OCR Text |
Show GIANT WALL-SIZ- E UNITED STATES MAP 0" a. s '1 " 1 v.:v,-.- J . if retail value. H9, beautiful, clear! inch, printed on heavy mp paper in eight (I) gorgeous colore! Exquisite detail helps you put your finger on unfamiliar, places In the newt. Valuable for schools and colleges in business offices and broadcasting stationsas a decoration for noma office or rumpus room. ' - $2.00 SO x 33 hard-ro-loca- 4 V!,v.. te And a Complete Map Library International World Map Suptrior Map of Europe 0 Superior Superior Superior Superior Superior Sucerior Map Map Map Map Map Map of of of of of of Asia Canada Africa South America North America Pacific Ocean Australia These big Hammond Standard Maps are each almost 12 square feet, expensively printed in full color, and very specially $2.00 value, only $1.00 each. 3 maps eneed. six (4) for $S.OO all nine, a $2.75 complete map series for only $7.50 ... . postage prepaid. No C.O.D. Please enclose payment with your name and address. Satisfaction guaranteed. L'W Surf." ... ." a r. " .,'.) Soulful-lookin- g Jo lln 'ill ' arfw1f ejfcMMBIMMeMWMWMMeWMHl kl' Muggs isn't really worried. He knows he's in good hands as veterinarian removes bandage from his healed paw. - "1 'li ill ill mil lettMeMUiimil ll BASIC BOOKS. INC. 151 No. MkaigM Ave., Chicago 1, III Whether you have a pedigreed poodle What does it or a lovable mongrel, its best friend feel like to be and yours is the veterinarian. falsely imprisoned for 16 years? by Jack Glasner 1 A. Read I PAID 1 T3 7 .Y.J v' FOR ANOTHER x-ra- -- MAN'S CRIME next week in Family Weekly JTets have been described as "the only kind of love that money can buy," and apparently a good many Americans agree: last year they spent $3 billion on the special brand of affection household pets dispense. Most of this probably was spent on our 25 million dogs and 25 million cats, the most popular pets. But there are many others: birds and fish of every description, hamsters, rats, mice, lizards, snakes, monkeys, porties, even burros though the last two aren't exactly house pets! Keeping this gigantic collection of pets happy and healthy is the work of the nation's veterinarians or animal doctors. Using every modern weapon from antibiotics to vets have done their job well. In the last 25 years they have helped raise the life span of the average dog from 7 to 12 years. Veterinary medicine, like its human counterpart, has benefited tremendously i . u Fi '4 iX, i This collie has an eye condition, but veterinarian's expert care and medication will soon dear it up. i r. 10 Family Weekly, June 9, 1957 ys, from new drugs and techniques. And in their own way, vets have contributed to techhuman healing. The Stader bone-pi- n nique for immobilizing fractures was used on thousands of World War II soldiers; it was originated by Dr. Otto Stader, an Illinois veterinarian. Stader's work illustrates one thing about veterinarians: they are researchers as well as doctors. Recently two California vets, experimenting with stainless steel, came up with a clamp which can be inserted under the skin and around a broken bone. The bone not only mends rapidly without much danger of new breakage, but the clamp can be left around the bone permanently without apparent damage. Today it's used for cats and dogs perhaps tomorrow for humans. Much of this research goes on in more than 3,000 animal hospitals across the country. Before he even thinks about an animal hospital, however, the aspiring |