HIGHWAYS closed
BY HEAVY RAINS
Western North Carolina
goads Hard Hit; Nine
Routes Blocked
KALEIGH, Aug. 13. GP> High
“ in western North CaroUna
*a affl5 today cut off Asheville
sJ“ ,he rest of the state except
Se route-U. S. 19 and 23
,,ng from the west.
'liay officials here said tra
7° from the east desiring to
* the Buncombe couny capital
re3t take state route 104 near
Jjarion and the federal highway
near MicaviUe.
Vance Baise, chief highway engi
left here shortly after noon
77 western par of the state to
“sped the damage.
,lio.h water closed U. S. 74 at
Qave, near Asheville, and near
nn Fort' it was reported, six feet
f water' swept through a railway
“Lei and washed out 70 in twc
1 . \ bridge on the same route
p!af;aid to be under two feet of
Ler near Black Mountain,
i Als0 in the Black Mountain re
- „ a steel bridge on an “import
” couniv road was said to have
Seen out. U. S. 25 near Henderson
was under water, and nearby.
s 64 was washed out. The Can
ton-Wavnesville road was under
water.
,. noon Baise was notified that
least one bridge had washed out
on Route 64 in the Toxaway area.
Route 70 at Old Fort was under
-i-ter at noon and near Ridgecrest
a Heavy slide also blocked that route.
The flood gates at Lake Lure were
opened during the morning and the
swirling waters were causing heavy
erosion on Route 74 but it was still
open to traffic at midday.
Baise listed the following routes
as closed to traffic before noon:
194 at Newland: 110 near Wood
row 191 at Mills River, with de
tour’ available over route 20; 29 at.
Elk Shoals near Spruce Pine; 19
and 23 east of Canton; 276 at Cae
sar's Head: 64 between Brevard
and Hendersonville; 64 between
Toxaway and Cashiers; and 24 at
Biltmore.
Baise said worst conditions were
reported in Henderson, Transyl
vania, Avery and Buncombe coun
ties.
The Raleigh weather bureau had
no reports of any floods and said
scattered showers were forecast
for the state generally.
New French Tribunal
Receives War Charges
RIOM, France, Aug. 13.——
The new supreme court of France
received today the Petain govern
ments general indictment of those
persons whom it accuses of lead
ing France, unprepared, into war.
These were secret preliminary
proceedings, but the charges were
reported to cover both civil and
military responsibilities. There are
clear indications that two princi
pal figures will be Edouard Dalad
ier, the premier who declared war
on Germany, and Maurice Gustave
Gamelin. the former generalissi
mo.
Flying time for a bomber be
tween LeHavre, French channel
port, and England is 21 minutes.
Time from Calais to England is
six minutes. 4
In Hollywood
BY PAUL HARRISON
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD — Behind the
screen: Authentic news is lacking
about that long conference between
Edsel Ford and Louis B. Mayer. 1
know that Metro has been figuring
on a film biography of Henry Ford.
Hollywood prefers to believe,
though, that Mayer was asking
whether the Dearborn manufactur
er could turn out a thousand Mick
ey Rooneys.
A suburban theater, long closed
for remodeling, has resumed oper
ations with a particularly unfortu
nate billing on its marquee. The
picture is “Opened by Mistake,” . .
Warning to the Warners: You’d
better begin taking precautions
now against the double-billing of
“Opened by Mistake” with Bette
Davis’ new picture, ‘The Letter'.”
Maurice Chevalier seems to
have lost every franc from his
long and thrifty saving, and Ital
ians now are enjoying his Holly
woodish villa at Nice. But he’ll
find plenty of new chances in
/ nerican pictures. Herbert Wil
cox wants him to co-star with
Anna Neagle in “No, No, Nanette.”
. - . Most of the finest players, di
rectors and musicians of France
will be refugees in this country.
Some are coming here on money
and low-pay contracts cabled by
shrewd talent agents.
* * *
The Marx Brothers’ picture, "Go
“West,” has been hitting production
snags, especially in the budget re
gion. The comedians are so wor
ried about these money troubles
that when Harpo took his reg wig
out of storage the other day he
found a lot of gray hairs in it. . . .
Now that Paul Muni has been dis
missed by Warners, his beards are
being cut down to fit John Garfield.
Paramount bosses are really
mad at Don Ameche, who walked
out on a picture after being loan
ed for it by his own studio, and
that he’ll be sued for about $175,
000 in damages . . . The west
ern star, Charles Starrett, hopes he
has found a way to get out of
horse-opera into heavier drama. He
bought Rocklen Stuart’s novel,
“Iron Men.” about an immegrant
who becomes a tycoon of Great
Lakes commerce, and is peddling
it with his own services as the
lead.
I wish the Motion Picture Relief
Fund would get that home for indi
gent movie veterans built and oc
cupied. The old-timers of this busi
ness, especially the has-beens of
the silent era, deserve not only se
curity and comfort but also shelter
for their self-respect. Not a week
passes in Hollywood now without
the engagement of a flock of old
stars and f#»atnrAd nlavprc fr»r
some new movie. Their parts may
be only one-day atmosphere bits,
for $8 or $10, but there always are
stories about how these oldsters,
broke and discouraged, have been
rescued from obscruity and are
being, given chances for a come
back. It’s cruel exploitation.
Casting about: Bob Hope, back
from that record-smashing person
al appearance swing on which a
million fans saw him, is Samuel
Goldwyn’s choice as the star in a
re .lake of ‘Whoopee,” done in 193C
which also will mark Jesse Lasky’s
reentry in production. . . . John
Barrymore has iJushed back h i s
stage tour with Elaine and remains
at 20th-Fox for ‘Falling Star.” . . .
“Nice Girl” is the title for Deanna
Durbin’s flicker in the autumn. In
cidentally, her producer, Joe Pas
ternak, has been conferring with
the George Temples and lunching
with Shirley. . . . Bette Davis will
be loaned to Goldwyn for Lillian
Heilman’s ‘‘The Little Foxes,” but
not until next yers.
Mike Curtiz recently got an
impudent communication from a
stranger, and by registered mail. It
began with criticism of his direc
tion and ended with a request for
$55. Curtiz was furious. He said,
‘Next time I read a letter like this,
I won’t even open it!” 4
18-YEAR-OLD GOLFER
READING, Pa. -AS)— Maybe a
golf champion is bom—not made.
Johnny Markel, Pennsylvania in
terscholastic champion for two
years didn’t take any chances on
mere natural ability. He’s been
practicing since he was 18 months
old.
Markel, now 18 and a senior next
year at Reading High School, ranks
with the best of Pennsylvania’s
amateur players. Winner of num
erous invitation tournaments, the
youthful Reading shot-maker top
ped his achievements by winning
the central Pennsylvania amateur
championship, the youngest winner
in the event’s 21-year history.
Markel’s father, Harry, is pro
fessional at the Berkshire country
club.
Johnny won his first title, the
Berks county junior championship,
two years ago. 4
Washout Causes Train
Derailment At Toccoa
TOCCOA, Ga., Aug. 13.—UR—A
Pullman car and a baggage car
of a Washington-to-Atlanta train
were derailed early today on the
city outskirts as a result of a
washout.
Southern railway officials as
serted no one was hurt. They said
more than 7 inches of rain within
the last twenty-four hours washed
out a culvert.
The train was delayed about two
hours.
Equipment for storing fresh
frosted foods in home basement
lockers has been developed by the
refrigeration industry. 4
More than 40 per cent of the
workers in the women’s and chil
dren’s apparel industry are em
ployed in New York state. >
U. S. ADMIRAL IS
SHANGHAI-BOUND
To Probe Reports Japs To
.Take Over British
Defenses
SHANGHAI, Aug. 13.—(ff)—Ad
miral Thomas Charles Hart, com
mander of the United States Asiatic
fleet, was reported tonight to be
making a hurried, unscheduled trip
to Shanghai from Tsingtao in con
nection with conditions arising from
Britain’s decision to withdraw her
troops from Shanghai.
It was understood he was to in
vestigate reports that the Japanese
are planning to take over the Brit
ish defense sector in the most im
portant sections of the International
Settlement as soon as the British
leave.
Admiral Hart will become the sen
ior foreign officer present and as
such is expected to preside over a
meeting of heads of the foreign
Shanghai defense forces Thursday
in which allotment of the British
zone will be considered.
Hart has been at Tsingtao, North
China port, regular summer station
of the United States naval forces in
the Orient.
The admiral will outrank Rear
Admiral Moriji Takeda, commander '
of the local Japanese naval garri
son, who otherwise would have been
senior officer as soon as the major
general commanding British troops
here had left.
‘Archies’ Flop
BY PAUL MANNING
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
LONDON—Anti-aircraft defense
has been a big disappointment in
this war.
Prior to the outbreak of hostili
ties in September, 1939, many mili
tary experts and army officers pre
dicted that the A gun, because
it had made such remarkable
strides in firing accuracy since
1917, would sweep the skies of
many planes in any future war.
Legends were built up about the
ability of the guns, firing auto
matically, to score direct hits on
targets traveling more than 200
miles per hour.
Germany officers wrote articles
for military journals in which they
said in all sincerity that any air
plane which attempted to pass the
ring of AA guns surrounding Ber
lin, Hamburg, Essen and other
points would be annihilated.
France circled Paris with anti
aircraft batteries, complete with
searchlights and sound detectors,
and felt secure against air attack.
Britain scattered AA guns around
the countryside in September and
waited.
ONLY SEVEN NAZI
PLANES DOWNED
Eventually German bombers
rnarpH nvpr Paris and T.nnHnn Prit. I
ish planes clamly flew over Berlin.
Anti-aircraft fire proved inef
fective.
And thus far in the defense of
England, of the 200 bombers which
have been brought down, anti-air
craft fire has accounted for only
seven—all during the month
of July.
Despite this record, AA guns will
play an increasingly improtant part
in Britain’s defense. For German
pilots, bombing during July with
a greater intensity as the invasion
of England entered its first stage,
know that direct hits on docks,
factories, and airfields can only be
scored by low, diving attacks.
Planes, like AA guns, can hit
what they can see. But both must
have their target well spotted.
One big lesson British AA stat
egists have learned is that a de
fended zone must be literally ring
ed with guns. Surrounding a city
or air field with a few is no good.
A screen of shells, completely cov
ering an area and exploding up to
15,000-foot altitudes, is the only real
anti-aircraft defense. London
probably the safest city in Eng
land from this viewpoint.
For every square yard of sky
over the city is covered either with
an anti-aircraft gun or a balloon.
The pom-pom, the Swedish Bo
fors, the machine gun, the three
inch, the 3.7 and the 4.5 are the
guns of England’s anti-aircraft de
fense.
Of these the multiple-barreJ
pom-pom has proved the most
effective in actua, ba.tle. Strictly
a naval weapon, the pom-pom has
time and again scored direct hits
on dive bombers, vulnerable as
they roared in a screaming
straight dive at a convoy ship.
In Spain and on the Western
Front the Swedish Bofers A gun
received lavish praise. But it still
remains a question mark under
actual battle in England.
RIFLES EFFECTIVE
FOR LOW PLANES
The machine gun, as in iai/, is
still king of the battlefield against
infantry attack. But as a defense
against low-li/ing airplanes it is
ineffective. Its cone of fire is too
small.
A battalion of marching soldiers
is more effective than machine gun
fire aginast a hedge-hopping air
plane. It was demonstrated in
pain, Finland and the Low Coun
tries that a group of soldiers firing
rifles into the air can bring a plane
down quicker because their fire
covers a wider area.
The three-inch, the 3.7 and the
4.5, Big Berthas of the A de
fense, toss fragmentation shells to
heights of 20,000, 30,000 and 40,000
feet. But like all modern AA guns
the world over, their accuracy is
negligible above 15,000 feet. 3
The deepest place in the Pacific
ocean yet found is off the island
of Mindanao, in . the Philippines
group, where a wfepth of 35,400
feet has been sounded. 4
Britain To Get 1,300 U. S.
Planes Monthly By Late 1941
WASHINGTON, Aug. 13. —W—
Arthur B. Purvis, chief British pur
chasing agent, disclosed today that
the United States had offered to
supply the British with between
1,300 and 1,400 of the 3,000 planes
monthly they had requested. De
livery of the planes, however, would
not start before "late 1940,’’ he add
ed.
Purvis said this smaller program
had been suggested by William S.
Knudsen of the defense commission.
The British wanted the larger
number starting next January, but
Knudsen suggested that they plan
Medical Care
Jy LOGAN CLENDENING, M. D.
Food, clothing, bathing, exercise
md recreation—these are the pil
ars of health for the youngster’s
second and third summers. Those
vere the traditionally dangerous
summers, but improvements in our
knowledge of hygiene, and in the
preparation of food have changed
ihat tradition.
Common sense has also come to
;he rescue, especially in the mat
ter of clothing for suummer. In
leed it applies to the older genera
;ion. I expect to see the time when
t will be just as unusual during
>ur American summers to see a
nan with a coat on as to see him
with an overcoat. And shirts cut
ow and open at the neck instead
sf four folds of linen plus neck
;ie! It is astonishing to remember
hat the sight of a little tot with
ius.t a sarong or a pair of shorts
is clothing would have been con
sidered shocking not so long ago.
Aid To The Feet
Going bare footed makes for
strong feet later on.
Screens, electric fans, refrig
jratcrs, air conditioning, shower
baths, swimmmng pools, public
parks, escape to the country in the
automobile — all these are hot
weather aids our grandfathers
knew nothing about.
The “second summer” was con
sidered dangerous because then
weaning had been accomplished
and the menace of contaminated
milk and other foods was ever pre
sent. But now no longer, with
proper milk inspection. And more
often than before with this health
impromevent weaning is over by
the first summer, so artifical feed
ing is a problem then also.
The first consideration for any
baby food is bacterial cleanliness
and here probably the greatest
safeguard of modern life has been
instituted in the Public Health in
spection of clean milk. I will dis
cuss milk as a summer beverage
in another article this week. It
should be emphasized, however,
that one of the great advances in
our experience of infant feeding is
that milk alone is not a sufficient
or ideal food. It lacks iron for one
thing and it has been found that
properly pureed vegetables in ad
dition to milk make for better nu
trition.
Feeding Adjustments
The individual infant or young
child has individual feeding needs,
especially in hot weather and it is
necessary to make periodic adjust
ments to meet special conditons.
A leaner mixture and less for
the same performance is a good
rule f o^ the human organism
well as the motor of your car when
the air is hot.
Modern industry has solved the
problem of food supply and made
it simple to take the baby or
youngster along on short summer
outings. Evaporated milk and
pureed vegetables can be carried
in their original cans, and clean
cool water in a vacuum bottle.
With correct supervision the
summer more than any other sea
son of the year offers opportunity
for physical development through
exercise. A wash tub full of water
in the back yard is a private pool
for practical purposes and jus',
as good as the ocean. 3
In Washington
By BRUCE CATTON
The News Washington
Correspondent
WASHINGTON,— Administration
political leaders are casting an an
xious eye at Chicago these days,
trying to determine whether the
big Keep America Out of W a r
rally may not result in an organiz
ed effort to swing isolationist sen
timent to support of Wendell Will
iie.
The meeting, at which the names
ef Senator Bennett Clark and
Charles A. Lindbergh were stellar
Irawing cards, germinated in a lo
:al counci^of the Veterans of For
eign Wars. It was an effort to bring
together all elements wanting to
assure non-involvement in the Eu
ropean war. Included are such di
verse supporters as the V.F.W.,
Disabled American Veterans,
League of American Mothers,
Daughters of 1812, Illinois Fed
eration of Women’s Clubs, Catho
iiaugmuis oi America, umiea
Spanish War Veterans, with dis
;inct cordiality, if not official sup
port, from Labor’s Non-Partisan
League, Father Coughlin, the
Communist Party, and various
peace and church organizations.
Some 300 organizations have
leen listed as supporters of the
Keep Out of War rally. These very
liverse elements have in common
mly the feeling that America must
lot go to war. But if they could
le persuaded that Willkie fills that
bill better than Roosevelt, they
might bear worthwhile weight on
ihe political scene.
POLITICAL ANGLE
IS DENIED
Capt. William Green Grace, 33d
Division World War veteran, who
introduced the original resolution
for the rally in his V.F.W. post,,
on a smaller number beginning “late
in 1941.”
Purvis said the proposals were
still in the study stage. He could
not predict what eventual arrange
ments might be made. He likewise
declined to say how many planes
would be delivered undei* existing
contracts.
He said he >vas here to discuss
the matter with officials and also
to introduce Charles Richard Fairey,
noted British yachtsman and air
plane manufacturer, who has come
here to assist in the purchasing
program.
denies strentiously any possible po
litical implication of the rally.
“We realize that the people who
attend will be supporting the Keep
Out of War movement for various
and maybe even contradictory rea
sons,” Captain Grace emphasized
before the meeting. "All we want
to do is to show the extent of this
sentiment, not why it exists. We
have no politics, we have no future
plans—we organized simply to
stage this rally. Nobody is going to
be allowed to use the meeting for
any other purposes than the one
stated—to demonstrate Keep Out
of War sentiment.
“As a matter of fact, we sent
invitations to the whole national
committee of both parties. Both
pledged anti-war planks. Of course,
I don’t know what response we’ll
get.”
OTHER ORGANIZATIONS
SEEK PROMINENCE
Grace admits a chance that per
manent organization might result
from the Chicago meeting, but de
nies that any such course was plan
ned. A Republican candidate for
municipal judge, prominent in the
Irish Fellowship Club, Grace se
cured the services of Avery Brun
dage as chairman "because I my
self don’t cut any ice.” He has
been actively speaking against War
involvement round Chicago for
many months, feeling strongly that
“to get involved in war would des
troy democracy and bring in the
very things we would be fighting
against. After this war there must
be one country where democratic
principles still survive.”
make capital of the Chicago rally,
There is evidence that several
POSTPONED
but Grace insisted strongly that
existing organizations may try lo
any such tieups were not intended
and would not be permitted. 4
Duplin Refunding Bond
Issue Sold At Raleigh
RALEIGH, Aug. 13.—(JP)—The
local government commission today
sold $150,000 worth of City of Fay
etteville municipal building bonds
and $30,000 City of Burlington street
improvement bonds.
The Fayetteville issue went to R.
S. Dickson and company of Charlotte
and Raleigh, Harris Trust and Sav
ings Bank of Charlotte, and the
Southern Investment company of
Charlotte, the first $114,000 at two
and one-half per cent and the rest
at two and one-fourth, with a $156
premium.
Burlington’s bonds were sold to
R. S. Dickson and company, the first
$24,000 for three per cent and the
rest for two and three-fourths, with
a $3.35 premium.
Other sales were:
Duplin county, $50,000 refunding
road and bridge bonds and $22,000
refunding school bonds, to Lewis
and Hall, Inc., of Greensboro, at
three and three-fourth per cent and
a $38 premium.
Cumberland county, $7,500 reve
nue anticipation notes, to R. S. Dick
son and company at two and one
half per cent and a $1.15 premium.
State A. F. L. Charges
Highway Wages ‘Low’
DURHAM, Aug. 13.—(A*)—The
North Carolina State Federation
of Labor adopted a resolution to
day charging the state highway
department with operating under
a wage and hour schedule “in
ferior” to that of industry.
The federation, at today’s ses
sion of its 34th annual convention
here, pledged its incoming admin
istration to seek an adjustment of
highway department wage and
hour schedules.
PEACE-MAKER
BALTIMORE, Aug. 13.—UP)—
A seaman who, witnesses said,
attempted to mediate a tavern
argument over the preparation
of a steak, was shot to death
last night.
The dead man was Benjamin
Claude Dwyer, 36, of Danville,
Va. William J. Mallon, Jr.,
proprietor of the tavern, was
held in connection with the
shooting.
Police said witnesses described
an argument between Maro Mal
donado, New York, a cook
aboard Dwyer’s vessel, and Mal
lon, over the cooking of a steak
Maldonado had ordered.
Dwver. thev said, was shot
when he sought to intervene.
The German Reich has 1,000
amateur orchestras and bands
with more than 150,000 active
members. 4
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RALEIGH
BRIEFS
STAR NEWS BUREAU
SIR WALTER HOTEL
BY HENRY AVERILL
RALEIGH, Aug. 13.—Yacation’s
over and it’s back to the daily
grind—which after all isn’t as bad
as it might be. The taking off is
fine and the mulling around is all
right, but after all the home bed
and even the office typewriter look
ed mighty good when your reporter
came back.
Despite repeated efforts to re
main strictly aloof from ‘‘shop”
during the two weeks off, your re
porter weakened on numerous oc
casions and did a bit of political
investigating in parts visited.
For instance, while in northern
Virginia, there was a meeting ol
the Orange county Young Demo
cratic club. Your Raleigh corres
pondent attended as the guest of
his nephew, the YDC club presi
dent. Orange is a strictly rural
county, in the district of Howard
Smith, rabid anti-Labor Board and
anti-New Deal congressman. There
wasn’t evident any rip, roaring en
thusiasm for Roosevelt, but it was
the consensus that the democratic
national ticket will win in Virginia
without much trouble.
Then there were several.western
North Carolina counties, in which
the republicans are beginning to
show more than ordinary pep but
even in those parts there seemed
no real idea that Wilkie can carry
North Carolina.
In east Tennessee—Gatlingburg,
to be specific—there was a res
taurant keeper who answered your
reporter’s "What do you think of
Roosevelt for a third term thus
"Hell, I never thought anything
of him for a first term. . .”
This same hard-bitten Volunteer
19c Bonded Prickley
HEAT POWDER
9c
_______
2 Dozen
Trupure Aspirin
9c
$1.00 CARDUI
79c
Republican mountaineer also
sprung the story of the dictators—
one which may not be new to all
readers of this column, but one
which struck your reporter as well
above the average.
It seems that the world’s dicta
tors were gathered for a discus
sion of which should be the dic
tator of all dictators.
“I should,” said Joe Stalin, "be
cause mine is the biggest country
and my word is law to more peo
ple.”
“No, I should,” declared Musso
lini, "I am the direct descendant
of the great Roman Emperors who
ruled the entire known world. As
their heir I am entitled to be the
dictator of all dictators.”
“I should,” quoth Hitler, "be
cause God appointed me to lead the
world into a new order. . .”
“I didn’t,” broke in Roosevelt. 4
North Carolina will b« represent
ed by enough budding officers of
the naval reserve to form a couple
of football teams when the V-7
cruises for embryo Ensigns start
on August 19 with the recruits
aboard the battleships New York,
Arkansas and Wyoming.
The 22 Tar Heels who have en
listed for the training which is ex
pected to qualify them for reserve
commissions are
Arren G. Ayers, Fairmont
James Milton Bannister, Oxford
Garland Everett Bell, Washington
Thomas Porter Caldwell, Char
lotte; James M. eVane, Toma
hawk; John B. Flynn, Washington;
James aniel Gilliland, Macon;
John R. Gordon, Winston-Salem;
William Henry Harris, Jr., Nor
wood; George Henry Jordan, Cary;
Thomas Green Lynch, Wilmington;
Herman McG Kennickell, Fetcher;
Robert H. Mann, Washington;
Preston F. Matthews, Southern
Pines; M. C. Stovall Wilmington;
Frederick I. Sutton, Jr„ Kinston;
J. E. Tyler, Roxobel; William F.
Ward, Warrenton; K. W. Wise,
ICC Grants Petition
Of Norfolk-Southern
WASHINGTON, Aug. 13.—(i<P9—
The Interstate Commerce commis
sion today authorized the Norfolk
Southern railroad to abandon about
68 miles of its Suffolk and Carolina
division and to sell its Norfolk
terminals to the Virginian railway.
The order authorized abandon
ment of 47.4 miles of line from near
Suffolk, Va., to Edenton, N. C., and
20.25 miles from Beckford junction
to Elizabeth City, N. C.
The Virginian railway has agreed
to pay 365,000 for the Suffolk ter
minals.
Cudahy Reaches N. Y.
But Is Mum On War
NEW YORK, Aug. 13.—(TP)—John
Cudahy, United States ambassador
to Belgium, who was reprimanded
by the State department last week
for expressing his views on the Bel
gian situation, returned today on
the Dixie Clipper, under instruction,
he said, “not to talk at this time.”
Asked if he had criticized the
American army he replied, "I wa*
a member of the American army
myself, and when I criticize the
American army I criticize my own
army.”
Twenty-two houses built by origi
anl pioneers still stand in Galli
polis, O., which was 150 years old
in 1940. - 4
Stumpy Point; John Wyatt, Hob
good; and Carver J. Peacock, Dur
ham. 4
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MUTUAL INSURANCE
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY SPECIALS *
I SUMMER SPECIAL CLOSE OUT “[ «| flf| PFtfH flftCjt I
25c Shn Milk, White Shoe Cleaner heave rubber ,
Bottle I fife I
$1.00 Tussy Hoi Wealher Cologne
Three Delightful Odors — Mountain
Laurel Boquet, Tropical Spice, Natural cP^P©
• Clever Lucien Lelong puts three lipsticks in a
little kit—three smart shades for you to enjoy.
Complement any costume or occasion with Tic
Tac Toe. Come in soon, while our limited quan
tity lasts.
Tic Tac Toe 3 Lipstick Kit $ J
1 GALLON HEAVY AMERICAN
MINERAL OIL. .$1.49
(GUARANTEED HIGHEST QUALITY)
SLEEP
WITHOUT DRUGS
Thousands who suffered sleepless*
ness at night, and tiredness by day,
now feel good, eat hearty and sleep
soundly, since drinking JOYANA m
milk during the day and at bedtime.
Supplies S Major Vitamins
JOYANA is a food fortified with these 5 im
portant vitamins—Vitamin A to help you re
sist colds, sinus infections, etc.... protecta
eyesight.. . needed for healthy skin. Vita
min B, needed for healthy nerves, good appe
tite and good digestion. Vitamin G log
healthy gums and teeth. Vita- ~—,
min D for strong bones. Vita
min G, a factor of great impor- ■ ^Jl |
tanee for normal health. JvWvRN
Joy ana and milk S times daily I |
gives you almost ALL these Arr^.
vitamins you need. When taken
before bedtime, JOYANA helps As* [>
prevent night hunger, a fre- f/y R
quent cause of restless sleep. ^
50 JERGENS’
Almond Rose Lotion, 2 for_50c
75c GLOVERS’
Mange Medicine.59c
60c *
Sal Hepalica..49c
^ RED CROSS
» PAPER TOWELS
For years the worlds finest 1
[ Paper Towel
j Mn> F
X^\ 3 Big Rolls
50c giant tube old gold , With This Coupon *
MENTHOLATED J LIFEBUOY SOAP !
SHAVING CHEAM J w w \
19c j. 4i#c Cakes 19 c j
Apple Blosson SOAP
Delightful fragrance of APPLE
BLOSSON, an absolutely mild
soap, refreshing to the skin.
Regular price 10c Per CSke
This Sale In
Box oi 6 for_
$1.25
Lydia E. Pinkhams
Vegetable Comp.
89c
40c FLETCHERS'
CASTORIA
31c
>>