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The Weekly Intelligencer from Mexico, Missouri • 2

Location:
Mexico, Missouri
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

FACE TWO WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, 1941 THE WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER ANNOUNCE 13 MEN TO FILL AUDRAIN'S SERVICE QUOTA; 5 ACTUAL DRAFTEES INCLUDED The thirteen men and their alternates in the February selective service quota for Audrain county were released Wednesday afternoon by Guy Andrews, in charge of the local office. This is the third quota Audrain county is filling, but it will be the first time men will actually be drafted into the service. Eight of the men going will be volunteers, while the other five will be inductees. Also, eight of the men going this time will be from Mexico.

Andrew said that the men have been asked to meet at the local draft board office in the Pilcher building Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock for their final instructions. They will leave early the following morning for Jefferson Barracks. The 13 Audrain men include 8 volunteers: Archie H. Roberts, Mexico; George C. Hubert, ico; Edward E.

Shay, Mexico; Carl Burchfield, Mexico; Gerald L. Hunt, Mexico (not 21); John T. Carr, Martinsburg; James R. Plybon, Mexico; and Call Negroes JEFFERSON CITY, Feb. 12 (AP)-Missouri's First call for Negro selectees was included today in the state quota of 1,563 men to be inducted into army service in March.

Of the total, 569 men are to be Negroes. The men inducted will be sent either to Jefferson Barracks or to Fort Leavenworth. Raymond H. Wieberg, Laddonia. The first to be drafted into the service are Elmer E.

Holcomb, Mitchell C. Brinegar, Howard F. Wells, Martinsburg; Raymond G. Kauble, Vandalia; and Cecil M. Kirtlink, Mexico.

The following men have been placed on the replacement list: Edward H. Hopke, Middletown; Raymond L. Renner, Vandalia; John B. Brown, Mexico; Paul E. Lackland, Mexico; Orville A.

Dennison, Vandalia; Willie C. Beecher, Mexico; Samuel H. Edmonston, Mexico; Paul J. Fenneward, Martinsburg; George H. Stahl, Mexico; Ernest E.

Black, Mexico; Lewis G. Craighead, Mexico; Walter E. Briggs, Mexico; and Delbert O. Reel, Vandalia. Sullivan Infant Dies Wednesday Clarence Joseph Sullivan, in fant son of Mr.

and Mrs. Harry Sullivan, E. LaFayette died 3 o'clock Wednesday morning at the Audrain Hospital, following an illness from pneumonia Clarence Joseph was born, Nov. 8, 1939 here in Mexico, the son of Harry and Helena Finn Sullivan. The Rev Russell Thompson of the Church of God will conduct the funeral services.

Burial will be in Elmwood Cemetery. JAMES JESSE FUNERAL FRIDAY Funeral services for James R. Jesse, former prominent Mexicoan who died at his home in San Antonio, Monday, will be held Friday morning at the First Baptist Church. The services will be held at 11 o'clock Friday morning. The body will arrive in Mexico from San Antonio at 11 o'clock Thursday morning.

ROBERTS FUNERAL IS THURSDAY Funeral services for Miss Mariam Roberts, 88-year-old resident of the King's Daughter Home who died Tuesday morning, will be held at the Precht Funeral Home Thursday morning at 10 o'clock. The Rev. Lawrence Fitzgerald, pastor of the First Baptist Church, will be in charge. Burdal will be in Bowling Green. MARRIAGE PERMITS County Recorder Ross Ewing issued a marriage license Tuesday to D.

M. Shouse of Auxvasse and Helen Sampson of Millersburg. Monday a license was issued D. Cooper San Pedro, and Goldie Mae Stoneking, Macomb, Ill. The mechanical flame originated with the States army in 1918.

MEXICO SKETCHES By WILL DANCE Tim "Give me Dr. P. C. Lahs, the veterinarian, please. There's a little problem here that I want his advice on!" Hospital Earns $5,855 In Jan.

A total of $4382.46 was paid Audrain County treasurer the Audrain hospital the month of January the monthly report, released Tuesshowed. Of this $1,539.30 collections on the current month's earnings and the rest earnings prior to January. January earnings of the hospital $5,855.76, compared to the expenses of $5,157.77. Depreciaand charity deduction for month was $1,120.89. The January report is as follows: Number of patients in hospital number of patients admitted during month, 125; total numpatients, 160; total outpatients, 36; total hospital days the month 1291; dismisseo from hospital 113; died auring month, 11; remaining in hospital at end of month, 37; highest number patients in one day, 49; lowest number patients one day, 35; average patients day, 41.6; average stay per patient, 8 days.

Clasified as follows: Female male 76, maternity 19, newborn 20, surgical major 26, surgical minor 23, E. E. S. N. T.

4. medical 63, private rooms 305, ward beds 986. Revenue Private Rooms Ward Beds 2392.75 Op. room, surg. supplies.

550.50 Drugs 432.26 Spec. Nurse, other 65.50 Laboratory service 422.50 X-Ray Service 430.90 Miscellaneous 12.00 Col. thru legal proc. 280.35 Total Earnings $5855.76 Cash Received Credit Extended Expenses Food Supplies 606.90 Milk supplies 102.80 Household supplies 359.41 Fuel supplies 193.77 Ice suplies 31.65 Medical supplies 240.87 Surgical supplies 79.07 Laboratory supplies 53.83 X-Ray supplies 83.08 Stat. and Prtg.

supplies 30.00 Office supplies 336.96 Collection Fees 41.18 Laundry 421.15 Lights, etc. 89.17 Salaries and wages 2303.19 Op. R. supplies 93.68 Water 50.24 Insurance 16.82 General Repars 24.00 Total Expenses Profit before deduction for depreciation charity 697.99 Depreciation Collection on earnings prior to current Collections on current month's earnings Total collections paid county treasurer JEAN KRUSON ON STEPHENS TOUR COLUMBIA, Mo. Feb.

8 Heeding Horace Greely's historic advice, Miss Jean Kruson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Kruson, 1029 S.

Olive Mexico, will go west with 650 Stephens College students when they leave Columbia March 13 on the sixteenth annual education and recreational tour. The extensive trip will carry them through fourteen western states and up into British Columbia. Mrs. Kruson will accompany her daughter. THE PROFESSOR AGAIN HIGH POINT, N.

C. (AP) High Point police are looking for a man who parked his car at a service station two months ago while "I run up to vote" and hasn't been seen since. Harvard Historian Says Lincoln Descendant Of English Gentry BY ASSOCIATED PRESS Harvard's esteemed historian, Albert Bushnell Hart, declaring he had evidence that Abraham Lincoln was a descendant of "English gentry," took issue today with "writers who have tried to make Lincoln out to have been a 'poor white'." The 86-year-old white-bearded scholar said "the closest I've come to great humanity in all my life was when I looked upon the white, dead face of Lincoln when I was a boy." He added, in an interview on the eve of Lincoln's birthday: "His family, during his childhood, was as well off as most southern white people of that time. It's an immense mistake to think they did not come up to scratch. They lived as all their neighbors did.

"Recent researches that I have made show that Abraham Lincoln was a descendant of a Lincoln family which prospered for 100 years in a town in southwestern England. "I stood on the spot where the Lincoln house had been pulled down and there was evidence that it was the residence of England gentry, people of account, people to be reckoned Jay B. Morrow To Wed Miss Alma L. Shireman The approaching marriage of Jay B. Morrow, an alumnus of Westminster College in Fulton and one-time athletic director at the Mexico Missouri Military Academy, to Miss Alma LaVerne Shireman of Stover, has been announced by the prospective bridegroom's parents, Mr.

and Mrs. C. R. Morrow of Moberly. The couple will be married the afternoon of February 15 in the home of Dr.

James M. Wood, president of Stephens College at Columbia of which Miss Shireman is a 1940 graduate. She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adam Shireman of Stover.

The marriage service will be read by Dr. Paul Weaver, instructor at Stephens and teacher of the Burrall Bible Class at Columbia. After the wedding the couple will be at home at 928 West Reed Street in Moberly. Mr. Morrow is field service agent for the Missouri Conservation Commission.

Thorness-Coil Wed The marriage of Miss Betty Thorsness of Huron, S. and Marvin Coil of this city, took place Friday afternoon in Mexico at the home of the officiating minister, the Reverend Lawrence Fitzgerald, pastor of the First Baptist Church. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Harlow were their only attendants.

The couple will reside in Mexico on Pearson Street. The Daily News and Intelligencer extends very best wishes. BAPTISTS BEGIN STUDY COURSE Four Courses To Be Taught During Six Wednesday Evening Sessions A study course on teaching in the church school will be conducted by the First Baptist Church for the next six Wednesday evenings beginning tonight at 7:30 o'clock. There will be four courses taught: 1. "Understanding Children," a recent book by Lewis Joseph Sherrill taught by Mrs.

Ben Elliott and helpers. 2. "Guiding Junior Boys and Girls in ne Sunday School," by Myrtle wins looney taught by Mrs. L. E.

Worner. 3. "The Art of Teaching Intermediates," by Ina S. Lambdin taught by Rev. Lawrence Fitzgerald.

4. "Studies in Ephesians," by E. Y. Mullins taught by Reverend Roscoe Munday assisted by Hugh Stanberry. The course will begin at 7:30 p.

m. each evening with a brief devotional. All interested persons are invited. PARENTS OF SON Mr. and Mrs.

M. R. Dunlap of Ladonia are the parents of a son born at the Audrain Hospital Wednesday morning. Births of Negro babies have increased from 240,683 in 1928 to 270,060 in 1939, according to the Census. During the same eleven years, births of white babies increased only from 982,246 to 1, 982,671.

Married Saturday Miss Quisenberry: Is Bride Of Robert Runyan Radio's Voice Of Experience Is In Own Trouble M. Sayle Taylor, radio's voice of experience and a brother of Mrs. Asa Burns, former Mexicoan, is having his own marital troubles aired. And his marital troubles, he says, run him about $1,000 a month more than he makes. His second wife, Mrs.

Jessie W. Taylor, has sued for a divorce in a Hollywood court and asked that a receiver be appointed to take charge of his assets, pending trial of the suit. He made bad investments, he said, both in Hollywood and New York, adding that he was paying $200 a month on two homes he leased in Hollywood and wasn't able to use. "Besides that I have the $135 a month rent I pay for the apartment my present wife and I are living in," he said, "Add that to the $250 a month I've been paying my second wife and the great expense I have gone to for an invalid sister who has had 60 operations and you can see why I'm dipping into capital at the rate of $1,000 a month." The second Mrs. Taylor charged that he persauded her to divorce him with a story that his first wife was going to sue him, which would ruin his radio career.

He promised to remarry her, she said, but instead he married Wife No. 3, Mrs. Mildred Taylor. Dist. Livestock Ass'n Meets Here February 26 According to word received at the County Extension Office from T.

A. Ewing and E. A. Trowbridge of the Animal Husbandry Department, University of Missouri, a district meeting of the Missouri Livestock Association will 1 be held in Mexico on Wednesday, February 26th, Glen E. Mutti, County Agent, said Wednesday.

Farmers from Callaway, Montgomery, Warren, Ralls, Pike, Monroe Randolph and Audrain Counties are expected to attend. Audrain County stockmen are particulraly invited to take part in the meeting which will be held in the Circuit Court room. The program for the meeting is as follows: 9:00 a. m. The Missouri Association and the Industry by Howard M.

Shirkey, President, Missouri Livestock Association. 9:15 a. m. Taking Advantage of Beef and Pork Production Contests by T. A.

Ewing. 9:45 a. m. Publicity for Meats and Meat Products by John H. Moninger, American Meat nIstitute.

1:15 p. m. Marketing our Pork and Lard by L. A. Weaver.

2:00 p. m. Food for Health and National Defense (Demonstration) by Miss Letha Knight. 2:45 p. m.

Farm Power and Agricultural Adjustment Administration by E. A. Trowbridge. TWO STORES CHANGE LOCATION THIS WEEK Two of Mexico's stores will be changing their location this week, it was learned Saturday. The Marshall Auto Supply Store is moving from 103 West Monroe to the place on the north side of the Square where the Western Auto Associate Store used to be, next to Moore's Grocery Store.

Pete Erdel's hardware store will move to the place vacated by the Marshall store. The changing will be done the latter part of the week. RETURNS FROM LIGHTING CLINIC S. D. Turner, commercial manager of the Mexico district of the Missouri Power and Light Company, returned Thursday from Cleveland, 0., where he attended a home light conditioning and merchandising Clinic held at the General Electric Institute in Nela Park.

Growth of human beings does not stop around 21 as popularly supposed. It is not unusual to add an inch after maturity. with. Perhaps the time that Lincoln's father came to America, but the point is he came from gentle stock." The aging historian also said he had a minor bone to pick with "writers who have placed the accent on Lincoln's 'poverty'." "Certainly he split rails," snapped Hart, whom generations of Harvard men know as so did all his neighbors!" To "Bushy" Lincoln was "the greatest soul among the presidents of the republic." Recalling the scene when he looked at the dead President when his coffin was opened at Cleveland on the way to the the burial in Illinois, Hart said: "The city had erected a little building in the park, and we filed past soldier guards and walked up a set of steps to where the body rested. "There were no flowers, no lighted candles or anything like that, as I recall.

Only the sound of shuffling feet as the people walked up to the coffin, glanced at the sunken face and then passed on. "You looked at the face and you never forgot it." SECOND PERSON DIES FOLLOWING FRIDAY CRASH Mrs. F. W. Meriwether of Eolia Died Saturday Shelbina Negro Pastor Died Earlier Injuries proved fatal to a second person Saturday as the result of a headon collision 8 miles south of Mexico Friday.

Mrs. F. W. Meriwether of Eolia, who was in the Audrain hospital suffering from a broken right arm, a severe cut on the forehead, lacerations of the body and internal injuries, died at 12:20 Saturday noon. The Rev.

I. L. Halley, Negro, of Shelbina died Friday night at the hospital having been severely cut on the face. The fatal accident occurred on Highway 54 at 4 o'clock Friday afternoon, when, according to statements of those in the crash, the car driven by Mrs. Heath Meriwether of Columbia traveling south skidded on the slick pavement into the northbound lane and struck the car driven north by Capel Walker of Shelbina.

Mrs. Meriwether was returning to Columbia after a trip to Eolia to get her parents-in-law. Walker was going back to Shelbina after a trip to Fulton. With Mr. Walker was the Rev.

Halley. F. W. Meriwether, the third person in the other car, is in the Audrain hospital suffering from shock, a gash under his chin and slight lacerations on the face. Walker and Mrs, Heath Meriwether were treated for slight injuries and released.

A CCC ambulance from the Mexico camp happened along on its way to Columbia and with the McPheeters Brothers Ambulance brought the injured to the hospital. At Coroner E. Y. Burton's inquest Saturday morning it was judged that Halley came to his death from shock and hemorrhage as a result of a collision between cars driven by Agnes Meriwether and Capel Walker, with the accident declared unavoidable. No inquest was held for Mrs.

Meriwether's death, Col. Burton said, as the death came from the same causes. The jury at the inquest was made up of T. D. Wooten, F.

Edwin Pollard, H. E. Lackland, H. E. Van Ness, Russell Stephens and J.

B. Weber. The bodies of both dead persons have been removed to their respective homes for funeral arrangements. Martinsburg Couple To Be Married Soon Announcement was made last Sunday of the approaching marriage of Miss Beatrice Winkelman and Mr. Frank Borgmeyer of Martinsburg.

The wedding will take place in Martinsburg February 17 at the St. Joseph's Church. Miss Winkelmann is the daughter of Mrs. Anna Winkelmann and the late Stephen Winkelmann and Mr. Borgmeyer is a son of Mrs.

Teresa and the late Henry Borgmeyer of Martinsburg. FIRE CALL The Fire Department was called to the Foster apartment of the J. L. Coil Apartments, 1121 North Jefferson Street Wednesday morning. A gas stove fire there caused slight damage before the fire was extinguished.

A school at St. Petersburg, holds its classes on the beach with pupils and teachers wearing bathing suits. 9 Miss Geraldine Quisenberry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G.

B. Quisenberry of this city was married to Robert Runyan of Highland Park, N. Saturday, February 8th. er, Jan. 30 to Mr.

and Mrs. William Lierheimer. Richard Gray Rivers, Jan. 31 to Mr. and Mrs.

Gerald Rivers. Deaths John Frederick Oliver, 36 years old, died Jan. Benjamin Wilkerson Robinson, 65, Jan. Sarah Elizabeth Crum, 80, Jan. 10; Martha Ann Toalson, 3 days, Jan.

11; John Thomas Byars, 67, Jan. 12; Emmett McDonald Bridgford, 75, Jan. 19; Ogden Dayton Shepherd, 67, Jan. 18; Sallie J. Carter, 79, Warren A.

Leach, 69, Jan. 22; John Frances Baker, 89, Jan. 23; Ronald Dale Holtkamp. 9 months, Jan. 28; Mrs.

Charles Kunkle, 45, Jan. 27; Olivia Melvina Baker, 66, Jan. 27; Anna Buford Staples, 67, Jan. 27; Darlene Marie Smith, infant, Jan. 29; Martha Mahala Payne, 63, Jan.

29; Anna C. Guthrie, 74, Jan. 28; Alma May Wilmshorst, 48, Jan. 30; Mary Ellen Robinson, 80, Jan. 30; Cleo Gwin Mills, 9, Jan.

30; Mrs. Maggie Sexton, 82, Jan. 31; Albert Douglas (col.) 84, Jan. 31. 'Audrain Students Are Invited To Guidance Confab KIRKSVILLE, Feb.

12- The High School students of Audrain county will have opportunity to receive expert advice about entering some thirtynine vocations at a Guidance and Student Council Conference in Kirksville, March 21. All students, teachers, and administrators in the High Schools of Audrain county have been invited to attend the second of such annual conferences sponsored by the Division of Personnel Service of Northeast Missouri State Teachers College. Supplementing the vocational counseling will be lectures and discussions led. by Mr. Lloyd W.

Chambers, National Vocational Guidance Director for Kiwanis International, and a series of Vocational Sound Pictures featuring such things as Finding Your Life's Work, Radio and Television and The Machine Maker. A new departure in this annual gathering is a consideration of the problems of student government in the public schools. Outstanding leaders in this phase of education have been asked to join the students, teachers, and administrators in the discussion of the possibilitie and limitations of such activity. PRESBYTERIAN SS HAS QUARTERLY MEET The superintendents and teachers of the Presbyterian Sunday School will meet at the church tonight for the quarterly business meeting. The program will begin with a covered dish supper at 6:30 o'clock To get an ounce of smoke you would have to puff up 16 packages of cigarets.

The marriage of Miss Geraldine Quisenberry of Mexico. to Robert Runyan of Highland Park, New Jersey, formerly of this city, took place Saturday at 10 o'clock in Elkton, Maryland. Their attendants were Mrs. Charlotte Smith of Mexico and William A. Ford of Highland Park, N.

J. The bride was lovely in an olive green, crepe, street dress and wore matching accessories. She wore an off-of-the face brown velvet turban. Her flowers were a beautiful corsage of bronze orchids. Mrs.

Runyan, who is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Quisenberry of this city, graduated from the Mexico High School and later attended Washington University School of Arts in St.

Louis. Mr. Runyan, son of J. D. Runyan, formerly of Mexico, and who now lives in Indianapolis, also graduated from the Mexico High School and attended the Missouri School of Mines in Rolla where he was a member of the Alpha Chi Sigma, Phi Kappa Phi and Tau Beta Phi.

In 1939 he graduated from the Missouri School of Mines with the highest honors in Chemical Engineering. Since that time 1 he has been connected with the Hercules Powder Plant in New Jersey. The couple will reside at the Riverview Apartments in Highland Park for six months when Mr. Runyan will be transferred to Radford, where he will be assistant manager of the new Nitrate Cellulose Plant there. The Daily News and Inteli.

igencer extends very best wishes to this popular young couple. Immediately following the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Quisenberry entertained at breakfast at the hotel in Highland Park for the newly married couple. Deaths Almost Equal Births During January Deaths in Salt River Township during January almost equaled births, the monthly report of Miss Blanche Neely, recorder of vital statistics, showed Saturday.

The number of deaths in the township during the month was 22, while there were 30 births. During the opening month in 1941 of the 30 births, 27 were white and three were colored. Deaths numbered 21 white and one colored. Births Marvin Franklin Davis, born Jan. 1 to Mr.

and Mrs. Ottemer N. Davis. Karen Louise Elliott, Jan. 2, to Mr.

and Mrs. Abner Wm. Elliott. Richard Spencer Matthews, Jan. 4 to Mr.

and Mrs. Richard Matthews. Robert Ray Green, Jan. 4, to Mr. and Mrs.

Cecil Green. Linda Lee Shelton, Jan. 5, to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Wells Shelton.

Helen Elaine Kaykendall, Jan. 5 to Mr. and Mrs. M. B.

Kaykendall. Eddie Wayne Bartolacci, Jan. 6 to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Oscar Bartolacci.

Bobby Joe Steele, Jan. 6, to Mr. and Mrs. Oscar William Steele. Alice Ann Cole, Jan.

7 to Mr. and Mrs. Lewis David Cole. Walter William Thomas, Jan. 7, to Mr.

and Mrs. Cyrus W. Thomas. Martha Ann Toalson, Jan. 8 to Mr.

and Mrs. Ralph Toalson. Wanda Arlene Richardson, Jan. 19 to Mr. and Mrs.

Elton D. Richardson. Claudia Maxine Scott, Jan. 11 to Mr. and Mrs.

Claud A. Scott. Linda Lou Crump, Jan. 12 to Mr. and Mrs.

Leo Crump. Fay Yvonne Stewart, Jan 13 to Mr. and Mrs. Vernon F. Stewart.

Brenda Kay Dougherty, Jan. 15 to Dr. and Mrs. James R. Dougherty.

Donald Edward Sewell, Jan. 18 to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sewell. Carol Lucile Jackson, Jan.

19 to LeRoy and Mary Jackson (col.) Karen Sue Hankins, Jan. 19 to Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hankins. Charles William White, Jan.

20 to Mr. and Mrs. John w. White. Barbara Ann Freise, Jan.

21 to Mr. and Mrs. Theo. Freise. James Claud Bishop, Jan.

24 to Mr. and Mrs. Claud E. Bishop. Carol Fay Grant Jan.

24 to Raymond and Gladys Grant. Grace Carroll Holtcamp, Jan. 26, to Mr. 'and Mrs. Phillip J.

Holtcamp. Robert Lee Feyer, Jan. 27 to Mr. and Mrs. Robert H.

Feyer. Melvin Edward Keith, Jan. 28 to Mr. and Mrs. Charles H.

Keith. Elaine. Jackson (col.) Jan. 29 to Herbert and Beatrice son. Darlene Marie Smith, Jan.

29 to Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Smith.

Lawrence Andrew Lierhelm- HINTS FOR HOUSEWIVES A salad: Select a firm head of lettuce, remove the core, and wash the lettuce but do not unhead it. Stuff the center with cream cheese mixed into a thick hard-cooked egg salad. Wrap in waxed paper and chill. Using a sharp knife, cut the lettuce into crossway slices. Arrange on salad plates.

Top with salad dressing or mayonnaise. An herb tip: Mix 1-4 teaspoon sweet basil into 1-2 cup canned tomato paste, spread, over cheese sliced or spread on buttered toast. Heat until well browned and serve at once with a hot beverage. Basil also dresses up stewed or escalloped tomatoes. UNEASY STOMACH? You may have WORMS pests may be living inside you now! Play safe! Get Jayne's Vermifuge right away! Jayne's is America's leading proprie tary worm medicine.

Scientifically tested, Used by millions for over a century. I expels large worms, yet acts very gently. I no worms are there, it works merely as a mild laxative. Demand Jayne's Vermifuge, It's horrible, to think about, but you had better the facts. Anybody, anywhere, can have roundworms! If you have signi such as uneasy stomach, itching nose and seat, nervousness, finicky appetite, these Excess acids, poisons and wastes in your Kidneys Must Clean Out Acids blood are removed chiefly by your kidneys.

Getting up Nights, Burning Passages, Backache, Swollen Ankles, Nervousness. Rhettmatic Pains, Dizziness, Circles Under Eyes, and feeling worn out, often are caused by -organic and non-systemic Kidney and troubles. Usually in such cases, the very first dose of Cystex goes right to work helping the Kidneys flush out excess acids and wastes. And this cleansing, purifying Kidney action, in just a day or 80, may make you feel younger, stronger and better than in years. A printed guarantee wrapped around each package of Oyster insures an immediate refund of the full cost unless you are completely satisfied.

You have everything to gain and nothing to lose under this positive money back guarantee so get Cystex from your druggist today for only tic. MAD When a cough, due to a cold, drives you mad, Smich Brothers Cough Drops usually give soothing, pleasant relief. Black or Smith Bros. Cough Drops are the only drops containing VITAMIN A Vitamin A (Carotene) raises the resistance of mucous membranes of nose and throat to cold infections, when lack of resistance is due to Vitamin A deficiency. MARK.

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About The Weekly Intelligencer Archive

Pages Available:
17,139
Years Available:
1885-1942