-13.
DEVOTIONAL, READING: Matthew
10:5-16.
Leadership School
Lesson for March 20, 1949
Make This Smart Doily
I
r TAKES more than a call of God
to be a Christian leader. It takes
study, it takes work. The call is
nqcessary, of course, but it is not
alL 4 Jesus set the
church an example
here as always. He
called his Twelve;
but he was not so
foolish as to think
that just because he
had called them
they were all ready
to go out and take
the lead. Jesus put
them thrirngh what Dr. Foreman
may be called the
first Leadership Training School in
the history of the Christian church.
Who Was Enrolled?
T HE TWELVE Apostles were the
training class. Not all Jesus’
disciples were equal to it; perhaps
some of them actually did not have
the time. But these Twelve had al
ready been set off from the others,
not because they were better men,
but in order to do more direct ser
vice in Christ’s name. There was
nothing formal about Jesus’ training
school.
It met wherever he was at the
time—in a honse, cr by the
roadside, or on a hill-top. There
were no set hoars, no textbooks,
credits or diplomas.
Jesus kept it going to the very
end, for even after the Resurrection,
as Luke tells us (in Acts 1) he was
still teaching his Twelve.
What Did They Study?
T HERE WAS no printed circular,
no bulletin, no prospectus or
catalogue. All the “courses”
amounted to just one thing: learn
ing to do what Jesus was doing. To
this day, that is the aim of all
Christian training. Mark and Luke
mention at least four things Jesus’
training-school students learned
from him: preaching, healing the
sick, feeding the hungry, and pray
ing. It would not be quite true to
say that part of what they learned
was spiritual and part practical, for
there is nothing more practical than
praying as Jesus taught it, and
Jesus never ministered to people’s
physical needs without touching
their spirits too.
Many s person now in some
hospital for the insane need not
have gone there If he had had
the help that a well-trained min
ister can give.
Ministers today are not taught
how to perform miracles like the
feeding of the 5,000; - but knowing
that people’s physical well-being has
a great deal to do with their spir
itual welfare, the alert young Chris
tian minister of today will be keen
ly interested in Chiristian social ac
tion.
How Did They Learn?
T HE TWELVE learned by doing.
It is the only way you learn any
thing of a practical nature. Memo
rizing a textbook, memorizing
rules, is not learning. You
have learned how to do a thing only
when you can do it. Of course you
have to see it done, first. A boy on
the farm learns to be a farmer by
watching his father and helping him,
more than from school courses in
agriculture, useful as they are.
There is nothing to take the place
of apprenticeship under ons who
knows. So Jesus' Twelve watched
him, listened to him, helped him,
before they were trusted on theil
own.
• • •
Will It Still Work?
T HE METHODS Jesus taught are
just as effective today as they
ever were. Not all churches nowa
days follow his line to the letter; in
fact, most churches do not. But the
basic principles which Jesus drilled
into his first traveling representa
tives are still good. One is faith.
Missionaries in the 20th Cen
tury are required to take a great
deal more equipment with them
to their fields than one pair of
shoes, one cane and an empty
purse. Yet who can deny that
any missionary of any church.
In China or in Korea today, must
live by faith from day to day?
Another of Jesus’ principles was
direct contact. People are n>t won
to Christ chiefly by sermon: from
pulpits, bul by in-the-home contacts.
Ministers know this, missionaries
know it; Sunday school teachers
ought to know it too. Getting ac
quainted with your boys and girls
at their homes, and being a friend
to them there, is what will give your
Sunday teaching its greatest force
and success.
(Copyright by the International Coun
cil oi Religious Education on behalf oi
40 Protestant denominations. Released
b- WNU Features.
Use of Green Color
In Sprint Food Menus
Will Enhance Appeal
WHETHER IT’S a party you’re
planning or just a family menu
you’re preparing, take a tip from
nature and use the delicate green
colors of foods
generously. They’ll
give the lilt of
spring to your
meals.
The green of
1 vegetables may be
combined with
white or yellow to
great advantage for appetizing
meals as weli as colorful tables If
you’re cooking the green vegetable,
it’s important to remember that
overcooking will make the delicate
green look dull as well as lose im
portant nutrients, so keep one eye
on the clock.
This is the time, too, when you
can use many of the green vegeta
bles in salads in raw form. Keep
them crisp so there’s no wilting and
you’ll have foods as fresh as the
season itself.
• • •
IF YOU’RE PLANNING • St.
Patrick's day party for oldsters or
youngsters, you’ll like this salad.
Grapefruit-Lime Salad
(Serves 8)
1 package lime-flavored gela
tin
* 1 cup hot water
1 cup canned grapefruit syrup
1 cup drained, canned grape
fruit
H cup sliced stuffed olives
Salad greens
1 avocado
Mayonnaise or French dress-
ing
Dissolve the gelatin in hot water.
Add the grapefruit syrup theh chill
until mixture begins to thicken. Add
the drained grapefruit and olives.
Turn into small individual molds
and chill until set. Unmold on salad
greens, garnish with avocado slices
and serve with mayonnaise or
French dressing.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Minted Fruit CocktaU
Braised Lamb Steaks
Mashed Potatoes
•Spring Vegetable Platter
Date Muffins Beverage
•Lime Bavarian Cream
•Recipe Given
apple juice. Chill until slightl)
thickened. Then fold in whipped
cream. Add sugar to pineapple and
fold into gelatin mixture. Turn intc
10xl0x2-inch pan and chill until
firm.
Meanwhile, dissolve the othei
package of gelatin in cups hot
water. Turn into another pan of the
same size as one used above. Chill
until firm. Then cut 8 or 9 sham
rock shapes with a shamrock cooky
cutter. With spatula, carefully ar
range shamrocks on first gelatin
mixture, allowing one for each
serving. Chill. Cut in squares.
If desired, cubed or riced gelatin
may be used for decorating instead
of shamrocks.
• • •
I
Bread Tray Doily
T HIS handsome bread tray
doily is worked in filet crochet,
is simple to make and generous
ly sized. You’ll have several done
in no time—for gifts or to keep
for your own use.
• • •
To obtain complete crocheting instruc
tions. stitch illustrations and fuet chart
for Tray Doily (Pattern No. 5861) send
20 cents In coin, your name, address
and pattern number.
SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK.
536 South Wells St. Chieaso 7, DL
Enclose 20 cents tor pattern.
No
Name — —.
Address ' "
Begorra, If it doesn’t look just
like a pirty for the youngsters
with perky lime gelatin shamrocks
sitting prettily on slices of lime
bavarian cream. Feature this
delicious Irish dessert on a green
linen or paper tablecloth, and
you have a picture table.
IF YOU’RE GIVING a party for
the Youngsters and want to give
them just a
snack, you’ll find
the next recipe
answers your
problem complete
ly. Perky sham
rocks are set on
slices of Bavarian
cream, and are
are guaranteed to
be the hit of the
party. As a mat
ter of fact. It
would be a good idea to hang onto
the recipe as it offers all sorts of
possibilities.
With little chick cutters you can
use lemon-colored ones for Easter,
red and pink flowers for May day,
etc. Serve them on a base of lime
Bavarian cream or on plain cake or
ice cream. Jolly thought, isn’t it?
Try it soon.
•Lime Bavarian Cream
(Serves 8-9)
1 package lime-flavored gela
tin
% teaspoon salt
1 cup hot water
1 cup canned pineapple juice
1 ern —earn, whipped
3 tablespoons sugar
I cup canned crushed pine
apple
1 package lime-flavored gela
tin
1% cup hot water
Dissolve 1 package gelatin and
salt in 1 cup hot water. Add pine-
LYNN SAYS:
Make the Most
Of Vegetables
A dash of nutmeg and pickled
onions added to new peas will lift
this lovely vegetable out of the
ordinary class.
Top asparagus served on toast
points with cheese sauce and slices
of broiled bacon if you want to make
a complete vegetable luncheon.
Tomatoes may be stuffed with
cooked corn kernels or those lovely
baby lima beans. Bake just enough
to cook the tomato
Asparagus tips riding on toast
points with smooth, well-flavored
cheese sauce make a truly spring
like dish for luncheon or supper.
The green and yellow color
scheme which this combination
makes will make a welcome sight
for winter-weary appetites.
ASPARAGUS, that aristocratic
vegetable, which comes into season
early in Spring is
sometimes called
sparrow - grass.
But whatever you
call it, this hand
some, green-tipi>ed
vegetable is one of
the true appetite
treats of the sea
son.
The vegetable
can be changed from a supplemen
tary to a main dish if you serve it
on toast with a cheese sauce be
cause cheese is a high grade pro
tein food. The cheese sauce is also
an excellent idea to remember if
you want to add interest to leftover
vegetables.
Asparagus on Toast with
Cheese Banco
2 tablespoons batter
4 tablespoons floor
2 cups milk
H pound American cheese,
shredded
Salt, pepper
Hot, cooked asparagus tips
Toast points
Make cream sauce with the but
ter, flour and milk. When thick and
smooth, add the shredded cheese
and stir until it is melted. Season
to taste. Place each serving of as
paragus on 2 toast points and cover
with a generous amount of hot
cheese sauce.
If you want to make a spring
vegetable platter that looks pretty
as well as one which interests winter-
jaded appetites, this next recipe is
just the thing:
•Spring Vegetable Platter
(Serves 6)
1 ponnd green beans
4 medium carrots, ent in strips
1 box frozen asparagus
1 hard-cooked egg, chopped
V4 cup batter
2 tablespoons lemon jnlce
Cook green beans in boiling,
salted water for 30 minutes. Cook
carrots in boiling, salted water for
15 minutes. Cook spinach without
water 5-8 minutes. Arrange spin
ach in center of platter and garnish
with egg. Arrange drained green
beans and carrots in spoke fashion
around the spinach. Pour over them
a sauce of the butter melted and'
mixed with lemon juice. Garnish
the platter with the following: Roll
slices of luncheon meat spread with
salad dressing around tiny sweet
pickles. Fasten with toothpick.
Like creamed cauliflower? Stick
H cup of salted almond meats in
the white sauce after pouring it over
the vegetable for appetite appeal.
Young cabbage cooked in milk
rather than water is delicious to
taste.
Melted butter mixed with lemon
juice and chopped parsley makes an
excellent sauce for whole cooked
carrots.
Cup of com added to 3 cups of
cabbage and seasoned with crisp,
crumbled bacon and a bit of sugai
is delicious!
No Original Cattle
Breeds in U. S.
Although the United States is m
meat-eating nation and slaughters
about 34,557,000 cattle and calves
annually, it has produced no origi
nal breed of cattle. On the other
hand, it has originated two breeds
of horses and ssvsss! breeds at
pigs.
Since the beginning of America,
pure-breed Cattle were imported
for breeding purposes. Henry Clay
imported the first Herefords tar /
use on his Kentucky farm.
BACKACHE
TORTURE?
SORETONE Liniment's
Heating Pad Action
Gives Quick Relief!
For fast, gentle relief of aches from back strain,
muscle strain, lumbago pain, due to fatigue, ex
posure. use the liniment specially made to sooth*
such symptoms. (
Soretone Liniment has scientific rubefacient
ingredients that act like glowing warmth from a
heating pad. Helps attract fresh surface blood U>
superficial pain area.
Soretone is different! Nothing else "just like
ft.” Quick, satisfying results must be yours or
money back. 50c. Economy size SI.00.
Try Soretone for. Athlete’s Foot. Kills all S
types of common fungi—on contactl
"M
RELIEVE
COID'S
MISERIES
mm
OPEN UP NOSI
—chock watery snif
fles and sneezes, with
PENETRO iSXL
EASE CHEST TIGHTMESS
and muscle aches.
Rub on stainless
PENETROSRUB
REASON IT OUT AND YOU’U
PREFER THIS
NATURES REMEDY (NR) TAB
LETS—A purely vegetable laxative to
relieve constipation without the usual
griping, sickening, penurbing sensa
tions, and does not cause a rash. Tty
NR—you will see the difference. Un
coated or candy coated—their action
is dependable, thorough, yet gentle as
millioiA of NR’s have proved. Get a
25c box and use as direaed.
FUSSY STOMACH?
RELIEF FOR ACID
INDIGESTION.
GAS AND ‘
HEARTBURN
THE TUMMY!
FBI ■lltl ACIIS All fAIIS tf
RHEUMATISM
NEURITIS-LUMBAGO
MCNEILS
MAGIC
remedV
i
BRINGS BLESSED RELIEF
Lars*Bottled —. m. il»iao-SmeSStee<
» CIITISI: III SltT M IIIEtllt <
u iii mm mm simm «it aut m istoat •
Bsllll IMS CL. tea. MSMSItlttl <