PAGE FOUR
Medford Mail Tribune
DtUr to?
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MEPTOKD rEiXnSO CO.
IHT-ll K. nt. a
iturn w. i hu tmut
B. UlUTtl IM1TH.
Aa Iadapaadeat hara
bun aa tnond dan amur at laadfart,
fcttaa. antra art f Ma I. int.
subscription aura
Bj Htn In Adorn:
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in
a. rrw la liian-la UeraVa'. AJhlvat.
Mlytnir. rvttfnl Pwa. l"Daeux. Taieat. Ud j
Aui ard B HUMan: . j
ruJr. aila Baedaf. Bert !
Palir, atlboBl Bjeriar. aweta.
naiiy, auaaot Boadti, aot rear
Im'.j, wuk suodar. rtat.,.
All uras, eaia is arhana.
oaeial pap af iht City af Hedrard.
OSnal af Jadtiaa Caai.
11XMBEE Of THE ABSOCIATfD rM
ttaritac rod tai n Berrka
Tht Aswdaud hm b oriaaifaij antltkal to
tl h l pac;lralB at all am diapsulxa
ntiiut U It at irl o-rle la IhU aaaar,
and aba U uw Utal brat poWttbed bmla.
AU tusu far aatrllcauaa af a&ectal dxistttaei
htrtia ail aba Itaaned.
A-timlrtra: tntmeMnt
yaait or ai mi bukeaO
or ciErmno.x
A. S. C attract arcslataai far sti
iniini Him II. IJ.
tM Uuffa I. 120. vat 4121.
PallT aierale itiitraiuaa far ill
liana 11, 1530 Idi.
rmrat prtu naa. 475.
MEUKEX 0 THE CVTTEO rtXSl
at C MO0CNSE.S k COJIfAST
Orflrai .V Ytrt. Chlcara. DWstt, taa
truth. Las Aajaka. statu, ramaps
5aS"
Ye Smudge Pot
(By Arthur Pny)
A number of maids are vainly
endeavoring to get eight hours
sleep In three, and run with lads
who try to get to work on time by
leaving home before they start.
Scurrilous remarks are being
hurled at the state of the weather,
without any appreciable better
ment in the state of the weather.
DIRTIEST DIG OF THE WEEK
ijince grandma had her hair
bobbed she does not look like an
old lady In fact, she looks like an
old man. (Penn Punch Bowl.)
The Portland ball team sur
prised Itself and everybody else by
winning two games the same day.
This indicates the other teams of
the Coast league have at last
wearied of walloping them. -
The governor Is acting like a
mad Democrat, and almost desper
ate enough to reveal his Humdin
eerism by attempting to sing.
BRIGHTEST REMARK JO
YEARS AGO YESTERDAY
'There was a sprinkling of soldiers
and a downpour of 2nd ' loots In
the Memorial Day parade."
A Yale philosopher predicts ln
60, years there will bo no home-
lifo In America." The lalo philo
aopher is correct, except for a
miscalculation of approximately 60
years. - . -
Hostilities will be resumed thru
out the state against cigarettes,
tt ith a series of services which will
be known as tho tobaccalaureate
cervices. '
A mule kicked George Degref-
fenferled. who helps Johnny Ma
cuire with his farm work, breaking
his arm. A mule shouldn't kick
any man with so much name.-
(Hiawatha Banner.) A mule will
do anything, once.
The Horse Bromley Boys were
downtown yesterday with him. and
they will grow up and be hustlers
liko the Rosenberg Boys.
The Siberian bloodhound resid
ing In the 'Gold Hill area was In
our midst again yesterdiiy, looking
as despondent as of yore. Ho is
now the size of a calf, and appar
ently stronger In the legs, not leav
ing the Impression they are going
to buckle under him without
notice. When the creature barks,
he sounds like a music lover
coughing In the middle of a bari
tone solo all present are anxious
tu hear. The dogskl was taken
hoineakl In the backseatskl.
KI TH IS LIFE
j (Hlurftnn IlernkI)
: If tho cotton planter raises
cotton to get money to buy his
women folk silk hose who tho
deuce does he expert to wear
his cotton? Then he kicks
about tho price. The farmer
raises wheat to sell to get
money to buy bread that
comes from the bakery but
that's another question. Then
the doctor Is all the time ask
ing for more and better health
conditions, putting the state
and the country to a lot of
expense, to kill off his own
busine
- Your corr. owes Atty Gus New
bury one dollar ($1 1, us the result
of losing a fool election bet, and
It looks like we would have to
retain him as counsel to keep from
paying same.
"As you cook diced carrots you
can emphasise their flavor by
adding a dash of sugar" (Ad
This Paper.) If you want to
get -some real genuine emphasis,
try a dah of sugar the next time
you cook creosote.
A younc man has ridden i motor
rlr across the Sahara I9esrt, and
now that It ran be done, why not
I -t all the motor cycling be done
In the Kahara? (Kansas City
H.ar.) The ma kins of a mighty
fine Idea.
Fourteen thousand real estate
salesmen of southern California
have failed to qualify for perma
nent licensee under a new exam
ination l.w.
More sightseers from the United
Htates visited Czechoslovakia last
year than from any other country.
TROLLEYS STAGING COME-BACK
WHAT tlie street railway business of this i-ouiitry mel is a
complete emne-baek. There is probably less bot news in
this than in the statement that the come-back now seems immi
nent. Of all the romances of industry, nothim; can beat "the come
back." It provides as heroic ami and romantic a tale as the
come-back in boxing, or morals or knivht-errajitry. Take spin
ach. Five or ten years ago there was nolower or more ties'-!
business on
earth than the spinach business. Spinach was a
mki Anvhndv seen eatim; .spinach was undoubtedly a little
rpueer.
Hut look at spinach now! Advertised, ducted off, improved!
'ami beautified, it is served at the
prolouger of life. And the jri.e is almost dou!le.
Take liver. If a banker saw a man eating liver a few years
airo, he innnediaiely stopped his credit. Me miM be ready for
the l0"r house. Today livrr wears a crown of o!d ; and the
poor have to rat chicken.
Take prunes. Kive years ayo they were the hallmark of lif .
among the lowly. The failure, whether fruit or human, was "a
poor prune." JVople had grown up to believe the prune simply
illustrated a boarding house landlady's dreadful sense of hu
nir. Today the prune is advertised mi full paes in four colors,
is packed in fancy dut-proof, air-tiu'ht cartons, is eaten proudly
and with relish by dukes, debutantes and dunderheads, and
costs real money.
The street car is going to repeat the story of the prune. It
has to.
After havnii; been in the dumps for many years, tne electric
railway industry has started in to modernize its plant and equip
ment. It is replacing heavy, slow vehicles, with lifht, fast ve
hicles. .Street ears are being made more comfortable, and the
; service is being improved. Altogether, si'-'ns are beginning to
appear in many directions mat ine industry, oy some super
human effort, is lifting itself by its own bootstraps, and stagin"
a hcalthv come-back. Raymond S. Tompkins in Nation's Busi-
PRUNE GROWERS
EARLY in June men who dry Oregon prunes and sell them
will meet in Eugene. The session is called by the State Hor
ticultural Societv. The object is standardization.
Five recommendations have been made.
That one grade be established and that fruit not meeting the
grade be sold on sample.
That moisture content be not
than 23 per cent.
That the "Weigand flotation
turity.
That an advertising fund be created by a levy of $2 a ton.'
That a special advertising committee be composed of a rep
resentative from the co-operative prune associations, one from
the packers and a third not connected with either group but
preferably a banker, who could
Oregon apples need no California brand to market them as
Oregon prunes long have been
ardized.
Oregon wheat is sold around
of grades and standards.
Oregon potatoes, graded, are
quality for cooking and as to
planted.
Oregon butter is beginning
because of the confidence that
cream grading law that will assure returns to producers in ne
cordancc with quality.
Oregon prune growers have
tion but with organization and
an official source that they follow the experience of all success
ful industries rigidly standardize their product and sell it by
aid of modern merchandising. Portland Journal.
The 'Hiiekest way to destroy the hardy independence of a
people is to have n (roverninent that functions as Santa Clans.
Peace hath her victories. It
a man in war, and only one fool
Motor boats have one advantage. It's much plcasantcr to
swallow lake water than detour dust.
Sunshine saving seems popular only in sections where there
is plenty of moonshine.
''Idleness and vice, arc inseparable,
true of Vice-Presidents.
The decent and honorable sum a senator fan spend is the
sum required to elect the one who is expressing li is opinion
about it. .
MUTT AND JEFF
DECORATION fcrVY IS OUGR ANtt Tn FOURTH) WH.R UlCRfc. YOU DURING I '!
PATR.OTI SWEEPS 0fe MG AND r Trt.lo v;5.,, f . UiPPfl ( r S
E Af GUtf X ArA, ' I9I7? VCRe YOU IN J Don't CHrM6
" MEDJ'ORD MATL
finc,t talifcs and hailed as
TO ADVERTISE
less than 18 per cent or more
method be used to determine ma
act as treasurer.'
marketed. The apples are stand
.
the world on a federal system
bought with confidence as to
freedom from disea.se when
to command a greater market
the next legislature will pass a
had difficulty not with produc
sales. Hvrc is a proposal from
tnkjs a thousand bullets to kill
with nn empty pun in peace.
This seems especially
One Speaker at a Time
TRIBUNE, MEDFOTID,
Quill Points
Why not a red light at the
mil way crossing, the caah regis
ter and the speakeasy?
That'
one thing Americans will obey,
-
when you can
Why be a nobody
cet a reputation by the simple
expedient of keeping your mouth;
8nu' " 1
War In a blessed period when;
only a few don't care what be-;
comes of the country so lone as
they get theirs.
Man. a a man, really has
no rrrrtlotu. And any land
is m free la ml to the man
1ki erts a low bmv from tltc
trecciiine teller.
. If the boy despises his own fam
ily because they aren't like the
Smiths, don't worry. He will be
come a .Teat critic.
May lie thincs aren't
they seem. You will
u oaa as;
rememberj
that boys Were headed for jail lf
they read dime novels a few years
ago,
Americanism: A growing ten
dency to well, to use an air mail,
tn m r tn m nroit I a na rned -
icular letter.
Why Is there no statue of the
plow horse? Our great men are
those who did some Job of plow-
ins for us.
You can't expect much pre-'
pa red new in a land where people
think each new boom will last
forever.
If there Is no such thing aa
telepathy, why do comic strip
artists happen to steal the same
vaudeville Joke on the same day?
Commonplace things arouse
i merest w hen they arc Iiidden,
and that may explain nature's
Invention of whiskers.
A country has about reached
bottom when Its most decent slo
gan Is: "More and better Jails."
An onion smells that way only
when It Is near. That's .why -the
intellectual thinks America to Eu
rope. - ;
Xo wonder the sweaty workman
is cynical when he sees some guy
whose shady past won him &
shady present.
Correct this sentence: "Our fans
aren't yellow." said the club man
ager, "and tho crowds are Jtlst
as big when we're In a slump."
BEST HORSE SHOES
WASIIINCTON. May 31. UP)
Coming from behind Representa
tive Fred (i. Johnson of Nebraska
won the horseshoe tOMinK cham
pJonnhlp of the house of repre
sentatives yesterday from Repre
sentative Albert Vestal of Indiana.
21 to 20.
At one time Johnson was more
than 10 points behind, but a suc
cession of ringers brought him
victory.
JOSEPH REPRESENTS
SAI.KM. Ore.. May 31. 0P
fleorKe W. Joseph of ' Portland.
Republican nominee for governor,
will, at the request of Governor
Norblad. represent the governor at
a safely meeting called in Portland
for June 7.
The meeting will be a prelimi
nary one to make plans for a state
wide safety council to be held In
Portland or Salem during the 1931
legislative session. Ml
Springfield. Safety lanes for
pedestrians pointed on pavement at
Intersections on Main street be
tween Third and Sixth streets.
Is Too Much
vNHeRe ujtRfc. YOU
OKEfiOX. SATrKTUV,
Personal Health Service
By William Brady, M. D.
'r-d tattm atrtlteua? W aomfiaj waiin am
brief tiA rriilea la hot Oalnj la it Una auaaVer
i s mil oa t Bad. U gaantl BM al
iaanm itau Triton.
. . w
T11J- so.NG OP THE PKEWKE IS JfKAftD IIKI1K A X D THERE
. v. nf innsillntnmv i festive In manv cut, of enlarced
here retentlv we touched on some-1
,, the more Elarins abuses is thatidren
; field
of surgery and some of the!". Xeslect.
I haz-ird
T- ha nirtf.'ll-
ular article not!- j
Ins was saiu bears the label fc.lhical fnilos
about the surpical j ophy"' or some such name,
removal of tonsils j J have commended diathermv
by & competent ! extirfiation here as a happy alter
physician or spec- j nati'- for those adults who cal
ialist. Lou the j not or will not undergo tonsil
reader in fer that! leclomv. because I know that dia-
such an operation 1
is not necef.arv. !
... " ... "
.... -
xeven oiiierenL
courses i, choose from, in any case fectlon of, the lung,
of enlarged tonsils (with or with-j These hazards of surgical ton
out 'adenoids) or Infected (dis-r silleclomy are unpleasant to men
eaed tonsils, briefly as follows: tion. but It Is my duty to mention
1. Surgical removal under local i them in order to present the mat
This
known tonsillectomy,
T1 s - . h ati mti.n
.iTr trrPrf Utrr..nnaeulai
tion, electro-desiccation, or endo
thermy. This method in skilled
hands may require no anesthetic.
3. Radium emanation, known as
radon seed implantation. This
method brings-about slow shrink
age of lymphoid (tonsil or ade
noid) tissue, -but for some inscrut
able reason Is as yet little used.
4. X-ray treatments. This meth
od has given considerable satisfac
tion in some cases, though the
chance of x-ray burn, and certain
other accidental untoward effects,
makes many pjhyslciajng hesitate
to u.ie it.
5. Topical treatment, . that is,
chemical or medicinal applications I
to the tonsils or their crypts by
the physician in his office. This
method is preferred by not a few of
the best physicians who have had
much experience with such case.
6. Natural treatment a diet to
insure adequate vitamin A, expos
ure to ultraviolet light (preferably
.sunlight, but various lamps wheie
one can't afford stnshlne), an1
open air life. This method is ef-
MAIL TRIBUNE
DAILY CROSS-WORD PUZZLE
AC BOBS
1. One oppoied
to
t. Serpents
t. Hold bsck '
It. -No tired
IS Italian tolni
14. Js panel tash
Chief
It. Precedes la
data
15. Anarchl-ls
IS. Parts of
radios
Solution of Yesterday's Puzzt
nsiAiui ii.sL JK iiPisq
sit rMp HiinLTrgjr
p elArisiA nUr O DnT10T
R APP IR TUiRlBEjDplR E
A I L 0 P DJ ANA E B E M I A
G "ElNlRjEPl .AlNDSiPlSlE.Pi
llR'EITtAII ILIlTIOlPlEiRiSfl
UBiAil lft,tfsUSElgPjEiPy
IailIi In Ie ppieIt PD I V EtRI
fl. Railroad
signal
J. Mentally
soand
U. Liks
Si. Restrain
17. Cardinal
SI. Krenlnr
, Had the eoar- Business of
in I ml hi
. Also 4i, Wrflles
. Rim promise to pay
, Awaits u. compass point
46, Forward . Ensllsh town
41. SabMantlTS . nth Ileal city
it Tropical forest Ocean
lne Prnflia
4. Footless it. American
4. Mini coIIoq. social!!
ft o's'EPSjEiP AjLPN;Elft O
I o PPJE iT Ia' JJN I iTsPl V
AlhAPLlAiRrtplQiEPOPE
NiECTIARllsNjAiPiETR
P,Bl PPiE AlHlSf lgHEllpIl
meal
12 p 14 v S t 1 7 8 b; I? 0
"22 7 53 "
24 p5? HZ "27" zT 1f 3T"
Ti WH '34'35r
, ' 41 42 43 44
44 6b . Si S2 S3
during
MAY 31. W.
amrxw, ay. w iwcm. : ,
af IHUn rtantt lall i In oa bi ""V
laaaraojaaa. ana a.
BTiILaa BraU
tonsils and adenoiJa in young chtl-l'o
Thls method appeals,
tiMrhmon and nl!tne XeK
Kn?land Vankees if the pack'ase
thermy in competent hands is as j
effective as purcery in com
t j.. , i ,.-,i!
.. . .!
anesmeHia. utiu uuaL-vuciaiiic
ter fairly to readers for their own
best interest.
Surgical tonsillectomy, neverthe
less, is the best method of treat
ment in the majority of cases o'
enlarged or Infected tonsils i-i
young children, at least where x
ray treatment is not available or
not desired.
Here I remind lay and medici.1
readers of the findings of Welch.)
who studied 1.000 tonsils that haJ
been removed in a clinic or dis-j
pensary In a mid-western city, and!
found that 710 of them 111 )
had never been seriously affected.
I think Welch's figures fairly rep
resent the tonsillectomy scandal
as it was at the time he reported
his investigation (1927); and I
believe the ever-ready and whole
sale operators and the born spec
ialists have shown some inclina
tion toward conservatism since
then. Our campaign will continue
as long as the tonsillectomy scan
dal is tolerated by American medi
cine. In view of the poor showing of
radical sureerv the cry of "no
the e very-ready
good" raised by
operator when
prospective pati
a"-!
?nt speaks of diathermy extirp:
, Closed ear
9. Lore oter-
mark
IS. A sua of
Adam
II. Cnmarrlrd
woman's title
IT. Afrrta
13. Aet
II. DfktlDT
PI ti. Employed
tx. fc.Brnpean finch
St. Make Into a
tahle
. And: Preach
. Shortly i '
SO. Mi. If ii I -
OttDtl
S3. Sjmiiot for '
surer
31. Take oat
37. Within: comb
form 19. Transgressed
dlrlni law
42. Made of a
certain cereal
41. Kxplute
46. Iniltale
4S. LantBlsh
47. lienas of tht
olive tree
43. Anrlent
Roman clan
It. Obtained
;j. Label -IZ.
Type sqnares
no w.n
1. Kind of tres
S. Hum
3. Witmnn's
weapon
4. EipreftMon of
Ineredallty
(. EariDan
moaniatns
4. Knlchl's tills
7. SJada ready
,tioo. m with bad srace J.o
iiml!isni physician no know.
what h W Ulkins about can afford
: to beliltle diathermy treatment.
' Instead of .inging tht sons lh
nu.aro. In the nc.se and throat
field would better study the new
method and try serve patterns
who should have it.
QI ESTIOXS AND ANSWERS
J-urnicr Followers Will Bo
Polurlitcd.
Several years aso. when I wrote
cm. about my health you as-
you about my
j sured me there was no such thins
as rBcumatifm.
I suppose you
others the same
'"'t iuiu ni.j
ihins. for I have noticed comments
by some reader and have nean
people speak of your neat way of
evading such inquiries. It was
therefore a delipht to me to pick
up the paper today and glance
ovv rour allied health column
i. .kl... Y twi!ifr With aflV
more)
to learn that you yourseii;
unneteDl'.have recently had a little rheumu
iinus theism in your knee and shoulder. I
am curious to see how you
dottz. such Questions now. I. i.
-
Answer. We shall see. I never
dod?e a question till I come to It.
I don't mind telling you how I
dodsed the rheumatism though. I
assimilated more vitamins (in the
Protective Corrective Regimcc
which I am glad to send any of the
older boys or girls) and a bit more
sunshine. So here I am as cheerful
as ever,- assuring you there is no
such disease, ailment or condition
as rheumatism. Perhaps I should
add that I have never neglected my
iodin ration these many years
that may have something to d
iih both recoveries.
What to Do for Nosebleed.
Please tell me how to deal with
nosebleed, especially where it is
a repeated occurrence and consid
erable blood is lost. R. .J.
Answer. In ordinary nosebleed
the person should sit leaning for
ward slightly, head bent forward
moderately, and hold both nostrils
closed between his thumb and fin
ger and breathe through the mouth
until the bleeding stops. Then he
should avoid blowing the nose un
til an hoar has passed. Anything
cold on the back of the neck tends
to stop nosebleed. Where the bleed,
ine is frequent, the physician
I should be visited, and the bleeding
j Pinl usually on the septum with
in the nose, found and cauterized.
lodisin and Coryza.
j I have been usin? Iodide of pot
( ash lately I was told it was good
i for goiter. But I notice I do a lot
: of sneezing and my nose runs like
; T was taking cold . . . Mrs. S. L.
; T.
Answer. Too much Iodin in
i any form will p r od u c e coryza
symptoms In some persons. Yoi
had better ask your doctor's advice
about it. '-
Droits for Red Lips.
Please tell me .something I can
uso to improve red lips and weak.
eyes. A. G.
Answer. I assume "weak eye
means red or congested eyes. Drop
i noach; eye each morning a drop
of this solution:
Boric acid 10 grains
Zinc sulphate 2 grains
Distilled water 1 ounco
(Copyright John F. Dille Co.)
CONTINUE NEXT IEK
SAN FRANCISCO, May 31. PJ
Following ia the weather outlook
for the week beginning June 1:
Far Western States: The out
look Is for fair weather in Cali
fornia and Nevada and considerable 1
cloudiness and occasional showers
elsewhere. Normal temperatures
are indicated.
THEM Ml
NEW YORK, May 31. (JPt All
of the securities markets and most
of the commodity markets were
closed today, making a triple holi-
iday of the Memorial Day week
! end. The banks were open for
j business for a half day. as usual.
however, and the Chicago board
of trade and the New York Pro
duce Exchange save for its securi
ties department, were open.
Fay Bank Claims
SALEM, Ore., May 31
A. A. Schramm, state superinten
dent of banks, will today mail
checks covering the seventh divi
dend on all claims filed against the
Bank of Jordan Valley, involvent.
The dividend is 7.3 per cent.
Do Yon Remember?
TEN" YEARS AGO TODAY
(From files of the Mail Tribune I
May 31,. 120.
Washington. Senate f&vori
armed Intervention In Mexico un- '
less order restored.
City pays tribute to soldier dead
with parade and exercises.
Fletcher Stout back on Job at .
West Side Pharmacy after ix
weeks' rest.
Health prizes awarded rural
scnooi:
Bliss Heine writes poem urging '
people to eat rabbits, and thvj,i"
the H. C. of L.
Sportsmen demand Hoguo river '
be closed "until the crack of
no matter who is gov-
ernor.
TWENTY YKAIIS AGO TODAY
(From f'h?s of the Mail Tribune )
May 31, 1910. ,
Washington. Speakers before f
Brewers asuociation predict "pro.
hihliion needed to show iu fal
lacy." '
Dr. Oliver, the evangelist, has
gone. Now we can have commun
ity peace. (Editorial.)
John R. Allen buys a beautiful
Victrola from the Whctsel Music
company.
Local cherries and apricots on
sale In stores.
City pays tribute to soldier deaj
with address in city park by Hon.
P. II. D'Arcy of Salem. '
Good progress made In city sew
er and paving work during mom:,
of May.
SUND.OWN
STORIES
MOON TALKS ON
By Mary Graham Bonner '" '
"Diana," the Moon told John
and Peggy, "was called the goddess
of the moon she was the twin
sister of Apollo, god of the sun.
Every evening, it
was said, right
after the sun had
finished his
course Diana
would mount her '
moon car and
drive her milk
white steeds
across the heav.',
ens. .while . the
stars would cheer, t;
her on her way. "
"Oh, oh, oh,','
in almost all nn?t
tions I have been
loved and even
worshipped.
"Oh, the people who have wish
ed on a new moon as they call It!
"People have made up so much
poetry about me but not being
able to hear any sound they could
never come and recite It to me."
John and Peggy nodded. ,
"The Kskimo people," he wont
on, "believed that I had a hallway
in my home in which all the cold
was kept out. In Ur, a very, very,
very old city in Chaldea, they used
to worship me.
"At a certain hour each month
they arranged with mirrors to
throw a reflection of me into a
chair which was called the moon
god's chair. When people saw this
reflection they believed I had come
right down to the earth to sit in
the chair!
"Years and centuries ago people
knew about my eclipses ami they
uwd to mark important events tin
their calrnriiirt. by my actions.
"In fact tho number of days In
the week in tho olderr, olden time?,
paid great respect to sky charac
ters. They called Sunday the Sun's
day, Monday the Moon's day, Tues
day was Mars' day, Wednesday was
Mercury's .day, Thursday Jupi- ."
tor's day. Friday- Venus day, Sat
urday Saturn's day.
"Then, of course, later, the Teu
tons had different gods, chief of
whom was Woden, god of war and
also of the sky. He was like the
Greeks' Jupiter and Mars together.
Woden had Wednesday named
after him. Thor. god of thunder,
was once Thursday and then It was
changed to Thursday. A pod
named Tlu Is the name from which
you now have Tuesday, and from
Frcya you have Friday. Freya
was supposed to be the goddess of
love, she cared for music and
flowers."
Monday "Imlinn Parailc."
By BUD FISHER
-aWT-BaWV
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