Ol
1
4 (See. 1) Capital Journal, Salem, Ore., Mod., March 21, 1955
Capital AJournal
An Independent Newspaper Established 1888
BERNARD MAINWARING, Editor and Publisher
GEORGE PUTNAM, Editor Emeritus
Published every ofternoon except Sunday at 280 North
Church St. Phone 4-6811.
POOR MAN'S PHILOSOPHER
NEW YORK UP) Hildcbarcle
Neff, Broadway's latest toast,
rocketed to fame from a back
ground of fear.
Success isn't likely to turn this
German-born girl's head.
She can still remember how she
made her first stage hit in
bombed-out Berlin wearing an ev
The Ground Hog Was Right
The first day of spring finds the nation battered by torna
does, blizzards and a fast moving cold wave from the Rockies
to the midwest with heavy snowfall.
Blizzard conditions whipped parts of Missouri and Arkansas,
Tornadoes hit Iowa and Colorado and wind-driven snow fell
on Nebraska, South Dakota, Wyoming, New Mexico. Tem
peratures dived to 11 below zero in some sections ana suu
frcezing 27 above threatens the southern California citrus
pmn.
r.,Tnnla, nrmcr nrr ived however, at 4:35 a.m., EST, the
moment of the vernal equinox when the center of the sun
was directly over the equator. Theoretically it is the time
when the dav and night equal 12 hours each. But modern
methods of measuring sunrise and sunset combined to produce
12 hours and 11 months of daytime and 11 hours ana min
utes of night. .
Only in the Far East was weather appropriately springlike,
ikmih fn nrevailed over some states. A tornado
collapsed a circus tent over 400 persons at Uvalde, Texas, a
major snow storm piled up 15-inch drifts at Sioux City, and
an airliner crashed near Springfield, Mo., with 38 aboard,
flying through a heavy mist.
It all goes to show the groundhog was a better weather
prophet than the weather man for instead of at least six weeks
more of winter we have received 10 more weeks and the end
ir not yet.
All nf which. In sDite of our scientific studies of the weath
er show how little progress hiss been made everywhere in the
world of either predicting or control ol the weainer ana now
., hopeless a job forecasting nature is. We do know that period
ically, if not always, the weather runs in cycles, and evidently
we are in another cycle and can expect for sometime dry and
cold seasons that insure blizzards, snow and draught and
rwiia dust bowls and crop failures.
On the Pacific coast we have a habit of blaming the warm
Japanese ocean current for shifting its flow further from the
land. But it is like other theories, only conjecture. But the
northwest's weather contrasts very favorably with that of the
rest of the nation comparatively, and we -ran find but little
' fault with our weather. We have had little or no snow, no zero
weather, no tornadoes and no floods, although we will prob
ably experience water and power shortage. G. P.
Curtains for Glen Taylor? t
It ia always dangerous to write a politician's political obit
uary until the time comes for the real one, but some are now
doing this for Glen Taylor, former U.S. senator from Idaho
and Henry Wallace's running mate on the national Progressive
ticket in 1948.
Taylor was overwhelmingly beaten for senator last Novem
ber ahd the leaders of the Idaho A.F. of L. unions have in
formed him that he will get no more support from them. "Wej ening gown made from a bed
aren't putting any more money on dead horses, was their
terse explanation to him. They asked him not to run again,
he had been beaten twice in a row and couldn't recuperate.
But Taylor didn't take it lying down. He retorted:
'fit like In av I've never been subservient to anyone, corpora
tions or labor leaders or anyone else. It's getting a little late for
labor leaders to tell me what 1 should or should not do.
"Having knives stuck in my back is no new experience to me, so
I'm not greatly disturbed. I've campaigned on cheese and crackers
In the past and I could do It again before I would let labor tell me
what I should or should not do.
"Perhaps this stab in the back is a great thing for me; In the
past my opponents have tried to label me as a stooge ol laDor.
Trie Met trial snouin 1 again run tor oince i wouia ngni inrec
front war against corporate interests, conniving politicians and labor
leaders does not frighten me in the least.
Taylor is considering a campaign against Reublican Senator
Herman Welker who succeeded him in 1951 and who has an
nounced that he will run again next year. Labor and Demo
cratic leaders appear to want Taylor sidetracked because
though he can usually get the Democratic nomination, partic
ularly if he has two or more opponents in the primary, he
cannot poll the whole Democratic vote and therefore can t
bo elected. That is, he wasn't last time. Next time might
be a different story.
Sure We'll Use 'Em
President Eisenhower's stntiMiient that we will use atomic
bombs in any future war puts everyone on notice. It will
arouse some outcries, particularly in Communist and fellow
traveler circles, but it will tend to prevent war.
There'll he no atomic bombings unless there is a war and
there will bp no war unless the Communists start it. Every
body knows this, none better than the Communists. And they
will bo less likely to strike if they know we will fight the
next war to a victory, using every weapon in our large, ex
panding arsenal.
Atomic bombs barbaric? No more so than the other bombs.
They kill the virtims no deader. All bombs are barbaric and
so are all weapons of destruction, even rocks and clubs when
so used. The importance of the atomic bomb is that it offsets
the vast hordes of ground troops our enemies have assembled
and trained, 'or aggressive purposes that are obvious to all
clear-headed persons.
What keeps them from so using the vast forces, which are
much larger than any nations ever before kept armed in time
of peace? American atomic power, which can counterattack
with devastating effect their vast ground superiority can
not prevent. If they knew we would not use our atomic
bombs they would know ihcy could win a war of conquest and
would he pretty sure to start it. So in terms of human life
we would he barbaric to withhold the one weapon that pro
tects the non-Communist world from attack
The idea that atomic bombs are barbaric while other weap
ons arm t is a slick piece of Communist propaganda that does
credit to their ingenuity but no credit to the mentality of
, those who accept it.
" THE 'ORDINARY' AMERICANS
AMERlCriVMfcbt Of PEOPLE
GOOD PEOPLE -HAMW0tMM6
PEOPLE -PEOPLe
LIKE
THE
COMMERCIAL ARTIST.
NO MATTER WHAT yoU DO,THy SW, "0U
CANT PLEASE ALL THE PEOPLE ALL
THE TIME" BUT THE COMMEftOAL
ATIT ALMOST HA TO
EVERY BO &y HE DEAL
WITH HEM TO
BE AN ART
CRITIC -
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WORKING LATE- THE
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THE JOB HA TO BE M
FINISHED By MORNING
CCMMERCIAL ART JOBS
47 RUSH JOBS-IT'S AtUlEf)
k IAI DlYf If-
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I DIFFICULTIES, $0V Of
1 THE MOM" WONbERFUL
ART 14 BEING TURNED
OUT By THOSE SUPERB
CRAPT5MEN OF BRUWani, PEN.
Hildcbardc Rocketed to
Fame From Wartime Fear
By HAL BOYLE
Tin- Stock Market lVole
If Arkansas Senator .1. W.
sheet, the only cloth available
Still fresh in her mind are the
wartime years when she carried
knife ... to take her own lile
if necessary.
Now co-starred with Don Am-
eche In "Silk Stockings", she
plays the role of Russian lady
commisar, a role made famous by
Greta Uarbo in the film "Nonotch
ka". "Silk Stockings", a musical,
reached Times Square after a
lengthy 15-week period of out-
of-town trials and tribulations
that had many Broadway gloom-
loaders predicting it would be the
season s outstanding flop. But it
opened here with a $750,000 ad
vance ticket sale, and proved an
instant hit.
The prospect of a long run of
fers "Hllde" the best prospect of
stability she has had since child
hood. "I lost 18 pounds during the
tryouts, but it was worth It," she
said. "I've lived in hotels for
six years. I've been nothing hut
a night plane passenger all that
time between Germany, France,
England and America.
"Now I can stay in one place.
I can have my own apartment,
and feel settled for a while. You
can have no idea what this means
to me."
Ililde shook her long red-blonde
hair and looked cheerfully around
her new four-room penthouse
apartment on lower Fifth Ave
nue, as if her mind were feeling
each piece of furniture to be
sure it was in the right place.
Ililde, now an American Citizen,
has been a picture star pilgrim
since the war. She has made
films in three languages Kno
lish, German, and French and
speaks each well.
Born in Ulm, Germany, Albert
Einstein home town, she was
studying art in Berlin on a schol
arship when a producer saw i.er
and arranged a street test. Her
first big picture, "Under the
Bridges", made by UFA, the Ger
man film studio, was never re
leased. It was destroyed during
an Allied bombing. Hildo then
became a stage actress.
Beneath her present security
lie crowfling memories of the
terror of those years, when Al
lied bombs rained on Berlin by
day and by night.
"Most of us carried knives in
our hoots," she said matter-nf-tartly.
"The knives were to dig
nut of the rubble, or, if we were
hopelessly trapped, to commit
suicide. ,
"I remember one time when
Good News for Us
Nrw York Dally News
It looks as if the Kremlin palace
fight which broke out after Stalin
died is anything but over.
Lavrenti Beria was the first of
the surviving top gangsters to bite
the dust. Gcorgi Malenkov has
been demoted and publicly humili
ated, at the instance of Nikita
Khrushchev, Communist party
first secretary.
Now, it looks as if Khrushchev
is opening up on a target well
known in the West none other
than Vvacheslav M. (Old Stone
'The only thing I am afraid of Seat! Mololov, longtime Soviet
Is another war," she said. "One; Foreign Secretary whose job up to I
war is more than cnouch for a! a few days ago looked pretty sc-
lifetime. I hate the way it divides : cure to most outsiders,
friends as well as nations. I The kept Moscow "newspaper"
"War is nothing but a blind j Pravda day before yesterday print-
panic . . . lonely individuals! ea long extracts Irom an attack
NATIONAL WHIRLIGIG
Demo Chiefs on Capitol Hill
Vexed by Lef twing Tactics
By RAY TUCKER
WASHINGTON Democratic lead
ers on Capitol Hill can hardly con.
ceal their vexation over the pat
tern of attaclc upon the Eisenhower
administration and family that has
fauver of Tennessee, Neuberger
and Morse of Oregon rather than
the more conservative "honor
ables" who sit on the right side
of the Senate and House chambers.
been fashioned by the liberal I FEDERAL VS. STATE W INGS
spuxesmen oi ine parly, who Horn h Iwav been traces
Suid T wuhnT' - ta -Ttt b? tWeoer"
-ilrt. y atW State wings of both major
every opportunity. ,parljel holdjg responsi.
This difference in politicial tastes hi n.ii.i nfiir.t ih. former
and strategy promised a revival , feel that thev should shape policio
of the intraparty feuds which em
bittered the 1952 convention, when
the congressional faction engaged
in a head-on clash with the guber
natorial group that forced the nom
ination of Adlai E. Stevenson, then
Governor of Illinois.
OFFENDING OFFICIALS
and enunciate the dominant phi)
osophy They resent actions and
statements by outsiders which em
barrass or commit them on quest
ions still in process of develop
ment. The Capitol Hill crowd also be
lieve that they should be consult'
In additloa to the state execu-led before governors or headline.
lives, the other objects of the so
called federal Democrats' irritation
are the radical and vocal officials
and orators of the Americans for
Democratic Action and the Demo
cratic National Committee. The
making Party officials deliver their
pronouncement on policies and
personalities, especially as so many
state executives are, in their own
minds at least, 1936 Presidential
possibilities.
OPEN FORUM
!
A. D. A. is generally regarded as BUTLER'S AWKWARD REMARK
a . nooseveii lamuy institution. u u...
ler's amazing reference to Mrs,
while the Democratic National
Committee is consideret' to be a
pro-Stevenson outfit.
Both of these organizations tend
to play up their favorite gover
nors and congressional liberals
llarriman of New York. Mevner
of New Jersey, Williams of Mich
igan, Lehman of New York, Ke
ttle Russians and obtained her re
lease. Today Hilde Is untroubled by
fears her present triumph will be
short-lived. She has a quiet con
fidence in her talent and ability
as an actress.
Eisenhower's health as a bar to
Ike's running again is the immedi
ate cause of current complaint, in
cluding suggestions that he resign.
A man given to such awkward re
marks, it is felt, can easily damage
the Democrats' cause even more
seriously.
With Capitol Hill Democrats so
cautious about attacking Ike per
sonally because of his popularity,
and with so many on friendly
terms witn rum, they were dum
founded when their nominal leader
against E. M. Croisan for $1000 dragged the Chief ; Executive s wife
damages because Croisan's goats. I !" polltlc,s- e fact that Mam
the plaintiff alleged, had damaged , !!, has Patterned her life after
his peach trees to that extent. j tlean.or Koosevelt s robust career
Railroad surveyors work) :z out I Butler inadvertently let an im-
of Falls City were seeking a new 1 portant political cat out of the bag.
route from Black Rock to the 11e voiced Partv strategists' secret
coast. ! fear namely, that they hope Els-
, !enhower will ret!" after one term
Capital Journal's X-Rayist had because they see no chance of de
wrillen: "U is said that Dr. Mary feating him.
Walker sleeps in her trousers. I powwow PLANNED
jutus an iigm even inougn no
one else does."
Salem 43 Years Ago
By BEN MAXWELL
March 21, 1912
W. J. Ball had started s it : founded when their nominal leader
Savs San Capistrano
Swallow Story Myth
To the Editor:
I notice that the wire services
continue to carry news stories
about the swallows returning to
San Capistrano on March 19.
This, too, in spite of the fact that
this myth has long since been
debunked by the California Au
dubon Society. It is nothing more
or less than a good publicity
gag that helps bring in hundreds
of visitors to that little southern
California city for the celebra
tion of St. Joseph's Day, a Cath
olic holy day.
My wife and I were in South
ern California last winter and
made it point to visit San Cap
istrano on March 19. Upon our
arrival we found that hundreds of
swallows were already nesting
in the old Mission. Natives of
the little village, Including the
priests in attendance at the Mis
sion, readily admit that the story
about the return of the swallows
on March 19 is a myth. The swal-
I lows do return to southern Cali
fornia generally in March, start.
ine in the earlv ' Dart of the
j month and continuing to arrive
I over a period of three or tour
weeks. However, there is no
I mass iniKi auuu ui mc uirus un
, r.iarcn in as ine news stories
I would indicate. Nor are they
! especially partial to Capistrano
j but are to be found in just as
lame numbers throughout that
entire southern California area.
A. L. L1NDBECK,
1040 Pine street.
By-Passed Again
Stayton Mall
We note that Stayton was by
passed as a call station for a pro-
i posed helicopter service. Silver
ton. Independence. Sheridan. Leb
anon and Sweet Home were listed.
j Fact that we do not have an
airfield may have been responsible.
It might be well for our chamber
of commerce to make inquiry into
the matter.
Miss Lily Stege had advertised
a small, two cylinder Maxwell
runabout, model A A, for sale
cheap: ,
Polk County Gas & Oil Land Co.
Butler had already antagonized
the "Federals" by announcing that
he planned to call a conference of
Democratic governors to prepare
for next year's campaign. At such
a powwow, of course, the gover
nors of the larger states enjoy the
most puDiicity ana nog tne lime-
WE ALREADY KNOW THIS
Oregon City Enterprise-Courier
There is one kind of research
the state strawberry commission
need not undertake That is In find
' the most toothsome manner for
serving fresh berries. There is no
peer to home made strawberry
shortcake with cream, real cream,
that is.
were starling operating again1 light, and it so happens that they
caught helplessly in
fate."
Ike Wins Again
. Albany Democrat-Herald
Those who are advocating hyper-
partisanship on the part of the
President as opposed to his own
tendency toward "middle of the
road" might observe that Mr. El
senhower came out OK again on
that $20 tax premium the Demo
ciats were hoping to offer the
American voters.
We think his moderation in for.
eign relations, with a minimum of
sword-rattling but a determination
rr.t to be pushed too far, also will
pay off.
a collective I made on Molotov Monday at Bel
grade by antiMoscow Red Dictator
Tito of Yugosalvia. Tito was re
plying fiercely to an attack made
one him by Molotov February 8.
Khrushchev controls Pravda. The
printing of the Tito blast is gen
erally interpreted as a Khrushchev
stab at Molotov. What else could
it be especially when you consid
er that Khrushchev has been pass.
ing snide remarks in public about
Molotov for a month?
mat s the way things go on
the surface in Soviet Russia when
the giants are maneuvering for,
grips on one another's throats. The
news out of Moscow in the next
few days promises to be interest
ing indeed.
Our feeling about it all: Any
dissension in the Kremlin is fine
for our side in the cold war, so
we're cheering for both Khrush-
coma Monday.
A representative of American
Linseed Co. and H. A. Brewer of
Portland had conferred with Eu
gene Bosse relative to securing
a contract for growing 2000 acres
of flax.
SOUND SLF.EPF.n
DENVER (V-Alvin Vigil told
police today he lay down on a bed
at his home to watch television,
dozed off and woka up to find both
A neighbor, Mrs. Martha Kimble,
the TV set and the bedspread gone,
said she saw three men carrying
a suspicious looking' box down the
street. A bedspread was draped
over it, she added.
ITS NOT A DUTY
Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes
Continuity with the past is a
necessity, not a duty.
are not especially popular or chum
my with the House-Senate crowd.
The South Bend politician, how
ever, is not the only man to have
talked out of turn. In the Federals'
opinion. Another Stevenson admir
er, former National Chairman
Stephen A. Mitchell, also indulg
ed in anti-Eisenhower personalit
ies. He charged that Ike favored
the Dixon-Yates, TV A-A EC deal
because "Bobby" Jones, the great
golfer and Atlanta friend of the
President, was a director of one
of the companies involved.
Governor Averell Harriman has
said that the automobile industry
received an undue share of. war
contracts simply because Secretary
Charles E. Wilson, Secretary Dou
glas McKay and Postmaster Gen
eral Arthur E. Summerfield were
feathering the nests of business
friends. McKay and Summerfield.
incidentally, are only dealers, not
manufacturers.
SACRIFICE REWARDED
PHILDADELPHIA (UP) -Mrs.
Mary Gentile will receive $100 next chev and Molotov with equal glee
inursnay tor recommending elim
ination of a job during the Air
Force procurement district's cam
paign to save money. It was her
job. Mrs. Gentile, a supervisor of
a shipment control unit, was reas-
Milieu wiien me Air rorce put ncr
plan into etiect.
JEWELS NEED MORE ROOM
LONDON 11 So many people
want to peek at Britain's fabulous
collection of crown jewels in the
Tower of London that a bigger
building is being planned to dis
play them.
Protestants and Catbolics
Even on Switching of Faiths
By GEORGE GALLUP
(Director. American Institute of Public Opinion)
In the first attempt, by means Ivilian adults, represent church
of the modern scientific sampling preference, NOT membership:
survey, to settle the controversy Church Preference
as to whether there are more Adults Only
Protestant-to Catholic c o n v e r t s'di..i.i.
than Catholic-to-Protestant, the
! Institute linds the decision end-
, ing in a draw.
Calholics
Jews
Other, None
Questioning of a carefullv-con-
slructed cross-section of adults
adults only, with each major pop
ulation group represented in its
true proportion to the total popula
tion, shows that a total of 2.800.-
000 adults have changed their re
ligious failh from Protestant to I palnni jc.
I alholic, or vice versa, at some!jcw.s
point in their lives. !0(h . .
Of this group. 1-400.000 Proles-1 ' "
tanls have been converted to Cath- 0a
ones anu iuiuuiu-.i nave
switched to the Protestant failh
.22.000.000
. 3.000,000
. 3.000.000
Civilian Adults ' 96.000.000
Church preference by men and
women is shown in the following
table:
Men Women
32.0110.000 36.000.000
10.500.000 11.500.000
1.500.000 1.500.000
l.BoO.OOO 1.200.000
Protestants
.i. n. rumncnt num. h..,l l,i. ..v.
market inquiry for partisan or personal publicity he laid an
egg, as the publicity artists would say, but we don't think he
had cither purpose in view. We think this serious minded
former university president undertook the project in good . l'ropaganda Minister Gobbets,
faith, to find out if anything needed legislative correction ! insPired by pictures of the warm
Nothing much has conic out as vet, plentv of enndi,.!:.. . ! rcTp,inn ,'hur'hin n'ld receive
views and a sharp drop In the New York stock mark el wwE1 C" !0.Mrjn?fc ,'n,,n ,u"mM
,. ,u ' , i . i - , "-"Kl1' V'huh arras, ried he same thing in
omc blame on the investigation, but which seem, , haveBerlin But his car was stoned,
been overdue after a sharp rise in values m recent months (and within two davs an SS lank
The relapse is said to be privately welcomed by financial ,00(1 Rard at every important
leaders and to have convinced congressional leaders that thJ,lr"'t intersection."
market can correct itself and doesn't need governmental meas
ures.
In answer to critics who blamed the market reveries on
Fulbright's investigation the Wall Street Journal remarked
the other day that the market and the business situation it re
in Catholic or Catholic to Protes
tant. Some have turned atheist,
some were atheists who later
Ililde said that as the Soviet
armies encircled Berlin she her
self donned a soldier's uniform
nd tried to escape to the River
Elbe. She wis caught by the
Russians a few milet hnrt nf the
fleets are both prettv rugged creatures, that if a litle thing American lines and thrown in a .'lis,,,,,, nreference Question in the Were Catholics, now
like this could throw them into a tailspin they'd have been conntrtinn csmp ntvl nea-mu.-l census in 1980. ! Protestants 1.400 000
I rnr three months I was the; The Institute assigned its nation- other .1.01x1.000
-,imjn in a csmp ot 4i uou,uide corns of reporters to first aski 'Survey results, expressed in
each adult In today s survey: minions ol adults, have been based
45.SO0.0n0 50.200.000
An Indication of the strong hold
Approximately one million other the Catholic church has on younger
adults have made a religious lr"c 15 ucaieu oy ine ian in
switch other than from Protestant whereas only 16 per cent of those
persons wi years ol age ana umer
are Catholics, 27 per cent of those
in the age group 21 to 29 are Cath-
adopled a failh, some are Jews 01 oy preierence.
who have become Catholics or! ," ,he 0,h" hand- 78 V" "nl
Protestants, and others. "f ,h f an ov" r0"p con"d"
The one million others do not in-! them-elves Proteslanfs. compared
elude anyone who has changed j10 67 P" "nt m in lhe 21 ,0 59
from one Protestant denomination fcT0Un-
to another. i . , .
Besides determining whether a, Each person was next asked:
person's present religious failh had ,. ,na "I"'"?' 'our Z',
always been the one of his prefer-' I'Sious preference or affUiation?
met. the American Institute of Yes tot
Public Opinion also sought to check No
the present church preference of. The 4 per cent who said 'No'
American adults. I were then asked:
With all church statistics admit ! "What was your religious pref
tedlv inaccurate, a committee in erence previously?"
now' at work to prevail on V. S ! W ere Protestants, now
Censn. authorities to Include I re-! Catholics 1.400.000
TYPEWRITER
Rentals
All Makes
Three $
Months
9
00
WE GIVE
GREEN STAMPS
VPEUMTER CO.
HOW TO SPOT HIM
Jonathan Swift
When a true genius appears in
the world, you may know him by
this sign, that the dunces are all in
confederacy against him.
CITY
Consolidate what you owe In on
loan with payments to-fit your
budget Get a fresh start on a sen
sible, business-like basis.
$25 to $1500
LOANS
where there's a LOAN PLAN
FOR EVERYONE
Room 200, 317 Court SL
Phone: 4-3396, Salem
Houn: Daily 9:30-5:30; Sat. 9-12
Open evening by appointment
Imih mtit H rnldtntt if mtV Itwtn
siiiiiiii
rrifrf?-a mm - -
dead and buried long ago.
We welcome Kulbright's investigation. If it put the recent
damper on the market, well and good. It was needed. If any
thing is seriously wrong, lei's have it. If "nothing a rong
v'll atnrc irc of that after a wnaiy immf. t'-
Isy onjnjsional lnvstiitii tftvr'tt- eftrik) g JartJ
carts Klbng)t'i wtettMi 0 o i
'-"". me recalled. "II was-
' hilarious as it minds."
' "y Iwind she was a girl dur-
Lnjm!c,'J"1 Inspection A kind
si' Polish (Ineln, .h. i...
" J"htfr during the hat-
& 6Wr.,w
What is your religious prel-on an estimated ns.ooo.ooo adult
erence Prolestant, Catholic or civilian citizrns normally reached
Jewish?" 1 In a modern sampling survey. The
It must be borne in mind that total excludes members of the
the survey results, which have Armrd ForcesP institatkinalired
Intervened with ! been translated into millions of d- persons, etc.
What Is ImmunitM?
Immunitq 1 a
state or condi
tion of thebodit
Which exempts
It from con
tracting con
tagious diseote
. . . ui... 1 tn resist infection
Ifi or whicn owuiu .w
effective!!. It is sometimes cauea
-resistance." The opposite condition is
called "susceptibility.."
Your phusidcin knows H is easier to prevent
diseases than to cure them. See uourphuslcian
before an illness strikes. We carry all the
rtcoqnlied Immunizing agents which
phu,sician might order-
CAPITAL DRUG STORE
Mln Store: 40) Slae. Comer 01 Liberty
Prescription Shop: Ml rhrmrketa. Griffin Bide.
We Give ."T Green Stamps
i...-IH
m
l a-wi lwK2iii
mm
7
O