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Star-Gazette from Elmira, New York • 6

Publication:
Star-Gazettei
Location:
Elmira, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

JELMIRA STAR-GAZETTE. AUGUST 9, 1933. PAGE SIX. By Herblock YES, YES GOON WHAT WE OVERLOOK We habituallv think of the rain cloud He Has No Right to Burn His Grass If He Can't Keep the Fire at Home i 7 3 i I -m. ELMIRA STAR-GAZETTE Consolidation July 1.

1907. of The Elmlra Evening Star (1888). The Elmlra Gazette (1828). The Elmira Free Press (1878). The Elmira Evening News (1894).

An Independent Newspaper Published every evening except Sunday by Elmira that we owe to it nernaris tne. By ROBERT though not the most da? heaveir-rSSSin E. Tripp, secretary, treasurer and publisher rfol-TS iVjJLfee chestnut trees nTw York OffiM Zifi mcago unica nfW ne cnestnui, San Francisco Office tip-JHLiw'-1 tasty nut and Entered at Postoffic at J51lNS', Weo- ppeared and it will be class mail matter. Subscription Rates First and before a blight-resistant be reared to take its place. year.

$5.00: 9 months. 53.75: 6 mo. 2 months. $1.00: 1 month, 7ac Higher rf yond second zone, jjeuverea oy 6w, Now the majestic elms are being threat cents a week; single copies three cents. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS t.

i. -xciuslvelv enUUed to the use! for 'publUonTol "alT nes dispatches credited tt not oSerwise credited in this paper and. also Does it seem to you reasonable and right that your income, the worth of your property and the welfare of your family should be affected by the whims of some stranger who gets his living by playing poker? It does not. of course. Yet you endure an arrangement very similar to that.

Some weeks ago, when government schemes had given some assurance of rising prices, the pulse of the nation quickened to an ojd familiar excitement. It was the gambling fever. In every hamlet, village and town the knowing ones collected their savings and made first payment on a share in the new boom. Stock prices and paper profits mounted higher and higher, supported by nothing more substantial than the imagination of buyers, and then inevitably fell when professional traders were ready for the shearing. What was the effect on innocent bystanders? Well, they were told that rising prices had added billions to the nation's wealth.

Every man's property was worth a little more. Prosperity was on the way back, and everybody was cheerful. Then the collapse came; the nation was poorer by billions of dollars; every man's property and prospects kept pace wito failing stocks; people again lost heart. What caused it? The old familiar lust for easy money. Nothing else.

When anybody criticises the stock market, its defenders offer convincing arguments to show that it is necessary. But does anybody contend that neceslty justifies gambling with the nation's security? If unwise people still hope to get wealth without earning it, they have a right to take a chance and lose their savings in whatever manner affords them the most pleasure. But the public has a right to interfere when the gambler's folly" affects the property and prosperity of everybody else. The "New Deal" promised by this Administration has ended many evils and abuses. Why should it tolerate the evil that waa chiefly responsible for the destruction of the old order? Killing ants in the kitchen does little good if you don't find the ant hill in the yard.

Copyright, 1933 the local news pubiisnea nerem. publication ol special dispatches are also reservea. FARRIER GETS MORE Whatever one may think of the Milk Control Board and it is evident that many persons do not think much of it it has been successful in getting more money to tne farmer for his milk. After the board had been in operation for a couple of months, it was able to show it had increased the return to the stated dairy ened. What is known as the Dutch elm disease has come to this country.

The chestnut blight was allowed to progress unheeded until it had done its deadly work; The Dutch elm disease is being combatted and the hope is that it can be kept from spreading- The elm malady was first noted in Holland 13 years ago. Since it has spread to Germany, France and England. It makes the leaves wilted, yellow and brown, and in one or two years kills the tree. Infected twigs show brown streaks when cut slantwise. The disease first appeared here in 1930 and 1931 in Cleveland and Cincinnati.

The dozen trees infected were promptly cut down and burned. This year the elm tree disease has been found in northern New Jersey, 141 cases having been reported. The American elm is one of the most beautiful trees, and no trouble or expense should be spared in preserving it from destruction. All who like trees, and who does not, should be observant, and if they see any sick elms, should report the fact. Childhood's Magna Charta FRANK -By GLENN My New, York Bedtime Stories By THORNTON W.

BURGESS By JAMSS ASWEIX York a Brittle For New Slate: men by about two million aoiiars. inow comes the statement that farmers will get some $2,300,000 more for the milk they sell this month than they got in August a year ago. This is not saving that the farmer is yet getting an adequate return. Probably he is not. But it does indicate that the board has accomplished something and gives added weight to the plea of the Governor's Agricultural Advisory Commission that the board be allowed to continue at least to the end of its term.

The board was created, it should be remembered, at the request of dissatisfied dairymen. It is equally cheering news that as yet no serious milk shortage has developed in any city, with the exception of Amsterdam. Indeed, the strike is far from state-wide as has at times -been stated. The largest milk region in the state St. Lawrence and Jefferson Counties and part of Oswego as yet has not joined the strike.

Nor does it seem likely that they will. At least a responsible North Country editor says that "if the situation can be held in hand for a very few days now, we are confident that the crisis will be passed, and we feel sure that our North Country farmers will never regret that they refrained from entering upon the strike." There is little doubt that without enlarging the New York milk shed there is an abundance of milk to care for all normal needs if only the dairymen who want to deliver their milk can do so. It seems likely, further, that they will find it easier to make delivery every day. The Governor has made it plain that he expects troopers and sheriffs to "prptect life and property and maintain Peter's Coat Is Torn Folly always has a price, And paying it is never nice. Old Mother Nature.

The loneliest spot in town is the corner of Forty-second Street and Times Square on a sweltering Sunday afternoon. No, there is one lonelier the Egyptology room of the Metropolitan museum. And come to think, there's the 190th Street Subway platform, three tier under ground and five degrees cooler than the street any scorched that comes. (5) To be transported to a school if the travel distance is too great. (6) To succeed in school.

(7) To attend a school where medical and dental inspection are available without charge. (8) To attend a school where organized play is provided as a normal activity. (9) To attend a school where the love of home, the desire for its improvement and an appreciation of the good, the beautiful and the true are taught. (10) To attend a school wherry co-operative activities are taught. (11) To attend a school where appreciation of society, its struggles and its victories is made clear, and its challenge to the future made personal.

(12) To attend a school where the selection of the life work of the individual is not left to chance. (13) To attend a school where the individual is trained for his life work. (14) To' attend a school where the problems of the school come from the problems of community, 6tate and nation, and not altogether from books. Need I say that we have a long way to go before we have completed this positive half of the task of which the abolition of child labor is the negative half? Copyright, 1933 The code that the President has put to American industry is among other things, as I suggested yesterday, a new magna charta for childhood. It is now possible to make the child's bill of rights reality instead of rhetoric.

We must remember, however, that the abolition of child labor is. but the negative half of the task in hand. When we release these children from the corroding school of child labor we must see to it that they are put and kept in the creative school of child learning. It becomes important in the light of the President's leadership in this matter to recall the child's bill of rights which W. W.

Carpenter drafted some years ago but which is still valid and today peculiarly pertinent. Every American child has the right: (1) To attend school every day during the school term and to go to school the same number of days in the year as every other child. (2) To be taught by a trained teacher. (3) To go to school in a building free from fire hazard. (4) To attend school in a building that is located in a healthful environment, a building that is scientifically built and equipped, a building that is kept sanitary.

provised wrenches anyhow. I looked around the roof restaurant of the McAlpin the other evening and suddenly realized that there probably wasn't a New Yorker eating in the room. All the natives had flocked to the "out-of-the-way" and the "exotic" eateries, while around me, plying their utensils very probably in the placid belief that they were among specimen New Yorkers, were two parties of Austrians, a Hindue, a pair of French love-lorners, a Siamese notable whose name I couldn't get right from the head waiter, and a number of healthy tourists from Kansas or Missouri. FARM AND DEBTS Government payments of bonus money to wheat and cotton growers who have agreed to curtail production of those crops have been held up by the discovery that many of these growers now owe the government money for various seed, feed and crop production loans. Some 200 million dollars was ready for distribution under the acreage curtailment plan, but it now appears that farmers owe the government exactly $139,335,742, most of which is in default.

Legal minds are struggling with the problem of what to do about it. Under an old law the government has the right to deduct sums owing to it from any payment made to private individuals. One might suppose that the logical solution would be merely to let the bonus money cancel the indebtedness and pay over the remainder, if any, to the growers. But it is evident that the remainder would be so small that the growers would not feel repaid for their loss of acreage. Many cotton growers for example, in the South were quite willing to forget all about their debts to the government; certainly they would not willingly plow under a large part of their growing cotton merely to cancel an old debt.

What they want is the bonus money promised them by the government. Digging up those past debts, which many of them never expected to beasked to pay anyway, sounds somehow as if the government was letting them down. In regard to wheat, it appears as if nature was beating the government to a curtailment program. This year's crop gives promise of being the smallest in 30 years. There are still millions of bushels, however, carried over from last year, so the farm administration urges curtailment of acreage for the next year.

But the trouble with a short crop, of course, is that even with high prices farmers cannot make enough to compensate them. The old law of supply and demand has not yet been repealed. Unless my eyes are focusing badly, the gentlemen parading the fancier boulevards have something odd about their attire of late. Saw a fellow yesterday with a plaid vest, and he wasn't advertising anything. My detectives race breathless to my desk with tidings of male attire in the 1890 genre rose waistcoats, high collars, gaudy mufflers.

Three readers aske me to be sure to record here Mae West's new telescope word for what in old-fashioned 1932 was dubbed sex appeal. Mae has coined "curvaci-ous," a mating of "curves" and "vivacious." You like? Mrs. Mollison, the flyer, picks her own dresses without comment, but hubby is particular on the subject of jewelry, so she's going unadorned by metal or stone until the family jewel case can arrive here from England. This Day in Elmira Aug. 9,1923 Manhattan problem: The manager of a Thirty-fourth Street hotel was beleaguered the other day by a guest who couldn't rest through the torrid afternoon.

There was an infernal squawking going on across the street It turned out that a pet parrot had climbed out on a balcony and was making the fuss and drawing a crowd in the street below, too. Midsummer tableau: Bluecoats with resigned expressions turning on fire hydrants for the kids of the tenements to bathe. Out they swarm, as each geyser goes up, attired in everything except regulation swimming suits which they wear only in pieces or in sizes vastly too large. The cops turn the water Jn because the youngsters will unscrew the taps with im- Officer Daniel E. Curtin of the Poliee Department, dies.

Employes of the James Manu facturing Company hold outing at Brand Park. Bishop Hoban of Scranton, and other priests of Pennsylvania, attend the funeral of the late Rev. Michael H. Dunn in the St. Patrick Church.

Amos L. Bauman, Elmira Heights grocer, elected vicepresident of the New York State Retail Grocers Association. Another furbelow has opened out sensationally over the town. I refer to the cellophane umbrella, a frail and usually brightly-hued screen against the sun which, rumor goes, keeps out more of the heat if it can be kept from snagging. and have conducted sales of "Buddy Poppies" for the benefit of injured veterans annually.

Your Questions Answered DietandHealth By LOGAN CIXNDENIXG, M.D. Fifth Avenue, always jealous of its "luxury trade" rep, is growing even more snooty as business revives. A new occupant of space on the avenue had the temerity to put a small "Sale" sign in a window. Three neighbors protested within an hour. I may be wrong, but I can't remember ever having seen a price tag in a Fifth Avenue window.

You can get an answer to any answerable question of fact or information by writing to Frederick M. Kerby, question editor, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York Avenue. Washington, D. enclosing THREE cents in coin or postage stamps for reply. Medical and legal advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be made.

All other questions will receive a personal reply. All letters are confidential. You are cordially invited to make use of this free service as often as you please. Q. What is the origin of breaking a ivine glass at a Jewish' wedding A.

It is a symbol of the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem by the Romans in A. D. 70. The Jew throughout the ages have been enjoined never to forget this great tragedy of their national experience, and even in their moments of grt-est joy they are to bear it in minjj Q. When was the German War decoration "The Iron Cross" instituted? A.

In 1813 as a reward for distinguished service in the War of Liberation. It was revived for the Franco-Prussian War of 1870 and was again issued for service in the World War. Just Folks Whatever one may think of this highly controversial subject of milk, there is little sympathy for such acts of violence as have been committed. Ihis no doubt goes for many dissatisfied dairymen who would have liked to express their protest in the kind of a peaceful and entirely lawful holiday as was at first contemplated. FUSION TAivES LAGUARDIA The fusion candidate for Mayor of New York will be Fiorello H.

LaGuardia. This has been decided, although the vote was not unanimous. Representatives of the several anti-Tammany organizations held a long session, and after a six-hour canvass of the whole situation it was finally decided by the representatives of nine organizations voting for LaGuardia and two organizations dissenting. The candidacy of Major General John F. O'Ryan was withdrawn in the interests of harmony.

Judge Seabury, who conducted the legislative inquiry which resulted in disclosing a mass of evidence of Tammany misrule under Mayor Walker, and who heads a strong following of independent Democrats, favored the nomination of LaGuardia. LaGuardia has served one of the populous districts as representative in Congress during three terms, but was beaten last fall, a Democrat being elected. In Congress, LaGuardia showed great industry. He was one of the most attentive members of that body, being present upon practically all occasions. He voiced his sentiments constantly with remarkable independence.

Against his record, we tfelieve, there is no mark of dishonesty or fraud. He is aggressive, pushing, impetuous and will make a whirlwind canvass, for he knows the language of the man in the street or the man in the halls. He will handle Tammany without gloves and is so sure of himself and of his position that he will not be driven to silence through any threat or manner of intimidation. In New York the situation is one in which fire must be fought with fire. That is the sort of contest in which Fiorello H.

LaGuardia will shine. "By EDGAR GUEST EMPIRE'S FISCAL POLICY There are times when the British Empire seems the loosest of organizations; there are times when it seems to function as a surprisingly complete entity. Just now it appears to be playing the latter role. Of great interest to world finance and trade was the announcement recently signed by Neville Chamberlain, Chancellor of the Exchequer and the premiers of all the dominions with the exception of the Irish Free State, of 3. general agreement upon a "sound" fiscal policy.

Five points are emphasized in the new agreement. They are the ultimate return to a "satisfactory international gold standard," possible participation by the United States and other nations in wider stabilization agreements, neutrality between the dollar Little Miss Carol Foolish, foolish Peter Rabbit. He started with the best intentions in the world and then forgot all about them just like a lot of people you and I know. He was going to get out of Farmer Brown's garden and straight back to the dear Old Briar-patch just as fast as his legs could carry him. Yes, sir, that is what he fully intended to do when just in time Bowser the Hound drove Reddy the Fox away.

He wouldn't waste any time about it. He even made a start. Then he snatched a leaf of lettuce as he was passing the lettuce bed. Then he stopped for a second leaf. And then well, Peter always did think a great deal of his stomach.

His appetite has led him into all sorts of scrapes and probably will lead him into many more. He just can't seem to help it. That is because he is such a happy-go-lucky fellow. 'Some are born that way. So Peter, knowing that Reddy Fox had been driven far away by Bowser the Hound, decided that it would be foolish not to have a good dinner while he was in that garden, and presently he had forgotten his recent fright and narrow Sscape.

He had forgotten his good intentions about returning to the dear Old Brier-patch. He even forgot that Reddy Fox isn't the only one fond of a Rabbit dinner. He forgot everything but eating. He hopped here and there in the garden, eating a little of this and a little of that, and not even taking the trouble to sit up occasionally to look and listen. If he heard the distant hunting call of Hooty the Owl he paid no attention to it.

Perhaps he thought that if Hooty was over in the Green Forest there was no danger. Of course, there was none as long as Hooty remained in the Green Forest. Bui Hooty has big wings and they can carry him far and surprisingly fasti Peter failed to note that the next time Hooty hooted it was frorr. a point much nearer. Peter was toa much occupied in filling his stomach to heed anything else.

What It was that caused him tp look up just when he did no one will eer know. But look up he did to sae a great shadowy bird with a pair of big glaring eyes, fierce hungry eyes, staring down ct him, and two big feet, each with four toes armed with the most wicked-looking claws, just reaching for him. Hooty struck quickly, but Peter was just a wee bit quicker in dodging. He did it without thought. An action like this without thought is called instinctive.

Peter's dodging to one side was instinctive. He was wonderfully quick in doing it, but not quite quick enough; one of those sharp, wicked claws struck him just back of his right shoulder and tore his coat. Of course, when it tore his coat it tore his flesh, too. It hurt. It hurts a lot.

Peter squealed. Yes, sir, Peter squealed. It was partly from the pain and partly from fright. It was a lucky thing for Peter, a very lucky thing, that only one claw struck him. If Hooty had succeeded in driving the four claws of jnst one foot into Peter it would have been just too bad for Peter and for me, for there would.

have been no more Peter and no more Peter Rabbit stories. But only the one claw caught, and that merely made a bad tear in his coat. Peter dodged under a big cabbage leaf. at once alighted. Then began a game of hide-and-seek around the cabbages.

Peter didn't dare take to his long heels and run, for he knew that Hooty, with those big wings of his, would soon overtake him. The wound made by that wicked claw hurt dreadfully, but Peter was too busy of think of it just then. If only he could reach the place where the beets were vith their big leaves so close together he might successfully hide. "Oh, dear, why, oh why, didn't I go home to the dear Old Briar-patch while I had the chance!" moaned Peter. Copyright, 1933 The next story: "Peter Doesn't Know What to Do." Q.

Has Chicago a larger area than New York City? A. Chicago has 201.9 sq. and New York has 299.0 sq, mi. I and the franc, no commitments upon future i "win. ft mvt-" A-t, 3 a Q.

Did Robert Montgomery act the role of "Claude" in the motion picture "Today We Live?" A. Robert Young was the actor and Robert Montgomery did not ap--pear in the picture. Q. What is the meaning and de' rivation of the name Krug? A. It is a variant form of the German surname Krieger, derived from an occupation, and means "tavern-keeper," "publican." Q.

What is chewing gum made from? A. Gum chicle, paraffin, balsam of tolu, balsam of Peru, sugar, glucose, water and flavoring. Q. What is philology? A. The science of the structure and development of language.

I met Miss Carol at the Fair, A dainty miss with golden hair As lovely as a yellow rose Which in my little garden grows, And I will vow, from head to feet As delicate and just as sweet. She dropped a curtsy as we met, A gracious act I shan't forget. Now there I stood 'mid buildings proud Among a constant surging crowd Which strove to look at wonders new And all the works our wise men do, But I stood still, as past they filed, Enraptured by a little child. On all that great Enchanted Isle Was naught so wondrous as her smile. The Hall of Science fairly teemed With things accomplished men have dreamed; But still I thought amid this whirl Of marvels, here's a little girl Just eight years old who's lovelier far Than all these dazzling splendors are.

The prettiest vision at the fair Is little Carol smiling there. Copyright, 1933 Lua.ua.gmg ui. pounu. ana tne luruier-ance of every effort to raise wholesale prices. Here again is evidence of thev swing to nationalism, bound to follow the failure of the London conference to find any definite economic road the nations would follow cooperatively.

So far as we are concerned it seems definitely to link- the Canadian dollar and the pound, a matter of decided importance to American business. Q. How long is the term of a United States Senator? A. Six years. One-third of the Senate is elected every two years and the next election will be in November 1934.

Q. Where did Emma Abbott, the opera singer, get her musical education? Please name the places of her birth and death. A. She was born in Chicago, in 1849 and died at Salt Lake City, in 1891. She studied in Milan and Paris.

The baby obeys the rule of all young and vigorous organisms it is prostrated comparatively easily, but shows comparatively remarkable powers of recovery. In the matter of hot weather, for instance, comparing the baby to a person of 70, the baby will wilt under much less heat than the older organism. But once the older person is there is very little ability to come back. The baby, on the other hand, perks up on the slightest provocation and is soon as lively as ever. Heat itself it not particularly hard on most small babies, provided they get good food and remain free from intestinal disturbances.

That is why the paramount rule for the care of the baby during the summer is to boil the milk three minutes. The sovereign remedy for excessive heat is water. Inside and outside. The treatment for sunstroke is a cool (not cold) bath and prevention is accomplished in the same way. The baby's skin is its most active heat conductor.

That, of course, is true with older people also, but the baby has the advantage over us that its bare skin is more freely exposed to the air during the hot weather. See to it that the eliminating powers of the skin are not obstructed. Two or three spongings a day with lukewarm water with a little baking soda (teaspoon or less to a pint) will not be too much, and will keep the skin in good condition and help the heat loss. After drying, the baby should be powdered liberally with ordinary cornstarch. It is emphasized that the water should be lukewarm.

Not cold! In the treatment of sunstroke the employment of ice or ice cold water results in shock more severe than the prostration itself it adds shock to shock. Theh best results are obtained when the water is not too chilled, and also when the water is thrown on the body with some force, as from a hose. The latter fact may be imitated in the case of the baby, by pouring the bath water over it from a small garden watering can with fine perforations in the nozzle. The rule about cold water is applicable to sea or lake bathing of very young children. Children under five years of age should never become immersed in water under a temperature of 65 degrees Fahrenheit.

Nor should children under 10 be allowed to go in and out of the water all day long. Along the warmer beaches an hour, or two at the water's edge in the morning or afternoon is quite enough. It is distinctly dangerous to allow a child do remain in the -water until the lips and finger nails are blue. LEFT TO NEIGHBORING STATES The League of Nations, having met with 1ii.l1- 1 1 0 Q. Hoiv many times does the blue, shell crab shed before reaching maturity? A.

About 15 times. Intervals of about six days elapse at first, later about 13 days, and between the final stages, 25 days. The average in width at each shedding is one-third. Q. How can rats gnaw througi hard wood and lead pipes? A.

Rodents usually have two fronl teeth or incisors in each jaw, separated by a considerable vacant interval from the molars. These are very large, reach far back into the skull, and continue to grow as fast as theit tips or cutting edges are worn They are coated on the front with hard enamel, and as the softer dentine Clipped Views One way to assure the peace of the world would be to Arrange that a nation couldn't have another war until it had paid for the last one. American Lumberman. Q. How Many radios are there in the United States? A.

In January 1932, according to "Radio Retailing," there were approximately 16,125,000 sets in operation. Trade estimates for April 1, 932, placed the "total at 16,679,253. Q. What are the official memorial floivers of the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars? A. The National Convention of the American Legion at Cleveland, in Sept, 1920, officially adopted the poppy as its memorial flower.

A nation-wide poppy program and sale was carried on in 1921 under the joint auspices of the American.Legion and the Franco-American League-The American Legion Auxiliary officially adopted the poppy as its National Convention at Kansas City, in October, 1931, but the American Legion at its National Convention in Kansas City, on the same date abandoned the poppy and substituted the daisy as its official flower. In New Orleans, in October 1932, the American Legion re-adopted the poppy, and it has been the official flower of that organization since. During 1921-22 the Veterans of Foreign Wars adopted the poppy and trade-marked the name "Buddy Poppy," WHEN DAMS BREAK Dams are relatively not as numerous today as they were two or three generations back, when every creek had numerous little grist or sawmills along its course. But dams built now are higher, longer and confine far greater volumes of water than in that earlier period. So when a dam gives way, as one did near Denver the other day, the thought arises as to how well the great structures arising here and there throughout the country-will endure the strain, year after year, of the pressing, searching waters.

Tests have shown that a well designed modern dam has a wide factor of safety, so far as the direct thrust is concerned. Danger lies rather in" undermining or disintegration of the foundations. Water, especially water under pressure, is a great solvent and disintegrating agent. We suspect that if the great dams built and to be built are to serve safely for long years to come, careful periodic inspection will be necessary. nxue success in attempting to adjust the territorial dispute which has, led to armed conflict between Bolivia and Paraguay, now asks the four principal South American neighbors of the warring countries to use their good offices to bring about a settlement.

This jungle fighting already has brought death or injury to several thousand men. The territory in dispute, though of considerable area and ultimate possibilities, is not developed or productive at present, nor is it likely to be for a long time to come. The original Spanish rulers only vaguely fixed the boundaries of their various provinces, especially the boundaries of districts rarely visited. This left a heritage of trouble to the successor nations. This dispute must be settled some time.

A compromise would appear the best plan. It is to be hoped Argentina, Brazil, Chile and Peru will accept the invitation and work successfully to effect an agreement. of the remainder of the tooth wears awav more raoidlv. the cuso of each The theory that opposites make the happiest marriages seems to be borne out by the fact that you seldom see a family quarrel when the wife is large and the husband small. Huntsville, Times.

Several big tire companies have increased prices. Tires are specially designed to feel the effects of inflation. San Diego Union. tooth takes a chisel like edge anJjj snarpness is maimainea. Q.

Name the drummer in Guy Lombardo's orchestra. A. George Gowan. Q. What is the quota for Jewish immigrants to the U.

A. They are included in the quota, of the country from which they come A man man be telling the truth now when he says he runs things at his house. He means the "washing machine and the vacuum cleaner. Ashland Independent..

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