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®S: THE NEWgERRY SUN, NEWBERRY. S. C. mm,mm — FIRST VILLAGE Prof Discovers Site of World's First Village CHICAGO, 111.—Have you ever wondered about the first time when men gathered to live a community life? Where was it? When did it happen? What were the living con ditions? Dr. Robert J. Braid wood, associ ate professor of old world prehistory and anthropology at the University of Chicago, can answer these ques tions. He recently returned to Chicago from northeastern Iraq where he and a group of associates spent a year digging in what they believe to be the earliest settled village in the world. “The. evidence we have collected and brought back with us from the expedition indicates that this com munity, no bigger than r. city block, is a landmark in the world's his tory. For it was here where the] great evolution from the hunting to the agricultural state had taker place," he said. Atomic Calendar Braidwood and his colleagues brought back odd objects such at tools, cereal foods, a variety oi wheat, a kind of pea, and various pottery pieces. They will be tested on the “atomic calendar". The calendar measured the arti cles brought back from the firsl Braidwood expedition to the place in 1948 and showed it to be the old est known village in the world. The age of the village, as dated by the “atomic calendar", is approximate ly 7,000 years, or 5,000 years before^ * Christ. What was life like in those days? Not bad at all, says Braidwood. The 300 residents, ancestors of the people living in the Mediter ranean area, lived in roomy three or four room houses provided with ovens, and complete with chimneys. Floors were of clean mud, packed over beds of reeds. Remains of some 50 houses were dug up by the expedition. Used Large Houses They also found one large house consisting of six rooms, with a courtyard. Braidwood believes the house probably belonged to the chief. Food came from wheat, barley and a kind of pea, as well as from recently domesticated animals. Bones of sheep, goats, pigs and a small horse were found there. Tools used were of the stone age. There were no defense barricades around the village and no remains of war weapons were discovered, in dicating a lack of enemies, or a peaceful time, Braidwood said. There already was a beginning of artistic expression in this early community. Braidwood’s party found figurines of animals and of “mother godessess." The party also found portable pottery, which had come into existence in the last third of the village life. “Although this was only a peas ant economy, some trade already existed, as well as a political and moral order," Braidwood said. —, P | Crime in America By ESTES KEFAUVER United States Senator Sixteen of a Series How- the Laws Are Enforced In Up-State New York As the Senate Crime Committee trailed the national crime syndicate across the country, evidence everywhere pointed in some way to New York City. America’s largest metropolis, nerve center for much of its financial and industrial life, also was a nerve center of the underworld. Our New York investigation, however, was not confined to the city itself. Months earlier we had conducted closed sessions in Manhattan, probing the workings of a vicious New York-New Jersey gambling ring and the flagrant operation of gambling establish ments upstate at Saratoga Springs. . One result was that Gov. Thomas E. Dewey, who had refused to go to Manhattan to see the Committee, convened a special jgrand jury to investigate the Sara toga conditions. In Bergen County, New ^Jersey, just across the Hudson River from New York City, gambling had be come so notorious that there final ly had been a partial crackdown. At the time of our hearings, only Anthony Guarini, who seemed to have been the front man for the ring, had been sent to jaiL After our hearings, however, gam bling indictments were returned against Joe Adonis, Salvatore (Solly Moore) Moretti, Arthur Longano and James (Piggy) Lynch. We questioned a Newark (N. J.) certified public accountant, George Goldstein, who seemed to perform the same functions for East coast mobsters that attorney Eugene Bernstein performed for the Chi- cago-Capone syndicate. He acknowl edged that for some years he has handled tax returns for “the New Jersey gambling partnerships." Profits from these various com panies were shared by Guarini, James Rutkin, Adonis, Gerais Ca tena, Salvatore Moretti, and Lynch. Actually, there is no way of tell ing exactly how much they took in, as Goldstein admitted he made out tax returns from figures which were not based on any real audit. But one gambling company alone admitted to gross receipts of $488,- 698 in its 1945-46 tax return. Still another business-like facet of the gamblers was their method of converting into cash the sizable checks taken from their victims. Max Stark—since sent to jail—was “check cashier" for the mob. Daily, he would bring to the small Mer chants Bank of New York City some 60 to 70 checks signed by losers at the casinos. Over six months, the checks came to about $5,000,000 Stark, conveniently, had become a stockholder in the bank; he owned 10 per cent of the bank’s stock. Danger Season Arrives For Rural Pedestrians CHICAGO. I1L—Being a pedestri an in country towns and farm areas is more dangerous now than any other time of the year. A safety engineer pointed out that the death rate for rural pedes trians was 42 per cent higher dur ing the last three months of 1950 than the average of the first nine. “With more cars on the road, the pedestrian toll maj^be even worse this year,” warned W. Dean Kee fer, director of safety for the Kem per group of insurance companies. said the factors contributing to the upsurge each year at this time inaiude: 1. The shift from brightly colored •summer clothing to darker fall and winter shades. This makes it more difficult for drivers to see pedestrians on dark days and at night, especially on country roads. 2. More traffic ip horns of dark ness. The accident rate per mile at night is three times higher than in daylight 8. Holiday travel, shopping and drinking contribute to make De cember the worst month of the year far pedestrians. Keefer advised drivers to slow down at dnsk, to travel at reduced speed at sight and to watch out for persons who are on foot He urged pedestrians to walk agMnst traffic on country roads and to get off the road whenever a vehicle approaches. When in town, cross only at intersections after looking both ways. High School Students Serve as Town Officials ALBANY, Wis —As a part of a better citizenship program and a practical example of how a com munity operates, Albany high sohool students recently took over the duties of village officials for two full days. Ballots were prepared and an election held in the high school Offices filled by the youngsters in cluded village president, board fee justice of the .peace, ice and policemen. Another New Jersey operator ex amined by the Committee was Willie Moretti. The 56-year-old old er brother of Salvatore Moretti was —and is—a big-time gambler, and. more lately, part-owner of a big laundry and linen supply company Willie let slip a great many scraps of information about the East coast mou. Willie’s talkativeness, apparently, was not an isolated phenomenon. Wnen rackets boss Frank Costello was testifying months later, Ru dolph Halley quoted transcripts of telephone wire taps, legally ob tained, which showed that Moretti called Costello “chief," and that Costello told him “. . . Rest and don’t call me so much" . . . “Don’t talk too v much; you know . . Costello insisted he was just giving a little friendly health advice to a sick friend. We took Willie through a list of leading gangsters, and with only a few exceptions, he knew them all. Hailey: Aren’t these people . . . what you would call rackets boys? Moretti: Jeez, everything is a racket today. Halley: These people come from a great many different cities around the country . . . How do you get to meet all of these people . . ? Moretti: Well, you go to race tracks and you go to Florida, and you meet them; and the man that is well known meets everybody: you know that. Halley asked him if he belonged to any political clubs. “I don’t belong to any. I am a bi-partisan,” Moretti answered. The incredible gambler went on to boast that he didn’t “operate politically"—that if he did, he might have become a member of Congress—“maybe sit ting where you are.” v ^ What about some old charges filed by an established competitor, a laundry in the same Jersey area, that Moreti was . taking business away from them by “strong-arm" methods? It was all a lie, Willie said; he did business in “a polite way." Even the firm that had com plained about him now has merged with his company. “Fortunately, God helped me," he explained. The BREAKFAST DID IT president of the rival outfit “went horseback riding, fell off the horse, got kicked in the head .. . and died, so his company became my part ners." Our examination ended on a friendly note. He showed us a post al card which he had made of what he called “the Moretti estate" on the Jersey shore. Expansively, he told his attorney to give me the .postal card. “Let him look at it,” Moretti said. “Maybe he wants to come down for dinner some time.” And, as he left, he urged: “Don’t forget my home in Deal if you are down the shore. You’re invited.” The situation which we uncov ered in Saratoga Springs was this: In August of 1947 Superintendent John A. Gaffney of the New York State Police asked that a survey be made of gambling conditions in Saratoga Springs. It Was established that six wide-open casinos were in operation, one of them backed by William Bischoff, alias Lefty Clark, the notorious Detroit gambler, and Joe Adonis of New York city. All this information was dutiful ly transmitted to Superintendent Gaffney. Gaffney put it in his “con fidential file." Nothing at all was done about it until 1950, when, be cause of newspaper exposes and bad publicity resulting from the alleged trimming of a customer at one of the casinos, orders went out to put the lid on. The gambling was throttled down. > • • • The excuse given us in many hun dreds of words, for the existence of this situation was, in effect, simply this: Gambling had been going on at Saratoga Springs for some time. True, the state police were supposed to enforce the law. But there was a “policy,” it was explained, that the state police enforce the law in “rural areas,” not in cities that had regularly organized police de partments. One of the most damaging admis sions made by Superintendent Gaff ney, it seemed to the committee, was when we asked him: Q. When you get to be the super intendent of the state police, you are supposed to have enough savvy or understanding to leave it (the gambling at Saratoga) alone, unless you are told to go in; is that cor rect? Gaffney: Well, probably, yes, it has been a policy over the years. Behind the situation, of course, was the complacence of the Sara toga Springs police department of 23 men. We interrogated an in credible local police chief, Patrick (Paddy) Rox, who admitted that he augmented his police earnings by collecting $10 a night for taking money from the bank to the Sara toga raceway Walter F. Ahcarn, the Saratoga detective supposedly in charge of supressing gambling in the resort town, confessed that he, too, sup plemented his pay—by $120 a week —transporting the bankrolls and gambling loot between two casinos and the local bank every night The gamblers—though, of course, Ahearn “didn’t know" they were gamblers—“were afraid of stick- ups more than anything else,” he said. Next week: Costello A Co. of New York. Condensed from the book. “Crime In America/* by Estes Kefauver. Cpr. 1951. Pub. by Doubleday, Tne. Diet. General Features Ccrp.—WNU. Expert Predicts 50 Per Cent Increase In Delinquency CHICAGO—A 50 per cent increase in juvenile delinquency within the next ten years has been forecast Dr. E. Preston Sharp, chief pf the Division of Training Schools for the Maryland Department of Public Welfare, cited the increase in popu lation as the cause for the rise in delinquency. He pointed out that the highest divorce rate ever recorded was in 1946. Children of these homes of the average age of five, he said, were most likely to be the juvenile delinquents of the next decade. Steaks in Morning Intrigue Detective DETROIT, Mich. -One tip on how to be a successful burglar might be the warning to never eat steak for breakfast. A dSt^ctive spotted two men and a boy ►.indulging in T-bones early one morning recently. The officer, Conrad Konetshny, was impressed. He Utdr-’t eat steaks in the morning and didn’t know anyone else who could afford to do so. He then noticed the trio had bulg ing pockets. He frisked them and found a collection of barber tools and $50 in quarters. The steak-eaters then confessed, the officer said, to breaking into a barbershop and a filling station. Held for investigation of breaking and entering were Clarence Shelly, 22, John Rogers, 20, and a 16 year old. Crime in America I By ESTES KEFAUVER H * United States Senator Seventeen of a Series Costello & Co. of New York For sheer drama, for wholesale peeling back of deceptive camouflage, the New York City open hearings were the climax of the Senate Committee’s crime hunt Our final judgment on Ambassador William O’Dwyer’s official conduct when he was Kings County district attorney and then mayor of New York, was this: . . Neither he nor his appointees took any effective action against the top echelons of the gambling, narcotics, waterfront murder or bookmaking rackets. In fact, his actions impeded prom ising investigations of such rackets.” O’Dwyer was questioned closely in connection with his han dling, as district attorney, of the wholesale homicide ring known as Murder, Inc. A former O’Dwyer appointee Frank C. Bals, one-time chief investigator for District At torney O’Dwyer and later the sev enth deputy police commissioner when O’Dwyer was mayor, was se verely castigated by Senator Tobey. The controversy was whether O’Dwyer and Bals had mishandled the case in such a manner as to permit Albert (Umberto) Anasta sia, aUeged boss of the murder ring, to escape prosecution. Murder, Inc., ’ which the gang sters themselves called “The Corn- times on charges ranging from grand larceny to kidnaping and ex tortion, but had paid only insignifi cant fines. Adonis is slick and smooth, an ex pensively tailored figure with iron- gray hair pdtnaded into a Holly wood ty^e hair-do. His voice was deep and gruff, but the words that came from his mouth were mostly wind y^. meaningless, legalistic phrases which sounded like the words of his counsel. • • • * A bizarre picture of still another phase of underworld life was given bination,” was a tightly run crime by the former Virginia Hill, now syndicate whiph police believe was responsible during the ’thirties for assassinating between 120 and 130 persons throughout the country. It has been charged publicly that An astasia directed its execution branch ahd that Joe Adonis was a top leader. ju;* . . • •'U, ■ The operations of Murder, Inc. finally came to light when, through confessions of underlings, police ob tained iron-clad evidence against Abe (Kid Twist) Relcfe, who later admitted he actually carried out the murders under Anastasia’s or ders. Reles made a deal with O’Dwyer to turn informer in ex* change for leniency. Information he gave sent eight men to the chair and some 50 others to prison. But before Kid Twist could testify against Anastasia, who was eluding arrest, the Informer met a mysteri ous death. Reles was under pro tective custody, not in jail, but in the suite of a Coney Island hotel. Early one morning while supposed ly guarded by six policemen, Reles. fully clothed, went out of his hotel window and was found dead five stories below. Out the window with him went the case against Anasta sia. Bals admitted that Reles was so frightened of gang reprisals that it was unlikely he intended to es cape; also that ‘lie was too much of a coward to commit suicide." When Senator Tobey, who later declared he believed Reles must have been thrown from the window, demanded an explanation of what had happened, Bals finally came up with the remarkable theory that the killer-informer must have intended to climb down one floor on a knitted bed sheet, come in a window and then trot back ,up to “kid around" with his guards, who had fallen asleep. • • • Even O’Dwyer later said he could not go along with Bals on the “peek-a-boo” theoiy. The fact remained that somehow, whether through carelessness or design, not only was the star wit ness against Anastasia eliminated, but Anastasia himself never was apprehended, although the Com mittee learned that he actually was serving in the United States Army —and the fact was no secret—dur ing part of the time he was sup posed to be a fugitive. Moreover, another O’Dwyer ap pointee, James Moran, then chiei clerk of the district attorney’s of fice, had caused withdrawal from police files of the “wanted notice" cards for Anastasia and other Mur der, Inc., fugitives. Anastasia, who entered this coun try by illegally jumping ship now is a partner in a prosperous dress manufacturing business in Hazel- ton, Pa., and lives in a $65,000 home in New Jersey. He replied, “I don’t remember" when we asked him to name any occupation he had engaged in between 1919 and 1942. • » * As for Joe Adonis, the commit tee found him one of the toughest, most contemptous of all the racket eers we questioned. Like others, Adonis knew all the big boys of crime, and followed the gangster circuit of Miami in the winter. Hot Springs (“for d’ bat’s." be told us) in the Spring. This man with blood-stained hands for, years had set himself u# as bigger than the law and was able to get away with it—until, in the wake of the Committee hear ings, he was sent to prison on the New Jersey gambling charges. Pre viously. he had been arrested many THING TO DO’ Mrs. Hans Hauser, the once-strik ing, erstwhile consort of the mur dered Bugsy Siegel and other gang sters. The strain of the life she had led since she ran away to Chi cago at 17 from her little Alabama town has taken «ts toll. Now 35, and plumpish she no longer is the cap tivating figure who once ,-charmed such gangsters as Siegel: Adonis and Frank Costelld. r She told a fantastic story of how she collected an annual income that ran into thousands of dollars from “the men I was around’’—only, she indignantly insisted,, they “were not gangsters or racketeers." When she began living with the late Ben Siegel—her eyes flashed indignantly when Counsel Halley referred to him as “Bugsy"—the gifts ran into big money and even “a house in Florida" costing $49,000. Halley questioned Miss Hill about a famous six weeks she spent at Sun Valley, where, incidentally, she met her latest husband, a skiing in structor. In six weeks, she squand ered $12,000—all but $1,500 of it paid in cash. Most of the money came from some Mexican gentle men whose names she refused to reveal as Halley suggested, “out of chivalry." Her income tax return shows that she used to report large winnings from betting on the horses, any where from $15,000 to $24,000. “I didn’t keep any books or accounts or anything, but I paid what I thought was right," she explained. When Halle? suggested that this sort of tax reporting might seem a little irregular to Uncle Sam, she peevishly snapped: “Well, then, he’ll have to take care of that, won’t he?" . “Uncle Sam? Maybe be will Mrs. Hauser," Halley said. “Well," she retorted in her tough little voice, “that’s all right, sure. I don’t blame him." If Bugsy or Joe Adonis or any of her friends would start to talk business around her, she testified, she would just get up and walk away. “Whether you believe it or not," she flared at Halley. “I don’t know anything about their business . , . I didn’t want to know." Of all the witnesses from the crime world summoned before us in New Yoijk, Frank Costello was thf focal point of interest. “No, Mr. ’Halley," Costello said toward the ?nd 'of his long exam ination when counsel asked him if he supported a certain judge’s can didacy. “Since the Aurelio case I burned my fingers once and I nev er participated in any candidates." • • • It was not a convincing picture that Costello sought to paint of his lack of political Influence. ‘There can be no question," the committee concluded “that Frank Costello has exercised a major influence upon the New York County Democratic organization^ Tammany Hall, be cause of his persona] friendships snd working relationships with its* Officers and with Democratic dis trict leaders even today in ten of the sixteen Manhattan districts.” Next week: Smashing the Crime Syndicate. Condensed from the book. “Crime In America/* by Estes Kefauver. Cpr. 1951. Pub. by Doubleday, Ino. Dlst. General Features Corr -WNU. Window Sills Window sills made from dark wood that are rain spattered and warped are unsightly and hinder complete closing of windows. Rem edy this by rubbing with a coat of boiled linseed oil. Company Makes History, Army Refund PHILADELPHIA—The tool mak ing firm in the Philly area that vol untarily gave the army a refund of $6,126 on an ordnance corps contract did so because it was 'the moral thing to do.” Harry E. Hyde, regional head of the Philadelphia ordnance district said that the company was Greene, Tweed and Co. of nearby North Wales. Hyde said that the company had obtained a contract for 1,200 bogu wrench asseinblies on a competitive bidding basis at a price somewhat over $50 eac . The assemblies are used by the arfny for self-propelled artillery mounts. The company produced each unit for $5.18 less than the expected sum after making what it considered fair profit. Clara Belle Town's Population Zero CLARA BELLE, Canada — Clara Belle must be considered a “railroad town" because it has a station and is well known to mining equipment manufac turers in the United States and Canada, but it has no inhabi tants. There are conflicting stories that the town was named for a woman or a cow. Although the town it known to railroad men and shippers in this country and Britain, few persons in the near-by town of Sudbury, in northern Ontario, have heard of it. The five-man station that com prises the town is tucked be hind the International Nickel Company’s smelter at Copper Cliff. Railroad lines funnel into Clara Belle from seven direc tions, and because the cars from the smelter often carry such high-priced items as platinum, Clara Belle does a business val ued at millions of dollars a year. Town Builds Parking Lots Aimed to Lure Back Local Trade RYE, N.Y.—Like many commu nities across the country. Rye has had a serious parking and traffic problem. The town has just com pleted a major operation on some!* of the back yards of the city’s blighted business district that is aimed at increasing the local trade by $4,000,000 a year. The program is the establishment of “car parks", the first two of which were dedicated recently. They are located behind stores on the main shopping thoroughfare. Two more such parks will be con structed next year. To accomplish the transformation the town condemned and demolished 20 residential properties and two small commercial establishments at a cosj in excess of $200,000. Then it spent $55,000 to construct the car parks. [ ,-, rt Trees will shade each of the 270 stalls and decorative shrubbery and flowers will be set in the stone curbs that divide the parking fields into small sections for easier ac cess to particular stores. That part of the program was developed with the help of the Garden Club of Rye which is contributing much of the greenery. The decision to rehabilitate the business sector stemmed from grow ing complaints of lack of parking facilities. The main shopping thor oughfare is a narrow traffic trap. There were only a few isolated lots near the stores and local residents were going to other communities for many items obtainable at home. Some housewives were even doing their day-to-day food shopping in other communities. With the new Car parks the mer chants hope lost trade will return, and they are doing their part by re building the rears of their, shops to form an attractive back-drop for thJ parking lots. To insure the continuing attrac tiveness of the free municipal park ing areas the town adopted an ordi nance that not only bars commer cial advertising signs but requires merchants wishing to identify their locations to submit the designs to an architectural board of review for approval Taxi Driver Wins Award For Boosting Home Town BURLINGTON, Iowa—Pride in his home town and a zeal for tell ing people about it, earned a Bur lington taxi driver a special award from the Chamber of Commerce in that community. Paul Brown was the honored individual and be re ceived an engraved fountain pen ft luncheon with the chamber board. Brown had as his customers re cently two gentlemen who were stopping overnight in Burlington while on industrial site inspection trip through the middle west. Bur lington itself was not actually on the list. After overhearing his passengers conversation about new industry. Brown got in a pitch tor his own town and did it so effectively that he induced the men to visit die local chamber and give Burlington con sideration. It is possible now that Burlington will get the new industry. County Board Asks Notes Of Local Newspapermen WAMPSVTLLE, N.Y.—The Madi son county supervisors have estab lished a public relations committee and have asked newsmen covering meetings of the group to show their notes taken at meetings to the com mittee. The committee chairman said the request was “not a formal demand" and was designed to see that the re porters all have the story. Newsmen who attended the meet ing in the community of approxi mately 300 said they would cooper ate “to a certain extent." One of the supervisors hastened to explain that the committee was not a censorship board of the local press. He added that it was ap pointed to “sift and assimilate the news and to enlighten the general public on phases 'of the ^board’s work." BY DR KENNETH i. FOREMAN ...... SCRIPTURE: John v DEVOTIONAL READING: Isaiah 1—7* How to find Christ for January 6, 1952 tell N OT every one finds Christ In just the same way. This was true at the beginning and it is still true. A very interesting recei.t book is, "These Found the Way," edited by Dav^f W. Soper. (Westminster Press, Philadelphia, $2.50.) It contains the stories oi a doz en modern persons who have become Christians. No two of then! ,h*Yjl the sazpa story to yet there is thing in among a& Of them. Each of them in Dr. Foreman some way has “found" Christ It ts a mistake to think that all Christiens must bo cost in the same mold, or that each of us must plant his feet exactly to the footprints (for example) of St Paul • * • • Sensational Conversions A T the beginning of John’s gos pel we find the story of One son after anothas, who FottOifed Christ. Jhere is only ol who believed In "Jesus oh the basis of what could «be called a “super natural" experience. This was John the Baptist. He testified that he had “seen the Spirit" (that is. God’s Spirit) coming upon Jesus. Now you cannot “see" the Spirit in the same- way you can see a fence-post. Even if you take the story in the most literal w«y, and take it to mean that the Spirit had taken the visible' form of a dove, tbe question still Is there: How would John know that this particular dove was not a dove, but the Holy Spirit? Whatever yon make of it, John was an exception. All the others in the story became fol lowers of Jesus through some one’s word, suggestion, invita tion; some one introduced them ' to Christ. That still is true. Very few people who are Chris tians today started out with some vision in the sky, spine vision of a dove or an ailgel or pf Christ him self (like Paul later on). • • • / , , „ Simpler Cases r UST.as likely, it was not spec tacular at all (Most of the con versions recorded in the New Testa ment were not in the' least spec tacular.) •> w It was some one- saying, “Let’s go te church,” or it was a Sunday school teacher saying, “BiU, isn’t it time you accepted Christ for your self?" or a girl sayLg, “How can I marry a fellow that isn’t even a Christian?” It may be reading a tract or it may be listening to some one’s testimony in a prayer meet ing, it might be reading that book about how some in our time have “found the way”,—or it might even be reading this column. However it comes about, two things are always true. First, some one introduces yon to Jesus. Then, yon make the de cision for yourself. Yon are not likely to come to Christ unless some one else suggests it and helps you; but no other person however good, and no church however great and true, can do for yon whpft yon alone can do for yourself: make up your own mind to say "Yes" to Jeans Christ. s' Nowadays much is said about “Fellowship Evangelism”. There is nothing mysterious about it.' For instance, a man who has never thought about becoming a Christian and perhaps no intention of bping one, joins (say) a men’s club at seme church . and one thing leads to another, and he gets ac quainted in this way with the min ister or with some one else who has had a real and happy experience with Christ . . . and presently his heart is stirred and he toe becomes a Christian— because he has onade Christian friends. i • • • Saying a Good Word Y ET it is a strange thing: many people will talk about anything else they believe in, before they will talk about Jesus Christ. : Suppose that from the begin ning every one had boon as close-mouthed about Him as most church members are? Si mon Peter, for one, would never have become a Christian. If It had not been for his brother An drew, who knows what would have become of Simon Peter? In commercial lingo, Jesus “sells" himself. First-rate things, ideas or persons always sell themselves. But even the finest articles in the world need to have their story told, they have tp be introduced, people have to know about them. Every church, every Christian, ought to be (in tbe best sense) advertising Christ. Is yours? Are you? •f the Churches sf Christ ef the UalteS States ef America. Releases hy WNU $ _ * Lany To# . The news tb^t Joe had los job got "around quickly, shod nosey friend asked: “Why did foreman'fire you?” “You know what a forei. —’’Joe shrugged, “-^-the one stands around and watches other men Work.” “What’s that got to do with it??* his friend wanted to know. “Well, he just got jealous me,” Joe explained. “Peopidl thought I was the foreman.” • . Beach Scene Abbreviations ai^e always fol lowed by a period except on the beach and then they are followed by a crowd. SPEEDY LONG-LASTING refcf fer Qet prompt relief—rub on 3 It instantly creates needed beat S jht where applied. You can /eel usterole’s great medication speeding fresh blood, to medication the painful BUcoTlf pa relief. If pain Is In tens Strong Mustorole! Any MUSTEROLE i Grandma’s Saying: YOU’LL ALLUS FIND the that are loved most are tbe who kin give others peace o' instead o’ glvln’ ’em a piece o’ mind. r.Va’ tit MU Kn. a a Daboer, WHEN I LOOK fer alltfs look fer the picture of Nu-Maid on the package. And there’s a package that’s Bumpin’ — modern in every Seals In Nu-Maid’s “Tab! flavor. And that churned-fresh vor makes a big difference in cookin’ and bakin’. • '*F* THE BEST WAY to measure friends is to put the _ their hearts—rather than around their heads. jVLfs *5 paid) J. K Winstead. ] SEEMS LI li E the word, always means “better.” Lei that’s true about yellow Grade” Nu-Maid, the garine. You can tell Ni better. You can tell Nu-Maid Is modern the way it spreads on smooth. One taste of that sweet, churned-fresh flavor and you’ll al ways want Nu-Maid, the modern margarine. will be paid upon publication to the first contributor of each ac cepted saying or idea...$10 if accc ted entry is accompanied by picture of Miss Nu-Maid from package. Address “Grandma” 100 East Pearl Street, Cincinnati 2, Ohiow ALWAYS LOOK FOB S^ wholesome Miss Nu-Maid on package when you buy Miss Nu-Maid is your assurance the finest modern margarine in t finest modern package. When children are puny./ SCOTT'S EMULSION HELM •EM CROW STRONG Weekly ekllires who need more natural A AD Vitamins bo-yin to srrow and develop when yon give them good-tasting Scott’s Ernnkfam every day. It helps promote strong sound teeth, a husky body—helps *en off Colds I Scott’s is a ! ENERGY FOOD TONIC “gold mine” of natural A AD Vitamins and energy-building natural oiL TASTES GOOD- « THEY LOVE IT! Economical I Buy today at your drug stora. MORE than fust a tonic— it’s powerful nouns