&o -fo tavern that’s just the 1935 way of \ _ - saying what Chesterfields liave \ \ been saying for years .. . \ '' C-lsP* 1 * fjSHBBT^I Chesterfields do about every- >% thing a cigarette ought to do. t | >.L '-1 ■:; : j Chesterfields have TASTE—yes I plenty of it. But not too strong. but insipid or H it. f jj^fk P* d © 1935, Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. ■SIS CHfVROIET.. . 'UOItA-ftOtf: ~ . “jA 1 """ '' ' -■■ ' ■■ ---■> ■:•■•.•:•■ A:r.-:v.->:.....; I THE MOST FINELY BALANCED LOW- EVER BUILT* jjigfl you, many advantages that you can^ r ■•> not hnd in any other low-priced car, when youl * ~ accept your Chevrolet dealer's invitation to drive' [ I the new Master De Luxe Chevrolet! It’s the only ' % car in its price range that brings you the match-■ IT H less beauty of Body by Fisher—the superior safety ' t .. Of solid steel Turret-Top construction—the glid ing comfort of the Knee-Action Ride! And it’s a * so ~ie only car in its price range that brings you ''fPJj ... jA'JjMpl jmk such a perfect balance of all motoring advantages, wmtkiZfi l Wmmrnfi AW such a fine combination of style and stamina, mmm jlll lAJraKJ power and economy, speed and safety, pick-up ' Chevrolet dealer r&**gS—accept Ills invitation to drive the most finely balanced lou.priced car ever built today! *■ U Compare Chevrolet's low delivered prices and easy G.M.A.C. terms *<&&& A General Motors Value . come in • drive nr today • without obligation L- ■ - ■ ’\ _ :. A. J. Dinsmore & Bro. phont 108 Rising Sun, Maryland AUTO Racing championship Langhorne, Pa., July 22. —Fired to a feverish pitch during recent Weeks, the hectic scramble for the prized Eastern A. A. A. automobile racing championship may be decid ed once and for all here Sunday, Aug. 11th, in the final meet of the season at the mile track. Ben Shaw, hard-riding Westville, N. J., pilot, manning the same Miller Special as that in which the late Johnny Hannon drove to the 193 4 title, is the current pace-setter. But Shaw is hard pressed by both Doc Mackenzie, the bearded sensation of Eddington, Pa., and the determined Bob Sail, 1933 winner, tvho has been staging a brilliant comeback cam paign during the past few weeks. With those three battling for the speed toga, a terrific pace is inevit able. However, chief honors may be carried off by the redoubtable Billy Winn, diminutive Kansas City star, who has entered with a new Miller Special, the latest speed creation of the celebrated car-builder, Harry E. Miller. Powered by a 250 cubic inch dis placement motor, this car is rated the last word in speed construction. A sum close to 520.000 was spent to build the car. Mauri Hose. Jewish speed terror of the middle west and an outstanding Indianapolis Speedway star, is com ing east to compete in the last mile track auto race classic of the season on Langhorne Speedway, Sunday, August 11. In the li.st Langhorne race held on June 16, Rose was the sensation of the meet. In the 50 mile grind he jumped out into the lead ahead of a sensational field of stars and stayed there until a broken drive shaft sent him to the pits. In the eyes of eastern race drivers he will be the most unwelcome entrant scheduled to start in the August 11 classic, promoters say. There will be 100 miles of racing on the wind up card at Langhorne, including five ten mile sprint events and a 50 mile final for the 18 fastest cars on the course. Qualifying trials will begin on August 10 when the 24 fastest machines entered will be come eligible to start in the com petitive events. la the hopes of closing the season " THE MIDLAND JOURNAL, FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1985 "* with a new track record for Lang horne, Ralph A. Hankinson, owner manager of the course, has announc ed that he will apply 15,000 more gallons of oil to the track to make it dustless and hard. o HIGH PERCENTAGE OF TREES IN SHELTER BELT SURVIVE The first general report from the U. S. Forest Service on progress of the western shelter belt shows that more than 200,000,000 trees were planted last Spring covering 6,800 acres in 50 counties along the belt’s 1,000 miles. The great belt, 100 miles wide, zig-zags northward from the Texas panhandle up through Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska and the Dakotas to Canada. Up to July 1 reports from the 50 counties showed that a minimum of 70 per cent and an average of 90 per cent of the plantings had survived. Trees found adaptable to various areas include cottonwood, green ash, red cedar, hackberry, “ponderous” pines and Chinese elm. Black locust trees with rapid spreading roots were preferred for areas of soil erosion. The belt eventually will act not only as a watershed to check drought and floods but will provide haunts for wild game. New patches will be planted gradually, at right angles to the constant wind direction. Tall fast growing trees are being placed in the center, smaller ones on either side and dense coniferous trees on the outside. The planting is providing tem porary employment for several thou sand workers taken from relief rolls. As to ultimate success, the Forest Service points to several thousand acres of national forest in Nebraska planted 30 years ago and now stock ed with game. He who goes with wolves learns to howl. It is announced that all direct re lief by the Federal Government will end on November Ist. By that time it is expected all employables will be on an earning basis. All employ ables, of which there are a million cases involving probably 4,060,000 persons, will be thrown upon the resources of the forty-eight States. Not a dollar will be donated from the Federal Treasury for such persons. THE FAR AWAY BELLS ARE RINGING Evangeist John Moses Baker Baltimore, Maryland The Far-away Bells are ringing, yve are nearing Home* Sweet Home, Where loved ones wait our coming, And none shall ever roam. The Far-away Bells are ringing, As the sun in the west sinks low; We can almost hear them singing, In the land of the golden glow. The Far-away Bells are ringing, Sweet music of long ago, Pleasant memort i bringing, Our Blessed Redeemer to know. The Far-away Bells are ringing, Let us brighten some one’s way, Lighten the burdens they carry, Soon will end Life’s little day. The Far-away Bells are ringing, God’s smiling face to see When the warfare here is over, With Him forever to be. 0 THE NOBLE AND THE GOOD Evangeist John Moses Baker Baltimore, Maryland ' Bring out the noble and the good, Hidden sometimes out of sight; God’s blessings on us one and all, Doing always what is right. Bring out the noble and the good, How fast the days go by . We can make the old world better, Brighter, if we would only try. Bring out the noble and the good, Like perfume from the flowers. God’s blessings resting on our work; May His peace be always ours. And when the warefare’s over, Well done, to hear Him say, The morning and the meeting, In that Land of Perfect Day. O CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SERVICES “Truth” will be the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, July 28. The Golden Text will be from Psa. 31:5—“Thou hast redeemed me, O Lord God of Truth.” Among the citations comprising the Lesson-Sermon will be the fol lowing from the Bible; Isa. 24:23 “Then the moon shall be confounded, and the sun ashamed, when the Lord of hosts shall reign in Mount Zion, and in Jerusalem, and before his ancients gloriously.” The Lesson-Sermop also will in clude the following passage from the Christian Science textbook, “Science and Health with Key to the Scrip tures,” by Mary Baker Eddy, page 99—“ Truth has furnished the key to the kingdom, and with this key Christian Science has opened the door of the human understanding." o Many of the wrong things men do are done in idle moments because they can’t think of anything else to do. 0 Today's invention is the mother of most of the activities of the next generation. CHEVROLET—'BROAD* CAST John Dillinger ’b reign as a modem bad boy of the Middle West and how it came to an end whea Department of Justice agent! itffk up the trait;, was the first of the Chevrolet Motor Company's new series of authentic "G-Men” dramatizations to be launched over an NBC-WEAF coast to-coast network Saturday, July 20, at 9 p. m. (E. D. S. T.). The story of Dilllnger and subse quent episodes in the weekly half hour series are based on factual records from the files of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Phillips H. Lord, of Seth Parker fame, who will write the scripts and direct the broadcasts, has been granted access to the government archives for story material. Further authenticating the radio presentation of “G-Men,” the sponsor is submitting all manuscripts to J. Edgar Hoover, director of the Fed eral Bureau of Investigation, for his approval before putting the programs on the air. Selection of the outlaw Dillinger for the first program is a natural result of the special interest of the automobile industry in the writing of the law which finally enabled the Federal authorities to take up the pursuit of the killer-fugitive and annihilate him after he had baffled local enforcement agencies for weeks. A violation of the Dyer act, pro moted by the automobile manufac turers in 1920 and making it a Fed eral offense to transport stolen auto mobiles from one state to another, occurred when Dillinger crossed the state line from Indiana into Illinois. It offered the government’s special agents, previously hamstrung by jurisdictional red tape, a legal right to enter the chase and their efflicacy aroused public demand that the bu reau be given wider latitude. The case proved the forerunner of a notable string of Federal successes in the extermination or breaking up of criminal gangs. The program will make no effort to color the records to gain theatrical punch. Its sponsors believe the pub lic will find in the factual scripts all the required dramatic elements and also will get a clearer and more truthful picture of the Government operatives at work if the records are sismply allowed to speak for them selves. G-Men activities in kidnaping cases, in the hunts for "Pretty 80. ” Floyd and “Baby Face” Nelson, in cases of crimes at sea and in the scientific development of meager clues, will be acted out in subsequent broadcasts. O COTTON FABRICS FOR SUMMER Fabrics for summer wear must be cool and have qualities which pre vent mussing, if they are to be prac ;ical and entirely satisfactory, ac cording to Miss Helen Shelby, cloth ing specialist of the extension service. In her opinion, manufacturers of cotton materials have done much to provide dress and suit fabrics that do not fade or shrink to a disturbing degree. Many of them, she says, re tain their original crispness of ap pearance of newness after repeated washings. While some are given a crease resistant finish, others are characterized by so much crinkliness that wrinkles from wearing, do not matter. She points out that much of this material bears labels setting forth these qualities, and that there is an art in reading labels to detect statements of facts regarding wear ing qualities. With reference to some of the specific materials, Miss Shelby states the cotton laces possess many desir able qualities for summer wear; that they are cool as well as cool looking; they do not wrinkle, and, when washed, they require very little pressing. Fortunately, she says, they are good style for day and eve ning wear. She lists the cotton crocheted or. knitted dresses or suits, and those made of one of the many sheer prints, as being satisfactory for sum mer wear. The eyelet embroidery has many desirable qualities, as proven by its popularity in several seasons, and the organdies, dimities, and lawns are destined to retain their popular ity season after season, in the opinion of Miss Shelby. O Usually the result of trying to kill two birds with one stone is that you lose the stone. ' o Making the world better is excit ing; and leaving it to its wickedness is the same. - O ■ One has to work considerably harder to be warmly regarded when one is old. O Don’t let a typographical error hold your attention too long. To newspaper men they are old stuff-