The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 50, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 9 April 1936 — Page 3

S; Up erwre • Science Service.—WNV Service. Newly Found Nerves Act as “Spares” to Speed Heart Action Tests on Dogs Reveal Their Dual Function NEW YORK.—Science’s first step toward an understanding of recently discovered nerve fibers for speeding up heart action, a discovery which ” may lead to their identification as hitherto unknown sympathetic nerves, was announced to the New York Academy of ’Sciences here by Dr. Lucien A. Brouha of the University of Liege. Belgium. Discovered at the University of Ghent In 1934 by Jourdan and Nowak, the tiny fibers have remained pretty much of a mystery to science, the only definite fact known about them being their position alongside the vagi nerves which run from the brain to the heart and which serve to retard the cardiac beat. Even now. Doctor Brouha explained, little is known of their function In the normal body—but in dogs whose sympathetic nervous system has been removed. these' new nerve fibers take Its place. Indeed, so successfully do they substitute for the missing nerves that Doctor Bronha finds It absolutely impossible to- distinguish a normal dog from one without its sympathetic system. How Dogs React. It was the ability of the new nerves to replace the sympathetic system In dogs that led Doctor Brouha to his conclusion concerning the possible function of the nerves as a substitute for the removed system. In the normal body, he believes, the nerves may ! aid heart regulation to a very small extent, although he said that In all probability they have additional functions as yet undiscovered by science. In research leading to these results. Doctor Brouha conducted pioneer treadmill tests on dogs both before and after removal of the sympathetic system. The experiments were performed in co-operation with Dr. David B. Dill of the Harvard University Fatigue laboratory where Doctor Brouha is carrying on his Investigations this year. | Outstanding among his finds were that the general behavior of a dog whose sympathetic chains have been removed remain* normal, although the heart beat of the animal at rest Is s slightly less than normal, and that emotional excitement produces the usual definite cardiac acceleration. If the dog takes light exercise. Doctor Brouha found, the cardiac rhythm remains below the normal rate, even during a long experiment In which the amount of exercise is considerable. Substitute for Regular Nerves. Another important find was that the capacity to stand very Intense exercise la not at all diminished three months after the removal operation, that time being necessary for the flog to recover from the operation. Experimentally checking the possible Influence of a rise in body temperature or muscular metoboUsm. Doctor Brouha found that they are definitely not responsible for the accelerated heart beat. Nor are adrenalin or simpatbin. for with the removal of the sympathetic system, these hormones are not secreted into the blood stream This leaves only increased activity of the cardto-accelator fibers of the vagi nerves to explain heart regala- - tine. The activity of these fibers. Doctor Brouha .says. Is also accomplished by a reduction In activity of the retarding fibers of the vagi nerves whose functions are well known. 10,000 Sterilizations in California PASADENA.—Over 10.000 human sterilisation operations—lo,Bol. to be exact—have been performed in accordance with the California, state sterilisation law, E, S. Gosney, president of the Human Betterment Foundation here, announced after compiling the 1935 figures. These operations, Mr. Gcmney pointed out. were performed on inmates of state Institutions since 1909. Neither the figures nor the California sterilisation law have any connection with privately performed sterilization operations such as the one now figuring in the Ann Cooper Hewitt law suit. Discussing the sterilisation law for Inmates of state institutions, Mr, Gosney said: •The consistently careful adminlatratlon of this measure In California Is reflected by the fact that during the first six years of the enforcement of the law, sterilisations per year Increased from II to 116: total 577; yearly average, M During the last 20 years they have gradually Increased from 182 in 1910 to 870 In 1935. The average during the past two decodes was 511 sterilization* per year. New Sky Wanderer Found by Belgian CAMBRIDGE. MASS —A tiny wanderer of the sky, now known only as an object, probably either a comet or minor planet, has bee® discovered by Prof. EL Delporte of the Royal Belglatf observatory. Information regarding the discovery has been received by Harvard college obfaint that only large telescope* can right It. It ts located *

X-Ray Burn Hazard Is Reduced by New Baffle Method Cancer Treatment Enhanced by Increased Radiation NEW YORK.—A new method of decreasing , materially the dangerous X-ray burns which have long been a hazard in the treatment of cancer and other malignant growths by these piercing radiations was described before the meeting of the American Physical society here recently by Dr. 0. Fa Illa, chief physicist of Memorial Hospital of New York. One possibility of the new method la that better treatment of deep-seated cancers will be achieved, according to Doctor Failla, because the present limitation of the amount of radiation which can be given a patient fa determined by the burning power of the rays on the skin. Any method to reduce the skin burning from X-rays will allow more potent radiation treatment Damaging Electrons Eliminated. Doctor Failla. long known in this country for his baric contributions to medical X-ray therapy, told how he Is now cutting out much of the secondary electrons which are an essential part of any X ray beam. It fa these charged particles of electricity which actually split apart the atoms of the skin and produce ionlxatfon tn them. It 1s ionisation which causes ' the skin reddening and damage eves though seemingly adequate protection is afforded by heavy shields of lead.! The lead shield. Doctor Failla points out, protects other parts of the body than the point where the radiation is desired but. of necessity, the opening for the X-rays allows any electrons also In the beam to come through. How Ntw Method Works. Doctor Failla's new method takes advantage of the fact that when electrons strike matter they are deflected at large angles. By setting up a system of baffles or stops a beam of Xrays containing only the desired gamma ray type of radiation can be attained. The deflected electrons are caught by the baffles. The advantage of the use of X-ray beams stripped of secondary electrons. ” said Doctor Failla, “is apparent In X-ray therapy, since the ionisation In the skin and the consequent damage are materially reduced.While present work with the method la confined to energy ranges around 230.000 volts, the adaptation necessary to extend the method to X-ray tubes of more than 1.000,000 volts was described by the cancer therapy authority. The new baffle method fa a simpler device for obtaining results now only attained by electric and magnetic fields that deflect aside the electrons as they come along the X-ray beam. Animal’s Ears Are Best “Mikes” Scientists Find PRlNCETON.—Quantitative measurements on the ears of guinea pigs show the animal ear to be a far more effective microphone than those constructed mechamcaily. according to the announcement of Profs. Ernest G. Wever and Charles W. Bray, of the Princeton University Department of Psychology. Small currents arising in the cochlea of the InnA ear and measured on an oscillograph provide an accurate measurement of the response of the animal to sound, and the results of recent experiments show that the animal Is capable of responding to tones of a wide range of frequencies, even though these tones be quite faint, whereas It is a well-known fact that mechanical microphones must sacrifice either sensitivity or range. That this electrical method of measuring sound effect is accurate was determined several years ago when the small currents were amplified about half a million times and run into a telephone receiver. It was then possible for one person to talk to the animal and another person in a distant room not only to recognise the words but the voice of the speaker. Find Sex Hormones Wil) Influence Eggs WOODS HOLE, MASS. — Male sex glands of unhatched chicks were caused to develop decidedly female characters by injecting the female sex hormone substances theelin and tbeelol through the eggshells, in experiments reported before the meeting of the Genetics Society of America here. The research was carried on by Dr. B. H. Wi liter of the University of Rochester and Dre. T. F. Gallagher and F. C. Koch of the University of Chicago. The theelin and tbeelol were injected la rather heavy quantities. From day to day. eggs were removed from the Incubator, opened, and the developing embryos dissected. The ovaries o.' the chicks that would fcave grown up to be hens were not affected. Neither were the left sex glands of the chicks that might have been rasters. But the right sex glands developed. surrounding their characteristic male tissues, other tissues just as characteristically female. Boys “Cry Babies” < as Much as Girls NEW YORK.—Little boys cry jsst as much as little gtrfaa So Dr. Catherine W. Brackett Ut the Child Development institute, here, has learned by timing the crying ot Between the ages of eighteen g iths and fonr years, the average child spends 2.5 per cent of his daye--or nlghta—crying. That makes an average crying time of 36 minutes a day. their time laughing. They faugh, mb the averaze. &7 oer cent of tfee time tne average, per evu zee us . ' z

McGoofey’s First Reader and I Eclectic Primer 2X I I - 'V M 1 PHIIIIPSw™ 1 < mb" * - ITn < jdu «A ’I ~ fjf ;: I 111 ” to- , I | ill ’ m I

THE STORY OF CARAWAY 1— Caraway was distinctly a home boy. 2— Even as a little lad he was afraid of shadows and never felt at ease out of his mother's arms. 3— In school be was the timid soul. 4 — He thought aN athletics too rough and shuddered at the thought of playing football and getting a nosebleed. 5— In college he was the class grind and most retiring student. 6— He could always be found tn his room. He didn't mix well and was | never comfortable in a crowd. 7— During his four years in college he never got off the campus enough to find his way about the city. 8— The only hobby he found interesting was the collecting of domestic birds' eggs. 9— After graduation he seemed very perplexed about a career. 10— Culturally he was okay but In experience he was decidedly sub-nor-mal 11 — He hadn't been around or made any social contacts. He had no horizons. His world was too narrow. 12— He weighed about 125 pounds, was ghastly pale, wore .triple-lens spectacles and liked to be alone. 13— It looked pretty bad for him. 14— But after a while he surprised everybody by finding a career and becoming quite famous. 15— He became a novelist and specialised in thrilling stories of adventure in the far-away places of the world. MORAL—It's all done by reflectors. • • • GRAMMAR TEST Which fa proper—“l am going to defy the motorcycle cop." or ‘T are going to defy the motorcycle cop." and why fa it poor policy in either case? The moving picture plot was very plausible.” or “The moving picture plot were very plausible." and why is It certain both statements are wrong? The man gave the boy $5 to buy candy and peanuts." or “ ‘No.’ said the man. *lf you want money for candy and peanuts go earn it”*? The soup Is hot." or The soup are FoL" and if so in what restaurant? "The lawyer stated the case as briefly as possible,” or The trial lastid two weeks"? • • • THOUGHTS ON KIDDIES Visitors oft yearn to boot Kiddies who are very cute. Strangers have a yen to swat Babies who are very smart. Daughters who are over-brigbt Leave me cold as Christmas night; I like little ladies better Who can't read or write a letter. Boys who talk like men of twenty Make me crave to smack 'em plenty; Those to whom a friend I would be Act no smarter than they should be. • • • Who is this? I a & • This is Alice. ■k Why does Alice look so downhe«rtI I ■ J Alice looks downhearted be- \ cause she is a radio ■ v faß * Isi But * hy * hons<l IM be!|BS a fan make Alice downhearted? Because, you see. Allee tikes Jan orchestras, soft-voiced crooners, dreamy dance music and that sort of thing. Well, what of It? . Allee cant get It these days. Why cant Allee get it these days? Because of the political speeches. What have the political speeches got to do with Alice and the radio? It makes It almost impossible for Alice to get the old familiar programs over which she loves to go gaga. How so? Because the air Is full of politics. Every time Alice opens a mike a lot of orators pop out and an orator has about as much charm for Alice as a keg of carpet tacks would have for a toe dancer. Is It really as bad as that? * It fa even worse than that. Allee goes home from a hard day’s work and tunes Into station BJKY, hoping that she will get a tittle soothing musie. and right away some big-mouthed politician leaps in ooe ear and out tha<otber. leaving great piles of debris en route.

STRENGTH OF SWORDFISHES ' Not tong «T> swordfishes were classed with Icebergs, storms and other dangers to ocean-going vessels. Although their swords ace only about three feet tong, they have often been driven through the sides of ships. In the Natural History museum in London, writes H. C. Belden, Los Angeles, Calif., in Collier’s Weekly, there is a piece of timber that, although less than • foot square. contains three of these brakes spears

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She -yearns for Rudy Vallee and gets Senator Watt N. Earache. She hopes for that dreamy “Paradise" number and gets. "During the last fiscal year, the United States exported 2.500.000 animal crackers, a record never approached except under the party for which I now appeal for your support this Novembah-h-h-h-h!" Is there no solution to the difficulty that fa making life so miserable for Little Alice? Yes. What fa it? Let the political orators talk in the morning when everybody is too occupied with other matters to listen. • • • WHATS WRONG WITH THESE SENTENCES? A turquoise is a fowl raised la America for Thanksgiving dinners. A console Is a diplomatic officer. A mirage is a type of blass-bottomed boat. Sequoia is the name of an Indian tribe. An aard-vark is a part of a ship. A scorcerer is a dish that goes with a cup of coffee. An adder is a man who adds. The Trojans were people who first settled in the United States. A seraglio is a musical instrument An eland is a peninsula or isthmus. A garboard strake is a type of wild duck. An abacus Is a trap door. The Hessians were soldiers who fought in the Punic wars. A punkah is something pot on an elephant's back for people to ride in. A troglodyte fa a man who hates women. • • • LITERARY TEST Check the proper poem'and authorship in the following: Elizabeth Browning wrote “Tam O’Shan ter"....... .“The Chargs of the Light Brigade”Ths Sea Mew”.....“Robert of Lincoln"“Old Mother Hubbard." “My Last Duchess” was written by Dana BurnetHenry Bunner...William Cullen Bryantßudyhrd Kipling. Rupert Brooks was the author of The Busy Heart" The Fairy Brook” “Phlllida and Coridon” “Fuzzy-Wuzzy.” “Ah, did you once see Shelley plain?” occurs in the poem called The Plow"“Queen Ma£” “The Stein Song” “Who Killed Cock Robin.” “Curfew Must Not Ring Tonight" was written byWilliam Er nest Henley Jimmy Mont gomeryLord Tennyson ........George Bernard Shaw Ella Wheeler Wilcox. The line. “Blessings on thee, lltth man." are to be found In “The Ballad of East and West" “How They Brought the Good Newt from Ghent to Alx"..Th« Law of the Yuk0n".....'..... Bret Harte wrote"Rece® slonal"The Village Blacksmith”“The Night Before Christmas""Little Orplfaz Annie”....Trees." • • • CURIOUS FACTS FOR CURIOUS PEOPLE The .toothpick was invented by a man named Eberwald. Among the traffic police of Venire the motorcycle is unknown. The Eskimo does not care for anfa mi. It is estimated that a golf ball used on a public links changes ownership twice every six months. The average life of a friendship contracted during a bridge game fa three weeks and two days. The proper way to pick up a wasp is by the right *•” leg and the left wing, but there fa not much sense in doing it at ati. There are no fire hydrants in Java, which simplifies the automobile parting immensely. A feather thrown In front of an electric fan will disappear rapidly. SCRAMBLED NAMES CONTEST Rearrange these tetters so they spell the names of prominent Democrats. Nerger. Dooacm. Roovelset Mi th® Lulh. * - Lerfar.

HOME OF SHETLAND PONIES Shetland ponies originated in the Shetland islands, a group off the north ot Scotland. The scanty fare and cold winds prevalent there are said to account for the small rise of these ponies and of the sheep, cattle, pigs and other animate on the islands. There is a legend that the ponies are descendants of Spanish cavalry horses that reached the Shetlands when the ships of the Spanish Armada were wrecked on these coasts.

/mOADVENTURERS’ CLUB Iron Tomb n K By FLOYD GIBBONS Famous Headline Hunter. FILL up those lemonade glasses and drink a toast to Alex Mackail of Port Chester, N. Y. Fill up the longest, tallest glasses you can find—fill up one for each of the thirty thousand members of the Adventurers’ club—and still you won’t be drinking as big a toast as the one Alex himself almost drank. Alex started working on a tall, cool one that was 20 feet long and 12 feet high. And no lemon juice or sugar in it, either. It was only by the sheerest luck 'that he managed to get out of finishing that cocktail, too. Boy* and girls, it's a lulu of a story. It happened in school. Alex wasn’t going to that school to get a cranium of knowledge, though. He was there for the good hard cash there was in It. Maybe the fact that the school was in Scotland had something to do with that. It was in the year 1922, and Alex, who was just a kid then, had nailed himself a job a* apprentice with a boiler repairing firm In the Scottish town of Glasgow. Trapped Inside a Rapidly Filling Boiler. They were working on a huge boiler In the basement of the Clydebank, public school. There were three of them on that job—Alex, his boss and an Inspector. The Inspector had climbed out of the boiler room and gone home. Alex's boss had decided that they'd done enough work for the day and had climbed out after him to telephone the shop. Alex was going to wait until the boss came back from telephoning so they could both go home together. While he waited, he pulled a copy of a Diamond Dick novel out of his pocket and sat down beside a guttering candle to read. In a few minutes he had forgotten that he was sitting Inside a stuffy old boiler. He was out on the open prairie, following Diamond Dick through a series of adventures that would curl the quills ot a porcupine. He didn’t realize lIKk V 7 — "K w In a Frenzy He Pounded on the Metallic Wail. that in another minute or two he’d be going through a real, honest-to-goodness adventure of his own—an adventure that would make all of Diamond Dick’s exploits look tike so many pink tea parties. The next thing Alex knew, there was a tremendous rush of water at the far end of the boiler. He jumped, and the candle beside him rolled to the floor and went out. Alex looked up then, for the daylight that should be streaming through the manhole in the top of the boiler —but the big tank was black as night Hi* boss had come back and, thinking Alex had gone home, had replaced the manhole cover and started to fill the boiler up. \ Alex lost his head then. He rushed to the Jront of the boiler and begarn hammering on it with his bare fists. That didn't do any good. The noise of the pump outside drowned any sound he might make that way. In a frenzy of fear he ran to the pipe through which the water was coming and made a futile attempt to stop the flow with his hands. That didn’t get him anywhere either, but the cold water that dashed In his face sort of brought him to his senses, and he started telling himself to keep a level head. The Deadly Water Kept Pouring In, “My breath,” he says, “was coming in sob*. I remembered that I had left a hammer and chisel at the other end of the boiler, and I started back to get them. That boiler was just twenty feet long, but it seemed like twenty miles. The water was getting higher every minute, but I finally made it, found the hammer and started pounding on the ■ides, i pounded hard enough to loosen the rivets, but still the water came pouring in. “Nevertheless, I kept on pounding. 1 knew there must be someone outside to shut the water off when it reached the gauge level. That wasn't much comfort, though, because by the time the water reached the gauge level, it would be a foot over my head.” Another few minutes, and Alex began to get dizzy. The pressure caused by the Inrush of water was going to his head. Still, he pounded away—not because he thought it would do any good, but because, in his terror, he didn’t think to stop. The Grim Reaper’s Scythe Nearly Felt Fearsome thoughts were going through his mind. What would his mother say when he didn't come home that night? Would anybody ever find him? What would happen when they lit the fire in the morning? “It was then.” says Alex, “that I went insane. I started screaming and tearing with my bare hands at the rusty iron wall of the boiler. I seemed to hear voice* outside saying, Hold on, Alex—lll get you!*' But I was too far gone to realize what it meant 1 hadn’t even noticed that the water had stopped coming in. 1 seemed to lose my senses somewhere in there, and the next thing I knew. 1 was lying on my back, out in the school yard." Yes—Alex's boss had dragged him out of that boiler—unconscious. He had fallen in a faint and had taken so much water into his lungs that? the boss had to give him artificial respiration before he came to. Alex is a grown man now, but he still has nightmares about that horrible fifteen minutes when he was trapped In a filling boiler. T ©—wxu S*rvlc«.

j Friday* 13th, Not Jonah to Many Old-Timers One of the most widely known of the “IS” superstitions is that it is unlucky to sit at a table where there are 13 persona. Tradition has it that some , one of the 13 will die within the year Rome authorities say this dates b’ck | h> the time nt rhriH when 13 garb ered at the table for the Mst Supper, says a writer In I‘atbltoder Magaxine Judas Iscariot was the first to leave and all are familiar with his fate. However, it is known that this superstition was rife among the Asiatics i tong before that Others trace It back to Scandinavian mythology when the 12 major gods ; were seated about a table in Valhalla and the evil spirit. Loki, arrived to j make the 13th. Friday bears special I significance in this connection because it was the festival of certain gods. Their wrath was sure to fall on the unwary heads of all who did not give up their own pursuits on that day to Indulge In the festival. In Paris, there are persons known as -fourteeners” because it Is their business to be available to all who wish a 14th guest ar parties and din Raby Throats From Sooth America Ruby throats migrate from Routh 1 Arneriea to this area. Some even go North up to within 100 miles of the ! Arctlc circle. In ail there are 501) to 600 species of humming bircls. most of them to the northern part of Sooth America. One species on Patagonia la a* large as a cardinal. - - - Absolutely Wrong ‘"Gambling is wrong." said Uncle Eben. “but so Is riggin’ up a m re thing dat leaves a stranger an chance." ,-s.s . ’ SfflgSSi - *.c, ' ’ " --v

ners when only 13 appear. However, there are - those persons who have no fear of the dreaded number but take it as their good luck symbol. In tbe national capital the auto tag numbered 13 has gone to the same person for a number of years while a great demand exists for tbe taca number 1313 and 131313. la>uls XIII of France chose a title with 13 letters and always made bls most important decisions and moves on the 13th. Nansen, the explorer, started on an Arctie expedition on tbe 13th with 13 men and returned home on tbe 13th. later attending a dinner party on Friday, the 13th, as the 13th.guest Richard Wagner, the composer, was born on the 13th in 1813. Ancients observed a 13-month calendar and the old custom of giving a bride 13 pieces of gold exists in Latin countries that have any gold. Appearance of Halley's Comet Halley's comet, tbe most famous of all such visitors, has a period of something more than 76 years. It was visible in April. 1910. for the twenty-ninth time since its first recorded appearance in 240 B. (X It will appear again to 1986, No Eogiiab at Harvard For 50 years after tbe founding of Harvard college, in 1636, it was against the rules to speak English in the Harvard yard. Research reveals that students were expected to converse and recite in 1-atin or, if they didn’t like that, In Greek or Hebrew. Anxiety Dream Disturb* According to the Freudians, the nightmare, called by them the anxiety dream, is the only sort of dream whieh really disrurbs sleep. ♦

Cross Stitch Towels That Are Fun to Make Patters 787 Just a bit—but a telling bit—of decoration is all that’s needed today td make our household linens smart. And so, simple cross stitch brings color and life to humble tea-towels which make dish doing- a pleasure rather than a duty./These motifs of glassware and china—in cross stitch —are easy to embroider. This half dozen makes fine pick-up work, and also a grand prize for a bridge party —or most acceptable for a fair donation. Pattern 787 comes to you with a transfer pattern of six motifs averaging 4% by 9% Inches; details of all stitches used; and material requirements. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (ruins preferred) to The Sewing Cir de. Needlecraft Dept, 82 Eighth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Love I* Magic That Will Draw Best of Minds to You As you love, you will begin to rise in the world. Life will become brighter, happier and more beautiful. Love is the magic key that will unlock all hearts. Love will attract to you the highest of minds. Love makes life beautiful because It fa beauty. BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. And It Did And there was the Scotchman who bought only one spur. . He figured that if one side of the horse went, the other was sure to follow. P Fgt 111 r SEtF-HKATIN® TteCotananisasen- I D O N ■fae Intel LicMac tes. AHyna barwtodota torn a rtrik* ■ match m>d The Oofanan beat* tn a jiffy: ia quickly ready bran Entire ironin* aurfaea ia heated with point the hottest. Ma&taina fta heat even for Ke fast worker Entirely aatf-beatin« Operates for MV an boor You do yoor ironing with lean effort, in one-tbinjiess time. Be aure yocr next iron in the geooio* InMaat-IJgbting Coleman. IVa the iron every woman wants. It’s a wonderful time and labor aarwr-nothins like it. The CBtamn ia the eaey way to iron acne Mstcaso (w nuts romw m ueteaa. TH* OOUHSAN LAMP ANO STOVK CO. Dree. Wtm* Wtateta. Kane.; CWrege. BL. MMateia. IK| Ina Andbw CaMf. tttU to Vat foist f s iv ff ze ““BUILDING-UP? t“T think very hi<hly of ADr. Pierce’s Medical Discovery, said U O. Hornback of 1900 S >9th St. Springfield. 11l “Constant working with paint rentes me to become upset At times I have no energy, g'ssjs’s.su Discovery straightens me up in good BlSLre WRINKLES! S 3-1 -a Watch them disappear quickly BSfcmSS with NOREEN§Skin Food; *fa> crowsfeet and lines vanish 15a =a with ita use and a radiant dear skin can be yours. Builds new fiEESSESKSjS&SSft: IHlIi LagSSSSS, ITCHING SCALPDANDRUFr For annoying itching and urr K*- * sightly Daa-H draff, use Gio vefs. Start today ■ with Glover’s ■ A Mange Medi- H cine and follow with Glover’S . Medicated Soap gists. Skin Sufferers find ready relief from itching off eozema, rashes and similar ill*, in the qtetete gentie medication off flffi Resinol ICUISSIFIEDMSj t |■ BB s3Sßsassazßsasaa»»assss9 kcropkan tovbs—smea CF H Western tours—B weeks. AU summer- | lISD 00 up. Onk Moves Torero. Onk Fsrfc. W. Frew-tear Ctehtes wr ttorerfwrty. Cotton Works. 113* Ctem Avre.. Ctslewse. Deos. to. * L.