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Show "World Varieties" Smash Hit in 1 Atom, U. N., 'Hamlet' Fill By BAUKIIAGE News Analyst and Commentator. FLORIDA, 1947-1948. The last pink blush of the setting sun has faded from the Indian river. The palm fronds are quiet and only the plaintive peep of the last wakeful bird can be heard over the whisper of the waters. A year has begun, but only the baby owlets realize that something Is different. Life has begun for their generation as it begins each winter almost precisely at this day and hour. I'm looking through my diary. New Year's Day Little news, but down the street the church bells ring and for some reason I go to the bookcase and pick up "Pilgrim's Progress." Weave a long quotation Into my broadcast and very glad 1 did so many people liked it. Back through heavy snow to dinner. January 6 Here is a red card with the seal of the United States on it: "House of Representatives, admit bearer to Radio Gallery." A new. Republican Republi-can dominated congress, the Brst in 14 years. The new "ins" riding high. The "o u t s" pretty gloomy. The Gallup Gal-lup poll showed J Truman at his 'ow point- (Tne crowd to hear the Baukhaee President s mes sage is no bigger than the one which lammed the sen ate to see Senator Bilbo barred.) Cowboy Glen Taylor of Idaho, however, how-ever, stole the Republican show. A difficult broadcast It looks strange. Indeed, to see Joe Martin and Senator Sena-tor Vandenberg sitting there presiding presid-ing with Truman below them at the speaker's desk. January 1 Had a birthday but didn't record anything. It couldn't have been important. January 16 Press conference at the Polish embassy. (What a change since I broadcast from the drawing room In the days when Hitler began be-gan to show his claws.) Now the Soviets have what Hitler took. Nobody No-body believed a word of what the Charge d'aftaire said as he insisted on Ihe purity of the government's pre-election activities. Invited to tea for Otto (Hapsburg) of Austria. Couldn t make it (How are the mighty fallen.) ' January 30 Broadcast from Roosevelt's bedroom at Hyde Park. Just as he left it. Bedroom slippers, dressing gown, the last magazines that he looked at before he left for Warm Springs, Fala's dog biscuit January 31 Broadcast from Poughkeepsie. It's centenary of Smith Brothers' cough drops all the employees wearing beards. February 7 Palestine Is boiling. February 15 Took Elizabeth (godchild) through White House. February 19 Dr. and Mrs. Stephen Palmer (pastor of my parents' par-ents' church. First Presbyterian of Lockport, N. Y.) called. February 20 Heaviest snowfall of year begins. Attlee announces India to be freed. February 27 Baby senators' dinner. din-ner. Commentators as "pitchers" grill freshmen senators "up to bat" at Press club. I had Flanders of Vermont McCarthy of Wisconsin and Robertson of Virginia. March 12 Broadcast from house radio gallery again. President's message on aid for Greece and Turkey. Tur-key. Announces "Truman doctrine." Presidential party departs in Sacred Cow. Nat (Nathaniel Peffer, protestor protes-tor of foreign affairs, Columbia university) uni-versity) addresses forum: "Get out of China Chiang is a crook." Late in March A southern Journey. Jour-ney. Daytona Beach, Pensacola, filled with vague memories of my grandmother's stories of ber pre-Civil pre-Civil war days here. Lunch aboard the carrier Saipan. Birmingham, Anniston southern hospitality and sympathetic audiences. April 9 Back In Washington. Saw Maurice Evans In "Hamlet" Very modern. Gravediggers' scene omitted, Ophelia finds her flowers pressed in a book. However, I liked It April 28 Farmers don't hate daylight savings time any more than I do. Washington on regular time, we get up an hour earlier. As hard for me as It is for a cow to change habits. April 29 Poor Richard club of Philadelphia gives me their "citation "cita-tion of merit" Had a very Jolly luncheon. Wally sits next to me (Wallgren, cartoonist of the Stars and Stripes). Later the United Businessmen's Busi-nessmen's association gave me a public service shield. May Day Mexico's President Aleman addresses joint session of congress. Later we 'meet him for cocktails and an interview at the decorous Blair bouse, state department's depart-ment's guest residence for VIPs. Terrific crowd, heat, the poor President Presi-dent nearly pushed Into the garden. "Viva Mexico, viva Estado Unidosl" May 16 Called on Dr. Loudon, Netherlands ambassador. He tells me he is leaving. It's not often you establish pleasant friendships with officials whom you may know very well professionally and socially. Dr. Loudon was an exception. Hate to see him go. May 20 Boys back from foreign T i ..k L Flying Disks, Passing Year ministers' conference in Moscow. Baltimore Sun's Paul Ward and Washington Post's Ferdinand Kuhn addressed the overseas writers off-the-record. What they said confirmed con-firmed other off-the-record conferences confer-ences with high officials. Not much hope for Russian-American amity. Couldn't Get Maple Sugar May 21 Hear violent argument "Vermont maple sugar Is better than Ohio maple sugar. . . ." Affirm, ative: Presidential Secretary William Wil-liam Hassett of Vermont. Negative: Dr. Louis Tuckerman, bureau of standards, nuclear physicist of Ohio. Later broadcast my willingness willing-ness to Judge If given samples. June S Secretary of State Marshall, Mar-shall, at Harvard, outlines Ideas on European recovery. June 11 Dinner and forum. Dr. Chisholm, Canadian minister of health, gave a splendid talk. He believes be-lieves it will take a lot of education educa-tion to change human beings from "the kind of people who go to war every 25 years." Still no samples. July S The air Is full of flying saucers. So are the airwaves and the newspapers. Typical mass Illusion. Il-lusion. July 25 Off for a week in New York state and Vermont. Showed my wife scenes of my hiking days. Climbed Mount Mansfield again (on a ski lift). (Maple syrup. $10 a gallon.) gal-lon.) August 2 Back to tropical Washington. Wash-ington. Re-stocked office aquarium with guppies, black mollies, zebras, angel-fish and jumbo snails. August 11 Preview of film "The Roosevelt Story." Good historical documentary, but commentary quite out of tune, for those who lived through most of it. August 19 Tragedy angel-fish succumbs and is eaten almost alive by the predatory, if sanitary, snails. August 20 Bill Benton, director of state department's "Voice of America" program, calls us in for criticism. He has a rather Impressive Impres-sive factual report oo its effectiveness. effective-ness. September 16 Back in the ABC broadcasting booth at the United Nations in Flushing, N. Y., to watch the general assembly Te-convene. Too busy to make any diary entries from now on. September 27 Returning to Washington. Progress at the assembly assem-bly seems to be caught In the "njets," but there Is a will to peace there which will hold the organization organiza-tion together to the last ditch. October 14 Interview with Stas-sen. Stas-sen. In huddle with state department's second-level experts. Marshall plan by no means ready. Paid for my own lunch. October 28 Folks In Upper Darby, Pa., seem less interested In the '48 presidential campaign than In the international situation. November 10 Folks in Oak Park, 111., seem more Interested in the '48 presidential campaign than In the international situation. November 18 MC'd "Decade of Destiny" program on Richmond News Leader's WRNL station for their 10th anniversary. Smithfield ham and more Virginia hospitality. November 17 Extra session of congress opens. President's European Euro-pean aid and domestic anti-inflation message received with polite but restrained re-strained enthusiasm by the majority major-ity party. Delivered a learned discourse: "Journalism: Its Cause and Cure." December 7 Television interview inter-view with Senator Flanders of Vermont Ver-mont and Senator Lucas of Illinois on inflation. We didn't do much to bring down prices, but our temperatures tempera-tures rose slightly under the kliegs. December 12 Off to Florida. WHAT CAR DO YOU LIKE? A48 Auto That sleek, snake-hipped automotive automo-tive beauty that you probably are on a waiting list for Is a shiny example ex-ample of the "survival of the fittest" fit-test" principle operating in the Industrial In-dustrial world. It is the evolutionary descendant of 2,200 different makes of cars which have appeared on the market hi this country alone during the 55 years since the first gasoline-powered automobile drilled down the pike. Of those 2,200 different manufacturers manufac-turers who introduced their products prod-ucts into the American scene, only 21 today continue in actual production produc-tion of passenger cars In the U. S. Nevertheless, this year's models owe much to these enterprising manufacturers who tailed to sur ; i I A. BOTTLE BABIES . . . Porkey and Jacob Werner of Baltimore, Md., must drink 17 gallons of water a day between them in order to go on living. They are victims of a rare kidney ailment that brings about body dehydration. Seventeen gallons of water weighs about 142 pounds; combined weight of the children Is 54 pounds. NEWS REVIEW Panama Bases Denied; List Grain Speculators Unanimous rejection by Pan- ama's national assembly of a treaty which would have given the U. S. the right to lease and man 14 military mili-tary and airfield sites to defend the Panama canal not only precipitated a diplomatic disaster but also left this nation in the position of a fighter without a left hand to guard his Jaw. The action, strongly opposed by Panama's President Jiminez, left the U. S. with Just one alternative to pull out since commitments had been given that no American troops would remain in Panamanian territory terri-tory without sanction of an authorized author-ized treaty. Military officials later announced that the withdrawal of some 2,000 U. S. soldiers from the 14 bases surrounding sur-rounding the canal would be begun Immediately. That meant, probably, that the troops would be pulled into the canal zone proper, which the U. S. leases from Panama. This was, by all odds,' the most crucial issue to arise in U. S.-Pan-ama relations since this country purchased the canal from France In 1904. And it was aggravated by the fact that the inability to man defense de-fense bases around the canal left this most vital point In American military security dangerously exposed. ex-posed. Rep. Albert Engel (Rep., Mich.), chairman of the house appropriations appropria-tions subcommittee on defense, stated his belief that the national assembly's 51 to 0 vote against the treaty was influenced at least In part by the Communist movement in Panama; and he suggested that the U. S. build a new Atlantic-Pacific canal outside Panama if that nation continued to refuse use of bases. There did not appear to be much chance of further negotiations, however; how-ever; the assembly's reJecUon of the pact probably closed the door on that course. Some officials were speculating on whether the problem might not wind up in the lap of the United Nations lor solution. SERIAL: Grain Opera Secretary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson, at the behest of the senate sen-ate appropriations committee investigating in-vestigating commodity speculation on the part of government officials, came through with the first installment install-ment of the "names" he had promised prom-ised to name. There were 711 of them big traders in grain and other commodities. commodi-ties. But except for the name of the man who precipitated the inves tigation, Edwin W. Pauley, presidential presiden-tial advisor and special assistant ANDERSON'S LIST to Army Secretary Kenneth Royall, there were no spectacular disclo sures on the list While there is no law against speculation, spec-ulation, the current investigations ordered by congress stem from re Is Child of vive. Many of them. In the true evolutionary spirit added something some-thing new that was Incorporated Into the cars we drive today. High on the list of major engineer-lng engineer-lng contributions by companies no longer In production, according to the Automobile Manufacturers association's asso-ciation's data, la the steering column col-umn control introduced by Pierce In 1904. Brush brought out a car in 1907 with coil springs, and In 1909 Hup-mobile Hup-mobile caught automotive engineers engi-neers by surprise with Its single unit power plant engine, clutch and transmission. The center gear shift control by King in 1910 caused a sensation unequalled un-equalled In the motoring public's i . 947 V ports that government officials have profited from "Inside" Information on government commodity buying plans. Anderson's 711-name list was the first Installment in a series which the agriculture secretary will forward for-ward to the senate appropriations committee, simultaneously making each list public. An estimated 14,000 names are available for such listing. list-ing. Meanwhile the senate appropriations appropri-ations committee, as well as a house committee, were ready to start sift ing the rolls for possible irregularities irregulari-ties and especially for leaks of inside in-side information. WARNING: On Prices The President's council of eco nomic advisers, an astute group that sometimes functions as Mr. Truman's conscience, has warned that the U. S. must return to "real price competition" if the present boom period is not to collapse into a shapeless economic mess. In its annual report the council sharply criticized "monopolistic practices" and declared also that: "Many Industrial prices must come down at least in relation to other prices and many rates of profit must subside while reasonable profitability Is established In other areas." The report surmised that the present pres-ent era of prosperity was "abnormal" "abnor-mal" because of such factors as heavy exports, short crops and great military expenditures. To remedy the situation the council offered of-fered these recommendaUons: 1 Elimination of deliberate cur- tailment of output as practiced by some labor organizations. 2 Discontinuance of the practice of big business of hampering the development of new, small businesses. busi-nesses. 3 Development of natural re- sources and increase in the industrial in-dustrial facilities of the nation. Search for Researchers One of the adverse factors developing devel-oping to hamper the nation's postwar post-war program of scientific progress Is a critical scarcity of scientists in certain branches of military research, re-search, government .officials have revealed. They discount however, statements state-ments that an aversion on the part of scientists to working on death-dealing death-dealing weapons is the primary cause of the shortage. Economic factors and a scholar's normal desire for complete freedom in study, rather than any anti-military philosophy, keep many of them away from government work, officials offi-cials of the military and the atomic energy commission observed. Greatest shortage is In certain key personnel, it was disclosed. The need was stressed for scientist-administrators who are capable of organizing or-ganizing and directing large research re-search projects of the type the government gov-ernment Is sponsoring. Long-range planning is being directed at correcting cor-recting the situation. Evolution eye until Pierce-Arrow put headlights head-lights In the fenders in 1914. And the Dusenberg's four-wheel hydraulic hydrau-lic brakes of 1920 were little short of revolutionary. When Eddie Rickenbacker brought out the Rickenbacker car In 1922 be added the aircleaner to automotive automo-tive equipment The Franklin contributed con-tributed the covered running board to the automobilist with the "Pirate Phaeton" In 1933. Although all of these companies have disappeared from the field, the engineering discoveries they sponsored spon-sored live on after them, and some of the refinements offered today are based upon Improvements which were displayed In bold type In catalogues cata-logues published around the turn of the century. Army Maneuvers Test Flight Data In Arctic Region Handling Planes in Subzerc Temperatures Poses Many Problems FAIRBANKS, ALASKA. - Stit bucking the peculiar problems o; handling planes in temperatures as low as 70 degrees below zero, tht men who fly B-29s over the north polar areas are engaged in maneu-vers maneu-vers for the second winter. At those temperatures, engine oil turns to something like hard rubber. Metals contract at varying rates, gasoline leaks develop, planes won'l stand still on the ice of the runwayi and take-offs are risky for a number of reasons, including the fact that gasoline won't always vaporize at certain temperatures. This information comes from men like First Lieut. Charles Jerman oi Wilmington, Del., a veteran of European Eu-ropean air combat and engineering officer of the 59th Reconnaissance squadron (very long range weather). weath-er). That's the squadron that flies the weather run to the pole. Another is First Lieut John P. Vanderveer of Antigo, Wis., who has written the first army technical pamphlet on maintenance of the B-29 under Arctic conditions. A former for-mer master sergeant who has achieved not only his commission but regular army status, he knows the B-29 intimately from nose to tail turret Lives Lost Last Winter. Men were killed last winter during dur-ing flights of the 46th Reconnaissance Reconnais-sance squadron's B-29s and other planes from Ladd field here. Information Infor-mation gleaned from the crashes has added to the file on cold-weather operation, but the engineering experts ex-perts say the file is far from complete. com-plete. Flight itself, they have found, is not much different from anywhere else, except for some special icing difficulties. The B-29 is pressurized and heated. Its crews often are as comfortable over the pole as they would be over Chicago. Navigation is tougher than ordinary ordi-nary because the magnetic poles are generally useless and only celestial navigation is positive. Radio is helpful help-ful but cannot always be relied on. Each polar flight carries at least two navigators and usually a third who is learning the ropes. The big problems are on the ground. Like Housewives. Sgt. Gordon L. Runge of Merrill, Wis., flight engineer on a B-29, said that even under the best conditions: "These engines are like fickle housewives. house-wives. You've gotta baby 'em all the time or they won't do a thing they Just sit there and moan." That goes double and triple, he said, with the polar planes. They haven't yet learned all that happens, except that it's mostly bad, when a plane like the B-29 is rolled from a hangar heated to 50 degrees or so and shoved into the winter air of 50 or more below. It sags here and buckles there as contraction of metals in the airframe, air-frame, engines and controls createj numerous "bugs." The pilot who doesn't say a prayer on take-off ii regarded strictly as a non-believer. Starting an engine is a long chain process starting with a blow torch and ending with heaters to pump hot oil through and hot air around the engine itself. The glass ice is a ball-bearing, slick film that sometimes makes ii impossible to stop a plane on the runway, with engine turning, for any purpose such as the vital engine check- before take-off. Several checking methods have been tried with small success. Train Helps Stalled Car but Second Auto Causes Crash CHICAGO. This is a story about a locomotive which was kind enough to stop to pull an automobile out of the snow. So what happened? Another automobile came along and smacked the locomotive. Hjalmar Stalin, 50, of Rockford, was driving his wife, Elsie, 50, and Miss Rosie Berg, 27, across the Chicago Chi-cago and Northwestern railroad tracks when his car skidded, hit a signal post and became stuck in the snow. George Grehn of Elmhurst, engineer en-gineer of a passing locomotive, stopped to help. While Grehn and Stalin were attaching a chain from the locomotive to Stalin's car, an auto driven by Mrs. Phyllis Isen-berg, Isen-berg, 47, of Chicago, hit the railroad rail-road engine. Six occupants were shaken up. Relics of Old Aztec Race Turning Up in Modern Mexico NEW YORK. - Hidden treasures In the form of parchments in picture-writing from ancient Aztec days are being discovered in modern mod-ern Mexico, according to the Mid die America Information bureau. When the Spaniards conquered Mexico in the 16th century, the Mexican Indians cached away many of these manuscripts, which recorded record-ed their history, religion and mythology. myth-ology. Today they are worth fabulous prices. Some 400 are known to be in existence, of which about 100 are In the National Museum of Mexico. csS CLINICS DOCTORS ELECTRICIANS FREEZER LOCKER OPERATORS play ratios COMMUNITY eUlLDINfrS SMALL TOWNS, U.S.A. Rural America Is on Threshold Of Many Revolutionary Changes By EARLE HITCH Released by WNU Features (Editor's Sole: First in a series of articles on the vital problems and opportunities of small town and rural America.) Almost like clicking a switch, rural America has been snapped into a new age. It is the era of big-scale, scientific agricultural production. Farming is undergoing revolutionary-changes. revolutionary-changes. As a consequence there is a shifting and shuffling in rural occupations. The new farming demands fewer workers. work-ers. But it wants more mechanical skills, more capital and more business brains. . Industry is decentralizing. Branches of big plants are getting away from the congestion of cities. More small shops and mills are springing up in rural environments. This, too, is changing trie cnaracter oi rural em- ployment. As machines displace labor la-bor in farming, new rural occupa-' tlons will have to be created. Otherwise Other-wise local population losses are Inevitable. Hence the people who live In the country today need, and will have, a new kind of community. The new community must be more than a place for trade. It must be the civic center of the whole country roundabout, round-about, as much devoted to matters of health, recreation and social good, as to matters of business. New Outlook Demanded. To keep pace with these changing conditions, the small towns will have to get new shapes and new ouUooks. They will have to adapt to the needs of their particular surroundings. sur-roundings. They need re-designing to make their activities suited to the new rural life that is developing. The country Itself Is becoming "citified." That is, country people peo-ple are as style conscious and as socially alert as city people. They have new expectations of their towns. Thus the towns must reconsider their reasons for being. The towns that recognize recog-nize this will find ways for more community usefulness. Those that act boldly and with imagination imagi-nation are going to be heard from. These are the conclusions of those who are watching the trends over rural America. That is why the years just ahead promise to be an era of activity in rural community planning. plan-ning. For the small towns which bestir themselves a bright and larger future fu-ture is in prospect Now, for the first time since the automobile and the smooth highway switched trade to the city, the rural communities have a chance to "come back." They need not be content with obsolescence. ob-solescence. What they need is to come alive, to shake themselves and take hope. That's the opinion of leaders in the rural life movement, among whom are Eugene Smathers, who has developed a model plan at Big Lick, Tenn.; Dr. Baker Brownell, who directed the Montana rural study for Rockefeller foundation; O. E. Baker, social scientist of University Uni-versity of Maryland, and Monsignor L. G. Ligutti, secretary of National Catholic Rural Life conference. Pioneer In Program. Important pioneering has been done in rural community reorganization. reorgani-zation. The lead in actually demonstrating demon-strating what can be done has been taken by the Catholic and Protestant Protes-tant churches, which have established estab-lished missions for social work in several rural communities, and by the American Friends Service committee, com-mittee, which has community projects proj-ects in Pennsylvania and South Carolina. Surveys and studies have been made by Rockefeller foundation, founda-tion, by various farm bureau federations, feder-ations, the farmers' union, the national na-tional grange, some of the agricultural agricul-tural colleges and the U. S. department depart-ment of agriculture. Taken together, these surveys and inquiries snow what is needed and practical ways to go about filling the needs. Wavy to Close Historic Arms Dump IONA ISLAND, N. Y. After 47 years as a prime link in the chain of American sea defense, Iona Island, Is-land, nestled In the scenic land of Rip van Winkle, goes on the shell The navy has offered its ammunition ammuni-tion dump on the island for rent, preferably for conversion to manufacturing, manu-facturing, laboratory or institutional use. The island's 123 acres do not permit per-mit further expansion and modern nurse &0 SEED TESTERS BUIMMINft POOLS The Inquiries and experiments 'have confirmed what civic leaders lead-ers have been maintaining that there are many ways In which the small community, probably to its own surprise, can provide what growing numbers num-bers of people want and cannot find elsewhere. That is, first of all, a pleasant place, in which to work and live. The towns which realize this and act on the Idea will be in favorable position. Things most needed over the country generally are better health services, clinics, hospitals, park spaces and swimming pools; new jobs to take the place of those that are being eliminated by farm machinery, ma-chinery, and more opportunities for small farming on a family-supporting basis. Devise New Projects. Among the practical projects that have been devised are rural homesteads home-steads for industrial workers, other types of homesteads for young rural couples wishing to get land and make a start in small farming, new rural industries like seed testing, poultry killing, alfalfa and sweet potato po-tato dehydrating, mechanical repairs re-pairs and upkeep for farm machinery machin-ery and electrical installations in rural homes, and various cooperative coopera-tive projects, like machinery pools, creameries, canning and other processing proc-essing enterprises. To keep the rural economy stabilized stabi-lized and to help the small farm families survive in the competition with big-scale farming, is a national policy to which congress long has been committed, and which is supported sup-ported by churches, farm federations federa-tions and political parties. The farm is the seed bed of the nation, say the population specialists special-ists and the rural economists. From the farm come many of the men and women of tomorrow. The cities never have replaced themselves and are not doing so now. The rural Institutions that have been outmoded should have the attention of the whole rural community. Over the country generally, everything from churches to mercantile systems needs overhauling, and there should be considerable education ed-ucation about what a modern rural community should undertake under-take to do for its people. The idea that the small town has new and important functions should be planted at once in the communities communi-ties that are determined to catch up with the trends, and should be emphasized em-phasized by repetition until the citizens citi-zens are convinced they should do something about it. Seeing Is Believing. To get the rural community out of its obsolescence and persuade it to catch up with farming progress, the whole people, youth and adults, must be made to see community deficiencies. de-ficiencies. They will not see until they are made to take a look. This is going to take tact, persistence and energetic leadership. To help develop and direct such leadership is one of the objects of the agencies backing the rural life movement This movement will be described in the next article in this series. safety requirements in the handling han-dling of high explosives are difficult to maintain here, the navy explained ex-plained in announcing the rental proposaL The most stirring chapters In the little islands' history were written during the two world wars, when the ammunition dump provided shells and other weapon fodder for navy vessels, merchant ships, overseas bases and shore stations. Pineapple Edgings For Your Linen m 'jam Pattern No. 56G9 THE ever-popular pineapple design de-sign shown here in a series d edgings that you can use on fini handkerchiefs, bed and table linens. lin-ens. These crocheted edgings art from 2 inches wide down to lty inches, are easily and inexpensive-ly inexpensive-ly done. To obtain complete crocheting lnstn tions, stitch illustrations and complete A rections tor .pineapple tagings (fatten No. 5669) send 20 cents in coin, your nami, address and pattern number. , Due to an unusually large demand mi current conditions, slightly more time li required in filling orders for a few of tbi most popular patterns. Send your order to: SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 828 Mission St., San Francisco, Calil. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No Address. Cleaning Name i Until a short time ago, the Kaffirs, Kaf-firs, a tribe of South Africa, employed em-ployed a naive method of cleans ing the blackened name of i young criminal. They would shout it into a kettle of hot water, clap down the lid and let it soak for i number of days. SEASON IT OUT AND YOUU PREFER THIS la In NR (Nature's Remedy) Tabl. f there are no chemicals, no minerals, ! no phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are ' different ocf different Purely vegi- j table a combination of 10 vegetable ingredients formulated over SO years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their ; action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle, as millions of NR's have proved. Get a 25 box. Use as directed. flfM TO-NIGHT tStV QUICK RE1JEF run ACID IN22GEST10I Relief At Last For Your Cough Creomnlsion relieves promptly because be-cause it goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to Boothe and heal raw, tender, in flamed bronchial mucous membranes. mem-branes. Tell your druggist to sell yol a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding un-derstanding you must like the way a quickly allays the cough or you an to have your money back. . CREOMULSION for Couehs. Chest Colds. Bronchitis HIGH-SCHOOL GRADUATES! HURSUIG IS A PROUD PROFESSlOli! many opportunities for graduates l fine hoipitali, public health, ele. -leada to R. N. - well-prepared none need new bt without job or an income, -open to girli under 35, high-achool graduates and college girla. ask for more Information ' Hospital wnr.r j LjeJB wouio ukcio cum - - rt EMBARRASSED? Driven nearly frantic by itching and burning of simple piles, that keep you fidgeting in discomfort? Countless sufferers are finding tj-v told relief from such distress U( bathing tender parts with the purj fently-cleansing lather of Res'"? oap then applying soothing, sls f ully medicated Resinol Ointment. Why don't you try this time-testeO easy way to long-lasting comfort I "' 5;'sV ifT Stem rw'i . it ALWAYS cnwwi :mei par -des 1 .law A quit Uni to l enri Mol ! w ! TT7 s H rnit wit! sim agr agr 1 Inst neu ctai I In the Incr Mr. cvei thej does Has ior" de A, St th be Tl gaze and This elec ALE u tran Boll TJ. 1 proc then fron the' tion, retu O. the for Mar. r W tl las presi the I dren tions waif nece |