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iSfO Beasley’s Farm and Home Weekly, Charbtte, N. C., October 16, 1941. Page Twfl BEASLEY’S FARM and HOME EEKLY Publis.hed each Thursday in Char lotte by The Weekly Publishing Company, R. F. Beasley, President. Entered in the post office as mail of the second class, on Oct. 3, 1928. Office 219 Law Bijilding, East Trade Street. Phone 6204. Subscription Price, $1.00 per year *rhe Weekly goes to press on Thursday and is delivered in the .Charlotte post office Thursday af ternoon. Advertisements to be in serted in current issue should be received not later than Wednesday. Devoled to the upbuildinj? of the farms and homes of Mecklenburg and contiguous counties, of which Charlotte is the natural centeT. It believts this is to be accomplished through the ancient American %ir- tues of honesty, thrift, imagination, and independence, and by growing cows, hogs, poultry and the feed stuffs to be marketed through them. RUSSIA’S SUPREME HOUR The New York Times says that in this hour of Russia’s deadly peril one would have to be cold-blooded indeed to pause far an analysis of communism or an inquiry into the character of Joseph Stalin. One’s hopes and fears are with the Russian soldiers who after nearly four m0iit,iis : p,f terrific fighting are siill exchanging'blow for blow with ■'Plitler’s massed legions, A his quietus just as ef fectively from a Soviet as from a Jeffersonian bullet. Democracy has its respite, even though Stal in and his colleagues did not plan it so. The Russia of today’s firing line is manifestly not the Rus sia of 1914-18. It has progress ed in industrial power and pro ficiency, or it could not have sup ported even four months of this mechanized warfare. It is probr ably less provincial and more na tionalistic. These changes could have taken place without com munism. Whatever happens dur ing the next few days or weeks the fact that they have taken place js a fortunate thing for Britain and for the United States, and a bad thing for Hit ler. Eyen tljough, the outcome of the present battles is the defeat and withdrawal of ’ the Russian armies, the Russian soldier will still have won for the democra cies the one esseiitial of their fi nal victory—the precious gift of timie. After the victory the de mocracies will be no more toler ant than they are, now of the doctrines and practices of the Communist dictatorship. But they will owe a debt of gratitude to the Russian people, whose-es sential qualities will outlast communism. MEN IN UNIFORM Any American, says the Chris- tion Science Monitor, who has been in one of his Atlantic port cities on a day or an evening when several ships of the fleet are anchored in the harbor must cerf^nly have b6en impressed first, the presence of. so- many men in uniform walking the streets or gathering in groups on str,eet corners; and, second, the splendid type of American manhood represented by the sailors. But when such energy is re leased in quantity, the even tenor of life on shore is very likely to be broken. Citizens can do one of two things in the face of the situation created by the increase in numbers and activity of our naval service. They can either anticipate a “blow-ofl"” when the fleet is in and provide ample po lice protection against it; or they can look forward to such a time as bringing an opportunity to exhibit^ a mature understanding of the situation. The United Service Organiza tions are doin^ the latter. Whole some and healthful sports and social activities, provision for .he individual to follow his own personal interest; these are con tributions which must be ofi'er- ed increasingly for the boys in the service. And it is well to remember that a, wise and gen erous execution of such a ser vice program must know ^yhen to leave the “boys” alone. Few of, us like to be “done gOod to.” We do appreciate having available opportunities for doing good. Men in uniform are like that, too. has happended in the world since' the first great war and even dur ing that war. Wars are no lon ger matters of boundaries, but of world systems. Hitler de fines the issue to be the destruc tion of his way or of ours. So much for our relations with Europe. But the.new world sys tem which is to take the place of our system does not stop in Europe, or on the shores of the Atlantic. In the east Japan sits poised now wa’iting for the com plete success of her partners in Europe. So long as that conflict is undecided, fear of America and England keeps Japan from moving. With England overcome, and we engaged in that mythical defense of our own borders on the Atlantic, with all our naval force pulled to this sphere, Ja pan proposes to immediately set up her new order in east Asia, for total collaboration with her partners in Europe, Asia and Africa. Among her first moves one would be for colonization in South America from the Pacific side to meet a like colonization and penetration of eastern South America by Germany. The people of America who talk of making peace with Hitler are composed, mostly of two classes, the simple minded people who do not look beyond the surface and the' ideal conception of peace on the one hand, and the various classes who have some personal reason for talking that way. In this class fall the politicians who expect to make capital for them selves, the people who hate the one side or love the other sO much that they are blinded to all other than their loves and hates, and the general rag tag and bob tail who expect or are already receiving some personal aggrandisement. You hear people say the Com munists are no better than the Nazis. Perhaps they are not. In this country both are the slum that have been floating to the surface by taking advantage of the freedom of Arnerica and the bewilderment of the simple minded, to do what they could to capture power in America. Both are servants of foreign masters and both are traitors to this country in which they have found shelter. But with Stalin the continued master of Russia America can still have peace and pursue its own way, while with Hitler master of Europe and the seas nobody could have any peacejexcept the peace of slavery and the total overlordship, of Germany. Stalin is .fighting in defense of his own system ^nd his own country and everything he is able to do in crippling Hit ler takes that much burden off our own shoulders for the future, because we can have no peace till Hitler is destroyed. To falter in support of Russia on the ground th^t there is no religious freedom or other free doms there is mere quibbling, following the emotions, not, rea son. There can be no peace till Hitler is destroyed. Any other talk is the prattle of children, not the conversation of men. Henry Fard’s naive proposal to “get the boys out of the trenches by Christmas’J had more reason in it than is con tained in any talk of a peace with Hitler. Then the conception of war was the old idea built up under international law. Then i wars were fought by armies in the field, when one side was over come a peace was made which each side would keep while rer turning to its own way of life. Hitler never has proposed a peace of this kind and could not make one if he wished to. Peace with him is only to secure ad vantage for another, aggres sion. That is the only kind of peace he would or could rnake, and the moment his enemies laid down their arms it would be bro ken. No country that still has arm."’ ics hands can lay,them down until Hitler is destroyed.; AS ONE EDITOR SEES IT By R. P. BEASLEY SOME ONE phones in to ask if Rev. Tom Bost, the RaMgh newspaper ma.n, is a regular preacher and if so what church is he pastor of. The editor was able to give the informa tion only in a general way, saying that while Mr. BoSt is ah Episcopa lian, he is geher&lly regarded as what Mr. Archibald Johnson used to call a blockade preacher, that is, one who has no particular assignment and kind of runs his own show. While Tom can preach as good an Episcopal sermon as anybody, he is never short on effectiveness when he happens to be called to break the word for a Bap tist or Methodist congregation. We don’t know, of course, but we are in clined to fancy that should he find himself before a Presbyterian con gregation, he might, as David did when he put on the armor of Saul, find the harness a little tight. If Tom were called to preach at Drumtochty, and Elizabeth McFadden, the seiraon taster, were still in her place in the congregation, she, might find some trouble in properly cataloging his firstly, secondly and thirdly. But Tom’s preaching forum is larger than any pulpit from which oral discourses eminate. His real pulpit is the S’uni day colums of the, Greensboro N'ews, which have carried a sermon with a scripture text for many years. We don’t see the Greensboro News any more, but asstmie that Toon still preaches in it every Sunday. All of Tom’s theology suits us but some^ times wte have a little difficulty in lin ing it up with the text. THERE’S MORE action and less news in the army maneuvers than anything of like scale that we have ever observed. The dailies are labo- I'iously threshing over old straw and trying' desperately to give a news flavor to the airoy corps, army divisr ions, and army movements. ' But no^ body opens the paper and says, “Gee- whiz, looka here.” The fact is that what the armies are doing furnishes little more news' than any othelr \vork- a-day business carried on in routine from day to day and W6ek to ‘ W6ek. They are doing the day’s work in preparation and while the presence io£ the iarmy and its vast machinery is highly interesting to people, no news paper writer ha?, yet been able to pro duce a striking story about it. AUNTIE PUT OUT THE WHITE FUG Had Nothing To Do With This War; Good Stories of Soldiers in the Feld (Special to The Journal) ‘ First Army Public Relations Divis ion, Camden, Oct. 9.—Some folks take these I Army Corps maneuvers pretty seriously here in the Carolinas. ■ Members of Go. M, 117th Inf., were advancing toward a cotton field cabin one moon-lit night during last week’s opening problem when they were sur prised to sep a white flag waving mad ly from a pole in fi'ont of the house. A scout, sent forward to investigate the possibility of occupation by neu tral umpires, knocked on the door of the cabin. The door opened slowly — and a' rather aged, and visibly shaken color ed mammy peeked out. Questioned about the flag, she explained: That she had put the flag there' That it was there to si^ify that she wasn’t “doin’ no scrappin’.” And that she ‘fwarn’t mad at nobody,” and was: figuring to remain strictly neutral. And that she had been praying most of the night she wouldn’t be shot, and was going to go “rig^ht on a-prayin’.” Although the .soldiers ,carefully pointed out that there was to be no real shooting in this “war,” on the following morning the flag was still there. THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON By REV. H. C. PENINGER (For October 19, 1941) | God. Intakes the transforming power Our lesson for next Sunday is tak- of the noly spirit to remake a man. en from four different scriptures, all , The office of the holy spirit does not relative to the same subject, the stop with regeneration. But as on the SQUIRREL DRAFTEE Pvt. “Chubby” Squirrel, draftee, likes Army life so well you couldn’t induce him to go “over the hill.” . Pressed into, military se;^?jce by men: of-the 117th Inf., when he was pulled: from the top of a pine tree near Camp Jackson, Pvt. “Chubby’ now has a free ; Wsh, wherever the outfit happens to light during its moves.' Pi’esented as a pet to Maj. Paul R. Brooks of Knoxville, Tenn.,( 1st Bat talion executive officer, the little fel low has been given over to the care of a Chattanoogaj .Tenn., : selectee. Pvt. Carter Glass. “Chubby” is pulling through-the I Army maneuvers rather comfortably, thank you. He spends most of the time in Pvt. Glass’ left shiii; pocket or at the bot tom' of the major’s slee^ng bag. STATE OF MECKLENBURG STARTS ON PAGE ONE COMMENTS ON LIFE OF ARDREY STARTS ON ?AGE ONE PEACE FROM ONE SOURCE ONLY— STARTS ON PAGE ONE to a militarism as strong and lasting as that of Germany. The idea that Hitler, in full 'posses sion of Europe and the seas, colild,' or would go his way and* leave us,, to go ours is childish, ignores .everything that Pineville.' The Ai'drev clan was of the old Scotch-Irish stock. Originally its members were Presbyterians but Cfep- tain Ardrey was a Methodist. He and scores Of other Providence townshiil leaders helped to build and maintain Harrison Methodist J]pis'eop&l church. In writing about the Ardrey diary I just touched high spots, leaving enough facts to'make an interesting history of a very fine old community. SILENT SHOOTING There is the story, too, of an aged negro who was watching the can noneers of a 155 mm. battery loading one of the big guns with adummy shell, then standing clear. The gunner raised one, the other holding the firing lanyard. Lieut. W.ar- ren issued the command to fire. The g-ijnneiv'yanked the lanyard, and the flripg' mechanism responded ..with a sha|;p click. The old negro took- his hands away from his .ears, tirid turned to Lieut. \V,;vvren., , ■ ■ , ' “She doja’,t make much noise, do.she,^ Boss?” he,^3ked. : lenburg will hold its 154th stated «ete- siOn beginning at 10 a. m; on Tues day, October 21st. Dr. Henry W. Mc Laughlin, director of rural s church work and Sunday school extension, will, at the request of Mr. Rufus A; Grier,, preach the opening sermon. Rev. W. H. Johnston,' stated clerk, has released a docket which calls, for the Presbyterial comrnunion follow ing the stermon. Rev. C. C. . Beam, superintendent x)f the Presbyterian hospital, has been nominated _ for rno'deratoi'. The following ministers expect to be present for reception in to the Presbytery: Rev. Wm. A. Brown and Dr. Lacy L. Little; Three candidates for the ministry will ask to be taken under care of the Pres bytery: Ed g'ar C; Goodwin, Jr., Jack Thomas Mioore, and Oren Moore, Jr., Reports from permanent commit tees are scheduled to be heard as fol lows: Assembly’s home missions, Rev. M. R. Gibson, chairman; Synod’s home missions, Rev. J. P. H. McNatt, chait-man; Bible cause, .Rev. E. V. Wiley, chairman; educational institu- tions\ Dr. C. E. Whitely, chairman. There will be a popular meeting in the interest of the Orphan’s Home, the report being presented by Dr. J. M. Walker, chairman. The stewardship committee wiU make a partial report. It is expected that a petition for the organization of a new Presbyterian church in the Selwyn Avenue-'Club Colony section of Charlotte will be presented. Rev. 'J. E. McJunkin is the pastor of . the host church; Hopewell is. lo cated on the Beatty’s'Ford road elev en mile® northwest of Charlotte. 'Thoseicoming from, some sections of the Presbytery will find it good to eome by DaVidSoni the pastor states;., Mecklenburg Presbytery is compos ed of Mecklenburg, Union, Anson, Richmond, Montgomery and Stanly counties. There are within its bounds ‘94 churches consisting of 18,553 members. > APPLES AND LIQUOR All about over Charlotte' you may see truck loads of apples parked for retail sale. Orte truck load was not so innocent as it looked. Federal reVe^ nue men evidently had a scent on' it. They pOunCed down on it, arrested three rhen in charge and unearthed 70 gallons of liquor hid away under the apples. During the same day Judge Webb’s Federal court disposed of 20- liquor cases, most of them from Mecklenburg. REPUBLICAN LEADER Right on the eve of the visit here of Minroity Leader Martin of Massa chusetts, the Republican Women’s club'of Charlotte passed a resolution endorsing President Roosevelt’s for eign policy. • ' Mr. i'Martin will -speak at other points in the 'state ’Friday' of next week rand icome to Charlotte on Sat urday and will speak- at a rally at ,three o’clock and at a 'dinner in Char lotte. Hotel, at seven o’clock. LADY MADE HAPPY A lady from Rock Hillv S. C., who recently visited the base camp of the 60th . Inf. Regti, touched the heai’t of an officer to wJiqm she spoke as she was leaving the camp. “My boy left for the ■ army ..last month,” she said with a catch in her throat. - . “I have been erying myself to sleep very nearly'every night since. Today was the first chance I have had to see what the army is really like, and yoij can’t know how relieved I, am. I talkr ed to your general, and a kinder ma^i I have never met. ., 1 “I looked at tents just like the on^ my boy is sleeping iny arid they, were neat and clean and. comfortable. J tasted the food arid if was good. And just now- I found a boy vv^o looke4 like.jny Joe. I took him to the side-, “.‘Tell me,, son,’ I said, ‘do you like the army ? “ ‘Lady,’ he replied, ‘it’s swell.’ " ,. “God blf sg ,you, sir^; fOr making an old lady happy.” | ROUTED BY GOBBLER A turkey gobbleir succeeded, dwin^ the opening battle oi I Army C.brpS maneuvers this week, where artillery barrages,, and machine-gun. fire 'had failed, ile stopped t}ie advance of Col E.;,„; '1, , Sgt. Eddie Girtman,,of :Co. E, 121st Inf.,; was leading his men p^t a^ wood4 :.ed ^area when they chanqed upon ft flock of turkeys vi^ith the big fellow at their.; head., Both sides . halted t6 size up the- situation. The turk, as ij; transpired, was a character of action!. He dharged, bending his initial off fensive upon Pvt. Joe Grinej:. Joe. swung a lusty riflebutt, ,yelled for help, and the battle was ori. Five minutes later Brother Gobble' triumphantly strutted from the fiel of battle, with his flock of hens in front of him. Co. E was in a mas? rOiit. . . , ! Sgt. Girtman rallied his patrol and pushed on, wondering why they could not sihiulate turkeys in this man’^ “war.” w'ork of the holy spirit and the new. birth. My readers' of course remember that for the last two lessons much has been said about the first and sec ond persons of the Godhead. In this lesson we are to study the holy spirit who is the third person of the Trin ity. In beginning I will say that we hear very littlfe said from the pulpit these days about the holy spirit. Just why our pastors say so little about it, I don’t know. Not many of them mention it in their public prayers. I feel like this is one part of the Holy Ti’inity that people should be taught and told about. But we must not think of it as an influence which God has sent abroad out into the world but as a distinct person which has come forth from God for he possesses the same attributes as God the Father and God the son. He is just as much divine as God the Father and God the Son. The Holy Spirit has been in the world since the day "of creation. At that time he brooded upon the face of the , waters and had a part in the work of creation. In the days of the prophets he was among men to lead, guide and direct the affairs of the kingdom. He was also present when Christ was in the world among men. Gn all of these occasions the holy spirit was present and had his spe cial office to fill. Since the day of Pentecost, he has been in the world every rriinute and every hour of the day, 365 days of the year. This time he is here as Christ’s representative ar,long the people and he is the per- soh through whom the powder of the Go,dhead is transmitted. It is by and through the holy spirit that you and I get to God. Vain and sacriligious is that person who ti'ies to approach the Father / in any other way. In this present lesson we first see him in the office of regeneration. It is through him that sinners are born into the kingdom of God. Except a man be. born of the water apd of the spirit. These are the words of Christ and they show plainly that the nev^? birth '\yhich is the birth of the spirit is absolutely essential to soul saving salvation. . The feeling that takes place in the heart as a result of the new birth is far more than a psychological, men tal and physical experience. I know it is true that .psychology can some times do wonderful things. But it cannot do for a man in a lifetime .what the new birth can do in one second. Training, education and psy chology m.ay conti^^ a man and thus lead him along the paths of a better life, but it can never transform his .ftature and bring him into a complete submission to the rule and will of cleaned up ? Then you must pfay to God for pardon for sin. Now here it is: has the burden rolled away,? I? their joy in your heart? Do you feel at peace with God ? Are you ready to die tonight? If so, then you have been born again. If there is any doubt about these things then you had better settle it before the sun goes dowm today. day of Pentecost, he cleanses and fills men with power both for service and for testimony. The holy spirit also helps us to pray. Apart from him we cannot pray aright. The holy spirit helps us to pray according to the- Father’s will. He also helps us td pray with faith, believing that God will come to our rescue and answer, prayers that are in reasOn and ac cording, to His will. We now come to the second part of the lesson, w’hich is taken from Christ’s conversation with, Nicodemus. I must'say here and now that almost every church creed in this day of modernism has its way and plan of accepting Christ. But these words of Jesus to Nicodemus forever bar any other plan or method of entrance to the kingdom of heaven. Every sane person who comes to God must come by way of a transformirig experience. It is the only possible approach to the kingdom of God. The man who Would enter must be born of water and of the spirit. As I study this great lesson it occurs to me that the mind of Nicodemus was unpreparecj for this kind of teaching on the part of Christ. The same thing is true to day. When I talk to people about the things of the world they hear mp. But when I mention the new birth or say anything about the welfare of their souls they at once become silent and dumb arid look off sottie other way. . At first Nicodemus. .misread the Master’s words and topk them to mean a physical rebirth at which he showed great astonishment at this most unusual thing. Then Christ Warned him against allowirig himself or his faith to be impaired by the reality of such a birth. Since my space is growing short I can not fin ish the lesson. I was called on once to explain the new birth, or, being born again. A^ I close this lesson I will do this now to the best of my ability and with the help of the holy spirit. First,, before anyone can get to God he must be convicted of his life of sin. In other words, a man must see his need of a Saviour. He. must see himself away from God, I’uin^d and lost. In other words, he rnu^t become scared. He must be afraid to live any longer in sin. This is con viction. Reader, were you convicted this way, if not then sorjiething is wrong. Then you must sanctify. That is, you must clean up your life. You must be willing to quit all your bad habits. The Old Bible term, .for sanc tification was to clean up, clean oft, and clean out. Neither Christ nor the disciples ever changed or vetOed its meaning. Church member, have yoU sanctified^? In other words, have you ROB POSTOFFICE BY MISUSING THE FRANKING RIGHTS STARTS ON page ONE Viereck utilized certain congressmen for free disseitiination of his ariti- British material, and had their‘"'as" ' sistance in getting into the 'Congres sional Record. Said to be named in the grapd;jury records are Stephen A. Day (*R5 of Illinois, congressman-at-laV^e;. ^ D. Holt, :^ormeis d,emocratic senator from West Virginia, and Ernest C|in- deen, the late farmer-labdr senator from Minnesota, kille^ in ?in airplane crash in August, 1940. Mr. Veireck prepai’ed, wrote, revis ed and edited do(j.uments and manu scripts for members, of both houses of congress, it is charged, arid is to have fiinanced a^id . controlled the publishing house of Flariders .Kail, Inc., located in New Jersey, from which a stream, of anti-British, pro- German material flowed. Mr. Viereck’s connection "with Mr. Dennett came in his alleged help, in organizing the Make Europ^ Pa^ War Debts comriiittee, to which he d? ,as serted to have contributed larg6 siiiiris for maintenance, and the’Islkliiid^ ,for • War . Debts coriimittee, wi1;h which Mr. Dennett, head of a ’Wa^hjngt)n press service arid publicity a^eAcy, is connected. , ' ‘;' Mr. Viereck, born in Munich'and brought to Anrierica kt ll, "^hei^ he was naturalized^ autoi^aticalljf, adrriit- ted before a corigressiOnal (SoWifhittee in 1934 that he had redeived;'|2i000 in the World War froirt consul to do public rei^tiflng ^ ^rk favorable to GefWiany, -Chifr^ prsesent question is wherelhis funds. Human tntereit STARTS ON PAGE ONBi Russia sh6uM not b^, iridluded. Morgan Blake, colujton’ist oft ^ the Atlarita Jouriial, surils up riitic’h that is going on as follows: “Once more the fearftil of the‘ Hrin, ' Are sweeriirig on with 'ftity -kti4 with might; , . f Once tkove each daily Sirikirtg Qi ' the sun . Finds more domains a vie^timi of their blight; ^ pur allies reer again ’rieilth iJlow ^ on blow, In vain they fight to stojfi' the hated f(«; , . . The skies are dark and gri’fi^ dis asters stalk; White ov^l* he»^ w’e talk »nd%talk find" i HlTLER^AND THfeai" j One story .going the rounds p^the Carolina maneuvers area illustrate;s the realism, which the,! Ajrmy Corps is .putting into its practice “war.” The tale comes frorp the 36th Field Ar tillery, a Fort Bragg outfit, coriiriiand- ed ,by Col. Walter W. Hess. jr. Five-year old Binnie Grover ;Roof was watching Capt; George E. Halli- day lead his battery of .455 pinj. .guns into position near Blackstock, S. C. The roar of the heavy tractors fright ened. Binnie; he ran into the house of a neighbor, Mrs. J. C. Forr, and hid behind,the stove, i ,.. . , , . ‘fWhat’s, the matter, Binnie ? ” asked Mrs. Forr. “I’m scared,” Binnie quavered. i‘‘Hitlei^ and, them,- is done in the pas ture a^fightin’”. SODA POP CASUALTY ■ All that Pvt. Jack McLoughan’s generosity brought,him was a severe cafee of cramps. . i ; Private'McCloughan, of Somerville, N, J., 'Vvith fellow members of Bat tery E 86th Field (Artillery of Fort Bragg, is encamped for I army Corps maneiiVters near Che^er. The other night ne offered tct* g-o after cold drinks for himself ''and four tent mates.: McCloughan,i;a generous lad, bought two for each, te'ri in all. ; An hour later, one of his tefet mates, Corp. Bill Fiederlein, fourid him doubled, up in agony, outside the camp. . : ' It seems that a hardhearted military policeman had refused to let him into the camp area with his ten opened soda bottles. Rather than throw away ten drinks — Private McCloughan feels better to day. A jeep—Army midget car — has joined automotive . exhibits ,• in . the Smitihsonian Institute lat: Washington; At, spme British bJihies, children are.'®iv6j| a special black current syr- ' Upy iyeported to contaia Ifive times b-s ' witamin C ,as oifange julco. * BUT YOU AiWAVS USED TO START RUBetNG YOUR EYES AFTER TV^E FIRST CHAPTER MO EYESTRAIN WITH THIS LAMP VE nearly FINISHED THE BOOK %:■ I reduce t ■I: '■i; DIRiCT-INDIRECT LAMP Hew models of the direct-indirect lamp hav« a glass reflector especialljr adipted for a MAZDA Indirect Three-Llte lamp which ClveS three levels of Jllnmlnation h’om th« same bulb. Besides, throwing light against the cefiing for general lliumination. the glass reflector permits ,ami»le direct, downward light. For more severe visual tasks, add th#* light fr^m three cAndles beneath the shadCf taking 40 or 60 Watt MAZDA lamps- IMPORTANT- B« >ur* to look for ^ aulfieriiaci cibrtlflcatfon tag eii th* tamp you boy. II 1«b’» an I. B. $. Sight Lamp if H doatn’t hav« tki« tog. eyestrain These amazing new :I. E. S.-S^tt«r Sight Lamps ... that cost'only » cent or two evenin*, to . . . are sciehtiflcany diadgnfd. iSr comfortable seeing and. help'ito-'pre- vent eyestrain. They come in at tractive styles in both floor abd ta ble models. ' ' The lamp shown Is a direct-indifect lamp- It throws, light direotlr- (bo your book and at ,th# saiti* Hini floods the room with a gent^rbui quantity of indirect light . from harhifuli shadow* and annoy ing glare. And they cost ao Vary little to buy and operate, I. E, S. FLOOR |iA*^S $7.95 to 111.95 Kc Cash |1 Per MMkth L E, 8. STUD! I4.M t: SOe Cask ^ PtN-TO-WAU. 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Beasley’s Farm and Home Weekly (Charlotte, N.C.)
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Oct. 16, 1941, edition 1
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