Hominy Journal (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 46, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 26, 1939 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE rwo
THE HOMINY JOURNAL. HOMINY. OSAGE COUNTY, OKLAHOMA
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1939
GERMANY
RUMANIA
HUNGARY
POLAND’S PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE (?)
Territory taken by Poland from Lithuania fond previously by Lithuania
from Hiuut/, together with land lost to Poland al the treaty of Riga, u the
Soviet’s fuit military objective ui “protecting’ Ukrainians and While Rusvans.
Germany will probably take all Polish land formerly belonging to herself and
Io the Austro Hungarian empire. Eastern Galicia, populated by Ukrainians,
yet a part of the Austro-Hungarian empire and highly coveted by Germany,
has a problematical future. Area in while mas remain a Polish slate.
THE WAR:
Diplomatic Front
Thoroughly vindicated this month
are the astute international observ-
ers who have called Russia's Josef
Stalin the shrewdest diplomat of Eu-
rope. shrewder even than Germa-
ny's Adolf Hitler who begged and
won Russia's friendship a few weeks
ago. Like a remote control opera-
tor who needs only to punch buttons.
Dictator Stalin sat in his Kremlin
palace and manipulated diplomatic
machinery that responded like one-
two-three clockwork in a sequence
of events that sped westward from
Tokyo to Paris and London, leaving
the harried allies of Europe's war
in miserable shape:
Trace. For five years stubborn
Japan has fought an undeclared, in-
forms/ war with Russia in the vast
wastelands of Manchukuo and Out-
er Mongolia' Ambitious elsewhere.
Dictator Stalin was not free to med-
dle in Eu-
ropean poli-
tics or peck
at the British
empire so
long as Jap-
an remained
a nuisance.
But one up-
shot of the
recent Russ-
German non-
aggression
pact was a
more thor-
ough welding
ism. Germany, already allied with
Japan, intervened to start conversa-
tions between Soviet Premier Via-
cheslav Molotov and Japan's am-
bassador to Moscow. Shigenori To-
go. Result: A Jap-Soviet truce, wel-
comed in Tokyo because it meant
Nippon could not only push her con-
quest of China but also oust pestif-
erous French and British interests
from the Orient.
Conquest. Thus freed. Russia
turned westward. German troops
already occupied half of Poland,
whose defense was collapsing rap-
idly. While Dictator Stalin ran the
show from behind scenes, Premier
Molotov sent his troops, tanks and
planes wheeling across the frontier
to "take under their protection"
about 11.000,000 Ukrainians and
White Russians in eastern and
southern Poland. Thus relieved (by
pre arrangement) from conquering
the rest of that nation. Germany
was in turn freed to turn westward.
Result. Some observers believed
70 German divisions used against
Poland were rushed to the western
front, where silence still masked
hostilities in the Saar basin. But
both France and Britain knew their
job was becoming more formidable
hourly as the Nazi juggernaut be-
gan unleashing its full strength
MOLOTOV
Eyes turned west.
world totalitarian-
Questions, Forecasts
Unnoticed in this ghastly and
growing conflict were the fate and
fortunes of men-at-arms. Britain
had lost 22 ships including the vet-
eran airplane carrier. Courageous.
Three hundred thousand men fought
in the Saar, with thousands more on
the way. Gdynia fell. Brest-Litovsk
and Lwow were shambles. Warsaw,
in even worse shape, negotiated her
surrender. Paris heard the Russians
were invading Lithuania, also that
the Polish war had cost Germany
100.000 killed and wounded. (One
dead was a grandson of the ex-Kai-
ser.) France’s mine layer. Pluton,
exploded in Morocco.
But men were merely pawns in
the game of war. While they died,
their leaders fretted over a future
which may make today's holocaust
mild by comparison. Nations with
far-flung territories (France and
Britain? suffer most when their ene-
mies (Japan, Russia. Germany and
Italy? are also far flung. While the
harried allies had their hands full
keeping mighty Germany at bay be-
hind her invulnerable West wall,
these things might happen:
Japan. Under German coaxing.
Dictator Stalin might withdraw his
support of China's long-suffering
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, thus
paving the way for immediate com-
pletion of Japan’s war Meanwhile
the maze of European concessions
and settlements in China could be
wiped out because western nations
are too busy at home to complain.
Russia. With 600.000 men concen-
trated on the Afghanistan border,
the Soviet could use this nation as a
jumping off place in her campaign
to establish rule over India. Mean-
while the Kremlin's threat Is lur-
ing Turkey away from her alliance
with Britain and France, thus clos-
ing the Black sea outlet which has
been Rumania's sole hope of inde-
pendence. g
Germany. Between them the
Reich and Soviet must divide Po-
land. If Germany takes only her
pre-World war territory (See Map)
and Russia takes only the land Po-
land took by force in 1919-20. a buff-
er state would still remain between
the two powers—provided a settle-
ment can be reached in southeast-
ern Poland, whose rich Galician
lands are coveted by both Berlin
and Moscow.
Italy. Shattered was the popular
belief that Italy would not only stay
neutral, but might even come to the
allies’ side. Observers still expect-
ed Benito Mussolini to promulgate
a peace conference any day. but
they also knew he had an ulterior
motive Italy wants the French-
Italian port of Djibouti, entrance to
Italian Ethiopia, made a free port;
she wants control of the Djibouti-
Addis Ababa railroad; she wants a
TROOPS IN WEST WALL
U hde allies had their hands full . . .
major voice in administering the
Suez canal; she wants other assort-
ed and miscellaneous concessions
which the allies foolishly denied her
after the World war.
Choice. The four totalitarian na-
tions might decide to strike first and
talk peace later. Or they may poise
their threats and then sue. Which-
ever course they take. Britain and
France are on the spot; never in
modem history have their empires
been so completely threatened
Probably the better part of valor is
to fight and Ignore totalitarian-
ism's peace offers. From experi-
ence. Europe s democracies have
learned appeasement merely whets
the appetite and prolongs the tor-
ture.
j LOUISIANA:
Next Case
When Dr James Monroe Smith
fled his Louisiana State university
for a Canadian haven last summer,
the U. S lost no time sticking its
foot into a messy state political pud-
dle. Resigned was Gov Richard W
Leche, succeeded by the late Huey
P. ("Kingfish”) Long's brother.
Earl. One after another of Louisi-
ana’s politicians were caught in the
trap, including Seymour Weiss, al-
leged political "powerhouse." and
finally Richard Leche himself
Rumor had it that U. S. Attorney
General Frank Murphy was merely
using Louisiana as a proving ground
to show the Democratic party was
equal in purity to New York's rack-
et-busting state's attorney and G O.
P presidential possibility. Tom
Dewey Whatever the reason, the
U. S. got its first conviction Five
Louisianians, including Dr Smith
■nd Seymour Weiss, were found
guilty of selling hotel furniture to
the state university, not once, but
twice Basis for the federal charge;
A check for the ill-gotten gains was
sent through the U S. mails
Immediately the federal prosecu-
tors went to work on their second
case, an open-and-shut matter of in-
terstate commerce and therefore
clearly under U. S. jurisdiction. In
this trial, prosecutors hope to find
Messrs Weiss and Leche guilty of
conspiracy to violate the Connally
"hot oil” law for allegedly piping
contraband oil to Texas.
DOMESTIC:
For Talk
In 1917 it was public opinion that
forced the U. S. into war In 1939,
as in 1914, public opinion wants no
truck with Europe's troubles. But
America’s memory of the war is
still so vivid that its citizenry's judg-
ment is more reasoned, less apt to
be colored by propaganda from
home or abroad Even so. there is
no unanimity.
Representative of anti-war thought
was the unprecedented radio talk by
Cob Charles A. Lindbergh, whose
congressman father committed po-
COLONEL LINDBERGH
". . . see need fear no invasion*
litical suicide by voting against war
in 1917: "As long as we maintain
an army, a navy and an air force
worthy of the name, as long as
America does not decay within, we
need fear no invasion ... If we
enter fighting for democracy
abroad, we may end by losing it
at home."
This was a fine spirit, as was the
Gallup poll finding that 84 per cent
of the U. S. wants to keep Ameri-
can ships out of war zones (a tenet
of the proposed neutrality act). But
America was nevertheless plugging
for France and Britain. Another
Gallup poll showed 82 per cent of
them thought the allies would win,
while 44 per cent (dangerously near
a majority for so early in the war)
favored sending U. S. troops abroad
if it appeared Germany would win.
Amid such befuddled opinion con-
gress met to argue the President’s
neutrality proposal: To repeal the
present arms embargo and sell bel-
ligerents anything they want, pro-
vided they pay cash and yse their
own ships. Isolationist sentiment
was growing, but so was "cash-and-
carry” sentiment, simply a result of
greater public interest. Most popu-
lar objection to neutrality revision
was not that it would discriminate
in favor of the allies (because they
rule the seas) but that common
sense overruled changing legislation
after the war has started.
Closer to trouble, more realistic
in its attitude, the state department
knew it must move chessmen as
belligerents moved theirs. Exam-
ple: Russo-Jap rapprochement
meant the Philippines might fall
easy prey to Tokyo unless the U. S.
delayed independence plans.
I No easy job awaited congress
Administration forces moved to lim-
it debate and the nation both booed
and praised. No problem ever de-
served more thought and discussion,
yet, paradoxically, this was a prob-
lem which seemed only to grow
more confusing when pondered and
debated.
AGRICULTURE:
Cotton
Last December 84.1 per cent of the
South's cotton - growing farmers
agreed to limit the unrestricted sale
of this year's crop to 12.000,000
bales. Penally; A fine of three
cents per pound on all cotton sold
above the quota. Announced in
Washington by Secretary of Agricul
ture Wallace was another referen-
dum on 1940 marketing to take place
December 9.
Fruit of Labor
The bee from his industry in
the summer eats honey all the
winter.
Put Just drops" fa
each nostril for quick
relief from Spring
head cold discomfort*.
PENETROiSil
WNU—T 35—39
A Sure Index of Valve
Buy
... is knowledge of a
manufacturer's name and
what it stands for. It is
the most certain method,
except that of actual
use, for judging the
value of any manufac-
tured goods. Here is the
only guarantee against
careless workmanship or
use of shoddy materials.
ADVERTISED GOODS
Bruckarfx Washington Digest
War Really Between Two Groups
With Utterly Selfish Motives
WHO’S
NEWS
THIS
Time Has Come When Citizens of I nited States Must
Examine Facts of International Situation: Debates
In Congress Should Be Enlightening.
WEEK
German
to
a lone voice,
with "move-
on his return to
. he has contin-
peace, decrying
for understand-
which turned out to be a
And it was left holding the
It still is holding the bag. be-
little of the eleven billion dol-
last year,
plea for
pleading
Chamberlain
brigandage.
the
im-
would we be in a
would be cries for
of war that would
of the Capitol
of its jungle of
the question thus
itself. We have
has been
identified
** or political groupings.
IT WAS not until a year ago that
Romain Rolland returned to
France, after more than 20 years'
exile in Switzerland He had op-
posed war. Sev-
‘ Lamplighter’ eral years be-
Sees Hope Only tore he finished
In •Inner Light’ 'Jean„ f1?™'
° tophe, Tolstoi
had called him "The Conscience of
Europe " He is a pallid old man
now. with thinning hair and sad,
deep-set eyes, but still "above the
battle” and still trying to arouse the
conscience of mankind
He dispatched to the New York
international congress of the Amer-
ican Musicological society a mes-
sage of good will It is quoted here
in accord with this department's
wartime alertness to such men and
messages. He says:
“In the field of art, there ia
not—there should not be—any
rivalry among nations. The
only combat worthy of us is that
which ia waged in every coun-
try and at every hour, between
culture and ignorance, between
light and chaos. Let us save all
the light that can be saved.
There is none more refulgent
than music. It is the sun of the
inner universe."
It was this tun that illumined
"Jean Christophe," one of the great-
est books of all times, published here
just before the World war, profound-
ly moving to multitudes of Ameri-
cans as an avocation of the creative
and aspiring spirit of man. Many
times in recent years, Romain Rol-
land has written that the world had
little hope of escaping another and
possibly last devastating war. But,
described as "an old man. broken
and despairing.
France
ued his
hatred,
tag.
Hit
■ever
meats,1
right or *eft. He opposed Henri
Barbour and his Carte group,
and the carious "united fronts,”
an he did the leaders of violent
reaction on the rig'it.
He was educated in music at the
Ecole Normale, became a devotee
of Wagner and then of Tolstoi and
Shakespeare. He is the evangel ot
the humane sp rit in a day when it
is bard pressed.
(Consolidated Features- H'Nl Service.)
however, are conditions
the United States I would
WASHINGTON - With congress
reassembled in special session for
discussion of. and action on. Presi-
dent Roosevelt's request for modi-
fication of our so-called neutrality
policy, the time appears to have
come when citizens of the United
States must examine the facts of the
international situation. Whether we
like it or not we can hardly ignore
thoae facts any longer It is Eu-
rope's mess, but that mess is hav-
ing an influence here and will have
more influence on our national view-
point. A decision must be taken,
soon. It may thus be that the pres-
ent extraordinary session of con-
gress will turn out to be an his-
toric meettag.
Mr. Roosevelt has requested re-
peal of the section of the present
law that prohibits export of arms,
airplanes and some other imple-
ments of war to all nations engaged
in declared hostilities. It will be
remembered that he made the same
request in the last session, but the
senate committee on foreign rela-
tions said, by its action a few days
before adjournment, that it would
have none of the plan. Conditions
have changed since that time, how-
ever, and the President is now in-
sisting upon repeal of the contro-
versial section and the substitution;
in its place he is asking for legis-
lation that will permit any and all
foreigners to come here and buy the
embargoed war munitions if they
pay cash for them and take them
away in their own ships
That, succinctly, is the crux of
the modification which Mr Roose-
velt seeks. He has plenty of support
for his theory And there is plenty
of opposition, too. Some of the iso-
lationists—men who fought Woodrow
Wilson and his League of Nations
plan—men like Senator Borah of
Idaho and Senator Johnson of Cali-
fornia—are still in the senate Their
numbers have been augmented by
fighters of the type of Senator Ben-
nett Clark of Missouri, and Senator
Nye of North Dakota, and Senator
Vandenberg of Michigan. I think
the vote will not be taken at once,
in view of the promised discussion.
And it probably is well that there
will be much debate, for the country
will learn more about the two sides
to the question
Unseen Factors Involved
Is Our Present Concern
But while the discussion on
so-called neutrality question is
portant, although the question in my
opinion is simply whether we will
open the gates for the export of
anything we can sell. I am quite
convinced our concern should be
about the underlying and, at pres-
ent, unseen factors now involved. It
is said that we are extending pas-
sive aid to Hitler by refusing to al-
low the British and the French to
come here tor thousands of planes
and millions of odds and ends usable
in war. It is said, too, that unless
we extend help to the British and
the French, our nation eventually
must face the onrushing tide of to-
talitarian! and dictatorship. It can
be, and is being, said that unless
the arms embargo is lifted, we will
have to go in ourselves sooner than
otherwise would happen
Al) of these things can be said
and are being said with reference
to both sides of the line Of fire in
Europe, but none of the argument
i has changed my conclusion which
j has been reached after talking with
scores of people who are in a posi-
, tion to know the facts abroad. My
conclusion remains, and is going to
continue to be. that it is Europe's
war. I add to that the further
i thought that our energies should be
i directed to maintaining peace in
North and South America, south of
the Canadian boundary
Now, there are those who say—
and they are numerous-that repeal
1 of the arms embargo will result in
revival of business in the United
States, as. indeed, it already has
started A business revival would
be swell. Nobody doubts that. But
the things like planes and powder
that go abroad have to leave our
shores. It strikes me that sale of
anything, whether planes or powder
or wheat or cotton and com. is
■ likely to bring the war much closer
to our shores. It makes me believe
that we would be better off if we
sold nothing at all. That is. why not
modify the policy by placing an
embargo on everything that goes to
th a warring nations ..nd let them
fight it out
Utterly Selfish Motives
Behind the War in Europe
To begin with, there is no moral
issue in this war. No one ought to
let themselves be kidded about that.
The war in Europe right now is a
battle between two groups of people
with utterly selfish motives. Hitler
and his gang have determined to
regain that which the British took
away from the German people in
the World war of 1914-1918. and the
' British and the French are deter-
mined not to let him accomplish it
Understudy of
Gandhi Calms
Taward British
Indian empire in
aren't worrying about Gandhi. More
important is the attitude and activ-
ity of his vigorous and popular un-
derstudy, the 44-year-o)d Pandit
Jawahhanal Nehru. The latter has
been boldly resistant to British rule,
spent six years in jail, and has ac-
quired popularity and leadership as
Gandhi reaches his seventy-second
year
Meager news reports from In-
dia indicate that Nehru has
been calming down in his agi-
tation against British imperial-
ism, and that, a few weeks ago,
he was vehemently denouncing
fascism and the new
aggression. London
assured, but watchful.
maj become a balance of power
in the clash of world dominions
and Nehru has been an active
propagandist of pan-Asiatic doc-
trine. summoning browns and
blac ks to resist what he believes
to be the aggression of the
whites.
Bom of a noble caste, Nehru was
educated at Harrow and Cambridge,
taking honors in the classics. His
father, the Pandit Motilal Nehru,
was a lawyer and the richest man
in Allahabad. He gave away his
mansion and moved into a shabby
little house when he became a con-
vert to Indian nationalism
His son. reared in splendor,
had no such ideas when he came
home from England. He was a
strong supporter of the British
regime until the Amritsar mas-
sacre of 1919. Then he burned
his 50 British suits, donned na-
tive dress, and became an agi-
tator for the Nationalist cause.
However, he was no devotee of
loin-cloth asceticism. He was
all for fighting and it was as the
most belligerent of all the In-
dian leaders that be came to
the presidency of the all-Indian
congress in 1935.
Nehru was at times sharply op-
posed to the non-resisting Gandhi,
but apparently their differences
have been resolved. He ia hand-
some and engaging, a vigorous as-
sailant of the ancient cast, system
of India
Hitler calls it justice;
and Daladier call it
Back in 1919 when the Treaty of
Versailles was written, the Germans
shouted brigands and other epithets
as the French and the British over-
ruled Woodrow Wilson and took
what they wanted Not only did the
winners in that war. excepting the
United States, take what they want-
ed, but they parceled out other parts
of the German empire
Where did the United States finish
in that war'’ It helped win a war
to make the world safe for democ-
racy,
sham
bag
cause
lars loaned to the allied powers ever
has been repaid Only little Fin-
land has kept her promise to pay
back the loans
Stripped of all
words, therefore,
seems to shape
nothing to gain, so why not make
over our neutrality into the policy
of an isolationist? Why not stay
out by keeping our stuff here at
home’ I know I will be rebuked by
those who say we cannot afford to
close down factories and let cotton
and wheat and com remain unsold.
Notwithstanding all of this, there
surely is ground for belief that it
would be cheaper in the end. cheaper
in money, if you want to deal only
in the materialistic side and cheaper
in blood, because it may come
that
'Ocean Patrol’ Called by
Some a Dangerous Step
There are a good many people
who believe that the President has
taken a potentially dangerous step
in ordering what is called an "ocean
patrol" while hostilities are on He
has placed ships of the American
navy as far as 200 miles at sea.
as he explained, that they may ob-
tain information as to what is going
on out there The patrol looks like
an invitation to some German U-
boat to take a shot at one of our
ships. Of course, they would not do
so deliberately; they would "mis-
take" a United States ship for one
of the enemy, or that would be their
excuse. And
dither! There
a declaration
rock the dome
Mr. Roosevelt said that the patrol
program amounted to a steel warn-
ing to the belligerents to stay on
their side of the railroad tracks, or
words to that effect. Those who
dislike the plan say. however, that
we. as a nation, cannot lay claim
to the sea as our very own beyond
a minimum distance from tide fall.
To get back to the neutrality pol-
icy, as it is called, I have found
many persons who have difficulty in
reconciling Mr Roosevelt’s present
request of congress with his action
respecting enforcement of the provi-
sions in the three-year-old war of
the Japanese in China. The law
gives the President discretionary
power in proclaiming its operation,
except that it becomes effective al-
most automatically where there has
been a declaration of war by a for-
eign power
Boldest Propaganda Now
Is Flooding the Country
In the meantime and as the fight-
ing progresses in Europe, we in
America are being flooded with the
boldest and the baldest propaganda
that can be conceived. From Ber-
lin and other points under Hitler
domination, we are being fed so-
called news that is as putrid as
politics used to be under Pender-
gast in Kansas City or Penrose in
Pennsylvania. It is amazing that
any one believes it.
From British and French sources,
and from their sympathizers in
this country, comes "news" that is
censored and controlled and in-
spired. It tells only the things that
the French and the British would
have us believe. We know just as
little about the real underlying facts
of the controversy from them as we
do from the Germans It is well to
remember that we never have
known what kind of an agreement
was reached at the Munich confer-
ence in September of last year. Wc
have absolutely no knowledge of
what kind of a sellout was arranged
between Hitler and Stalin Nor do
we know what has happened in
sofar as Mussolini is concerned.
More important than any of these
things,
within
like to see our congress use some
brains and take action that will gel
us out of the depths of a nine year
depression. It is quite evident that
all of the theories that have been
tried still remain theories. I am
among those who fear that entry
into another world war will mark
the end of our form of govern-
ment here unless our home condi-
tions are far better than at present
It seems to me to be more impnr
tant to solve our troubles rather
than those of Europe
K]EW YORK.-Mahatma Ghar.di
*• ’ has indicated that, in his opin-
ion. a world war against Adolf Hit-
ler would be justifiable and possibly
necessary The
British. with
their impera-
tive job of keep-
ing their great
hand, probably
By LEMUEL F. PARTON
By WILLIAM BRUCKART
V, NV Service, National Press Bldg., Washington, D. C.
CLASSIFIED
DEPARTMENT
PHOTOGRAPHY
BOLLS DEVELOPED
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TWC MMOtA COMMMnr
M a, aanmi ch* • aw*.
FRUIT
lirird Aaplr*. from the Ozarks. Large
».,m 25< pontp'.ld Free fruit for taUn(
ord' Bern Carlack. Mprlnckale, Ark.
r
HOUSEHOLD
QUESTIONS
For Cooking in the Open.—Two
fires often are more convenient
than one. One may be used for
the coffee and the other for roast-
ing or frying.
• • •
For Rust on Porch Lamp.—To
remove rust on metel porch lamps
rub them with fine sandpaper or
steel wool and then apply a thin
coat of lubricating oil.
• • •
Polishing Towels.—Towels in-
tended for polishing glassware oft-
en shed tiny particles of fluff. To
avoid this, they should be washed
in the ordinary way and then
rinsed in a very thin solution of
starch.
• • a
Washing Knitted Suits.—Knitted
suits should be handled carefully
after they are washed. Wrap them
in a Turkish towel for several
minutes—to get rid of part of the
moisture Then lay them on a
clean, dry cloth or towel until they
are dry. Never wring or twist
them—that is likely to break the
fibers
• • •
Economy in Meat.—In buying a
roast it often is economical to get
a large one and cut off several
chops for the first meal The roast
will keep for several days in a
mechanical refrigerator.
Removing Stains.—Lemon juice
will remove a red ink stain A
paraffin stain should be covered
with oatmeal, then brushed after
24 hours. Soot marks should be
covered with coarse salt.
• • •
Encouraging Diligence. — Mo e
a 1 st of duties for the young mas-
culine member of the family to
follow in cleaning his room. The
business of checking them off each
day gives him a sense of impor-
tance that encourages diligence.
Surfbird’s Nest
For nearly 150 years, since the
surfbird was first given its scien
tific name, its nest and eggs re
mained unknown. On May 28.
1926. the first and only nest ot
this rare bird was discovered and
recorded by Joseph Dixon and
George Wright. The nest was lo-
cated on a barren rocky ndge.
1,000 feet above the timber line
above Savage River Canyon,
Alaska.
Pull the Trigger on
Lazy Bowels, and Also
Pepsin-ize Stomach!
When constipation bring' on acid indi-
gestion, bloating, dizzy spells, gas, coated
tongue, sour taste, and bad breath, your
ktomach is probably loaded up with cer-
tain undigested food and your bowels d-n't
move. So you need both Pepsin to help
break up fast that rich undigested food in
your stomach, and Laxative Senna to pull
the trigger on those lazy bowels. So be
sire your laxative also contains Pepsin.
Take Dr. Caldwell's Laxa'ive, because its
Syrup Pepsin helps you ruin that w n-
derful stomach-relief, while the Laxative
Senna moves your bowe ls. Tests prove the
pout r of Pepsin to dissolve those lumps of
undigested protein food which may linger
in y<'Ur stomach, to cause belching, gastric
acidity and nausea. This is how pepsin-
izing your stomach helps relieve it of such
distress. At the same time this medicine
wake- up lazy nerves and ■ n your
bowels to relieve your constipation. So see
how much better you feel by taking the
laxative that also puts Pepsin to work on
that stomach discomfort, too. Even fin-
icky children love to taste this pleacant
family laxative. Buy Dr. C.iHvtell'« Lax-
ative-Senna with Syrup Pepsin at your
druggist today!
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Hominy Journal (Hominy, Okla.), Vol. 18, No. 46, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 26, 1939, newspaper, September 26, 1939; Hominy, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1588053/m1/2/?q=Lincoln+School: accessed June 29, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.