Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 May 1923, p. 3

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VSs , 1 '• l' ' >,••'" ,f f>? THE McHBNBY PLAIJTDBALEB, McHElfRT, V.--'••'••v Find Queer Laws •} f. 1V .r , in Old Records Man Who Committed Suicide in 1738 Was Tried on Murder Charge in New Orleans. If you sometimes Chink our laws art drastic, what do you think about what they had to stand for way back In 1738? 1 New Orleans.--Even though the present-day American is so surrounded by laws that he has to watch his step at every turn, he la not so bad off after ali. In 1738, a person In New * Orleans could not even commit suicide and go unpunished. Someone having asserted that the Sixty-seventh congress, recently adjourned, enacted 931 new laws, and with many state legislative bodies clearing their decks for action In order to add a few broadsides to the list of statutes, inquiring persons here have been examining musty old Spanish and French official records In New - Orleans to ascertain how the people of other days fared. 8entonce Doad Man. A man committed suicide here tn 1738 and the records show that the courts tried him for taking a life. He iwas found guilty, and It la set forth „ that "the inanimate body that held 'life too great a burden" was sen* fenced to abandonment without burial. Petty theft involved a penalty of flogging, three years' imprisonment, confiscation and a fine of 50 francs. Persons convicted of having shot or wounded an animal owned by another were sentenced to capital punishment As in these days and times, a murderer was executed by hanging &ut execution for wife murder was bx y Strangulation. There was no Volstead law; but for permitting his slaves to become intoxicated one man was forced to mount a wooden horse and was drawn through the streets, while his neighbors laughed at him. The wooden horse seems to have played a prominent part in the punishment of petty criminals. Patients at the city hospital learned that meat they had been consuming with a relish was doc sad cat flesh, one Bobert Villeneuve, a butcher who supplied the institution, was haled before the court on a complaint filed by the patients, who charged that thsgr frsd been served "roasted dogs." Tie Cat Around Neck. The records show that Villeneuve was mounted upon the wooden horse and given the same treatment received by the man who had permitted his slaves to become drunk. In the case of Villeneuve, however, his chest and back bore placards inscribed: "Master Eater of Dogs and Cats.**' After this punishment had bees meted out the record further states that "an old gray cat was hung around the neck" of the culprit. And finery for the women played its part, then as now, for one document refers .to the purchase by a' father of "seemly clothes" for his eighteen-year- Bite of Staffed Fox Head Fatal to Girl Paris.--A few weeks ago tin*. Ernestine Lablelle, twenty years old, wore her white fox fur to a dance at St Ur&lne, near hen, A friend jokingly snapped the head of the animal on the girl's nose, and as a result the girl is now dead of blood poisoning; caused by the animal's teeth. old daughter. The parallel! of the clothing problem then with that of the present day continues In this case, for It seems the purchase consisted of "feathers And thread stockings." The finery got into the records bo> cause the father went lntojlebt for them, and debt then was a crime If one could not pay. So reduced in circumstances was the parent that be reported to his creditor: "I am on broth. I have but one chicken to kill." The outcome of the affair could ascertained from the documents. Spray Ring ; Improve Orchard A girl suppresses the crying habit when it begins to make her nose red. Want American Museum Scientists Ask Canada and United States to Combine in f String of National Parks. Washington.--To benefit science, and popular education during future generations, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the largest scientific body in the world, has proposed establishing an International system of museums of the original American wilderness. Its object is to preserve examples of the primitive in nature from the Arctic ocean to the Gulf of Mexico making a continental scientific laboratory and popular educational exhibit covering both Canada and the United States. International 8ystem Exists. The basis for this International system already exists, the scientists believe, in the national parks systems of the two nations. No political or administrative union of these is advo- All Religions Hateful to Soviets cated, but an International policy of complete conservation from Industrial uses, backed by perfected lawa In both countries. The association Issued the following from its headquarters in the Smithsonian institution here: "Whereas, By repeated action of con« gress for more than half a century, widely approved by scientific and other societies and by the public generally, the national parks of the United States have been completely conserved from industrial uses so as to constitute a system of national museums of native America; and Whereas, One of the national parks of Canada is similarly completely conserved ; and "Whereas, The combined parks systems of both countries, coverlng geological, biological and geographical examples from the Alaskan range, through the Canadian Rockies, to the Grand canyon of Arlrona, if preserved untouched, will constitute a unique continental exposition of inestimable value to science and to the popular education of future generations; therefore "Be it resolved. That the American Association for the Advancement of Science earnestly requests the people and the congress of the United States und the people and the parliament of the Dominion of Canada to secure such amendments of existing law and the enactment of such new laws as will give to all units in the international parks system complete conservation alike, and will safeguard them against every Industrial use either under private or public control at least until careful atudy shall Justify the elimination of any part from park classification." The American Association for the Advancement of Science Is International, Its' nearly 1,000 members representing both Canada and the United States. The execution of the Roman Catholic prelate Mgr. Butchkavlch is the outcome of the terrible war waged In Russia against all religions. Children, It is •aid, are being taught In school to hate religion, while a soviet law prohibits religious teachings to all children under eighteen. Here is a caricatured ftttgy of Buddha being carried In a Moscow anti-war procession. German Thieves 8teal Knobs. Berlin.---Door-knob thieves are canting Berlin householders much annoyance. Hotels, apartment houses, office buildings and private dwellings are all prey to the searchers for secondhand brass. In one of Berlin's leading hotels all the brass nozzles on the fire hose in the corridors disappeared one night, together with many othor brass fixtures. Man Rescues Costly Diamond From Sewer Pottsvllle, Pa.--Harry Ootler, hunted for a "needle" In a haystack and found it The "aeedle" was worth $1,500, however. Cotler dropped a diamond ring into a sewer drain. With the city's consent, he dug Into the drain and found the ring. .Buddha Statue Made of Bones of 2,600 Dead Tokto.--An image of Budda made entirely from human bones will shortly be dedicated at Jogwanjl temple, Fukagawa. According to the head priest of the temple, more than 2,600 dead persons' bones had been stored •during the past ten years within the temple's charnel house, at the request of those poor people who were unable •to bury the dead after cremating them. DISPLAY OF BABIES SHOWS FRANCE'S BIRTH SHORTAGE Window Exhibit h Paris Teds Story of Decreasing Race. Paris.--A row of three babies, of diminishing sizes, clothed in white and resting on a black background, has been attracting attention in the windows of the National Alliance for the Increase of French Population. It Is a show window way of tolling the story of a decreasing race. The largest baby has written underneath, "Year 1868--1,034,000"; the second baby, "Year 1913--746,000," and the last baby, "Year 1926?--500,000." The trouble between France and Germany is one of babies, according to the spokesman or this organization, and Germany Is bound to win the next war because of more babies. According to the latest figures, Germany has 500,000 babies, and France but 35,000 above her death rate. France's present population is placed at 39,200.000, whereof 1,500,000 are foreigners. Her native population for the , first six months of 1922 increased by fl|2rure<1 ,n 1922 a return of $8.52 for Co-Operative Plan Tried Successfully in Several tVuit States. (Pnputl by the United SutM Dspkftnwt of Agriculture.) The co-operative spray ring, developed In connection with demonstrations in orchard spraying, is solving the problem of spraying the small home orchard, for an Increasing number of farmers, According to reports to the United States Department of Agriculture. While the plan has been used most extensively in Iowa, farmers In Minnesota, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois and Ohio find it a good method, and on the Atlantic coast several counties in Connecticut and New Jersey organized rings in 1921. In Iowa, the number of counties reporting the organization of spray rings increased from 16 in 1921 to 31 In 1922. Seven counties in Illinois report new spray rings In 1922. Stark county, Illinois, which organized two rings in 1921, has become so interested In the care of the farm orchard that six power-machine rings and five hand-machine rings were organized In the summer of 1922, serving mora, than 100 home orchards. Simple Organization Plan. The plan of organization of these rings is kept as simple as possible. The men interested In spraying get together at one of the extension meetings and decide to try co-operative spraying. Usually a written agreement covering the method of managing business matters and the ownership of equipment of the ring Is prepared and signed. The kind of equipment, hand or power, is selected and the cost is apportioned, a schedule is made out and the members decide whether some one member will spray all the orchards for an agreed labor price, or whether an outside person will be hired to do the work. Each of the three plans has proved satisfactory. In Poweshiek county, Iowa, they have found it most convenient to do the work individually; in Stark county, Illinois, the same plan Is followed. In Union county, Iowa, the sons of two farmers operated the power-machine last season, one furnishing a team and the other a gasoline engine. They sprayed 14 orchards, some 1,500 trees, completing each spray In two days, the members giving little or no attention to the work. Students of Runnells Consolidated School in Polk county. Iowa, sprayed practically all the orchards In their community. Advice as to sprays and time of applying Is usually obtained from the county agent. Size of Ring Varies. The size of the ring varies, averaging from three or four tnembers in the smallest ones to twenty or more in the larger. The cost of operation depends, of course, on several factors, the type of equipment, whether labor is employed or the work done by members for themselves, the distance betweeen orchards, the number of sprays put on, and similar items. For one orchard in Webster county, Iowa, where four sprays were applied, the average cost of material per tree was 37 cents, labor 33 cents, depreciation on machinery 5 cents, making a total cost of 75 cents per tree for the four sprays. A Union county (Iowa) ring spent $210 for equipment, material and the labor of two men and teams, and sprayed 1,500 trees four times. A 12-orchard ring organized in Johnson county, Iowa, several years ago, spends about 15 cents per tree per spray. The results, according to the owners, more than Justify the small expenditure. In every case where the spraying was done as advised last season, the work accomplished Its object and the members had plenty of clean, sound home-grown apples to store for winter use. The Webster county orchard produced 99 per cent clean fruit. Fayette county, Iowa, reports in the sprayed orchards 75 per cent of the fruit as clean and sound, and 25 per cent scabby and wormy; the unsprayed orchard showed 35 per cent sound, clean fruit and 85 per cent scabby and wormy. Walworth county, Wisconsin, spray ring members picking, packing or grading apples. Twenty-five men were shown by extension workers how to pick and pack their apples, using home-made equipment, and the surplus apples were put on the market in baskets and home packed according to market grades. SENATE DELAYS ROAD MEASURE Essfttyton Invokes Rtrte Caffing for Three-Day Consideration. BACK ACHED if Deadly Turkey Disease Is Traced to Chickens Recent research indicates that chickens and turkeys--especially turkeys-- will not thrive when raised together within comparatively close quarters and small field range. It has been found that blackhead, which is said by Investigators to be responsible for 90 per cent of losses among growing turkeys, may be produced in the poults by feeding them the eggs of a small worm found In the blind gut of chickens. The germ which causes blackhead may and does live In the eggs of the common intestinal worm of hens. "Even turkeys sick with blackhead are not so dangerous to their kind." says Dr. W. A. Billings of the agricultural extension staff, University of Minnesota, "as are common hens or the soil on which the hens are raised. The turkeys should be hatched and raised where they will not come In contact with chickens or chicken yards, for It Is possible to produce blackhead In chickens by simply feeding them contaminated soil from a hen yard. Damp weather and early morning dews do not cause blackhead, according to investigators. This upsets a theory long maintained by some poultrymen. In order to contract the disease the turkeys must get the germ, and the fact Is established that they often do get It by eating the eggs of the chicken intestinal worm. Doctor Billings says the way to raise turkeys successfully is to protect them from Infection which they get from chickens and chicken yards. Green Feed Required for Summer Feeding There is probably no feed which excels good pasture grass for economical milk production. To be sure, the highest records of milk and butterfat have not been made on a grass ration, but In economy of production, grass ranks first Good grass is not available (luring all of the summer months. Even though the cows are pastured over a large area containing plenty of grass, there are times in late summer when it becomes dry and of poor quality. If milk production Is to be maintained, some provision must be made to furnish the dairy cows a green, succulent ration other than grass during such a period. The soiling system has come to be used rather generally -lii many dairy sections. 7 Spraying to Control Many Injurious Pests Arsenate of lead at the rate of 1^ pounds of the powder to 50 gallons, can be used with dry-mix sulphur-lime for the control of codling moth, curcullo and other chewing insects. When arsenate of lead Is used '.n combination with dry-mix sulphur-lime it should first be mixed with water and then added to the diluted mixture. Watch Young Plants Carefully for Bugs Watch young plants carefully for In sects, if aphis appear on cabbage and cauliflower, the infested plants should be removed and the aphis destroyed. If the aphis are wide spread over the plants, they should be sprayed with a nicotine solution. Dust cabbage plants with arsenate of lead to destroy the WOrmS. v.;:.:;::---.. 9,045, compared to 15.84U in IMS, a normal prewar year. With the number of marriages Increasing (193,452 for the first six months of 1922, as compared to 160,- 722 In the corresponding period of 1913), the birth rate is slightly lover, as Is the death rate. The national alliance, however, points out that there is a 3 per cent decrease In the German olrth rate due to postwar poverty and to a number of other causes. France is endeavoring by tarlslation to increase the birth rate. Fathers of four or more children are given higher salaries, and other measures are being adopted, one of which Is to give a father an extra vote for every child. Attribute Longevity to Deep Breathing System Chicago.--A system of breathing, to which persons one hundred and three jrfars old attribute their longevity, wrs an important addition to Impressions of France, Italy. England and ."Switzerland which Henry C. Lytton, prominent merchant, brought back on Ids return from a five months' trip to ICurope. Proud of the vigor which made him lK>ast of a forty-seven-year-old son, lKr. Lytton attributed his recovery from an attack of bronchitis which •sent him on his trip to an article he had read In a magazine while abroad.t "It told about an Island where the -Inhabitants use this breathing system and as a result often live to be one hundred and three years old and more," he said. **Count ten as you Inhale; count ten as y u hold your breath ;and count ten while you exhale. DH this a dozen times as regularly as you go to bed and get up, and you will increase your chest expansion »and lengthen your years." LEARNS HE IS A BARON Is an unusual experience, ft happened to Raul Slllro Sobrero, resident of Los Antfeles, who has Just received papers from Rome attesting the fact that he is a baron. The title was conferred upon Sobrero's father for service rendered the duke of Genoa in a battle. The title passed from father to son, but Sobrero didn't know it until It was thrust upon him. each dollar spent In spraying. The bearing trees were sp/*ayed three times. Results of spray ring work in. Hardin county. Iowa, In fact, were so good in 1922 that the disposal of the surplus fruit was a problem, as none cof the members had had any experience In Telephone Pea Popular. The Telephone pea is a popular tall growing variety, but it requires considerably more space and it is less suitable for the small garden than the bush peas. Early Ohio Potatoes* Under most conditions, a good strain of Early Ohio potatoes will outyield other varieties. The Irish Cobbler and Triumph varieties, however, are also good yielders. USE SALT TO KILL THE BARBERRY To be a hi day and an window dresser one auLienian the &axt 1 28,800 in England Get Over $2,000,000 a Year " London.--In a statement In the house of commons Stanley Baldwin, chancellor of the exchequer, said the total number of persons In Great Britain liable to a supertax In the last financial year was ubput 80.000, with a total income of £470.000,000 (about $2,180.- 800,000). The total number of incomes over £500.000 ($2,320,000) yearly was 28,800. with a total income of £3Hi7jQQo,' 000 ($1,702,880,000). Chemicals to Play Important Part in Eradication. (Pnpired by the United State* Department of Agriculture.) Chemicals will play an important part this year in the eradication campaign against the common barberry, which aids the spread of black stem "fcust to the wheat fields. Where only the digging method has been practiced it was difficult to remove all the roots, especially in rocky ground or around (tree stumps. Where even the smallest fragments of the roots were not destroyed, sprouts have sprung up the following year, necessitating a repetition of the work. In lawns or gardens where a careful watch can be kept of the places from which bushes have been removed, digging is all right, for In a year or two all roots left at the first digging will have sprouted and can be removed. To make the eradication of the bushes simple and sure, two chemicals have been found by the United States Department of Agriculture to be effective for use in such places as pastures and wooded lots and along fences where it is difficult either to dig bushes up completely or to locate the exact spots in a resurvey. Of these two, common or crushed rock salt is very satisfactory. Ten pounds of salt piled on the crown will kill a-bush of average size. It should be applied to the bush as dry salt and be left standing or cut down. If left standing, they are easily located and the necessity of re-treatment more easily determined. Parsley Excellent to Use as Edging Flower Parsley Is very slow to germinate and should be sown as early as seeds can be put Into the ground. It may be used as an edging to a flower bed with good effect and as only a few leaves are needed at a time, such as are necessary for kitchen use may always be secured without destroying the ornamental effect. OPEN INQUIRY INTO BUDGETS House Committee, Not Expected to Find Against Governor*--Small *.®S&ns Tax Bill--Senate Passes : ~ ~ -Appropriation for Soldiers, Springfield.--The passage of Governor Small's $100,000,000 hard road bond issue was delayed for three legislative days when Senator G. Essington, Republican, Invoked the rules on the governor. The governor and his friend, Senator Richard Meents, who Introduced the bill, wished to have it passed and sent to the house immediately. Three-Day Interim Demanded. Senator Esslngton's action came, as a surprise. The rule with which he delayed the passage reads in part: "No appropriation bill shall be passed and no report of any conference committee on an appropriation bill shall be considered unless the bill or report has been printed In its final form and placed on the desks of the members at least three days prior to the final passage of the bill on the consideration of the report." This rule had been adopted In both houses at the beginning of the session because of the scandal which arose from the omnibus bill two years ago. "Disregard the rule and we will Invalidate the biip^warned Senator Essington. Lieutenant Governor Sterling, president of the senate, stated that the bill was of too much importance to take a chance and ruled that action should be suspended fQ/ the required time. Probe Committee at Work. The house committee to Investigate expenditures of money appropriated by the legislature in the last twelve years has started its work. Because of the personnel of the committee and the number of state administrations which are to be investigated, it is not expected that findings adverse to any one of the last four governors will be made by the committee. 8oldier Bonus Bill Passes. Passage by the state senate of the $55,000,000 appropriation to pay soldier bonus claims marked the finish of legislative action on the bill, which now goes to the governor. The senate vote was 41 to 0. The house bill, providing tjiat on petition of 1,000 legal voters the electors of a city may vote on repeal of the election commission act, also passed the senate, 37 to 0. House Committee Dry. The prohibition question will come io a showdown In the Illinois legislature this week. This promise was made by Representative M. L. Igoe, Democrat, Chicago, following the house judiciaries committee's defeat of his bill to make the Illinois prohibition laws conform automatically to any change that congress makes In the federal dry laws. The vote was 20 to 12. It was the second time the committee had voted dry this session. A month ago It * turned down a group of bills for an outright repeal of the senate dry laws. Small Signs Tax Bill. Governor Small signed the bill allowing Chicago a tax rate of $1.85 and downstate cities a rate of $1.33 1-3 for KoMnsoii Tells Hov Sfe Found Relief by Taking Lpim E. Piakkaa't Vegetable - v'*J AmariDo, Texas.--" My back was ny greatest trouble. It would ache so it would almost kffl me and I would has* cramps. I suffered fa this way about thrsa years; then a ladfe friend su g tg ested that I try Lydia Pinkham • Vegeta> ble Compound. Ituwa had better health since, keep bouse and am able to do n work. I recommend the Vegetable Compound to my friends as it has certainly given me great relief." --Mrs.C. B. ROBINSON, 608 N. Lincoln St., Amarillo,Tex. The Vegetable Compound fa a splendid medicine for women. It relieves the troubles which cause such, symptoms as backache, painful times, irregularity, tired and worn-out feelings and ih*i hum ness- This is shown again and again bjy such letters as Mrs. Robinson writes as well as by one woman tailing another These women know what it did fgf them. It is surely worth your trial. Housewives make a great mistake to allowing themselves to become so ID that it Is well-nigh impossible for then to attend to their necessary household duties. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM tooniDuanf-ttdfdUrhlllB RmImm Color aad B«Mty to Gray ud tfcft «*. u4«L«*at rh-ocftrta. »W<»I Cto.WUfM*»«fcm HINDERCORN8 ^ ^ «. ..op. al| p»tn. VoLfurTi. VS» FRECKLES Maw Is the Time to Get Rid of TLns Ugly Spots There'« no longer the sliffhteat need at (••ling ashamed of your freckle*, aa Othlae --double strength--la guaranteed to rem or* thaae komeljr vpota. Simply jc*t an ounce of Othtne from druggist and apply a little of It night a ad morning and you ahould aoon aee that ev«a the wont freckle# have begun to diaa.ppe»r, while the lighter one* have vanished aatlraljr. It la seldom that more than u ounce la needed to completely clear the •kin ud gain a beautiful, clear complexion Be eure to ask for the double-strength Othlne, as this la sold under guarantee if Monay back If It falls to remove frecklMl BETTER DEAD Life is a burden when the body is racked with pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes despondent and downhearted. f To bring beck the sunshine tab* LATHROP'S The national remedy of Holland for over 200 years; it ss an enemy of all peine re* suiting from kidney, liver and uric acid troubles. All druggists, three sizes. < 'or the nima Gold Madil on #vana bos and accept no imitation Prefers the Street Car. A Detroit multimillionaire who owns j fwo large automobiles and employs a chauffeur thinks he has an excuse t(M not using them. "I like to ride bacfc; and forth in a street car," he says. "1| = is friendly, and you get Into pleasant talks with people. It is no fun riding a three-year period. The passage of I ®n a ^'mous ue w'*h a chauffeur out lavj the bill was asked by Mayor Dever and I an^ y°u sitting there stiff and' Fish have cold blood, that Is. blood taking the temperature of the water. J may be used at any season of the year I iHtl] success. The bushes either may Alfalfa and Clovers » Sources of Nitrogen Red and alsike clover, as well as alfalfa and sweet clover, have been found to supply 75 to more than 100 pounds more available nltrogeu for a following grain crop than does a nonlegume, according to one state agricultural college. These legumes are said to be the cheapest source of nitrogen. other Chicago leaders on the ground that It was necessary In order to raise a .sufficient revenue for the city's needs. * - New Divorce Bll(, The house Judiciary pommfttee opened the door from the divorce court to the marriage bureau. Under provisions of a bill approved by the committee divorced persons maji take new mates the same day and live within the law In this state. The theory and existing law to compel divorced persons to wait one year before marrying again has proved a boomerang against the conventions of society, in the opinion of the committe » Hits Daylight 8aving. "Daylight saving" In Chicago or any other city or political subdivision of Illinois is prohibited in a bill introduced in the legislature by Senator Wright (Rep., DeKalb). The conflict in time cauSed by moyirtg Chicago clocks one hour ahead of the standard time that prevails downstate causes confusion, which is sometimes costly. Senator Wright says. ' Attorney General Brundage lost,his first skirmish In the house with Governor Small. The house sustained the governor's veto on an item of $16,- 000 for Inheritance tax collection in Oook county by a vote of 76 to 54. •lone. It's kind of pathetic."--Youth's Companion. FOR OVER 40 YEARS RALX.S CATARRH MEDICINE hU b«en ua«d successfully In the treatment of Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE COBalsts of an Ointment which Qulcklr Relieves by local application, and the Internal Medicine, a Tonic, which acta through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces, thus reducing the inflammation. Sold by all drugrists. '. J. Cheney * Co., Toledo, Ohla, Waiting for the Laundryma* "How come you got that rag tied around your neck. Hank? Sore throat?" "Nope, I haven't got my laundry back yet"--Judge. -- --^ 'Aim right, start right, and keep plugging away." .f Legumes Make Fertility. Tears of experience teach that.there is no better means of having fertile soil than by growing legumes and tuning them into the soil. ' * • • v vjf Farmer's Big Needs. The best breeds and the bestbeet serve the farmor's ueeds^ All Over .the State. Curran.--Mrs. Louise Emily Elwell, ninety-eight years old, who died here, was one of the older residents of central Illinois. I* was on her farm that U. S. Grant camped while mobilizing troops for service in the Civil war and Mrs. Elwell and her husband ground corn wit'i which to make flapjacks for soldiers. Savanna.--Golfers of Savanna and Mount Carroll plan to purchase a tract of 100 acres midway between the two cities, lay out a course and build a clubhouse. Freeport. -- Muriel Hutmacher, eleven, was helping his father about the farm near here when several of his playmate^ induced him to go hunting pigeons in the barn. Muriel climbed to the loft. One of the boys on the ground tossed a stone at him. He dodged the missile, but fell through a hay chute to the ground floor. -JYheo they picked him up he was dead. Elgin.--A fund of $4,000 to add to the facilities for ex-service men at the Elgin State hospital is to be raised by the Kane County ex-pervlce men's organization. *"*" I ; Sure Relief FORINDIGESTION /£MWm) tNMCKSTMffJ v; 6 Bell-ans Hot water Sure Relief ELL-ANS 254 AND 75$ PACKAGES EVERYWHERE Skin Eruptions Arm Usually Dam to Constipation When you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lubricating liquid Is produced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and thus secures regular bowel movements by Nature s own method--lubrication. Nnjol is a lubricant--not a medicine or lass tire--so cannot gripe. Try it today. A LUOPICANT-NOT A UAXATtVC

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