T H U R S D A Y , D EC . 13. 1951
S O U T H E R N O R E G O N N E W S R E V IE W
PAGE TW O
SCANNING THE WEEK'S NEWS
THE
of M a in Street and the W o rld
F IG H T
P A R A L Y S IS
THE DEAD— M eanwhile, this lim ited Asian
conflict, called a police action by m any, h as turned
into the fourth costliest w ar In this nation’s history.
The casualty list now totals 100.176, th e Defense
d ep a rtm en t reports.
The ac tu al b attle figure is higher th an the
JANUARY 2 *3 1 latest released figures, because official announce
m ents of this kind a re generally two or th ree weeks
behind com bat action.
In com parison, the to tal battle losses for the entire w ar in the south
w est Pacific w as 113.991. Of this total, 84,200 w ere killed or wounded.
DISARMAMENT__ The m o st im p o rtan t question discussed at the
U.N. m eeting in P a ris thus fa r h as been d isa rm am e n t on a world-wide
scale. Both the w est and the ea st have offered th eir plans.
G eneral d isa rm am e n t would give the people in the hom e towns of
this country and elsew here in the world a new sense of security. The
outlook, how ever, is gloomy.
The Russians insist that prohibition of atom ic bom bs ought to p re
cede any d isa rm am e n t move, followed by a big five d isa rm am e n t con
ference. and an im m ediate one-third cut of all conventional arm ed
forces and weapons.
The w estern idea is for an orderly, stage-by-stage process, sta rtin g
w ith a census of existing arm am en ts, including atom ic and arm e d
forces; rea l inspection and verification of any a rm s cuts; and u ltim ate
prohibition of atom ic weapons.
The possibility of a com prom ise betw een the two views is unlikely.
As a result, the world can expect the g eneral assem bly to becom e m ired
in debate and world tension to continue at the p resen t level.
THE COLD WAR_ On the Cold W ar front th ere w as one Im portant
developm ent during the past week. P resid en t T ru m an o rd ered w ith
d raw al of all A m erican ta riff concessions to the Soviet Union and
Poland. In addition, the P resid en t im posed a com plete ban on the im
portation of luxury furs from the two Com m unist countries.
Some weeks ago R ussia halted all shipm ents of m ang an ese to the
U. S. and since th a t tim e the fu r tra d e has been an im p o rtan t source
of dollar revenue for the Com m unist bloc.
The P re sid en t’s action does not com pletely h alt im ports from the
Soviet Union and Poland, but it does m ean the two countries will h av e
to pay higher tariff rates. S im ilar action had previously been taken
against Com m unist regim es in Czechoslovakia, B ulgaria, H ungary,
R om ania and China.
EUROPE_ Gen Dwight Eisenhow er, su prem e com m an d er of Allied
forces in Europe, told North A tlantic T reaty
V T u V b e ’s'
"b a b y ” A-bombs and other new w eapons eventually m ay cut E u ro p e s
m ilitary requirem ents, b u t, in the m eantim e everything possible m us be
done to build w estern defenses.
The gen eral said he w anted as m any divisions as fa st as they
could be supplied—betw een 30 and 40 in 1952 and betw een 60 and 70 by
1954.
He w arned the A tlantic T re aty nations “th e re is no possibility, if
w ar com es, of any of us, our children, or our children’s children, liv
ing a life of decency again.”
\
'outlet
Peace and Prestige
REASON P resid en t T rum an
O NE
ducked out for the Key West
sunshine w as to work undisturbed
on two m a jo r issues th a t have been
keeping him aw ake nights—world
p eace and the ad m in istratio n ’s sag
ging prestige.
White
House assista n ts w ere
w arn ed about the Key West trip
by Mr. T ru m an at a staff confer
ence. "T his won’t be any picnic.
W e've got plenty of h ard work to
d o .”
On the first headache, peace, Mr.
T ru m an assem bled all the plans
an d ideas dum ped on the White
House doorstep to study at Key
West. He hopes to com e up with a
tangible, im ag in ativ e p ro g ra m to
stop the sp rea d of com m unism and
p rev en t w ar.
The P resid en t, for all his other
faults, has an alm ost m ystic,
though som etim es naive sense of
his role of a p eacem ak er and con
stan tly rep e ats to close associates;
"T he only thing th a t counts is to
find a w ay to world peace."
Mr. T ru m an has in m ind a type
of point 4 p ro g ram which would
te ac h oth er nations how to build
th e ir industry and ag ricu ltu re as an
altern ativ e to the huge arm am en ts
rac e. He is also deeply concerned
about a rela ted problem which this
colum nist has frequently reported
—nam ely, the hundreds of thou
sands of iron cu rtain escapees who
have fled to the w est but a re tre a t
ed no b e tte r than under C om m u
n ist regim es, sim ply because the
A tlantic P a c t nations have no plan
of action.
Before he left for F lorida. Mr.
T ru m an suggested to sev eral sen
ate friends who planned E uropean
ju n k ets; “ Look around while you
a re abroad, and tell m e really w hat
is happening, w hat people over
th e re a re thinking, and w hat we
should do.”
On the second m ajo r problem
_sagging prestige here at home
—T ru m an rem a rk e d to new
D em ocratic ch a irm an F ran k Mc
Kinney th a t the corruption issue
had sunk deeper than he rea l
ized and there had to be a house
cleaning. He indicated to Mc
Kinney th a t he would try to
work out som ething d rastic
along this line.
One top p residential ad v iser has
reco m m en d ed th a t H ow ard Mc-
G rath. the do-nothing atto rn ey gen-
dropped> and a h a rd .d riv ing
independent refo rm er be appointed
IFAiii happens to the millions big corporations take in each year has
often baffled the man on Main Street. Here is how General Motors, one
of the biggest in the nation, spent its sales dollar: 26 1/4 cents to
employees, 49 1/4 cents to suppliers, 15 1/4 cents for taxes, 1 3/4 cents
for depreciation, 1/2 cent for reconversion, 4 3/4 cents to shareholders,
and 1 3/4 to maintain the business.
N A TIO N A L DEBT
U. S. Debt Nearing $275 Billion Lim it
ceiling.
.
At the end of N ovem ber th e n a
tional d ebt w as e stim a te d a t $259,-
WALTKR 1MKAO. WNU Cert •«gen O M
A New W arning
to crack down on crooks and g raft
____
ers. Two n am es w
ere ___________
suggested;
gen W ayne M orse, the Oregon re-
publican, and Sen. E stes K efauver,
th e crim e-busting D em ocrat.
Truce Talks
H ere is the inside story on the
FARM TREND— The la test B ureau of the Census rep o rt reveals
th e re h as been a decided tren d tow ard few er but bigger and b etter j K orean tru ce talks
G en eral R idgw ay has cabled a
equipped farm s betw een 1940 and 1950. In 1950 th ere w ere 5,384.000
strong recom m endation to the Pen-
farm s in the United States com pared to 6,097,000 in 1940.
D uring the decade, however, the av erag e size farm unit grew from tagon th a t we keep the m ilitary
__
.
A. V—
---- t - -------—/
/- .» w a c .
«a»
r-v-i
» 1F1 1 C ♦ Q
11 F I t 1 I
174 acres to 210.5 acres. D espite the d ecrease in the n um ber of farm s p ressu re on the C om m unists until
all the te rm s of the arm istic e are
th e total acreag e rem ained approxim ately the sam e in 1950 as in 1945
O ther statistics in the report included: (1) About 870,000 few er p e r settled. O therw ise, he w arn s th a t
sons »’ere working on U. S. farm s in 1950 th an in 1940; (2) Less than th e Chinese will stall o ver such
one-third as m any horses and m ules were on farm s in 1950 as in 1920; m a tte rs as inspection te am s and
(3) In 1950 there were 59.764.000 cattle and calves m ore than th ree exchanging prisoners.
Ridgway also claim ed th a t
m onths old on farm s as com pared to 60,674,736 in April, 1940; <4) The
his forces can h u rry the final
num ber of chickens on farm s was 2,500,000, or 0.7 per cent m ore than
a rm istic e—provided they re
in 1940.
m ain free tu tw ist the Com m u
n ists’ a rm . On the other hand,
GAMBLING__ The new federal lax on gam bling m ay reach into
hundreds of home towns as a resu lt of a new ruling by Revenue Com
he arg u e s th a t afte r a tru ce his
m issioner John B. Dunlap. The com m issioner has ruled th a t the $50
m en won’t feel like fignting for
license fee on gam bling applies to thousands of stores w hich have punch
ground th a t they know is going
to be given back anyw ay. Ridg
boards on th eir prem ises.
w ay ’s gam ble is th a t his tactics
E ach clerk in such establish m en ts as tobacco shops, gas stations
w on't cau se a breakdow n of the
and other retail stores w here the ow ners accep t m oney from a custom er
talk s, but will actually speed the
for a punch board chance m ust p u rch ase a license, he ruled.
final arm istic e.
H ow ever, th ere is no question
but th a t R idgw ay’s proposal rep
rese n ts a definite and im p o rtan t
change of policy.
B a rrin g unex p ected changes in
the p rese n t econom ic trend, the
U nited S tates d eb t is expected to
push p a st th e p re se n t le g al lim it of
$275,000,000,000 d u rin g th e n ex t year.
As a resu lt, S e c re ta ry of the T re a s
u ry S nyder is exp ected to ask con
g re ss to ra ise the n atio n al d eb t
HOÎT1E
Town
WASHINGTON
Korean Peace by Christmas Possible;
U.S. Casualties Now Total 100,176
KOREA— P eace in K orea by C h ristm as is the one gift the people
of A m erica’s hom e towns desire m ore th an any other. Although there
is no assu ran ce th a t such a peace will be forthcom ing, the possibility
does exist.
The hope th a t the world will have peace by C h ristm as was bolstered
by reports from K orea th a t the Com m unists and Allies had reached
agreem ent on a cease-fire line acro ss th a t w ar-torn country.
A greem ent on the cease-fire line, however, does not m ean peace by
C hristm as. A fter ratificatio n of the line, it becom es the final buffei
zone across K orea provided the two sides ag ree within 30 d ay s on all
rem aining arm istic e issues. If no 30-day ag reem en t
is rea ch ed on supervising the truce, exchange of
prisoners and recom m endations to the governm ents
MARCH OF DIMES on troop w ithdraw als, the buffer line will be revised
»'hen a full arm istic e finally is signed.
C onsidering p ast experiences in negotiations
with the C om m unists, th e 30-day talking period
would seem v ery short. T heir delaying ta ctics h av e
consum ed m onths thus far and it is unlikely they
will change them .
IN F A N T IL E
A Young M echanic
C an M a k e These Toys
000,000,000, an in crease of $4 billion
since April and the highest in 434
y ears.
By June, 1952, the debt is ex
pected to am ount to $262,500,000,000.
If p resen t spending an d ta x receip t
fo recasts a re co rrec t the d eb t wil.
p ass the $265 billion m a rk during
the following six m onths. This would
n ecessitate lifting the legal debt
ceiling.
folks in th is cijuntry, of w h at
F EW
e v e r religious belief, or of w h at
Small Town U tility
Serves Farm Folks
W h e n to Fish?
We have p roclaim ed often In this
d ep a rtm en t th at the tim e to go fish
1—
.dime
ing is "any tim e you cun got nwuy I
»ÖU» » «U« • • *«•
IWU lUAfll«
to go." N atu rally , th e re are m any I
who w on't subscribe to that, point- |
P A I I I S H ?I2
Ing out th a t » f a th e r conditions too ’
frequently d eterm in e w hether or not
WHOLE fleet of toy truck« of
a m an m ay go fishing
d iffe ie n t t y i < and ■
> war«
T h at is true, of course; and we
do n 't m ean a m an should alw ays house where nn endless variety of
go fishing In freezing w eather, a hales, boxen and puckaRe* may ho
roaring gale or when the ruin Is loaded and unloaded. A ll made of
strea m in g down In to rren ts. H o w blocks and scraps of wood. Parts
ever, th ere a re tim es when what of trucks are shaped w ith actual-
would be considered "b a d w ea th er" . size guides. Every step is shown
on pattern 212, price 25c.
for fishing pay* off handsom ely.
WOHHMItOI* P A T T F K N »1 U IH 'K
It did for us and a couple of com- }
llr a w ir I ••
panlons only a few w eeks ago when, .
I t r d f o r d 11111«. N « w ¥ , r k
with stre a m s high and m uddy, we
set out to a n earby pond to do som e ,
panfishing.
Our com panions w ere equipped j
with m innows and worm s. We toted ;
a fly rod und some No. 14 trout '
flies’
rcr/rcA U . ocP
When we reached the pond, the ,
My party '
day. which alread y had sta rte d out
windy, tu rn ed Into one w herein the
wind was alm ost of gale propor
tions The wind w aves on the pond
w ere alm ost a foot high and white-
caps w ere running. The wind was so
strong th a t a fly rod. held v e rtic a l
ly In the air, took a bend as If a
heuvy fish w ere on.
On th a t p articu la r day and under
those specific conditions, we would
have w agered th at our flies would
not have enticed a single strik e all
day: and our com panions agreed
with us.
D espite the velocity of the wind,
we w ere able to lay a respectable
length of line occasionally and to
MEGTWCLATUM R Ê U IF Æ G
our am az em e n t—w henever we did,
H C A C X C W M lÇ & C I-
we got a strike. The b ream and
- z X t PC H EY C H E S T Ml
crap p ie w ere hitting furiously nt
flies which one W’ould have thought
they couldn't even have seen In
th a t kind of w ater.
The m en using m innows and
w orm s cau g h t th ree fish betw een
them !
j Wo point this Incident up here to
b o lster a contention we huve m ade
before, th a t no one will ev er get
angling down to an ex a ct science.
A A A
ev er ra c e or color, eon disag ree
G as M a d e A v a ila b le
wholly with the recen t w arning is
T o F a rm s lo r F ir s t T im e
sued by the top h ie ra rc h y of the
C atholic church in the United S tates,
The farm folks within 20 m iles
in annual m eeting h ere in W ashing
of Antigo, Wls., have gone in foi
ton.
gas in u big way. This new in te r
And this w arning Is th at an a la rm
est of farm folks in healing und
ing p arallel exists betw een the
cooking with gas sta rte d over u
situation w hich faces this country
y ea r ag o with the reorganization of
today and th a t which faced the
A ntigo's City G as com pany.
R om an E m p ire 1500 y ea rs ago—
The Antigo utility which m anu
nam ely, b a rb a rism on the outside
as exem plified by C om m unism , and factu red gas from oil, coke und
refined m a teria lism and m o ral d e ste am converted its plant to " p ro
cay within. It Is not a p leasan t or p an e-air" gas und offered service
com p lim en tary picture painted of
us as a people by the th ree C a rd i
nals. six Archbiahopa and four
Bishops w hich m ade up the ad m in is
tra tiv e board of the N ational C atho
lic W elfare Council.
H ere a re som e b arb s w hich hit
hom e: "We have sent our young
m en on m ilitary expeditions to far-
off lands so th a t Justice and fre e
dom m ay be k ep t alive in the w orld;
and y et at hom e we have becom e
ca rele ss about the foundations of
ju stice and the roots of fre ed o m :”
"E x p ressio n s such as, ’my life is
m y own a ffa ir’, or T m ay do as I
p lease’, or ’in politics, anything
goes’, are all too com m on today.
M rs. Dale M adison, a ru ra l
T here is no tim e in m an ’s life when
h o m em ak er, has converted h er
he is excused from obeying the
kitchen to gas. and rep o rts It
m o ral law. The clerg y m an , the
gives her m ore freedom from
educator, the doctor, the law yer,
kitchen duties.
the politician, the em ployer, the
em ployee, husbands, wives and chil to fa rm hom es and ru ral Arms
d ren a re all alike strictly bound. All
within a radius of 20 m iles.
hum an rights and obligations have
The new ru ra l cu sto m ers have
their* source in God’s law.
th eir own "b a c k y a rd u tility" in the
“ D ishonesty, slander, d e tra c
form of sto rag e tanks for large
tion and defam ation of c h a ra c
u sers and “ b o ttled " installations
te r a re as truly tran sg ressio n s
for hom es with sm a lle r consum p
of G od's com m andm ents » h en
tion.
reso rted to by m en in political
B ecause they a re a p a rt of the
life as they a re for all other
Antigo utility system , country cus
m en.
to m ers receive m onthly fuel bill
"T h e re a re not two sta n d ard s of ju st like the town. Fuel consum p-
m orality. One and the sam e stand tion is reco rd ed on a m e ter nt-
a rd prohibits false statem en ts about tachcd to th e ir cylinders or tanks.
p riv ate individuals and false state- J g ad w ca|j,e r c a n 't In terru p t serv-
m ents about m em b ers of m inority k c glnee n su(Tlclcnl guppiy is
groups and races. It will not do by gtorcd on tbc p rem ises In ad vance
w ay of excuse to say th a t state-
use E m pty cylin d ers are p e rt
in en ts of the la tte r kind can be ex-
rep laced by com pany serv-
cused because of long-standing pre-
m cn
* Î1 f d i OF*
• M orality h as its place In busl-
S in e , the reorganization, r a te ,
ness and industry because the con- h av e been reduced for town and
" ...
,
, , . men ...nrV
ditions
under
which
work, ihn
tne farm u sers th ree tim es,
w ages they get, »the kind of work 1
th ey do, all a re su b ject to the juris- ! C o n to u r F a r m in g C u ts
diction of the m oral law. When
econom ic conditions a re such that j S o il Losses in H a lf
the raising Of a fam ily by working
Iowa agro n o m ists rep o rt th a t
people is m ad e difficult and at contour farm in g cuts soil losses In
tim es Im possible, then those respon- | half, boosts corn yields as m uch
sible for this deplorable situation a l 7 4 bushels per ncre and ups
a re guilty of break in g God s law SOybcan production by 2 7 bushels.
and they a re also accom plices in
O th cr ad v an tag es from contour
the sins resulting from th e ir injus farm in g include lower fuel and op
tic e.” The p re la te s called upon e ra tin g costs for tra c to rs and other
A m ericans in every w alk of life to m ach in ery and an in crease in the
red e d ica te them selves to the w is length of corn rows.
dom of our founding fath e rs and
The need for m o re contour cul
quoted the following p assag e from
tivation will In crease with the
W ashington's farew ell ad d ress:
"O f all the disposition and habits stead ily expanding acreag e of row
» liich lead to political p ro sp erity , crops to m eet th e nation’s food
religion and m o rality a re indispen needs.
While contouring Is a vital step
sable supports . . . reason and ex
p erience both forbid us to expect in keeping soil a t home, oth er soli
th a t national m o rality can prevail building m e asu res a re needed to
in exclusion to religious p rin cip le." keep fa rm land a t high yielding
• • •
levels. E v ery crop Iwirns up o rg an
ic m a tte r and uses up plant nu
Senator McCarthy
trien ts. The o rg an ic m a tte r can
In the
_
__ final edition of the Con- (be replenished by growing well-
gressional R ecord for the first scs- fertilized deep-rooted legum es reg-
sion of the 82nd congress, Sen. uia r iy | n the rotation and by re-
Jo sep h M cC arthy of W isconsin has tu rn in g m an u re and crop residues
caused to be in serted eighteen se p a to the soil.
r a te speeches, sta te m en ts or w hat-
ftot, no doubt to be used in his c a m
paign for re-election in W isconsin.
Safety Plug
The theory is th a t the a rticle s a re
supposed to have m ore au th o rity
when clipped from the Congression- |
al Record.
• • •
H ere are the background facts
w hich '.hey a re considering.
When we w ent into th e truce
talk s, the biggest obstacle seem ed
to be d raw ing a tru ce line. We
ag re ed —in fact, u rg ed —th a t the
tru ce line be settled first. This has
been the whole question of the past
se v eral weeks. We even drew our
proposed tru ce line on a m ap so the
C om m unists could have no doubts
about It. A fter m onths of haggling,
the
C om m unists finally cam e
around to our te rm s. T h eir last
proposal w as so close to our de
m an d s th a t th e re w as nothing left
to haggle over. At first W ashing
ton couldn’t u n d erstan d why Ridg
w ay didn’t snap it up, but sent his
negotiators back Instead with a flat
rejection and a w arning th a t the
tru ce line couldn’t be draw n until
the other te rm s of the arm istice
w ere settled.
Classroom Needs
T he Office of E ducation of the
F e d e ra l S ecurity Agency points up ;
th e need for 600,000 new classroom s
to accom m odate public elem en tary
and secondary school pupils each j
y e a r until 1958 and the fa c t th ere
will be som ething like 8,000,000 ad
ditional children enrolled by th a t
tim e. E nrollm ent in elem en tary and
secondary schools by th a t d ate will
be 37,186,000. Costs of construction
will run se v eral billions.
• • •
Agriculture
F irs t state to com plete its s tre a m
lining of the A g ricu ltu ral d e p a rt
m en t into a one-stop serv ice with
all sta te offices of the d ep a rtm en t
housed in one building, m ost signifi
can tly w as in Iowa. Iowa is the
hom e of Allan Kline, p resid en t of
the A m erican F a rm B ureau F ed
eration, m ost o u tstan d in g critic of
S ecre tary B ran n an and his d e p a rt
m ent.
• • *
Backstage
Economic Help
The ABN underground In south
e rn R ussia claim s th ree Soviet re
publics, K azakh, Uzbek and Turk-
om en, are boiling with revolt and
v ast purges. (ABN Is an u n d er
ground of M oslem and Mongolian
_ groups in south and e a st R ussia.
a p ea sa n t revolt In all the Euro-
pean satellites h as brought a shake
up in C om m unist ag ricu ltu re m in-
istries plus short ratio n s . . . A r
g en tin a’s d ic tato r P eron has Just
fired eight of his top generals.
The C om m ittee for E conom ic D e
velopm ent, n on-partisan group of
top business and professional m en,
in a recen t sta te m en t say s: "T he
econom ics of the free world calls
for g rea ter efforts by A m erican
businessm en to help In applying
th e ir "know how” in raisin g the
p production
l „uvlvv.„„ and the
---------------------------
sta n d a rd of liv-
¡n g of underdeveloped countries
through the P oint 4 p ro g ram , ex
panding world tra d e and stren g th en
ing the North A tlantic nations.
A
G E .T J U D Y !
About "L ead "
By now, th e nlm rods in many
sta te s will be out afte r rabbit, quail
grouse and other upland gam e.
T here will be m any hits, m any
m isses, and those who m iss will a l
ways be w ondering "how com e?"
The an sw er Is not a sim ple one.
Millions of w ords have been w ritten
and spoken on this su b ject and there
has been m uch discussion as to
w hether good wing-shooting can be
taught.
It can be taught, of course—but
only to a d egree. T hat Instinct in
a h u n ter w hich m ak es him swing
his gun muzzle the right distance
ahead of a flying b ird or a hurtling
h are is a m ystical som ething which
cannot be com pletely gleaned from
books.
The only answ er, as we believe
any honest Instructor would tell
you, Is sufficient p rac tice in the
field to becom e a good wing shot by
Instinct. But. with our w aning fowl
and gam e supply, the m odern hunt
e r doesn’t have the chance to "g et
good” th a t his dad and granddad
hod.
The next best thing, then, is skeet
and trapshooting. T hese a re only
su b stitu tes and we do not g u ara n
tee th a t religious application to tra p
or station will m ak e you a good
gunner; but it will help to som e ex
tent.
L earn in g to "le a d ," vhlch Is the
se cret of successful wing-shooting,
m u st be done in th e field for best
resu lts; and. In the end. wing-shoot
ing Is an In stan t reaction to the
th ree facto rs of speed, d istance and
alignm ent w hich m u st be correlated
properly if the bird is to be downed
or the bunny stopped.
A A A
Boys & Guns
A new safety plug has been
developed th a t should be of
In terest to m ost fa rm e rs. It has
a tiny rep laceab le fuse. E lec
tric a l cords a re connected to
the plug exactly a s they a re
connected to the w all socket It
self. The fuse blows out should
a sh o rt circu it develop In any
connected cord. T his prevents
c u rre n t from reaching the d an
g er point, Instantly cutting off
the source of fire.
Nebraska Farmers Paid
High Cost for Corn Crop
N eb rask a farm e rs paid with two
lives, 194 fingers, 18 hands, 10
a rm s, one leg, four toes and two
feet In g ath erin g approxim ately
225 m illion bushels of corn. T hat
is la st y e a r’s accid en t record.
F a ilu re to stop the co rn p lck er be
fore try in g to rem ove the stoppage
of the m achine accounted for al
m ost ev e ry accident. F a rm e rs
should discuss safety problem s with
th e ir h arv e st crew s.
The question of when to give his
son a gun and when to turn the
youth loose In the field with It Is a
re c u rre n t and serious one for all
fath ers who sincerely w ant their off
spring to enjoy the p leasu res of
hunting.
And, It Is one which each fath er
m u st d ecid e for him self; but there
a re a few guldeposts which, if kept
In m ind, m ig h t sim plify the prob
lem . They a re :
If th e re is any doubt about the
boy’s sense of responsibility and
aw aren ess of safety, d o n't let him
tak e the gun out unless you, or some
o th er ad u lt Is along.
T ry to Instill—by repenting as of
ten as possible—the cardinal rules
of gun-handling safety into the boy.
Don’t let the boy tak e his gun out
with Just oth er fellows of his own,
or even older, age along.
A A . t
W e ig h t of Reel
The w eight of a fly reel, In the
classic specifications, should be one
and one-half tim es the w eight of
the fly rod. T h at’s whnt sportsm en
used to think. But a fte r the trial and
e rro r m ethod proved the fallacy of
th a t thinking, fly rod u sers cam e to
th e com m onsense conclusion th a t
the reel should weigh w hatever It
tak es to m ak e the assem bled outfit
feel “ rig h t” in the hand—balanced
so as to perform a m axim um of
| serv ice with a m inim um of fatigue,
EAT ANYTHING WITH
FALSE TEETH I
If you have (roub le w iib plate«
(bat slip, rock,c»u»e «ore gum» —
t r r B rim m e H le a ti l i n e r O n e applicant»«
make» placet In
u iiheitl fieuUe» er p u le ,
betauae Brim m e Fiaaii* O ner harden» p rrm a -
o enclj io your plate. K elm ee end rebts lo o t«
p l a t e r i n a way no po w der o r pa»»« <an do,
t v e o o n old rubb er plate« you gc( good (c a u l»
aix month» (o a year or longer. YOU c a n g A V
A N Y T H I N «1 Sim ply lay e ><l a trip of Plead«
Liner on troublesom e gp per or lo w e r. Bata
and it m olde perfectly,
to an#. (at cel eta,
odorleaa, harmleaa lo you and your plafea.
R em ovable aa directed. M oney beck if not
com pletely »atiihed. AtA fo u r d ru g g u t/
B R IM M S P L A S T I-L IN E R
T M l rlR M A H tN T
D tM T U R t R IU N IR
'say many old (oiks
about good tasting
SCOTT'S EMULSION
Th ousand« o f h a p p y
folks know thia I Good-
taatlng S ro tt’a Kmulaloa
helps you w a rd o f f eohle—help» you
ge t w all fa s te r —and helps you keep
g o in g s tr o n g w h en y o u r d ie t needs
more n a tu ra l AAI> V ita m in » ! K ro tt’e la
a H IG H E N E R G Y F O O D T O N I C -
rieh In noturnl A A I) V ita m in s
and energy-building n a tu ra l
l ’< oil. T r y i t ! 8 m bow well you
feel. Easy to take and digest.
Economical. Buy today a t your
d ru g s to re !
M
MORE than just a tonic —
il't powerful nourishment!
SCOTT'S EMULSION
N /0 H ENERGY T O N IC
It's Wonderful the W ay
Chewing-Gum Laxative
Acts Chiefly to
-1 M T
REMOVE WASTE
GOOD FOOD
• Here's th e secret m illio n s o f folks hay»
discovered about. rr.r.s-»-MiHT, th e m od
ern ch ew in g -g u m laxative. Yes, hero la
w h y rrrN-s-MiNT's a ctio n Is so w onder
fu lly dlfferentl
Doctors say th a t m a n y other laxative*
sta rt their ‘'flushing" actio n too soon . . .
rig h t in th e stom .irli w here food is b ein g
digested. Isirge doses of su ch laxative*
u p se t d ig estio n , flush away n o u rish in g
food you need for h ea lth a n d energy.
Y ou feel weak, worn o u t.
H ut g e n tle rzr.N-a-MiNT, ta k en as rec
om m ended, works ch iefly In th e lower
bowel w here It rem oves o n ly w aste, n o i
good food I You avoid th a t ty p ica l weak,
tired, w orn -ou t feelin g. Use rr.xN-A-MiNT
a n d feel your “peppy,'' en ergetic se lf I G et
rxKN-A-MiNTl No lncrenso In p rice— s t ill
25f, 50y or o n ly 10«.
K
feen - a - m in t .A ^ ffi
. FAMOUS tm W IH G CUM taXATIVC