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Show THE LEW SUN. LEW. UTAH Brxxckart's Washington Digest Two Great National Policies Line Up Queer Combinations President's Control of Money and Neutrality Legislation Legisla-tion Bring About Political Mix-Up; Roosevelt Assumes Command and Takes It on Chin. By WILLIAM BRUCKART WNU Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. C. WASHINGTON. It has been often said that politics makes strange bedfellows. bed-fellows. It does that many times. Seldom, if ever, however, has there been more unfamiliar faces extending extend-ing beyond the same bed linen as occurred recently in congress. The political bed served as a temporary resting place for most of the Republicans, Repub-licans, a flock of anti-administration Democrats and a sizable collection collec-tion of "yes" men from the New Deal camp. It was such a ludicrous ludi-crous combination that my memory harkened back to the legend of the Kansas wheat fields where it has been said that owls, prairie dogs and rattle snakes nest together below ground. Two great national policies, breast fed and clothed by the New Deal, were the issues that brought about the strange alignment of polrticians. One question was whether President Roosevelt should be allowed to keep his "emergency" power to tinker with the currency and to buy silver, both domestic and foreign, at prices that provided a subsidy for silver producers. The other question involved in-volved this nation's position in its relations with other powers commonly com-monly referred to as "neutrality" legislation. It ought to be noted, in passing, that the queer and somewhat humorous hu-morous combination of conservative and radical political warriors deliv-ered deliv-ered a series of uppercuts to the point of Mr. Roosevelt's political chin. They did it several times. Mr. Roosevelt did not like it. He squawked about the obstructionist tactics, which was what they were. But his shrill cry about the tactics tac-tics was predicated upon argument quite as silly as the political alignment align-ment which brought about the temporary tem-porary defeat. Trade Brings About Some Strange Combinations While Mr. Roosevelt's argument was as full of holes as a sieve, it strikes me that it probably was less to be condemned than the action of some of the' members of the senate in the same series of controversies. The strangest of combinations among the politicians evolved from a trade between the Republicans and the portion of the majority in the senate to which I have referred. Senators from silver producing states, some Democrats, some New Dealers, and the Republicans made a deal a very polite description of the transaction. It worked out so that the silverite senators gave their votes to the Republicans who were seeking to take away Mr. Roosevelt's Roose-velt's "emergency" power to change the value of the dollar. The Republicans also wanted to put an end to the administration's purchase of silver produced outside of the United States. In return for the silverite votes on these Issues, the Republicans gave the silverites their votes to increase the price paid for silver mined in this country. The Republicans gave the silver producers an additional subsidy of about 13 cents an ounce, or agreed to stand for that much. It was a rotten combination, a trade that smells. I have long argued ar-gued that silver purchase at prices above the market was typical of a great deal of the theory that dominates domi-nates current administration policies, poli-cies, but that senate combination on the basis which we know cannot Justify, Jus-tify, nor be Justified by, the desire to correct unsound policies. There was an old demagogue in the senate some years ago who said, in a flight of oratory, that "it is sometimes necessary to rise above principle for the party's sake." His soul ought to ,rest in peace, forever, because his goal was more than achieved by the rare political trade among the senators and by the type of argument Mr. Roosevelt made in demanding retention of his "emergency" "emer-gency" powers over money. No Attack Made by Anyone Upon Stabilization Fund While Mr. Roosevelt was only temporarily defeated in his program pro-gram fur control of the money of the country, it might be well to review the shallow argument he put up as the reasons why the "emergency" pjwers should be continued. He said, for example, that taking away his control of the dollar and the right to subsidize silver was like laying up half of the navy's ships in the navy yards. I do not follow that analogy, so I will forget about that one. The other argument was that withdrawal of the power to devalue de-value the dollar would place the nation's na-tion's currency again in the hands of the Wall Street gamblers. Mr. Roosevelt said they would speculate in currencies and that there would b trade wars again. It was the same old story: When you have no other goat, jump on Wall Street But it is well just here to point out one phase of the situation that resulted largely from the stubborn-n?ss stubborn-n?ss of the President Throughout the battle with the senate over the n-called monetary bill, there never was an attack by anybody upon the stabilization fund, also an emergency emergen-cy proposition. There is $2,000,000,-000 $2,000,000,-000 in that fund and it is managed by the treasury which seeks, by purchase pur-chase or sale of foreign currencies, to maintain some even relationship between American and foreign money. mon-ey. It has worked well. It will be continued, without a doubt, and it certainly should be. As a piece of constructive money machinery, it shines like the millions of dollars of unneeded and useless silver that has been purchased by subsidy payments. pay-ments. The stabilization fund is the thing that prevents Wall Street speculation spec-ulation in currencies, not the President's Presi-dent's power to devalue the dollar. But because Mr. Roosevelt insisted on all of the powers being continued beyond June 30, of this year, the whole thing went smash. Thus was necessitated new legislation to get even the good parts of the program. Roosevelt Takes Command Of Situation: Program Flops Mention ought to be made of how the whole program crashed, or was tossed out. When the Republicans and the Democrats and New Dealers Deal-ers from silver states made their deal, it appeared that Mr. Roosevelt Roose-velt would be satisfied to continue to buy silver from American producers and to operate the stabilization fund. But he wasn't. He rushed to Wash ington from his Hyde Park, N. Y., estate and took command. The bill which the senate had subjected to emasculation under the strange-bedfellow combination originated in the house. It has to be sent back to the house, therefore, to have the amendments considered. That meant a conference between special delegations from the house and the senate, and here was where Mr. Roosevelt got busy. He directed the house delegation to refuse the senate sen-ate amendments, and the senate conference delegation, being headed up by Majority Leader Barkley, another an-other equally fervent New Dealer, Senator Wagner of New York, and a sometimes New Dealer, Byrnes of South Carolina, yielded to the demands de-mands of the administration. That circumstance is not unusual in legislative affairs. But it was thought the senate coalition of Republicans Re-publicans and silverite senators would be able to force some sort of a compromise. That did not happen. hap-pen. AH of the senators who had sold their votes for a higher price for silver turned tail and ran. They left the Republicans holding the bag. Which would have been very bad for the Republicans, except that all of this happened during the day of June 30, and the powers involved were to expire at midnight, that night, by limitation in the law itself. The Republicans were pretty sore about the situation. They had the element of time on their side, however, how-ever, and so they engaged in "legitimate "legiti-mate discussion" of the amendments, amend-ments, of the perfidy of the silverite silver-ite senators, of Mr. Roosevelt's reasons rea-sons and other things, until after the witching hour of midnight The whole thing ended on a sour note. Voting Usually Reflects Sentiment of the People So the circumstances as we have seen fail to do credit either to the President, or the senate Republicans or the senate New Dealers. It was a pretty low grade of politics, but it disclosed one thing: there is rather rath-er large representation in the house and the senate which has lagging confidence in Mr. Roosevelt Now. pursuing" that further, I have noted the usual voting of house and senate sen-ate rather reflects the sentimeni throughout the country. I think this lack of confidence in Mr. Roosevelt is further shown by the long drawn-out battle over wha: powers the President should have in dealing with international problems Mr. Roosevelt has asked for rights that would let him designate "wat zones." and would permit him ti order Americans away from them He has sought to obtain legislative authority to sell arms and munitions if they are sold fur cash and car ricd away from our shores by boats of the purchasing nation. Some of the things he has s ughi seem to me to be reasonable, bu; the house has not thought so. and I expect the senate will have many words to say about them also. Ther is so much stalling and maneuver ing and efforts to save political face that certain conclusions are inescap able. I referred to the lack of con fldence in Mr. Roosevell displayed in several ways. It is perhaps more manifest with respect to the neu trality question than in any other way. Indeed, it has been gossiped around Capitol hallways for a couple of months that congress will not adjourn ad-journ as long as international crises are popping around like firecrackers. firecrack-ers. That of course, is an exag geration; but it is not exaggeration to say that a considerable number of senators and representatives do not want to leave Mr. Roosevelt an entirely free hand in international dealing. (Released by Western Newspaper Union.) WEEKLY 1SEWS ANALYSIS G. 0. P. Centers on Vandenberg Despite Tom Dewey's Showing In Popular Opinion Samplings (EDITOR'S NOTE When opinions are expressed In these columns, they are those of the news analyst and not necessarily of this newspaper.) Released by Western POLITICS: CO. P. Shift As recently as one year ago politicians poli-ticians feared such highly successful success-ful public opinion samplings as the Gallup poll might make party nominating nom-inating conventions needless. Example: Ex-ample: New York's racket-busting District Attorney Thomas E. Dewey is No. I popular candidate for the Republican presidential nomination next year. But popular opinion is one thing and common sense another. Astute Republicans know Tom Dewey has no administrative record, know also that he might be elected and still prove a failure, thus destroying the party's chances in 1944. In Washington, Wash-ington, where political schemes are hatched, the G. O. P. now seems bent on nominating not Tom Dewey 1 , n. STYLES BRIDGES A'o 'IV in campaign literature. but another Michigan product. Senator Sen-ator Arthur H. Vandenberg. Reasoning: Rea-soning: Most conservative politicians politi-cians favor him and most G. O. P. editorial support falls in his direction. direc-tion. What such seers have not considered consid-ered is that 1938 found Gallup polls, Fortune polls and several other samplings much less fallible than U. S. editorial opinion, which the public rejected to elect a Democratic Demo-cratic President. But since 1936 the public has followed a newspaper-inspired newspaper-inspired trend to conservatism, which probably makes today's editorial edi-torial opinion less erring. Biggest Vandenberg asset in winning win-ning both G. O. P. and Democratic votes is his middle-of-the-road record rec-ord and a reputation for working harmoniously with both friends and enemies. In May he led a victorious victori-ous fight against the Florida canal project in which he was supported by 22 Republican and 23 Democratic Democrat-ic senators. Better than anyone else, observers think he could win anti-Roosevelt Democratic votes. Other G. O. P. boomlets: Bridges. In 1936 New Hampshire's ex-governor and present senator, H. Styles Bridges, missed the vice presidential pres-idential nomination with Alfred M. Landon simply because strategists thought a Landon-Bridges combination combina-tion sounded too much like "London Bridge is falling down. This month thousands of booklets captioned: cap-tioned: "For President in 1940 Styles Bridges" are being distributed distribut-ed in his behalf by a New Hampshire Hamp-shire organization. Noticeably absent ab-sent from campaign literature is the first initial H., a concession to diplomacy. diplo-macy. Martin, House Minority Leader Joseph W. Martin Jr. was judged most popular congressman last winter win-ter by newspaper correspondents and has now become vice presidential presiden-tial possibility. Since he would rather rath-er be speaker of the house next session ses-sion than vice president (provided the election goes Republican), Joe Martin is busily fighting off boosters like Illinois' Rep. Leo E. Allen, who predicts that the man who managed Alf Landon's nomination fight at the 1936 convention will find a lot of friends awaiting him at next year's gathering. AGRICULTURE: Good or Bad? Until Judgment day men will probably use the year 1929 as a basis for comparing economic conditions. condi-tions. This year, 10 summers after the stock market reached its peak, a decade's experience led Standard Statistics company to probe the U. S. farmer's status, General conclusion conclu-sion is that it almost parallels 1929' s, though conditions themselves differ as night from day. Today'- "prosperity" "pros-perity" has a different basis. Retail sales, always a good index, seem to be up. But biggest increases are shown not by Independent local merchants but by mail order houses, which may Indicate no return of prosperity but simply a swing to mail order buying. Less important but significant in the mail order in-'crease, in-'crease, is decentralization of ia- ausiry. Offsetting a possibly dull picture is a drastic shift in farm expenditures. expendi-tures. Though cash income for r -fi 'r'V .- BY JOSEPH FT. LaBlSE Newspaper Union. 1939i first four months was only 73 per cent of 1929, the farmer's essential es-sential purchases cost substantially less. In the past 10 years mortgage mort-gage debt has dropped 26 per cent; interest charges, 35 per cent; hired hands and expenditure for labor has dropped; taxes in 1937 were 33 per cent less than 1929. Result: Overhead Over-head and operating costs are down and a larger portion of farm income in-come is available for buying industry's indus-try's products. But if this increased portion goes exclusively to mail order or-der houses and not to local merchants, mer-chants, observers wondered how permanent prosperity could reach the rural U. S. WHITE HOUSE: Initials Hint to uninformed newspaper readers: Added this month to Washington's Wash-ington's alphabetical agencies are FWA, FLA and FSA - Federal Works, Federal Loan and Federal Security agencies. Another change: Though WPA retains its battle-scarred battle-scarred initials, it must now be called Works Projects administration, administra-tion, not Works Progress administration. adminis-tration. BELGIUM: Isolation In 1914 German troops marched to France via Belgium, meeting little lit-tle resistance en route. In 1939 a Reich war machine would be stopped on Belgium's frontier, thanks to a fortification system far out of proportion to the little kingdom's king-dom's size. But Belgium has not cast her lot with France and Britain, Brit-ain, has instead followed King Leopold's Leo-pold's pronouncement of 1936 when Belgium declared herself free from all former obligations with these nations. na-tions. Significantly, no' French or British general can today examine King Leopold's defenses. Last month France's General Chauvineau protested, declaring a French-Belgian defensive formation was the best for all concerned. A few weeks later France got her answer an-swer in Brussels' newspaper, Der-niere Der-niere Heure. The Belgian stand: If Germany respects Belgium's independence in-dependence in a general war, all will KING LEOPOLD . He prefers to be friendless, joeless. be well, although France's line of defense would be shortened by 155 miles. But if Germany again penetrated pene-trated Belgium, France would possibly pos-sibly evade a German attack on its northern frontier and might not aid Belgium as immediately as it did in 1914. If past experience is any indication, indi-cation, France might even squeeze out of a war via the time-tested appeasement ap-peasement route. Meanwhile the Belgians have good reason to rush their fortifications. Knowing a German drive would hold France as its ultimate goal, shrewd King Leopold also knows the Reich might avoid a conflict with him if there Is a good chance it would delay de-lay the attack on France. FORECAST CITATION Admiral Harry E. Yarnell, who stood pat on the U. S. position during Japan's recent re-cent drive against Occidentals In China, is expected to be given the distinguished service medal by congress. CP Increased world consumption consump-tion of U. S. cotton is expected by the agriculture department on basis of current sales. For the year ending August 1, consumption consump-tion is estimated at 11,250,000 bales compared with 10,900,000 bales last year. RETURN Lord Beaverbrook's London Evening Standard predicts pre-dicts a return to England this fall of the duke and duchess of Windsor. OIL T. G. Delbridge of Philadelphia, Phila-delphia, president of the American Ameri-can society for testing materials, materi-als, estimates the U. S. has ample am-ple petroleum supplies for 150 years. : WW. Iv : ! '- N I; ' ' W 1 INTERNATIONAL: Armaments What constitutes absolute "neutrality" "neu-trality" in wartime has never made itself quite clear. Superficial neutrality neu-trality under the U. S. law bans sale of arms and munitions "lethal weapons" yet under the amendment amend-ment of Ohio's Rep. John M. Vorys such indispensable war-making equipment as trucks and commercial commer-cial airplanes may be sent abroad. Early July, when the neutrality bill was making its way through congress, con-gress, found the agriculture department depart-ment proposing government subsidized subsi-dized export of cotton in a program whose chief benefactors would be aggressive Germany and Japan, both of whom need cotton to stuff into theii ammunition. But U. S. participation in dictator rearmament is only part of the picture. pic-ture. Though France has just banned shipment of scrap iron to Germany, though Britain's new min-istry min-istry of supply will have the right to ban such shipments, profit-con- J- & 1 I 4.M ! ""V f' Wll1l,Jti"'"',V""''"'a''a''''"'''" SCRAP IRON SHRAPNEL British steel, British deaths? scious democracies and dictatorships dictator-ships have no moral compunctions about such things; scrap iron or any other material of Mars is sold abroad to the highest bidder until domestic rearmament demands that it be kept at home. Samples: Last month Britain's liberal Lord Davies told how scrap iron and steel exports from the United Kingdom King-dom to the Reich rose from 4,500 tons in July, 1938, to 17,000 tons in August, 21,000 tons in September (month of the Munich crisis) and 23,000 tons in December. France gave Germany 350 tons of pig iron last August when the Czech crisis was just rising, gave her 19,-000 19,-000 tons in September when the crisis cri-sis was at its peak, and 75,000 tons in November. Still more revealing are Germany's Ger-many's 1938 foreign trade statistics, statis-tics, showing that 1,059,800 tons of Germany's total 1,146,027 tons of 1938 scrap iron came from Belgium, Bel-gium, Luxemburg, France, Great Britain, Holland and the U. S., all potential enemies. In March, 1939, the same countries contributed 161,-344 161,-344 tons, which would make 1,936,128 tons if the same import level were maintained throughout the year. From the U. S. in 1938 came 462,782 tons; in March, 1939, came 20,175 tons. Other import figures for Germany: Ger-many: Iron Ore (tons). 1930 1937 1938 Sweden 8,725.432 9.083,751 8,992,331 France ..... 2,779,868 5,739,513 5,056,121 Spain 1.824,880 310,540 1,082.551 Copper Ore (tons). G. Britain .. 20,121 60,081 32,055 Franca ... 96,297 86,227 155,869 Belgium .... 64,970 66.752 53,710 Manganese Ore (tons). U. S. S. R. ... 173,653 61,336 60,924 Brit. India .. 78.353 121,318 17.226 Australia .. 53,668 " S. Africa 290.679 268,044 Nickel Ore (tons). Brit. India ... 2.711 3,593 60 Greece 8,839 Canada ..... 99 13,250 13.368 Most logical deduction is that the next World war may find British, French, Canadian, Belgian and possibly U. S. troops dying "of wounds Inflicted by arms made of metal from their homelands. CONGRESS: Going Up In 1878 an economy-bent Forty-fourth Forty-fourth congress appropriated $291,-220,000. $291,-220,000. In 1909 the government's expenditures first topped the billion-dollar billion-dollar mark; 1918's war crisis brought it to 18 billion; 1919 made it 27 billion. Never since then have U. S. expenditures dropped much below the four-billion mark and last year came a peacetime record of 11 billion. By mid-July, with most appropriating (but little else) out of the road, the Seventy-sixth congress had managed to set a new record of about $13,110,000,000. Beyond its control were such costs as mounting old age pension reserve and the railroad retirement plan. Cropping up from the past, too, was an item of $3,624,812,065 for interest on the $40,000,000,000 national debt Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini were held responsible for almost two billion of it, but not even President Presi-dent Roosevelt would acknowledge the $338,000,000 which an election-conscious election-conscious senate tacked to the' agriculture agri-culture department's appropriation bill for parity payments and disposal dis-posal of surplus commodities. Most significant drop: Relief. For the 1939-40 fiscal year the U. S. will spend $1,755,600,000. against $2,915,. 605.000 last year. Item by item expenditures, ex-penditures, with little more to come: Independent agenciea tl.66818 340 Agriculture 1,194.173 633 Interior 172.679.765 Treasury-post office 1.700,615 054 War (military) 508,789 824 War (supplemental) 223.398 047 War (engineering projects etc.) 305.138.514 J-avy 773,049.151 Ibor - 30.536.170 state. Justice, commerce .. 122.177 220 Congressionat 21 851 779 First deficiency 23 765 041 !ndJ1?ficiency 157:619:059 Third deficiency 3.039 377 Belief (supplemental ' ' for 1939i S25 ftOdftnn Rene or 1940) iTiZw WHO'S NEWS THIS 1 WEEK ..... rrvfr. y.l.. By LEMUEL F. PARTON NEW YORK. As Adre Maurois heeomes an "immortal." it would seem that there ought to be honorable mention, or at least a elmnlB parlsnd But for Spouse of some kind, Maurois Might 'or Mme. Mau-Still Mau-Still Be Mortal , !re he exDlained how his wife, also a person of distinction, learned typing and stenoeraohy to keep tus script flowing smoothly and legibly to the oublishers. He writes only in long hand, eaid to be quite as cramped and illegible as that of Horace Greelev. and she alone of all mor tals can translate it Seat No. 35 in the French academy might still be vacant but for Mme. Maurois. He was born Emile Herzog, In Rouen. His literary divagation was the first short-cut to immortality immor-tality in a line of ancestral woolen wool-en drapers reaching back to the year 900 A. D. He was a bachelor bache-lor of arts at 15 and a doctor of philosophy at 18. He began work in his father's factory, but got right on the job as a philosopher philoso-pher and literateur, so, when he was assigned to the British as an interpreter in the World war-he war-he could fill them in on Byron, Shelley and Keats, and did so. Later he explained Disraeli to the English, and, around the clubs, they bit their pipe-stems and admitted that this French chap knew a lot of things they hand't even suspected. "Ariel, the Life of Shelley" put him in the big literary tournament in 1923, where he has been ever since. He is slight in stature, dapper and fastidious, with his thinning gray hair deployed carefully left and right, gesturing only cautiously with the sensitive hands of an artist. He has an acute, skeptical mind, interested in-terested in politics only in its historic his-toric sweep. He weighs words like an apothecary and it is as a craftsman crafts-man and finished wordsmith that he qualifies for the academy. With keen insight, he has experted America Amer-ica on his numerous visits here, clocking us through the valley of despond. His latest appraisal found us moving out of national adolescence adoles-cence into fully rational, adult statehood. state-hood. He hopes for the best, but is not a fuzzy optimist. The "decline of the humane ideal," he thinks, is the most disquieting trend of the modern world. n WALTON MOORE, of the state I- department, who will be 81 years old next February, like Mr. Chips, thinks the way ahead lies o is M . through the hu-R. hu-R. W. M oore, 80, manities. Mr. Is the Mr. Chips Chips showed Of State Dept. he was no fos-sil fos-sil when they tried to bench him, and no mere is Mr. Moore boarding the Pan American clipper for Europe. He is amenable In old-fashioned behavior a tall, quiet, gray, courteous Southerner and alertly adaptable to all new devices de-vices of living. He is keenly interested in-terested in aviation, having taken many airplane flights along the Coast, and one on the German dirigible Hinden-burg. Hinden-burg. The state department! participation In international arrangements ar-rangements for landing fields and the like has been in his hand. In congress from 1919 to 1930, from Virginia, he was a colleague of Secretary Hull. President Roosevelt made him assistant secretary of state in 1933 and later counselor for the department He Is a bachelor, driving 15 miles to his work from Fairfax, Va. He looks as if he could end all war talk Just by serving mint juleps all around. O ERE'S a general who has saved more men than any single general gen-eral ever killed. He leads expeditionary expedi-tionary forces against armies of jun- c . m, gle germs Dr. Saving Life, Not victor G. Heisl Taking It, F orte er of the Rocke- Of This General11" foundation. founda-tion. He is in the news with his report on food re-search re-search in India, in which expert-ments expert-ments in animal feeding suggest new access to health and well-being for humans. On May SI, 1889, his father ent him to the barn to turn loose the horse, with the Johnstown Johns-town flood rising. He floated away on the barn, his parents drowned, and he kept on going-through going-through Jefferson Medical college, col-lege, 16 times around the world In his 50-year fight against disease. dis-ease. Until 1914. he was with the U. S. marine health service, then with the Rockefeller fcnnl daUon. His fame biased out three years ago with his book. An American Doctor's Odyssey," Odys-sey," and later publications. (Consolidated Features WNU Service.) Crocheted EcUT th 5r vi h 81 Of of ty ai nt P fu bo be u Tl Pattern No. 2002. You'll want to crochet edgings they're oil Lz' widths since they lend ? m"M many uses. Soint suitable for round doilies t tern 2002 contains directions"' making edgines: iHmw:.' them and stitches; material Send 15 cents in coins fort pattern to The Sewing & Needlecraft,Dept, 82 Eighth' New York, N. Y. ic Please write your name, J aress ana pattern number phi Q UICK UUit) Fit Sentinel Fetturet CRUTCHES "'"THERE are too manyAmJ advocating tne construct rmtrliMi tn nut nnA ,1,. j - r - uig ai 1113 0j ; , viduals and too few expounding laeais wmcn made Amerio jten U. S. Senator William H. King. LOST YOUR FEf Hera la Amazlno Relist tc Conditions Duo to Sluggish Bom ffiit?fnT So mild, tiioroi Jrealiing, Invigorating. Dependable relief t sick heartaches, bilious spells, tired leelmj i: associated with constipation. Withmit Dirk 260 to 01 NR fllinOUl RISK rtrueelHt. Make the test--. 11 not delighted, return the box to m. lit, reiuna tne purcnass Srlce. That's fair, et NR Tablets today. ALWAYS CARRY , QUICK RElr pUH FOR Ail flNDlGESl Two Tasks It is one thing to show a t J that he is in error, and another: put him in possession of truth.-Locke. truth.-Locke. How Women in Their 40's Can Attract Men Here's good advice for ft woman ivM he'U lose her appeal to men, who w Boom noc nasaes, iosb w yvy, w-v t upset nerves and moody Bpeils. vrtn. mure ireau u a wo. -7-, re. eed a good general system tome t"1 jfmknam a vegeiaoie tomr especially for women. It helps Nature w . .l,...;ul Vmo help EVt vivacity to enjoy lite and assist eww Jittery nerves nd disturbing yPt0?oi often accompany change of Me. n" To Spend Wisely A fool may make money, M takes a wise man to spend t KILL ALL FUE51 plaeefl anywhere. KiUersttrMrfK Guaranteed. convenient-Oug, Lasts Vi. dealers. Harold 6omV.I. I UIUU"V,"V Of life 28 WNU W Easy to Understand A good example is the best mon. Old Proverb. TodVi of Doch'sJ many T vide osc Jkf Dean's iS laboratory too. approve every word or "".t yon read, the objective of "hlfJ recommend Doan-t PMs as 7j, treatment tot functional kwttj , and for relief of the pam ana causes. J fc If more people nHZt Irfdneya moat constantly JVst xnai cannot stay in w -, jury to health, there wotiid r deratanding of why a vrben kidneys lag. ana "' tion would be more often "V Barnine. scanty or tIS tion may be wtrr.br of V Itmction. Yoa may su" g 4 ache, persistent da' -Titf. i siness. -ettiria; no X. a" nen nnaer lua w - all nkved out- . . - to rw Use Docnt Pits. It a medicine that baa wo" claim than on aomexnin. - i m |