Newspapers / Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.) / March 31, 1949, edition 1 / Page 5
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GIVE 10c to the MARCH OF DIMES and we'll give you this BIG, FABULOUS 20-PAGE It's Interesting... It's Educational The Kiddies Will Love to Color it! Yes, it's a brand new kind of coloring book . . . with all the best loved characters of "Alice in Wonderland", plus new, modern Philco Appli ances ... all in one happy combination of easy-to-color pictures and fascinating verse. (hrrieM w.v^,rtv/ /ifitfouft Milt Ihty test/ C/ AOutrs MUST ACCOMPANY CMItPdSx Johnson Electric Co. J 128 South Main St. Phone 144 GROW ff&UW HUSW CMC/fs me ■ 5 m-O-PfP IVA/K Ful-O-Pep Rearing Plan May Save up to 30% or More on Rearing Cost This year, plan to raise your chicks on Ful-O-Pep, the feed that has produced more than half of the world's champion egg layers oi tne principal Dreeas. rui-u-Jrep chick Starter is built around wholesome, nutritious oatmeal, and fortified with nature's richest vitamin combination, Concentrated Spring Range. By following the Ful-O-Pep Restricted Feeding Plan you may save as much as 30% or more on feed cost. At the same time you raise big, profitable pullets, the kind that fill out and stay strong and productive for several years. S*« us today for your<su0£ty of Ful-O- -J: Pep Chick Starter. Farmers Federation Co-Op Marion, N. C. Old Fort, N. C. Phone 77-J Phone 91 ADVERTISE IN THE PROGRESS Best Advertising Medium Library Notes BY ALICE BRYA-N County Librarian Home Demonstration Club Mem j bers may borrow books for their! Reading Prog-ram from the library' headquarters at the Community j Building in Marion, from Commu nity Bookmobile Stations, or di rectly from the Bookmobile. Re-: quests may be made to McDowell! Public Library, by telephone, by j postcard, or by personal visits. The; library can supply all titles oil the j 1949 Home Demonstration Club Reading List. The following titles are listed on the 1949 Reading List for Home Demonstration Clubs: "Remembrance Rock" by Carl Sandburg; How to Stop Worrying and Start Living" by Dale Carnegie;1 "The Big Fisherman" by Lloyd C. Douglas; "Light in the Windows", by Mary Roberts Rinehart; "Fam ily Circle" by Cornelia Otis Skin ner; "It Was Not What I Expected" by Valentine Teal; "City Boy" by Herman Wouk; "The Family Mem bers" by Martin Yoseloff; "Shan jnon's Way" by A. J. Cronin; "Eski jmo Doctor" by Aage Gilberg; "Pil 'grim's Inn" by Elizabeth Gouge; I "Red Plush" by Guy MJcCrone; i "New Song in a Strange Land" by | Esther Warner"; "David Lilien | thai" by Wilson Whitman; "Within | the Harbor" by Sara Ware Bassett; | "Jibby the Cat" by Felix Saltan; "Woman With a Sword" by Hollis ter Noble. "The -Running of the Tide" by Esther Forbes—Story of Ma'am In man, a ship owner in the wealthy town of Salem, and her grandsons who are sea captains. "The Birth of Israel: The Drama As I Saw It" by Jorge Garcia Granados — Eye-witness account, exciting in its urgency, of what the i United Nations Special Committee Ion Palestine found in the Holy Land | and of how they decided in favor I of partition and of how Israel was born. "If I Forget Thee, A Picture Story of Modern Palestine ' by Mayor Levin—How the boy David came to Palestine, thus keeping his j promise to his father, and what he : found among his own people in the 1 Palestine of todav. I ! "Highland Heart in Nova Sco jtia" by Neil MacNeil—Kindly, en i tertaining tales of the author's rel | atives and their friends on Nova j Scotia's Cape Breton Island some forty years ago. "Iceland, New World Outpost" by j A. E. Rothery—Enthusiastic ac i count of the world's oldest democ rar»v as it is toHav with t.hp rns terns and crafts of the ages com bining with ways of the modern liv ing- i "Another Year" by R. C. Sheriff ' —story of wholesomeness and hu-! mor about a clergyman in his Lon- i don slum parish. | "Prophet in the Wilderness" by] Hermann Hagedorn—Story of Br.J Albert Schweitzer who-took up the study of medicine at thirty, after he was already established in the arts, and who went to Central Af rica as a medical missionary. "The Babe Ruth Story" by G. H. Ruth—Story of the man who rose from the Baltimore waterfront and a school for orphans and delinquents to become baseball's most famous ■md best-loved figure and the cham pion and friend of boys all over America. "Fifty Great Americans" by H. T. Schnittkind and D. L. Thomas— Biographies of fifty great modern Americans, presented in readable style. "Roses for Every Garden" by R. C. Allen—Easily understood, sen sible advice on growing roses with information on rose culture in dif ferent climates. "Jobs for Women Overy Thirty Five" by J. K. Arthur—"Recogniz ing the difficulties in starting to earn a living after thirty-five, the author suggests both jobs in which age is an advantage and those where it is a handicap. There is a chapter on taking stock of assets and liabilities." "Science, Servant of Man" by J. B. Cohen—Inside story of the scientists work, with examples as shown in the development of syn thetic rubber, nylon, plant stimu lants, k weed killers, hybrid corn, blood transfusion and others. "Everyday Miracle" by Gustav Eckstein—Sketches of animal in telligence and habits as seen in the Canaries, mice and other animals the author has cherished; Beautiful ly and humorously written. "Early Tales of the Atomic Age" by Daniel Lang—Stories of what went on behind the thick curtain of secrecy till the first atom bombs were ready, of how the physicists who turned the bomb loose feel a bout what followed, and of what the future may hold as far as this fearsome force is concerned. I "An Inheritance of Poetry" com-' piled by Gladys L. Adshead and An nie Duff—An anthology for family reading with selections based on the deep and lasting enjoymen on the, part of its compilers. "Still Water" by Katherine Burt —In the foothills of the Smoky Mountains Thomas Baird, a young musician, and his wife Ruth return to an old family mansion and to aii old mystery which takes on renewed life. Nankeen cloth is said to derive its name from Nanking, China, where it is said to have been first manu factured. Another Public Service Added We are happy to announce the addition of a new 1949 Miller Cadillac, Funeral Car, to our fleet. This gives us a complete motor service. We are in position to serve our patrons anywhere at any time, day or night, with our straight modern ambulance, and two Funeral Limousines. This new car is a Vista Grey in color and has the Beauty and Comfort that only the 1949 Cadil lac can give. Westmoreland-Hawkins Funeral Service # MARION, N. C. Phones 276 and 476 220 South Main St. (Dedicated To Community Service) 21/2 Per Cent Penalty ON TAXES AFTER APRIL 1ST Pay Your 1948 County Taxes Now and Avoid Further Penalty \ C. M. POOL, SHERIFF and TAX COLLECTOR.
Marion Progress (Marion, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 31, 1949, edition 1
5
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