Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 19, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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MKDFOTtTL. XlTCFlOy? TUESDAY, MAY 19. 192."
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PXOE FOUR
MWTMWtftT MA ft, TTtTTUTNTC.
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tfKDFORD.MAIL TRIBUNE
AM INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER
rOBUSBEJ) EVKRY AFTEItNOOH BXOBP1
SUNDAY. BY THE
VEDFORD PR1NTINO CO.
Th MJford Sunday Morning Sun It fnrnlahrd
Offlee: Mnll Trlbant Building, II 17-10
Horth Plr trrt Ptiune 76.
A canulldation of the nmvnirie TtqriM, thr
IMforU Moll, the W.'dford TrlbuM, tht South
ftt Ortffonian, Uta Attilund Trlbunt.
RORKKT W. RUHb, Editor.
8. HUM PTE R 8UITII, UuiivgrT.
By Mail In Ad vine:
, Pilj, with Kundajr Sun, jcar ....
' Pll with Hurt-lay Hun, month ...
Dftll. without Muiiduy Sun. year . .
Ufiij, wttLout Hunday Sun, mouth
..?7.60(
. .to
,. 0.60
DilLr. wtuotit Nuiidio- aim. mouth .oo
W4Alr fclafl Trlbunt. oil year 1.00
6imJ? Huti, one year 1.00
Y CAKR1KR In lledford, Aahlund, Jaekaan
ftlU. Crtitral Point. Phoenlz, Talent and on
Hiatwaji;
I)y, with Sunday Sun, month $ .76
Miiy, wnuemi nujiany nun, omnia do
Mf, wiuioui nuiuiaj nun, one year... .pu
in IJy. with Hunduy Hun. one year 0.60
ill term by carrier, caah in advauc.
PACING EACH OTHER.
toUred aa aerond-cUia matter at Medford.
Qrftm. under act of March 0, 1B7U.
r- - ' " '
p(ftcU) paper of the City ol Mi-dford.
Officio I puper of Juckaon Ccwty,
MKVHKRH Of TOR AnmmnvrKm IflRHfl,
Jttte AawH-'lated Preaa la eicluulvely entitled
o the uae for republication of ell newa die
ti4it credited to It or not otherwise credited
laJi paper, anu aiao lo uie local uewi uuo
AD right of republication of special dl
lvtie Herein are aiao rewired.
T '" "
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Ferry.
,? It Is hoped the olltlclanR now
polluting our Institutions of higher
(wwiiing ny their complicated couniV'
il)g, will got the Job finished in time
to dPftocrate the churches Tor tho
campaign.
" , From tho looks of things, tho Lord
failel to put the female eyebrow In
(hp proper plucu, and accordingly, in
jM'fiiff moved up on higher ground.
THE RETORT COl'RTKOrS
' (I'orlJain! Telegram)
C. P Werner advortlnes ho will
tint h rfmnonHlliln fm mv hlllu.
P'. Since I am not incurring any bills
o notice 1h superfluous and In
reply suggost that no one need
runt him on my account. Mrs.
;ieunor Werner.
Sing In liack from China, anil
fit ; tlte waHhbonrd. There he wont
When the moon was in tho rod. The
COW'fn the pasture chokes on Die
weeds hy .the fond, Ho wild Confu
cius. : Confucius was rltfht.
"A" Is for adenoid, tho calibngo that
: . HTOWH ,
In sickly young children, JllHt bnck of
i ' the noHe.
"H'' Is for bacillus, a bug that will
' hue
l.lttle oafs who refuse to liriiHh teeth
cvoiy night. (Time.)
; Kotch'tulled woodpeckers upstate
sre dying unexpectedly from unknown
onuses.' They havo heard Homebody
call them by their scientific nume.
Mlstuh 0. Maddox, tho eminent
nhlnologlst and Methodist Is petulant.
Tho po'k chops aro coming with great
frequency, and ho has u pulr of Sun
- duy shoes.
Next to Fatcoo Arbucklo and his
wide (laving slmllnr "tastes In litera
ture," Miss Abblo Rockefeller and her
groont, (whatever his name Is) being
thrifty, on their honeymoon Is the
Wost engrossing. The first named
have ho reason to be literary, and the
seoond named no reason to ho thrifty.
' WARNING: Unless tho three (3)
Oalshevlkls apprehended Hmoklng
cigarettes In the city park, ,M outlay
evening, Muy 18, explain how they
Kcratched the mutch, publicity will be
given their names.
1 N, n.: KAMCM KKroltMKltS
' i a (KniiHas City Kiar)
INDIANAl'OLIS, May 14. Rlu
dents of Hutler college here must
either curry a third person as n
chapman or abandon for all
time the Kord coupe as an eco
nomical means of travel to and
froin ' dunces, house parlies and
on the streets of ImllnnupoliH.
Several Oregon towns Hint used to
think burning a fiery cross on a Hill -eldo,
vucuum cleaned their corporate
limits, are now buttling over piling
wood on tho sidewalk, and the uso of
Main street as a ruugo for family
cows.
WIIKN KMC1ITS WIOltK HOl.11
The knight errant gent was courage
ous and bold,
Kxceudingly gallant, they say:
And rode all around in a bessemer
sult
In search for somebody lo slay:
llo lookod like a furnace, the kind
without pipes,
And rattled around like n I. Is,
And siiuinted thruugh silts In a big
Coffee pot
That hid his remarkable phiz.
But how In the world did a knight
scratch his buck,
Oh, how did a knight scratch his
hack?
Imagine tho way he would .squirm
and would twitch
Whenever his shoulder-blades started
to Itch
And yell for a plumber to come and
unhitch
the furnace ho wore on his buck!
Mosqultoen held nothing of terror for
him,
This gallant egg-stove of n man:
They weren't equipped with acetylene
tanks
-To burn oua hole In the can.
But, gosh! there were dogs anil where
there nre such
You're mighty dam sure to find
fleas
And think of n gent with some ci li
ters like that
' Inside of his tin B. V. D.'s! '
' v (Baltimore Sun.)
VtMIE nll-Kimsas mimic contest held'annually in Emporia is a
X combined contest, iri'and festival and music teachers' confer
ence all in one. More than 2000 pupils from 70 hiish schools tro
to teacher's collene for several days of playing and singing and
listening to good music.
A typical day's program includes ipiartet events and boys' and
girls' glee club events in the morning, -a judges and supervisors'
conference about noon, choruses and glee clubs in the afternoon,
a music and memory contest at 4 o'clock and a fine presentation of
Mendelssohn's "Elijah" in the evening by a trained adult chorus.
On other days there are piano solos-and duets, cornet and trom
bone playing and so on through the various musical instruments
and musical accomplishments suitable for high school age children.
"Not to win a prize or to defeat an opponent, but to pace eacb
( .-flier on the road to excellence," is the motto of the annual con
test, which is already of several years' standing.
With such a mnlto, the spirit, of good sportsmanship, of sincere
interest and of music appreciation is bound to thrive. Many of the
contestants come year after year without any expectation of gain
ing prizes, but because they like music and experience general
benefit from the contest. , .
It is a splendid project, for n state geographically located far
fi'om the great musical centers, lint love of the beautiful in music
or anything else knows no geographic limitations.
QUILL POINTS
Itoldly by bombs Bulgars boost brotherhood.
Iminoijesty in dress exposure in excess of tile average, which
will soon be impossible.
Americanism: Yelling for free speech; refusing to listen to
the other side.
Inferiority complex: Reing rude lo show that you're just as
good as anybody.
It might be worse. Nobody bus called this wliite-inule era of
fusel oil the fuselage.
No married woman is childless. If she hasn't a baby, she makes
one of her husband.
OROSSAWRD PUZZLE STORi
HOW MUCH DO YOU WEIGH?,
Little Alice is 2-5-7-9-11-13-17-20
hepclf on a weighing machine.
Iter teacher told her 7-8 was al
ways ise for 1012-1S-I8-21-22J
25-29 to be weighed every week
or 16-19 for then one can tell
whether to 3-6-8 more food or 29-30-31
to cat so much.
1-4 school Alice is 23-28 no
means bright for she has 23-24-25-26
in the same class for two
years.
27-28 Ma says 26-30 doubt Alice
doesn't eat the right food and
rest enough. Ma says one should
not drink 4;5-6 until one is grown
up.
Our dog Fidp stands in 1-2-3
of our cat, Maltie. Fido loved to
walk among the 13-14-15-16 at the
foot of the lot, but 18191 when
Maltie drove him out FiJa
changed his mind I
Answer To Last Puzzle '
1-5-9-15-1 8-21 (tennis), 1-2-3 (two), 3 7-11 (one), 8-9-10-11-12 (Inner).
21-26-28 (not), 1217-20 (run), 2-6-10-16 (went), 4-5-6-7 (seen), 25 -26-27
(son), 23-26 (is), 21-22 (so), 13-14-15M6 (isn't), 4-814 (sis), 19-20 (on).
23-24 (in).
Copyright, 20SS, by The International Syndicate - '-' '
1,1 L I .
Personal Health Service
By WILLIAM BRADY. M. D-
Blgnd letter partalnini to paraonat health ano hygiana. not to 4laaaa flafnoela or
traatmant, will ba anawarad by Dr. Brady If a tamped, aalf addretted envelope li ancloaed.
Lattara ahould be brief and written In Ink. Owing to the laroe number of lattara reealvad, only
" miiwiwu nmiw, no rwuiy ww aw dmdi V wane HOI OOnrarBtin U IIMUUOt lOM
Addreet Dr. Willi Brady, lr ri of Ihla newepape.
Wulk uiid Sitvo Your Iife.
Corroct this sentence: "It's 'neen driven only in town,' said
tlie dealer, "and by an old man who never went over twenty an
The Greatest of Modern Migrations
Hakhttarl trlhCHnion, nMn In revolt
iiKnlnHt tlie Persian government, pro
vide a mortorn dirololypo of the niaroh
of tho Children of iHraol out of the
wlltlurtH-HH, uncord I iik to a lmlletln
from WaHhliiRton, D. C. hendnuartera
of the National Geographic Bociety.
"Only In the cam of tho rtnkhtlarln,
who live In the'vlld west' of PerHla,
their pIlprlmaRe In nccompliriheri every
six nioutlifl, and tho trail traverses
nnov covered mountains, Icy HtronniH,
and other obstacles aloiiK what has
een callod tho 'wickedest 200 miles In
all tho world.' -s
'I I Hinder of Half a Million Tloonf
"Along with 50,000 of the men, wo
men and children on their semi-annual
Oilessey go some half a million cattle.
The trlhesmen llvo on tho cattle nnd
he cattle live on grass. Only during
he winter months Is there grazing on
he scorching littoral of tho Perslal
lulf: and only In the summer months
is thoro grass on the plateau country
ifiek of tho Tinkhtlnii mountain range,
lence people and cattlo have to move
with tho seasons.
'Who mho Itakhtlarls knock down
holr hlack and ornngo and white
ents to go In search of grass they pile
neir household effects on tho backs of
heir animals, and atop these cargoes
I'ldo tho lnmliH, tho calves and tho
'hiekons. The women strap to their
hacks their crude wooden crades, In
which the yenrry their babies and I
heir hushands'gpuns.
(oiiIh Decline, lo Swim.
"If an ohsorver would get the epic
luality of tills mammoth migration ho
should station himself beside a stream
one of the torrential, Icy cold incuin-
aln rivers. First the tribesmen make
afts underlaid with Inflniorl unnf
kins and on Ihese (hey entrust women I
and children, tho younger animals and
their meager household effects. Then
I hoy drive their horses, cows and sheep
Into! the swirling stream. The goats
alone refuse to swim and, perhaps in
return for the use of their dead com
rades' skins, cross on the rafts.
"Tho roar of the falls above, the
screeching of animals, tho cries of the
dying beasts cnught in whirlpools, and
the yelling of the men go to make up
a din that Is weird and unparalled.
Finally the men themselves take the
Icy plunge. This scene Is not a matter
of hours, hut of days, and the cross
ing 1b continued through the moon
light nights.
OnHH Snow Trail lit Hiiro Feet.
"Tho next high light of the trip
conies with tho mountains where men
and women discard shoes and break
trails through snow filled ravines and
along Icy passes, over higher and
higher, until, when the summit Is
reached, the weaker humans and ani
mals have boon left blooding, freezing
and starving on tho steep trails. A
panorama of the serpentine lino,
twisting and twining from tho valley
below as far as tho eye can see, is one
of tho most ploturesriuo spectacles of
human geography. Tho climax of the
mountain climbing comos with the
ascont of the giaAt and soemlngly in
accessible Zardch Kuh, Boino 12,000
feet high.
'The Jiakhtiarls do not bow to
Teheran; they continually aro at war
with tho Lurs and other neighboring
tribesmen. They are ruled hy tribal
chieftains. Their niw value women
lightly, using them as beasts of bur
den, nnd pay slight attention to their
daughters. Their sons they teach to
shoot nnd swim and rido by tho time
they are nine or ten years old.
Heally big buslnoss men and women several years and find them the best
RipplinRhi)mGs
EXAGGERATION.
- The t'Afnit are over until the next
rutting of alfalfa, and the coming of
the 2nd loots. (
TJ UNKTCWN boosters, in their ardor, sometimes knoek the
truth askew, and this sort of thing comes harder (jn the
town than knoeks would do. I have evermore insisted that no
falsehoods he oxprest; I have wotted, I have wisted, that tho
truth is always best. Punktown's merits are so striking she is
sure to gain renown; let tlie pikers do their piking in some
less deserving town, Came a stranger to our city, nnd his given
name was James, and his story roused the pity of nil delegates
and dames. He had lost his costly dwelling in n distant, wind
swept clime, where tornadoes come up yelling, pulling stunts
which are a crime, "Now I wish tolwell forever," he remark
ed, with fallihg tear, vliere no cyclones come to sever all the
ties n man holds dear. "Where a man won't see his stables blow
the gables from the north end of his shack.' And the boosters
cried, "Oh stranger, if in Pulldown you abide, you will never
he in danger, here no cyclones are supplied. Only balmy breezes
fan us in this calm, sequestered vJe, and no tempest ever ran
us, we have never seen a gale." So the stranger bright a
shanty just beyond llir public square, ami he settled with his
auntie in a calm contentment there. And he just was nicely set
tled when n windstorm came along; it was rude and highly met
tled, it was truculent and strong. And it tore his shack to
slivers and it blew nwtf? hisfjat, and he's using ink in rivers
tcllimr all tlie world of that.
take time to play, cost what It may,
The little follow can't see it that way.
The best doctors give a lot of time
to study, being great roadors of the
current medical literature, attendants
graduate 1 n s 1 1 1 p
at medical socloty
meetings and visitors
in clinics and post
tlons. The little fel
low Is- too busy to
squander any time
jSSQ& Now, then, how Is
ijr "your blood pressure?
t Ma' ') Well, nnywny, listen
to this striking ob
servation mad hy Drl Henry K. Mohler
in n study of hypertension and hyper
glycemia in n series of forty-six cases:
"Forty-five of the forty-six patients,
when they camo' under our observa
tion, ranged from I per cent to 60 per
cent overweight." ,
The forty-six patients had not only
high blood pressure but also too
much sfignr In thd blood. All had
some sugar in the urine, but in only
16 was tho condition considered fully
developed diabetes. -Twelve had al
bumin and hyaline casts in the urine,
and four showed albumin with hyaline
and granular casts. These casts pret
ty certainly Indicate nephritis,
llrlght's disease. "
Tho high blood pressure In these 46
patients was not due to too much
sugar In 'the blood and is not a con
stant finding In diabetes. Just what
Iclid It mean, tnen? Br. Mohler doesn't
speak with too much conviction about
that, but ho conveys a good hint when
he says: "These patients were in
formed by us of the dangers of obes
ity nnd overentlng, with the attendant
results of hypertension and glycos
uria, and advised to commit their
physicians, that their diets might bo
regulated." (Hypertension is another
term for high blood pressure, and
glycosuria means sugar glucose in
the urine.)
To nof tho 46 bad risks had no
symptoms. They would count them
selves well. That Is because folks
don't know what health means, and
don't seo tho wisdom of running to a
doctor until they get so sjck they
can't run at all. I'll wager my job
against some honest work that tho 10
bad risks that had no symptoms could
not run a mllo In any time. A lot of
people who aro equally bad risks and
have no present symptoms ought to
know that a healthy adult not over 50
years of nge should be able to run o
mile nd lib., but don't know whether
they could do it, because It is such an
undignified thing to try. Imagine a
refined lady of considerable heft, or
a high tension gent, running along the
street to try this out why the cop at
the first corner would probably ar
rest tho nut as a suspicious character.
Dignity Is a deadly evil which tends to
grow on one. once you give It a start.
High blood pressure or hyperten
sion la often hut not always nn early
reaturo or cardiovascular degeneration
(hardening of the arteries, chronic ne
phritis, slow failure of the heart,
apoplexy.) Let that sink In. fat folks,
and then listen to another of Dr.
Mohlor's observations: "Obesity fre
quently favors the development of
sclerotic (that means degenerative)
changes In the body, which are capa
ble of producing an increase in tho
blood pressure and a diminished abil
ity of the body cells lo utilize carbohy
drate. Degenerative changes that
take plnce In the body, when affect
ing tho structures involved in carbohy
drate metabolism (that moans the util
ization of starches and sugars) of ne
cessity must impair their efficiency
and result in hyperglycemia (too much
sugar In the blood), and glycosuria
tgiucose m tho urine.)"
Hut don't he downhearted, fat folks.
I've got n nice spring tonic for you.
one which will purify your blood and
everything.
If you're a big one. this tic will
do you n lot of good. U you're a Ut
ile fellow, you can't afford it.
The remedy Is oxygcV
The average dose is two miles.
To be taken on the hoof.
For ordinary cases, three times a
day.
Ql-KSTIOXS .I AVMVKKS. j
(rand ma Rolls.
remedy for constipation that I have
ever tried. Thank you for tho idea. I
have passed it on to others, Including
a six months old grandchild who had
to bo dosed every night. But when
his paronts give him his regular som
ersaults his bowels move quite natur
ally. (P. F. S.)
Answer Grandma rolling her own
Is new thing, but the baby's experience
is unique. I do not advise the gen
eral adoption of somersaults by babies
so young, but when a baby is a year
old he might begin old ago Is pre
ventable If taken In time,
' Ijoucsomo .Too
I am 3 years old and would like to
marry and have at least three child
ren.. My Intended wife doesn't like
children and says she would never
have any. Yet I bellevo we love pach
other. What would you say, doctor?!
(Lonesome Joe.)
Answer Don't. Tied to a wife with
such views you would bo more lone
some than you are now, Joo. There
are plenty of girls of a more promis
ing disposition on the market why
pick a lemon?
Meniere's Disease
Please state the cause,, symptoms
and cure of, Meniere's disease (W.
T. W.)
Answer Deafness due to some dis
ease or Injury of the auditory nerve In
tho internal oar, associated with head
noises and severe seizures of vertigo,
is called Meniere's diseaso. There Is
no specific cause known, aside from
the lesion of the auditory nerve in the 1
labyrinth (Internal structure of the1
car.)
Titer wuz koiimi lively oommeiilln'
on tli' violent eartli tremors Umt hhook
our neighborhood last lUght, but only
a few ole ioplo were shocked. "1
wish a bus would meet a load o' luiy,
for tlita Inactivity Is glttfu' my goat,"
complained Constable IMuiil, I'duy.
Timejy Views
on World Topics
JUNIOK
CROSSWORD
FUZZLB
-m m- ISM;
e.
vtv.ue.iMii
Who's Who
Vlyssea S. Grant-Smith.
The new United Htatos minister to
Uruguay, Ulysses S. Grant-Smith, is
enjoying a short vacation at his home
In Washington, Pa., before sailing for
Montevideo early In June to assume
his new duties.
He has been In
tho JJnlted States
diplomatic . service
for twenty-two
years, and whs un
til recently minis
ter to Albania, be
i n s transferred
from that post to
South America.
Entering the dip
lomatic service in
1893, ten years af
t e r graduating
from Washington
and Jefferson col-
lnirp rii'ani.Qmllh
has represented tho United States In
eigni airrerent countries, his Uru
guayan post to .be his ninth. He was
uist second secretary at the United
iaies legation at Constantinople, Tur
key, to which post ho was appointed
on Moptembcr 8. 19(13. He has since
servco successively at aSntiago. Chile;
London, Fngland; Hrussels. Belgium:
lenna, Austria; Copenhagen. Den
mark; Budapest. Hungary, and Scu-
uin, Aioania.
Ornnt-Smlth was counselor to the
-Miierican embassy at Vienna whon
the United States severed diplomatic
relations with Austria upon entering
the World War. During the war he
was for a time, counselor to the le
gation at Copenhagen. Denmark, and
later charge d'affairs. After the war
Orant-Smlth was named United
States commissioner to Hungary and
he negotiated the treaty between
Hungary nnd the United States which
provided for resumption of dinlnmntio
relations, this being the last treaty of
the war.
Dean Scores Preachers Who Seek
Applause and Congregations Who
iivo It.
Applauso seeking by the pulpit was
set forth recently by Dean William
Ralph Inge of St. Paul's Cathedral,
London, as the crying evil of the mod
ern church. Dean Inge is now. In the
United States.
Modern tenden
cies of the pulpit to
please and not to
profit, he cited as
dangerous to the
Christian church
No detailed rules
for modern life are
found in either
testament, he said,
general principles
alone being given.
I'l-enching for
Applause
In his indictment
of the desire for
tnpplause on the
part of many min
isters. Dean Inge said: ,
There are ninny preachers who
make long sermons. If they are well
applauded they are as happy as if they
had obtained a- kingdom. If they
bring their sentiments to an end in si
lence, their despondency Is worse, I
may almost say, than hell. It is this
that ruins churches. That ye do not
seek to hear" sermons that touch the
heart but sermons that will delight
your ears with their Intonations, nnd
the structure of the phrases, just as
if you were listening to singers and
lute players. And we preachers hu
mor your fanlcea instead of trying to
crush them.
"We act like a father who gives a
sick child a cake or an ice cream or
something else that is merely nice to
eat just, because he asks for It and
takes no pains to give him what Is good
for him; and then, when the doctors
blame hlnvsays 'I could not bear to
mako my child cry.' That is what we
do when we elaborate henutiful sen
tences, fine combinations and hnr
monfes to please and not to profit to
be admired and not in Instruct- to de
light and not to teach you, to go away
with your applause In your ears and
not to better your conduct.
Indicts Himself
"Believe me, I am not spenking at
random. When you applaud me as I
speak I feol at the moment ns is nat
ural for a man to feol. I will make a
clean borast of It. Why should I not?
I am delighted and then, when I go
home, and I reflect that the people
Who havo been applauding me, have
received no benefit, and that, Indeed,
whatever benefit they might have had,
has been killed In the applause, I am
Kore at heart and I Inment and I feel
aB though I had spoken, altogether in
vain. And I say to myself, "What is
the good of all your labors, if your
hearers do not want to reap tho fruit
out of all you say?' "
HOW TO KOLVIS PUZZLE.
The w oids ;trt in the numbered
squares and run cither aeroHH or
Hruni riniv nnc U'ttff in niaeed In
each white square. If the proper
VOI'( IS ure lUUHU,, i-iirii wiiiuhimuuh
or letters In the white squares will
form words. The key to the mizido
the flrt word Is given In the
drawing. Below the keys to tho
olher words.
Kimning Across. ,-, . .
Word 1. In the picture, . - :
Word 4. To go Into. , v
Word 5. A high singing voice.-, i .
Hunninx Down. -Word
1. Oppoaite to sour. ;
Word 2. Frequently.
Word 3. A mistake.' Wo make
many of them in spelling, gram
mar, etc.
YESTERDAY'S PUZiLH
ANSWERED
Lift Off-No Pain!
IVMt mnivu KIDXEVS
hon thp ,T;dneVH nvo It. nA
koo.1 flushlnc tnke FOLK Y Plixs a
illliiTtir attniulnnt for (ho kidneys.
klilm-ya. Inrrrngp thHr nclH-i'ly
ine .aant i-. llcf. Ijin.lon Tnyli-r
rrhilstor. Inun u-rli... ! .'... '
fully say that KOI.KY PII.LS arc the
"Pat I fVW IIKP,1 1 hn.l t,- .
Iit.i? .h.n,y X'''1"--" nnd IK-cr: I
couldn't lift nnythlnc my hack yna so
weak. Kyry mnrnh-e I wa dlziy.
I hayo been turning BomergauU. for) fine.'. "s"0,d everywhere? D0W 1 "i
EVER I
If Ym
Do you ever see ilonblet
Does concent rating
upon print cause your
eyes to smart or burnt
Do you close them wear
ily after reading for
lialf an. hour or so?
Come to us and we will
furnish you with a pa:r
of glasses that will -jm-edy
the defect
Iloesnt hurt one bit I Drop a littls
IrccKinc on ap achinK corn, instantly
that corn stops hurtiiijr, then shortly
you lift it ripht off with' fingers.
Your drupRist Bells a tiny bottle, f
I reczone' for a few cents, sufficient to
remove every hard corn, soft corn, or
corn between (he toes, and the foot
calluses, without soreness or irritation.
Wong Pon
Chinese
Medicine
For Treatment of
Vcnte and chronic
Dlwaws of Men
nnd -Women.
Otflot Hourt: B A. M. to 8 P. M
Comultatlon FrM
fc"'"'v?!51"7:","-',i" rj.v.
'f 1
U comfort
5