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T H E D I L L O N E X A M I N E R *» 'X '-jii
CLASSIFIEDD E P A R T M E N TFEATHERS WANTED
FEA TH ER S WANTED, NEW OR OLD Ship or w rite to Sterling F ea th e r Company, 909 N. B readw ay. 81 ., Lonla. Missouri.
WANTED: G E E SE . DUCK, PHEASANT body fea th ers and quills. We also buy dressed Reese and ducks. Send to— FARM ERS’ STORE - MltcheU. S. D.
TRAPPER’S SUPPLIES
Edwards' Wolf S§rKgone night that brought * 181 .60 . Free formulas and 1 nstrnotlona. Get Edwards’ real Coyote Scent. GEORGE EDWARDS, LIVINGSTON, MONT.
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PHOTO FINISHINGROLLS DEVELOPEDBight prints and one enlargement oi your choice of sixteen prints without enlargement, 25c. Reprints So each
NORTHWEST PHOTO SERVICE Fargo • • North Dakota
MISCELLANEOUSA W EEKLY PERSONAL L E T T ER for you —Som ething new I! W rite for full inform ation. I. TURNER. P . O. Box 5101, M etro Station, Los Angeles (65), C alifornia.
AUTO ACCESSORIESA ntl-F reeie , noncorrosive, Inexpensive, m anufactu re yourself. F o r deta ils send 3c stam p. H. F . Betke, Box 609, B orger, Tex.
The gaily enameled unit insignia you see on a soldier’s lapels and overseas cap are reproductions of his regimental shield displayed in the center of the eagle on his regimental flag. It’s a part of U. S. Army tradition. Traditional, too, is the Army m an’s preference for Camel cigarettes. (Based on actual sales records from service men’s own stores.) I t’s a gift from the folks back home, that always rates cheers. And though there are Post Office restrictions on packages to overseas Army men, you can still send Camels to soldiers in the U. S., and to men in the Navy, Marines, and Coast Guard wherever they are.—Adv.
ST, C H O IC E -M IL L IO N SSt. Joseph a s p i r i n
I WORLD'S LARGEST SELLER AT 10'
Small BusinessUp to the war, 90 per cent of
America’s 2,800,000 businesses employed less than eight persons apiece.
GROVE’S COLD TABLETS
A Reàl Mèdici neGrove'» Cold T ablets are prom pt In action—decisive In resu lts. They’re a m ultip le m edicine—an Internal m edicine. Go to work In a businesslik e way to work on a ll these usual cold sym ptom s a t th e sam e tffne. Relieve headache—ease body aches— reduce fever—relieve nasal stu ffin ess. Grove’s Cold T ablets give wonderful com fort! Take exactly as directed. R est, avoid exposure. Ask your drugg ist for Grove’s Cold T ablets.Save Money— Get Large EconornySbe
/"T o relieve distress of MONTHLY
Female WeaknessLydia E. Plnkham’s Vegetable Compound Is made especially for women to help relieve periodic pain with Its weak, tired, nervous, blue feelings —due to functional monthly disturbances.Taken regularly—Plnkham’s Compound helps build up resistance against such symptoms. Here is a product tha t helps nature and that's the kind to buy I Famous for almost a century. Thousands upon thousands of women have reported benefits. Follow label directions. Worth tryingI
LYDIA L P IN K H A M ’S COMPOUND
Relief At Last ForYour CoughCreomulsion relieves promptly be
cause it goes right to the seat St the trouble to help loosen and expel germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchial mucous m em branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion with the understanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back.
CREOMULSIONfor Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis
WNU—X 4 6-43
Watch Your Kidneys/
Help Them Cleanse th e Blood of Harmful Body Waste
Tour kidneys are constantly filtering W ute matter from the blood stream. Bot kidneys sod etimei lag in tbeir work—do not se t ss Nstnre Intended—fsfi to remove im parities that, if retained, may poison the system and apset the whole body machinery.
Symptoms may be nagriag backache, persistant headache, attacks of dinfaess, getting op nights, swelling, poffineas under tbs eyes a fading of nervosa anxiety and loss of pep and strength.
Other signs of kidney or bladder disorder are sometimes burning, scanty or too frecnaent nrinstSoQe
There should bo no doabt that prompt treatment is wiser than neglect. Has Doon’s POIe.Doan's have been winning now M inds for mom than forty years.They have a nation-wide reputation. Am raeoamandsd by gm tsful aerate tha country evar. Ask year meHMeri
Doans Pi us
Republicans Gain in State, G ty Elections
Republican and Democratic political strength Is apparently more on a par than it has been for many years, according to results of thé recent off-year state and city elections. GOP candidates won not only the posts they were expected to get but also some they were not expected to get. Three of the victors are pictured above. Left: Walter £ . Edge, Republican, elected governor of the State of New Jersey. Center: Joe R. Hanley, Republican, elected lieutenant-governor of New York state. Right: Simeon S. Willis, Republican, elected governor of Kentucky in a tight vote battle. Kentucky had not elected a Republican governor since 1927. The recent election was said to have been the closest in that state since 1915. In Philadelphia, Pa., Mayor Ber nard Samuel won over his Democratic opponent, William C. Bullitt, former ambassador to Russia and. France.
Four Typical U. S. Fighters of the South Pacific
Left: U. S. A. of the U. S. N.—that’s U. S. Aarnham, 24, a yeoman of the United States navy, pictured inspecting a box of junk jewelry on an island in the South Pacific. The jewelry was collected in Los Angeles for trading with island natives. Center: Sitting on top of their sleeping quarters arc two marine antiaircraft gunners who have shot down many enemy planes during the 140 raids they have helped to disperse in two months. They are Pfc. Frank D. Dollard, 19, (left), and Corp. Robert Wolf, 23. Right: George Asi- makis, 29, a machine-gunner with the coast guard who took on a Jap in the jungle and scored with a left hook to the jaw. But he was forced to resort to firearms when the Jap drew a knife.
Carrier Transports, Supplies Tank
, r ' S '
Wear and tear on our tanks is cut down considerably by this tank recovery vehicle which carries the tanks np to baltlcfrontsj Thus, they enter an engagement with cool engines and fall fuel tanks. The carrier is 58 feet long and weighs over 40 tons. It is armed for protection against enemy ground and air attacks. It carries enough ammunition and rations to enable the crew to operate independently for four days. The arm y has labeled this new craft the M-25.
The King Is Peeved; the Queen Dignified
Norman Nelson (left), 15 months old, appears to be on the verge of a hearty howl as he poses for the cameraman after being named "Blaster Chicago” at an annual baby contest sponsored by the Women of the Moose. B is attitude draws a look of disdain from the queen of the show, Jacqueline Clark, 29 months old, (right), who dignifiedly accepts the title 9l “Miss Chicago.”
Mountbatten in India
British Admiral Lord Louis'Monnt- batten (right), supreme Allied commander in Southeast Asia, is greeted by General Sir Ancbinleck, commander in chief in India, as Mount- batten arrived in New Delhi, This will be Mountbatten’s headquarters.
Opens CIO Meeting
Philip Murray, president of the Congress of Industrial Organizations, opening the CIO’s sixth annual convention in Philadelphia, Pa. CIO members now number 5,285,990. -
A typical illustration of the sudden sweep of righteous belligerency which suddenly transformed America into a hard hitting war machine is a group of women who guard the Allis- Chalmers superchàrger plant in Milwaukee, Wis. Before Pearl Harbor, these women probably would have been shocked at the sight of a gun. Now they are crack shots with pistols, shotguns, and tommy guns, as they and other patriotic women guard our vital war plants.
H A L T ! — That’s what Agnes Zemen means when she blows her whistle.
G A TE GUARD— Lucille Beil examines the gate pass presented by the driver of a loaded truck.
CH ECK — All vigiladies have orders to be suspicious, Jewell Halliday, left, not only checks this visitor’s credentials but also the inside of a leather bag he is carrying. The military women stop each visitor to make sure that he or she is okay before be ing admitted. They also check each incoming automobile and the contents of all brief cases.
Below: Yvonne Iiyden, left, puts most of her shots in the bull’s eye. Mary Andrashi checks the high score.
»
189612-42
Body Moulding.V 'OU’LL be delighted with * way this four-gore slip wit?
brassiere top fits your flgure! s may finish it with a sm art front and lace hem. The pati includes panties to match.
• * •Pattern No. 1896 la designed for '
12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Correa; Ing bust measurements 30, 32, 34, 3e 40 and 42. Size 14 (32) slip require yards 36 or 39-lnch material, pantli yard. One lace motif plus 4 yards en to trim set.
Due to an unusually large demand current war conditions, slightly more is required In filling orders for a fc the most popular pattern numbers. •
Send your order to:
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEP 530 South Wells St. Chic«
Enclose 20 cents in coins for ea- pattern desired.Pattern No........................Size..........,Name ........................ ....................... .Address ............ ...............................
I
THE BOSS is Lieut. E. E.Van Toor. He trains the lady guards for their posts. He is pictured showing Peggy Walker, a new recruit, how to disarm an intruder.
SINGLE FILE — With tommy guns slung over their shoulders vigiladies drill.
io often used medicated"multeit —now many mothers use Pen modem modication in a base con ing mutton suet. Rub on—do action relieves colds’ muscular 0( coughing. (1) vaporizes to con stuffy nose (2) outside, stimulate spot where applied. Get Pene
More Seven-Leaf CloversRecent botanical studies si
that seven-leaf clovers are th times as numerous as six- clovers.
DON’T LET
CONSTIPATIONSLOW YOU UP
G When bowels ars sluggish and , feel Irritable, headachy, do as milif do - chew1 FEEN-A-MINT, the mod chewing-gum laxative. Simply chi FEEN-A-MINT before you go to t taking only in accordance with direction* — sleep without being' t turbed. Next morning gentle, thqror relief, helping you feel swell again. 1 FEEN-A-MINT. Tastes good, is har and economical. A generous family sup;
FEEN-A-MINT “i a
SNAPPY FACTSABOUT
<*> RUBBER
Of the 123,000 communities In the United States, 54,000 have no rail connection. They, depend on rubber tiros for their existence and their con-' tacts with ether communities. They rely solely on buses, trucks and passenger cars.
Reduction of the national average mileage of passenger can to 5/400 miles a year through rationing has proved an I mportant factor In rubber conservation. An Idea of how this mileage Is regulated will be understood when It is known that 55 per cent of the country's c an are operated on "A" gas ration books alone; about 25 per cent hove"B "an d 20 per cent have "C* books for supplementary supplies/
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1% ornez peace
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