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a-WHERE -SpW— SHAU^^r/*' I BUY A HEW - WATCH? At o pc putable jeweler fl cowrie. At Ernest lerfcc, lee., *L. aJi ■ PwEW 9 IWw wwQww gvoraittae witb your wotcb ot oe extro ckoryt. All tbe oo tfooolly fooMHis mokes ore ovoooove. t nces vvyo 29.75. Charge • »adget • Layaway IfHNESTBIMJ <l4 iMi st. n.w. Jbmm*’ ItoJiHfii w Dl. 2779 Must You Avoid Favorite Foods? ...because of Acid Stomach? Nearly everyone has favorite foods that bring on heartburn ... sourness ... acid indigestion. But millions have found the answer is simple as A-B-C. They just carry a handy roll of Turns in pocket or purse. Eat 1 or 2 like candy for quick, soothing relief. Turns contain no soda to over-alkalize or cause acid rebound. And they are FASTI Cost only a dime. Get a roll today! OrfylOc Igsggfp TUMMY \ rV~T. t *+•**,} Tl NEWMOTIEIS at m*m * pa 4m art SUMnct li\ CHICAGO ITU 1 HOSPITAL V jggl S. MsiylwS. nil... 37. M J iTME DIAMONDSCOFE WujS/ijjSk Vted mb he members o/ the ,M American Qtm Society. Every dioamad in our stock is scieaHficolly graded. 9 I*' " A.7u/m4OTI BROs.inc. I 704 ii—st. n.iu. meosu^B Registered jewelers Ameriton Gem Society 1 J||Sji|ggv Iff »jfe I I»ifcJ m V .:»k" Hu*. ■ I IK I mBwH r J flra Morning moil coll ot the Post Office. George Sowers, colling for his mail, stops for a word with Mrs. Mabel Bowers, the postmistress. Mrs. Bowers plans to join her husband in Washington soon. ttk lijjL- .gJanESdf ’£*» • n'\r**» - Bernard Broil, secretary, ond William P. Bennett, president of the UMW Local 4113, watch water bubble from the abandoned mine. This acid water pollutes trout streams. * **tr f«#l f I A Y ts ■ • " jd^HmS V, * Iffl .' IV , i, .Jm-zßej,; . ~ 'SI w ■ rIKI 4)W"k'«4''- •■ ■ : f ■ - #* m§ : Mai '" ,. • .'"•-■ —-* ' - * Z/& *— . -. . — . *• •■ • - -•> * ..... All ploy and no school now, but children who remain in the community will be taken by bus to nearby Oakton this winter. STA , STA y f photos Kempton have scattered In many directions. Some have found homes and work in neighboring communities; oth ers have been forced farther away. A few are standing by to see what developments may bring. There is William P. Bennett. 44. president of Local 4113. United Mine Workers. He and his wife own a mountain farm near Kempton. which makes them independent of the mine. "I lived here before there was a Kempton.” said Mrs. Bennett, “and I guess I can stay here without the town. I feel sorry for those who have no place to go.” Bernard Broil, union secre tary. is standing by. "It’s not easy for a man approaching 50 I KVA* A 1 Page 10 —THE SUNDAY STAR PICTORIAL MAGAZINE to get a Job these days,” he explained. Mrs. Mabel Bowers is the local postmistress. She said the Post Office will be discon tinued and the families in the neighborhood will get their mail via a star route. She will move to Washington, where her husband has recently located. "Kempton, although it won’t. be any more, always will be home to me, I suppose,” she said And then there are Mrs. Ella King, a widow, and her brother. Henry Gay, who haven’t been able to find any place to move. They have lived in Kempton for more than 40 years. ‘‘For us.” she said, “there is not much future.”