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Show S I?J Anniversary of Sound Movies Recalls Early Panic of Slars atm Tinman Purge Aimed at Restoring Parly Machinery and l.ommeululor. the dcvf-- pri.ent of the breech ! ail. n flrmrrr., ai.d the perfection Wahbingtiiu, It. f . the miking nf spiralled the r.f i (tu.g WASHING JoN, Ii. the bar: cl which Ports Peace rni.feiei.i e even gut i r vis w l.iticJ Hint the gave the bullet ur prujeitiir ita underway vuiili Kail ) twisting muicinei.l, and kept rales ci mui ii Li'iV l tr- - f'orii t if ling "heiul (, cr l.eels." TVs fr.i icaM-'range and acu-iac- H.M' (crvler, lf.K lye Mrrel, STAGE'CREENRADIO Public, Press Uncnllius(i(l al Talkie Advent Ity IJAL'KllAGF. .feu i CLASSIFlFr PEPARTm11 N W., By VIRGINIA VALE g Ralaaaad by Waalarn Nrwspaper Union. WAR CONTRACTS fore came to morion pictures years ago yet most of the excitement ov.r the in. that ;. c "In rhiJnsix wm a' ill i.n the t.ian the artillery, 'V m ii have Ii.jIIm- - if P lire- - nrrl sail rt,ill-,l'.- r Uni ci.'u tint the Infinity in lie fi,!.,l.vi t. I r. m u I ur.t'l I'. t.v war nf 111,0 fi i . 10 tin k t tiler tl.v r.rl- - uuiui.-iias ci as i.i ary it'.ti'iif li.e i.n.lliiy (hit. U"duui.i l!y li.e were In, and liyiniit cl .in.ed m.ii y. ii prf i a ti v 1:1:4 ii, i.rt."i-l.mm-r- , Hy hiitoil I ! i'i 1 li el. if the VUIUlilii'l, (1 urlti.lt ".for nf !!. i.l iidv.iute V. Lull, s.'iti.'. n e Ilia in cki.ii's f,i,.t li.e touri. n iiicin In . hi r i.f the rn.cs fill - i t (,je...-w a i C' ii Yi :t i'c, iy, necor iiiig tn the oil ih defi ati d, that n.i t .yirn n rr ut.'.ri, is ";:i 3:.;i-r- i ivi il, luuiu UJ fi: riii ns ni c.il.i.er ilia li'.p'.i i.,i.i e nf lint hat'-fo- , gnctir II. an I.. a t!..it of mi. nil and why II. e I'li.-ii-iiim.s " Inis i! lim'.wi U hi In- - made y neck nut as f ir as he roi.M tu Imlurie tie (nr u urn, shrIJi, or .i. mbs car-- ; ll:g tn bint him. 1 r.n see tin ln' lime ns r.rd by pi nie.'i, or conliiiio J ,n the l.C ilmi.ell lip H tit t'.lit lilt, I'illl-likof a iicl:ct. I mi iitiun tin! elTi'clivencss of (thum- he h.in j.ist oiiiugh if to a m:iiIc In n .iko yuii 'ui tillery" In the killer sense,' if l. 'I f.i belit'le Uie ond any ayrripalhclu-alldougnboy who Slaughter w.n right, he (the li cru- is r oily llai uliinio ratio," but because Ilia jiri jeclite, either earned, der, ti was wioug. Tliitik what Slaughter f i .!! have hi a plane or by propulsion in a aid if he had been eh eleil! rorket, IS wiiat might be called Uie and the di'linilr.'e Weapon llul he wait defeateil Tim Hiint is day slier llnr primary, the real sigdid not develop nificance of the ha tile heeaine Uie rocket in the Civil war because clear. we felt we had fnuicthmg betlrr Meier In American history haa Ihieeeh ...irimg i riled artillery M.y uilmiriistratlun been up nginiisl and small arum. And again the Uie situation which devirioed when rocket was set aside by a decision the Roosevelt ended. J arrived at befoie we engaged am not arguing hew or why that actively in World War II when our ituation came about, lint the fad exia-rts- , both tn Uie army and out la we hava had a situation where of it, a including the great who could gauge our proparty line meant little, and the age-olprinciple of majority rule, duction capacity, felt Uie the theory on which congu-ss- . as a w.ia a superior weapon. airplane We did nut entirely neglect working body, ia organized, haa study been violated. and on the rockOutstanding example was the et duiing the war, however, and rules committer. There were five now we are probably farther adsoutherners vanced in tins of "artillery" Democra- t- on tliut committee, and Uian any uthcr tyie naliun. We also with Slaughter's help, they cuuld have learned to prujecl our "srlil-lery- " tie up the vote and tic up any legisby means uf Uie ,drlmc, lation Truman asked for, (pilotless airplane). On August T, Now maybe the fact that the ad- Ulc dunes droned their from ministration couldn't get its legis- Honolulu to Cuhfoi ina. Onewayuf Uif-lation before cungrets, or couldnt drnppcd a bomb. Tlie rest landed got It passed when it did, was a siicccx.-ifnlly- , A plane with tin pilot good thing. I am not discussing can bomb a naliun tliut fur distant that. I merely say that what hap- without risking human life. pened la not a good thing for the y system. And as Uie situ- I Thit the ation grew more acute, congress Army, Mr. Jonet? wasn't a working body. In World War I when YMCA Lets take the testimony of a canteens were thoroughly loyal Republican mem- and Red Crus ber of Uie committee and acting established right up into Uie zone minority leader, Kepresenlulive of the advance, and even nearer Michener of Michigan. If the Dem- the front, some of the old timers'' ocrats retain control of the huuse, of those days wrute to the editors Michener said, the absence of Rep- insisting that Uie Civil war was won resentative Slaughter will permit on "aalt horse end likker" (I rernll the rules committee to function the that phrase in one of the letters) way It was intended to function; and we were just softening the boys. Well, It didn't soften them too namely, the legislation of the party tn power will be sent to the oft for Chateau Thierry and the Argonne. floor. Then came World War II. and That didn't mean Mirhrnrr wanted the rival party' legislation some of the veterans of the earlier passed. It limply meant hr knew war raised tlieir eyebrows at the that Slaughter, teaming up with HSO, turkry dinners at ttie front the Thanksgiving. Ice cream (m- Democrats nd the Republicans, was able to stead of brans, salmon, corn willy or notliingi tie tin vote and stymie anion. Hut, soldier, you ain't hr.ud And that Isn't govern nut! m! ment. When thry say "Thi is the army, Mr. Jones." to you future G I s, Air-PowBig you'll hardly brlirve it. Killer in War Did you hear what Field Marshal This has been an aviation yea. (blood, sand, and green the The first peacetime year tliut Normandy hedges) Mont ginnery America has been arknowledged hud to say? He tielieve enlisted a mistress of Uie air as well as men in the British nr my ought in of the sea and the It has live like other folks. Biilromi-.s- , been a time of reminiscence, of barracks. You hud your breakfa-- t In ln-recapitulation, as well as forecast nd foreshadowing before, goes the warning I remember the interview I had "but you won't have it theresung, imv with a certain army odlnal dur- mere." Maybe not. Hut if Meiri'v ' His ing the war. impatience, has his war, lli it h soldier caii mashing the ordinary rules of cen- read in bed. And what about ihoic tiu-ksorship, had revealed the seeret uni. of the bazooka kept 'confidential" forms American soldier ate it in after was use, and the til wear? long 141m-details of which Germans had long ilike lh,! bars i ,!:.e who Since learned to their sorrow. (The said givil-liyto Blue Hell). And bazooka functions on the rocket pet! .ip with a I. glib principle.) rr shade lor the Irousiis! a,j The officer 'inlcd to an old overcoats AND CAFFS! V i'll aren't hi li.e ptir.t on his wutl. It was n picture ain.v now-- . Mr, of American soldiers discharging Jones. You're hi gui-.ij rocket projectile in the War of And then there is that terminal 1312. leave pay bill passed by r.mgii 7, Why, then, if Uie rocket princisuppose, to pacify the ple was known to us in those early who got out of the army witlu-uwe did not devebip it as the days, mg w't'.it they wen ge.og to Germans did, 1 asked. nits. Almost three billion d. ll.u Uie reason The rocket was dumped into (i I. pocket to neglected in the Civil war period, them up with what the I was told, was because ordnance tor furloughs they hadn't on taken. experts were concentrating r n rn'licr : ! i ; in.-i.- r: f- I d 1 . eu-'l- t ; e - 20 cians are chuckling at the p- l.u-cimplication behind the May scandal case. The inside story Is that Mr. May, chairman of the house military affairs committee, walked Into the difficulties with the Mead Invest!- - toil.iy makes n.uvu-- urn of America's (liicf ind is'nes didn't Coine from the press or public, but from stars who pun. i Led liy the rt-oration tl.ut their Vo.r-might n t bo i.ilrhed for im uiil.i.g, an ui.eiiihu-iasri- : public, of Liu- - first and sloplii'a! l.oL.it, "The J j.i.1 hi:..r" r!. or. rig M iy i, was si. it Al I rr.iu thru on a ith i d in shir's vo.ru was ii ei.i .i.iUe or he wi-i- John Nagi-- l II. ii li.nrie iyii. i re II. u i.m! ti'.il-i.it- kill l.cc til s.iiil.,1 W.'i.Ulil N igel, wf.u w..s oi. i.'r cMOM at Hie time ii.vl reviving $2,.'iU0, v. us hi.i.-u-i- l Pj every (li.er nnd In the company in fli.vt twu years uf talkies, In! marie ll.ihiud film. 31 Western Take Lead. Recording sound for Wetrierns at first seemed Impossible- - but Kx EARLY IN CAREER llougla Fairbanks, acclaimed by millions a idol af the Is shown with his first camera staff while making line of hi early pictures, Bessie Love played apposite the star in above picture, title unknown. made "In Old Arizona" with Varner Baxter as the star and such film greats as William B(;. l, Hupalnng Cassidy, and the lale Bril Bait ruse to their fame. Westerns : i Indus-tiialist- d his Kmcmagraphone, as he called it. back to the plant. It wasn't until a year or so Inter that the president of the company took it with him to Europe to intro-- ; duce an educational flint. There it was received with such enthusiasm that company officials believed the talking movie was perhaps best u,ed 1 educational purposes. Be- f0re nioru educational movies had been produced, however, the movie industry put into general use the Hoxie mnrhine. Today it is used by prartically every movie company in the country. two-part- .. now total more box office receipts than any other type of picture. Joan Crawford and Grrta Garbo bath thought someone was playing Joke is them by substituting men's voices when they first heard recordings of their own voices. Wallace Beery made a talkie for Paramount hla first promptly was fired and went to MGM. He's been there ever since. Zazu Pitta of silent days was considered a great dramatic actress. Her voice on the sound track ruined It all and she wisely switched to comedy and made her fortune aa a funny girL Charlie Chaplin, silent and sound comedian of the early days, even now is after six planning a come-bacyean of absence. Started in 1921. Picture and sound recorded and synchronized on the same piece of! i j er ... HISTORICAL STARS . . . Among the most famous stars tn early days of silent films were Charlie Chaplin and Jackie Coogsn, shewn here in n scene from The Kid. '' feri.-w- t k'-n- BARBS OLD WESTERN MADISON. WIS. - Defying mod- ern methods of criminal detection. Wood county farmers have banded together in the vigilante system to curb recent outbreak of rattle rustling here. An SOS over a rural party teleold-tim- phone line prompted the first concerted manhunt, when 90 farmers, packing guns in old igilante style, set out on a quest for rustlers. They beat a wooded sector from midnight until dawn but the rustlers had disappeati-d- . Bernard Kroening, who live in nearby Rock, saw a car slip up to W EN DOV V. R. UTAHN EVA DA. Honihuscent of the Civil war con- the move oi!sored by trf,vl'r,iV 2,111)0 residents of the Utah part ef this little Honucvrilc sal', fiat of 2.500 to secede from Utah so they ran Join t.'ieir other 5tW towi-sf's'(1,'!;f of Nevada, where man rail do tinylhmg tie war.ts well, almost aiy'h.iug. "Utah doesn't rven seem to knew we're in the s'.' le m-- upp.iivn'ly d even care if we'te in tee bew uled I Union, G.'Ten, spokesman for the seeessi.-e::- . Mo.n ng.i ns. Utah is the fact that !hr Berlin e state's law are too strict. ree-av"A louii-t- , from the Fast. : ! in my place and l ok for tin! s et ii'achmo," ru'.uned a cafe owner on the U'.ih side. "I have hi tell him we can't have thrin, so he say 'tn heck with - er t from n:)r...-- h use h .: ter It ':.ul- ta me White it :s;a iliima the cur: mt g Roy G. Owner, said to be an cn- ; uvr u!od by b .ve a much r- ' t ii de uie gtneer economist, offers me (mid uui! Ukia.'-whii.i or .t.nul'y s you) this suggestion: Only by sup-- to a sep.u, ite v. te in jv. un 'Vi Man plying the mouse with cherse to ; do California Maa.e. mt ta lo appi :! gtiif-tt can mention the the point of Stalled 37 yea: I'ct. ie lur death of Ui !., a. ri f. Wu. the mouse be taught to abstain which ought to have a v w.fo of son - ky Mr. the invoi'for of the from stealing. He says man is where. r of Civil war faii'o, he spi avd.itg much advanced beyond this point. "rruzy quilt' sttueture soon boscon wri! t'o catne an architectural horr-'r- . that onto earh race- th rough sriny post cv.riia:: Constant construction and reno- track a ItUls rain must fall. Neither jeep ncr cheap. s lu-i- tv woods on hi farm, two occupant emerging and entering the woods. He fired three sh ris, chasing the men deeper into the woods. Meanwhile, his wife got busy on the party line to round up '.he gang uf 50 farmers. Before their arrival, however, the mysterious car raced off down the read. gave chase in his rur but lest the quarry. Krucn-in- g told Hip v:gil.mtes he believed the two strai-gestill were In the wood and that the car had been driven by a third parly, who bad remained in it Sa-.i- i 'J lwa. Sail i Us, cj. Invest in Your CountijJ Buy U.S. Saving. Bond,; f J m o'suumnsm Ctt O'Sullivan SOUS as Heals next tint shoes repaired. edg yoatavtw EASY POES IT OP HILL ok pom: ft! or n Although hampered by fog. the farmers beat through bushes and thickets for hours without finding the rustlers. Two Marshfield traffic officers and several deputies helped them. An electric wire which charged a fence on the Kroening farm had been turned off by the thieves, and the farmers theorized that the men h.id made careful preparations for herding the animals through the fence when truck arrived later. In a previous rustling incident, mysterious stringers fired on a farmer who came upon them on his farm near Wisconsin Rapid. sne this While set', only can 3 2 boor. I: s follow tu ro- - ti e state "In Nevada, if rvan wants he orders one ir t.io. then 1: he's ipi-and Giften said. "In Ulih. be h..s to gel , pa to t! e ia J store , . . and buy lias to i quart, bo he doesn't io,v up wark the t " day will I'i preset ted to let the U: ii lg iriab.ae and. if ed there, must be accepted by lie Nevada Thou will be uski d to i'.ter the boundary tj include nil of WiM-vein Nevada. drir-k- , i:u-:'.cj.- a' per-arif- , ,ik(7 1" ' f.-- lu-x- ap-pr- leg'-i.ifi.- ie con-gr- ,- if e tired. ef house to jn open cn so'.'.l walls S me nf the I.ui'M i'i'ct: Ii; hr.-to- e . i oil than 4t i'.-- r .iiri-ct-!- tie ent;.:e pr.'Vi with no stair-w- , n.lirp staiwiv. each with 13 roc :li the step, are sc.ri-v.li. tenor. Many if t'.i'in. live foe window li'ci. have puj. ity value except f.r c.i j luniuig In the maze uf secu t p hidden panels and trap do. rs. -' ai-i- l . i cross-countr- - bar-keip- have bars in some of the the West. , Texas High School Boy Presents Own Program on Radio ilrivi'i iut.'-- s you' a to Nevada." . ai-i- l l'is-.;u-- i set-up- run-.se- Farmers Pack Guns to Curb Rustlers SAN JDSK. o- best-sell- 1 STYLE j MESQUITE, TEXAS. Although only 1, years old Dale Berry. Mes- school has been senior, quite high booked on sustaining program over radio station WRR with his own cowboy band. Berry, who secured his own sponsor for the program, formerly played with Bill Cowboy Ramblers and was on the Grand Ole Opry program over Nashville station. Berry plays the guitar and other members of the band are Rebcrt Jenkins. Cleo Land-rit- , Benny and Matt MeGiethern. in Instruction piano and a few guitar lessons represent Berry's only musical training. Be is a son of Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Berry of Mesquite. . Will-ban- k IIousG'XXuntcrs Covet Mansion Built to Appease Ghosts CAME. Cvietou v.i'.'en forced it at.v t by Daukhage : or.-.!ii- JM1S( ELI.ANEoi.s Y AND ibvi" oflic rurruiai. l!t tag Machirrs ALT I L.AKl 1KsK:xcVK? jit Di-n- , ! i Jusm BIG PROFITS MACK POPCORN All .Sfuiiien Steel IMMEDI AJ E Di.MYEHY Xiom Sjh hifl' M I 1 m-- t j certain political authorities had circulated the report ' tliut the case against May was worked up for purposes of widen-- 1 trig the split within Democratic rai-kby the liberal side for the purpose r.f ptml.ihii'.g a conservative Southerner. If it did not originate In such purposes, it certainly had that political effect. However logical this report may aound to some, the Inside story is that the Mead committee membership was making n routine check Into the complicated financial set-- CLAUDETTE COLBERT up In the Garsson companies. Some suspicions about the May transaction were uncovered but not the 39 weeks; they'll select their made public. Then May brought Dr. own vehicles, choosing hit movies, novels Henry Garsson le see Mead te com- stage successes, nd short stories in which they've plain about the companies being "persecuted" by a meddling Inves-- ; appeared or wanted to appear. ligation, which, they contended, They'll be given the greatest poswas bolding up reconversion to sible leeway In selecting their ma! terial. What a peacetime activities. MEAD HAD TO ACT. With practically all movie atari The committeemen claim other efforts were made to get them to yearning to try their luck on the disist, blit they will m t identify1 stage, vis summer theaters, Jeff these efforts beyond the point of Donnell received n bid that ethers saying these enme from within the lenged for. The highly successful Democratic party. Playhouse at Ognnquit, Me., asked r In n plsy of her Despite the imminence of the her to guest-alacoming congressional election, the own choosing, with her husband, Rill Anderson, with the Dialogue-DirectRepublicans cu-- t Democratic members in all wavs. directing It And she bad te turn The Republican Sen. Hetncr Fer- It down beesuse shes playing the guson of Michigan (who does not second feminine lead in Columbias Mr. District Attorney, now shootrun ng.iin until ISMII) has been termed the "bird deg" of the com- ing. Shes asked for a rain check mittee. Ferguson and his Repub-carte- d for next year. 4 licun colleague wire in a position to force Mend to net if he tried Stuart Erwin (star of the CBS cover UP- - Ierhops they may "Plume Again Finnegan") and his 1"v keen gleeful at the prespoct wife, June Collyer, recently celecrat on the eve brated their 16th wedding anniverroa!1iig a departure fir home and election, sary by entertaining Allan Jones Ancthcr inner political sidelight and Irene Hervey, whose 10th anthe Garssi-nhired as their niversary came that same week. l for the inquiry W'uyne Juhrsi'ti, New York The scenic Roosevelt highway City Dcmorrat. along Californias Malibu coast, The evidence carried odora near Los Angeles, Is the setting reaching to high heaven, but did for much of the action of RKO's not prove conclusively that May forthcoming "Step by Step." Anne ever received any money direct- Jeffreys and Lawrence Tierney ly, although tt produced testimony have the tup roles. indicating money wss sent The committeemen have been autbor-iie- d James Melton will replace Rayto look over the income tax returns of May to supply the miss- mond Massey beginning October 8 as star and master of cereing links, and while these cannot be axed as evidence or made pub- monies of the Harvest of Stan. The program's format will change lic in any way, the committee may ret some leads to the links. The with more emphasis placed on law permits President Truman to music than formerly, though authorise such looks at the returns. dramatic story of American conlife or historical highAll in all, the newsmen who sat temporary will be included in each broadt the press table throughout the light cast. Melton's contract is for flvo inquiry thought the whole case could be put down as a scandal so years. h plainly marked with evidence that no one could cover it on It sounds wonderful Bob Hope any side, Democratic. Republican, PAC, or replacing Clayton Collyer as radio's with Paulette any other. Superman. Goddard supporting him sa Loin , REP. COFFEE INVOLVED. Lane," the girl reporter. But tha But lo and behold, the case pro-i general public won't hear IL Itn duced political tail larger than burlesque the dug. The Coffee case, follow-- . Command program recorded for the Performance; mg immediately thereafter, con-- , show will be used for transmission a Democrat, to our armed forces overseas and Hep. John M. Coffee, who received for veterans in hospitals. $2,500 from a war c. ntrac!.,r for services. He votes mostly i,n the Barbara Hale and Bill Williams, leftish side. RKO contract players who did so Thus the scandals came out even well were elevated to starDemocratic ranks between the dom, they are back in Hollywood after two conflicting factions, and the a honeymoon during Republicans the gamed must which they travelled 7.400 miles Er,,ui:d from the entire transaction 3.000 by automobile, the rest At least no one showed they claims air. to have or were selling aninfiuen ce. It was Senator Brewster, RepubliHarry Carey Jr.( son of the vet- can of Maine, who told the e of the Coffee matter, which rran actor, has been assigned a key role in "Pursued. tl"rt was mentioned in United 5w.es Pictures' drama of the campaign in Tacoma, early It southwest. will be filmed in Republicans. near Gallup. N. M., with I think the sum total uf the Tetcsa Wright. Judith Anderson scandal matter is this: If ,iy. aid Robert Mitclium. one started turning over every war contract, at this 1 hough Benny Goodman time of world crisis andparticular is terdifficult to gain ground in rifically popular, that new air show an elect i. n, Uie ultimate outcome sill be called "The Victor Borge would be difficult to foretell Si). w. starring Benny Goodman," ny rate, the Mead committee Rot the oth,r around. Weil, no went to work on some who gets top billing, it's presumably r";l!ler minor cases on the Pacific b' w,sd ,0 be 8od program. mask g ver: l!.io: Was rr bert, who'll launch the aeries, Betta Joan Goddard. Davis. Paulette Fur.taine. John Garfield and Gregory Peck radio's greatest Ust of stars as program regulars. Each will be heard several timei during Jol-or- ty two-part- INQUIRY COULD GET OUT OF HAND WASHINGTON. The politi- Sound Just IX top cinema stars will shine on the Hollywood Players programs, beginning Tuesdays at September 3 9:30 p. m., EDST, and continuing for 38 Tuesdays thereafter. They are Claudette Col- nLl US tlas Kslcawd br Wntara Nawspapar Union. I bus-ban- D Uxi 5 Year Guofairteo HYBRID rOPTORl POPCORN SEASONLNC Camplsfs Sappkat ARTHUR UNGER CO. ajsfin! wcsUMMsaMi , y ciin-nutie- tech-aio'l- vi w TCl AR 'XTKE FREEDOMS T.te Paris gathering of 2! nations to cor.--, dor the Big Fi'n deal started off under unique fur sta'-eiThe 170 grai-eage co'i.prish g p. ).d texts ore caus der.-by tc have t'oui verv dt.lted from a tecj.nic.il s';.rli-.- ...jv if Ti'.s was chare. dfo dill, it.lt.es f trues., . lA Follow tug the death of her Mr. Winchester became conscience-strickeby the lethal of the rule in war and peace and built addition to the house ta "p.ic.fy and entertain the she-.- ' She cutriim.i J of cun victims.' buiidirg n.Ui'ion for iv.uiy each providing a new monstros ty. Every nicht for 37 years, servant prepared and served lavish banquet spreads, as Mrs. Winchester chatted with her "guests Vlkla nuns AW did ' ..h a,m. making iHrinret. lahnr lh,. 1 , ARSYOO YSfEft!LT(R9 . . . Business mil haia their inning on the u hen ant 0 them mil Amin flnum-G'i rl (Jurn for a V W hittling in - - I ei--freehad !.(ir am in Brook The Kid from Brooklyn; ""mn Fran Sinatra. e"!. air A, tnwm , (rn fgrecnent, few thought them ary stronger than the . d guarantees, I S F.lmnnr Parker MUdrrtT in the r Wmwuh tttHuitigp" that K Varner Bnn, hair giirn her the led rnh' m nrf f,Mrn ;rrn( Inure h;tnl chanted more ljunnr Hun hall n mrii in all the eart she's Ti f U in ex-p- t,..,-,- urll !!!. . te Ml - luring n',:l youTs pnle. this mnjr be due Bo try Lydia K r i Ci.t . -- - - . ' :. V- -'' . .taW-Ee nyi rf a n ons of the h''t build up led b'1''1 iJ Plnkham's Tsb.rv ' r J 'to u to tssrt blood-iro- n ;-- 5 a Ihra tujJ |