Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current, February 11, 1952, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAOE SIX
HERALD AND NEWS, KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON
FRANK JENKINS
Bdltor
Entered as second class matter at the post office of Klamath FallvOre.,
on August 20, 1006, under act of Congress, March 8, 1870
' MEMBERS OP THE ASSOCIATED TRESS
The Associated Press Is entitled exclusively to the use for publication
of all the local news printed in this newspaper as well as all AP news
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Mail . 6 months 16.50 By mall year 111.00
hujfiiilitl'u CbmtdA
By DEB ADDISON
"You have a wide following,
the man said, "with a certain type
of riff, raff, at least. You'd bctwr
put in your cojumn mat uie nut
ahot California city hunters won't
And any privata land in Tule Lake
open to them come next, quck sea
son.
The reference, of course, was to
the reaction in Tule to the or
ganized sportsmen getting into tne
act on the matter of land lease
policy,
Thia wasn't the first of it. Tule
toman have been nibbed the
wrong way for soma time by the
hordes of "city hunters." It Was
the last straw.
We've been wondering for some
time how things were going to
come out when this Invasion of
hunters. We're still wondering, be
cause there are many sides to
the land-water-hunter-farmer prob
lems.
Many local hunters have long
since thrown up their hands or
thrown down their guns in de
spair. They refer to this Influx as
the "yellow peril."
Yours teuly hasn't ventured Into
the goose stubble In the South
End for a good 10 years. Tne last
goose hunt, which turned out to
be a swan song, went like tnis
Along in the afternoon two or
three of us found a large stubble
field that was free of man and
beast. We scattered out in the
middle of it, put up a few dekes,
and burrowed into the windrows to
watt.
A lone goose was let down by
my gun. He fell close by, shook
himself and stuck up his neck. He
was allowed to stay put, under
watchful eye, as a good live decoy.
Time went by. Then a foreign
sound prompted me to crane my
neck and peer around behind. I
managed to roll out of the way
just in time to escape being run
over by a large sedan, A hunter.
In resplendent regalia, boiled out,
grabbed the sitting goose, and
away they went.
Since then ell hunting has been
done in the depths of a mucky
marsh where no cars can run
you down,
With all the reading we've done
on the death of King George VI
and the session of young Queen
Not long ago President Truman
called for nomination of presiden
tial c&naioates oy direct national
primary in other words, by vote
of the people. Now he has assailed
the existing system of presidential
primaries as eyewash.
There's no question that this sys
tem falls far short of the ideal.
It's limitation to just 16 of the 48
states is enough alone to handicap
But more than that, the primary
laws of those 16 states are so
varied and complex as to confuse
the real meaning of the expres
sions of popular sentiment they
elicit.
StiU, it's hardly fair to dismiss
them all as eyewash. An incum
bent president certainly can get
another nomination from his party
without resort to primaries, as Mr.
Roosevelt did in 1936, 1940, and 1944
and Mr. Truman did in 1948.
But that Is a reflection of the
prime political fact that a presi
dent Is the most powerful man In
his party so long as he holds of
fice and shows any intention of
keeping it.
An opposition candidate, however
is in no such commanding position
except in the rare Instances when
he stands out in his own party
and no serious contest develops
against him.
When that Is not the case and
a real fight does shape up, the
primaries can be strongly influ
ential and even decisive in either
determining the ultimate nominee
or ruling out a particular candi
date. In 1944 the late Wendell Wilkle
announced that he would base his
decision whether to seek renomina
tlon on the GOP ticket on the re
sults of the Wisconsin primary.
When he was roundly beaten, he
Withdrew from the race.
During the spring of 1948, Harold
Stassen was riding the 'crest of
primary triumphs in Wisconsin,
Nebraska and Pennsylvania and
seemed headed for a victory in
Oregon.
It was being widely predicted
that such a result would gie Stas
sen an overwhelming edge for the
Republican nomination at Philadel
phia. At this point Governor Dewey
Went to Oregon, made a whirlwind
tour and then outpointed Stassen
in a radio debate broadcast nation-wide.
Dewey captured Oregon,
"FEED AWAY" YOUR
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Ken-L-Ration now contains thhnphyU
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And dogs love it because it's packed with
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spected horse meat.
Feed Ken-L-Ration regularly and strong
log odors are ended forever! Get Ken-L-Ration
at your favoritrstore or dealer's,
fnr free sDecial certificate that
WWIWW'llliaillilW.illwilliyittiiBigiiByii m ii iinmui uuiiiu n ..mi ,
s - v',(K . S -
aaWWiirn TTimlMiifflnm i imA On nmiliiilA i liT.nf iin in, W - ,!, n
Blli JENKINS
Managing Editor
Elizabeth, we've been wonder
ing about the full names of the
British royalty. As near as can be
found, from works immediately at
hand, It's like this:
The Royal Family of Briton was
known as the House of Hanover
from George I through six mon
archs, the last being Queen Vic
toria. Edward VII was head of the
House of Saxe-Coburg. (Ask some
student of history why the change.)
George V. Edward VIII, George
VI, and now the new Queen Eliza
beth are of the House of Windsor.
(The change to Windsor' was by
proclamation on July 17, 1917.)
George VI was christened Al
bert Frederick Arthur George. He
was known as Albert or by the
nickname, Bertie, when he was the
Duke of York. He was the first
prince to receive royal assent to
marry one not of royal blood since
1680 when James II married Anne
Hyde.
The new Queen Mother was
Lady Elizabeth Angela Marguerite
Bowes-Lyon. Their eldest, the prin
cess who now is Queen, is Eliza
beth Alexandra Mary. Her family
nickname is Ilibet, from her own
first attempts at saying her name.
The new Queen Elizabeth (it
should be Elizabeth II) is more
than a figurehead, despite the
fact that England is more of a
democracy than the United States.
1 England Is a democracy (the
United States is a federal republic)
in that the last bill passed by Par
liament is the supreme law of the
land. It supersedes all previous
legislature. Thus, England could
and did, shift from capitalism to
socialism and back again by par
liamentary vote. The people had
no appeal beyond Parliament.
(This quoted from Mrs. Buena
Stone's mimeographed sheet for
Fremont Junior High.)
Still. Elizabeth, at 25 the Queen
of Great Britain, Ireland, and of
the British Dominions beyond the
seas, will carry more responsibil
ity to her dying day than most
presidents, dictators and other
monarchs.
It's reassuring, for the sanity of
the world, to know that her favor
ite sports are deer stalking and
salmon fishing.
and Stassen's star faded.
Dewey's comeback and winning
of the nomination a second time
is generally considered to have
started witn tne Oregon primary.
The story may well be the same
in 1952. General Eisenhower, Sena
tor Taft, Governor Warren and
Stassen are competing, and all but
Warren are now entered in two or
more primaries.
Results could be decisive, espe
cially for Esienhower, whose back
ers count most heavily upon the
general popular support they claim
for him.
If, for example, he should lose
or win by a shaky margin in the
March 11 New Hampshire primary
Eisenhower would have an ex
tremely rocky road thereafter.
For there the GOP administra
tion is behind him and he is con
sidered to have every advantage.
By the same token, a bad show
ing for other candidates in states
where they are rated strong would
put a crimp in their presidential
plans.
The primaries eyewash? No one
who remembers the Republican re
sults of 1944 and 1948 and sees the
1952 outlook clearly can credit Mr.
Truman with more than a half
truth. The United States has always
lent encouragement to wholesome
expression of nationalsim in any
quarter of the globe. Its voice has
been on the side of freedom.
Consequently there must inevi
tably be considerable sympathy in
this country for the aspirations to
self-determination which are now
rising to the surface across the
whole breadth of the Middle East,
in Iran, Egypt, Tunisia and else
where. Yet we cannot help but regret
that in both Iran and Egypt a
legitimate campaign for national
liberty has fallen into the hands
of inflammatory extremists who
are doing harm to their own cause
and that of the whole free world.
The focus today is on Egype,
where mob emotions fanned by ir
responsible leaders and press have
engulfed Cairo in a wave of un
controllable violence.
The recent riots prove that death
and the widespread destruction of
property are the certain accom
paniment of the course chosen by
these foolhardy Egyptians.
It is one thing for the Egyptians
to wish to be left alone to manage
their own affairs.
It is another for them to remem
ber that their geographic situation
A Three Days'4
Cough Is Your
Danger Signal
Creomulsion relieves promptly because
it goes right to the seat of the trouble
to help loosen and expel germ laden
phlegm and aid nature to soothe and
heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial
membranes. Guaranteed to please you
or money refunded. Creomulsion bas
stood the test of millions of users.
PRrnMiircir.M
Theyll Do It EvdyTimeiTOS .$m;By Jimmy Hatlo
5saSS!i PLACE WITHlhl 7 ( -1 Z"
VMUONG PlSXAhlCE1 ) WUST THE L$-
i-l OF THE SWTIOrJ- 1 I ZAGX
iii I M L441I a-IUII f I JUT - - - ' r, W "SV ." V v I
tt era l&S-M f
Bl ill
,So-HE SOT A
LITTLE NEST-
.FIVE MINUTES'
WALK TO THE
. TRAIN
lp.SiAr'ms'A
YEAR AGO, AtiO
. CRArtSWW HASKrT
WALKED IT VET
m
There's a U.S. Slave World
As Terrible
By POX V'HITEHAD
WASHINGTON tfl There Is a
slave-world In the United States
today which Is as vile and degrad
ing and brutal as any slave camp
behind the Iron Curtain.
At least 50.000 men. women and
children are prisoners in this twi
light world. It has no morals. There
arp no laws exceDt the laws of
greed and selfishness. It promises
nothing except a fleeting pleasure
and then the pain and misery and
suffermg of the damned.
Anyone may enter who wishes.
Each year an alarming number of
people either wander in or are
lured into this other world. Many
deliberately choose to go there.
There are no bars. No barbed
wire fences. No guards to prevent
escape. Yet few find their way out.
They may want to desperately.
But thev discovered they have
neither the strength nor the will
power to leave once they enter.
SINISTER
It's the slave-world of narcotics
which in recent years has become
a sinister pied-piper luring more
and more young people into the
worthless life of a "junkie" a dope
addict.
Rieht now this slave-world exists
in such cities as New York, Chi
cago, Washington, D. C, Detroit,
Cleveland. New Orleans and Phila
delphia as possibly the worst ex
amples. It has no boundaries. It could
become a part of your home town.
It could spread into your schools
as it has spread into other schools.
It's a world that is built almost
entirely on the street-corner sales
of stolen or smuggled narcotics
wmcn onng m pruiiis matting pi
kers of those who traffic in mink
and influence-at-5-per cent.
Heroin is the favorite narcotic of
the junkies. It's made from the
juice of the poppy seed. A pound
ol heroin is worth about $300 in
Turkey. That same pound Is worth
with the vital Suez Canal link to
the East, makes' them an import
ant but vulnerable, part of the
free world's barrier against com
munism. Unfortuantely, the Egyptians
themselves are not capable of de
fending the Suez or its hinterland.
And that Is the principal reason
the British insist upon maintaining
troops there.
For the Egyptians to rail against
the British in this situation is total
ly unreasonable and unrealsitic,
since without some effective sub
stitute force the Suez would to all
Intents stand undefended.
And here it is well to recall that
such a substitute has been pro
posed. The Western powers have
invited Egypt to join a Middle
East Command which Jointly would
take over the defense of the Suez.
In such a set-up, British troops
might figure as merely one ele
ment in a multi-nationa force or
not at all.
Egypt's answer to this plan is
an unqualified rejection. Its lead
ers have committed themselves
rigidly to ousting the British, with
no adequate plan for protecting the
Suez In their absence.
The Egyptians flatly decline to
accept the world's estimate of the
canal's Importance, or Its meas
ure of their own military Insuf
ficiency. Seen in this light, their upsurg
ing nationalism cannot earn the
support from other free peoples
that it normally would command.
There Is such a thing as putting
first things first, even in the realm
of nationalist ambitions.
The "first thing" today , is the
defense of all free nations togeth
er. Until we are secure against
communism, Egypt shall have to
wait to rid its soil of all foreign
"interlopers."
So long as it stubbornly Insists
otherwise and declines to join fair
cooperative effort for the defense
of the Suez, the major powers have
no choice but to maintain that pro
tection in their own way.
The Egyptians may continue to
kill and burn in protest, but this
will get them little but bitterness
the accomplishment of selfish ends
and frustration. This is no day for
the accomplishment of selfish ends
at the expense of the free world
community.
as Any on Earth
from $75,000 to $100,000 on the side'
walks of American cities.
For these profits men will risk
prison, steal, kill and commit all
mnmiers of crimes. Men, women
and children willingly take the
same risks to get money with which
to buy the stuff to satisfy their
craving for more and more nar
cotics. CRACK DOWN
Less than three weeks ago Fed
eral Bureau of Narcotics agents
staged the biggest erack-down on
the slave-world in the nation's his
tory. They rounded up more than
500 suspected peddlers believed to
have supplied addicts with more
than $18,000,000 worth o Illicit dope
yearly.
That's a sizable roundup. But the
clean-up job is far from finished.
rne average dope acicuct spends
at least $10 a day for narcotics
and there are about 60,000 addicts
in this country. That means the
narcotics underworld takes $500,000
a day or $183,000,000 in tribute an
nually from the junkie slaves.
Once "hooked." a narcotics ad
dict will do almost anything (or
the money he needs to buy another
shot of dope. Teen-age kids have
admitted they needed from $10 to
$20 a day for narcotics. And crime
is the only employer who will pay
that kind of money to a teen-age
youngster.
The nation has been shocked in
recent months to learn there is a
slave-world including a growing ar
my of youngsters less than 20 years
old. This shock came largely from
disclosures made by the Senate's
Crime Investigating Committee
headed by Sen. Kefauver, D-Tenn.,
and by hearings in New York and
Detroit.
TRUTH
No matter how fantastic the story
it is true. A school official in
New York City has conceded that
one out of every 200 Junior and
senior high school students In the
city probably is a user of nar
cotics. That's about 1,500 youths.
And he said another 3.500 teen
agers who are not in school may
be using dope.
Chew on that on a while. Five
thousand teen-agers in one city
each paying up to $10 a day or
more in a desperate search for
thrill" or to avoid with more
dope the awful sickness and pains
that come when the effects of one
shot begins to wear off. They arc
on a treadmill which has no end
unless they can be cured or denied
narcotics.
D. L. Quigley
Funeral Held
LAKEVIEW Funeral services
were conducted here Monday after
noon for Daniel Leapher Quigley
who would have been 98 on March
2.
His wife, Mary, preceded him in
death 23 years ago.
Mr. Quigley is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Loy Lamb, West
side, and a son, C. V. Vandlver,
Seatle. There are six grandchil
dren and one great grandchild.
Services today were from the
Ousley-Osterman chapel, with In
terment in Westside cemetery. The
rites were conducted by the Lake
view Masonic Lodge, with the Rev.
Carlton M. Babbige officiating.
New Telephone
Setup Sought
DORRIS Articles of incorpora
tion for a user-owned telephone
system in the Macdoel area are to
be presented at a public meeting
Tuesday night at the Macdoel
schoolhouse.
The meeting Is sponsored by the
Butte Valley Farm Bureau center.
A modern telephone system for
the south end of Butte Valley is
tne oDject. aoo nagar, owner of
the Dorris Telephone Company, has
offered to Install an automatic
switchboard at Macdoel to handle
calls, with users providing their
own lines and instruments,
Beautiful Valentines . . . Vnhrht'x
Pioneer Office Supply Co. 629 Manl
nil.
PonetrOfficeSuflify
Crahsuays
KNErV WH4T
HE WANTED -
iAMD SO DID
STONESTHKOW,)
Ten Killed
In Oregon
Accidents
By The Assoclutrd Press
Oregon's first balmy weekend
this year brought death to 10 per
sons. Nine, Including five teen
agers, died in traffic mishaps. A
4-year-old boy drowned when ji
high wave swept him off the bench.
Four of the teen-agers died in
one crash. A car driven by Glenn
Smith, 17, Sweet Home, ran oil
a highway into Crnbtrce Creek
nine miles northeast ol Lebanon
Saturday night.
Ho and three others William
Wootcn. 17, Sweet Home; Mar
Jorlo Vnuble and Jcrald Zerkel,
both 16, from Lebnnon died In the
wreck. Two girls escaped. They
are Carol Ann Whlnery, 15. and
uarlene Vandeney. 16. botn of
Lebanon. They were Injured but
not seriously.
DRINKS
Police snld one of the girls told
them some of the youngsters had
been drinking.
Franklin Cornwcll, 18, of CottaRe
Grove, suffered fatal injuries when
a car he was driving plunged off
the' rond 10 miles east of Cottage
Grove Sunday. There wore seven
other youngsters In the car. Three
of them suffered Injuries which re
quired treatment. One, Alice Rob
bins, 12 of Culp Creek, was In a
critical condition.
Two persons were killed and four
others injured in a two-car collis
ion Sunday near Coqullle. Dead Is
Mrs Robert Blankcnshlp, about
20. of Fourmile, Ore., who was
killed outright and Paul South
worth, about 48, who died later
at a hospital.
Wesley Mitchell, 29, Portland,
died in a Portland hospital Sunday
from injuries suffered in a Satur
day night crash. His pickup truck
collided with a parked truck-trailer
In downtown Portland. He was
Portland's 7th traffic fatality this
vear.
FlitE DEATH
Wayne Rcgals, 23. Cody, Wyo.,
was burned to denth Suturduy
when a truck he was driving lunged
off an embankment and caught
fire In Clackamas County.
A 4-year-old boy, Jackie Frank
Storey, son of Mrs. J. 0'. McNeill,
Empire, was presumed drowned
when a wave wnshed up on a
beach and swept him and a woman
Into Coos Bay. The woman. Mrs.
B. L. Jones, Coos Bay, made It
back to shore.
Firm Awarded
Road Contract
A. Telchart and Sons, Sacramento
have been awarded a contract In
the amount ot $310,780 for construc
tion of a four-mile length of high
way in' the Ravendale-Socrct Val
ley section along the Three Flags
Highway, south of Alturas.
The route, called the "Inside
Route," will be shortened slightly
by the reconstruction project, which
will eliminate some of the worst
curves on the highway between
Alturas and Reno.
According to a Three Flags High
way Association news release, the
Federal Government Is paying for
the work across Federal lands, and
the state Is paying the cost of the
route traveling over private prop
erty. EUGENE I The University
of Oregon Law School and tho
State System of Higher Education
win hold a regional Trnllic Court
Conference here Feb. 13-15.
I'm not just whittling Dixio; I
wouldn't drive without com
plete auto insurance.
?"'(' ' 'h
Jit v - '4
j ' 4 ' f i'" 4 'J
Jm Thomas
INSURANCE
6th & Main Phone 6465
it it s a
M ' V , ; - , 1
4 IS
v 'If
HOLD TIGHT StiU
frightened by imprisonment
in a refrigerator room
"where she had taken refuge
from ammonia fumes in a
Milwaukee ice cream plant,
Dolores lleisler, 110, hangs
on for dear life, to fireman
who carries her down a
ladder. An explosion re
leased the fumes.
Unbeatens
Collide
PITTSUUItCiII Lfi St. Bona
venture mid Duquesnp. the na
tion's only unbeaten major collrne
basketball teams, collide Monday
night In one of the lop attractions
of the season.
I a a.
Hk LUCKY
SHOE SAIE '
V V faCw "Corncy" hooding . , . but nothing
' VjrP 'j "corncy" obout theje volucj ... check y
(f f C 'or Vursc" ord ice , , . From Hots to ftt' . y
! It5.'C I i hi-hccls ... tho pricci ore down. v:-1'.
f HEELS ! use '
) The finest in dress shoes , , . YHIIR
fj Johonscn . , , Cormcllctcs . . , tvi I I wUfl
O hi . . , blacks and browns in k,Ah PHARflF
4 suedes and calfikins ... rcqu- B3 ' VllHIlwlw
7 77 J? ' ACC0UNT
cASUALnL0AFERs
ll Wcdgo heels..., uede, . . . elk U Famous ''Trompcxc'' ... neo- 11
ll,, ,. . , I 1 I'to lolo and hocl . . . antique I I
1 A red or brown in smooth leather II
...final clearance... black and brown in suede.
1oyce
. Im Odd lots in tho famous Joyce W
j fj shoes ... if the size fits , , , j
5 4 0 I,ca' 'or suro ' ' ' ftl
(1 NYLONS
Nor off-brands O'r-i v- .M'Cf Hjtf
. , bul perfects 'iiktMiitaMi fl jfiS
in a famous
brand ... 51 IM fsU ,
qauqc J5 de- fl (ft 5j,.-i, J8 B
nier ., assorted I " .j 4 ff
colors and sizes W iiWJ. 15 p,
. . . limited iSr r " : k AsP
quantity... V y , W,e h
IT
- , r
dlolBoyk
NI!!W YOHlt in llmiwwIvi'H
who (In much t'lili'i'tulnlug olti'ii
Mi'.h. "I uiiiilit nu well bo running
a lintel."
Mis, Al Tlf.cli amors, Hho be
llrven liny wlln who can imiUtIhIii
well In Iht own launii can run a
lintel MiucusNlujly It nlio llutl llio
lamina,
"1 li'i'l It In far fattier tu eitler
In 800 hotel kui'kIn llian to fine fur
10 In my own linnm," nald Mm.
ilsch. one nf the nation's lew wom
en Hotel pi'ivnienis,
"I til ltn wonder why more wom
en don't enbaik In the hold buM
m sfl. We'd have hetlei' huteln, They
need the woniau'H loucli."
The Tiwh'H luiiilly Ik a unlqun
loiii-nieinber partnership, Haydn
l lseh. lier husband, Al, a loniiei'
elutlinm umimliicliiiTi', and their
two mhim- 1,iutv, 'JH, and Hob, 2t,
operate n eliiiin ol 10 lintels Ini'lud
iiik the MeAlplii 111 New Yolk and
(he 'l'laymoro and Ainljansadur in
Atlantic City.
' None ol us draws n salary. "
she says, "F.ach lakes what lie
nerds, ''
H-:t Pltti.iiU'T
Mrs. 'llsi'h, a lilenilly, warm
voiced woman ol hi, lielpa Miirr
vino the entire chain. Hut her own
pet project Is Latiict-ln-Uic-l'liicK,
a I.uki'woort, N. J., winter resort.
.She okuyed lis purchase In lllili
alter n llve-niluulu Inspection.
"1 believe in women's Intuition,"
she salt! smiling.
Shortly beloru this sho had Bold
n children's camp she had operat
ed prolllahlv lor ten years. Her
faintly wanted her to retire, but
retirement held no charms lor her.
"Coddled women uao luster and
seem empty," she said. "KeepniK
busy may not keen yon yoium but
It makes you tool younger."
-'tiitin-iiil success or inilure has
never altered her enjoyment ol llv
mi,'. "When Al and I eaine out nf
the Brooklyn iniurlnuc bureau in
lll'.'O." she said, "he had only 30
cents In his pocket. And we nave
a dime ol that to a blind beuuar."
r'or her honeymoon she accom
panied Al on a sales trip Ihrouxh
New Knuland. She ot a sM) a
week Job, and they lived on that
while her husband was lauiicluuit
into business nn his own.
They wero living nt a $10,000 a
year clip In 1821), owned nine re
tail clothing stores. Hut the crash
willed them out.
"I even sold mv engagement
ring to keen us out of bankruptcy,"
recalled Mrs. Tlseh. "lor the next
r ,,u lluelli (111
lour veins tne "'" '.. .,
.'.'Lt Vll week I. nil wn Mot I It
our debit. t-'KI. I 1 ' , ' .
,l,er was never a let r .h' d over
U l wouldn't Imve had It V
,ii',. wav. We've always had lull,
just belnit toKi'lher."
And loitciher they built tip '
fortune. 'Ih" spirit behind the. uaod
im-k t it" lh-'V Kvo ll, blind beu
Hill' Is rellci'led In new M ilan
liiropv. Thev boimhl h '''I1"1'' !,''
le"ed children a lice I0;nrt vara.
f women's adaptability In Indus.
- i imminent In
VVOIliril in ' " "" .
liandllu. details.'' she siild, "
iclalis urn vnnuv ,
business. I never hud found Hint
nun resented neaiing won
an. They rather seem w " .
When s in 1 tsisirn iikiko
w.m.en are capable o( filling any
idle III the hotel Held, I asked;
"tv,.ii how about the job oi
house delecllvi'?"
I'm nlad vmi nroiium uu.i m .
,i, i,id "Meeaiisn rluht now 1 m
considering hiring II Indy delM-
llve, I think ane a m '""'
loinallc."
,, 1','nw i 'flu nrfneM
Deiiartinent Monday Idcnllf ed M
additional bullln casiuUtlej In Ko
rea Iii a now list I No. 40H) w hich
reported U killed, 30 wounded and
eliiht Injured. ,
"Monthly Pains" stopped
or omazingly rollevod,
In 3 oul ol 4 toioi In doclori' hnfl
Chances nro you're putting up
liiacccJiHirlli with tho functionally
;ausrd palim. cramp anil weak, "nu
Rood" Iccllnm of menstruation I
l''or, In actual lel by dot-torn, Lydla
Plnkliama ('ouipouud brouulit
plrte or slrtklnu relict from Mich din
ireno 111 3 oul of 4 of the cmcnl
Lvdlnl'lnKlinni'alimMlnfiiliiinoelio'i'
Hn urt t.yill K. Plnklialn'a Vtnelal'l
Cnntpoiiliil -or ncie. Imintiveil 'Inlildl
with ikIiIimI Iron Hre II Inked dummi
lln, nti'iitll -II (lix-nli'l Bli'o rillef It'.iB
tlliNia l)( KftClin". l(lr-lii'tl (MI trcl
brtii-r beiutr nuu duiottf your iirrliKlt
Ol-lt you mttlir Imin tllllfllnOttl "linl
flMnlipd" of "rhmmd nf life." lull oul )iuli
Irniiilf rul f'lnkmiM'a IJ itr lutl, tuvl
ll ftM nUlln rffrf! mm
ulilitfat'ac(lt(ilfaal
Wi',1 olu. tint aiumul aalal
saves you Hi on your first can, Send this
d on a postcaru to ft.en-i.-rruaui.is,
629 Main
Phone 7412
Dept. 249, Box 5339, cago 77; ill.
i