The Quapaw Chieftain (Quapaw, Okla.), Vol. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 29, 1946 Page: 3 of 4
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THE QUAFAV CHIEFTAIN QCAFAW OTTAWA CO OKLAHOMA
Friday Aipti 39 19M
Changing Character
Of Outmoded Rocker
TN TODAY’S cramped ' living
1 quarters there is little space for
a rocker that neither harmonizes
with antiques nor modem furni
ture Yet with the slight altera
tions shown here such a chair may
be made to seem at home with
either type of furniture
After the rockers Save been removed
It may be made to change character to
auit the material used for cushion and
back covert
Tbil Idea It from Home-Maklns Booklet
No S which alao contains more than 30
pagea of Illustrated dlrecttona for other
things to make from thinga on band and
Inexpensive new materials Readers may
Set a copy of Book S postpaid for U cents
y writing to:
' MIS IDTS WYETH SPEARS
Bedford Hills N Y Drawer M
Enclose IS cents for Book 0
CLASSIFIED
DEPA R T M EN T
AUTOS TRUCKS A ACCESS
FOR NEW STAKE BODIES Dump Holst
Bodice Panel Bodies Live Stock Bodies
Freight Horse or Luggage Trailers and
Tank Trailers or Repair Work see
JOHNS BODY CO
174S S 1SU St St Leals Me
Tel Sldaey Ut 7
BUSINESS ft INVEST OPPOR
GABAGE service station grocery dwell
Ing and 4 cabins: 100 ml east of K C
on hwy 24 120 ml west of Quincy 111
On account of 111 health am going to sell
Write or phone for further particulars
J E Behring BeytesvUle Me Fh Ut
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FARMS AND RANCHES
RANCHESt Large and email Improved
wells dams and timbered creeks excel-
lent grasses wheat yielding 90 barley SO
oata SO bu: adjoining lease assigned If
desired 7 to 10 e per acre: deeded land
IS to B10 per acre
W H FINE Faith Seath Daheta
FOR SALE— GO acres: fertile farm with
3-atory bungalow: 7 large rooms: hard
oak floors: bath: 9 closets: bedding press:
3 big porches: bulletin K cabinets sink:
full six basement: new hot air heating
plant: carbide lights: REA available:
cistern and living wells: large barns:
windmill: on mail pbone H 6 bus and
milk routes: SV miles railroad town: m
miles Zion Lutheran church and school
in lowest tax levy tone Bates County
price 18 000: possession at once Contae:
A R DIE ReehvUle Mlaaeert
LIVESTOCK
I AM FORCED TO SELL my entire hen
of registered Angus cattle consisting of
lflfl bead young cows yearling heifers
calves and young bulls at private sale:
very reasonable price
C J DELBR1DOB ileex Falla fl B
MISCELLANEOUS
ftTORAOE— Low rate: modern warehouse:
local and distance moving VON DEB ARE
MM OUve Ik flt Leals 9 Me
TO BUT or sell plane or part In a hurry
consult the Windsock Writs for free sam-
ple cepyilBE WINDSOCK Meaat Verses
pie cepy
Dllaals
POULTRY CHICKS S EQUIP
WILD OBESE DUCKS Peafowl Phase-
ants Pigeons Prices free JEWEL
GAME FARM DANVILLE ILL
WANTED TO BUT
MONET WANTED
Large and Small Lota
Comb and Extracted
' State Quantity and Price
CLIDE E BOM IBUBERT NEBB
Buy U S Savings Bond!
MOROUIIE
lumn!giviyio
REAL EFFECTIVE RELIEF FROM
POISON IVY
and POISON OAK Formulated
during war External use 8 on bottle
(LOOpoatpnld Means Bank Haaraataa
PAUL 8 McBOWCU Boot He 8
MeUl Kaaaaa 0018
JUST
8 AIN IN
twqs eRiAOaP HMP&S&If
WNU-D
34—48
R
wimn
Fat Tom T Fool Wall
14 ham enry day Y day (vary
mk lew topple tha kidrars Slut
uts mattar Inm lbs Hoed
waste mat
If mon
i aware of hew tbs
matter
wlthoat tajary le
be better nadentaadiag ef
whole eystem Is apsst when bldaeps lafl
Cos esmiHmm mra that socMthleg
mag Tea may safer scatter bach-
ache laliitm babes tkceamUa
Uo at the bills ms aad kaip tbaae la
ism eat paieoaaas warns bam the
beaA Tboyraamm aoMag bermM
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uA mnm
G WHITS
THR ITOIT Tirol PAH: Meet CeL
frank Kartx pilot of a flying fortran
tails of Oat fatal lay when tha Japs
track la tha Philippines Bight of his
were killed wklla leelag for Shop
aid Old with many ether forte
waa demolished an Ike grand Alter
escaping la Australia what la left f tha
quadras lies I Java wksra they go on
many atlsskms evsr Iks PhUtpptDes and
tha Java sea The boys la Jsva hssr
what happened to tha Marblehead and
tha Hoasloa and morale tags The Batch
blow ap their ammultloa damps and
tha order comss through to svaeuts
Tha littls Dutch navy tights a losing Bgbt
la tbs dark Java eoUspses Sjt War
reafelts lever gets his moacy
CHAPTER XIX
‘When I said I hadn't got it he
said if it ever did come through
wasn't to open it until he got back
or something like thit He'd meant
every word of it and yet now it
seemed he didn't want me to see it
I couldn't understand But it didn’
seem to matter Because what did
any letter matter now that we could
talk all we wanted to around the
world?"
‘‘It wag long after midnight when
we finished'' said Frank "But it
waa tome satisfaction to know
would cost the Japanese maybe five
hundred dollars and I only hoped
I'd be out of Java go they couldn’
collect from me 1
'Then I got back to work on the
Dutch military who of course were
up all that night They knew what
wag coming tomorrow even if the
civilians were only beginning to sus-
pect It wa two o’clock in the
morning when I got Major Fisher
out of bed with the newt that al-
ready the landing barge of one
flank of this invasion force had been
sighted right off the beach
"After a final desperate call to
the Dutch General van Oeyen he
agreed our boys might leave turn-
ing their P-40's over to the Dutch
fighter pilots provided that before
they went they strafed the Jap land-
ing barges Without verbal orders
from the Dutch commander they
would not have gone
"So I rustled two cars and a truck
to transport them and by four
o'clock we were headed for Gnoro
We got there a few minutes before
dawn to find our boyg were up and
out on that final mission although
they did not know it was their last
"Again we telephoned Van Oeyen
in Surabaya to tell him the orders
had been obeyed and be told us re-
luctantly to bid them Godspeed and
good luck they bad fought the good
fight and those who returned from
this mission were now tree to go to
Australia If there was a way
"I hoped there still would be The
Colonel hid told me the day before
that if I could get them aeroif Java
—to Jockstrap— by noon they would
find three Fortresses which be had
ordered back from Australia to pick
them up However he couldn't guar-
antee that these Fort would dare
wait on that field beyond noon
"As we stood on the Gnoro Field
of course I got tense Would those
kids come back alive and In time to
get across Java by noon? If we were
late would the bomber pilots get
jittery and maybe pull out without
us? Not that I'd blame them for
today no plane would be safe on any
field in Java
"The Dutch pilots are grave but
they make us welcome
‘Then comes the roar of P-40's
and here la the firit flight— In out of
the Rising Sun as though fleeing
from it Jack Dale it Itf leafier
We grab them What happened?
"It look bad they tell us There
were so hi any barges And when
they started spraying them the
barges threw up horrible cones of
fire In great masses There was a
cross fire too— from Jap shore bat-
teries already landed At last they
had set their ugly crooked teeth
into the lair white coastline of Java
"Then Jack said In a loqr voice
‘When In bell will we get out of
here Frank?'
1 said I had news for him but
Just then the next flight comes roar-
lng In— it's three Hurricanes flown
by Dutch pilots ell that la left of
the Dutch Air Force this final day
except of course they had plane-
less pilots who were to take up our
abandoned P-40'
"Now here's the third flight buzz-
ing in low— P-40's this time and the
American bo?e (till have their old
spirit left beceuse they buzz up the
drome' come roaring in right over
the roof of the operation! office— for
lighter pilot It's like knocking at
the door They're still the old 17th
Puriult Group— or whit's left of
them
"I looked at the P-40'i They are
so full of holes they should be con-
demned— there Is hardly one the
Dutch would dare take up egaln We
were leaving them little enough
Now my boys are gulping coffee
They grab an apple each and sand-
wiches to take along and ram
thlnge In their bagz and I auppoie
It's time for goodbys Captain Ana-
meet leader of the Dutch lighten
tall thin dark-bilred with a finely
chiseled face nervous like many
lighters 1 standing silent at one
aide Hi Dutch boys are with him
"What can we say? Our American
boys have fought with them like
brothers for weeks We’re now mak-
ing a dash for safety
"Anamaet Is the courageous one
He walks forward put up his hand
and says simply without a quaver
Thanks for all you have done We
have tried' but we are finished1
Gravely and with no bitterness
"I ask Mm why be and all bis
boys don’t come out with us We’
find room lot him in the planes
Then we can continue the war from
Australia Ht shakes Ms bead
"Now our boys art loaded In the
truck and presently we’re out on
the main highway headed across
Java but just then we bear a fa
miliar drone— Jap dive bombers
Smelling their way Into Java
they've finally found this field It'
only luck they hadn’t found it be
fore Our boys crowd against the
tail gate ol the truck to watch them
peel off one by one assume that
40-degree angle toward the ground
let go the little egg pull out of their
dives and then— r-r-r-umpf the bomb
takes hold It punctuates the lea
son we’d been trying for days to
It was tws o'clock la the morning
when I get Major Fisher cut of bed
drive home to the Dutch Infantry
generals— that the field was now un-
tenable It was only the weather
which kept the Japs out of it yes-
terday "But now we have worries of our
own Thera are seventy-six of us
in this little caravan— fifteen of
them pilots We have only one road
map so the drivers’ Instructions are
to drive carefully and stay to-
gether It's a long drive at the
speed we can make A close squeeze
to make it by noon Then in spite
of the road map we get lost— not
badly but two or three times ws
must backtrack Then I see we'll
never make it by noon The boys
tired from many weks of fighting
try to doze standing up in that jolt-
ing truck I don't sleep but I
have nightmares At every cross-
roads I wonder if lightning-fast light
Jap tanks mayn't come sliding in
on us Even if we had time to turn
and run before they open fire with
their turret guns they would have
cut off our escape to Jockstrap
“My wrist-watch hour band seems
to race These tired hoys bounc-
ing In that truck trust me The Air
Corps got them in here now the Air
Corps la getting what Is left of them
ouL They don't doubt that a big
bomber will be waiting with Its door
open on the Jockstrap runway to
tsks them to Australia Suppose we
get there to find the bomber pilots
have waited past the rendezvous
hours and then gone on back to
Australia eihpty— and ws look at a
vacant field knowing the Jeps are
closing in behind us?
'My watch hand races toward
noon and we're still hours from
Jockstrap but I have an Idea We're
not far from what shows on my
map as a fair-sized town which
should have telephones from which
while the boys have lunch I can
call the Colonel and tell him we're
on our way— that those bombers
must wall
"The town la a sleepy little place
built round what at a quick glanca
one might mistake for a Middle
Western courthouse square War
hasn't touched It and you'd think
could never come In the hotel they
stare at our uniforms— they're the
first American onea they've seen
The boys order while I hunt a tele-
phone to call tha Colonel it Jock-
strap But minutes tick by and they
can't locate him Nor anyone else
who can deliver a message that we
are coming end those bombers
must wait
"Do J waste more time calling?
Or do wa hurry on hoping wa’U
get there before they are frightened
from the field? That seems mora
sensible to w forge on I haven't
the heart to tell them I couldn't
reach tha Colonel
They're all tired In the cert
there'a no wrestling or kidding'
wMch is amazing for fighter pilots
BE
'EY
WJUlTlATUtlf
Finally I know tram the map wa
must be approaching Jockstrap
But on what aids of tha town Is tha
field? We can’t waste precious min-
utes uselessly fighting its narrow
streets
"Then to one side I see leaping
flames and a column of smoke
That's all the marker you need to
find an airdrome at this stage of a
war I tell the driver to steer for
the smoke and he’ll find the field
"And at first It seems aU to
have been for nothing There are
the hangars split wide open— six or
seven Forts burning merrily Also
the water tower Is Mt Profession-
ally I admire It as one of the best
bomb runs I’ve ever seen The Japs
seem to havg made a perfect job of
cutting off our retreat— but not
There remains a single Fortress!
"It seems Lieutenant Vandevan-
ter managed in the nick of time to
get her off the ground and flew out
to sea until the raid was over Luck-
ily they sent only bombers and no
Zeros wMch could shoot him down
Here be is now perched on the edge
of the field
“But at the utmost be can carry
only a third of us I dispatch about
fifty in the trucks to Madlun Field
hoping It Isn’t blown up and that
two Forts the Colonel tells me are
due In from Australia can get them
out
"And now we have a bonfire at
everything we couldn’t take with us
but wMch ws don't want the Japs
to have— aU our photographs every
official paper the entire records of
the 17th Pursuit Group for the Java
and Philippine wars It aU goes
up In those flames on Jockstrap
Field forever— except what the few
remaining boys standing around that
fire can remember of what the oth-
ers did We even chuck in a few
bomb sights that ' were kicking
around— for luck and for kindling
"But just as the flamed were leap-
ing highest the air-raid siren start-
ed to scream We dived for drain-
age ditch and I think I got my
worst scare of the war Because
up above were two Zeros approach-
ing and down here on the field was
our solitary Fortress — our last
chance to escape— sitting in front of
God and everybody (including those
Japs) mother-naked and defense-
less How long I held my breath
(taring up into the iky I couldn't
say now But for some reason they
hadn't dived on ui yet and then
when one rolled up to let the other
take picture I realized It was only
a recco flight to take the damage
they’d done a few hours before
T began loading the boys into
that plane But I did one final thing
couldn’t forget Captain Anamaet
(tending there on that Gnoro Field
watching us pull out and if I’d
wanted to the othera wouldn’t have
let me So with the Dutch liaison
officer there at Jbckstrap we made
arrangement that if tomorrow night
see could get any plane through
from Australia they would circle our
old bomber field at Malang Th
liaison officer wss to notify Ana-
meet so that if Ms Dutch fighter
pilots could get there and Malang
wasn't by then in Jap hands they
would light a bonfire on its field as
signsl that it was safe for our
Forts to corns In and pick them up
and take them out to Australia
whera we'd have another chance to
fight the war together
"We kept the date'The next night
Captains Bill Bohnaker and Eddia
Green (lipped through to Malang
For forty-five minute they circled
our old field But there waa no
bonfire Maybe Anamaet’s boys had
died during the day giving their all
for Java Maybt they'd got to the
field Just ahead at the Japs and
wer now prisoner unable to light
their bonfire but listening in the
darknes as Bill and Eddie circled
and circled above them What hap
pened w ntver knew But I'm
glad are couldn't have foreseen that
darkened field at Malang as w aU
climbed Into our own Fortress
turned off the Jockstrap field and
beaded eeit for Australia flying into
a rising moon"
“Nothing much waa going to hap-
pen on that flight to Australia" con-
tinued Frank "although we couldn’t
know it All had to cram forward
for the takeoff of course for with
that big load in the rear we'd never
have got her tall up We manned
battle stations and only after we
were halfway across the ocean did
the gunners leave their turrets I
rode up lit the pilot's compartment
and there were at least seven of
us there three sitting on the floor
"At two o'clock In the morning we
sight the coast In th§ moonlight
which gives it ghostly hue It's
just fiat desert but finally we find
the little town of Broome We cir-
cle it and finally a liar path breaks
out below— they'rs tossing kerosene
flares out of s moving auto to show
us the runway so we circle and
com In
"I couldn’t sleep The mosquitoes
were making mt groggy and also I
was thinking of our planes circling
Msltng Field for Anamaet After
a white I got up end looked out the
hanger door The first pale dawn
was breaking over Broome wMch
could now tee consisted of a gen
aril itore a gat station two houses
and this hangar shack— perched out
here on the edge of nothing where
the red send desert of Australia
meet th Mu salt desert of the
sea
(TO BI CONTINUED)
Helesasd by Western Surquil Ban
' By monOA TALE
Katharine hepburn
was nearly drowned at
sea while making a picture
George Zukor directed it
was in scenes (or “Sacred and
Profane Love” that Greer
Garson was swept into the
sea at Monterey with Zukor
directing Not getting to be
a habit with him wa bopel Well
he’s directed the great of (tag and
screen — Ethel Barrymore Laur-
etta Taylor Greta Garbo Ingrid
Bergman with great success and
no casualties “All these women are
GBEEB OAESON
unlike any you ever saw before"
he says “and when first you see'
them you are not sure that you
like them But once people become
accustomed to peculiarities of strik-j
Ingly Individual actresses thousands
try to b like them"
—
Kenny Baker fteps In as emcee
and star of "Glamour Manor” Sep-
tember 30 on ABC The show will
have the lame format as last year
story three days a week audience
participation Tuesdays and Thurs-
days Baker every day
— —
Denmark’s “Viking Ctrl" whs’s
signed n long-term contract with
Hall Wallis preduettoas has th
leading feminine rale In "The Beg-
gars Are Cemlng to Tew" She aad
her family were among th last to
leave Denmark before th Germsa
occapotioa
— —
Jan Withers got her start In films
In a Shirley Temple picture
“Bright Eyes" Now that they're
both growiMtp Jane says she’d like
to make another picture with Shir-'
ley She prove what a real actress
she Is a a reporter in ‘Danger
Street" ‘
William Wyler can't eee why tha
doctor said It wa just "a common
cold" that told him up during th
filming at Goldwyn's "Th Best
Years at Our Lives” He figures
that th coat at halting production
for a day costa exactly $513813 Of
course that Included th salaries
of stars extras and technician Aa
for th extra IS cents — that was
for a box of aspirin
Peter Lind Hayet considered by
a lot of peopl the best comedian
now at large reports to Hollywood
in th fall for hie first picture role
he'U play a pres agent in Nunnally
Johnson’s "Mr Peabody and th
Mermaid" Radio row (till to gap-
ing over th very sensible stipula-
tions h mad when first radio of-
fer wer dangled before Mm— (100
a week for himself $3000 for script
writers Ht leaned th importance
of writers after an unfortunate ex-
perience with th ' Beatrice Kay
show (
Tommy Dorsey working In "Th
Fabulous Dorseys" (United Artist
release) to prepared for anything
"Ths way Hollywood does things"
said bo "I'm not sura they won’t
ask my brother Jimmy to portray
me and than ask me to play
Jimmy 1"
Th “experts an “It Fay T
Be Ignorant" are frightfully disap-
pointed —net a itngl romance has
developed betweea oantestaato
whe'vo met when appearing an th
pregram Mara than a kindred
coaples have been Inlrodaoed to
each other Friday after Friday n
yoong man aad a yoaag woman
have been selected tram tha audi-
ence aad braaght to tha stage Bat
Torn Howard still has hope
Marsha Hunt and Felix B restart
win b teen In good company in
"Carnegie Hall”— th east include
Jaicha Heifetz Arthur Rubensteln
Lily Pona Rii Stevens and Benny
Goodman Boston Symphony orches-
tra New York Philharmonic and
Vatican choir
ODDS AND ENDS-Whan Cords
BamharJt directing “PouauaA" at
Famer’i colls "Joan?" he get re
oonras roes Joan Craword Fin
raid CkanJlar and taring Nice
contract Robert Taylor's signed with
N-G-M i ii’i lor JJ years no options
and he cun produce and dtroc i raot
thing spoilt his looks for acting
Dennis Dey hrsshs in new radio pro
gram A Dot h i the Life at Bennie
Do r on October J-AflC Thortdsy
evening Fran h File featured
fas 1 Cover the Big reran" taeama
Ir Gdfiif nftxB i mImbmb
Ml little
CO FAR 184$ has been an amazing
3 season In two ways— for its bril-
liancy and its failures For fts Mex-
ico— and th good that Mexico has
done for ball play-
ers everywhere
The Red Sox Jo
Louis and Assault
hav taken full
charge of the spot-
light side They
hav been the out-
standing cham-
pions Golf has no
entry with Ben Ho-
gan and Byron Nel-
Ted Williams son tb two lead-
ing money winners
trailing Lloyd Mangrum in the (I
S Open W seem to have the best
tennis players but a Frenchman is
still th Wimbledon winner
What has happened in the flrw
year after the war? Except in the
way of record attendances and gen-
eral enthusiasm the aftermath of
World War n hasn’t even ap-
proached th aftermath of World
War L Not in the way of competi-
tive class
Csa yea asm era petit ri today
wh have anything like th com-
bined clam at Bab Bath Jack
Dempsey Bebby Jeaes BUI Til-
des Tommy Hitchcock Roger
Hornsby Earl Baade Walter Hagen
Gene Sarnies Red Grange Man of
War? We have Joe Leals 1
Joe Loais has been the world's
heavyweight champion for o
nine years
Wa hav Ted Williams but Ted
Williams Mt over 400 before the
tost war He was a great ball play-
er or at least a great hitter before
World War n ever developed
slight fever Sammy Baugh and Sid
Luc km an go well back before World
War tt
Tb brief postwar period has de-
veloped a wild stamped to the box
office But very little beyond that
In baseball the batting stars today
include Ted Williams Dixie Walk
r Dom DiMaggio Vernon Musial
Hank Greenberg and a few more
But these are veterans— moet of
them Hal Newhouser of the Tigers
sqfl Rocky Graziano hav been the
two leading stars sine 1941
Against this list I haven’t the
heart to give you the names 6f
those who hav laded folded up or
slipped badly— who returning from
army and navy assignments fen
far behind Th outstanding per-
formance ef 1945— eo far — has been
th Bed Sos phis Ted William
Plus th Dodgers’ fin showing
against heavy odds player for play-
er The second nomination to Joe
Louis who against Billy Conn bad
almost no opposition
Ben Hogan and Byron Nelson are
th two major matey winner fat
golf— but Lloyd Mangrum to Open
champion and Harman Kelaar Is
tb Master’s winner And Sammy
Snaad to British champion It to all
very much confused very badly
tangled up
Most Class in Football
In my opinion the feature part
of 194$ won't belong to baseball
racing boxing basketball track
golf at tennis It will belong to
football This applies to both th
college teams and th pros Ibis
first applies to th quality at com-
petition There will be far more
class to football than any other
postwar sport can even approach
I understand that over 100000 ap-
plications had been made for the
Army-Mi chig an game back in June
There will be over 300000 ticket
applications tor thit contest at Ann
Arbor Applications for th Army-
Notre Dame game will pass th
300000 mark before September
Army-Not re Dame and Army-Navy
together could leave the 800000
mark behind — If filer was
anly spec enough
Th Navy-Geergia Tech gam la
Atlanta already ha tw times lb
seal application that Atlanta can
Natra Dame Army Navy
aad Michigan win ha a triple sen-
sei for aimed every contest The
thing wffl happen to Seath-
era California and UCLA aa to
west coast Alsa to SL Mary’s and
ethers
But I doubt that Notre Dam
win have the team Frank Leahy
had in 1943 or that Army win have
th team Red Blaik had in 1944 or
1945 The talent hasn’t improved
but tb crowd interest has Veter-
ans coming from army and navy
servlet bava proved nothing Soffit
hav been better — other hav
taken a big dip This has been true
In baseball — and it will be Just
s true In collef and pro football
Thera will be itart from other
years who will shins — and thert
wUl be star from other years who
win b flops
Thar wtil be a professional foot-
ban entanglement that win leave
you gasping— and mora than a tew
pocketbooks flitter than a thin
plank In looking on ahead you
wUl also see a big revival In ten-
nis Interest — and one of tbs hot-
test amateur golf champlonsMpe
any galloping member of the Thun-
dering Herd has aver known Bud
Ward — Frank Stranahan — Cary
Middtocoff — goffer good enough
to bast th Nelsons and th Hogans
in major tests plus young stars
moving up Ibis has bean a rather
dizzy season so far up and down
Funny Little Bears
For the Nursery
CWINGIN’ on a star and sliding
J down the moon that’s whatj
our personality-plus bears do Usa
tor crib carriage covers nursery!
linens I
They’re so fat and tunny youTf
enjoy the embroidery In beglnner-atitchas
Pattern 709 haa transfer of 17 mo tils from
2 by Z to Hi by 10 inches
Sevtnc Circle Needtecralt Dept
94 W Kaadolph SC CMeaf M HL
Endoa JO cents tor pattern
No
Name
a Ha—
Gas on Stomach
mnifiMfiflifolUf— MifirtHM UtatJ
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MILLIONS ARE GUIDED
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salts for 4 ynra da vahabl bmiU
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If pals ROOD-BOX!
Too stria and woman oho auffar oo
from simple anemia that you r pal
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to lac a Uood-traa So try Lydia B
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The Quapaw Chieftain (Quapaw, Okla.), Vol. 13, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 29, 1946, newspaper, August 29, 1946; Quapaw, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1850930/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.