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WHO'S NEWS THIS WEEK By LEMUEL F. PARTON (Consolidated reatutoa?WNU Service.) NEW YORK ?Something like Ho ratius at the bridge, or the little Dutch boy with his finger in the dyke is the American Col. C. L. Chen . . _. ... nault and his Air Circa* Pilot American pi Ha* Wing* Spread lots, guard Over Burma Road m? the ,Bur: ma road and dropping the Japanese as fast as they come. Their score is more than 60 Japa nese planes downed, including 24 bombers, with a possible score of around 100, taking into account the enemy planes hit but not downed on the spot. They're doing all this with antiquated planes, and so far they've lost only 10 of them. Six years ago, Colonel Cben nault headed the army team of precision acrobats which spread heart-failure among the crowds attending the Seventh Annual Army Air races at Miami. He and his mates, Lieut. J. H. Wil liams and Lieut. William Mc Donald, put on probably the diz siest air show ever seen and at the same time a demonstration , of the amazing maneuverability of airplanes'under highly expert control. The colonel, a lean, dark, quiet, wiry man, was 45 years old when the above air show came off. He retired from the army and holed up in a neat little house at Waterproof, La. He had his books and his dog and he was going to enjoy life with his friends. However, he kept up his studies of air tactics and strate gy, having written two authoritative text books on these subjects. In 1937, he was approached by a representative of the Chi nese government who proposed that he become air adviser to the Chinese government. This led to his four years' service in China in which he organized and commanded the present A.V.G., or American Volunteer group, which is now outfighting the Jap anese along the Burma road. When he was here in January, 1940-, he said that the Chinese planes were liquid-cooled and at a great disadvantage against any up-to-date machine. A quiet, reserved officer, with no dash of the swashbuckler in his make-up, he says that he and his boys can hold the road if they can just get a few more fairly fash ionable planes. ?? TP HE United States marine corps * did not need the saga of Guam and Wake island as a reminder that it is an old established firm. The ? , , _ corps is two Gen. Holeoma Deep years older In Tradition of than the V. S. Marine Corps P"3?"1 ed States government, and on November 10 ol this year will celebrate its 167th an niversary. Its anchor, globe and eagle em blem and its "Semper Fidelia" have been pretty nearly everywhere, and, historically speaking, it will be old stuff to the marines, wherever they land. Just now It has Its highest ranking commandant in history, with the President's elevation of Commandant Thomas Holcomb from the rank of major general to Ilea tenant general. General Holeomb, <2 years with the corps, is a quiet-spoken, heavy set, - business-like officer who, like his "Leathernecks," has been around a lot and has a way of making himself at home un der Inhospitable conditions. His World war honors, won in France, include a citation by Gen eral Pershing, the Navy Cross, the Silver Star, the Purple Heart and tha Legion of Honor ribbon. He entered the marine corps as a civilian. His rough-and ready military education later was supplemented by a course in the command and general staff school in IKS. He saw service in China and the Philip pines, back In the dawn days of "manifest destiny," and In the WerM war he commanded the Second battalion of the Sixth marines in the St. Mihiel and Manse Argouae offensives. He eras assigned to Cuba in the past-war years and, by IKS, had attained the rank of brigadier general la ISM he was made a major general and comman dant of the marine corps. The Continental congress set up tho marines, the oldest branch of the American armed forces. Away back in 1KB they took Demi, in Libya, recently taken by the Brit ish. They were lighting pirates in the Dutch East Indies in 1835; in' Tripoli in 1840 and Formosa in 1867. Their range has been north and' aouth from the Arctic to the far South Seas, and east and urest around tha globe. Without dispar agement to other forces they have come to symbolize tough fighting guuweas and capacity for fast catcb sa catch-can milling anywhere. 'Buzz' Wagner, Fighting Pilot Daredevil of the Philippine Skies Plays Havoc With Japanese Invaders. MANILA.?This is a thumbnail portrait of one of America's leading pilots: Long hours of practice in acro batic flying bore fruit recently when Lieut. Boyd ("Buzz") Wagner of Johnstown, Pa., found himself over the airfield established at Vigan by the invading Japanese. With Lieut. Russell M. Church as "wingman," Wagner had gone out on a reconnaissance mission. Fliers often hunt in pairs. They give each other protection. A wingman flies just off the wing of his leader. Suddenly Church's ship was struck by anti-aircraft fire. Evidently he knew the end had come. Forcing his burning plane into a half-mile dive, he released his bombs. He made no effort to bail out. His plane crashed. Wagner already had made one bombing dive over two dozen Jap anese planes, parked on the fleld. He saw that Church had been hit. Disregarding the fact that his chances of emerging alive from solo attack were slim, Wagner came back, his guns swept the parked enemy ships with bullets. Five times he flew over his target. Acrobatic Practice Pays. During one of his zooms an enemy plane took off. Wagner couldn't see it. His own wing obscured his view of that part of the fleld. To get a better look at the airport, he rolled his ship over on its back. That was where his long hours of acrobatic practice in the air came in. Then he saw the Japanese plane. He righted his ship. He throttled back, letting his enemy gain a little headway. When he finally opened fire, his guns tore a wing off the enemy ship. It was typical of Wagner, who is expected to receive the Distin guished Service Order for his ex ploits in the battle of the Philippines, to prepare for air combat the hard way?by meeting every emergency he could think of in mock combat ahead of the outbreak of war. In the last few days he has shot his way out of an attack of five en emy planes. He has attacked as many planes lone-handed, shooting down two, and returned unscathed. In the attack on Vigan, Church and Wagner scored hit after hit on the Japanese planes on the airport. At least ten were destroyed. A fuel depot was left in flames. nioi uie umy tiero. Wagner is not alone among the heroic air defenders of the Philip pines. Others are fighting just as hard, just as bravely. But he per sonifies the spirit of the United States army air forces. He is an aeronautical engineer? and likes swing music. His quar ters contain a stack of phonograph records. His first concern is for the men under his command. His re ports are filled with praise for them. Mention of his own fights is brief. Three years of engineering at the University of Pittsburgh took him to Randolph Field, Texas. He was graduated with a second lieutenant's commission from adjacent Kelly Field in 1938. He had spent a year in the Philippines when the war be gan. Standing before his superior after the Vigan affair, he was like an em barrassed schoolboy. He is only 25. "Well," he reported haltingly, "maybe I got a few of 'em because I sort of bombed and machine-gunned for quite a while. I don't think I could miss all the time." " 'Okie' Found Youngest Of Great-Grandmothers BAKERSF1ELD, CALIF. ? An "Okie" at the Arvin Migratory camp, which was made famous by references to it in John Steinbeck's novel, "The Grapes of Wrath," is hailed as the youngest great-grand mother in the United States. She is 45-year-old Mrs. Frank Pip kin. She is the mother of 13 chil dren, has 14 grandchildren and a great-granddaughter. Moreover, she sings folk songs well enough to make recordings for the Library of Con gress Mrs. Pipkin, a native of Shawnee, Okla., was married when she was 13 years old. Her eldest daughter was married at 14. This Organ Grinder Will Continue for Duration B6SIQN.?Guglielmetti Bonflglio, an organ krinder, stands these days in the cold, cranking out "My Wild ! Irish Rose." "I am not going to put up the hand organ this year as I used to," he says. "All the world needs music and Guglielmetti is going to do his part." German Cannon Melted Down for Canadian Use LIVERPOOL, N. S. ? German guns, which have rested peacefully at old Fort Point since their cap ture in the first World war, are being melted down for manufacture of new guns to be used against their former owners. Inaugurating an extensive scrap metal salvage campaign, three yoke of blue-ribbon oxen hauled the guns through the town to a melting pot at a local plant. 'Caviar Bowl' Seen As Future of Dam New Industry Predicted for Bonneville Lake. ASTORIA, ORE. ? Lake Bonne ville, formed by the backwaters above Bonneville dam, may become a huge "caviar bowl," in the judg ment of veteran fishermen. White sturgeon, the source of do mestic caviar, were facing extinc tion in the Columbia river as a re sult of unrestricted fishing, but now they have been discovered in large numbers in Lake Bonneville. With proper sanctuary there is no appar ent reason why they should not thrive again here. Before the beginning of the 20th century white sturgeon were virtu ally destroyed in the Columbia by intensive fishing that produced a catch of 5,000,000 pounds yearly. The killing off of thousands of un dersized sturgeon caught in gill nets, seines, traps and wheels by com- | mercial fishermen, despite the fact that the taking of small sturgeon has been prohibited for several years, diminished the 1941 catch to less than 40,000 pounds. While little is known of the habits of the white sturgeon, which is slow but extremely hardy, it has been ascertained that it does not suffer from pollution, unscreened irriga tion ditches, or the shutting off of propagation areas, which have claimed a staggering toll of Colum bia river spring Chinook salmon and Bluebacks. It is said by fishermen that the fish thrive in landlocked waters, consequently a movement has been made to transplant them to inland Oregon lakes. Since the fish appar ently endure high water tempera tures as well or better than salmon. Grand Coulee lake, Wash., has been established as a future possibility. Fighting Parson Quotes Bible to Join Marines SAN DIEGO, CALIF.?Citing a Biblical verse as reason why he should not try to avoid the draft as a conscientious objector. Rev. John Sinclair, a graduate minister who preached at non - denominational churches of Portland, Ore., now finds himself a private in the marine corps, where he hopes he will find some "real fighting." The verse quoted by the "fighting parson" was from Psalm 144: "Blessed be the Lord, my strength, which teacheth my hands to war and my fingers to fight." Another "fighting parson" whose conscientious objections to war were overcome by the Bible, was Sergt. Alvin T. York. Objecting to being drafted into the' armed forces be cause of his religious scruples, York changed his mind after a draft offi cial read passages to him from the Bible concerning "righteous wars." In his native Tennessee York had been at times a so-called "natural" preacher, that is, one who some times preaches, but is not a regu larly ordained minister. Going on into war, York set a pattern for other "fighting parsons" to follow, by becoming the outstand ing hero of the World war through his singlehanded capture of more than 100 Germans. It is estimated there will be 450, 000 conscientious objectors in the current draft, many of them mem bers of the Mennonite faith. Bovine Prowler Killed By Soldier on Patrol OXNARD, CALIF.?An unidenti fied corporal, patroling a deserted stretch of sand dunes near Port Hueneme, heard a noise. "Halt," he shouted into the dark ness. "Who goes there?" No answer. He repeated the com mand. Still no answer. The corporal fired?five times. Came daylight and an army offi cer looked up the bookkeeper for the D. McGrath Estate company, owner of one of the state's finest dairy herds. He had to instruct the clerk on how to file a claim for one white faced heifer, riddled with five army bullets. Elk Forget Manner* to Woo My Lady Nicotine | SOUTH BEND, WASH. ? Game Protector Josh Allen would be hap pier if his herd of North River elk hadn't taken up with Lady Nicotine. Not that he minds their moral de- i linquency, he said?but they've be come a traffic hasard. Allen said that elk now were in the habit of going on to the highway at all hours to "mooch" cigarettes from motor ists. "They don't know any difference between a thrilled tourists and a bored truck driver," Allen said. "I've had to keep busy herding 'em from the highway to let road crews work." Elks don't inhale. They chew. Flood Victim Give* Red Cross $600 Gift HARTFORD, CONN. ? A for eign-bom American citizen said "thank you" with a $600 gift to the American Red Cross for help ing his family during a 1*36 flood. He insisted that the Red Cross take .the money even after offi cials explained that he was under no obligation to return funds giv en him by the organization. Boy Not Fact Enough ' To Escape Operation TAMPA, FLA.?The automobile drew up to a hoepital entrance. Out of the car bolted a 11-year old boy. Hia parents caught him as ha j dashed across a bridge. Back at the hospital an appen dectomy waa performed. "Aw, it wasn't so bad," the lad admitted. 1 Navajo Boy, 9, Is Slrilfull Artist Critics Amazed Over Work Of Indian Youth. SAN DIEGO, CALIF.?Bea Tien Yazz sounds like a college football yell, but actually it is the name of a nine-year-old Navajo Indian boy, whose paintings at a recent exhi bition at the La Jolla (Calif.) Art Center amazed the critics. The exhibit of the Indian lad's work was arranged by Mrs. William J. Lippincott, whose husband is in charge of the trading post at Kin teel, near Wide Ruin, Ariz. About two years ago Mrs. Lippin cott gave "little No Shirt," as his Navajo name is translated, a 10 cent box of colors and a table on which to work in a room by himself. Immediately he began to show traces of a natural talent. Since that time he has sold enough sketches to buy his own paints, a horse and some chickens?all the wealth in the world, as he sees it. Although observers were amazed by the sense of balance and per spective displayed in the boy's paint ings, it was pointed out that the artist would be more amazed than his public if he could be made to understand the meaning of his ex hibit. As it is, he knows nothing of his work's being exhibited. He has never taken any art les sons, working entirely without in struction, and is so shy, according to Mrs. Lippincott, that the sight of a stranger often will send him scur rying into hiding for several days. Pay Dirt Found Beneath Floor of Assay Office NEVADA CITY, CALIF.?Hal Da vis, Nevada city assayer, had a gold strike of his own?and right beneath his office. Davis was moving his office from one of the town's oldest buildings, constructed about 1852, when he dis covered gold in dirt on and beneath the floor. Panning yielded about four ounces and Davis constructed a sluice box which he hoped would produce as much more. An assay snop nas Deen nousea in the building for many years and it was believed the gold leaked from a melting pot while being made into bricks. The incident recalled the gold rush days practice of selling the sawdust covering the floor of saloons. Drinks were paid for with gold dust weighed over the bar and often dust escaped to make the sawdust as valuable as high grade ore. Locked Door Puts Baby In a Jam?Strawberry BOSTON. ? Two-year-old Sheila Bychman, Roxbury, was undisturbed when the door of her mother's pan try closed accidentally and she was locked in. Although her mother, Mrs. There sa Bychman, discovered that Sheila was in the pantry, her attempts to tell the baby how to open the door were unsuccessful, as the young lady answered: "Can't open the door without a key. There's no key here, mamma. So it's all right if I have a key?" Occasionally Sheila reported to her mother on conditions in the darkened pantry?"the jam and mother's chocolates were nice." Policemen, summoned by Mrs. Bychman, forced the door to release a jam-covered Sheila. Enlistment Papers Save Thief From Reprisal LITTLE FERRY, N. J.-Barber Frank Circkirillo paused as he shaved a customer and, the razor resting on the man's throat, re marked: "I know you. You're the man who stole my boat five years ago." The thief who had robbed the bar ber and his brother of a boat Ave years ago and then fought them off with a knife, had a bad moment. What did the barber do? "Oh, I let him go when be showed me an enlistment for the navy," ; Circkirillo said. "Now he'll have a real ship and I hope he proves him self worthy." Temperament of Cow Will Cost U.S. $2,703 TACOMA, WASH. ? A farmer's ! contention that moving his dairy herd would make his cows more fretful cost the government an ex- j tra $2,703 for an addition to Fort Lewis. The government had offered $13,797 for the 278 acres that Ed ward Castle leased from J. L. Wolf for dairy operations. The farmer and landlord asked double the amount. Farmer Castle pleaded that his cows would fall off in their milk production if moved to other sur roundings. A jury awarded $18,500. Osage Heirs Give Big Headache to Oklahoma Courts One Indian Estate Puzzle: Grandchildren Are Also Nieces, Nephews. PAWHUSKA, OKLA. ? Solomon himself would have found it no easy task to untangle the involved Okla homa Indian estate cases cluttering the dockets of Osage county's courts. And for the county and probate judges who are called upon to de cide the heirs to millions of dollars worth of oil property left by wealthy Osages, the task often approaches the impossible. While the Osages were in their heyday from 1906 to about 1927, many members of the tribe became rich on the discovery of oil on their lands. Then the older members of the tribe began to pass on to their happy hunting ground, most of them without making wills. The Indian inheritance cases start ed pouring into county and district courts. Settlement of these cases has been made more difficult by the fact that the Osages frequently were polyga mous, sometimes having as many as four wives at one time. Hasy on Relatives. Further confusion was created by the Osage manner of referring to their relatives. The Osages called their grandmothers' sisters "grand mothers" and their brothers-in-law "brother." The Osages, in their language, do not recognize relationship any far ther removed than first cousin, and the Osage word for cousin so closely resembles the word for brother that evidence can easily be misin terpreted. Older members of the Osage tribe go on the witness stand unwillingly. Attorneys for the litigants usually insist upon two interpreters, and the interpreters frequently disagree on the English translation of the testi mony. To supplement oral testimony, at torneys bring into court the musty records of the Osage Indian Agency, dating back half a century. But even the most accurate of the agency's records sometimes add to the confusion. Listings of the family groups of the Osages was started in 1887 and records kept by missionaries among the tribesmen on occasion are-produced to contra dict evidence from the agency rec ords. Kn*ti ? Mirnn' In a recent case in Osage county I district court, involving a $100,000 estate, one attorney introduced in, evidence the records of the Osage agency which showed that a middle aged widow and her young daugh ter had married an old Indian man at the same time. The widow also had a young son, who, according to the records, became the step-son of the old Indian and at the same time his brother-in-law. Both women bore children, whose relationship to each other could be interpreted as half-sisters and half brothers, or as uncles and aunts and nieces and nephews. The stepson of the old man also married and had children, who be came grandsons and granddaugh ters of the old Indian and at the same time his nieces and nephews. Today records are being kept to prevent such complications in fu ture Osage estate cases. But, in the meantime, thousands of dollars of county funds are being used and many weeks occupied with taking testimony to establish the rightful heirs to Osage fortunes. Quart of Nitro Mislaid 2 Years in Police Room TOLEDO.?A quart of nitroglycer in found today in the Toledo police department property room where it had been on a shelf undiscovered for two years was taken into the countryside today and exploded. The concussion shook the neighborhood for more than a mile. Police said there was enough of the explosive in the bottle to wreck the safety building. The ni troglycerin was discovered on the Maumee river bank more than two years ago, but no one knew what the can contained. Golfer in Rough Swings And Two Balls Fly Out CHARLOTTE, MICH. ? Fitch Beach, director of the local country club, was keeping his head down and taking the right amount of turf with each iron shot. On one bole, however, his tee shot dropped at the edge of a small creek. Taking his stance at the wa ter's edge. Beach swung vigorously and two balls sailed on a line for the green. One was his own and the second was one that had been buried in the turf all winter. Ingenious Ohio Farmer Breeds Own Rat Traps STRONGVILLE, OHIO.?Edward J. Siedel, who lives in this farming community Just outside Cleveland, doesn't build his better rat traps he breeds 'em. And for 46 years orders have come to his door. Sie del's traps are ferrets, and they beat any trap. "They're death on rats," Siedel says, "lithe and limber, a ferret will squeeze through any hols large enough for its small skull." WW1I.IW Wl III IRiKutd bj Wtittn Nmpnptr Union-) The 'Fine Bathtub 'TPHIS year marks the 100th anni *? versary of what is probably the most famous bath in history. The interesting thing in that the bath was never taken, that Adam Thomp son was the man who didn't take it and that he didn't take that famous bath in Cincinnati, Ohio, back in December, 1842, even though you can find plenty of printed "authorities" which solemnly assert that he did. Here's how it all came about: Back in December, 1917, when Americans were as concerned about vt uriu wai A M they are today about World War n, H. L. Menck en, later famous as the editor of the American Mercury, wrote a story which pur ported to be the history of the first bathtub in Amer ica. "My motive was simply to have some harm less fun in war days," says Mr. Mencken. "It never occurred to me that it would be taken seriously because it was packed full of absurdities." But ap parently he didn't realize how gullible the public was. The story, which first appeared in the New York Evening Mail of De cember 28, 1917, stated that the first American bathtub was displayed by one Adam Thompson, "a wealthy cotton and grain dealer," to a group of his admiring friends in Cincin nati on December 10, 1842. It was at a party "for men only" and all of the guests took baths in the new contraption. That party, according to Menck en, had an unexpected aftermath. The bathtub was denounced by phy sicians as a menace to public health and the Boston city fathers passed an ordinance prohibiting its use ex cept upon medical advice. In Vir ginia a $30 tax was imposed upon the installation of each bathtub and Hartford, Conn., Wilmington, Del., and Providence, R. I., all charged extra rates for water in which to bathe in bathtubs. The Philadelphia city council, he solemnly averred, tried to pass an ordinance prohib iting the use of bathtubs between November and May but the measure was de feated by two votes. However, adverse legisla tion couldn't stop the use of the "new invention" and during Mil lard Fillmore's administration as President he had a bathtub installed in the White House and thus became the first Chief Executive to take a bath there. Such were the "facts" which the public accepted in all seriousness. Eight or nine years later Mencken wrote an article which was syndi cated to newspapers all over the United States. Reviewing the his tory of his hoax, he said: "Pretty soon I began to encoun ter my preposterous 'facts' in the writings of other men. They began to be used by chiropractors and oth er such quacks as evidence of the stupidity of medical men. They be gan to be cited by medical men as proof of the progress of public hy giene. They got into learned jour nals. They were alluded to on the floor of congress. They crossed the ocean, and were discussed solemnly in England and on the Continent. Finally, I began to find them in standard works of reference." In one of his books Mencken tells how the story was reprinted in the Boston Herald with a four-column head and a two-column cartoon la beled satirically "The American Public Will Swallow Anything." Says Mencken: "And then, three weeks later, in the same editorial section, but promoted to page one, the same Herald reprinted my 10-year-old fake?soberly and as a piece of news. Since then the story has been re printed countless times?some times for the purpose of debunking it but more often as an authentic item of < "social history." Despite all of its author's efforts to debunk his own fantasy, it keeps bobbing up regu larly and people keep repeating the yam as though it were the truth. As a final touch of irony it has ap peared at least twice in the news paper with which Mencken's name is closely associated?the Baltimore | Sun! As a matter of fact, the bathtub has a much longer history than a mere 100 years. The cave men left behind them paintings which show that they made a kind of bathtub by conducting water from springs through hollow logs into rock basins in their caverns. The people of Babylon, Mesopotamia, Crete, Egypt and Greece all had ingenious water systems and practiced frequent bathing. . The baths of ancient Ro mans were famous for their luxury and cleanliness. All of which proves that the "Inventor" Thompson eras | anticipated by many centuries, H. L. Mencken Millard Fillmore Did Just Hut Mother (opening refrigerator)? Sonny, did you pick all the white meat off this chicken? Sonny?Well, Mother, to make a clean breast of it, I did. Elevated Her Miss Jinks?You moon you lot Ikm toll corporal ileal a kill from youf Mist Short?Yot, hut ho had to hold mo up to do it. That's It Ben?Gladys is a wonder. She actually talks with her eyes. Jim?Yes, and I suppose when she feels like using strong lan guage she just gives you a cursory glance. Pawnbroker's sign in New York ?"See me at your first incon venience." He Does Know Dzudi ? Women endure pain much better than men do. Dinocan?Who told you that, the doctor? Dzudi?No, the shoe dealer. That Was All! Officer?What's your name? Draftee?Quitz Jones, sir. Officer?Where'd you get that queer name, son? Draftee?Well, sir, it was this way. When I was born, my Dad came in and took one look at me and said to Mom, "Lucy, let's call it Quitz!" CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT SALESMEN WANTED SELL Mill-Ends. Get exclusive agency. Year round independent business. Good profit. Small investment. National Mill End Co., One Audubon Ave., New York Ctty. Do You Bake at Home? If you do, send for a grand cook book?crammed with recipes far all kinds of yeast-raised breads and cakes. It's absolutely free. Just drop a postcard with your name and address to Standard Brands Inc., 691 Washington SL, New York City.?Adv. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On CreomnMon relieves promptly be cause It goes right to the seat of the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender. In flamed bronchial mucous mem branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the un derstanding you must lllte the way It quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Value Health Look to your health! And if you have it, praise God and value it next to a good conscience.?Izaak Walton. Ask Sriafa. Abeet MOTHER GRAY'S Cjf f W I IT tOWDItl TL-" 7 n flS SET: In tba home, for naa whm^^wiy ) naadad. Sold at drusatores Mnd everywhere. Trial Pacheee Free. Addresa Mother drey Co- LeBoy, K. T. Err in Haste Men err not so much in prompt action as in hasty judgment.? Louis Napoleon. "MIDDLE AGE" WOMEN?S) HEED THIS ADVICEII If you're cross, restless, nervous ?suffer hot flashes, disslness? caused by this period in a woman's life ? try Lydla Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Made especially for toomen. Helps to relieve distress due to thS functional disturbance. Thou sands upon thousands of women report remarkable benefits. Pol low label dlrecUacs. WNU?4 7?q Shallow in Self Deep versed in books and shal low in himself.?Milton. IW/HEN kidneys function berffy end " yon suffer ? nagging becked*, with dizziness, burning, scanty or too (reaoent urination and getting up at night; when you feel tired, nervous, all upset... use Dean's Hits. Doan's are especially lor poasty 1 ; I ? J - - t l-ll- - - nt ? ? WIHW05 Ktanvyv rvuiitotrs 01 ooxo are used every year. They arc n ccaa aHsnded^die country over. Ask you
The Alamance Gleaner (Graham, N.C.)
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