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Ofhcial Organ The Bulletin lrwinton, Ga.
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MoSTANTI-FREEZE | 2\ ()f e |
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'LOSSES IN WINTER % o~ 7 |
DRIVING ARE [/ Rk /A |
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(B)OVERFLOW [ !‘
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ANSWER: (B). Tests show the average car loses between 1 and 2
quarts of anti-freeze solution every 1000 miles, when using the proper
thermostat, most of it through overflow. Less than one-half pint of
volatile type anti-freeze is lost through evaporation.
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ISP YOUR ANTI-
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. A Y LN (A) THROWN AWAY
SR T (B)SAVED AND
B Ul \ USEDAGAIN
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ANSWER: (A). Throw away your old anti-freeze. During use, it can
become contaminated and cause serious damage if left in your car
indefinitely. The chemical test to determine if it can be used again
costs more than new anti-freeze.
ARI TP
IN YOUR CAR e 1
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FIRST FROST W
ANSWER: (B). Anti:freeze should be %ut in your car before the
first killing frost. Check with the nearest U.S. Weather Bureau office
{or watch for frost warnings in the local weather forecast. ’
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'ANSWER: (B). The model of a car has nothing to do with anti
| freeze. You're safe in using a reliable standard-priced anti-freeze like|
| Zerone unless you drive at high altitudes or in temperatures below 30
ldegrees Fahrenheit or if your car has a “high-opening” thermostat.g
In these cases. a good premium-priced product like Zerex is needed.
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The Bulletin : '
19 Shopping days left, better
drop in before 2nd or 3rd choices
are in order. Can we expect you?
F rlday Dec. 1 1950
From where I sit... 4y Joe Marsh
~ A"Merry Christmas” |
?‘ To You, Too!
We're going to have a community
‘Christmas tree in front of the
Court House this year! Judge Cun
ningham brought the matter up
in a mecting last Thursday. Passed
unanimously.
We saw Jackson, the forest
ranger, and he showed where
there’s a whopper of a cedar tree.
Easy Roberts and Handy Peterson
are going out tc do the cutting—
and Cappy Miller will snake it out
to the road with his team. '
We're wusing Sandy Johnson’s
flat-bed truck for hauling. Hammy
Gilbert—who’s a telephone lines
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R RR R R S e e e T e e :
Congressmen returning to
Washington are finding ballots
from the nation’s independent
businessmen reflecting a serious
“no-nonsense’ attitude toward
the defense,-or war, -effort. These
ballots are from the latest nation
wide poll of businessmen taken
by the National Federation of
Independent Business on four
issues.
L I S
On one of the issues, immedi
ate adoption of Universal Mili
tary Training, 7Y9% of the busi
nessmen are for; 18% opposed;
3% undecided.
* ok %k
Many of the businessmen vot
ing are veterans. They know they
will pay taxes to support such
a program. -
% %
But, as veterams, they are fa
milar with the waste of both men
and meney that has accompanied
the nation’s confused ‘‘jerry
buil{’’ mobilizations of the past.
¥k ke
In the same poll, businessmen
took the stand that slashing of
foreign commitments should take
place before imposing drastic re
strictions at home.
* X %
The vote on this issue was
83% for; 13% against; 4% wun
decided.
: * ok % 3
Verified reports that American
tax millions are being used to
give tobacco to Europeans; set
up luxury hotels; have destroyed
confidence in any concrete good
coming out of the expenditure of
billions of Marshall Plan dollars.
* % ¥
In voting for Universal Military
Training, the businessmen ac
knowledged guns will be nceded
even if some essentials are lost
at home. But, they say, there is
a limit to how far dollars can be
stretched. Dollars stretched too
far cease being dollars; they be
come wallpaper.
* k%
The businessmen’s votes also
face another issue squarely. For
some time, as was done in World
(©National Federation of Independent Business
man—will supervise setting it up.
Buzz Ellis, the electrician, is do
nating the lights.
EF'rom where I sit, you not only
have more fun when everyone co
operates voluntarily, but you get
better results. A good example is
the Self-Regulation Program spon
sored by the Brewing Industry.
Under this voluntary program, re--
tailers selling beer co-operate by
keeping their places of business
orderly and “spruced” up—for the
benefit of the whole community.
Copyright, 1950, United States Brewers Found
War 11, monopolies have sought
to have the Dept. of Justice can
cel all prosecutions for Anti-
Trust violations. -
ook %
. Monopolies argue they are too
busy in a war effort to defend
their violations in court. Or as
one Washingtonian observes,
‘“This logic is the same as a
burglar asking to be excused
from standing trial because he is
too busy investing his loot in the
stock market.”
* k%
At the outbreak of Korea the
first defense move of many cor
porations, facing anti-trust court
action on alleged violations in
1945-50, was to request court ac
tion against them be dropped.
® ok ok
In this current poll, 67% of the
businessmen voted against sus
pension of anti-trust laws; 30%
voted in saver; 3% are undecided.
*% % '
This indicates that monopoly
argument that appearance in
court curtails their production
has not met with common belief.
Probably, because most people
know that monopolies have big.
staffs of corporation lawyers for
this very purpose. :
£ ok *
And as one observer comment
ed, ‘“Wheever heard of a corpo
ration lawyer being any good at
a turret lathe. The monkey
wrenches they use never build
arms.’’ :
%f % ‘
On the same ballot, business-:
men voted 84% against the cur
rent scheme of Washington So
cialists to reduce the number of
business firms in the nation in
event of all-out war.
% % %
In general, there is a growing
sentiment in the Nation’s small
cities and towns to remove from
Washingion thousands of officials.
whe are now classified as hydra
matic bureaucrats. In current
Washington speech, a hydra
matic bureaucrat is a shiftless
politician,