Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, April 10, 1947
B eauty and H ealth
By Sim ple Exercise
New Foreign Policy Foreshadowed
«
Marked Historical Import
Attached to Aid Program
GOOD
S C IE N T IE IC
By BAUKHAGE
» A ia ly il t - A CnmmeMlMnr.
lig h t, if not the sunset, of c iv ili
zation.
P resident T ru m a n and his ad
W ASHINGTON —One of the h a rd
visors fe lt the policy m ust be enun
est things to recognize is h is to ry in
ciated. And far-seeing people re a l
the m aking. We often liv e thro u g h
m om ents of catastrophic and ca ta ized th a t A m e rica m ust shoulder
clysm ic significance, yet w h ile the the m a jo r re sp o n sib ilitie s that B r it
v ita l seconds are tic k in g off. our ain had c a rrie d so long as the m ost
only im m e d ia te im pression is the p o w e rfu l of the E nglish-speaking
lim ite d effect on ourselves o r on our fa m ily o f nations, and w hich she no
longer is able to c a rry .
close surroundings.
T rue, we have started to create
We have a ll lived through a period
w hich has been fille d w ith some an o rg a n iz a tio n —the U nited Nations
h ig h ly sig n ifica n t —w hich is supposed to m ake it im
e v e n t s , begin possible fo r any single nation or
ning — say — group ot nations to d is tu rb the
w ith
the
out peace. But to c a rry out its job, the
break of W orld U nited N ations m ust have an in te r
U n til the
W ar 1. We cele n a tio n a l police force
brated
the A r U nited Nations has the force to
m is tic e on No back up the w ill of the m a jo rity ,
that single nation w hich can m uster
ve m b e r 11. 1918;
we w atched the such pow er w ill decide the course
progress of the of the w orld.
We have th a t power. P o te n tia lly,
peace
co n fe r
ence, and then so has Russia.
The proposed A m e rica n foreign
came the tra in
of
in te rn a tio n a l p o licy has behind it only one idea.
events w hich c u l T h a t is to keep the pow er fo r peace
m inated in V E in the hands of w hat we ca ll de
Baukhage
and V - J Days m ocracy.
T here has been doubt expressed
and the founding of the U nited
by some as to w hether the pro g ra m
Nations.
by
the
a d m in is tra tio n
A ll this was background fo r an o u tlin ed
other event w hich took place as the w ould serve th is o b je ctive . The m a
ides o f M arch, 1947, approached. I jo r ity of leaders in both parties
re fe r to the enunciation of a new how ever seem to be convinced th a t
there is no b e tte r method presently
A m e rica n foreign p o licy — w hich
m ay prove to have fa r g re a te r h is at hand; th a t i f we are to m a in ta in
to ric a l significance than any o f the o u r d e m o c ra tic way of life u n til the
U nited N ations has become an effec
other happenings I m entioned.
As one observer put it : “ I f the tiv e orga n iza tio n , we have no other
P resident's message • u rg in g aid fo r course to pursue. I f we take no ac
Greece and T u rk e y ) is im p lem ented tion, we s im p ly tu rn the w orld over
to the fu ll of its im p lic a tio n s , it m ay to Russia. T hat w ould mean w a r
be another Monroe D o ctrin e fo re e ve n tu a lly. Im p le m e n tin g the T ru
shadowing a pax A m ericana w ith a m an p o lic y m ay avoid i t
I h e a rtily believe in the U nited
hundred years peace— such as the
pax B rita n n ic a p ro v id e d —or, it m ay Nations, and I feel po sitive that i f a
m a jo r co n flict can be put o ff long
be a de cla ra tio n of W orld W ar I I I . ”
E ith e r e ve n tu a lity w ould m ake it enough, the U nited Nations even
the m ost im p o rta n t event in m odem
tu a lly can be made strong enough
h isto ry. I f it should establish a hun to outlaw aggressive w a rfa re effec
dred years of peace, it could easily tiv e ly .
P ledging o u r w ealth and sinew
foreshadow perm anent peace. If. on
the o ther hand, it signalled another to p ro te ct C om m unist - threatened
W orld W ar, it w'ould mean the tw i countries seems our only hope.
WNU Service, 1618 Eye Street, N. W.,
Washington. D. C.
A G E D S T U D E N T . . , T h e old s a y in g th a t one is “ n e v e r too old to
le a r n ” Is an a c tu a lity fo r J a m e s G e o rg e N lc k le n , 79, fo r m e r p lu m b e r
and s e a m a n , w ho Is now a s tu d en t a t San E ra n c ls c o ju n io r c o lle g e.
B e s p e c ta cle d and g ra y -b e a rd e d , N lc k le n a tte n d s classes in a n a to m y
and c h e m is tr y , a lth o u g h he Is fro m 55 to 60 y e a rs the s e n io r o f the
m a jo r it y o f his c la s s m a te s , th re e of w hom a re show n h e re v 'lth h in t.
NEWS REVIEW
New Atom Board Urged;
Red Menace Spotlighted
ATOM CONTROL:
/Vew Tian
As congressional conservatives con
tinued th e ir fight against a p p o in t
m ent of D avid E. L ilie n th a l as c h a ir
man of the n a tio n a l a to m ic energy
com m ission b ills were introduced
fo r the creation of a new board to
be headed by S ecretary o f State
M arshall.
U nder the plan introduced in the
senate by Senator M alone (Rep.,
N ev.) and five colleagues and in the
house by R epresentative Jenkins
(R ep., O .), o ther m em bers o f the
new board would include the sec
re ta rie s o f w a r and navy and tw o
persons named by P resident T ru
m an.
C onservatives seized upon the
c ritic a l in te rn a tio n a l situ a tio n to a t
te m p t to sid e tra ck L ilie n th a l, fo rm e r
T V A ch a irm a n who has been ac
cused of countenancing the presence
of C om m unists in the power agency.
In proposing establishm ent o f the
new board to govern a ll phases o f
dom estic a to m ic production, Repub
licans, Joined by southern D em o
cra ts, declared that the G re e k-T u rk
ish c ris is indicated the need fo r close
p o litic a l and m ilita r y co n tro l over
nu cle ar energy fo r national security.
Saving of Primitive Area Urged
N ow fa cin g Uncle Sam ’ s C hief
F o re ste r L y le F. W atts is a question
alm ost as h o tly disputed as G erm an
re p a ra tio n s a t the Moscow co n fe r
ence. As g u ardian of the n a tio n 's
g reat n a tio n a l fo re st w ilderness
areas, he has to give a yes o r no
answer fa ir ly soon.
W atts' headache concerns the San
G orgonio p rim itiv e area in South
ern C a lifo rn ia ’ s San B e rn a rd in o N a
tio n a l fo re st—one of A m e ric a ’ s few
re m a in in g rem nants of honest-to-
goodness w ilderness w hich conser
va tio n ists hope to preserve fo r fu
tu re generations.
F o r several years, the skiers who
lik e to rid e u p -h ill so they can get
the m ost out of th e ir dow n-hill sport
have fixed th e ir sun goggles on the
fine snow slopes deep w ith in this
p rim itiv e area. N ot a ll skiers, m in d
you—some lik e San G orgonio as is
—the deep, cool woods, a large
green meadow. D o lla r and D ry
lakes, ic y stream s, a challenging
vista o f M t. San G orgonio and the
lo fty s u m m it of the peak its e lf—and
they lik e to ski there. B ut others
p re fe r a touch of c iv iliz a tio n —ski-
tows, a highw ay into the place, a
h o te l-re sort near by. So the C a lifo r
nia Ski association, w ith help fro m
the N a tio n a l Ski association and the
C a lifo rn ia State C ham ber o f Com
m erce, sponsored a proposal to
b u ild the highw ay and accom m oda
tions fo r a b ig ski resort. I t looked
as i f San G orgonio would be about
as p rim itiv e as television and cook
in g w ith electronics.
B u t the F orest Service was keep
in g an open m ind. A fte r a ll, it m ig h t
be b e tte r to devote San G orgonio to
m ore p rim itiv e skiing. So la s t De
cem ber the service announced a 90-
day in te n tio n of changing the a re a ’ s
cla ssifica tio n as “ p rim itiv e .” T his
cleared the w ay fo r going ahead
w ith the skiin g developm ents. The
F o re st S ervice p rin c ip le is “ the
greatest good fo r the greatest n u m
ber in the long ru n ,” and m ost of
those who knew about the issue con
cluded th a t, based on such a thesis,
th is b it o f the p rim itiv e was gone
w ith the m ustache cup and the
M odel T.
The service called a p u b lic hear
in g in San B e rn a rd in o w hich turned,
som ew hat to th e ir surprise, into
w h a t V a rie ty calls a “ b o ff” p e r
form a n ce . So m any people showed
up th a t the c iv ic a u d ito riu m had to
be engaged fo r tw o days instead ot
one — and as in congress, the ses
sions lapped o ve r u n til evening.
S u p p o rtin g
the sk ie rs ’
proposal
w ere the C a lifo rn ia State C ham ber
o f C om m erce, the C a lifo rn ia Ski as
sociation and 18 ski clubs. T h a t was
about as expected.
I t was the d e te rm in ed opposition
th a t ra ise d eyebrows. The opposi
tio n in clu d e d the skiers who lik e
th e ir sp o rt in the raw , along w ith
ch u rch g roup re p re se nta tive s w ith
s u m m e r cam ps a t the edge o f the
p r im itiv e a re a ; spokesmen fo r wa-
OPTIMISM PREVAILS
I t provides th a t a board of 48
$1 - a - year m en fro m p riv a te
business shall a d m in iste r the
funds allocated to the national
science foundation. And most
sig n ifica n t is the fa ct th a t the
M ills b ill provides no safe
guards to prevent assigning pat
ents and processes to the big
business groups w hich these >1-
a -yca r men represent.
MOSCOW:
Future Reich
!
I
I
|
A t odds on m ost phases of post
w a r p o litics, the U. S. and Russia
cam e to g rip s again in Moscow on
the fu tu re pattern of the G erm an
governm ent.
B oiled
down.
the
differences
am ounted to U. S. proposals fo r a
system of strong state governm ents
w o rkin g through an adequate cen
tr a l a u th o rity and Russian recom -
m endations fo r a strong ce n tra l
governm ent w ith the states subordi-
nate.
The U. S. proposals advanced by
S ecretary of State M a rsh a ll are de
signed to give the G erm an people a
closer check on th e ir governm ent
through the state level and d im in is h
the p o s s ib ility of a strong ce n tra l
a u th o rity lik e the Nazi re g im e as
sum ing fu ll, c o n tro llin g pow er. In
this respect, the U. S. plans embod-
died A m e rica n p rin cip le s of states
rig h ts and state representation in
congress through the senate.
000 acres below the w a rtim e peak in
1944.
The c o u n try ’ s corn crop w ill be
grow n on 2,400,000 few er acres than
la s t year, according to growers*
M a rc h 1 plans. The to ta l o f 87,599,-
000 acres fa rm e rs intend to plant to
corn th is y e a r is down 5,300,000
acres fro m the 1938-45 average. E x
cept fo r 1941, i t is indicated to be
the sm allest since 1894 when the
n a tio n ’ s corn acreage s till was ex
panding.
A re co rd-breaking wheat crop m ay
be in the m aking, it was indicated.
A lthough the acreage planted to
sp rin g w heat is expected to be
s lig h tly less than la st year, this w ill
be offset by a near re cord acreage
o f w in te r w heat sown la st fa ll.
S hifts in w heat acreage in im p o r
ta n t states alm ost balance to in d i
cate prospective p lantings o f a
s lig h tly s m a lle r acreage o f a ll spring
wheat.
o
Thick Waistline
W
I T ry this one: Stand with arms our to
I the sides, and kick your right leg across
I your body, trying to touch the left hahd,
, Feel that stretch? Return leg to position,
¡and kick the left leg. Do 12 limes, alter
nating legs.
Whatever your figure problem, our
Render Service Booklet No 00 can help
you. Exercises (or slimming hips, waist,
bust, legs, neck, back. Send 2» cents
(coin) for "Beauty and Health Through
Simple Exercises" to Weekly Newspaper
Service. 242 W. 17th St., New York I I.
N. Y. Print name, address, booklet title
and No. DO.
Monks Make Up Fifth
Of Population of Tibet
There are so m any monks in
Tibet principally because it is so
J hard to make a living and raise a
fam ily there. Monks make up onc-
i fifth of the population of Tibet. Ev-
I ery year thousands of young men
enter m onasteries instead of m ar-
I rying, for it often takes us m any
as six husbands to m ake enough
j money to support one wife, and
I m ost women have a t least three
I husbands ut one tim e.
A wife may dism iss a husband
whenever she feels like it, and this
brands him as a social outcast.
MAKING DEMOCRACY WORK
D E P A R T M E N T : The V i r g i n i a
Press association is b rin g in g tw o
French jo u rn a lis ts here fo r a three-
m onth to u r to get acquainted w ith
the U nited States. Charles Sans and
G ira rd d 'O rg e v illc are the w o rkin g
newsmen who w ill m ake the trip .
C re d it Miss Daphne D ailey, e d ito r
o f the B ow ling Green C aroline P ro g
ress. w ith the idea. . . . The A m e ri
can fie ld service, having done a
g reat jo b as volu n te e r am bulance I
d riv e rs d u rin g the w ar, has taken
on a peacetim e Job— sending A m e ri
can students to study abroad w ith
a re cip ro ca l arra n g em e n t fo r fo r
eign students to study in the USA.
. . . Upon the death of H a ro ld D.
S m ith, ex-budget d ire c to r and a
g reat public servant, his fa m ily
asked that frie n d s not send flowors,
but donate the money to c a n c e r’ re
search. There are now 180,000
deaths ann u a lly in the USA fro m
cancer, yet its o rig in and cure are
s till unknown. . . . The B ro n x v e t
era n s’ hospital is b u ild in g a sw im
m in g pool dedicated to the fo u r
chaplains — P rotestant,
Jew ish,
C a th o lic — who gave th e ir life b e lts
to soldiers on the sinking tra n sp o rt
D orchester and w ent down p ra y in g
th a t there m ig h t be m ore good w ill
am ong men. The fo u r chaphiins
w ere F a th e r John P. W ashington of
N ew ark, N. J., R abbi A lexander
Goode of Y o rk, Pa., the Rev.
George L . Fox o f C am bridge, Vt.,
and the Rev. C la rk V. P o lin g of
Schenectady, N. Y.
• • •
T A X IN G
HO LLYW O O D
I t h a sn 't been o ffic ia lly announced
but the tre a su ry d e p a rtm e n t is a ll
set to co lle ct several m illio n d o lla rs
fro m H ollyw ood stars and film exec
utives who cleaned up huge sums
by paying c a p ita l gains taxes ra th
e r than incom e taxes on p ictu re
profits.
W hat happened was th a t when
Incom e taxes zoomed, the film
people h it on the idea of organ
izin g separate co rporations fo r
single p ictu re s. Then a fte r each
film was produced they liq u i
dated the co rp o ra tion s and paid
a ca p ita l gains ta x of 25 per
cent instead of a personal In
com e ta x of 80 to 90 per cent.
One of the sin g le -p ictu re men was
p roducer Sam G oldw yn, who last
fa ll learned th a t the tre a su ry in
tended to co lle ct the difference be
tween the incom e and the ca p ita l
gains rates. G oldw yn announced
th a t he w ould go in to co u rt to up
hold his rig h t to pay at the low er
rate. F o llo w in g th is i t looked like
The greatest decreases in oats are
the tre a su ry had backed down.
shown in the N o rth e rn P lains states,
H ow ever, the tre a su ry now has
M innesota and Texas, w ith s m a lle r
ironed out a ll the legal kinks and
decreases in M ichigan, Ohio and
b ills fo r back taxes now are going
New Y o rk.
out fro m the Los Angeles office of
In the N o rth C e n tra l states, the the bureau of in te rn a l revenue.
m a in b a rle y producing area, the
H ollyw ood d ru g stores w ill do a
acreage is expected to increase 3 boom ing business in aspirin.
p e r cent. W heat has tended to re
0 •
•
place b a rle y in the Southwest and
M E R R Y -G O -R O U N D
the southern p a rt of the C orn belt.
A d m . E rn e st K in g , re tire d com
Sharp flaxseed acreage Increases m ander o f the fleet, is w ritin g his
are in d ica ted fo r a ll the Im p o rta n t m e m o irs in " F ro m A rg e n tia to
p ro d u cin g states. In the N o rth Cen P otsdam .” A rg e n tia is the N ew
tr a l area, w here 85 per cent o f the foundland base o ff w hich the A tla n
1946 crop was produced, fa rm e rs In tic C h a rte r was w ritte n . Economy-
tend to p la n t 71 per cent m ore flax m inded R epublicans m ig h t check
than la st year.
in to how m uch naval personnel
Acreage increases in soybeans are
expected in a ll im p o rta n t pro d u cin g
areas. L a rg e s t Increases are re p o rt
ed in states and local areas where
soybeans are grow n m a in ly to be
harvested fo r beans
puWtheTrl99eL®
Lazy Inna"»5
D E M O C R A C Y AT WORK
L arge C rop A creage P r e d ic te d
W A SH IN G TO N .—O p tim is tic over
soil conditions and im p ro ve m e n ts in
the fa rm la b o r and m a c h in e ry s itu a
tion, fa rm e rs are p la n nin g the la rg
est acreage o f crops th is ye a r since
the w a rtim e peak in 1944, the cro p
re p o rtin g board o f the d e p a rtm e n t of
a g ric u ltu re reports.
I f fa vo ra b le w eather p re v a ils d u r
ing the g ro w in g season, recent re c
ord pro d u ctio n of m a n y im p o rta n t
crops is expected to be broken this
year.
A lthough s lig h t decreases are ex
pected in acreages of w heat, corn
and potatoes, h ig h e r acreages are
in d ica ted fo r soybeans, sugar beets,
beans, peas and o th e r crops, the
crop re p o rtin g board says.
The aggregate acreage o f crops
now planned w ould exceed the a cre
age o f la st ye a r by 2,300,000 acres
and th a t o f 1945 by n e a rly 1,000,000
acres. I t w ould, how ever, be 7,400,-
quu
HAT type of exercise is help
ful in slimming the waist und
midriff? The m ain thing is to get
those lazy muscles working uguin,
so concentrate on brisk stretching
j or twisting exercises.
K ilg o re 's b ill was passed by the
senate last ye a r, despite the open
opposition o f the N ational Associa
organizing pressure cam paigns fo r tion o f M a n u fa ctu re rs, w hich wanted
some cause fa vo ra b le to le ftism .
its m em bers to p ro fit fro m govern
Since 1935, they have been espe ment-endowed research.
c ia lly active in the m ovie in d u stry.
H owever, the N A M did succeed
Hoover said. In a d d ition to try in g
in b o ttlin g up the K ilg o re b ill in the
to take over H ollyw ood unions, they
house and now is try in g to su b sti
have sought to get a foothold in the
tute the big business-authored M ills
w ritin g and p ro d u ctive ends o f the
b ill in its stead.
business.
• • •
I
REDS:
Threat to America
M ore so perhaps than before, e te r
nal vig ila n ce is the p rice o f fre e
dom. F B I D ire c to r J. E d g a r Hoover
w arned the nation in d e scrib in g the
C om m unist th re a t to the A m e rica n
fo rm o f governm ent.
A ddressing the house un-A m e rica n
a c tiv itie s co m m itte e , H oover de
clared th a t the Reds in this co u n try
constitute a s m a ll but closely k n it
group seeking to o v e rth ro w our de
m o cra cy and substitute an iro n -cla d
d ic ta to rs h ip denying the p rin cip le s o f
re lig io u s w orship, p o litic a l freedom
and econom ic o p p o rtu n ity. He p o in t
ed out "that only 25,000 Reds w orked
the Russian re vo lu tio n in 1917 and
th e re is a la rg e r p ro p o rtio n o f C om
m u n ists at present in the U. S.
H oover called fo r relentless prose
cution of the Reds found v io la tin g
the laws of th is country.
P u ttin g
A m e rica n s on th e ir guard, he said
the Reds w ere unceasing in th e ir
te r companies who wanted the area efforts to su b ve rt la b o r unions;
kept in w ilderness so as to conserve spread C om m unist d octrines in the
its watershed values fo r orange schools, and prey upon foreign lan
grow ers down the va lle y. In be guage groups.
tween were the hikers, the sports
Besides
in filtra tin g
established
men. w om en's clubs, n a ture lovers, ra d io channels, they also are try in g
n a tu ra l science groups (the area to set up outlets o f th e ir own. Under
has six fo rm s o f p la n t life th a t grow d ire c tio n o f p a rty leaders, they are
nowhere else) and c iv ic clubs.
p ro lific le tte r w rite rs and e xp e rt at
Then there were the le tte rs p o u r
in g in fro m a ll p a rts of the co u n try
—so m any th a t the F o re st Service
both in its C a lifo rn ia office and in
W ashington had to re s o rt to the
m im eograph m achines to answer
them . The le tte rs voted o ve rw h e lm
in g ly against c iv iliz in g the area via
ski-tows and hotels. Now it's up to
Watts.
“ We th in k now th a t the p rim itiv e
area w ill su re ly be p re se rve d,” says
H ow ard Zahniser, e d ito r of the
m agazine,
“ The L iv in g
W ild e r
ness,” “ and w ith a v ic to ry in th is
issue we shall c e rta in ly be a ll the
b e tte r able to m u ste r support fo r
the Forest S ervice in g u a rd in g other
threatened areas in our n a tio n a l
w ilderness system . B ut we have no
q u a rre l w ith skiin g . We w ant to see
it develop fu rth e r. We hope th a t San
G orgonio w ill become even m ore
a ttra c tiv e
fo r w ilderness s k iin g
than it is .”
• • •
Leaping in fro n t o f ra ilro a d tra in s
was the fa v o rite fo rm o f suicide in
Japan last ye a r. W hat, no h a ri-k iri?
• • •
‘ G R A N D M A S AR G E ’ . . . Prob
a b ly the only gra n d m oth e r in the
C onsidering poor It a ly ’ s troubles,
U . S. Women’s a rm y corps In
she isn’ t lu c k y h a vin g to take back
Japan, M rs. M innie B a rb e r, who
“ L u c k y ” Luciano.
• e •
holds the ra n k of sergeant, has
e ig h t g ra n d ch ild re n , a son and
There was n e ve r a good w a r nor
tw o daughters. Sgt. B a rb e r Is a
a bad peace, said F ra n k lin , but un
mess checker at the M itsubishi
fo rtu n a te ly i t ’ s not a case of the
m a in b u ild in g in Tokyo.
worse the w ar, the b e tte r the peace.
!|GURE|
B E D F E L L O W 'S
It's not m a kin g the fro n t pages,
but sig n ifica n t hearings are being
held before the house in te rsta te and
fo re ig n com m erce com m ittee fo r
e stablishm ent of a national science
foundation. In vie w of fra n tic a to m
ic e xperim ents abroad, these are
Im p o rta n t.
O rig in a to r of the science-founda
tio n Idea i p ro vid in g federal funds
fo r research) was West V irg in ia 's
able senator, H a rle y K ilg o re . His
b ill, w hich set up a board o f nine
men appointed by the P resident and
confirm ed by
the senate,
was
backed by the W hite House und
m any scientists. Key to the K ilg o re
b ill was the p ro visio n that u ll d is
coveries made through the use of
fe d e ra l funds be mode a va ila b le to
the public.
H owever, the b ill now before the
house in te rsta te and foreign co m
m erce co m m itte e , introduced by
re a c tio n a ry Congressman W ilb u r
M ills of Arkansas, is ca re fu lly
angled in another dire ctio n .
K in g is using to help author the
book. . . . “ S oldiers’ A lb u m ,” a
g re a t p ictu re -re co rd of the w ar, has
been published by Col. E rn e st Du-
puy, a p u b lic re la tio n s officer. Co
a u th o r is L t, Col. H e rb e rt Brcgstein.
WHEN CONSTIPATION makes you feel
punk as the dickeni, bringi on stomach
upset, eour taste, gassy discomfort,
take D r. Caldwell’s famous medicine
to quickly pull the trigger on lazy “ In
nards” and help you feel bright and
chipper again.
DR. CALDWELL’« is the wonderful sen
na laxative contained in good old Syrup
Pepsin to make it so easy to take.
MANY DOCTOR« use pepsin prepara
tions in prescriptions to make the medi
cine more palatable and agreeable to
take. So be sure your laxative is con
tained in Syrup Pepsin.
INSIST ON OR. CALDWELL’«— the fa
vorite of millions for 50 vears, and feel
that wholesome relief from constipa
tion. Even finicky children love IL
CAUTION i Dee only as directed.
DR. (WEIL'S
SENNA LAXATIVE
e o N T A iN to im
syrup pepsin
EHSV-OII
/ f
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I h ilrib u ln r I n q u in n Invited
Gas on Stomach
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When exeesa «to roach arid causae painful, suffocat
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KILLS RATS & M IC E
New, «maxing, effective ANTU blended in
a ready-mixed bait rata can*t resist! Rela
tively safe for humane, peta. Dry form —
ready to use.
If not available at your dealers, aend $1.00
to Walsh Laboratories, 525 W. 76th Street,
Chicago 20, 111., for full-sixe box Rodan and
free copy of "Rat Facta in America.”
R O D A IN
WNU—13
15—47
✓—HOF—
FLASHES?
Women In your ” 40’a"l I___ ____
fun ctio nal ’middle-age’ period pecul
la
women
cause you
— - r to r »
v » M W * 4 xzsakaoxj
>u to
w
to
suffei
vaa
av a u hot
u v
Her
flashes, nervous, hlghstrung, weak,
tired feelings? Then do try Lydia B.
Plnkham 's Vegetable Compound to
relieve euch symptoms. I t s /am out
fo r thia purpose I
Taken regularly—Plnkham 's Com
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against euch distress. Thousands have
reported benefit I Also a very effective
stomachici tonto. W orth trying I
mui.mmuirsxss^i