Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 01, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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    PAGE FOUR
MEDFORDvTEIBUNE
"BrarroM la Sarjthera Oram
earle the Mall Trlboave"
Dalla Eicept Salardar
Publlihad or
DrORD PEINTINO CO.
"" M"f St. Pbooe tut
..',0B'CRT w " '
aHEST a OIUTRAP. Ilinuir.
ladepeadeat Neweueaer.
ntered aa eeeend elaee matter at Med-
ford, Oregon, under Act ef IfarcB a, 1179.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Br Mall In Advancei
Daily and Sunday oaa rear IT H
Callj and Sunder en mo. the. . . 4.0
Ballj and Sunday three months. (.Id
Dally and Sunday ana month... ,TI
err Carrier In Advance Hedford, Aeh.
Sf!?- Contral P". Jeeeonllle, Odd
Bill. Pboents. Talent, aad ea mete
a-onteet
Bally and Sunday. ana year. ....tt.sa
ally and Sunday .asa enonlh.. .Tl
All tertne aaeb la advaaca.
"'TtllLt?' CH' - MadfarS
Olflelal l-apet ikaa County
Wlra
MEKUER OP AUDIT BURBAU
OP CIRCULATIONS
. Advertising Repreeealatlea
. WBST.HOLLIDAT COMPANY use.
Office, in He. Tark. Chic., Oalr.fl
leal.MUc7, Lo "' Seettla
Parilaad. St. teH,., Atlanta, Vaaeaaaar,
SV. a
Aftmitt
totutinjliittjuun
Ye Smudge Pot
By Arthur Perry
The Jap hoodlums Interned at
Tulc Lake have adopted a policy
of silence. If they listen hard
they might hear one of their
sniper countrymen dropping out
of a cocoanut tree in the Solo
mons. Wendell Willkle was just
wonderful all last week. He
said nothing to make republi
cans want to kiss him one day
or kill nun the next.
All the Oregon congressional
delegation but one Is on the
blacklist of union labor. He Is
the one who will be fresh out of
votes when they are counted
next May.
"As the result of omitting the
letter 'c Walla Walla paper
caid of a returned traveller, 'His
friends were surprised to find
him unhanged.' " (Pendleton
East Oregonian.) Except for
the honor of the thing, he is glad
it didn't happen.
The O. Cleveland Corura
twins passed their third birth
day. They attribute their
achievement to regular breath
ing and feel as young as they
ever did.
-
Conditions in Germany are
rapidly approaching the time
when Herr Hitler wiU again
hold conferences with Signor
Mussolini in a fancy lunatic
asylum. v -
HAUGHTY, NAUGHTY HENRY
(Oakland (Cat.) Tribune)
"In - centering his attack
upon the railroads, Mr. Wal
lace has bit the President in
his most conservative spot."
a
Shells are so scarce, shot guns
when used to culminate a rom
ance, are all unloaded.
- The nut harvest Is now at It
peak. Small boys come home
with a bushel of walnuts
crammed In a pants pocket. It's
the same sized pocket In which
their Paws can't completely con
ceal a pint.
The Jugoslavs are still putting
up ferocious resistance against
both the Nazis and each other,
on the Balkan front.
a
Stockmen are now warned
by the government not to ship
their cows and hogs to market
so fast, or the packers will be
swamped, resulting in the con
sumer being able to get a steak
without performing a miracle
and feeling guilty.
a
THIRD TIME THE BESTI
(Boston Herald)
"Mrs. French, whose vocil
and artistic merits have been
dwelt on considerably in the
past, was in good voice despite
the fact that there was prac
tically no air to breathe. As
always, she sank with excep
tionally good taste and con
siderable emotional convic
tion." a
Bankers report a scarcity of
pennies throughout the land and
ore unable to explain It. There
is also an insufficiency of dollars
in many pockets.
a a
In the Portland area to date,
BOO ships havo been launched.
There has been nothing like this
since tho good old days when
tourists were plentiful and every
nlfalfa patch along the highway
boasted two service stations,
a a a
Quite a number of store win
' duws were liberally smeared
with parallin by Hallowe'en
sprites, some of them about the
rlcht age for military service.
Paraffin Is an essential war pro
duct used In muntion making
and allegedly In the throes of a
shortage.
a a a
The first "Shut that door!
Were you born in a barn weaUv
or?" prevailed this a. m.
. Ua tun Tributes Wans aula.
Churchill Chickens Return
Too bad I
When Prime Minister Churchill made that "hands
across the sea" speech at Cambridge, Massachusetts,
early in September we feared it was a diplomatic
blunder the first time our Homeric hero had nodded.
And now twej months
None other than Alf.
lican presidential candidate, in a reply to Walter
Lippman s criticism ox himself asKs:
"Who is going to be
Roosevelt or Churchill?"
WHO indeed!
There is the partisan-isolationist reaction, -the
only surprising thing is it
it to jell.
And as remarked, at the time, if the suggestion
for such an alliance between the two great English
speaking countries had corne from this side of the
ocean, there would have
For Britain would never complain, nor shun any
such advances. Quite the
have the United States.
HAVE to have Britain
would, in the opinion of this department, help BOTH
countries.
But with the initiative
pven from sucn a very popular cntisner as iur.
Churchill, a certain revival of the "ancient grudge"
was inevitable, the. old Yankee suspicions and fears,
some may have thought dead but have only been
sleeping, were bound to be aroused again.
And that is, we repeat, too bad.
The former Kansas governor ends up with this
final fling:
"I do not want to see the world lined up on the basis of
nnurpr.nnlitira and nllianct leadine to the inevitable. That
has been the mistake In the past. If the President will dis
avow Mr. Churchill's suggestion for an exclusive British
American alliance, this whole case 1 ready for dismissal.
Of course President Roosevelt can do no such
thing, and would not if he could.
Mr. LiDDman mav come back and accuse Alf of
pettifogging, putting words and meanings into the
Prime Minister's mouth which were never uttered
and never intended.
But there is the rub I
"Oh that mine enemy might write a book 1"
For the text of that Harvard University speech is
on file, and while Mr. Churchill at no time spoke ex
plicitly of any "exclusive" alliance between the two
countries, that interpretation can be placed upon cer
tain passages, and the more the. anti-isolationists try
to explain otherwise the worse the situation for them
will become. v . t
CO it would have been
Churchill had allowed Governor Dewey, the New
York Herald-Tribune, or some other strong pro
British spokesmen in this country to carry this Anglo-
American alliance ball in
game, instead of tackling
"Not A Party
Well, just what did. Winston Churchill say, and
what did he mean?
The speech was a felicitious one, delivered in a
warm, friendly and highly
mospherea graduate of
award of an honorary degree irom Harvard univer
sity. ' ' .. ... . . -... :
That fact should be kept in mind. The British
Prime Minister undoubtedly spoke more informally
and frankly than would have been the -case before
the congress in Washington, for example. And the
political significance of what was said therefore,
should be discounted by those who care for the truth
and not for some interpretation that would give par
tisan or personal advantage.
According to Mr. Landon the whole spirit of Mr.
Churchill's Btudied statement, however, contemplated
the most exclusive kind of an alliance, not only a com
mon citizenship but a common sovereignity.
Well, here probably are
leader had in mind :
"Now In mv opinion it
Improvident act on the part
either of them, to break up this smooth running and im
mensely powerful machinery the moment the war is over.
For our own safety as for the security of the rest of
the world we are bound to keep it working and In running
order after the war, probably for a good many years, not
only until we have set up some world arrangement to keep
the peace but until we know that it is an arrangement that
will really give us that protection we must have from danger
and aggression a protection we have already had to seek
across two vast world wars. I am not qualified of 1
course to Judge whether or not this would become a party
question In the United States, and I would not presume to
discuss that pomt. I am sure, however, that it will not be
a party question in Great Britain. We must not let
go of the security we have found necessary to preserve our
lives and liberties, until we are quite sure we have some
thing else to put In its place which will give us an equally
solid guarantee."
In other words, Mr. Churchill favored a continua
tion of the military alliance that now exists, after the
fighting has stopped, and not only until such time as
some more permanent and inclusive peace league is
formed, but until the value of that organization
as a protection against war has been established.
There is no suggestion, no intimation whatever,
of a common citizenship or a common sovereignty.
Undoubtedly Mr. Churchill had nothing of the sort
in mind. But that ia Mr. Landon's interpretation and
that, we fear, will be the internretation of the rabid
anti-Roosevelt and anti-British fanatics throughout
me country. The 'unfortunate thing Is, the British
rnme Minister did not loresee such an outcome be
fore the statement was made.
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD,
later comes the pay-off.
M. Landon, the 1936 Repub
the King's first minister,
it took such a long time for
been no particular danger,
contrary. Britain HAb to
The United States does not
although such an alliance
coming from the other side,
better IF Prime Minister
the great global diplomatic
the job himself.
Question?
congenial academic at
Oxford, responding to the
the remarks the ex-GOP
would be a most foolish and
of our two Governments, or
Personal Health Service
Br WlUUm
Sltne Itttsrs pertalnlni to personal
diagnosis or treatment, will Da aaswerst, tj Dr. Brady I, a siamc.
addressed envelop i nclosed. UtUri should f brttf and wrltur, lo ins.
Owlnf to the lana rtumbdi ol lturs reild mlt a
here. No reply can bo mad to queried tut conforming lo IrtatnicUoaa.
address Or. Hllliam Brad;, MS CI Camlno. Beverlj HUH. Cam.
PARKINSON'S DISEASE
It Is not illogical to believe
that there is a calcium deficiency
in Parkinson's disease. On this
basis I Deueve
the patient
with Parkin
son's disease
should regular
ly supplement
his diet with
calcium and vi
tamin D daily.
How to do this
is described in
pamphlet "The
Calcium Short
age," mailed on
Oi. Brady request if you
Inclose twenty cents, or ten
cents and a three-cent-stamped
envelope bearing your address.
Expe.'ience hss shown that
Parkinsonian patients should re
main as active as possible, al
though the tendency is to re
main idly seated or lying abed
much of the time, and that per
mits the rigidity to become so
extreme that, if they try to walk
at all they walk like living stat
ues. They should do regular
light calisthenic exercises, noth
ing strenuous at all, just mild
movements calculated to pro
mote or maintain freedom, re
silience, grace of movement.
Discussing the subject in N. Y.
State Jour, of Mod. In the mid
summer of 1943, Drs. Morton H.
Hand and A. M. Rablner lik
ened Parkinsonian rigidity to
frozen water. Water freezes on a
cold day, but is less likely to
freeze if it is moving. Let Park
insonian patients beware of the
temptation to sit and think or
to sit and vegetate or to lie abed
more than the necessary sleep
ing time. That way the rigidity
is likely to become so mark--J as
to be actually painful and dis
able the victim. Do not give up
your regular work or occupa
tion because nf Parkinsonian
tremor, so long as you can pos
sibly hang onto your lob. Don't
be pushed into a corner before
your time. After all, what s a
little tremor and maybe a slight
impediment in walking, between
friends?
Step out for a short walk fre
quently every day, rain, shine
snow or blow. Practice a few
dance steps many times a day.
bKlp the rope. Take up your
knitting, crocheting or needle
point to occupy your hands
when you do sit for any length
of time. Play the piano, harp,
organ, violin every day. Set up
a loom and weave things for
News Behind
The News
By Paul Mallon
(Continued from Para One)
WLB has long, but hesitatingly,
been threatening to suggest to
the president.
The devious ways of conflict
ing bureaucracy obviously have
succeeded only so far in mak
ing a deficient matter practi
cally Impossible.
But not the least phenomenal
aspect was presented when Mr.
Lewis, the supposedly beloved
and Iron-willed dictator of the
miners, pleaded ineffectively
with his men to go back to
work. For days and days they
Ignored him.
Does this mean Lewis has lost
control of the miners? Not In
the slightest. When he sent wires
to the Alabama strikers, for in
stance, urging them to go back,
the men simply refused to be
lieve the telegrams were au
thentic. Two hot Lewis wires got no
where. So Mr. Lewis dispatched
personal emissaries to the fields
and told the men the signatures
were valid and they should re
turn, to work.
THE men then said Lewis was
hatinrr fntlmMatext hv WT.T4 nr
the president; that he would
m
RELIEVES SIIIE
DISTRESS OF
HEAD GOLDS
Worh Fast Right Where Trouble Is
The second you put VlcVa Va-trorol
(a few drops) up each nostril it starts
relieving the snifflv, smxzy, stuify
distress of head cold. Va-tro-nol a
spedalized medication Is so effec
tive because It don three Important
things to relieve discomforts . . .
(1) shrinks swollen membranes . . .
(2) soothes irritation... (s)heips clear
up ccOd-clogged nose . . . mikes breath
log taaicr... and brings such grand
OREGON, MONDAY. NOVEMBER 1, IMS
Brady. M. D.
aaalth and nyilena. Dot to '
yourself or your friends or as a
profitable sideline, uarnina,
sewing, carpentry, pottery, there
is always something to do in your
spare time to keep from "freez
ing." '
In the past ten years it has be
come established that vitamin D
is essential for or controls
calcium-phosphorus metabolism
(assimilation, utilization, reten
tion). Since we have acquired
this newer knowledge I find I
no longer place so much Impor
tance on the use of parathyroid
in the treatment of Parkinson's
disease, so long as the paUent
supplements the diet with an
adequate daily ration of calcium
and vitamin D. -
QUESTIONS AXSWEBS
Exercise, Work and PUT
Rut to smile at what your corre
spondent said about too much work
for an ezpetant mother. X am 33,
havo two fine children, one three
Tears olef, the other 31 months. A
week before the first one was born
I attended a square dance and thor
oughly enjoyed myself. Bad my dally
swim up to within two days of aer
oirtn. Throughout my second preg
nancy I continued ail my usual ac
tivities, planted, culuvated. harvest
ed my own garden (husband In serv
ice) ana never felt better. My con
finement was perfectly normal. I
think evry expectant mother would
feel better and have an easier con
flnment If she followed tho advice
you give about exercise, work and
ply. (Mrs. J. W.)
Answer A lot or them would. Oc
casionally, due to some physical de
feet or Illness the expectant mother
must avoid every sort of activity un
less her physician approves of It. But
as a rule tho expectant mother eats
atong mucn oetter in every way u
ana aoes nor avoid everyday exer
cise, work ana piay. Expectant moth-
era i ana .pecrai lament) wm una ;
Instructions and advice about this
and other matters in booklet "Pre
paring for Maternity" for copy send
ten cents and stamped envelope bear
ing your address. If you want "The
Brady Baby Book," too. lnolow ten
cent additional.
Reducing Mania
Bister aged 45. 0 ft. 1 In. tall,
weighs 118 pounda. She la taking
three grains of thyroid a day. I am
against reducing pills but ihe will
not listen to me. (Mrs. B. M. A.)
Answer Woman aged 40 or more.
81 Inches, should weigh 130 to 135
pounds. Aside from the fact that re
ducing will make your sister look a
holy fright, bring out her otherwise
not. noticeable wrinkles and mska
her health miserable. It Is danger
ous for her or anyone else to monkey
with thyroid. Thyroid may be safely
taken only under a phslclan's con
trol. (Copyright, 1943, John P. tHIle Co.)
Ed. Notei Persons wishing to
rnmmunlrate with Dr. Brady
ehnnld send inter direct to nr.
William Brady. M. D. t5 d
Camlno. Beverly Hills. Calif.
never ask them to work with
out a contract because he had
so often warned them such a
practice would Involve them In
trespassing upon company prop
erty. Here you have agein the grow
ing anomaly of the union lead
ing one way, the workers strik
ing another and aU In the
midst of a war for survival of
their way of life. : j
t e ' j
THE railroad situation is no
less Involved, if momentarily
less In the headlines. Brother
hood Leaders Harrison. Robin
son and Whitney have forcefully
torn the administration the 4
cents an hour wage increase and
back pay to April 1 granted by
atamuzer Vinson after WLB
had recommended 8 cents, could
not possibly be accepted.
xney implied they would lose
their Jobs as heads of the unions
If they tried to accept It. If they
are correct, the current union
vote will go against the govern
ment settlement.
In the end, the government
may be forced to give in for 8 or
6 cents in accordance with the
apparent policy of negotiating
for the best poss'ble settlement
in each case. In this case, Vin
son, rather than WLB, is being
blamed for the critical, unsettled
mess.
'
DUT the steel workers, auto
workors and others already
have notified the government
that If Lewis and the brother
hoods break the Little Steel for
mula (as they already have done
relief! Follow directions in folder.
HOTt . . . When used at first sniffle,
nor$ignofacold,Va-trrJhe!pj
rassp VICKS
VA-TR-nOL
Y.HEEZY
w
In effect), the government will
be presented with similar de
mands from them for increases.
Worst of all, no one in the
administration or outside seems
to have an answer to the prob
lem. My guess is there is no
answer, matters having gone
this far.
The condition must be accept
ed as an eye-opening example
of the deficiencies of managed
economy, the inefficiency of bu
reaucracy, and the difficulties
presented by a revolutionary un
ion movement against sympa
thetic government during a des
perate world war to protect the
bargaining freedom of labor and
the individual.
If it doe not make sense. It
at least makes America the ha
ven of confused economic and
political currents it ia today.
Olive
Barber's
Observations
Again I quote from Private
Buck, our neighbor lad who is
now an army cook In the South
Pacific. He's lately discovered
avacados. "I eat them in every
thing I fix for myself," he states,
"and never seem to get enough.
There are lota of them growing
here and are supposed to be
fattening. I could stand a little
of that.
"I haven't had the pleasure of
eaUng a tomato in 16 months.
You know tomatoes are my fa
vorite food. The next time I see
a field of tomatoes, I'm going
to sit in the middle of it and
eat tomatoes for three days.
"I never discovered tomatoes
until past 20 years old. Be
cause my father didn't eat them,
t ,t f. ,rt
..-.
no good. But once I found how
good they really were, I hoped
I'd live to be a hundred so I
could hake up for those 20 lost
years.
"The other cook just came in
and said there was a letter for
me. I asked, Who from?' 'From
Olive', he replied. So you see
you're not Mrs. Barber, or even
Olive Barber; just Olive. Either
you or Frank could walk into
our kitchen and wouldn't need
an Introduction, I've talked so
much about you.
"We all read each other's
letters. Harry just got a letter
from his sister in England. She
says one pound of grapes costs
the equivalent of five dollars. A
small melon is 45 shillings, or
almost twelve dollars.
"Our old lady cat has had
three batches of kittens this sum
mer. (This is the cat who had her
kittens in a shell hole one time
and in a gun pit the next. The
same cat who carried her litter
into the pantry just as the offi
cer came around on an inspec
tion tour. She so won over the
officer with her feminine bland
ishments that she was allowed to
stay 'if she Is a clean cat'. The
cooks swore she was.) I think
she has. an A card, or whatever
kind it takes to get the most over
there in the States.
"There is a bread fruit tree
growing right close to my shack.
Last night a very large bread
fruit dropped on the roof di
rectly over my bed. For a min
ute, I thought we were being
bombed."
He then gave a most Interest
ing account of a visit he made
to a native home, which I'll in
clude in a later column.
Checkers is one of the oldest
games on earth, and has been
played by more humans than all
other games put together.
fl
L "vn'mnnrr
i T WaJ fc
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I
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xr.v-:-? -a.?
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fcaaaaassMssaaaW
CONGER
FUNERAL
PARLORS
SIXTH AND WEST MAW
PHONE 3147
Office of
County Corona
IN M DEPENDS
ON SUBSIDY HELP
(Oootnroad from race One)
clple was being used in industry
and mines to increase produc
tion.
"The subsidies that were
used (to 'meet special-farming
costs without raising prices to
consumers) cannot properly be
called producers subsidies or
consumer subsidies," ha said,
"They are war subsidies. The
costs which they cover are war
costs.
"On the farm as in industry
the war has pushed costs above
the levels that prevailed before
the outbreak of war, and above
the levels that will prevail when
victory has been won. These
are costs of war, and it is en
tirely appropriate that they
should be met out of the public
treasury, just as are the costs
of producing tanks and planes
and ships and guns.
To Hold Line .
He reiterated, citing many
statistics to support his reason
ing, his determinltation to hold-the-line
against inflation. The
nation cannot afford to acquire
the "habit" of inflation he said,
because "we have children to
think of." Those who advocate
inflation must be prepared to
accept the responsibility for re
sults, he added.
"This is no time to start wan
dering into an untried field of
uncontrolled and uncontrollable
prices and wages," he said.
The President reviewed the
food production program of 1943
and asserted that despite cries
in some quarters of "meat fam
ine" and "food shortage" the
American people as a whole are
eating more now than they did
before Pearl Harbor.
"A shortage in sirloin steak
and in choice fruits," he said,
"does not mean that the war
program has failed."
". . . Ninety three per cent of
American housewives agree that
a good job (of food distribution
and rationing) a job fair to all
has been done. Unfortunately
the seven per cent who are not
satisfied are more vocal. . . .
Farmers Lauded
Mr. Roosevelt said the patriot
ism, resourcefulness and ability
of the American farmer aad in
1943 to overcome manpower,
machinery and fertiliser short
ages to produce an incredible
amount of food. Ke promised
that the amount o' steel for farm
machinery was being doubled
and that It would be unlimited
for production of repair parts.
He scotched "talk about im
pending "meat famine"' with a
report that from October until
next March total meat produc
tion, excluding poultry, would
amount to 14,400,000,000 pounds
dressed weight, compared with
12,800,000,000 pounds during
the same period last year.
He conceded that the armed
forces and lend-lease would
take more of the food supply
next year 14 per cent of pro
duction for the armed forces
compared with IVt last year,
about 28 per cent of total pro
duction. Then he added that there
wouk be more soldiers in both
the American army and navy
and the Allied services and
pointed out that servicemen eat
more than civilians.
Los Angeles, Nov. 1 (U.R)
Critical war Industries were
urged today to pledge use of
part time or "double duty':
workers to ease the labor short
age. - aSt - - Wr)" - . It"-
(. - ""'W fill
SERVICE For
The LIVING-
0"Bt true to your work;
your word; and your
friends."
John Boyle O'Reilly
Conger believe In this, there
fore, they ire supporting tha
War Fund Drive a true serv
Ice to the living, both at hoie
nd abroad.
Growing with thli Community Sine 1888
Flight o' Time
Mddtoid and Jacktor Co. His
tery from the illas oi the Mat
Tribune 10 and 20 rears ago
TEN YEARS AGO TODAY
November 1, 1333
at Was Wednesday)
Governor Meier draws plana
for relief, jobs, and rum control.
Rain falls in Crater Lake Na
tional park, and melts recent
snow.
Drunkenness increases In city
as liquor supply loosens.
Unsettled and cloudy.
85, low 47 degrees.
High
Hugh S.. Johnson, NRA, in
vited to visit this city on tour
of coast.
Medford high football squad
leaves to play Eugene tomorrow
night there.
Cold, dry
for Oregon. .
winter forecasted
Value of corporation property
in county shows decrease.
TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY
November 1, 1923
(It Was Thursday)
Stephen Mather, director of
national parks on tour, Is guest
of Craters club at luncheon.
Andrew Jeldness, mining man
of the Blue Ledge, certain he
saw one of the Siskiyou tunnel
bandit suspects here the first of
the week. (Ed note: One of the
DeAutremont twins, after ar
rest, admitted he had been.)
- Light rains. Preclp. 08 of an
inch. High 52, low 35 degrees.
Ex-Crown Prince Wilhelm, In
exile since the war, plans to re
turn to Germany.
Hasklns drug store advertises
two live gold fish free with ev-'
ery purchase . of new dental
cream.
October rainfall heaviest in
past nine years with a total of
2.12. inches. -
CHIEF OF STAFF
Washington, Nov. 1 U.R
The Army and Navy Journal
said today that army circles ex
pect Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
to return to this country, when
the Italian campaign nears Its
close, to take over direction of.
the Office of the Army Chief of
Staff. ... .
It expected this to coincide
with the time when Gen. George
C. Marshall "leaves to establish
his headquarters in London."
The usually informed but un
official service Weekly did not
say specifically that Eisenhower
would replace Marshall as chief
of staff, saying only that "army
circles are confident" that Elsen
hower will be selected by "the-commander-in-chief
to direct tha
Office of Chief of Staff of the
Army." .
".Lost 52 Lbs.!
WMRSIZI 14 AGAIN"
MRS. O. B. HILLS. ST. WORTH
A. Pictures Hr.-
TOO Buy leet sound, and hi
nut. houki, .mnui near
fwrrte.. No dnisi. pfe Uii
T
Cut
et tbete result.
Id clinical teat, under tha direc
tion of Dr. Voa Hoover. 100 per.
ec-oa lott 1 to 15 iba. average
In a he weeks with tha Ar3
rl an . Swora to beore a Notarr
eat any meaia, I
meats or butter.yi
down. It's rJmohi
eon enlov d.iirtm. f-t..niin .....i. .
eed) AYDSbetora each meal. Abso. aW
lutelT harmleaj, T 17 a larse dre box of AYDS BOraJ
firr?!? '""S" onlyM.MTMoner bacrtVAWuB
U roa don't get resnlte. Fbene
Walnseott's East Side
Vain and Blrerstde. ..
Fharmaej,
aaaf V
, f
Jfl &.VV
4