While He is Juggling the Calendar, President Roosevelt Might Advance Winter a Couple of Months. Many Can't Afford to Go Fishing to Dodge the Heat.
THE WEATHER
1 1 u in id 1 1 y i:M p. m. ycmcicluy 27 V,
)liK)iHt lHiniPrutuni yenlm-iiuy 1MI
Koui'Kt tttmpHi-alurH lllHt night flit
I'l-tM-iiiituitun for 24 hours .... 0
'l'H ll. Hlllro fll'Hl of IllOlllll 0
I'm-in. from Hi'pt. 1, IMS 2B.H4
lA'flclcncy lnco Hit. 1, 1U3S 7.7U
Fair. ,
WAR
It's polling closer dally In Eu
rope, When It. comes, will Eng
land and F ru lieu Htitml by Poland
or allow Hit) Nazis to gobble Dan
iilg without resistance on their
purl? Keep informed through wire
news In the NKWS UKVIKW.
mm
JHt tJOU&LA5 tOUNTY DAILY
VOL. XLIV
NO. 115 OF ROSEURQ 2 5
ROSEBURG, OREGON, MONDAY. AUGUST 21, 1939.
VOL XXVIII
NO. 15 OF THE EVENING NEWS
TJfo
v . f i .-r jt i - v . r l . - .. a c t - vita e r r k- u j ti j s i r. a
i i m r- ur n iv, w . m p si m . n n u
?1
3-
73
1 2
mm
HE
TO AVER
Forest
Succession Of
Fires Fought
By 100 Men
Crews Also Rushed to New
Shively Creek Blazes;
Mill Community in
Klamath Swept.
One man, equipped with matches,
was offsottlni? the work of more
than loo men, armed with modern
fire-fighting tools ill the Paradio
crek urea near Klkton, Fred Soutli
wiek, supervising warden of the
Douglas Forest Protective associa
tion, reported today. A large crew
Saturday hroiight under control a
fire strung out along a two-mile
front, only to have a series of new
fires, covering approximately 4'Ht
acres, set out Sunday.
('reus nlso were sent Into the
Shively creek area In the southern
part of the county, where all old
lire revived Sunday and jumped its
trenches.
The state patrol had more thnn
200 men on fire lines today, while
ripproxliiiatPly 40 civilian fire fight
ers were recruited hero late yester
day and sent into the woods near
Powers to aid the Coos county
patrol.
PINE RIDGE FIRE VICTIMS
SHELTERED IN CHILOQUIN
KLAMATH FALLS. Aug. 21.
(Al) Six hundred homeless per
ilous, virl litis of the fire that de
llroyed Pine ridge, 115 miles north
!' hero, Saturday night, took shel
ter today hi uearhy Chiloquin, thelr
pltms for the future as dark ns Hie
ashes that once were their homes.
Nearly all the men were employ
ed in the mills of the Forest Lum
ber compuuy and their plnns rested
on whether the company would re
hlllld. Raymond White of Kansas
City, president of the ' company,
was reported en route here by
plane to study the situation with
resident nijjiiagei'H.
The refugees were housed in
Chiloquin homes and In the Red
Cross emergency headquarters at
tho Chiloquin high school gymna
sium. Cots, hlankets and food
were supplied by residents of Chilo-
(Continued on page 6)
LAKE TAHKENITCH
RESORT FIRE HIT
GARDINER, Aug. 2L-The Lakr
Tahkenltch dock store, dance pa
vllion ami floating dock owned by
Dean brothers were destroyed by
fire of undetermined origin at 2:30
a. m. Saturday. Loss was sot at
f.MHHJ. lloats and motors were
saved.
Owners of the razed property
nnnounced pluns to rebuild before
litmr day.
BALLROOM USED BY
STUDENTS BURNS
Kl'GKNK, Ore., Aug. 21 (AP)
Fire of undetermined origin de
stroyed the WiMunieiie park ball
room, rendc7.vous for I'nlversity
of Oregon students, early Sunday.
Ixiss was estimated at $15, Quo by
Manager A. It. Loud. ,
Editorials on the Day's News
liy FRANK JKNK1XS
A WITNUSS testifying before
the Dies committee says the
inula want Aniericn.
llefore permitting yourself to he
roine too much excited, recall what
happened to the little boy who
wanted the moon.
IirllAT did happen to him?
" Why. be DIDN'T CKT IT. The
fact that he wanted It merely pi-ov-ed
bow silly he vas.
nrilK stock market has nnnlher
Hitiking spell, the third since
Kurnpenn wur news got hot ngaln.
Speculators know that the out
break of war in Kurope would
cause a sharp hrenk In security
prices os Kuropean owners hasten
ed to convert their American stock
holdings into cash. History indi
cates that such a break would be
followed by a boom as wnr orders
began to pour In.
What the speculators want to do
Firebug Still
Robot Idea Applied
to Ride 'Thumbing'
Saving wear and tear on the
thumbs is shown in Cleveland,
Ohio. En route from New York
to Detroit, Charles Ball has only
to pull leisurely on a string, and
(Presto!) he gets there.
T
TO BE PROSECUTED
Brothers of Drowned Boy
Get Deat3i Certificate,
' " " Allowed to Go.
i '1 r : i .- ' '
No prosecution is -planned of Ihe
three Stanton brothers of U'nsliou
gal. Wash..' who last Thursday
night loaded the body of a drown
ed brother, William, 18. inlo a dil
apidated automobile and look it
homo, District Attorney J. V.. Long I
reported. Coroner II. C. Stearns
has reported he does not plan ac
tion against the boys, who plead
ed ignorance of the law and fright
when they returned to Douglas
county last night to secure a cer
tificate to permit burial of the
body, Long said.
William Stanton was drowned
Thursday night at the Dlinmlok
mill pond near Azalea, southern1
Douglas county, where the four
brothers were endeavoring to ob
tain work at the mill. The three
remaining brothers, without await
ing nit official iuvesigatlon anil
nuthorlty for removal of the bodv.
left immediately for their home in
ashougal with the corpse in the
rear seat of their car and started
state police investigation Into a
(Continued on page 6)
BUS, FIRE ENGINE
. CRASH; 29 INJURED
PHILADELPHIA, A r. 21.
(AP) A (Jreyhoumt bus from the
world's fair und a fire engine an
Hwerlng a false alarm collided to
day In a pnMlawn mist, Injuring 23
persons.
The Inis was en route from New
York to Washington, The colli
Hion occurred at an interesecllcm
on Honsevelt boulevard, which car
ries U. S. route one through Phila
delphia. Is lo sell ahead of the break and
liny hack nhead of the lioom.
yillC federal reserve board re
ports that lis index or Indus
trial production advanced four
points in July to 1m2 per cent of
the l!ti:t-l!IL'!j average, reflecting
continued improvement in business
In the l ulled States.
The index stood at lis in June
and !)2 In May.
IN splto of predictions to Ihe con
trary, the killing of the spend
lend (shot in the arm) bill hy con
gress nppears to have encouraged
business Instead of frightening it.
npiIK federal reserve board re
ports that In July prices of
some industrial materials advanced
while prices for agricultural prod
ucts CONTINI KD TO DI-XLINK.
(Continued on page 4.)
Hurd Cannery
Begin Aug 28
Capacity Enlarged, 200 to
Get Work; Fresh Prune
Pack of 1,500 Tons
First Job Set.
Oreatly enlarged and more ef
ficiently equipped, Hurd's cannery
at Iiosebnrg, operated by F. A.
Hurd, will mart Monday, Aug. 2K,
on the first of a puck of lfiOU tons
of fresh prunes to be canned under
a semi-cooperative arii eement with
f(i DoupIuh county growers.
Mr. Hurd today employed ap
proximately 2iu persons, who will
he formed into three crews, each of
which will work seven and one-half
hours daily, placing the cannery on
u virtual 24-hour basis of operutiou.
With the enlarged capacity provid
ed by improvements and Installa
tions made during the past few
months, the cannery is equipped
to handle approximately 115 tons of
fresh fruit per day and can turn
out canned prunes at the rate of
350 pounds of fruit per minute,
when operated at full capacity.
Capacity Enlarged
In preparation for the season,
Mr. Hurd hus completely remodeled
his plant, und has Installed new
equipment. With a guaranteed vol
ume of fruit arrunged In advance
lie has equipped the cannery to
meet not only the 'specified needs,
hut. has nrntuged a reserve - capa
city to tulte care of any possible
emergency,
Under Ihe agreement reached
with the growers, and with the lie
construct Ion Finance compitny,
which is providing funds for ad
vance payments to growers and to
meet actual canning costs, the op
eration of the cannery is limited ex
clusively to those growers holding
contracts. The growers have advis
ed Mr. Hurd that deliveries will he
started the last of the week.
Employes Assigned.
In preparation tor starting work
Monday morning, Mr. Hurd today
interviewed prospective employees
and assigned 32 women ami 1!) men
to each of the throe shifts. Kach
employee has been assigned his or
her respective tasks and every
thing Is lu readiness, Mr. Hurd re-
(Contlnued on page 6)
NKW YORK, Aug. 21. (API
Clendenin J. Ryan, fill, a son of the
late Thomas Fortune Ryuu, millll
millionaire railway magnate, was
found dead at his home off Fifth
avenue today, a victim of illuminat
ing gas poisoning.
Police said his head was inside a
gas heater in the fireplace, wllh
Severn! tftu wliln nnnn u Imti H,o
'hnilv UllR (llaenl-nru.l Uv n I,uImuuu-
ageut.
Tlukjmtler in the household suf fered
a heart attack when Ihe dis
covery was made. ,
A son. Clendenin J. Ryan, Jr..
former secretary to Mayor La(iuar-i
ilia and assistant to Sanitation
Commlr.slnner William F. Carey,
survives.
The vlclim, a retiring figure, sol-'
dom came to public attention, in
l!l:l, he was sued by Miss Muriel
Sharp of Harden City, N. Y who al
leged that Ryan failed to keep a
contract to pay her J'iiiO a month
for life In return for her services
In maintaining an apartment In
New York.
Detective Arthur Dninii-a said
Ryan hud been siifferlng from dia
betes ami had been under medical
enre for some time.
1 Ihe home where he died-a sop
arale residence from Ihe Firth ave
nue house of his eslranged wife--contains
ninny valuable urt treas
urea.
"NUISANCE" TAXES
SHOW HUGE SLUMP
WASHINGTON, Aug. 21 (API
Reflecting lower collecllons
from personal incomes, tobacco, li
quor, amusement admissions and
other taxable Items, internal rev
enue receipts in July slumped more
than '.(t.ufHi,(i(M under July. IMS.
The bureau of Internal revenue
reported today that July collec
tions totaled 3ln.O!)O,740.
Busy in Elkton Area
Filmdom Romance Leads to Altar
I t- . f v
f , i 4
f' P- (( '',
; '-'A -
-: V I
If s i : "f'- I
' 1 r r)
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Aherno
DIOL MONTH, Calir., Aug. 21.-(AP)T It was Mr. and Mrs. Ilrian
m. t,i.. 'rl,.i lli-lilh Hhiire slar. 117 ' and Joan Kontllino. HI. Holly
wood film actress, were married ill
sniull audience of friends. Miss Fontaine., slnler of Olivia do llavlllaud,
...,i,u..n.i iiii,.,t-n,i uitii-.lftm in two vem-H. Aherne. long on Ihe Kllg-
llsh and American stages, was first
Mnrlene Dietrich. He has more recently played 111 "Helovoil I'.ueniy aim
Juarez."
Suicide of Key Witness. Indictments
Against 6 Persons Latest Chapters
In Louisiana's PoBiticcsl Scandals
NKW ORLEANS, Aug. 21. (AP)
The violent death of Or. J. A.
Shaw, key government witness
and keeper of l.ouisiana's oil indus
try secrets for u decade, today
gravely complicated the federal in
vestigation of tangled state affairs,
but government prosecutors promis
ed no letup.
Shaw, director of the minerals dl
vision of Ihe IiOiiisinna conserva
tion department and titular "czar"
of the state's oil industry, was
found fatally wounded at his home
here last night. A revolver lay
nearby. He died on the operating
table in a hospital 4fi minutes later.
Coroner C. (Irenes Cole said it was
suicide.
More Indictments Filed
On the heels of Dr. Shaw's tra
gic death Abraham h. Shushau.
powerful Louisiana politician and
former close associate of Huey p.
Iong, was Indicted by the federal
grand jury here today with four
other persons on charges of using
the mails to detraud.
The indictment concerned an
Orleans levee hoard bond refund
ing action In which Shushau al
legedly received 4! 12.740.
Named with Ihe former presi
dent of the levee board, wlnw
name was stripped from Sh unban
airport here two weeks ago, wer"
Robert J. Newman and Marvin T.
Harris, Jr., member of the prom
inent investment firm of Newman.
WRECK OF CRACK I
TRAIN INJURES 171
CHATSWORTH. N. J., Aug. 21.
(AP)- About find men, working
steadily In Ihe flooded South J
sey pine belt wilderness (or
houiH, cleared last nit; lit the de
railed "Illue Comet," crack Cen
tral railroad of New Jerf ey flier,
mid opened the carrier's one-track
line 10 traffic-.
Five coaches and n hnegage car
of the l.lue and Rold train were rte
railed Satui day nl:,ht flaring n
heavy rainstorm. Seventeen wr
sons were injured.
St. John's chapel yesterday before u
filmed lu "Song of Songs," with
Harris and company; Herbert W
Waguespuek, member of the levee
board at the time of Ihe transac
tion; ami Henry J. Miller, an ac
conntant, all of whom allegedly
shured in a SlJKl.uno fee paid In Ihe
refunding.
Two other Indictments were
handed down today, one naming
State Senator Clarence A. Lorio,
prominent Hat on Kongo politician
and former aid to Hmy E. i-ong.
and the other Dr. James Monroe
Smith, former head of Louisiana
Stale university. Unio was charg
ed with using Ihe mails to defraud.
Smith with income tax evasion.
The prosecutors ssid Shaw's ab
sence as a wllness made Ihe case
much more difficult but would not
alter prosecution of former Cover
nor Richard W. Lecho and Hotel
Owner Seymour Weias, potent Long
heirs, who are charged wtlh Free
man W. Harford. Texas oil million
aire, in an alleged conspiracy to
loiate the Connally "hot oil" act,
which prohibits Interstate shipment
or Illegally produced oil.
Only last Thursday Shaw testi
fied in federal court at Dallas.
Texas, that he was forced hy
higher-upH to sicn the order by
which production of 13 Rodessa
field wells was stepped up, with
Lor he and WelHS allegedly sdt(ting
a ten cent per barrel commission
on this oil in an arrangement with
Hurford. which eventually netted
the two ft;7,ni0 each.
MISHAP KILLS SIX
IN FISHING PARTY
U'K hl-'Afll K II Anif "I .
! (AP) -The sea cast up r,ix bodies
on the bench today, revealing tie
, tragic end of an all day fishing
! party.
i The victims v.et(. identified an:
I-alph Pryor, fift. of Dover, own
er of the boat; Miss Kthelyn Cul
ler, of Newmarket, a coitfin of
Pryor; Frank Plnnte, of New Rns
ton. N. II.; Joseph Wajnar. 2-'!, "T
New market ; Waller Hat graves,
(21, of Newmarkei; Clarence P.
Veaton, 47, of Dover.
Gets Top Post
At Bonneville
Illinois Utilities Expert
to Displace Banks, Who
Will Complete Job
at Grand Coulee.
WASH1NCTON, Aug. 21. (AP)
Nr. Paul J. Itaver, chairman of
the Illinois commerce commis
sion, was named today administra
tor of the Ilonneville ptiwer pro
ject In Washington ami Oregon,
effective September 15.
I r. Haver, born In I.ogansport.
Ind., will relieve Kraut A. Banks,
federal const ruct Ion superinten
dent of the (irantl Coulee project
in central Washington w ho has
been acting administrator at Port
land, Ore., since the death of J.
1). Itoss.
Iti announcing Dr. Itaver's ap
pointment. Secretary Ickes, nomin
al head of the Ilonneville project,
said he was grateful to Governor
Horner for releasing the oiliclal
from his Illinois post.
. Held Well Qualified -
Ickes said he felt, that Hr. Hav
er was especially well qualified to
handle the Bonneville assignment
"as a result, of his long and bril
liant record."
"Ho has demons! rated ability lo
handle In tin public Interest the
market ing of the power from lion
nevllle. dam," Ickes said.
Ilr. lliiver, Who Is 45 years old.
graduated us a civil engineer from
the University of Nebraska in 1!)17,
received a degree of master ' of
hmiiness administration fro in
Noriihwesterli university In lf'J7
and a degree of doctor of philoso-'
phy lu 1!);U.
1 hiring lhf war" lie served as n
lieutenant lu the 11 It Held artil
lery. Upon his return from Fiance
he served until 19-7 as, a valua
tion and estimating engineer in
Chicago. For the next six years
he was. In lurn. Instructor, assist
aut professor and associate pro
fo.HHor of public utilities at North
western university.
In W he became supervisor of
the section of rates and research
of the Illinois commerce commis
sion, organizing the section '.II
rectlng special research on rev-
(Contlnued on pago
I
Douglas county poultrymeu will
hold their annual picnic In I'mpqua
park, Sunday, August 27. AH poul
trymeu and turkey growers are lr.
viled to participate In the (lay's
events. A special program, Includ
ing distinguished speakers and a
poultry culling demonstration by
N. L. Reunion, extension poultry
man of Oregon State college, will
be of interest.
Members of the poultry depart
ment of Ihe college, including II. h.
Cosby, N. L. Reunion and Wilbur
Cooney, will he present, as well as
(J. (,'. Keeney, manager of the Pa
eific Cooperative Poultry produc
ers, and will report on the Seventh
World's Poultry congress and ex
position recently held at Cleveland
Reports on Ihe poultry situation and
outlook will be made by Mr.
Keeney.
Poultrymeu attending the phnlc
are requested lo bring a basket
lunch. Coffee, Ice cream and cold
drinks will he furnished. Tlrj pro
gram will start al II o'clock with
the poultry culling demonstration
bv Mr. Reunion, followed by the
dinner and talks.
NEWS-TELEGRAM
QUITS BUSINESS
PORTLAND, Auif. 21, (AP) -The
Port laud News-Telegram an-'
ununceil it would fiispeud puhllca
lion with today's editions because
of "greatly increased cohIs of pro
duction" and "an ever-growing tax
burden."
The p'tp'T said Ihe com pel lug
Oregon Journal had taken over fen
linen and oilier comics, and had ac
quired the circulation list.
The News Publishing r-ompnny
will retain its physical properties,
including Ihe building, plant and
equipment,
The suspension left the Oregon
Journal alone In the field, wllh th.
Oregon Ian a lone lu tho morning
field.
Threat of Rabies
Defied by Smoker
I - i
- 1 i,
k i : 4
In "tobaccy," smoked In a fav
orite 3-Inch stem pipe, 64-year-old
Nestor Sildanen, Vancouver,
Wash., farmer, puts faith that he
won't get rabies. Bitten by a mad
dog some weeki ago, Sildanen
has refused. Pasteur treatment.
Health authorities givehlm only
a 50-50 chance to beat the' dis
ease and quarantined him.
Youlh Who Takes Words
Out of Others' Mouths,
Also Mystified. ,
MKDINA, N. V., Aug. 21. (AP)
Nineteen-year-old Francis Man
ner, u human echo who simultane
ously duplicates another's speech,
had science puzzled today with
his Involuulary knack of taking
words out of people's mouths.
'"I'm stumped," ndmllled Dr.
Carleton F. Heorield, professor of
psychology at the University of
Huflalo, after testing th youlh
wllh classic quotations, scienilfi"
tongue twisters and even foreign
languages.
"This boy reproduces the lalk
of others without a percept ihle
time . Interval between words of
the speaker and Ids own," Dr. Sro
field added.
To Magner himself, the slrauge
trait is just as much a puzzle. "I
found It out by accident two years
ago," ho said.
Dr. Heorield began his expert
merit by putting the youlh through
a, series of tests Involving compli
cated neurological terms. Magner
responded without hesitation.
"I'll now roc! to a few Hues of
poetry," the psychologist said.
He began: "Hence loalhed mel
ancholy." and Magner, picking him
up with the first syllable, recited
uller him: "Of Cerberus and black
est midnight born in Stygian cave
forlorn. 'Mongst horrid shapes
and sivh and sounds unholy , . .
"a'lim."
Word for word, Ihe psycholo
gist's speech emerged a duet on
the Hps of his subject, even to the
a'hm . . ."
Cancer Patient Will
No. 1 in "Frozen
PHILADKLPHIA, Aug. 21.
(AIM A man with cancer spread
ing slowly through his pancreas
submitted to a series of tests al
Temple university hospital today
to determine his iltness to become
medical science'.! regit hi r pal lent
No. J lor Ihe "frozen sleep" cancer
tiecltnerit.
The man. Max Harlan, 42-yenr-old
Stockport, la., farmer, entered
(he hoHpltal yesterday. If blood,
K-ray and piiysletil examinations
show he Is qunllrled, the treat
men I - which Involves lowering
the normal body temperature of
!S.fi degrees to ST. or !iu muy he
gin tomorrow.
The unusual method was devel
oped by two Temple phyalHnns.
Dr. Temple Fay ami Lawrence W.
Smith, who report ud favorable re
sults in skin cancer cuse fur the
first lime last May. Little M
known of Its effect on Internal
cases.
Like n bear hibernating for the
winter, the patient Is put to sleep
rap ;
: scracEPiifo
Joint Peace
Plea By Seven
Bid Accepted by Group in
Oslo Congress; Poland
Reinforces Army on
Slovak Frontier.
BRUSSELS, Belgium, Aug.
21. (AP) The government of
37-year-old King Leopold of Bel
gium, often hailed as a poten
tial mediator of Europe's trou
bles, today suddenly invited the
ministers of six small powers to
rush here by airplane to join
Belgium in a peace plea to the .
larger nations of the old world.
The seven nations associated in
tho Oslo trade convention were
asked to send their foreign minis
ters The nations Involved are Bel
gium, The Netherlands, Luxem
bourg, Sweden. Norway, Denmark
and Finland.
It was understood bore that all
had uccopted.
Preliminary soundings for such a
conference were made privately nt
the lnter-parltamentary union con
gress which closed Saturday at
Oslo.
Tho reaction was found to he
favorable and with the central Eu
ropean outlook rapidly becoming
more grave the invitations worts
dispatched urgently.
POLAND RE1NPORCES ARMY
-ON FRONTIER FACING NAZIS
WARSAW, Aug. 21. (AP) Po
land was said today to have sent
troop reinforcements toward her
frontiers racing tiermany and Slo
vakia ns a general precaution
against similar Increases reported
hi have been made by Germany.
(Along Slovakia's 2r()-mile fron
tier wllh Poland, 2UQAHH) (ierman
(roups under full War equipment
wore report otl to have been mussed
yesterday.
(Roads wei-o choked with troops,
artillery and supply trains as the
(iernuins concentrated behind the
four main passes through the
Tatra mountains Into Poland'. "' '
(Ulna, Slovakia, was general
headquarters, and the towns of
Cadca, Trstena Orlow and Mezlla-
(Conttnued on page H.)
FOSSIL. Ore.. Aug. 21.--(AP
Ilecause of u Portland salesman's
presence of mind, William M.
Scott, of Idaho, faced a peniten
tiary sentence for robbery today,
and two companions wine held lu
Jail.
W. V. Rumble, the salesman,
found Lester Simpson, of Itandon,
badly beaten, on the highway near
Priueville, Simpson Bald two men
and a woman offered him a ride lo
Halter In their car. A few miles
from Prinevillc, he said, they beat
him nud stole i'A'.l.
Humble and Simpson overtook
the trio near Mitchell, and (he
salesman, posing as un officer,
"arrested" them. Then he called
Ihe Mitchell town marshal, who
Jailed He -in.
Drought to Fossil, Scott pleaded
guilty. Francis Moore, Port land,
and Maude Hagerman, Portland,
were helil. Judge Curl Hendricks
sentenced Scott to servo five yearu
in the penitentiary.
be Experiment
Sleep" Treatment
wllh a mild nneathetie and chlp
I ped Icq piu-ked closely around his
body to Induce a state of suspend
ed animation. Rreathlng slackens,
i he requires no food and his n t-
In all etimluative functions cease,
j For four or five days he re
I mains In a cold, dreamless sleep.
Then he Ih awakened with a warm
I drink which restores normal bod-
lly functions,
The physicians Imp this n
frigerallve process will check tho
(growth of cancerous tissue lu Har
( lan's body und possibly destroy It.
I Dr. Kay him! Dr. Smith said In
l Ihe current Journal of the Amerl
can Medical association healing
was stimulated by tho "refilgera
(lion" and that patients have "got-
ten rid" or ulcerative lesions "in
i some of theso cuses."
j The treatment was not nn
nounced as a cure. In expert
I incuts, general improvement, din
j appearance of pain and gains In
j weight were marked lu many ln
stances.