Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 30, Number 76, Decatur, Adams County, 29 March 1932 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

IF© NEW YORK WINS GLOVE TOURNEY \sVw York, Mai 29 (U.R) — \ strong New York Isiving tram il«* feftled Chicago's iii:i<l before a m-Hr rpford crowd at Madison Square Garden last night In Ihr fifth nnniiul Intercity ynlden gloves tournament, New York won 2 out of It! bouts. Tin* garden was Jammed ail It 2u, Vli fans, com 1 ni' dose to tin* Now York record sot two weeks ago in tho metropolitan golden ttlovos tin nls wlieii 21.7u2 at tend oil. Thofo wore only two knockout**. Now York won tho feature bom. the heavyweight final, when Jerry Wright, negro, took the three-round decision over Adam Smith of Hockford. 111. Chicago won last year's intercity filial, l-'t bouts to 11. The summaries follow: 112-round class. Hist string: — lands Snlica, Now YorV defeated Albert Soupkop, decision. Second string: Julie Katz, New York, defeated Dalzer, decision. US-round class, first string: John Defoe. New York, defeated Leo Kodak, decision. Second string: Jimmy Martin, New York, defeated John O.inter. decision. 126-round class, first string: Richard Carter. New York, defeated Joe

£V__§ ''Breakers" Style No 481 FREEMAN SHOES FOR MEN £ i I Sport style at its fin- J M est! There's a smartness about the Enq lish last that puts it in a ' - class by itself. Three colecombinations —blacf and white —brown and white— Tu-Tone brown and Sahara. | Sizes sto 12—widths AA I to D. See our windows I for other new styles. Other shoes as low as $2.99 to+ia-T-MyeaColru: / CtOTNiNG AND SMOIS J eo*. DAO AND LAO- ' DECAT UK' INDIANA'

l OOk VOI R HOME • • • VOI R GEESTS 110 sowi TCu anise LUSTAQUIK FINISH WITH Kyanize Self-Smoothing Lustaquik Finish ’ you can quickly transform dingy furniture or drab walls and woodwork. Easy to apply; no offensive odor; dries dust-free in one hour; hardens in four hours! . . . Make tiiis test. Cover a surface with Kyanize Lustaquik Finish and make a number of marks on it with a nail. Then watch the wet paint smooth itself into a perfect finish! San i z e v kjgL WL self-smoothing *. PAINTS C V.tRVISHES • KVAMELS Callow & Kohne j The Cut Rate Drug Store on East Side of Street * • ■ *

>3!¥S Ritmiii S»m oitil air in* . SS*MIf j ;wirk Harvey, New York, <l** * l «-:t t Sal v a hire, ileelslon. , I t*, jht( l it 1 1 « l.i • Hr 1 11 iuj hill W Uoi iiH Nrtt York ih 1* .*!••«! H iirs I j Rolhli-r. ih*r|sli»n. Sei'oiiil nirliiy |S;»I Ih-Mitiol, New York, itfleateil ■ Dan Neeftian. <l«*rlstntt. I 147|tmn<l ilitss. tlr.i iliiiiK I Johnny IMiatsm. Cliirugo, ilffe thMl VSam Karilerwilf, ilerlnlon. Seroml II siiinp: Ihini'V Smith, Now York. 1 ilot’oa et| Will la in <'eh broil, ileoN ion. H*n-jMiiinil i las- , fir*l hli*lvik: Mark Hough. ,NM*w York, ih-fouted Charles Nil ;ro. knockout 2**2, so 00 ml roil ml. I, 1 Seooml sfrinj’: Max Marek, Chi 11 , defeatoil Tom Chester, <i< 1 is- *' i ion. 170-poulot <laes. first string: Ver* j non Miller. Cnit ago. defeated Walter Morris, decision. Second! v string Boh Pastor. New York, do [ jfeated Adolph Winter, decision. j » Heavyweight class, first string: Jerry Wright, New York, defea ed ' Adams Smith, decision. Second \ string: Gene Klopack, Chicago, <l«-j feateil George Commerton. knock-, out. 2:011, second round. i! ! DEMOCRATS TO ARRANGE MEET 1 ■99 N ' TINUK 1> ChUM PAGE UNEI t 1 permanent convention chairman and j I other officers. » Chairman Raskob named the ar- j . raiuement.s committee last night a* ; ■ follows: I-, Harry F. Ryrd, Virginia; Frank! I Hague, New Jersey; Scott Ferris,!

> Oklahoma; Mrs Nellie Tayloe Ross, Wyoming: Mrs. Florence (1. Farley, ! Kansas; Robert Jackson, NewHampshire, secretary of the Nation;al committee; J. Bruce Kremer. Montana; Norman K. Mack. New .York; Isidore B. Rockweiler, California; Arc hi bold McNeil, Connecticut; W. T. Kemper. Missouri; Ar thur F. Mullen. Nebraska; George A. Collins. Colorado; John S. Cohen ] Georgia; Vincent M. Miles. Arkansas Joseph Wolf. Minnesota; Horatio J. Abbott. Michigan; Thotna- I). Taggart. Indiana; Mrs. Bernice S. Pyke. Ohio: Mrs. Clara Oris coll Sevier. Texas; Mrs. Anna ; St; able. South Dakota, and Mrs. John (’Green way. trisona. Flier Loses Life I New York, Mar. 29 —(U.R) Capt. | V N was preparing a Bellauca mono plane tor a trails Pacific flight, was l ;n...a ,a..,■ ~. 1..,,, ,s e . dived into the water beyond the northwest end of Floyd Rennet air port. Captain Nagoya took oft from Floyd Bennett airport a few min utes before the crash for Newcastle, | Del. The plane was demolished. n — Slink’s Companion The large*! imin eating sharks sometimes attain a length es lid P Jo feel It is not true that ihe fe Unde shark !« IditnJ The pilot-fish a member of the mackerel familv and or.lv about 12 Inch-s li\.g. ac companies ships and also sharks guiding the sharks to iltel, I It sw ie.s close in front ot the shark hut probably does this to feed mi 1 fragments scattered by the shark and also to secure protection fronds s-rnmio*

}• ♦ Al flic Training ('amps | tty United Hre», ■ 1 Petersburg, Fla., Mar. 29. |(iff*) Manager MiCmthy of ihe \>-w Veil. Yankee* announced ihe I."lea .* of piti liels lloiniidtis Aube and Rllfus Meadows (o Ihe Newark 1 Internationals, the Yanke. farm :li am They will Join Ihe lleura at Savannah, (la., lod.ty. The Yanks will do their spring training here ! ne\i year, Colonel Jacob Itilpperl, owner of the team, announced Yes J lerd.i.v the Yankees defeated In i d iti iia polls, 12 to ,v Fori Myers, Fla,. Mar. 21*. Man , cer Hill MeKechtlie Intimated that a cut will be made in the lloston Hraves rosier within 21 hours. At bast three will Ik* released on op- , t ion. Yesterday the Hraves heat, the Philadelphia Athletics, I to 2. j Itiioxi. Miss.. Mar. 29. —Manager! | Walter Johnson gave young Boh ! Friedrich hi.s chance to w in a place lon the Washington Senators' pitchling stuff when he slated the youngj ster against the Baltimore Orioles | today. # | Isis Angeles, Mat 29. The Pitts i burgh Pirates yesterday defeated I Detroit, 5 to I, in IS Innings. Dallas. Tex., Mar. 29. The Chicago White Sox beat Dallas, 9 to | ,7, yesterday. I’rhan Faber, in Ills | first start with hit hard. Dallas I gamering six runs off him before hie was relieved in the sixth by Pa: j I Caraway. Harold Anderson, outi fielder purchased from St Paul, got 'a pass, single, double and triple. I He also stole home. Savannah, (!a.. Mar. 29.—Sillier I ior bitting when hits meant runs, lallowed Ihe fast-galloping Newark Hears to triumph over the Boston lied Sox here yesterday, 6 to 3. I Johnny Neun hit a home run into the left renter stands in the sixth.

! | Jacksonville, Fla.. Mar. 29. —The ’■ Brooklyn Dodgers were here to- ' day for their game with lndianap- ** j ulis. Manager Max Carey favors n 11lie warmer, southern Miami for t* I next season, lie brought the entire : | squad here. i- | St. Petersburg. Fla.. Mar. 29. — ; •' Tlie Cincinnati Beils were pi tying 1 ihe New York Yankees here today. ; I Tomorrow morning the Reds nill tueak up camp at Tampa and pla the Athletics at Orlando in the as- : ternoon. San Francisco. Mar. 29 The New York Giants defeated the San ’ Francisco Seals. 22 to 12, yester- ' day. The Giants slapped the off«r- --* ings of tiive Seal pitchers for 26 ■ • - jr. . -,f V* .***-> nils. I\tll*ilt*i hr fcut iUMi •** -it** ? Moore five. Negro Veteran Dies Indianapolis, March 2!h tU.R) Charles W. brown, s 2. last survivor jot Company \, 2Sth regiment of j negro troops of the Civil war, di**d jat his home here. Brown formerly | was junior vice commander of the I Indiana O A. B . the highest posijtion held by a negro. Persons! ‘‘l Q ” The «|ii«*tienl or “1 " of a per**»n ts determined h> mulrif*lvins the mental aue h> and dividing hy tlie act uni use. Thus the Intelligence quotient of a normal person Is 100 A fieraon with sn **l <)" hehov NO is rated as sub , normal while one w»th mm "l Q-* above I*2o is ruled »> gifted. About rive persons in 100 will be found to t*e ‘JO below normal and ilwut i j five Jo above normal i Franklin’s Vast A h hi e built before 1 T*Vi by Re jattiiu Franklin in Miilndrlphia wain a court which came to lie called Franklin place. Having used g< .natty of his days in travel, when j he was forced tu rent nr room, j Franklin spent Ids older days Ir this house of ins own and died there. He had It enlarged In 178-5 so that lie had three stories, and « i large upar;r-ient intended for the meeting of c-e American phllnsoph ( K-al society, of uhi -h lit was presl | -lent. | « Rights in Invention A shop right is a right to use an invention which is automatically I created on bch.i.f of the owner of the shop, when the invention is deI ! veloped in such simp by an employee who uses tlie time a&il ! equipment of the shop for produe | ing tlie Invention. Such shop rights ! are non-assignnhle and apply alone to inventions (a-rtaining to the Sin plover’-- hpsire-s . 0 - Beautiful island Tlie Island of Sark, wb'ch has | been called "a pearl set in a sapphire sea." is renowned for Its nat--1 urnl beauty. It has been the Inspiration of poets, unmng whom were Swinburne and Victor lingo, j There are huge rocks over which the i sea break* wildly, perpendicular | dills anti weird caves. The island ; appears, in fact, to he a veritable | Garden of Eden of which any woman would delight to he queen. Mrs. Martin S-toutenberry of near Decatur underwent a major operation at the. Wells County Hospitalin Bluffton, Monday. The operation was for the removal of her appendix. |

DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT Tl I'SDaY M \R< H 'l9, DWt*

* Can Tony Slop III*- Largo || - m— - ' ' •

Billy Petrolies knockout of Bat Battalino in New .. York brings the “Fargo Fxpress” in line for a title match with Lightweight Champion Tony Canzoneri and the boys will probably meet early this Summer. The battle between Petrolle and Battalino will be remembered for many a day, being as desperately sensational and bloody a fight as has ever been seen at Madison Square Garden. Oid-timers recalled the Wolgast-Nel-on classic of the good old days. And

HOUSE LEADER STATES CREDIT IS IMPORTANT tCONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE> tax." he continued, "hut. gentlemen. now in order to restore con- j ridence of this country I would, | levy the worst kind of taxes. T appeal to you. gentlemen, not only in tlie name of my partly. lint in the name of my country. that it is your paramount duty to raise sufficient taxes to main-) tain the credit of the country ” Garner’s voice rose in an emo ! tionai appeal that drew loud ap-‘ piause from the house. Tlie speaker referred to the fall yesterday in the dollar and to the ..ill in the slock market. Foreigners, he said, hail put their credits here because it was the safest place in the world. They now will withdraw their funds, lie said, unless the budget is balanced and confidence restored. “If this congress refuses to levy, a tax bill that will balance the budget, within On da vs no hank would la- able to meet its depositors." Garner said. The result. In- .aid. woo'd be 'be worst, p-inii” in the history of the country. Garner asked those who wenwith him In balance III;- budget. I to stand. There was a great surge as members rose in a body and ap ! planded. Only a handful remain- 1 ed seated. Washington. Mar. 29 (U.R) —The house ways and means committee today submitted a Midget balancing tax hill program which would raise Jl.2Cl.OtiO.OfHl. an amount larger than originally proposed in the sales tax program. The new project is built around | three major proposals: One quarter of one per cent on i sales of stock, with no less than four cents per share. • Automobiles, three per cent on pleasure tars, two per cent on trucks and one per cent on accessories. 1 First mass postage rateh. threei 1 cents instead of two. In addition, a wide field of new excise taxes was suggested making new levies on cosmetics, furs.! jewelry, beverages, chewing gum and other articles. The new program was submitted as Speaker Garner took the floor of the house to demand coordination among members of his party on a tax plan which will balance the budget. The taxes proposed by the ways 1 and means committee follow, to ) gether with amounts expected to! be raised by each item: Income tax—new surtax brack ) ets at $6,000 instead of $10,000.! $7,000,000. Reduced corporation exemp-j lions to SI,OO0 —$6,000,000. Administrative changes - repeal of net losses—s2o,ooo,ooo. Net Dividends change seel ion 15-8—59,000,000. Dividends section 15-B $2,000,000 Rearrange depletion allowance *12,000,000. Miscellaneous-sales of stock one quarter of one per cent 'but not less than four cents per share — $75,000,000. Transfers of Itonds, one eighth of one per cent-$13,000,060. Capital stock and . bond Issues, i 10 cents per $100—113.000,000 Conveyances on real estate, 50 i cents on S3OO or over —$10,000,000. j Sales of produce on exchanges, 5 cents per $100—16,000,000. Admissions over 45 cents. 1 cent j j for each io cents or fraction —I 9

it is not at all unl kely that Billy will enter the ring a favorite over the title-holder. He won a tenround decision over Tony in Chicago in 1930 before Canzoneri became lightweight king. Petrolle. retired a few years back a.- “washed up,” has fought his way back to within a step of the throne, and the fans who saw him k. o. Battalino are willing to concede him the seat. In Canzoneri, Billy will meet a foeman worthy of his steel.

, $40,000,000.’ Rxfinc taxf>s, cosmetic# 10 per cent--$25,000,000. I Furs. 10 per cent —$20\000,000. Sporting good and cameras. 10j ; per cent —$4,000,000. Beverages. 1021 rate $11,000,000 Matches, four cents per I,ooo—-! $11,000,000. ('hewing gum. five per cents2,ooo,ooo. Radio phonographs, five per. cent —$11,006,066. Mechanical refrigerators, five per cent $4,506,600. AtltomoHles. three per cent, iru k.. two per cent, accessories mi e per cent $57,000.n0n. Yachts and motor boats above sls value, it' per cent $560,060 , Legislative and administrative features $27,506,060. I’o ’age increase to thrc» cents — $185,000,600. ICedu ed appropriation, ten per ■cut $243,609,000. Total proposed in bill $1,261.nro.imO. In addition the committee ie I cons'di ring three more taxes: Abolition of the alternative feature of affiliated returns, $9.00n,noo; cattily. 5 per cent for $12,000.009; uafety deposit boxes, 10 per (ellt for sl.fHHi.rtoo. GROUPS UNITE FOR DRV CAUSE _ CONTINUED FORM PAGE ONE) national wine bureau which recent- t !y met at Paris to urge world wMe j prohibition repeal. Despite wet gains in Congress i Mi - De Yo said. Both House and Senate still remain 70 per cent dry. and our 72nd congress has more dry members in both branches i ; than had the conzress which passed ; ■ the Volstead act in 1919.” The W. ('. T. U. still is confident t that prohibition it the best me.h- : >d of curbing liqquor tra fie, Mrs. ; Poole said. Women have, not changed thei rminds on this subject, ' . either she added. f'l-a.,' "s.gn.*t jr. s" A pseuile seienei strangely mixed with theology, is the doctrine of ihe signature of plants, that is. 1 the helief that fur every illness . there is some herb writ the power i to mre it anil that Ihe herb he. ** * l Hie sign or mark by which it may be known traa nsi what particular t j illncs it c\ -i tr* aor-oeit Cisjadi Protects Walrus I lie w air-.s in Cunadian w«t*r» ! is protected No one is nlic'.ved Ic i kill their except foi foist and (tie i lliltidiet ’ll any < lie tear is tlmiled I to seven for Eskimos and font for whites The walrus is an inymr ■ Innt fisnl for the Eskimo and his ; dogs. all kit's have to be report I »<J to tup counted pollero Ovstw Y.aa'hs Oyster* should ntw oe eaten dur i j lag their spawning months, but | should he protected ta this period. It Is merely » coincidence that these 1 months in the year do not contain the letter 'r" Oysters, nowexer. , ate riot unwholesome during these months If ea'en fresh from unpol | tilted waters I o Pilgrim’s Mimeuto There Is a Mayflower tonimemrv 1 1 oration stone at I’lymonib England, wldeti records the fact that Fly mouth was the last point touched by the I’ilgrim Fathers on their way 1 to America o Danger In “Dumb” Car 11 The horn on his das.iy s car was , stuck and made only the faintest , ■ sound, so little Johnnie said to him. “Don’t you know it's dangerous, daddy, to go ridir.y in a car that I can’t talk?”

WOULD REVISE POWER RATES , a (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) pense would be saved by consider I s ation of its en'ire rate structure as I* one item, and establishment of ‘rates on a single operating unit!' basis. In thus respect the conten-1' tion is identical to that in the 1 • Martinsville case. - • - o-~ ! f Bodies Are Discovered - . Evansville. Imi , Mar. 29. (U.R) . Bodies ot two unidentified men , were foilnud in this'vicinity today. ■ and a blood-spattered car. abandon j id near Evansville, was thought to s lie the one in w hich they were i slain. j Police rushed efforts at identi- 11 hi ation. upon word that the vie- 11 lints may have been federal prohi-I ildtion age ns. One man. with his throat cut. was thrown tri m a car near Mt. Vernon. The other body, will) the head battered in. was thrown ont near Henderson. Ky. Poiit ('l ief Emme’u Bell. Evansville, went to ML Vernon to view one body, while fingerprint experts went to Henderson. The auto thought to have been used by the assassins, wlis said lo lie a stolen machine. - Hoover Opposed To Soldier Bonus Bill j Washington, March 29 i UP) — President Hoover today expressed ' absolute oprosition to the much diij.cus.ied piject tor full payment of Veterans adjusted compensation j j certificates estimated to cost S:V j 000,000.000 (billion.) ”1 do not believe any such legla- 1 j !a iiia can become a law." he de- . dared at his noon pro. ; conference} ’ today. He said the hill would underi mine present efforts to sustain the 1 j credit of the United States governj inent. Bandits Get 5i75,000 Minneapolis. Minn., March 29— (UP)—Machine gun robbers raided the North American branch of the Northwestern National hank today and escaped with loot ey-tinwied at $175.00’i. I Cosmetic* Long in Use j Til#* knowlimllv nf <-<rsim‘l Irs I ; biwk to rtHiiote HnHqulty nml tl»**lr I I min.’il# nuii*>ris«* flu* liist. r> of ill#* : 1 f. luxury aitd exlravagiirH'** «»f 1 HL r »*s Ttjf» n i|mlit-r »if sin.jtlx I him! mm j s uint I ♦’in j ployed ms |ierfiinies is ir»< nk'alahlf j nn ‘l aiuiost Cilhilous and »tie IxMiki* written by Kgypfianh (iieeks ami I Rninmis on the wibjwt timost con* i i stitute ,i IjHnirv in rheimselvfa. Horsesheo Supertfition Silversmiths, jroidsinitlis, cop ! | perß.iiilhs and hla« ksiniths have hi , been held in a sort of my ate j rhnis The'r work of weld | inn oud si.iining had s d deal of ! mystery in It x liirh min steml to i vi){ier»tifinn. Some reliea of tills s\i|»erstirion made nim*h of smiths j anet flieir work, especially of thei* ] horseshoes In iat**r times • O'"' Civ’i War Bounty Jumpers A bounty lumper in tlie t’ivil wm ' was 4»ne who UfM»n fiayment of hoiin ty enlisf<»d for the army and aft erward desertetl from the servnf* Usually h man who did this sue eesxfuily once repealed the perform tine until he had amimulhiod quire a sum of moin»v or was caught a s : the game j O Opening Round & Square Dancing, Wednesday night,! Sunset,

STUDY GROUP IS ORGANIZED I iiilcd Stales Society Takes Korin in Indiana: Lawrence Is Speaker Indianapolis, Mai 29 till!) Tin I'nlied Stall's Society, organized for I'dueathui of citizens in mat lers of I’uveriinii'iil and already Cttlal llshi d ill 28 males. w.i-m launch* d in Indiana today lit n mum met ling at which David Lawrence, islllor of lll*' i’utlod Slate: Daily, Washington, wa; Ihe I chief speaker. latwii'ili-o is chairman of tin national organization and William Fortune, Indianapolis, wan named!, Indiana chairman. M<*mlK*ra of. 'ln* hoard of dire tors are Calvin Coolidge. Klihtt Root. John (Irian IliMen, Newton 11. Baker and; •Owen I> Young lu outlining the purpose of the I society. Iziwrence pointed out , that present day government is a ; government hy the people who tan not possibly pass upon the detail 1 ed merits of (''implicated questions. and must depend upon lead : erg in tbe community. He stressed that the organ Iza tion is non political, that its efforts ire directed toward unbiased edu-' cation in matters pertaining to government and polities. —■- ——— -O —* Hearing Held Today Indianapolis. March 29. — (U.R) — Healing of charges involving Her aid Ely. matchmaker for* the local American Legion boxitig shows, was set today before the State Athletic Commission. Mfix F rb, Indianapolis attorney petitioned the commission to re voke the legion's promoting 11 cense because Fly allegedly paid Chuck Wiggins in advance of his fight with Yale Okum, two weeks ago. Advance payment of fighters is banned hy Ihe commission Ely maintained that he gave Wiggins sirm worth of tickets be'ore the tigh: and took the remainder' of a S3OO purse for money he had ; loaned Wiggins. After the bout, several creditors sought to attach Wiggins' share of the receipts, and learned that settlement already had been made.

GENERAL MOTOR! ITRUCK--66 HORSEPOWER 6 CYLINDERS I '/a TO 2 TON *595 CHASSIS F. 0.8. PONTIAC Bdtfv Prtwt f 0 k Sixty Day* 1 STANDARD SO C STAKE BODY stindwti m«f3i. SM.BO Siutfwk Staka Ewwao.'tK 00 Hi|ti Dick. JIOO * P«n»l. 1235.00 ' J Cwnyy. J 230 00 Cwiosr kf"< I‘P M J2Sl)< Vtn P«n«l. J 300.00 Oh* Ex****. SBO 00 Hijtiinil W It* E« ,, » ** * STANDARD BODIES TO MEET EVERT HAULING REQUIREMENT Every one of the ten body types illustrated above is eni '•‘ nt ’ ere l'A-2 ton General Motors Truck 131-inch chassis. Seven BL " j.j. modela, including farm combination unit, are «vailable on . ( f inch wheelbase chassis, at correspondingly low prices- 0 twelve Colors is optional al no extra rost. Let us show vo-t h<»* )U nave money by selecting a truck chassis and body as a und. Adams County Auto Cft 228 W. Madison st. *

I 1 “ iO' t"11 \| ar Federal Faim n <l*4 Councct i,„ p.,..„ n vcion "mi,*, ed I.v i,w-i.„ k •■''•'"i tb. " r " ,, "“ r "N lllittcc „,|| , |w , -id H-* ii,* in |,,. |s ' " ' A i">*lii»l,t v„k i' |; "i"bi.z i:,j <•'■ loiiiTa I Asmciaii,,,,. . ,l *ll j"» Id 'iiicrn .1,, u,,,, ~• N I Natl •ii-'il W... • II • '-'I A -,'lo. iltf j M j! 2] \Vc,i,. r|| J Mil I'ket llig V *l l ic> i; Houle i' ( | ' Atbio. bu"l,,, k |,r. N '„„. n ' m o •**iior»l |* Ul , t’"-' ■ I','Hurg >*, call, to del ™ outer cit.es their mover " avoid H ,-!*„ :i „ n ip ,'*• •it their ov.'l '.iirclle* m * aresw.,,. .me „f, New \,,rk ; , her, u „ congreg..'",, (~"■« !n m„ J b* plat s u, ne a Gwent s„ , ,t "‘ V h " rtl '-"' - re.-ehe i*r, gi«- v „ •-'tit. - X.s Y..M- | *„«, One J.« far Glvceri, Btycerin. the i'l,smk«| Chemicals n;'» iimiiineniWe « Blie of Ihe imMc-,1 heinit m ,||_ Ihe presence CilieMUltel* MJ through iis ■ .j'.iii„(, „( , In w 1.i.-li the s •»!„., ;e,| |,a,!||)3 iit|i!.titt..! <■ u M r, mJ3

@as%3feii Take W NATURE’S krurDY-^ Yourelmuna* ■v..it#f“ r -^ properly by diitt. • g yuurc«t2 v ill pnd witn a boaci ac-uon in i* easy as nature at her griping. Try it. Uniy Zc. The All \\'-euble Uxative » % i*3! Mill Mukr the test tontjlu m ■