The Beaverton enterprise. (Beaverton, Or.) 1927-1951, January 05, 1945, Page Page 2, Image 2

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    Friday, January 5, 1945
B E A V E R TO N ENTERPRISE, Beaverton, Oregon
I ’ iure 2
O u r W u r W illi Japan
J im r im .* , rulliuin<r
I'uMUhr.l Kiiilay of pnrli » poh l»y th* l*loiie*r I'ul>llahini{ <3o.. at Hwavarton,
(li.
.11
I U l l i . . . I up <|>. m i l l l ' I n a , mi. U l i
IKK)
( >n>
«1
I b « iM M tufflo« a t l l o a v u r t o n , O r a .
H ii I i « i rl|ilInn l'ava»»!« III Advancn.
ilonvuiliin Of fir» K.iil im | ii Ian lllilg., I'hnna llravai ton 7.431
rortland orno* »i>H Panama lllil« , 3»<l anil AUlnr
I'linna ATwatar »161*1
4 /« m / i «I
0 « ic | o ( h ) N u ä s b 1 p h
PUBlIS^t 1 }
Lights S of New York
K I l Ml VINSON
tinnii Mi oli sitati
Halnty Jane
Iteri mg sleppmg luto a pud,He st
1 ni livellile and ForlV IHUl sllerl
101,1 biioging enl thè Sii Waltei Ita
li m ' i In ludi a do»en male speets
1,. 1 ■.
l'anl Whtteman. who |Hires
ovvi luindreds of musical compost-
1
> , \, i \ \v< . k foi Ihe Itine Net
v ik. ..lu,j\ing a dilT. reni ktnd of a
,. ) ilion in a Kitij
venth st 1 ert
.ni i.al.M
l.ovely Arietta
1 '. oid D ote") Fiancis. lunehtng at
' idi
looktng llkr a l»hie l'elle of
, t
,| in i •■»' bine piali! Olltfit
(Hai 'loiis Gioita Nord, Ihe
"Jtkalmg V uiies" ballerina, hrlng
ni salvaged (vaste pa­
lot
I'M nilo Pie AWVS ,'i'IUvtlixn depot
at '• v .a \ e n n e and Ferii thlrd and
te, . n mg in evohange two ticket»
Nat
for Skating V a llili,« "
t). mdni »ine. ihe W aM orfi new
.sito bio log orchid» in thè lob-
: ,i (01 Ivo. piriti iw alist.
bv
FT una Casp.e tini «ornane*, Just
bn
( lift Noie« V e doti on American
oigsrrltes in v'anada is ffl ST a car-
ton , , . In (‘ -ada gasoline may
. he sold after T P
p m o» on Siiti
v
J
-V k
to I sh «eien dais a week
.
W
. \\ . . '. i'd N> ’.son Ilei
, 1, n .
;•.!
, i piomuient Amori-
xx 111 t se . ■ t m s V day cere
m. 1 al Camrgte hall at midnight
ihe dai l’-o (.'.'«Mnitilbmal autnen-
o G m - ani is announced «oft-
ìb F i. estoni House is sponsoring
.on.
Close to 2 !kkk-
miiitari 1 , ' ie'e* have been prxx-
. .. In tm oii, k ì auloniotive in*
n i s oc the beginning of the
I veis'itsC r Ruht, Mack Ttrwck
s.e.e-1
In \\ ,n id War t,
m W tnr V« a»nt l i
ante
wove produced tor bur
ed forces
Incident *Ry, the
, . on siiv.i pxMvbasext its Arsi
. ,n 1 W and its :; ist truck
% % %
Here K Vhwre lVttx Stewart tbr
es* f.vwM Texas, nonoN a Vant-
V ' ,.« at the OotiT.HiM
No
■• I ' .' s .' , .- g.-
-v-iber ,v' well eien as
1 co v r oiate psiTvhasting a
• > *.
V * n Marti ■. vwm '
v V .v. and IVv ' 'V,\d ingeniti
".’•<■ s'ob No.- - afte» everyone
e
. ie « Vary G-aix and Ratty
II
The VillfWi IVi ev .tohn-
ro 1 .f and .Van Huoaon making
. »
te a T it >n Lwvtys
H« H.itron making
War Sa' vng* booth
a“st Portx-eighth—•
K
TVrry cane
’ at a sandwich bar
A i »on before boarding
■ -
< tessei, ('Vnn.vns
a ever, ihe yo.,ng bar ma»d
ihe g.f.ss oi ss,;g hr f e
/4
X ttwi V ) a 4VH
: g
tB 'Ks* fiNlotV! enei her if he
' «
a « (\ £ «
> p
A V t\ V
frvwned
x a think I tax,
■ 3-kv.ee« nssves
r hi and new Gl
Ne,i!enr»ant wittn
New axWee’’"
angy.h ‘ ,Vw t
x nr ry nbeut
y.ni'Te mad ' *
''.■».NX iv«
a «■».'.< on
I S' inking
eharsemr
,ie v fuel.*
)'»<•*•* a Flave»
Aililrnila: OiMlrudc Nu t mi . star
of Dnvr Wolpar'a Hrnmlwny hit,
"Follow llio Girls," recalvra moro
tlinn 80 marriage offers each week
ns n reault of her terrific rendition
of "I Wannn Get Married."
lint Miaa Nleacn wants it known
thnt while ahe sings about longing
for matrimony in the ahow, she's
been happily married to Albert
Greenfield, Chicago restaurant own­
er, for more than « year.
Ilert
I.ytell opines thnt In these days of
man power shortage, the only girl
who doesn't need a good line is a
telephone operator.
I»*ll ftvntli« «t* WNU IH pb HUV b .
Curtiss Hrlldivnrs
U sin g 20-M M . Cannot)
—... .
iiXtn
1W
AT 101
Aeftnes
WASHINGTON. It C Cannon
firing war planes. Ihe first ever
built for operation from an air­
craft carrier. a\e in opera
lion against the Japanese. They
are Curtiss llelldlver dive bomlv
ers, equipped with 20 millimeter
guns, attached on the leading
edge of the wing These weapons
lake the place formerly used
for 50 caliber machine guns
$ 6 0 ,0 0 0 .0 0 0 Niwi Loot
In France Is Recovered
PARIS \ fabulous fDO.OOO.ik» as­
sortment of French giH^ls. ranging
from kitchen crockery to old mas­
ters. which the Germans scucd dur­
ing their occupation, has been re-
covered, m cstli tho'ugh clever work
by French resistance forces as the
Nans were bring d r u m out
Although the Germans tried to
prevent recovery of their levt. even
distributing some of it to the French
public, a large amount of valuables
was saied through the sabotaging of
enemy trucks
Suburban quarries, which served
as dumps for thousands of seised
tires, and numerous waiehhouscs
also hai e yielded a great board of
loot
Older Men and Box*
In Reich Guard. W ord
MOSeYIW. FSSK - The hulk
of Himmler's home guard is in
the a fr ftx'uv' from 59 tc Af « ith
hoy* of 15 comprising on’,' alvmt
t?i' ,\V of the force Ned Siar **id
reoento N,'.r*l«'-C.r Hz'* - s r T t
wriier, apparent* fz i hi* infer
matjon from the testimony o<
home tuard troop* captured hi
the Russian*
S^ xhv S s ,xf iN-vui-se are used most
lx to add rest and flavor to feeds
Rut thex have other uses Tnce-se
is made frxvn- o m n a r w Nod pe-p
i^er is a tome Rt»ck pe;x>er xs usoo'
>» ».Nips And ( v r fc - 'e s ('‘a ree—or. a
native e# 3nd>a w used in e*u de
evslpgwf Turmer v . which o: .g.nailx
cam e «nty ftwn Iivl.a but which
new <v>-oe* ir. quart.ties from Haiti,
pro' »des a Roe ' elio« dx-e also
turmeric ,-u. ,vr used in tests for
W a -," * •
' e - N . : v,-
, , , .-
Mr Wex-et '.■..-nd tSa» a fu m e t was
making beaxw nuechases txf tub
--eric jVwvk-T That was i e out rtf
.mo n*:> a *
: gaivin w as m ace
and it w as e .«.werev* Thai the fur­
rter was usine tuT-merx- to tom
Ch mes»e dog -X -is
red i '.ves
Fine ladies of the r
sprwik ed a
3 :Tt ‘e cirmaro.-,n or t
l noe
.•w.lx t.vik aw*« the
'•'eg-« ” ,v»or
hut mmg «evi w’e.,1 ,
any ■'fhe'T
pex^i- e A fi'e-rvd
t or
bet rxrv-k pies-y- p,fr}? n
ue
M a r.x spi. •( v V»'; -~-*r: > ,-rr I-fed
are ?».•-« r* «v>.*i Hr•TV \T *Sr
» tea
Sn im . xi*' r. •n.ft ifllftTNTf
ihe
thf !i«;1 ¥' Ì
TTià A A »VT>iyr
rwmo
garter salt e»n».ir
ceierx
”w . sagre ma: >.-
( " t e ax e.nd
•mug'reeV w' v-T
I?
f>v
c « jr r x
1
' 'ft «*»?r»f»i *r*5 *v»*
•Av , ». rv’
*.N, • t*9 ft1
ne» (•»Mi
Rewith vsftr.' * rvi fv/ p
* t \? v r i »"V'Tv
per oar* wax Ox‘i ~N*i>
Oft'*» ♦*ift
rivxm V< V NV. ft* *>»# fkJkf»r ikh
o -ogarw J»H4l Oil - If ft TV
ce- X V'.* R» 'Mi vfA uf*e
&T"Jk£».
**»**!¥>* MR 's'»
l / i Fft
t
rv^nnw hj
fr.irf
n *m» I* Vsxv
.'»nr
rh# •ex»« a.
«r
ft*16*6 Mtff
frtìTt
Tt\$
Re. -ausar o ttrtecr' *ir^rr>t»r■ jy AiìllT^
Ur «t.ippìn» Ortrdltio
i[hr «uoph
Ik >e ed «r.’.-ns ha* beer tr ">ÌéRf»£ •ami*
,ir b ».» amavn-a « n -.-, itfs Jìu i art*
Maeiapa*.'*: Re-ig-iar huffi
le»
ana Na t, Dai; ihe
[?*'!•«'*# Jrtjb
■ m um U
iiruiliM
ya
bine*
M M i rwrwv
emh frort thl
in/ì*r«
ano the .) tlx*
O F l a**»’
pr-i.-w of »
e w . «-il 1W11
uurr
Ftvii nnc»fT mgpph for
■
m%
*
"lnnrt%
lor veara. on
a tog no *ot,
k v is
<d the Hexte
Ht
mm
The Sixth War Loan m arks u new turn in the war both on the
flghtin;» and the home fronts. It points our tremendous war effort
definitely in the direction of the Pacific. During the first five war
loans Am ericans were primarily thinking in terms of beating
Hitler.,
Now our government asks us for a loan of 14 billion more dollars
of which five billion dollars must come from individuals. Why?
Haven't vvi nearly finished off our so-called Number 1 Enem y?
Can Japan hold up our powerful war machine very long? Your
son, hrothei and friend in his Pacific foxhole wouldn’ t raise such
question!, because they are up against realities, not day dream s.
They kill 01 are killed. They pray every waking moment for a
sky darkenin ; cover of friendly planes. They thank Am erica for
giving them the finest medical care in the world when their ren­
dezvous wii' i -su n y i i a Pacific jungle is at hand. They know
the war with the Japs is just beginning.
Here ate som e other Pacific realities so that you will under­
stand why there must be u Sixth War Loan and why it is absolutely
necessary that it be n sudeess:
The Allied Military Com m and has estimated that it will take
years, not months, to lick Japan.
Japan's present arm y numbers about 4,000,000 with 2,000,000
more men available and fit for military service who haven’ t been
called up to date. Another 1,500,000, between the ages of 17 and
20, are not yet subject to the draft,
j
The Jap Air Force is growing.
i
In addition to millions of native workers. Japan has a potential
| slave force of 400,000,000 conquered people. 50
-t Japan's labor
force is m ade up of women. Another 25', bov- and girls utfder
20, the balance men. The Jap workday is twelve to sixteen hours
with two days off a month. The Jap cannot leave his job. change
it. or strike. The highest daily wage equals about three Am eri­
can dollars 3 0 'e to 75% of which goes to taxes and compulsory
savings.
The Jap, as our men in the Pacific know, will fight to the death.
As far as the Jap is concerned, the outer Em pire -and the men
who defend it arc the expendables The Jap will fight the Battle
from inside the inner Em pire.
The Jap believes that we shall weary of war too easily and
too early.
In the invasion of France, supply ships had an overnight run
to m ake. In the coming Battle of Japan, ships in the Pacific will
have long-reached round trips that often take five months to make.
These realities are worth thinking about before you keep your
home front rendezvous with a Victory Volunteer. Perhaps you
will feel that the national personal Sixth W ar Loan objective—
purchase of at least one extra $100 War Bond— is entirely too sm all
for you The better we face the realities confronting our forces in
the Pacific the quicker the whole bloody business will be over
and the sooner we will welcom e home our fighting men. That's
an A m erican reality to work for with all our dollars and our sweat.
Turn a Squalid
House Into Club
Ihimpcr Corn Crops
A o n * on i >/</ Story
Yanks 1 n t r o d u c e Western
Civilization in India's
Print net ion Pooateei Greatly
By Hybrid I anety.
Assam Valley.
AN MR SFRVICE COMMAND
B iSI IN INDIA Wt its n eh .'.'.ra­
tion was int
i d in India's As-
saiv, v a llo in oro week This feat
was aexor-p is' o j hj a squadron of
¡nr scr\ u e ,. n rr«nd enlisted men
Thex trarsforr od a dilapidated
haivhoo ! . . so into An enlisted men's
recreation etuh
It all stArteo After months of hv-
.n* in a monsoon flooded tent city
lhat « as F ato of recreation and
diversion It was N ato of everything
except -va.a: a «V-ted mosquitoes
ar-d a persiste: t downpour of ram
To And re ..of fro -- i'-e no"oto -.ous
VXAiioi of rar- on : n .r te n s thex had
to wailo* ,n kne't'--deep mud
Kerre*(ton Needed
Recreation « a s 'ceded hadty'
T>,is seio.-v group unit of r 0 A r
se -or <V'"( iva rvd was roA.rx and
» .
to s.rxioe the hue* t ; a-.s-
P>*’tts , -xl
it *. -
: or p a n e «
,N
men
were p id of the.r issaur.g. moni­
toring a o. sopxrrv.sior of the rec­
ord air freight .vd secit oxer t^e
to ghhir.a b> ATC r'a-'es.
wh-oh ewkev. high i : a se from p-e
coi-o.r-A-oer ,xf the C R 1 ,Ch.r,a.
kiiT g*
India' a.r srrxioe c.im-
rr ana
Rut '- s i as “ ail work and nc p',ax
make Jack a du., boy. aU war and
no re)a\stv>n make Gt J.v a - . tv
r flio »ert axis er Ret wem. « *
t
.iut>es this
infantry of u>e air'
unit wA-ted a place Te gather a
p.ace w >e:-e i ; x o. . o - a.- stone*
a heart t'-i.r fern >o< - ' :«•< g.ris
tbr.y lei » h
ino
iga-ge a
bulì
os.: the tri ai *
tr ibu
«r rn another
if th3
«. he ir talk-
l - and ioa re­
se - ucb the
lì
. rcx*r thr c
kV*r
? ».*rn
-me.
A
w
:.-.ir was
in Urf
r».aìre o-
me.
*rìc
1 ;.s ar>.->
ihr X WAS
th f #1 CÙÙH'T*
:
fMfftt fi V fehl
S h 'T - inpr«
»
So
te eci.-vpt the
> .>. oath
* l»rg ai N irht
*
V it $
w that
ihe nel
broathlrs* » ■;) us p,«f Jh ¡1
we group unit f t i-t ft prmnngzr*
t v e of k m e rv s i » m • w'ort an:
»nitiAtrtf i*»»i * «« in ‘x «'oualloc bx
the •finish«'." . 1-, i.ia. .
ror »
saVAgr rtumr. ttv» rum f m wttf
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nftrtf «mt
run n* Miim
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SÌJS
T ruin: dut*
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T^# I m w w
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kji’Nia'ft A,r Fjwf,wi*j!u ) mi k iif f‘ »f»*v
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CHICAGO - Those bumper corn
crops grandfather used to boast about
w-ere just drops in the bucket com ­
pared to what his grandsons are
growing in this second World war,
according to a statement made pub­
lic here by the Middle West Soil
Improvement committee
"In granddad s day,” sax's the
statement "+g acres of com produc­
ing 40 bushels per acre—or a total
of 1 S.V bushels—was a prime year's
work for a farmer Today, with hy­
brid corn there are plenty of farms
where one man alone can produce
between J 000 ar-d f 000 bushels per
season
' For the third year in a row now.
. . . .
-
has passed t", i TOO OOC XG bushel
mark Latest esir-iates p ice the
'.¡H4 yield at J.10MJST«» usheis,
compared w
35? XX’ ‘.he year
bef.re « n i . 3T5.lM.AT" bushel» .n
IM2
Th e ra itch fpom opxen-po ihnated
va net: cs ta hybnd coni -.¿s
sde
: h « -■ > . ....... : •
: c
and op<ned up a new era ir. agri-
culture w sere more busheis c*r be
produ.'ed or fewer acres
"A nothtr faefor ras of eourse.
beer. resqw.sih ,-r f . f thè record-
bre-akir.g yoe'os T 'i t s thr ■«, rr .-s
mg fcno wiedge by far--e-s of bcw fo
fers. .re hytom corn As hohri.t
grrowr m, pffai’.anty. fs : ers have
learned more and more that m
yielc.r.g iron-. 2. to 25 p c
n.ore
com per acre than Ue ola-farhioned
ty-pes tr.^ new xanety takes more
n.v.ns'.merit cut of the soi] than did
rts lower-y jeiding predeccssora As a
result, farmers hax«e had to use
m w e r-.^vea terti.jwr on hybrid
com ana .k-rwise hax-e had to ¡a n
new and be -Ter methods nf apptyir.g
the p la n food
'I t is esa.mated that more com
was fem.iired througrhotft the com
he t soires ir 3?*4 thar e'-cr before
it hnOoffy Beoauar at tests and re-
aearck by agroro— ists at state s.gn-
ru'tura experiroenl stitior.s far—-
e~s have had the henef: of ar m-
measmg fund at imcw iecge o.incerr-
mg the he-srt methods of fert.-iur^
hybrid com and the quar,t.;x oi
rr .anc frrtilu-er cortasnir.g r. tropett.
phoanhorus and potaat which should
he appbet xr oroer tr assure the
be-sr. possible crop. **
AM ERICAN
HEROES
B Y LE FF
Mdjnr i >I, J 11, f. iibsugli, Iiifunlr). of Omaha, earned hia Silver Star for
gallantry in aeliou in Tuni-ia. Under heavy machine gun tire aimed directly at
hi* i»<>-,v - - wl-l -h -Jenred the radio, he disregarded all pergonal safety, and
re ain, ,1 m full
" of thr ,-nrin* »fihin close range to shout direction« and
»nl.rs U* I«» of his rompuiui-s. Our praise for his heroism is not enough,
neU'l f*u' K ■■ /»’ ■»»,/' w m l httld Vm.
ho
U-Boat Mates
Serve i Roles
Pharmacist Rat'ng Found to
Act as Doctor, Dcnt'st,
Nurse. Chaplain.
NEW YORK. — Tales of pharma­
cist's mates on submarines who save
lives, heal wounds, mend broken
bones and serve as “ the doctor, den­
tist, nurse and even the chaplain all
rolled into one,” were related at the
annual meeting of the Association
of Military Surgeons of the United
States. The narrator was Capt.
Charles W. Shilling of the navy
medical dorps, in charge of the
medical research laboratory at the
New
London, Conn , submarine
base.
A submarine. Captain Shilling
pointed out. does not carry a medi-
i cal officer nor a dentist, nurse or
chaplain The pharmacist's mate is
therefore trained “ so that he can
handle the various emergencies that
arise.”
The instruction consists of eight
weeks of concentrated specialty
training and six weeks of basic sub­
marine training. The course includes
lectures and demonstrations of
routine first - aid measures—band-
sct.«. co m p ii»«-s. sutures, anesthe­
sia. nursing care, administration
of fluids and plasma, use of the sulfa
drug*, treatment of fractures —
srlmts, plaster casts an-d their dan­
gers
laboratory procedures and
compounding prescriptions, and two
w ifk s of actual w rk in the operat­
ing room, sick call and wards. In
addition. dental first-aid procedures
are taught
Treat M »n' Cases.
Among some of the conditions
successfully treated by what many
consider relatively untrained medi-
o.
-- iirr.i.s
Capta.n Si ...ng
listed
t il-harxdled amputations of
ni ters and toes,
sutures of cuts
and care of fracUires and gunshot
w c unds On one patrol, he reponed.
■ a case of mental dera-gem er.i oc­
curred. with rrpv-sted attempts at
s.. . o.c
"The pharmacist s m ete,” the of-
finer said, handled the case with
sk.'. . restraining :ve patient with
s.he-cts. giving sodai cs and tring-
ir.g bum to pvr rt with.xut nr ishape rr
sorte at the patent's a out u depressed
state
Another pharmacist s mate had
an entire sur p ea l clinic on his
hards at cv>e time witii three
won-on end three ct't o.r men seri­
ously wounded out of a group of 14
individua'.s rescued at sea There
were s'rap.nel wound* ,c all parts of
the.r bodies requu^irg surgical re­
m oval ”
C. . :a. 5
. quoted the mate s
dfscm riior . f v . « fie band ed one
of i*'<-se CAM >
' Thus w as a woman -who had a
Piece of sb.raprif : cut the berti, m of
ber 3-r-fis: ti-ore was * * . _r>d of
about three i*>cv es or.c snd about
Two inches deep. Emst I s L ipped the
b o o d .-g Then 1 ciesnec it L'or-
f*.,f ' «
w
a'lcexh.-
arie
put « ..I f* .
U. S. Treasury Departmtitt
Good as a Surgeon.
Captain Shilling com m ented:
“ When this boat finally put its
passengers ashore 15 days later, not
a single case had developed any in­
fection. What trained surgeon could
have done any better?"
Almost the entire gamut of dis­
eases and medical emergencies
have arisen on patrols and have
been “ well handled” by the mate,
the officer declared. Referring to a
well-known case in which a phar­
m acist's mate performed a “ suc­
cessful appendectomy” in a sub­
marine, Captain Shilling added that
“ abdominal
surgery
by
phar­
m acist's mates is definitely frowned
upon, and those who go through
our school are carefully taught the
conservative treatment of acute
appendicitis.
“ I am happy to say,” he con­
tinued, “ that many cases (of acute
appendicitis) have been treated con­
servatively and either have cleared
up or (in two known cases) have
gone on to rupture and formation of
an abscess which was easily handled
at the completion of the patrol.”
Budget Bureau Order»
Big Slash in U . S. Jobs
WASHINGTON. — The budget
bureau, the White House announced
recently, has instructed Federal
executive agencies to reduce their
personnel requirements by 46.855
during the last three months of this
year.
The reduction is to be made from
the total of 1,643.210 jobs covered by
the Overtime Pay act which were
listed by the various agencies as es­
sential during the first quarter of
the current fiscal year—July, Aug-st
and September.
Chinese Graduated From
American Bomb School
PUEBLO, COLO. — The first all-
C'-inese aerial bombardment crews
to be graduated in this country
are row ready to fiy American
bombers in action against the Japa­
nese.
Ton of these crews, trained at the
P
sir base, received their
diplomas it . ceremonies recently.
Tfi.s .s the only base in the United
Siiit « .»rere t*e C 1- -ese are tra.ne-d
aa heavy bombardment team.*.
Rad ium Used to Treat
Childhood Birthmarks
CHICAGO — Treatment of sutin
blotches and birthmarks (heman-
gi.ma) with rad.urn is “ lndiesfed
especially" fer children, since it can
be applied painlessly without anes­
thetic and can be retained by ad­
hesive plaster without i n mob liming
the child. G E Pfafiler of Philadel­
phia SAid rooMitly.
In a talk prepared for delivery
at 1 V joint meeting of the Ameri­
can Roentgen Ray society and the
Radiological society exf North Ameri­
ca at the Palmer house Dr Pfah-
>er professor of radiology at the
Ur v cr.sty of Pennsylvania, said
such radium treatment possesses
‘ most at the same advantages”
when used or adults.
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