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News Review of Current
Events the World Over
American Delegation on Way to London Economic Con*
ference—Brookhart Becomes “Agricultural Ambas¬
sador” to Russia—Morgan Inquiry Proceeds.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD
^ GIX delegates and nineteen experts
are on their way to London to
represent the United States in the in¬
ternational economic conference from
which so much is expected in the
ml
Rep. S. D.
McReynolds
crat; Senator James Couzens of
Michigan, Republican; Representative
Samuel D. Mclteynolds of Tennessee,
Democrat, and Ralph \V. Morrison of
Texas, retired hanker. Chief of the
experts are William C. Bullitt, execu¬
tive officer; James P. Warburg, finan¬
cial adviser; Fred K. Nielsen, legal
adviser, and Herbert Feis, chief tech¬
nical adviser, under whom will serve
several members of the “brain trust.”
Of all the delegates the one con¬
sistent conservative is Congressman
McReynolds. He is chairman of the
house committee on foreign relations
and his influence is expected to be
potent in the deliberations of the dele¬
gation. Senator Couzens, the one Re¬
publican member, has frequently
lined up with the more radical Re¬
publicans and Democrats in congress.
The administration, according to
Assistant Secretary of State Raymond
Moley, has considerably modified Its
expectations of what the conference
will accomplish, and now realizes that
the prospects are definitely limited
and do not include a lowering of tar¬
iffs or an immediate permanent sta¬
bilization of currencies. Secretary
Hull is said to be the only one of the
administration leaders who still ad¬
vances the urgent necessity of a dras¬
tic international agreement to lower
tariffs and trade barriers.
Mr. Moley included only the follow¬
ing among the solutions which prob¬
ably would be obtained at the confer¬
ence:
An agreement on monetary policy
through action of central banks sup¬
plemented by an agreement among
governments to synchronize policies
of internal public expenditure.
An agreement on progressive re¬
moval of restrictions on exchange.
The international wheat conference
moved from Geneva to London and
there the representatives of the United
States, Argentina, Australia and Can¬
ada continued their discussions. If
they agree upon any plan for curtail¬
ing wheat acreage it will be submit¬
ted to the economic conference for
approval.
REAT BRITAIN, France, Italy
and the other nations that owe
war debts to the United States failed
in their effort to have the debts in¬
cluded in the agenda for the economic
conference, but their delegates enter
the conference with the cancellation
or drastic reduction of the debts their
chief aim. The Roosevelt administra¬
tion insists that the war debts, how¬
ever important they may he, were not
a major cause of the depression and
are not a major remedy. Consequent¬
ly the parleys in London are almost
certain to develop into a great battle
of diplomacy.
President Roosevelt has flatly de¬
nied that lie intends to negotiate new
settlements of the war debts without
recourse to congress. This was made
necessary by dispatches from Wash¬
ington published in London, saying
Mr. Roosevelt had offered to accept
from Britain $10,000.000 as part pay¬
ment of the $75,900,000 due .Tune 15.
It seemed fairly certain that the
British government would make this
payment in full. This will be easier
than before because of the devalua¬
tion of the dollar. Britain can either
pay in paper dollars, which cost about
2 per cent less to buy than gold dol¬
lars, or in American securities, which
can be bought with paper dollars at
a discount and turned in at par.
/CHAMPIONS of the gold standard
* in both the house and the senate
had tittle chance as the administra¬
tion forces pushed through the
Fletcher-Steagall resolution for the
abrogation of the gold clause in all
governmental and private contracts,
both present and future. The meas¬
ure, asked by the President to legal¬
ize action already taken, was first
passed by the house by a vote of 283
to 57. Twenty-eight Republicans and
ail five of the Farmer-Laborites joined
with the Democrats in favor of the
resolution. Representative Luce of
Massachusetts, who led the small
minority, denounced the measure as a
breach of faith on the part of the
government; but Chairman Steagall
of the banking committee said it was
essential for the recovery of national
prosperity.
INVESTIGATION of the banking
* house of J. P. Morgan & Co. was
resumed by the senate banking com¬
way of a
out of the world de¬
pression. Secretary of
State Cordell Hull
heads the delegation
and his associates as
announced by the
White House are:
James M. Cox, vice
chairman, former
governor and Demo¬
cratic Presidential
candidate in 1920 ;
Senator Key Pittman
of Nevada, D e m o-
mittee, and a new list of Important
persons who had received bargains in
stocks was produced. Ferdinand Pe*
cora, the committee’s counsel, was
persistent In his probing, but was
compelled to tell the senators. In ex¬
ecutive session, what evidence he pro¬
posed to introduce and what he ex¬
pected to prove by it, and to con¬
vince them of the propriety of his pur¬
pose. Senator Glass was still deter¬
mined that Pecora should not bring
out matter outside the committee’s
jurisdiction or irrelevant to the in¬
quiry. Mr. Glass said he had re¬
ceived a number of anonymous
threats by mail and what he termed
“blackguard telegrams" because of
his stand.
Though William H. Woodin’s name
was on one of the Morgan lists of
"preferred" customers before lie be¬
came secretary of the treasury and
hence demands for his resignation
were made by various men in public
life, Mr. Wnodin declared he had not
resigned. His statement left no doubt
that he would be willing to quit his
office if his presence there in any way
hindered the return of prosperity, but
it also was interpreted to mean that
Mr. Roosevelt wished him to hold on,
at least for the present. More serious,
perhaps, is the case of Norman H.
Davis, the very active “ambassador at
large” in Europe, who also was on a
Morgan list. Representative George
H. Tinkham of Massachusetts has de¬
manded a congressional Investigation
of the financial dealings Mr. Davis
may have had with international bank¬
ing and business interests.
Asserting that Mr. Davis has spoken
at Geneva in “repudiation of the tra¬
ditional American foreign policy," Mr.
Tinkham said that a congressional
committee should also investigate Mr.
Davis’ connection with "disloyal and
seditious American organizations and
foundations in the United States.”
C -WITH WILDMAN BROOICHART,
'J former senator from Iowa, has a
new job. Secretary of Agriculture
Wallace has appointed him “agricul¬
S. W. Brook
hart
work has no connection with the
question of diplomatic relations,
though he hopes recognition will re¬
sult from his efforts to effect a thriv¬
ing trade between the two countries.
The Iowan has been given the title
of "special adviser to the agricultural
administration” and serves under Ad¬
ministrator George N. Peek.
“I’ve done a lot of work already,”
he said. “I have gone into the mat¬
ter with people here, including the
Soviet representative. Boris Skvirsky.
He’s a pretty fine fellow and I’ve had
several talks with him."
Mr. Skvirsky is not a trade repre¬
sentative of the Soviet, nor has he
connection with the Amtorg corpora¬
tion, organized by the Soviets to
transact business In America. Mr.
Skvirsky said that he is a representa¬
tive of the Soviet foreign office.
ERMANY has refused to accept
'-J an unfavorable report of the
League of Nations on her treatment
of the Jews and virtually told the
league that the affair is none of its
business. The league council, how¬
ever, referred juridical aspects of the
issue to a committee of jurists with
the understanding that the matter
will have a complete airing.
\ITHEN President Roosevelt the
» v other day selected Arthur E. Mor¬
gan, president of Antioch college at
Yellow Springs, Ohio, as director of
the vast Tennessee
valley conservation
project, there were
many derogatory re¬
marks about the ap¬
pointing of just an¬
other processor for a
big job. But the skep¬
tical ones did not
know about Morgan,
Since 1902, when he
was just out of high
school, he has been
active in engineering
work and has planned
and supervised construction of about
seventy-five water control projects.
These include the important reclama¬
tion work in St. Francis valley in Ar¬
kansas and the Miami conservation
project at Dayton, Ohio. He was chief
engineer In the Pueblo (Colo.) con¬
servancy district; he drafted the re¬
vised drainage codes for Minnesota,
Arkansas, Ohio, Mississippi, Colorado
and New Mexico, and has been con¬
sulting engineer on drainage and flood
control projects ail over the nation,
He is entirely familiar with condition*
in the Tennessee valley.
tural ambassador” to
Soviet Russia, and
has instructed him to
explore the opportu¬
nities for disposing
of American surpluses
of cotton and live
stock in that country.
In effect, this means
the opening of trade
negotiations with a
government that is
not recognized by
Washington, but
Brookhart his
Arthur 6.
Morgan
p EVERTING to the matter of the
gold standard, dispatches from
Vienna tell of how, in the seventieth
congress of the International Chamber
of Commerce, the United States was
bitterly denounced by Charles Boisse
vain of Holland for what he called
its "immoral’' monetary course. He
condemned the behavior of those na¬
tions which abandon the gold stand¬
ard "although unquestionably in a po¬
sition to maintain It.” He condemned
also what he described as the “repudi¬
ation” of the gold clause in contracts
by the United States.
In the transportation section, Ira
Campbell of New York defended Unit¬
ed States shipping against what he
termed an international attempt to
rule It off the seas. American mer¬
chant marine cannot exist without sub¬
sidy, he said, and an international
agreement to abolish subsidies would
mean the abolition of American ships.
\V. L. Runciman of Great Britain
objected to his argument that the
American marine Is needed for nation¬
al defense, asserting such argument
is out of place in a commercial con¬
gress.
ITar debts also came up for discus¬
sion, W. H. Coates, British delegate,
asserting that they must be settled
before it would be possible to improve
world economic conditions.
AAILITARY representatives of Ja
Lv-1 pan and China signed a formal
armistice in the warfare in north
China at Tangku, where the negotia¬
Gen. Feng
Yu-hsiang
traffic between Peiping and Shanhaik
wan.
Just before the signing of the truce
the banner of revolt against the Chi¬
nese Nationalist government was
raised by Gen. Feng Yu-hsiang, usual¬
ly alluded to as the “Christian gen¬
eral.” Feng denounced Gen. Chiang
Kai-shek, the dictator, as a traitor
and announced himself as commander
in-chief of the “people’s anti-Japanese
army.” He had been recruiting a large
force at Kalgan and it was believed
he was acting in close co-operation
with the army of Canton, which was
reported to be moving to the north¬
ward. In Tientsin it was thought that
Feng must have been receiving large
supplies of arms and ammunition from
the Russians of Mongolia by the old
caravan route from Urga.
The National government Issued a
declaration that the Tangku truce is
entirely local and of a temporary na¬
ture.
“It is not incompatible with the de¬
clared policy of continuing a sustained
resistance and efforts for the recovery
of lost territories,” the statement
said.
“It Is absolutely impossible for the
National government to agree to an
ignominious surrender since the Man¬
churian issue is entirely outside the
sphere of the local military truce with
Peiping.”
T ANSING state penitentiary near
*- / Leavenworth, Kan., was the scene
of a sensational escape of 11 convicts
who were led by Wilbur Underhill, a
lifer and one of the most desperate
outlaws of the Southwest. During a
baseball game Warden Prather and
two guards were seized, used as
shields and forced to accompany the
fleeing convicts over the wall. Other
guards were disarmed and the men
got away in the car of the prison
farm superintendent, keeping their
prisoners with them as hostages un¬
til hours later, when they were re¬
leased in Oklahoma. In their flight
they commandeered two other cars
and captured three women, who were
set free near Pleasanton, Kans.
CIX bandits held up the State Ex
^ change bank of Culver, Ind., and
fled in an automobile with $10,000.
But the men of the town had been
trained as vigilantes and, receiving
word of the crime, they mobilized im¬
mediately under command of Captain
Obenauf of the Culver Military acad¬
emy and went into action. Result:
All six bandits were captured, one of
them being fatally wounded, and the
loot was recovered.
/"’VNE hundred thousand spectators
saw Louis Meyer of California I
win the 500-niile automobile race at
the Indianapolis speedway in record
breaking time. They also saw a
series of fatal accidents that sadly
marred the great spectacle. Three
men were killed and three others were
badly injured. Mark Billman of In¬
dianapolis was crushed to death when
he lost control of his car and it
crashed Into the retaining wall, and
Elmer Lombard, his mechanic, was
hurt. Later the car driven by Hal¬
comb Fox of New Jersey lost a wheel
and skidded Into the middle of the
track where it was smashed by the
car of Lester Spangler of Los An¬
geles. Spangler and G. L. Jordan,
his mechanic, lost their lives, and
Bert Cook, Fox’s mechanic, was in¬
jured.
In a test run the day before the
big race William Denver and Robert
Hurst lost their lives.
Meyer completed the run in 4 hours
and 48 minutes, his average speed be
ing 194.102 miles an hour. He won
$12,000 first prize money and $1,150 Id
lap prizes.
©. 1933, Western Newspaper Union.
CLEVELAND COURIER
tions took place under
the guns of Japanese
naval craft. The truce
provides for demill
tarizatiqn of the area
bounded by the great
wall on the north, the
Peiping-Mukden rail¬
way on the east and
the Peiping - Suiyuan
railway on the west;
for dissolution of the
Chinese volunteer
corps in this area and
for resumption of rail
CULVER CITIZENS
CAPTURE BANDITS
Vigilantes of Indiana Town
Nab Bank Robbers.
Culver, Ind.—A group of 500 vigi¬
lantes, commanded by Capt. A. A. Ob
enhauf of the Culver Military acad¬
emy, captured six bank bandits and
recovered approximately $16,000 In
loot taken from the State Exchange
bank of Culver.
The last three members of the gang
were driven from a wooded area near
Ober, ten miles west of Culver, by
tear gas bombs in the hands of the
vigilantes. One of the bandits, who
Identified himself as T. C. Teske,
South Chicago, was shot and fatally
wounded as he fled from the bank.
Five other members of the gang gave
their names as Eddie Murphy of New
York city; Jack Gray, twenty-three
years old. New York city, and Joe
Cohen, twenty years old, of Chicago;
John Gorman, twenty-seven, of De¬
troit, and James Davis, twenty-seven,
of Tampa, Fla.
The bandits entered the bank car¬
rying shotguns, forced four employees
to He on the floor, and scooped $10,000
from the cages. Miss Iren? Bogardus,
an assistant teller, saw the men en¬
ter the bank from a concealed office
and In accordance with plans previ¬
ously made, telephoned the Culver
academy.
The vigilantes were sent into action
by the call and before the bandits left
the bank they had seized guns and
sought points of vantage. The gun¬
men seized Assistant Cashier Carl
Adams and Glen Matrix, a customer
who had entered, and used them as
shields as they fled to their car. Ol¬
iver Schilling, son of the bank presi¬
dent and a vigilante, had mounted to
the top of a building near the bank.
As the bandit car gained speed,
Shilling opened fire with a rifle. The
driver slumped in his seat and the car
overturned on the edge of town. The
bandits deserted the car and stole an¬
other ear. Near Ober the stolen car
crashed into a tree and the bandits
took cover in the woods.
Members of the vigilantes in pur¬
suit marked the point at which the
gunmen had entered the wooded spot
and waited until reinforcements ar¬
rived. Commanded by Captain Oben
hauf, the vigilantes then surrounded
the woods, which is four miles square,
and began to close In. Cohen walked
out of the woods and surrendered. He
insisted he had no hand In the rob¬
bery, saying he was only hitch hiking.
Three calls were sent back to the mili¬
tary academy for ammunition and fire¬
arms before the other gang members
were captured.
‘Teske,” who was killed, was iden¬
tified as Joseph Switaiski, former Chi¬
cago policeman, and “Joe Davis” was
recognized as Daniel McGoeghegan, a
tough Chicago hoodlum.
WASHINGTON BRIEFS
Taking a direct slap at propaganda
demands for debt revision, President
Roosevelt denied that he Intends to
negotiate new settlements without re¬
course to congress.
Maj. Charles A. Shepard, sixty-one,
convicted of the murder of his wife,
Zenana Shepard, on the military res¬
ervation at Fort Riley, Kansas, was
granted a review by the Supreme
court.
The house of representatives gave
overwhelming assent to the admins
tration’s abrogation of the gold clause
in all present and future obligations
of the government and private persons
in the United States.
Without a record vote the senate
passed the Roosevelt emergency trans¬
portation bill creating a federal rail¬
road co-ordinator to bring about econ¬
omies in railroad operation. The six
hour day amendment to the bill was
withdrawn by Senator Black after
Chairman Dill announced that Presi¬
dent Roosevelt did not want it added,
Slayer of Wife and Son
Hangs Himself in Cell
New York.—Louis Del Gatto, forty
eight, awaiting trial on a charge of
slashing his wife and five-year-old son
to death last March, hanged himself
in his jail cell. Dei Gatto, formerly
a Brooklyn jeweler, left a note to his
four surviving children saying he was
“a victim of a cruel destiny.” He had
fashioned a noose from his bedding.
Lord Derby’* Horse Win* Derby
Epsom Downs, England.—For the
third time in the history of the earls
of Derby, whose house started the
world’s famous turf event 150 years
ago, the English Derby, was won by
Lord Derby, when Hyperion, well
backed at 0 to 1, carried his silks to
a record-breaking victory over 23 of
Britain’s finest three-year-old thor¬
oughbreds.
Soldier* Fight Socialist*
New York.—A group of young So¬
cialists was mobbed In Mitchell square
by a contingent of National Guards¬
men and Veterans of Foreign Wars.
The soldiers and veterans believed
there had been an insult to the Amer¬
ican flag.
Church Lifts Sex Ban
Edinburgh, Scotland.—The general
assembly of the Church of Scotland
gave qualified approval to the admls
uion of women to church offices.
Herd Association
Idea an Old One
Danish Farmers Raised Milk
Production 8,000 Pounds
by Testing Plan.
By S. M. Salisbury, Professor of Dairying.
Olilo State University.—WNU Service.
Dairymen in Ohio accepted a lesson
from the dairymen of Denmark when
they organized dairy herd improve¬
ment associations, or cow testing as¬
sociations, as they are most common¬
ly called.
The forerunners of the modern Ohio
herd improvement associations were
the Kontrol societies of Denmark, or¬
ganized 40 years ago. The Kontrol
society, like the 30 modern Ohio dairy
herd improvement associations, was
formed to provide for a monthly visit
of a tester. The tester weighed the
milk produced by each cow in the
herd and sampled it for butterfat test¬
ing. He also kept a record of feed
consumed and computed production
costs for each individual cow in the
herd.
From these records, kept year aft¬
er year, the dairymen of Denmark
were able to cull from their herds the
poor cows and find and keep the good
ones. So effective were the associa¬
tions in Denmark that the country
raised the average production per cow
to 8,000 pounds of milk and 300
pounds of butterfat. Average produc¬
tion of Ohio herds is about 5,000
pounds.
Testing year in and year out with an
eye to the low-producing individuals
and their elimination from all future
pedigrees offers our only hope for con¬
tinued brooding of useful dairy cattle.
Plant Beach Grass to
Check the Blowing Sand
The first private attempt to reclaim
thousands of acres of shifting sand
In New York state was made recently
near Brushton, in Franklin county.
Nearly 5,000 clumps of beach grass
were planted on a farm.
The field, which is representative of
nearly 10,000 acres in Franklin county,
and of more acres in nine counties sur¬
rounding the Adirondacks, is worse
than waste land, for It will not grow
crops and is a menace to a nearby
road. The field grew 80 bushels of
buckwheat to the acre 80 years ago,
and five years ago an attempt was
made to hold the sand by planting
trees. The trees were literally blown
from the field.
The beach grass has been used suc¬
cessfully in France, and by the Long
Island park commission at Jones
beach. The grass is propagated by
stolons, or underground stems, and
makes a mat so thick that trees may
be planted on the ground within two
or three years. The clumps of grass
are planted about 18 inches apart and
the 5,000 clumps planted about a quar¬
ter acre, or enough to show whether
the method Is successful.
Erosion on Piedmont Land
Five million of the 50,000,000 acres
of IMedmont country extending from
near New York city to central Ala¬
bama, along the east side of the Ap¬
palachian mountains, have been essen¬
tially destroyed by soli erosion as far
as their use for crops is concerned, the
United States Department of Agricul¬
ture says. In addition to these 5,000,
000 acres which have been ruined,
more than 13,000,000 acres have had
trie surface soil largely or completely
stripped off by erosion. Although
many farmers continue to cultivate
patches of this land, they are able to
make only the barest living. In 1924,
when prices were much higher than
now, trie gross Income of many fam¬
ilies on these denuded areas, where the
family averaged more than five mem¬
bers. was only $300 a year. To pre¬
vent such erosion destruction, the de¬
partment recommends terraces, tree
Planting, strip cropping, brush dams
to prevent guJlj*ig, and similar prac¬
tices.
Control of Stomach Worms
Rotating pastures so that lambs do
not graze on land where sheep ranged
trie year before is one of the best con¬
trol measures. But even where per¬
manent pastures must be used, stom¬
ach worms can be controlled by
drenching with a bluestone or copper
sulphate solution. This treatment is
easy to give and costs very little.
Agricultural Squibs
Iowa claims the largest proportion
of actually arable land.
• * *
Cherry tres respond more readily to
nitrogen fertilizers than do apple or
plum trees.
* * *
Tomatoes will grow on 45,000 acres
ot the Ozark hills in Arkansas, say
canners of the area.
» » *
Tennessee hay, corn and tobacco
production declined from 10 to 20 per
cent in 1032 under the year before.
* • •
North Dakota is the only state In
which trie milk produced in every
county averages 90 gallons or more per
capita annually.
* * •
Dairy products are now first In the
amount of gross farm Income, a posi¬
tion formerly held by cattle, hogs, and
- ; lieep as a group.
* * •
New York state potato growers plan
"> cut their acreage about 8 per cent
or 17,000 acres for 1933. The 30 lead¬
ing late potato states plan a 6 per cent
■ut, or I (54,000 acres.
Knitted Things Demand
Extra Care in Washing
Have you succumbed to the knit¬
ting or crocheting fever? Whether
or not, you certainly have sweaters,
knitted suits, etc., for who can be
without them these days? They’re
so attractive, and almost indispens¬
able for sport and everyday wear,
and If washable, as many of them
are, It’s so easy to keep them clean.
Before washing a new sweater,
test It to he sure the colors are fast,
by squeezing an Inconspicuous por¬
tion In clear, lukewarm water for
five minutes or so.
Knitted things often get out of
shape when wet, so to insure restor¬
ing them to the correct proportions
just draw an outline on clean, wrap¬
ping paper before wetting. Inci¬
dentally, the Ideal time to draw this
outline Is when the sweater is new,
before you have stretched the el¬
bows, etc. Then this outline may
he used each time you wash the
sweater.
Remove unwashable buttons, buck¬
les, etc., and turn the sweater
wrong-side out. Make rich suds with
mild, neutral soap flakes; always
have the suds and rinse waters luke¬
warm or cool. Put in the sweater
and wash by squeezing the suds
through and through the materiaL
Never rub. Wash quickly. Do not
soak colored garments.
Thoroughly rinse in plenty of luke¬
warm or cool water. Squeeze out
the water—don’t twist. Then roil
the sweater in a dry turkish towel,
knead for a moment and unroll.
Don’t leave colored garments rolled
up while wet. Ease trie sweater into
shape on the outline. If the sweater
tends to shrink, pin it in place on
a firm surface as on corrugated
pasteboard, or an old rug. Use pins
which will not rust.
When the sweater is dry remove
it from the outline, turn it right
side out and press It lightly, using
a damp cloth to remove wrinkles
and pin marks.
Salvaging Old Car*
Every old car has some value as
scrap metal. Three years ago a
prominent motor company conceived
the idea of dismantling cars in a
large scale way and remelting the
steel scrap in open-hearth furnaces.
Satisfied with its first efforts, the
company increased Is operations
about a year ago by the installation
of a 1,000-ton hydraulic press for re¬
ducing the cars to bales, and a 400
ton furnace to remelt these large
bales. One ear a minute is com¬
pressed into a handy bale of scrap
metal only 30 inches long, in this
press, which is said to be the largest
of its kind in the world.
ClearYourSIdn
of fhmfdeA
Anoint the affected parts with
Cuticnra Ointment. Wash off in
a few minutes with Cntlcura Soap
and hot water and continue bathing
for several minutes. Nothing purer
or better for skin troubles.
Write for special folder on
the care of the skin
Address: “ Cuticura,” Dept. 9 S.’
Malden, Mass.
How Penegro
finds Pain of
Tired Feet
Penetro Is extremely effective in end¬
ing _ the pain of tired and aching feet
It penetrates four times quicker with
extremely reaching the active medication, thus
inner muscles and joint*
where the trouble occurs. Nightly use
of Penetro will tone up the languid
circulation, limber up joints and make
your feet fee 1 great. Penetro is snow
white and stainless. Three sizes, 25c,
50c and $1,00 at oil drug store*.
A single dose of Dr. Peery’s “Dead Shot”
expels worms. Tone* up the stomach and
Dowels. No after purgative necessary.
All Druggists. 60c.
Di*Peery*s
Vermifuge
Wrights Pin Co.. 100 Gold 8treet, N. Y. City
Cheapest and Best Fly
Ask your dealer for Daisy
Killer. Placed anywhere, fit
tracts and kills all flies. rues. Heat* inks*. ell
dean, convenient. Made metal. Lasts Can't
season. of
Injure anything. Harold spill or tip Inc., over. Brooklyn,N.Y. Can't soil, ot
Somers,
DAISY FLY KILLER
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling
Beauty Imparts Color and
to Grajrand Faded Hair
Hiscox 60c and $1.00 at Druggists.
Chem. Wks.. Fatcbogne.N.Y.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO — Ideal for use in
corm ec ti° n with Parker'a Hair Balsam. Makes the
an( * 60 cents by mail or at drag
insts. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.Y.
S Neeaha a £, So 3H*J Guild, rn M-103 free with K. 43rd each St., 75c Chicago. order.
NfoB IT BY NAME ie IAHGE MRS
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