OCR Text |
Show CDmjcl $1wdLl Wjul, anil OBuul CwdoWL WisJmpA. ogL 1$ By PAUL JONES (Olreetsr af Pabll Infaraiatlsa. NatUaal SaCelj CaaeU.) BIG things happened in 1945. The war ended. The atom bomb busted. Taxes began to come down. And Mr. Bonner was shot by a duck. Mr. Bonner is, of course, Mr. Stanley J. Bonner of Houston, Texas, Tex-as, as every duck now knows. On fine October day he grabbed nis trusty automatic pistol and ventured ven-tured Into the back yard to shoot a couple of domestic ducks. Duck No. 1 feU at the first shot. But Duck No. 3, a more aggressive type, leaped at Mr. Bonner, Jarred bis arm and caused the gun to go off. The bullet hit Mr. Bonner in the knee. The duck? Still alive and aassy. Wacky? Sure. But no wackier than a lot of other freak accidents that happened in 1949. tor a roundup round-up by the National Safety Council reveals that coma war, come peace, people go right on having the darnedest darn-edest things happen to them. To wit: Mrs. Edward Comfort of Brooklyn, Brook-lyn, was driving through Virginia, her 15-month-old baby riding happily beside her in a basket strapped to the seat of the car. So far as Mrs. Comfort knew, there were no hard feelings between her and the baby. But the child suddenly stopped contentedly con-tentedly drinking milk out of a nursing bottle, swung tile bottle lustily lust-ily and conked Mrs. Comfort neatly on the head. Dazed, the let go the wheel and the car overturned In a ditch. Neither mother nor baby was hurt Bard-Headed Fellow. Not so allergic to a thump on the head is Charles Anderson, a hardy resident of Los Angeles. Mr. Anderson, Ander-son, in fact, has reason to ret gard himself as practically Indestructible. Inde-structible. He was repairing a wall one day when a concrete block feU from a fourth-story scaffold and hit him smack on the head. He reeled Into the street. Just in time to be struck down by Policeman Jess Haenel's motorcycle. He recovered satisfactorily from both accidents. And Mrs. Dorothy Jensenius was walking in Chicago's loop one day when, lo and behold, a bucket came hurtling down and hit her kerplunk. It had been dropped by a dismayed window washer seven stories up. A shoulder injury to Mrs. Jensenius and a dent in the bucket comprised the damage. In Toledo, Mrs. Margaret Cook's car blew a tire at a railroad crossing cross-ing and careened down the tracks toward an approaching freight train. The auto struck a signal switch and threw a red block against the train, automatically stopping it. 'Stick of Wood' Goes Boom! When a pin in her washing machine ma-chine broke off, Mrs. Axel Soder of Makinen, Minn., looked around the house for a substitute pin and finally final-ly found something she thought was Just the thing. She sawed off the end of it and started to hammer it into the machina. She might have done it, too, if the substitute pin hadn't exploded and blown her clear Q&dlLaiwq dkd dtigkb A new railroad safety development develop-ment involving instantaneous and automatic operation of powerful red lights at both head and rear ends of trains making emergency stops is being installed by the Chicago and North Western Railway system. -. Should a train with this equipment Come to an emergency stop, either because the engineer set the brakes or becauie the ' air hose between any of the cars had parted, oscil- across the room. She had selected a stick of dynamite. Hits Bight Post. Taxi-driver Ethel Sheffield's cab skidded into a lamp post in Regina, Saskatchewan, one 16-below-zero night last January. She was knocked unconscious and might have frozen to death if a fire alarm box on the lamp post hadn't been set off oy the crash, bringing firemen to the rescue. Every returning G.I. is mighty glad to see the family again, but few are so vociferous in their greet ings as was Soldier Frank Chlan of Baltimore. He gave his mom a hug so big it snapped several of her ribs. It's odd enough, perhaps, when a fire starts itself and then puts itself out. When it happens twice the same way, you begin to wonder. But once in Utlca, N. Y.. and again in Dark Harbor, Maine, the sun's rays, passing through a bottle of water in a truck, set fire to the floor of each truck, only to have the hett of the fire break the bottle and the water put out the flames. Fire in Fire Station. Probably the most embarrassed firemen in the country were the members of the volunteer department depart-ment of Columbus Manor, HI., the night an exploding gasoline tank in a pumper wagon set fire to the fire station. Unable to get their own equipment out of the station to fight the flames, the Columbus Manor laddies had to look on glumly while firemen from nearby towns did the Job. A lot of people stick their necks out in various ways, but not so spectacularly spec-tacularly as did Virginia Triplett, an elevator operator in St Paul. Miss Triplett was leaning her head outside out-side the elevator on the first floor when the automatic doors closed. Passersby tugged at the doors by hand until they could be opened by mechanics. Doorframes Too Low Out in Hollywood, where anything can happen, "Sunset" Carson, six-foot-five cowboy movie actor, went to the studio hospital for an aspirin to help his headache. Coming out, he struck his head against the door frame, keeled over unconscious and had to have four stitches taken in his scalp. Whether it was a suicide pact or just an accident, no one will ever know. But when Miss Bette Boren of Marinette, Wis., returned home one day last March, she found the family's two dogs on the floor, overcome by gas. They had, in some manner, turned on the stove. They were revived and haven't tried it again. Every year someone lets a train pass over him without serious results. re-sults. In 1945 it was Jesse Spitzer of Denver. Mr. Spitzer did it the hard way by first having himself an auto accident This threw him through the roof of his car and landed land-ed him on his back in the middle of the track Just as the train came along. Mr. Spitzer lay quieUy and securely until the engine and long string of freight cars had roared over him, then found he had broken a leg in the auto accident. No year would be complete, of course, without someone falling safe on StAwmliwAS JlasJt iating red lights st both head and rear ends of the train would go into operation automatically. The powerful pow-erful beams would serve Is "stop" warnings to all other trains approaching ap-proaching from either direction. On clear nights the red lights are visible visi-ble for several miles and have considerable con-siderable penetrative power in rain or fog. They can also be seen over a long range in daylight The automatic principle and the ly out of a third-story window onto a cement sidewalk. The 1945 fall-out girl was Beverly Kay Schwartz, 20 months old, of Maywood, 111., who escaped with a slight head injury. Just to be different, a Chicago baby took his mother along with him when he went for a two-story plunge to the street The year-old child slipped from a porch railing. His mother, Mrs. Audrey Hudson, ffrohH-sl hlm ok fclm 1ftt hr i balance, and mother and son fell together. Neither was seriously hurt Most farsighted plunger of the year was James Hearn of Seattle, who fell three floors down an air shaft to land cozily in an easy chair. Ambulanoe Throws Her Out As Mrs. Clara Wagner accompan- led a sick friend to s Chicago hos-1 fact-finding panels and cooling off pltal, the ambulance in which they periods to head off industrial strife, were riding turned a corner no Aside rom te jee measures sharply that the rear door flew open i passed, all the other presidential and Mrs. Wagner was catapulted j propogali have eltner been emascu-into emascu-into the street She was returned to lated held up ln commlttees, or the ambulance. 'and continued the J comrietelv ienored ud on Canltol Journey patient. Just to prove that America hasn't a corner on freak accidents, a wind storm in North Adelaide, Australia, scared I deliveryman's horse into running away, but also blew the de-liveryman de-liveryman ahead of the horse in time to stop it I Bobcats don't frighten Mrs. Donaldson Don-aldson of Breen, Colo. When she came suddenly upon a big one in her turkey yard, she fearlessly seized a club and attacked it The bobcat's hide now hangs in kitchen. Mrs. Donaldson did suffer a single scratch. the not as a An ordinary field mouse ran up lose next June 30. the steering wheel of an automo- . , President Truman, however, as bile driven by Hollis Lee Randolph was President Roosevelt before of Topanga, Calif. Mr. Randolph, him, is loathe to use this power be-who be-who couldn't have been more star- cause, if he did so, this government tied ' had It been an elephant, lost in peacetime would be operating as control of his car, ran it into a ditch and turned it over. Neither he nor the mouse was hurt. A Liberty ship crashed into a bridge in Boston harbor, knocking a 90-foot section of the bridge into President who claim be is lacking the water. Although the structure in program and initiative, would be carries elevated lines, automobile the first to raise their voices in pro-traffic pro-traffic and foot ways, there were no test over the first dictatorial act trains, no autos and no pedestrians pubKe 0pinion Rule, vis av ai mjw utnv w -tuvu Yet it was midday, when traffic is usually heavy. No one was hurt on the ship, either. One of life's little mysteries to doctors and economists came when 17-month-old Larry Lingle of Har-risburg. Har-risburg. Pa., swallowed a nickel and coughed up a penny. Henry Hale slipped on the ice in Chicago. A policeman asked him if he was hurt. "I broke my leg, ' replied Henry, calmly. 'Take me home." The police did so, then asked solicitously, so-licitously, "What doctor do you want?" "Doctor!" Hale snorted. "What 1 want is a carpenter." Yes, it was a wooden leg. w And Just as a reminder of how tough things really were during the war, Michael Babich walked up to a fellow worker in Newark, N. J., during the height of the tobacco shortage, facetiously asked for a cigarette, cig-arette, got one, and fainted! (jJaArdnq eg (Danqsih lights themselves were developed by the railroad and the Mars Signal Light company of Chicago working work-ing in close co-operation. It is the fourth successful step in railroad safety research "accomplished by the two organizations in the past 10 years. The first came in 1936 when the Mars oscillating headlight, now a regular feature on many of the nation's na-tion's fast trains, was placed on the original steam-powered "400." JUjfome Rep&iten !- uiruitirrnu Jm iiMjninvivn Bw Wnlt.r Jni WNUi WNU WtMniton Burtm. tilt Ey St.. H. W. Congress Should Listen To Voice of the People . T"lUf Oka at, h.. fc.Anm 1X1 " " ucw cai UC5U good time to take stock mm am m of the Washington scene and the position in which the government finds itself. Scanning the record, that position looks none too good. In the first place, out of the 21 -point program which President Truman sent to the congress back in September, Sep-tember, only three points have been acted upon by both houses. These three include the bills to create a single surplus war property prop-erty administrator, about which more will be written later; t- provide pro-vide for limited tax revision, and I" iuw. "? September, the President in versal military training, for com- nulSOry health insurance, and for HilL The President has been criticized criti-cized in some quarters because he has not gone to bat with congress and fought harder for enactment of his program for reconversion and postwar economy. What of War Power? . And this criticism brings up an important question which the people peo-ple most certainly should consider If we are to get the most out of our democratic form of government President Truman still holds his almost al-most unlimited power under the wartime act Most folks will agree that during wartime it was necessary neces-sary that the chief executive exercise exer-cise this dictatorial power reaching into almost all phases of our national na-tional life and national economy. But now that the fighting is over and the country is attempting to get back onto a peacetime basis, the question is: "Shall the President continue to exercise that wartime pdwer?" In other words, the President Pres-ident could seize all Industry tied up in strikes and operate them; he could direct the foreign policy of the nation; he could fli wages and set prices; he could do alt these things and many more under the power that he now holds, but will a dictator naUon and not as a democracy de-mocracy governed by the consent of the governed. And the very organizations organ-izations and individuals who are now loud in their criticism of the This country and its democratic institutions must of necessity be guided by public opinion. No law, no act of our leaders will long withstand with-stand the force of an opposing public. pub-lic. The point is, however, what is the opnlon of the public on these vital domestic and foreign questions? ques-tions? Here In Washington are heard only the voices of the vocal minority and pressure groups. We hear these voices on foreign policy, we hear them on elimination of price and rent control: they are heard on farm questions, surpluses, parity prices, conservation, the Missouri Valley authority; the question ef strikes . . . what about Russia . . . wa;e increases ... the cost of living . . . so-called socialised medicine . . . a tbousand-and-one questions. Are these loud and consistent voices from minority groups here in Washington the considered opinion of the American public ... of the men and women in the 16.000 home towns of the nation ... of the 52.-300,400 52.-300,400 farm and rural area folks . . of the millions in our teeming cities? It would seem to your home town 'reporter that now would be a good time to really let our legislators know what the folks back home actually ac-tually think about all these vital questions. It all boils down to the ?ue8tion . whether the nation, un- ler ou" en'wc rorm of govern- ment Is to be guided by a unified ipoken, public opinion on both foreign for-eign and domestic affairs, or whether wheth-er the decisions of the congress and the President are to be controlled by the minority lobbies. Danger of Lobbies These lobbies, however, are so powerful and persistent, that a real crisis can break out any time. AO this talk about the "invisible government" gov-ernment" that we used to hear is not merely wild imagining. There are hundreds of well-paid, shrewd lobbyists in Washington, all skilled at getting the legislation they want j passed for the interests they repre- , sent Many are . highly successful. They constitute a real danger to our traditions of government and could j bring on a disastrous reaction. Try Nazis in Ruins Of Their Handiwork Scene of the Historic Trial 91 Per Cent Destroyed by Bombings; Case Sets Precedent for Outlawing War. By BAUKHAGE IVeiDi Analyst and Commentator, Back in Germany, Baukhag report the war crimes trial of 21 top Nazit with the tame vividneu with which he narrated their rise to power in the prewar pre-war years when he wot stationed in the reich. Below it the first of s series of article written from Nuernberg: WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street N. W.. Washington, D. C. NUERNBERG. GERMANY. I have just left the courtroom where, as I write, the trial of Germany's war criminals is still in progress. The courtroom is Just above me In this great stone courthouse which was almost untouched by the bomo-ing bomo-ing which reduced this most beautiful beauti-ful and famous city to the point that it was declared "91 per cent dead" by the experts who followed the occupation by American troops on April 20, 1945. I am writing in the press room with reporters from more than a dozen nations about me. Most of us are in uniform, the majority being the uniform of the United States army, which all war correspondents in our theater wore. Up until recently re-cently correspondents had s simulated simu-lated rank of captain. Now we are simply uniformed civilians operating operat-ing under military orders. As I look back over the beginnings of this trial the earliest discussions discus-sions before the tribunal itself was formed I have the feeling that we are now looking at something very real actual and factual, rather than theoretical and vague. At the first gathering, the appalling condition condi-tion of this city produced the feeling that all about It and in it must be chaos too. Nuernberg dates back o the lltn century and It grew into I such favor and beauty that it bore the name of Germany's "treasure i chest" It was a chest of treasures of art, song and culture as well as' of the gold that poured into the cof- fers of the merchants. Now it is a shell, and one of Europe's best ex-1 ex-1 amples of the atmosphere and charm of the middle ages is gone, j How the nearly 300.000 people who ; are said to be living in these ruins exist it is hard to say. The streets ! are cleared, some street cars are ! running, some shops are opening, a 1 city government is operating. But. , few houses are livable. In some ' cases parts of great office buildings j have been restored. Such cellas as I can be cleared of rubble and roofed are crowded. A huge air raid shelter shel-ter 280 steps below the ground contains con-tains a small village in itself. Milestone in Man's Progress It may be that what is accomplished accom-plished will be washed out by subsequent sub-sequent stupidities; but I believe, whether we go forward Immediately Immediate-ly from this point or not it will remain a milestone in man's effort to accomplish the outlawry of war, that it will be a landmark from which others may set their course anew. Grotius, father of international internation-al law, held to the principle that aggressive wars were illegal As Justice Jackson pointed out it was because of the greed for land which characterized the 18th and 19th centuries cen-turies that this concept was thrust aside and the world came to accept the tenet that war in itself was not illegal And it seems to me that all attempts to stop war must be futile so long as such a concept exists in international thinking. No one who saw the spontaneous reaction to Justice Jackson's opening address to the court could feel that the tremendous tre-mendous effort which has gone into the creation and operation of this court can be completely lost For those who have witnessed these proceedings there is s striking strik-ing symbolism in the rise snd fall of a nation which built a vicious culture in less than a decade with one final objective (aggressive war), which very ideology destroyed it as no nation has been wrecked before. Here we see before us ln the flesh (in some cases considerably less flesh than they were adorned with in their hey-day), the men who conceived con-ceived and carried out this plan, which Is the distillation of the philosophy phi-losophy that might Is right and which negates the whole basts of the moral law which has been established estab-lished by civilization. Step by step, with the epitome of tons of written evidence, with moving mov-ing pictures, with plans and charts. BARBS In the various provinces of France, grape harvesting is ritual-lzqd. ritual-lzqd. In Burgundy the grapes sre collected In wicker baskets known as "vendangeots." In Champagne they are piled In little wooden barrels, or "caques." Wooden baskets bas-kets are used in the Bordeaux region, re-gion, buckets In Provence, wicker hods in Medoc, and panniers In the Cote d or. uf the growth of the Nazi plan Is being set forth factually, coldly and logically. logical-ly. A new chapter is being written in every session of the court We watched Nazidom untold before be-fore us step by step - first In the removal of the physical ability of the German people to resist; then in the gradual substitution of Nazi concepts con-cepts for the normal human concepts produced by the Christian philosophy. philoso-phy. One of the American attorneys quoted a comment of Dr. Schacht on the effect of the destruction of the freedom of the press. Schacht was quoted as having said, at a time before he knuckled under to Hitler, that thousands of Germans had been killed or imprisoned and not one word was allowed to be printed about It Of what use is martyrdom, he asked, when it is so concealed that it has no value as an example to others? Therein lies one of the answers to the moral failure of German Ger-man resistance. By the time the Nazis were ready to fill their concentration camps with their foreign victims, they had learned well the art of handling the resistance of their own people and smothering it behind a wall of utter silence. As the court pointed out, the first purpose of the concentration camps, the persecution, suppression and propaganda, was "the conquest of the German masses." Each successive step was traced by the prosecution with the same meticulous detail, detail that kept even the prisoners with their ears glued to the headphones and their eyes following the speaker or the exhibits. ex-hibits. Accused Make Brave Show . However, for us in the courtroom, more impressive than the things that were done were the men in the prisoners' pris-oners' dock who actually did them. Goering was no longer a name, he was a person, now leaning back and grinning, how with his arms on the edge of the rail of the dock, his chin resting on them. There was Rosenberg, whose task was to twist the minds of the people with his absurd story of a super-race, of anti-semitism. There he sat, looking down, his fingers nervously toying with the telephone cords. There was Keitel, stiff, cold, proud, arrogant all Prussian in his uniform, uni-form, stripped though it was of every badge, ribbon and insignia. He maintains himself with dignity, but not for a moment does he forget his pose. At this writing the psychiatric psychi-atric analysis of the prisoners has not been completed and Keitel has not been reported upon, but I daresay dare-say his I. Q. will be high, though perhaps not equal to that of Goering, Goer-ing, who, surprisingly enough, stands right at the top. Goering is tacitly acknowledged as leader by the others. oth-ers. To the observers he appeared still the silly poseur, although he seemed more reasonable appearing than the fat and grinning mannikin I saw as he presided over the Reichstag Reich-stag in his comic opera uniform. Admiral Doenitz, who looks like a pale shadow, is also at the top of the .1. Q. list. He remains almost motionless, only occasionally consulting con-sulting his attorney, who appears in a German naval uniform as he is on duty with a part of the fleet used in mine sweeping and was released especially for the trial. Down at the bottom of the list so far as Intelligence goes is Julius Streicher. Although of far lesser stature than the rest, this miserable character Is a symbol of the fa3 of Nazidom because he is meeting his fate in the city in which he rose to power a fate at which he himself him-self hinted. Streicher conducted the last class ln Nazi indoctrination for lawyers held in this very courtroom where he had been tried by the pre-Nazi authorities for various misdemeanors misdemean-ors and perhaps other crimes. As he concluded his last lecture, he pointed to the prisoners' dock and said: "We used to sit over there. Now we are standing up here. But there may be a day when we are sitting down there again." He IS sitting down there today. In a brand new dock, to be sure, but with the same great iron eagle over the high marble frame of the door-' way looking down on his cringing head. by Baukhage Since the inauguration on December Decem-ber 1 1945, of radio-telephone communication com-munication between the Netherlands West Indies islands of St Maarten and Saba, the latter, which is little more than an extinct volcanic cone, with its lone community, known as "the bottom," in the crater, la believed be-lieved to be the world's smallest island is-land possessing such communication facilities. jOU IA ' OREW PEARSON at'tViM'irirrTrmTltiO0 rRUMAN DUCKS QUESTION OF SECOND TERM WASHINGTON. - Pres. Harry Truman isn't sticking bis neck out in the 1948 nolitical race vet. Democratic Rep. Edward Herbert of Louisiana and Mayor Robert Maestri of New Orleans discovered :his when they called at the White House the other day. Maestri reminded Truman that the Louisiana delegation was among he first to support him for vice president at the 1944 Democratic sonvention in Chicago. Then be tdded: "We hope to cast our , votes tor you for President at the next ionvention." Truman chuckled good-naturedly Out that was alL "AD I can say to that," he replied, "is that I'm Just doing a Job here from day to day and letting the future tale care of Itself." SLOTHING FOB VETERANS Chief dilemma faced by the returning re-turning war veteran when it comes to new clothes is that either he will get clothes or his wife and sweet-aeart sweet-aeart will get them. There aren't going to be enough for both. In this choice between man and wife there is no question as to where the U. S. government stands, st least in theory on the side of 'iie man. He has been away fighting, fight-ing, his old clothes are moth-eaten and he deserves something to wear. Setting them tor him, however, nay be another matter. Bottleneck of the entire problem soils down to linings. Wool clothing cloth-ing tor men must have linings. This i means rayon and cotton. At present 'the wool and worsted situation is Improving and there probably Will 'oe almost enough for 1946. But rayons and cottons are differ-int. differ-int. In the first place most of their production was allocated to war ases and it takes some time to get mills reconverted. Second, and here Is where the sex problem comes in, most of the rayon and cotton now available for civilian use has been going to women. In other words, women are getting the rayon blouses, the slips, the undies and other things they like to wear. Meanwhile the much more prosaic but absolutely ab-solutely necessary lining for men's suits is left out in the cold. In addition, the hosiery manufacturers man-ufacturers are even asking for, and getting, a lot of rayon poundage pound-age for stockings, despite the fact that nylon is coming back. WHY WOMEN GET BREAK Chief reasons for this channelling it clothes to women, despite the needs of veterans, are: 1. Higher prices and more profits (n women's apparel Men's clothing manufacturers blame this on OPA. 2. The War Production board last tall issued priorities on cotton and rayon in order to spur production of medium-priced clothing, but toi some strange reason entirely omitted the bottleneck of men's suits linings. Since then the WPB has been abolished, abol-ished, but its successor, the civilian civil-ian production administration, il anything, perhaps, has done a little worse. Well-meaning Herbert Rose, head of the CPA textile division, who has sublime faith In the ef ficacy of priorities under any and all circumstances, has proceeded tc grant priorities to "hardship" caser for coat linings. By the end of November, No-vember, 160 "hardship" cases had received lining priorities from Washington alone with' scores o) other priorities issued by CPA branch offices, making the whole situation more snarled than ever. Meanwhile, Frank Chester Bowles, who has done more to protect the American consumer than any one else in Washington, Washing-ton, readily admits that he has made a mistake in clothing. His problem, however. Is whether to get an army of women's clothing dealers on his neck by decreasing the ceilings on women's wom-en's clothes, or whether to boost the price of clothes for men by allowing higher price ceilings on their clothes. One or the other probably will be ; necessary even in addition to the plan for voluntary rationing of men's clothing and the issuing o! ciouung ceruncaies to men at sep oration centers. Now we in this country have s i great rorm oi government and a ! great basic concept of getting along with our neighbors. And it's time ws went out as Christ did and tried tc sell our American religion. CAPITAL CHAFF "I've been reading the platform! of the two major political partiei for the past 40 years," remarket Coa Carter Manasco of Alabama who did so much to sabotage th( full employment bill "Wett, h everything called for in those plat forms had been carried out thi country would have been ruinet now." . . . "Most significant thins, about the Republican's Chicago con ventibn to me," remarked "Cap Harding, secretary of the Demo cratic congressional committee, "U the excellent planning. White Oilcloth W Is Easy to Keep Clea: THIS white oilcloth bum,, from ROOK A f homemaking booklets offered1 these articles. Here are all ahVad ' u 80 Make a pattern by followini n .-... -Hti mi. nuie a pan!.; ine-inch squares and then draw Eg tine to cross the squares at shows. t Will need one-quarter yard at oilck heavy pink thread for the hand-statin. seams and two pink beads or buttoojk the eyes. Cut two body pieces, four pieces and a strip two inches wist Z thirty-six inches long for the center ui ui uvujr. uitciuiiv uie ears 10 Blgji them stand up. Join edges, as shot-leaving shot-leaving an opening in the body (or rfc fing tightly with cotton or bits d tt cloth; then finish sewing. NOTE: Book 6 contains thirty-two Of hand work, rag rugs, furniture reus, eling and curtain ideas. Send request ft oooKiei 10: MRS. RUTH WTETH SPEARS Bedford Hills New Tort Drawer 10 Enclose 15 cents tor Book No. I rlTimiT Address- Qulckly Relieves Distress oi A lime va-tro-noi y n.irt eacn nosiru prompt? fV it relieves sniffly, stuff JDrCp distress of head colaV makesbreathingessls, Alsa kelps prevent many colds from developing U used in time. Try lti YouH like ltl FoUow directions la package. FEEL OLD? nisu an 11 ri DAbA Abut brings quick relief l muscle pains doe to fittigne, exposure, colds or overwork. Con-tains Con-tains methyl salicylate, effective ef-fective paia-relievioK gnu. fStTHKJ Is Money-Back Guar an tea Mads ky McKessea a Dobbin for Sals i roil Crutglst Buy U. S. Savings Bon! MZO IN fUBISf Million of people uflerins fx impl Pile, tin found promr relief with PAZO ointment. Hetti whys Flrat, PAZO ointment woiwj Inflamed area relieves pain sw Itching. Second, PAZO ointow lubricate hardened. dri I pat"" help prevent cracking and K oca. Third, PAZO ointment tarn to reduc ftwelllna and check Di bleeding. Fourth, if easy to PAZO ointment' perforated rw Pip make application "traf' thorough. Your doctor caa vou about PAZO aintment SUPPOSITOIIIS TOO) Some persons, and many docro prefer to use suppositories, so FM" come In handy supposlinriea N Th. um -rait hind relief w fAZO alway gives. Beware Cougts f fom cominoa ccMs That Hang ft Creomulston relieves prompfiTC cause It goes right to the seat trouble to help loosen and .vt germ ladea phlegm, and aid, lb soothe and heal raw, tender flamed bronchial mucous X cranes. Ten your aruBgi . - bottle of CJreomulsipn . with tw etoi-etAnrtino' vmi must like tned quickly allays the cough or JOB to have your money bacK. .11 CREOMULSIOJ MERCHANDjSj .:.,V-Tw I Must Be GOOD ! & to be J h ConsistentlvAdvertisgi & BUY ADVERTISED GOggj tJ.:: Si 'SQUARES: FT "HOWN 1 SIDES &' Y'f WITH A If V VI rsTwp 1 1 foil between! A if ASM |