The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 30, 1950, Image 4
THE NEWBERRY SUN, -NEWBERRY. S. C.
a
Exciting Date Frock
Is Certain to Delight
Sure Delight
E XCITING date frock for juniors
that’s certain to delight tfte
youthful sewer. Note the pretty
neckline, cool sleeves, huge pocket
that can have an applique or
monogram added.
Pattern No. 8473 Is a sew-rlte perfo
rated pattern for sizes 11, 12, 13, 14, 15.
18 and 18. Size 12. 3% yards of 38-inch.
Send 25 cents today for your copy of
the spring and summer STYLIST. Spe
cial fabric news; smart easy to sew
styles; free pattern printed Inside the
book.
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
530 Soetb Wells St.. Chics** 7, DL
Enclose 25 cents In coins for each
pattern desired.
Pattern No. ........
Name ..............a
Addreas
.Size..
BARGAIN LIST!
New & used still Sr
movie cameras, sup
plies, etc. Write for
big fist. SPECIAL:
New Ansco camera &4 rolls Him
S4.54 postpaid.
£TARK FILMS
Eat. 1920 Dept. WN Baltimere 1. M4.
Relieves Soreness, Aches and
Pains of the Muscles.
Sold at all leading Drug Stores.
A sample bottle FREE by
sending this ad to
THE SWANSON CO.—Newark, Ohio
TES, In just 7 days, •. In one short week
• group of people who changed from their
old dentifrices to CaloxTooth Powder aver
aged 38% brighter teeth by scientific test.
Why not change to Calox yourself? Buy
•today • •. so your
fqelfc can start looking
Artghter tomorrow!
BROADWAY AND MAIN STREET
Plan Given to Beat Inroads of Dread Disease-
Makes All Doctor's Offices Cancer Finding Labs
By BILLY ROSE
Mr. Alfred S. Black
Hattiesburg, Mississippi
Dear Mr. Black;
A couple of months ago you dropped in to see me, and as the
result of our meeting I wrote a column asking for suggestions on
how to best spend the $2,000,000 left by your brother to the Black-
Stevenson foundation to provide “preventive and remedial treat
ment for cancer sufferers.”
And I was plenty happy when you phoned a week after the piece
appeared and told me you had received 4,000 letters, many from out
standing medical men and research organizations.
Well, this is letter No. 4001, and
If your patience and eyes can take
it I’d like to out
line a startlingly
unspectacular plan
which may save
the lives of 50,000
cancer victims a
year at a cost of
less than $5 per life.
The idea—and it’s
a simifle one—was
passed on to me by
Dr. Harold T. Hy
man of New York,
the well - known
physician whose four-volume “In
tegrated Practice of Medicine” has
been called “the practitioner’s
bible” by Time magazine. But be
fore I ease into Dr. Hyman’s no
tion, let me give you some of the
reasons behind it.
•• • •
IN THIS WEALTHIEST of na
tions, where we have more doctors
per capita than anywhere else, mil
lions of people get periodic medical
check-ups—but seldom are they
checked for cancer until something
begins to hurt. The reason, accord
ing to Dr. Hyman, is that these ex
aminations seldom include a “sur
vey” for cancer, even though this
involves little more than a few
probings and scrapings.
’INF - v
- U
Billy Rose
As I get it from Dr. Hyman, m
person has a 50 per cent chance
of licking cancer if it is spotted
in its incipietst stages and treated
by a competent physician. But
once the malignancy is far enough
along to came pain and the asso
ciated symptoms, the odds against
killing the man-killer drop to 20
Per cent.
Which, in my simple arithmetic,
means that 30 out of every 100
cancer deaths can be prevented
if we find a way to make every
doctor’s office in the country a can
cer detection center.
Here’s where Dr. Hyman’s notion
and your brother’s money come in.
Why wouldn’t it be a good idea
for the Black-Stevenson foundation
to compile all the latest knowledge
on cancer diagnosis in one hefty
volume and then, working through
the various local medical societies,
see to it that a copy of this volume,
free of charge, reaches the desk of
every family doctor in the country?
And why wouldn’t it be a logical
extension of this idea to follow up
the book with supplements when
ever the research labs come up
with a worth-while advance in test
or technique?
IF THIS PROGRAM were backed
up by an educational campaign to
alert both doctors and public to the
importance of nipping cancer be
fore it buds, it is Dr. Hyman's esti
mate that each of our 100,000 gen
eral practitioners would spot at
least one incipient case each year.
And since there’s a 50-50 chance
of curing cancer in its baby stages,
it figures that some 50,000 lives
could be saved annually—either by
local medicos or by specialists and
hospitals equipped to deal with the
malady.
I know this is an undramatic no
tion, promising no miracles and
requiring no glass-and-chromium
skyscrapers. I also know it isn’t
new—clinics in New York and a
few other cities have worked along
these lines for years.
A campaign on a national
scale, however, is something new,
and it ought to appeal to you be
came it would give the fellow on
RFD 1 the same chance to live
out bis tbree-score-and-ten as the
chap on Central Perk West.
Pm not suggesting, of course,
that you tear up the 4,000 letters and
put your entire $2,000,000 into this
one venture. The plan which Dr.
Hyman has outlined could be car
ried out for a tenth of that sum,
leaving the bulk of your endowment
for well-administered agencies and
projects such as the Damon Run
yon fund.
And by putting a couple of hun
dred thousand on the sure-shot of
diagnosis rather than on the long-
shot of research, you would be ren
dering the averagfe Joe and his mis
sus a service hardly anybody else Is
bothering about.
Sincerely,
Billy Rose
By INEZ GERHARD
W ILLIAM PINE took his wife to
a sneak preview of “The Law
less;” he and William Thomas, after
making some sixty successful ac
tion pictures, had stuck their necks
out and tackled one that was highly
controversial. And for the first time
Mrs. Pine said to him afterward,
THE
FICTION
CORNER
HE SPOKE HIS PIECE
By Richord H. Wilkinson
WILLIAM PINE
“I like your picture!” Starring Mac
donald Carey and Gail Russell, “The
Lawless” deals with the minority
problem in a small California city.
The Johnston office recommended
it to special United Nations consid
eration. Paramount executives want
ed to scrap it at one point. It is
honest and realistic, showing what
might happemin any American town.
Johnny Bond, western singing
star, has been signed to an exclu
sive, two-year radio contract by the
World Broadcasting System. He
will transcribe songs for the pro
gram service library, used by more
than 700 radio stations.
Bob Garred has been heard in
six movies in the past two months
but hasn’t been seen in one, which
is how he wants it. Being photo
graphed entails making up, endless
rehearsals with others, and over
time work, he pointed out— “And
I just don’t have the time. My two
news broadcasts a day make it im
possible for me to do any acting.”
So he will remain a voice rolling
from a loudspeaker.
Warner Bros' forthcoming
“Fifty Years Before Our Eyes”
features some of the rarest old
film footage in the world, such
as Prince Hirohito’s chat with
Lloyd George before World War
I, and the first movies of Hitler,
Stalin and Mussolini.
W ITHOUT REALIZING It Armine
had been watching the young
man with the black hair and blue
eyes. She admitted to herself that
he was good looking. Also, he
wore his evening clothes with Just
the right degree of casualness; his
face was pleas
ant and guile-
1 e s s. Danger
ous, she thought.
The type of man
who couldn’t be
trusted. Deceptive. Like Loring
Brookes. Mere thought of Loring
gave her a funny little pang.
And then the young man with
the blue eyes and black hair
started toward her. He weaved
his way in among the dancers and
tapped Seaver Clark on the should
er. “Mind if I cut in?” he asked. *
“Hope you don’t mind? Believe
me it took courage.”
“Did it?” said Armine coldly.
“Am I to feel flattered?”
He grinned broadly. “Sorry. I’ll
quit if you say so?”
“And leave me stranded In the
middle of the floor?”
“Well, then, when the music
stops.” Bnt when the music
stopped they weren't on the
floor at all. They were out on
the terrace, looking np at the
moon, and Armine was say
ing, “1 do wish you’d take me
back. I’m cold.”
“You can’t be cold. It’s a warm
night. Besides, if you start to go
back alone I’ll grab your arm. And
that will make a scene.”
She looked at him angrily, but
he only grinned. “I’ve half a mind
to do it. It might teach you a les
son.”
“It probably would,” he ad
mitted. “But please don’t. You
see, I’ve been watching you all
face was tense. “You’ve got to hear
me. I know it all sounds crazy: But
it isn’t. Last year, when I went
away in such a hurry it was be
cause my brother had been hurt in a
football game. I wrote you the day
after I arrived in California. Air
mail. It wasn’t till a month later
that I learaed the plane crashed and
burned. Then I knew it was too late.
I came on east, bringing my brother
along with me. He got well—”
He broke off. She was staring at
him in amazement. He gestured
helplessly. “I tried to look you up,
but you’d gone south for the winter.
And then in the spring the universi
ty sent me up to Canada to do some
research work. I got back a week
ago, learned you were in town and
came here tonight, hoping to see
you. I . .
He turned away, got half-way to
the'door when she called. "Loringl”
He swung back, and she came up to
him. “Was . . . Robert Brookes . . .
your brother?”
“Yes. How did you know?”
“I didn’t know. But I read
about him in the papers. And 1
read about the crash of the
plane, too . . . Oh, Loring, what
a stupid little fool I’ve been!”
She was in his arms, sobbing hys
terically. Loring held her tight;
presently tilted her chin and kissed
her mouth. “Darling! I ... I hate
to think of what might have hap
pened if you had objected to coming
out on the terrace.”
“Objected? Why, my precious.
. . . if . . . if you hadn’t brought me
out I would have died!”
DEATH WON ... In a dramat
ic effort to save the life of two-
month-old Joseph Bryant of
Boston, Patrolman Jeremiah
Harrington breathes into the
infant’s month.
This Is
Your Paper
You're Angry?
Write a Letter
By William R. Nelson
N ewspaper subscribers who
become angered at the paper
have long used cancellation of their
subscription as a means of show
ing their irritation. Such action is
generally looked upon as being the
same as stopping patronage of a
store to show displeasure. But, is
it the same?
The reader who cancels a news
paper subscription does not cancel
telephone, gas, water or electric
service to show displeasure with
those services. Yet, the home town
newspaper is, in many ways, com
parable to utility services.
There Is a
Subscription notable differ-
Is a ence between
Fraction newspaper and
other utility
services. It is the individual sub
scriber’s share of the cost. For all
services except newspaper, the sub
scriber pays the full share of cost
plus a profit or its equivalent.
The subscription price of the home
town newspaper, ■ however, is but
a fraction of the actual cost ol
producing and delivering it to each
subscriber.
Unlike other services, where ths
subscriber can somewhat control
the cost through regulation of the
amount used, neither the subscriber
nor the publisher can regulate the
amount of newspaper service to be
rendered. Being a continuous re
cording of local history, the amount
of newspaper space required is
bound to fluctuate. To meet its obli
gation, yet keep the cost of its serv
ice so low all can afford it, is why
the paper sells subscriptions below
cost.
Cancelling a subscription to a
newspaper, it seems obvious, is not
the best way to show displeasure.
A better way
Letter is to write a
Is letter to the pa-
Better Per. If your
point of dis
agreement is a matter of general
concern, and you authorize it, the
paper will publish your letter. In
that way you publicly chastise the
paper and tell another side of the
controversial matter.
Publication of matter critical of
themselves is another of the unique
characteristics of our newspapers.
No other public or private institu
tion or service is so willing and
eager to publicize its own mistaxes.
Subscribing to £he home town
newspaper should be looked upon
as the same as subscribing to the
other services available in the com
munity. The price is small and
adtually below the cost. And, what
ever the amount, it is a necessary
item for complete enjoyment of life
in the community.
mm puzile
LAST WOK'S
ANSWER
Patrice Wymore, known in New
York as a dancer and singer, re
ported for her role in “Tea for Two”
wearing the finest white slacks suit
money could buy, with a white cap
on her red hair. Even on the Warn
er Bros, lot she stood out. But two
minutes later deflation of the spirit
had set in. Director David Butler
took one look, and asked if she
were going to work on a parking
lot between pictures.
When James Cagney and his
“Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye” troupe
made some scenes at a Glendale
supermarket two elderly matrons
were spotted among the extra play
ers. They explained that they slipped
in to get just one close look at Mr.
Cagney.
. . . “Oh, Loring, what a
stupid little fool I’ve been!”
evening and planning this cam
paign—bringing you out here, I
mean.”
“The idea!” Armine tossed her
head. “Well, you can bring me
right back again.”
“Not until I say what I have to
say.”
S UDDENLY HE sobered. “That’s
the trouble with you — you’re
never willing to give a fellow a
chance. You take him at his face
value and let it go at that. It’s not
fair.”
What! Certainly you can’t be
serious. If this is some sort of
Joke, it’s m poor one. Please
take me back!”
“Wait.” He gripped her arm. His
ACROSS
1. Frighten
6. Family
groups
11. Pinaceous
tree
12. Indian
prince
13. Degrade
14. Century
plant
15. Thump
16. At home
17. Border
18. Pulls with
effort
21. GiU (abbr.)
22. Viper
25. Fish
26. Weight
(Java)
28. Twinkle,
as stars
31. State flower
of Utah
32. Rough lava
33 Footlike
organ
34. Half an em
35. Stripes
38. Cushion
40. Tantalum
(sym )
41 The Orient
45. Fresh-water
fish (Cur.)
47 Debate
48 Any climb
ing plant
49 Affirms
50 A dye
51. Set again
DOWN
1 Crust on a
wound
2. Philippine
port
8. First man
(Bib.)
4. Grating
5. Before
6. To wind
and turn
7. Loiter
8 Partly open
9. Journey by
water
10. Semites
16. A state of
U. S.
19. Island in a
river
20. Salt
(phem.)
22. Obngregate
23. Synopsis
of a play
24. Hog
27. Chart
29. Head
(slang)
30. Youth
36. The life
principle
(Hindu)
37. Wait on
39. Afternoon
receptions
42. Grows old
□□□Q □□□□
□EDO □BEHJ
□EBHEJ □□□□£!
□□□□&□ BDOC
□ □ nCSE
□ □□□ □□BBEIC
□□□ □an
□□hdoo nanc
□cd □□□ nn
aama □□□&□□
□□□□□ □□□□□
□□□e □□□□
□□□□ □□□□
43. True
44. Examination
46. Cuckoo
47. River
(Switz.)
N*.' 67 v
Meat Loaf, Potato Salad Makes Ideal Meal
(See Recipes' Below)
»
Z
s
A
f/S/
4
7.
8
9
lO
II
m
12
IS
m
14
IS
i
WSJ
17
1
i
7///
«
19
TO
21
22
zs
I
ZS
////
ZO
27
28
27
Jc
St
I
52
i
U
$4
3S
3*
$7
i
I
i
58
57
4*
i
41
42
4$
44
•45
46
I
47
.
48
ffr? ;
45
50
m
Si
Meals—Indoors or Out
W EEKEND plans have a way of
going awry, depending upon
who drops in and what the weath
er turns out to be. Fortunate in
deed is the homemaker who can
serve from four
to eight people
readily, or set
the dining room
table or bring
the meal to- the
back porch. ^
- Meals for such
weekends should
be planned with
care so there
will be ample food, but none to
waste. Choose combinations that
can be reheated and served later
if they’re not eaten.
Good staples for menus include
potato salad, ham or chicken. Have
salad ingredients washed and chill
ing so that you can use as many
or few as needed. A plain, cake
which can be frosted at the last
minute, or some creamy citrus sher
bet nestling in the refrigerator will
solve dessert or snack problems
conveniently, and with a flourish.
•Spicy Potato Salad
(Serves 6 to 8) t
3 pounds cooked potatoes
H cap pickle jnice
H cup finely chopped onion
2 teaspoons salt
34 teaspoon pepper
2 teaspoons celery seed
% cop chopped sweet pickles
3 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
H cup mayonnaise
Pare and dice potatoes; add
pickle juice and allow to chill in
the refrigerator for 1 hour! Add
onion, salt, pepper, celery seed,
chopped pickles and eggs. Blend in
mayonnaise, mixing lightly but
thoroughly chilled in refrigerator.
•Ham Loaf
(Serves 6-8)
2 pounds ground, smoked ham
1 pound fresh pork, ground
1 cap soft bread crumbs
1 egg, slightly beaten
M cup milk
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
1 teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 small onion, grated
34 cup sweet pickle relish
2 tablespoons melted butter
2 tablespoons brown sugar
Whole cloves
Combine ham, pork, bread
crumbs, milk, mustard, Worcester
shire sauce, onion and pickle relish;
mix lightly but thoroughly. Lightly
grease a 9x5x3-inch loaf pan; line
with waxed paper and grease light
ly. Pack mixture firmly into pan.
Combine butter and sugar and
spread over top of loaf. Insert
whole cloves on top of meat mix
ture. Bake in a moderately hot
(375°) oven for one hour or until
done. Pour off excess drippings
that form during baking. Serve hot
or cold.
• • •
H ERE’S A flavorful way to cook
chicken. It may be served hot,
but, if desired, the pieces of chick
en may be removed from the sea
sonings and cooled to be served
cold on a picnic supper.
Chicken Saute
(Serves 6)
1 frying chicken, cut in pieces
3 tablespoons butter or substi
tute
34 cup flour
LYNN SAYS:
Here are Flaverful
Summer Eating Tips
Green or snap beans from the
garden will take on a real taste
appeal when they are mixed, just
before serving, with some crisply
tried, crumbled bacon apd lightly
cooked chopped onion.
Fresh or canned grapefruit seg
ments and diced pears marinated in
apricot nectar in the freezing tray
make an excellent appetizer or
dessert course for hot weather
eating.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
•Spicy Potato Salad *Ham Loaf
Corn on the Cob
Bread and Butter Sandwiches
Carrot Sticks
Olives
Celery
•Orange Sherbet
•Easy Cake with Whipped Cream
and Bananas
•Recipe Given
thyme
onions, chopped
mushrooms, quartered
lemon Juice
t teaspoons salt
%
34
4
34 pound
2
1
1 teaspoon salt
34 apple Juice
2 medium tomatoes, diced
B
and chives
' Heat butter in heavy skillet Mix
flour, salt pepper and thyme in
paper sack. Shake pieces of chicken
in this seasoned flour mixture.
! Brown chicken
in skillet Add
pnions and
mushrooms. Cov
er and simmer
for three min
utes. Mix lemon
and apple juice,
sugar and salt
and pour over
chicken. Cover and simmer for
five minutes. Add tbmatoes. Cook
slowly for an hour, or until chicken
is fork tender. Sprinkle, before
serving, with parsley and chives.
V
H
ERE’S A SIMPLY mixed cake
which is delicious when laced
with whipped
cream, sliced
bananas and
maraschino cher
ries. If you pre
fer, ' a simple
lemon - orange
flavored or choc
olate icing may be used.
•Easy Cake
(Makes 2 8-inch layers)
194 cups sifted cake floor
34 cnp lard ^
74 cop sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
34 teaspoon salt
34 cop milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
2 eggs
Cream together % cup flour and
lard. Add the remaining flour,
sugar, baking powder, salt and 34
cup milk. Stir and beat vigorously
until smooth and fluffy. Add re
maining milk and beat thoroughly.
Add eggs, one at a time, beating
thoroughly after each addition.
Pour into two greased 8-inch cake
pans and bake in a moderate (350°)
oven for 20 to 25 minutes. Frost
when cool.
•Orange Sherbet
(Makes 3 pints)
34 cnp sugar
134 caps unstrained orange
Juice
1 cup evaporated milk,
thoroughly chilled -
2 tablespoons lemon Juice
Add sugar to orange juice and
stir until dissolved., ChilL , Whip
milk until very stiff. Fold in lemon
juice, then orange-sugar mixture.
Pour into cold freezing trays and
freeze until firm.
Serve chilled tomato juice with
lemon to start off porch suppers.
Pass with the juice a plate of
cream cheese balls rolled in finely
cut dried beef.
Dress up meat loaves with a pine
apple topping by placing slices ol
pineapple in bottom of a greased
loaf pan. Pack meat mixture on top
of fruit. Serve the loaf inverted.
Fold diced ham in your supper
waffle batter and make them more
tempting. Serve with tossed salad
and a colorful fruit dessert, and the
meal’s complete.
CLASSIFIED
BUILDING MATERIALS
JUST RELEASED
COUNTY franchises for th*
turing and distribution of the new
ed Termite Proofing concrete b
blocks. When building a new bom«
take the place of one course of the
lar blocks and are guaranteed to
Subterranean Termites out of the
Ing permanently. For particulars
or see the blocks at
Proofing Co., *781 Central Ato
Potorabnr*. Fla. Ph. 74-8373.
BUSINESS A INVEST. OPPOR.
NYLON Sheers. Nets & MarQUiief -
FuU. pcs. and shorts. Stdy supply,
col Levitt Fabrics, S3 Mercer St.
5-s6l8, New York City. N. Y.
FIRESTONE Store—wKh Western _
and bus agency, also Texaco Service
tlon located on courthouse circ-R*
ticello. Florida. W. D, Sawyer, e*
Phone no, Montlecllo. Phone or -
Approximately $15000.00 cash
DOGS, CATS, PETS, ETC.
MONKEYS for nets. Babies
adults. Live deliy
livery cuarnn.__
each, 4 for $100. Hundreds of birds,
rots. Love Birds. Write for Pries
Miami Rare Bird Far
KendalC
FARMS AND RANCHES
FOR Sale—fifteen hundred acre
acres cultivation, 700 acres v
good timber, good houses, gc
meats, a real General and S.
Electricity, deepweU. well loe
acre-farm, 155 acres cultivation, j
woodsland. good timber, on par
good houses, ideal stock farm,
me for full details and price.
J. A. Golden. Realtor
SSI Sylvester,
FARM MACHINERY A EQ
ATIONAL T-20
AY** HARROW
GARAGE. Phone La
▼Ule ^ 8600, ~ Lawreneeville
~ ~~.D. S, LawroneevUlo, Oa.
R.F,
HELP W
ANTED—MEN
sassswvs
pany, Centreville.
E. Belcher Lumber
AlabanMig ^ .
WANTED—Pulpwood contractors
and load. Stum page available
$3.00 unit, 40 to 20 mile ham.
Bex *4*. Rammend,
HELP WANTIMEN, W<
•at. A, Chicago, so.
Tyreha
AvaMa, . .
COLD 7 Cough T “Faskomelo^ -
for both. “Theothyme.” another _
tic spice from the Greek mountains.
35c pp. SOFFOS. 68 Washington,
ken, ft. J.
INSTRUCTION
SCHOOL OF- Jig-Saw-—Building
Engineering. Must be high ~ ‘
uate. Course $500; money
student sticks out the S
course. Starting wagas after
$50 oer week. Speedy advan
$10.(XX) per year, depending
,and application. Apply P.<
Jax, Fla.
SIGNWRITING SIMPLIFIED
alphabets, ten numerals, cata
Demonstrators, S41 S. Paallna.
MISCELLANEOUS
WATCH B. PA1
Guaranteed complete over
Parts. Only 33.50 (Plus
Insurance) One week *e:
BUDDY'S WATCH
ell St. S.W.
1*8 Mitchell
RE
■Bb
cm
fine su:
guaranteed,
rs In dli
_ not sat
SUPERFIN1
P.O. Bex tM
CAB Dealers, garages.
Plastic auto seat co\ — —
prices Write Keystone Mfg. Ce.,
S, Gn. for samples.
UNWANTED HAIR
Permanently eradicated from
with Saca-Pelo,
^ ’jj, JR 3. J.k. ...
c^the.body
_ discovery of the age.
tains no drug or chemical
the hair root.
Ltr-BMr Laboratories
879 Granville St., Va
POULTRY, CHICKS A
NORTHERN BOB WHITE Q
AND RING NECK
QUAIL: eggs—30c each.
Day old chicks—50c each.
12 week old quail • $2.00 each.
deL.
15 week old quail • $3.50 each. He
del.
PHEASANTS: eggs—26c each. I
Day old chicks—50c each.
8 weeks old—$1.75 each. July and 1
12 weed's old—$2.25 each. Aug. an#J
Sept. del. _ _ 1
Full grown birds—$3.25 hens,
cocks.
Live delivery guaranteed.
Booklet on raising and care with
order. Minimum shipment day
birds 25, larger birds 10.
EDWARF
P.O. Box 895
D A£tt n - *
NT FARM
Aabara. Ala.
REAL ESTATE—MISC.
OWNERS ef property in Florida or
ant t6 sell or trade. VTe.
diana who want
Thomas Nugent
1944 N. Alabama St., Indianapolis, Ii
Nhnniehts, ML Dora, Aorlda.
TRAVEL
I
Planning for the Put
Buy U.S. Savmya wnu
^WNKSi
6 FLAVORS ~
[ri Mm
* O V * — —.
£^MOROL
Tirnn ►» r r « o . f u m
WNU—7
GENERATION ^ 6
ha$ Used LANFS
jCut in half for small c
ind ea
Thoy are small an
For BEG-
And PROMPT
ULARr?Y
' ACTION