The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 30, 1951, Image 6
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Starter Fertilizing
Insufficient for Crop
Use of Fertilizer Alone
Won't Build Com Yields
One reason why some farmers
swear at and not by fertilizer, is
that they don’t use enough plant
food, the middle west soil improve
ment committee points out.
Adding a small amount of "start
er” fertilizer at planting time may
get corn off to a quick start. But
scanty applications often fail to
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Well-fertilized deep-rooted leg-
tunes grown in rotation will
build a reserve of plant food in
soil and increase corn yields.
provide sufficient nourishment to
carry the crop through the season
on low fertility soils.
Without a reserve of plant food in
the soil, the corn crop will starve
in midsummer and not have enough
nourishment to make ears.
The use of fertilizer alone will
build corn yields on most farms.
But for maximum yields, the farm
er needs to build the soil’s tilth
structure and organic matter sup
ply. When well-fertilized deep-rooted
legumes are grown regularly in
the rotation, the soil is mellowed
and conditioned for high com
yields. There are extra reserves of
crop-feeding organic matter avail
able.
Iowa Factories in 1950
Outproduced Iowa Farms
For the first time in 11 years,
Iowa factories outproduced Iowa
farms.
of January it was estimated
that Iowa factories turned out 2%
billion dollars’ worth of food prod
ucts, machinery, chemicals, drugs,
printed matter and other goods.
Sales of farm products in 1950 were
estimated at more than $2 billion,
but no estimate was as high as $2%
billion, even including the value of
produce eaten and used on the farm.
Factory products frequently nosed
farm products out of the number
one spot in Iowa’s economy between
1924 and 1939, although it usually
was c close race.
In 1924, for instance, cash receipts
from farm marketings totaled $666,-
533,000 and manufactured products
sold for $685,276,088.
Farm production is expected to
increase in Iowa during 1951, as
elsewhere in the nation, but with
the increased rearmament program
in full swing, factory production
will also increase.
Clip Dairy Cows—Care of the
dairy herd includes clipping. Clip
ping helps produce clean milk, re
duces labor needed in care of the
herd, helps control cattle lice, and
improves appearances of the cattle.
Flock Protectors
A pair of fleet-footed greyhounds
accompany Harold Jamieson, Osh
kosh, Nebraska, turkey raiser as he
iaapects part of his flock of 2,000
broad breasted bronze turkeys.
Jaaaieson explains that the dogs are
poison to coyotes which abound in
that part of the country, but never
bother the turkeys. A pair of huge
dogs like these are standard equip
ment with many turkey raisers in
southwestern Nebraska.
Neglect of Dental Care
Lewers Milk Production
loan H. Loughary, dairy special
ist, reports too many dairymen neg
lect dental care of their cows. When
a cow is about two to three years
old, the second set of teeth come in.
Occasionally, one or more of these
may come in crooked and when
this occurs the cow will not eat well
and her production is retarded.
Proper care by a veterinarian will
eliminate this defect in many dairy
herds.
IP' » Wwi i'M*
cookies Kate High at Snack Time
(See Recipes Below)
Cookie Jar Time v
/rvrrHEN I HAVE the cookie jar
filled,” says many a home
maker, “I feel that I’m ready for
anything, the children’s coming
home from school, teen ager’s get
together, or
friends dropping
in.”
With an assort
ment of delicious
cookies on hand,
you can indeed
be ready for al
most any form
of simple enter
taining. Serve them with a bev
erage for most occasions, add ice
cream, sherbet or a delectable
creamy pudding and you add a
flourish to your entertaining.
If the drain on the cookie jar is
heavy, make simple drop cookies
which are so easy on effort and
keeping quality.
* * *
Stone Jar Molasses Cookies
(Makes 3H dozen)
2*4 cups sifted flour
2 teaspoons double-acting
baking powder
1 teaspoon ginger
1 teaspoon salt
1 cup molasses
% cup butter
H teaspoon soda
Sift flour once, measure, add bak
ing powder, ginger, and salt, and
sift again. Heat molasses, remove
from fire; add butter and soda.
Add flour gradually, mixing well.
Chill until firm enough to roll. Roll
very thin on slightly floured bdard.
Cut With floured 2*4-inch cutter or
with fancy cutters. Bake in greased
baking sheet in moderate oven
(350*) 10 minutes.
• • •
•Fudge Squares
(Makes 20 1” x 3” squares)
H cup shortening
1 cup sugar
* eggs
2 squares bitter chocolate
94 cup sifted all-purpose' flour
94 teaspoon baking powder
94 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup broken nut meats
Blend shortening, sugar, and eggs.
Melt chocolate over hot water and
add to first mixture. Add flour,
baking powder, and salt which have
been mixed together. Add vanilla
and nut meats. Place in 7 w xl0 < 'x2*
pan which has been rubbed with
shortening. Bake in a moderate
oven (375°) for 25 to 30 minutes.
Cover with Fudge Icing.
+ + + i
Fudge Icing
2 tablespoons shortening
2 squares bitter chocolate
94 teaspoon salt
1 cup sifted confectioners’
sugar
1 tablespoon milk
94 teaspoon vanilla
Melt chocolate over hot water.
Pour over the
shortening and
mix thoroughly.
Gradually add
the confection
ers’ sugar, salt,
milk, and vanil
la. Stir until
smooth. Cover
fudge squares while still warm.
* • *
Date Nut Drops
(Makes 4-5 dozen)
94 cup shortening
1 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
2 cups broken nut meats
2 cups seedless raisins
2 cups chopped dates
LYNN S 'VS:
Serve Palatable Desserts
To Satisfy Big Appetites
There's always time to make a
dessert if you use simple ideas
which can be dressed up easily. For
instance, melt some chocolate pep
permint wafers and use to frost
pound cake. Sprinkle with chopped
nuts.
Griddlecakes make an excellent
dessert if they’re fruit-filled. To
regular batter add some chopped,
tart apples and fry. Serve with
brown sugar and cinnamon.
LYNN CHAMBERS’ MENU
Veal Balls, Sour Cream Gravy
Buttered Noodles
Julienne Carrots
Lettuce-Spinach Salad
Bran Rolls Butter Beverage
Rhubarb Sauce *Fudge Squares
•Recipe Given
194 cups sifted all-purpose
c flour
94 teaspoon baking soda
94 teaspoon salt
94 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon cinnamon
94 teaspoon cloves
94 teaspoon allspice
2 tablespoons orange or pine
apple juice
Cream shortening and sugar; add
eggs and beat well. Add nut meats,
raisins, and dates and mix. Add
flour, soda, baking powder, salt,
cinnamon,
cloves, allspice
which have been
mixed together,
and fruit juice.
ChiU dough.
Drop from tea
spoon two inches
apart on a bak
ing sheet rubbed
with shortening.
Bake in a moderate oven (375*) 12
to 15 minutes.
• • •
Corn Flake Kisses
94 cup sugar
1 egg
94 cup melted shortening
1 cup flour (sifted before
measuring)
1 cup corn flakes
1 teaspoon baking powder
94 teaspoon salt
94 cup chopped nut meats
1 cup finely cut dates
Combine sugar, shortening and
egg. Sift dry ingredients together.
Add to the first mixture along with
remaining ingredients. Drop from a
teaspoon onto a greased cookie
sheet. Flatten tops .slightly. Bake
in a moderately hot oven (400*)
for 10 minutes.
• • •
Scotch Oatmeal Cookies
1 cop lard
1 cup brown sugar
94 cup sour milk
2 cups flour, pastry (sifted be
fore measuring)
2 cups oatmeal
1 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon vanilla
94 teaspoon salt
Cream lard and sugar until light
and fluffy. Add sour milk in which
the soda has been dissolved. Add
oatmeal and flour, reserving enough
flour to roll out cookies (about 94
cup). Roll out and cut into squares.
Place on a greased cookie sheet,
sprinkle with sugar. Bake in a mod
erate oven (350°) 15 minutes.
* • •
Sour Cream Cookies
1 cup brown sugar
94 cup shortening
1 egg
1 cup chopped nut meats
2 cups pastry flour (sifted be
fore measuring)
1 teaspoon nutmeg
94 teaspoon soda
2 teaspoons baking powder
94 teaspoon salt
94 cup sour cream
Cream shortening, add sugar,
then mix well. Add the egg; beat
thoroughly. Sift together flour, soda,
baking powder, salt, and nutmeg,
then add alternatively with sour
cream to the first mixture. Mix
well and drop from a teaspoon on
well-greased cookie sheet. Bake in
moderate oven (350°) 20 minutes.
Several kinds of fruit left in the
refrigerator? Place in deep dish,
top with piecrust and bake. Invert
so crust is on the bottom, slice like
pie and serve with whipped cream.
Baked fruit like pears and apples
can be served on top of small
slices of slightly stale cake. Have
plenty of syrup from the fruit to
spoon onto the cake.
Keep individual pastry tart shells
on hand along with chocolate,
vanilla and butterscotch puddings.
You have a choice of tarts any time
you want them.
SpPlii
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THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C.
THE
(Wr'.l
Town ^
ggPORTSP
IN WASHINGTON
WALTER 5HEAO WNU Co rf -ponden
M ORRISVILLE, Pa.—Here in the
cradle of American liberty,
only a stone’s throw south of the
site of Gen. George Washington’s
historic crossing of the Delaware
river, a new and exciting chapter in
the romance of American industry
was written recently when ground
was broken for the construction of
the Fairless works of the United
States Steel corporation.
There have been new plants of
United States Steel built in this
country in the fifty-year history of
USS, but never before, even under
pressure of two world wars, has a
steel plant of this size been built
all at one time, which, by the end at
next year, will be producing 1,800,-
000 ingot tons of steel.
The day, the weather, the site
and the plans made to promote the
occasion were all of a piece to
stimulate the imagination: a cold,
snow-spitting day; 3900 acres in a
bend of the Delaware river just
south of this small village.
It could have been such a day
when the Continental army In
small boats assayed the cross
ing of the ice-choked Delaware
to engage the British in the bat
tle of Trenton. But there was no
such luxury and trimmings and
gas heat, no filet mignons for
the ragged, battle-weary, eqld
and bedraggled troops of Gen
eral Washington as greeted the
guests of United States Steel.
Today the work is going forward
to build a $500,000,000 plant to pro
duce more steel to stiffen the ribs
of the nation and to pour more
wealth into its economic veins. It
does not require much of the im
agination to picture this spot with
in a few short months—10,000 em
ployees who must have houses, who
must have schools and shopping
facilities and churches where there
are none today. It requires little of
the imagination to picture the huge
dredging boats which will rout out
a channel in the Delaware from
Philadelphia up to the Trenton
bridge, 40 feet deep, and dock facili
ties accommodating large size ocean
going vessels.
And in the mind of this reporter,
who was present on this occasion,
the Fairless works of United States
Steel is the smaller end of this proj
ect which has required several
years of planning and promotion, of
vision and pioneering effort. For
at the other terminal of these huge
ocean going vessels is a veritable
mountain of iron ore which must
be scooped up and transported from
the jungles of Venezuela to the
hungry maws of the pre-eating fur
naces of the Fairless works on the
banks of the Delaware.
And here again the pioneering
spirit and the imagination of the
men who run United States Steel is
projected into the future. For in the
revolution-troubled country of South
America, engineers of USS must
dredge through the troublesome
delta of the Orinoco, up-riyer into
the jungles past Ciudad Bolivar, up
stream on a tributary to Bolivar
mountain, said to be higher grade
ore than in the famous Mesabi
range in northern Minnesota. But
more, two towns must be built for
employees of this fast undertaking,
more schools and stores and hous
ing and spraying against jungle ills,
before ocean going ore boats form
a moving link between the South
American republic and the vast new
plant in Pennsylvania. More than a
billion dollars is involved in this
gigantic undertaking by U^^d
States Steel on two continents
As Benjamin Fairless, presi
dent of United States Steel,
said: "This constant interchange
of wealth between two conti
nents will create new jobs,
new homes, new opportunities
and new prosperity for the peo
ple of both countries, and will
surely strengthen the historic
bonds which have long united
the Americas — economically,
politically and fraternally.”
This reporter sees in this vast
new undertaking of private enter
prise another evidence of the part
nership so often spoken about—a
partnership between labor, industry
and government. It took govern
ment certificates of necessity for
permission to build this plant; it
took government allocations of the
steel to fabricate the plant and it
takes the government, through army
engineers, to provide the channel
in the Delaware so that ships may
go through. All of which makes
rather ridiculous the oft-heard
charges from private enterprise it
self, that the government is going
socialistic and that private enter
prise is doomed. It would appear
that United States Steel has at least
a billion dollars worth of faith that
private enterprise is here to stay.
* * •
%
18-Year-Olds
The 79 to 5 vote by which the
senate passed the bill providing for
the draft of 18-year-olds now and
universal military training later,
was a surprise even for the sup
porters of the bill. On final passage
only five Republican senators voted
against the measure.
The bill now goes to the house
where it will possibly face another
period of debate,, but should pass
without too much difficulty.
THE READER'S DATE BOOK
Seventh Annual Sunday School
Week Scheduled for April 9-15
One of the most important observances for the home towns
of America during the coming month will be the observance of
National Non-Sectarian Sunday School Week, April 9-15. Sen.
Styles Bridges of New Hampshire will serve as chairman, of the
1951 observance.
The acceptance of Senator Bridges to be chairman during the
week of the observance which is designed to increase by hundreds
of thousands the regular attendance
of children in Sunday schools of all
■ - faiths, was made
public by Dr. Al
fred P. Haake.
chairman of the
layman’s national
committee, a non
sectarian, n o n-
profit organiza
tion, sponsoring
the activities for the seventh year.
Senator Bridges in accepting the
post of chairman said:
“Ever since its inception, the
National Non-Sectarian Sunday
School Week has been a growing
movement. It has the single objec
tive in mind of impressing upon
every American man, woman and
child his responsibility to God and
country.
"America was founded upon the
principle that every nation’s ulti
mate trust must be in God.
"Today, in face of the world sit
uation, I am more convinced than
ever that that faith which was so
much a part of the lives of the
founding fathers of our country,
must find a rebirth. In the minds
of those who are trying to build a
sane and peaceful world our nation
and the other free nations of the
world today are committed to a’
life and death struggle with athe
istic communism. This battle can
never be won alone by force of
arms or diplomacy. The ultimate
strength .which America brings to
this struggle must come from a
people consecrated to the prin
ciple that spirituality is the final
reality.
"I believe, without hesitation,
that the layman's national com
mittee, through the National
Non-Sectarian Sunday School
Week, can make a much needed
contribution to the strengthen
ing of the spiritual life of our
nation.
“I have agreed to serve as chair
man of this very important move
ment. Our task this year is
to form a ‘committee of 100,’
consisting of 100 outstanding execu
tives, representative of 100 different
industries to serve as honorary
vice chairmen.”
People in all walks of life, in the
home towns and cross roads of
the nation, will be encouraged by
proclamations and statements of
their governors and mayors to
make this week a major one in their
communities. Veteran groups, indus
trial organizations, labor unions,
civic and fraternal organizations,
women’s clubs, youth movements,
chambers of commerce, and other
organizations have been asked for
personal participation.
Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, in a
statement read at the recent con
vention of the American association
of school administrators, expressed
one of the purposes of the observ
ance when he declared the develop
ment of integrity and civic respon
sibility in all American youth is an
essential element in the defense of
the American system of government
and democratic life.
April
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
Efficient Use of Electricity Is
Vital in Time of National Crisis
BY CLAUDE R. WICKARD
Rural Electrification Administrator
Adequate supply and efficient
use of electricity on the farm in
time of national crisis can well
spell the difference between ample
production for wartime needs and
serious shortages.
In the last decade and a half,
electricity has proved itself an ef
fective tool in producing more food
with less hum?**, labor. The nation
consequently b z much to be thank
ful for because there are 3,000,000
more farms now than at the time
of Pearl Harbor wired and ready
to use the power of electricity.
An increasing number of farmers
know what electricity can do for
them. This is shown by how quickly
they put this new power to more and
more farm tasks once service is
available.
Farm labor already is hard to
find, and many materials impor
tant to the farmer will increase in
scarcity. Electricity provides a
means of offsetting these shortages
because it enables the farmer to
do more with less.
With nine out of ten farms al
ready connected to the high-
lowa Testing Landing
Fields for Small Towns
OSCEOLA, Iowa. — Four Iowa
cities are leading the way toward
an airport program nearly every
small town and city can afford.
Osceola, Hampton, Ida Grove and
Guttenburg now have single-strip
airports, adequate for farmers’ and
businessmen’s private planes.
Each of the airports was built at
a total cost of well under $1,000.
They adjoin a main highway and
are only a mile or so from town.
■
— 1 .’n,
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Cobbler's Bench Makes
Unusual Coffee Table
1 ->
SCRIPTURE: Genesis 1—3; Psalm
104; John 1:1-3.
DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 19:
l-«.
God Invented Us
Lesson for April 1, 1951
MAKE A COBBLERS BENCH
COFFEE TABLE OF SOLD P*£
This is the official poster to
be used during the seventh an
nual observance of National
Non-Sectarian Sunday School
Week, April 9-15, 1951. It has
already been posted throughout
the nation.
THE WEEKS AHEAD
Mar. 25-31—Advertising Recogni
tion Week.
25-31—Honey for Breakfast
Week.
1—April Fool’s Day.
1—Clean - up, paint - up,
fix-up campaigns be
gin (April-Msy).
1- 7—Conservation Week.
1- 8—National Laugh Week.
1-30—America’s Heartland
Development Month.
1-30—Cancer Control Month.
1- 30—Let’s Play Ball Month.
2- 8—Boy’s Club Week.
2-12—Carpet Fashion Open
ing.
2-22—Sprint Style Show of
American Gas
Ranges.
4- 9—American Camp Week.
4-14—Nationally Advertised
Brands Week (drugs
and varieties).
7- 14—Donut Week.
8 —Daughter’s Day.
8- 14—Pan-American Week.
9- 15—Sunday School Week.
11—Brand Names Day.
11-17—Trimmed-Dress Week.
11- 21—Nationally Advertised
Brands Week in chain
variety stores. '
12- 22—Large Size Week (in
dependent drug
stores).
12-28—Silver Parade (Jewel
ry Industry Council).
15-21—Want Ad Week.
15- 21—Noise Abatement
Week. «
16- 29—Packaging Week.
19- 21—Leather Goods Week.
16-22—Garden Week.
20- 29—Coin Week.
20-29—Rice Week.
22-28—U.S.-Canada Good
Will Week.
lines, and construction being
speeded to reach most of the
others, farmers are in a better
position than ever before to
meet the nation’s emergency
needs. They have an opportunity
* to use electricity for their bene
fit. They have a responsibility
to use It for the nation's bene
fit. '
We know that in many tasks a
one-horsepower electric motor,
using a few pennies worth of power,
can, do as much work in an hour
as a man can do in a day. We know
that poultry and egg production, for
instance, show 10 to 40 per cent
increases with the use of electricity.
A simple homemade pig brooder,
made largely of a light bulb and
some odds-and-ends of lumber, will
cut losses at farrowing time by
30 > per cent.
Electricity works through ma
chines and appliances. Now there is
a good possibility the farmer’s
electrical equipment will not be as
easy to replace as has been the
case. Repair parts may even be
difficult to get if the emergency
lasts any length of time.
This makes It highly impor
tant that farmers do everything
possible to keep their power
equipment in good running
order. We strongly urge fann
ers to check over every piece
of electrical equipment on their
farms—clean it up, oil it as re
quired, replace worn cords and
broken plugs.
The county extension agent and
other workers in the extension serv
ice either at the county or the state
office will have information in this
field of farm operation.
/#P«0D INVENTED it,” says C.
^ S. Lewis about the universe.
It is a 20th-century way of saying
what the Bible says about God and
the world. There have been whole
religions based on
the idea that God is
good and spirit is
good, but anything
which is not God or
not spirit is bad. If
this were true, then
our bodies would be
bad, and all the
physical world
about us would be
bad; our souls Dr. Foreman
would be prisoners, so to speak, in
a vast fortress of evil.
This is not the truth the Bible
tells. The story of Creation in Gen
esis tells us that when God had fin
ished with making the world he saw
that it was good, very good. He in
vented the world, he invented spirit
and matter both, he invented us
body and soul. Whatever evil is
now in the world and in man did
not come from God, it is not a mis
take of God’s. The world, as God
invented it and intends it, is food.
• • •
The World Did not Happen
T HE Christian church has changed
some of its ideas about Brea-
tion, but it has never ceased to.be-
Heve in creation. Very few church
es, if any, now affirm that ' the
world was created in precisely six
24-hour days, and still fewer would
be willing to name the dates on
which creation took place.
Nevertheless the Christian
church has not given up,, and
will not give up, her belief that
God created all things. The doc
trine of creation means, first of
all, that the one God willed the
universe and what is in it.
The universe did not happen, it
did not make itself. It was not made
by different gods working against
one another. Zoroastrianism, for in
stance, teaches that the world was
made by two gods, one of light and
one of darkness. Whatever the god
of light created, the god of dark
ness would make something exact
ly opposite. No, Jews and Christians
alike say, there is only one Crea
tor, the infinitely wise and good
God.
• • •
Nature’s Laws
l^-ON - RELIGIOUS philosophers
™ have sometimes said that the
world explains itself. But Christian
philosophers, not to mention Jew
ish ones as well, have seen that the
world does not explain itself. There
is too much evidence of purpose
and design running through the pat
terns of the universe. Definite laws
can be discovered and to some de
gree understood.
.The same laws which govern
matter on this planet, and In
deed the very same elements,
the "building-blocks of the uni
verse,” are to be discovered in
the remotest stars. If the uni
verse were an accident It would
not he tied together as it is.
It would not be a universe of law
but one in which nothing could be
counted on, nothing expected. It
would be no universe but a multi-
verse, a mad world, indeed no
world at 'all but an infinite con
fusion.
t • • •
Why Are We Here?
B UT CREATION means something
more personaL It means that
we ourselves have been called into
existence by the Almighty,—not by
a god of mere sheer power, but by
the one God of infinite and all-
powerful Love. Man is not here on
this planet by some trick of blind
fate, mankind is not a mere fleck
of foam tossed up by the restless
ocean of the Infinite, soon to be
washed away in the ebbing tides.
Man—that means also, we ourselves
—are God’s invention.
We are not now as he intend
ed us, to be sure; sin has
change)! the picture sadly, as
we shall be thinking next week.
Why are we here? We are here
because God put us here. This
means that life has a meaning; but
also that we cannot find that mean
ing without knowing the will of
God. His will is for our welfare;
only the Creator knows what is best
for his creatures. God intended this
world to be used by us, not abused.
When any man or group of men
get the notion thVt this world be
longs to them alone; or when one
generation misuses the resources
of the lands and the waters, leaving
to their descendants a wasted earth,
then God’s will in creation is being
defied. But when we take his will
as life’s guide, we are on the way
to fulfilling his purpose in Crea
tion.
(Copyright 1M1 fejr Dtrlstai «f
CtaristUa EdpeaUan, N»U*a»l
af tta Ckarahea at Chrlal la tha Ualtad
Stataa af Aaaarlaa. Ralaaaad kg WNU
Faataraa.)
Cobbler’s Bench
M AKE YOUR own reproduction
of an old-time cobbler’s bench.
The containers he used and the
underslung drawer will serve you
well.
Pattern 23A gives a bill ot matertala.
actual-size cutting guides and Illustrated
dlrectiona for every step Price af oat
tarn 23S ta 25c.
WORKSHOP PATTERN ttCRVICR
Orawef It
-Regard Hilla. New Fare.
Omitted Sins
The pastor was examining one
of the younger classes, and asked
the question: "What are the sins
of omission?” After a little si
lence one young lady offered:
“Please, sir, they’re sins we
ought to have committed, and
haven’t.”
TONITE POP
POP
CORN
I
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■V v ' - ••‘‘1
SLEEP
awful
Doctors aay many other
•tMsaefc whera they often
iwurtahing jood^ you
_But gantla awof-*-
Taken aa recommended, it
In tha lower bowel — ra
waste, net weed feed! You as
weak faellng — you feel line. ^
life I Get rm
Creomulsiom
it goes right to the sett i
to help loo
phlegm and aid nature to
heal raw, tender, inflamed 1
membranes. Guaranteed to i
or money refunded.
stood tile test of millions of
shifhb?
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