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Show IWHOWAN I T1MKS. PAKOWAN. iaii loionous - ooli? (an ;,f IfcnftLW, tsSGtfP Clunge C'-v $ i! Ji Mf iMcp ; JLJ f parr Cirtaln frog r Shipments Will Help rile the Peace in Europe . ;a to C..r duP, secretion fiom t r primitive nat.vo poisoning Hu 1 , ( t.,..r j"5 The jHiiscn m., u " i 'oof i ---- ! r-- rllv 1 1,1 , .. i.l t. - - v. , i . I - color, U aIo iw-t- f,,r t r of dyeing the U II V ISU KIIAC.n is t'limmrnl-ilof- . ,m Amazon parrots. Ti grfTT' NfH ers of the bird are b. k, j , word of our officials. T) t will i'f the skin is ruU .. a, , V M' rrwrf. KilC I Mrrrt. N ".. to those who oppose our economic frog. As a const 4 l 4'luiiton, I). U. e ,, 4.;, the l est weapon they, have feathers whi n tn, v . when ,r. yu ever received. As fast os possible, Fni., Snr . it t uf.d un f I:. bright yellow i, hcjiJ ,t I'te-all the advantages which enhances t1 e . we are losing .. k .r g uii di gained by the success of arms. We bird in the eyes of p e r.ativti t in Op W Mitt U ..in, jirn are losing the reace much faster r .i i,s'i ' e j c at the cl fe of World War I. than Vt. Atl.mt'c in first The great blow has been the yt li ha e rf.nl r.nil food muddle. Others will pile up l.ke l.f.ii iii.inv ctl.fr . a snowball. . epjf.ils in prorara-ticwe will have to that It appears DE P M fir a !nve the reduce inadequate raalready will start s, . w me m will of i course, Berlin. This, tion for s.a rt !y to git food Misrr.Li ANIOls give the Russians a strong talking to live hut. ired mil- r j J, J HR M T ASO si IL western the powers point against OITIre rurniiutr. Siit, n in, Iii n starving .v! en we cannot afford to sustain the Mtrhmri S.ln it-lug f women and tlul fj SAtT LARK Ul ah I VIIKVo ration for the normal IS W..1 kali as Hr.e4. dren in Euroje and I h consumer. And so the path of our friend, the MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS The voluntary effrom Izvestia, crosse that reporter down to cut 'fort of the American official. Cleaily we food consumption ' RADIO PIANOS the different segments of the see IPPUIIffi simply hasn't wukcd. of western' which received JuM opponents car lotd of goo J ' It isn't that tie piojle are un- pictuie pU0i have sketched tn no $125.00 to $385.00 willing. It's that there was no im- democracy troubled across the strokes faint our Alt in4 Ptdlot from ) 7.S0 to I mediate way to cut down on world. IT nit dtu rtf IK9 mmjprvtt pructual. eating which seemed of Yes, indeed, food will write the HOME SERVICE C0MPAXT And so a practical means getting 41 Wl TAM WR lll lt Ck. I '4 food in cans is to be tried, and its peace! vollocal on the will success depend POULTRY, CHICKS & EQUIP. unteer organization in your commu- Polls Show U. S. U. S. APPROVED blood nity. The fuods needed are milk Ready to Sacrifice M ebukt, 14 brenj t. (condensed, evaporated or dried), to note that the H rt Ufa It is 0 j interesting Utreest moat, fish, peanut butter, baby American people are perfectly willC4ra4 lteefcnr p foods, baked beans, juices, stews, ing to make sacrifices to send food soups, honey, vegetables. Two surveys were to Europe. SFF.DS, PLANTS, FTC, I know that you have heard this of Denver TeraaU. Cbbat. Onion. Olrr? p.ira before in dt tail. I hope you will made by the University one of Research center, n vo onion need Rtnui for c I hear it again, with further details, National 68 per cent of Mead TUnl tnrm. Otrrtoa. Nmu which showed that but perhaps you dont realize what those interviewed indicated their WANTED TO BUY you and the United States can get wish to resume rationing if neces- HIGIIKST CASH in return for the food we send out, mills i r. tn iidie.in order to send critical food lor poalotfe M.imp collection' and what we may lose if starvation sary iv to Write )..iionv txl abroad. MMtt ( becomes widespread. KOBI.N SON, Dot 45, Albany, Ofq inthe same Another by survey The whole question is pointed up stitution showed that more than a in a displayed third of the people (35 per cent) bewhich an dispatch from Moscow to lieved that we should send food to official called my attention last Invest in Your Country-B- uy week. It was a statement made by Germany as a gift if she could not a correspondent of the Soviet paper pay us for it. I believe if a similar poll were U. S- - Savings Bondi! Izvestia, who had been touring the taken in that to feeding Japan, regard American zone m Germany. The food stuff difficulties which the results would be approximately forced lowering of rations (in the the same. American zone), the correspondent wrote, are explained, in my view, Gardens Grow not so much by the absence of pro- On Skyscrapers ductive districts as by a lack of People have their roots in the soil order and distribution of agricul- even when they live 20 stories above Then he went on tural products. I had that pavements. asphalt to explain that the big estates had to mind as I leaned forcibly brought nut been broken up, as they were in over the wall of a wide terrace of the Russian zone. a penthouse garden high above Park avenue. New York. Hunger Used as Gobi's As I looked to the right and the Political Weapon I saw fresh green left, everywhere This criticism, which I think in. edging other walls like the one vr c8a'v'1 help vestigation will prove to be exceedagainst which I was leaning; and how eg?" reveals and biased I below unfair, ingly me, could glimpse neat gar(ooncf food, or the lack of it, is serving dens already sprouting cheerfully and can serve as a weapon to stir in the first warm spring sun. There was a vine spreading over one up discontent and to bring the western countries into disrepute and dis- wall; higher up were tall trees favor. bursting into leaf. Tall, I say the Revolution follows hunger just as tops were some 300 feet above the ALRI6HI TOMORROW surely as hunger follows war. pavement, if only some 15 feet I)ependnb As a matter of fact, one of the above their elevated roots. most efficient organizations in the I saw one old man in a battered LAXATIVE American military zone of Germany straw hat, his trowel laid aside and (ivtiON, mil ev m !((( is the agency which distributes food. the evidence of his industry in a GET A 25' BOX Working closely with it is another row of little pine trees m neatly highly efficient American agency painted tubs. He was resting in a which the British have used as a garden chair, a little fountain playmodel in their zone the health and ing in the wall beside him, and a sanitation division, neat privet hedge for his skyline. However, there is a food shortage Farther away was a real achievein Germany, just as there is in the ment a lawn at least 50 feet square rest of Europe. The effects are the with tulips blossoming a neat same everywhere, and Germany walk that led to nowhere.along an of as serves excellent example 1 J . . h sj-ti-- m l : r I -- 1 I C- i f : i CLASSIFIED 1 . ART ENf - fW' 1 - i 1,550-calori- UA j j j It s n edwaui) HNU I flarn. We not enjov living do! Backed by over 400 years of hisn tory, tradition and romance, South Carolina is still glamorous and appealing. Consider for a moment that 90 per cent of the South Carolinians in the armed forces, when polled, indicated their intention of returning to their native state when they got out of uniform! Though they had seen the world, they found nothing to lure them away from the Low country, the Up country, and the Piedmont in between. South Carolina has had a glorious past. But also it has a future! It endured terrible years of Reconstruction following the War Betwei n the States, and it was not until the turn of the century that order came out of chaos. Then South Carolina was aware of itself again, ready to cope with" its problems m ihe light' of progress. Each decade has seen improvement, and a further step toward the fulfillment of its destiny. South Carolina is vibrant with new life, new energies, and a will to progress. Wealth has been introduced by textile and other industries, including 'HY soft-spoke- -- Trr?. ywrwy ' i ! us A Ml RANSOM K J. WILLIAMS Governor of South Carolina It was the Spanish settlement of San Miguel de Gualdape. Other Spaniards came, De Soto and Juan Pardo, to explore the interior about the Savannah river. Competing with the Spaniards were the French, who in 1562 briefly settled a Ixidy of Huguenots at Port Royal. None of these ventures endured, however, and it was left to the English to establish permanent setin the Low country. tlements. Charles d I in 1629 granted to Sir all Amenca from Robert Heath sea to sea between the 36th and 3M parallels of latitude under the name of Carolina Even then the cmin-- , try remained unexplored until 1663 when Charles II chartered the same territory to eight of his loval friends. They became lord propri-etois of the province of Carolina. In March, 1670, the first settlenu nt. consisting of 148 persons, was made at Albemarle Point and named Charles Town, the Charleston of today. Cavaliers and Puritans came from England to swell the population The fame of Carolina sunshire spread, and the story of its fertile soil was repeated in manv lands. Old grist mill, Anderson county From across the sea and from other American colonics they came, until plastics and chemicals. Soil rec- there were Cavaliers, Puritans, lamation, reforestation, flood con- French Huguenots. Irish, Dutch and Germans trol, hydro-electri- c development Many Quakers arrived those are the projects of today. early, and one of them, John Arch-ladserved as governor of the Agricultuie has been spurred to new heights by scientific aids. Fields of province. Later moie than a thoucotton, corn, tobacco and peanuts sand suffering Aoadiuns found a refstill remain; but new crops have uge and a home Added to all these been added and mote will come. were the Negroes, bunging an unAnd new industries too, for South suspected gift of rhjthm, and furCarolina is rich n natural renishing the smews for the struggle sources, many of them as jet un- to build a new land Like all colonists they brought developed. with them old hatreds and differOpen for business, South Carolina advertises, ami points to exences of class and need. Some cellent highways, rail and water came for riches, sump for adventransportation, and main routes of ture, others sought relief fiom reairplane travel. Favored by a mild ligious persecution They quat reled climate, it bei kons to those often among themselus, hut stood who want a home, p insure, jobs, together ao common against business, manufuctu. icg, farming enemy. Thev ropul-e- d tie attacking and a good life. Indians and thev fought off pirates More than 80 years before Vir- from the In 1718 co.M at ginia was founded and over 90 years Chaileston. 4l pirates swung from before the Puritans reached Massathe gu'lows in one mor ff with 22 chusetts, a white settlement was of them dangling t ere one day. founded on what is now Winyah bay They fought h r tae tig1 t of local - . W nTW 1 veil gov i rnment. They overthrew the j roprietary government and be-- i an e a rojal province under the king's charter. They finally revolted against the king himself, and became one of the 13 original American colonies. They reasserted themselves again in 1860, and there followed the Civil war. Through all the years, in massacre and war, through storm and fire, despite earthquake and pestilent e, the people of South Carolina struggled on. They explored the wilderness and located new towns and more plantations. They built roads through forests and swamps, and threw bridges across rivers and streams. They built houses of tabby" a composition of crushed oyster shell and of thick hardwood logs. They spread out from the Low country to the Up country. They built for beauty and utility and discovered the dignity of life. Charleston is the place where the Ashley and Cooper rivers meet to form tiie Atlantic ocean," is the traditional geography lesson of a Charleston child a lesson as significant as it is descriptive. Men and women of South Carolina believe in themselves, in their state, and in their destiny. They have produced leisure, culture and a high responsibility of citizenship. They have drawn character from the land ibelf, and courage and integrity from their labors. More than 250 years of war-torhistory have molded and tempered and strengthened a people until they know their metal. Gloriously patriotic in World Wars and II, South Carolina has furnished, fed and trained men for every battlefield in the world. Her heroes have followed Old Glory to the farthest ends of the earth, gathering Purple Hearts and battle stars and filling lonely graves. South Carolinas motto is Dum Spiro, Spero (While I Breathe I also, Animus Opibusque Hope); Iarati (Prepared in Spirit and Wealth, or Ready with Minds and Resources), and at no time in her history have these phrases been more fitting than they are now. From the mountains to the sea, South Carolina has 31,055 square miles of inviting land! n 1 ' ww-- y ; o ff f ' y ft J,' ;vv V ' r ' ; qL zZJ .HA , 'y. Xv air vtt, ' ' . , 4N . v ev-eve- ry v ?; v Rebuild Mexican Agriculture Through the building of modern, comfortable homes for rural workers, the improvement of farm land, and introduction of mechanized farm equipment, a general plan for the rehabilitation of Mexican agriculture has been initiated. One hundred model farms have been completed in the district of Topilejo, with means for working the land in modern and efficient manner. A model school and home for teachers also have been built. To create in each center of population a permanent board which will treaty. A revealing comment on how this consider the respective problems of works was appended to a report farmers, livestock raisers, business made shortly after the British were men, industrialists and artisans. forced to drop to a To promote undertakings for the scale and coal producton dropped manufacture or sale of modern approximately 20 per cent. This was implements of agriculture. the comment: To distribute by credit individualHeavy workers are dropping at ly, 'to towns, or to areas, modern their work and food riots have al- farm tools, necessary technical diready taken place. If this ration is rection, selected seeds and fertinot raised soon, there will be no lizer. coal: without coal there will be no To promote and organize private transportation; without coal and capital for the creation of small intransportation, there will be no stitutions that will dedicate themfood of from processing indigenous selves to the maintenance of rural resources. credit as the only logical means The fact that we now have to for agricultural development. Co back on our pledged word to the To build schools and homes for German people will seriously im- teachers in agricultural, industrial our and the confidence or prestige livestock centers, as well as pair of the German in the County road. people BARBS pledged . . . sentiment interests An s U, Low Typical Edisto Island. Table Rock mountain, Greenville, with reservoir in the foreground. y the political effects of a food short-- I age. There, the American authori-- ' ties can accurately check on what, is going on since the military gov- -' eminent is so closely tied in to phase of the daily lives of the people. Recently a military government official in Germany wrote to me: "No slogan was ever truer than Food will win the war and write the peace. We are about to sit down at the peace table with Italy. Russia prob- ably will not be present. But the food that Italy does not have may affect the validity of that peace a Spray with Black Leaf 40. One ouoc6 in 6 gallons of water makes an effective aphid-spra-y. Black Leaf 40 also controls leaf hoppers, leaf miners, most thnps, mealy bugs, bee bugs, young sucking bugs and snft'&r insects. A TOBACCO CHEMICAL COUP, INCORPORATED Kentucky Louisville 2 WNU-- W ... A y - o- A u , ' , . o't,-'i.occ- 1,000-calor- all-ye- ! '1 me personally for the same rea-S"- 'i I have always sympathized with Cjrano de Bergerac. The Titttar.s, I am told, consider the Western iri es ugly, because, instead of a r.:t e, modest little proboscis in the I'.iale of their faces, they have vi at one Tibetan descr.bed as "the spout of a teapot turned upside down. hospitals. by Ba u k ha ge irHre n"i!rtinie slaughtering be enforced to check the meat black market. But black mar- - ,1,J is trolled. Ail n takes is a cow and a knife. never con- It s true weve had some mfla-Eu- t t on und r OPA I cant see b ow you can S,P a leak the dam ty blowing the whole damin up Help Them Cleanse the Blo of Harmful Body Was Your kidneya aro constantly iraata matter from the blood kidneys aometimee lag in their wor not act aa Nature Intended f!'. w.f move impurities that, if retained,w tn poison the system and opet body machinery. u.die. nagging be Symptoms may persistent headache, attacks of di getting up oigbta, swelling. of . under the ey a feeling tjeng anxiety and loes of pep orandbladder Other signs of kidney order are sometimes burning, scanty too frequent urination. There should be no doubt that pr treatment is wiser than neglect. Doan' s Pillt. Doan' s have been w, new friends for more than fortv.t,na repute They have a natioo-wid- e Are recommended by grateful peoP1 country over Atk pour -, |