The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, February 29, 1952, Image 3
THE NEWBERRY SUN. NEWBERRY. S. C.
••
FREE SCHOOLS
HI^HSchool
Aid in U.S.
Rising, Report
ST. LOUIS. Mo.—To a great ex*
tent, “dishonest” attacks on the pub
lic schools that have increased re
cently are responsible for the phe
nomenal “grass roots” interest in
American education.
This was the general belief of
about 750 delegates to the citizens
assembly on education, called re
cently in St. Louis by the National
Citizens Commission for the Public
Schools.
The delegates included community
leaders, board of education mem
bers and civic-minded citizens. The
commission, headed by Roy E. Lar
sen, was formed three years ago to
improve public schools. Since then
it has grown until today there are an
estimated 10,000 citizens' school
groups throughout the country.
These groups have done much to
strengthen and gain support for their
home town schools.
Watch Drastic Steps
Larsen told the delegates to watch
fbr the tendency in some commu
nities to be “stampeded” by minor
ity critics of the schools. And he
cautioned that the home towners
should not allow one or two ex
tremists to stampede either the
school administrators or the com
munity into any drastic steps that
will harm the free public schools.
He also warned the home towns
not to let their schools deteriorate
as a result of the war mobilization
program. By bringing school condi
tions out in the open, citizens gen
erally will rally to support their
free public schools.
Leo Perlis, national director of the
Community Services Committee of
the Congress of Industrial Organiza
tions, told the delegates that this
country still had not arrived at its
democratic goal of equal education-
al opportunities for all youths.
Education Put First
“The goal of education for all will
not be attained unless all of us, lay
men and teachers, parents and tax
payers, labor and management, all
citizens join forces to look at the
problems, to face the questions, to
try to find the answers,” he said.
“If we have to pay more to get
the kind of education for all we
want, then let us pay more. There
isn't anything that is more impor
tant.”
About 100 citizens' school groups
are being founded weekly in the
home town of America, commission
officials reported. And their work is
beginning to reflect in the public
school by better facilities and teach
ers.
Kentucky Town Hunts
Adequate Water Supply
HARRODSBURG, Ky.—Like many
small towns across the nation who
have experienced unusual growth in
the past several years, the com
munity of Harrodsburg is faced with
the problem of providing adequate
utilities for its new citizens.
Located in a rich agricultural sec
tion of Kentucky, also an expanding
industrial section, the community is
without an adequate water supply.
And like other small towns, the prob
lem of financing is a big one.
The community’s present pumping
plant is located on the Salt river
and was completed in 1922. Average
daily use of water in the town has
jumped to more than 300,000 gal
lons, double that of 1940.
In the event of a dry season, like
that of the summer of 1950, the
town would face a dangerous water
shortage, officials report. '
The Chamber of Commerce has
proposed a new pumping station on
Herrington Lake, but an estimated
$350,000 to $397,000 would be needed
to build the system.
Ministers and Laymen
Fight Village Gambling
LINCOLNTOWN, Ga.—The minis
ters and many laymen are taking
mn active part in a campaign against
gambling in the village of Lincoln-
ton.
As a group they have been attend
ing the regular meetings of the town
council, and at a recent one, suc
ceeded in getting stricter laws enact
ed against gambling and vice. Be
sides stiff fines, the law provides
that convicted parties are subject
to 10 to 35 days in jail ror the second
offense, and a straight 12 months
for the third.
It is one of the strictest laws on
the books of any small community
in the country.
Annual Ice Cream Social
Held in Wild Snowstorm
STILLWATER, Minn.—The third
annual outdoor ice cream social was
held in Stillwater recently during a
howling snowstorm.
And the home folks had fun. Bath
ing beauties, wearing long under
wear under their suits, paraded
through the storm in weather 10 de
grees above zero as the band played
“In the Good Old Summertime.”
Several businessmen donned straw
hats and sport shirts and “putted”
snowballs around until the snow
became so deep they had trouble
finding the “green”.
It was better than last year, how
ever, when blow torches were
brought out to thaw the ice cream,
which froze solid in below zero cold.
SHOPPER’S
CORNER
By DOROTHY BARCLAY
SUDDENLY LENT
*|*HE Lentea season catching you
off-guard? Suddenly out of the
depths of winter comes that usher-
ing-in season bringing spring in its
wake. No ideas for those meatless
meals that even non-observers plan
for during Lent? Be of good cheer,
lady, for fish, eggs, and all those
nutrition-laden dairy products are
plentiful and reasonable.
That king of all fish, Whitefish, is
flooding your market right now, ali
the way from Can
ada, and at half the
price you’ve been
paying for your na
tive Lake Superior
type. How about
that royal Planked
Whitefish which has
brought fame to
many a restaurant, honor to many
a home-maker, and joy to your fam
ily?
Haddock, too, the crown prince of
the fish kingdom, is available In
increasing supply. This fish lends
itself to all manner of tasty and nu
tritious variations. The most popu
lar of all treatments is stuffed and
baked, of course. But if you have
bone trouble, why not remove the
bones, and bake the fillets like pies,
with a double crust of your favorite
bread or cracker crumb dressing?
Put it together, and what have you
got? The tastiest slices of pie your
>ven has turned out in weeks.
And to curry favor with your fam
ily, curry the flavor. Haddock’s
delicate taste combines ideally with
that exotic taste from the Indies,
curry powder.
Oysters, too, are plentiful these
cold waiting-for-spring days. Have
them in a nourishing stew for a
satisfying, one-dish supper. Or bake
them, scalloped, for stretching them
farther. If you really want to make
a hit bake individual casseroles for
each member of the family, and
make like a party. Some of your
stores even have seashells for such
purposes—very attractive, and very
special
mmmrnmmm
HKtRSK-sSiS
EGGS APLENTY
As for that other Lenten stand-by,
eggs—the Department of Agricul
ture avows that egg production is up
5 per cent over a year ago, and
egg prices probably the lowest right
now that they’ll be in all of 1952.
So rejoice, homemaker, for not only
are these early eggs cheap, but
they’re top-quality. Grade A eggs
are especially abundant during the
Lenten season, and are a bargain
because there’s such a minute dif
ference between A’s and B’s, in
value and in price.
While the two grades are equally
nutritious. Grade A eggs show a
large proportion of thick white,
which stands up well around a
firm, high yolk. These eggs are es
pecially suited to poaching, frying,
cooking in the shell, and for oven-
baked dishes.
And while eggs are so plentiful,
why not look ahead to the time when
they won’t be, and tuck some in your
freezer for later «se? You can
freeze 'em whoU, or separated
whites and yolks, depending on your
future plans for them. Label them,
whole or which separate, and re
member that tM yolks or the whole
eggs should he used within six
months, but the whites will last a
year.
Wounded Marine Can Sing
Through Painful Journey
WITH \HE FIRST MARINE DI
VISION fN KOREA—Slipping and
sliding down the mountainside, two
stret'aer teams were having a
tough time carrying the wounded
Mattie—even in relays.
had lost a foot in a mine blast
jun at dusk and now it was raining
ar I dark. They had to get him to
if edical aid and quickly. A helicop-
was out of the question in sty-
• an blackness.
now did the sorely-wounded Ma
rine take his journey through pain?
He may have been a little out of
his head from shock but all the way
down the hill he sang “The Marines’
Hymn.”
Angry Housewives Force
Chief to Eat His Words
EAU CLAIRE, Wis. —Angry house
wives besieged City Manager James
Pollock and forced him to apologize
for hinting they were poor money
managers if they could not feed,
clothe and bouse their families on
$45 to $50 a week? The women
marched on city hall carrying signs
reading “We Want an Apology’ ;
“We Can’t Budget on $45 a Week, *
and “We Are Not Poor Manaaerr”
Pollock hastened to apologize.
TULE LAKE
Fabulous Crops Being Produced
On Dry 90,000-Acre Lake Bed
Modern pioneers have struck pay
dirt in the now dry bed of a 90,000-
acre lake near the California-Ore-
gon border. Instead of rich ores,
in the past five years they have
taken $27,000,000 from the rich soil
in the form of Klamath potatoes,
malting barley and clover.
The new farmers, most of them
veterans of Uncle Sam's fighting
forces, homesteaded and developed
the area, after the waters of shallow
Tule Lake had been drained by the
U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
At first, even the surrounding ter
rain was inhospitable. It lies on a
4,000-foot high plateau, rimmed by
rugged mountains and the desolate
Modoc lava beds.
But the soil was fabulously rich,
and needed only irrigation water
and the hard work of the willing
veterans to eventually transform the
area into a prosperous, modern,
comfortable agricultural commu
nity.
By INEZ GERHARD
E VEN after appearing in more
than 25 pictures John Beal was
still hoping for a big break, the
one role that would take him straight
to the top. It was given to him by
Stanley Kramer, the star maker;
Kramer called him, in New York, to
ask if he’d like to play the prison
psychologist in “My Six Convicts”,
at Columbia. Beal says he reacted
very calmly—except that he still
has a lump on his head from hitting
the ceiling of his hotel room. Be
tween films be has done radio,
television, and appeared on the
New York stage; two plays he
starred in were bought for the
movies, but someone else was giv
en the roles he created.
Just how valuable are movie stars
In radio? “Pulse of New York”,-•
top research organization, has re
ported the result of its survey. The
week all those M-G-M programs fea
turing such stars as Bette Da”is,
Ann Sothern, Lionel Barrymore and
BETTE DAVIS
Lew Ayres started on the Mutual
network, listening audiences in
creased an overall total of 17%
over the previous week.
The^ University of Michigan’s
Men’s* Glee Club makes its screen
debut in the RKO Pathe Special,
“Songs of the Campus”. Fourteen
of the nation’s top colleges are rep
resented in this compilation of popu
lar college songs.
This is a typical field of bar
ley nearing maturity in the Tule
• Lake homestead area. The old
shoreline of the lake can be
clearly seen at the base of the
hills hi the background.
It wasn’t easy. The first home
steaders lived in shacks and tents
while they harvested a crop. Roads
were bottomless mires of mud.
There were no schools, no electric
power, no telephones. Many of the
faint hearted gave up, but most
faced the situation and hung on
doggedly.
The town of Tulelake was In
corporated in 1937. Paved roads
crossed the basin, power and tele
phones were installed, and homes
built. Schools and churches went
up, and a weekly newspaper began
publication.
THE FULL potential of the area
still had not been tapped, so alter
World War II the veterans’ quest
for land culminated in the most pub
licized lottery since selective serv
ice. Two thousand ex-servicemen
from all parts of the nation sought
86 farms being offered for home
steading. Other farms were home
steaded in 1947 and W48. Today
there are plans for opening' still
another area of the old lake bed.
Agriculturally, the homestead area
is a sensation, despite its short
growing season and often severe
winters. Klamath potatoes have
been sure-fire and the Hennchen
(malting) barley grown there has
drawn premium prices almost every
year. Introduction of Alsike clover
brought the homesteaders another
good cash crop. r In addition the old
lake bed raises onions, alfalfa hay,
some seed crop^. and livestock.
The steady cash income' from the
homestead farm* has. brought an
equally • steady and solid growth to
the oommuaily* -City effioteis like to
point out that, despite its brief his
tory, Tulelake is not a boom town.
Its permanent, modern buildings,
wide paved streets, four hotels,
theater, schools, civic and social or
ganizations confirm that contention.
As one of the west’s most famous
duck and goose hunting areas, the
city is benefitted by a large influx
of hunters every year. And the area
even has an incipient oil boom.
Today the entire area is pros
perous. The homesteaders, from
first arrivals to the Johnny-come-
latelys of the years from 1946 to
1948, are doing fine. Merchants in
Tulelake are more than prosperous.
The homesteaders are grateful
that the government offered them
the opportunity to own their own
farms, but they point out that they
built their own individual successes.
Farming under these conditions
required know-how, courage, physi
cal strength, and plenty of just plain
hard work. The Tule Lake home
steaders had those qualities in
abundance, plus a geperous portion
of the pioneering spirit which de
veloped the west.
CROSSWORD PU2UE
LAST WEEK'S
ANSWER ^
ACROSS
1. Mother-irt-
law of Ruth
(Bib.)
6. Side of a
doorway
10. Once more
11. Wing-shaped
12. Turn inside
out
13. Dwelling
14. Free ‘
15. Arched
17. King of
Bashan
(Bib.)
18. Game fish
19. Hurl
21. Like
22, Public
vehicle
25. Anesthetic
27. Kingdom,
NE. Africa
29. Body of
water
30. From
32. A Roman
emperor
33. Greek
island
35 Gold
(Heraldry)
3.6. Guest
39. Sorrow
40. Egresses
41. Leaves out
43. Location
44. Make
amends for
45. Drinking
cup
46. One who
shoes horses
DOWN
1. Sail a
vessel
2. Matured
3. Rowing
implement
4. Bishop's
headdress
5. At home
6. A shirt
ruffle
7. Below
(naut.)
8. Manufac
tured
9. Raised
12. Eats away
13. Misuse
16. Flightless,
20. Wild
sheep
(India)
22. Secondary
23. Extirpator
24. Shops
26. Under
ground
parts of.
plants
28. African
antelope
31. Back
33. Quotes
34. Foam
36. Waistcoat
extinct bird 37. Iris
18. Definite (S. Afr.)
article 38. Perches
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rauunm HSUUH
UrfMHUHUIlHHR]
nrm uun wh
ohiin fin unii
KiBHU HlirdiUU
HUMCTf RJHUHH
NO. 0-9
39. Expressed,
fermented
juice of
grapes
42. Cry of a cow
44. Roman
pound
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H
THE
FICTION
SHARE ALIKE
CORNER
By Richard Hill Wilkinson
■HE second week after
reached the cabin on
they
Wolf
Creek, Sid Condon, exploring a
tributary alone, found goM. He
spent half a day estimating the
value of the filnd. It was a pocket
and would prob
ably net a total
take of between
$40,000 and $50,-
000. Sid filled his
pipe and sat down to meditate. The
thing to do, of course, was to get
Duke Brandon, his partner, clean
out the placer, and hit for Big Rock
settlement before the snow came.
Sid sucked on his pipe, and his
eyes grew crafty. Into his mind
there bame a picture of thin-lipped
Duke Brandon. Why should he share
this find with Duke? A man with
$40,000 could retire and live for the
rest of his days In comfort. A man
with only half that amount would
have to scrimp. Forty thousand dol
lars!
Duke Brandon was in a surly
mood that night. He had had no
luck. The food supply was getting
low. Snow would come soon. Why
not quit now while their chances of
getting out were good?
“Walt a week," Sid urged.
“Might as well make sure we
ain't missln' anything.”
So Duke was prevailed upon. The
next morning they started out again
in opposite directions. Sid went
south, circled west and came to his
claim. Working feverishly he pan
ned a handful of gold and carried
it up stream a half mile, cacheing
it beneath a large moss-covered
rock.
The next day and the icxt and
the next it was the same. Duke be-
GRASSROOTS
Truman Will Be in Ring Fighting for Nomination
By Wright A. Patterson
A T A PRESIDENT’S PRESS con
ference in Washington, with the
bright and shining lights of the na
tion’s correspondents in attendance.
Harry S. Truman stated he would
not reveal his political plans until
the last week in April. The Demo
cratic primaries for United States
senator from Missouri will be held
the last week in April, and the al-
ways-awake newspaper boys imme
diately popped at the President the
question: "Do you intend to enter
the race for that senatorial post?”
but he would not say.
They knew he could not seek both
the presidential and the senatorial
nominations. Those newspaper cor
respondents figured that as a
democratic presidential candidate,
he might be beaten. As a demo
cratic senatorial candidate in Mis
souri he would have a far better
chance of winning. They knew that
as a Missouri senator he had been
far happier than as president.
They jumped at conclusions and
wired their papers that he would at
tempt to secure the Missouri sena
torial nomination, but the President
had not said he would make sucb
an attempt.
The correspondents pointed to the
fact that he could not have both
nominations and that he was never
happier than when serving as Mis
souri’s United States senator about
the close of World War I and as
chairman of a committee to re
negotiate army war contracts
through which he saved the gov
ernment large sums. There were no
criminal charges involved then as
there have been In the internal rev
enue scandals, which, as President,
he has not cleaned up.
As a Missouri senator he cannot
continue to be the big boss of the
Democratic party. He would have
to listen to others, and that would
not be acceptable. The President
likes the sound of coins jingling in
his pockets. He has not turned’ his
salary back to the treasury as did
Hoover.
He has spent his $50,000 expense
money, and he paid no tax on it,
nor was the account audited. He has
enjoyed the privilege of using the
President’s yacht as a diversion;
he has appreciated having his boon
companion General Vaughn in the
White House to distribute deep
freezes. He likes to spend his winter
holidays at the Key West naval base,
which he could not do as a Mis
souri senator, but can continue to
do as President. Such are some of
the prerequisites he would have to
surrender when he quits the Job of
President. And then, instead of liv
ing in the rent free White House,
he would have td again pay rent.
Now what would he gain by a
switch from the presidential to a
senatorial job—if he could get that?
It is only reasonably possible that
he could. Instead of a $50,000
untaxable, unaudited, expense ac
count, he would have only $12,500.
quite some difference. Instead of
some 1,200 White House employees
to do his bidding, he would have
one, probably Bess as his secretary.
And her salary could be added to
the family Income. He would just
have to get along without the solace
of Harry Vaughn’s presence, and
without deep freezes. He could use
taxis instead of private planes and
trains, and collect five cents a mile
travel fare. But he would not go so
much and Bess would have to hold
back a bit on her entertainment of
distinguished guests. The bulk of
the company would be Missouri
farmers, and they would not com
mand expensive rations.
Margaret can help with the apart
ment. That will mean a maid less
to pay for. But what is the use.
boys, in attempting to figure it out.
Harry probably says. Whether 1
am to be beaten or net for the
presidency, I have intimated 1 will
make a fight for it, and the sena
torial place must wait for another
time. I can do without a job, or 1
can again turn to selling haberdash
ery until that time comes, but I
cannot turn the boys down.
Those extra intelligent big city
newspaper correspondents knew
Harry S. Truman would not turn
down the big chance until he had
been counted out. He could be count
ed upon to be still in the centet
battling so long as the show was on
But the next Missouri senatorial
race will be a new story and a new
answer.
*—
President Truman has enjoyed
doing things that astonish the Ameri
can people. He has liked to estab
lish exceptional precedents. It might
be he would resign as president,
and give the Veep a chance for a
brief term.
With the speed of a snake his
hand flashed to his hip where
hung the revolver. ,
came more disgruntled. He decided
to remain only one more day.
The next morning Duke headed
north. Toward noon hp swung west
and south. At midafternoon he
came to a moss-covered rock lying
near the shore of vhat was to him
an explored tributary. He sat down
to smoke and rest, and as he sat
there the slanting rays of the sun
fell upon a dull, yellow piece of
metal. Duke blinked, then leaneo
forward. He picked up (he niece
of metal and saw beyond it a small
opening beneath the rock.
He knelt and reached into the
hole and took out a handful of gold
Sid Condon had stood in the bed
of the stream when cacheing his
placer gold, so there were no foot
prints nor other signs to indicate
his having been there.
There must be *30,000 worth of
metal in the cache. Half of tha«
was his, according to the unwritten
law. The other half—but what could
a man do with a mere $15,000?
D UKE took a small ack from his
pocket and filled it full with the
dull, yellow dust. His breathing
was heavy as he knelt there. Hi>
eyes glowed feverishly. He knotted
the sack together and rose from his
knees—and stopped dead still
Sid Condon was standing not 15
feet away. Sid’s left hand contained
a sack similar to the one in Duke’s
It was not full, but the bulge was
evidence enough as to its contents
For split seconds the two men
stared at each other. Significance of
the meaning of the situation dawned
slowly in their sluggish brains.
Sid Condon’s lips flattened
against his teeth. His eyes nar-
< rowed to slits.
- “So!” he cried hoarsely. “So 1
This is how it is! Partners, eh?”
“Partners,” Duke Brandon
echoed. “Partners!” he repeated in
ugly scorn. "You louse!”
Sid Condon laughed harshly. He
was bigger than the other man, ana
he felt confident.
With the speed of a snake his hand
flashed to his hip where hung the
revolver. His finger contracted on
the trigger and flame belched from
its muzzle. .
Sid Condon saw his partner’s
body jerk convulsively, and he knew
he had scored a bit; knew it only
dimly though, for the sound of his
own gun had come from a great
distance, and there was a drumming
and pounding in his ears. He sank to
his knees, and through the haze of
his vision he saw that Duke Brandon
was also on his knees.
Then he knew that Duke had
equalled him in speed at the drew
They lay, so close they could
almost touch, each holding firmly k
a sack of gold; lay and cursed and
were eventually silent while th*
silvery stream rippled on, and nigh*
finally came.
Lack of Deep-Rooted
Legumes Cuts Yields
Legumes Give Organic
Matter to Worn Fields
“Coming” some soils year after
year without restocking the organic
matter via deep-rooted legumes in
the rotation, will cut yields to the
vanishing point even if you add fer
tilizer and install drain tiles.
Ohio soils specialists demon
strated that in tests at the Pauld
ing experiment farm. The results
of the tests are shown in the accom
panying photographs taken on ad
joining fields.
Both fields had been fertilized and
tile-drained. The top field was con-
tinously in com. The lower field had
a rotation of com, small grains and
two years of alfalfa.
Year after year of com crops
had robbed the top field of its or
ganic matter. The soil became
packed down and stuffy. It was so
tight that water could not get down
. below the surface. The middle rows
of com were drowned out by pond
ed rain. In other rows the roots
couldn’t get sufficient nutrients,
oxygen and moisture to feed the
stalks, leaves and ears.
The lower field shows a healthy,
vigorous growth. Over the period of
*Jhe tests yields averaged 30 bushels
more than in the other field. The
deep-probing taproots of the alfalfa
kept the soil open to air and water.
The mineralized organic matter left
In the soil by the legumes improved
soil tilth and furnished plant food
for the com and small grains. The
organic matter improved the soil’s
drainage and water holding capac
ity More moisture was stored for
the use of the corn crop.
Proper Farm Belt Care
Gives Longer Service
Proper care of the flat belts that
drive threshers, ensilage cutters,
buzz-saws and other farm machin
ery will result in years more serv
ir* and prevent breakdowns and
costly repairs.
Here are a few suggestions for
prolonging the life of farm belts:
1. Protect belts from oil by spiasu
guard.
2. Use vulcanized splices to repair
belts Metal fasteners tear the fab
ric, expose belt ends to moisture.
3 Remove oil or grease accumu
lations with dry-cleaning fluid.
4. Store belts in a dark, cool and
iry place when not using them.
5. Maintain correct alignment and
keep pulleys clean.
6. Keep belt tension properly ad
justed at all times.
7. Specify the manufacturer’s ma
chinery part number when ordering
replacement belts; ^
Chick Brooders
The secret of successful brood
ers for young chickens is uni
form heat. For those housewives
and farmers who may be re
ceiving their hatchery chioks in
the next few weeks, here is an
Idea that may fUl their needs.
The donble socket (see above)
directa heat outward and gives
better coverage, preventing
crowding in the center.
Most Farm Families
Have a Home Garden
%
According to a United States De
partment of Agriculture survey last
year, five million of the six million
farm families in the nation raised
gardens. Nearly all of the five mil
lion canned food, and about two and
a half million- stored garden pro
duce away in treezera.
The department reports this Is
one of the many reasons that there
is plenty of food in the United
States.
mm
CLASSIFIED
agents
LOCAL DISTRIBUTOR .WANT*®
nationally known line of high quality se
lective cosmetlct. Be your own hn “
make "mo^e'than'waKes
United Enterprleea, Ine., If S-E- Seeeee
Street, Evansville 9. Indiana.
BUSINESS A INVEST. OPPOR-
HEALTH demands immediate sale of
Paint and Body Shop. Downtown location.
A-l reputation. P.O. Bex 815, Pi. Lasse*-
dale, Fla. •
LAUNDERETTES—New conu>i*i*
delivered your location.
Less than *4 usual cost. *ZJ25 for unU
to do $300 weekly, profit *200. Weal for
large tourist units, replacing 10 oW
washers, $1,130. New. exciting. cuta
costs unbelievably. Writ* Bates Laandir
Machinery Ce., fo« E. Kaley Ave., Or-
lande, Fla. Phene 8-47B7.
STEAM SAW MILL—Complete with 3
steam engines, boiler, Spee ,5 > *®
feed, edger and dry kiln at sacrifice prlc*.
M. A*. Ml " ‘
Florida.
tickler * Son, Ine., Klssli
RETAIL BAKERY for Salo. Fully
g business. Only bar,
rice $2,800.00. Located
Elkin. N.C.
ped. Good going
m town. Cash pri<
217 E. Main St.,
DOGS, CATS, PETS, ETC.
PUPPIES FOR SALE, thoroughbred Fo*
Terriers, $19 males; registered Cockers,
$30 males, females $25. We ship any
where. Banna's Kennol, WoodraS, S.C.
HELP WANTED — MEN
WANTED—Tree Surgeons — Experienced
preferred. Good steady working condi
tions; insurance and vacations with pay.
Write: Tree Sargeoa, P.O. Box flit,
Lynchburg. Virginia.
HELP WANTED—WOM
NURSE
Anesthetist, Registered, to alternate
employed anesthetist. Physician Art
siofogist also on staff. Modern V
hospital.
A W.
MINISTR ATOR
Kennestone Hospital
Marietta, Qa.
MACHINERY St SUPPLIES
USED CEMENT BATCHER
Want 1500 lb. capacity. Also, want
water metering tank for Ready Mixed
Plant.
MISCELLANEOUS
My Pain Was Relieved!
“Suffered 20 years, used ‘Acthome,’ nerr
chemical concenrate. Wonderful! Tried
everything before ‘Acthome’ helped me.”
For the present,, available only direct
from company, 3 packages for $5.
back guarantee; ^Acthome/' Dep».
213 Aragon, Coral Gables. Florida.
$1-00 Currency Delivers Magic
—Lights.Fuel Oil Heaters, Furnaces
stantly Guaranteed last fc
tions. Box 637 X South Boston
for ge
. Va.
YOUR Pietaru on Stamps re;
from any size snapshot or ph<
Send picture plus $2 for 100 pho
Personalize your stationery, also
Other uses. BOB HENRY,
Miami Beach, Florida.
WRIST WATCH SPECIAL!
A beautiful men's wrist-watch—
steel case—waterproof, shockproof
With expansion banal Swiss Jei
movement! Written guarantee for
full year! Only $9,951 Send cash
we prepay postage, or 25% depc
C.O.D. plus postage. Truly a w
will be proud to own.
B and 3 JEWELERS
823 W. Church Si.. Orlande. Fla.
TIRED OF GETTING DUNS
and garnishees? Don't borrow to_ pay
debts. Let us help you pay them and Uvu
at your present job. Send post card tor
Information. P.O. Rex 652, Gadsdeu, Ala.
UNWANTED HAIR
Permanently eradicated from any part of
the body with “Saca-Pel*,*' the remark-
able discovery of the age. Saca-Pelo con
tains no drug or chemical and will kill
hair root.
LOR-BEER LABORATORIES
679 Granville St., >
Vancouver. B.C.
POULTRY, CHICKS St EQUIP.
NEW HAMPSHIRE8. Yellow Buffs,
Barred Rocks. Minorcas, Leghorns—a«
and breed as available^—$1.95 per 100
f.o.b. Carolina Hatchery Oatlet, Box H17,’
Columbia, B.C. >.»
SURPLUS CHICKS. Hatchery surplus.
Big type. Primarily ckls. Rocks. Reds,
Crosses, etc. Live delivery guaranteed.
$2.85—100 C.O D , F.O.B. Bouknight’a
Chicks. R. 2. Columbia, S.C.
SEEDS, PLANTS. ETC.
CHRYSANTHEMUMS
varieties in all types
star
— World-famous
and kinds. Send
CERTIFIED Coastal Bermada. Write for
free copy “Year Round Grazing on Pe»^
manent Pasture.” Patten Seed Company,
Lakeland, Georgia.
U. S. SAVINGS BONDS
Art Now
U. S. DEFENSE BONDS
CONQUER nil EC
CONSTIPATION ■
AND RECTAL IRRITATION!
CscocSr hom
Relief oo MONEY BACK GUARANTY*.
No HoepM Bdl, No Opermdoo. No
•cot. No Low of TTwe or P»f 1
Not • Salvo Not ■ :
•eat. Yet to Safe —eo
YOU CAN'T IOSI. Joyfal
row ■boor wftwfod hr
City Bank aed Tniet
Dr. Reilly’s Applicator Inc*
Dept. X.42S1 W. Fond Du Lao Ave.
MILWAI
LUKES IS. WIS.
Beware Coughs
From Commsa CsMs
Hurt HANG ON
Creomnhlon relieves promptly bccaost
it goes right to tho seat of the troobte
to help tooeoi and expel germ Jade*
phlegm and ski Batura to soothe sod
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
membranes. Guaraateed to please vou
or money refunded. Creomubioa MB
stood the test of miOioas of asea.
CREOMUCSION
WN J—'i
HEAD COLD
NASAL
PENETM HOSE DROPS