buy bonds 1 h fl where you work. jnewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1967-06... · your...

1
" ~ * - 1 ' 1 «,». The joy of giving wedding, anniversary or special occasion gifts, reflects an added flare for drama when remembrances include distinctive selections of china, crystal and silver as illustrated. today's bridal "dowry"'is a sophisticated, streamlined silverlined approach to wedding etiquette compared to the horse-drawn era when a young girl's endowmenfmight have included six cows, two acres of land and a few odd pieces of silver. \u25a0 ; SHAW'S "MAN OF THE YEAR" ?Kermit J. Britt, honor stu- j dent and president of the sen- I ior class at Shaw University, j was named "Man of the Year" during the men's supper, held j I in the university dining hall j j last week. A member of "Who's | Silver designs can be as imagin- ative or as classically rendered as today's highly individual and dis- criminating tastes demand?from distinctively wrought sterling key rings for hrid aPftthuid ants to or | nately worked coffee andteaserv- ices lor newlyweds in pursuit of totallygracious living Jewelers pride themselves on their invariably wide selection of silver gifts designed to fit any need. Candlesticks, compotes, fondue or chafing dishes, salad sets, serv- ing platters, buffet warmers, salt and pepper shakers, cigarette boxes, silent butlers, ceramic lined vases and gleaming goblets are but a few of the many decora- tive and useful silver gift ideas your jeweler has to brighten your home or the home of friends.: I radition is glared for in keeping with modern living, at cording to the -Jewelry Industry Council, and contemporary cus- tom includes a gift of .1 silver service to the couple by tlu parents of the bride. An air o! added excitement to wedding festivities starts with the bride's selection of a silver pat- tern. preferred designs in hollo ware for her new home, and ster- lingremembrances for her party. A wonderful and welcome as- sistance to the bride is the jeweler's bridal registry" where her per- sonal selections of silver, china and crystal arc recorded lor easy access by family and friends want ing to give shower or wedding gifts that relied lasting thoughtful ness. I'he elegance and Versatility of silver is unsurpassed as the ideal complement t«> today's accent on at home entertaining A single, shimmering silver bowl, for in- stance. can lend alternate quick- change artistry to any buffet or formal dinner setting, as a vege- table dish, condiment server, for rolls, hors d'oeurves, as a center- piece for colorfully arranged fresh fruit, or as a handsomecontainer for flowers. N. C. Teachers Urged to Back Fla. Sanctions North Carolina teachers were called on this week to give i their support to national and state sanctions imposed against the state of Florida by the Na- tional Education Association and the Florida Education As- sociation. E. B. Palmer, executive sec- retary of the North Carolina Teachers Association, called at- tention to the unsatisfactory educational conditions in Flor- ida and commended the FEA and the NEA for their efforts ; to provide quality education for the children of Florida. "Once again the profession is being called upon to demon- strate its united support of teachers in a statewide strug- . gle in an effort to improve educational standards," said Mr. Palmer. "The NCTA, 1 am confident, will stand behind Florida's teachers in their protest against the intolerabe school conditions in their state," he added. National and state sanctions | caution teachers outside of Florida not to accept employ- ment in the state of Florida. Other sanctions include cen- sure of Florida Governor Claude Kirk and public notice that school conditions are un- satisfactory in the state. It is estimated that 9,000 new teachers would normally seek employment in Florida during the 1967-68 school year. government offices throughout | the nation. They will act as aids to nurses, police officers, libra- rians, hospital technicians, wel- fare workers, and forest rang- ers. Many of them will be out doors planting trees and beau- tifying parks. ON NKI.KAH KAI.LOI T Defense officials report about l 70 mi 1iiiut Americans would be ' unshielded if a nuclear attack ' occurred in 1972. Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara has maintained that fallout shelters t would he an integral part of I any antilia'istir pr'U'rani. I Labor Dept. Boosts Summer Jobs for Youths WASHINGTON The U. S. Department of Labor is mak- ing more than 100,000 extra Neighborhood Youth Corps summer jobs available through additional funds voted recently by Congress Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz announced. This brings to more than 341,000 the number of summer jobs planned for disadvantag- ed youths through the Bureau of Work Programs, he said. The other 241,000 NYC job op- portunities were announced in A^ril. CongFeSs has "appropriated an additional $75,000,000 for summer poverty programs. Of niversary of summer work ex- perience ancj training provided by the Neighborhood Youth Corps. It will swell the ranks of those youths aided by NYC since its inception to well over a million. The summer work-training program, unlike those operated the year round for out-of-school youths and for about nine months for those in school, is of limited duration and pro- vides enrollees with work ex- perience, preferably outside of a school environment. The youngsters will be work- ing in parks, libraries, hospi- tals, police stations, and local this, $47,000,000 was earmark- ed for the Neighborhood Youth Corps. The summer NYC job pro- gram will give a boost to the President's 1967 Youth Oppor- tunity Campaign, goal is to find work this "Summer for youngsters 16 through 21 years old. k About 13 million in this age group are expected to be job- hunting when school is out, and an estimated 2 million have little hope of finding jobs, unless employers make a special Effort to help. 5 Secretary Wirtz noted that this represents the third an- <H Your letter? Maybe never. Busy businessmen can save tune by calling long distance. GENERAL TELEPHONE W A Htmbti aI I'M GUC faml/ el CompQnm j Timely Tire Tips ( * [ on * ®* ? »*r »** ©' timely Tire Tips to help you vol ml > * .< V | \u25a0\u25a0 ' y more dependable service from your tires. If /l -|VHr9I ) 1 / < /KsxaM x ( ' When you stop to consider that tho only things sup- \u25a0 J |H Is ~ sKvwl ' porting your car on the road art four prints not H < IIf KM < j * wiM much larger than your hand, you easily realiza the \u25a0 j CT V' k\\\Y/ '\u25a0> \ » importance of tiro safety Frequent visual checks H 9| IBr* JV y v > <\) '\u25a0/. / XIVjH S 01 | n 1 1 will reveal unsafe tiro conditions such as smooth B Mf HZlfl'' » f.'/i v '' y' /\ KiaVjl Cnarles Klgsufe tread, cuts, breaks and bruises in tht lira's sidewall H Smt 9 / . iVy-.,1 and tread. M I pfl» K jjV <<\ « u ) \ i * W«* good tima to Insuerf your tires is whan your car H U Tflk IS x vt Is on a grease rack for service Your service sta- M ' | I olore jvian;»Kor | (on «tjrn <jant will be happy to assist with this in- M ,V \ 1. \\ > 1 r ißiqsbee Tire Soles Of- Another time to inspoct your tires Is whrn 1 \ t I tuns new S sold the best PRICES ro * d hazards as iron be C our own financing. Closed Wednesday 1 p.m. ? Open All Day < ?? RIGSBEE TIRE SALES 3 I J. D. Brothers IQg La j c<WOOJ j Avenue ?2720 Hillsborough Road c * I ra H fl H K i fl A fM ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0» Who", Britt, a business ad- ministration major, is also busi- ness manager of The Bear, the Shaw yearbook. He plans to attend graduate -school at the University of Wisconsin, Mil- waukee, next fall. He is the | son of Mr. and Mrs. William K. Britt of Corapeake. ! | j Pots or Plots... Save Garden Hands n> .Vlr \u25a0ttaj J THE PRICE of beauty is vigi- lance. It is no longer necessary to pay for the pleasures of garden- ing at a cost of chapped hands, red skin and broken nails. Experts on hand care, the Pac- quin people, advise putting hand cream on thickly before you put on gloves. Apply cream gener- ously under, as well as around nails. Beauty Treat While you work, your hands get a beauty treatment. They're also easier to clean later. Hand creams for normal skin, extra dry skin, and a medicated type for chapped hands, are all recommended by Pacquin experts for gardeners. From about 070 up, they're at local drug stores and cosmetic counters. Didn't You Know It? Women Have Thinner Skin Than Males! jf> In case you didn't suspect it all along, a woman is thinner- skinned than a man. Actually, the feminine skin is just a trifle thinner than the male's, but the difference is measurable. How To Be Loved Also measurable is the fact that the way a woman cares for her skin reveals whether she ex- pects to be loved. So says psycho- analyst and psychologist, Mar- jorie Taggart White, who tells why attractive skin (fives women of all apes more self-confidence in a booklet, "Skin Care Is More Than Skin Deep." The publication.is free on re- quest from the I'acquin Division, Chas. I'fizer & Co., Inc., Dept. FH, Iv 12nd St., New York 10017. The company recently held a skin care symposium, addressed liy Dr. White, when a new l inse- oir cold cream was introduced by I'acquin. BiK Attraction The natural goal of a women is feeling attractive to men, states Dr. White. She points out, however, that many women ex- press serious emotional difficul- ties by hiding behind "makeup masks," or reveal inner conflicts through facial blemishes. This psychoanalyst says, "A wife worried about losing her husband to another woman may turn her jealons anger against herself, by breaking out into a rash. A teenager may signal psy- chological insecurity by neglect- ing rules of good skin care." Emotional Problems Dr. White adds, "If we saw a person wasting away from hun- ger at a table filled with delicious food, we would say unhesitat- ingly that such a person had a serious emotional problem. Yet, many women today, from teen- agers up, are depriving them- selves of admiration, love and happiness by poor skin care." ? <> SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES? JOIN THE STAR-SPANGLED FREEDOM PLAN Buy Bonds where you work. They do. j * * They move out from the land ing area and toward their work. It's a tense job, defending free- dom. It takes brave men to da it well. These men are brave and farsighted. A majority of all our servicemen in Vietnam save for the future and support freedom through regular pur- chase of U.S. Savings Bonds. Should you join them 5 Buy Sav- ings Bonds where you bank or work. Freedom Shares new plan for Americans who want to help their country. Now, when you join the Pay- 1 roll Savings Plan or the Bond-a- Month' Plan, you are eligible to purchase the new type U.S. pav- ings Notes ?Freedom Shares?- as a bonus opportunity. Free dom Shares pay 4.74 r 'r when held to maturity of just four- and-a-half years (redeemable after one year), are available on - a one-for-one basis with Sav- ings Bonds. Get the facts where you work or bank. Join up. America needs your help. A), U.S. Savings Bonds/ Freedom Shares The U.S. Government doe* ?vyy not pau for thi* ndvrrtine- \&y ntent. ft «» presented an a ? public nervier in cooperation with the Treasury Depart- ment and The Advertifiivp Council. l Ctof TAKE THE HUNGER OUT OF YOUR CROP Maybe corn and wheatj don't grow on vines, but if you're not paying much at- tention to the fact that these; crops need lots of nitrogen and phosphorous every_year to maintain high profit yields, they might well die on the vine! When you plow down a high analysis, water-soluble ; fertilizer each spring, it sup plies Jhe kind of phosphorous and nitrogen that soil bac- teria need"to turn sod, straw, and stubble into humus, the stuff that makes soil bold water, minerals, nutrients soil that is the difference be- tween 50 and 150 bushels of corn In addition to phosphorous and nitrogen, scientific tests conducted by scientists at Olin Mathieson laboratories have shown that potash is useful to the soil, too. Ordinarily, fertilizer blend i is often made by mixing solid I forms of nitrogen, potash and phosphorous in a machine that tumbles or blends the in prcdients. What occurs is that these separate - materials don't combine nor mix uni- formly. Experience has also! shown that different size par- ticles segregate. In short, one is apt to get a plant food be- ing placed on one spot of the ! field with little or none on an-, other. It is because of this "hun- ger" problem, that a new kind of fertilizer has revolution- ized the industry. Ammo- Phos by Olin, one such ferti- lizer, is a chemical compound of nitrogen with phosphorous ,'and potash, when desired) all built into every pellet. There can be no segregation. It is water soluble, a high analysis pelletized fertilizer that may be used at almost any time of the year and in a ; variety of ways. After great I use over the country, farmers , have also pointed out that such Ammo I'bos fertilizers : store well, distribute easily and uniformly and give good results. In fact, there are wide- spread reports lately that ! many farmers arc assuring themselves bumper yields of corn, cotton, winter wheat i and other crops bv fertilizing ! with water soluble, high an- i alysis pelletized plant food 1 each fall « GILT SHILLIN' 100% BLENDED SCOTCH r WHISKY Ml 86.8 PROOF B5"l $2 so mm mm tenth Imi.tSIIII.I.IVI q. . __ FIFTH \u25a0 IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ljl fl AUSTIN, NICHOLS & CO., INC. W NEW YORK-NEW YORK A You'll go better refreshed with ice-cold Coca-Cola. Gives a lift to your spirits, a boost to your energy ...a big, bold, unmistakable taste. In short: Coca-Cola is more than an ordinary soft drink. A jUt. Cow Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by: nUHHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO 3B

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Page 1: Buy Bonds 1 H fl where you work. jnewspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn83045120/1967-06... · your jeweler has to brighten your home or the home of friends.: Iradition is glared for inkeeping

"

~

*

-1' 1

«,».The joy of giving wedding, anniversary or special occasion gifts, reflects an added flarefor drama when remembrances include distinctive selections of china, crystal and silveras illustrated.

today's bridal "dowry"'is a sophisticated, streamlinedsilverlined approach to wedding etiquette compared tothe horse-drawn era when a young girl's endowmenfmighthave included six cows, two acres of land and a few oddpieces of silver.

\u25a0

; SHAW'S "MAN OF THE YEAR"?Kermit J. Britt, honor stu-

j dent and president of the sen-I ior class at Shaw University,

j was named "Man of the Year"during the men's supper, held j

I in the university dining hall jj last week. A member of "Who's |

Silver designs can be as imagin-ative or as classically rendered astoday's highly individual and dis-criminating tastes demand?fromdistinctively wrought sterling keyrings for hrid aPftthuid ants to or |nately worked coffee andteaserv-ices lor newlyweds in pursuit of

totallygracious living

Jewelers pride themselves ontheir invariably wide selection ofsilver gifts designed to fit anyneed.

Candlesticks, compotes, fondueor chafing dishes, salad sets, serv-ing platters, buffet warmers, saltand pepper shakers, cigaretteboxes, silent butlers, ceramic

lined vases and gleaming gobletsare but a few of the many decora-tive and useful silver gift ideasyour jeweler has to brighten yourhome or the home of friends.:

I radition is glared forin keeping with modern living, atcording to the -Jewelry IndustryCouncil, and contemporary cus-tom includes a gift of .1 silverservice to the couple by tlu parentsof the bride.

An air o! added excitement towedding festivities starts with thebride's selection of a silver pat-tern. preferred designs in holloware for her new home, and ster-

lingremembrances for herparty.

A wonderful and welcome as-sistance to the bride is the jeweler's

bridal registry" where her per-sonal selections of silver, china

and crystal arc recorded lor easyaccess by family and friends wanting to give shower or weddinggifts that relied lasting thoughtfulness.

I'he elegance and Versatility ofsilver is unsurpassed as the idealcomplement t«> today's accent onat home entertaining A single,shimmering silver bowl, for in-stance. can lend alternate quick-change artistry to any buffet orformal dinner setting, as a vege-table dish, condiment server, forrolls, hors d'oeurves, as a center-piece for colorfully arranged freshfruit, or as a handsomecontainerfor flowers.

N. C. TeachersUrged to BackFla. Sanctions

North Carolina teachers werecalled on this week to give itheir support to national andstate sanctions imposed againstthe state of Florida by the Na-tional Education Associationand the Florida Education As-sociation.

E. B. Palmer, executive sec-retary of the North CarolinaTeachers Association, called at-tention to the unsatisfactory

educational conditions in Flor-ida and commended the FEAand the NEA for their efforts

; to provide quality educationfor the children of Florida.

"Once again the profession isbeing called upon to demon-strate its united support of

teachers in a statewide strug-

. gle in an effort to improve

educational standards," said

Mr. Palmer."The NCTA, 1 am confident,

will stand behind Florida'steachers in their protest against

the intolerabe school conditions

in their state," he added.National and state sanctions

| caution teachers outside of

Florida not to accept employ-

ment in the state of Florida.Other sanctions include cen-sure of Florida GovernorClaude Kirk and public notice

that school conditions are un-satisfactory in the state.

It is estimated that 9,000 new

teachers would normally seekemployment in Florida during

the 1967-68 school year.

government offices throughout |the nation. They will act as aidsto nurses, police officers, libra-rians, hospital technicians, wel-fare workers, and forest rang-ers. Many of them will be outdoors planting trees and beau-tifying parks.

ON NKI.KAHKAI.LOI TDefense officials report about l

70 mi 1iiiut Americans would be '

unshielded if a nuclear attack '

occurred in 1972. Secretary ofDefense Robert McNamara hasmaintained that fallout shelters twould he an integral part of Iany antilia'istir pr'U'rani. I

Labor Dept. Boosts Summer Jobs for YouthsWASHINGTON The U. S.

Department of Labor is mak-ing more than 100,000 extraNeighborhood Youth Corpssummer jobs available throughadditional funds voted recentlyby Congress Labor Secretary

W. Willard Wirtz announced.This brings to more than

341,000 the number of summerjobs planned for disadvantag-

ed youths through the Bureauof Work Programs, he said.The other 241,000 NYC job op-portunities were announced in

A^ril.CongFeSs has "appropriated

an additional $75,000,000 forsummer poverty programs. Of

niversary of summer work ex-perience ancj training providedby the Neighborhood YouthCorps. It will swell the ranksof those youths aided by NYCsince its inception to well overa million.

The summer work-trainingprogram, unlike those operatedthe year round for out-of-schoolyouths and for about ninemonths for those in school, isof limited duration and pro-vides enrollees with work ex-perience, preferably outside ofa school environment.

The youngsters will be work-ing in parks, libraries, hospi-

tals, police stations, and local

this, $47,000,000 was earmark-ed for the Neighborhood YouthCorps.

The summer NYC job pro-gram will give a boost to thePresident's 1967 Youth Oppor-tunity Campaign, goal isto find work this "Summer foryoungsters 16 through 21 yearsold. k

About 13 million in this agegroup are expected to be job-hunting when school is out,and an estimated 2 millionhave little hope of findingjobs, unless employers make aspecial Effort to help. 5

Secretary Wirtz noted thatthis represents the third an-

<H

Your letter? Maybe never. Busy businessmen can save tune by callinglong distance.

GENERAL TELEPHONE WA Htmbti aI I'M GUC faml/ el CompQnm

j Timely Tire Tips

( * [ on * ®* ? »*r »** ©' timely Tire Tips to help you vol ml > * .< V| \u25a0\u25a0 ' y more dependable service from your tires. If/l -|VHr9I ) 1 / < /KsxaM x

( ' When you stop to consider that tho only things sup- \u25a0 J |H Is ~ sKvwl' porting your car on the road art four prints not H < IIf KM < j * wiMmuch larger than your hand, you easily realiza the \u25a0 j CT V' k\\\Y/ '\u25a0> \

» importance of tiro safety Frequent visual checks H 9| IBr* JV yv> <\) '\u25a0/. / XIVjH S

01 | n 1 1 will reveal unsafe tiro conditions such as smooth B Mf HZlfl''» f.'/iv '' y' /\ KiaVjlCnarles Klgsufe tread, cuts, breaks and bruises in tht lira's sidewall H Smt 9 / . iVy-.,1

and tread. M I pfl» K jjV <<\ « u) \

i * W«*good tima to Insuerf your tires is whan your car H U Tflk IS x

t» vtIs on a grease rack for service Your service sta- M ' |

I olore jvian;»Kor | (on «tjrn <jant will be happy to assist with this in- M ,V \1. \\ > 1 r

ißiqsbeeTire Soles Of- Another time to inspoct your tires Is whrn 1 \ t I

tuns new Ssold the best PRICES ro *d hazards as

iron be

C our own financing. Closed Wednesday 1 p.m. ? Open All Day <

?? RIGSBEE TIRE SALES 3I J. D. Brothers IQg La jc<WOOJ j Avenue ?2720 Hillsborough Road c

*

I

ra

H fl H

K ifl A

fM' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0»Who", Britt, a business ad-ministration major, is also busi-ness manager of The Bear, theShaw yearbook. He plans toattend graduate -school at theUniversity of Wisconsin, Mil-waukee, next fall. He is the

| son of Mr. and Mrs. William K.Britt of Corapeake.

! | j

Pots or Plots...Save

Garden Hands n>

.Vlr

\u25a0ttaj J

THE PRICE of beauty is vigi-lance. It is no longer necessary topay for the pleasures of garden-ing at a cost of chapped hands,red skin and broken nails.

Experts on hand care, the Pac-quin people, advise putting handcream on thickly before you puton gloves. Apply cream gener-ously under, as well as aroundnails.

Beauty TreatWhile you work, your hands

get a beauty treatment. They'realso easier to clean later.

Hand creams for normal skin,extra dry skin, and a medicatedtype for chapped hands, are allrecommended by Pacquin expertsfor gardeners. From about 070up, they're at local drug storesand cosmetic counters.

Didn't You Know It?Women HaveThinner SkinThan Males! jf>

In case you didn't suspect itall along, a woman is thinner-skinned than a man. Actually,the feminine skin is just a triflethinner than the male's, but thedifference is measurable.

How To Be LovedAlso measurable is the fact

that the way a woman cares forher skin reveals whether she ex-pects to be loved. So says psycho-analyst and psychologist, Mar-jorie Taggart White, who tellswhy attractive skin (fives womenof all apes more self-confidencein a booklet, "Skin Care Is MoreThan Skin Deep."

The publication.is free on re-quest from the I'acquin Division,Chas. I'fizer & Co., Inc., Dept.FH, Iv 12nd St., New York10017.

The company recently held askin care symposium, addressedliy Dr. White, when a new l inse-oir cold cream was introduced byI'acquin.

BiK AttractionThe natural goal of a women

is feeling attractive to men,

states Dr. White. She points out,however, that many women ex-press serious emotional difficul-ties by hiding behind "makeupmasks," or reveal inner conflictsthrough facial blemishes.

This psychoanalyst says, "Awife worried about losing herhusband to another woman may

turn her jealons anger againstherself, by breaking out into a

rash. A teenager may signal psy-chological insecurity by neglect-

ing rules of good skin care."

Emotional ProblemsDr. White adds, "Ifwe saw a

person wasting away from hun-ger at a table filled with deliciousfood, we would say unhesitat-ingly that such a person had aserious emotional problem. Yet,many women today, from teen-agers up, are depriving them-selves of admiration, love andhappiness by poor skin care."

? <>

SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1967 THE CAROLINA TIMES?

JOIN THESTAR-SPANGLEDFREEDOM PLAN

Buy Bondswhere you work.

They do. j

* *

They move out from the land

ing area and toward their work.

It's a tense job, defending free-dom. It takes brave men to dait well. These men are braveand farsighted. A majority ofall our servicemen in Vietnamsave for the future and supportfreedom through regular pur-chase of U.S. Savings Bonds.Should you join them 5 Buy Sav-

ings Bonds where you bank or

work.

Freedom Shares new planfor Americans who want to helptheir country.

Now, when you join the Pay- 1roll Savings Plan or the Bond-a-

Month'Plan, you are eligible to

purchase the new type U.S. pav-ings Notes ?Freedom Shares?-as a bonus opportunity. Freedom Shares pay 4.74 r'r whenheld to maturity of just four-and-a-half years (redeemableafter one year), are available on -a one-for-one basis with Sav-ings Bonds. Get the facts whereyou work or bank.

Join up. America needs yourhelp.

A), U.S. Savings Bonds/Freedom Shares

The U.S. Government doe*?vyy not pau for thi* ndvrrtine-\&y ntent. ft «» presented an a

? public nervier in cooperationwith the Treasury Depart-ment and The AdvertifiivpCouncil.

l CtofTAKE THE HUNGER OUT OF YOUR CROP

Maybe corn and wheatjdon't grow on vines, but ifyou're not paying much at-tention to the fact that these;crops need lots of nitrogenand phosphorous every_yearto maintain high profit yields,they might well die on thevine!

When you plow down ahigh analysis, water-soluble ;fertilizer each spring, it supplies Jhe kind of phosphorousand nitrogen that soil bac-teria need"to turn sod, straw,and stubble into humus, thestuff that makes soil boldwater, minerals, nutrientssoil that is the difference be-tween 50 and 150 bushels ofcorn

In addition to phosphorousand nitrogen, scientific tests

conducted by scientists atOlin Mathieson laboratorieshave shown that potash isuseful to the soil, too.

Ordinarily, fertilizer blend iis often made by mixing solid

I forms of nitrogen, potash andphosphorous in a machinethat tumbles or blends the inprcdients. What occurs is thatthese separate - materialsdon't combine nor mix uni-formly. Experience has also!shown that different size par-ticles segregate. In short, one

is apt to get a plant food be-ing placed on one spot of the !field with little or none on an-,other.

It is because of this "hun-ger" problem, that a new kindof fertilizer has revolution-ized the industry. Ammo-Phos by Olin, one such ferti-lizer, is a chemical compoundof nitrogen with phosphorous,'and potash, when desired)all built into every pellet.There can be no segregation.

It is water soluble, a highanalysis pelletized fertilizerthat may be used at almostany time of the year and in a

; variety of ways. After great

I use over the country, farmers, have also pointed out thatsuch Ammo I'bos fertilizers

: store well, distribute easilyand uniformly and give goodresults.

In fact, there are wide-spread reports lately that

! many farmers arc assuringthemselves bumper yields ofcorn, cotton, winter wheat

i and other crops bv fertilizing! with water soluble, high an-i alysis pelletized plant food

1 each fall«

GILT SHILLIN'100% BLENDEDSCOTCH

r WHISKYMl 86.8 PROOF

B5"l $2 somm mm tenth

Imi.tSIIII.I.IVI q. . __

FIFTH

\u25a0 IMPORTED & BOTTLED BY

\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ljl fl AUSTIN, NICHOLS & CO., INC.W NEW YORK-NEW YORK

A

You'll go better refreshed with ice-cold Coca-Cola. Gives a lift to your spirits, a boost to your energy...a big, bold, unmistakable taste. In short: Coca-Cola is more than an ordinary soft drink.

A jUt. Cow

Bottled under the authority of The Coca-Cola Company by:

nUHHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO

3B