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THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 1949 Barkley Cites Senate Rules Saye It Is Duty Of Presiding Officer To Enforce Debate Rules In Senate WASHINGTON — (1) — Vice- Prendent Barkley, who presides over the Senate, has given the frnetorm few warning he intends f© enforce the rules of debate. te seid that heretofore some | the mules have been violated * enenimeus consent, because he aue eeemed trivial, or be- come some senators were re- tuctant to make » point of order @@einet another senator who may be vieloting rules. Se, Barkley seid, it appeared te be up te the vice president to enforce the rules. He warned the senators that wn they heave the floor for a wreeh they are not compelled to yield to another } t mm debate on a motion ke up @ bill or resolution) = Matter which may be! " a. the rules of the Senate! provide that # senator can yield) wuther senator only for a the vice president ex- red he fet equired to yield for He may yt Powe pose of permitting enuter to ask him a ques Hf he yields for any other pur ~ and running debate bnsucs frequently happens. morc . by unanimous consent, ry f the rules, he hay be the floor by wae tion of the} Has unsion followed WORK. .. TIME Old ftashio ly from the (&) Witephoto WHITE SMOKE BILLOWS from magnesium set 6ff by an atomic impulse ]5 miles away. cutting the ribbon of Elza gate to let the public enter Oak Ridge. Tenn., the famed atomic city, fon the first time. grafted on a widely scattered farm community. The war-born city of 35,000, fifth largest in Tennessee, looks like a huge Army base n't quite sure They “taken Some senators we they understood the rule. were afzaid they would be floor” by violating a rule without knowing they were violating it The president suggested they might protect themselves by vice asking the unanimous consent of the other senators to permit an- other s r to interrupt them while th were talking Senator Hayden had the floor at this point With the vice president's warning still fresh in GO ALL-ELECTRIC the Modern Way SAVE MONEY ned, German Servants Go To England. HAMBURG, Germany — () — The British military government reports that 2,345 German women have gone to Briain as domestic servants. his; mind, he opened his speech this way “Mr. President, myself unanimous proceed.” I now grant; consent to inefiicient methods cost you more—but modern, easy-to-operate, time-and-labor-saving electric conveni- ences mean better living and easier work—at lower cost. Use electricity exclusively. It does jobs better... more economically. Use it freely... because it does more work for less. THE MORE YOU USE, THE LOWER THE RATE City ElectricSystem x *k* kK * hare being By A. H. ANDREWS follows: “Of the hardier plants thriving in the open ground what inter- | flowering shrubs, — slender | shape, about two feet tall, with i wavy: 1 long pointed | ' some ing white and! some red berries about the size jof shoe buttons, which a friend’ } took to be Ardisias and which | | was later confirmed by Bailey’s Cyclopedia of Horticulture, the! red being identified as Ardisio! crenulata and tHe white as A.| jiaponica. The red is especially | | gorgeous, rivaling Christmas hol-' | ly, though the red and white are, very. showy in contest aeene Y lant is* said “té° make -a Very sat | ractive low helge and from the | | lumerous young seedlings sc: {tered in all dircetions I judge it] | 1's easily propagate The Ardisia was a favorite of ‘or. Henry Nehrling, noted bot- 1 onist. who it in his garden | .t Gotha, 1 mentions it {in bis writ vilows: “The common / ia crenula lta, probably a native of southern | China and India, is grown in | arge numbers in greenhouses for ts bright red very abundant | nasses of berries which are in | «reat demand for Christmas dec- | | oration. T are easily grown in dots, a fine specimen in a five or ix-inch pot, covered with. bril liant berries, cach as large as a cing fea Ardisia | ea, be most s ture wherever seen. The ; should be found in every garden | nd_on every veranda in Florida. | “When Mr. Charles Ford wi irector of the Hong Kong Bo- | tanical Gardens he sent me many | ceds of plants that he thought! vould thrive in Florida. In this | collection of seeds I found the ry berries of a most beautiful mamillata, a native From 1907 to 1917 number of th compact | 0 3 feet high, and as nteresting and conspicious as A.} renulata, though very different j yea it in many respects. I lost} ny plants in the disastrous freeze | of 1917 ral years ago I received ur Bureau of Plant Indus: yther Ardisia—A. polyec a native of India. My is now about 7 or & very beautiful. | Day to New of most ex- color whict of flow entirely of i while _ the wer tt pure white. Thesc flowers form a beautiful decora id T have often de nds and callers are provided in tt a Hit Record BRUNSWICK. Germany-~(4")- Production of Volkswag ple’s cars) at the fz here reached the record figure of 2,600 in Feb: Y the military gove ent announce In addition 1,500 of the little cars, formerly used by the Arn reconditioned for on the German market. ' ‘going back where they came | ‘drawn, pay by Ardisias Showy Hedge “Plants { In January, 1938, while visiting Col. Raymond Robins, na- H tionally known lecturer and philanthropist, at his Chinsegut| Hill estate near Brooksville I was taken for a tour of the garden} | by his secretary. On the high and wind-swept crest of the Annutalaga Hammock where only the more hardy foliage and flowering plants were seen what impressed me most was the Ardisia which I do not recall having encountered in South Flor- ida, or at least it is not commonly found here. From The Amer-j ican Eagle of that date is quoted a description of the plant as} $$$ ———___ ested me most was a large bed of | or. in| suffered from cold.” sale] now LONDON—()\—A government in play BROWNING, Mont—(@)—Hair cnet foul should be recommends that the lime is a major sports problem time one of: the braids ach ; disbanded by the es — y end of next } September. when it will be three | years old. The Committee says the corps; ‘has cost Britain's three services! . 110;333,915 pounds ($445,335,660) and handled 114.037 Poles: A late eount showed it still had 11,015, OF ti 5.837 were of-| fieers—old or disabled and hard | to place in jobs. | Most ofthe Poles balked at! from, because the Communis' are in power there now. Only} 8,912 have been repatriated, with 50 waiting to go. Of the others, 11,409 have moved on from Britain to other countries, 71,563 have taken jobs in this country,'2,066 have turn- ed students and 2,066 have joined the armed forces. The tageends are expected to go abroad or to settle in Brit-! ain. pe Meinbers of the corps have} rank, two-thirds { to three-quarters of that for the British ser The committee General Motors’ Lowes Priced Bight s > isable It’s no wonder that thou- distinguished as it is—is still priced automobile, @ car thet» « seeet be put om pu Ciaeblee eee <auiy and tayiods GE just Shame the een? teak Gee 2 tar tht P i people all over the General Motors’ eight! just gree and goee—sbe after joule ' country have decided— As a matter of fact—if you cam aatedassases of romeo once and for all—to move up to the ford ci magnificent new 1949 Pontiac. eed coe ad. the afford one of the When you do buy a Pont will be driving an outstanding probably It’s an easy step to take, because the uew 1949 Pontiac—beautiful and THE MOST BEAUTIFUL THING ON was Silyer Streak St new Bodies by Fish make the 1949 Pontiac truly most beautiful thing on wi ro Nu curnatiencsg sire sbieft sxe ¢ You just sit back and drive! Optional om ull wedels at cates evet. ae cherry and of a glossy black col- My plant at Naples never | | 419-421 CAROLINE STREET and TELEGRAPH LANE MULBERG CHEVROLET COMPANY TELEPHONE 277 Grocers are featuring two-pound specials on NUCOA, the delicious “‘bowl-mix”’ margarine that lets you color two pounds together as quickly as one... has no extra cost tacked on for a “squeeze bag”! GO TO YOUR GROCER’S—see his display of Nucoa and other money-saving “specials” this week. He wants to help you keep your cost of living down. He knows, for instance, that the trick package adds two or three cents to the price you pay for margarine ina “squeeze bag”—that delicious “bowl-mix” Nucoa keeps customers coming back to his store. It’s America’s most popular margarine. 4 MAenng SAVE Time, “Bowl TWo pounDs XOGETHER UPROAR Re RBIS Ey? pounds of WUCOS af ‘your fad store f IT'S AMERICA’S MOST POPULAR MARGARINE vars! WELLOW NUCOA iN ‘4 LB. PRINTS AT YOUR FAVORITE GROCER