The Detroit News-Herald (Detroit, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1946 Page: 4 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Red River County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Red River County Public Library.
Extracted Text
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THE DETROIT NEW8-HKRALD
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t state, such M Hawaii
should join the Union aa
suggested, a aaw star.
4MB, would be added to the blue
sa gff the United Status flag the
July 4.
Hear the stars w ould be arranged
!■ still a guess, tor no precedent
octets. When Premidwtt Taft by ex-
ecutive order in 1911 established the
flnt sfBcial arrangement for the
stars, the National Geographic soci-
ety points out. all 48 states were in
the Union, and no provision was
made tor subsequent additions
The law of June 14, 1777, estab-
lishing the flag, merely stated that
it was to have IS red and white
stripes and a blue union with 13
white stars No reference was
made as to wl.ether the stripes
should be horizontal or vertical.
Ml same early flags had vertical*,
stripes. The law also failed to state
the number of points the stars
Should have and the position they
should occupy. Vermont was ad-
mitted to the Union in 1791 asd Ken-
tucky in 1792 Congress acceded to
their demand for recognition by
enacting a law on January 13, 1794,
providing that after the first day of
lfay, 1795, the United States flag
Should have 15 stripes and f5 stars.
This was the flag which inspired
MMKIlfO
ASSAD
's» GEORGE S. BENSON
RmUnt—MerHey Ceikft
Sttn-f J ritMtst
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Francis Scott Key to write “The
Star-Spangled Banner.”
1
Cadmium Recovered
From Smelting of Zinc
Known since 1817, cadmium is
rarely found alone. Usually it occurs
in company with zinc, and is re-
covered in, the smelting of zinc ore.
The flue du*t collecting on the cones
of the retorts is mixed with coal,
then distilled and redistilled until
cadmium appears.
Normally, more than half the
world’s output was produced in the
United States, domestic recovery
reaching about 714 million pounds
In 1943, the latest year for which
figures are available. Colorado, Ida-
ho, Montana and Utah were cred-
ited with almost three-fourths of the
total! Home production was not ade-
quate for the year’s needs of al-
most 8 million pounds. Reserve
stocks filled the gap. Nine-tenths
of the supply is used in electroplat-
ing and bearing alloys.
Chief world producers, apart from
the United States, have been
Mexico, Germany. Canada, South
West Africa, Poland, Australia, Bel-
gium and Norway. War keyed pro-
duction to high figures in all zinc-
smelting countries, and increased
Canada’s total in 1941 by 30 per
cent. In prewar years the United
States imported metallic cadmium,
and exported compounds.
Feaaot Butter
Peanut butter today is treated so
that the oil won’t separate easily.
Improved techniques in the prepara-
tion of the peanut butter leave it
less likely to get rancid and quality
of peanuts used in butter are bet-
ter. Grade one peanuts are
blanched, roasted and ground with
many variations in each process.
The flavor of the butter depends
largely on the degree of heat used
and the length of time spent in roast-
ing. The more the roasting, the
deeper the color of the butter. Peo-
ple living on the east coast like their
peanut butter a rich, dark brown.
The farther west one lives the more
likely he irto want his peanut butter
light brown in color. Texture of pea-
nut butter varies with the manufac-
turer. All varieties are on the mar-
ket, from the kind that spreads as
smoothly as butter to the crunchy
kind.
King Customer
Catering to the customer has been
America’s most profitable and high-
ly diversified craft for several gen-
erations, and it must never stop if
this country is to stay great and free.
Catering to the customer is an hon-
orable and interesting activity, and
there is nothing to stop it but man- I
made laws. May they never be |
enacted! Cerlainlj 194(5 is no time j
to experiment with silly ideas.
Take the automotive industry for ■
an example. It is probably the *»*■*« !
example. Automobile men have j
gone to great lengths to please the
American buyer.' His wish for
speed has been served, seasoned
wit!’, safety. His need as to seating
capacity, his taste in design, his j
whim in color, and (most important)
his buying power, have been taken
into account. Result: A car for a
king.
Primitive Notions
Perhaps the first time a ear manu-
facturer decided suddenly to rip the'^
insides out of his plant and put j
in new machinery to give King
Customer a better' dollar's worth,
the stockholders winced. Maybe, in !
that long-gone day, stockholders con- *
sidered such exp ses wasteful, but
they learned better. Catering to the
customer is exactly what makes 1
dividends grow bigger each year.
We may imagine also that, back
in the early days of the horseless
carriage, some factory workers wor-
ried about their jobs for a while aft-
er lower prices were announced.
Probably some good workmen i
asked, “How Ion? can the big boss
keep paying us after he starts giv-
ing his profits to the consumer?” (
These doubters are wiser row too,
game as the old-style stockholders.
Imitating Nobody
Yearly better machines, more
handsome and less costly, have built
big industries and created thousands
of good jobs. Wage earners and
stockholders prospered together
while shrewd management studied
King Customer’s needs and met
them. When the Japs struck at
Pearl Harbor the United States had
one automobile for every four people |
—one for each 139 people in the rest
of the world.
American. manufacturers know
the route that leads to national pros-
perity. Just the same, they are be-
ing urged to turn aside and try a
course completely strange to west-
ern industry. It’s an old ji ngle road
that has lost many great races in
poverty. It means business servile
to power. It means opening private
records to be thumbed at will by
partisan fact-finding committees.
Looking for What?
Such a committee will be con-
cerned with W'ages — only with
wages. It will have small interest
in prices of cars to the user; less in
returns to investors. Iis job will be
to say what wages an employer is
able to pay. Rightly, wages are de-
termined bv a workman's ability to
produce. The new concept seems to
be that an employer's savings have
a bearing on wage levels.
Such a scheme would ear mark
for wages all but a paltry share of
a firm's earnings and investors
would turn away. Down would come
cash reserves, plant equipment and
output. Quality would suffer, prices
would advance and sales drop off.
Paying nu n. not by what they pro-
duce but according to the employ-
er's ability to pay, is the surest (if
not the fastest) way to hopelessly
low wages and a dog's life for us all.
N«< not style, determines the
fashion in bullet jackets. The bul-
•t Jacket has had three changes
since the solid lead bell fired tram
the old pre-Civil war gun was trans-
formed into a snub-nosed lead cyl-
inder and then into an elongated
streamlined projectile.
Military bullets are Jacketed not
only to make them more humane,
but among other things to reduce
the fouling of rifle barrels. Even
the Japs used jacketed ammunition.
A jacketed bullet with the nose cut
off is a “dum-dum’’ bullet end has
long been outlawed in war.
With the advent of smokeless pow-
ders, a compound bullet was devel-
oped. This consisted of s hardened
lead core and a metal jacket. The
first bullet jackets were made of
steel, which caused rapid wear of
the barrel. Next a cupro nickel
jacket was adopted. All jackets de-
posit some metal on the surface of
the bore, and with curpo nickel,
this was deposited in lumps near
the muzzle and interfered with ac-
curacy. In 1894 Winchester devel-
oped a gliding metal jacket which
eliminated all of the disadvantages
of steel or curpo nickel. This metal
consisted of 95 parts copper and five
parts zinc.
Finds Rumen Rich
Source of R-Vitamins
The rumen contents of cattle and
sheep are potentially a rich source
of B-complex vitamins, particularly
adaptable for use as vitamin sup-
plements in poultry rations, accord-
ing to Dr. Paul R. Frey, associate
chemist of the experiment station
of Colorado A. & M. college. Dr.
Frey conducted an experiment in
which he analyzed the rumen con-
tents of 140 steers for various mem-
bers of the B-comp!ex vitamins.
The rumen is part of the d.gestive
tract—a small pouch which precedes
the true stomach of cattle, sheep
and goats. During the past 15 years
it has been thought that the rumen
contents are rich in such B-complex
vitamins as riboflavin, pantothenic
acid, thiamin, niacin and pyridox-
ine. The results of Dr. Frey’s anal-
ysis show the average dried rumen
contents to contain four times as
much riboflavin and pantothenic
acid as are required by growing
chicks and breeders.
Frey adds that the average ru-
men contains about 100 pounds of
contents which average 10 per cent
solid matter. On this basis, there
was in 1944 in the United States a
total of 65,000 tons of solid matter
from the rumens of slaughtered
cattle.
In Southwest Alberta
Renaming ot Canada’s 9,009-fool
Caetle mountain in hoaor of General
Elsenhower lengthens the list of
peaks which have recently become
natural monuments to distinguished
war leaders. Canada had previous-
ly named three 9,809-foot peaks aft-
er Allied leaders, Roosevelt. Church-
ill and Stalin. Colorado changed the
name of one of its two Mount Wil-
sons to Mount Franklin Roosevelt.
Mount Eisenhower, notes the Na-
tional Geographic society, lifts its
bulky mass about half way between
the famous resort centers of Lake
Louise and Banff, in Banff National
. park, a 2.500-square mile slice of
southwestern Alberta. The many-
headed peak rises some two miles
north of the Bow river, and its
base extends eight miles along that
stream. From its broad and rocky
platform the mountain tapers up-
ward into bold shapes that suggest
in form the towers and battlements
of an ancient castle. The sheer, bare
i sides rise 4.000 feet above the valley
! floor.
The region is studded with high
: peaks, eastern outposts of the con-
j tinent’s vast Rocky mountain sys-
tem. Mountain climbing lias be-
come a recognized attraction. Swiss
guides and pack trains make the
ascents easier for novices. Mount
Eisenhower was first climbed ui
1884
Wartime Output of Radio
Industry Sets Record
With a total war output of approx-
imately 7% billion dollars, the radio
Industry produced nearly twice as
much radio-radar communications
equipment during the war than it
produced radio equipment alone for
civilian t se in all the years since
commercial radio began about 1922.
From January, 1942, until the war
ended in 1945, the industry’s war
production mounted to the huge to-
tal of $7,220,000,000. the records
$how. In addition, the industry pro-
fluced about $250,000,000 in military
aquipment from September, 1941,
until the end of that year, bringing
Bn aggregate contribution to the
war effort to close to the 7V4 billion
floHar mark.
Best industry and trade statistics
show that iri the entire period of ci-
vilian radio beginning in 1922, the
total volume of radio equipr tent
manufactured was about $4,225,000,-
100, not including transmitting and
communications equipment, the as-
sociation announced. This is some
billloq dollars leiss than the pro-
duction total for war.
Easter Island Not Part
Of Lost Continent
Although Easter Island in the
South Pacific remains probably the
most profound mystery in archeol-
ogy, all its weird prehistoric culture
is le ss than 800 years old. There
is no evidence that the strange little
volcanic island, whose shores are
guarded by a circle of stone giants
with scowling faces and empty eyes,
is the remnant of a lost continent
where once flourished a great civili-
zation, says Dr. Alfred Metrautc, an-
thropologist.
When the island was first discov-
ered by Europeans in the 17th cen-
tury, it sfeemed impossible that the
apparently somewhat degenerate
Polynesian inhabitants could be the
same people who had carved those
great statues, some towering 80
feet high. Almost equally great a
mystery even today are wooden tab-
lets with a “hieroglyphic’’ writing
in which, it is claimed, certain strik-
ing similarities have been found to
“hieroglyphs” on stone tablets more
than 5,000 years old found in the
Indus valley
Canned Meats
To add flavor to canned meats,
place canned roast meat in the oven
and cook until thoroughly browned.
Then pour sour cream over it.
Baste the meat with the cream
liquid until it is cooked through. A
teaspoon of dry grated cheese add-
ed just before taking from the
oven gives even more zest to the
meat. Tomato sauce varies canned
meat flavor. Onions, celery and
peppers cooked with meat gives
three more taste changes. A bit of
raw ground ham or sausage added
to canned ground meat changes the
meat loaf or pattie flavor. In mak-
ing stew, avoid overcooking by par-
boiling the vegetables before adding
them to the meat. Canned meats
lose their canned flavor in combi-
nation dishes. Macaroni or spaghet-
ti dishes with ground meat and to-
matoes are good. Spanish rice with
canned meat, is another variety.
Mushrooms with fried meats or in
casserole combinations add another
flavor. A dash of different herbs in
combination or alone take the
“canned” out of the canned meat.
Rural Processing Rises
One of me results of rural elec-
trification is a development of ru
ral processing plants and other in
dustries which create new sources
of rural employment and wealth,
says the Rural Electrification ud
ministration.
A steady rise in the annual num-
ber of applications received by REA
borrowers for industrial and com
mercial power service has taken
place during the war years. As in
previous years, a majority of the
applications vfere from manufactur-
ing and processing industries. The
demand of the nation at war for
coal, oil, and other minerals and
wood, brought a relatively large
number of applications from mines,
oil-pumping stations, lumber mills
and sawmills. Many feed mills, lock-
er plants, cotton gins, and other ag-
ricultural processing ndustries also
sought power. Irrigation applica
tions were numerous.
Improved
UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL
CUNDAY I
School Lesson
Lesson for March 3
PRYHrImRqm.
A PEOPLE FINDING
A HOMELAND
LESSON TEXT: Joihua 1:1-4; S3 ML
MEMORY SELECTION: Thau »h»U bless
the Lord thy God for the food Und which
b« bath given thee —Deuteronomy 4:10.
P f S T t « E
rjND that mil
HELPS NIRVO.iS
TO RELAX
ASD L f Avl $
CALM,
Wm
HEN
AS
Negro Republic of
Haiti Long Troubled
Haiti is no stranger to revolution.
On-again-ofT-again internal strife be-
gan virtually with the establishment
of this first Negro republic in 1820.
Gradually mounting, it reached a
climax in 1911 and 1915. “Ballots
by bullets" brought no less than sev-
en luckless presidents into office at
the capital. Port-au-Prince, during
those four years. Then the United
States marir.es took the situation in
hand Haiti, smallest and most
densely populated Western hemi-
sphere republic, became a tempo-
rary’ ward of Uncle Sam.
Lying southeastward across stra-
tegic Windward Passage from Cuba,
Haiti occupies the western third of
Hispaniola, only island in the world
which is the home of two sovereign
nations. Haiti's share, fertile but
Largely mountainous, covers 10,748
square miles, nearly matching
Maryland's area. On it. three mil-
lion F'ench-speaking Negro de-
scendants of African slaves com-
pose a farm state three times as
populous as Maryland excluding
Baltimore. In the eastern two-
thirds of the island, the Dominican
Republic is crowded enough with lit-
tle more than hall as many people.
Spanish-speaking.
Vacuuming Edges
Why the edges of rugs or carpets
often remain dirty after ti e vacuum
cleaner has gone over the entire
surface is a" question that has per-
plexed many a housewife. This oc-
curs when the nozzle of the machine
has been allowed to go beyond the
edge of the rug. In order to draw air
and dirt up through the rug, the
nozzle must be kept just inside the
edge so that it forms a seal between
machine and rug. If the nozzle runs
over the edge the air rushes into
the cleaner without going through
the rug and the part along the edge
is not cleaned. Opposite tactics are
j in order, however, when the ma-
chine catches and lifts up rug
edges or fringes. Then it is neces-
sary to break the seal long enough
to loosen them. An easy way to do
this is to lower the handle just
enough to tip the nozzle slightly. If
fringes catch and wind around the
rotating roll, shut off the motor im-
mediately and loosen the fringe.
« us If you can't
Cough Drop*. Oar
don't to ai
TTscm*rwtzfcaed. Soon, wn hope,
l agate to #4«Ny of Sarith Bratton...
IS, daUctaat Btedk or MaMhol. 54.
smith bios, com mops
MACK OB MfMTNOt-S#
Use More Fertilizer
In the five years ending with 1940
the average annual consumpti :i of
commercial fertilizer nitrogen, ac-
cording to a survey by the depart-
ment of agriculture was about
:t90,000 tons, and by 1944, it was up
to 026,000 tons The states that f* i
their crops most heavily on this niT
trogert were eight Atlantic and Gulf
Coast states—Virginia. No'rth Caro-
lina. South Carolina, Georgia. Flor-
ida. Alabama. Mississippi and Lou-
isiana. The department says this
group used 59 per cent of it. The
entire area west cf the Mississippi
used only 18 per cent, more than
half of it going into California fit las
and orchards. All states showed a
considerable increase.
Blanket Warmth
The warmth of a blanket depends
on the amount of wool in it, the
nap and the closeness of weave.
You can discover the amount of
wool in a blanket by looking at the
label. The greater the percentage of
wool, the warmer the blanket. To
know the weave of the blanket, un-
fold it and hold it up to the light.
For warmth and wear, choose the
blanket with a close and even weave.
Next, look at the nap. Napping helps
to make a blanket warm. It forms
little air pockets to keep the cold
out. A thick nap is good unless the
fibers are napped so thickly that
the filling yarns are weak. Auiother
test for the nap is rubbing the
blanket with the palm of your hand.
If the nap rolls up and forms little
balls of lint, the blanket probably
Is woven from short wool fibers.
These short fibers cannot be an-
chored firmly in the foundation of
the blanket.
Garfield’s Death
Shortly after 9:30 a. m. Saturday,
July 1, 1831, President Garfield,
about to leave the capital for the
week-end, was walking with Secre-
tary of State James G. Blaine on the
platform of the Baltimore and Po-
tomac depot at 6th and B streets,
N.W., Washington, D C. Charles J.
Guiteau, a disappointed office seek-
er fired two shots, both of which
stfack the President Until Septem-
ber 6 he was nursed at the White
H >use, then was removed by spe-
cial train to Elberon, N J., a family
summer resort. There he died Sep-
tember 19. His body lay in stati in
| tiie Capitol in Washington, then was
j taken to Cleveland, Ohio, for burial,
j Guiteau was convicted and was
I hanged in Washington, June 3. mt.
God is the Lord of nations as well
as of homes, and he is concerned
that those who honor him in their
homes have opportunity to serve
him in their national life. This was
true in a special way with Israel,
but it is also true of us today.
Ready to enter the Promised
Land, the people had to part with
their groat leader, Moses, who was
not permitted to enter. The time
comes when even the mightiest of
men fall, but life must go on and
new leadership must be found.
I. The Changed Leader (Josh. 1:
1-4)
1. Worker/ Die—God's Work Goes
On (vv. 1, 2).
God buries his workmen at the
end of their day of labor, but God’s
work goes on. The people had- be-
come attached to Moses and had
learned to trust his leadership, even
though tiiey often murmured. With j
his death we might have assumed
that there would be a letdown, but
that was not in God's plan.
The Lord works through men. He
gives them abilities and fiscs them
for his glory, often in a way which
astonishes them and others. But let
them not become 'proud, for God
has someone to take their place
when they are gone. They are not
indispensable
2. The Need Is the Same, So la
the Blessing (vv. 3, 4).
The promise given to Moses was
still good. God's promises are al-
ways good They are the only really
stable thing in a trembling universe.
The question is, Are we ready to
take him at his word?
They were to step out by faith.
The land was promised to them
only as the sole of their foot should
tread upon it. Israel never took
out the full promise of verse 4. They
ladked faith
God honors those who believe him
and who move forward by faith to
plant the foot of spiritual conquest
in new territory Some are doing
it now. Are we’
The enemies of God's people were
many and mighty, but they were not
able to stand in the wav of Guff's
people when they were moving for-
ward for him. Here again, Israel
failed. They did not drive them out,
because they did not take God at
his word T1 e application of that
truth to us is obvious, i
II. The Unchanging God (Josh 23:
111)
Between oui first scripture and
this selection will be found the his-
tory of the conquest of the land (at
least, of the larger part of it), and
the division of the territory between
the tribes
Years have passed quickly, and
the new leader. Joshua, is now an
old man, soon to go to his reward.
He gathers the eiders who repre-
sented the people and gave them
good counsel for the days ahead,
even as he recalls the blessings of
the past.
1. God Did Mein (vv 1-3).
Israel had been in many hard bat-
tles. They had gone thi the tri-
als of pioneer days in a new and
unfamiliar land Now they were
established and at peace. Perhaps
they were recallii g theii mighty ex-
ploits arid tlv :i i wu sacrificial ef-
forts.
Joshua rem.no's them that it wps
God who fou: lit for them (v. 3).
We need just such a reminder in
our land today.
2. God Will H 'p (vv 4, 5). Joshua
had a word of encourt ’oinent for
the days ahead There was much
yet to be done. The land had not
been fully taken. He reminded them-
of God's help in the past, so that
they would depend on it in the fu-
ture.
It is one mark of a great man that
he looks beyond the end of his own
short existence and plans for the
future.
What about the future? Joshua
reminded them that every blessing
they had received, every victory
they had won, everything had cam
from the hand of God. There and
there alone was fi eir dope for the
•future. And it was enough!
3. Help You i se.i (vv. 6-11) To
keep true in the i.md where their
i me Narrow Ha _
interfere with your work at i
yaw good time*, take
Dr. Eilat
(Liquid or Effervesce* Tablet*)
Nervous Tension can make m
W*tof*L Jittery, Irritable.
vous Tension can cause M—rm
Hesdsrhe and Nervous Indiges-
tion. In times like these, w« *■«
more likely than usual to become
overwrought and nervous and ta
wish for a good sedative. Dr.
Miles Nervine is a good sedative
—mild but effective.
If you do not use Dr. MQart
Nervine you can’t know what B
will do for you. It comes in
Liquid and Effervescent Tabite
form, both equally soothing to
tense and over-wrought nerves.
WHY DON’T YOU TRY ITT.
'Get it at your drug store.
Effervescent tablets 35# and 75#,
Liquid 25» and $1.00. CAUTION
—Take only as directed. ,
Acid Indigestion
Relieved in S minutes or
double your money beck
Wbm nmi .tofn.rh a, 1.1 nun iwuiful «SWW>
las |u sour ab—<-h .ml h—rtbur*. lirtm mhK
arwrrlb* U>. luM mini MdlrtnM kMamfcx
matoautle rail* nadtelnw Uha tkoa. la “-It M
tmu No luatlre. B>:l ui brlasa aim n a
tier or
to aa t
aa Sfc at all dnniiu.
Try This New Amazing
COUGH MIXTII
Fast Working—Triple A«1
You Feel the Effect I as tat
Tho King of all comb mcdlctnaa .
comho or bronchial Irritations reeni
from colds In cold wintry Cnnndn Is Bl F
NT's --CANADIOL" Mixture Fnat U
Ins. triple nctlns Buckley's Mixture qu
loosens and raises phlosm lodged In
tubas —clears air pa—S— aoothsa rasped
raw tissues, one or two sips and want
coughing spasm oasts. You s*t results fast.
Compounded from rare Canadian PI no-
Balaam and other soot hi ns healing Ingre-
dients Buckley's "CANADIOL" Mixture Is
different from anything you ever tried Oat
e bottle today at any good drug store.
WSMlN
Were Never Meant To
Softer Like This!
Kara’s a tip for
m
Irritability and —,
Weak. Tired. Cranky - g
FseNngs—du* to
If the functional “middle-age
period peculiar to women makes you
suffer from hot flashes, touchy,high-
strung, weak, nervous feelings, try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound to relieve such symptoms.
Taken regularly — this great medi-
cine helps build up resistance against
such ' middle-age” distress.
Thousands Upon Thoosaads Helped!
Pinkham’s Compound Is one of the
best known medicines you can buy
for this purpose. It has proved soma i
of the happiest days of some worn- ,
en's lives can often be during their
40’s. We urge you to give Pinkham’s j
Compound a fair and hon- .
PLjf est trial. Just see ff it doesn’t (
V Uigc JUU IAJ * --------^
/♦w Compound a fair and hon- J
JlC«f est trial. Just see if it doesn’t
£ help you, too. It’s also aj
ereat stomachic tonic!
JjjduL £. (PbnUuiww
VEGETABLE COMPOUND 1
i .;n idol worship
. 'i: in W)I n 111.v 11>.
biii on tlio part of
t
('
neighbors it:':
*.111(1 nil iii.iiim
quired definite,
Israel.
They weri
slightest fie
. It'll
iol a
dll t i'lMn. ■'
tuie 111 f 1
'1 11. \ v
llu ■ i ' ■
tlu.i lltit. In*
to the Loro. .
ol die close r.
ana his people.
Tfiere are many thoughts here
which ean be profitably applied to
our daily lives. Faith in God calls
for stalwart action ipd separated
' living for hia^ Sb**A*A»-*'___J
deviate in the
w;.\, to thi
■ it'. i (v 6),
, ir, the ^ rung
r ; v'.ful depur-
• i ’o swear by
1 even to tnen-
cio to "cleave”
I Me presentation
n between God
Tortured man gets help!
k
Lemon Juice
Mixed at Homo
Relieved
RHEUMATIC PAj
says Sufferer!
S
**I have uted ALLENRU for tcvefd I
months. I could hardly walk on accoUM !
of my knee*. Bui now those'paint art
relieved. I can go like a race bunt
now," Mort Shepard of Ohio.
' Don’t be a victim of the pains
aches cauted by rheumatism, lum’>
or neuritis without trying this simj
inexpensive^ recipe you can mix g (
borne. Two tablespooos of ALLENBJ^
plus the juice of Vi lemon in a glass <4
water. Try a bottle TODAY! Be
tircly aatitfied with it — or money I
85(. Drug stores.
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The Detroit News-Herald (Detroit, Tex.), Vol. 18, No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 28, 1946, newspaper, February 28, 1946; Detroit, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth855368/m1/4/?q=waco+tornado: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Red River County Public Library.