The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 190, Ed. 1 Monday, August 12, 1957 Page: 4 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
Extracted Text
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THE DAJCT NBWB-fKLBGKAM Monday, August 12, 1957.
CARNIVAL
By Dick Turner
■.T^J
VflRKET PLACE
Of VIUIONS
WANT AD S
RENTING* HIRING
BliilNG'SElLISC
7^" - - - ■ *.,4 ^ ^
'
L
'
I
1
Just Call
/
Miss Want Ad
TU5-3141
Salesman Wanted
NEWS-TELEGRAM
WANT AD RATES
Figure Your Own
Ad Co»t»—
No.
One
2-3
5-6
Words
Day
Days
Day*
15 or
less
.75
1.10
1.70
16 to
20
.75
1.60
2.25
21 to
25
.95
1.85
2.80
26 to
30
1.15
2.25
3.35
31 to
35
1.33
2.65
3.95
86 to
40
1.50
3.00
4.50
41 to
45
1.70
3.35
5.05
46 to
50
1.85
3?7S
5.65
CASH DISCOUNT
Take a 20 per cent discount
from these rates if cash accom-
panies order.-Three days allowed
for payment where ad is received
over telephone without loss of
discount. Do not pay carrier boys
for classified ads.
Minimum c h a r g e (including
cash discount) 60 cents, without
nts.
discount 75 cent
Women’* Apparel_4
SHADES OF THE ’20’S! IT
SEEMS THE NEWEST FASH-
IONS WERE ALL INSPIRED BY
WHAT MAMA WORE WHEN
SHE WAS A GAY FLAPPER
DOING THE CHARLE STON,
AND WHAT PAPA WORE
WHEN HE DROVE A STUTZ
beaRUat.
WE WILL THEREFORE GIVE
$25.00 FOR AN OLD RACCOON
COAT IN ANY STATE OF DIS-
REPAIR WAHSOEVER. WE
WANT TO SHOW THE PRES-
ENT Y 0 U N G GENERATION
THE MAIN PIECE D’RESIST-
ANCE OF THE 1920’S.
AS FOR THE LATEST 1957
FALL FASHIONS, WE HAVE A
WHOLE STORE FULL. YOUR
ONLY TROUBLE WILL BE DE-
CIDING BETWEEN SO MANY
DELIGHTFUL S E L E C TIONS.
COME BY AND BROWZE. WE
LOVE TO SHOW OUR LOVELY
THINGS.
WOOD'S SHOP
210 Church Street
SALESMEN
WANTED
Apartments for Rent 30
FOR RENT — Three-room fur-
nished apartment Apply 614
South Davig Street
FO R RENT—Furnished apart-
; ment, also unfurnished apart-
ment. Dial 5-2763 or Apply 418
j Oak Ave. Roger (Jambron.
Route salesmen or side
line men. Can you book
fireworks on a guaran-
teed plan? Deposits or
payments are not requir-
ed. Your prospects are
Grocery, Drug, Variety
stores and service sta-
tions. Open territory of
50 mile radius of your
home. Advance on orders
paid weekly. If interested
write Box A-756, Sulphur
Springs News - Telegram
and tell me about your-
self.
IFOR RENT — Furnished apart-
ment, four rooms, private bath,
garage. Bills paid. Geo. C. Ste-
phens. Phone 5-3855.
FOR RENT—Nice upstairs apart-
ment. Private entrance and ga-
rage. 306 College. Dial 5-2984.
Mrs. F. L. Wilgon.
Sleeping Rooms
FOR RENT — Nicely furnished
south bedroom private entrance.
Garage for car. Phone 5-3039,
1004 North Davis Street
Shoe Rebuilding
FOR that always “NEW LOOK’
let us keep your shoes repaired,
redyed or restyled. Complete
line of leather goods.
FREE SCOTTIE STAMPS.
HANS ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
Connally St. Phone 5-2927
Houses for Rent
Men or Women Wanted 19
MAKE $20 daily. Luminous
Nameplates. Free samples. Reev-
es Co. Attleboro, Muss.
FOR RENT Three room and
bath house. Close to town. J.
Harlan West. Phone TU5-2209 or
5-4542.
Good Things to Eat _21
DELICIOUS PLATE LUNCHES
FOR RENT: Three room house,
located on Tate Street. Newly re-
decorated. Contact Windcll Sa-
paugh, Phone 5-3629.
—From 65c up.
The best steaks in “these here
parts.” Charcoal broiled before
your eyes, served with baked po-
tatoes and salad. Try them Today!
CHUCK WAGON CAFE
Miscellaneous for Rent 35
FOR RENT: Local RentalTrail-
Household Goods
ers—Refrigerator^ Dollie—Blank-
et cargo insurance NOW on Na-
tionwide trailers. DENNY’S Phil-
lips “66” Service Station, 1003
Main Street, phone 5-4848.
fashion Notts
Answer to Previous Pirtxls
ACROSS
“It has been a dismal failure in solving some problems
-—breaking up that gang around the water cooler,
for instance!
Letters From
Readers
("Letteri Tram Kasdan" an publish'd
at Intarvala from readers sf thU paper,
•rhan not oear 2W words. if the author's
name la aignad to tha letter aad me Jis
•object to rerUioa bp the editor. The
author’! name trill be omitted If requmtad.
Tha opinion! mprttsod are thoaa af th*
author and nn printad for thrlr worth,
and an not ondonod nor svpossd bp Ub
RAILROAD SALVAGE OUTLET
Save 40 per cent to 60 per cent
on kitchen cabinets, wall cabinets,
double and single beds. Studio
couch—$65.00. NEW SHIPMENT
of utility tables, coffee tables,
step tables, 5 piece bleached ma-
hogany bedroom suits. Numerous
other household items.
Wanted to Rent
WANT TO RENT—Nice unfur-
nished two bedroom house. Con-
tact Doris Lynn at Lucille Beau-
ty Shop. Phone 5-4712.
Business Opportunities 37
CALL TU5-3141 and a com-
petent ad-taker will gladly assist
in writing your Want Ads.
Blind Ads — We are not al-
ia, lowed to give out information
* concerning ads signed by box
numbers. Please do not ask.
Personals_ 7
WEDDING Memories are beauti-
fully retained with WRIGHT
STUDIO story-t c 11 i n g photo-
graphs.
GOOD VALUES in FURNI-
TURE. Terms. Used furniture
bought and sold. NEWELL CAM-
HRON, 225 Gilmer Street.
CARDS OF THANKS—One of
; the nicest ways to tell your
friends "thank you.” Published
*« only as paid material at regular
classified rates.
Business Service
IN MEMORIUM — Memorial
eulogies, whether in prose or
poetry, are accepted only as paid
material at regular classified
rates.
CANCELLATIONS —If an ad
is cancelled, you pay for the ac-
tual number of days your ad
runs.
MEW FHA REPAIR Loans. Six-
ty months to pay. No down pay-
ments. Build anything, repair,
re-paint, add a room. Build a
Grade A bam, garage. Loans up
to $3,500.00. FOXWORTH-GAL-
BRAITH Lumber CO., 143 Col-
'ege Street
LAWN MOW Eft sharpening, bi-
cycles, tricycles repaired, electric
welding. Same location 33 years.
ASA HOOTEN, Hunter Street.
FOR SALE CHEAP! Complete
Youngstown Display cabinet sink.
Formica - top."" Wall cabinet and
base cabinets, 9 YUtA'chm*;,.
blue and yellow.
BARTON’S PAINT AND
PAPER STORE
Main Street
Miscellaneous for Sale
"FOR SALE
Good attic fan.
Roll-a-way bed.
Two typewriter desks.
50-Bumper jacks.
DEADLINES—All ads must be
in by 11 a. m. of the day of publi-
cation.
ERRORS—Advertisers are re-
quested to notify us immediately
of any error in their ad. We are
responsible for only one incor-
rect insertion. T
FOR new roofing, aabastoa aiding
• new garage, Grade A dairy
ism, hay hum, painting and pa-
•ring. Thirty-eix months to pay,
no down payment. We have tbs
ieat deal for yoa. Jack W. Byrd
Lumber Company.
I
u . /u < a
1— Cards of Thanks
2— Florists and Nurseries
3— New Cars for Sale
4:—Women’* Apparel
6—Ambulance Service
6— Lost, Found Strayed
7— Personals
8— Business Service
9— Beauty Aids
10— Wanted to Buy
11— Let’s Trade
12— Used Cars for Sale
13— Auto Service
14— Tires, Parts, Supplies
15— Male Help Wanted
16— Female Help Wanted
17— Salesman Wanted
18— Jobs Wanted
19— Men or Women Wanted
20— Help Wanted _________________________1_________________
21— Good Things to Eat
22— Household Goods
23— Musical Instruments
24— Miscellaneous for Sale
25— Pets and Livestock
26— Poultry, Feed Suppliea
27^—Gifts j.
28— Hay and Grain - *
29— Farm Implements
80—Apartments for Rent
31—Room aad Board
82—Sleeping Rooms
38—Shoe Rebuilding
84— Houses for Rent
85— Miscellaneous for Rent
86— Wanted to Rent
37—Business Opportunities
88—Business Property
80—Farms and Lands
40— Houses for Sale
41— Lots for Sale
42— Real Estate Wanted
48—Legals
44—Notice
46—Education
46— Announcements
47— Instructions
48—Household Appliance*
OPEN 24 HOURS
DAILY—7 DAYS A
WEEK
Automatic Washers
ami Dryers—No
Attendents! Wash
U lbs. for Just 20c
2 DIME
Laundromat
307 Fo. Locust Street
Portable Barbecue pit.
DERMONT MORGAN
___ 327 Main 8t.
JUST RECEIVED —Lovely cos-
tume jewelry in all the new Fall
shades—So nice to Pep up your
late summer wardrobe. Come in
and scleet yours today.
TUCK JEWELRY
“In Stirling Drug"
SELLING OUT — Stock’of Paint
—$2.99 gal., while it lasts. MOR-
RIS & SON FEED STORK.
NEED some relaxation? Gather
"up the wife, khfs, fish-hook* *
Come down and select bait,
tackle, life preservers and HEAD
FOR THE CREEK!
PATTON’S BAIT AND
iendty service,
TACKLE SHOP
Jefferson St
FOR QUICK and friend
Where you always get the best—
SKKLI.Y GAS—NEW and Used
Tires—
MAJOR OILS—that stand the
test.
Drive Out to
JOHNNY DAVIS*
Church Street
BENDIX WASHERS
Authorized Sales and Service
JOHN M. SHEFFIELD
Phone TU5-2722
Wanted to Buy
JUST RECEIVED
Another Factory
Shipment of Those
Famous
21 Inch
4 Cycle
“Atlas Aire”
Power Mowers
With
Lawson and.
Biitftfs-Strattoft,
Motors
See These Today!
Liberal Trade-In
Allowance For
Your Old Mower
L. B.
WESTER
FURNITURE
WANTED — Clean cotton
Mw Affl»
K'
H
SPOT CASH
Paid for used furniture and any
other miscellaneous items. DER-
MONT MORGAN. 827 Main St,.,
• '.........
thousand bales of
hay, second cutting Johnson
grass. J. M. Raiden, Night phone
Frontier 8-2491, Honey Grove,
**»*5.yT <30
Man nr Woman
OWN YOI R OWN BCHINK8S
A new item. First time offered. Start
in apart? time, if natiafied.
th**n work full time.
Refilling and collecting money from
bulk machines in thia area To qualify
you must have a car. reference, $720
cash to secure territory and inventory
l Deposit well rod by written contract.
Devoting 4 hours a week to husineas
your end on percentages of collections
should net approximately $350 month-
ly with very good possibility of taking
for expansion to full time position
with above average income. Include
phono in application.
Daily News-Telegram Box 735
Does $300 to $600
Per Month
Appeal to You.
Reliable men or women for this area to
handle nationally known products
purchased daily by the public for the
first time at a bargain through new
beautiful merchandising dispensers.
Will not interfere with your
present employment.
To qualify you must have $1192.50
i#v ttAMA on . ash available and car;
to $31*5."0
should net up to $300.00 to. $aOO.O0
a month working K apgre hours weekly,
and must be able to start at. once.
This Company will extend financial
assistance to full time if dfaired.
Do not answer unless fully qualified
for the necessary time and investment.
# Business Is Set UP For You
# No . Selling or Soliciting
For Personal Interview in Your
City, Write:
Paramount Meichaiulising
Company
8000 Bonnhommc Ave.,
Clayton 5, Mo.
Houses for Sale 40
FOR SALE
We have a very nice thred-
bedroom brick veneer home on a
corner lot at 911 Ardix Street
Contact us now.
A very good three bedroom,
two baths, at 902 Gilmer Street.
A Bargain. ---------------------—-——-
Very nice home, just rework-
ed inside and outside, at 917
Main St., on big lot
We have 870 acre farm for
Sale, also a 407 acre Farm for
Sale.
A GI equity at 1015 Mulberry
St. Very low down payment
BAILEY REALTY AND
ABSTRACT COMPANY
FOR SALE OR RENT — My
home, 825 North D4vis, across
from school. Brick, four large
bedrooms, three ear garage.
Writ* Harry Meyer, 4926 Weno-
nah, Dallas, or call TU5-2976.
FOR SALE: Five room house with
screened-in back porch, lot 85 x
200 ft Nice chicken house. Newly
painted. Phone Dick Harmon,
Phone 5-2621.
FOR SALE—Sacrifice three-
bedroont i frame house. Large lot,
t afreet CC
quiet
609 Beckwortb St
DIES EXPLAINS VIEWS
Those of us who voted for less
postal salary increase than the
$646 per employe, which the
House passed, have been depict-
ed by some as unfriendly to post-
al employes. The public, which
must pay the bill through increas-
ed taxes and inflation, is entitled
to know the facta.
The 12 1/2% increase which
the House passed, when extended
(as it must be) to all the 4,600,-
000 civil and military employes
of the government, would eventu-
ally involve Federal expenditures
of about 3 billions of dollars an-
nually. This money would have to
come from borrowing since the
people are now taxed to the limit.
We already owe more money than
all the rest of the world put to-
gether, and the interest charge on
this Crushing debt is 7 1/2 billion
dollars and is predicted to rise to
11 billion dollars. Since we are
ilufcVW'g great trouble refinancing
the present debt, liow can we bor-
row more money?
Sinjce 1945 the employes in the
postal field service have received
six salary increases, as follows:
July 1, 1945, $400; January 1,
1946, $400; June 30, ,1948, $450;
her 3, 1955, 8.1% (average)
$360. An average postal worker
who entered the postal service at
25 years of age and works until
he is 65 years of age receives a
base salary of $4,710 a year to-
day. His net take home pay is
$3,591 a year. When he retires at
65 years of age, he will receive
$3,591. In addition, he will re-
ceive a paid up life insurance
policy, and his widow, should she
live longer than he, will receive
a guarantee of practically $1800
a year for as long as she lives.
The employes have various fringe
benefits such as annual and sick
leave, night work differential,
uniform allowance, group life in-
surance, liberal retirement sys-
tem, military leave and longevity
pay, which costs an additional
29 1/2% of the amount of the
total payroll of all employes.
While all of us want to see our
Government set an example of
fair treatment to its employes, in
view of the present grave finan-
cial condition of our Government,
it seems to me that our Federal
employes should be satisfied at
this time with a salary increase
which would approximate the rise
in the cost of living, with provi-
sion to allow the Postmaster Gen-
eral to establish a higher rate of
pay for many postal employes,
clerks, and carriers, fn order to
recruit and retain qualified post-
al' employes. An honest Congress-
man must also think of the tax-
payers, the solvency of the Gov-
ernment and the welfare of our
children who must shoulder the
public debt. — Sincerely yours,
Martin Dies.
1 Easter bonnet
4 Exclamations
SFabrte
12 Age
13 Encourage
14 Toward tha
sheltered side
13 Insect
15 Detonations
it Sillier (slang)
20 Collect
21 Cereal
22 Popular shoe
shades
24 Modern
designer,
Christian-
26 At thht time
27 Unit of wire
measurement
30-
honorable
32 Fissured
34 Frontiersman,
Kit-
35 Frozen
pendent
36 Measures
of type
37 Not one
39 High cards
40 Skirt part
41 Eucharistic
wine cup
42 Dim
45 Revolts
49 Called again
51 She's “sweet
as apple cider”
52 Entrance to
a mine
53 Withered
54 Nothing
55 Pitcher Magtie
and “My Gal”"
66 Ireland
57 Female saint
tab.)
DOWN
1 Fashion .
expert, Edith
I Italian river
3 Skin
ornamenters
4 Horsewoman's
attire
5 Competent
6 Fireplace
UHHU
Hl-JHU
l IIIUU
■ iSLII I
l*HJi IMS
mizi tan
till l LJ
fjlke al i
Util i 1MU
— till II I"
LIUIUJ
KJadOl
lUUid
IP4HI
34 Fish
7 Thoroughfares 25 Moslem leader
<*b.)
8 Injures
• Arm bon#
10 Where nylons
are worn
11 Inferior
26 Singing voice
27 Soft shoes
29 Man or Wight.
for instance
29 Dregs
31 Givers
17 Kind of acid 33 Fashionable
19 Mountain
lakes
23 Eagle’s nest
Florida resort
38 Sexless
40 Paces
41 “As You Like
It" forest
42 Under-
garments
43 Wife of
Tyndareus
44 Wicked
46 Persian elf
47 Redact
48 Shoppers’
-* delight
50 Verbal suffix
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57
It
November 1, 1949, $120; July 1,
1951, $400; March 1 and Decem-
FOR SALE
Eight room duplex, excellent
condition and location. Extra
bargain.
Big Airliner
Crash Probed
Six room frame, two bedrooms
and den. Extra large lot with oak
trees. Texas Street,
Five room frame, two bed-
rooms, Bark Circle Drive.
Two bedroom and den, frame.
Russell Drive. Low equity.
Two bedrooms and den, brick
veneer. Drexel Drive.
BURT C. WAITS
.insurance and Real Estate
Phone 6-2623
FOR SALE ,
Three/ - bedroom brick, near
Freeway. Very reasonable.
Four rooms and bath on Green-
ville Highway. On one acre lot-
14, 500.00.
Modern eight room house with
two hatha. Well located, only
$5,500.00. Financed. Payments
$47.00.
Three bedroom dwelling on 1
acre lot. Church Street. Priced
to sell.
Quebec, Aug. 12 i/P—Authori-
ties arc trying to piece together
wreckage of a chartered airliner
in a swampy Quebec rural area to
determine what caused Canada's
w'orst air disaster in history.
The four-engine DC-4 airliner
went down in a thunderstorm yes-
terday near Issoudun, Quebec,
killing all 79 persons aboard. At
last word only one body—that of
an infant—^-had been recovered.
The plane was carrying veter-
ans and their families home from
a vacation in Britain when it fell
about 15 miles southwest of Que-
bec City. Six of the dead were
crew members of the plane.
The victims reportedly includ-
ed 33 men, 41 women and 5 chil-
dren. The chartered Maritime
Central Airways plane left Lon-
don for Toronto on a flight chart-
ered by a veterans group. The
pilot, 37-year-old Norman Ram-
say of Montreal, stopped off in
Iceland and then brought the
plane up the St. Lawrence river
valley in sunny weather..He made
the prescribed -radio chocks «*n-
route, including one passing over
Quebec City. Moments later the
plane ran into a thunderstorm and
crashed.-----------------------—
Sophia Warms
Up for Dollar
Tossing Stunt
Italian Actress Sophia Loren
Italian Actress Sophia Lorean
says the is going to try George
Washington’s feat of throwing
a silver dollar across the Po-
tomac.
For the benefit of photog-
raphers, she even practiced
throwing a few dollars in
Washington.
But a newsman in Freder-
icksburg, Vs., pointed out that
Washington’s dollar throwing
was done at Fredericksburg and
the river was the Rappahan-
nock, not the Potomac. Miss
Loren was invited to try the
Rappahannock with some more
silver dollars.
Miss Loren, in Washington to
shoot a movie ("Houseboat"),
said it was all right with her.
But her publicity man aaid she
would he too busy to make the
50-mile trip to Fredericksburg,
so Sophia can spend her spare
time studying up on American
history.
Poland's Reds
Seek to Build
Fading Pairy
Warsaw, Aug. 12 UP!—Poland's
Communist party has ended a na-
tionwide series of rallies aimed at
getting some action from mem-
bers in the fact of mounting eco-
nomic troubles.
Reports incidate many of the
party’s claimed 1,400,000 mem-
bers have withdrawn from all
political work.
Only the party leadership
knows what proportion remains
active after the shocks of de-Stal-
inization, the Poznan uprising and
the Hungarian revolution.
Sources in Warsaw estimate the
number of active Polish Commun-
ists now at from 250,000 to
750,00.
Johnson Backs
Senate Civil
Rights Plan
Liveable four • room dwelling
within two blocks of square.
Total price $1,750.00.
BRICE REAL ESTATE
Phone TU5-4760
Notice
it. J. MORGAN—You arc invit-
ed to call at the Dairy Queen by
noon Tuesday for a free quart of
Dairy Queen. Phone 5-3640.
Education
FINISH
HIGH SCHOOL
at ham In spars time, with AMERICAN
SCHOOL. sstahUshad 4* yon*». Our grad-
ustss haw entered *00 dlfferaat adW**
and onlvorsltlsa. Full rrsdit for subjects
already romplrtrd. 1* 00 a month Includse
all books and Instruction. DIPLOMA
awarded Write for KRKK Ik-pagt kigb
school bulletin.
ai." ■
AMKR1CAN SCHOOL
~ Dsn*. NT. Ben 110T
LsngvWw. Taxae Phuue PLasa M34i
» »
I ,
m *
There,will be a called meeting of
Sulphur Springs Lodge No. 221
AF&AM tonight at 7:30. Work
in the F.C. degree. Visiting breth-
ren welcome. W. D. Barnett, WM
D. Hi Hutchinson, nee,
5100,000 Jewel
Theft Reported
Memphis, Aug. 12 W—A Pitts-
burgh diamond salesman told po-
lice in Memphis that two middle-
aged bandits robbed him of about
$100,000 worth of gem* in hi*
hotel room last night.
, The victim, 60-year-old Jacob
Davis, said one man held a gun at
hi* hack while the other snatched
two brown paper bag* containing
the gent*.
Davis said he offered no resist-
ance because of his age and a bad
heart.
Seven years ago, Davis was
robbed of $100,000 worth of dia-
monds in Nashville. He later iden-
tified photos of the bandits and
*kll were given long prison terms.
Try a Want Ad for Result*.
Washington, Aug. 12 tP—Sen-
ate Majority Leader Lyndon
Johnson says the civil rights bill
passed by the senate last week is
an effective, enforceable measure
and that those who say it is mean-
ingless “arc hoping to keep the
issue alive because it divides
Americans.”
Johnson said: “The measure
does not seek to change our so-
ciety overnight. It is not punitive
legislation directed against the
South. It is a law designed to fit
all Americans.”
He made his remarks last night
in his regular weekly address
broadcast over Texas radio sta-
tions.
Johnson said “The bill will not
change the situation in Texas at
all. There is no major group in
our state that is%now denied the
right to vote so far as I know.”
7^
Masonic
Notice
Solved
Columbia, S. C., Aug. 12 III
— Two doputy sheriff* in Co-
lumbia mad* quick work of an
early morning prowler com-
plaint yesterday. They noted on
tho complaint!
“It we* u* — checking tbo
property.
Try a Want Ad for Result*.
Milk Output
Shows Drop
Washington, Aug. 12 (3? — The
U. S. Department of Agriculture
reports that milk production de-
clined seasonally in. all sections
last week, although cooler weath-
er and rain helped pastures in
some regions.
Supplies were adequate for
fair to good bottling demand, with
lighter offerings available for
gooil manufacturing demand.
In New York, milk plants in-
creased inventories, anticipating
that the pending producer strike
may create shortages. Prices ad-
vanced 10 to 15 cents.
The fluid cream market was
steady to firm. Supplies were ade-
quate for mostly fair to good bot-
tling demand. ‘In sonic quarters,
heavier fluid milk purchases for
anticipated emergency needs cur-
tailed the cream supply.
Progress
Cairo, Aug. 12 tfl—Modern-
ization, but not American style,
has come to grain tbreahing in
Egypt.
For centurie*, the Egyptian*
have been threahing their grain
by leading blindfolded water
buffalo over it to crack tha
hull*.
Now the peasant* are ipread-
ing the grain on paved high-
way* and driving automobiles
over tho crop.
BABIES LIKE
Gg 7«j
L-.ilJj
IUIKES THEM
Science Shrinks Piles
New Way Without Surgery
Reo Ye*. N. T. <*pM*al> - For the
A rat time science has found • new
healing *ubstaaee with the astonish-
ing ability to shrink hemorrhoid*
and to rdieve haln-wtthoat surgery
In ease/ aftar cats, while f«n
raliavlag pain, actual raduathr*
(shrinkage) teak place.
Moat a mating of all -
•a therougl
Moat a mas lag ot —------ -
gk that anffarars mad*
- result* were
ilshing itatementa Ilka '
have ceaaad ta bo a problem I”
The aaeret la a new healing sub-
stance (Bio-Dyne*)-discovery of a
world-famous research Institute.
This substance is now availnbla fat
enn
ippeeitery or ointment form under
tho name Preparation a.* At yosr
druggist Money hack guarantee.
•amu.artt.av
r
o-m*
. V
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 59, No. 190, Ed. 1 Monday, August 12, 1957, newspaper, August 12, 1957; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth828591/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.