The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, September 14, 1951, Image 3
Efficient Machines
Increase Production
American Farm Records
Are Made by Equipment
No one any longer disputes the
fact the machine, namely the trac
tor, has replaced the horse on the
average American farm. Constant
research in recent years has re
sulted in high speed implements,
more work for each gallon of fuel,
and a number of multiple-job at
tachments for the farm tractor.
The mechanization of American
agriculture has been the main rea
son for increased farm production
in the last 10 years or more. But
it stands to reason that the more
- A? J , ; £ ' J
mte. Mm
HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS
Two American Documents To Be
Enshrined on Constitution Day
mmu puhle
LAST WEEK'S
ANSWER
The tractor has replaced the
horse on thousands of American
farms, but many farmers still
do not know how to get the rno^t
efficient use from the tractor.
mechanized the farm becomes, the
more important it is for the farmer
to know how to care for ftis ma
chinery and how to operate it skill
fully.
Properly adjusted machinery can
pull with less gas and less strain on
vital parts. Such things as proper
hitching, use of the right kind of
oil and regular lubrication, sharp
soil-working tools, correct carbu
retor adjustment, can improve
tractor efficiency from 10 to 20 per
cent.
Crop Conditions Are
Reported Good in U.S.
The U.S. department of agricul
ture reported continued improve
ment in conditions for crop devel-
opement during June and early
July has resulted in prospects
among the most favorable the coun
try has ever known.
The department reported farmers
were able to plant crops on the
largest aggregate acreage since
1933. Yield prospects are reported
virtually as good as the best in re
cent years. Winter wheat prospects
improved, despite adverse harvest
ing conditions in parts of Oklahoma
and Kansas, and spring wheat acre
age-exceeded planting intentions by
nearly a half-million acres.
As a result, an all wheat crop of
1,070 million bushes, 18 million more
than on June 1, is now in prospect.
Larger acreage of corn, hay, soy
beans and sorghums than intended
•arlier are growing under mostly
favorable conditions. Of the major
crops only rice and hay are ex
pected to set new production rec
ords, but several others will be of
near-record size.
Caring for chickens housed in
coops is simplified with feed
boxes like the one shown above.
It has small wheels at one end
and can be pulled out for filling
without opening a door through
which chickens might escape.
Hie boxes are made like draw
ers with the front ends project
ing beyond the sides so they
cannot be accidentally pushed
beyond the openings in the coop
sides. Wheels are attached to
the rear ends on nail axles and
rest on the bottoms of the coops.
Factory Wages Buy More
Food Ilian in 1929
An hour of work in a factory wil
buy, on the average, a largei
quantity of nearly ail kinds of fooc
than it would a generation ago, ac
cording to the U.S. department oi
agriculture.
Department figures on food prices
factory wages for 1929 show
that the average wage for an hour
of factory work would buy 6.4
loaves of bread. Now it would buy
10 loaves.
America’s most precious histori- *
cal documents—the Constitution of
the United States and the Declara- \
tlon of Independence—will be en
shrined permanently in hermetical
ly sealed glass enclosures at a cere
mony Monday, (Sept. 17) Constitu
tion Day.
The ceremony, in which Presi
dent Truman and Chief Justice Vin
son are scheduled to participate, is
expected to be one of the most im- i
pressive ever held in the history of ;
TNOROTHY Samoflf, cur rently
^ giving a delightful performance
in the Broadway musical, ‘‘The
King and I,” still finds time for
many guest performances o n
radio, to which she owes her first
big break. Some years ago she
auditioned for Menotti’s radio
opera, “The Old Maid and the
Thief,’’ at NBC, won the role, and
was enthusiastically received all
DOROTHY SARNOFF
over the country. This autumn may
find her on the air regularly on a
new program. In her very limited
spare time she creates hats, paints
a landscape occasionally, and re
cently has begun designing travel
ling bags—her latest, made of plas
tic, will soon be on the market.
BiU Holden is looking for a
new hobby, one fitting for a
man with three children and
not much time. He’s given up
building model airplanes with
motors—almost lost a finger at
it, just before starting “Force
of Arms,” at Warners*.
Hollywood loves Murray Sices,
leading designer of suits for small
women—so many of the stars are
about the size of Wanda Hendrix,
who’s five feet two. With little time
to shop, they used to find it almost
impossible to find clothes that
would make them look the way
their fans expect them to.
In the beginning, 12 years ago,
“Mr. District Attorney’’ was pat
terned after the legal career of an
ace prosecutor, Thomas E. Dewey.
It switches from NBC to ABC on
September 21, and October 1 will
also be seen on television.
Star Bill Johnstone of the CBS
Radio Network’s “The Line-up”
and his son Ronald, a Los Angeles
drama student, are building an
elaborate model theatre, 41 inches
by three feet by three feet. It will
be operated entirely by electrical
power, and they are doing all the
work themselves—but they’re let
ting Mrs. Johnstone make the cos
tumes, sets, etc.
In a test sealing, Dr. Roy W.
Wampler, assistant director of
research for Libbey - Owens-
Ford Glass company; Alvin W.
Kremer, of the library of con
gress, and Dr. G. M. Kline, of
the national bureau of stand
ards, show how the original
documents of the constitution of
the United States and the Dec
laration of Independence will
be preserved permanently in
helijm-filled glass cases.
the parchments, particularly since
this will be the last time the docu
ments will be touched by human
hands. Scientists say the en
closures will preserve the papers
“for as long as man can foresee.”
After the ceremony the sealed
leaves will be replaced in their
Shrine in the Library, where they
have been viewed by an estimated
20,000,000 persons in the last 27
years. The display of the single
page of the Declaration and the
five leaves of the Constitution is
expected to attract even greater
throngs of sightseers after the
ceremony.
Plans for preserving the original
engrossed and signed manuscripts
are the result of studies and ex
periments made during the last 10
years by the national bureau of
standards at the request of Luther
H. Evans, librarian of congress.
During the last two years the |
library and the NBS have been as
sisted by thermopane technicians
of the Libbey-Owens-Ford Glass
Company, who perfected the special
metal-to-glass seal used to keep the
glass cases air-tight.
“Every resource of science and
technology has been applied in the
effort to make these precious doc
uments as permanently secure as
the principles they proclaim,” said
Dr. Evans.
• • •
DR. EDWARD U. CONDON, di
rector of the national bureau of
standards, explained that exhaus
tive tests were conducted before the
NBS scientists and the library de
cided this was the best method of
protecting the documents and at
the same time making it possible to
continue to exhibit them publicly.
The glass enclosures, basically
the same as the thermopane insula
ting glass used in thousands of
American homes, will be filled with
helium, an inert gas, as a further
measure of protection for the doc
uments. Even the relative humidity
inside the cases is controlled to pre
vent the parchments from expand
ing or shrinking.
The early history of these docu
ments was dramatic and—especial
ly in the case of the Declaration of
Independence which is 175 years old
this year—involved much rough
handling during the Revolution and
the War of 1812. During the last
generation, however, the library
has protected them carefully and
this latest improvement in the
method of display is expected to
preserve them intact for future
generations of Americans.
ACROSS
1. A food
fish
6. Conflicts
10. A thick
soup
11. On top
12. Inner
courtyard
13. Boring tool
14. Biblical -
lion
15. Specimen
16. Web-footed,
flightless
bird
19. Half an em
20. Organs of
hearing.
21. Fairy
(Moh.
Paradise)
23. Gloss
25. A depression
(Anat.)
26. Ringlet
27. Push with
the head
28. Registered
Nurse
(abbr.)
29. Cardinal
number
32. Marbles
35. Hewing tool
36. A pacing
horse
37. A former
Russian
leader
39. Sea eagle
40. Floating
masses
of ice
41. Colors,
as fabric
42. A heron
DOWN
1. Extra
2. One who
mutinies
3. Silkworm
4. Sign of the
zodiac
5. Tellurium
(sym.)
6. Possessing
heat
7. Aslant
8. Tumbler
pigeons
9. Round,
pad-like
borders
(Anat.)
12. Invalid’s
food
13. City (N.
Palestine)
15. Little girl
17. One of
CelUc
people
of Ireland
18. Receptacle
for coffee
21. Body of
water
22. To alienate
23. Grated
harshly
24. Republic
(C. Eur.)
25. Merriment
27. Public
vehicle
29. Feminine
pronoun
30. Be
HHiinu muiiM
□uamuia mum
wuaau nuhuh
1114 Mlimidld
UHfci mHHUIO
MkiMUH UUUKM
mmuNC! um
mi
nunn lomuMM
st^atf nmiiHM
rrmau unam
N-se
31. Lair
33. Skin
disorder
34. Elevations
(golf)
37. A support
38. Blunder
40. Exist
1
2
4
5 '
i
6
1
8
9
10
7//
7/s
II
12
i
13
14
%
m
IS
iff
n
16
i
19
20
i
21
22
25
24
SJ
25
2b
i
27
28
i
29
30
3»
32’
33
34
l
35
3b
37
38
39
1
40
1
41
42
!
1-21
THE
FICTION
LUCKY LESLIE
CORNER
By Helen Langworthy
T HEY CALL ME Lucky Leslie—
not because I’m so lucky but be
cause of my wiff Celia and her
phobia. Sure, lots of people believe
in luck, omens and tnat stuff. But
you could cover half the country
before you’d find anyone the equal
of my Celia for ideas on luck. It’s
not ordinary garden variety luck
... that Celia talks
3 -Minute about eit ^ er — not
S 1 .". four leaf clovers,
riCtiOn new moons and
-J rabbit’s feet. Oh,
no! Celia goes in strong for lucky
numbers. In her book, 7 is the
luckiest, 3 is a fair number and 6
you skid by with eyes shut and
hands clenched.
Celia believes- if you have good
fortune doing a thing a certain
queer way once, then if you repeat
it—bingo!—you’re fortunate. If Celia
were to find a diamond on the
corner of Main street on the 7th of
the month and while wearing a red
rain coat; she would believe that
next month, come the 7th, she could
don the same rain coat (no matter
if the sun was blazing), go back and
find a ruby. The queer part of it is
—Celia would.
When we were married in those
unpleasant days of ’43, I had leave
from the 15th of one month to the
next. We had known each other for
a couple years, Celia and I. If I’d
had my way we’d have been mar
ried the 16th. But Celia said, “The
7th—that’s the day for luck.” Even
reminding her that that date was a
century away and that we would
be'married but a few days before I
went back into action wouldn’t
swerve her. The 7th it was; To this
day Celia believes the reason I
wasn’t amongst the 166 killed in our
regiment was because we were mar-
GRASSROOTS
There Is a Way To Repeal Income Tax Amendment
By Wright A. Patterson
T HE FEDERAL CONSTITUTION
provides two methods of
amending that document.
The one method with which we
are familiar calls for the passage
of a resolution by Congress call
ing for an amendment, followed by
ratification of the proposed amend
ment by the legislatures of three-
fourths of the states.
The other provides for pas
sage by any state legislature of
a demand for an amendment
and then ratification of that de
mand by the legislatures of
two-thirds of the states.
The second method bypasses
Congress entirely. The Los Angeles
Times referred to this method of
amendment as a “club provided for
the states for the protection of
states’ rights.”
It is now being considered as a
method of repealing the amendment
that made possible the levying of fed
eral income taxes. This would force
the national government out of the
field of tax revenue and leave it to
the states to provide for state ex
penditures and would stop the
"grants in aid" that now represents
the largess of the national govern
ment out of federal taxes in exchange
for which the states surrender much,
of their sovereignty.
It took a long time to secure the
enactment of the 16th amendment,
the income tax amendment, by the
needed three-fourths of the state
legislatures, even when the amend
ment was backed by the powerful
influence of Theodore Roosevelt.
Twenty-one states have voted
for the calling of a constitu
tional convention. A vote of 32
is necessary to call one.
When such a convention meets
it can propose such an amendment,
or amendments, and then three-
fourths of the states must ratify the
proposed changes to make them
effective.
Limit to federal taxation is bring
ing action from the states. The pro
posal has been made to repeal the
16th amendment and substitute one
that would limit the federal to 25
per cent, leaving a share for state and
local governments.
With the federal government now
owning a large portion of the land
within the state boundaries and
withholding it from state and local
taxation and with the seizure of tide
land oil, the federal government is
depriving the states of a source of
revenue. There are more and more
sources of state revenue being
jeopardized.
Many officials fear there will be
nothing left on which to levy state
taxes unless a way can be found to
halt the grabbing of the source of
state tax revenue.
When state and local govern
ments can no longer finance their
operations, they must, of necessity,
pass out of existence, leaving all
government functions to Congress.
A new concept of taxes on a na
tional basis is needed. Certain lev
ies should be provided for the sup
port of the national government
with no provisions for federal
“grants in aid.” Other tax fields
should be left open to state and
ocal governments.
That would be in line with what
Congress has been talking without
making any attempt to effectuate
their idea. Now, a constitutional
convention, called by 32 state legis
latures, may start the idea rolling.
Want to be sure about it all?
Would you like to learn more about
that “club” in the hands of the
states? Read Article V of the Con
stitution of the United States. It
is there, with the processes re
quired well stated. A constitutional
convention is in the making.
*
Our fears of the big, bad Russian
Bear are home inspired, and that
fear has been built for a partisan
purpose. The people of Europe,
3,000 miles nearer the Red army
than we are, have no thought of
war with Russia. They are willing
to fight if the needs come, but they
have no expectation of an attack
by Communistic Russia in any see-
able future. Fact is, there is more
likely to be a revolution within Rus
sia, involving the Red army, than
a World War III, but our home
manufactured war scare provides
an emergency'' for us. Emergen
cies were the foundation on which
the bureaucratic army was started
and has been built, and that is defi
nitely partisan political.
But Celia said, “The 7th—
that’s the day for luck.”
ried on the 7th. And maybe she’s
right!
Take our son—the doctor said
David would be born on June
26th. Celia said she chose July
3rd. The doctor snorted,
“Choose!” But David was born
on the 3rd of July at 7 o’clock-
just like Celia had predicted.
Her strongest belief is that things
happen in 3’3. If there’s 2 big train
wrecks, Celia expects the third.
When David had measles and chick
en pox inside of 2 months, I thought
it enough. Celia said there would be
more. He came down with the
mumps on the 6th. If we have un
expected company 2 nights in a
row, Celia makes a batch of cookies
and waits for someone to drop in
without warning. They always dot
B UT even Celia couldn’t find
enough lucky omens or charms to
counteract the 6th of the month that
was rushing at us. Old Crawford,
head of Crawford Corporation said
business was so bad that half the
office crew would be through on the
6th. I was one of the last taken on.
The 6th was coming and I had a
good idea of who was going to get
a pink dismissal slip in their pay
envelope. Celia said she would try
to think of something. Ha! We both
knew we were whistling in the dark.
Early the morning of that fateful
day David woke with a terrific
stomach ache. Two hours later he
went to the hospital for an appendi
citis operation. I know, operations
aren’t unusual. But it was blow
number one—of three. At breakfast
our toaster popped sparks and
smoke instead of toast. Celia chat
tered about the low cost of repairs.
But I knew she was thinking to her
self ‘the second trouble.’
Like they had gone into deep
mourning, that’s the way the of
fice force looked. I tried to write
op orders like it was just any
day, instead of the 6th. Celia
telephoned to say she had
dropped her wrist watch and
broken it. Now why was a trivi
al think like that worth a tele
phone call! Women!
Then the pay checks came. Mine
didn’t have a pink slip. I could have
danced on my desk top. I rushed
home to tell Celia the good news
and that her theory was wrong. She
took it casually. “Remember my
watch,” she asked blandly. “That
was the third blow. See?”
But do you know something fun
ny? She said she dropped it. 1
found her shoe on the dresser amidst
some bits of broken glass, and some
glass was stuck in the heeL You
don’t suppose the heel of her shoes
met that watch on purpose—or, do
you?
SHOPPER'S
CORNER
By DOROTHY BARCLAY
m-
|P
imM
WEAR AND TEAR
pVERYTHING wearing out at
“ once? Your clothes busting out
at the seams, your rugs parting
company in the middle. Your sheets
ripping all over the place? Every
thing around the house, yourself
included, looking like the last rose
of summer? Then it’s high time to
plan that stitch-in-time day! Beat
the holes and the
rips to it!
You’re going to be
plenty busy come
fall, with the kids
going back to
school, and all your
Red Cross and
church and club ac
tivities stepping up their pace. So
now’s the time to save what you
can, and make or remake, for all
fabrics are getting tougher to re
place!
But first of all, look over your
whole field of operations. What
clothes can you save by the timely
stitch, or by making into something
else? What do you need in the way
of equipment and simple tools?
Check your scissors—maybe they
need a trip to the hardware store
for sharpening. And while you’re
there, you’ll be tempted toward in
vesting in regular dress-makers’
shears. They’re so easy to use, and
make such a smooth edge, we bet
you’ll bring home a pair! They’ll
save you time, trouble and doing-
over, and in the long run, considera
ble money.
Is your sewing-m a c h i n e in
smooth working order? What’s the
matter? Some parts or attach
ments need repair? Take them to
your sev/ing-machine dealer. And
while you’re there, maybe there
are some of the new attachments
you could use to advantage. For
time-saving—and again, in the long
run, money-saving, a seam guide
and a zipper foot arrangement are
invaluable.
Now how about those old house-
dresses? They seem to have a way
of wearing out in the upper part
first, while the skirt still has a
future? Don’t just consign them to
the dust-rag drawer, but save what
you can. One way is to remake ’em
into aprons. Cut the waist off at
the waist-line, cut down center
front and back of the skirt—and
there you have a base for two
aprons, the sides of the skirt mak
ing the front of the apron. The fops
of the sleeves make excellent
pockets. Who knows what that
creation will start?
TAPE FOR ALL
Best boon to the homemaker, in
many years, are the mending tapes
you will find at your store. Iron
and mend is this heaven-sent tape
recording! There are strong mend-
h.g tapes for your rugs, your car
and home upholstery, for play-
clothes and work-clothes, for sheets
and table cloths. And what pa
tience and work they save you. So
hie yourself to your store, and in
vest in as many kinds and colors
as you could possibly need for all
purposes. You’ll be making one of
the most economical buys of your
busy life.
Thin places at the shirt-collar on
your husband’s good white shirts?
Press white tape on the wrong side
before the shirt breaks through and
he’ll never know, for he’ll see no
sign of mending. The children’s
jeans breaking through at the
knees? There are special jean
patches in both brown and blue, for
reinforcing those thinning spots.
Your beautiful living-room rug
split by a careless heel? Press
some mending tape on the wrong
side under the rip, and prolong the
rug’s life. Even table linens,
towels and dish tovfels, mended
with this ironed-on tape, will
weather countless launderings.
Save what you have, mend while
there’s something still to mend, and
from what you can’t use in its orig-*
inal state, create something new.
Florida Supreme Court
Upholds Three Convictions
TALLAHASSEE, Fla.—The Flor
ida Supreme Court recently af
firmed the grand larcency convic
tions bf three Miami telephone girls
who stole nearly $12,000 over a two-
year period by hiding rolls of quar
ters in their brassieres. The case
made national headlines several
months ago.
The three girls are under sen
tence of one year each. They were
employed by Southern BelL
Look “Real” Enough?
They certainly do, these life
like plastic lures that shnnlate
insects and can he used ever
and ever again. A small heck
is embedded in the lores which
are made from B. F. Goodrich
Chemical Compauftr’s Geon
plastic and have been success
ful in taking all types of fresh
water fish. At present these
lures, which are manufactured
by the Burke Flexo-Prodncts
Company, Traverse City, Bfich.,
include 10 species. They are
black cricket. Mayfly nymph,
dragonfly nymph, crawfish,
white grub, hellgrammite, baby
black ant, baby crawfish and
baby grub.
AAA
Dry Shooting
Even though there is no chance
for wing-shooting in the field until
the open hunting seasons roll around
again, it is not necessary for the
serious-minded shooter, who wants
to improve his marksmanship, to
lay his firearms aside and wait for
time to pass.
Next to actual field shooting at
game, clay target '“busting” pro
vides best practice for the scatter-
gun fan and firing at stationary tar
gets or moving targets on estab
lished ranges is the rifle and pistol
shooter’s “meat.” In fact, clay
target shooting is about the best
practice a wingshot can have, as it
allows him full and easy oppor
tunities to correct shooting errors,
find out about leads and learn to
quickly adjust himself to his gun.
Hand trap Win Do
“If, however, no clay target
shooting is handy and no shooting
range facilities are available, a
handtrap can provide grand, inex
pensive and informal sport and a
basement range with proper bullet-
catcher can easily be rigged up.
Even if these are not practical for
the time being, the shooter need not
discontinue the practice he needs
so much,” according to Gail Evans,
manager. Advertising and Shooting
Promotion Division, Remington
Arms Company, Inc.
“There is another form of sheet
ing practice which is of great value
to the individual and which can
be brought into play almost any
where and any time,” says Evans.
“This is known as ’dry shooting*
and merely consists of simulated
firing with an empty gun. This sort
of practice is really a MUST for
the beginner and Hie seasoned gun
ner quite often brushes up on his
gun handling through this method.
“The best way to become accus
tomed to a new gun, or the dd
one, too, for that matter, is by han
dling it frequently. If it is a shot
gun, raise it to your shoulder quick
ly, align the sights and swing on
an imaginary target. Do this as
fast as you can. Then after you
have pressed the trigger and com
pleted the follow-through swing,
check your shooting position. This
includes the position of your
on the stock, the position of the gun
butt on your shoulder and the align
ment of the gun barreL Make the
necessary corrections and do the
same thing over again. Repeat this,
time after time, and after awhile
the gun will swing up to your shoul
der in proper manner almost in
stinctively, your head will auto
matically place itself in the right
spot and the whole firearm will
seem to become a part of you.
Practice Before Mirror
“Practice this mounting of the
gun, swinging and follqw-through
before a mirror. This will aid you
to correct your shooting position.
It wiH also allow you to check up
on your follow-through for you
MUST remember to keep swinging
after you have pressed the trigger.
AAA
Watch It!
It won’t be too long now before
upland game seasons will be open
in many states. That means gun
handling, of course, and, with gun
handling, the need of safety pre
cautions. One can’t play it too safe
in the field. Gun safety is abso
lutely necessary and it cannot be
overemphasized. Despite the con
tinual preachments against reckless
gun-handling, field fatalities seem
to increase rather than decrease
every year.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS A INVEST. OPPOB.
SIGH CLASS Palm Beach Beauty Shop.
hotel vicinity, lease. Write Box 250,
larxnxe Lake, New York.
DOGS, CATS, PETS, ETC.
ENGLISH Bulldog Puppies—AKC regis
tered, 8 wks. old, white with either lawn
or brindle markings. 814 W. St. Johns St.,
Lake City, Fla. Ph, 327-R.
SIX Pointer Pups for sale, five mo. old--
Stud was by Texas Rangers High Note
and out of Harrigan’s Girl. $25700 pair.
T. W. BARKSDALE, GRAY COURT. S. C.
FARMS A RANCHES
FOR SALE—Several good farms.
C. E. Gardner, Atty.
Darlington, S. C.
HELP WANTED—MEN, ft OMEN
CHEF—A-l, well experienced In aU
phases food preparation incl. baking,
white or colored. Well paid, permanent
position. COOKS—5 regular cooks, expe
rienced and responsible, white or colored.
Write letter giving experience to Mrs.
Beulah Kilgore, Dir. of Foods, Hawthorne
School of Aeronaatieo, Spence Field,
Moultrie, Ga.
HELP WANTED—WOMEN
Ibup?. of Narses, surgical nurse, staff
nurses, dietitian for modem, new 38-bed
hospital to open in October. Write .Admin
istrator, Chattooga Cemniy Hospital, 3am-
merville, Georgia.
= j —
MACHINERY A SUPPLIES
SMALL Saw Mill, S8 H. P. gas motor.
part at <
terfleld.
origi — ...
Maseotto, Florida. Ph. 8987.
MISCELLANEOUS
FREE Bahamas, Br. Guiana, U.P.U.,
Persia, with fine approvals. Fast per
sonal service. Assured Stamp Co., Box
4S1, MiaaM <3> Fla.
DO Tou Got “Buniod-Dp“ TeoT Just like
those old style cotton wicks. Send for
Vick-Wick. Gives a hotter, cleaner flame,
and Is guaranteed to last three years.
Same size as perfection 331X. Diameter
3 9/16. Only 1.90 each, 4 for $9. Postage
pd. Vlok-Wlok Corp., Old Saybrook, Coun.
• BILLFOLD Photos on silk portrait
Y 'RONS, $1.50. Stuffed bears, dolls,
98; Crochete<‘
Maurlne
1.98; Crocheted pot holders, 75c.
McCabe, Noel, Me.
“FREE RAZOR BLADES”
be run only once. MAIL COUPON NOW.
THE WILLIAM MITCHELL CO.
Box m
Marlon, South Carolina
Please mail me your 30 day supply o!
FREE Razor Blades. This does not ob
ligate me In any way.
Name • • •.
City
print plainly
Zone State.
TO RENT OR LEASE
HOMES—COURTS—APARTMENTS
Sales-Rentals
John J. Woodslde, Jr., Realtor
em So. Atlantic Ave. Ph. 4033
DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA
WANTED TO BUY
WANTED: Diesel engine, gas and diesel
generating units, bare generators, large
electric drive motor generator sets.
Midwest Utilities Power Equipment Corp,
1270 Augusta Blvd., Chicago, Ulinolu
Phono EVorglade 4-4511
Planning for the Future?
Buy U.S. Defense Bonds!
I
ft's Wondmrful the Way
Chmwing-Gum Laxativ
Acts ChMty to
REMOVE WASTE
-HOT
GOOD FOOD
• Hero’s the secret millions of folks hsvt
discovered about pssw-a-mxht, the mod
ern chewing-gum laxative. Yes, here Is
why rzsx-A-Mnrr's action Is so wonder
fully different I
Doctors say that many other laxatives
start their “flushing” action toe seen...
right in the stomach where food Is bailiff
digested. Large closes of such laxatives
upset digestion, flush away nourlshtnff
food you need for health and «
You foal weak, worn out.
But gentle ra-A-Mnrr, taken a
oanznended, woks chiefly In the
bowel where It removes only wests, not
good food! You avoid that typical weak,
tired, worn-out feeling. Use rnor-A-scnre
and feel your "peppy," energetic self i Get
-a-asnrxt No iner
My. 80# or only 10#.
in price—still
K l ■■B—.a-siiuv IS
■^AMOWOCl—1C CllUXWIWi
WNU—7
37—51
/
Morton
salt
tN i T. (
Costs orifyZS
a week for the
average ftmilyl