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annuai GTA Conference
Here September 12 - 14
Two of the pations’ outstanding
quthorities 0B tax assessing will
irect the Second Annual Train
ing Course and Conference so-
Georgia Tax /ASSessors when it
S venes September 12-14 at the
University of Georgia.
Director of the school will be
Algro Jenks, Tax Assessor for
waterbury, Conn. He has gained
nationwide recognition as the or
ganizer and conductor of some
ifty schools for assessing officers
in 26 states and two provinces in
Canada, and as author of the
Manual for Texas Assessors Fol
lowing his graduation from the
University of Wisconsin he serv
ed fourteen years with the Wis
consin Tax Commission in the
General Property Department,
going from that assignment to the
University of Texas where he
was Director and Instructor of
the Bureau of Municipal Re
search, Prior to becoming asses
sor for Waterbury four years
ago, Jenks was affiliated with
the Connecticut State Tax De
partment as its Research Tax
Director.
Associate Director of the Geor
gia Tax Assessors Training
Course ana Conference, J “Newt”
Lummus, jr., is tax assessor for
Dade County, Florida, an office
he has held since 1929, a past
president of National Association
of Assessing Officers; a nmrember
of the Tax Assessors’ Association
of the Florida Legislative Com
wittee: and an executive commit
teeman for the National Tax As
gociation.
During the three sessions, lec
tures will be delivered by nine
authorities in various fields that
are related to tax assessment
techniques and administration.
The panel of speakers will in
glude Charles D. Redwine, Geor
¥a State Revenue Commissioner;
M. H. Peabody, Assistant Attor
ney General for the State of
Starvirg, Thirsty Men Find
Water More Help Than Steak
BY DOUGLAS LARSEN
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON.— (NEA) —ls
you were shipwrecked on a des
ert island, dying of hunger and
thirst, a few drops of water would
do you more good than a juicy
steak,
And a steak probably would
be worse than nothing at all.
That’s one of the new facts just
turned up by the Army on the
unpleasant business of starving to
death. More than 1,000 soldiers
voluntarily suffered various stag
es of starvation and intense
thirst to provide the Army with
this valuable information
Goal of the year-long research
was the development of a new
“survival rativa.” The Quarter
master Corps wanted to find the
minimum amount, and kind, of
rations a human being needed to
survive while lost at sea. in the
arctic or in the trop#:s.
The most significant discoverv
was that the amount of water a
man has to drink is the most im
portant element in his chance for
survival until rescue comes. You
can live 20 to 30 days without
food but only three to four days
without water. . . ¢
It was learned that the amount
of protein —the food element
found in meat — which a persor
eats determines the amount of
water which the body can retain
Protein has the effect of drying
up the body. Therefore eating a
steak on a desert island with lit
tle or no water available would
probably be worse than eating
nothing, depending upon how
long rescue took.
_After hundreds of different ra
tion combinations were tried by
the volunteers, It was discoverad
GEORGIA ONE DAY ONLY
Thursday, Aug. 4th.
AIR-CONDITIONED
‘\\%@“ i ' COTTON CARRIER
‘ % e / JAMES and MARTHA
% Oscar McGooney
Ry Carroll Family
‘ msgs‘ e Smith Brothers
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John Calvert ta o
: “Appointment 1 P
) YOUR FAVORITE RADIO STARS!
Georgia; Harvey Atkinson, Di
rector of Property Tax Division,
Georgia State Department of
Revenue; Standish Thompson,
Attorney for the Fulton County
Board of Tax Assessors Dr. James
J. Lenolr, Professor of Taxation,
Lumpkin Law School, University
of Georgia; Comer Davis, a mem
ber of the Fulton County Board
of Tax Assessors; Dr Merle
Prunty, head of the Department
of Geography, University of
Georgia; William M. Lester, Di
rector of the Georgia State Tax
Revision Committee; and C. V
Stanton, president, Georgia As
sociation of Assessing Officials
Officials of the conference ex
plained that, while the school is
being conducted for all city and
county assessors within the state,
it is open to assessors of neigh
boring states and to persons who
in general are interested in tax
assessment problems and their
solutions. The class meetings wi'l
consist of lectures, discussions
and actual classroom demonstra
tions of solutions to technical
assessment problems. Those at
tending the school will be housed
in University dormitories and all
text books and reference mate
rial will be provided by the Uni
versity of Georgia Library.
To those who attend all ses
gions of the training course cer
tificates will be awarded. Those
who received first year certifi
cates last year, will receive 8
special certificate, indicating
their advanced status.
The training course and con
ference is being offered jointly by
the Association of Assessing Of
ficials, Association of County
Commissioners, the Georgia Mu
nicipal Associationg Department
of Revenue of the State of Geor
gia, State Board of Vocational
Education and the University of
Georgia.
that two parts protein with three
parts of fat and 14 parts of car
bohydrates provide the best bal
ance. Some protein is necessary
to keep human tissue alive.
The Armry serves an average of
3,000 calories a day to a man as a
standard diet. The test showed
that 1,800 ealories per day is the
minimum a man can live on over
a long time without having bod
ily deterioration and without loss
of morale.
Enough nourishment to keep
up morale was discovered to be
essential for survival rations. Yon
could probably just exist for
years on 1,000 calories per day
But a surviver trying to live on
that amount would soon lose the
initiative and mental efficiency
necessary to make attempts to
save himself, build shelter or
search for additional food
Another important fact the
tests showed was that survival
rations have to taste good. After
a few weeks of eating exactly the
same food, even a starving man
can become too revulsed to eat it
The Quarternraster Corps ad
mits that the rations that have
resulted from the starvation tests
aren’t the best. that will ever be
developed. But they are far bet
ter than anything comparable
given to the men during World
War 11. Two types, for arctic and
tropical use, are now being pur
chased in large quantities
The arctic ration contains the
1,800 caloric minimum. It consicts
of two kinds of cereal bars, a
dried - fruit bar, a nut bar and
three kinds of chocolate and
candy bars. In addition, there are
small quantities of bullion cubes
soluble coffee, soluble tea, candy
coated chewing gum, sugar tab
lets, cigarettes and matches.
Quick-Frozen Orange Juice I
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ORANGE JUICE, sparkling cold and flavorsome, is sure to
bring requests for more when you serve it as a refresh
ment beverage on a hot summer’s day. And if you use the
quick-frozen kind, it means oniy the fiip of a can opener, the
addition of water, brisk stirring, and the lovely golden drink is
ready. It’s a thrifty treat, too, so you can be generous in grant
ing seconds without worrying about an upset food budget.
You can buy fancy cookies to
serve with it or you can serve it
with homemade specials. Some that
are as easy as they are mouth
melting are these peanut butter
sookies made with instant white
cake mix. You can make five dozen
in hardly more than a dozen min
ates. All you have to do to make
the batter is to add milk, shorten
ing and peanut butter to the mix,
beat thoroughly, and it's ready. If
you are serving refreshments to a
big crowd of hungry youngsters,
perhaps there won't be any cookies
left; but if there are, keep them in
New “Airpak” Shipping
Shell For Jet Engines
AKRON, Ohio—A rubber- cush
ioned steel shipping shell that will
protect jet aircraft engines from
damage by jars and jolts was an
nounced today by Raymond C.
Firestone, vice president in charge
of research and development of
The Firestone Tire and Rubber
Company.
The airtight steel container is
pressurized to protect the engine
from damaging effects of humid
air. It is cradled on rubber air
springs which are designed to ab
sorb practically all shipping shocks
by floating the engine on amsair
cushion. b
These shipping and storage con
Labor-Saving Devices Reduce
Work, But Don’t Add Glamor
BY RUTH MILLETT
NEA Service Writer
A New York wife recently shot
herself after a quarrel with her
husband over who would do the
dishes in the electric dishwasher
That incident is a not-so-gentle
reminder that labor-saving de
vices alone can't take the drudg
ery out of housework.
If a woman gets the idea that
housework is beneath her dignity,
she is going to feel like a drudge
whether she plunges her hands ‘n
soapy dishwater or puts the
dishes in a machine and flicks 2
switch.
Not so long ago I heard a fath
er admit ruefully that when he
built a new home for his family
he thought® he had elinrinated
most reasons for bickering among
his children, and complaints
about Bousework from his wife
Remembering that they fought
every night about the dishes he
installed an electric dishwasher
Recalling also that they argued
as to whose turn it was to emptv
the garbage, he put a unit in the
&
Ll Y
THE complexities of stud agree
ments, stud fees, registration of
litters and registration of puppies
probably keep more people from
breeding dogs than does the actual
work involved. Moreover, many
pure bred pupples are left unreg
istered, automatically depreciating
their money value and the sale
valus of any offspring they may
have.
Actually, registration is quite
simple, and every owner of a pure
bred dog who is interested in rais
ing pups for his own pleasure or
for profit, should acquaint himself
with the procedures.
First of all, for the owner of a
female, the selection of a mate is
of top importance. If the pups are
to be sold as show prospects it is,
of course, necessary mot only that
a show winning line be chosen but
that a dog be picked with clm-to-‘
teristics designed to strengthen the
weak characteristics of the female.
For dogs raised as pets, tempera
ment is more important.
Good stud dogs are regularly ad- |
vertised In most of ine GOg ißaga
sines and the breed “&hl in almost
any area can recommend
kennels having first grade biood
lines. Stud dogs which command
the highest fees ars those with
proven akility. Champion show dogs
do dnot always oonstitute s good
stud. >
Arrangements and fees vary, but
in geameral, the owner of the dam
pays the owner of the sire a
straight fee for the service of Msl
dog. Sometimes, nowever. iis ai
an airtight container, such as a big
glass jar with a screw top. Sepa
rate them in layers with crumbled
waxed paper.
Peanut Butter Cookies
1 mch{o instant white cake mix
1/2 cup milk
2 tablespoons shortening
1/3 cup peanut butter
Turn cake mix into bowl. Add
milk, shortening, and peanut butter
and beat thoroughly: Drop from tea
spoon onto ungreased cooky sheet.
Bake in hot oven (400°F.) 8 to 10
minutes. Makes § dozen peanut
butter cookies.
tainers known as *AirpXgs,” are
being made by Firestone "’r West
inghouse J 34 jet aircraft’ engines,
Each measures 138 inches in length
and 47 inches in diameter.
Each cylindrical container is
made in two sections which encase
the jet engine. After the engine
is bolted into the container, unit
is sealed, pressurizd and mounted
on skids with a specially designed
rubber air spring suspension sys
tem.
These air springs virtually float
the engine and its container on
air. By adjusting the air pressure
in the rubber pneumatic spring
unit, resistance to varying shock
forces can be controlled.
sink to take care of the garbage.
To keep his wife from complain
ing about all the clothes the fam
ily got dirty, he installed an au
tomatic washer and drier.
Housework Still Produced
Complaints
“But,” said he, “t"cre’s ust as
much bickering as ¢ 'r, and my
wife ‘still complains about the
housework. So I guess you can’t
win.”
No, a man can’t win. Unless, of
course, he is lucky enough to b=
married to a woman who doesn’t
regard housework as beneath her.
who takes somre pride in her job
as homemaker and who instilis
in her children a feeling of satis
faction in doing thier part to
keep their home a livable at
tractive place.
It's just as easy to fight over
who is going to start the electrc
dishwasher as who is going i
wash and who is going to dry if
all housework is a hated, degwad
ing chore. Labor-saving gadgets
can lighten housework. But you
can’t count on them to glorify it
rangement calis for the owner of
the sire to have the “pick of the
litter.” If this arrangement is made,
it is well to have the agreement
in writing, including the stipula
tion as to the age when the pup
is to be taken and whether a single
living pup constitutes a litter.
First step in registration is the
recording of the litter. This calls
for information about the dam and
sire and the signature of the own
ers regarding the date of breeding.
This registration is made with the
American Kennel Club as soon as
the litter is born. Actual registra
tion of the puppies, by name, can
be done at the same time, or any
time thereafter.
AKC fee for the litter registra
tion is SI.OO if it is done before
the puppies are 3 months old, and
$2.00 if made later. Registration
of the individual puppies is $2.00
up to 18 months of age, and $4.00
thereafter.
The owner of a maie dog wishing
to offer his dog for stud will usu
atly find it worth while to show
shs Aoz and f nossihla win enough
shows to make his animal a “Cham
plon”. While this in mo way im
proves the dog, it does improve the
stud fees he can command, since
mozt people prefer to breed their
femasles to dogs of proven standing
in the show ring.
Owners of good male dogs who
don’t want to go into the business
but would like to secure a pup from
their dog can often locate a likely
dam through their loval veterina
yian or dog club.
THE SANNER HERALD, ATHES % GXORGIA
Joan Lesiie
Glamorizes
Goodness
HOLLYWOOD-—Joan Leslie has
decided that virtue, can be made
to pay off at the box-office. She
has resolved never to play a wick
ed woman on the screen. Further,
she plans to produce ‘“wholesome,
uplifting films that the whole fam
ily can go to see.”
“You can make anything inter
esting,” the vivacious redhead ob
serves, “so why not make virtue
interesting? It's so much better
for everybody.” Goodness is
harder than sin to make interest
ing, she concedes. “Even so, wick
ed roles are highly overestimated.
People resort to them for come
backs, occasionally, only because
they’re sensational.” Joan ap
proved only of “constructive sen
sationalisin,” 1
The Detroit-born star is herself
engaged in a long-delayed return
to the screen. “Bed of Roses” is
her first picture in two years. The
delay was occasioned by her long
court hassle with Warner Brothers.
Joan contended that her contract,
made when she was 17, shouldn’t
bind her after she became 21, The
California Supreme Court said it
should, and the U. 8. Supreme
Court refused to interfere. Warner
Brothers then released her from
the pact a few months before it
expired. Joan in return, dropped
her suit against the studio over her
billing in “Two Guys from Mil
wates ™
Joan has busied herself in sev
eral ways. She went to Paris as
queen bee of a style show spon
sored by San Francisco apparel
manufacturers. While abroad, she
became interested in the postwar
plight of children. She came back
and campaigned in Denver, Salt
Lake City, and elsewhere in be
half of Crusade for Children, ap
pearing on the radio, at benefits
and public gatherings. Religious
and women's groups encouraged
her plans to produce wholesome
films. She has incorporated Culver
| Productions and taken an option,
for SIO,OOO, on a magazine story of
a religious nature. Also scheduled
is a comedy romance called “The
Best Things in Life Are Free.”
As for her heroines in future
movies, Joan says: “I want to make
good women interesting.” She
pondered a few possible real-life
subjects: Jane Addams of Hull
House fame, Queen Victoria, and
“one or two women who helped
in the development of the atomic
bomb.” She thought of Evangeline
Booth, the Salvation Army leader,
and Mary Baker Eddy, founder of
the Christian Science Church. “I
think all réligions are wonderful,”
said Joan, a Catholic. “Prients
| have advised me to do a Protestant
| movie. As long as it’s in favor of
l faith, it’s good for every faith.”
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T A,
—A dancer reveals wool stock
ings and lace panties at a festi
val in a campaign at Oberaudorf,
Bavaris, to replace modern dress
® by traditional costumes. 9
City Slickers
Take To
The Roadside
WEST HAVERSTRAW,N. Y. —
(NEA)—From now until the frost
is on the pumpkin, the city slicks
ers will be taken over the horticul
tural hurdles by rural characters
who call themselves Farmer Jones
or Farmer Smith, but who really
are retail businessmen along the
highways of the nafion.
This doesn’t mean that every
roadside stand which sells fruits,
vegetables and eggs isn’t what it
seems to be—a local farmer get
ting rid of his excess produce by
direct sales to consumers. But
enough are phonies for weekend
city drivers to be on the lookout.
All too often the “farmers’ ex
changes” and “farmers’ outlets”
stands that you see along the high
ways are conirolled by city whole
salers.
All too often the produce that
is temptingly displayed along the
roadsides not too far from the big
cities has come from the city
wholesale markets. The “farmer”
has driven into town, ioaded up
before daylight, and come back to
arrange his layout of “local pro
duce.”
Thus Maryland potatoes are sold
as “home grown” in New York —
before the Long island potato sea
son comes in; Georgia peaches are
similarly sold in Indiana. Later
on in the year the process is re
versed, with the late northern pro
se sold on southern roadsides.
Most srates have food market.ng
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JOHRN RRICH. He's Just coch; the mode! i= fressing,
Day Welder
Fancy lceman
At Nighttime
CLEVELAND — (NEA) — John
Krich's talent with a chisel is
carving out a nice, cool job for
himself, During the hot spells, he's
the envy of all his friends, be
cause he spends a lot of time in
the ice house.
Even when the temperature siz
zles up to the high 90s, Krich has
to go to work wearing long under
wear, two shirts, wool pants,
overshoes, a fleece-lined jacket
Johnson’s At Ringside When
Marilyn Has Bubble Trouble
By ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
HOLLYWOOD—(NEA)~— Mari
lyn Maxwell may not be so im
pressed now with Clarke Gable
sitting at a ringside table and
whistling at her atomic bubble
dance.
That’s because I'm in there at
ringside whistling, too, and, after
all, Gable isn’'t a Hou‘ywood re
vorter.
It was director George Sidney's
idea. g
“Why don’t you get into the
scene as an extra?” he said. “I do
it all the time. It’s much better to
see what’'s going on.”
So when you see “Key to the
City” you'll see Johnson sitting at
a table in the Blue Duck night
iclub right beside Marilyn when
she makes her entrance for her
“atomic bubble dance,
I'm all aglow on weak tea and
hamming it up good. It was an
ideal place to see what was going
on, as Director Sidney said.
" But in this case there really
wasn’t much going on, Everything
was coming off. |
Everything was coming off of
Marilyn. |
Well, as much as the censors
would allow.
Marilyn comes out wearing only
a lot of little coolred balloons in
unimportant places ana bigger bal
loons in important places. What
makes it an atomic bubble dance,
the studio said, was that the bal
loons are decorated with black
sequins in atomic symbols.
Censors Say No
Anyway, the balloons are all
that Marilyn js supposed to be
wearing. That’s what the script
says. But the censors said other~
wise, after they heard that Marilyn
eventually loses ail of the balioons,
starting a riot.
The censors said M-G-M would
have to film a scene in Marilyn's
dressing room showing that she|
wears panties and a bra beneath
the balloons. So the studio did.
But what you see beneath the
balloons on the set is mostly Mari
lyn. Iknow. I was close enocugh
to Marilyn to start my own riot.’
But I didn’t have a pin, darn it.
As this bubble dancer in a che»*
San Francisco night club, Maril:
naturally does a great deal
wiggling a la burlesque stripper
The censors warned the studi.
about that, too.
“No bumps or grinds,” the cen
sors warned. The studio prom
ised,
The big headache was the bal
loon costume itself. Three ward- |
robe women were standing by‘
with extra balloons and four com
plete emergency costumes. The
studio purchased 1700 balloons to
last for the two weeks of rehear-!
sals and four days of shooting. I
There were ropes around the I
set to keep the men back and there
were Chuck Walters, whe taugml
Marilyn the dance, and producen"
Z. Wavne Griffin.
Griffin was mopping his brow.
“I'll be very happy indeed,” he
said, “when 1 get these balioons
out of my hair. Maybe you won’t
believe it, but I've had three studio
conferences just on this bubble
dance.”
Director Sidney had his prob
lems:
bureaus, food commissions or div
isions of purchasing standards.
These departments annually issue
warnings against the gyp roadside
merchants, '
U. 5. Depariinént of Agriculiure
county farm agents aren’t happy
Ibout the practice because it tends
to give the real farmers in the
areas they serve a bad name. But
there’s nothing illegal about such
a procedure. You're getting the
same vegetables or fruit you'd be
buying from your green grocer in
town. Chances are, you're paying
about the same price; ‘
But what is represented as fresh '
farm produce often just isn’t fresh.
and two pairs of gloves.
Working for a large ice com
pany, Krich ecarves figures out of
blocks of ice. They're used to
decorate fancy tables for wed
dings, parties, conventions and the
like.
It's only a sideline with him. His
full time (and hotter) job is weld
ing. But after dinner, he cools off
by reporting to the ice house with
his special multi-pronged chisels.
With the temperature at a frigid
24, he chips away at 300-pound
blocks of ice, fashioning birds and
beasts and even an occasional
bathing beauty.
He learned his art while work
ing as a pastry cook a dozen years
ago, then switched to earving ice
instead of dough.
“I have to see that the right bal
loons break at the right time. Un
fortunately, 1 can’'t talk to bal
-100!1'.'! 3
Chain Reaction
Actually Marilyn’s bubble dance
doesn’t last very long. Or rather
the balloons don't last very long.
Mr. Gable accidentally sees to that.
He's sitting at a ringside table
with Loretta Young, who is get
ting madder by the moment be
cause of the attention he’s paying
Marilyn.
They are, after all, newly elected
mayors attending a convention in
San Francisco and Loretta thinks
he’s being very undignified. But
Gable, an ex-longshoreman, is
having fun. He opens another bot
tle of champagne and the cork
flies away and pops one of Mari
lyn’s balloons.
It sets off a chain reaction and
‘all of her balloons pop. Gable
rushes in with his coat to save her
modesty. The riot starts and chop
suey starts flying all over the
place. The police arrive and Gable
and Loretta wind up in jail.
As you can see, Marilyn’s bal
loons start an awful lot of trouble.
Later in the story Marilyn and
Loretta have a knock-down, drag
out fight. Loretta goes into the
fray with the classic crack:
“Sure I can fight. 1 was the
only girl in my class at Harvard
and I had to learn to defend my
self.”
* ® » ‘
Fashion note: Bonnie Best just
created an 1. Q. dress for “Intelli
gent Quail.” The design is a sten
ciled all-over pattern of bifocal
glasses.
When canning peaches use only
agate porcelain or iron utensils,
Never use aluminum,
NEW FORDS --- READY NOW
For
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY | !
BLACK AND MAROON STATION WAGONS
BLACK CONVERTIBLE — RED INTERIOR TRIM.
F-1 PANEL DELIVERY — % TON
F-1 PICK-Up ————— 12 TON
F-2 EXPRESS v B T
F-3 CAB & CHASSIS & EXPRESS—
% TON HEAVY DUTY.
F-5 CAB& CHASSIS 135" & 158",
F-6 CAB & CHASSIS-2TON-2
SPEED AXLE.
F-7 CAB & CHASSIS-2%2 TON -2
SPEED AXLE. |
F-8 CAB & CHASSIS-3TON -2
SPEED AXLE
Wide Variety Colors and Models.
C. A. TRUSSELL MOTOR GO,
“Athens’ Oldest Dealer” i
Pulaski at Broad Phone 1097
PAGE ELEVEN
Georgia farmers produced g
than 108 million pounds of flue
cured tobacco in 1948. The v
sold for an average of 47.48 cents
per pound, one of the highest ave
rages recorded for tobacco Pro-:
duced in this staie. . :
A large moisture-resistant papeJ
bag can be slipped over the hea
of an oil mop in the broom closet,
This protects other clean broom:
and brushes from oil stains, pre
vents oil on mop from drying out
&
Used Cars & Trucks
RENEWED AND
GUARANTEED
by
“Athens Oldest Dealer”
1948 PLYMOUTH, Special De
fuxe Club Coupe—Original
black finish, 20,000 actual
miles, Low pressure tires, cus
tom radic and heater, seat cov
ers, chrome window ventila
tors. Looks and runs like a
brand new ocar —
1495.00
1946 CHEVROLET, Conver
tible Club Coupe — Original
black finish, brand new white
side wall #ires, black sufoma
tie top, luxurious red leather
upholstery. Push butten wadis
and all purpose heater. A clean
one-owner car which is in fn‘
above average eondition — |
1395.00 |
1946 FORD, Tudor Sedan—
New maroon baked enamel fin- i
ish, V-8 - 100 W. P. engine. |
Practically new tires, 3,”‘5
covers, Excellent mechanical |
oondition throughout. Looks
good and runs geod — ;
1095.00
1941 FORD, Deluxe Tudor
Sedan—Black finish, V-8 - 90
H, P, engine. Extra good tires,
seat covers, radio and heater.
If you like zip and pep plus
good looks them don’t fafl to
see this one —
765.00
1940 WILLYS, Fordor Sedan—
Black finish, fair rubber,
mechanically 0. K. and will
give good economical service—
Tomorrow’s special at only —
235.00
1945 DODGE, Tractor and
Semi - Trailer—Transmission
and engine complefely over
hauled. 2 speed axle, 800 x 20
dual wheels—Good rubber.
ready for hard service—Com
plete at only —
795.00
39 Others To Select
— From —
All Credit Handled in
~— Our Offices —
Terms—l 2 Down-—
Balance - 12-21 Mos.
For Demonstration And
Further
Information, See
Jack Avery, Mack Mew
born, Norman Freeman,
Dan Poss.
e a il
(. A TRUSSELL
MOTOR (O.
“Established 1918”
Pulaski at Broad
Phone 1097 -