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THE FULTON PATRIOT, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1943 ESSENTIAL WAR WORK FOJR MEN AND WOMEN FULL TIME Employment APPLY Oswego Falk-Sealright Employment Office Persons now engaged in war work or other essential activity will not be considered. Mrs. Jessie Cole Quinn EMBALMER AND FUNERAL DIRECfOR Robert W. Gardner Licensed Assistant * FUNERAL PARLORS 40 SOUTH FIRST ST. Phone 142 Day or AT FIRST SIGN OF A 666 TABLETS. SALVE. NOSE DROPS Tomato Juice Cocktail Fresh tomato-juice cocktail is one °ood way to capture the flavor of this luscious red vegetable. The cooking experts suggest that you use very red and ripe tomatoes. Wash and chop them, tnen force the pulp through a fine sieve to extract the juice. If you wish to give the drink a little more zest, put some raw onion in the juice until the fla- vors are blended. Then, season with freshly squeezed lemon juice and a.dash of horseradish and salt. * Sweating Closet A frequent hot weather complaint of the bathroom is a water closet that sweats. Sweating on the outside of closet bowls and tanks is from mois- ture in the air deposited when it comes into contact with surfaces chilled by cold water in the supply system. When the water reaches room temperature, there is no fur- ther sweating. A Thorough Check-Up We recommend it for your car. Let us make that check-up and give you the expert ser- vice that you can always expect here. Alexander & Lovelace 22 WEST FIRST ST. PHONE 236-J UNSAFE^HOME ATIONAL SAFEtV COUNC11 ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN But you may always protect against financial loss thru Insurance. CALL 129 FOR DETAILS URE INSURANCE AGENCY Cor. Cayuga and Second • FREE PRIVATE DEMONSTRATION TUESDAY, OCT. 26th, 1 P. M. to 8 P. M. CLARK HOTEL, FULTON, N. Y. Whether you are now very hard of hearing or if you axe just losing your hearing-* don't miss this opportunity to learn how x you can be helped to HEAR BETTER—thanks to new discoveries of the U. S. Government Deaf- 7T ness Survey. No obligation. Ask for Acousticon. ACOUSTICON ED ON U.S. GOVERNMENT Your Broadway and Mine: Sallies in Our Alley: Secretary of the Treasury Morgenthau went into the Hotel Delmonico pharmacy, made a small purchase, and handed the clerk a $100 bill. The clerk, failing to recognize him, scrutinized the money carefully. \I hope it's good,\ he said . . . \It ought to be,\ was the dry reply, \I made it my- self.\ . . . Ann Corio, mentioned al- most daily by a racing paper (The Morning Telegraph) phoned the pic- ture firm she works for and com- plained . . . Surprised at any ac- tress squawking about too much pub- licity, they asked Ann what was wrong . . . \What's wrong?\ she yipped. \My name's in it so much that people are starting to bet on me!\ Sounds in the Night: At Havana- Madrid: \He's in 4F. Walked through a screen door and strained him- self!\ ... At the Stork: \I'll cut you down to Mexican size!\ . . . \What size is that?\ . . . \It ain't tall!\ . . . In Reuben's: \He doesn't enter a conversation. He invades it!\ . . . At Leon and Eddie's: \She gets on his nerves. Her fa- vorite perch\ ... At the Latin Quarter: \They've been going un- steady for years\ ... In Ver- sailles: \My dear, I no longer care that you no longer care\ . . . \It's worse than that, darling. I no long- er care that you no longer care that I no longer care!\ The Magic Lanterns : • Mark Hel- linger herded the whole Warner Bros, payroll into Edouard Cantor's support in \Thank Your Lucky Stars,\ and what did that get him? A wow, that's all! Cantor and Dinah Shore give zip and melody to the main yarn, and the olio trimmings come from such mighties as Davis, Bogart, Garfield, Fiynn, De Havil- land, Sheridan, not to mention et and cetera . . . Sonja Henie is still the most skillful and winsome cutie on skates, but the story has her cutting the same old Figure 8 in \Winter- time.\ It's all about a broken down Winter resort, with Sonja getting\ Jack Oakie and Cesar Romero out of the barrel, or something. Pretty to look at, but the tale is as cold as Sonja's ice ... Charles Laughton, who can make bamminess artistic, is -handcuffed in \The Man From Down Under.\ He plays a bluster- ing old Aussie warrior, mixed up With a couple of Belgian orphans. A Jap attack is rung in to straighten out matters, but Laughton had been too mauled by the writers to re- cover . . . \The Kansan\ gives you Richard Dix, Jane Wyatt, Vic- tor Jory, et al, out thar in the sage brush country, a-fightin' and a-lovin' and a-cliche-in'. The Magazines: William Shirer dis- cussed \American Traitors of the Radio\ in Harper's, meaning the cor- respondents who hired out as liars to Goebbels. They were weakies, said Shirer, fearful that they couldn't make a living if they came home. Mebbe—but what about those back here whom the Reich reached? They were living high—hobnobbing with our biggies and feeling inferior to nobody . . . Will Rogers, Jr., is all for a fast break with Franco, he states in Coronet. When the Axis is cracked, he warns, the Nazi big- shots will scoot into a friendly Spain and be free to cook up some new barbarities against civilization. Un- less! . . . Carl Hermenn Frank, the Czech who betrayed his people for Hitler's marks, has more to shiv- er over than even Quisling. Frank, according to Collier's profile, or- dered the slaughter of 250 Czech youths. He had them shot down while attending the funeral of a pa- triot, also murdered by Frank's mas- ters . . . Morton Eustis describes in Theatre Arts-Monthly how a North Africa air raid broke up Josephine Baker's act. When the all-clear came Josephine picked up and carried on. Showing no war will rob a perform- er of that bow. The Front Pages: Sen. Lodge, back from the battle areas, blasted the \rosy propaganda\ back here. He plans to report to congress that \our fighting men are mad because of the false optimism of the news at home\ . . . Erudite Times opinion boys are flunking a simple arithme- tic course. Last week they said: \The first front is Poland, the sec- ond France and the third the Middle East.\ The day we invaded the Eu- ropean mainland the same editors said: \The second front is now ablaze in Italy\ ... A newspaper like the New York Herald Tribune deserves every American's applause. Thoroughly Republican, but it never forgets it belongs to America, which made both parties possible. Observations: The hungriestIstreet in the world—the one on W. 33fd St., between Fifth and Broadway. Has 19 restaurants . . . The subway ads that read: \Sumner Welles is the coolest man in Washington\ . . . The old horse market on E. 24th be- tween Lexington and Second. Be- cause of gas rationing' and rubber ditto the trading in nags is enjoy- ing its biggest boom in 50 years . . . The Brig-Gen'l with four rows of campaign ribbons, and the sailor ex- claiming: \Look at all that fruit salad!\ Who's News This Week By - Delos Wheeler Lovelace „ Consolidated Features.—WNU RelV^se. XT EW YORK.— Post-war plans are •*-~ also occupying our Abner H. Ferguson, commissioner of the Fed- eral Housing administration. With .j.,,. * c »i himitis Millions of Small homes On e Homes With War may gather Restrictions Ended f r ° m M r Ferguson s pleasant predictions that small homes will pop up throughout the country like dandelions as soon as Wartime restrictions are lifted. Reminding that the FHA needs no new legislation to go into im- mediate action in the small- home field, and pointing out that there is still available practical- ly, half a bjJijon dollars-of un- used insurance authorization, Ferguson talks of two million homes per year for.ten years after the swords are beaten back into plowshares. Meanwhile he urges home owners to keep up repairs. A Democrat, a Mason, a married man and a father, Ferguson has been with the Housing administra- tion since* 1934. First he was as- sistant counsel, then general coun- sel, then assistant administrator and. since 1940, administrator. He got his law degree at Georgetown university in 1904. Before that he attended a military school. He lives in Washington, D. C. But he was born in 1881 in Paris, Va. There are 19 Parises in the encyclopedia not counting Paris, France, but the one in Virginia doesn't appear at all. It must be mighty small. But when Mr. Ferguson's charming new homes begin to rise, Paris, Va., will begin to^ grow. And so will all the other Parises. CURPRISE parties take the place of tea parties in the capital these days. One of the most successful was the recent appointment of . , - . , . , v x Edward R. AbeLincolnish,Yet ste ttinius Ed Stettinius Came Jr. as un- Up the Easy Way de r \ se c state. Many names had been ban- died about in connection with this -post, but whoever thought of the handsome hard-working lend lease administrator? Stettinius was in San Francis- co when the surprise exploded. It may have been worked out by telephone. No Uss than three 'phones have always decorated his almost bare desk in the al- most bare office he occupied as lend lease administrator. One was appropriately white; that ran to the White House. Crisp memos are another favorite aid to Mr. HuM'a. new second in command. Memos are pepper and salt to the big, dish of work he con surr.es each day. Washington knows him as a terrific worker. He is banging away sometimes as early as five and six in the morning. His father was a J. P. Morgan partner and young Edward at- tended the University of Virgin- ia and married a Richmond belle. Nevertheless he went to work in 1924 for General Motors as a common laborer. He was vice president by 1931, and in 1936 U. S. Steel made him chair- man of the board. President Roosevelt has used him in vari- ous important jobs. He took charge of lend lease two years ago. Forty-two years old, he* likes his 500-acre Virgirwa farm, horses, scrap books about J&Ts^bree sons, raising turkeys and collecting ancient vehi- cles. \\l ITH the Germans driven back * * to the Dnieper and retreating northward in Italy, the president of Turkey seems to be leaning a little — * . i n • » •inthedi- Turkish President rectlon o f Will Know When to the Unit- Get Off the Fence ed Nations from the carefully perpendicular position he has maintained heretofore on the continental fence. Gen. Ismet Inonu is one of the most astute diplomats in the global picture.- He trained under the crafty Mustapha Kemal Ataturk, whom he succeeded as president when Ataturk died in 1938. Even Ataturk had no diplo- matic device so effective as In- onu's deafness. In a tight cor- ner, the president just plain fails to hear. He mislaid his ear- phone when Franz von Papen came looking for a pal in 1939. But from all accounts he was hearing excellently during our Archbishop Francis J. Spell- man's recent visit. He reads English, French and German. Small and insignificant, Inonu was nevertheless rated a good general in 1922 in Anatolia. When Ataturk in- troduced Turkey to surnames in the western style, Ismet took his from Inonu, scene of his famous victory over the Greeks. Before that he w&s' Ismet Pasha. Fifty-eight years j5ld» he has - a wife, two sons, and a host of friends, too, who call him affable and kind- ly, although his soldiers found him a strict disciplinarian. Once every year he asks 10,000 children to his villa and gives them a bag of candy each. LOOK AND LEARN By A. C. GORDON 1. Did any signers of the Consti-j tution of the United States become! president? 2. When was artificial ice first made? 3. How long did the Spanish- American war last? 4. What would be the total length : of the navigable rivers in the U. S.? ; 5. How many letters are there in the Russian alphabet? ; 6. Approximately how many i pounds of wool does it require. to \ make a man's medium weight pure woe I suit? 7. Through how many states^ does che Lin'coln highway pass and how \ong is it? 8. Frrom what is naphtha obtained? 9. What provine of Canada has the •reatest Indian population? '10. How long does it take for a turtle's \eggs to hatch? 11. In what year and by whom was the rotation of the earth on its axis established? 12. What five states were the last to be admitted to the ..union, in order? 13. What is meant when speaking of a thing that is said to be \man- ually operated\? 14. Who assassinated President McKInley. 15. What percentage of pineapples is water? 16. How many islands are there in the 'group called \Th-e Thousand Isl- ands\^ the St. Lawrence river? 17. How did the \Irish potato\ get its name? 18. What state has the highest av- erage altitude and how many feet? iy. What is a ment? 1 facto\ govern- 20. What is the meaning of a tan- dem bicycle? Answers- 1. Yes, two; George Washington and James Madison. 2. In IS80. _,-8. From April 21, 181*8, to August 12, 1898. 4. About 23,500 miles. 5. Tairty-s-ix. 6. Nine pounds. 7. It passes through 11 states and is 3,300 miles long. 8. From petroleum. 9. Ontario. 10. Tniiteen months. 11. Copernicus, in 1543. 12. Wyoming, Utah, Oklahoma, New Mexico and Orizona. 13. ; Operated by hand. 14. Leon Czolgosz. 15. Approximately 89 per c< nt 16. 1,692. 17. The Irish were the first Euro- peans to recognize it as a staple food. 18. Colorado, 6,9'00 feet. 19. A government which exercise- power irrespective of its legal author' ity. 20. It is a bicycle built for two persons, r o.ne sitting behind the other Mosquito Bomber The fighting Mosquito bomber— \the fastest airplane of any type in operation with any air force in the world today\—is built entirely of wood, a number of the parts lami- nated. HOW YOU CAN GET LOAN BY MAIL If you need a loan of $10 to $150 ot more, but don't want to take tune MAILoan service. It enables you to get a loan entirely by mail, no matter where you Jive. You even repay Cht loan BY MAIL P * e. MAIL. You get the same friendly, considerate •ervice, the same prompt attention, you would get if you visited our office personally. Loans are made on signa- it b O d s you involved. best. Outsider Phone or write how much you need •nd we will send you the necessary papers. As soon as they are returned to us and approved, the money will b« mailed to you FINANCE^CO. of New York 103 S. l«f St. Edw. Woehr, Mgr ALBERT J.p'BRIEN I Funeral Director FUNERAL HOME Tel. 490 254 HIGHLAND ST. Job Printing at The Patriot Office w ards have a dress for every woman in town... 4.98 and 6.66 . , . new ones every week! Dresses for every occasion — from classroom classics to stunning furlough dresses . . . every color and style you can think of! Every size, too ... 9 to 15's for juniors, 12 to 20, 38 to 44 ... even extra and half sizes at these tiny prices! Come in and see them i M ontgomery Ward j COR. CAYUCA AND SECOND STS. PHONE 970 •)' D/