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Show r-: - i r 7r 11 rn mmaltt I wwsn si t w tv I UMrASKXfr 1 i HByWol,e,Shead ' ' ' " ' IT(f Wtshintton Burtau ' ' mm cw nr. - ; - y : What Is Future of Price Support System? RECENT removal of the flve-cent-a-pound subsidy on butter brings into focus the whole question of government subsidies insofar as ... . ...it, 1 they apply to farm proaucu. viu these subsidies be rapidly removed? Will the change-over be a gradual one? And whose policy will prevail-that prevail-that of Secretary of Agriculture Anderson An-derson for a complete elimination of food subsidies as rapidly as conditions condi-tions warrant, or the more cautious policy of OPAdmlnlstrator Chester Ches-ter Bowles, who wants to keep prices down with the help of subsidies. subsi-dies. Farm-minded congressmen and government officials concerned with the operation of the subsidy program, mostly agree that subsidies subsi-dies were all right as a wartime practice, but that they have no place In a peacetime economy. Farm organizations, or-ganizations, particularly the dairy Interests, have been outspoken against the subsidy practice, especially espe-cially against those subsidies known at "consumer subsidies," and have declared that 'the consumers are well able to pay fair and fixed prices without the benefit of a subsidy paid out Of the federal treasury. . CotttZ Billion a Year The whole subsidy program has cost the government, and that means the taxpayers, approximately two. billion dollars a year. It is agreed that the roll-back subsidies during wartime have helped to absorb ab-sorb abnormally high wartime production pro-duction costs and keep prices en a "reasonable plane. Whe'ther the subsidies, however, have saved the general public any money in the long run is . a moot question upon which not etl are agreed, although testimony before one ot the congres sional committees was to the effect J mat lor every aouar spent in government subsidies from three to five dollars would be saved in the price ot food; at the retail level If this ii true, then baaed on an annual two billion dollar outlay, this would mean a yearly saving of it least six billion dollars to consumers In the retail stores of the country. Government subsidies are of two classes and work both ways one, the consumer subsidy, paid to hold down prices, and the ether the price support er Incentive subsidy, paid to hold op prices and to Increase production la certain products. Witt itktB Hold Up? The question which remains unanswered un-answered is will Removal of subsidies subsi-dies bring about a drop in pricea to farmers? Or will supply and demand de-mand help keep up the parity prices which the fanners are guaranteed? The best- opinion, here Is that there will bo a compromise base adopted on consumer subsidies, and that they will bo finally eliminated. but on a piecemeal or gradual pro gram, with the sugar and flout subsidies sub-sidies probably the last to be elimi nated. Besides these, commodities subsi dies are in effect on wheat, milk, peanuts, cooking oils, beans, meats and a tew other items. There is also a subsidy paid by the RFC to a certain cer-tain class of oil operators. This alone has cost almost a hundred mil- , lion dollars. The RFC also has handled the subsidy on meats, butter and wheat. and at the end of 1944 these payments pay-ments had been approximately 660 million dollars on meat, U7 million dollars on butter and 88.1 million dollars on wheat and flour. New Ban 1fanted .While the program tor elimination ot subsidies goes forward slowly, farm organizations are busy organizing organ-izing themselves for a fight to set up a new base for arriving at parity prices for farm products. On the theory that the present parity price, which means farm purchasing power pow-er equivalent to the 1909-1914 period, no longer fits the picture under present pres-ent increased costs ot production and living, action may go along two courses: 1. Setting op an entirely dew set of figures for determining parity, or demanding 100 per cent of parity Instead of the M per cent now guaranteed guar-anteed under the law, er Z. Attempting to add farm labor costs into the parity price as provided pro-vided la the bill Introduced by Congressman Con-gressman Pace (D Ca.). j A measure attempting to do this trick was defeated in the senate during dur-ing the 78th congress, although from this writing it appears the Pace bill may have a good chance of passing the tower house. And in the meantime, there is considerable bickering and difference differ-ence of opinion on Just bow long present prices are guaranteed under un-der present laws. It is pretty generally gen-erally fegreed that on wheat, cotton., rice, corn, tobacco end peanuts, the parity figure Is guaranteed for three years. (Two years after January I following official end ot the war.) I j mmmmuMttmimifi MHtttMmtmmmutmmmmMmitmm smrisf ft ,OTraaattsaoisa J Good IciMiiij The Fellow in the Airplane Above Quickly Surveys Your Farm! , By EDWARD EMERINE WNU Feature, WE WERE a few minutes min-utes out of Kansas City, and the C-47 transport plane was gliding along at about 160 miles an houTi some 2,500 feet above; sea level. The rolling lands of eastern Kansas lay below, us, "Notice the erosion down there, Art?" I asked the man sitting in the bucket-seat next tome. -'. - . "Yes, I do," he replied quickly. "Pretty bad on some of those farms, but look at the ponds, the terracing and coik tour farming on others." The mission was a press flight, and "Art" was Arthur V. Burrowes, editor ot the News-Press, St Joseph, Mo. At the time I was s public rela tions officer with the Air Transport command. A group ot radio and preis representatives was being flown to Abilene tor the homecom ing celebration for General of the Armies Dwight O. Eisenhower. A lot ot us were looking out of the plane's windows, surveying the soil situation is wo sped through, the air. Like many others, Editor Burrowes Bur-rowes is interested in conserving the rich soil ot northwest Missouri and northeast Kansas. The city ot St Joseph, with Its stockyards, pack tog plants, cereal mills and rows of business houses, depend on that soil. Art Burrowes writes editorials about it, gives space for news stories sto-ries and pictures that tell about keeping that good earth from going down the Missouri river, Into the Mississippi, and on down to the Gulf of Mexico to build a greater delta there. He was that day seeing his beloved country tor the first time from the air. Take 'Mental Photographs.' But for the past four years or more, .while bombers end fighters have circled overhead and crossed the 48 states, American youths In those planes have been looking down on American cities and farms. With practiced eye they've taken mental photographs of bills and valleys, gullies gul-lies and mesas, plains and moun tains, rivers and Jakes. As they trained to be pilots, navigators and bombardiers, they also learned about America. "I'm going to buy a farm when the war'e ever," s young pilot told me. "But 1 want to fly ever and look at It firsts I knew what. he meant He want ed to see the colorations of the soU. the yellowish patches where the soil was thin, the darker shades of red and brown, and finally, the black, rich bottoms. He wanted to see how much of his farm would be good land and what percentage would be poor. In a minute's flight over the farm he could see every gully, locate lo-cate every pond, and view every ef fort at sou conservation. That pilot bad seen son all over America, from the Everglades ot Florida to the bills of New England. He had seen rocks sticking up out of fields in Virginia and had battled red dust over Oklahoma. He had flown over denuded hills of Alabama and Georgia and traced the missing sou to the marshes down near the ocean. Vp la the air the story of the land Is told graphically and anickly. The chart spread out below hides Bathing Bath-ing and reaches from coast to coast. from border to border. The vari colored soils admit their worth. The extent of damage by a forest fire to viewed within minutes. An Ohio riv er flood, lashing out to destroy or carry away man a home and food, will take only a few hears to eover from aa airplane. Booses, livestock and debris floating dowa the stream .... ,v ... Fields Look GOOD From the Air! lom oi do not make a pretty sight, bat hundreds hun-dreds of fliers have seen it. Years ago 1 flew from ScottsbluS. Itebv, over the North Platte valley in a small biplane. There were uncovered uncov-ered fields where potatoes and beans had been grown, and the wind was whipping, up dust to be carried away. But southwest of Mitchell, I noticed something else. Where the Hall Brothers had used strip-farm ing for their wheat growing, the dust wasn't blowing) . Abandon Banco. It was in 1938. after the "dust- bowl't years, that I talked to an old friend, R. T. Cline, at Brandon; Colo., inquiring about acquaintances of other years. How is the Bupp family? , It was my question. tTbey. left their ranch," Dick dine told me. "They moved to the Arkansas valley and have a filling station, I think. So much dust cov ered the range they couldn't run cat tle any more." Recently I flew over eastern Colo rado, and the range looks good now. Maybe the Ruppa are back on weir ranch. About 10 years ago 1 visited my Uncle Ira, who lived on my grandfather's grand-father's old farm between CarrsviUe Erosion Shows Its Colors and Hampton, in Livingston county, Kentucky. We walked over the billy farm. "It should have been terraced years ago," Uncle Ira admitted. "It could-have been done. There was a big wash right here, for instance, but I kept filling it in with brush and trees and stuff. Not a trace of it left now, aee?" I've never, seen that old farm from the air, but thousands of American fliers have looked down upon it I think I know how it looks from up there. Several aviators I've known are concerned about erosion in America.' Don't expect them to Join Friends of the Land, or write about conservation conserva-tion with the skill of Louis Brom-field; Brom-field; but they're concerned about it Just the same. One of them who bad flown over the Sahara and Gobi deserts remarked that there were CO Chlcagos or New Yorks in those places. He might have added that there were ao Ford or General Motors Mo-tors factories there either. I am not a farmer, no more than I am a pilot For three years I rode around in planes while I was In the army, but. I'm Just a newspaper news-paper man with a rural background. Looking Down on - Thousands ot men who trained 'with the AAF at Randolph field will remember the BT-lt. the plane from which they first surveyed Texts Tex-ts from the air. The BT-14 allowed aa anobstructed view of the landscape land-scape below and many of the sto-. sto-. dent pilots wondered Just how soft those fle'ds really were In case they had to make landing en one of them. Randolph Field has long claimed to be Uncle Sam's "West Point ot file I mi The first erosion I ever saw was on our homestead ranch near Calhan Colo. The settlers planted trees for a windbreak, and I chased tumble-weeds tumble-weeds for sport , The Honorable Robert G. Simmons, Sim-mons, now on the supreme court of Nebraska, used to be a representative representa-tive in congress. I've heard lot ot bis speeches, but the most Impressive Im-pressive thought he ever uttered was, to me, something like this: "Nebraska has ao mines, no oil wells," said Bob Simmons. ''Nebraska's ''Ne-braska's wealth la eight inches- of top soil." Early in the New Deal, a shelter belt Was suggested. It was to be a grove of trees from the Canadian border to the Rio Grande. It was laughed at until It was abandoned. But I'm not so sure it wouldn't have been a good thing. GiganUo Windbreak. My reason tor believing in a shelter shel-ter belt is the Halsey National forest for-est at Halsey, Neb. Out in the middle mid-dle of an arid country is a beautiful pine forest covering 30,000 acres, a gigantic windbreak which conserves the soil and builds it up year after year. I can imagine such a forest extending acrosa the United States, and it doesn't look silly to met Soil erosion is everybody's business, busi-ness, I think. The banker, the doctor, doc-tor, the merchant all are affected as much as the farmer. Some two billion people In the world depend for their livelihood on that thin skin of top soil spread over the earth. 4 Many believe that 140 million people In the United States should bo a little concerned over soil loss and destruction. In any event, it shouldn't be left entirely to the farmer to combat wind, water, fire and overcropping. 6ee It (or Yourself Many towns and cities are using aerial surveys in their postwar planning. plan-ning. Traffic, smoke, toning, park planning and other civic problems can be surveyed from an airplane, many times more advantageously than from the ground. And always It is a thrill to fly over your own house and yard, to look down on the little spot you call hornet But it is the vast farms, ranches and ranges that make the greatest aerial panorama. See for yourselt Get a "sky-view" of the land you think you know so well. You'U like it The next time you ride in an airplane, air-plane, look out at the technicolor soil map below you, stretching miles and miles for you to study. Look particularly at the acres of poor, denuded de-nuded soil, yellowish and impotent And remember that your food, even the meal the airline's hostess has Just served, came from the soil below you. Texas From a BT-14 the Air One of ear permanent air fields, Randolph greatly Increased Its training as early as 1940. The service records of most pilots, young er old, will show a tout of duty at Randolph Field. .Training will continue con-tinue at Randolph for AAF personnel, person-nel, evea though the war has ended. Many ether types of planes were ased, and are being ased, at Randolph Ran-dolph for both baslo and advanced training. I k mZL - Tif 1 1 EISENHOWER DEMOCRAT OR REPUBLICAN WASHINGTON. When Admiral Dewey 'eturned triumphant from capturing the Philippines 'i the Spanish-American war. newsmen asked the conquering hero whether he was a Democrat or a Republican. Republi-can. The admiral wasn't quite sure which. That ended the Dewey boom for President Today, Gen. Dwight Eisenhower may be put in the same position as Admiral Dewey. Both parties are consid ring new blood for 1948. GOP leaders are convinced that given a candidate who can win labor votes yet not alienate the Hoover conservatives, conserv-atives, they can win. Obviously. Eisenhower is important presidential timber. Popular impression is that Eisenhower Eisen-hower is a Republican. He was appointed ap-pointed to West Point from the rock-ribbed rock-ribbed Republican state of Kansas by GOP Senator Joseph P. Brlstow. And nobody In those days could get anywhere in Kansas unless he was a Republican. , However, though it may be news to GOP -leaders, DWight Eisenhower put himself on record early in life as a. Democrat .Furthermore, be was an energetic vWjHlam Jennings Bryan Democrat and in November. 1900, made a, speech af the annual Democratic banquet heltf in Abilene, "Kan. The 'Other speakers were older and seasoned Kansas Democrats; Demo-crats; but Dwight Eisenhower, then only 19, was picked to stand up witn them and harangue the' crowd. He IKE'S OLD. FRIEND I am Indebted for this Information to J. W. Howe, now of Emporia. Kan. Howe not only published the Abilene Abi-lene News, but was a member of the school board and knew young Dwight better than anyone outside bis own family. The Abilene News office was head- ' quarters tor a group of high school boys who came there to discuss their problems, talk sports and poli tics, read the papers and do odd lobs for the paper. J. W. Howe says of Eisenhower: "Dwight liked to read the exchange ex-change newspapers from out of town. He never complained about working, seeming to take that for granted. In school discussions, dis-cussions, he was always for the under-dog and contended we needed a somewhat better distribution dis-tribution of wealth.". William Jennings Bryan at that time had made many speeches in Abilene and the young folks liked to hear him. In tact, Bryan made some definite inroads on the Republicans. Repub-licans. The Republican party at that time was beginning to be split into two groups, led by Taft and Teddy Roosevelt The fight in Abilene Abi-lene was bitter, and this was the situation when Dwight Eisenhower started out in 1909 to get the proper endorsements to enter West Point. DWIGHT GOT TO WEST POINT The Eisenhower family had no political pull on the contrary. Dwight's father was listed as a Democrat though he took little part in politics. Dwight himself was more active than his father, but whatever pull he had was with the Democrats. However, the factional fac-tional Republican fight helped him. Editor Howe, the town's chief Democratic Demo-cratic leader, advised Dwight 'o go get the endorsement ot Phil W. Heath, editor ot the Abilene Chronicle Chron-icle and spokesman for the "Square-Deal" Republicans; also to get the endorsement of Charles M. Harger, editor of the Abilene Reflector, Re-flector, spokesman for the "Stand-Pat" "Stand-Pat" Republicans. Since young Eisenhower was not allied with either faction, Heath and Harger were very friendly, and gladly gave him their support. Thus, he was able to obtain not only the endorsement ot the Democrats, but of both Republican factions a real compliment to his standing in the community. Eisenhower's first and only venture ven-ture into politics occurred while he was taking postgraduate work at the Abilene high school, preparatory to West Point Chief speaker at the Democratic banquet was George H. Hodges, later governor of Kansas. Dwight's subject was "The Student in Politics." Two themes ran through the speech of the 19-year-old future commander ot the Allied armies in Europe preparedness and helping the under-dog. According to the Abilene News: "To say that he handled himself nicely would be putting it mildly His speech was well received." A tew months later, Ike Elsen hower was In West Point where no one is supposed to be either a Demo- rat or a Republican. EISENHOWER MERRY GO ROUN D In high school, young Dwight was sailed "Ugly Dee." ... One day a gang of schoolboys trooped into J. W. Howe s editorial offices to nar rate how Ike fell off a horse. "The lorse turned his head, to knock off tjflj andl Ike . Just fell ofT." they ;aia. . . . uwigni naa come in waning wani-ng on one leg and guarding his arm, tie just grinned. Actually, the torse had stepped, in a hole and 'alien, but 'Ike never tried to ex-slain ex-slain it to the other boys. . . The Elsenhower gang at school had odd raits. UNRRA Test of Sentiment For World Co-Operation Faith In Ideat Necessary to Of Allied Relief Agency After Reports Of Early Difficulties. By BAUKIIAGE Newt Analyst end Commentator. WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street. N.W.. Washington, D. C. The forces in Washington battling for world co-operation are finding the going tough. It la hard to get people to have faith in collective security when they witness such things as the breakdown of the foreign for-eign ministers' conference in London, Russia's reluctance to co-operate in the Far East advisory commission, Argentina's espousal ot the ways of the dictators. At times it seems as though, Internationally speaking, de mocracy were approaching tne win ter of its sorest discontent It is unfortunate that in the midst ot this period ot suspicion and anxiety, anxi-ety, a yes and no vote has to be taken on a matter that may mean life or death, and to that extent, peace or anarehy, to hundreds ox thousands of people in Europe. I refer to the 500 million dollar appropriation appro-priation for UNRRA which has been winding a precarious way through congress. By the time these lines appear, that appropriation which congress previously authorized may have been granted. There has never been much doubt as to its final approval But the danger lies in the effect of proposed reservations. This BDnronriation bill is con sidered a bell-wether. If it goes through unencumbered, it may mean that other measures affecting our relations with other nations are fairly safe and that such isolation-Ism isolation-Ism as exists in the country (and, therefore, In congress) is less than one-third of the whole. It is true that there have been loud and emphatic demands that such knowledge as we possess concerning con-cerning the atom and Its potentiality be kept strictly to ourselves even though scientists say it cannot be less than common knowledge even the "know-how" to turn It to military mili-tary or commercial use within a few years. But I believe that if you will submit to careful analysis the expressed sentiment of congress on this subject it would reveal a line-up which takes little consider ; ation of any international aspects of , the use of atomic energy. In other ! words! the viewpoints so far ex-i ex-i pressed have differed as to whether this new force has been looked at as something to sell at home and . the question has been whether it be produced under state control or by private enterprise. The question of Internationalizing the bomb has remained re-mained in the domain of theory. A look at the arguments tor and against UNRRA and the reaction to them gives us a much clearer picture pic-ture of tendencies, isolationist or otherwise, of the arguer. U. S. Support Is Vital When a congressman casts his vote "aye" or "no on the bill to appropriate the money for UNRRA he is not simply virtually voting aye or no on whether we help feed starv ing Europe. If he votes no and the noes have it there will be no UNRRA. True, all contributing na tions put in the same proportion of their national income 1 per cent but it so happens that 1 per cent of the national income of the United States is nearly three-quarters ot the entire sum contributed. Your voter knows this. And he can't help realizing the UNRRA is symbolic of American participation in any world organization. Without this country's advice, consent and support, no world organization can exist And likewise, with American support no nation can afford not to go along. Another thing that the congressional congression-al voter knows when he votes on UNRRA Is that it is far from perfect per-fect He knows that the personnel, the efficiency, the standing ot the organization or-ganization have improved tremen? dously in the last tew months since it has been able to get the personnel person-nel it required, which it couldn't get before because of the manpower and brainpower shortage due to the war. But he knows it is still hampered by its polyglot nature and he has to have faith enough in its purpose to make him feel that the risk of failure fail-ure is worth taking. Because UNRRA, like any international organization, or-ganization, is everybody's baby, It can easily become nobody's baby. Each nation has been only too ready to criticize it always excluding their own representatives' functions, of BARBS ...by Daukhage Three wheeled "bugs" little tear-drop cars run by an airplane engine will soon be available at around a thousand dollars. More use for DDT. About 800 "tasters" In 28 shoo factories were among the many strikers ot the day. The question is how long can a tester last when be tsn't.testingf " Vt?7: i ynri Continue Work course. UNRRA has suffered greatly great-ly from a poor press because the task it faced was well nigh impossible impossi-ble in wartime. The bad news, therefore, overbalanced overbal-anced the good news as far as reports re-ports ot progress on the part of the active, contributing countries were concerned. From the passive, recipient recipi-ent countries naturally there were plenty ot complaints. These "sins ot omission" were ballyhooed. The other side of the story was not It was the sad and familiar tale ot priorities, a story many a business man can tell Even when UNRRA had money in hand for food required re-quired (although some of the contributing con-tributing members are very slow to pay, the United States still owes a little less than half of its allotment allot-ment and authorization), it was impossible im-possible to get tiie combined food board, which decided who got what to allot any to UNRRA until the armed forces, the domestic market the lend-lease, and the liberated countries who had money to buy, got theirs. And even if the food was available, frequently there were no ships in which to transport it That situation- has changed. Food is now being delivered to Europe. By Christmas it Will be moving at the rate of half a million tons a month. But the memory of past deficiencies de-ficiencies lingers and doubt as to future performance could easily be used as an excuse to defeat the measure unless one is really convinced con-vinced that UNRRA's Job is so important im-portant it must succeed. And there we get down to the nub of the whole argument For to agree with the thesis that UNRRA's objective is de sirable is to agree that the good of one is the good of all and the good of the other fellow is the good ot the us "us" standing for the United States. It is easy to show that millions in Europe will starve this winter unless they get food from outside their own borders. It is easy to prove that in those countries which are UNRRA's concern the ones which were in vaded and which cannot pay tor food starvation will lead to disease, dis-ease, riots, revolt and death. And we know that under such conditions, nations turn to totalitarianism and when that fails, to chaos. We also know that unless we help tide these people over, we cannot expect to sell them our surpluses because "you can't do business with a graveyard." Nevertheless the isolationist isola-tionist would respond, what of it? Let's stay in our own backyard. Therefore, the voter, weighing UNRRA's past errors with its future fu-ture potentialities, will vote for it only if he still believes that world co-operation is something worth tak Ing a risk for. So UNRRA becomes a test of bow well this belief is standing the test of misunderstandings and disappointments disap-pointments on the diplomatic front which we have faced in the past weeks. We hear a great deal about the difficulty of understanding the Japa nese mind and many people have their tears as to how we are going to get along in the years ahead dur ing which we will occupy the Coun try and attempt a reconversion ot Japanese thinking as well as eco nomic life. Recently! had a long conversa tlon with an officer who bad inter viewed some of the more intelll gent Japanese officers captured in the Philippines just before the sur render. Several remarks of one of these men illustrated the difficulty of reaching the enemy mind. My friend asked the prisoner: "What did you think of our propa ganda? "It made us laugh," the Jap re plied. "Be specific," my friend said. "Well, you sent us leaflets saying, 'Surrender; come over to our lines and receive plenty of hot food and cold water.' Wo laughed at that We bad plenty of cold water in the mountains. What we wanted was hot water." Water, to a Jap, meant in this case a bath. They bathe in very hot water. That was what they wanted and couldn't get To the Americans water means, after the heat of battle, first a drink. "The department of Justice has over 87 million, fingerprint cards. But they don't all belong to crooks. They've got mine among others. The rubber manufacturers say there is going to be a revolution in sports wear, curtains and wall coverings. cov-erings. They can be coated with new substances which win resist not only water but oil and grease. Lamps to Make As Christmas GiftM IP -VOU want to make a tJ p Impressive gift, a iaml 1 Vv fitted With shade is .uM gl -ri" -w" uu can make h the aid of a pattern that you exactly what material.! use and how to assemble ae The lamp at the left has a k about ten inches high mad ot j, blocks put together with tour itr smaller thin blocks stained a tone. Very smart and worthy d , living room or study. The g u of toy blocks is just the thing fa i Children's room. , . NOTE These lamp bases nd ita are made with Pattern 287. taiiih Pattern 288, used for decorating i child's shade, may also be usedt furniture or walls. Patterns anucit postpaid. Send order to: MBS. BOTH WVETH SPEAES Bedford HiUi Newlw Drawer 10 an, - ta j n.. I Ill ont fnr Pattern 9BS t KB ma litis Name-Address- How Sluggish Folk Get Happy Relief WHEN CONSTIPATION nukes jood punk as the dickens, brings on stoma upset, sour taste, gassy distonk take Dr. Caldwell's famous audita to quickly pull the trigger on hrj t ; sards", and help you fed bright a ! chipper again. 1 DR. CALDWELL'S If the wondirhl M laxative contained in good old 1 1 . Pepsin to auke it so easy to take, ; f ' MANY DOCTORS use pepsin snpn lions in prescriptions to make tu m tino more palatable and agreeiUei take. So bo sure your laxative ii tained in Syrup Pepsin. INSIST ON DR. CALDWELL'S ft( i! vorite of millions for 50 years, and i that wholesome relief from const? 1 ton. Even finicky children lore it j CAUTION Use only as directed. DR.CMDM Mar Citj SENNA IAXATIYE CONTAINIOSIYRTJpp mtei rAby cloths, developed by l jf Goodrich, attached to tat . In factory assembly Kn able assemblers to pick 1 small metal parts witho fumbling. Officials predict mat r Hon may lump to nearly 4,000,IW passenger ear tires a mon sot the last quartefof 1945. Spare tires should never main Idle until other tirei worn out. Rubber need to t basa It ! condition. The now M. Goodrich all-iy Sllvertown passenger car tit tually outwears prewar natural bar tiros, Relief At Utf creomuision reuc r $ cause it goes right ; to tt 6 . a K.1I Atl 1 germ laden pUJteoV to soothe and heal . s, flamed bronchial mufous braaeiTeUyottfdrugiW5i . a bottle of CrsaniilsWo derstanding you must me quickly allays the cough J j to have your money b it : woorjf BASES 2r ' I SNAPPY FACTS RUBBER y i 1 ,-iOi .tart.... r.t.i.fi,mw--wi' j greet BtEGoodricl R """"nrnmri " iw 11 hj 1 ie.ieeoajssjLMfli.'.' jsoows 11 I 1 '.! ForYourCoo Paring f ooi Hi forCouois,wiesiwoiut'" |