FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1M THE TVATNESVTLLE MOUNTAINEER PAGE THREE Third Seeti6ti) fhallenging Nature Col Qf Plant Life Used ions Regulate Extend IT 111 L'lH llll Ult: ndont .Mall tu bftOIV to ..: '. nii-'llt liril-wlli-'. , bia a nil :)(iM.'Il.-U r :.tullllt I 01. I -'I'1' M-l ! fl II- 111! t.N ll-lllS i'ik-y ,,l by ; I. It'. ,:.;lal; .it.' Illf Hie i .ic'.i- l.i-tcil Hliill lllll w 1 eiK , 1 11110 I hat 111; liy hut III ! n 1 1 " t'l, m! .id ,- .it in' tin- II. U 1 11 .In all mm and 1 11.: -.lore. ii wiukl il lunliol i,l his 1 . milalnr i-r.s llOIll ill fm.st 111 1 1 iii at ic -in make llli'l 1(1S- 1.11 would I hat is II 1 ..-as us lor their attention toward helping the military. As a result of that help, the U. S. Army today is armed with chemical powders and sprays that can be used in time of war to kill all plants in an enemy coun try. The Army has clamped an air light secrecy on the subject and won't even talk about it. Many of the "inhibiting" and stimulating" growth regulators have practical, peace-time use. Take 2,4-d. It has been used suc cessfully to kill broad-leafed weeds in fields of narrow-leafed food plants, such as sugar cane, rice, corn, wheat and rye. But it's dan gerous to use unless precautions are taken. It kills all broad-leafed plants, crop or weed. Then there is naphthaleneacetic acid. It has been used since 1939 to keep apples from dropping from trees before they ripen. And, to day it is in wide use in orchards 111 the Pacific Northwest. Must Learn "How" Agriculture scientists are trjing to refine those regulators and to concoct new and better ones. They believe the first step is to learn how they work. We still don't know what the mechanism is," said Dr. George living, assistant chief o!' agricul tural chemistry. "We must learn what happens between the time the chemical is sprayed and the. result is seen in the growing plant." Atomic power may solve the ()f iporblem by producing large quan tities 01 arioactive atoms at uaK liidge. Tenn. The chemists took radioactive iodine atoms and work ed them into the molecules of the plant regulators. The "built-in radioactivity put a "mark" on the chemical regulator. Standing by with Geiger counters, the chemists now are "tracing" the regulators, "watching" them go to work on pla nts. 'Black Widow' Can Fool Doctors By FRANK CAREY Associated Press Science Reporter WASHINGTON Surgeons have sometimes been fooled by the bite of the Black Widow spider. The excruciating pain in the abdomen produced by the bite of the venomous "widow" has at times been mistaken for the pain of some organic ailment, says Lieut. (JG) Dallas E. Billman in the Naval Medical Bulletin. Some victims of the Black Widow are subjected to need less operations, he says, as a re sult of diagnosis of acute appen dicitis or rupture. "The excruciating abdominal pain renders the patient willing tc submit to any surgical procedure which he believes will relieve his pain," Dr. Billman adds. He recommends that doctors al ways consider the possibility of "Black Widow'' bite in case of acute abdominal pain, and that close attention be paid to possible heart effects in proven cases of such bites. "More of these cases will prob ably be encountered in the fu ture with greater frequency," he predicts, citing a report of a group of doctors, made in 1936, which said the Black Widow is greatly increasing in number and is invading large cities. cod ' ef ' e77c J Dr. Billman says research sliows that tiie venom 01 the female is 15 times as potent as the venom of the rattlesnake."' The female spiders destroy the smaller males soon after mating. Male "Black Widows" can bite, but their bile is nor cangerotis. The "Black Widow" also is call ed the "hour-glass spider," from a marking shaped like :"i hour-glass on their bellies. DIAPKRS TO AFRICA hi- usei .'111'' ol' - ,,ii,i-i'al ! u II II (I ANDERSON, S. C. (UPl An Anderson firm is now supplying diaper service in darkest Africa. 1'ive hundred dozen diapers were -shipped to a South African whole sale house from McGee and deck ley, local exporting firm which also is solving three-cornered problems of i lor customers in r.cuncior, Norway and Sweden. Ex-Pupils To Have Voice In Running High School CHAMPAIGN, 111. (UP i Cham paign high school officials are giv ing "old grads" a say-so in plan ing the curriculum of their alma mater. Graduates in all walks of life have been asked, by questionnaire, to tell what high school courses were valuable to them and what courses proved of little benefit. School officials plan to tabulate the information, revamp the pres ent course of study and do a "bet ter job" of teaching future pupils. Capital Letters (Continued From Page Two) issue. He said "No!" and thus re fused to give the ambitious Re publicans more fuel for the fire that they are now in the process of building under the Democratic Party in North Carolina. Il Ni l 1(1 it "iil.ili i's With the exception of Califor ,n oiiK -is . ! nia. the Philippines yields more imti iI dm--1 gold annually than any state in the i lin iicd ; the union as well as Alaska. !ll; TO BUM) OR REMODEL? il to lu ll) You with your remodeling or building j fsl miu in srlecting the materials you will need. (Ml. OX IS FOR ESTIMATES PHONE 539 YWOOD COMPANY, INC. isod Ruilding, Plumbing, Heating Contractor OLD-TIME JITNEY DRIVER RECALLS CROWDED DAYS SEATTLE iL'Pi --- Frank Cross has been a cab driver in Seattle for 38 years and remembers the old 5-cenl days when a jitney driv er could crowd 12 to 14 riders aboard a Model T Ford and no body complained. Cross said you could "pile 'em in the front seat, two deep and three wide, jostle and crowd 'em and step on their feet." "Nobody cared, they thought it was sport," Cross said. "But it's different these days. They sit in the back alone and untrodden and complain about your driving. People weren't nerv ous in the old days." SERVING HADDOCK One and one-half pounds of had dock fillets are needed to serve five people. If they are to be broiled they may be dusted with flour and basted with butter or fortified mar garine during the broiling. If they are not to be served witll a sauce they should be garnished with a wedge of lemon. ODD JOB MAN PRODI CES CASH ON DEMAND INDIANAPOLIS i UP) Police were called to settle a tenant landlord dispute over $1 .SO, "How much cash do you have with you now?" a patrolman asked the tenant, Edgar Martin, 39-year-old handyman. "About $500," was the reply. "Let's see." demanded the skep tical cop. "From the two pairs of pants lie I was wearing, Martin pulled a bill fold, four money bags and assorted cash. A count revealed nine $"0 bills, 31 $20 bills. 120 $10's and hundreds of $1 bills, each folded separately. The total: $2,984 -Martin's sav ings from 20 years of odd-job work. (Continued from Page Two) guignan, east of Cannes . . . Also at Florence and Anzio, Italy, at Tunis, North Africa, and in the Philippines at Manila. The commission is responsible only for the construction and maintenance of cemeteries in for eign countries, but General North pointed out that four others on American territory are being con templated in Puerto Rico, Hawaii, Alaska and Guam. Cemeteries in the remote Paci fic islands, he says, have been va cated or are being vacated. "We feel," he says, "that there are places in the world that are going down in history with Get tysburg and Antietam, such as Tarawa, Iwo Jima and Okinawa. "On the other hand, there is no use building a monument if nobody is going to see it. Those places are relatively inaccessible and we feel they should be marked in some way that is simple, that does not invite vandalism and does not, require maintenance." The commission secretary said the number of dead to be buried overseas had not yet been deter mined. "Originally we estimated 25 per cent; now we are estimating 50 per cent," he says. "This means three and three-fourths times as many graves as for World War 1." The Battle Monuments Com mission is also responsible for the operation and maintenance of eight World War I American mil itary cemeteries in Europe, con taining the graves of 30,908 American dead of that war. It operates and maintains the Mexico City American National Cemetery which contains the graves of some 1.500 Americans who died in the 1847 Mexican War. 4 Use Want Ads for quick results. One of the greatest revolutions in farming methods in the Inst decade is the tractor-drawn hay baler. Approximately 32 per cent of last year's hay crop was baled in the field. Floral Tribute FILM AND STAGE Actress June Lock hart poses with a bunch of sweet peas, named after her, al the Inter national Flower Show in New York. The new sweet pea Is the result of ten years of experimentation find development. (International) Rambling (Continued from Page Two) the cross word puizle, cannot understand its lure. But ask a bookkeeper what is the most ex citing thing about her work and she will tell you that it's getting a trial balance. There you are; there's the answer. It's that un certainty that forces you to make "ends meet". To take two extremes and make them come together to form a complete result. In other words, it's the gambling instinct that is part of all of us. Having had a sea captain for a grandfather, we grew up Under traditional "signs of weather". They laughed at us the other day when clouds hung low and rain was pelting down, and we predict ed that it would clear up within an hour or so . . . because smoke was going straight up. Well, with in an hour the struggling sun was warming up our sodden spirits . . . it might have been pure luck but it helped us out. THIEVES TAKE IT EASY REXBURG, Ida. (UP) Thieves who broke into Woody s Drive Inn took time out to fix themselves two hamburgers on the electric grill and dish up a couple of milk shakes. When they got through with eating, they took $12 from the cash register, picked up $25 of merchandise and left. A dollar today buys 15 tunes as much light as it did 20 years ago, the lighting industry claims. Your Washing Done Automatically Willi a HENDIX Automatic Washer For As Little As 20c A WEEK ROGERS ELECTRIC CO. Phone 4(il Your Bcndix Dealer Main Street CRAWFISH CP A TREE ELBERTON. Ga. (UP) W. H. Yeager found a crawfish stranded on a peach tree six feet above the ground after a hard rain. Yeager said he doesn't know whether the creature crawled up or was rained down. Ul dva nee -Design Trucks W DC 3 mil Mife D(l frr, ,wt fief mew mi ieer feefretl KD SYNCHRO. f MISSION in h.ovv. "' x.w op.ra(ns OtUMN GEARSHIFT '. driv.B, . ATED PARKING J" "or ar0, ,o()y r SHArT ATTACH- MENT TO WHEEl HUB ( grMttt trnglh and durability In ttftavy-dvty mdl. NEW IMPROVED VAIVI-IN-HEAO ENGINE hat grtatw dwrabilily uni Una HlcUncy. THE CAB THAT "BREATHES" Frh lf haarad In cald waanSar ii draw in end vtad air tarcad aaH Plus Uniwald, aH-lal tab can-h-uclien Naw, baaviar taring Fult flaatinf hyaald raar axlaa SaacraHy datignad Waka BaMkaarinfl traarinf Wida Itata whaala and May arharil n-i tpiitmjl ml aifr cerJ. 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Young and Brookshire Annus Chevrolet go. J ' Main Street