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Page Four Ways To Avoid Mildew In Hot, Humid Weaiher :..t ___ days ahead, homemakers must be §ure all garments and linens are thoroughly dry before putting them away, explains Edna Cal lahan, Ohio State University ex tension clothing and textiles specialist. An article washed but not ironed immediately, should be hung out to dry, rather than rolled up damp in the laundry basket. Mi® Callahan suggests home- makers not sprinkle clothes in hot, humid weather until they can follow through with the ironing. Whenever clothes are dampened before ironing, they should be kept in n cool place. Plastic bags n^ay be conven ient for storing damp clothes, but they are not ventilated. Mildew may develop on the damp clothes in this airtight hncr, even thoMe.h the plastic its*'t v.-.!! m-t ie affected. One hundred percent nylon or orlon is mildew resistant, but rayon may be stained by mildew. Mildew allowed to develop in cotton fabric over a long period of time damages the fiber, says the specialist. The spores of mil dew are universally present. This whitish cotton-like growth is a mass of threads which grow from the spores whenever the temp erature and moisture conditions are favorable. As the spot« in crease in age they becon «.•« ni siderably darker. Fresh mildew stains may be removed with .soap and water, followed by a sun bleaching, (provided the article is not a colored one which may be faded by the sun). Any good laundry bleach should remove old stains. However, some embossed and some permanent finished cot tons may turn yellow from bleach. These usually are label* i "Do not use chlorine bleach." INJURES EYE Jerry Flemis.• the Houston Construction Cor. pany. had a foreign object moved from h'« ri»M »*yp. Fr day, July 28 i-t i'. local physician. Furniture of All Kinds Lawn Mowers Automobiles Boats Bicycles Baby Furniture Appliances Television Sets People, Spotc In The News EVANGKLIs'l Biiiy Graham and wife are caught by camera undt.i a (perhaps symbolic?) subway sign a* thry hrnd for FIRST unretouched photo of Republic Aviation's '"Thundorchief" is released by An- Force. The F-105B is a supersonic plus, nuclear-weapons-carrying fifihter bomber v Nrr.v York crusacio. .. .. ... s I'ICH PLl Marjorie Mormngstar" ~es to Natalie Wood, 18, Iter many older girls A-ere tested •. in Im version il TOY, five-months-old Pekinese, recovering from paralysis, wa. fitted with this pecial siing to help him learn to walk again. To Sell Your "Don'l Needs" Inexpensively Use A low-Cost Journal-Leader BABY DETECTO scales, semi-bathinette and a stroller, all for $12.00. Louis Brown, 918 W. Main Street, Caldwell, Ohio. Phone '318-R. 51 52 1 pd. TO SIZE WANT-AD 3 WEEKS -0NIY-$1 ,i »rd 1'i'ss i Order your want-ad for 3 weeks to sccurc the maximum results. If items are sold, telephone in your cancellation— THESE ITEMS SELL FAST IN SUMMER TIME Power Mowers Garden Equipment Farm Equipment Plants Fertilizer Clothing And Hundreds of Other Items If s easy lo place a 3 weeks want-ad- just phone 98 and ask for an ad-laker. One ol our cheerful, helpful wanl-ad girls will help you word your selling message for maximum results. Do il tomorrow- it'll mean extra money for you! What Can the Want-Ads Do For You! The Journal-Leader I Wouk's booK by St. Joseph, Mo., doctor s THE Cameras Projectors House Trailers Rugs Screens Plumbing Fixtures Building Materials K* TOMATO KETCHUP Su-Z-Q—Mi-oz. Can VACIIT LI THF JOTJRNATi. CALDWELL, OHIO The 'Big Six' In Profitable Timber (rop Production 'I Iron's nu k op ,c Bm Six" in Ohio's native woodlands: white oak, red oak, black wal nut, white ash, tulip poplar and sugar maple. They command attractive prices because of their lumber value. A woodland which con tains 60 percent or more of these trees, either mature or young, is a profitable one, according to F. W. Dean, Ohio State Univer sity extension forester. Trees in a farm woods, like cows in a dairy herd, should be paying producers, not "board ers," Dean says. He suggested farmers take an inventory of their woods to check which trees are productive and which are non-productive. A profitable woodland, the forester points out, should pro duce at least four or five board feet per tree per year, or about 250 to 300 board feet per acre per year. Trees should be well distributed, all ages and sizes from two inches to mature trees twenty-four to thirty inches in diameter. A normal stand con tains 200 to 300 trees to the acre, with fifty to seventy-five of saw log size. In addition to the "Big Six," a profitable woodland, Dean says, might contain such varieties as hickory, elm, cherry, beech, bass wood and soft maple. RETURNED HOME Mrs. Lester Pitts and infant ison were removed to their home on Caldwell route 1, Sunday evening, June 30 from Thomp son's hospital. Hay And Pasture Day Scheduled July 11 .V•: i.-ts at A vZ v 1h.» Ohio Afri- cultural Experiment station will stages hay and pasture field day at Wooster, July ll. During the morning session, visitors will tour experimental plots at the agronomy farm and hear talks on alfalfa cutting schedules, planting forages in corn, fertilizer placement and rate of planting for corn, and crop residue management. Afternoon tours will provide opportunity for visitors to see several phases of forage crop research. Problems of stand establishment will be discussed and experimental seeding equip ment will be on display. Special ists will talk about companion crops, birdsfoot trefoil and sum mer seedings. A special feature will be a demonstration on the use of nitrogen fertilizer on le gume grass mixtures. Registration for the .field day will begin at 9:30 a. m. EST at the agronomy center. Lunch will be served at the farm. When fruit juice and milk inust be combined, the milk may curdle. If you add the fruit juice to the milk slowly, stirring rap idly, curdling is not so apt to occur. Giant strawberries and black berries collected in South America by the U. S. Depart ment of Agriculture, may have important characteristics to breed into our domestic fruits. See The Journal for Quality Printing. HEINZ CATSUP 14-oz. Bottle TOMATO JUICE 2135c Hi ORANGE DRINK ~23c 46-oz. Con »IC lOlti Stuffed Olives 39' YACHT Ll li—20 (•/.. .far PEANUT BUTTER 59c BLCL RIBBON—80 Count NAPKINS VISIT OUR VEGETABLE DEPT. HUTCHINS SUPER MARKET USR 21 South Caldwell Prices Apply To Friday and Saturday Only! 2! 19' Vi Price Sale STATE PARKS J* *. i/ 1 Ifi iiie lai tiitiliiuafc AOi UiW til .portion of Ohio, not far from Where the states of Michigan and Indiana corner with Ohio, 105 ,ecre Harrison Lake, a State Re serve, each year attracts many thousands of motorist visitors. Harrison Lake was created in 1939 by the Ohio Division of Wildlife. Today visitors to this State Park enjoy picnic, bathing, Milk scorches easily as it'heats, so it will help to stir it almost constantly. Cooking it in a heavy pan also helps prevent .scorching. Of 1956 production of coal and lignit, 75 companies mined 313, 896,031 tons, or 75 percent, accord ing to Keystone Coal Buyers' Manuel. wo* Jt /uy Mi:.vrs FRYIN' ... Pan Ready CHICKENS K00L AID L*T,O [1G £i A f'^% MONARCH Refreshing Drink 6 i 25° l(!-oz. Jar 39c LB. U. 8. CHOICE CHUCK ROAST 45 YACHT CLIB SALAD DRESSING Qt Jar $0MI0 boating and fishing facilities. The fish population of this lake in cludes Urge mouth and small mouth bass, crappie, blue gills, bullheads, and carp. Harrison Lake is located in the, western edge of Fulton County within a square formed by the junction of U S. Route 127, U.S. Route 20, and State Routes 66 and 246, although it is not ad-' jacent to any of these highways. Pocahontas coal was the fuel used by the Great White Fleet sent 'round the world by the U.S. Navv in 1908. Production of coal in America in 1956 was 500,000,000 tons, or enough bituminous to build a wall around the nation 22 feet high and 10 feet thick. REYNOLD'S YOU SAVE WHEN YOU SHOP Thursday, July 4, 1957 NEWS FOR VETERANS Q—-1 Wi1 FREE... Package of BOND'S WIENER BUNS WITH PURCHASE OF ONE POUND OF ARMOUR WIENERS!- ARMOUR'S CcMo Packed WiEN 1 11 I n (II house because I just got a job in anoth er city. Is it possible to find out in advance whether VA will re store my GI loan rights. Or must I wait until after I sell, and then find out? A—You may find out in ad vance whether your GI loan benefit will be restored by mak ing a request to the VA office that guaranteed your original loan and furnishing the reasons why you want to sell. Remember, however, your GI loan benefit cannot be restored until VA is relieved of responsibility on the original loan. You can accom plish this by paying the loan in full, or by having the new chaser do so. pur Foresters and meteorologists are trying to reduce western forest fires by studying lightning behavior and seeding cloucts to prevent lightning, say the V. S. Department of Agriculture. Ohio, Indiana and Iowa alt placed slightly over 10 percent of their allotted corn acreages in th# corn acreage reserve, according to Ohio State University exten sion economists. Of the 18 new deep coal mines opened or placed in development in 19£6, a total of 12 were in West Virginia, the nation's leading pro ducer of bituminous coal. According to American Water ways Operators, Inc., coal river traffic has risen 26 million tons between 1947 and 1955 and now exceeds 100,000,000 tons a year. v A *5 tofr' mm lb 25 Ft Roll