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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 13, 1932)
PAGE FOUR Tha OREGON STATESMAN, Salem. Oregon, Wednesday Morning. -Inly IS, 1932 "No Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman. March 28, 1851 THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING CO. C&AB1X3 A. Spbacus, Sheldon F. Sackett, Publisher Charles A. Spragub j - Editor-Manager Sbeldon F Sackett .- - - Managing Editor Member of the Associated Press , ! The Associated Press la sclusively entitled to tha uaa tor publics tlon of aJI news dtapatrhes crdiMt It or not atherwlse credited In this apr ,; . Pacific Coast Advertising RepresenUtivesV " Arthur W Stypes, ln. Poniat. Security Bids. -Baa Francisco, Kharon Bids.. Loa Angeles. W Pac. Bid. Eastern Advertising Representatives: rord-Parsons-Btecher. Inc. New fork. tTl.Madtaon Ave.$ . OhlraKo. S N Mk-hiunn Ave Entered at the Poetoffiee at Salem, Oregon. as Second-Clot Matter; Published every momma errtpt Monday. Businese off -r -i $ C ynl S'reet SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Mall Subacrlpllon Katea, in Advance Within Oregon : Dally and Sunday. I Mo -SO cents. 3 Ma $1.25. Ma I2.2S ; 1 rear $4.00 Elsewhere 6 cents par Ma. or li AO for I year In advance. By City Carrier: 4S cents a month: $5 0 a year tn a-vance, Pet Copy 1 cent a On twilna and SVwi Ktnnds 5 r-nta Party Planks on Prohibition THE Portland Journal, the Oregon paper regularly win- ning the gold medal for -walking the tight rope without falling on either side of controversial issues, denounces the republican liquor plank as a straddle. The Journal by in ference, then sustains and supports the democratic plank yiich is for straight repeal, but makes no provision what ever for any substitute method of control. The Journal IrnAiva so ataw rtnn in tYia ri4-Tv lm"i7s 4" V) 4" frio O rlnntlATt fcf the democratic recommendation of straight repeal would mean the immediate restoration a A 1 M "sVT "XT 1- TTT? ' gi9 i 1 1 area iv iiw iiTif u lannn no liquor laws now and where public sentiment favors easy sales of intoxicants. - ( There is profound difference between the republican f and the democratic planks. For years the wets have been saying that they abhorred the saloon, but were interested in "temperance". Very well, the republican plank definitely t forbids the return of the saloon. The wets have asked for -1 W 1 A a 1 11 , a w locai option as to wneiner liquor is pronioiiea or not. very well, the republican platform would grant local option to such states, provided such sales of liquor were not made in saloons, which in effect would tolerate some dispensary sys- , wax as prevails in oweaen or o i runs counter to the democratic A t L i. JL . Il i 51 S CI J r roue Buusutute meinoa 01 liquor control wnere tne aemo ; cratic plank imposes no restraint and merely invokes a pious expression'of hope which the claque of gallery gave the in stant lie to. -. One of the speakers in the democratic convention re i ferred to the Christian Century as the leading non-sectarian religious journal of the country. This magazine has been an i uncompromising supporter of prohibition, yet is clear-vision-' cd enough to see the evils which have attended it and realis tic enough to analyze the political cioss currents which ac- , cumpauy me present agitation, in an eaitoriai written ve tween the two party conventions the Christian Century ob - serves: ! "Our opinion of the republican plank on liquor is that it should be gratefully received and approved by every reason able dry. Likewise by every reasonable wet. This is not said facetiously or Ironically. The longer the republican plank is studied the more will it commend itself as fair to both sides, ww-.ww.wMwk. . ui wvbMW .uu yabftAVvAw 1U yuiUSO, XUi U dlates a plan for the resubmission, of the liquor question in terms which prescribe a just formula under which the issue Is to be submitted, leaving untouched the merits or substance pt tha issue Itself. Though the republican proposal is for re submission. Its essence Is that it proposes to control the form ula of resubmission "Enlightened drys have for some time been coming to the position that public policy now demands that the question be r taken back to the people for a fresh mandate. If this mandate goes against federal prohibition, it goes without saying that 'prohibitionists will abide by the law. if it goes in favor of pro hibition the task of enforcement will be greatly simplified." I Moreover the wording of the republican plank does not commit the party or any member of it to endorse its provi sions for the question is a grave moral cruestion. which tran scends party lines. The democratic party openly favors re peal, and thus becomes the political tool of the wets. And Frank Roosevelt, erstwhile dry, announces he is for the platform 100. In addition the democratic platform con i tains a plank for short circuiting prohibition by permitting light wines and beer to be sold, which is an open avenue to , nuumcation. ' Va-P H ffftt. ' J A 9 " 1 A' t r Mr - " w - - vvuuvA j hawa r to state option which means restoration of booze with only t a modicum of control. The republican platform holds the ; high gjround that prohibition is a national as well as a local f question, that IF there is to be modification it must be on terms which PREVENT the return of the open saloon in the areas where legalized liquor distribution is demanded, and at the same time PROTECT the areas which prefer E prohibition. Such a platform when analyzed is not a strad dle. It presents the issue of Retention or Modification; whereas the Democratic platform endorses REPEAL. 4 i Dries should be under no doubt as to which of the" two platforms they should support. I And a Little Pie Shall Lead Them Lne cemucranc niannrm . i - p Anew barometer of business has appeared. The old stand , bys have been weekly bank clearings, car loadings, kil owatt hours, bond prices, pig iron production. For weeks business prophets have been scanning these statistics to see if they could not find some basis for hope. The. while these crystal gazers were straining their eyes in well-nigh fruit less effort, a new index of returning prosperity has arisen out of the west. !T It is the hog. The humble hog, from, of old known as the mortgage-lifter of the Ioa farm. The hog is coming back. Where he has been we do not know; where he is go ing we do not know; but he seems to be on the way. The price of hogs has undergone a mysterious strengthening in recent weeks. The price did get down to around 3c a pound, which ia painfully low. But now with a chorus of approving er-nts from hog-growers, the price has gone up to 5Vc, even 6c Monday at Portland. l' ? ft.is part of the country we do not quite appreciate toe significance of the boost in the hog price. But the great raid-western corn belt is chiefly a hog-economy. Corn is not Sil.BO muc? as ft is fei t swine and marketed as meat 2eJe for years the staple profit-makers for the mid HmTli rmer' year when thgs looked the blackest 14 K . om zr2 characteristic norvpraifv . tors of the derTartm:;; ' V m rmtM -I-.7l -6'uUUie aim suaaeniy Decomes a proiitable servant once more. Frankie Roosevelt Is sailing of the onen saloon in the 1l AT J . V 1 Jin otih rvi nriTQ n o tit n . n no irza - uaua. Ana most decisively it platform in demanding a def- a - ! 1 - 1 ft i 1 . a - wniim rum tha PAnntrv hor to 3c a pound, the hog with ., T ... ,7.? uie prognosuca- the seas In a rawl called tba, M-tn : . . . mm. ? Sl' Air -i ftM AS, a 0 I Ml Kt Fmob Sro-lca If . Iw- )n tfiu BITS for BREAKFAST -By R. J. HENDRICKS- Hlstorlc markers, etc.: (Continuing from yesterday:) The writer is attempting to find, among many other things, where Joseph O. Wilson and family lived, in Salem, before they went to reside in their new brick house which Wilson erected where the Bligh block Including the War ner Bros. Capitol theatre is now, southeast corner of High and State streets. Mr. Smith bought that site, lots 7 and 8, block 7, some time before December, 1861. That meant 165 by ICS feet, opposite the Marion county court house block. What, the reader may ask, was the price paid? : The deed shows a consideration of J 2 00. It was executed by Chloe Aurella Willson December 6, 1861, in the city and county of Hartford, Con necticut. m She had been Chios A. Clark, of the Lausanne party of mis sionaries, arriving in 1840. Dr. W. H. Willson had come in 1837. He was sent to the Nisqually mission, near the present Taco- O- II NEW DEMOCRATIC CHIEF Vi W r Ottel SCftT cTLMTcJR. v .w. . V - . - i VlTH AT i i James A. Farley, know to thoamands as "Big Jim," Is set the aetrconet to polities as is popularly supposed outside his heme State ef New York .la fact, the saaji who U credited with "pnttinf Roosevelt erer" at the ,rac-a "" aa ceen ptayiag tbe game states he waa twelve. Fariey ;wa bora ia Grassy Peiat, Rockland Cotmty, N. Y- a 1883, aad at a C whea be should have beea coeatiac kis auurblee be was fasdaatad by e oratory. extolUac the fall dinner pail, that was a feature of the - McKi-day-Bryaa campaign. So iatriguad was be by -oliUca that be was de a towa committeeman ia the Democratia Party, long before be made bu first atark a ballot. Farley's first elacUve offiae was that ef jTowa Clerk of Stony Potat, N. Y- from 1912 to 119. Thea ia rapid ssweeeasoB bo became Superruor and Asse-ahly-aaa, ia the maaatuae alimhing to eminence ia the councils of the Suto Desnoeratie Party, of wbieh he was named chairman i. 1930. His "riagcraf f ia tbo recent campnif- for Govoraor Fraaklia D. Roosevelt, which astounded aaany told warners es of innumerable coaventiona, may kare boaa a prodact of bu expenaaee as chainaaa ef the State Boxing Coauaisaioa) for politics resembles boxing inasamch as the aaain object is to gt oae's opponent iwbare one wanta him and then to hit hard mu4 of tea. "Big JiaV methods pn those of the Regular Fellow," the good mixtr. Big, jovial, diplomatic and astute, be U a past master la gaidiag a wavering iacliaatioa Just la ho dirottioa ia which be wants it to go. This faculty bald the Roosevelt - --r wun in maaj a oTiag Two Weeks? Parole ma, Wash., and she was also de tailed for that post. They were married there. When the Salem townsite of the Methodist mission was divided into four 640 acre claims, the northwest mile square went to U E Judson and wife and was transferred to J. B. Mc Clane and wife and patent Issued to themv Mrs,- McClane had been Helen C. Judson, daughter of tha claimants, and had married Mc Clane. The northeast mile -square went to J. L. Parrish and wife. the southern 640 to David Leslie and wife, and the central mil square to Dr. W. H. Willson and wife. a S S In AprU. 1856, Dr. Willson died. Chloe Aurelia Willson Clark had come with the Lau sanne party to be a teacher of white children. She opened the Oregon Institute August IS, 1844. with five students, and was the first teacher of the institu tion, which became Willamette university. The brick house built on the Bligh block site by Joseph O. Willson was the home of his 1. - - : - j-j- THE" "CoTO-rmr st. sassioa ai lae recent coaveatioa. I t" ' s ' ' i! .'- ;. " XA-X ' - - iisjw - 4 family, and afterward was a ho tel, under several different names. Jos. Meyers bought it for $10,000. lie sold it to Thos. O. Bligh for 130.000. Its value now. with improvements, must be not far from a quarter of a million. a W Jos. A. Baker, Salem's longest time resident, who will .be 93 on the 23 rd of this month, remem bers that the Wilson brick house was standing in the '61-2 flood, so it must have been erected in '60 or '61, for that flood was at Its height the last days of 1861. , and Mr. Baker remembers that the water came up around that house, and It was necessary to brace it, to keep the walls from being undermined. So there was likely a bargain or bond previous to the execution of the deed in Connecticut. S n Mr. Baker is not clear on the place or places of residence of the J. O. Wilson family prior to that. He has a faint recollection that they lived where the main manu facturing plant of the paper mill now stands; or near the south west corner of Trade and Com mercial streets. He remembers that he himself roomed for a time in the Nesmltit building, northeast corner of Front and Trade, about where the Fry ware- nouse is now. S S The deed records show that Jos. O. Wilson and J. W. Nes mith bought the last named prop arty. Dr. W. H. Willson and wife deeded to them, Nov. 5, 1853, that corner, 24 feet on Trade by 60 feet on Front. The considera tion was $100. .So the historic Nesmtth building, first Salem home of The Statesman newspa per, territorial printing office, meeting place of the lower house of the territorial legislature of the session of '53-4, must have been the partnership property of Nesmith and Wilson. It was aft erward the sole property of Wil son, for Nesmith deeded to him ,-.intere8t' Prt 01 11 Nov. 20. 1857, and the rest Sept. 27, 1860; the last date near the time he (Nesmith) was, with CoL B. D. Baker, elected to the United States senate. It Is probable that Jos. G. "Wil son and family had several dif ferent homes in Salem hAfnr- went to their new brick house. For a cons-aeration of $1300, Nov. 25. 1853, J. W. Nesmith and Joseph O. Wilson bought from W. H. and Chloe A. Willson lot 5 of block 4, northeast corner High and Chem keta, and lot 6 of block 2, next to the northeast mercial and Marlon and lot 8 of Wock 60; the last block next to the river on the north side of Center street, corner Water, and lot 4 of block 63. the northwest corner of State and Front; and -cany u oi oiock 65. surrounded by COnit. ChemeVAt Snnm.. and. Capitol. I ; a . i Joseph O. Wilson kept buying lots at the foot of Center street, nntll he owned all of the half block fronting on the river, on the north side. In one transaction he bought the lot at the northeast corner of Center and High (In the high-school block), together with one of the lots at the foot of Cen ter street. This was Not. I. I860. July t, 1856, he bought from Chloe A. Willson ( "widow" ) lot of block 70, northeast corner of Court and Church, for $100. C. N: Terry took the acknowledgment 4a Salem. This is the Breyman Boise property, opposite the postotflca, on which there is now a filling station. I : . I H Joseph O. Wilson at one time, beginning Sept. 27. 1860, owned a half interest in the ground on which stands the Senator hotel, High and Court. - - -. V- Aug. 16, I860, he bought from Chloe A. Willson a tract of about three acres near tha river prob ably the ground on which the pa . per converting plant stands now. Th M By A SYNOPSIS Lola Carr-a, "The Night deb Lady", Is mysteriously Murdered ia her penthouse apartment at three o'clock New Year's morning. An boor later, the body ef Lola's guest, Christine Q mires. Is found ia Lola's room. Christina had beea killed first aad her body hidden. Dr. Hugh Bald win attributes both deaths dne to heart failnra. Cut Eraratt. Chris-i , tine's New Year's Eve escort, claims J ac erou gut acr mmuu;u ana uta went riding, alone, ea the Motor Park way. Mrs. Carewe, Lola's mother, denies seelag Christine return. Police Gmmiasioner Thatcher Colt discounts District Attorney Dough erty's theory that Lola was killed by jewel thief ring she headed and that Christine met the same fate for knowing too much. Yincent Row land, Lola's lawyer, discloses that Everett loved Lola and was Jealous ef Dr. Baldwin. The Commissioner telephotos a picture ef a young man, named Basil, found ea Lola's dresser, to the Paris Prefect of Police requesting that he identify It aad investigate Lola's past. The police are en the trail ef Christine's brother, Edgar, who left his Roch ester home for New York after re ceiving a telegram New Year's Eve. Christine was to have inherited wealth shortly. Dr. Maltooler, the medical examiner, contradicts Dr. Baldwin's statement that heart fail are caused the deaths. A strsp picked ap ia Lola's room presents mate evidence ef having caused the bruise on Christine's neck- after death. Everett confesses he lied about riding on the Motor Parkway. He states Christine told him she had found out a plot to murder Lola and feared for her own life because of her knowledge, adding that Dr. Bald win was Involved. CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN "AND Eunice James I" "Just a little German girl x from SUten Island. I think she is fas love with Guy Everett." -Quite likely." smiled Colt. "Now what have you got about Lolat" Flynn pulled a sheaf of papers from a aids pocket. "Plenty," he answered, "but what does it mean? By working here, . and telegraphing Hollywood, we have interviewed three of her for mer leading men, one producer, a eostumer, and a scenario writer who was in love with her. Also a dosen wealthy men she was friend ly with here ia Now York. None of them will aay very much. If X were to make a guess, I would say that Lola had something on thea all." "And yea weald be right!" smiled Colt. "What about her ar rival in this country?" "Got that, too. Of course the rec ords were all locked up, but those Department of Justice boys can ret pretty nearly anything they want. Lola came to this country alone about twelve years ego here are the records!" Colt studied the transcript of the State Department records with ab sorbed Interest. Then he tasked them in his pocket. ' "And about Christine ?" he went on. ' "Her brother and his wife are leading citizens ef Rochester. Their reputation is first rate. They did leave on the train for New York but so far they haven't reached here." "Unless they arrived before the crimes," murmured Colt. "There's always that," asserted Flynn, dosing one eye. "As for Vincent Rowland, he went home, went to bed, and from all accounts is at this minute sound asleep." "Sensible man!" sighed Colt. "What report did yon get en Doe tor Baldwin?" "The worst of all," revealed In spector Flynn heavily. "He spent the rest of bis night at his office. Hasn't gone home yet. The bell boys at their apartment house say he and his wife quarrel frequently over money and Lola Carewe. People in the next apartment say the same thing. They say the wife Ls a good woman and all that but fat and jealons! And that's bad!" Colt nodded his entire concur rence, as he lit his pipe and ahuf-i July 31. 1861, he bonght the west half of lots 1 and 2 of block 20. southwest corner High and State part of the ground on which the Oregon building now stands. S "e The records show that Joseph O. Wilson had faith In early Salem, and was not afraid to back his judgment by securing choice loca tions and improving them. Tha deed records show that he also se cured farm tracts near the city. -At one time, he owned a larre number of lota and hlnr-Va fa North Salem, and he sold soma of that property to George XL Wil liams, afterward attorney general or tine united states, mayor of Portland, etc., who lived and practiced law In Salem for a long ume in we early cays. e e Josenh O. Wilson. Ran tt nrti- Uams, R. P. Boise and A. C. Glbba, luonunuea on page 6) What Is your favorite spot !n Oregonand why? This was the question asked yesterday by The Statesman reporters. Rena Allison. ' ataulentt tm fond of ail the beaches, thongh I believe I like Neskowla the best. I think Taft la an Ideal bIim. especially If one likes boating, - Mark White, clerki "Oceanilda forme. u. -t 1 - Daily Thought I find letters from God ia the street, and every on la signed by God's name. - . . And X leave them where they are, ior i-raov mat wer e ar I Others will punctually come for .-- aver and ever." Whitman. ', , New Views urder of the flight Club La NTH ON Y ABBOT : "Macy sends on the report about Lola Carewe's hybrid past," con tin lied Colt. fled the typed reports Into a drawer. "What about the bottle and the writing paper that you: found un der the mattress?" he asked. Flynn shrugged his shoulders. "No finger-prints on any of it," he growled. "Looks to ma like ws'rt dealing with a professional." "Or with a smart: amateur," amended Colt, as be turned to an7 other pile of papers beside him. "Here are the cables from Scot land Yard." "Macy sends on the report about Lola Carewe's hybrid past," con tinued Colt, reading hastily. "Start ed life as a London working girt. Once arrested for a fight with an other girl tn the millinery shop in Sohe where she was ! employed. Then disappeared. Reappeared along the Riviera as a dancing girL Walts of her own invention called "He Seorpionl" Colt looked over at me and chuck led. My chief -loves the whimsical, the odd and the extravagant in all the affairs of life. He eould not hide his pleasure ia this pictur esque detalL Quickly he shuffled through the other reports lying there the offi cial statements of the department chemists and the Assistant Medical Examiner, and a message from Fal lon,, left ia charge of the pent house, stating that aS was quiet. Colt was about to pass on, when a telephone rang. The operator warned us that we would presently receive a call from If. Dupont in Paris. "Thank God the old boy works fast," exulted Colt aloud. "Yon are banking on ; Lola 'Ca rewe's past as the key to the whole thing?" "I am, Tony it seems logical to me that, one way or another, the more we learn of Lola, the nearer we come to the killer ef herself and Christine." "And this. BasO?" Again the telephone rang. The connection was complete. M. Du pont was ready to speak with 1L Colt. The great French police de tective came directly to the point. He had taken the portrait, con veyed te him by the telephoto gra phic service, and shown it to Gran don, the photographer, in the Ave nue DTena. After some search, the picture was identified and here the under-oceanic voice of M. Du pont became tense with excitement. "It is Basil Boucher, tnon cher ami Basil Boucher, and no ether when I heard that name I was tremendously excited. For, I remem bered the name a cause celebre here ia Paris." Tm all attention, M. le Prefect!" Daily Health Talks By ROYAL S. COl'ELAND, M. D. RECENTLY I wrote about eczema and toh) of the fre quent occurrence ef this an noying condition la children. To day I want te tell yen about ast-ana la young children and its relationship to f-IHr raenly develops la children who have had eczema in Infancy, and some authori ties believe that most children who have ecxe ma wCl at some future time de velow aa aath. xatic complaint. Cepshad. ' Tha cause of ecaema has never beea definitely determined. Ik is believed that many eases in ehfld hood are due to certain foods taken by tha infant or tha mother. ' tt has beea found that ia soma way these sazns foods may be the cause Of V-fl. Asthma Is beQered te be caused by a sensitivity to certain proteins in the food, in the air, or la tha clothing or furnishings of the home. The disease is most com monly eaased by feeds or Inhaled dusts, soeh as animal dandmff. ; feather dost, pbxnt dost s-ud pollens. ' SUa tests are used te determine what snbetance causes the attacks. Injections of various uhstaacea axe tnade under the stia or by Aiiswera to , ML L M. QWhat do yen ed vise for scars from burns? j JL Consult a skin speciali-d so thai ha ran -tatarrah-a Karr !--- the scars ge aad what is best to do A SOW uus. . f Hr-, II M isn "Ah, well! BasO Boucher was an honest young bank clerk of very respectable parents. Then one day he met a dancer Her name was Lola I know no other. In my city she had left behind her a sordid trafl ef ruined men. Basil Boucher loved her. He promised her a ruby if she would love him. Te get the money he robbed the bank. We came to arrest him he had disap peared. VoOa!" "My dear confrere, may i re quest another great favor frota your kindness?" "It is with pleasure chat . co operate." "May ' have by telephoto all the pictures of Basil Boucher and his family that yon can find?" "Ave plaiair " "Especially the carte didentite pictures in your office." "It shall be as yon wish, M. Colt!" "A moment or two more, please m "A thonaana, if you wish them!' "What business did the Boucher family have?" The son, BasO, was a bank em ployee, -a teller, do yon say? The father had a little shop, where he sold specimens te medical labora tories. A malodorous business, li Colt!" . "Vraiment! Further, did yoa get word from Rorrmania?" "Of a certainty, yes! They have no record of a M. Jorge. But they say it is a good old Roumanian name!" Thanks!" Colt sat back with a smile. "X knew K." he muttered. "X was sure of it!" But he' refused te explain what he meant, and a moment later the telephone rang again. Professor Luekner was calling. "Good morning, Herr Commis sioner!" rumbled the eld biologist as usual, I was making notes oa an extension phone. ' 1 "Good morning, Herr Professor!" "Herr Commissioner, the superi ority of machines over night-sticks has again been demonstrated. Yoa have made possible another tri umph of tht greatest of the detee tivoweafoTH the vacuum cleaner!" "Whice) means?" prodded Colt, as the good-humored old professor paused for effect. "I know what killed the young ladies but I wont tell you. Yoa will have te come and see for your self." "Well be right op!" snapped Colt and jammed the receiver back on the hook. (Te Be Con tiorf) CoprrlcW 131. fcr Cvrid rrteie, las. Dt-tnbotad ar Kiac f eatares Syndicate, lae. scratching the skin and the reac tion determines whether the in dividual is susceptible to the sub stance injected. Such tests are made with foods included ia the daily diet, also samples ef dust and other substances found ia the houaa. If the offending substance Is a , food, it should be taken from tha diet. If it is dust from certain household furnishings, they should be discarded. If it is due to pol lens, treatment may be given ia the form ef special vaccines, which should be Injected at periodic in tervals vnn. the sensitivity m Ia alt eases of asthma, a com plete physical examination by a yitHu-s as aw. r wary ouiore sue cessfnl treatment and relief can be exDeeted. All ahnarmslidM .V-nll be corrected wherever possible. The oiet ana manner of Imnr must be carefully iirvestigated. If the child is ntndernouT-ihed, attention should W mAmmm -.HJ!. V!. -!- w mi mm ma u sua i i , tanea. Cod Brer oil should be ctvea twice a day and the diet should contain simple but nourishing foods. " : X am eftea asked whether a change ef climate is of any bene fit. While change te a different climate Day bo beneficial. It does net help aa esses of ast-mia, and la addrtioa tt Is expenaire aad may subject tha child te many ua nsemary risks. There are marry medicines that give relief during a U .1 a -w acute attacks, but they should only oe aMimrnisierett unoer uw per al euperrlsloa ef a phyiidaa. L-eallh O .Mrs. XX R. Qv What do yen advise for ringworm en the head? tirri ttlf sillmsiii if -ipsa! earelepo for fall particulars aad repeat your question.