The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, October 12, 1951, Image 6
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. *S. C.
Crime in America
By ESTES KEFAUVER
United States Senator
Five of a Series
Corruption of a Small Town: Case Study
So far in this series, the pattern suggested is that crime and
contempt for the law is a big city operation. This is not necessarily
so. The smaller cities and towns have it, too.
Sometimes, as our senate cpmmittee was to learn, crime in
smaller places was conducted as a suburban, or branch, operation
of the n Barest big city gang. This was particularly true in the Chi
cago and New York areas. On the other hand, there also is the
phenomenon of the wide-open small-town, free from big city gang
influence and where the local operator—usually a single “string
loan”—is able to operate without paying any particular tribute to
the law.
In many big cities, young people
come into maturity with an attitude
of contempt for the law, because
they see and hear almost daily,
that criminals, through alliances
with conniving politicians and
crooked law enforcement officers,
are bigger than the law. It would be
a frightful thing if this same disil
lusionment should spread to the
small-town youngsters of America
The committee touched briefly on
one such case study in its ques
tioning, both privately and in pub
lic hearings in Chicago, of a man
tiamed Thomas J. Cawley.
In a way, Cawley, a stocky, un
abashed, monosyllabic witness, was
a refreshing change from the pro
cession of hoodlum witnesses whose
carefully rehearsed refrain, “I re
fuse to answer on the ground ,it
might tend to incriminate me,’’ be
came so grating to our ears. He, at
least, made no bones of the fact
that Thomas J. Cawley was the un
disputed gambling king of two small
Illinois towns—LaSalle, population,
12,023, and Streator, population.
16,442. The two towns, both in La
Salle bounty, are about 27 miles
apart.
I should like to quote simple and
unadorned excerpts from the official
record of the examination of this
small-town gambler.
Cawley s first appearance was
in executive (closed) session, Oc
tober ro, 1950, at the U.S. Court
house in Chicago.
Q. What is your business, Mr.
Cawley? A. A cigar store operator.
Q. What other business do you
have? A I operate l. farm and a
book.
Q. Where do you operate your
book? A. 621 First st., LaSalle, 111
Q. Is that the only book you op
erate? A. I operate one in Strea
tor, 111. ,
Q. Is it (the Streator operation)
solely a book? A. Well, it is a gam
bling room, is what it is. We have
dice.
Q. You also have gambling equip
ment? A. Yes.
Q. What type of games do* you
run? A. Dice.
Q. Roulette? A Roulette, LaSalle,
and that is all.
Cawley went on to say that be
employs about 65 to 70 persons in
LaSalle; this includes his restau
rant, bar and cigar store em
ployees. in addition to the gambling
help.
Q. How long have you operated
the book there? A. I imagine . . .
around 15 years.
Q. Is that in LaSalle? A. In La
Salle; at Streator, I would say 10
years.
Q. Who is sheriff of that county?
A. The sheriff now is Ryan.
Q. How long have you known
him? A. I hardly know the man.
Did you know Mike Welter?
A. Yes, sir ... He wa3 sheriff three
terms .
Q. Did you contribute to the cam
paign funds of any of the other Sher
iff’s? A. No, sir; only Mike Welter.
Q. How much did you contribute
to his campaign? A. $500.
Q. Mike Weltpr knew what busi
ness you were in? A. I wouldn’t
know whether he would or not.
Q. What we want to get at is:
How can you run wide open down
there without the. sheriff knowing
About it and doing something about
it? It is generally known, is it not,
that you operate these places? A.
That is right. I was born and raised
there. I had a good friend, the may
or of the town, and he wouldn’t let
none of them politicians come into
our city.
Q. He would not let any politicians
come in? A. He wouldn’t let them
politicians come from the county
into the city from LaSalle.
■ Q. He would not let the sheriff
come in? A. That is right.
Q. So he is the one who let you
keep on running; is that it? A. He
never let me keep on running. He
didn’t do any more for me than he
would for anybody else. Anybody
can go down in that town right to
day and open up, and it doesn’t cost
them a 5-cent piece.
Q. The sheriff does not botler you.
A. That is right.
Q. Do the people like it, you
think? A. I think they do—90 per
cent of them.
Q. What is the present Chief of
THE WHITE SHEEP
Police’s name? A. Eddie Kas-
prowicz, something like that.
Q. He knows what business you
were in? A. Yes. Everybody in town
knows what business I am in.
Q. Do you pay money for protec
tion? A. No, sir.
Q. Never have paid any money?
A. No. When I do, I will get out of
business.
*V
Q. Do you contribute any money
to political parties? A I might con
tribute to both parties a ch^ck . .
a hundred dollars here or a hundred
dollars there; yes . . .
Q. That was to the political party,
but to no particular individual? A.
That is right.
• • •
Further questioning revealed thai
Cawley’s business was a family
enterprise of which he owned 52 per
cent. His share of the nfet profits
the previous year (1949) was ap
proximately $67,000. He said his
partners were a brother and two
sisters; that they “absolutely’’ were
not connected “with anyone from
Chicago’’ or elsewhere, and that
when they (the Chicago element)
come in, I go out.’’
We next delved into Cawley’s
connections with the racing wire
service. He was in that business,
too, in both towns. His ticker Serv
ice, which he bought from one df the
Continental Press distributors, was
cut off at LaSalle shortly before he
testified but still was operating at
Streator.
Q. You had never been raided?
A. Yes; I was raided once ... I
have had one conviction.
Q. What was that? A. Web. run
ning a gaming house.
Then, two months later, tut com
mittee had Mr. Cawley back ia Chi
cago for examinations in open hear
ings. In the meantime we had read
in the Chicago newspapers that, the
day after he told us in executive
session that he ran without inter
ference, his place in LaSalle was
shut down tight by order of the
mayor. In Streator, the police chief
was quoted as saying he had called
at Cawley’s Paddock club out found
“nothing but punchboards and lucky
bowls.” But the following is what
we heard from, the still unruffled
Cawley.
Q. Do you still have an estab
lishment in both places (LaSalle
and Streator)? A. That is correct.
Q. Are they still operating? A.
That is right.
Q. Have they been down to speak
of for any period of time in the
last two or three months? A. Very
little.
Q. Everything is going the same
as usual? A. Yes.
• • •
Cawley went on to list, perfectly
frankly, in response to questions,
all the forms of gambling in which
he was engaged. In addition to the
horse books, he listed a baseball
pool, punchboards, roulette and a
small poker game. Slot machines
had been out for some time.
Still curious as to how*-he got
away with it, I picked up the ques
tioning.
Q. How do you account for the
fact that you can operate the way
you can, Mr. Cawley? A. Well, it
has been going on down there for
25 years.
Q. You said 90 per cent of the
people like it? A. That is right. We
had an election down there that
proved that.
Q. Tell me about that? A. The
sheriff—two sheriffs run, one runs
on an anti-gambling ticket and the
other fellow runs on an open ticket,
and the fellow on the open ticket
wins the election. Q. Don’t ybu sell
liquor in your places? A. . . . They
took my liquor license away from
me.
Q. And when did they take the
liquor license away from you? A.
After I got back from this meeting
the last time. (Laughter in the hear
ing room.)
Q. But you still sell liquor? A.
That is right.
Q. But it hasn’t made any dif
ference in your operation? A. No
No.
Next week:
Playground.
Miami: A Polluted
Condensed from the book, “Crime In
America,” by Estes Kefauver. Cpr. 1951.
Pub. by Doubleday, Inc. Dist. General
Features Corp.—WNU.
Capone's Brother is Justice of Peace
CHICAGO—A long-lost, almost for
gotten brother of ♦he late A1 Capone
has been located by government in
vestigators, living the life of a
peaceful, law-abiding citizen.
Assistant US attorney Lawrence
Miller said the man is James Ca
pone, 63 year old ex-town marshall
and now a justice of the peace at
Homer, Neb., where he is known as
Richard J. Hart.
The information was disclosed as
the first witness appeared before the
grand jury investigating alleged in
come-tax evasion by another Ca
pone brother, Ralph.
Hart was summoned before jury
to explain why he holds title to
Ralph’s home near Merced, Wis.
Hart reportedly was not in contact
with the Capone family for 33 years.
He left home at 16 to join a circus.
Hunting Luck?
Who has the most luck in hunt
ing? According to Henry P. Davis,
public relations manager, Rem
ington Arms Company, Inc., “hunt
ing luck” is a minus quantity and
the fellow who has the most suc
cess in hunting is the fellow who
works the hardest at it.
“Hunting is pretty much like
Inything else,” says Davis. “We
get just about what we put into
it. If we’re out to enjoy an outing
and get the fullest benefit of the
many, many facets of the outdoors
In its varied moods, we can let
the game bag become incidental
and take our chances with ‘hunt
er’s luck.' This is probably the
only way we can really get the
full measure of pleasure from a
trip afield, for there is a lot more
to be found in hunting and fishing
than just getting game or catch
ing fish.
Luck Too Unsure
“But if we’re out after ‘meat in
1 h e pot’,” trusting to ‘hunter’s
luck’ will seldom grease the skil
let. To bag game or catch fish
we must not only have a certain
amount of know-how but we must
also put out a considerable amount
of effort in making that know-how
work. I used to hunt quail with
an older friend who seemed to be
just in the right Shooting position
every time a Bob White flushed. If
game was walked up, he was in
variably the one who flushed it.
I called him ‘lucky’ until observa
tion taught me that he was work
ing at the job of hunting every
minute in the field. He was a keen
student of wild life habits, knew
what kind of cover to hunt at
what time of day, watched the
shifting of the wind, etc. His re
markable ‘luck’ was merely an
energetic application of knowledge
gained through hunting experi
ence.
“Of course, hard work afield
will not alone fill the game bag.
A supply of game has to be there
first. But the interested and
energetic hunter will generally do
something about seeing that proper
habitat conditions prevail on the
hunting grounds he uses regu
larly.
Creel Census 'Indicative
“A recent creel census on the
fresh, waters of the state of Mary
land, conducted cooperatively by
the Department of Game and In
land Fish and the Department of
Research and Education, shows
that in that state 10% of the fish
ermen catch 46% of the fish. And
53% of the fishermen catch the re
maining 54% of the fish. What
happens to the other 37% of the
fishermen, you might ask. Well,
according to the census, they sim
ply catch NO fish. And that is
what is generally known as ‘fish
ermen’s luck’.
“I don’t know how closely these
figures come to covering the game
harvesting situation, but I do not
think they would be far off the
beam if so applied.
“In explaining the figures of the
census, Harold J. Elser, biologist.
Department of Research and Edu
cation, said: ‘In the world of
economics, a few people have large
incomes, a lot of people have mod
erate incomes and many more are
in the low income bracket. In the
world of fishing, a few of the
anglers catch a lot of fish, a much
larger percentage catches a mod
erate amount of fish and another
large group catches nothing. Al
though the fisheries manager
would like to spread the catch
more evenly, there is little he can
do about it. The people in the
“catch nothing” group are either
not interested in anything but the
hard-to-catch fish or are those peo
ple who do not have a suffeient
amount of know-how, luck or pa
tience.’ ”
Versatile Hoop Net
There are numerous ways by
which a commercial fisherman may
capture his thirty-five-cents-a-pound
catfish and twenty-five-cent buf
falo. He can use hoop nets, trotline,
gill nets and trammel nets.
The hoop net is the most versatile
and popular of the lot, with the pos
sible exception of the trotline. Hoop
nets are simple in design, their suc
cess lying in the fisherman’s skill
and his ability to think like a fish.
They are constructed from white
oak or dogwood hoops, three feet
in diameter and covered with
tarred net so as to form a furneled
cylinder. Once a fish enters the first
funnel or “throat,” it is unlikely that
he will find his way out.
Yard Training
Since it’s about time for taking
gun dogs afield again, a word
about yard training may not be
amiss here. Before a pup is taken
afield,‘he should have some private
tutoring to leam simple obedience
and the meaning of a few spoken
commands.
This yard training, as it is called,
may begin in the pup’s sixth or
seventh month—or as soon as he’s
old enough to know what it’s all
about.
Serve Baked Beana for Informal Sappers
(See Recipes Below)
Festive Buffet Sappers
THIS IS the season for a flurry
of sports activity such as football,
baseball and hockey. If there are
teen-aged boys and girls in your
home, or if the man of the house
is an enthusiast of one of the sports,
you’re in line to
be asked to
serve a t least
one “after the
game supper.”
These are won
derful occasions
because you need
food hearty and
easy to prepare. The serving is even
more simply done because the oc
casion is so informal. Push the din
ing room table against the wall,
or use a large buffet.
A centerpiece set against the wall
is nice, if it’s seasonal. Then plan
to cover most of the table with food,
and leave a bit of space for a stack
of plates, napkins and usually, a
single fork for each person. Most
buffet suppers of this kind can be
eaten readily with a single fork.
Another centerpiece uses a shal
low bowl of garden flowers in a
massed arrangement. Use needle
point flower holders for the flowers,
and also for attaching “penants”
made small, with construction pa
per, and glued to thin sticks.
One menu which will certainly
prove popular includes baked beans,
served in a bean pot or an old-fash
ioned casserole of the pottery type.
Serve this with
molasses bran
brown bread
with cream
cheese, if you
/ ^ =s ' hke, sliced to-
I f matoes, pickles,
\^A/( celery, and an
apple crisp pudding or a fruit cob
bler for dessert.
• • •
Deluxe Baked Beans
(Serves 6)
1 uncooked medium ham hock
(H pound)
1 No. 2 can baked beans, with
out tomato sauce
1 large onion, peeled and
chopped
% cup catsup t
3 tablespoons brown sugar
VA tablespoons dry mustard
V* teaspoon black pepper
1 tablespoon vinegar
1 tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
4 whole cloves
1 No. 2 can pineapple chunks
Remove meat from ham bone and
odd to beans which may be placed
right into the casserole. Stir in
onion, then pour in catsup and syr
up from pineapple. Sprinkle over all
the brown sugar, mustard, pepper,
vinegar and Worcestershire sauce.
Dot four chunks of the pineapple
with 'the cloves and reserve for
last. Sink ham bone into center of
the bean mixture, and arrange pine
apple around the bone. Place the
pineapple with cloves on last. Cover
and bake in a moderate (350°F.)
oven for one hour; remove cover
and bake about 15 minutes longer
until brown. For a crowd, multiply
recipe accordingly and bake in
large pans. /
• • •
*Molasses Bran Brown Bread
(Makes 2 loaves)
1 cup ready-to-eat bran
A cup seedless raisins
2 tablespoons shortening
H cup pure dark molasses
LYNN SAYS:
Refrigerate Foods
To Speed Preparation
If you don’t want to do all your
food preparation before a meal,
many good things can be mixed in
advance, then refrigerated until
cooking or baking time.
Thin batters like those for waf
fles and griddlecakes can be made
in advance then refrigerated, pro
vided they are tightly covered to
prevent crusting. If desired, thin
With a little milk before using.
LYNN CHAMBER’S MENU
Baked Beans with Tomato Sauce
♦Molasses Brown Bread with
Cream Cheese
Cabbage-Carrot Slaw
Baked Apples Cream Cookies
Beverage
•Recipe Given
94 cup boiling water
1 egg
1 cup sifted flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
94 teaspoon salt
94 teaspoon cinnamon
Measure bran, raisins, shortening
and molasses into mixing bowl. Add
hot water and stir until shortening
is just melted. Add egg and beat
well. Sift together
flour, soda, salt
and cinnamon;
add to molasses
mixture stirring
only until just
combined. Fill
two greased cans (the size used for
baked beans) about % full. Bake in
a moderate (350°F.) oven for 45
minutes. Remove from cans and
serve while hot.
* • •
HOT TAMALE pie is an excellent
main dish for a buffet meal. With
it served a salad of mixed greens
and a light oil dressing. Cherry Up
side Down Cake wins cheers for des
sert.
Hot Tamale Pie
(Serves 6)
94 cup cornmeal
194 cups water
94 teaspoon salt
194 cups evaporated milk
1 tablespoon fat
1 small onion
1 cup ground raw beef
1 cup tomatoes
1 pimiento
94 teaspoon salt
Measure meal into heavy sauce
pan. Add water and 94 teaspoon salt.
Boil until mixture begins to thick
en, then add milk and continue boil
ing 8 to 10 minutes, stirring con
stantly. Chop onion and cook slowly
in fat until yellow. Add meat and
cook until red color disappears,
then add tomatoes, pimiento, cay
enne and 94 teaspoon salt. Turn into
a baking dish which has been lined
with 94 of the mush. Cover with re
maining mush and bake in a mod
erate (350®F.) oven for 45 minutes.
• • •
Cherry Upside Down Cake
(Makes 9-inch round)
TOP:
194 cups well drained fresh, can
ned or frozen cherries
94 cup light corn syrup
94 teaspoon cinnamon
1 tablespoon butter
CAKE:
94 cup shortening
94 cup sugar
1 egg, beaten
. 1 cup sifted cake flour
194 teaspoons baking powder
94 teaspoon salt
94 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
Place cherries, syrup, cinnamon
and butter in saucepan and simmer
10 minutes. Cool. Pour into a well-
buttered 9-inch round or square pan.
Cream shortening, add sugar and
egg and beat until fluffy. Sift to
gether flour, baking powder and
salt and add alternately to cream
ed mixture with milk mixed with
vanilla. Pour over cherries. Bake
for 25 to 30 minutes in a moderate
(350°F.) oven.
Do you have difficulty keeping the
breaded coating on meats and fish
when frying? Chill after breading
and they’ll stay on better.
Yeast dough for rolls, buns or
bread refrigerates well when cov
ered, for several days. Store shaped
or in bowls and let rise in a 90°F.
oven or at room temperature before
baking.
Cookies will be more tender and
crisp if you allow the dough to stand
in tiie refrigerator. Or, slip well-
wrapped dough in one of the freez
ing trays if business is “rushing,”
SEWIN6 CIRCLE PATTERNS
Perfect Team for School Days
It's Flattering to All Sizes
BY DR. KENNETH J. FOREMAN
SCRIPTURE: Genesis 27:1—33:17.
DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 4.
God's Untuned Harp
Lesson for October 14, 1951
C AN the perfect God make use of
an imperfect man? He has to;
there is no other kind. God is the
perfect musician; his # melodies and
harmonies are flaw
less; but he has to
play these on the
harp of humanity,
twanging strings
easily broken,
never long well-
tuned.
One such doubt
ful string was
young Jacob. He
improved immense
ly, later in life; but
at the time of the incident de
scribed in Genesis 28 he was a very
rough diamond indeed. His own
home was too hot for him. His fath
er had been bitterly disappointed
in him; his twin and only brother
Esau had sworn to kill him at the
first chance. He was a swindling
liar, leaving home on the run.
If he had treated his neigh
bors with the same lack of con
science he had shown toward
Isaac and Esau, there must
have been “many a dry eye”
when the news went around
that Jacob had left town. As a
matter of fact, he kept on, for
some years after this, being the
same sort of sharp trader he
had always been.
His dream at Bethel did not con
vert him, as is sometimes thought;
if it did, his conversion waited 20
years to “take.” If the reader will
examine Jacob’s vow in Gen. 28:20-
22, he can see that it does not ex
press a very lofty view of religion
on Jacob’s part. Jacob makes his
promise to the Lord with a large IF
attached; IF the Lord will prosper
him, keep him safe, bring him back
and so forth, THEN he will give
the Lord ten per cent. Who would
not pay a ten per cent commission
for guaranteed protection and pros
perity? No, we cannot say that
Jacob at this time was saintly.
* • •
God’s Purpose
A ND yet God spoke to him, made
great promises to him. Was this
only a conceited dream of Jacob’s?
It was a dream, of course, as the
writer frankly says (verse 12); but
was the dream only the kind of
thing that psychologists call “wish-
fulfilment,” with no meaning except
to show what Jacob had been think
ing about? Or did the dream stand
for something real?
The general belief of the
church is that God really did
have a concern for this man and
did speak to him through his
dream, even though it was the
kind of dream which perhaps
only a Jacob could have had.
But how could the perfect God
“make a covenant” or come to any
terms with such a man as Jacob
then was? The answer is probably
in the story itself and in what fol
lowed it. God had a purpose far
beyond Jacob the man. He had a
plan for him too; but it fitted into
a far greater plan for mankind. “In
thee shall all the families of the
earth be blessed” refers, Christians
believe, to Jesus Christ and what he
has meant and will mean to the
world. Without Jacob, and the race
which would call him their ances
tor, Jesus would not have been.
• • •
God’s Harp Has Many Strings
O NE of the most remarkable titles
for God in the Bible is “the
God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob”
(Exodus 3:6). We might expect the
first name; we are astonished to
hear the other two.
Abraham, of course, was a great
spiritual pioneer. He was great in
other ways too; a man who would
be outstanding in any age, in any
place,—one of the great religious
geniuses of all time. Of course God
is the God of such men, we expect
it.
But what about Isaac and
Jacob? Isaac was a nonentity, a
weak character, far from
bright. Even his sins were sec
ond-hand. As for Jacob, even
after he became a changed
man, as in time he did, his old
crooked record remained a fact.
The Bible does not try to con
ceal it.
Then can God be the God of the
weak and the God of the sinner?
Yes, that is the glory of the God
who is revealed in his Word. Other
religions know of gods who are
friends of top-level human beings,
genuises and saints; only the reli
gion of the Bible knows of a God
who takes a personal interest in the
weak and who pursues the sinner to
change him.
Only the Bible knows of a God
who draws to himself all sorts and
conditions of men, and makes use
of them for his great and gracious
purposes.
(Copy right 1951 by the Dlvisien ef
Christian Education, National ConneU
of the Chvrehes ef Christ la the United
States of America. Released by WNU
Featsres.)
Princess Jumper
CJO pretty for'daughter to wear,
^ so practical for mother to
care for! A pretty princess
jumper for young girls with a
puffed sleeve blouse for a team
mate.
« * *
Pattern No. 1230 ia a sew-rite perfo
rated pattern in sizes 2, 3, 4. 5. 6 years.
Size .3, Jumper. yards of 39-inch;
blouse. IVa yards.
The Fall and Winter Issue of STYLIST
la filled with Ideas for smart, practical
fall-through winter sewing; gift patterns
printed inside the book. 25 cents.
14-44 ’ W
Shirtwaist Frock
A well tailored shirtwaist fr<
that’s popular the
over. This one buttons down the
front, has comfortable sleeves,
handy pockets that are optional.
Pattern No. 8400 is a sew-rite
rated pattern for sizes 14, 16, 18, 20; 40.
42. 44. Size IS. 4 yards pf 39-inch.
—
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN
367 West Adams St.. Chicago 6.
Enclose 30c In coin for each
tern. Add 5e for 1st Class Mall If
desired. *
Pattern No Size,....
1 Name tPlease Print)
Street Address or P. O. Box No.
dity
State i
Double Trouble
“Darling, you would be a mar
velous dancer but fpr two things
“What are they, sweetheart?”
“Your feet.”
Definition
And then there was the Alpha
Phi who was so dumb she thought
a buttress was a female goat.
—•—
Be Fair
Householder (facing burglar
with revolver)—“Put all that stuff
back on the sideboarl at once, do
you hear?”
Burglar—“Lumme, gov’nor, not
all of it; be fair! ’Arf of it belongs
next door.”
—•—
• Out of Work
Mrs. Brown’s husband was a
writer, and he pounded the type
writer at home, turning out manu
scripts of one kind and another,
which he sold for sufficient re
compense to enable the Browns
to afford a maid. The new girl
had been working only a little
over a week, however, when she
came to her mistress, and said:
“You pay me four dollars a
week, mum.”
“Yes, Sally,” Mrs. Brown ac
knowledged. “And I can’t afford
to pay you any more than that.”
“I know, mum,” Sally agreed,
glancing back at the room where
Mr. Brown was reading up on a
subject about which he was pre
paring to write an article. “But I,
want to be fair, mum. I’m willin’
to work for only three dollars till
your husband gets a job.”
—•— ■ •
The Winner
Binks bought a new shirt, and
on a piece of paper pinned to the
inside found the name and ad
dress of a girl, with the words,
“Please write and send photo.”
Scenting a romance, he wrote to
the girl and sent his photo.
In due course he received a
reply. It was only a note. “My
chum and I ha^ a bet on,” it read,
“as to what sort of a fellow would
wear a shirt like that, l^y chum
said a dude, I said a shrimp, and
I’m glad to say I won.”
Blue-Bloodhound
Mrs. Profiteer—“Is this a pedi
gree dog?”
Dealer — “Pedigree? I should
just think ’e is, Mum. Why, if the
animal could only talk ’e wouldn’t
speak to either of us.”
—•—
Cheer Up
“Good morning, sir. I’m a oond
salesman.’f
“That’s all right, my good fel
low. Here’s a half dollar—go buy
yourself a square meal.”
tsumms.
T
It’s so easy to relieve coughs
and stuffiness of colds in a
hurry this home-proved
way — with 2 spoonfuls of
Vicks VapoRub in a vapor
izer or In a bow) of boiling
water as directed in package.
Just breathe in the steam!
Every single breath carries
VapoRub’s soothing medi
cations deep into throat and
large bronchial tubes. It
medicates irritated mem-
branes, helps restore normal
breathing. For coughs or
upper bronchial congestion
there’s nothing like using
Vicks VapoRub in steam.
For continued relief al
ways mb it
on throat,
chest and V —
VapoRub
yback.
r ARE YOU A HEAVY 1
SMOKER?
Chaaft to SANO—tbo
dlstiaetivo cigorette with
LESS THAN |%
NICOTINE
Hof « WKm - ______
Sano’s scientific process cuts nico
tine content to half that of ordinary
cigarettes. Yet skillful blending
j,
i <5