dr mr some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/mvs... ·...

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IF'PETEH.'PMN HAS you ALL TIED UP WITH CHEST COLD Q0/&C... me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday, March. 10, 1W9 MOMMY'S RIGHT/ I 3-IN-ONE [^STOPPED THE ' H, SQUEAKS/ White coal is the figurative name for falling water that is capable of being used for power purposes. The term originated in France; it is .the literal transla- tion of houille blanche and was probably suggested because much' of the falling water in France originated in snow-covered moun- tains, or because falling water when filled with air bubbles ap- pears white when compared with the blackness of coal. Tide water, usable for power, is sometimes called "blue coal." Democracy Out oi Chaos B RUCE BARTON has been a friend of mine for many years. He was a congressman represent- ing a New York City district. Ac- companied . by Mrs. Patterson. I called at his Washington office In the house office building and asked if he would assign one -of his young lady assistants to the job of escort- ing my wife to the senate and house galleries so she might see the legislative branch of her gov- i cTnmcnt in action. 1 saw Mrs. Patterson again about 4 o'clock that afternoon. She was almost in tears and """wwjl could not talk with- Kr . - V out a tremble in her Kr. ' 7 I voice. I asked the God's Signature Lesson for March 13,^919 I N A STRANGE city you may sud- denly need tobe identified. So roe suspicious clerk wants to know if your signature is genuine. It Is a fair challenge, for too many liars are in circulation. Je- sus himself had to furnish identifl- cation. No less a person than his'old friend John the j&SBRflK Baptizer had grown j uneasy. Are you the One we are •MMMKSMHi looking for." he in- Dr _ Foreman quired, "or- shall we look for some one elieT" Jesus' answer to John was not to discus# the theology of the Incarnation, or anything of that sort He ]ust vent about his usual day's work. In the course of that day he cured a good many sick people, and , preached to some very poor people. "Now go back," he said, "go back and tell John what you have seen and heard." What those men saw that day was what Jesus at another time called the "finger of God." the genuine divine signature. V"! "I'm badly dis- I I appointed and I H B L \ M greatly discouraged I by what I have I S seen. I cannot con- I ceive of the nation I PATTERSON continuing to live with such men run-.I ning it,", she' said. In the senate one 6onator was I making a speech. There were not more than a dozen senators in the chamber, and none of them was I paying any attention to the speak- I er. Some were reading newspapers. I Others in small groups were talk- ing among themselves. There was | no decoruip, no dignity, no interest, "In the house of representatives It was different, but more discour- aging. There tt was a rabble. Every one was talking and interrupting every other one. It eSS senseless. I had expected to see two great de- liberative bodies, the membership . of which represented the braina of i our nation; to- be thrilled and en- ' thused by their deliberations. I was not. I was only discouraged by a rabble." The lady had built op a wrong conception. She had envisioned j a gathering of supermen who wonld deliberate with-great and austere dignity; whose every { word would represent wisdom I and statesmanship ability. J But tf we did have such a mem- bership of both the senate and house, they would not represent government "of. for and by the people." What she had seen has in the past, represented America and that for which America stands—and always will. In the membership of the two houses of congress are to be found the types we have in every community. They are typical of the people they represent. As it has been in the past, is now, and will be In the future, there .are to be found a limited few of outstanding ability in each congress, but the vast ma- jority are the types that are our real Americans. Congress Is, as It should be. bat a national town meeting. It has been that since the begin- ning of the federal government. It is that now, and let us hope tj. continues to be a national town meeting. As long as It la that, our* will be a government Mr Some-today! \ ACTION [ The face of China, as it awaited with everlasting Oriental patience the heritable arrival of Communist domination, was the face of despair. Chiang Kai-shek, perennial hero of China, is gone. Taking his place, to preside over the dissolution of the Chinese republic, was Acting Pres- ident Li Tsung-Jen (second from.left, abqve), shown with members of the Nationalist high ech- elon. What he asked John to notice was simply this: the blind see, the lame .walk; lepers are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and (as a climax!) the poor hear good news. The signature of God. in short, is not sheer power; It Is using whit power one has. to help people In trouble. That was the sort of per- son Jesus was. Not By Bread Alone T HE EXPRESSION, "needy peo- ple." nowadays suggests people who haven't enough to eat .or wear. Jesus helped such persons; but he Shanghai, Nanking and other major cities pre- sented a mural of misery. A hungry refugee (left) tries to eat bark off a-tr«e. Children huddle against a wall to keep warm (above). Still another man, shredded of dignity, filches a ration of rice left out- side a store. yond well-cired-for bodies. There ........ . ' . . . . ___ ^ #..„ tu- tott»d rodpo Introauco vow to wott- was the poor man from the grave- <jrfu| ^ S|Qr ^ Yortl k, yard, for example.—he was happy ^ 5lar ayoor * enough. He didn't want clothes, U«p« froth for month. without rofrig#rorto«.. and he was strong enough to steal all the food he could eat. AH he . wanted, In fact, was to be let alone. p u t j e w . k n e w j b a t w h a t he need- f ed above all was a sane mind, a f Iff I T I I I B I mind no longer run over and tramp- J IV 1 I IIMHH led by a regiment of devils.. I k A I M I When Jesus got through with him F I I T D D | | he was clothed, but that was not the best part of I t He was In hla Tfc«« t- CAU right mind. So God's signature la men manga IB <v*ui not only written In a sound body. It <L. safer daarette \ Is In the sound mind. Again, at Jer- Icho when Jesus Invited himself to U&W dinner with that pint-sized tycoon, H , ] i i J i i B l K Zacchaeus, Jesus did not go Just -J tor the meaL He went because he knew that Zacchaeus needed some- BB ^ I 1 * S B I k I Documents pertaining to work of the Nation- alist government (below) were cvefully burned to keep them out of the hands of the onrushing Com- munist invaders. Meanwhile, thousands of civil- ians jammed the roads leaving Nanking, and the vanguard of tho Notionalist armies poured into the city for a last-ditch defense. JKS&. - ' - EHi As she looked at the indifference displayed In the senate and the pan- demonium in the house, Mrs. Pat- terson did not realize that the real work of both bodies is done behind committee room doors. That in those committees careful considera- tion is given each piece of proposed legislation. All too frequently that consideration is based, not always on the best interests of a majority of the people, but' often on partisan advantage, on the number of votes It will attract for party candidate* at the next election. That Is a flaw created by self- ish political Interests Inherent In -onr two-party system. It does not spring from any defect , In the federal constitution. With. . aQ of that, government Vof, for and by the people,", as repre- sented by congress. Is far sope- rl9r to the rule of an army of. bureaucrats, directed by a dlo- tator. They may not be able statesmen; they may not be men of exceptional ability; but as long as we have the Joe Doaks, the BUI t Smiths, the Jsck Browns and the Mary Lees representing us at Washington, we will continue to have government "of. for and by the people." They are the average Americans. Bruce Barton conducted an ad- vertising agency before his election to congress and is again back on his old job after four years In the limelight. He was, and is, a repre- sentative American. He is typical. We do know that after dinner Zacchaeus was a changed man. He was going to give back every dishonest penny, with Interest; tine content to half that of ordinary cigarettes. Yet skillful blending makes every puff a pleasure. n x u m o - t u L L -ABACCO oo, IHO. X. J BiumwwiiiaiilxukJH"! ur root BOOM AIOUT UMO a earn every one he had cheated, he was going to give away half of his holdings for the benefit of the poor. What Jericho needed was a new administration, an honest one; they needed slum clearance; and Zac- chaeus was going to give It to thept But first of all Zacchaeus bad need-' ed s new heart—and' Jesus gave him that Again It was the gen- uine signature of God. We Too A LL ABOUND us Is a troubled world. Some men, seeing It Infer there Is no God. Others con- clude that If there Is one, he must be bad or weak. The truth Is that the signature of God Is not to be found in the evil and the confusion of the world. It is to be seen'.wher- ever freedom Is standing against slavery, wherever truth Is pushing back Ignorance, where diseased bod- ies are being healed, where sanity replaces madness. It began as the Marshall plan, then It became ERP, to which has been added ECA. OEE, OUSSP, PAB, ACFMP and MACIMFP. What they all mean I do not know, except that they are parts of the Marshall plan operations, resulting In com- plications In America and confusion in Europe. They also add many hundreds to our government pay- rolls plus travel and living ex- pense! in Europe. We Cannot always do things as simply as Jesus did. Curing the diseased Is not for us a simple mat- ter of saying, Be well. A Christian woman, distressed by whf t she had learned of the plight of the Insane In her backward state, was asking the head of the slate hospital (him-" self a church officer), "What can we Christians do?" "Get behind the legislature," he said. (Copyright by the InternaUonal Coun- cil of Rcflslous Education on behalf of 40 Protestant denomlnaUons. Released by WNU features.) Tropped between the Nationalist, troops, en tering the city for a last defensive fight, and the rapidly advancing Communist forces, the citizens of Nanking created scenes of indescribable con- fusion as they attempted to leave the city and cany their household belongings out of fne reach of possible shell damage. China, sacked, bumed and despoiled countless times throughout its his- tory, again was falling before a new invader.

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Page 1: Dr Mr Some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/MVS... · CHESIF'PETEH.'PMN HAST you ALL COLD TIED UP WITH Q0/&C...me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday,

IF'PETEH.'PMN HAS you ALL TIED UP WITH

CHEST COLD

Q0/&C... me//v

M T . V E R N O N S I G N A L T h u r s d a y , M a r c h . 10 , 1 W 9

MOMMY'S RIGHT/ I 3-IN-ONE [ STOPPED THE ' H, SQUEAKS/

W h i t e c o a l i s t h e figurative n a m e f o r f a l l i n g • w a t e r t h a t i s c a p a b l e of b e i n g u s e d f o r p o w e r p u r p o s e s . T h e t e r m o r i g i n a t e d in F r a n c e ; i t i s . the l i t e r a l t r a n s l a -t ion of h o u i l l e b l a n c h e a n d w a s p r o b a b l y s u g g e s t e d b e c a u s e m u c h ' of t h e f a l l i n g w a t e r in F r a n c e o r i g i n a t e d in s n o w - c o v e r e d m o u n -t a i n s , o r b e c a u s e f a l l i n g w a t e r w h e n filled w i t h a i r b u b b l e s a p -p e a r s w h i t e w h e n c o m p a r e d w i t h t h e b l a c k n e s s of c o a l .

T i d e w a t e r , u s a b l e f o r p o w e r , i s s o m e t i m e s c a l l e d " b l u e c o a l . "

D e m o c r a c y O u t o i C h a o s

BRUCE BARTON has b e e n a fr iend of mine for m a n y yea r s .

He was a congressman represen t -ing a New York City dis t r ic t . Ac-companied . by Mrs. Pa t te rson . I called a t his Washington office In the house office building and asked if he would assign one -of his young lady ass i s tan ts to the job of escor t -ing my wife to the sena te and house gal ler ies so she migh t see the legislative b ranch of her gov- i cTnmcnt in act ion.

1 saw Mrs. Pa t t e r son again about 4 o'clock t h a t af ternoon. She w a s

a lmost in t e a r s and " " " w w j l could not talk with-

K r . - V out a t r emble in h e r K r . ' 7 I voice. I a sked the

God's Signature Lesson fo r M a r c h 13,^919

IN A STRANGE city you m a y sud-denly need t o b e identified. So roe

suspicious c le rk wants to know if your s igna tu re is genuine. I t Is a fa i r challenge, fo r too m a n y l ia rs a r e in circulation. Je -s u s himself had to f u r n i s h identifl-cat ion. No less a person than h i s ' o ld f r iend J o h n the j & S B R f l K Baptizer h a d grown j uneasy . A r e you the One we a re • M M M K S M H i looking f o r . " he in- D r _ F o r e m a n quired, "or- shall we look fo r some one e l i e T " J e s u s ' answer to John w a s not t o discus# the theology of the Incarnat ion, o r anything of tha t s o r t H e ]us t v e n t about h i s usual d a y ' s work.

In the course of t h a t day he cured a good m a n y sick people, and

, p reached to some ve ry poor people. "Now go b a c k , " he said , " g o b a c k and tell J o h n what you h a v e seen a n d h e a r d . " What those men s a w tha t day was what J e s u s a t ano the r t ime called the " f inger of God . " the genuine divine s ignature .

V " ! " I ' m badly dis- I I a p p o i n t e d and I

H B L \ M grea t ly d iscouraged I by what I h a v e I

S seen. I cannot con- I ceive of the nat ion I

P A T T E R S O N continuing to live with such m e n run- . I

ning it,", she' sa id . In the sena te one 6onator w a s I

m a k i n g a speech. T h e r e were not m o r e than a dozen sena to r s in the chamber , and none of t h e m w a s I pay ing any attention to the speak- I e r . Some were read ing newspapers . I Others in smal l g roups were talk-ing among themselves . T h e r e w a s | no decoruip , no dignity, no in te res t ,

" In the house of r e p r e s e n t a t i v e s It w a s di f ferent , but m o r e d iscour-aging. T h e r e tt w a s a r abb l e . E v e r y one w a s ta lking and in te r rup t ing e v e r y other one. I t e S S sense les s . I had expected to see two g r e a t de-l ibera t ive bodies, the m e m b e r s h i p . of which represen ted the bra ina of i ou r na t ion; to- be thr i l led and en- ' thused by the i r de l ibera t ions . I w a s not . I was only d i scouraged by a r a b b l e . "

The lady had built o p a wrong conception. She had envisioned j a ga ther ing of s u p e r m e n who wonld de l ibe ra t e w i th -g rea t a n d a u s t e r e digni ty; whose e v e r y { word would r ep re sen t wisdom I and s t a t e s m a n s h i p abi l i ty . J

But tf w e did have such a m e m -b e r s h i p of both the s e n a t e and house , they would not r ep r e sen t gove rnmen t "o f . for and by t h e people . " What she had seen h a s in the past , r epresen ted A m e r i c a and t h a t fo r which A m e r i c a s t ands—and a lways will. In the m e m b e r s h i p of the two houses of congress a r e t o be found the types we have in e v e r y communi ty . T h e y a r e typical of the people they r e p r e s e n t . As i t h a s b e e n in the pas t , is now, and will be In the f u t u r e , t h e r e .are to be found a l imi ted few of ou ts tanding ab i l i ty in each congress , bu t the v a s t m a -j o r i t y a r e the types tha t a r e ou r r e a l Amer i cans .

Congress Is, as It should be. b a t a nat ional town m e e t i n g . It h a s been tha t s ince the begin-ning of the f ede ra l g o v e r n m e n t . I t i s t h a t now, and let us hope t j . continues t o be a na t iona l town mee t ing . As long a s It la t ha t , our* will be a g o v e r n m e n t

Mr Some-today!

\ ACTION [

The face of China, as it awaited with everlasting Oriental patience the heritable arrival of Communist domination, was the face of despair. Chiang Kai-shek, perennial hero of China, is gone. Taking his place, to preside over the dissolution of the Chinese republic, was Acting Pres-ident Li Tsung-Jen (second from.left, abqve), shown with members of the Nationalist high ech-elon.

What he asked John to not ice was s imply th is : the bl ind see, the l a m e .walk; lepers a re cured, the deaf h e a r , the d e a d a r e ra ised, a n d (as a c l imax! ) the poor h e a r good news. The s igna tu re of God. in short, is not shee r power ; It Is us ing w h i t power one has . to help people In t rouble. Tha t was the sort of per-son J e s u s was.

Not By B r e a d Alone

TH E E X P R E S S I O N , " n e e d y peo-p le . " nowadays suggests people

who h a v e n ' t enough to e a t .or w e a r . J e s u s he lped such persons ; bu t h e

S h a n g h a i , N a n k i n g a n d o t h e r m a j o r c i t i e s p r e -s e n t e d a m u r a l of misery. A hungry r e f u g e e ( l e f t ) t r ies t o e a t b a r k of f a - t r « e . Chi ld ren h u d d l e a g a i n s t a wall t o k e e p w a r m (above) . Stil l a n o t h e r m a n , s h r e d d e d of d ign i ty , f i l ches a r a t ion of r ice l e f t o u t -s ide a s tore .

yond well-cired-for bodies. There ........ . ' . . . . _ _ _ ^ # . . „ tu- tott»d rodpo Introauco vow to wo tt-w a s the poor m a n f r o m the grave- < j r f u | ^ S | Q r ^ Yortl k, y a r d , for example .—he was h a p p y ^ 5lar a„ y o o r * enough. He d idn ' t w a n t clothes, U«p« froth for month. without rofrig#rorto«.. and he was s t rong enough to s t ea l all the food he could ea t . AH he . wanted , In fac t , was to be let alone. p u t j e w . k n e w j b a t what h e need - f ed above all w a s a sane mind , a f I f f I T I I I B I mind no longer run over and t r a m p - J I V 1 I I I M H H led by a reg iment of devils . . I k A I M I

When J e s u s got through with h i m F I I T D D | | he was clothed, bu t t h a t w a s not the best par t of I t He was In hla Tfc«« t - C A U r ight mind . So God ' s s ignature la m e n m a n g a I B < v * u i not only wri t ten In a sound body. It < L . safer daarette \ Is In the sound mind . Again, a t J e r -Icho when J e s u s Invited himself t o U&W dinner with tha t pint-sized tycoon, H , ] • i i J i i B l K Zacchaeus , J e s u s did not go Just -J tor t he m e a L He went because he knew t h a t Zacchaeus needed some- B B ^ I 1 * S B I k I

D o c u m e n t s p e r t a i n i n g to work of t h e N a t i o n -a l i s t g o v e r n m e n t (below) were c v e f u l l y b u r n e d t o k e e p t h e m o u t of t h e h a n d s of t h e on rush ing C o m -m u n i s t invaders . Meanwh i l e , t h o u s a n d s of civil-ians j a m m e d t h e r o a d s leav ing N a n k i n g , a n d t h e v a n g u a r d of t h o N o t i o n a l i s t a r m i e s poured into t h e c i ty fo r a l a s t -d i t ch d e f e n s e .

JKS&. - ' - EHi As she looked at the ind i f fe rence

d isplayed In the sena te and the pan-d e m o n i u m in the house, Mrs . P a t -te rson did not rea l ize tha t the rea l work of both bodies is done behind c o m m i t t e e room doors . T h a t in those commi t t ee s ca re fu l considera-t ion is given each p iece of proposed legislation. All too f requen t ly t h a t considerat ion is based , not a l w a y s on the best in teres ts of a m a j o r i t y of the people, but' of ten on p a r t i s a n advan tage , on the n u m b e r of vo tes It will a t t r a c t for p a r t y cand ida t e* at the next election.

Tha t Is a f l aw c rea ted by self-ish political Interests Inheren t In - o n r two-party s y s t e m . I t does not spr ing f r o m a n y de fec t , In the federa l consti tution. W i t h . . aQ of t ha t , government Vof, fo r and by the p e o p l e , " , a s r ep re -sented by congress . Is f a r sope-r l9 r to the ru l e of an a r m y of . b u r e a u c r a t s , d i rec ted by a dlo-ta to r .

They may not be ab le s t a t e s m e n ; they m a y no t be m e n of except ional abi l i ty ; bu t a s long as we h a v e the J o e Doaks, the BUI t Smiths , the J s c k Browns a n d the M a r y L e e s r ep resen t ing us a t Washington, w e will cont inue to have gove rnmen t "o f . for and by the people . " They a re the a v e r a g e A m e r i c a n s .

• Bruce Bar ton conducted a n ad-ver t is ing agency be fo re his elect ion t o congress and is aga in back on his old j o b a f t e r four y e a r s In the l imelight. He was, and is, a repre-senta t ive Amer ican . He is typical .

We do know tha t a f t e r dinner Zacchaeus was a changed m a n . He was going to give back e v e r y dishonest penny, with In teres t ;

tine content t o half that of ordinary cigarettes. Yet skillful blending makes every puff a pleasure. n x u m o - t u L L -ABACCO o o , IHO. X. J

B i u m w w i i i a i i l x u k J H " ! u r roo t BOOM AIOUT UMO a e a r n every one he had cheated, he

was going to give a w a y half of his holdings for the benefit of the poor.

• What J e r i cho needed was a new adminis t ra t ion , an honest one; they needed s lum c lea rance ; and Zac-chaeus was going to give It to t h e p t But first of all Zacchaeus b a d need-' ed s new hear t—and ' J e s u s gave h i m t h a t Again It was the gen-uine s igna ture of God.

We Too

ALL ABOUND us Is a t roubled wor ld . S o m e men , see ing I t

Infer the re Is n o God. Others con-clude t h a t If the re Is one, he m u s t be b a d or weak. The t r u t h Is t h a t the s igna tu re of God Is no t t o be found in the evil and the confusion of the world. I t is t o b e seen ' .wher-e v e r freedom Is s tanding aga in s t s l avery , whe reve r t ru th Is pushing back Ignorance, where diseased bod-ies a r e be ing healed, w h e r e sani ty rep laces madness .

It began as the Marshal l p lan , then It b e c a m e E R P , to which h a s been added ECA. O E E , OUSSP, PAB, ACFMP and MACIMFP. What they all m e a n I do not know, excep t t h a t they a re p a r t s of the Marsha l l plan operat ions , result ing In com-pl icat ions In Amer ica and confusion in Europe . They also add m a n y hundreds to our government pay-rolls plus t rave l and l iving ex-p e n s e ! in Eu rope .

We Cannot a lways do th ings as s imply as J e s u s did. Cur ing the d i seased Is not fo r us a s i m p l e m a t -t e r of saying, Be well. A Chr is t ian woman , d is t ressed by whf t she h a d l ea rned of the pl ight of the Insane In h e r b a c k w a r d s tate , was ask ing the head of the s l a t e hospi tal (him-" self a church off icer) , "Wha t can w e Chr is t ians d o ? " " G e t behind the l eg i s la tu re , " he sa id .

(Copyright by the InternaUonal Coun-cil of Rcflslous Education on behalf of 40 Protestant denomlnaUons. Released by WNU features.)

T r o p p e d be tween t h e N a t i o n a l i s t , t roops , en t e r i n g t h e c i ty f o r a l a s t d e f e n s i v e f i g h t , a n d t h e rapidly a d v a n c i n g C o m m u n i s t f o r c e s , t h e c i t i z ens of N a n k i n g c r e a t e d s cenes of i ndesc r ibab le c o n -fus ion a s they a t t e m p t e d t o leave t h e c i ty a n d c a n y t h e i r househo ld be long ings o u t of f n e r e a c h of possible she l l d a m a g e . C h i n a , s a c k e d , b u m e d a n d despo i led c o u n t l e s s t imes t h r o u g h o u t i t s his-tory, a g a i n was f a l l i ng b e f o r e a new invader .

Page 2: Dr Mr Some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/MVS... · CHESIF'PETEH.'PMN HAST you ALL COLD TIED UP WITH Q0/&C...me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday,

MT. VERNON SIGNAL

SEWING CIRCLE PATTBINS

IJoled ^Jrocl S s y o u t h f u l

oCovedy % t i t i e for 'iJrouAieau

To Relieve Your Cough, Mix This Recipe, at Home

'own •U. (Or you can use corn syrup or liquid booty. Instead of BO ear »yrup.> Than put 2H ounces of Pine* (obtain-ed from any druggist) Into a pint bottle, and AH up with your syrup. This makes a full pint of medlrlif. that will please you by Its quick mo-tion. It never spoils, and tastes fine.

This simple mixture takes right hold

IT'S YOUR OWN FAULT YOU VYEB6MT INVITED TO EDITH'S BIRTHDAY PARTY. THAT /MOUSE YOU TOOK TO HER LAST PARTY SCARED HER CAT. AWAY'*

*AGE BRINGS SUCH RESPONSIBILITIES/ REMEMBER. WHEN WE HAP SO FEW CARES?'

By Margarita / TWE roRYOURX/IwV MEDICINE REGCIEjffucKT/

Just four pattern pieces. A draw-string waist makes it flt just right, lace sweetens the neckline.

If your diet 1 lacks bulk for nor- re mal elimination, 3 this delicious cereal will supply (J it. Eat an ounce i every day in 1 milk—and drink s plenty of water, jg If not satisfied 1= after 10 days, send ei Kellogg Co., Battle

. 12-29 Exciting Yoked.-Frock

P'XCITING, smart, wearable—a handsome yoked frock that

combines two fabrics effectively. Narrow ruffling trims the sleeve and yoke edges, a bow tied belt snugs in your waistline. i tJV&ua-Xo: comes la sizes 13, 14, M. IS and 30 Slto 14 »U yards 18-lnch; % yard contrast

Easily Sewn Gown DRETTY enough for a trousseau

is this lovely round-necked gown that's such easy sewing.

MUTT AND JEFF SNOW' SNOW/ SNOW/

IVE NEVER SEEN so AS W6 MAO /

a - T H I S W I N T E R / k

V I 'M GLAD ALL 1 THIS. SNOW CAME D O V M m FLAKES

INSTEAD OF f

A L L A T ONCE/ /

em wrs Mrs mm Food chopper won't slip off the

table when grinding meat if you place small pieces of sandpaper between the clamps and the table.

If your blouses persist in "rid-ing up," sew top-half of snaps un-der skirt band and lovfer part, of snap to blouse — reinforce the blouse where snaps are sewn. Blouse will stay down, skirt will stay up!

Use long, sweeping strokes when ironing cottons and linens — for easier and more satisfactory results.

When airing clothes outdoors on hangers, fold fruit jar rings over line and slip hangers through loop ends to help prevent clothing from-swinging down the line.

I Treat linoleum around the sink with an application of automobile wax to prevent spotting and wa-

| tersoaking.

When storing boxes on top shelves, attach tags,to long cords so you can read wtiat is in them without climbing up a chair or lad-der—saves time and energy in lo-cating just the box you want.

ISNV FLEJSCHMANNfe DRY YEAST A FAST^/

^ M O W ' S ABOUT "WAT

CM M E * X OHt

By Arthur Pointer ' DHW&SHE' THE N OBJECTIONS DCMTSAy ANYTXIN6 ABOUT ,

tT STAYS 6TR0NG LONGER

rg lOOKI buy 3'packages f j at a time—keeps on tha

pantry shelf. No refrigeration needed!

3 times as many- women prefer

FLEISCHMANNS YEAST

SUNNYSIDE CHEST GOLDS!

BAGS/ WUEBE WAVE ' •CU BEEN ML PAY f /

' HE HASN'T BEEN " EATING MIS SOPSEI? EITWE8. WXNg

HE'S BEEN ACriNG MK3HTV PECULIAR IATEIV, ALRIGHT.'

VIRGIL WHERE IN THE WORLD IS THAT f W W EV«R AMPUL ODOR / I T IS, CIND n

1COMIN& FROM } AND THROW V , ? . ^ " l A r r o U T '

I POUND IT. POfl. A COUPLE OF 5 FCWgOES WE.RE

RamNe» IN) SMOKE Camels and test them in your "T-Zone" (T for taste, T for throat). If, at

any time, yon are not convinced that Camels are the mildest cigarette you've ever smoked, return the package with the unused Camels and we will refund its ful l purchase price, plus postage. V- V~\

(Signed) R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co* J ' f V m

GRANDMA By Charles Kuhn I. MUST O'-ROLLED O N T H ONE O" TH' CRACKERS • ' I BROUGHT T ' BED T ' I B MUNCH O N - < • ,C!J||I| | | | | .M

HM SO THAT'S IT-

Page 3: Dr Mr Some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/MVS... · CHESIF'PETEH.'PMN HAST you ALL COLD TIED UP WITH Q0/&C...me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday,

MT. VERNON SIGNAL. MT. VERNON. KY. THURSDAY, MARCH 10. 1949

Classified Ads

cd

WAiNitu—woman 10 help Ash from auipnate. I.also have mother with house work and plenty of com fertilizer 3-9-6 children. Kentucky family, more and 2-12-6 and 20%. I have

able marrwith rar f o r h o m e , h a n w a6es. thirty Iplenty of Nitrate of Soda, call on farmers in H „ T dollars a month. Permanent1 Also have plenty of Sulphate

w!fnL.<, , home write Mrs. Wm. Mullins, Pot Ash in 100 lb. sacks for the 'onderrulop- R R g B0 0 X 330 Dayton, 3. | tobacco growers.

a °ay. Ohio. tfp. I Boone Saylor, Mt. Vernon, tfc. castle Count}'. portunity. S15 to S20 No experience or capital quired. Permanent. Write to-

.day. McNess Company. Dept A, Freeport. III, lOp

MiBt &• Ada for Spr

Ad; .

row brand Shirts, win colors, all sizes. McB«e

t f c .

We have the very best in! FOR SALE—1 Kitchen Cabi-^work shoes. McBee & Adams. I net, 1 Kitchen Safe, 1 Cook

Lsdies, ?.Ti«scs and Childrens Stove, good as new. 1 Jim ,Oxfolds and Pumps, for dress Brown Merit Crtfam Seperator and hardwear. McBee & Adams. -—iHc <-t fea*'—•--=

• r, ' r\ r- J " • J Lovcll, Burr, Ky. t24p. 'en = Dress Oxfords, priced, - ~ ' right, new styles, in Freeman : FOR SALE—One Electric and Peters. McBee & Adams. ,Cooking Stove. Call at Signal

c , , . . , F O R SALE—One pair of 3-FC H SAL., i ? Acres.New year-old Mules, about 15 hands

Home and Oulbuildm^s. Elec- F-e J. F.- McKinney, Burr, trie. See Arv»l Hunt. Maret- Ky. tMlOp. bur*:. Ky.

ward. . FOR SALE—HouSe and Lot B and new styles in CHAMP with 3'-'/ Acres, more or less.

a'.s. McBee & Adams. ifc. Known as the Steve Drew Women's "and Misses 110114 ob-ee. jiwt above the Burr p o s t - . . " - ~ H

Toppers. McBee & office. For further information | Livin^torT 'Kv

LOST—50 CI. Ammunition-Box, containing envelopes. I \v*th keys. Return to Bob Ford, I Mt. Vernon' and

tfc. - FOR SALE — Nice Yo< Black Mare. Work anvwh. Good Saddler. See R. W. Kllic at his place at Callowa

see Mrs. Burr. Kv.

W.

Book

State" Bank, j P , • , «... Call for your' Fiederick. Check at The Bank of Mt. Ver-|

non. 117c.i'

Z d Z S A ? Z , , ^ ' I ' U s h e a t i n g - ^ r plumbing I you need, deep or shallow well >.t uave Chicks the 2nd of March.

—, ? a s . sr ft suss?*# C r ^ y S S A , ^ e - 5 J b T n e d H ^ ^ 100 acres of land, some timber . r s£ e c ! a l White Ro^ks $14.50. WANTEEM-Home for a- T1 and coal. Located 2 miles off „ . f , o c k s t c* t cd. Rockcastle year old boy. Needs home. Pre-' U. S. 25 on Chestnut Ridre „ , c J y ' C r a b ° a r d l , J5? • f c r t 0 l i v e c , o s e enough to at-Road. See E. T. Lovell, Callo- R o u t c 3- - tM25p tend Mt. Vernon school. ™ay- Ky FOR SALE—Fertilizer. I have See County Judge. tfc

FOR SALE—Redcaned Fes- i n s , 0Ck f i v c carloads of fert- ELECTRIC WIRING — All cue Seed. Maret Hackley, Route !',z0.r" have three carloads of kinds. Reasonable prices. See 1 Stanford, Ky. tl7p. P, r a d c fertilizer 4-12-8 or j a m e s R. Price. Electrical Con-

grade ferti- tractor. Box 173, Mt. Vernon,

_ ^ v - u 6-8-6- these high

FOR SALE—-Recleaned Fes- lizers or Pot Ash from Sul- Kv cue Seed. Albright's Hardware phate. Farmers we want to use, —— Store. Brodhead. Ky. tl7p on our tobacco this year Pot j FOR SALE—Canned Goods

Peas. $1.00 per doz.. County | Gentleman Corn. S1.50 per doz., I Qreen Beans. $1.50 per doz.. I Apple Sause. $1.25 per doz.. Mil Gal. Buckets of syrup. 30c to

,35c. See David Gregory, tfc.''

' 'LOST—Billfold-' in Living- j ston. Ky. Keep money and re- . turn papers to Mack Bales Gar-age for reward. James Sears j q-o Whitesway Cleaners, Lon-1

don, Ky. Itp.,

I Will Buy

Wrecked & Junked Cars Any Model — Any Make

Any Shape

GENTRY'S GARAGE Phone 111 Richmond Street

Mt. Vernon, Ky.

SPRING SEEDS SPRING OATS

Columbia Red, Northern While and Clinton

KY. 31 FESCUE

Certified LADINO CLOVER

99.60-90 TIMOTHY

BROME GRASS

BLUEGRASS

ORCHARD GRASS

LEEPEDEZA

RYE GRASS

RED TOP

Here's Your Invitation to Our BIG, FREE

Invitation . Bring the Family •

and have Mi.5'

A Lot of Fun • J

With Us

POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENT

F. F. BOBBINS For

Magistrate 3rd. Diitrict

FRIDAY, MARCH 11th - 7:30 P.M. Mt. Vernon High School

Chester Rotroff And Joe Sidney - Comedians Belmont Brothers - Jugglers .

Folk And Popular Music

A1 Rodgers. Betty Pearl And Paul Thornton

COLOR MOVIES Educational - Travel - Comedy

Absolute Auction SHERMAN MAUPIN'S

Dandy 25 Acre Farm, Stock Of Groceries, Household Furniture

And Farming Implements Located 11-2 H i . M. of Brodhead, Ky.

THURS., MARCH 17 th AT 10:00 A. M.

LOCATION—This baby farm is nj sly located about IV2 miles North-west of Brodhead. Ky., on the West side , of the concrete Highway No. 150, in good neighborhood, on one of the most travelled throughfares in the State and near the thriving town of Brotihead, Ky. LAND—Some 15 acres are cleared of which 5 acres are in orchard grass and the remainder in woodlanH pasture. Has .9 acre tobacco base. Watered by well at residence and pond for stock. IMPROVEMENTS—Clean slock 0! groceries, household and kitchen furniture, numerous small farming implements, 10 barrels of corn, potatoes, etc. 0

Farms of this size and improved such as this are indeed scarce and this sale presents to you that wonderful opportunity to buy and to own. your own home and at your own price. We urge your closest inspection and most sincerely invite you to attend this Absolute Auction on THURSDAY, MARCH 17th, AT 10:00 A. M. and pound your bids in. POSSESSION—On or before 30 (fays from day of sale. A • . TERMS—25% On Sale Day. 25% upon delivery of deed and the re-mainder in two equal annual installments, bearing legal interest.

For further particulars, see or write either the owner, Mr. Sher-man Maupin, Brodhead, Ky., or

Messer, Sutton €r Carter, Agents

C. K. Gover, Cler]

M M l l

Crab Orchard, Brodhead & Stanford, Ky. Phones: C. O. 2461 - Stanford 180 & 105 -

Col. James B. Messer on the Block CoL C. Col. Paul Noland, Cashier.

Yellow SWEET CLOVER

White SWEET CLOVER

RED CLOVER

SAPLING CLOVER

ALSIKE CLOVER

Oklahoma -ALFALFA

Kansas ALFALFA

TOBACCO SEED

TOBACCO CANVAS

TOBACCO SETTERS

PLANT BEfo FERTILIZER

Garden Seed In Bulk Or Package

FARMERS 'SUPPLY COMPANY

Danville. Ky.

GIVE NOW 41

BRYANT BROTHERS Your International Harvester Dealer

AUCTION •• * ;

Fred Myers & Wife's Nice Suburban Home & Personal

Property Tuesday, March i s

10:00 A.M. On The Premises, Rain Or Shine LOCATION—On U. S. No. 25, just out of Mt. Vernon, Ky., near Ren-fro Valley, near the Holiness Church, about 400 yards from High School, close to Hill View Camp. HOME—Nice 4 room Home with porch in front. Concrete' Stucco Foundation, Boxed and Weather Boarded, Heavy Green Slate Roofing, Good Well at Kitchen Door with Well House. On 3 Acres of Land, with Extra Fine Garden and Everlasting Spring. Smoke House, Small Barn, Wood and Coal House. This is a good location. PERSONAL PROPERTY—Antique Walnut Wardrobe, Kitchen Cabi-net, Coot Stove, Library Table, with lots of other articles too numer-ous to mention. POSSESSION—Day after Sale. TERMS—Reasonable, announced day of sale. OPPORTUNITY—Seldom are you offered nice small places like this —so well located, so come out and give this Good man and wife a fair price for this very Valuable Baby Farm.

For Futher Particulars—See or Write, Mr; Fred Myers, Mt. Ver-non, Ky.; or r~ • y

V Brown, Laswell & Hurt, Agents Ml. Vernon, Brodhead-and Crab Orchard, Ky.

Col. Delberi Laswell, Auctioneer. Free Silver Given Away During Sale.

If-you are thinking of Selling or Buying see the above firm. We get you more $$.$$.

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U. of K. Library

Siodfisad Mr. John Newland, retired

rail-road conductor, of Atlanta, Ga., was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fletcher and other relatives here over tne week-end.

Miss . Patsy Hendrickson,- _ _ _ _ _ student of the E&stern Ken-1 ESTABLISHED 1187 tucky State Teachers College, Richmond, was at Home wiui, f _ J _ _ n _ n . -her mother, Mrs. Sam Hoskins,' J u Q Q Q D c l f l l l i l l l l l bunday. j 3

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil McKin-1 ney and little, daughter, Jane Cass, visited her brother, Les-ter Cass and family in Bereb Saturday.

Rev.' Charles Brown of Lex-ington was a welcome visitor in our little city Saturday.

Miss Bethada. Cfomer of Mt. Vernon spent the week-end

• with Miss Marjorie Crawford. Ihey were dinner guests of Miss Rosemary Anderson Fri-day and attended the basket-ball tournament at Stanford.

Mr. Green Lovings is able to be out after a serious operation in Berea Hospital, Berea. He visited his grand-daughter, Mrs. Sowder and family near Hiatt Sunday.

Jack Fletcher and J. G. New-

Mmnl wtvnm FTTTE OT S20 TO $100 Kfa C0TITH6

TEAKING OR WOTOATING-BOOKS, NEWS-PAPERS OR PERIODICALS BELONGING TO PHgLIC-LIBRARIES.

tutes, Artld* 1*® Devoted To

Th* Interest! of

Onr County

"WHERE THE BOONE WAY JOINS-THE DIXIE" MT. VERNON KENTUCKY THUHSDAY. MARCH 10. 1949 VOLUME 84

Dies In Somerset At Age Of 75

Judge B. J. Bethurum, 75, former circuit judge and Com-monwealth's attorney in the 28th Judicial District, died at Somerset City Hospital Sunday after an illness of several months.

A native of Rockcastle Couri; ty. Judge Bethurum represent-ed Rockcastle and L a u r e l 'bond. Thev confiscate

£«W a : | ba r re l s of mash and 50 pounds of sugar.

Fancy Siill Nabbed Just Outside Town , One of the best whiskey-making outfits seen around here lately was captured on a farm about Mt mile from town Monday by Deputy Sheriff Warren Carpenter and two state officers.

It was made up of a large copper boiler and" c o p p e r worm and was allegedly being operated at the time by James Rowe and Walter Vance, who were arrested by the of-ficers and later released

Reckless Driver IFire Damages Wrecks Sheriff I Building Housing Carpenter's Car IFire Department

As Deputj Carpenter s Highway 25 big cut late

ture from 1898 to 1902. He was prominent in State and Ninth District Republican politics from early youth.

After enactment of the 18th HOLINESS CHURCH

. (By G. W.' Murphy) I Thank God, of the Church,

it is the most wonderful insti-tution existing today. We men seem to have been put in charge of -it some Apostels, Pastors, et al., as it pleases God.

However God tells us plainly in 1st Tim. 3; I, also in Titus 1; 9, what the qualifications of such man shall be. No where in the Bible does He put a woman in charge, but tells them how to.conduct themselves both in and out of church service. Some

jacx tletcner ana J. o . New- .Amendment, he served as legal land were in Tennessee Friday advisor to the state prohibition of last week on business director. For 20 years he was

Mr. and Mrs. Morgan Wright ; division counsel for the South-end sons Billy and George and .ern Railway at Somerset. He Lewis Sigmon of Louisville w a s twice Republican nominee were guests of Mrs. Molie Sig-.for U. S. senator but was un-mon Saturday and Sunday. successful.

Mrs. J. G. McCollum who has j i n 1946, Judse Bethurum de-been very ill at her home clined an appointment to the across the river, Jeffersonville, state Court of Appeals, during was moved to the home of her the administration of forme? son, Shirley Adams on Ander- < Governor Simeon Wilis son St., Wednesday of last I At the time of his death, week. She continues seriously j Judge Bethurum was, a director of you professors but not pos-

, . „ , . . of the Citizens National Bank, sessors, say "Yes I Believe The toward Crawford, Arthur of which he was at one time Bible, every word of it." Then

Clouse and Johnnie Harmon of president. He was an' elder in >f you are not a first class hypo-Richmond, Ind., were guests of First Christian Church of crit, why on earth do you not Mr. and Mrs. Emmitt Crawford Somerset and was active in the 8° t 0 doing what it says? * over the week-end. professional, business, and re-'i God is not pleased with you M r s -C leo Howard was down jiigious life <Sf the community, are anyone else to come into a from Wallins Creek Thursday | Survivors include his wife, church with a lot of spirits of of last week with her sister, Mrs. Leila Williams' Bethurum, Divination which tend-to divide Mrs. Jennie Robins. land his stepson and "adopted a n d separate the love the mem-

Johnny Games and son, C61. J. Bethurum Williams, bers have one for another, you little daughter, Jill, were re-IU. S. Army, retired, now presi- are not fit to preach or SReak cent guests of Mrs. Bob White .dent-of. the Citizens National in the church and little daughter, Lee Ann, Bank. i n >? e r ™ . , . , "Funeral was held at the home

Mr. W. A. Johnson is report- Tuesday* Burial took'placer at Mt. Vemon TuesUay afternoon.

Sheriff Warren opped hip car on just' north of the Tuesday evening

to discharge his passenger. City Patrolman Clifford Pitman, a truck crashed into the rear of the car, demolishing it and severely shaking up and bruis-ing its occupants. .

The officers said that John D. Miller of Sand Springs, who was driving a new Ford truck was operating without lights. They arrested him for drunken and reckless driving and later released him. His truck was slightly damaged. Carpenter's car was ruined.

P. T. A POSTPONED

The regular meeting of the Mt. Vernon P.-T. A. vffas post-poned this week due to the burial of Judge B. J. Bethurum. It will be held Tuesday, March 15, at 2:30 pjj>. at the Mt. Ver-ntfMJigh School.

ed very, ill at his home on Old Fairground Street.

Mrs. Henry Owens returned to Louisville Monday, after - 'a visit here.

Arthur Adams who uSdtr-went an operation for appende-citjp. in Stanford JHospi' ceritly was able to return last week. We are glad ft port him much improved.

John Davis Robins was up from Louisville last week with his mother, Mrs. Jennie Robins.

Pfc. Bobble Burton who" is stationed with the U. S. Army at an army camp in Illnois is at home on a ten day furlough with his Barents, Mr. and Mrs. Dawson Burton.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Painter have returned from Florida where thev spent the winter.

Mrs. Sallie Potts and grand-

J h e Power Of A Word

A careless, word may kindle strife, A cruel word may wreck a life." A bitter word may hate instill. A Brutal . word may smite and kill. A God spoke word will light the day. and a joyful word wil smoothe the way.

So lets be tareful how we talk. Come T<J Church, and God forbid I say a word to hurt your feelings.

About ten o'clock Monday morning the fire siren ironically sounded its own alarm. The fire department building was on fire this time.

It was hard for citizens to believe but sure enough there was heavy smoke billowing from the eaves and windows of

ADDITIONAL PERSONALS

Billy George Griffith Celebrates His Second Birthday

Master Billy George Griffith entertained a group .of his little friends Wednesday after-non, at his home on West Main St., in honor of his second birthday.

Many nfce gifts were received and delicious refreshments were served.

Ladies Sunshine Class Meets With Mrs. N. M. Smock

Mrs. N. M. Smock was host-to the Ladies Sijnshine the second floor where Mr. and I £5? , £ I l .^ ! Sunshine

Mrs. Joe Harmon lived. Pi85®, ° ' the Christian Church Volunteer workers removed I " ° ^ a y . frVe.ni"/L h e r h o m e

part of the city's desk's files -- Mam Street. records and other things housed below but the Harmons lost al-most everything they had be-cause the fire< had made such headway before being discover-ed.

. is not known whether it started from a defective flue an oil stove in the Harmon •kitchen.

Firemen finally overcame the blaze after pouring three streams of water into the up-per story for almost an hour.

The building, belonging tc Dr. J. F. Pennington was parti-ally covered by insurance.

Engineers Working On Quail-Somersei Road L Highway Engineer

Vaughan of Stanford,

Commissioner's Sale Little Chats On Public Notices

SAFETY IN DELAY A man -who has recently been

through the settlement of two small estates i s , puzzled and somewhat irjEfed'il.the time re-quired. The (affairs of both de-cedents were in good order, both left valid wills, there were

The Commonwealth Of Kentucky

Circuit Court ra C. Evans & Herbert Evans

Plaintiff, «-VERSUS

NOTICE OF SALE, .. . . S u „ , Evans P , « Al. oTSilS

B - , . . ~^ , d a n j took more than "two years to ""d "* °,h" »°re

Circuit Court rendered at the: T January Term thereof 1949, in the above cause, for the Divi-

These being his first direct , experience 'in such matters, he

sion of Proceeds, until paid and jfn S l i c e d tew bf ft i* m?sUken. PossiWy' t he t ime

\2^ZA°: could have been shortened for

JrCot S fwSn a'free agent is in respect to the rates it can charge for legal advertising, or Public Notices. This is because, for the most part they are fix-ed by law. This fact is not al-ways understood by laymen end others.

As might be' supposed, {he rates vary from state to state

somewhat for different types of notices. Until a few years ago, the normal rate in one state was -so low the larger papers could not. carry some

Glenn -.ho has

been associated with the local department working on High-way 25 for the past several months, will start a sorvey this week on the link of No. 70 be-tween Quail and the Lincoln county line, a distance of ap-proximately 334. miles.

Engineer Vaughn will be as-sisted by Jess Bray, James Davis, Byron Lawes, and Bill Crawford.

Survey will begin in the near future on the Rural Highway jmk between Sand Springs and

; Highway"-80- ;; Wr- Rockcastle River. This road; when com-pleted, will open up a section of this county rich in natural resources.

Lady Moonshiner Taken Into Custody

After devotional hour games were played and delicious re-freshments were served.

The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. A. F. Hoff-man.

Mrs. James R. Perry and chil-dren of Paris arrived Tuesday for a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A F. Hoffman..

Mr. and Mrs. Sim Brown of Louisville were here this week with Mr .and Mrs. Clark Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Hansel. ~ Mr. J. M. Laswell and Mrs. Howard Egan were in Oak Ridge, Tenn., this week work-ing on income tax reports.

Mr. and Mrs. Cleo Meece of Norris, Tenn., were the week-end-'guests of her father, Willis MCKenzie and Mrs. McKenzie and sister. Miss Edna Grace McKenzie.

Misses Betty Ann Griffin, Betty Jean Miller, Mary Eliza-beth Anglin, Messrs. Opp Buss-ell, Jr., Joe Henderson, Tuck Baker and Jack Perciful of Eastern State Teachers College, Richmond, spent the week-end with relatives here.

Miss Tabitha P. Craig of University of Kentucky spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Craig.

Mrs. Jalia Bray and Mrs. Fred Mulling spent Friday in Richmond, shopping.

Mr.' McKinley Perciful spent Friday in Richmond.

Mrs. Ann Miller Mrs. Doro-thy Bordes and Mrs. R. H. Chrisman spent Saturday in Lexington, shopping.

Raymond McClure

ML Vernon Loses To Middleburg In Dist. Tourney

The Mt. Vemon Red Devils were knocked out of the Dis-trict . Tournament Jast Friday afternoon by a sharp shooting team from Middleburg, by a score of 69 - 40. The Red Devils looked tired and listless from the start ami it was evi-dent that the Devils were no match for Middleburg, who have the best .won and lost record in the state. 32 wins and 2 losses.

Middleburg continued their good play to the finals to whip Stanford 47 - 41 and take the District Championship.

Robert Cromer Selected Ai Most Valuable Player In

Tournament In the Red Devils victories

over Crab Orchard and Liberty the fighting and driving play of Robert Cromer and Terrill Owens was outstanding.

Robert Cromer was selected as the most valuable player in the tournament and received a handsome cup for his award.

Revil Pike, Livingston. Billy Riddle, Brodhead and Robert Cromer, Mt. Vernon, were all on the all-tournament team.

NOTE OF APPRECIATION

We wish to take this op-portunity to thank our friends for their help and general con-tributions in the loss of our furniture in the fire at the Fire Department.

Especially we want to thank Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Miller, Rubel Harris, Arlie Smith, Floyd Owens and all who toojc a. Your kindness will never

orgotten. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Harmon

TURNER . Mrs. Alabam Turner, of Cop-

February 10, passed ' away February 16, from ailments of heart trouble and flu. She was the widow of the late H. ,C. Turner.

House door in the City of Mt ,K , , u . .M f papers couia not- carry some Vernon Kentucky, to the high- 1 e s ? estates, but the.law pur- types of notices exefept at a loss, arrested Bertie Lunsford of the1 , / v u : s ' f o a r l U a i | ey a n d Mrs.

- ~o-,est bidder, at public auction on wisely-fixes a hunt- In Minnesota the law allow- "Possum Kingdom" neiffhhnr.l MagB'^Lwesay spent last week-terdey. have returned home the ~ - mum time in such matters. ed as much as 45c per descrip-froni a visit with relatives in ^ 21 DAY OF MARCH 1949 < A common purpose here is.tion on assessment lists, in Wis-Ohio. . j At One O'Clock'P M: • ' ; °£ publication in . local]consin 30c and Illinois 20c. A

Miss Tula Kincer was here U thereabout, upon a credit of ? e n " S y l T ? 2 , | u p r T e c o u r t

from LaGrange overe the week- j six months the following de-1 of several Public Notices decision held 15c a line a rea-end witk. hw parents, Mr, and j scribed property, to-wit: concerning each estate. One ;sonable charge for legal notices Mrs. John W. Kincer, Sr. Tract No.-1 Beginning at a i ,as J? d o ™ltf? appointment f but in Illinoi? for a time it was

Mrs. Rose PurcelVand grand-1 cum corner on'a 209 V4 acre sur- ' administrator* others: as low. as 2V£c a line. Regard-daughter, Mrs. Eugene Hodge1 vey; thence N 46Vi ET80 poles 'T • presentation of any less of the rate, the law never and baby dai^hter, Kiary Lee. j to forked maple a t ' a drain; a " d " ^ a t e l y the final intended this service to be per--were in Stanford Wednesday of. thence, N 79 E 152 poles to two m e n takes time1 formed at a loss. last week with relatives. *

University of Kentucky of Lex-| the^ChZjh o ? * ^ h r i s T f o T ?ri si zs-snss of^ridd"edtown ' o 0 m s e p B a " ^ s i " ' s he leaves to mourn her

Two state revenue, officers ^ S S r f t t ? ^ s ! and Warren Carpenter Tuesday! ^ »« ' Bobbie Riddle, Mrs. Mattie

" Gertie Lunsford of the ,ani? Mr?- Jones. Mrs. Nora Watkins, Miss Kingdom" neighbor- with MK n ! ' a s t w e e J Ella Turner, Mrs. Arlena Mob-

hood northeast of Brodhead T •, Ernest Bullock and ' chvging her with operating an! 1V y ' ^ . . illicit still. The boiler thev ' , - ° " d M r s - Kenneth Hop-said, was made from a' cream i f a-?u >.®,on s p P n t t h e week-can. She had 3 barrels of malh ; ^ d

r J ' t h ^ smother . Mrs. C. C. ready, the officers said. jCa,1?1" a " d *?'r- Carter.

. Mr. and J4rs..Roscoe Hysing-T-5 Torrance Wolfe, who w'?S and daughter, Lou Darlyn,

Mr n v Ichesthuts and pine "on the east'and at the forks of said road thence, 22 ft. J M - « • n • and Mr. side of. the • Kincade road; Heading from Bullock's mill:

and Mrs. Marion Davis and chil- thence," with meanders of same tbence,. leaving said road and dren spent Sunday, at Ottawaa|N 11 W 28M> poles to a. stake with a bark road 'south 26 east .with Mrs. Oladys Adams and on E. side of[.said road, where is j.j v& poles to a spotted oak;

stationed in Texas, was here Brodhead were the guests of Thursday with his parents, Mr ^ a ? s" T ' , d e n Owens and Mrs. J. T. Wolfe. ' l ™ ^ '

Mrs. Joe Noe, J t , and Mrs.

family Mr. and Mrs. Prewitt Hoff-

man of Whitesburg spent the week-end with her parents Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Holbrook. 0f said road, N. 45 Vi W. 18

now marked a pine; thence, N ; thence, S. 13 W. 16 poles to two 58 Vi W 52 poles to -« stake in I red oaks; thence, S. 25 E, 17V6 said road; thence, 21 Vt W poles to . a hickory on east side

They were accompanied home by Mrs. Mary Crawfprd and Mrs. Hugh Taylor for a weeks visit with relatives and friends.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Edward Hurt were over from Richmond to visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hurt and Mr. and Ms. Charles Bussell.

Mrs. Ercell Mullins of Mt. Vernon visited the family of her cousin, C. W. Smith Tues-day.

Dr. and Mrs. Nevil M. Gar-rett had as their guests over the week-end, her sister,. Miss Carolyn A. Matthews of Frank-fort and' Mrs. J . T. McGlothen of Pekin, Ind.

MM." Dan Holcomb and little .sons, Herbert and Gene, have

returned after a three week's visit with 'relatives in Oregon, 111. They were accompanied home by her son, Henry Hpl-comb and family.

Rev. and Mrs. L. E. Harris wereJin Scottsburg, 111., last week where he was called to officiate at a wedding. They report a lovely time with their many friends in their old home to^n.

Mr. Cy Owens, Robert Hen-drickson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dees, Mr. and Mrs. K. J. Mc-,

(Continued on page 4)

poles to a -postdak at the.forks of road; S. 861* W. 78 poles to

hickory, Heads' corner; S. 32W W. 47 poles to a stone and

thence, S. 13 E. 24 poles to the beginning, containing 101 acres more <jr less. .

Tract No. 2 Beginning at post oak at the forks of a road, one of which leading from Kin-

road to Isaac Mizes; thence, a northward course to a black jack on the west side of said Kincade road; thence, a west course to a chestnut on top of a ridge, and about 100 yards above the corner* of a field cleared by Willey Lov-ings; thenca. southward course to. a/Suine at the corner of a fence an3 m & line of the Gilmore and Swenney survey; thence, a S. E. course to a hick-ory in line of said survey; thence, to the beginning^ .and containing 53 acres more or less.

Tract No. 3. .Beginning on a black oak at the Kincade Ridge Road on the west side of saicj road, which was made by Har-vey Carlton and Wiley Lov-ings, Carlotos corner; thence, northward with the meanders of said Kincade road to a black

poles to two sour-woods on the l)illside; thence, west 58 W. 24 V4 poles to a white oak; thence, S. 41 W. to a stone cor-ner; thence, a southern direc-tion to a chestnut corner;" thence, N. 87W E. - 94' poles to

a small hickory arid black jack;- the beginning,. containing 75 acres more or less.

Tract - No. 4. Beginning at a hickory standing on a steep hill side,' thence; crossing a hollow N. 57 63 perhaps W. 130 poles to a stone, S. 12 W. 85 poles to three chestnut -oaks by

drain; thence, with a . con-ditional line between Thomas Head and Marion Pittman N. 56Vi W. 121 poles- to a white

poles to a [with a dogwood poihter; thence J o h n Cox spent Tuesday black oak in the Swmney line, a division line between W T 1 Lexington, shopping. with a black oak marked point- jHicks and Lloyd Owens s ' 44 „ Jud<?e J- R- Llewellyn, of Mc-er corner to Pointers land; IR -12U, nnl»s Kee, Kv.. was here TII^H.-W f-> er corner thence, a new line S. 57 E.124 |road

-<° th,es a,Kd d°e®S3d and stone pointers,

containing 55 acres, be the i thence, along the ridge road S same more or less. J I U m n , .

Tract No. 7. Beginning at a IJ?!4 , ?.°u S , l ° 3 s l o n c m

stake on the top/of the road as o « w P ° m t e r s : follows: J». 27 W. 14 poles, N. 'J1®100: S : . 8 5 w - 1 6 P° l t s to-a 38 W. 16 poles, N. 48-% W. 19 [ s l a k e l n t h e c o u n l y road, with, poles, N. 26 W. 10 poles, N. V* a s l o n e pointer; thence, with W. 8 poles, N. 14 E. 12 poles, N. ! t h e county road N. 58Hi W. 34-28. E.- 12 poles to a stake j n a ' h r c e f 'fths poles, N. 21 W. 9-gum pointer; thence, leaving • poles N. 40 W. 8-three fifths the road S. 85 V4 E. 15 poles to a P°.ies to the beginning, and — Stone with two hickory point-ers on the side of the hill; thence, S. 70 E. 62 poles to a stone on the east side of a branch with several small pointers; thence, up the branch

3 V* W. 9 poles to a stake in the branch; .thence, S. 17 W. 35 pol/ss to a stone between

and containing 55 Ms acres, more . Or less.

Tract No. 5. Beginning on' a stone, Swinneys line, it also is known as William Pointers corner; thence, N. 13 W. 16 poles to a black oak on a ridge; thence, N. 36 E. 58 poles to a small hickory; thence, N. 10 E. 9 poles to-a stone, with white oak pointer; thence, with a new conditional line.N. 56 V* E. 121 poles to a chestnut oak by a drain; thence, S. 22 W. 70 poles to a spotted oak on a"" ridge

oak and poplar, on south side above Pointers dwelling house;

oak and stone; at the end of a | hickory and dogwood on the conditional line; thence, N. 1.0 I west bank of the branch; thence E :ft) P°les , two chestnut S. 23 E. 10 poles, to a stono by oaks on a hillside; thence, "N. | the branch; thence* S. 29 W. 19 32 E- 53 poles to the- beginning ! poles t<j a stone on a steep

bluff; thence, N. 59-% W. 26 V4 poles to a stone by a hickory near a pond; thence, S. 87 W. passing through the pond 8 poles to the beginning, and containing 26 acres and 148 square rods. '

Tract No. 8. Beginning at a stone by the county road, a corner to a 26 acre tract; thence, with line of same N. 87 E. crossing a porfd 8 poles to a stone near a hickory; thence S. 5f)-34'E. 26 Vt poles to a stone

32 Vi pqles to a stake in the K e e ' K y - ' w a s h e r e Tuesday to top of the ridge, with ?, t t o"d t h e burial of Judge B. J.

Bethurum. And he says that he made the nomnating speech placing the name of B. J. Bethu-dum before the Republican County Convention for the nomnation for Representative in the summer of 1899, he says that shorUjfc before that time he had been admitted to the bar, but was teaching school at that time. After his school was out' he located at McKee, Ky., and began the practice of law, and in 1925 was elected County Judge, and was instrumental in getting the Scenic Highway built over the Big Hill and through Jackson County to Manchester.

Mrs. T, C. O'Mara, Sr., who recently underwent an opera-tion at the Berea' College, Hos-pital, .Berea, has returned home very mych impWJed.

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Jones were in Barbourville Friday.

Miss Nina Purcell of Eastern State Teachers College, Rich-mond, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Everett Purcell and family.

Tract No. 9. Beginning at stake on top of a ridge, oorner to Jake Payne and in Allen Bullock's line; thence, with Paynes line N. 60V6 W. 39-pne fifth poles to a stone; thence, leaving Paynes line'and with another tract of Evans S. 50V£ W. 88 poles to a stone; thence, N. 70 W.x2 poles' to a stone, Lloyd Owens corner;-thence, his line up the branch 3Vf W. 9 poles to a stake in the branch; thence, S. 17 W. 35 polps to a stone between a dog-wood and hickory on the west bank of the branch; thence, S. 9 W. 16 poles to a stone; thence. S. 44 E. 26-three fifths poles to a stone on top of the ridge by the road in Geder Bullock's line; thence, his line N. 23 E. 19-four fifths poles to a stone,

between Allen BuHock

ley and Mrs. Minnie Riddle all of Copper Creek. Three child-ren preceded her in death. She also leaves 28 grandchildren and 35 gre^t-grandchildren.

75,

on a bluff; thence, N. 29 E, 18 and Geder Bullofk; thence; poles t o j i stone near a branch! (Continued on page 5)

confined to her home in Crawfordsville, Ind., for the past three months writes to the Signal and says she is able to be out again. She visited her grandson, Mr. Larry Livesay and family Sunday. She says her friends from this county were nice to send her the love-ly cards while she was ill.

PAYNE Mrs. O. M. Payne, age

passed away February 26, at her home in Disputanta.

»She was a member of the Macedonia Church for a num-ber of years and later moved her. letter to the Clear Creek Church. She was a good Christ-ian woman and was always kind and thoughtful to others. She Was always ready with a kind word .and good deeds for the sick and afflicted and wrtll be greatly missed in this com-munity.

She leaves to mourn her passing, her husband, six sons, Dr. George Payne of Brodhead; Stanley. Payne, Sand Gap; Howard Payne, Berea: John Payne, Disputanta: Bluford Payne, Detroit, Mich.; and Cleve Payne of Bereai, four daughters. Mrs. Tine Williams, Paint Lick; Mrs. F. B. JJorman, Covington; Mrs. Angie Phillips, Berea; and Mrs. Hilda Cornett of Berea. She also leaves 30 grandchildren and s e v e r a l great-grandchildren, two* bro-thers, Bob Abney df Big Hill and Reuben Abney of Berea; three sisters, JUrs. "Anna Anglin, Cartersville; Mrs. Ollie Holt, ~ Disputanta; and Mrs. W. • IL Stephens of Sfiiffold Cane.

Funeraf sservices were con-duced Monday, February 28, by The Rev. Charley Lunsford *

Clover Bottom, Jackson County. Burial was in the fam-ily burying lot near the Mace-donia Church.

Mrs. Anna Stoeker a n d daughter, Jean, Miss Goldie Thpmas. James Moore and Henrietta Huizengia all of Berea and Mr. and Mrs. Fim Adams visited Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Frith and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lambert Sunday.

Page 5: Dr Mr Some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/MVS... · CHESIF'PETEH.'PMN HAST you ALL COLD TIED UP WITH Q0/&C...me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday,

P A G E T W O M T . V E R N O N S I G N A L T h u r s d a y , M a r c h 10, 1 9 4 9

WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS-Big Business Flayed in T-H Row; Unemployment Increases in U.S.; Soviets to Keep Prepared for War

'DEATH SPRAY: | Nazis Had It

Bikini Test Probe

SECRETARY of Defense Forres-tal and the navy are moving

frantically to hush it up but a full-fledged congressional investiga-tion of the ef fec ts of the Bikini bomb tests is in the offing. In fact . Sen. Brien McMahon, cha i rman of the atomic energy committee, m a y announce it any day:

Senators say privately that they are fed up with the hush-hush pol-icy of the brass hats. While the aenate commit tee is 100 per cent In favor of keeping secret all a tomic Information of possible value to an enemy, they do not believe ei ther the U. S. congress or the American people are an enemy. Also, com-mittee m e m b e r s feel the brass hat* • r e deliberately suppressing con-i tderable information about the ef-fectiveness of the bomb to cover up mis takes they have m a d e in fail ing to redesign or abolish war-ships.

One Interesting fact now In the hands of the senate com-mit tee is pa r t of the Inside s tory of Bikini. I t shows tha t of the 73 ships involved In the Bikini tests, more than 61 were sunk or destroyed.

This is an enormous loss f r o m only two bombs. Yet it was never released in understandable fo rm to the American public. On the con-t rary , news releases were care-fully spread out over a period of t ime so that the m a n in the s t reet r r • • . . , never really knew what happened. I T r o u b , e ' T r o u b I e

BIG BUSINESS HEARD ON T-H LAW . . . Charles E . Wilson (right) pres ident of Genera l Electr ic , test if ies a t senate labor commit tee hear ing on Taf t -Har t ley bill. With h im, at le f t . Is L. R. Boolware, vice-president of Genera l Electr ic . Thei r conclusions: The law is a " rood law with wise sa feguards In labor-management re la t ions ." ITiat labor thought otherwise is shown by the p lacard Wilson holds.

LABOR LAW: . In the field of liberal—or, a s some

W h a t B o m b s Did |would t e r m it, even ' l e f t wing"— The real fact , however, is that Republ icanism. the GOP ' s Sen.

\ two bombs at Bikini sank the Bat- Wayne Morse of Oregon was con-tleship Arkansas, the ca r r i e r Sara- ceding nothing to no m a n . toga, the J apanese bat t leship Na-1 T H E SENATOR was vocally and gato, two cruisers , 10 destroyers, vociferously hur t . The defense of three submarines . 12 t ranspor ts t h e Taf t -Har t ley law by "b ig busl-and numerous other vessels. The n e s s " was giving the sena tor no r e s t a i r c ra f t car r ie r Independence, and he m e a n t to let everyone know which was subjected to Intense about i t blasts f rom both Bikini bombs, is With • little originali ty but much now anchored off San Francisco, vigor, the sena tor was crying tha t permanent ly destroyed—usable only the at t i tude of m a n y defenders of as a testing ground to de te rmine the Taft-Hart ley law was a " J u d a s the possibility of removing radio- be t raya l of the capital ist ic s y s t e m . " activity. . T h i s Is still dangerous j IN A SUDDEN onslaught against

. two y e a r s a f u j tb_e ..ship was at- m a n y of the business m e n who have r~-r t*v«ra4fcked. " - ' a p p e n d b e f o r e the commit tee in

' Members of the senate a tomic defense of the measu re , the senator energy commit tee point out tha t declared their a t t i tude is "shocking the loss of so many ships f rom one . . . . selfish . . . class-conscipus . . . bomb would be considered a m a j o r un-Christ ian." nava l d isas ter at any toe, yet , | c o n t r o s t , h e p r a l s e d S e n a t o r because the public Is not aware • T a f t ( R 0 h l o ) w h o s e n a m e ^ U w

£ ^ J f ; T bea r s , for his " fa i r -minded objee-T-athtab admi ra l s a r e busily U v l t ^ . c o n s l d c r i n g t c 3 t l m o n y on

• S Z . ?„ T , " m £ l i ^ , d 0 U a r l the " shor tcomings" of the a c t down the d ra in on a 56,000-ton su-perca r r i e r which could be put out of action permanent ly If a bomb were dropped within half a mile of i t . .

Morse declared he and T a f t a r e " m u c h nea re r together on the need for a law less dras t ic against l abor" than they .were In 1947 when the ac t was passed .

MEANWHILE, sent iment w a s growing among congressional ob-s e r v e r s tha t with every day of delay

David Bradley, a scientist who was o n legislative consideration of Taf t -an official observer a t Bikini, re- Har t ley law repeal , t he re Increased veals t h a t a f t e r the tests , the navy the probability of l abor ' s fail ing to t r ied frant ical ly to r emove radio- E c l a s many of the law provisions act ivi ty f rom damaged ships b u t , o u t l a w e d a s they might tiope to do. p i / C C I / M C . without success,. Bradley reported A m a j o r bat t le was shaping up on . . . w . tha t "sa l t water , lye. foamite . soap, the proposal, with many legislators ° r

all spread with l iberal amounts of evidencing a dawning conviction '

Problem "InsoJvable" Informat ion brought to the sen-

a t e commi t tee ' s attention by

gob profani ty , had no avai l In moving the rad ioac t iv i ty ."

Sandblas t ing was par t ly e f -fect ive. but you can ' t sandblast a whole ship under bat t le con-ditions. Nor can you sandblas t P e a r l Harbor or the Bremer-ton shipyards or Chicago. Pos-sibly, with grea t quanti t ies of s t rong acid, you might be able to r emove enough paint to c lear the decks of fission products. But short ef that , the coat of radioactivity^ adminis tered by

1 the A-bomb Is on to s tay .

Bradley concluded t h a t "The problem of decontaminat ing the total service of a battle ship or the br ick and f o m e n t of a fu ture Hiro-sh ima remains practically insolv-• b l e . "

Plutonium is the most dangerous a tomic e lement .of all. I t lodges in the bones, destroys the blood-producing mar row and m a y kill e i ther by wrecking the red and white blood cells of the victim o r i t m a y kill the victim many y e a r s l a t e r through the formaUon of bone tumors . • Plutonium canhot be re-moved by any known process.

None of this Information Is sec re t . All of It Is known to many of the doctors of all na-tions. l e t Secre tary Forres ta l , who this year Is building more

dollars worth n ' t paid much

attention to the problem. This Is the Inside reason why the a tomic energy commi t t ee Is now seriously planning a full-dress Investigation of Bikini and its resul ts .

Most Important document the scientists a r e urging the a tomic

. energy commit tee to break loose Is the nonsecret sections of the re-por t of the evaluation board of the Joint chiefs of staff on the Bikini tests which defense secre ta ry For-res ta l has bottled up. The repor t

00 mff l fon ; snips,

All was not sunshine and soft breezes in F lo r ida . I t was hot enough but at this wri t ing the re had been nothing to call off the hea t Imposed by Gov. Fu l le r War ren ' s ed ic t aga ins t bookies. "Bookies" to the ini t ia te are those who take race

concludes with the significant s ta te - ! horse bets off the t racks , usually in men t tha t " F u t u r e wars employing r e a r rooms of public es tabl i shments a tomic bombs m a y -.well destroy —in m o r e sumptuous Instances- In nations and change present stand- the i r own es tabl i shments . a r d s of civilization." i i t appeared the governor ' s crack-

tha t pe rhaps It would not b e wise to s c r a p the Taft-Hartl_ey_ law In Its ent i rety and r ep lace ' I f with some version of the Wagner a c t .

JOBLESS: 3 Million Out

At presen t count the number of Jobless In the United States stood a t three million.

However , according to the ex-perts . t he re was no cause for im-m e d i a t e concern. Commissioner E w a n Clague of the federal bureau of labor said the t i m e to become a l a r m e d would be when the un-employed total r eached five mil-lion and s tayed there .

Would It r e ach f ive million? THAT WAS A POINT on which

the exper ts d isagreed. Those who were loudest In point-

ing to the possibility of a depres-sion pointed out that in jus t th ree months the jobless total tiad jumped f rom 1.8 million to the present th ree million. Tha t was a r a t e of accelerat ion which, they claimed, should cause everyone t o , be a l a rmed .

T ime was an e l e m e n t Com-missioner Clague contended. Wait, he said, until the March and April begins to rev ive t h e construction business and E a s t e r t rade and then "we' l l be able to tell be t te r jus t , where we ' r e "

The federa was a d rop of . . j million workers In non-agricultural jobs between mid-December and mid - Janua ry . P a r t of this was s e a s o n a l he sa id ,

GETTING HOT IN FLORIDA

with

Fraternity Man Chooses Mind Over Gastronomies

Culture had won a minor t r iumph.

At-Ann Arbor, Mich., Paul H. Smith, University of Michigan

-Junior, was about to have at It hog for eat ing capaci ty

Thinking bet ter of the idea, he changed his mind.

Reason, It appears , had raised Its awesome head.

Smith declared that , on second thought, it occuVred to him that the contest might be a "ref lec-t ion" on himself and his f ra te r -

hlgb Fra te rn i ty m e n f rom above Cayuga 'a wa te r s Rose Bowl breathed easier , buck-led anew to their academic taaka.

bu t the overal l decl ine was g rea te r than normal .

SIGNIFICANT was a repor t of Robert G. Goodwin, director of the bureau of employment securi ty, who said tha t the number of people receiving Jobless benefi ts Increased by 62,000 to a total of 1,784,000 dur-ing the week ending F e b r u a r y 12. In the s a m e week in 1948, there were 1,030,000 such c la ims.

Employment or its lack has al-ways been a m a j o r fac tor of indi-cation In an evaluation of the na-tion's economic condition because of t h e ' s i m p l e fac t tha t in pas t re-cessions genera l -unemployment has. always- preceded periods of nat ional depression.

The Russians m u s t keep p repared for

That was the message of Soviet Marsha l Nihcftai A. Bulganln.- Sov-iet minis ter of a r m e d forces, In a s t a t ement in an order of the day

arking the 31st anniversary of the Red a r m y .

The M a r s h a l n a m e d the possible enemy—th^, United States.

Bulganin added tha t the " ru l ing circles of the United States which seek to establ ish their world domi-nat ion by fo rce pursue a policy of aggression and of unleashing a n€w

The language was strong, even for the Russians . Was i t t h e begin-ning of a campa ign by the Soviets to p r epa re the m a s s Russ ian mind for conflict? ,

It could be. Bulganln played on fea rs and pre judices which migh t well lay the groundwork for cal l ing the Soviet people Into war . Int ima-t ing the possibili ty of a t tack, b e assured the Russ ians tha t the "Soviet people m a y r e s t assured our a rmy , a i r fore® and navy will vigilantly s tand guard ove r their socialist homeland . "

THE UNITED S T A T E S . w a s toe only western power singled out by the m a r s h a l in his o rde r of .the day.

But the re was a n a i v e ' e lement of braggadocio in all the anniver-sary s ta tements . I t s e e m e d " L t Gen. S. S. Shatilov, depu ty , chief director .of" the poli t ical ; board, of

ial noted there" "Oie a r m e d services , wM**liying to "whist le pa s t the g r a v e y a r d " when he s ta ted that In its ear ly days t h e S o v l e f a r m y had "routed the hordes of 14 p o w e r s .

Governor Warren Runs 'Bookies' Ragged • n . - down was going to st ick. The book

les "went underground" and it was repor ted tha t a te legraphic news service supplying resul ts of horse r aces had suspended.

Most repor ts emana t i ng f rom the state were to the ef fec t tha t booldei were out of work except for . a f e » trying to do a smal l bus iness by runners and telephones. The out look didn ' t a p p e a r ' t o o rosy.

Out of Mountain View, C a l l l , c a m e one of the .mos t chilling, awesome post-war t a l c j . of wha t might have been in World War IL

I t was about a "dea th sp ray"— a spray so fa ta l tha t if a spot of It the ,s ize of a d i m e lay on a pe r -son's skin, tha t person was doomed.

T H E SPRAY was described a s being potent enough to knock out whole divisions of men in exposed positions.

A dime-sized s p o t unless wiped off quickly, would kill a m a n in two minutes. I t would pene t ra te ordi-na ry clothing - and jsome types of gas masks .

Authorities for these s t a tements we re U. S. a r m y engineers who destroyed 125,000 tons of the sp r ay where it wa» stored In carefu l ly hidden caves In Bavar ia .

M a j . J a m e s M. G r a h a m of the engineer corps said the Ge rmans called t h e chemical " tabun ," a combinat ion of the scientists who

i ted i t According - to M a j o r G r a h a m , who had charge of the disposal of t h e chemica l , " t a b u n "

a mi l i t a ry secret until about six months ago when some informa-tion concerning it leaked out to the Amer ican public. One thousand tons we re spa red f rom destruct ion and shipped to the a r m y proving , grounds at Aberdeen, M a r y l a n d

THE MAJOR said the stuff Is near ly odorless tha t a person has to know exact ly wha t he Is smell-ing before h e can detect l t wi th

nose. I t has a faint f ru i ty f lavor and looks like c rankcase oa

Then the M a j o r said something that would add no comfort to those who f e a r a wa r with Russia . He s a id tha t the scientists who de-veloped " t a b u n " were In Berlin when i h e Russ ians took over and probably became subjec t to Soviet control.

Speculation was tha t lt was not used by toe Ge rmans because of

re luc tance to engage In chemical w a r f a r e for a lack of knowledge

" what weapons in this field might be possessed by toe Allies.

OLIVER TWIST: Fagin Is Issu*

Intelligent J ews would d raw lit t le consolation f r o m toe violent a c U of their fellow m e n In multi- torn Berl in .

With t h e world on tenterhooks ove r the possibility of a third world wa r and with toe issue of Pales t ine not ye t completely sett led a s It a f -fec ts the Jews, a mob of Berl in J ews saw fit to demons t ra te over the showing of a Bri t ish-made -film

T H E F I L M was "Oliver T w i s t " a s tory fami l ia r to a lmost every English-speaking schoolboy and, ap> parent ly, fami l ia r t o a g rea t m a n y J ews a s well.

The Berlin Jews , It seemed, couldn' t s tomach the Dickens crea-tion, Fag in , one of the m a j o r cha r -ac te r s in the s tory. Fag in . depicted as a J e w , Is an unlovely cha rac te r who teaches children to s tea l for him and accords them bruta l t rea t -m e n t

The cha rge tha t the film was "ant i -Semit ic" was hur led by the Jewish demonst ra tors . Their demon-strat ion was effect ive. I t "resulted in t empora ry withdrawal of the f i lm. G e ^ n a n police hospitalized some of the r ioters , but sa id they could not continue to pro tec t the thea t re .

T H E E N T I R E AFFAIR provided a disturbing spectacle. Berlin, sup-posed to be the proving ground of the ability of nat ions to work to-gether , h a s become, instead, the malodorous corpse of tha t concep-tion.

People Are Funny

Brain Vs. Brawn la It bet ter to be bigger or

be s m a r t e r ? b It be t te r to have brawn or

ca r ry brains? Would yon ra ther be a wrest-

ler or be Einstein? (Who draws the bigger mpney for his pains?)

Would yon ra ther be a P la te or a f ighter?

Which quality will belp yon best to thrive?

Would yon r a the r be a muscle or a th inker?

Wed, I 'm satisfied to be al-mos t alive.

Can i t be that brain at las t has supplanted b rawn In sport? Tha t while the r a c e Is to the s w i f t the bat t le is no longer to toe strong?

In checking over midwinter disburse-ments of the laurel and the olive, the awards of crowns and coronets by var ious c l u b s , b o a r d s associa-tions. c h a m b e r s of c o m m e r c e etc. we discovered the s tar t l ing fac t tha t

Grant land Rice ^ ^ h . ' " a n T d E p lacement had been

r a the r rudely shoved aside. rfBrain at las t re turned to i ts rul ing

place in the eyr ie and the big hulk Is s t randed on the beach.

For example , we might aa wen s t a r t with football. Who drew the big bulk of the awards? The answer Is quite simple— Doak Walker, Charley

- Jus t ice and Frank le A l b e r t Walker, of S.M.U., weighs 165 pounds. Just ice of North Caro-lina weighs the s ame . Albert of the S a n 1 F ranc i sco 49'era la around 166."

This is on the light side of a game 1

that has been tak ing on weight y e a r a f t e r year .

We read, now about lines tha t ave rage 225 pounds f rom tackle to tackle—or 223 pounds f rom end to end. We read of backfields tha t , average 187 or 191 pounds.

But most ef the post-season | glory was awarded to athletes below 17t. This m e a n t they had to be Intelligent and mental ly a ler t . seen m e r e than a few 220 or 2SO-pound guards and tackles who were fas t , bat not overburdened with any men-tal we igh t Some of them were swell Unemen Just the s a m e . ' I t was an amazing thing for

F r a n k i e A lbe r t a wolverine among toe mastodons and mammoths , to get so many votes. In Addition to his s m a r t n e n and hjs skin, Albert has always had, f rom his Stanford days, another qualification so often missing. This Is s tamina . You can also add ruggedness.

In Other Fields, Too Footbal l Isn't the otily game tha t

en ters this consideration of b rawn ' versus brain. Baseball hands m o s t ' of its laurels "to -Lou Boudreau, an-other 165-pound entry.

In the pas t We.'ve had Cobb—185 pounds; Wagner—200 pounds; Babo Ruth—225' p o u n d s : (.ajole — 200 pounds; Homsby—190 pounds, and ' Joe DiMagglo—195 pounds. Stan Mu-slal, running close to Boudreau. Is In a t 170 pounds and Cat Br 'echeen ' won't pa s s 155.

No Crystal Ball Needed To Tell Needs of Soil

Tests Will Give Fanner Answer to Question You don ' t need a crystal ban to

tell you whether your soil needs A soil tes t will give you the yes

or no answer . Where a deficiency exists, a tes t will Indicate how much lime your soil needs. County agricul tural agents, vocational agri-cul tural teachers or agronomists at s ta te colleges and exper iment sta-tions a r e glad to cooperate in m a k i n g such tests.

Test ing is a lways the safes t course In applying l ime. Some soils have plenty l ime. Adding more might be h a r m f u l ra ther than help-ful to crop production.

To soils that need I t l ime Is the keystone of any well-planned soil building p rogram. L ime adds needed calcium. L ime boosts too efficiency i f fert i l izers. I t neutral izes acid so l l j and m a k e s possible the growth of sweet clover a n d alfalfa . These deep-rooted legumes add precious organic ma t t e r to toe soil.

But l ime by itself cannot do the whole soil bu i ld ing job . I t h a s to be supported by the generous use of phosphate and potash ferti l izers, by plowing under deep-rooted legumes, by the re tu rn to toe soli of all possible an imal m a n u r e and crop residues.

Quail Family Is Secretive T h e l a r g e a n d p o p u l a r q u a i l

f a m i l y Is r e p r e s e n t e d In A m e r i c a b y five d i s t i nc t g e n e r a .

T h i s b i rd Is v e r y s e c r e t i v e In a l l h i s w a y s a n d is f o u n d in t h e m o u n t a i n s a n d d e s e r t a s . w e l l aa a m o n g t h e s o u t h e r n a n d w e s t e r n g r a s s l a n d s .

mm

NATURE'S REMEDY (NR) TAB-LETS—A purely vegetable laxative to relieve coostipatioo without the tuoal griping, fickening, perturbing senaa-Bona, and'docs not cause a rath. Try NR—TOO will aee the difference. Uo-coated or candy coated—their action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle as millions ©i NR's have proved- Get a 23c boa and use aa directed.

f/3BEB5B3 f / y WTO-NIGHT FUSSY STOMACH? CUT FOR ACS , npi •m FOR •

THE TUMMYI

Plowing Under Organic Matter Aids Oxidization

Plowing under , some organic m a t t e r In the field or garden la a good way of disposing of c rop resi-d u e s because toe microbes "burn* or oxidize t hem.

pro-I of

such mate r ia l s m a y have disastrous ef fec ts on a c rop planted soon a f t e r plowing. In which c a s * l t la said the e r f } was "burned o u t '

Microbes need m o r e than energy " g o " foods. They need the "grow" foods, too. Just as humans do. They do.jiot demand tha t the nitrogen be given them In toe complete proteins or the more complex compounds of this e lement a s humans do; never-theless. they are Just a s exact ing In their needs for nitrogen, a t least . In Its s impler forms.

Dr . William A. Albcecht, cha i rman of toe depa r tmen t of soils. Univer-si ty of Missouri college of agricul-ture . In discussing how soil microbes get their food, points out that they get it before growing crops get theirs.

$732 Turkey

And, people a r e funny, la m a n y of the things they de. This woman, Charlotte Kierstein, 13, on probation tor a check swindle verdict , couldn' t keep a Job. Sus-picions employer* f i red he^.14 t imes . Then. J 0 e i i > t he r own re-quest , -her s tory hi t tho pape r s and now she ' s been deluged with Jobs. Her pas t will make no dif-f e r e n c e . '

A-BOMBS: Whom To Tell?

Government officials we re being f rank, but fut i le . They said they hadn ' t f igured out how to te l l Ameri-cans ways hi which to pro tec t them-selves f r o m A-bombs without lett ing the whole world in on the "know how."

Thei r d i lemma, A-bomb off icials said, is how to d i s semina te this In-formation a t home and keep lt mt home. No defense p lans exist, for a rea defense.

T rack follows the s a m e Ideas. Two highly-crowned and laurel-embossed t r ackmen las t * y e a r were Harrison DiUard and"' Mel Patton. DUlard Is .on the m a i l e r side. Pa t ton Is s lender. Neither goes In for surplus weight. Young Bob Mathlas , a wctl-buUt kid. Is one of the few brawny ones to make the g rade .

What about boxing. Las t year no t . one heavyweight ,got within ten kilo-m e t e r s of having a purple toga thrown across his shoulders . 'Louis? Walcott? Char les? Nothing doing.

4dos t of the awards went to Btrf Williams, a lightweight, Sandy Sad-dler, a featherweight , and Marce l Cerdan, a midd lewe igh t

Cerdan, toe F renchman , led the pack and drew mos t of the decora-tions tor stopping Tony Zale, a tough guy to stop.

Nothing above a middle-weight waa even mentioned—no Ught heavyweights—no heavy-weights. And In the U t t e r d £ vision. It m a y be several y e a r , before anyone *«Wraes along te

What about golf? Pr ior to his automobile .accident, 137-pound Ben Hogen was the acknowledged champ—one of the best that ever played.' Mangrum, who has been close and still Is, Is another l ight weight (3 toe 14&pound class. Hag-1 en weighed 183 pounds. Bobby Jones and Gene Sarazen were short , but powerfully built. In the 170-pound b r a c k e t Nelson Is a 180-pounder I and Snead Is close to this m a r k .

J i m m y D e r n a r e t . i s solidly built. But Hogan and M a n g r u m a r e two I r a r e exceptions. They take, you back to the d a y s of Bill Johnson in tennis—a r emarkab l e competi tor a t 118 pounds. !

Elwood gwanson ef Tnrlock. Calif. , with, his g rand champion turkeys a t the F a r West turkey show. The M-Ib. ben an toe lef t waa g r a n d champion and sold for *34.50 a pound. The 41-lb. torn on the r ight waa r e se rve grand c ' jamplon and aol&Jfer fSMM • pound. The bi rds we re finished on a g ra in and m a s h ration to which pellet l ied milk product was

Livestock Sanitation Gets Credit for Avian TB Curb

Professor F . E . Mussehl of to. Universi ty of -Nebraska poul t ry hus-bandry, depa r tmen t credi ts the work of the U. 8. livestock sanitat ion as-sociation with doing much to re-duce losses f r o m avian tuberculosis.

The livestock sanitat ion group comes Into toe picture, he explains, because av ian tuberculosis was qui te often found responsible for condemnation of hogs. Swine reten-tions for tuberculosis are lower.

MUSCLE STRAW? SORETONE Liniment's Heating Pad Ac t ion Gives Quick R e l i e f !

'SSD**''

o» • hacmj pad. Hdpt alma fiSk nrSea fl«4"Wplr. . 1

Somoo. h In • d u , b, itself. F«*. rcntus SoomZastoo! " pr^ j 7r» Saturn for AOJral Faot U k « 5 •

Smetc (ot tekef~ FREE

f PAGES INHALEKv !>•:

ffOertr.Cfaad i s

RELIEF AT LAST ForYour COUGH to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm and aid nature to sooth, s a d heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous membranes. Tell your druggist to tell you a bottle of Creomumos with the understanding you must Uka the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money bade.

CREOMULSION for Coughs,CnestColds, Bronchitis

i l l ? I'm DU0USED BLACK LEAP 4 0 I

fMl ao narrow, hlgbatrun*. t t«d» Than do try Lydla E. ptnkbam'a Vegetable Com pound to n U m snob symptoms, pinkham'a compound also baa what Doctora call a aSo-martiln tonto affectl

LYDIA L PINKHAM'S SSSSi

Help T h e m Q e a n a a of H a r m f u l Body Was te

kidney* tometfme* Uf In their work—do not act u Nttur* Inundod—f«ll to r*-

SSS'uy^r ssft f ESS order are mnwtlmM burolnr. scanty tf too freqoent urlnatioo.

There thoold be so doabt that proaM

now Wen da (or mora than forty yan. Tkey have a Mtioo-wida reputation.

DOANS PILLS

Page 6: Dr Mr Some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/MVS... · CHESIF'PETEH.'PMN HAST you ALL COLD TIED UP WITH Q0/&C...me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday,

MT. VERNON SIGNAL

CLASSIFIED Men Drilling Below Water

Simplicity, Harmpny Outstanding On Tables Set With Taste. Care

By Ertta Haley AR E YOU PROUD, of the d l she i : :

and cloths and napk ins which you u s e for se t t ing the table? Or. a r e they Just a Jumble of all sorts of d ishes which you 've h a d in the pas t ?

If you rea l ly w a n t t o add beauty and grac iousness to your home , one of the bes t ways in which to d o It i s t o se t your tab le f o r m e a l t i m e s with a t t r ac t ive and beau t i fu l d ishes a n d the i r p roper accompan imen t s .

J u s t in case y o u ' r e wor r i ed as t o how the new tab le se t t ings can come out of the budge t , i t ' s im-po r t an t to po in t ou t tha t the p ro jec t n e e d not involve a lot of expense . v i Qual i ty d ishes a r e wi thin every- . << one ' s r each , and a s fo r tab lec lo ths ^ -V o r dollies and napkins , these migh t possibly be m a d e a t h o m e with l i t t le B ' * o r n o out lay of ac tua l money . . i

I t ' s Impor t an t to h a v e ce r t a in colors and p a t t e r n s In mind before T W * ' "ve ly des ign in contem-s t a r t ing this p r o j e c t Decide w h a t f ™ * A m e r i c a n po t te ry haa you like and be certain* what you »l™pUc!ty in e v e r y l ine. I t la • h a v e chosen i s In h a r m o n y with t h« fu rn i sh ings in t h e hpme .

H o m e s done In s imple modern , e a r l y Amer ican , a n d some colonial types call fo r s imple tab le set t ings. F o r the m o r e e l abora te per iod types of homes , you' l l want t o choose

HOUSEHOLD MtMOS...hA Contemporary. Design By INEZ GERHARD

BE T T E DAVIS, accord ing to l a t e s t repor t s , w a s the mov ies ' high-

es t pa id w o m a n s t a r of IMS. Yet, when she f i r s t tackled Hollywood prac t i ca l ly n o one, except Bet te h e r -self, would h a v e thought she h a d the ghost of a chance to ge t any-where n e a r the top. She was not p re t ty ; he r f igure w a s not espe-cially good. Hollywood s w a r m e d

A m e r i c a n d lnnerware , l ight In weight , ye t s t rong and du rab l e . I t c o m e s In subtle, paste ls tha t a r e a f a v o r i t e for casua l . In formal liv-ing and fo r t h a t p l easan t , re lax-ing supper a f t e r the rush of the day .

B E T T E DAVIS

with v e r y beaut i fu l girls, m a n y of t h e m with Influence tha t counted in t h e i r ' f a v o r . But she h a d w h a t counted—belief in her own ta lent , de te rmina t ion to get ahead, willing-ness to t ake roles the p re t ty g i r l s wouldn ' t touch with a ten-foot pole. She de se rves every penny of h e r sa l a ry .

S e r v e H o m e - M a d e ' R o l l s O f t e n ! (SIB Recipe! Below)

Worn tablec lo ths c a n f requen t ly be cut down t o r ec t angu l a r shapes to m a k e dollies. P e r h a p s the old napkins will e v e n s e rve with the "new dol l ies ." Cot ton bags , sheets , pil low c a s e s and cotton r e m n a n t s c a n f requen t ly be conver t ed In to doilies. Dye therp If i t m a k e s t h e m m o r e a t t rac t ive , a p p l y a fight s t a r c h a n d p re s s carefu l ly .

F o r s imple tab le set t ings , use a fine, h a n d - h e m m e d edge, a n a r r o w edging of good lace, a b ias t r im-m i n g or a f r inge .

H O M E M A K E R S who want to keep u p the i r m o r a l e will f & d sat isfact ion in the p r a i s e of the fami ly . Such r e m a r k s a s "Oh , boy, m o m Is m a k -

ing those rolls for d inner tonight ,"

f 1 or " T h e house ? wonderful

A j - * with tha t o read bak ing . " br ing a

i Uft and a mt t0

t he h e a r t of m a n y of us beseiged

with the rout ine of endless cleaning, dus t ing , laun<QV and p r e p a r i n g m e a l s .

No longer n e e d the re be an excuse for not m a k i n g yeas t - ra i sed b r eads and rol ls a t home , for me thods have b e c o m e exceedingly simpli-f ied recent ly . You don ' t even have to knead these del ightful concoctions any more , and in m a n y cases , one r i s ing is suff ic ient .

No-knead rolls and b r e a d a r e light and delicious. T h e y do not h a v e qui te as f ine a t e x t u r e a s b r eads which h»ve b e e n kneaded , bu t this i s a s m a l l m a t t e r , especia l ly when you c a n h a v e f r a g r a n t y e a s t rol ls so quickly. . ...

T h e r ec ipes fo r quick rolls of th i s type a r e qui te d i f f e r en t f r o m o thers you 've used . Less f lour i s used and the dough i s s o f t The direct ions given in this column have been ca re fu l ly tes ted, so be s u r e to fol-. low t h e m closely, and you' l l h a v e a m a z i n g success .

Broiled Whitefish L e m o n But te r Pa r s l eyed Po ta toes But te red Asparagus Apple Celery Salad

Beve rage ' P o t a t o Rolls Lemon Sherbe t Cookies

A qua r t e t of g a y comedies wor th r e m e m b e r i n g If you like to laugh— " A Fore ign A f f a i r , " (Dietrich, J e a n Ar thur , Lund) " J u n e v B r i d e , " (Davis , Robe r t Montgomery) " A Le t t e r to T h r e e Wives" and " F a m -ily Honeymoon."

c a r a m e l rolls, as follows: C a r a m e l Rolls

Spread the dough with one and one-half . t ab lespoons bu t te r , mel-ted. one-fourth cup b rown s u g a r and one teaspoon c innamon. Roil and cut into one-inch pieces . Com-bine one-half cup b rown sugar , th ree tablespoons honey-f lavored corn sy rup and one tablespoon but-ter . Spread about one tablespoon of this mix tu re in g reased muf f in t ins and p lace in cut p icces of dough. Let r i se until l i g h t then bake in a mode ra t e ly hot (375*) oven fo r IS to 20 m i n u t e s o r unt i l golden brown.

T h e r e ' s an old-fashioned ho t b r e a d which g r andmothe r used , to m a k e , po ta to rolls, a rec ipe which h a s now b e e n b rough t up-to-date wi th s t r eaml ined technique to speed the process .

•Po ta to Rolls (Makes 2 dozen)

1 c a p scalded milk 3 tablespoons shor tening 1 tablespoon s u g a r t teaspoons sal t 1 package yeas t , compressed

o r d ry g r ann la r

P i ty P e n n y Morgan , who con-ducts m o r e than 300 audit ions a week to weed out the ta lent fo r Ar thu r Oodf rey ' a "Ta len t Scoots ." E v e r y w h e r e she goes en te r t a ine r s a p p e a r and t ry to impres s h e r with their ta len t . E v e n when she s t a y s h o m e the re is no respi te . " I even h a v e

MeMe table settings.... t ab le Bettings t h a t a r e in h a r m o n y with the style of the period.

If you ' r e in doubt about what t o choose, r e m e m b e r t h a t a s imple type in subdued colors will b lend with a lmos t any .decora t ive scheme . Selec t Table Background To Harmonise with Dlnnerware

1 If you ' h a v e chosen a subdued yellow set of dishes , your best choices fo r tablecloths will Include soft green, s e v e r a l shades of blue, b rown and of course , white , e i ther p la in or touched with any of the a l ready-ment ioned colors.

danc ing g r o c e r y boy , " plained the other d a y .

When "My Fr i end I r m a " r e a c h e s the screen, via P a r a m o u n t Mar ie Wilson will have the' role she p lays on the air . D i a n a L y n n will be " J a n e , " J o h n Lund will be M a r i e ' s f r i end , Don D e F o r e wil l be the mil l ionaire who ta i ls , in love with Diana . M a r t i n and Lewis , the comedy t e a m , win appear—not too of ten, l e t ' s hope—as a p a i r of am-bitious ac tors .

for Broiler* and layers Now Hampshire* sad other broiler brttds for ImmcdlSI* dtlW.ry 1B largo or immli qusatftUs. Writ* todav for catalog and BIO saving* oa aarly booked ordars. Davis Poultry Farm & Hatchery

Seeing J a n e G r e e r smile a t Dick Powel l in RKO*s "Sta t ion Wes t " i t ' s h a r d to-beHeve t h a t nine y e a r s ago she thought she would never be ab le to smi le aga in . She woke FOR THIS SEASON of the year ,

one rec ipe which you' l l want to use of ten . Is t h a t . f o r ho t cross buns.

-Hot Cross Buns (Makes 18)

H cap hot , mashed potatoes (anseaaoned)

1 4 c u p s sif ted al l-purpose f lour

* Combine the ' mi lk , shor tening, s u g a r a n d salt . Add yeas t and m i x well. Blend in bea ten eggs and m a s h e d potatoes. Add gradua l ly the f lour and m i x until wel l 'b lended and dough i s sof t . Store dough in re-f r i g e r a t o r o r cold p lace for a t least Jwo hours o r until needed. T h e fop of the dough should be greased .

When r e a d y to use, roll chilled, dough to one-half inch thickness on a f loured b o a r d s Cut with a two and one-half Inch cu t te r . •- P l a c e on a g r e a s e d b a k i n g sheet . (Or; shape rol ls Into, a n y shape des i red , like pa rke rhouse , c loverleaf , t w i s t s , b ra ids , bowknots, e tc . ) . Let r ise In a w a r m place until doubled in bulk, about one a n d one-half hours . Bake In a mode ra t e ly hot (400*) oven for 15-20 minu te s .

h e r f a c e pa ra lyzed . Two months of t r e a t m e n t s d id ho good. But she looked so f imny when she tr ied to smile t h a t she took h e a r t exerc ised till she got well.

Hampshire , White Rock dotte X Rock, Wyandotte: shire U. S. Approved— PuUorum Controlled profit - mmmui chlcka bred especlally-for llvablllty. f&i Crowth and fait, uniform feathcrlni

Broad Breasted Bronx* and Sma Whit® Turkey*.

Wrlta (Or Quantity Price*. KEWABK APPROVED BATCBK1T

Dept. C-J, Newark. Okl*.

Wvan-Hamp-

1 package yeas t , compres sed o r d ry g r ann la r

1 egg 3 cops s if ted, al l-purpose floor

o o m e r to Hollywood, B r a d E v a n s , m a y r ep lace S ina t ra on " H i t P a r a d e . " A f o r m e r d isc Jockey, E v a n s la a l so a n ex-F B I agent , under h i s own n a m e , J o e Dosh. B a t h o m a k e s re-cords under his own n a m e .

'irePUREY'ill" f AS M p N E Y C A N BUY 1 awatfs uasssr s u n JO m I mreLEwta

St.Joseph A S P I R I N

CHIC A G O , - ( U P . ) -For m o r e than' a year , about 500 men have been liv-ing on Islands of s teel in the Gulf of Mexico, dr i l l ing for oil below the su r face of the wa te r .

Two oil men a t tending the a n -nua l convention of the A m e r i c a n Pe t ro leum inst i tute said the opera-tion. known as offshore dril l ing, l a ' being ca r r i ed on by 15 oil com-panies . Thei r operat ions covers a 2,500.000-acre a r e a f r o m six t o 20 mi les off the shores of T e x a s and Louis iana .

T h e oil m a n said the i r com-panies h a v e achieved " fa i r ly good" resul ts »o f a r , co ihpared with land opera t ions which cost much less than offshore dril l ing.

Before u n d e r w a t e r dr i l l ing can begin, gangs m u s t cons t ruc t the i r 1,500-ton s teel . Is lands by dr iv ing pil ings 100 fee t below the ocean bed, a n d ex tend ing them 50 fee t In the w a t e r a n d 40 f ee t above the w a t e r ' s su r face . Construct ion of the pi l ings costs an oil f i r m about $1,-000,000 before dri l l ing can s t a r t

' Crews Change Work Offshore dri l l ing c a m p s then

a r e set up on the pil ings o v e r a n a p p r o x i m a t e lt0-by-80-foot a r e a . Besides the dri l l ing p l a t fo rms , e ach c a m p Includes a bunkhouse and cookhouse and enough sup-plies to provision a 1 5 - m a n c r e w fo r th ree weeks .

However , c r e w s usual ly work fo r seve ra l d a y s only a n d then a r e t ransp lan ted to shore fo r a s m a n y d a y s off . Shif ts of worke r s a l t e rna te a round the clock all y e a r .

The oil men said their p r inc ipa l h e a d a c h e s a r e the t ropical s t o r m s which sweep the gulf a r e a f r o m May through N o v e m b e r . However , the pilings a r e cons idered a s s a f e as the ground on shore and the m e n seldom a r e called In f r o m the i r c a m p s atop the pil ings. T h e pil ings a r e buil t to wi ths tand . 165-mile winds and 35-foot waves .

U n d e r w a t e r " dril l ing w a s s t a r t -ed a f t e r geologists repor ted w h a t they t e r m o d a "cont inenta l s h e l f ' In the gulf waters . T h e " s h e l f '

, is „ composed of land which ex-t e n d s m a n y m i l e s Into the w a t e r be fo re dropping to oceanic deptfes.

Use Grav i ty Meter A m e r i c a n oil m e n in" Venezuela

w e r e the f i r s t to employ offshore _. dr i l l ing m e t h o d s and succeeded In

recover ing oil f r o m d e p t h s - o f 100 fee t below t h e , su r face of L a k e Maraca lbo .

Geologis ts use f g r a v i t y m e t e r i f ' to. outl ine a r e a s which should tM

t e s t e d fo r dr i l l ing . . The ins t ru-m e n t » r e v e a l s d i s tu rbed a r e a s

y- 4- which show w h e r e oil m a y bo p r e s e n t bu t the oil m e n aald the only s u r e way to test the ground

el i s to s t a r t d igging opera t ions . • * T h e oil m e n said t h a t offshore

dri l l ing In t h e . Gulf of Mexico ^ w a i s t a g e d by oil f i r m " In t n

e f fo r t to a u g m e n t Amer i ca ' s c rude oil supply and r e se rves .

Way Trials Judge Suggests Trying War-Makers Early

LOS ANGELES.—The pres iding Judge Of the Nuernberg w a r c r l m * t r i a l s h a s said t h a t f u t u r e w a r s m a y be p reven ted by t ry ing In ternat ional c r imina l s be fo re hostlUtlea. b r e - k o u t

J u d g e Michael A. Musmanno of P i t t sburgh urged es tabUshment th rough the United Nat ions of a p e a c e t i m e in ternat ional cour t t o t ry c r imina l s responsible for In-ci t ing war .

A f o r m e r N a v y captain. Mus-m a n n o p res ided over h i s to ry ' s b igges t m u r d e r t r ia l—that of

' Naz i gene ra l s accused of s lay ing one million persons . He Is h e r e to confer on "a fo r thcoming mov ie b a s e d on a 20-volumc r e s e a r c h work he complied to prove Hit ler la d e a d .

"Throughout h i s tory the m a n who burned one house and killed o n e

•innocent person would be hanged fo r a rson and m u r d e r , bu t If he des t royed a whole civil ization h e w a s given a comfor tab le n iche In h i s to ry , " the Jydge sa id . " T h e g r e a t newsness which c o m e s f r o m World W a r H Is the c rea t ion of a t r i b u n a l ab le to Judge Internat ional c r im-inals. -• - —

" T h e heU with th i s Idea t h a t a n y one nat ion in responsible fo r in te r -na t iona l c r ime . Was G e r m a n y re-sponsible fo r what happened in Europe—or w a s H i t l e r ? "

M u s m a n n o called *HUtsr " t h e m o s t m o n u m e n t a l f i gu re of all h is tory, a b l e by h i s s t r ange , over -whelming m a g n e t i s m a n d person-ali ty t o d o m i n a t e the m e n a round h i m . "

TO RELIEVE MISERY OF coios a LIQUID OR TftBUTS-SAMl FAST R H J »

Peace At Last From PE RSI STENT JTCH» moot bl«u the day thmy chmaaed to RMIBOL

Antique Psaler Uncovers,, Ancient "Shocking Machine" . N E W L E B A N O N , N . Y . — A n an t ique dea le r ' s s e a r c h of a New Lebanon b a r n t u r n e d u p a n elec-. t r i e " shocking m a c h i n e " used by the S h a k e n m o r e than 100 y e a r * ago t o t r e a t coughs and colds.

The s t r ange the rapeu t i c device consists of a glass cyl inder tha t genera tes s t a t i c e lectr ic i ty by turn ing aga in s t a chamoi s p a d .

. I t Is cons idered the m o s t complete e x a m p l e of i t s k ind. T h e only o t h e r known specimen, Incom-plete, Is In the New Ydrk State m u s e u m In Albany. - Re fe rences to the "shocking

m a c h i n e " were found In an 1827 Journal of the Shakers , a religious s e c t

Planning for the Fulure? Buy U. S. Savings Bonds!

Colorful pale lavender , yeUow and brown for the background. >

F o r those of you who Uke f lo ra l types , se lec t those colors for back-ground which ma'tch or complement the m a i n colors in the d lnne rware .

S i lve rware and g lassware , too, ahould be in keep ing with the dinner-w a r e a s well a s the background tabfccioihs or dolUes. H e r e a r e Sonrcea F o r Tablecloths

I t ' s easy, of course, provided you h a v e the money to buy tablecloths and dollies fo r tab le set t ings, bu t l f s tun to see what you c a n do a t

Be Smart!

Never aga in need you be ao-cuscd of w e a r i n g a neck lace m e r e l y fo r o r n a m e n t ' s sake , f o r now It haa a ut i l i tar ian aide aa well . T h e new donble duty i d e a la a highly o rnamen ta l necklace tha t la a t t a ched to a s t rap less even ing , d r e s s to hold It s m a r t l y tn p l ace . The designs . of the

b race le t s a r e p a c e se t t e r s , too; for example , In the ske tch shown la' a c lus ter of g r apes of s imu-lated p e a r l s aga in s t rhlnestone-s tudded leaves, combined with gold, f

Study Dlnnerware Style Before Choosing

A m e r i c a n d lnne rware i s now m o r e plentiful than at a n y t i m e s ince pre-war d a y s a n d you' l l f ind m a n y a t t r ac t ive new lines s t ress ing a spir i t of individuali ty. In tens ive r e sea rch , increased output and lower costs have combined to pu t qual i ty w a r e s within the r each of every •family.

T h e r e a r e ce r t a in d i f fe rences in w a r e with which you should be f a -mi l i a r before buying. AH of the foUowlng t y p e i a r e m a d e by Amer -ican pot ter ies : v i t r i f ied chlha. semi-vi t reous ware , of ten called f ine ea r thenware , a n d po t t e ry .

Basical ly , the Ingredients and m e t h o d s of m a k i n g a r e m u c h t h e s a m e fo r a l l th ree , bu t va r i a t ions In p rocess ing and f i r ing give d i f f e ren t c h a r a c t e r i s t i c s to each .

China, fo r example , is the m o s t de l ica te of d lnnerware . I t Is t rans-l u c e n t m e a n i n g t h a t when you hold a p la te t o l i g h t you c a n see the out-l ine of your f ingers through I t I t m a n y s e e m f rag i le , bu t i s ac tua l ly s t rong and durable . China i s vi t r i -fied, which m e a n s tha t the w a r e h a s been m a d e ent i re ly non-porous and non -abso rben t

Because of Its del icate beau ty , china d lnne rware h a s . long been Identif ied with the f o r m a l or sUni-form al occasion, bu t It m a y be used in a lmos t any sor t of t ab le set t ing, especial ly If the s impler p a t t e r n s a r e used .

Semi-Vitreous Ware I s Non-Absorbent

In style and beauty of pa t t e rn , seml-vi t reous w a r e h a s the s a m e qual i t ies as china. I n p rocess ing and texture i t is d i f ferent . Scml-vi t reous w a r e i s molded s o m e w h a t th icker t h a n ch |na a n d . i s usually f i r ed a t lower t empe ra tu r e s . It i s no t vi t r i -f ied and Is not t rans lucent . How-ever , i t ' s an especial ly s t u rdy w a r e , capable of wi ths tanding m u c h w e a r a n d long use. The deep glaze com-pletely sea l s the s u r f a c e and m a k e s the w a r e non -abso rben t

Usually, semi-vi t reous w a r e i s less expens ive than china. I t Is m a d e In p a t t e r n s which a r e en t i re ly sui t -able fo r f o rma l se t t ings and m a n y m o r e which a re right a t h o m e in l e s s f o r m a l s u r r o u n d i n g s .

Much of the gay , colorful n e w d lnne rware , which s t r ikes a no te of i n fo rma l i t y is known In gene ra l u s u a g e a s . " A m e r i c a n p o t t e r y . " Bas ica l ly , I t ' s a seml-vl t reous w a r e a n d la n o kin to the i m p o r t e d rough Dat ive w a r e commonly known aa

p o t t e r y . Such na t ive w a r e is rough In t ex tu re , m a d e f r o m c o t r s e d a y s , f i r e d a t low t e m p e r a t u r e s a n d thin-ly glazed..

M a n y of the m o s t popula r p a t t e r n s fo r casual . Informal occasions a r e In A m e r i c a n • p o t t e r y - Th» w a r e i s deeply glazed.- chip-resis tant a n d s tu rdy . Only because of i t s s impli-ci ty, gay p a t t e r n s a n d i n f o r m a l p a t t e r n s i s It called " p o t t e r y . " . Because of i t s e c o n o m y ; A m e r i c a n po t te ry f i t s well within the f a m i l y b u d g e t F o r this s a m e reason , m a n y fami l ies have the p o t t e r y fo r lynch-eon a n d b r e a k f a s t s e rv ice In addi -tion t o the i r d lnne rware se rv ice of ch ina o r seml-vl t reous w a r e .

Wha teve r you h a v e , , t a k e s o m e p recau t ions aga ins t misuse . Cups should be hung whenever possible, a n d p la tes m a y be s t acked o r p l a c e d on r a c k s . China and seml-v l t reous w a r e p l a t e s should b e s t acked with p ieces of

W a r n e r Bros, los t no t ime In schedul ing " T h e Tr ia l of Card ina l Mindszenty ." Top pr ior i ty h a s 'Been given to the' f i lm, so t h a t i t m a y be p roduced a s quickly a s possible. Anthony Velller h a s been assigned t o produce and wri te i t

" I A m With You" i s the f i r s t f i lm m a d e under rel igious ausp ices con-s idered good enough t o be dis tr ib-u t e d commerc ia l ly a s weU a s In 16 m m . form fo r churches , schools, etc. P o r t r a y i n g the expe r i ences of Swedish miss ionar ies on S o u t h Af r i ca , with profess ional ac to r s in Impor t an t roles, i t Is h ighly d r a m a -t i c a n d deeply moving . T h e ReU-gious F i l m associat ion d is t r ibutes i t

If you a sk fo r t i cke t s t o ' " H i e Ad-ven tu re s of S a m Spfcde" you won ' t g e t . t hem, and producer -d i rec tor Will iam Spier once m o r e will feel like the m e a n e s t m a n In radio . But t h e r e cannot be a h aud ience fo r this m y s t e r y show; the act ion m u s t be kept tau t a p d tense, and a g a s p or a n " O h " of " A h " m i g h t spoil i t So hundreds of would-be spec t a to r s a r e tu rned down each week.

ODDS AND E N D S . . Wayne Morr is h a s n ice plana fo r next s m e r ' s vaca t ion — wants to f ly his wife to Alaska In h i s ffwn p lane . Leon Er ro l will s t a r In another RKO se r ies of two-reel comedies , which ex tends his associat ion wi th the studio to a r e c o r d — I t cons t lve y e a r s J . . Bob Hope did 38 shows In 34 t i t l e s , grossed $850,-000 dur ing h i s r ecen t persoqal ap-p e a r a n c e tour and gave m a n y f r e e shows at GI c a m p s and for chari-t ies a s well.

H teaspoon

Combine milk , shortening, s u g a r and s a l t When - l u k e w a r m , add yeas t and m i x thoroughly. Blend In egg. "Bicn add gradua l ly the Dour with ra is ins and c innamon and m i x until well-blended and soft . P l a c e

g reased bowl and cover . P l a c e dough In r e f r i ge r a to r unt i l needed .

o r allow t o r e s t j v l f o r 10 minu tes be-

I f o r e s h a p i n g . { F o r m dough Into j buns and p l ace on " g r e a s e d b a k i n g

s h e e t Le t r i se in •rm place (80*

' t o 85*) until U g h t about 45 minutes- In the " m e a n -t ime, c o m b i n e one weU-beaten egg whi te with two table-spoons of cold w a t e r and b r u s h the tops of the buns with the m i x t u r e Just before bak ing . S lash a deep cross on t o p of each bun wi th a s h a r p knife , a f t e r they h a v e risen. Bake In a ho t (425*) oven fo r 20 minutes .

Combine fou r teaspoons of milk with one cup s i f ted confect ioners ' suga r and one-four th t easpoon vanil la. D r i p this mix tu re o v e r the buns filling the crosses , whUe- the rolls a re still ho.t

Omi t the r a i s ins and e innamon f r o m the above rec ipe and u s e it for

K c a p l u k e w a r m w a t e r 1 bea ten egg ?. tablespoons , mel ted shorten-

ing I teaspoon sal t 3 tablespoons snga r

G r a t e d rind of 2 o ranges K c a p orange Jalce

' -4 c aps floor

. Dissolve the yeas t In water . Add the bea ten egg. shortening, sugar , o r a n g e r ind a n d Juice. Stir In Dour, m i x i n g unt i l smooth. A d j w m o r e flour, if necessa ry , to m a k e - d o u g h e a s y t o handle . Le t r ise in bowl u t i l doubled in bulk. P l a c e in g r e a s e d loaf pan arid let rise aga in unUl doubled in bulk. Bake in a hot (400*) oven for 10 minutes , then i d u c e hea t to m o d e r a t e (350*) and b a k e fo r 45 minu tes longer.

LYNN SAYS: Serve Hot Sandwiches F o r a Savory Lunch

S c r a m b l e d eggs p laced be tween two" slices of b u t t e r e d toas t which h a v e been sp read with anchovy-pas t e m a k e a de lec table sandwich .

Spread " deviled h»rfi- on whi te b r ead , top with another slice' of b read and dip In an jegg-milk mix-tu re . F r y as fo r F r e n c h t o a s t

Hot sliced toOghe m a k e s .an excel-lent sandwich ' when t e a m e d with fried apply,s on a toasted Eng l i sh muff in .

Bulk s ausage m e a ' -,-led ln..pat-t ies , and placed l . i w e e n hot pan-cakes , m a d e the s a m e size a s the s ausage pa t ty , a re h e a r t y as well a s good.

: P l a c e baked or boiled h a m on a sUce of b r e a d and sp read thinly with m u s t a r d . Top with a slice' of Amer ican ; cheese and p lace in the oven until cheese mel t s slightly.

Sprinkle thick slices of t oma to with s a l t pepper and bits of bacon. Se rve on sUceS of but tered toast which h a s b « f n sp read with ham sa lad or deviled ham.

KEMPS BALSAM <01 COUGHS OKI 10 COLDS

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P u b l i s h e d e v e r y T h u r s d a y A t No . 10 C h u r c h S t r e e t ,

M t . V e r n o n , K y . A . F . H o f f m a n , E d i t o r

E n t e r e d a t M t . V e r n o n , K y . P o s t O f f i c e a s S e c o n d C l a s s

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C o m m i s s i o n e r ' s S a l e

M T . V S B N O W S I G N A L , M T . T E R H O M . KY.

C i r c u i t C o u r t r e n d e r e d a t t h e | N u m b e r T h r e e . B e g i n n i n g a t a n . R r i n r i l n T t l r i r r a J a n u a r y T e r m t h e r e o f 1949 , i n a s h , a c o r n e r of L o t N o . 3 ; | o r m Q 1 B x u q g e t h e a b o v e c a u s e , f o r t h e D i v i M t h e n c e w i t h a l i n e o f s a m e N . I , , . „ , s i o n of P r o c e e d s , u n t i l p a i d a n d ' 8 7 ^ 2 E a s t a t 6 0 p o l e s p a s s l M z l a n d M r s . U l y s s u s B a k e r i t s c o s t , t h e r e i n I s h a l l p r o c e e d ; p o l e s t o t h e r i g h t o f t h e s p r i n g s p e n t S u n d a y w i t h M r . a n d t o o f f e r f o r s a l e a t t h e C o u r t i n a l l 1 3 8 M , p o l e s t o a s t o n e i n I ' H R H o u s e d o o r i n t h e C i t y of M t . i a j j n e Q f y j O w e n s l a n d - ' L e o n a r d B u r -V e r n o n , . K e n t u c k y , t o t h e h i g h - 1 t h e n c e w i t h s a i d l i n e S 5 w ' < * e t l e ° ' C o p p e r C r e e k a t t e n d -e s t b i d d e r , a t p u b l i c a u c t i o n o n 4 2 V 6 p o l e s t o a s t o n e s e t in t h e £ d c h u r c h a t B r i n d l e R i d g e t h e 2 1 D A Y O F M A R C H 1949,1 . * 7 ™, ™ S e , S a t u r d a y n i g h t .

A T O n e O ' C l o c k P . M . , c o r n e r ; t h e n c e w i t M D w e n ? l i n e ' M r " a n d S l r s - W i l I i s C o f f ° y o r t h e r e a b o u t , u p o n a c r e d i t o f N 8 9 V 4 ' p a s s i n e t h e c o r n p r nf s p c n t t h e w e e k - e n d w i t h ' M r . 6 m o n t h s , t h e f l o w i n g d e s c r i b - {"he p a r t o f T i s l o t a t a b r a n c h , a n d M r s - J ™ B u r d e t t e . e d p r o p e r t y , t o - w i t : i n a l l 1 4 0 p o l e s t o a w h i t e o a k M e s d a m e s E l i z a b e t h a n d

K n o w n a s L o t N o . 4 i n t h e s t w i t h b , a c k Q a k p o i n t e G l a d y s M i n k w e r e , in B e r e a f i r s t p a r c e l i n t h e d i v i s i o n T h i s t h e n c e N , 9 3 - 3 6 y 4 p o l £ t o t h ( ; S u n d a y a f t e r n 6 o n . t r a c t c o n s i s t s o f t w o a d j o i n - , b e g i n n i n g , c o n t a i n i n g 3 3 a c r e s I M r - a n d " M r s - W a l t e r B u r -i n g t r a c t s . T h e p a r t o f t h e h o m e | a n d j 1 0 S q U a r e r o<] s x h e o t h e r d e l t e h a v e r e t u r n e d t o I n d i a n a

I P a r t i s k n o w n a s L o t N u m b e r a " e r a v i s i t w i t h f r i e n d s a n d A b s o l u m B r o w n j relatives.

f o l - ' M r s - E , t a P r o c t o r s p e n t F r i -d a v a f t e r n o o n w i t h M i n n i e M i n k .

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R o y S a y e r s , E t . A l . D e f e n d a n t .

B y v i r t u e of a j u d g m e n t a n d l i v e d a n d s a i d t r a c t i s t o h a v e a | X " j o r d e r of s a l e of t h e R o c k c a s t l e f r e e u s e of t h e w a t e r f r o m L o t ; ? , v , S ! 0 " a n d , , s b o u n d e d - - ~ - . -• l o w s : B e g i n n i n g a t a s t a k e in i

• k c h o o l r o a d , M r s . S a r a h S o w . „ „ d e r ' s c o r n e r ; t h e n c e w i t h s a i d 1 M r - a n d M r s - G e n e C l a r k a n d r o a d a n d C a b l e ' s l i n e N."3M> E. ! d a u ® h l e r o f L a n c a s t e r s p e n t 7 9 p o l e s t o a s t o n e n o t f a r f r o m I S u n d a y w i t h M r . a n d M r s . S a y e r s ' S c h o o l H o u s e ; t h e n c e H e „ n . r y M ' n k -

' w i t h S a y e r s " l i n e S . 8 9 * 4 E . 75 M r , a n d M r s . T B M i n k p o l e s t o a s t a k e in a b r a n c h ; ? P e m _ S u r , d a y w i t h M r . a n d t h e n c e u p

i SELL WITH GARRARD | OPERATED FOR FARMERS BY FARMERS g j S A L E S F O R A L L C L A S S E S O F L I V E S T O C K E V E R Y

I F R I D A Y : H O R S E A N D M U L E S A L E E V E ^ Y T U E S D A Y

S A L E S O F F R I D A Y . M A R C H 4 . 1949

i T h e G a r r a r d C o u n t y S t o c k y a r d s t o d a y r e p o r t e d t h e % ^ s a l e of a t o t a l o i 932 h e a d of l i v e s t o c k a t i t s w e e k l y a u c t i o n ^ g i h e r e F r i d a y . R e c e i p t s , a n d q u o t a t i o n s f o l l o w :

'J C A T T L E — R e c e i p t s . 2 8 6 : s t e e r s . S 1 7 . 2 5 ® 2 2 . 1 0 ; h e i f -! e r s . S18 .40 (T 20 .70 : b e s t b a b y b e e v e s , $22.25'?? 2 3 . 1 0 : o t h e r • b a b y b e e v e s . S i 9 . S 0 < i 2 2 ; c o v / s . S 1 3 . 2 0 1 3 . 1 0 ; m i l k c o w s .

5 8 2 . 5 0 187 .50 ; c o w s a n d c a l v e s . S128"ei T02.S0: b u l l s , K - S 1 9 . l Q a I 0 . 3 0 ; s t o c k b u l l s . $ 9 5 f i 140; s t o c k c a t t l e . S 3 2 . 5 0 ® K 134. • . . . . -

H O G S — R e c e i p t s . 3 1 2 ; p a c k e r s . $ ? 0 . 6 0 : m e d i u m . $ 2 0 . 6 0 h e a v i e s . S17 .25 ; l i g h t s . S20 .20 : s o w s . S I S . l O j S 16: s o w s a n d

; p i g s . $62 .50 Yi95: b e s t s h o l e s . S21 3 2 3 . 1 0 : o t h e r s h o t e s . S16 (5 20 .50 .

[ C A L V E S — R e c e i p t s . 1 2 5 ; t o p s , S 2 9 ; s e c o n d s a n d ! b i : » - h e r s , S ' F ' ^ ' 2 5 . 4 0 ; h e - v i ^ s . $ ? 7 T"27.60: c o m m o n a n d | m e d i u m . S22 ft 2 4 . 6 0 ; o t h e r s . S21 d o v n .

S H E E P a n d L A M B S — R e c e i p t s . 7 2 ; n o q u o t a t i o n s .

K 5 C / * E 0 a r . d M U L E S R e c e i p t s . * n o ' ^ u o t S t i o n s .

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B R Q D H E A D ( C o n t i n u e d trva p a g e 1)

K i n n e y , M r s . H . A . H a l l a n d M r s . J e n n i e R o b i n s w e r e in M t . V e r n o n T u e s d a y t o a t t e n d t h e b u r i a l o f J u d g e B . J . B e t h u r u m , w h o d i e d a t h i s h o m e i n S o m e r s e t S u n d a y .

M r s . R a l p h C a s t l e o f N e w l o n , T e n n . , a n d n i e c e , M i s s A n n a C a r o l P i k e , o f C o r b i n w e r e g u e s t s o f M r . a n d M r s . J . B e n P i k e l a s t w e e k . M r . - P i k e a n d M r s . C a s t l e w e r e in L e x i n g t o n t o v i s i t t h e i r b r o t h e r , R o s c o e P i k e , w h o i s i n S t . J o s e p h H o s -p i t a l . T h e y r e p o r t ( j i m v e r y i l l .

T h e w o r d t o u r n a m e n t - l o s e s i t s m e a n i n g u n l e s s i t i s c o n -d u c t e d in a f a i r a n d h o n e s t w a y a n d d o e s m o r e h a r m t h a n g o o d t o a l l w h o p a r t i c i p a t e , a d r e a d -f u l d i s a p p o i n t m e n t t o t e a m a n d c o a c h w h o l o o k f o r w a r d a l l

s e a s o n t o t h e i r d i s t r i c t t o u r n a -m e n t a n d m o s t d i s g u s t i n g t o t h e f a n s w h o f o l l o w a l l t h e i r g a m e s a n d k n o w t h e y a r e s k i l l -e d a n d a b l e t o m a k q q n i c e s h o w i n g o n a n y f l o o r , t o b e l e t

I d o w n b y a p u n f a i r d e c i s i o n . B r o d h e a d i s e x t r e m e l y p r o u d

of t h e b o y s o n t h e i r t e a m , n o t ' o n l y o n t h e f l o o r b u t t h e i r e v e r y d a y l i f e , t h e y a r e h o n e s t , c o u r t e o u s a n d p l e a s a n t in a l l

t t h e i r d e a l i n g s a n d s h o w g r e a t a b i l i t y i n t h e g a m e s a n d h a v e

| m a d e a w o n d e r f u l r e c o r d j t h r o u g h o u t t h e s e a s o n . T o o m u c h i c a n n o t b e s a i d of t h e p r e t t y

a n d e f f i c e n t c h e e r - l e a d e r s , w h o w e r e e v e r r e a d y in t h e i r a t -

I t r a c t i v e a n d c h e e r f u l w a y t o p e p t h e b o y s o n t o v i c t o r y . »

I B i l l y R i d d l e w a s s e l e c t e d o n

T H U R S D A Y . M A R C H 10. 1 9 4 9

t h e a l l t o u r n a m e n t t e a m i n t h e 4 6 t h D i s t r i c t . T o u r n a m e n t a t S t a n f o r d l a s t w e e k , h i ? t e a m -m a t e s , . c o a c h , J a c k W r i g h t a n d c h e e r - l e a d e r s w e r e a l l h i g h l y c o m p l i m e n t e d .

M r . a n d M r s . E d w a r d ' L e e C o f f e y a n d s o n , K e l l y , o f D a y -t o n , O . , s p e n t t h e w e e k - e n d w i t h M r . a n d M r s . T . L . F r i t h .

T h e o H a y e s of M i d d l e t o w n , O . , s p e n t l a s t w e k - e n d w i t h h o m e f o l k s .

Allen's Flowers „ F o r A l l O c c a s i o n s

M e m b e r F . T . D . . B i l l M c H a r g u e . A g e n t

u n d e r U . S . G o v e r n m e n t a n d B o n d e d f o r y o u r r p r o t e c t i o n

L A N C A S T E R ,

K i r b y T e a t e r

P H O N E 191

H o g a n T e a t e r

Garrard Comity Stockyards K E N T U C K Y

J . L . T e s t e r I

s a i d b r a n c h a n d D o c k - O w e n s ' l i n e w i t h th<-

. m e a n d e r s of s a i d b r a n c h 3 1 E . 120 o n e t h i r d p o l e s : t h e n c e & 40V4 E. 17 -Ht p o l e s ; t h e n c e P 5 3 E. 13 p o l e s ; t h e n c e S . 3 2 F . 1 7 - t w o . f i f t h s po les" t o a s y c a -m o r e b u s h o n t h e e a s t b a n k o:

I t h e b r a n c h a t o r n e a r M r s ' S o w d e r ' s c o r n e r ; t h e n c e w i t l h e r l i n e a n d f e n c e S . 1 2 ' - v W

1 2 9 - o n e f i f t h p o l e s t o a d o g -j w o o d b u s h a t t h e a n g l e of t h i f e n c e ; t h e n c e N . 88 W 115 "po le

• t o t h e b e g i n n i n g , c o n t a i n i n g 5 i c o r e s a n d 100 s q u a r e . rods-B o t h t r a c t s t o g e t h e r c o n t a i n 8" a c r e s a n d 100 s q u a r e r c d r

I O r s u f f i c i e n t t h e r e o f t o p r o d u c e t h e s u m of m o n e y s< o r d e r e d t o b e m a d e . Fo> th> p u r c h a s e p r i c e , t h e p u r c h a s e -m u s t e x e c u t e b o n d , w i t h a p p r o v e d r s e c u r i t i / ! s . i>ea.-j»<'.J<?»a i n t e r e S V ' i f d f l i W e " d a y of s a l e I

i u n t i l p a i d , a n d h a v i n g t h e f o r c e a n d e f f e c t of a j u d i r m e n t I B i d d e r s w i l l b e p r e p a r e d t c | c o m p l y p r o m p t l y w i t h t h e s e ' t e r m s .

— J O H N W . G R I F F I N R o c k '

| U s e t h e C l a s s f i e d A d S e c t i o n L i t t l e C l a s s f i e d s P a y " U " B i c

M r s . C o l m a n M i n k .

Q H I C K S

I .B.K/.

QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms «f Distress Ar is ing f r om

STOMACH ULCERS DUE™EXCESS A C I D Fre«B**kTftRs»fH*M«Treatmintthat Most H«lp er I t w m Cast Yea NetMns ' O n r thro# mllllaa botUea i l l l n W n u u

M i for rUMI • ! > U m « r d m « i u U i i fr .ni Slom—b M M a l l l t t m l n l o b H i t Add —

M A G G A R D D R U G S T O R E M t . V e r n o n . K y .

DR. H . K. FULKERSON O P T O M E T R I S T

l l t l n « M I N I D OLAUES FTTTKD V r p n T W r t — ^ i W . 9-12 AJL

M i , , f j g g > 1-4 P.I. S w M , I , . I W 280

Zoo A znsicte—outside-aUarouTid tAe car—

WMMW A f/ie most Jteautifu/ LBUJ5T of

GRAY THEflTRE B r o d h e a d K e n t u c k y

T h e T h e a t r e Y o u L o v e T o V i s i t

S U N - M O N . - M A R . 13-14 " B e t t y G r a b l e - D a n D a i l e y - J a c k O a k i e - J u n e H a v o c

W H E N M Y B S M I L E S A T M E

( I n T e c h n i c o l o r — - a g r a n d p i c t u r e ) . A l s o : I t C o u l d H a p p e n T o Y o u .

T H U R . - F R I . - M A R . 17-18

R a y M i ' I a r d - F l o r e n c e M a r l y - E r o d e r i c k C r a w -

f o r d S E A L E D V E R D I C T

A l s o : L a t e s t N e w s .

S e r i a l - " T h e S e a H o u n d " - C h a p t . I - F r i . - S a t .

S A T U R D A Y - M A R . 19

J i m m i e W a k e l y - D u b T a y l o r

P A R T N E R S O F T H E S U N S E T

A l s o : C o m e d y - C a r t o o n -S e r i a l .

S U N . - M O N . - M A R . 20 -21 .

G r e g o r y P e c k A n n B a x t e r R i c h a r d W i d m a r k

Y E L L O W S K Y A l s o : R a d a r F i s h e r m a n .

Did She Say

C O A L ?

Then our Extra Low Price will save you money Screened Ov-r Shaker Screens so you won't have a pile of slack to clcan up in the Spring:

Wei~hi And Size Guaranteed

Price At Tipp^

Block Coal $5.50 Por Ton

Ejg Ccal $5.00 Par Ton

Price Delivered At Mt. Vernon Block Coal $7.00 Per Ton

Egg Coal $6.50 Per Ton

Black Hawk Ceal Co. Orlando, Ky. Up Brush Creek

THE STYIEUNE DE IUXE 4-DOOB SEDAN

Tie most Beautiful

B U Y for Styling

The most Beautiful

B U Y for- Driving and

Riding Ease

The most Beautiful B U Y f o r Performance with Economy

E v e r y t e s t y o u m a k e a t t h e t r a f f i c l i g h t , tin t h e h i l l s , - o n t h e

' s t r a i g h t a w a y — a n d o f g a s o l i n e a n d o i l m i l e a g e a t ^ p u r n e y ' s e n d -

w i l l c o n f i r m y o u r o w n d e e p - s e a t e d c o n v i c t i o n t h a t C h e v r o l e t i s

the most beautiful buy qf all f o r p e r f o r m a n c e w i t h e c o n o m y !

M o r e o v e r , y o u r n e w C h e v r o l e t w i l l keep on g i v i n g t h i s finer

b r a n d of t h r i l l s a n d t h r i f t w i t h - u n f a i l i n g d e p e n H a b i l i t y , y e a r

a f t e r y e a r , f o r i t ' s t h e o n l y l o w - p r i c e d c a r w i t h a world's champion

• Valve-in-Head Engine, h o l d i n g a l l r e c o r d s f o r m i l e s s e r v e d , '

o w n e r s s a t i s f i e d , a n d y e a r s t e s t e d a n d p r o v e d .

The most Beautiful

B U Y f o r Comfort

The most Beautiful

B U Y for All-Round

Safety

N e w "Dubl-Life" Rivetless Brake Linings — Last up to TWICE, as Long I l inings are secured to brake shoes by a special "Perma-Bond" process thoroughly tested and proved b y millions o f units under all kinds of driving conditions. Because there a re no rivtt t o

limit lining wear o r score brake drurris, lining l i fe Is pract ical ly doubled. Chevrolet is the flrsf full-shed car In America to br ing you this important braking advancement!

Baker Motor Campany ML .Yeceea, Ky.

Top Quality Used Gars & Trucks For Sale At New Reduced Prices 1947 Ford Fordor Sedan, blue with healor. Low mileage and

seat covers.

1941 Plyir»uih Tudor Sedan. Black very clean. Air ride tires.

1S40 Chevrolet Fordor Sedan. Newly painted maroon. Seat covers and healer.

1940 Chevrolet Tudor Sedan. Black. Good tires, heater seal covers. • j ,

1940^Plymouth Seven Passenger Sedan. Black.'Good car lo * make money with.

1937 Oldsmobile Fordor Sedan. Black. Seal covers. r

1939 Plymouth Fordor Sedan Black. Seal covers. A cheap car.

1941 Plymouth Coupe. Maroon. Very clean. Seal covers, radio ' ' and healer.

1939 Chevrolet Coupe. Black.

1932 Ford Coupe. Black and only one owner.

1947 Ford One Ton with pickup body. Heater.

1942 Ford IV2 Ton Truck. Good tires and a cheap price.

THESE CARS AND TRUCKS CAN BE FINANCED THEY'RE PRICED TO SELL. \

MORPHY MOTOR CO. LANCASTER ST.

STANFORD. KY.

COME IN AND RIDE.' IN THE '49 FC ACADEMY AWARD WH

PHONE 222

FASHION

Page 8: Dr Mr Some-today!signal.rockcastlelibrary.org/wp-content/uploads/archives/1949/MVS... · CHESIF'PETEH.'PMN HAST you ALL COLD TIED UP WITH Q0/&C...me//v MT. VERNON SIGNAL Thursday,

fixr the- good of your business

Dennis Morgsi Carsoi

Buck Jonas

Mi. Vernon,

MT. VERNON -SIGNAL. MT. VERNOI*. K\

SOCIAL A N O P E E S C N ^ L

Miscellaneous Shower Given ; Blossom Fred, Secretary, Mrs. For-Dorolhy Cox, Bride Elect ' Evelyn Gregory, Treasurer, and

Mesdames John Cox and Joe Mrs. N. M. Smock, Correspond-N?e» «*•» were hostesses to a ing Secretary. FT i d ay I » was voted *y the Club to

n( M ! ? ' N iJr w"?e s e n d B box' of sjhool supplies SfrpcPin^0 6 o n , Main and miscellaneous articles to rvf-T,', IT ' • M l s s D o r o t h y | t h e German children in the £ « v K ? n 0 1 f t 0 o M r - American Occupied Zone. Roy King is to take-place Satur-day, March 12. 1

The home was beautifully i M r s - c l e o Hbward of Wallins decorated with bridal decora- 9 r e c k sP«nt Thursday and Fri-ti<5ns. Many beautiful and use- " a y v i s i t i n K relatives here and ful gifts were received. D«f- at Brodhead. . • licious refreshments of punch1 M r s - M y r t l e B u r t c n o f Gum and cake were served. .Sulphur spent Friday in

' Vernon, on business.

thfem. Mr. and Mrs. M- M. Caugh-

ron of Columbia, Rev. J. W. Caughron of Columbia and Mrs. Bobby Stafford of Somerset werrf the week-end guests of Mrs. Fred Murrelljand family. They were accompanied home Sunday by little Miss Sandy Murrell for a few days visit.

r's Sale (Continued from page 1)

with the road and Allen Bul-lock line with the road as fol-lows: 15V£ E. 9 poles N. 13 E. 10-two fifths poles N. 17V4 E. 9-three fifths poles, N. 11 Mi E.

poles and 8 links, N. 29Vi E. Mt. |8 poles. N, 6'4 W. 4-four fifths^

poles, N. 52Vi E. 12 poles and

V4 W. 18 poles and 14 links, I duce the sum of money so pr-iles and 14 links, S. dered to be • — -S. 8 E. 16 po!

17V4 E. 11 poles and 16 links t S. 16 W. 6 poles and. 22 links to a gum, Lloyd Owens corner; thence, with his line S. 84 E. 14 poles and 16 links to a stone, S. 68 E. 6 poles and 8 links to gum, Evans corner to another tract; thence, with line of same N. 72 Vi E. 21 poles and 13 links to a stone; N. 43 V\ E. 42 poles to a stone, Reynolds cor-ner; thence, with his line N. 64 W. 32 poles and 4 links to stone by a chestnut; thence, N. 23 W. 22 poles and 13 links to the beginning and containing' 29 acres and 60 square rods.

Tract No. 12. Beginning at a "Bum in Lloyd Owens' line on the side of a hill; thence.

made. For the pur-chase price, the purchaser must execute bond, with . approved securities, bearing legal inter-est frpm the day of sale, until paid, and having the force and effect of a judgement. Bidders will be prepared, to comply promptly with these terms.

JOHN W. GRIFFIN Master Commissioner

Rockcastle Circuit Court

Woman". Club Hold Monthly U r ; "Hd Mrs. George Griffi h j "nKS, « y n a w one nalt ^ j stone on the S t i l e ' " d a y S l3St ^ to,Sa N*. 72W E . P l ° S n ^ i ^ e o^a hUl with a hickorj--one fifth I

! poles, S. 82 Vi E. 6 poles and 14 j P°!n t e r-v i s i t s relatives and ^ ^ ^ t ^ a d ^ ^ t t e w o K a S b tttlj*-'&"5i3*3SJL?2:the,nce- ? • 5 0 W

FLOWERS FOR All Occasions

Mrs. O. V. Helton, Agent Mi. Vernon, Ky.

Mays Florist

day Evening, February 28, at ?®,e . . her home on West Main Street f r i e n d s l n M t - Vernon and for their February meeting. ' ; t h e county over the week-e

A very interesting program mM I ? ' l l U n8h a"1- M r s - hednnine" "containing'27 "acres s m a 1 1 s°uerwood pointers about,

was presented by the U r l E. McWilliams. of Lexmg- and 47 sauare rods a c r e S , four poles west of a drain; I Scouts. I ton. and Mr W E. Dillingham a n £ r a e t X to Beginning at a " t h e n c e - N" 6 2 V 4 w - 2 0 Poit* to a

New officers for the • year !2 f B r o £ h e a d - , h a v e r® l"rn®d stone bv the countv road f n the s W n e o n t h e b a n k ° f branch1

were elected. They were: Mrs home after being called to Lovd Owens corner a n d b e t w e e n t w ° set! Tom Mullins. President Mrs' i ° n B J b o ^ G,a',V°.n account of wHh the^Md S 52 E s t c n e s : t h e n c e - N- 8 8 w - ctoSs-1 William Landrum. First Vice- d

L° A clrt ledge M? Car"- 14 P ° ' « S. 41 Vt E. 9 poles to a 'n® J h f b r a nn

c ha 4 ,P° les ai

President. Mrs. Jack Crawford. atake: thence, leaving the road l c r o s s < X ) o n a «one with a ' Second Vice-President, Mrs. ^ % e r n o n - , - and with another road along L • w - P°"^er, :, , t h^n c , e '

" - ' J r . and Mrs. D W. Griffin 2 e X ' a 'small'chestnut wUha h S . j

week-end guests of h«r par- ^5 "P0 3 t 0 s t o n e ' i thence , N. 53-% W 7-one fifth! ents. Mr and Mrs. T. B Di'.lin - )o-d Ov ens co^er: ftence, \ the^ drain:

?- h".bcm «":J ££ JSW.iriJS paunlliianiWiiiiMMlaj^llyilu.M.iij. Bc.lnnl„2 „ TS.V. ' lZ;

stone near the tap of a ridge ? S ^ ° ° , dn P° ! n l e r j l

comer of Reynolds; thence, to J- p ° s a n j j '"with his line N. 41 E.-Tr&oies ( " _bfgjMmg-and

and 22 links to a stone by a Cr™l?u™n* y one-j

ridue road: thence, N. 88 W. 48 " ' po'es to a s'one where stood a! T h e Master. Commissioner hickrrv and black oak; thence , . w i " - o f f er said tracts of real N. 42 V/. 45 poles to a stone by estate for sale to the*public by| the fence, corner of Other Bui- eombmmg' Tract No. 1 and! lock: thence. S. 71Vj W. 4 poles i Tract No. 2, will offer Tract to the road: thence, with the ^o. 3 for sale by itself, will of road S. 33 E. 25 Roles and 16 ' c r Tract No.. 4 for sale by it-links. S. 451^ F.,- 18 poles. S. s e ' f . will offer Tract No. 5 for

'rW Car

G. W. Harpkv . at th» Circuit Court Clerks •ffic". !?» hmt a vronderfnl lot of protoc-tkwi to offer you raasonabla. Protect your Home asd Faxaily. l asars your Automo-bile today.

G. VT. MUHPHY, Agent State Farm Mntnal, Automobile Insurance

Compaay. The largest in the world.

17Vf» E. 3 poles and 19 links, S. 4 W. 11 poles, S. 11V, 10 poles,

Floweri for1 All Occasions We Grow Our 0 » n

'ichmond Greenhouse MRS. I). C. CRAIG. Rep.

'hone 131 Ml. Vernon

'ALU E! N E W M O D E L H H | > T O N

aODBB^-tedl"TRUCI€

sale by itself, will offer Tract No. 7 and Tract'No. 8 together, will offer'Tracts Nos. 9 and 10 together, and will offer Tract No. 11 by itself, will offer Tract No.'12 by itself, and the Master Commissioner will then offer the entire 11 tracts as a whole-to the public and will sell said property upon the basis wherein it brings the greatest sum of money," said tracts to .be sold lying and being in Rock-caste Cojinty, Kentucky.

Or sufficient thereof to pro-|

You are invited to i n s p e c t . . ; and com-pare . . . this remarkable 2-ton truck value. I t ' s priced with the lowest! B u t . . . it 's built to give you MORE for your money. Just read these features and facts: 1 . "Job-RatetT throughout for maxi-

mum G. V. W. of 16,500 l b s . . . . body and payload allowance of 10,675 lbs. . . . on 7.00-20 — 8-ply front "tires atid 7.50-20—10-ply djial r e t r tires.

2 . Powered with a 236-cu.-in. high-compression truck engine . .'. "Job-Rated" for performance with economy. •

3 . Cc«t-redndag engine features include aluminum alloy pistons, heat-resist-

ing. valve seat inserts, oil-bath: air cleaner, governor... and many others.

4 . Low upkeep and longer life with extra-heavy reinforced frame, rugged 11-inch clutch, 12,500-lb. hypoid rear axle, heavy-duty main and auxiliary springs . . . and extra-powerful brakes with vacuum-type booster. All built to fit the job.

5 . Time-saving ease of handling with short turning diameter (only 44 feet to right or left) and wide-tread front axles (63H inches).

fhe re are many more reasons why this outstanding 2-ton truck will save you money. Come i n . . . get all the facts about

truck value. No obligation. this

imUEE HOUSEHOLD FURHtSHffiGS

Household FuraisJiinfi Policy *tu'

fnucu tc o w d N g i t i u l U i i by 6r>

For Insurance Of Alf Kfcnfo S«e— K Hefffcrjag

Si. V anion, Ky.

Vernon, Ky.

For

Richer

Pastures

Manv pastures provide poorl feed for livestock because the I soil lacks phosphorus. Phos-! phorus-deficient -soil produces phosphorus - deficient f e e d . Phosoborus-rich soil produces feed richer in both phosphorus .-

1 and protein—and a bigger, more palatable growth! A gen-

.erous aoplication of our FOUR-LEAF Powdered Rock Phos-phate will benefit vour pas-tures —and the livestock grazed on them—for years ahead! In-vestigate.

OB Sale By M(. Vernon Chapter F.FJL

Rev Turner, Teacher • r write te . . . . THOMSON PHOSPHATE CO 1 4#7 S. Dearborn St.,

HI.

VERNON THEATRE

Mt. Vernon, Ky.

SUN.-MON. - MAR.. 13-14 Lena. Turner - Gene Kelly June Allyson - Van Heflin

— In — THE THREE

MUSKETEERS (Technicolor)

TUE.-WED. - KAR. 15-16 Ted Donaldson

—In— MY DOG RUSTY

Children 9c Adults 25r '

THUR.-FRL MAR. - 17-18

TWO GUYS FROM TEXAS

(Technicolor) Children 9c Adults 30<

Well - Dressed Men Wear C3RLES CLOTHS • -

-.oiding north-m sprinrj sun. Is ~ and stop

DOGWCOD is in b'oom — ihe robins are '••nrd — fdi-rway3 lio g-e^n und-r t i e WE This is the tiire to put awav •• iatsr woo.'i out in a new Curlee Spring Suit. Curlee Suits are styled in the n;rd"-n m-nn'jr for iron want tl:e best. Smavl quality fabrics in the nevest p i t -terns. expert designing. cralismans>iip wl.i .h builds com-fortable fit -and- lasting good looks into every gar=-.est— these are things we've come to expe~t from Curlee.-And this is whv wo can sny—"ell-dressed men wear Curlee Clothes.—Come in and make your selection today.

McBEE & ADAMS

REDDY KILOWATT SAYS:

KITE FLYING Tl" Safety Firs?

1. KEEP KITES AWAY'FROM ELECTRIC WIRES 2. USE DRY COTTON STRING ONLY 3. NEVER USE METAL ON KITES 4. NEVER CLIMJ.PQLES .. ,

BOYS AND GIRLS—don't take chances when you fly your kites. Follow Reddy's advice and fly /our kites in open skies away from electric lines. Then you won ' t endanger your own life or cause an . interrupt ion in electric service.

COMMUNITY PBBLIC SERVICE COMPANY Ifou*. QitetulLf ZUctuc Company