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PAGE TWO
BN (N ATHENS ITS CROW’S FOR GREATER SAVINGS NN
Notice To The People
Of Northeast Georgia
Crow's Drug Store is never knowingly under sold on identical items which
are sold or advertised locally at lawful prices.
Crow’s will continue to offer the people of Northeast Ceorgia the best in
quality, best of service, at the lowest prices.
REMEMBER — YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME TO SAVE SAFELY
AT CROW'S DRUG STORE.
Reg. $7.95 8" ELECTRIC FAN5...........n0w 6.95
10 INCH WESTINGHOUSE ... ELECTRICFAN .. .. .. 12.95
B .TRNS .. ................1®
CROW'S COOD QUALITY crow's B
Pint Size 400 : Reg. Size 4
( I. 0 R 0 x FLASHLICHT
B BATTERIES
5¢ TISSUES
With Coupon k
it 2 Special ...... 29¢ i
COUPON COUPON
2% POUND JAR HOMEY ....................1%
i QUALITY SOAPS
. RENR WRISLEY BATH SOAP
‘_ fi“‘*-« ‘ | PINE - CANATION
Lg FOUR BARS . .. ... 1.5
i 10 BARS WRISLEY
" ok
S Only 59
LADIES MAKE-UP MIRRORS.. .. .. ...........189
RICHARD HUDNUT HOME PERMANENT......... 1.69
QUART U.S.U. MILK MAGNESIA .. .. ........... 25
BOX 24 GIY(ERINE SUPPOSITORIES .. .. .. .. ... 29¢
1.25 COMPACT TRAVEL SYRINGES .. .. .. .. .. .. 8%
B ARREESK BAIM .. ..............L .03
L B .s n R
ki e ASSORTMENT
CANDY - MINTS B i6hren FLupl] CIGARETTE
UM bc . LIGHTERS
dfor 15¢ WITH COUPON REDUGED FRICES.
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LOVE FINDS A WAY—Four-year-old Judy Ann Goral, of Cleveland, Ohio, loves her Grandpa.
He’s her pal and has spent most of his leisure time building her a swing, a playhouse, a merry-go
round and she has forgotten how many toys. So, when he had to go to the hospital on the eve of
his 62d birthday, Judy was upset. She tried many times to visit him, but her age barred her.
Finally she went home and, with an assist from her mother, worked out her inspiration. With it she
rushed back to the hospital and, as seen at right, was able to wish him a happy birthday after all.
Looking down at her from the hospital-room window Grandpa said: “That’s my girl.”
By
Jonathan Forman, M. D., Vice President
FRIENDS OF THE LAND
Columbus 1, Ohio
FOOD — SOIL — HEALTH
“Any discussion of food-soil
health relationship can be molded
very readily into a cult. A harm
less cult, it is true, for everyone
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Save time, worry and pressing bills with CAR-SAC :
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who has tried to raise his food on
soil into which he has put all the
essential bioelements for the
growth of healthy slants. On the
other hand, those of us who have
been trained to think of the indi
vidual—our patients and ourselves
—cannot afford to wait for in
struction from the researcher who
may not be able to tell the facts
for a couple of more generations,”
Jonathan Forman, M. D.., editor
of the Ohio State Medical Journal
and vice-president of Friends of
the Land, has been tellings the
groups which he has addressed re
cently.
“There have been and there still
are misunderstandings about soil
health relationship, but these mis
understandings,” Dr. Forman in
sists, “arise through misunder
standings of words, not of facts
. . . rather from the manner of
enrphasis.” y
All are agreed that the basis of
optimal health is a variety of good
foods selected from the seven
basic food groups recommended by
the Nutrition Committee of the
National Research Council. This,
of course, presupposes good diges
tive and assimilative powers,
which in turn demands good bod
ily function of the tissues of the
individual’s body with its conse
quent adequate glandular secretion
and good muscle tone, But these,
too, come from good food, well
used. The fundamental need of the
people throughout the world, in
cluding our own people, is just
MORE good food.
“A couple of years ago,” Dr.
Forman relates, “Dr. Paul Sears,
the noted ecologist of Yale Uni
versity, said of me anrong others
that I am a member of an ad
vanced guard determined ot get
the best possible food for the Am
erican people in the shortest pos
sible time.”
Explaining this line of thought
in more detail, Dr. Forman con
tinued:
“In order to make clear my po
sition and what I am driving at
in all the hundreds of speeches
made and articles written by me
on the subject, the following sunr
mary should help:
“l. The basis of optimal health
is a variety of good foods prop
erly selected from the seven basic
groups recommended by the Nu
trition Committee of the National
Research Council. This recommen
dation is predicated upon the fact
that the individual has good di-«
gestive and assimilative powers,
which in turn demands good bod
ily function of all of the tiggués of
the individual, with consequent
good muscular tone, especially of
the intestinal traet and the heart.
%2, In the selection of the in=
dividual items on this meny 9{
the fevep basic foods we are no
lookifig for iterms that are unusu
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LONG-HAIRED ART—Lady Godiva rode again in Covs otry, Eng
land the other day. But instead of a lone Peeping Tom taking «
surreptitious gander, as happened with the lith céntury original,
thousands of persons lined the streets to applaud the current model.
It was all part of the Festival of Britain, with actress Ann Wrigg,
clad in a flesh-colored Bikini bathing suit and a knee-léngth blond
wig taking the rolé of heér historic predecessor
ally rich in any particular vitamin
or mineral . . . just healthy plants,
vegetables, and fruits, and flesh,
milk, and eggs from healthy ani
mals. This means that all of the
elements in the item are in bal
ance for the health of the plant or
animal. It is possible to breed for
unusually high count of this or
that but in doing so we may jeop
ardize the survival of the result
ing individual through upsetting a
nicely adjusted balance in its
economy. 3
“3. Then we must recognize that
the greatest contributing factor to
the inadequacy of the average diet
i 8 the damage that we do our
foodstuffs after they are grown
and before wé eat them. We nray
select our foods properly from
the seven basic groups and still
lose out because of the way our
food has been harvested, stored,
processed, refined, prepared and
served. Somewhere along the line
we may have destroyed one or
more essential elements and thus
have defeated the care with which
we selected our menu.
“4, But underneath all of thjs is
the necessity that the soil on
which our food is grown shall con
tain all of the elements that are
needed for the growth of healthy
plants and animals. Bad farming
practices, resulting in soil erosion,
soil depletion through overcrop
ping, inadequate fertilization and
overliming, more frequently are
the reasons why the soil is lacking
in some essential mineral, although
in sonre instances it never was
‘there from the beginning, or was
so closely bound in the underlying
rock that none was available,
Most deficiencies are man made
and are correctable,
“5, It is possible to grow a plant
in deficient soils that will repro
duce its seed and survive after a
fashion. The yvield is lower than
average and it does not offer all
of the nourishment that a normal
plant would. It is possible for our
domestic animals to get by on poor
food, giving birth to fewer young,
offering less milk, with possible
deficiencies in the glandular tis
sues, but with no particular chan
ges affecting its muscle as a food
for us. The picture is one of less
resistance on our part, of less good
food, poorer -selections, less re
sistance to infections of all sorts,
tissues that wear out long before
their time, thus producing arterio
sclerosis, myocarditis and coronary
artery disease, nephritis, apoplexy,
and in some instances certain types
of cancer, at least.
“g. So if we are seeking robust
health . . . the very best that is
humanly possible . . . we see that
our food comes fronmr healthy
plants and animals. To insure this,
we must see that they are grown
on soil rich in all the minerals and
organic matter necessary for opti
mal health for each of them. Then
we must harvest our food prop
erly, and cure it properly, store
and process it so that it will lose
none of its original goodness and
nutritive qualities. Then we must
see to it that we get some of each
of the seven basic food groups,
properly prepared and served, to
insure lasting goodness.
“7. If this is done and we do not
overeat, we shall have the very
best health that is possible for us
to have, and we shall live as long
as our inheritance dictates ... to
our full potential and there is
every guidance to indicate that
with the healthiest of nervous sys
tems that we shall be able to
adapt ourselves to whatever our
circumstances demand, and we
shall be happy and contented, for
we shall have peace of mind.”
4-H’ERS CAMP
Georgia 4-H club members are
taking part in a summer camp
program that, by the time it ends
in late August, will. furnish in
struction and recreation for around
10,000 boys and girls from 100
counties.
SILAGE ADVANTAGES
Among the many advantages of
silage, the cheapest stored feed for
dairy and beef cattle, are the fol«
lowing: (1) It furnishes good feed
for any season when grass and oth
er green feed is lacking. (2) There
is little or no waste in feeding. (8)
In dry years when crop yields are
low, the entire plant is best uti«
fied as silage.
Smallest mammal ever known
in America has been identified
from a three-sixteenth-inch piece
%‘ jawbone found in Wyoming.
€ Animal wag a t}gg shrew,
which lived 55,000,000 yéars ago.
THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1951,
30,000 Believed
’ 7
Evicted Inßed
Hungarian Purge
By EDWARD E. BOMAR
WASHINGTON, July 12—(AP)
The State Department radio esti
mates that 30,000 persons have
been evicted thus far from their
homes in Budapest during a re
ported Hungarian Communist
purge of “undesirables.”
The “Voice of America” in a
broadcast overseas this week said
such evictions have also now be
gun in the Czechoslovakia cities of
Brno and Bratislava.
One account from Hungary told
of evacuees living in forced silence
in a stable, beaten and otherwise
treated like animals.
Two members of the American
legation staff at Budapest whe
were ordered out of Hungary b
the Communist regime said on
their arrival in Vienna last week
that probably 14,000 had been
evicted in the past seven weeks.
Facts Known
The “Voice” said in & report
broadcast in many languages ove’
recent days that “facts are know:
to the West — facts which have
been smuggled out from behin:
the Iron Curtain or which hav:
been brought out by refugees whi
themselves were marked for de
portation and who managed to es
cape.”
“First-hand accounts indicate
that once-beautiful Budapest to
day is a city of unrest and even
terror, especially at night,” the
“Voice” said, “This is when th:
hated deportation orders are re-.
ceived.” The account went on:
“Reports indicate that due to the
generally unsettled condition
within the city, special police re
enforcements have been brought
in from the outlying districts. Al
rail and highway traffic into the
city is under close control. Onlv
persons with special police passes
can leave the city.
Supplies Disrupted
“Supplies of foodstuffs have
been disrupted. As a consequence
the black market runs wild. Bread
—selling under ration at one for
int sixty filler—brings 16 forints
(about $1.50) illegally.”
The radio quoted a letter which
it said one deportee managed to
smuggle back to a friend in Buda
pest stating:
“There are 30 of us living in a
stable. We are bedded down on
straw. We are whipped and—upon
orders of our guards—we are for
bidden to talk. We are mute the
whole day long. Are we, then,
men or animals? T would say we
have become animals, The So
viets have completed the evolu
tionary cycle.”
Swifts, flying in India. have
been timed at 200 miles an hour.
| B g
7 Empmnt R RLULL
2 Wl oy
S L P
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7 KILL ,
. Y GARDEN PESTS
NO PUMPING i 7
REQUIRED “‘ke AU
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THESE SpAdljGuNS
GO ON YOUR BARDEM MOSE...
waler pressure does the work.
INSECTICIDES
SPRAYS +FUNGICIDES
1 Y’( e L.
e
O Zs Insect-0-Gun
= Let water pressure do
: /the work. Jar holds
/ s/ enough te make
/ 3 gallens proper
spray ... eny brand. No pumping,
no tank ko earry, cleans in 30 sec
onds, replaceable jar, pistol grip,
sasy-to-operolé water valve, life
time construction, guaranteed.
The Finest
Garden Sprayer Mode ~ . .‘S’s
TR
SPRAYS . FUNGBICIDES
A 1 ST 1
4" GARD-N:GUN
'", A sticdy, ndxpensive,
’ 5 swioll dizé sprayer. Jor
Rolds shsugh to make
; 1% gols. of ony spray. Hai 1 universal
{ jet; eléans in 30 seconds; home replace
{ able jar Hislime consiruction; guaran
fi teed. Instead of pistol grip and irigger,
« has simple Touchomatic control; flips on
! and off. The GARD-N-GUN too will give
| @ sure kil of alt gorden 3245
pests. Price
WEED KILLERS
LLLLICRD CrerTiLizEßS
T
| Spray any brand or type
of wéed killer or ferti
=/ lizer that is applied with
| water, Jar holds enough
| to make 15 gals. proper mixture. Soft
| spray won't damage plaats or lawns; no
| side spray; no mist to drift. One finger
{ control-spray proper minture or plain
water as you wish. Cleans in 30 seconds;
won't clog; home repldaceable jor; life
time censiructions guaranteed. Fertilizes
or weeds I 10 minuies areas thal take
2 howrs by ewtmoded methods.
Everysse sesds @ Goo-Guwa. 32 45
L Price
| at your ;-x,v"t"u s";sAr:;; dealer
:’S ~E, ‘ i s g
COFER SEED (O.
Athens Phone 167