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UNCLE NATCHEL AND SONNY Fire! Fire! /Uncle Natchel and Sonny are on your radio twloev
keach week. See listings of leading southern stations./
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Golden Juice for a Golden Voice
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Lauritz Melchior, brilliant Wagnerian tenor of the Metropolitan Associa
tion, pausing for a final sip of Hawaiian pineapple juice at his dressing
table before going on to the opera stage, in the title role of ‘‘Tannhauser"
LAURITZ MELCHIOR, the Metro
politan Opera's great Wagnerian
tenor, finds that a tall glass of
Hawaiian pineapple juice before a
“Tannhaußer" performance will do
a great deal to polish off those full,
lyric high notes for which he is
famous.
In Mr. Melchior's dressing room,
at the Metropolitan there is always
a large bottle of fruit juice from
which the Danish "konigliche Kam
mersinger” - (singer to the royal
court) pours himself a drink before
going on the stage as '‘Tannhauser'’,
“Tristan”, or “Siegfried”—the great
Wagner hero roles which he has sung
more often than any living singer.
Mr. Melchior has found Hawaiian
pineapple juice effective not only as
Teacher Brings Apples to Pupils!
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STAYING alter school used to mean either a birch rod or a lengthy
lecture. But Rose Kohout, senior co-ed at Lewis Institute, Chicago,
doesn’t seem to mind. She and her home economics instructor, Miss Kath
erine Hayes, indulge in a little after-school munching of big red apples
from Washington State. Instructors at Lewis upset the old tradition—
pupil bring* apple to teacher—by serving apples to the pupils. In the
apringtime, when other fresh fruits are scarce, apples ere found to \a an
excellent antidote for spring fever.
UNCLE NATCHEL AND SONNY Rabbit Saves His Les-Hind Leg
Bf?UDDER Jeff’s cue fine 'll? /Sin't ^t natchEL^ —4whyfo' you dim’ hol' A
A HARK - \BOy AH' HE SHO LUB DAT GAL Y-— V * ' l L'/SEE WHAT I GOT\ — —TIL- NATCHEL.LIKE I I
^A\rA^= == =^^ SUNF^WAHREACHIN’ XX '* IhEAH? AH'M gonna) / TOC VO' <
X \\ ('but she don't love^*H|| fo' oe light JESy —l/^ LE \ /uncleS >\\ V°NN y ?)
B ir^' /sfRENADINg\ rV^ 5 \ /HIM, UNCLE NATCHEL. jSgZ LAK ALL DE 1 — H ° LD ) NATCHELI A,A
JE I p L ^w
* n ®TI ^CM__F' V 3
xtlio
a thirst quencher that will not harm
the voice, but actually as a means
of soothing the throat and clearing
the vocal passage.
The pineapple juice practice is
one of the few precautions Lauritz
Melchior takes for his voice. He is,
hi fact, a notorious disbeliever in
the fads and fancies to which many
of his operatic colleagues subscribe.
A hearty meal, a good cigar, and a
midnight hunting expedition when
he is in California, Maine, or at
home in Chossewitz, are never
passed up by this singer, and, as
the critics will attest, his voice has
never been any the worse for it.
“Eajoy life fully and you will want
to sing and therefore be able to do
it well", Mr. Melchior declared
WHEFLER COUNTY EAGLE. ALAMO. GEORGIA,
THE NORTH CAROLINA
EXPERIMENT STATION
tells you how to > -
STOP RUST and START PROFITS
NV —
V
•
The NORTH CAROLINA EXPERIMENT STATION recommendstop-dressing r
cotton with 50 to 100 pounds of MURIATE or 125 to 250 pounds of KAINIT Y
per acre on fields which have shown heavy Rust damage in the past and where
the complete fertilizer treatment contained only 3% potash. i V
The recommendation is made in a recent news release which describes a
series of tests in which “ plats receiving the additional amount of potash produced
larger yields, heavier seed, heavier bolls, more lint per seed, better grade, longer
- !
staple, stronger fibers and a higher [percentage of normal fibers. Rust damage, on
plats receiving no additional potash, lowered the yield and reduced the quality of
the fiber to such an extent as to lower the value of the crop sls to $25 per acre.”
The Station selected fields of three farms which had shown severe Rust
damage. One standard variety of cotton was planted in 1935 and 1936. At
planting each field received 400 pounds of complete fertilizer containing 3%
potash, common to the practice of the area. The fields were divided into plats
and certain plats were given additional potash at chopping. The results of \
these tests prompted the above recommendation.
* I
N. V. POTASH EXPORT MY., Inc., Hurt Bldg., ATLANTA-Royster Bldg., NORFOLK
TOP-DRESS WITH NY POTASH
TRADE MARK REG.
e ;
ff Use 100 pounds of NV MURIATE per acre, or 200 pounds of NV KAINIT, or a mixed-Roods, nitrogen- 71
^Potash top-dresser made with NV POTASH. All of these are on sale by Your fertilizer Man. See Him Today! J] Aiu