The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1948 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Tocker Foundation Grant and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Crosby County Public Library.
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h
-•
eg Making I
Workbench
THE CROSBYTON REVIEW
r
%
PULL size patterns, similar in
" use to those which women rely
upon to make dresses, are now
available for use on the flat sur-
face of lumber.
The pattern for making this handy work?
bench consists of outlines printed on pa-
per, of all Component parts of the work-
bench; step by step instructions that a
boy of 14 years of age can understand.
• •
Just the bench for your cellar or garage
workshop. Send 25 cents in coin, money
order or check for .Pattern No, 15 to:
Easi-Bild Pattern Co., Boi 71, Pleasant-
ir
B
J8h
■H-
TUt -
If
Ville, N. x
If your nose some-*
times fills up wit h stuffy transient con-
gestion—put a few drops of Va-tro-nol
uj each nostril. It quickly reduces con-
gestion and makes breathing easier In
• hurry . .. gives grand relief from
snlffly, sneezy, stuffy distress of head
colds. Follow directions In the package;
VICKS VA-TRO-NOL
VsV®"'-
c tone
IT OUT AND YOU'JLk
PREFER THIS
• In NR (Nature'* Remedy) Tablet*
there are no chemicals, no minerals,
a* phenol, derivatives. NR Tablets are
different—orf different Purely vege-
table—a combination of 10 vegetable
ingredients formulated over SO years
ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their
action is dependable, thorough, yet
gentle, as millions of NR's have
Get a 25# box. Use ss directed.
It
To Help Avoid
COLDS and
COUGHS
due to colds---
. Many Doctors
recommend
SCOTT'S EMULSION
If yea estefc eolda
often—bacauM you
don't i>t enough
A AD Vitamin food—you'll b« grateful
for the way good-taitlng Scott's
Emulalon hslps build you up and Wlps
ward off cold*, build itimioa and
resistance. Scott's is a HIGH
ENERGY FOOD TONIC-
rieh In natural AAD Vitamins
and energy-bufldiny-natural
oil. Good tasting. Easy to
digest. Economical too. Buy
todar.at youV drag store.
MORE than just a tonic—
it's powerfulnourishmentl
SCOTIS EMULSION
High Eher&y tonic
READ THE ADS
WEEKLY HEWS ANALYSIS
v ' ^
II. $. Troops Leave Panama Bases;
Anderson Lists Grain Speculators;
Nation Warned of High Price Perils
Released by WNU Features.
(EDITOR'S NOTE: When opinions are expressed In these eelamna. they are these el
Western Newspaper Unlea's news analysts and not necessarily ef this newspaper.)
panama:
No Bases
Unanimous rejection by Pan-
ama's national assemWy of a treaty
which would have given the U. S.
the right to leaseandman 14 mili-
tary and airfield sites to defend the
Panama canal not only precipitated
a diplomatic disaster but also left
this nation in the position of a fighter
without a left hand to guard his jaw.
The action, strongly opposed by
Panama's President Jiminez, left
the U. S.jwith just on,e alternative—
.tcx-puH ouWsince commitments had
been given that no American troops
would remain in Panamanian terri-
Home Again
SCRIPTURE: Isaiah 40:28-31; .Mat-
thew 9:9: John 14:8-14- AcU W:22-31.
DEVOTIONAL READING: Psalm 33.
The safe* "simple and tur*
way to have pure drinking
water the year 'round.
Operates on any pressure
water system without extra
pumps or motors. Sterilizes
V4' C
water with jet of chlorine
solution similar to water
sterilizing system used in
large cities. Will answer the -
water problems for any
farm, ranch, rural home or
cajap-sa fel yT;si m p. I y a mL
surely. "
wsiti ro
JTtATID fOLDI«|
|0F TEXAS
P 1 MAM 1D+M
Buy JLJ. S. Savings Bonds!
Relief At Last
TCreonralslon relieves promptly be- i
lit to the seat of the
loosen nn^ expel
~ and aid nature
r to-
_ mucous mem-
muoea. Tell your druggist to sell yon
i bottle of Creomulaion with the un-
derstanding you must like the way it
quickly allays the cough or you are
wo have your money back.
CREOMULSION
^jofCoaghs, Chest Colds> Bronchitis
SPEEDED-UP COMFORT
for to-called
KIDNEY SUFFERERS
r«ffSa-
£
GIRLS! WOMEN!
B <ry this If you're ,
■RVOUS
•ettmiai urrtU
tUd
Lytlla
PS. Plnfchatols Vete-
EcvtSmSS
AC "S-Star QuaHty^ OH^Fllter
Elements ♦•ave an exclusive safe-
guard in the Collector Tube Trap.
It's made of acidproof glass cloth,
_ which can't iu
pollution of
the engine BiL
Don't 'take a
chance on dirty
buy
and thus allow
oil. Buy AC
and be sure.
!! It's A
GIFT !!
One Brand
Ven-
ind
balls
TOTMbub-
bl'a oum for
on.y $25.00
for *35.00—
puts
$10X0
our pock
Ono to
to mar
ubssquant
orders for
Gum filled
balls.
Send
with order
1V &THOMAS CO., SK-2 *
1E72 Jefferson Paducah, Kentucky
TRYP0ST-WAR "FASTERACTING"
TABLETS
Rilsvi fhe aches e*d
of Colds fast wHfcMHtalHeHocl
r • ClUlSI UMHh«/ '
HIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATES!
NURSING
IS A PROUD
PROFUSION!
tory without sanction of ah author-
ized treaty., -t-—• ,
- Military officials later announced
that the withdrawal of some 2.000
Q. S. soldiers from the-14 bases sur-
rounding the canal would be begun
Immediately. That meant, probably,
that the troops woyld be pulled into,
the canal zone proper, which the
Uj S. leases from Panama.
This- -was, by all odds, the most
crucial issue to arise-lriU. S.-Pan-
ama relations . since this country
purchased the'canal from Prance
In 1904. And it was aggravated by
the fact that the Inability to man de-
fense bases- around the canal left
this most vital point in American
military security dangerously ex-
posed. •
Rep. Albert Engel (Rep., Mich.),
chairman of the house appropria-
tion's subcommittee on defense,"
stated his belief that the national
assembly's 51 to 0 vote against the
treaty was influence at least in
part by the Communist movement
in Panama; and he suggested that
the U. S. build a new Atlantic-Pa-
cific can'al outside Panama if that
nation continued to refuse use of
bases.. ,
There did not appear to be much
chance of further negotiations, how-
ever; the assembly's rejection of
the pact probably closed the door on
that course. Some officials were
speculating on whether the problem
"might not wind up in the lap of the
UnitedI Nations for solution
serial
Grain Operu
Secretary of Agriculture Clinton
Anderson, at the behest of the sen-
ate appropriations committee in-
vestigating commodity speculation
on the part of government officials,
came through with the first install-
ment of the "names" he had prom-
ised to name.
There were 711 of them — big
traders in grain and other commodi-
ties. But except, for the* name of
the man who precipitated the inves-
tigation, Edwin W. Pauley, presiden-
tial advisor and special assistant
ANDERSON'S LIST
to Army Secretary Kenneth Royall,*
there were no spectacular disclo^
aures on the list.
While there is no law against spec-
ulation, the current investigations
ordered by congress stem from re-
ports that government officials have
profited from "inside" information
on government commodity buying
plans.
, Anderson's 711-name list was the
first Installment in.--a series which
the agriculture secretary will for-
90 p ♦ r - tnifr* senate appropriations
committee, simultaneously making
each list public. An estimated 14,000
names are available for such list-
ing. '■?
Meanwhile the senate appropri-
ations committee, as well as a house
committee, were ready to start sift-
ing the rolls for possible irregularis,
ties and especially for leaks of in
side information.
What We Know ol God
Lesson for January 11, 1948
THE Scripture for Sunday's les-
son, is Isaiah 40:28-51,; Matthew
Jf:9, John 14:8-14, and Acts IT: 22-31,
with Psalm 33 as the devotional
rrading.
"Hast thou not
known? Hast thou
not heard, that the
everlasting God, the
Lord, the Creator
of the ends of the
earth, fainteth not,
neither is weary?
Back la the U. 8. after attend-
ing the United Nations human
rights session In Geneva, Bwitser-
land, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt pro-
claimed that the commission, of
Which she was chairman, "did a
very good piece of work," She ex-
pressed satisfaction with Interest
showg J>y «lt"nations in the discus-
sions of hqman rights, was
pleased, too, with Russian cooper-
ation.
Dr. Newton
-H
"Many Industrial " prices must
come down at ieast in! relation to
other prices and Tttajjy rates o£
profit must subside while reasonable7'
profitability-ifr^ettabhshed in other-
tfreas." ' • ' .
This was a clarion call for a
revival of. the old freebooting com-
petition ini American industry.
yThfe report surmised that the pres-
ent era of prosperity was"abnor-
mal" because of such factors as
heavy exports, short crops and
great military expenditures. To
remedy the situation the council of-
fered these recommendations: 7
1 elimination of deliberate jCut-
I • tailment of output as practiced
by some labor organizations.
2 Discontinuance of the practice
• of big business of hampering
the development of new, small busi-
nesse&c^y ••
^Development of natural re-
^J. sources arid increase in the in-
dustrial facilities'of, the nation.
PROPAGANDA?
ForVMT
Rep. Forest Harness (Rep., Indi)
has charged the army with carrying
on an illegal campaign of "propa-
ganda" in behalf of a universal mili-
tary training law, thereby .adding
more fuel to an issue already des-
tined to be superheated in "1948.-"*
Harness, chairman of a special
house invest!gating«committee, said
he would call high army officials be-
fore his group soon after congress
reconvened on January 6 to answer
accusations concerning the use of
taxpayers' money to influence pub-
lic legislation.
Said he, "I am receiving hundreds
of letters daily from every part of
the country concerning a propa-
ganda pressure campaign being
waged by the army for universal
military training."
A recent investigation by his cotri-
mittee, he said, had disclosed the
hiring of two-civilians to tour the
country addressing women's groups
and making radio speeches favoring
the proposed law.
- Contention of the army is that it
fcimply is doing everything it can to
foster a sense of the need for na-
tional security_ among the people,
and Harness had yet to prove that
the army was morally wrong in that
view, whatever theHenal technical!*
ties of the situation might be.
There is no search-
ing of his undei>
standing. He giveth
power to "the faint,
and. to them that
have no might lie
Inoreaseth strength. . . . They
that wait upon the Lord shall renew
their strength; they shall mount up
.with wings as eagles; they shall
run, and not be weary; and they
shall walk, and not faint" - . - ;
That Is the^passage from Isaiah.
What a pfomise 1 In this hour when
nieti iare bending beneath the bur-
den pf a war-weary world, how it
gives lift to one's soul to contem-
plate the words of this great and
blessed promise. v
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS
Imart Sbate ^Jrock for
union
Gad Our Maker
to girls ander SS, hlak-eeliool 1
aiadaetas —d snllefe girls..
ask |(r asore iiforaelM
at the hospital where yea
weald like to enl
warning:
On Prices
The President's council ^ of eco-
nomic advisers, .an astute group
that sometimes functions as Mr.
Truman's 4K)nscience, has warned
that the U. S. must return to ''real
price competition" if the present
boom period is not to collapse into
a shapeless economic mess.
In Its annual report tbe council
sharply criticized ^'monopolistic
practices" and declared also that:
the payoff:
Who'llVav?
Economy-bitten members of the
house <of representatives* who jug-
gle billions of dollars-with the"
aplomh,„oJ a high-wire performer are
at a loss as to whom they can stick
for a -$418 printing bill.
With the dreadful irony that some-
times appears to make an embar-
rassing situation worse, the bill if
for a committee report on'money
entitled "Money Makes the Mare
Go." _ i' '
The committee on coinage,
weightx and measures ordered thg
report two years ago but has since
gone out of existence, hence, can't
be handed the check.
John .McBride, former clerk ot
the committee, drew up the report
but can't be convinced he should,
pay for it, maintaining that It wasn't^
his fault that It came out "a little
late."
«
BABY RATIONING
Europe's Population Too Denso for Resources
For her own good, Europe should
lose no time In attempting' to estab-
lish a favorable ratio of population
to its feeding resources, observes
Guy Irving Burch. director of the
population reference bureau.
It is imperative, ha said, that
such action be taken before the U. S.
reaches the point where It no longer
can underwrite Europe's material
I shortages under the Marshall plan
or similar ventures.
One way to reach that favorable
ratio la tor increase Europe's re-
sources. The only other way 1« tc
decrease populfUon. yet, Burch
pointed out many European coun-
tries are giving bonuses for largei
families. Today, he said, Europe
literally cannot support her dense
population either by Industrializa-
tion or agriculture
L
*f tl E GIVES to all men life and
breath and everything," Acts
17:25. One of our; daily prayers
| should-be to thank God that he has
j let us open our eyes to the beauty
| of another dawn. We must not take
. it for granted. It is the goodness
and mercy of God that permits us
to open oUr eyes, to breathe, to
; have food, to think. He gives us life
and.breath and everything.
He causes the sun to shine and
the tides to- ebb and flow. He
causes the rain, to fall and the
winds to bear thete blessings. He
holds the earth in its course. God
Is the maker of every good thing.
"-""-"•fT-. • 7^
And He Is Our Father
"^OT only is God the Creator and
Sustainer of the physical uni-
verse; but he is also our Father. He
knows us each by name. He cares
for the sparrows, simply because
• they are sparrows. _He cares for us
because we are his children, made
In his image, capable of. fellowship
with him. The end of man, as the
Catechism clearly teaches, is to en-
joy God and glorify him forever.
Read SigalB the passage that de-
v sCrlbes Paul's visit to Athens, and '
how he observed that the people,
though quite intelligent, were
worshipping many different gods.
Paul summoned them to worship;
the one true and living God.
When we acknowledge - God as
Maker and Father, we are then en-
able to serve him in conscious as-
surance of his love and caye for. Uf
as fats'adopted children. . "'
• e • i . '
Show Us the Father
DEAD again John-14:8-14, and
join with Philip in the prayer,
"Show us^the Father." Jesus an-
swered Philip, saying, "He that
hath s$en me hath seen the Fa-
ther." We come to know God as
Fathpr through Jesus Christ, and
only through Jesus Christ.
Jesos goes on to say to Philip,
"If ye shall ask anything In my
name, .! will do It." The greatest
need of our day and generation
is a fresh understanding of God—
his nature and his will. We cait
know him through. Jesus Christ.
And we come to' know him
through faith in the Lord Jesus
Christ.
Enoch walked with God. Abraham
was the friend of God. David was
a man after God's owrl heart. And
Jesus came to perfectly reveal the
Father. . The determining factor in
knbwing God as Father is our will-
ingness to believe in the Lord Jesus
Christ : .
■ ■ J. ..a- •
BeliefTn God Today
' I VHE Bible is a Book for today—
A any day, every day. It reveals
the purpose of creation, both of the
universe and man himself. It re^
veaSs the loving concern ^f God for
every soul. It portrays his forbear-
ance and his mercy and his exceed-
ing kindness, even to sinful men and
women who reject his love.
I Best of all, the Bible tells ns the
^tfeetest story ever told — the
story of how pod gave his only
begotten Son that whosoever be-
lleveth on him should not perish,
but have everlasting life.
Religion, the Christian religion* is
the most practical proposition in-the
world. Every man is constantly in
reach of God, if only he will believe
on tfie Lord Jesus Christ Ciod is
yonder In the loneliest watchtower
of the timberlahds. He Is yonder on
the Stormrtossed ship at sea. He is
everywhere, waiting to own and
bless any end all who will come
to him through Jesus Chrjst
ViVKJST'""m- '
8254
ll-IS
OLAMOUR plus for teen-agers!
A stunning date dress, that's
bound to be the envy" of, your
friends with its gay shaped pep-
lum and flattering neckline,. Try a
glowing velvet or soft rustling taf-
feta or faille.
Pattern No. 8254 comes • in'sixes 11, 12.,
13. 14. 16 and 18. Size 12, 3% yards ol 39-
inch.
The fall and winter issue ot pabk
contains a wealth ot seeing Inform.ii^-s
special features-T-free pattern DrlnuTri
side the book. 25 cents.
. Send your order to:
8EWINO% PIBlJI.E PATTERN JEPT
330 South Wells St. Chlcaeo 7, m*
Enclose 25 cents in coins for eark
pattern desired.
Pattern No—i.—__
Name ,
Address- _L
VS//V&*
Tryfemon /# Hb/ter.
The juice of a lemon in a glass of
water, when taken first thing on arii,
ing, is all that most people need to
insure prompt, normal elimination.
' No more harsh laxatives that irritate
-the digestive tracl and impair nutri-
tion ! Lemon in w^ter is good for yoiiJ
Generations of Americans h&ve takes
lemons for health—and generations
of doctors have recommended them.
They are rictrin^vTtamin C^su
valuable amo'uhtsof Brand P. "
alkalinize; aid digestion. "
Not too sharp or sour, lemon in watir
has a refreshing tang —clears tht
mouth, wakes you up. It's not i
purgative —simply hefps your sys-
tem regulate itself. Try it 10 days.
US I CAtlFOftNIA SUNKISr LtMOMt
that's a job
for 'Cam/y'and M/fy'the MENTNOLATUM TWINS
We
soothe
inflamed
membranes
%
ease
breathing!
<3
Quick MENTNOLATUM
• When head -cold misery makes
you gasp fof air, and hose feels
raw and tender, reach For soothing
Mentholatum and B-R-E-A-T-H-E!
Mentholatum contains comfort-
ing Camphor and minty Menthol,
_ JW
two famous, fast-acting ingredfc'
ents jjfe&at help thin out thick
mucus, reduce swelling, sooths |
co Id - inf |a mcd --mem bra nes. Soon
sorenfiss eases up, head starts to
clear. Don't take head-cold misery
lying down—use Mentholsrtum.
ALSO RELIEVES CHEST-COLD TIGHtN£S&
NASAL IRRITATION AND CHAPPING
islip
am:: •v>
PRINCE ALBERT*
MEANS MORE SMOKING
joy FROM MV PIPE. PJ.
GIVES ME A MELLOW,
RICH-TASTING SMOKE
THAT IS EASy ON
My TONGUE
"IT'S A10* to load my pipe
with crimp cut Prince
Albert," says J. J. Hart.
"P. A. packs right and
burns right for' a rich-
tasting smdfs that's
really tongue-gentle."
PS*
CRIMP CUT
PRINCE ALBERT IS
GREAT-FOR QGARETTE
WKIN'S! RA. ROLLS UP .
fi^ST AND EASY) SMOKES
COOL AND TASTY
P
"TrWr^NOl.to roll
"l^ee lvla* ont
Prihce Albe
f C-tfUT^r.
i up Into neat,
cigarettes."
Sr$
art,'
"P.
says H.
. shapes'-,
full-bo diefl
TUNt IH PWMct AtBfST'S "OMIS MII
ONN.B. C.
-r
-
'
•\ ..
"S
'"X
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Curry, W. H. The Crosbyton Review. (Crosbyton, Tex.), Vol. 40, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, January 9, 1948, newspaper, January 9, 1948; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth256275/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Crosby County Public Library.