SIX MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE
MedfordJ&Tribune
Evfryona In Southern OrajOB .
Reads tha MUI Tribune"
Daily Except iaturday
I-uuiisi'ci tir
MEDFORD PRINTINO CO.
North Hr St Phon. al
ROBERT W. FUHL, Editor
ZRNEST B CILSTRAP. Manager
HEBB GREY. Advertlilnt Miff-
C FERGUSON. ManaKlnf EdlUW
ARTHUR PERRY. Sunday Editor
MRS OLIVE STARCHER. Soc. Editor
GERALD LATHAM. Circulation Mtr.
An Independent Newi paper
Entered ae lecond data matter at
Medford. Oreaon. under Act of
March J. IB"
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
BF Mall In Advance:
Daily and Sunday-on. ;
Dally and Sunday alx montha 4 00
Dally and Sunday threa moa. 3.10
Dally and Sunday one month .10
By Carrier In Advance Medford.
Aihland. Central Point. Jeckaon
vllle. Gold Hill. Phoenix. Talent,
and on motor routea:
Dally and Sunday one year....I.00
Dally and Sunday one month .73
All terma caah In advance.
Official Paper of the City of Medford
Official Paper of Jackaott County
United Pr.il Full Leaied Wire
MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU
OF CIRCULATIONS
Advertlilni Representative
WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY. INC.
Olflcea In New York. Chicago, De
troit. San Francisco, Loe Angelea,
Seattle. Portland, SL Loull. Atlanta.
Vancouver. B. C.
OiEcloOLrisBrii
Ye Smudge Pot
Br Arthur Perry
Batches of s unshlne Thurs.
and Fri. made the people feci
better, and the speed idiots go
faster.
o
Coos county had one of the
hardest rains in years, and lady
wrestlers over the week-end.
a a
Both the Hale Wheeler boy
Gall, and the Fletch Fish boy
T. David, of Phoenix have teeth,
and a start towards a vocabu
lary. o o
Water flowed freely all week
In Jack. co. streams. Even Lost
Creek found itself.
a
"Peace On Earth!" In China,
Java, Iran, and Spain, B. league
wars are raging.
e a a
C. Pankey, the hort. expert,
and other natives have all re
turned from the Jollification at
Frisco. Other citizens are hit
ting out for Arizona. They can't
wait until July, and be sunburn
ed at home, '
The B. Tornado eked' out a
win over Salem Fri. Eve. They
were flu-ridden and travel
weary, and did not blow with
any ferocity or velocity.
a a a
Feminine owners of Persian
lamb coats here were undis
turbed by the word last week,
the Persian government was
about to tumble and out of
funds. One lady thought they
went broke buying a Persian
lamb coat.
a a
Tha British and Russians have
executed about two dozen as
sorted Nazi war criminals and
traitors. Unlike Gen. Yamashlta,
convicted In Manila for all
around cussedness, the victims
were unable to appeal to the
high court and have an argu
ment on the re-argument of the
argument, (North Dakota, 30;
Connecticut, 12.)
a a
A Los Angeles lumberman,
caught unawares, shook hands
Wed. with Dewey Hill, tile Pros
pect hired man and stemwlnder.
The gentleman from the south
will be able to move all the fin
gers of his right hand by next
Tuesday, the attending physician
reports.
a a a
Ed Kubll, the Applcgnte cow
man towned Wed. and sized up
some bulls at the auction lot.
There was quite a congregation
of stockmen on hand, exchang
ing "bum steers" and predicting
the hay wouldn't last.
a a a
The results of the Rose Bowl
game pleased everybody in Ala
bama, and an overwhelming ma
jority of Jack. co.
a a a
The New Year was greeted
here without any pandemonium
or worse, but with many still
short a calendar.
o e
Adm. Halsey, the naval hero,
was best man at a movie queen's
wedding. Ho kissed the bride
better than he rode the Mikado's
white horse last fall.
The Espce is looking for a
cold, late spring. Their efficient
section crew stowed away a car
load of coal the first of the week,
a a a
Hog-killing has started in the
rural regions. The butter short
age will continue throughout
most of 1946, and by next No
vember, there won't be any pan
cakes to smear it on, many fear,
a a a
More interest is manifested
hereabouts in a Portland prize
fight next Friday than in an up
state Congressional election in
the First district on the same
date.
Sunday, Jan. 6. 1948
Editorial Correspondence
New York, N. Y., Dec. 29 Another snow-storm, a wet,
sticky one this time instead of a blizzard. Wager Mayor LaGuarrlia
is glad he is stepping out for snow is a terrible headache In tms
Hih,,lni. Rabvlon. and if it isn't attended to properly the burgo
master gets the blame for It. It
clear up the blizzard, and then
i-u ...n. nA.,an Anna
nanem me juu u...
on the NYC one gets an excellent birds-eye view of Harlem-
drifts of dirty snow ana piles or. garoage pruiumtm "-
every side-street. And now more snow is added to the mess.
ineiiu juoi. uova x.wit, "-""'- o-.--
Europe that Is positively sickening. Imagine walking along a city
. j , i w --.i i nunA inn nut nf a mess of rubble
street ana sci-ihk a usimun v....- .
and fall over dead from starvation! And this is no exceptional
Incident. Most oi me large cities are, we u.
"Merely graveyards with the gravc-DIGGERS a month behind
In their work!"
And now hop over the ocean and spend this week-end in New
York!
What do you sec? ,
Everyone or practically everyone, well fed, well-clothed
i m iu...n Unci ia ha rlimAYpri hv a New Year's
preparinK L J1 a LI1I,L ou"
eve celebration that promises to
excess and aeDaucnery.
In some of the swankiest night clubs It will cost you $50 to
.-i-i- i ir nm nnf Irnnwn to the management
gei a tuuie iur iww, uu " j
you won't be able to get that. To
spending another $au win De very, very uumuu.
n... -i a..,i biuov nnv mpmhpra nf the Jeunes.e
rJUL UUC9 LIIU. DV.bic nnt-j
d'ore?" Not for a minute! The
... . . . m
As for getting a noiei room iur new , - -
anlmule and hasn't been for three months!
m m m
Well, there Is a situation and a contrast, for some of our
prominent moralists to mull over. There will undoubtedly be
t i.uMnnt manilnn mnnnv wasted in Greater
enuuKii nuui iDiiuiKiiv
Manhattan alone to save a hundred
. . i ,
nothing now can stop tnui iiuwuuy
those lives!
Nlru.pen fnrtv-flve will certainly
tragic year of modern times!
We have had time to read over the text of the Moscow com
munique with special reference to the provision regarding the
atomic bomb, and feel very much as we did last June when the
final results of the UNO conference were announced. A very
Imperfect piece of work, as full of holes as a dried out sponge;
but a START. , , ,
And after so many failures in the field of international co
operation, a START is something, in fact a great deal. This is
mprin11v true as far as the matter of atomic energy is con
cerned. For now probably the
near future use the atomlc-oomD
tfnoinnd nnd Russia. have agreed
over to a commission of the United Nations and when that has
been done this country will hand over the "know-how" of bomb
construction.
That is a big step toward
bomb and the outlawing of it, as a DEStructive force in war, con
centration upon the CONstructlve use of atomic energy in peace
As has been repeatedly remarked in mis department, in mis
matter of the atomic-oomo lime is extremely iiupuriuni. nuw
long Is it going to take for example, to get the machinery set up
for this atomic control in the United Nations? If it takes such a
long time, that Russian scientists have time to discover how to
make the bomb, then good night! only a miracle could then
prevent an armament race in the atomic realm, and a war that
would literally mark the end of what has been known as modern
civilization.
We realize we have had a great deal to say about the atomic
bomb in this column since Hiroshima, and probably there are
many who are pretty much fed up with the subject.
For them we would suggest a
Collier's of January 5th and ah article by Dr. Hurold C. Urey, one
of the pioneer atomic scientists, entitled "I Am a Frightened Man."
That might be followed up by the
reports of Generals Arnold and Spaatz, concerning air power in
the atomic age; reports of the Federation of Atomic Scicntistr of
Washington, D. C, and another (joiner s article called - .tomorrow
the Moon."
If. after reading these offerings, there remains any feeling
that the Mall Tribune, or any
much about the atomic bomb, the
atomic energy and at the earliest
can say to such as these is this:
"You are living in a fool s
followed in this crisis, by a majority of your countrymen, the time
is coming, and not so very far in the future, when that world will
blow up in your face, reducing you and all you possess and all
you hold dear, to DUST!"
' If that isn't something worth
about in an effort to prevent,
COMMUNICATIONS
Letter, tv (he kdlliif muat oeai
tha name and adrtreaa .11 tha writer
allhouih the tile il a pn name m
milieu tin piihliranttn la permit
lhl lhe Mall I'rlhnne ratervei
tha nghl tn edit all laltara tvllh a
view Ui alarlly and enndaniallnn
Sugar Needed
To the editor: I am of the
opinion that rationing of sugar
may cause a lot of trouble with
some people should the ration
allowance be too little, especial
ly among some people and chil
dren. It is true the pancrea gland
gives off insulin and It is often
found, especially among older
people, that the rotio of insulin
causes diabetes. However, kid
dies have too much insulin In
so nc cases and not enough in
others. 1 fear in 99 per cent of
the cases of children, too little
sugar will affect the kidneys.
And now, Mr. Chester Bowles,
what lias It cost Uncle Sam each
day due to inertias of sugar.
Sugar is a natural mineral and Is
not difficult to obtain from cer
tain rocks and In such synthesis,
due to chlorophyl, along comes
formaldehyde, and the great vi
tamin, amino acid. Such for
maldehyde Is a catuclyst of zinc,
copper, manganese, magnesium
and what not.
Now, Mr. Bowles, try to
squeeze out enough sugar for
the young and afflicted and I as
sure you mortality among the lot
will decline.
I am only an old sourdough
with mud-bespattered regalia
but along with it 1 have had 14
years study In geology.
ROY G. PATCH,
Hornbrook, Calif.
TRAINMEN TO STRIKE
Tulsa, Okla., Jan. 5 U.R)
The Brotherhood of Railway
Trainmen has called a strike of
all brakemen, switchmen and
trainmen on the Frisco railroad;
for 8 p. m. Sunday, union local!
officials said here today. j
took an army of 8,000 men to
in outaway districts like upper
Cnmlnff rlnwn from Mt. KlSCO
view of Central
-' - - -
break all records for extravagance,
----- ---- --- -
get out after midnight without
J
demand far exceeds the supply-
XT..... Vn..1. tnara ain't nn aih
,
thousand lives In Europe. But
...Un ah nrtiViina nan envn
wmwic u""6
go down in history as the most
only countries that could in the
as a war weapon niimiM,
to turn the matter of control
final international control of the
course or reading starling wiin
"Smythe Report," the official
other newspaper, CAN say too
necessity of world control oi
possible moment, then all we
paradise and if your Judgment 13
talking, and reading and writing
then what IS? R.W.R.
BY GIRL SLAYER
San Francisco. Jan. 8 (U.P.)
Police said tonight thoy were
skeptical of the latest confession
of Thomas Henry McMoniglc,
35-year-old cx-convlct held for
tha kidnap-murder of Thorn
Chamberlain.
McMonlgle, according to San
Mateo authorities who soid the
confession was reported to them
by Santa Cruz county officials,
said he kidnaped a 20 to 30-year-old
negro girl In San Fran
cisco, drove her to Devil's Slide,
murdered her and threw her
body over the cliff.
It was at Devil's Slide that
MrMonlgie, in his original con
fession of the kidnaping of
Bobby-soxer Thora, placed the
disposition of the San Jose high
school girl's body. Garments
believed io have belonged to
14-year-old Thora were found in
the area. Including a pftir of red
bobby-sox clinging to the face of
the cliff.
San Francisco police said they
had no missing person of the
descriptloi given by MeMonigle
in this his third different
confession. They said they were
"highly skeptical" of his state
ment in view of the fact that he
is scheduled for trial for murder
In Santa Cruz county on Janu
ary 30.
PLAN HOGE OUTLAY
Sacramento, Jan. 5 tU.R
Gov. Earl Warren disclosed to
night that he would recommend
uses for all but $H. 000, 000 or so
of the state's reserve funds of
$35,000,000 at the special legis
lative session opening Monday, j
z
GERMANY TO GET
Gen. MTJarney Tells Plans
Three Divisions Need
ed Unselected
Frankfurt, Jan. 5 (U.R) Gen.
Joseph T. McNarney, command
er of American forces in Europe,
today announced his long range
plans for policing the American
occupation zone.
There will be a task force of
38,000 men equipped with ar
mored cars which will patrol
the zone day and night. There
will also be three infantry
divisions totaling 45,000 men,
an air force, 12 light tank bat
talions, and service and admin
istrative echelons to support
them. In all the American
long-range occupation force will
total 300,000 men.
McNarney expected the 300,-
000 total to be stabilized by
July. There now are 616,000
men in the European theater,
McNarney reiterated the war
department policy of returning
eligible soldiers home as fast
as possible, but said redeploy
meit, henceforth, would be de
pendent o.i fulfillment of Amer
lean responsibilities in Germany
rather than on the availability
of shipping.
McNarney said the three
divisions assigned to permanent
occupation duties had not yet
been selected. Previous occupa
tion plans called for 367.000
men, including eight divisions.
The America noccupation
force will be responsible for the
control of approximately 60,000
square miles and 16,000,000
people, McNarney said. Troops
are required in 55 cities and at
airfields, depots and dumps.
McNarney said he personally
believed the military govern
ment was doing "a good job
even though some Germans
Nazis don't think so."
SOUTHERN BELLE
ROMANCE AT END
Nashville, Tcnn., Jan. 5-(U.R)
Lt. Helmut von der Aue, who
escaped from a prisoner of war
camp and ran away with a
plantation owner's wife, planned
to marry her and live in Wash
ington "where I am sure one of
the many good German people
would get me a job".
Von der Aue, who was ar
rested with Mrs. Edith Rogers
here, today told the United
Press that he fell in love with
her while working on their
plantation near Bculah, Miss.
"Until then I had felt like a
second class man," said the son
of a Prussian landowner, "but
she liked me and she used to
invito me in every day for
drinks.' Her husband was sel
dom at home. I fell In love with
he.- and I wanted to marry her.
I still do."
Speaking perfect English, the
26-year-oKl Messerschmitt pilot
said that he and Mrs. Rogers de
cided to run away to Washing
ton last Tuesday night after a
party at the plantation home.
He is six feet tall, brown hair
ed, must.iched and extremely
handsome.
The Luftwaffe pilot lost a
round with a P-38 Lightning In
Italy in September, 1943. He
bailed out behind the American
lines and had been a prisoner
since that time.
While in Nashville, Mrs.
Rogers who Is 37 years old and
very pretty and the German
flier stopped at a motor court.
The $10 they had when they
started out had dwindled to $3.
so Mrs. Rogers pawned her
watch for $5 in order to buy
food. She then telegraphed
relatives in Roscdale for more
money.
Von der Aue was first token
to a local guardhouse and later
he and Provost Marshal R. M.
Fnlkcnstcine departed for Camp
McCain, Miss.
Falkensteine said von der
Aue's punishment likely would
l Let Ui Help You
I BUY A I
I HOME !
I FIRST FEDERAL i
i Savings k Loan Attn, of f
Medford
j 27 North Holly j
TTTTTtTTtTTTTTVtt
Pearl Harbor Commanders
Take Stand January 15
When Hearing Renewed
Washington, Jan. 5 (U.R)
Adm. Harold R. S'ark, former
chief of naval operations, con
eluded a five-day defense of his
pre-Pearl Harbor record late to
day with testimony that his war
time assignment in Europe call
ed for "superior judgment."
Secretary of the Navy James
V. Forrestal ruled last August
after the war in Europe had
ended that Stark should be
barred from future assignments
requiring "superior judgment 1
because of "faults of omission"
before the Japanese attacked
Pearl Harbor Dec. 7, 1941.
Stark gave his defense before
the congressional Pearl Harbor
Investigating committee.
When he finished, the com
mittee recessed until Jan. 15 to
allow its new chief counsel
Seth W. Richardson, to familiar
ize himself with the inquiry
Adm. Husband E. Kimmel, Paci
fic fleet commander at the time
of Pearl Harbor, will be the next
witness, and Lt. Gen. Walter C
Short, then Hawaiian army
commander, will follow. -
Stark was questioned about
his assignment as wartime com
mander of U. S. naval forces in
Europe by Sen. Scott W. Lucas,
D., 111., and Rep. Frank B.
Keefe, R.. Wise. He was assign
ed to that post after he was re
lieved as chief of naval opera
tions in March, 1942.
Asked if the European assign
ment called for the exercise of
"superior judgment," Stark re
plied that he thought it did. He
testified that he first learned of
Forrestal'r ruling from the press
last August.
Earlier Stark told the commit
tee that the late President Roose
velt had cautioned the navy be
fore Pearl Harbor not to en
courage British hopes for Ameri
can participation in the war
against the axis. He also em
phasized 'hat conversations with
the British and Dutch did not
commit the United States to
war against Japan.
OF
Sacramento, Jan. 5 (U.R)
Mnro than 3.000 California
babies born out of wedlock
have been adoDted this year, the
department of social welfare re
vealed today, saying the figure
is expected to reach 5,000 by
1947.
Reporting on adoptions dur
Ins the rjast vear. the depart
ment stated there was a total
of 5, 174,. of which 3,602 were
independent or agency adop
tions. A department study in
1944 showed that approximate
ly 95 per cent of babies adopted
in these two classifications are
illegitimate.
BIRTHS
ATCHLEY To Mr. and Mrs.
John, Brownsboro, Jan. 5, 1946,
a girl, four and one-half pounds,
at Community hospital.
PETERSON To Mr. and Mrs.
Loretta, Shady Cove, Jan. 5,
1946, a girl, six pounds, at Com
munity hospital.
BRUGMAN To Capt. and
Mrs. Robert, R. 2, Box 211, Jan.
4, 1946, a girl, seven pounds, at
Community hospital.
FIELD To Mr. and Mrs. Mcl
vin, 502 Haven, Jan. 4, 1946,
a boy, seven pounds, at Osteo
pathic Clinic.
be 30 days solitary confinement.
Mrs. Rogers was freed to
night on $2,000. She will be
tried In Clarksdale, Miss. ,ln
May for aiding von der Aue's
escape. I
OREGON FINANCE now offers
SMALLER
PAYMENTS
ON loans from $100 to $800 or more you can take up to 18
months to repay instead of 12 months. More time means
smaller monthly payments payments most anyone can afford.
Compare in the table below.
Cash
You
Gel
$100
150
250
300
oi n
1! Monthly
Paymanta
$10.00
IS. 00
25.00
30.00
Oregon Finance likes to say
"Yes" to loan requests, and
specializes in making loans
from $10 to $1000 or more on
salary, furniture or auto with
out involving friends or em
ployer. Come in, phone orCraterian Bldg. 45 S. Ctmtral
write. Telephone 4433
F
May Give Key to Human
Growth, Longevity
Army Assists
Los Angeles, Jan. 5 (U.R)
Three University of California
bacteriologists revealed today
they have developed a . new
technique of assaying foodstuffs
which may provide the key to
human growth, reproduction and
longevity.
Merril N. Camien and Drs. A.
J. Salle and Max S. Dunn dis
closed that for two years they
have been experimenting with
the assaying of foods by use of
micro-organisms to determine
presence, source and proportion
of the amino acids necessary to
proper human performance.
The new development was
kept "under wraps" until today
because much of the work was
done in developing and testing
new army rations. Quartermast
er corps assignments still occupy
much of the scientists' time.
According to Camien, the
process involves:
1. Finding the optimal syn
thetic medium on which lacto
bacilli (bacillus producing lactic
acid) will grow, and by elimina
tion discovering which amino
acids are needed to support
growth and in what proportions.
2. Adding a lactobacilli cul
ture on an agar slide to a
volume of the mediuo under
sterile conditions. In the first
test tube, all the 19 amino acids
except the one being tested will
be present. Then in succeeding
tubs, varying proportions of the
amino will be added and the
growth of the organism watched
in each.
3. Plotting the growth of the
organism, the amount of amino
acid produced by it from each
mixture, and forming a "stand
ard curve" index of it.
4. Carrying out much the same
process on liquid foodstuffs to
determine the amount of acid
produced per gram of food and
the proficiency or deficiency of
that protein, helping determine
how quickly the body can pro
duce the acids.
California May Cut
Rural Speed Limit
Sacramento, Jan. 5 (U.R) A
proposal to reduce the state's
maximum, speed limit 'to 50
miles per hour in rural areas
was overwhelmingly approved
by members of the motor vehicle
legislative advisory committee
anc" the assembly interim com
mittee on transportation at a
joint meeting in Sacramento to
day. Assemblyman M. J. Burns of
Eureka will report the recom
mendation to the interim com
mittee, which will decide wheth
er or not a bill should be offer
ed to the legislature to make
this change in the state law.
P.-T. A. Activities
P.-T.A. Council
Interesting plans were made
for the January meeting of the
Jackson County Parent-Teacher
association at a meeting of the
executive committee held
Thursday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. H. O. Colburn. Details
will be announced later. Four
teen attended the meeting.
The Grand Canyon of the Col
orado is bordered by Arizona on
one side and Utah on the other.
QUOTATIONS
ANALYSIS
on Listed and
Unlisted Securities
Conrad Bruce & Go.
313 Fluhrer Bldg.
Phone 7471
NEW
Pavmentt
II .Monthly
$ 7.00
11.00
18.00
22.00
Oregon
Finance Co.
25DIE.150HURT
AS TWISTERS HIT
Hundreds of Homes Wreck
ed, with Damage High
Timber Levelled
Palestine, Tex., Jan. 5 (U.R)
A series of mid-winter tornadoes
which slashed east Texas last
night left at least 23 persons
dead and more than 150 injured,
some of them so critically they
were not expected to live.
Rescue crews still were dig
ging for more bodies buried in
the wreckage of hundreds of
homes over a vast area of east
central Texas.
Palestine, Nacogdoches and
Lufkin were the three hardest
hit areas. Reports from the three
fixed the number of injured at
upwards of 150.
The raging winds killed 13 in
the Palestine vicinity, six at
Nacogdoches, three at Lufkin
and one in the little Shiloh-St.
Paul settlement of Leon county.
Both the death toll and the
number of injured were expect
ed to climb when ripped-out
telephone and telegraph lines are
restored, permitting a full sur
vey of the storm area.
Bill Laurie, owner of radio
station KNET at Palestine, said
an aerial view of the wind whip
ped region showed damage far
more extensive than had been
expected on the basis of earlier
reports.
"It is difficult to believe that
damage could be spread over so
wide an area," he said.
It was impossible to secure a
reasonable estimate of the over
all property damage done by the
tornadoes.
The twisters struck in the
heart of a rich timber country
and foresters set damage in
Angelina county (Lufkin) alone
at upwards of $300,000. Timber
damage in Nacogdoches county
was fixed tentatively at $250,-000.
NzTHE GREAT"
DODGE
L. C. TAYLOR CO.
Dodge - Plymouth
Stenographer
PERMANENT POSITION,
STATE EXPERIENCE
IN FIRST LETTER
BOX 105
MAIL TRIBUNE
YICK SO CHINESE HERB CO.
(M
Iul .ill Removed to Soarh Rid?.
J. H. LEONG, Herbalist
Flight o' Time
Madlord and Jackson Co. His
tory from tha files of tha Mail
Fribuna 10. 20 and 34 raars
TEN YEARS AGO
January 6, 193E
(It Was Sunday)
U. S. Supreme court holdi
AAA is illegal and invades state
rights.
Tax collections In county gain
after five years slump.
Roosevelt hopes national In
come will equal regular spend
ing, but predicts deficit in relief
funds in budget message.
Occasional rain. High 44, low
34.
Former President Hoover In
talk charged "New Deal is using
fear propaganda" to force ex
perimental legislation.
TWENTY YEARS AGO
January 6, 1926
(It Was Wednesday)
Sunburn, via violet ray, U
latest feminine foible.
Constitutionality of Oregon
peddler license law upheld.
Rain. High 47, low 37, preclp.
.10 of inch.
High school basketball team
to play Alumni Friday, with this
lineup: Laing, center; Herriott
and Dunn, forwards; Williams
and V.'hite, guards, and the fol
lowing reserves: Melvin, Mc
Donald, Archer, Cookste, and
Anderson.
THIRTY-FOUR YEARS AGO
January 6, 1912
(It Was Friday)
Two masked bandits robbed
mail car of No. 16 near Red
ding, Cal., and got much booty.
High school forms basketball
team.
City streets and sidewalks are
a glare of ice, and many citizens
take tumble. Coldest day of
year with low of 21 and high of
27.
The approximate value of
Chicago's public service and ele
vated transportation lines is
$87,000,000.
112 South Riverside
REMEDIES FOR STOMACH ULCERS
Heart RhaumatUm. Atthma Catarrh.
Pllaa Pro'tatt Glxnd Eciama and all di
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