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Show Steel H. J. Christen sen Wins Sweeping Court I F elation ouri in Coses Victory U. S. U; S, Steel Corporation today fluoridation damage suits filed had ;won a sweeping victory in by farmers from three counties, Of the 305 cases, 85 were from the U. S. Federal Court in Salt 305 Wasatch over Lake City County and all 85 were long-standi- i ng mESD,;TJ- 4 1957 - DAILY HERALD returned as justifying no award of damages. The rest were farmers from Salt Lake County except four, which were from Utah Of. the Utah County County. cases, only one damage award was made, $1040.33 absolute damages to Ralph Flanders and and $460 conditional means he may which damages, for $460 allegedly damaged get cattle if he wishes to sell them to U. S. Steel. Seek $25 Million The original 305 cases sought a total of $25 million damages, and also sought to permanently close the Geneva Steel plant by injunction. Federal Judge Willis W. Ritter awarded a total of only $10,880.43 absolute and conditional damages out of the $25 million sought. The conditional damages leaves it up 'to the farmer whether or not he wishes to sell the assertedly damaged cattle to U. S. Steel for the amount specified, or, if he chooses not to sell the cattle, damages. hegets no conditional The outcome of the cases, which have been pending over a period of years in the federal court, was regarded as a sweeping victory for U. S. Steel. The judge flatly rejected the ' injunction plea of the plaintiffs that the Geneva Steel plant be permanently closed. In addition, he only awarded damages ' for assertedly damaged cattle, and rejected ill crop claims. Of the total of 305 cases, 31 failed to appear and their cases were dismissed for that reason. Large Amounts Paid U. S. Steel in past years, however, has paid large amounts to Utah County farmers for fluoride damage to cattle, with virtually all cases being settled out of court. No figures have ever been released by the company, but it is known that between $4,000,-00- 0 and $5,000,000 have been paid to about 600 Utah County farmers from Lehl to Springville in settlements. This with machinery worth millions of dollars which Geneva has installed has probably pushed U. S. SteePs total fluoridation cost in Utah County million. to close to his Stock Market J. A. FURNISHED BY HOGLE AND COMPANY Member of New York Stock Exchange IX)W JONES AVERAGES Total Today 456.30 1,520.000 Open 11:00 a.m. 458.32 350.000. .42 123.70 .59 2.0i 124. 3 Stock Utilities Rails 10. 40 Jl 66.67 .02 66.69 .32 156.49 157.13 . 54 SALT LAKE STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Bid Asked Yesterday Today Yesterday's Close: Close Banner $7.12 a 7.50 Open 76 i 76 i 14 ii .15 Va Allied Chemical Bristol Silver 36 Aluminum Limited . . 363b ... 42 Va 42 Va 65 .75 American Can 39 397 .03 'i American Cyanamid .03 47 Va 47 .45 40 American Smelting 1687 .24 2.1 1688 American Telephone 74 Va .05 '.a American Tobacco .. 74.a .05 .21 207s 20 Atch Top & S F .... 21 .45 .44 Bethlehem Steel .... 413s ,4138 75 'is 05 Va 75 .06 Va Caterpillar 72 Va 72 Vm 95 $2vi Chrysler .07 51 06 'a Clark Equipment ... 50V4 .11 30 3 a .09 Corn Products Rf. . 303,s .04 2 Denver & Rio Grande 42 4 42 Va .04 .07 52 Vm .06 52 Va Dow Chemical .20 .17 177 Va 177 Du Pont .07 91 Va 05 Eastman Kodak,.... 92 Va 10 .13 29 El Paso Nat. Ga ... 29Vm 50Vm .03 'i Ford Motor 03 503m .25 20 59 g General Electric .... 60!' .01 i .02 467 47 General Foods .09 40 06 40 Vm General Motors .80 77 "i 79 Vm 80 Vm Goodvear .45 43 129 Va 129 Oil Gulf 01 32 Vm .Cl'i Int. Harvester 32 Va .03 U Int. Nickel 02 i 79 Va 79 Va .23 .27 87 87 Va Int. Paper Park Nelson 10 09 'a 42 Va 41 Park City Con 03 04 U 90 Va 91 Kennecott ProsperKin West .. .16 .19 & Mftf. 81Va Silver Minnesota Mng .01 a Monsanto Chemical . 01 Silver Shield 32'a 32 Va .47 15 So. Standard 34 34 Ward Montgomery .14 10 . 22 Vm 22 Va Swansea Con Distillers National .17 15 '2 Tar Baby 63 Vs 63 Va National Steel 57 !2 .60 453 Tlntic Standard Pacific Gas Elec. ... 45s .72 Vi Parke Davis 60 57 V3 Utah Wyoming 574 .08 06 Weit Toledo 79 Va J. C. Penney 79s8 .17 15 a Williston .. 39 7 39 7 Petroleum Phillip .04 0;3 Zuma 50 V Proctor & Gamble .. 50 SALES 31 31 la Radio Corp 70 Cardiff. 100 at 47 78 4778 Steel Republic 2,000 at 22. R. J. Reynolds 60 59 Vm Clayton Silver. at 200 20. 27 Vm Comstock, 2.000 at 21; 27 Sears ' 92 '2. DraRori. 600 at 95; 1,100 at 52 V 51 7m Soconv Mobile East Standard. 2.000 at 7; 5.000 at Std Oil of Cal 503(8 50 Va 6a563,8 Std Oil of New Jersey 56 38 Grande Deposit. 2.000 at 2. 65 38 65 Va Texas Company 413fe . 413B New Park. 100 at 80. Timken Roller Bearing North Standard, 2,000 at 1. 35 Vm 35 at Transamerica 105 Va 105 Va Park Nelson,at 9,700 at 20; 5,500 Union Carbide Corp. 500 at at 5,500 25; V 24; 26 23; 6,500 263,8 Union Pacific 23Va 26; 500 at 27: 1,000 at 28. United Airlines ..... 23 m 2.800 at United Park City ... IVm at V; lVa Royston Coal. 2.000 59 38 B9? 45,000 at" 5; 10,000 at 5V3; U. S. Steel 1.000 at 6. 22 Va Utah Power & Litfit .. Silver Shield. 7.000 at 1. Western Airline .... 23 3 8 59 i Tar Baby, 2,000 at 16. at 2. Westinghouse Elec. . 59s,8 Western Alloy, 1,000 Va405s Woolworth 408 Williston. 1.000 at 15 AMERICAN STOCK EXCHANGE Bid Asked Today's Quotations: 5T'8 Barium Steel 53i 12 12 Va Bunker Hill 2 13a Day Mines 18 19 Gladding McBean Mtn Sts. Tel & Tel. 112 Va 11334 7a New Park 3i 4 35s Rico Argentine 43A 47s Utah Idaho Sugar OVER THE COUNTER Bid Asked. Today's Quotations: 57 .62 Big Pinev 67 .73 English Oil 28 25 29.75 Oil NEW YORK (UP) -S- tocks Eauity 39.00 First Sec. Bank .. 37.50 edged higher on moderate turn- Interstate Motor .. 10.37 a H12Va .67 63 over early today with gains rang- King Oil 9 37 2 Co 8.62 Va Lang 3.62 , 4.37 Va Const ing from fractions in most leaders Lang 23 25 22.25 te a point or more in a handful Mtn. Fuel Supply .45 Oil Securities .... .55 5.25 5.62 V2 of specials. Rare Metals 6.12 Va 5.87 Va Ste Nat. Ga Among the better gamers were Three 16.50 Utah Southern Oil 15.00 Johns-Ma- n 3.00 ville, up Vz points fol- Western Sts Rfg. . . 2.75 MUTUAL FUNDS disof termination merger lowing Yesterday's Closing Quotations Bid Aked cussions with Best wail Gypsum, 5.65 Inc. Affiliated Fund and Safeway Stores which respond-e- Canadian Gen. Fund 17.26 186.11 68 to a higher earnings report Chemical 15.72 16.99 How B Fund 20 55 21.97 ivitJi a gain of IVa points. Ameri- Eaton. Eaton. How S Fund 19 30 20.64 can Hawaiian Steamship ran up Fundamental Inv. . . 14. 95 16.38 Incorporated Inv. . . 7.99 108.64 iV. to 87. 10.10 Mass. Inv. Growth 92 Allied Chemical rose nearly 1 in Mass. Inv. Trust .. 10.52 11.37 & Elec. 10 93 11.91 its group, Douglas almost a point Television URANIUM QUOTATIONS .03 Va 02fc in the aircrafts, Kennecott IVz in Atlas xn 06 bpco tha coppers, and Climax Molyb- Bee Hive 01 V, .01,; 14 .16 Big Horn denum l78. .06 05 Indian Bis Leading steels were firm 02 Vi .03 Circle Cliffs 33 .28 Youngstown Sheet & Tube Columex .07 06 Congress fell around a point. Other declines Elaterite .07 05 100 1.18 included drops of a in Zenith, Vs Federal .22 18 Gold Cloud in Thompson Products, a point to Greenriver .06 05 02 .024 S in Beckman Instruments, Gunsight 8c 22 .26 Met Int. Oil 2 75 3.12 Va Porcupine, ACF Industries, Lisbon 4.68 LuckvMc Home American Addressograph, 08 Mt. Peale .10 Products. .30 New Metals .10 .55 45 Oil Securities Rails and utilities were little Producers 'x 07 Va 06 1.18 1.00 Radorock changed. Bullion Monarch . . Cardiff Central Standard .. Chief Con ... Clayton Silver Combined Metals . . Corns took Cons Eureka Croff Dragon East Standard East' Utah . Eureka Bullion Eureka. Lillv Con . . Eureka Standard .. Gt. Western Kennebec Majestic Oil Mammoth Mtn. States Dev. .. Naildriver New Park North Lily NorthStandard Parle Konold .32 J28 . 1 -. Johns-Manvil- le : ....... , ...... - 4: - Stock Issues Edge Higher . . d . . . . Mc-Inty- re Red Hill Shumway Standard Sun Uran White Canyon Grain Futures Wyoming i 06 .50 57 06 .74 28 .07 .75 .62 .07 .78 .31 1; soybeans off 2 to to 68 points. 2; lard of 13 $24,-958.- out-of-cou- on Ogden Livestock Livestock: OGDEN (UP) Cattle 2,600; opening trade slow; slaughter classes stockers and feeders moderately active compared with last week's lower; no reclose; cows liable test of market on steers and heifers; stockers and feeders weak to SO lower; one load standard about 700 lb. grass slaughter heifers 17. 10 ;t commercial cows canners and cutters few commercial bulls rather 50-1.- 00 12.50-13.5- 0; 9.50-12.0- 0; 16.50-17.1- 0; few choice lb. yearshort ling stock steers load mediiim feeding heifers 998 lb. 17.50. Calves 250; vealers about steady; stock calves opening siow about steady; good and choice vealers 20.50-23.0few head good and choice stock steer calves 21.25-22.2few good and choice stock 525-59- 5 20.75-22.0- 0; 0; 5; heifer calves 18.00-19.2- 5. butcher hogs fully steady with last week dose; early sales mixed lots U.S. barrows 0 and gilts unsorted for grade lb. few sorted 19.60; sow market not established. Sheep 1,300; no test of the market and no sales over the weekend; supply includes around two carloads Wyoming lambs plus trucked lots Utahs most of which arrived late. Hogs 300; 1- -3 200-23- 19.00-19.5- 0; 5 f5 fe 33n 1- -2 MKTS dl054a car east section 3.75; U.S. car western section 3.65. Potato Market 60 rt anti-fluoridati- 1 CHICAGO (UP) Soybeans led a general decline of all grain futures at the close of the Board Of Trade today. Wheat closed 1 to 2S cents oats lower; corn off T to off V to 58; rye off 21a to 23i; -- -- 15 20 30 Industrial Volume Yesterday ' Close: wife 1 1 Street sales: Idaho russets few low as 3.65; 50s few CHICAGO (UP) Potatoes: few 4.75; Oregon rusbakers 2.65; Total 391 Friday, 132 Saturday, sets no sales reported. 3 Sunday; arrivals 210; track 345. Onions: supply moderate, deSupply moderate, demand mod- mand moderate, market firm. erate, markets steady. Track sales (50s): Idaho SpanTrack sales (100s): Idaho russets ish U.S. 2 3 inches and larger 1 0 per cent 10 ounces and larger car 1.50. 3.85-4.3- 25-3- 5; Long Illness Claims Provo In Judge Ritter's opinion noted that Geneva has spent research and new equipment correct the situation a total he to of c This with Utah County out of court, awarded damages would put the cost of Geneva of its fluoridation troubles at V - ' portant a part of farming community on the other compels the most thorough and painstaking examinations of their respective claims. "Much of the evidence is scientific. It is in a relatively new field of industrial air polution by fluorine and its effects upon livestock and vegetation. It is that there Is assembled in this record the most advanced learning to date upon these subjects. Some Conflict "There is some conflict between expert witnesses of plaintiffs and those of the defendant. For the reasons more fully set forth in Che referees report, the court finds the testimony of the defendant's (Geneva) experts more credible. "When in 1950 the defendant discovered that the Geneva Mill was emitting fluorides sufficient to be injurious, it commenced studies and research to install corrective equipment. Between that time and time of the trial the defendant has expended a sum of $8,689,000 for research and installation of corrective equipment. "On this record the defendant steel company, at great cost has remedied the situation and reduced the output of fluoride to a tolerable level." . De-liv- ed Worthingrton Statement The following statement was issued by Leslie B. Worthington, president of Columbia - Geneva Steel Division, U. S. Steel Cor poration: "We are gratified that the trial of these long and costly court cases is concluded. As has been previously reported, United States Steel and Colum bia Geneva Steel Division have attempted to do everything possible conducive to harmonious relations between all interests in volved. We believe that our efforts and the tremendous cost we have incurred have been the right course of action. "Our activities in Utah County could not have possibly been the cause of al lthe damages involved in all of these cases. The 305 plaintiffs threatened to close our operation in Utah with an injunction. They sued for considerably in excess of $25 million damages, with respect to farms located in three counties Salt Lake, Wasatch and Utah County. "All of us in U. S. Steel Corporation hope that the courts clarification in these important issues will serve as a future guide to both industry and agriculture, the two dominant factors of the economy of Central Utah. "We shall continue to operate Utah, the West, and Columbia our plants in the best interest of Geneva Steel Division." SCHOOL CANDIDATE Dr. Ray R. Canning, candidate for 48, aft- lingering He was bora March SI, 1909, at Provo, a son of Chresten Carl and Ellen Susanna Jorgensen Christen sen. He was educated in Provo schools, and resided here all the Alpine Board of Education from the Orem area. Ray Canning Seeks Alpine School Post his life. He was engaged ' in farming and custom plowing for Letters. Dr. Canning, who makes his home in Orem with his wife, the former Lois Cook of Tremonton, and their four children, served in the armed forces as a combat infantry rifle platoon leader in World War II and was a recipient of the Silver Star, the Bronze Star and three Purple Heart citations. His business experience includes employment as business representative and cashier in the Provo office of the Mountain Telephone and Telegraph Company, city circulation manager in Provo for The Daily Herald and business representative of the Pennock Company of Salt Lake City. Dr. Canning's prof essional training and experience in the fields of human behavior, educational background, population growth and city planning quali fy him for the position of school board member and he promises to work for the utmost good of all school children, his backers declared today. 12-2- to 88, low tonight 44 to 54 70 to 80. considerable cloudiness' through Wednesday; frequent showers and or thunder showers today and tonight, diminishing Wednesday; cooler. .High both days 72 to 72, tonight 44 to 54. Max. wU Death Cause SOUTH SALT LAKE (UP) An autopsy showed today a Provo wamaai found dead behind the wheel of her car here Monday died of a heart attack. South Salt Lake Marshal Henry Dipo Jr., said Helen Louise Hall apparently died of the attack just after she pulled the car to a curb and turned off the engine. Helen Louise was Hall the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Kehl of Marietta, Ohio. She was married to Kenneth Hall, they were later divorced. She had been a school teacher in American Fork. Funeral arrangements will be announced by the Berg Mortuary. Utah Obituaries SALT LAKE CITY 1008 -- John F. S. three-month-o- nd Confer Es-tel- Kopp, Hartvigsen To Speak Before Provo Kiwanians' 51 70 47 79 45 63 " .11 59 81 51 99 90 80 68 52 61 54 59 59 56 54 58 55 66 ,89 o Given As 41 56 54 42 60 93 70 80 77 85 98 87 85 86 78 65 67 89 City-Count- .32 &1 81 Clinic Begins Full Program Pep. 59 L Immunization These immunizations are available to all ages. The DPT is for infants through eight years, the DT is for eight through 12 years, and the tetanus is for anyone beyond 12 years. Salk vaccine, typhoid and smallpox serums are for all ages. Min. 60 l Heart Attack and high Wednesday Southwest Idaho: The Daughters of Utah Pioneers Billings Convention slated for Thursday, Bismarck Mr. Christensen L Oct. 5, in Salt Lake City, has been Boise 1 1 m e of h i s cancelled because of the flu epi- Boston death. He was secretary of the demic. Butte Elders Quorum and a block teachChicago er. Denver Survivors include his mother, Wednesday Morning Las Vegas Provo j three brothers and three Logan sisters, Carl J. Christensen, Salt Los Angeles Lake City; Nephi A. Christensen, Miami Ithaca, N. Y.; Ralph J. ChristenMinneapolis sen, San Diego; Lucile ChristenNew Orleans sen, Provo; Helen Christensen, New York New York, N. Y. and Mrs. J. A. Ogden Regular weekly immunization Omaha (Eva) Van Orman, Encino, Calif. y Health Phoenix Funeral services will be con- clinic of the in m. ducted Thursday at 11 a. Department will be held Wednes Pocatello the Berg Drawing Room Chapel. day from 10 to 11 a.m. in the Pro- Portland 175 North Bishop Robert Halladay of the vo Community Church, Provo Ave. officiate will University Pioneer Second Salt Lake City program of San Francisco at the services. Friends may call The full school-yea- r at the Berg Mortuary Wednesday complete immunizations will be St. George to 8 d. m. and resumed tomorrow after a summer St. Louis avanin v vmi' O fmm 6 of curtailed services. Thursday prior to services. Burial Seattle Beginning tomorrow, immunizaCeme will be in the Provo City tions will be available for Salk Spokane tery. Washington anti-poli(any shot), DPT (diph- W. Yellowstone theria, tetanus, whooping cough), tetanus DT (diphtheria-tetanus- ), Helen Louise Hall and alone, typhoid smallpox. Guardsmen 90 70 96 79 76 79 64 77 .02 JO What's Playing At the Movies Tuesday, Oct. 1 PROVO Academyt The Sun Also Rises, and Fight Pictures. Paramount The Pa jama Game, with Doris Day. Pioneer Moto'r-V- u Naked Par and Flesh and the Spur. adise, Coach Harold Kopp and Dean LEH1 Milton Hartvigsen will be the Royal dosed. guest speakers 'at the Thursday AMERICAN FORK noon luncheon - meeting of the Coral Johnny Tremain, DisProvo Kiwanis club it was an- ney. nounced today by Erven J. NelStarlite Teen Age Thunder, son, president of the club. and Carnival Rock. Coach Kopp will review the PLEASANT GROVE current football situation in the Grove Unconquered, w i t h Skyline conference and give an Gary Cocper. appraisal of his team. Dean OREM Scera Cecil B. DeMille's The Hartvigsen will discuss the aims and goals of the department of Ten Commandments. Jeanne jEagels, health, recreation and athletics Timpanogos The and Proud and Profane. of which he is in charge. SPRINGVILLE Dr. Weldon J. Taylor, vice 3:10 to Yuma, and Art City president will be in charge and The Diamond Wizard. the speakers will be introduced .it by Dr. John Bowen, program trj i sun The 'Also Huish Sun Rises, chairman. with Tyrone Power, k I Lee Claims (Continued From Page One) second front in Washington and union officials credited this side-pla-y to the convention with being responsible for the unusually large number of challenges. PENS - PENCILS Scheaffey- - Esterbroek, Standard Supply Co. 83 N. Uni Ave. FR 50 mm 6. 4, liuv-type- four-hou- Southeast Idaho: partly cloudy through Wednesday with scattered showers and or thunder showers; a little cooler; a little more cloudiness Wednesday. High today 78 Atlanta West 86, Burgener, funeral Temple, died Sunday; Wednesday 1 p.m. Thirtieth LDS Andrew John Ward Chapel. former 46, From Gore, resident, died (Continued Page One) Los Angeles. William Sunday in, troops in the Jeeps were Arkan- H. Brigjrs, 70, former Salt Lake sas guardsmen rather than memresident, died Friday in Long bers of the 101st Airborne. Andreas C. G. The Negroes walked up the Beach, Calif. W. 4st S. died 69, 54, Anderson, front steps of the high school at funeral Thursday noon, Saturday; 8:22 a.m., trailed by several 255-2ld Colleen East. Bell, guardsmen. The usual crowd of Kenneth of daughter white students waited on the steps Wilson Bell, died G. Suzanne and to watch them enter. Sunday. Burt LeRoy Cowan, 60, died Sunday; funeral Wednesday la noon 36 E. South Temple. Gardner, 81, died Saturday (Continued From Page One) in Los Angeles; graveside servernors were here to "sell the ices Wednesday at 2 p.m. Mt. white people generally and the Olivet Cemetery. Infant Bow South in particular." son of man, Ralphs and Norma r, Arthur Gray, Daily Herald The four governors announced Thomas Bowman, 2573 Valley flew to Brewster, Wash., to after a r, stra- View Ave., died Friday. see his mother, Mrs. Anna Gray, tegy session before the White RIOEVIOND Walter E. Spack-mawho suffered a heart attack Sun House conference that they would 80, died Sunday; funeral day. Mrs. Gray, 71, Is still se confine their proposals to the feder- Wednesday 1 p.m. Richmond al-state riously ill clash in Little Rock. South LDS Ward Chapel. Herald Employe Flies to Bedside Of Sick Mother 15-2- DUP Meet He was a member of the LDS Church and held the office of an co-own- er in the west today and generally cooler Wednesday. High today 80 to 90, low tonight 40 to 55, high Wednesday 70 to 80 northwest and 75 to 85 elsewhere. Aft5 ernoon winds southerly miles huminimum relative hour, per 2 cent. midity per ler Flu Cancels many residents. OREM Dr. Ray R. Canning, member of the sociology faculty at the Brigham Young University, is announcing his candidacy for the Orem area on the Alpine School Board. Dr. Canning has been in the sociology department for the past 11 years and has done additional research in the fields of human behavior. He has had additional educational experience in the junior and senior high schools and as a and director of a preschool nursery center. Dr. Canning's community service includes the establishment and directing of Utah County's citizenship training group, a program of juvenile delinquency rehabilitation affiliated with the Third Juvenile District Court of Utah. He served as chairman of the Boy Scout Troop Committee in the Orem Fifth Ward and ar. a board member for the Utah State Mental Health Association. Dr. Canning is a member of the BYU Athletic Council, a past judge of the University Appeals' Court and acting chairman of ther credit committee of the BYU Credit Union. He is a member of the National Council on Family Relations, the American Sociological Society and the Utah Academy of Arts, Sciences and Utah: partly cloudy today and Logan: partly cloudy through in the northwest porWednesday Wednesday with scattered show tion with scattered showers or ers and thunder showers mostly showers mostly in the in the afternoons and evenings. s thunder at his home following a afternoons and evenings. Continued Cooler. High today 85, low tonight fair elsewhere in the state Coo- 55, high Wednesday 0 illness. ernoon opi- nion he said: "The operation of the (Geneva) mills is a vital factor not only in the economy and the general welfare of the State of Utah, but as well as the United States of America. "A conflict between so important an industrial plant on the one hand and so large and Im- Harold James Christensen, West Center, died Monday 1098 $15,000,000. Judges Opinion In Judge! Ritter's official WEATHER FORECASTS AND TEMPERATURES Citizen at 48 on $8,689,000. nearly SKIES TODAY -- - 20-min- ute n, THE HOUSE 'i. "WAT JACK BUILT mm FOR BIG 57) "Jack" or money as it is Icp. HOW LEADING HOSPITAL STOPS IWnneiy SORE THROAT PAIN FAST Amazing new iodine gargle soothes, helps heal inflamed tissue Science now releases world's greatest germ killer in safe, pleasant gargle form for throat infections mtore respectfully referred when invested wisely, to), ' Doctors in leading hospital have discovered new, fast relief for painful sore throat with revolutionary new type iodine gargle. 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This new gargle coats raw nerve ends inside the throat and mouth where pain starts while it kills harmful bacteria that cause infection. Even hours later, germ count is practically nothing so relief lasts ana lasts. You can now get this drtmatia new iodine earele without pre scription under the name "of centrated DINE GARGLE. It is stainless and has a remarkably iu- refreshing taste. Use ISODINB Gargle at first sign of a cold to prevent sore throat misery. At aQ druggists. Dsbdl 001' Garglo iftSfsvIartBtt 1 Cocp, 3fe , ' . I |