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Show U. S. Office of Air Safety Guards Cadets in Training 'Accident Statistics Prove Value of Regional Safety Officers' Work; Program Has Three Main Divisions. By BAUKIIAGE Veins Analyst end Commentator. WNU Service, Union Trust Building, Washington, D. C. The army air force has been around the world 134,078 times! That Is what air miles add up to three billion, three hundred and fifty-two million in the fiscal year 1943. Just how safe Is the Job of a pilot? Not the job where you have to count on the enemy fighters and the ack-ack, but the Job of learning to lie a pilot "Ninety-five out of every hundred army air foroe cadets are going through their flight training program with no personal Injury of any kmd. says CoL Sam Harris, chief, army air force office of flying safety. The office of air safety is the in stitutien which has built safety into training programs as a highly em phasized part of the whole regime, It has three main principles. Initial Phase The first is "prevention and In vestigation," and the keynote here Is experience. The 54 officers who take care of this end of the work have a total air experience of 33 years, 318 days In the air. These men, known as regional safety of ficers (RSOs) are assigned to each air force and command in the Unit ed States. Here is an example of how the RSO works. He goes to a certain field. He meets some cadets who say they haven't had any breakfast. He puts that down in his notes. He looks the place over, notes a ditch parallel to a runway. He orders the Bitch filled, talks with the mess officer of-ficer and has breakfast served earlier. ear-lier. Then he tackles the boys themselves. He gives them a talk on the importance of Instruments. Three separate moves and the accidents ac-cidents are cut down there. The second principle is "flight con-, con-, trol." Here is where the flight control con-trol officer, traffic cop of the air, comes in. For traffic control is as important in the air as on the street. The men of this force offer a Pilot's Advisory Counsel. This service serv-ice leads pilots through or around dangerous traffic or weather conditions. condi-tions. Suppose the flight control officer in the Seattle center knows Lieutenant Lieu-tenant Smith is headed in that direction. di-rection. He also knows that a "cold front" is moving across his path. So be radios Smith, tells him to make for an alternate airport. No. 3 on the list of safeties is "safety education." Safety Education Most of the accidents in training in the United States are due to personnel per-sonnel error the fault of the human being, not the weather or the machine. ma-chine. This education comes through special movies, through manuals, through cartoons and posters. Here are some of the slogans that help: "Hitler and Hirohito cheer , . . when you forget your maps ., . . when you pay no attention to telephone tele-phone wires . . . when you jam on your brakes . . . when you don't check your gas . . ." Other points are driven home with a little sardonic humor such as "when a pilot thinks he's pretty hot, he's usually close to burning." "To grow old in the natural way, a pilot has to use his hick sparingly . . ." The first six months of 1943 compared com-pared with all of 1942, show these percentages of reduction of accidents: acci-dents: ' In primary schools , 2.3 In basic schools 5.5 In advanced schaals 11 And just see the table for accidents acci-dents as miles flown go up! 1921-30 Maes flown, 155,818,000 accident rate, 2.11. 1943 Miles flown, 3,351,940,000 accident rate, .716. That's how America is learning safety in the skyways. War Brings Recognition To Psychiatry There will be so many changes after the war that a lot of words will not even have the same meanings. mean-ings. New things and new thinking will appear and people will have to learn the new words In order to think the new thoughts. Already the war has caused psychiatry psy-chiatry to be "adequately recognized," recog-nized," according to Dr. Richard B R I E F S . . About 90 per cent of Maine's po tatoes are grown in a single county Aroostook in the northernmost part of the state. When Maxwell Anderson's play, "The Eve of St. Mark," opened in Stockholm recently, it received the best Swedish reviews for years, according ac-cording to an article in the Afton-bladet, Afton-bladet, as reported to the OWI. mimm B! gaaaB aai aaaaaai aa aaaaa M,II", Hutchings, who is the author of "A psychiatric Word Book" published by the New York State Department of Mental Hygiene and now in its seventh edition. This is not a book for laymen but it is exceedingly interesting to scan its pages just to see how ordinary words can achieve new meanings as new thoughts about new things develop. de-velop. The word book is invaluable to the doctor and many others who will be more and more concerned with this important study of interpersonal inter-personal relations psychiatry. Let's take a layman's look at the pages of the little pocket volume. Starting at the beginning with "a an." Not the simple articles they look! The definition is not new In this case but shows the special meaning the person who reads psychiatry psy-chiatry must know. The definition reads: ' "Prefixes derived from the Greek and having the same meaning as the prefix un- or the suffix -less. Without; absence of; not. Cf. amentia, amen-tia, anosmia." That takes us to amentia which means (1) absence of intellect; (2) a state of mind bordering on stupor; (3) feeblemindedness. You have heard of behavior but what is behaviorism? It is "the psychological theory which holds that correct conclusions in psychology psychol-ogy must rest upon objective study and interpretation of behavior." You have also heard of conversion. conver-sion. Here is the psychiatrist's meaning of it. "The process by which an emotional trauma (that is an emotional 'wound') after repres sion becomes converted into a physical phys-ical symptom In hysteria." Practical Application It you think that sounds too high brow, Just recall the remark: "He's had that squint ever since he saw that terrible accident." There are a lot more interesting new meanings clear over to the last word "zoopsia" which you know all about if you ever saw "Ten Nights In a Barroom," the great prohibi tion play. "Zoopsia" is what we (in-correctly) (in-correctly) call "D.T.'s." The definition defini-tion is "a visual hallucination of animals ani-mals or insects." The little book also has an appen dix In which there are careful and more detailed descriptions of the emotions anxiety, fear, pride, van ity, etc., which we now know are as dangerous to our mental health when they get out of control as a flock of flu germs are to our bodily welfare. I'll give you a definition of the one emotion which is highly impor tant because when It gets the upper, hand in politics, it can do as much harm to a form of government as to an individual. "Egoism and egotism are not synonyms. Egoism is a self-seeking desire to gain advantages at the expense ex-pense of the rights, convenience or possessions of others. It is essentially essen-tially antisocial. Egotism is overvaluation over-valuation of self, one's opinions, ability abil-ity or cleverness and corresponding undervaluation of others." Now, just apply that definition of egoism to blocs, political parties, nations and you'll see why psychiatry psy-chiatry is important in the new world. The more people who under, stand it, the more people will understand under-stand each other. The words in "A Psychiatric Word Book" are important words. ($1 postpaid from the Hospitals Press, Mental Hygiene Department, State of New York, Utica, N. Y.) Popular Questions Here are answers to three questions ques-tions I was asked most frequently on a recent trip to the Middle West: (1) When will the war be over? I don't know. I wouldn't be surprised sur-prised if Germany cracked Inside this winter. At least another year to clean up Japan. (2) What about International cooperation co-operation afterward? I don't know. The feeling I get in Washington is that there will be an honest attempt to form an International Inter-national league, just as it is suggested suggest-ed in the Moscow conference. (3) Will President Roosevelt run for a Fourth Term? I doubt If even he knows that either. He probably will unless the war is done and over. . by Daukhage The A. F. Davis Welding Library has been established at Ohio State university, Columbus, Ohio. ! . . ; One of the favorite jokes of Ger- mans In oft-bombed regions is: j "During last night's raid on western west-ern Germany, 69 bombers were shot j down. One of nur fighters failed to return. One of our towns is miss-; miss-; ing." WEEKLY NEWS ANALYSIS Fighting See -Saws in Southern Italy As Nazis Prepare for Allied Landing; Reds Capture Important Rail Lines; Food Subsidy War Continues to Rage Released by Western Newspaper Union. . South Pacific This picture show tome of the devastation U. S. bombers have caused in Japan's big shipping and air base of Rabaul, feeder point for enemy forces operating in New Guinea and the Solomons. Solo-mons. In a recent attack, fighter planes from aircraft carriers protected land-based bombers in their assaults on Rabaul. Their footing on the southwest shore of Bougainville secure, U. S. troops were being re-enforced for their push inland against the 40,000 Japs reportedly clinging to their last major stronghold in the Solomons. The U. S. brought fighter planes into the action to bomb and machine gun enemy positions hewn into the jungle. Since Pearl Harbor, a naval spokesman reported 67 U. S. warships sunk: one battleship, four aircraft carriers, nine cruisers, 39 destroyers and 14 submarines. ITALY: Fighting See-Sdivs Fiehtinff in the mountains see sawed in southern Italy as the Germans Ger-mans cleared sections of the west coast to the north in anticipation of Allied landings from fleets which they reported were massed in Naples. Na-ples. Bitter fighting marked the mountain moun-tain warfare in the Mignano region, where the Germans were guarding the pass leading into the level plain stretching approximately 80 miles to the north to Rome. One U. S. company alone used 500 hand grenades in the close, rough encounters along the rocky slopes. Anchored in six-foot-deep tunnels securely se-curely thatched with heavy timbers and sand bags, the Nazis held strong positions, relatively secure from dive-bombings or artillery fire, but sometimes open to attacks from the side or rear. SUBSIDIES: Fight On With other branches of agricul ture, representatives of the livestock trade spearheaded the attack against the administration's subsidy program pro-gram before the senate agriculture committee. On November 1, President Presi-dent Roosevelt had called on congress con-gress to continue government payments pay-ments to encourage production and reduce consumer costs through retail re-tail price reductions, announcing the program now runs the U. S. 800 million mil-lion dollars annually. ' Frank Boice of the American Livestock Live-stock association told the senate committee subsidies for reducing retail re-tail meat prices will save the consumer con-sumer barely $2 annually. P. O. Wilson of the joint livestock committee com-mittee declared cattle producers were never consulted on establishment establish-ment of, meat price ceilings. Opposition to subsidies also was registered by the Grocery Manufacturers Manufac-turers of America, representative of 85 per cent of the nation's processed proc-essed food producers. The organization organiza-tion stated that price control of its products on a subsidy basis was unsound un-sound because the cost would have to be repaid in taxation, plus administration ad-ministration expense of the program. pro-gram. RUSSIA: Near Poland ' Slowly, Russian troops were bending bend-ing the center of the Nazi battle line back to the pre-war Polish border, bor-der, with the Reds no less than 50 miles distant from the old boundary at two points west of Kiev. In addition, the Russ were snapping snap-ping important rail lines hooking up Nazi forces in the north and south. To the south, the Germans report ed 500,000 Russ attacking at Krivoi Rog, big mine center where the Nazis stopped the Reds' surge through the Ukraine when it threatened threat-ened to trap huge forces in the Dnieper Dnie-per river bend.- In Washington, D. C.,.it was announced an-nounced Russian armies had been aided by the lend-lease of 6,500 planes and more than 3,000 tanks in the two years ended September 30. HIGHLIGHTS SACRIFICE: Crewmen of a Flying Fly-ing Fortress in England saved the town of Wargrave from heavy damage dam-age at the cost of their own lives. They guided the plane, which was just taking off on a raid, over the housetops, and jettisoned their bombs in the river, just before the plane exploded. One man parachuted parachut-ed to safety, but the others were killed. TH&M W SUN, LEHI, UTAH '1 V 3y.-. 17 . Mi WHISKY BUSINESS: . Senate to Investigate Charged with hoarding whisky stocks to evade taxation and raise prices, big distillers ,..,,.. were to be called to 4 ' A Washington. D. C. - , , Deiore a senate sud-committee sud-committee to explain ex-plain alleged shortages short-ages despite reported report-ed inventories of five or six years. Said Senator Frederick Fred-erick Van Nuys, Indiana: In-diana: "We know that some of the big corporations, which have been buying up little distilleries, are keeping liquor in the Frederick warehouses eight or Van Nuys ten years, when most liquor does not age perceptl bly after four years." Senator Van Nuys said other phases of the investigation will concern con-cern the practice of distilleries sell ing inventories to stockholders, and the alleged mixture of straight whisky with 70 per cent neutral spirits for sale under strange brand names to evade price ceilings, AGRICULTURE: Assured of Fertilizer As manufacturers, the army and Tennessee Valley authority have en tered into an agreement with the War Production board to supply 625,000 tons of nitrogen for agriculture agricul-ture for the 1943-'44 season. Under the agreement, the army will realize $47.50 per ton on the nitrogen on an f.o.b. basis, with TVA selling the fertilizer. In cer tain southern states, Associated Co operatives, Inc., will act as distribu tors, and in all other states east of the Rocky mountains, TVA will sell the product-through brokers designated desig-nated by WPB. To manufacture the nitrogen, the army will operate its marginal fa cilities for ammonium nitrate, and TVA will furnish specifications for the conditioning materials necessary for a fertilizer nitrate. Hog. Marketing , With a 1943 spring pig crop of 74,050,000, the government is mak ing every effort to assure an orderly marketing of hogs and prevent heavy runs in December, and Janu ary. To achieve this end, industry representatives have banded into committees at 14 key terminal cen ters to advise producers on ship ments. As a further aid, the War Food, administration will release marketing instructions through press and radio. . Complicating the marketing situa tion is the fact that the record pig crop must be handled in the face of strained transportation facilities and manpower shortages. Storage of the pork and by-products for civilian, military and lend-lease use also will lax reingerator capacity. It is pointed out that ordarly mar-keting mar-keting will assure producers of 200 to 270-pound weights of the minimum mini-mum government support price of $13.75, Chicago basis. in the week's news REWARD: An 11-year-old New York office boy, earning $5 a week, found a pouch containing some jewels. jew-els. . They were diamond rings and pins valued at $115,000. He received nine crisp $100 bills, and two fifties HELP WANTED: For the first time in the history of the anthracite coal industry, mine operators are advertising for mine workers in the newspapers. ,'9 l - .'m t Farm Speculation To prevent "destructive specula tion," Senator Guy Gillette, Iowa, has Introduced legis lation under which a seller would pay a 10 per cent resale transfer tax on the purchase price of farm land, when the property has been acquired after the & passage of the act and resold within a year. The legislation would - expire two years after the war, Vnder another plan, Gillette said, profit on a transaction would be absorbed Guy Gillette by a tax ranging up to 100 per cent. NATIONAL GRANGE: Goss Re-elected Meeting in Grand Rapids, Mich., for its 77th annual convention, the National Grange re-elected Albert Goss, Washington, D. C.,' as master. Goss highlighted the convention by calling for congressional revision of the present parity formula, which, he asserted, fails to include farm labor costs; wrongly assumes that farm income for the base period pe-riod of 1909-'14 was in proper proportion pro-portion to non-farm income; is based upon price rather than income; and is, obsolete because the relative value val-ue of commodities has changed greatly in recent years. Also elected were David Agans, Three Bridges, N. H., overseer: W. G. Armstrong, Niles, Mich., treasurer; treas-urer; Harry C. Caton, Coshocton, Ohio, secretary; and Mrs. Bessie Seebert, Chlchako, Okla.; Mrs. Blanche D. Newsom, Columbus, Ind.; Mrs. Alice Pearson, Miami, Fla.; and Eugene A. Eckert, Mas-coutah, Mas-coutah, 111., national committeemen. WORLD RELIEF: Study Financing : While President Roosevelt called upon congress to authorize appropriations appropri-ations to finance America's share of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Re-habilitation administration, the UNRRA considered various proposals propo-sals for raising funds to carry out the program during its meetings in Atlantic City, N. J. Saying it is hoped "a small fraction frac-tion of the national income" of the contributing member nations of the UNRRA will be sufficient for its work, President ' Roosevelt defined the organization's purpose as an en deavor "to help the liberated peoples peo-ples to help themselves, so that they may have the strength to undertake the task of rebuilding their destroyed homes, their ruined factories, and their plundered farms." . UNRRA studied three proposals for raising funds: 1. Assessment of member nations on the basis of per capita income; 2. Member nations' contributions of 1 per cent of their national income; 3. Assessments against foreign trade figures of the member nations. U. S. fLANES: 'Wings on Guns So well are U. S. fighting planes armed, that it can be said American Amer-ican engineers are designing guns and putting wings on them. With that statement, Army Air Force Technician CoL Frank C. Wolfe listed 19 reasons for U. S. planes' tremendous firepower. Among the reasons were hydraulic and electrically operated gun turrets tur-rets with multiple gun installations; increased firepower for nose and tail positions of all types of bombers; improved computing sights for all gun positions; fighter gun sights which extend present sighting ranges; improvements in armor plate and bullet resistant glass; remote re-mote control and fire control systems, sys-tems, y No less than 70 types of aircraft are being tested at army fields, Colonel Colo-nel Wolfe said, with approved types sent to battle zones for additional tryouts before being finally put into production. ' Hat in Ring Three times governor of Ohio, John W. Bricker formally announced his candidacy for t i , - f the Republican nom-f nom-f ! 'nation for Presi-h Presi-h dent. During his , j tenure as Ohio's i ft cniei executive, me ft state's debt has been cut 22 million tC. dollars, and a 24 f ''J million dollar post-h post-h " ? i wa" building and i ing ii way tuna nas i 1 - 4 been set P from s s , . . surplus. Announcing bis candidacy, Bricker Brick-er said: "We must John Bricker keep ourselves strong, liberty -loving, self-governing and use that power pow-er and influence throughout the world to bring about better international interna-tional relations and to prevent the deadly destruction of war.' , BULL: A prize Holstein bull sold for $26,000 at "a national blue ribbon sale, the highest price since 1919, when King Sylvia went for $106.00o! The highly valued sire is Carnation Madcap Supreme. He is 16 months old. A cow sold for $10,000, next highest price at the sale. An average aver-age of $3,230 was established after the first 20 head were sold. The champion Hereford bull, T. Royal Rupert 60th, has been insnrpri for $25,000, largest policy ever takpn out on a bulL r f ' - ' ' ' - ' fcfn if i ruth n Mufti refill iitw fi iffrriiiartfi i ft m Li 1 L vi.ti y "1 About New York: What looks like a' palace at Paris Ave., and 51st is merely the uppity Racquet and Tennis Clubhouse . . . There Is a Park Ave. penthouse that has a garden with a 30-foot waterfall water-fall .. . Radio City's studios are built like boxes within boxes, separate sepa-rate rooms within rooms, raised from the building floors by steel springs covered with felt in order to improve acoustics. Imagine going go-ing through all that trouble for soap operas . . . The Music Hall Rock-ettes Rock-ettes can live comfortably without ever leaving the theater. They work there, can eat in its restaurants, and have a luxurious dormitory atop the theater to sleep in . . . Talk about tact. At one Park Ave. place, the headwaiter never bows to a patron, if he is with a woman not his wife. - Thirty-two years after Columbus discovered America the strip of land now "known as Manhattan was discovered dis-covered by Giovanni da Verrazanno. There isn't even a street named after aft-er him .. . . What many sightseers think is romantic and picturesque in Chinatown are merely rundown tenements. The city's worst slums are located there . . . Our fighting Mayor LaGuardia has installed a "punching bag in one of the City Hall rooms -. . . Only six cities in Germany Ger-many contain more Germans than Yorkville . . . Many of the Ori ental herbs sold for high prices in exclusive food shops are grown in Staten Island ... If you want a whiff of old New York, go to the Murray Hill Hotel Ten times as many people visit New York during a year as live in the metropolis ... As far as earth- w quakes are concerned, the Big City is the safest part of the world ... Only 4,000 of the 18,000 Chinese in New York live in Chinatown . . . This gives you an idea how cosmopolitan cosmo-politan our burg is:" It has three Arabic daily newspapers . . . The Chinese maintain a school for their children in Mott St. . . . The merriest mer-riest locale in town is the Puerto Rican section of Harlem on Saturday Satur-day night . . . There are laws regulating regu-lating the shape of our skyscrapers . . . The opening of the Brooklyn Bridge was celebrated as a national nation-al holiday. For twelve years, while the bridge was being built, the chief engineer had lain partially paralyzed. para-lyzed. The first lady to drive across it was his wife, who acted as his intermediary. The Herman Goering award is presented monthly to a member of the American Air Force in England . . . It is given to the Yank who contributes most to the German war effort It is a large iron cross (12 by 12 inches) worn around the neck . . . The RAF has a similar prize published each week in its paper a parody on an official seal Recently it was awarded to the crew of a large bomber, returned from a mission . . .-It seems they couldn't make their radio work properly on the way home. The gas was almost gone and finally they were forced down in what they thought was Holland. . Upon landing, they immediately set fire to their bomber, stayed with it until it lit up the black night . . . Then they ran like anything for what they thought was the nearest near-est house, praying that the tenants' were sympathizers. It was the saloon around the corner cor-ner from their base! One of the most important stories of the war (how the surrender oi the Italian fleet was achieved by s radio engineer of the Overseas Branch of the OWI) was ignored oi buried by most newspapers. No' one of them even mentioned his name. He is Robert Morris Pierce of Cleveland, Ohio, attached to the Army's Psychological Warfare branch, of which OWI is an important im-portant part . . . Here is how it was done . . . When Italy surrendered, a messagewas prepared for broadcast to the Italian fleet ... It is doubtful doubt-ful if the fleet would hear itbecause itbe-cause the Italian Navy had a strict taboo on listening to our broadcasts . . . Pierce solved the problem by working all night to shift the big transmitter to the international distress dis-tress signal band to which ships of all nations listen , . . The message was broadcast every 15 minutes for several hours . . . When the Italian fleet steamed into Malta (as a result of the broadcast) Admiral Sir Andrew An-drew Brown Cunningham, Allied Naval Force Commander, said: "Tell General McClure they've accomplished ac-complished in one day with propaganda propa-ganda what I've been trying to do for three years with the Navy." Groncho Marx told Artur Rubinstein Rubin-stein that Southern California was becoming the home of musical greats. Rachmaninoff, Menuhin, Iturbi, ' Rubinstein, Heifetz, 1 all ol whom played at the H'wood BowL The maestro said when the season ended he was in the foyer of the Philharmonic and heard two dowagers dow-agers discussing music. "How was the season at the Bowl?" one asked. "Quite good." was the answer, "considering that we had nothing but local talent." CLASSIFIER DEPART MEK STAMPED GOOpR ; FREE CATALOG St.,m7T (An for embroidery write wKh'tehm Hi T WORK CO., Bos 184, MonrgrU OFFICE EQUIPMENT '4, WB BUY AND 8KLL Offlt, r,.I T Pllw. TTPwriter Adding MmMuhv SALT IAKEDK8K EXCHNgWOJ: USED CARS TRAu7p?C?s TJyjie White Fawn FIou Leads Them All Ask your Friendly Grocsr Just 2 drops PenetmV Nose Drops in eatk nostril help yos breathe freer almost instantly, to you: head cola gets ait. Ou t 250 2Vt times much for BOc. Caution i i use only aa directed. ell Penetro Koie Drapi If you suffer from hot flashe; weak, nervous, cranky feelings, k: a bit blue at times due to & functional "middle-age" peric peculiar to women try Lydia E3 Pinkham's Vegetable Compouri. to relieve such symptoms. Takeif regularly Pinkham's CompouitJf 1 helps build up resistance agair.:frt: such distress. It helps natunyr Also a fine stomachic tonic Fo:C' low label directions. r LYDIA E. PMHAM'S coKtj . , -jyj 'Focus Cats' " The Focus Cats are pilots m carry no guns and whose specif ! is photo reconnaissance in r? European theater of operationff1 ; ; IS Don't Inst ignor a cotd! They're ? treacherous tricky. Rest aToid eo poaare. Ana tor prompt, aectsm I relief from usual cold miseries, taJtf I Greve's Old Tablets. They contait gi sight active ingredients a multiple f medicine. Work on all these symp t( torn of a cold at the aame tlm..jii, heaitach bodv aches fever naf TJ atuf flneaa. Take Grove's Cold Tablet! exactly as directed. Accept no MM JL atitutea. Get Grova's Cold Tablet4' for fifty years known to millions wee) "Bromo Quinine" Cold Tablets. L'j San Money Get Writ Economy DON'T LET CONSTIPATION! SLOW YOU UP t When bowels ars sluggish and ? feel irritable, headachy, do as milliwl do-chew FEEN-A-MINT, tha mofrL chewing-gum laxative. Simply chci. FEEN-A-MINT before you go to bff taking only in accordance with pact;Wn directions sleep without being do: turbed. Next morning gentle, tlioroi: js relief, helping you feel swell again. FEEN-A-MINT. Tastes good, is batCf1 and economical- A tranarnn f nmtlv lUCr FEEflMfjn 4h For Uie Preservation Of the American & Way of Life ft ft Jas Ihil fcat fee BUY U. S. WAR BONDfe 6 "ininsi mi tna And Your Strength and r f- rtolnw Par It msy be earned by disorder v!rele ay function that permits po , vaate to accumulate. For trul , people feel tired, weak and q wkea the kidneys fail to "a,f " acids and other waste matter ln My blood. . . .-Hi'M'i Yo may suffer ntfrfnf baw rheumatic peine, headaches, renins p nights, lei pa'M, gtp ' Sometimes frequent and scanT r , Kjui tioa with smarting snd burner ft other sign that something is wroM ' the kidneys or bladder. There should be no doubt atp Pm. treatment is wiser than neg IWt PiUt. It i better tor ? medicine that has won cl" nrnv.l than m, something less , Vim known. ZW. h. b bee, a many yemr. Get C-oan a today. Z aw It 2 : rw: YOU WOMEN WHO SUFFER FR0M5S ill E Mlllt ad ! W V7NU-W i gHgarwj-W Li iiwai .am mm til tatTl aslalasirT |