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Show AMERICAN FORK CITIZEN Digs Up Ancient Tomb of Fourth Dynasty in Egypt v - Tli dlecovery of another ancient Egyptian tomb, believed to be the burial place of Knum Baef, aon of Chefron of the fourth dynasty, haa teen announced by Prof. Sellm Bey Hassan. A aerlea of arrange Incident had prevented the archeologlst from forcing forc-ing an entrance Into the tomb. After a rope had been placed around the first llmeatone bloc aeallng the en- ranPA TTnuaan'a fnramnn waa arahhaif by a laborer. A abort time later the professor himself began to feel 111 In the Intense heat and decided to postpone post-pone attempts to open the tomb. Professor Pro-fessor Hassan recently announced discovery of a tomb containing the mummy of a princess believed to be the daughter of Cheops, builder of the pyramid near Glzeh about 8700 b. a L .about: Here are7fe3c Baking Results cak5 nmiart W7 Tkb scant asrisf txi pram as mil, iiiii mil CLAslEI 61 1 L,cae HrJtct tcini sirt an 10. KODAK FILMS VSiJiSEs MiimmMMStMiimiiM, any alaa rtn mada SSa aotat rsarlnta, m eiw. eh. Writ m bow for ncimftor aadfi liUaaTMDvUea. It'aau to ull w fll. awn rnoTO suvkk, Saa su. tun m4liv jUtil wttkaaan lath fata wiUaawlMlaa' fbrnaraww 14 Va of lauMdi-a4a lauMdi-a4a WMtM tralnlaf M BilaiMai cnat, Two la aa all Mirlm to taoaa who aaattfy. Wrtie gnocck swa. rmummt, suumois SALT LAKE'S KEWEST E3STEUY Oar leUry ti wWlg&f.sd Jratfle far freer lr MX A L HOTEL Temple Square 0) TVa Dotal Taaaata Sara Sua a hlUy aWrabfa. MmmU? ataaoa-P ataaoa-P air a. Taw, wtU aJwaya Hm4h ti . lata M inly aaaalaftaata. aa4 tharaawU asaaaalila If aw aaa tan Sara wait aw iaaa why tkla fcawal lai HIGHLY UCOaOUOTOKD T aaa saaieiUliwfcya JtfS aaarsj tffatnsctfati t stl at tMa So tiW tssianr ERNEST C-XOSSlTERrMgr. i i , , ., a wyuw . 21 CIDETIIE OVERLAND on PACIFIC LIMITED TO K LIMITED 7) AII FRAUCISCOU FROM OGDEN OR SALT LAKE CITV kle In an sir-coo-ditiooed coach on our, fastest trains across Great Salt Lake and over the High Sierra. Coffee 5, sulk 5f, sandwiches I0 also low cost dining car meals. Southern Pacific Foe fardtar aVtaOa sae of writa XX ft. OW1N, Gaaaral Aroe. 41 to. Mala ft. Salt lake dtf ;rvr- -Oa. BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF. The more I ponder on Italy' sacrifices in Ethiopia, as balanced against what she gains, the more I'm reminded of the old story of the Confederate Confed-erate who was released from a northers prison camp after the surrender. Skeleton-thin from Jail fever and debility, ha started on tottery legs for the Ohio river, determined de-termined to die on southern solL One night this poor rack-o- bones crept Into a haymow. Next morning, early, ear-ly, the hired man heard suspicious sounds In the loft and ran for reinforcements rein-forcements Presently, Pres-ently, the ex-cap-tire's refuge was surrounded by stalwart, stal-wart, armed men. The farmer's six- foot aon leveled a lrvln8.Cobb " cocked musket "Com out of thar, whoever yon be," ha bellowed. "Consarn your hide, wa got you." The southerner raised a white face. "Taa," ha said, wanly, "and one h I of a git you got" aaa Hla Next Movie. WETBJB starting a new picture, and I an teamed op with 811m gummerrllle, 6 feet 6 of pare comedy, com-edy, and little Jan Withers for ber age, the greatest scene-atealer In the business. It's as though Little Lit-tle Boy Blue were sandwiched In between Jesse James and Calamity Jane. Well, as I go down for the third Urn HI atlll be gurgling feebly, fee-bly, so give me credit please, as an earnest gurgier. They call our picture "Public Nuisance Number V but a movie Is like an Indian starts out with a name and winds np with anyone of a half-doeen. I once knew a Black-foot Black-foot who was first one thing, then another, and the best he could do for himself In his old age waa to be known as Chief Many Tall Feathers Feath-ers Going Over the H1IL a a Prank of Zloncheck. TEDB papers seemed so barren not a slnglo front page story about Representative Zloncheck, Washington's No. 1 Boy Scout Life, Indeed, Is empty on a day whoae low descending sun sees no gay deed done, no headline won by the nation's official problem child. Be may have started off at the foot of the ladder, alphabetically speaking, but hla startled constituents constitu-ents ean't complain that the gallant lad atayed there. Either he's getting get-ting pinched or getting Jailed or getting married or getting hla pen In hand to tell the President how to run the country, or getting ready to polish off some fellow-statesman of the house, or Just getting about And hasnt be put the throbbing pulse Into the Congressional Record? Rec-ord? It reada now sometimes as the old Police Gasette used to, Rules for Olympic. AS I understand it and somebody some-body correct me, please, if I'm wrong the rules for the forthcoming forthcom-ing Olympic Games In Berlin have been so revised that It will be quite all right for any of our Jewish athletes ath-letes to take part Jost so they dont win. rm wondering, thought about what may happen when the American Amer-ican team turna np over there with a whole batch of negro foot-racers In the outfit It's going to be aw fully hard to convince a Prussian crowd that they're merely medlom- to-well-done Nordtc-Caucaslan atock browned In the pan, so to apeak. It so happens that our fastest runners are all colored boys. Perhaps Per-haps tts just as well They may have to keep right on running. a a Improvement In Influenza. IN RESPONSE to large numbers who wrote or wired, I would atate that either I'm getting over my influenza, or maybe rm just getting get-ting used to It Its latest whimsical whimsi-cal notion was to settle in both ears, and now abould It thunder, a rare occurrence out there, In order or me to get the benefit of the phe nomenon, Itll have to thunder again -and louder. However, being temporarily tem-porarily deaf haa lta advantages: I don't -hear the dull things the other people say, but can still enjoy the bright things I say myself. As will be noted, Tm back from Palm Bprlngs, where I cooked in the desert sunshine until all I needed need-ed to do before being served waa to drape a sprig of watercrbsa across my brow and thicken the gravy with a little brown flour. Driving In, I kept tying up the traffic; ao many motorists mistook my face for a atop algnaL Should I relapse I'm going to try to throw myself Into the epizootic. Tbat'a a horse disease, but I've been aa alek aa a horse and had to be as strong aa a horse to live through it and, anyhow, I know a goo horse doctor. IRVIN 8. COBB. Copyright WNC Sanrlo. , News Review of Current Events the World Over Borah Eoseg in Ohio Primary House Defeats Frazier-Lemke Frazier-Lemke Inflation Bill TugwelTs Report on His Resettlement Administration. By EDWARD W. PICKARD Waatara Mawapaaar Valoa. .. .,.4..! SENATOR WILLIAM BORAH, banked heavily on success In the Ohio Presidential preference primary, but the Republicans of that state turned him down decisively decisive-ly In favor of their "favorite son," Robert Rob-ert A. Taft son of the late President Taft Of the 63 delegatea to the Cleveland convention, conven-tion, Borah captured cap-tured only fire, the others. Including Ik a Mimu Urge, being Tsft wtof men. The winning delegation will be virtually unpledged, because It will vote for Taft only on the first ballot Mr. Borah did not take this defeat calmly. He gave out a state ment In Washington accusing the Republican organisation leaders of manipulating the votes of colored citizens against him by promising the passage of federal anU-lynch-lng legislation which he has op posed as unconstitutional. The Idaho senator added: "The Republican party win go Into the campaign laying great stress upon Constitutional Integrity and the preservation of state rights. "The men who are In control of the party, and who will likely be In control of the convention, will writ its platform and name lta can didate,- have already-demonstrated that they care nothing about Con stitutional Integrity or the preservation preserva-tion of state rlghta, that their talk on this subject is hypocritical and Intellectually dishonest" Ohio Democrats polled about 500,- 000 votea In the primary, nearly 100,000 more than the Republicans, and they expressed their preference for Mr. Roosevelt over Col Henry Breckenridge to the tune of 16 to 1. They also renominated Got. Martin L. Davey, who will be opposed by John W. Brlcker, Republican, In No-' ember. Weat Virginia also held primaries and there Borah and Roosevelt won easily over nominal opposition. The atate's Republican delegation, however, how-ever, will go to the convention nn-instructed. nn-instructed. r It Is Interesting to note that one of Ohio's delegates at Cleveland win be Alice Roosevelt Longworth, daughter of T. R." and a spectator at many prevloua conventions. WE ARE not going to have any currency inflation, at leaat before be-fore next session of congress. The Fraaler-Lemke- farm - mortgage refinancing re-financing biU, dragged out of committee com-mittee by a petition signed by 218 house members, and then hotly debated de-bated for a day, waa defeated by the decisive vote of 235 to 142. The bill called for the printing of three billion dollars for Its financing. The petition signers Included 150 Democrats, and before the vote every one of them was told by Pat Boland of Pennsylvania, the party whip, that the President didn't want the measure passed at thla time and that If the member voted for the btU it would be just too bad for him. Besides thia potent argument the Democratic leaden Induced President Presi-dent William Green of the American Ameri-can Federation of Labor to Intervene Inter-vene and he called together the federation's fed-eration's executive council and bad It write a letter saying It waa opposed op-posed to the bin because of the Inflation In-flation feature. This waa read to the house by Speaker Byrns sod undoubtedly affected the vote, though some members resented being be-ing told what to do by Mr. Green. There was relief In the White House when it waa announced the President would not have to veto such a measure In an election year. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT was supposed to have abandoned for the present the Florida ahlp canal and Passamaquoddy tidal power projects for which the house refused to appropriate further funds. But Senator Robinson of Arkansas was called to the White House for a conference con-ference and returned to the house to Introduce a resolution authorising authoris-ing the President to appoint engineering engi-neering boards of review for the two schemes. r The boards would present their findings by June 20, andv If favorable, favor-able, the President would have authorization au-thorization to set aside S10.000.000 for the canal and 19,000,000 for Passamaquoddy Pas-samaquoddy 'out of available relief money. - NEWTON D. BAKER and Dean Acheson, counsel, for fiv power pow-er companies that are trying ft block the government's municipal power program, met with defeat In the District of Columbia Supreme court when they aooght to subpoena subpoe-na correspondence between President Presi-dent Roosevelt snd Secretary Ickes. Jerome Frank, a New -.Deal attorney, attor-ney, stated that the President had directed that hla "privilege" of tes timonial immunity be asserted In th esse, and Chief Justice Wheat refused to issue the subpoena. WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATOR ADMINIS-TRATOR IIARRT HOPKINS Issued an order to state WPA directors di-rectors Instructing them not to employ em-ploy armed guards, not to spy on workers snd not to blacklist. workers work-ers who organize. The order was Issued following a conference with Victor F. Rldder, New York city WPA administrator, who employed a detachment of guards to protect hla office agalnat anti-WPA demonstrations which "Mr. Bidder asserts were stirred up by Communists. w .. .i .... OPPOSITION in the senate finance committee to the corporate profits tax In the administration's $803,000,000 revenue bill was so Strong that both Democrats and Republicans Re-publicans sought for ome compromise. compro-mise. Treasury officials were heard In favor of the measure as passed by th house, but former treasury officials and various business and Industrial leaders speaking la opposition op-position were seemingly more persuasive. per-suasive. Senator Tom Connelly of Texas put forward a plan be thought all might agree upon. It would retain the 15 per cent corporation cor-poration Income tax and repeal only the capital stock and excess profits taxes, instead of -repealing all corporation cor-poration taxes as proposed In the house bill In addition It would superimpose su-perimpose a graduated tax on undistributed un-distributed earnings, exempting the first 20 per cent on the amount retained. re-tained. The house bill rescbes a maximum of 42 per cent of the total Income if none lr distributed. Senator Byrd of Virginia, another of the Democrats opposed to the house bin, showed. In a letter to Secretary Morgenthan, that 11 of the largest corporations In the country coun-try would pay no taxes under the Roosevelt bill. RESPONDING to a senate resolution, resolu-tion, Rexford TugweU made a report on the activities of the resettlement re-settlement administration of which he is the head. He showed that It has 15304 employees on the administration administra-tion pay roll and haa been allotted 1275,549,044 to spend. Of .thla amount the report stated, 138347,005 has been spent and a total of $173,001,- TU8WJ - ing $102,458,112 unincumbered. un-incumbered. Up to April 15, according to the report, the resettlement administration administra-tion had taken options on 9,670,000 acres of land, of which optlona on 8,400.000 acres, costing $3644,000, had become legal commitments. Aa of May 7. the report said, 59,521 persons. Including 8,581 on the OCC pay roll, were employed in connection connec-tion with the land acquisition program. pro-gram. The report atated that a recent aurvey Indicated that the purchase of approximately 24,000,000 acres of land would be needed to block In and round out" the existing projects and to establish a minimum number of new projects. Of 33 subsistence homestesd projects, construction has been completed com-pleted on 18, la In progress on 11 and final plana have been drafted for 4. The report lists four suburban sub-urban housing projects, financed from a $31X100,000 allocation for thla purpose. They are In Berwyn, Md Bound Brook, N. Jn Mllwau-waukee, Mllwau-waukee, and Cincinnati On rural rehabilitation, the report says the RA has cared for more than 800.000 families. For its rehabilitation, re-habilitation, advances to individual "clients." the administration will expend $100,000,000 through June 30. There were morel than 71,000 workers employed on projects financed fi-nanced by the organization during April, the report states, adding that the peak is expected. to be reached during the' summer with 100,000 workers. IF Tni? house 'concurs in senate action, the title of Harold L. Ickea will be changed from secretary secre-tary of the interior to secretary of conservation. A bin making th change was passed by the senate at the Instance of Senator Lewis of Illinois. . Two years ago, when Mr. Ickes was at the height of his power, be wanted the title altered to "secretary of conservation and works" and hoped that many of th agencies of the Department of Agriculture Ag-riculture would be transferred to his department Buf Secretary Wal-ace Wal-ace objected strenuously, end lately so much has been taken out of Mr, Ickea hands ..that Senator Lewis cut his bill to th on paragraph, making the change of , title-' and leaving leav-ing off "and works." 1 - ; j .r . ii i niii'fi in' i Y - f Manuel Azana CHANCELLOR KUET 8CHTJ. 8CHNIGG of Austria has long been st outs with th vie chancellor. chancel-lor. Prince Ernst von Starhemberg, and now he has got rid of that active young man and Is practi cally th sol dictator of th coun try. This wss accomplished by th resignation of, the cabinet and its reconstruction Immediately with Von Starhemberg left out Bchaschnigg is not only chancellor hut also minister min-ister of defense and foreign minister. minis-ter. Von Starhemberg had antagonized antag-onized Scbuschnlgg by Insisting on keeping up his own private army, the Belmwehr, and aiao by his friendliness-toward Mussolini and bis general Fascist sympathies. MANTJEL AZANA was advanced from the premiership' to the presidency of Spain by slmost nnsn iroous vote of th 873 electors gath ered In th crystal palace at Madrid. He succeeds NIceto Alcala Zamora who was removed from office on a charge of malfeasance after aft-er the Leftist victory vic-tory in the recent elections. Azana, fifty-alx years old, is ji lawyer, orator and playwright .and Is regarded as th most astut politi cian In Spain. To th notification committee be said. "Spain may rest sssured that I win be loyal to the principles of democracy and that the welfare of the nation will be my constant concern." HINDENBURG, the Immense dirigible, carrying 107 persons, mall and freight made th flight from Friedrlchsbafen to Lskehurst, N. J, in 61 hours and 57 minutes and was welcomed by thousands of Americans, including R. Walton Moore of the Stat department who brought th greetings of President Roosevelt Three dsys later th airship air-ship started back to her new . base at Frankfurt-on-Main. Th dirigible dirig-ible was in command of Capt Ernst Lehmann, but he received far less attention her than did Dr. Hugo Eckener, the veteran skipper of Zeppelins. Eckener, In bad with the Nazis st home, was permitted to be aboard the ahlp as an "adviser." He snd Captain Lehmann went to Washington together, while the ship wss being groomed for the return flight to call on President Roosevelt Roose-velt and other officials and return their greetings. On the return flight the Hlnden-burg Hlnden-burg traveled awlftly, reaching Frankfurt-on-Main 48 hours and 18 minutes after the departure from Lakehurst BECAUSE the League of Nations council would not Immediately recognize Italy's annexation of Ethiopia and the creation of the new- Roman-empire. Premier Mussolini Mus-solini recalled hla representatives from Geneva, and before long Italy may quit the league entirely. At present it is merely "not participating" partici-pating" In Its activities. The council coun-cil had adopted a new resolution virtually condemning again Italy's aggression In East Africa and then adjourned until June 15. Previously Baron Pompeii Alois!, chief of the Italian delegation, had walked out of a session of the council because Wolde Mariam, Ethiopian representative, was permitted per-mitted to take a seat and present a plea from Emperor Halle Selassie. Selas-sie. PARK TRAMMELL, vetersn United Unit-ed 8tatea senator from Florida and a staunch supporter of all New Deal measures, died In Washington of a cerebral hemorrhage which followed fol-lowed an attack of Influenza. Though ill, he tried to remain on the senate floor long enough to vote for a proposal to include $12,000,000 In the War department appropriation appropria-tion bill for continuation of the Florida ship canal This effort probably prob-ably cost him his life. SECRETARY . ICKES Supporters were easily defested by the Harry Har-ry Hopkins forces In the house fight as to whether th Public Works administration ad-ministration abould share in the handling of next year's relief funds. But It wss understood th feud would be revived In the senste on der th leadership of Senator Hay-den Hay-den of Arizona, Democrat and a member of the appropriations committee. com-mittee. The house majority voted according accord-ing to the wishes of the administration adminis-tration on the relief bill, which Is a $2,30420.712 measure carrying $1,425,000,000 to finance th Work Progress administration after July 1. In addition to the relief appropriation, appro-priation, the bill carries $458,631300 for the social security program, $39,-900,000 $39,-900,000 for the Tennessee Valley Authority, $400,000 for continuing the communications commission's telephone Inquiry, and various new snd deficiency amounts for other sgencles, - - MUSTAPHA NAHAS PASHA, leader of the Waf d or Nationalist Nation-alist party In Egypt baa become premier and formed a new government govern-ment In which he holds also the post of minister of the interior. Wssyf Ghall Pasha la his foreign minister and Gen. AU Fahmy Pasha Is minister min-ister of war" snd marines - Tremier All Pasha Maher and his cabinet resigned following th appointment ap-pointment of a regency to serv until un-til young King Farouk rescbes' th ag of eighteen. : Artkn Briaaaaa BRISBANE THIS WEEK Six Bailee in Three Days World's Greatest Terror Another Mild Bad Man How to. Avoid Thonfht President Saeasa of Nicaragua confirms ! officially the statement j i , that very poor woman on the "distant shore of Lake Nicaragua has given birth to seven babies." The mother, Mrs. - fiinforosa Martinez, bsd a difficult time. The births stretched over three days- May 8, 4 and 6. The babies' names are,' or were, Jose Jesus, Ramon del Car men, Maria del Carmen, Socorro del Carmen, Maria de Jesus and J nan a Ramona, ; The seventh name was not tele graphed, for there was no seventh. as it was exnected there would be. rive of the sextuplets are al ready dead. Only one, a girl, lives. What would population of th earth be If such births were the nils and an lived? - At the opening of th CathoUe press exhibition In Vatican CUr. Pope Plus, for the second time within two dsys, cautioned the world against communism, which he called "the greet terror which threatens all th world," For th comfort of those that Uve In dread - of final Communistic world conquest It may he aaid that thus far nothing opposed to human natur has ever succeeded. By the arrest in California of Thomas H. Robinson, Jrn kidnaper of Mrs. StolL Mr. Hoover and his G-men brought Into the shadow of the electric chair the last of the group of dangerous criminals that have recently been wandering about the country. This "bad man." like others re cently gathered In, shook with rngnt when be round lb gun point ed at him. made no effort to fieht When the guns are nolnted the wrong way, "bad men" often change to good, meek and scared men. Stamp collector have held a eel- eDration. grateful to Doctor Eck ener for a new kind of stamp. How many ways man finds to keep busy and at th earn time avoid think lng I Collecting queer things, stamps or tear Jugs; playing bridge, work lng cross-word nuzzles. Dlarine soli taire, rushing to the fsr corners of the world to spend money usually not earned; going to Africa to kill big game animals. Those are some substitutes for thinking and working work-ing constructively, the only occupation occupa-tion worthy of a human being. aaaaaaaaaaa) Mrs. James C. Canlp of Clovta. New Mexico, aa a girl was not sble to finish high school, but that did not discourage her. Sh waited some years. Then she Joined the senior high school class with her son and daughter-in-law,' and will graduate with them thla month, among th most brilliant scholars. Chancellor Hitler, who was never married, nevertheless thinks marriage mar-riage a good Idea. Young Nazis, In the pnbUe employ, have been told that nnless they marry by the time they are twenty-six years old there la something the matter with their "courage and will power." A syndicate Is formed to seek the "burled gold bags of Alexander the Great" containing at leaat $300.- 000,000 In yellow wealth. Alexander the Great's ghost might he surprised to hear abont that. Alexander was too busy to collect goto, ana not the kind of man to bury It In A hoi. flrl amall para- pl In Encouraged by her father, a slx- ieu-jcar-oia men . arhnni walked onto the wing. of, a plane, prepared for a first chute Jump at 1,500 feet The lot perceived that the parachute i-vm oau wen puuea . prematurely puueu uer oaca inr.0 the cockpit ume io save ner from death. Without reoulrine Mrs. Harriet O. Hague, elrhtv-aiz years old, flew th ocean on the Ulndenburs return Mn tti v.- to your friend who used td oppose female suffrage "because women are not brave like men." ..... The Italian flag flies over nalle Selassie's palace. He win HUH aaa that palace airaln. but ha ha k... of gold bars with him snd hss moved to a safer, better climate. Th civilized world, what... t. attitude toward tha aiauii. alleged descendsnts of King Solomon Solo-mon and the Qieen of Sheba, must rejolc In Mussolini's proclamation aoousning slavery throughout Ethiopia, Ethi-opia, where alavei ha k.. chlsf cash-produclngnroduct w mmm vwuraa aradtoala, i v NU Sariea. Rnveil column of thlsMa?1 to Join the IlzrV5 In valuable fre. Violence meSJ' hell and foraTS win the acquiegctnV th applause of, those who dUp But It cannot maka w hood, or falsehood Into. . all talawsa a.. "' - to,., ill' NEW EK; THRILLS k:: Hot Wband tnarrdistWA na. new TiU0ttT& fcrant panoa noca aViir" lutxithiMm What a diflaS btnauon erf natural hrZ?' a trial. Not how MtwaOiT! taia BO phenol riwativaa. 25c fim aa Wisdom Sets k When the thrills then philosophy begus. "-k , k tneft I'iw.ttitiHli i mi id Branny raieVCpSB,! ging shoe pressuri aa safely loosen snd ram callouses--use NeBi. ScboU's Zhx-pads,v Titr ad blittwrn. FltihtoT, AS eh drag, soot aadtnk FEMININE mi C -Kiaa Garseid it. J Aria, Hid: 1 Fund ft beta taikr bit win. a dowi fates of Uh apprtihaajpi of Dt raat always bad treat faith It Sat bottle of the 'Prttcrtptie' a wife aatiaa nort and enteral Oa la your aeifhboraeal for FIRST AID V Cccmon Skin Ail or Injuries Resmo y TaP-' an aT.1SI Jaa. hump- DO yoa suffer btn -too frequent ariatfst headache, dizxines, k leg paint, twcllingi as Under the syn? Afsy-out Afsy-out feel all urnhang know what b wrong? Than give tome tW for functional kidney " anits escesi waste to Kit sod to poison and spxtt systenk- UeDoen'iPilkDosiV: kidneys only. They me OS world over. Yos a F sine, time-tested Dosri store. mm No ticed to "nomingSick horning sickness- ' add condition. To avoid a, fists bj tlkalii Why Physicians Rectf Milneiia Wafsf These mrt-flavored,calllll,, inr milk of magnesia M l . ! la tab wafer is approximately qoT'l dose of liquid milk otmgr thoroughly, then S"110"?, acidity u tb mourn mu UlgeaUTV BTHOUI P" . pUu ilinunatio of the cause gas, headache, bloated a a ! f-Sal a oosea outer ouwnui-in ouwnui-in . -nr.r la be!-- 3, at SS and 60c reap'. convenient tins for your n-; gl3at20e.EachwafirF . J. J. f milk Of aVi N uu huh w. : ., good drug stores sell andreoo Start aslng these Art' aattcld,gitrUMtlvsw: IWesdoiislsamplMOTtft phyatcuna or dentuu m -h. oa profeonal letterhead. 7C ktfc. 4401 Sird ., l , 3 t . .- S ' as n orfgitwi mm in2 1 K -. fond) ail" itfttive 'jit1 tp" jjjaerj HSPI H-depl lOSing eftvffl rrwdl a ; iin. 1 sfhe its c n "t3 I t -1 f iat i Juid L If life & Uis V ?acl a ah u crop )du 'Jnf -serai : act. rerop! ! r |