BRAND-SPANKING NEW MOME FOR SALE , On the Highlajids-Dillard Road, a new, modern home on about 3 acres located in the mountains overlooking Little Tennessee River Valley. Living room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms, tile bath ad screened porch. Kitchen well equipped ? Youingstown cabinets, Hot Point stove, refrigerator, automatic hot water heater; floor furnace for year-around comfort. Attached garage. Price to sell at $14,000 on account of death of owner. Call, write or wire HENRY H. ROBINSON AdamvCates Co., Realtors 201 Hurt Building, Atlanta, Ga. YVAlnut 5471 "rreed your COWS THIS EASIER WAV /\ When you have a cow to be bred phone us for Proved Sire Service. It'l fast, economical, convenient, lafe. Macon County Artificial Breeders Assn. Now Grandma HEARS Again with nothing in her Ear If you are hard of hearing? no matter what your age? it may be possible to hear even whis pers again? without a hearing aid in either ear! The amazing new Acousticon Contact Re ceiver invention, that is worn behind the ear, has enabled thousands to hear with clarity and comfort . . . without so-called "invisible" earpieces . . . without a headband . . . without pressure of ANY kind. Discover for yourself what it means to hear again that wonderful world of sound you once knew. Send this coupon for com plete information. Acousticon-Asheville Company 905 Jackson Bldg. Asheville, N. C. Tel. 2-1311 Easy Budget Terms Available The Acousticon Super-X-Ear transmitter is as beautiful and tiny as a fine piece of jewelry. You can wear it on your wrist, slip it in your watch pocket, wear it with a brooch or tie clasp ?it is inconspicuous. Yet this electronic marvel is so powerful and so clear toned, its hearing performance will amaze you. Batterlr- "'.loriei and Repairs for all .. _s of Hearing Aids FREE HEARING AID CLINIC THE FRANKLIN TERRACE HOTEL Franklin, N. C. Monday, July 28, 1952 From 10:00 a. m. to 2:00 p. m. 'RY ANT'S MATTRESS SALI Three Days Only $14.55 For Your Old Mattress or Spring Replace your old mattress and spring with a Peerless Champion Springfield Mattress and matching Box Spring. . . .? Made by the makers of famous Peerless Quality Bedding. $49.50 Each-Less $14.55 For Your Old Muliiiss or E;x S. ring YOU PAY Compare these QUALITY FEATURES ? NACHMAN PERMFORM Spring Unit ? No sagging edges. ? Stitched Sisal Padding over spe cial spring cover ? No cupping ? No Spring "Feel". ? Layer upon layer of soft felt cotton. ? Vertical stitch prebuilt border. ? Convenient reinforced handles. ? Beautifully taped edges. ? Outstanding designs ? long . weening covers. Your old mattress and spring is worth $14.55 at BRYANT'S Stalemate Continued From Editorial Pace possibility into account. And undoubtedly they have given thought to the military importance of seeing to it that such a war is started at a time and under circumstances most favorable to lis. That can be brought about only if we start the war! * * + Day after day, for more than a year now, we have been trying to arrange a truce to end the fighting in Korea. Before that, we had been trying, for six years, to work out a live-and-let-live ar rangement with Soviet Russia. Those efforts proved as fruitless as have the negotiati ins at I'anmum jom. And sO we are at a diplomatic, as well as mili tary stalemate; it seems obvious that it is impos sible to deal with the Russian government. If we cannot deal with the Kremlin, if. the mast ers of the Russian people not want peace, what hope is there? There appears to be only me ? that we can deal with the Russian people. That, it will be said, has been and is being tried; it for we have such instruments as the Voice of Amer ica and Radio Free l'.nrope to tell the Russian peo ple the truth. That is (rue. It also is true that, generally speak ing, the Communist propaganda deals in half truths and lies and ours in fact's. Hut that does not remove the basic weakness of the messages beam ed by the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe , ? that these messages are propaganda, pure and simple. They arc as much a part of our struggle with the Kremlin as are armies and navies and air forces; the only difference is that these propaganda agencies use ii" e the solution? Rut it would not work if it were mere clever, propaganda. It would not ring true if its purpose were simply to win the cold war for the l*ni'.',d States. Such a message, unless it carie from the heart, would be the sheerest hypocrisy ? and would boomerang. ? ? t 1 It would work only if it were really meant. It would work only if those who sent the message t were seeking not victory for America, but peace for . all mankind. It would work only if they were as | anxious to save Russian lives as American; if they thought of Russians and Americans as equal sons of God. It would work only if those things were true, be cause one of the paradoxes of Christianity is that a man can win only by losing. And another, that Christianity is a positive force only when it is an imated by the spirit of "love thy neighbor as thy self*. * * * r All the schemes of all the so-called practical men" have been tried, time and time and time a.^ain ? and always they have betrayed us into war. A man-to-man application of the principles, of Christianity to international problems ha-;, at the | least, the virtue of never having been tried. This Week With " Continued From Editorial Page J milk, self-rising flour, and tur- _ | nip greens'. < | Following are some questions .and answers on corn meal: f ? Q. Why do we need enriched 1 corn meal? i A. Enriched corn meal will | cdntribute to better health. ' One-third of the cereal foods | eaten in North Carolina are | made from corn. Q. What Is enriched corn meal? A. It is corn meal to which] extra food value has been added t] In the form of vitamins and L minerals. I _ Q. Is the enrichment of corn . v meal something like the en- , * rlchment of flour? ? A. Yes. The enrichment of o both la recommended by lead- j, lng doctors and nutritionists. I Q. Does enriched com meal 1 and grits, look, taste, and cook 1 differently? 1 1 A. No. Just like other corn ! ? meal and grits. Q. How Is corn meal enrich- | ed? A. By the use of a little ma chine which mixes the enrich- | ment Into the meal as it j streams out of the mill. Q. Will enriched corn meal and grits help to protect ] health? | i A. Yes, the added vitamins i and minerals will help to pre- j 1 vent pellagra, anemia, and oth- j ' er nutritional diseases. Q. Flour is enriched. Then ' why Is it necessary to enrich corn meal and grit^? A, Because many people eat littte flour and bread and much com meal and grits, so they do not benefit from the en riched flour. Q. Does whole corn meal need ?enrichment. j A. Yes, asm lacks by nature ?enough of several important : food values which enrichment ? adds. Com requires unusually 'large amatnts of niacin from [other sources for Its complete jfdigestion. Q. Have degerminated corn meal and grits lost vitamins and minerals in the milling process? A. Yes. North Carolina laws ? require tte enrichment of de | germiratat com meal and grits, ; but net that made from the | whole coee . | Q. How' much does it cost to j enrich nasal? ' A. About 1 cents per bushel. ! Q. Why are we establishing j a com meal enrichment pro i gram in North Carolina? A. We hope that North Caro- I 1 K1CTLY PERSONAL By WEIMAR JONKS -Continued From Page 2 trangely, it Is the newspapers lat prate loudest, on their eti orial pages, about "human lgnity" that most insistently jfuse, in their news columns, 3 accord this bit of recognition f the dignity of the individual. And why "Mary Jones" rather ban "Miss Mary Jones"? Why, specially, when the same pa er, in the same paragraph, ays "Mrs. Ruth Brown ? If hey're going to put the Mrs. n to show that Ruth Brown s married, why not the Miss fo llow that Mary Jones isn't? Jesides, what difference does ler marital state make to the iverage reader? Who cares? And why, a thousand times why, when a reporter is writ ing about a man, does he ?o? out of his way to refer to the man's wife, and call her "Ann" or "Sue" or "Jane"'? Why not simply "Mrs. Smith"? Scores of recent news stories lbout General Eisenhower have made a point of referring to Mrs. Eisenhower, but nev-.r f^at ?'ay. Always it has been | "his wife, Mamie", or just "Mf.~\e". it's a bit impertinent, it '?m to me; certainly it is silly. SP This column referred' rec ently to the use of "evening ' lor afternoon and other old moun tain expressions. To these, Paul Carpenter adds one: "They run the shoat over me". It nreans, he explained, that' a mas is overwhelmed by some-, thing. Who knows how that, ones sterted? Lisa will eat only enriched com meal and grits and that millers will make only enriched. opXD. meal and grits. - JUMBO Tw* A*! S wpoww ? ?'WMKY wWMadl I ?val-b?Mnhi? wi*m> j AUCTION SALE The following Farm Equipment v'l? tn "old for cash on grounds afte:* rale of L. Simmons Stock Farm: One Case trac';or \ One Bogg and Brush h-nr.ow | One disc harrow * One side delivery rake One hay loader ! One manure spreader ' One ham-n^r m il One complete haydrvrrg out:lt One tractor plow One 120 gallon mil?: cooler 29 tons or more of new hay And other farm implements Cyclone Realty Co. . Selling Agents FOREST CITY, N. C.