The Electra Star (Electra, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 19, 1946 Page: 6 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Electra Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Electra Public Library.
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THE ELECTRA STAR
<■
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i-
finished dividing up the Balkans—
getting
NEWS REVIEW
Baukhage
NO ‘SWEET TOOTH’ YET
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show what they think of the American food just arrived at their
camp at Tervueren, near Brussels.
remarked
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ed and 287,100 completed.
AUTO OUTPUT:
Hits Lag
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only one of many, burned, and the
converts and their families in.the„
in 1940.
The present short domestic
ply situation reflects a drastic de-
crease in world production resulting
from the .war. World production this
year has been estimated at 27,200,-
000 tons, or 7,300,000 tons less than
ffie prewar average.
in 1940. The per capita supply this
year is officially estimated at 72.3
pounds compared with 108 pounds
Yugoslav coast to try to head off the
German army, Tito’s men disarmed
the British and sent them back to
Italy.
mademoiselle.' ”
Then finally this note on August
15, when the Chinese were closing
in on the improvised fortifica-
tions manned by lord and flunky,
soldier and civilian making their,
last stand ... “a veritable ring of
flame on all sides of the defenses.”
And then! — “Through that
racket that was around us all
night, we could faintly hear the
unmistakable sound of the for-
eign guns of our troops.”
“ That page of history, let us hope,
will not be repeated.
New York's newest fabulous
party thrower is Dick Cowell. I
don’t remember seeing his
name in print before. He has a
Park Ave. home that—well, he
entertains 390 guests at one
time. And that’s almost night-
ly. .. . He goes in for gold in a
big way — dishes, trappings,
even his personal toilet articles.
. . . One guest swiped his all-
gold nailfile recently. . . Please
return; no questions asked.
Sharpest declines in production
were in Europe, the Philippine Is-
lands and the Netherlands East In-
dies. In Europe, where normally
considerable beet sugar / is pro-
duced, shortages of fertilizers and
farm motive power, lack of coal for
operating sugar mills and disrupt-
ed transportation have interfered
with production.
The sugar industry in the Philip-
pines, important prewar source ol
supply for the United States, was
practically eliminated under Japa-
nese occupation. In prewar years,
the islands exported nearly 1,OOO.OOC
tons a year, nearly all to this coun
* try.
pg
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rfwgSR a? M
V&V ■ !
Means Devised To Halt
Further Lags in Housing
HOUSING:
Fear New Obstacle
Having trimmed commercial
construction and tightened alloca-
tion of materials to speed up the
veterans’ emergency housing pro-
gram, Housing Expediter Wilson W.
Wyatt feared a prospective labor
shortage as a new obstacle to the
rapid erection of’dwellings.
Revealing his apprehensions in
his August report on the vet hous-
ing situation, Wyatt indicated that
the government would .strive to
head off- the latest bogeyman with
an intensive recruiting and appren-
tice training program.
Despite a pickup in new building
in July, Wyatt disclosed in his re-
port, the emergency housing pro-
gram is lagging behind the an-
nounced goal'of 1,200,000 homes and
apartments for this year. During
the first seven months of 1946,
4307,100 new dwellings were start-
THIS IS THE HOUSE! ... Out
at Lemont, III., a house is rising
which is different than the bouse
that Jack built in the nursery
rhyme, because much of the work
is being done by a couple of Janes.
Mrs. Joseph Gurski, center, is
laying brick on the new family
home, assisted by willing friends.
|Hg
Editor’s Note: While Winchell
| Is on vacation, Jack Lait is act-
ing as guest columnist.
TITO SHOWS HIS TEETH
When Dictator Tito fired on, U. S.
airplanes recently it was not the
first time he had shown his teeth.
His first snarling display of force
came toward the end of the war as
relations between himself and the
British began to coot
One night Tito’s headquarters
were raided by < a. Nazi airborne
divisiori and he. barely escaped. It
so happened’-that on this particular
nighf, Randolph Churchill and .all
other ; Britishers left ^Tito’s 'head-
quarters for. the .first', time ^in z two
months.,
•; Tito was’beside himself with rage
’and suspicion, figured the British
were out to doublecross him, and
shortly thereafter flew to B'ari,
Italy, then headquarters for refugee
Yugoslavs.
As Tito’s plane landed, several
hundred Yugoslavs armed with tom-
mj guns surrounded it. No British
official was allowed anywhere near
their chief. Later Tito was invited
to dine with Gen. Sir Henry Mait-
land Wilson, British commander in
the Mediterranean, and arrived at
the dinner with two dozen husky
Yugoslav guards, who lined up
with tommy guns on both sides of
the dining room.
“I say, marshal,
General Wilson, “isn’t this
most unusual procedure?”
“This, general,” replied Tito,
“is a most unusual war.”
Next day he flew to Bucharest,
conferred with Russian officials,
then returned to Yugoslavia. His co-
operation with the British was ab-
solutely dead.* He was now openly
working for Russia. Meanwhile the
United States had poured millions
in lend-lease- material into Tito's
hands.
Shortly after that, when British
commandos landed at Split on the
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Jerome Wildberg, producer,
has never tasted liquor in his
life. He had to make a phone-
call and had nothing smaller,
than a $5 bill. He went into a
cheap groggery, ordered whisky
which he didn’t touch, banded
over the bill. As he waited
for the change, a lush put his
arm on his shoulder and
hoarsed: “You know, we’re a
couple o’ damned fools!” (And
with that he passed out.)
News Nuggets—
A former screen star, who made
a fortune, lists her youthful bus-
band, on her income tax question-
naire, as a dependent. .’. . The only
Rolls-Royce in Saratoga belongs to
Mrs. Leo Best, of our Hotel .Plaza.
. .a. My item, that the Warner-Joan
Crawford contract is unsigned, was
verified to me. The reason: Joan
demands a clause that her every
picture be released within six
months. "Humoresque” is being
held back because the studio wants
it in competition for next year’s Os-
car awards. . . Walter Florell, the
hat designer, won’t break through
his OPA ceiling—only $100. . . . The
Windsors check in at the Waldorf,
Oct. 1. . . . Jimmy Savo is seri-
ously ill in a Los Angeles hospital.
. . . The much-sought Nijinsky is
reported in Vienna. . \. Lew Ayres
will be best man for Jennifer Holt
and Bill Blackwell, Sept. 25.
____...______„ a press, conferences in
Detroit, Mich., C..E. Wilson; presi-
dent * of General Motors corpora-
tion, presented the'company’s case
against- both the government and
workers for the serious lag in auto
production. ‘
Pointing out that G.M. had turned
out only 400,000 cars and trucks in
the year following V-J Day instead
of the 1,400,000 scheduled, Wilson
charged the Truman administration
vicinity slaughtered.
“In some cases,” says the di-
ary, “the Christians thought it
better to be roasted in their ,
houses than try to escape.” (She
herself had decided that she
might as well be massacred in
her pink silk dressing gown with
a pink bow at her neck as in her
golf clothes.)
On the 19th of June, the Chinese
government offered to- give legation
members their passports and escort
them-and their families to the port.
There was a division of opinion as
to whether to trust the Chinese; In
the evening the German minister
started to confer a second time on
th’’ question when he was murderedw
in the streets.
The situation-grows worse.
Dead Piled
Around Ramparts
A bullet knocks off the headpiece
of a baby’s crib.
AU the women are sewing sand-
bags.
The Dutch and Austrian legations
burn.
On July 1: “There are so
many dead dogs, horses and
Chinese lying in heaps all
around the defended lines, but
too far for us to bury or burn
them.”
They used the dead horses closer
by, however: “The «- - mess has an
invariable menu. At breakfast, rice,
tea and jam; at tiffin, . rice and
horse; at dinner, rice, horse and
jam.”
With the privations and fear of
the Boxers grew the suspicion and
distrust of the members of the for-
eign missions of each other. Rus-
sians and English hated each other;
Americans were the buffers. Racial
ructions have no date lines. Mary
Hooker notes:
“The dislike of the Russians
for the British Is so cordial that
It is only equaled by the feeling
the British _ entertain toward
them. Qurvcompound joins the
Russians, itnd they, love us and
we.loye them in as .strong s
. fashion’ as they hate their Eng-
lish neighbors on their ..other .
side.” ,
And so pretty Mary Hooker wrote
history. . . .
But it was more than history. It
was drama. It was tragedy. Just
look over her shoulder once again:
“July 9 , . . day before yes-
terday, the Austrian Charge
d’Affaires was shot at the
French legation! ... At first we
kept a record of the dead or-
badly wounded . . . but now
they come in so often we cease
to note the exact number. . . .
“July 16 ... I was en route
to the hospital carrying a pot
of coffee to the doctors and
nurses when some soldiers
passed me, carrying a rough Jit-
ter, bearing Captain Strouts
(the British commanding offi-
cer) mortally wounded.”
Then July 16:
' “It is discussed quietly by
men that they will certainly kill
‘ their wives when that time
comes (to make a final stand).
God grant it never may! Apro-
pos of this, 1 have in my pock-
et a small pistol loaded with
several cartridges, to.use if the
worst happens. A Belgian sec-
retary stole it from the armoury
for me—‘in case you need it,
protest was raised against deliver-
ies of grain abroad at the expense
of U. S. brewers while beer was
being imported from England, Bel-
gium and Holland. &
Other resolutions called for the.
trial of Yugoslav airmen who shot
down American fliers; support of
the Anglo-American recommenda-
tions for admission of 100,000 Jews
to Palestine, and condemnation of
the practice of awarding actors
combat awards for troop entertain,
ment.
Sugar Shortage Remains Acute
WASHINGTON.—No general im-
provement in the sugar supply situ-
ation is possible until the 1947 Carib-
bean crops, particular^ the Cuban
and Puerto Rican output, begin to
move to market in large volume
about six months from now, the
agriculture department reports.
Chances that supplies will in-
crease sufficiently to permit aban-
donment of consumer rationing
next year appear “rather slim,
ficial.s declare.
The forecast was made In con-
nection .with announcement that
1,187.000 short tons of sugar will
be allocated for civilian distribution
in the October-December quarter.
The figure compares with an allot-
By BAUKHAGE
News Analyst and Commentator.
WNU Service, 1616 Eye Street, N.W.,
Washington, D.C.
WASHINGTON. — Mary Condit-
Smith, a young Washington society
girl, visiting dip-
lomatic friends in
China, and a ’lev-
en-year-old boy in
a little town on
the Erie Canal
both were keep-
ing diaries at the
turn of the cen-
tury. .
Mary, alone in
her room in the
American lega-
tion in Peking on
June 11, 1900,
slipped on her
pink silk dressing
gown, sat down
and wrote:
“The telegraph was broken last
night. We have no more communi-
cation with the outside world; our
world is this dangerous Peking.”
That same day, though it was
really the day before, according to
the strange tricks Old Sol plays
as he pushes the clock around while
he marches westward and paradox-
ically reaches the Far East—that
same day, Monday, June 11, a boy in
the fifth grade of the High street
school painfully inscribed this entry
in his book:
“It rained this A. M. Two more
weeks and we’ll be free from this
School of Misery.” (The next day
it is of record that he broke the
crank of his “wheel”—bicycle to
you.)
The boy’s name appears at the
head of this column and what he
wrote isn’t important, but just 46
years later he was to read Mary’s
diary; She had gone to her reward
long since but not until her diary
became a book and she had become
Mrs. Hooker, a colonel’s lady.
WTiite Man’s Prestige
Slipped to Low
As I read this fascinating story,
told in,simple, boarding-school Eng-
lish; those awful days when the for-
eign colony in Peking lived in the
'daily . horror / of - massacre - during
the. Boxer "rebellion,' became very
real. . - -
Today the fires of civil-jvar are
I spreading in China. Voices are be-
‘ ing raised, demanding that our ma-
rines be withdrawn. American,pres-
tige has fallen almost as low as. it
was when Mary Hooker in her diary
. told the dramatic story of the Boxer
Rebellion—that moment, in China’s
history when Americans, along with
all foreigners reached their nadir.
History repeats. —
The Empress Tzuhsi, a reaction-
ary, encouraged the activities of the
Boxers and other groups whose
chief purpose was to cleanse China
of the “foreign devils.” It is only
fair to say that China had passed
through a period during which the
occidental powers had exploited her
to the hilt.
Attacks on foreigners, especially
missionaries, began in 1899, but as
Mary Hooker records, “the diplo-
mats and people -in general put
these things down to the usual
spring riots which yearly seized
Peking.”
By June and July of 1900, however,
the foreigners found themselves be-
sieged in Peking. As late as, June
7 Mary’s diary reports:
“Mr. Pethick . . . forty years
a resident of China and an in-
timate friend of half ihe pollt-
* leal leaders, knowing their 1
weaknesses by heart, urges the
minister to state to Washington
the situation as it is, but all to no
avail.”
Three days later, as I mentioned,
the foreign colony “had no commu-
nication with the outside world.”
The next day's ■‘ntry states:
“Such intense excitement!
This afternoon the Japanese
Chancellor of the Legation went
down to the railway station in,
the official legation car to see if
there was any sign of troops.
Returning by the principal gate,
he was seized by the Imperial
(Chinese) troops, disemboweled
and cut to pieces.”
Eagerly Awaited
Arrival of Troops
From then on the entries become
even more exciting “. , . twenty of
our marines have been sent by an
officer to guard the big Methodist
Mission . . . the Russian secretary
. . . has figures at the ends of his
fingers about the number of troops
Rqssia can land in Tien-Tsin . . .
are they trying to prepare us for a
Russian coup d'etat? . . .
Each day the arrival of foreign
.troops was awaited. On June 17 the
entry reads:
“Just’ one week ago today we
got the telegram that the com-
bined forces of England, the
United States, France, Japan,
etc. . . . had left to go to the
relief of the legations In Peking -
. . . when the time comes that
the American and Russian lega- ,
tlons can no longer hold out,1 the
British legation will be the stage
for the terrible last act.”
The Roman Catholic church was
w
I EBB!
A J
Mlp
FACES MIRROR JOY • • - Happy faces of these Belgian children
NAVY:
To Provide Comforts
• One could almost have heard the
rattle down in Davey 'Jones’ locker
when the navy announced that it
was air-conditioning the new cruis-
ers, Salem and Newport News,, to
determine the best kind of equip-
ment for eventually cooling all of
its ships.
In announcing the navy’s plans
for providing additional comfort for
crews on the bounding main. Vice-
Adm. Edward L. Cochrane, chief of
the bureau of ships, emphasized
that air-conditioning had proved in-
valuable in boosting morale and
fighting efficiency in combat.
Various types of new air-condi-
tioning equipment will be used in the
tests in the new 17,000-ton cruisers,
with the cool air transmitted into all
living and working compartments
save machinery areas where the
heat is too intense. Simplified coils
will be shockproof and easily
cleaned, it was said.
with having attempted to appease
labor unions by taking the lid off
wages while at the -same time
stating that price increases were
unnecessary. As a result, manu-
facturers were “put in the nutcrack-
er,” he averred.
Although G.M. has 88,000 more
employees on its payroll than in
1941, production is about half, Wil-
son said. Tests on relative jobs
have shown that worker productiv-
ity is about 80 per cent of the pre-
war rate. Refusal of employees
to extend themselves, a high ab-
senteeism rate, inexperience and a
large turnover partly 'due to the
ease in collecting unemployment
compensation all have contributed
to the inefficiency, Wilson declared,
VFW:
Ask Vet Aid
Adoption of resolutions calling for
increased benefits to World War I
vets and satisfaction of domestic
needs first before providing for
those of other .nations highlighted-
the Veterans of Foreign Wars na-
tiprial encampment 1: Boston, f^assl
Congress 'was purged to authorize
pensions for World War I vets for
olds age and- ' disability, with' pay-?
ments made'for the latterZregardi
less of whether the disabilities re-
sulted from military duty. Such
payments are made to Spanish-
American war vets.
The government was asked to halt
shipments of food to former enemy
countries as' long as any American
was unable to'obtain sufficient food
stuffs to' maintain proper health. A
History and Strife Have No Datelines
' .si’, -
Diary of 46 Years Ago
Points Way for Present
\ ---------------------
TITO DEAL EXPOSED
WASHINGTON — When the full
details of the Teheran conference
l are told, they will show that after
| Josef Stalin and ‘Wington Churchill
I finished dividing up the Balkans—
} one of the worst things FDR let
i them do—Stalin then sold Churchill
on the trigger-happy little dictator
who recently caused such a crisis
between the United States and
Yugoslavia.
Marshal Stalin, at that stage of
the Teheran conference, was in
expansive mood: «He had beaten
down Churchill’s insistence that the
second front against Hitler be
staged through the Balkans and had
put across an agreement instead
that Russia take over Romania and
Bulgaria, with Britain
Greece and Yugoslavia.
So at this point, Stalin gave
his friend Churchill some ad-
vice. The Adriatic coast of
Yugoslavia and the areas in
which^Britain is especially in-
terested, he said, are Croatian,
not Serb. Therefore General
Mihailovitch, a Serb, was the
wrong man to run Yugoslavia.
Instead, Stalin offered Church-
ill his man Tito, a Croat.
Those are the inside facts on how
Churchill happened to take on Tito,
and how the United States immedi-
ately switched tons of valuable
lend-lease equipment to Stalin’s pup-
pet-in-disguise.
The finishing touches to this
tragic error were applied when
Churchill sent his bungling son,
Randolph, together with, equally
: bungling Brig. Fitzroy McLean, to
serve, as liaison > officers to Tito.
They, in turn, played right into the
i hands of Stalin’s shrewd plan to
. steal Yugoslavia right out from
under the British.
IHIr
sMKsl
IfcM
"ife
be out>on his ear. The Serbs, who
formerly ran the country, don’t like
him, because he is a Croat and they
have been put on the sidelines. The
Croat people don’t particularly like
him because they are strong Roman
Catholics and he is a- Communist,
Only people who really like Tito are
the Montenegrins, ^nd their, lead-
ers adore him—for a very special
reason.
The Montenegrins are the bom
fighters of Yugoslavia. Living in one
of the rockiest countries in the
world, they have nothing to do but
fight—or migrate to America, which
they did in large numbers before
the war. Almost every third Mon-
tenegrin you met in the old days
spoke a little broken English and
had worked for a time in the steel
mills of Pittsburgh or Youngstown.
BALKANIZING AMERICA
m*stery is unsolved
’ Jeru-
out of
to
BALKANS BREED CUTTHROATS
Today in Yugoslavia, Tito is any-
thing but popular and, if it wasn’t
for the support of Russia, he would
Although the mystery is u..,
as to how the grand mufti of
salem was permitted to slip
his comfortable villa in France
Egypt, some highly important addi-
tional information has now leaked,
out about his activities — as a result
of U. S. army cross-examination of,
Nazi prisoners. The cross-examina-
tion lays bare Hitler’s plot to Bal-
kanize the United States; also to
stir up terror against the Jews. For
Hitler the two projects invariably
went hand-in-hand.
IBM
John Boles, ex-screen* star, has
come back—as a floorshow singer.
His click at the Arrowhead Inn„
E? brought him a string of cabaret of-
lets. . . . Lew Lehr, the comical.
clown, bought the 68-acre Colonial
L mansion of the late Col. E. R. Brad-
in. ley at New Canaan, Conn. . . . June
Havoc is in again for a plastic—
L her third, or is it fourth? This one
I', is a dilly, I hear—to remove rings
K- from under her eyes! . . . Three
I' months ago, James Barry, bariton-
ing at the Havana-Madrid, ran an
elevator in the Paramount Bldg. . . .
I;. Bee Palmer, Al Siegel’s first wife
and first star, after ’a 20-year chill,
I; came to him to say she would stand
by him in any threatened litigation.
K . . . The Tommy Farrells (he’s
CJlenda’s actor son) have their final
decree,
!
Barbara Stanwyck and Bob Tay-
F’ lor have applied for passports, with
visas to Sweden. . . Anne Sothern’s
; sister. Bonnie Lake will lead a 10?
singer ensemble... . Good for David
Brooks! He discarded his micro-
phone at Cafe Society Uptown, and
. “Three
A Crisis Is Imminent in the domes-
tic affairs of the John Jacob Astors.
t’’ . . . Virgo, the model, calling it *all
y a mistake after one week of mar-
riage. . . . Midtown hotels are still
clearing out permanent guests;
p some refuse to rent rooms that
& can accommodate two as singles—
at less than the double rate. . . .
& Platinum, up from $60 to $90 an
ounce, will go to $120, jewelers an-
ticipate. . . . Swedish filmagnate
Gustav Walley is here to line up.
acting talent. . . . Faith Dorn, How-
ard Hughes’ movie protege, whose
pname he spent a fortune to-bally-
hoo, will be billed in Preston Stur-
ges’ “Vendetta” as Faith Domergue.
p; . . . Col. Charles Lindbergh is > oc-
I?* cupied. with a new scientific'experi-
I;' ment, nothing to do. with aviation..
Beatrice Kay stopS"me to dab
her eyes with a hankie and say,
“I’m mourning for a dear
friend, who just went to his eter-
nal rest—he got a political job
in Washington!”
Bl
Koi
ment of 1,147,000 tons for the corre-
sponding quarter last year.
Below Prewar Figure.
Total amount allotted civilians
for 1945 is 5,400,000 tons. This com-
pares with a prewar consumption
that reached a peak of 7,587.000 tons
In 1940. The per capita supply this
Sen. James Mead is in for a de-
B cisive trouncing by Gov. Tom Dewey
E; in his forthcoming race for gover-
k nor of New York. ... I raise my
I? former prediction of a 500,000 ma-
| . jority to 600,000. . . . Ex-Gov. Her-
B- bert Lehman, foremost contender
I for the Democratic nomination to
Mead’s senate scat, can scarcely
overcome such a sweep, although'
he is expected to run 200,000 to 250,-
f 000 ahead of Mead. . . . Gen.' Hugh
A. Drum, apparently Dewey’s
p choice, is an unknown in politics, a
r regular army man, commissioned
t by President McKinley \^hen his fa-
ther, a captain, was killed in the
Spanish-American war. ... As a
p. campaigner he has no record, ;and
t it is difficult to predict what sort
of individual showing he will make.
F,
is even more effective. . . .
Broadway Girls,” a smutty current
L contender, is Zoe Akins’ oldie, “The
Greeks Had a Word for It.” It was
£ a Goldwyn picture, with Ina Claire,
,»■’ Joan Biondell and Madge Evans in
4ear“ig roles.
I
Ml?
September 19, 1946
JUST'W
One or the Other
UI declare my wife is running me
crazy. If she’s not home mooning
around, she’s down town spending
money.”
“I see—either pensive or expen-
sive.”
—--- I
A Warning
Hi—I see your mule haf
branded on its hindquarters. Was it art
army mule?
Si—No. That stands for unsafe.
1
F PLEASES 1
t
Contains No Cream of Tartar
s>
th-' \
Queried for his opinion of a new
play, Monty WToolley growled, “For
the first time In my life I envied
my feet. They were asleep!”
Vef O’SuffiyM SOUS as well of
Heels next time yott have your
shoes repaired.
MORE MUEAOf
WITH GREATER
comfort:
.1
I
—CM*.
, Gm4 RtcMUtpiM <
1/ ■ ■ - •<?.«
b .<•?
•I
AMERICA’S, 7.
No.1 HEEL
• • v • a nvd’-s ol e '
There’s More Than Quantity
m & large jar of Moroline, petroleum, jelly.
There’s quality, too. Soothing dressing
for chapped skin, minor burna-scalds ana
bruise*, minor cute, chafe*. Get Moroline.
IS GETTING UP NIGHTS
GETTING YOU DOWN?
Thousands say famous doctor’s
discovery gives blessed relief from
irritation of the bladder caused by
. excess acidity in the urine
Why suffer needlessly from backaches,
run-d*wn feelin* from excess acidity fn
the urine? Just try DR. KILMER'S
SWAMP ROOT, the renowned herbal
medicine. SWAMP ROOT nets fast on tha
kidneys to promote the flow of urine and
relievo troublesome excess acidity. Origi-
nally created by a practising physician.
Dr. Kilmer’s is a carefully blended combi-
nation of 16 herbs, roots, vegetables, bal-
sams. Abtolutely nothing harsh or habit-
forming in this pure, scientific prepara-
tion. Just good ingredients that quickly
aef an the kidneys to increase the flow of
urine and ease discomforts of bladder hT*
tation. AU druggists sell Swamp Root.
4WAY5! «
L ✓ Low Cost!
r Z Doubt* Action!
k /No Bitter Taste!
b / Grand for All Baking!
v!
p'-
h
graihy. £
1¥y genAe Yodora—jed the wonderful |
difference! /th. a
p I
cm
'a 5 H
Silent Consent
He—May I kiss you? May I
please kiss you? Say, are you
deaf?
She—No, are you paralyzed?
| Yodora Cj
I checks
I perspiration 4
I odor
ITOE 5W7ff///6£Sr
| Made with a face cream base. Yodora
|.is actually soothing to normal skin*.
1 No harsh chemicals or irritating (1
| salt*. Won’t barm skin or clothing. »
I Stays soft and creamy, never gets U
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Stewart, W. C. The Electra Star (Electra, Tex.), Vol. 27, No. 16, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 19, 1946, newspaper, September 19, 1946; Electra, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1219880/m1/6/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Electra Public Library.