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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1933-07-20, Page 7Recent Events From Overseas Doctors Encourage Fasting London, Eng:—Modified fasting as a cure for, disease received the endorse went of famous Harley Street, Glas- gow and Edinburgh doctors at a con- ference at Bridge of Allan, Stirling - shire. They decided to press for the setting up of special departments in public insttutions for fasting cures. They expressed the opinion fasting was not a matter for unqualified prac- titioners. Tho conference was pre- sided over by Sir William Wilcox, and among those present were Lord Hor- der, physician to the Prince of Wales, and Sir Humphrey Rolleston, physi- elan to the King, • 70 -Year -Old Man Rescues a Child Douglas, Isle of Man. •-- Alfred A. Kelly, at Douglas, 70 years old, has been awarded the vellum certificate of the Royal Humane Society for rescu- ing a three-year-old child from drown - Ing. He also holds the Life Saving Medal. He was recovering from an Illness at the time he saved the child from death. Man Killed by Fish Sting London, Eng.—William Tart, of Dungeness, died from the sting of a Ish, a weever, while he was engaged h mackerel fishing. The weever stung the man on a fin- Iler while he was hauling in the nets. ls hand became swollen and a doctor lydered him to Folkstone Hospital. tart, •who was 39 years old, had been ► fisherman since he left school and was shortly to• have been married. A reporter asked Dr. E. J. Allen, di- rector of the• Marine Biological Lab- eratory, PIymouth, if there were any Banger to seaside visitors from the weever fish. "Sometimes, the small Ines sting children paddling on a candy beach," he said, "but they do little•harm, though the stings are pain- ful. "The larger ones can do a great deal of damage. They are found by fisher - Men who know how dangerous they lire. I do not think that there is any tenger to bathers from them." • Double Romance London, Eng.—It is understood that he Earl of Rosslyn's youngest daugh- er and his granddaughter have be- jome engaged to be married. The daughter, Lady Mary St. Clair prskine, is to marry Mr. Philip Dunn, my son of Sir James Dunn, Bt., the famous Canadian business magnate. The granddaughter, Miss Rose Bing - am, daughter of Lady Rosabelle rand, is to marry the twenty -one - ear -old Earl of Warwick, though the ngagement has not yet been officially nnounced. Lady Mary is twenty-two ears of age and Miss Bingham is wenty-one. New Police School London, Eng.—Imber Court, the pre - lent home of the mounted branch of e Metropolitan, Police, at Thames tton, may be turned into the len- sedlen- sedised new police college. 1 This college, under Lord Tren- ard's recent recommendations, is r the purpose of training the "officer ass" of the police force. Should Im- er Court be chosen, it will beaen- rged. The mounted police will re - 'airs there. itlif. omen Complain Men Swagger Say Scientists Masculine Delusion of Grand- eur Lies in Fact that Life is Complex For Him 1 Chicago.—Complaining about head- aches that don't exist is women's or- t' dained lot, the American Association kfor the Advancement of Science was !told last week. Man's lot is to swagger about the ouse with inflated ideas about his •h1iwwn importance. The reason: Life is t+hat way. These observations were reported ay Dr. Mandel Sherman of the Uni- rsity of Chicago, as the result of lerten'sive studies that he said indi- ikated the existence of a direct rela- [onship between cultural background d the abnormal mental symptoms hf persons. Varying kinds of mental twists, Dr. { herman also declared, were found ong abnormal persons of different igious faiths. He placed no inter- retation on the findings. Comparing the symptoms in the ental diseases among the three main hens of religious affiliation—Cath- c, Protestant and Jewish, Dr. Sher- iIan said: "Of the hallucinations iir the Pro- .iestant`group, 57 per cent, pertained religion. In the Catholic group only 7 per cent, pertained to religion. L Whereas none was found in the Jew- ish 'group. I "Of the total number of grandiose elusions (abnormally high+tself es eem), the percentage distribution s as follows: Protestant, 55; Catho- c, 39'; Jewish, 6." Of the group of patients studied, r. Sherman also found that women d more religious delusions than men d mere frequently imagined they bre sick: On the other hand, the men pa - 'wits suffered mors, from delusions of randeur. Tho jokplanation for this difference, e sail!!, lay in the fact that life, for n,an, was more complex, his social King to Open Dry Pock Southampton, Eng. — The greatest dry dock in the world, built at South- ampton for the Southern Railway at a cost of $1000,000, will be opened by the King my 26, During the con- struction of the dock 2,000,000 tons of earth and mud were excavated from the site and 750,000 tons of concrete were used. The dock was planned to accommo- date the new 701000 -ton Cunarder, "No. 534," now lying unfinished at Clyde- bank; but it could accommodate a ship of 100,000 tons if the world had one. This great "enterprise is only a part of the Southern Railway scheme for extensions to Southampton docks, and the aggregate cost of all the proposed works is about $60,000,000. Seek to Save Capital Canberra.—Because it is feared the experiment of creating an Australian federal capital at Canberra, a former sheep ranch, may be abandoned at some near date, residents are organiz- ing a campaign to popularize this city. The federal parliament was estab- lished here only six years ago. The new city is so isolated and costly to the nation that. many Australians have suggested it be evacuated. - British Visa Fees Scored London.—The council of the London Chamber of Commerce, on the recom- mendation of its. travel organization section, has sent letters to the Chan- cellor of the Exchequer and the For- eign Secretary urging that the ques- tion of the visa fee charged to Ameri- can victors should be reviewed. It has been submitted that as no visa fee is required from Americans visiting many European countries, whether for business or pleasure, the $10 fee charged here is a source of much annoyance and must have some effect on the volume of traffic. Seasick Yacht Stealers London, Eng. — Two seasick men who were rescued from a helplessly drifting yacht off the Goodwins—Her- bert Ingram, aged 23, and Albert Ball, aged 20—were at Canterbury recently sentenced to six and four months' im- prisonment respectively for stealing the boat from Whitstable. Pigeon Returns After 8 Years Manchester, Eng.—After an absence of eight years, a black chequer cock racing pigeon returned to the loft of his owner, John Lewis, of Maryport. The bird disappeared in a race as a yearling. Prince Climbs Big Ben London, Eng.—Prince George went climbing recently—to the top of Big Ben by way of the web-like scaffold- ing that surrounds the tower. He was watched by a knot of people below, but they did not know who he was. "Climbing the' ladders to such a height Is not an easy job for one not accustomed to the work," said an of- ficial, "but the Prince got up very quickly and showed very fine nerve." After spending a few minutes en- joying the sight, he climbed over the parapet which leads into the gallery where the bells that chime the quar- ters are installed. problems more numerous and difficult, his contacts with others in daily com- petition, commoner. What Shall We Say, Now You Are Gone? Old friend, what shall we say, now you are gone? That all ie over—all the things we knew— The things we shared—so flat to one alone, So full of savor tasted once with you? Those trifles that made friendship? Let us hope That you have found a place, not • very strange, Where you may sit and wait for me— some slope Of sun -warmed grass, with trees, where sight may range • Across wide valleys to the sunset hills. There rest, and plan what you and I will do When I come footing after. If the ills Of life have tired us, I will sit with you, Not speaking much, until at last the peace • Of that still place has wrought into the soul Its silent benediction and release. OUR CROSS -WORD PUZZLE mom aurAmmil6 .20 1111111,411111111 28 29 Ell 1," /AM= T'_1J!d!R m1111111111111111111 49 ■ 30 46 50 •51 54 Horizontal 1—Portable chair 6—Not volatile 11—To pertain 12 Heaved 14 -Type unit 15—P laineh a ad d r es s es 17 -Pronoun 18—Beverage 20—Darknesses 21—Beast's cave 22—Skin disease 24—Alkaline solution 25—Rude child 26—Buddhist temple 28—Sea nymphs 30—Note of Guido's scale 31—Youth 32—Verbal noun. 35—Promise 38—Beverages 39—Prior 5Z 55 41—Ruminant 42—Foolish 43—Affected smile 45—Bishopric — 46—Pronoun 47—Cons 49—French article 50—More spruce 52—Printing spaced 54—Verse 55—To hasten Vertical 1—Iroquian Indian 2—Spanish for "the" 3—To stem 4—Particle of matter 5—Star group 6—Prizes 7—Toys 8—Donkey 9 --Exists 10—To act 11—To bore into again 13—Small depressions 16—To weep 19—Enraged 21—Deepens • 23 -God of winds (variant) 25—Plait of hair 27—Tribe of Israel 29—Sick 32—Street Arab 33—Click beetle 34—Decorous 35—Dangers 36—Slang: armed 37—Cornered 40—To free 43—Stalk 44—To detain 47—Pen 48—Scottish for "so" 51—Exclamation 53—Prefix: down Then we will rise together, with the whole Of life before us, as it used to be, In that new land, not much unlike the old, And walk with •the old strength to search, and see What prospects that new country Wray unfold. Answers to Last Week Puzzle S U•E T ELIK0, A •U P 4MB 0 E E R 5 % B E A. A I D• R Y Y 0 5 E 0 T U 5 T 0 E .F T T L 0 1 S L 0 E E L e 0 A F N. U A N T S Y E S Two Women After King's Cup Thirty-eight airplanes have been entered' for the King's Cup race* on July 8. They represent 17 distinct types of single and twin -engined civil craft, and employ nine different air-cooled motors of moderato pow- er. Eleven of the aircraft types have not yet participated in a race of major importance; some of them have only recently completed flying trials. Lady Bailey has entered a plane and will pilot it herself. Mrs. A. S. Butler, who did well in some earlier King's Cup contests, will also take Dart. In all, competitors who reach the final round will fly approximate- ly 800 miles. Every airplane will be assumed by the handicappers to be capable of averaging at least 100 miles an hour over the course. And maybe, in some hollow, we shall find The very spring, the very trees we knew. That were the heaven most perfect to my mind— The same o10 pace to travel in—and you. —John Edward Colburn in "The Vermonter." Hundreds of unstamped letters in the letter boxes of San Antonio, Texas, puzzled' the postal officials till experts found that the stamps had bean eaten off by ants attracted by the guru, "Pencil Figures" Declared Not Truly Feminine The problem of "that fashionable pencil figure" and the anxiety it causes among young women of to -day was re- ferred to by Dr. Margaret Lowenfeld, speaking in London recently at 'the conference of the Alliance of Honour (Women's Section). "If you look at any large group of girls to -day," she said, "you will see that the girl who is most attractive to young men is the girl with a figure Iike a pencil. But she certainly is not the best constructed for the production of healthy children. This 'pencil' figure, which is so fashionable to -day, may be partly responsible for the high British maternal death rate. Ie. Sweden, where a much broader figure is considered attractive among women, the maternal death rate is con- siderably lower than it is in England. "Many girls suffer acute anxiety be- cause they have developed a full fig- ure, which is supposed to be unattarc- tive." r r , SAVE Plug Tobacco will last .you 3 longer. It burns %slower gives' you more smokes, more enjoyment for the same money. DIXIE ONLY 20c A BIG PLUG ...SMILES... "But why are you so angry with the doctor, Mrs. Blank?" "I told him I was tired, and he asked to see my tongue." "I don't believe in associating with my inferiors. Do you?" "That's all right, old mau—I don't mind making an exception in your case." Shoes Size Twenty-two Museum's Attraction Chief attractions of the state mus- eum In Missouri's state house in Jef- ferson City, Mo., are a pair of shoes, size 22, once worn by Miss Ella Ewing.. Miss Ewing, a native Missourian, who died several years ago, was 8 feet, 4 inches tall. She was supposed to be the "largest woman in the world" during her life. Bale of Hay Pays Alimony PANSIZONNeMaineiraMAASSUMWMA Bert Anderson of Los Angeles was threatened with contempt of court when be failed to Pay his wife $50 alimony. Bert had no money,, but plenty of hay, His wife got the hay—ten toils of it, The wife wrote from a fashionable hotel: "Dear John, I enclose the hotel bill." John replied: "Dear Mary, I enclose cheque to cover the bill, but please don't buy any more hotels at this figure; they are cheating you." Summer Shower It's hard for a woman approaching 40 to make up her mind to be her age. Making hotels homelike would be fine if they didn't make them like modern homes. They say a man whips his boys for the same kind of foolishness his dad couldn't whip out of him. A woman gets all run down, worrying about what her husband refuses to take seriously. Some minds are so open that they can't. hold anything. A jig -saw jigger called up the jig- saw depeartment of a store and asked if any new ones had come in from Jigsawville. Young Saleswoman—"Yes, we have a new one just in." Jig -Saw Jigger—"What's the name?" Young Saleswoman—"The Road to Denver." Jig -Saw Jigger—"All right. Send it out." But when the Jig -Saw Jigger re- ceived the new jig -saw puzzle the name on the box said: "The Rhododen- dron." Mrs. P.—"Your new neighbors are great borrowers, aren't they?" Ms. R.—Yes. If they keep up their present pace my next party will have to be given at their home!" The talking movies have a never- ending possibility, but we shudder to think of a slow motion picture of a man stuttering. Judy—"Does that story you are read- ing end in a modern way?" Grace ----"Yes, they are married aed live happily thereafter for a few months. The difference between meddling and investigating is that we investi- gate and the other fellow meddles. Hostess—"Mary, you must put an- other place at the table. An unex- pected guest has arrived." Maid"But, I can't, madam, there is no more china." • Hostess—"Oh, that's all right. They will be so close together they won't know one plate from another anyhow." Eager Youth—"One kiss from you and I could die happily!" Bored Miss — "Well, here's your kiss," Helen—"Ha] and I have parted for- ever." Bess—"Good gracious! What does that mean?" Helen—"A fivepound box of candy in about an hoer." Classified Advertising GOVERNMENT APPROVED CraCKB {.-t ALE OF GOVERNMENT APPROV. 0 ED Chicks. While they last: Leg horns 06e, Barred Rocks .06ac. On week old chicks one cent more. J. G Tweddle, Fergus, Ont. or his posterity won't have anything( to brag about. Mother—"Daughter, how many times do you imagine Henderson has kissed. you?"' Daughter—"So far mother dear, I haven't had to imagine at all." Parents who tell their children that spinach will give them strength should tell thein the rest of it—drat it will also give them grit. Permanent waves are things of beauty but the upkeep of the fragile things far exceeds the initial cost, Husband—"Mary, after I die I wish You would marry Bill Henry." Wife --"Why do you ask that?" Husband—"Well, he introduced us." Mistress: Bridget, It always, seems to me that the crankiest mistresses get the best cooks. Bridget: Ah, go on wicl yea blarney! King Gustav's Role In Romance Bared Stockholm.—How King Gustav of Sweden became involved in a sail- or's romance was recalled in the mass of anecdotes and biographical liters• ture which greeted the King's recent 75th birthday. "Darling," read a note His Majes ty found amid his mail one morning, "can you meet me at the usual plata tonight?" Investigation revealed the message, was intended for the Swedish war. ship "King Gustav V" and for a certain sailor in particular. King Gustav paused to chuckle and dictated a telegram to the captain of the warship suggesting the addres' see be given shore leave that even: ing, The fellow who has nothing to boast about but his ancestors better got busy Turkish Woman Made Judge Istanbul.—For the first time in Tur• key a woman has been appointed judge of a criminal court. She is Moizzez Hanim, formerly judge in the Istanbul Court of Correction. OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liver Bile --Without Calomel Your liver's a very small organ, but it cep. tainly can put your digestive and eliminative organs out of kilter, by refusing to pour out its daily two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels You won't completely correct such a condition by taking salts, oil, mineral water, laxative candy or chewing gum, or roughage. when they've moved your bowels they're through—and you' need a aver stimulant. - Carter's Little Liver Pills will soon bring back the sunshine into your life, They're purely vege- table. Safe. Sure, Ask for them by name. Refuse aubstitutes, 250 at all druggists, 48 UP TO D STA LES TE —Old Reliable Minard's When horses come in to stable with wire - cuts or saddle boils, or cows have caked udder, the thing to do is get the Minard'd bottle at once, as Mr. Dowd of Glenboro, Manitoba, knows. He writes "I like your Minard's Liniment. Like to have it in the house. 1 have found your Minard's Liniment especially good for barbed wire cuts on horses." A. family doctor prepared Minard's Liniment over 50 years ago. Still invaluable in every stable and every house. 80 WEAK IND EN Take Lydia E. rinibann's Vegetable Compound Have you -ever felt :that 'you were too Weak to do anything that you did not have the strength to do your work? Women who are weak and run-down should take a tonic such as Lydia E. ?leekham's Vegetable Compound. Head- aches and backaches that aro the result of a tired, run -dosed condition often yield to this marvelous medicine. 98 out of every 100 women who report to us say that they are benefited by thio medicine. Buy a bottle front your drug- elet today ... and !watch the results. ' ISSUE No, 28--- 33 1-T/Id,E8115ATE 0 M A EWE 1$ A-. D1/,,$ E X. C A R E D4D R IP' R:t U T T E R S0D REAMS L EN.D U P E 4K' A•R A.T1 A L L%/f/G 0•D -S, ,R 10 5 R Y Y 0 5 E 0 T U 5 T 0 E .F T T L 0 1 S L 0 E E L e 0 A F N. U A N T S Y E S Two Women After King's Cup Thirty-eight airplanes have been entered' for the King's Cup race* on July 8. They represent 17 distinct types of single and twin -engined civil craft, and employ nine different air-cooled motors of moderato pow- er. Eleven of the aircraft types have not yet participated in a race of major importance; some of them have only recently completed flying trials. Lady Bailey has entered a plane and will pilot it herself. Mrs. A. S. Butler, who did well in some earlier King's Cup contests, will also take Dart. In all, competitors who reach the final round will fly approximate- ly 800 miles. Every airplane will be assumed by the handicappers to be capable of averaging at least 100 miles an hour over the course. And maybe, in some hollow, we shall find The very spring, the very trees we knew. That were the heaven most perfect to my mind— The same o10 pace to travel in—and you. —John Edward Colburn in "The Vermonter." Hundreds of unstamped letters in the letter boxes of San Antonio, Texas, puzzled' the postal officials till experts found that the stamps had bean eaten off by ants attracted by the guru, "Pencil Figures" Declared Not Truly Feminine The problem of "that fashionable pencil figure" and the anxiety it causes among young women of to -day was re- ferred to by Dr. Margaret Lowenfeld, speaking in London recently at 'the conference of the Alliance of Honour (Women's Section). "If you look at any large group of girls to -day," she said, "you will see that the girl who is most attractive to young men is the girl with a figure Iike a pencil. But she certainly is not the best constructed for the production of healthy children. This 'pencil' figure, which is so fashionable to -day, may be partly responsible for the high British maternal death rate. Ie. Sweden, where a much broader figure is considered attractive among women, the maternal death rate is con- siderably lower than it is in England. "Many girls suffer acute anxiety be- cause they have developed a full fig- ure, which is supposed to be unattarc- tive." r r , SAVE Plug Tobacco will last .you 3 longer. It burns %slower gives' you more smokes, more enjoyment for the same money. DIXIE ONLY 20c A BIG PLUG ...SMILES... "But why are you so angry with the doctor, Mrs. Blank?" "I told him I was tired, and he asked to see my tongue." "I don't believe in associating with my inferiors. Do you?" "That's all right, old mau—I don't mind making an exception in your case." Shoes Size Twenty-two Museum's Attraction Chief attractions of the state mus- eum In Missouri's state house in Jef- ferson City, Mo., are a pair of shoes, size 22, once worn by Miss Ella Ewing.. Miss Ewing, a native Missourian, who died several years ago, was 8 feet, 4 inches tall. She was supposed to be the "largest woman in the world" during her life. Bale of Hay Pays Alimony PANSIZONNeMaineiraMAASSUMWMA Bert Anderson of Los Angeles was threatened with contempt of court when be failed to Pay his wife $50 alimony. Bert had no money,, but plenty of hay, His wife got the hay—ten toils of it, The wife wrote from a fashionable hotel: "Dear John, I enclose the hotel bill." John replied: "Dear Mary, I enclose cheque to cover the bill, but please don't buy any more hotels at this figure; they are cheating you." Summer Shower It's hard for a woman approaching 40 to make up her mind to be her age. Making hotels homelike would be fine if they didn't make them like modern homes. They say a man whips his boys for the same kind of foolishness his dad couldn't whip out of him. A woman gets all run down, worrying about what her husband refuses to take seriously. Some minds are so open that they can't. hold anything. A jig -saw jigger called up the jig- saw depeartment of a store and asked if any new ones had come in from Jigsawville. Young Saleswoman—"Yes, we have a new one just in." Jig -Saw Jigger—"What's the name?" Young Saleswoman—"The Road to Denver." Jig -Saw Jigger—"All right. Send it out." But when the Jig -Saw Jigger re- ceived the new jig -saw puzzle the name on the box said: "The Rhododen- dron." Mrs. P.—"Your new neighbors are great borrowers, aren't they?" Ms. R.—Yes. If they keep up their present pace my next party will have to be given at their home!" The talking movies have a never- ending possibility, but we shudder to think of a slow motion picture of a man stuttering. Judy—"Does that story you are read- ing end in a modern way?" Grace ----"Yes, they are married aed live happily thereafter for a few months. The difference between meddling and investigating is that we investi- gate and the other fellow meddles. Hostess—"Mary, you must put an- other place at the table. An unex- pected guest has arrived." Maid"But, I can't, madam, there is no more china." • Hostess—"Oh, that's all right. They will be so close together they won't know one plate from another anyhow." Eager Youth—"One kiss from you and I could die happily!" Bored Miss — "Well, here's your kiss," Helen—"Ha] and I have parted for- ever." Bess—"Good gracious! What does that mean?" Helen—"A fivepound box of candy in about an hoer." Classified Advertising GOVERNMENT APPROVED CraCKB {.-t ALE OF GOVERNMENT APPROV. 0 ED Chicks. While they last: Leg horns 06e, Barred Rocks .06ac. On week old chicks one cent more. J. G Tweddle, Fergus, Ont. or his posterity won't have anything( to brag about. Mother—"Daughter, how many times do you imagine Henderson has kissed. you?"' Daughter—"So far mother dear, I haven't had to imagine at all." Parents who tell their children that spinach will give them strength should tell thein the rest of it—drat it will also give them grit. Permanent waves are things of beauty but the upkeep of the fragile things far exceeds the initial cost, Husband—"Mary, after I die I wish You would marry Bill Henry." Wife --"Why do you ask that?" Husband—"Well, he introduced us." Mistress: Bridget, It always, seems to me that the crankiest mistresses get the best cooks. Bridget: Ah, go on wicl yea blarney! King Gustav's Role In Romance Bared Stockholm.—How King Gustav of Sweden became involved in a sail- or's romance was recalled in the mass of anecdotes and biographical liters• ture which greeted the King's recent 75th birthday. "Darling," read a note His Majes ty found amid his mail one morning, "can you meet me at the usual plata tonight?" Investigation revealed the message, was intended for the Swedish war. ship "King Gustav V" and for a certain sailor in particular. King Gustav paused to chuckle and dictated a telegram to the captain of the warship suggesting the addres' see be given shore leave that even: ing, The fellow who has nothing to boast about but his ancestors better got busy Turkish Woman Made Judge Istanbul.—For the first time in Tur• key a woman has been appointed judge of a criminal court. She is Moizzez Hanim, formerly judge in the Istanbul Court of Correction. OFF COLOUR? HOW IS YOUR LIVER? Wake up your Liver Bile --Without Calomel Your liver's a very small organ, but it cep. tainly can put your digestive and eliminative organs out of kilter, by refusing to pour out its daily two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels You won't completely correct such a condition by taking salts, oil, mineral water, laxative candy or chewing gum, or roughage. when they've moved your bowels they're through—and you' need a aver stimulant. - Carter's Little Liver Pills will soon bring back the sunshine into your life, They're purely vege- table. Safe. Sure, Ask for them by name. Refuse aubstitutes, 250 at all druggists, 48 UP TO D STA LES TE —Old Reliable Minard's When horses come in to stable with wire - cuts or saddle boils, or cows have caked udder, the thing to do is get the Minard'd bottle at once, as Mr. Dowd of Glenboro, Manitoba, knows. He writes "I like your Minard's Liniment. Like to have it in the house. 1 have found your Minard's Liniment especially good for barbed wire cuts on horses." A. family doctor prepared Minard's Liniment over 50 years ago. Still invaluable in every stable and every house. 80 WEAK IND EN Take Lydia E. rinibann's Vegetable Compound Have you -ever felt :that 'you were too Weak to do anything that you did not have the strength to do your work? Women who are weak and run-down should take a tonic such as Lydia E. ?leekham's Vegetable Compound. Head- aches and backaches that aro the result of a tired, run -dosed condition often yield to this marvelous medicine. 98 out of every 100 women who report to us say that they are benefited by thio medicine. Buy a bottle front your drug- elet today ... and !watch the results. ' ISSUE No, 28--- 33