The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, June 19, 1943, City Edition, Page TWO, Image 2

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    ‘Gird Now for Coming Struggle’.....
Barclay visit to Bolster
Negro Democrats?
Washington, June 15 (ANP)_..
Was the visit of President Barclay
of Liberia a political gesture, plan
ned to bring back into the Demo
cratic fold the fast vanishing Ne
gro vote? Sentiment i nthe capital
runs strongly to that direction with
many being outspoken in their
pointing out that the serious de
fections of the Negro vote from
the Democratic party grew out of
the failure of the party to sustain
King Yuen Cafe
CHOP SUEY
2010/. N. 24th St. JAckson 8576
.Open from 2 p. m. Until 3 a. m,
American A Chinese Dishes
McGILL’S —
BAR & BLUE ROOM
E. McGill, Prop.
2423-23 NORTH 24th St.
WINE, LIQUORS, and
CIGARS
Blue Room Open 8 p. m. to 1 a. nv
Open for Private Parties from
2 to 7 p. m.
—No Charges—
WE SPECIALIZE IN MIXED
DRINKS.
Free Delivery from 8 a. a to
la.ii.
JA. 9411
WE CARRY A FULL LINE
OF BONDED LIQUORS
TIm TESTIMONY of THOUSANDS:
It's the
HOTEL
THERESA
When in
NEW YORK
eny season
of the year
7tk Are. at 125th St
,..in the Heart of Harlem
tOO spacious, all outside rooms]
luxurious suites. The beautiful
Orchid Room for dining; cocktail
lounge and bar; the lovely Me*,
sanine for relaxation. Ideal atmos.
pfcere for rest, study, <3nd comfort.
largo rooms witk pjirata bath
•2.00 SuM~*2.50 0«M M4 W
Without prhrata bath
•1J0 lit*)*—*2.00 Omtb mt *
WALTER W. SOOTT. tianagae
HOTEL THERESA
y» Aw. at 12S«h St, Not York GttY
Roosevelt’s plans for certain im
provements in the condition of the
Negro generally.
However, with all of these plans
blocked by reactionary Dixie auto
crats, Roosevelt and the New Deil
are forced to suffer the loss of the
Negro vote in the pivotal states
where often the black vote is the
balance of power.
It is noteworthy, as one of the
objectors point out, that Mr. Bar
clay was taken to states where
there is a strong Republican ma
chine oprating to the detriment of
the New Deal; Ohio, which has a
Republican governor; senators and
representatives who are not “back
seat drivers;’’ from Ohio into Pen
nsylvania; then into New York aud
so on, in each of the states where
there is a large Negro vote hitherto
Republican, but in recent years.
Democratic.... now wavering be
tween loyalty and disillusionment.
Care was taken to not offend any
deeper than possible the feelings of
the strong southern bloc of sen
ators who now control the senate.
The Republicans are saying noth
ing. They are letting the Demo
crats go ahead with their plans and
wait further developments.
JIMMY
GENTRY
in Chicago
CHICAGO (PPS. Inc)__. .After
reading the many good deeds done
by the NAACP during 1942, coupl
ed wit hohe fight the officials and
delegates made in the Detroit
Packard strike settlement, I am
firm in my belief that every good
citizen of color should have seif
respect enough to join the organ
ization and support its program.. I
As I write this column, the tail
end of J. “Fats” Robinson’s long
BUY YOUR
POULTRY
AT THE
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
2204-6 NORTH 24th ST.
Get the Best in Quality at the
NEBRASKA PRODUCE
—LOWEST PRICE—
Phone WE. 4137
cdN Living
Costs BacU Ho-e
Are Wet? UP’
'
* Electricity still is cheap . . . that's
good news onywhere these doys! With
practically everything costing more than
it did before the war, it's comforting to
know there's one big exception . . .
ELECTRIC SERVICE RATES STILL ARE
LOW!
Providing your electric service costs more
now, too, than it did before the war be
gan. Taxes have jumped unbelievably—
from approximately $1,400,000 in 1940 to
$2,100,000 in 1942. But, in spite of these
increases, we have been able to continue
your same dependable electric service at
the same low rates. As far as we can
foresee, the careful, experienced man
agement that has been able to keep your
electric rates down so far will be able to
continue doing so.
NEBRASKA
POWER
COMPANY
OCD N-E'W'S
.. CLIP AND POST THIS FOR
To conform with the standard
practice for air raid warning sig
nals. s second “lilue W;rru;< for
possible return of enemy bombing
planes has been added to the sys
tem which will be used by the O
maha Civilian Defense Corps in
future air raid tests. This warn
ing signal of two minutes steady
WHEN l’OU HEAR
BLUE Two minutes steady
Warning blasts of sirens,
Horns or whistles.
RED Two minutes of warbl
Warning ing notes of sirens, or
short blasts on factory
whistles.
BLUE Two minutes
Warning steady blast of
sirens, horns, whistles.
1
WHITE No public warn
(All ing. Radio Sta
Clear) tions will carry mes
sage.
• *
It is important that everyone
should familiarize himself with the
“LISTENING POSTS”
Every citizen ,and especially
members of the Omaha citizens de
fense and service corps of the OCD
should be “listening posts” and re
port any information on subversive
activities or sabotage plots to OCD
headquarters, the Military Intelli
gence, or the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, J. E. Davidson, OCD
director for Omaha said.
“Air raid wardens, other OCD.
volunteers and citizens generally
are not expected to act as sleuths
ofr investigators,” Davidson said.
funeral procession has just passed
my window. Yep, Fats Robinson is
gone—dropped dead, just like that.
He was truly the king of night life
in this man’s town. His Apex club
in Ri’bhir.?, Til., was a pleas-i it es
cape from the August heat. CM
/a to is g-dng ui i.isa Fats. .Cl:-rn
oiiteen Wilkins, Ivliss Bronze Cue
ca.L'o is ow. i-i town for the
tsumme-' lias bi'en atte.nbrg
Allen University .n Columbia, S.
C.....I read Bil’y Rowe’s column
on night life in Harlem... .‘‘Broad
way’ ’Bradley is forever beating
his gums about ‘‘Slio-me Town’s”
Rialto*._Rollo Vest vows that De
troit’s Paradise Vailey is a haven
for sun dodgers but, ouke it from
me, brother, Chicago’s Bronzeviile
has everything that’s needed in
night life. .. .You’ll find Anna Jon
es .former dancing beauty, runn
ing her own Turf Club here and
Joe Hughes .former Mayor of
Bronzeviile .boasts of his DeLuxe
Club and manager, smiling Charlie
| Christian_Charley Glenn’s Rhum
boogie is the town talk and it
jumps with Tiny Bradshaw’s band
....‘‘Big Jim” Martin has opened
i his out of door gardens on the
West Side and the place is sport
ing a new coat of paint... .Hert
elle Collins, a former beauty prize
winner, is among the headliners
there.... Dorothy Donegan wras
guest artist at a cocktail party at
Rhumboogie. They say she stomp
ed out a new pair of stompers.._
, Rudy Williams, ‘‘The Boston Baby”
| has got Picadilly Patrons eating
| out o fhis hand, he says.... If you
want to hear the blues in new fash
ion, get an earful at Dan’s (Iowa
football star) Den__There is an
unusual treat in store for you if
you’ll lend an ear at Dan Dixon
and his boys at Square’s Boule
vard Lounge... .Ily Kelly’s *‘4li”
Club is still tops in uniqueness
and prices, too....Lloyd "West de
clares there is nothing to the in
duction rumors and the Club Con
go is still going strong... .The Ne
gro Newspaper Publishers’ Assoc
iation had the grandest time of
(Continued on pageJ9g=,4)
Real Shoe Man-^
FONTENELLE !
SHOE REPAIR
Cash and Carry
CLKANKK
1410 North 24th St.
CARL CRIVKRjv i
Iji Tel. WE. 2022 j!
j; Considerate, Dependable, Dig- ■ j
j nified Service. It is for the ! |
(' family to decide what the funeral ■ >
■ j j cost shall be. ] j
i Thomas ji
ji FUNERAL HOME
11 j 2020 LAKE ST. Omaha, Nebr.jl
BEADY REFERENCE
blast of sirens .horns or whistles
is similar to the firt alert “Blue
Warning’’ signal.
The new air raid warning signals
with which Commander J. E. Dav
idson of the Civilian Defense Corps
urge severyone to become famil
iar, are now as follows:
IT MEANS YOU DO THIS
AIR RAID Civilian Defense
PROBABLE Mobilizes. Traf
fic and pedestrian
movement continues.
AIR CD workers at posts
IMMINENT ready for action.
Traffic stops, except
for emergency ve
hicles. Public takes shelter.
RAIDERS Civilian Defense
MAY remains mobilized.
RETL7RN Public leaves shel
ter and resumes ac
tivities. Traffic re
sumes.
RAIDERS Civilian Defense
HAVE GONE demobilizes.
DANGER IS Community ro
PAST turns to normal
status.
new air raid warning signals
- I
“Such activity might endanger
their lives, the lives of others and
make the information they have
wrthless. Tt|iiey should,, however,
report this information at once to
OCD headquarters and also to the
Military Intelligence, Seventh Ser
vice Command, Jackson 7900 or the
FBI, Jackson 8220, depending on
whether it concerns an enemy at
tack or sabotage unrelated to or
ganized military attack.
“Organized sabotage is directed
by trained Nazi saboteurs loosed on
the world. To combat and capture
them is no job for an amateur,”
Mr. Davidson said. “These offic
ial agencies are trained in investi
gation and able to do the necessary
sleuthing more efficiently than a
civilian.’’
PROTECTIVE MEASURES
AGAINST GAS ATTACK
In the event of an air raid, en
emy planes may drop gas bombs or
spay gas fom low-flying planes to j
injue civilians, Dr. A. C. Andersen, j
senior gas officer of the Omaha,
I
civilian defense council, said in an
nouncing protective measures a
gainst war gas.
“The majority of persons, of
course, will remain indoors or im
mediately seek shelter during an
air raid,” Dr. Andersen said. “A
tightly closed room, preferably on
an upper floor, affords protection
against war gases. Waetr-soaked
blankets cr cardboard should be
ept ready to cover and seal shat
tered windows.
“If caught out of doors during a
spray attack, get out of the gased
area quickly by moving diagonally
against the wind,’’ Dr. Andersen
advised. “While hurrying to the
closest shelter, the first house or
building within reach, look down
and shield your eyes with your
arms. If liquid blister gas has
splashed your skin, blot it up with
your handkerchief, part of your
clothing that has not been exposed,
or rags and dispose of these as
used. You must act quickly to
minimize the irritating effect of
the gas.
“Remove the rest of your outer
clothing, including your shoes, be
fore entering the house, and leave
them outside. This is no time for
false modesty,” Dr. Andersen said.
[ “Don’t touch the clothing you have
removed except with a stick 0r gas
j proof gloves.
‘Get to the bathroom, kitchen or
laundry room as quickly as pos
sible. Flush your eyes with water
and complete the blotting up ot
[drops of blister gas. Bathe freely,
j using plenty of soap and water a ud
ipat the skin dry, don’t rub. DreSs
in any clean clothing you can ge‘.
If a solution of baking soda is c
' vailable, it may be used to bathe
the eyes and as a gargle, instead
of water. If Jordinary household
bleaching solution is at hand, sat
urate a cloth with it and apply to
regions of the skin that were
splashed with blister gas. This
! chemical will help to neutral z?
the blister gas, but it must be re
-mvoed by careful washing after
ward. Don’t ever use bleaching
solution in your eyes ,nose • r
mouth,” Dr- Andersen cautioned.
Inhaled gas may call for th: fol
lowing treatment. Dr. AndersCn
said:
“If your nose or throat feel ir
ritated, snuff and gargle a diluted
solution of baking soda. If your
chest feels oppressed and you have
trouble breathing lie down and stay
perfectly quiet until you can be
taken to a doctor."
SAYS CARVER
• • •
| Plain Talk. Jj
Mi *)
ELMER A. CARTER
There is overwhelming evidence
of a deliberately planned effort on
the part of certain elements of our t
population to head off the integra
tion of colored men and women in
to American industry except as un
skilled laborers. The walkout at
Mobile, Alabama a few weeks ago
and the more recent strike of 20,
000 workers in the Packord plant
in Detroit’ because three Negroes
had been upgraded to jobs requir
ing skills, has all the earmarks of
being engineered either by axis a
gents or by unregenerated trans
planted southerners, who see in the
breakdown of the pattern of racial
segregation in industry the doom
of that system by which the meas
ure of man is the color of his skin,
ond who therefore are panicky iest
the unfair advantage they have
possessed for 300 years he on its
way out. Of course it could be a
combination of both But whatev
er it is, it could not have happened
if the managemento of the ship
yard in Mobile and the Packard
plant in Detroit had at the outset
token a firm and forthright staid.
In all instances of mass walkouts
such as these, the agitation is ini
tiated and sustained By a very
small and insignificant group of
men, in most cases not more than
fifteen or twenty. The number of
the rank and file who would risk
their jobs because a Negro is up
graded will be found to be infinite
simol. They are persuaded, cajol
ed, threatened by a few vicious
leaders strategically situated in
various departments. More often
than not, the propaganda is spread
by petty bosses, foremen, or sup
erintendents who hope to gain the
confidence of the workers under
their control by maing a show of
looking out for their interests.
Long before the walk-out occurs,
the management itself is aware of
the undercurrent of ogitation and
is able to identify the ringleaders.
And where this agitation is con
tinued without censure, it is as
sumed by the great mass of work
ers that antipathy toward Negro
workers has the sanction and the
blessing of the management.
The Packard Company has been,
for many years one of the most re
actionary of all the automotive
companies in the Detroit area in
its attitude toward Negro wrorkers.
It has stubbornly resisted the in
troduction of Negro workers for a
quarter of a century, except on
the lower levels. In contrast to
the Ford Company, Packard has
maintained a racial policy that was
and is a reproach to American in
dustry.
Because of its past history, it is
difficult to believe that officials of
the Packard Company are blame
less in this latest and least inex
cusable sabotage of the war effort.
If the management did not stimu
late the walk out, it certainly !s
guilty of criminal negligence in not
taking steps to prevent it before
it occurred, by summary action a
gainst the leaders whose activities
must have been known.
These walk-outs are valuable in
that they disclose the present and
what is more important, the post
war program of certain organized
groups in America. That they >.re
organized there can be no doubt
and one of their avowed missions
is to destroy the economic gains
which the Negro has been making
as a result o fthe war. These dram
atic demonstrstions of planned rac
ial repression and persecution
should be the guide of the Negro
es’ strategy for the post-war years.
They reveal the nature of the strug
gle that impends when millions of
jobless soldiers return from the
battlefields of Europe and Asia
and Africa. There should b; no
doubt now in the mind of the Ne
gro as to any plan of action. The
time for silly maneuvering for
priority in leadershpi is over. The
time to gird for the greatest strug
gle in his history is at hand. It
| will be in truth a struggle for his
survival as a free citizen in this
j republic as it will be a struggle for
THE OMAHA GUIDE
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER
Published Every Saturday at 2418-20 Grant St
OMAHA, NEBRASKA
PHONE WEbster 1517
Entered as Second Class Matter Ma'xh 15, 1927, at
the Post Office at Omaha, Nebraska, under Act of
Congress of March 3, 1879.
*i. J. Ford. — — — Pres.
Mrs. Flurna Coooe^ — — Vice Pres.
C. C. Gallowav. — Publisher and Acting Editor
Boyd V. Galloway. — Sec’y and Treas.
SUBSCRIPTION KA I K IN uj.aI'a
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Three Months — — .75
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SUBSCRIPTION RATK uUT OF TOWN
One Year — — — $2 50
Six Months — — _ $1.50
Three Months — — _ $1.00
One Month — — — _ .40
All News Copy of Churches and all organiznt*
ions must be in our office not later than 1:00 p. m,
Monday for current issue. All Advertising Copy o*
Paid Articles not later than Wednesday noon, pre
ceeding date of issue, to insure publication.
National Advertising Representative:
INTERSTATE UNITED NEWSPAPERS. INC.,
545 Fifth Avenua. New Yoik City, Phone MUrray
Hill 2-5452. Ray Jick, Manager.
THE HARLEM NITE-WATCH
by DON DeLEIGHBUR
NEW YORK.Harlem’s Men
Behind the Bar Club threw its third
annual ball at Bob Douglas’ Renais
sance Casino last week.... to a
packed house You’ve never bjen
anywhere and you’ve never .seen
anything until you go to a ball giv
en by bartenders.
First: you’re run over by pretty
girls, friendly girls, yellow, brown,
and black girls w'ith a huge sprinkl
ing and flavoring of white girls,
all anxious to frolic.
Next, you’re nearly engulfed in
a tidal wave of free liquor of all
brands, mixes and strength suppl
ied by the swarm of liquor comp
any representatives who turn out
to these affairs to push their var
ious brands.
Then: You watch the crowd grow
mellow. You watch the guys who
serve the drinks in the role of
hosts trying to outdo one another
as they put on the dog. And they
really put it on.
Valaida Snow opens at Max Gor
don’s swank Blue Angel in down
town Gotham’s Swing Sector on
the • site of the old Kit Kat Club in
55th St. The former toast of Eur
ope is playing her trumpet and
chirping her songs as she did in the
old days at the Grand Terrace in
Chicago, the Cotton Club here and
in Blackbirds. Leonard Ware's
smash-hit trio is also on tap at the
Angel.
*****
Don Redman, master arranger,
is picking up his baton again after
years of inactivity as a maestro.
The short, stumpy, thoroughly like
able ex-leader of McKinney’s Cot
ton Pickers ,has been selected as
the bandman who’ll put the music
in the new half million dollar Gold
Coast Room on the site of the old
Winter Garden on Broadway.
Fritz Pollard, Sr., the all-Amer
ican from Brown University, is
putting in the talent and says the
show will feature Ella Fitzgerald,
Avis Andrews, four or five out
standing acts plus eight of Amer
the survival of Democracy itself.
Just because the strikers belong
to the CIO .union it would be the
height of folly for Negro workers
to shun the ranks of organized lab
or. If the events at Mobile and
Detroit have one lesson, it is that
Negroes everywhere, in every oc
cupation, on every level should
join the ranks of organized labor,
and if there is no union in the oc
cupation in which they are engage!
they shoulv-o start one. It is ob
vious that any other course will be
fatal.
Wins Check for
Suggestion on Way
to Do Job Better
Precious man-hours are being saved
daily in processing metals for Navy
equipment at a General Electric
plant, thanks to a production sugges
tion submitted by Hezekiah Coleman,
shown above with the check he re
ceived for his idea. Coleman, whose
job is dipping metals of various sizes
and shapes into vats containing
cleaning fluids, suggested larger con
tainers for handling the metals, en
abling him to put through greater
quantities in a day.
Bom in Denmark, S. Car., where
he attended school, he worked for
several years in furniture factories in
the south until he learned to operate
various types of machines. In 1941
he moved to Schenectady, and after
•working as a cook in a drug store and
a hotel, obtained his present job at
G. E. Married, his favorite forms of
recreation are Ashing and baseball.
SUBSCRIBE
ica’s most beautiful girls. The gT
item is a pip. Pollard’s Sun Tan
Studios at 217 West 125th St., lias
been a beehive of activity since he
landed the job of putting the talent
in the new club. His backers are
spending nearly $10,000 rounding
up the girls, having sent Pohard
on read trips to Philadelphia, Wasn
ingtor,, Baltimore, Boston, etc., tal
ent hunting for the right type of
sh-ls.
Poliard says the girls most ac
ceptable are those without stage
experienee.He wants them copper
colored, not less than five feet five !
and a half inches tall; definitely I
pretty and weighing around 126 to
130 lbs. The girls will not have to
dance one step in the revue, out
they will have to learn how to walk
It seems that the owners of the
place don’t want chorus girls to
Qar.ce .saying that the patrons cto
net get a real chance to see what
colored girls look like when they’re
dancing. Instead, the girls will
walk in interesting routines, cos
tumed an dgowned for the occasion.
Fritz is still looking.
Cab Calloway’s Strand Theatre
show is the season’s outstanding
smash hit success. It takes a
showman like Cab to break rec
ords and the reason is plain.
Calloway insists on the best in
his tevue and bands.
His orchestra today is one of. th ■
best balanced outfits in the nation,
and that despite the Selective Ser
vice Act, war jobs, and other coun
ter influences that are tearing
down topflight music combination'.
The band is dressed right, it
plays right and looks right in i's
Broadway setting.
The special acts in the Calloway
unit—Paul, Dinky, and Eddie,
Frances Brock, the girl with the
galmour voice; Cholly and Dotti?,
classy dance team, plus a line of
dancing girls are all in the Callo
way tradition.
And when one adds Dooley VVii
scn, the “Sam” of Humphrey Bo
gart’s “Casablanca”, as an added
attraction, little else is wanted or
.. ___-_-.t
24th AND LAKE STREETS
PRESCRIPTIONS
—-Free Delivery_
WE. 0609
DUFFY PHARMAt v
nAM4 AamIiIa Guard Against Trouble
UOn t Ud!f1Ul6 from Minor Injuries
Cuts, Scratches, Burns
Be Wise.Guard against infections which may "lay
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fn ex. for INS.
needed.
That's why Calloway holds 1.1s
own in Broadway company that
has Included Harry James, Jimmy
Dorsey and others, including Frank
Sinatra, the singing sensation.
You can’t eclipse class. No s'.r
ree!
HEN Functional Nervous
Disturbances such as Sleep,
leasnesa, Crankiness, Excitability,
Restlessness or Nervous Headache
Interfere with your work or spoil
poor good times, take
Dr. Miles Nervine
(liquid or Effervescent Tablets?
Nervous Tension can make you
Wakeful, Jittery, Irritable. Ner
vous Tension can cause Nervous
^Headache and Nervous Indiges
tion. In times like these, we are
more likely than usual to become
overwrought and nervous and to
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—mild but effective.
If you do not use Dr. Miles
Nervine you can’t know what it
will do for you. It comes in
Liquid and Effervescent Tablet
form, both equally soothing to
tense and over-wrought nerves.
WHY DON’T YOU TRY IT ?
Get it at your drug store,
Effervescent tablets 35* and 75*,
Liquid 25* and $1.00. Read direc
tions and use only as directed.
Dll r O' GETSPEIDY
I# ■ B la W REUEF FROM
I I Kei Baa w ITCH AND BURE
THEN WALK AND SIT IN COMFORT
Use Poslam—the CONCENTRATED
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The oily base HOLDS Poslam’s
medication on the smarting skin
to cool and soothe that agonizing
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coast for 35 years. Ask your
doctor. Only 60c, all drug stores.
NEW! “BACTERIOSTATIC”
FEMININE HYGIENE
Gaining Great Favor With Women! *
Many doctors urge the regular use
of douches for women who want to
be refreshingly clean - for women
troubled by offending odor, itching
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Some products may be harmful
germicides which burn, harden and
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Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash!
Instead-Pinkham’s Sanative Wash
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It not only discourages bacterial
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Inexpensive!
Thrifty Service
6 LBS. OF LAUNDRY BEAUTIFULLY
LAUNDERED FOR ONLYCII AND ONLY
7c For Each Additional lb.
This includes the Ironing of all FLAT
WORK with wearing Apparel Returned Just
Damp Enough for Ironing.
EMERSON - SARATOGA
2324 North 24th St._ WE. 1029
A BEST KNOWN MEDICINE^
o made especially to relieve ‘PERIODIC’ #
FEMALE PAIN
And Its Weak,
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Take heed if you, like so many
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tress of ‘'irregularities" — due to
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Then start at once—try Lydia E.
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WOMAN’S MOST IMPORTANT ORGANS.
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^ .. _