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PAGE TWO
S MONDAY THRU THURSDAY NN
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BIG BUYS.
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GUAMPOD | e
with e2cl PUL g el Fre b
of a reß Sohls I Gor Phasinndiet Ao
510?\1& ‘lc compounds your pr:ucriptio:
4 You fle\\ bo‘h : 5 with precise skill and accuracy. ‘
‘ "i’,_‘l‘,lll”t'--— l
' HALO SHAMPOO s§7e¢
‘ Glorifies Hair, 315 OUNCE. . coverresres
BROMO SELTZER 5T¢
Efiervescent, 2}/ oZ. 80tt1e........0e0
DIAL SOAP 19c
Deodorant, 25¢ Bar. ......oooooeccrees
INHISTON TABS 39¢
Anti-Histamine. Box of 12........0e0e
FEENAMINT 21¢ |
Chewy Laxative. Boxof 16.......c000:
ALKA-SELTZER 29¢
Effervescent. Bottleof 8.......000v0ee
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$1.25 V. T.TONIC.. .. .. .. .. 8%
FOR GAS oy
10c BLOCK MAGNESIA .. .. .. . 5
SEIE? POR MUSCULAR PAINS.
$1.25 ABSORBINEJR. .. .. .. ... T%¢
et
30c BLACK DRAUGHT .. .. .. . 1%
AT o.|
15¢ PHILLIPS MAGNESIA .. .. .. 5%¢
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ASPIRIN TABLETS .. .. .. .. ... 12
.
PINT MINERALOIL .. .. .. .. .. 19%¢c
RUBBING ALCOHOL .. .. .. .. . 1%
FOR KIDNEYS
75c DOANS PILLS .. .. .. .. ... 4%
Sale items are cash, none sold to dealers,
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U k"‘ NWK . WA NN s e 3
A POOL THERE WAS—Badgered by Korea's blazing heat and swirling dust, this bunch ot Marines
reacted quickly when they found this nice big water hole. Ever resourceful, the Marines threw a
parapet of sand bags around it to create a reasonable facsimile of a swimming pool. (Photo by
NEA-Acme Staff Photographer Jim Healv.)
By
Jonathan Forman, M. D., Vice President
FRIENDS OF THE LAND
Columbus 1, Ohio
PREGNANCY DEMANDS A
GOOD DIET
The greatest waste in human
health, happiness and money
comes in our efforts to re
produce ourselves. We physicians
are proud of the fact that in 1918
the death rate of mothers in child
birth was nine for each 1,000
births, and that by 1945 we had
reduced it to less than two; but
we still are concerned with the
sad fact that some 137,000 mothers
still lose their lives. We have a
lot to learn about the immediate
causes of death of the mother in
child birth, but we do know that
while our investigative scientists
are trying to find all of the an
swers to this problem, that prac
tically all pregnant women can
be saved from sickness and death
during their pregnancy. There
have been a dozen or more studies
in recent years, all of which show
that when the expectant mother
has a decent diet, such as we know
how to teach her to select for her
self, she does not have morning
nausea, reclamptic symptoms, nor
those dreaded convulsions of preg~
nancy, and there were no deaths
in the several series reported al
though there were among the wo
men who did not get the diet and
were used as controls,
In recent years there has been
a 75 per cent drop in the riumber
of infant deaths from prematurity.
These, too, can be nearly all pre
vented by giving the expectant
mother a decent diet so that her
womb can be a proper place for a
fertilized egg to implant itself and
' THATS NEW Jouve gotea seett
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it "-—-————-—_._l‘flflfl! { partment. Even a spes
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PR R o for wall bortles, too.
THE SERVEL GAS REFRIGERATOR brings you all that's
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It's absolutely motorless—carries a ten year guaranteel
The big freezer compartment in this 11.5-cu-fe. model has
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beautiful models to choose from.
Suvin,@lffimx
Je iR F g p LGRSO
THE BANNER-AERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
grow. All of the mothers of these
dead infants simply did not have
enough of the vital essential§ in
their foods to make their=wombs
capable of holding and nourishing
the fertilized egg. So more than
100,000 infants are sacrificed 1o an
inadequate diet. Our dairymen
know what to do about the shy
breeder, and how a diet of good
food will often bring her back to
become a regular breeder. Yet we
physicians have not offered to the
400,000 women in this country
who want to bear children, but
find themselves unable to carry
the child past the first three or
four months of pregnancy, the
real remedy of good food from
good soil. Finally, we do know
that most of the 10 per cent of 1
our sterile marriages would re- |
spond to a better diet. |
All of these can be explained in|
terms of a lack of calcium, mag
nesium, and the other essential
minerals from the soil as well as
the necessary vitamins, most of
which have a trace of an essential |
soil mineral in its molecule or
some one of the minerals acting
as a catalyst to help the vitamin
or hormone to do its work. Final
ly, in all of the series in which the
expectatnt mother was put on a
decent diet, motherhood took a
deep spiritual quality that had
been missing and the pregnancy
became the great experience that |
1 Nature intended it to be. l
There is adequate evidence to[
prove that if the expectant mother ‘
gets an adequate diet—not the:
best we know how to prescribe but
one good enough to get by on—her
offspring will have a jaw that is
big enough' to receive the teeth as
they are formed; each tooth will
be squarely set in the jaw and
equally spaced. The face will be
well formed, There will be no
teeth to be straightened, no crook
ed teeth, no cleft palates, no hare
lips, and all the faces will be sym
metrical and beautiful. What is
more important, the teeth of a
child from a mother on a good diet
will be of superior quality so that
they will last as long as the indi
vidual, even if it be 120 years,
provided they get anywhere near
decent care and that person him
self gets a good diet.
The longer land is farmed as we
have been farming ours, the more
depleted it becomes of those min
erals which are essential to good
teeth and to health. Of the first
70,000 recruits for the United
States Navy in World War 11, it
was shown that the quality of
their teeth followed the pattern of
soil fertility.
Malnutrition sets the stage for
the development of tuberculosis
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and other infections. Lots of
youngsters contract tuberculosis,
but only those who are victims of
bad nutrition succumb to the di
sease,
(Excerpt from address of Jona
than Forman, M. D. at the annual
meeting of the NASCD in Oklaho
ma City, Feb, 20-23, 1951.)
Dr. Buchanan
Gets New Post
The U. S. Department of Agri
culture announced today that Dr.
Thomas S. Buchanan, pathologist,
left Saturday, July 14, for Monro
via, Liberia where he will become
a member of the U. S. Govern~
ment’s economic mission for dev
eloping the agriculture of the West
African republic. The assignment
is made at the request of the Gov
ernment of Liberia and in coop
eration with the Technical Co
operation Administration, Depart
ment of State.
Dr. Buchanan is the second De
partment of Agriculture specialist
to go to Liberia under the Point
Four program. Dr. Clayton R.
Orton, a former dean of the West
Virginia College of Agriculture,
has been assisting the Liberian
Department of Agriculture and
Commerce in developing plans for
an expanded program of agricul
tural research and extension ed
ucation since last September.
Dr. Buchanan has had many
years of experience in forest path
ology. He was a forestry patholo
gist in Oregon and Georgia for the
Department of Agriculture’s Bu
reau of Plant Industry, Soils, and
Agricultural Engineering for more
than 16 years. In 1944, he entered
the armed forces and served with
the U. S. Marine Corps for two
years. At the end of the war he
joined the staff of the Weyerhaue
ser Timber Company in their
Longview, Wash., development de
partment. Since 1947, he has been
an associate professor at the Uni
Lunches, Picknicks, And For Every
J Occasion Benson's Super - Enriched
§ Bread Is The Best Bread Money Can
Buy. "Benson’s” Every Time.
versity of Idaho’s School of For
estry.
A native of Tacoma, Wash., Dr.
Buchanan holds a B. S. degree in
forestry from the University of
Idaho, an M. S. from the Universi
ty of California, and a doctor’s de
gree in pathology from Yale Uni
versity.
Dr. Buchanan will travel by
plane to his headquarters in Mon
rovia.
Great Britain has had only two
labor prime ministers: Ramsay
MacDonald and Clement Attlee.
: .
Summer Dresses -
All our most attractive numbers .
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2 price .
Save half the price on all Summer Blouses,
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BRADLEY'S
SUNDAY, JULY 15, 1951.
The Weather Bureau of the
United States has 2500 observing
stations in the western states.
Colorado has six thousand miles
of trout streams and two thousand
miles of lakes.
Most ancient encyclopedia ex
tant is Pllny's’ “Natural History "
according to” the Encyclopedia
Britannica.
Fir cones stand erect on the
twigs; cones of pines and spruces
hang down.