The Syracuse Journal, Volume 28, Number 48, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 March 1936 — Page 2

BRIsBANE\ THIS WEEK If Russia Joined Japan Not Heroic Action Lloyd George Hopeful England Still Safe Editors talk about Asia, led by Japan, conquering the world. They might speculate on a unI ion between Japan and Russia. Improbable, you will say. truly, but If Russian-Japanese hostility could be changed Into Rus-sian-J a p a n e s e agreement a new world chapter might open. You hear of Russia's “red army." 1.300.000 men, thoroughly armed, and 7.000.000 reserves. Arthar You see photographs of Russia's amphibian tanks, mounted with machine guns, rolling over the land and swimming rivers; you .wad about Intensive training of tens of thousands of Russian air pilots, parachute jumpers, etc., and see even the broad-shouldered young Russian women drilling with rifles. Western Europe may have a problem closer at hand than Japan. Our British cousins In the Revolution cheerfully let loose howling, scalping Indians on their cousins in the American colonies, and bolshevism might cheerfully turn Asiatic killing efficiency against western “080111111801." You remember how cheerfully the great historian Gibbon predicted that, in the American war, "with firmness ail may go well." because "Scotch Highlanders, Irish, Hanoverians. Canadians, Indians, etc- will all in various shapes be employed." There is no reason why Russia of 1036 should be more squeamish now . than England at the end of the Eighteenth century. Lloyd George, who ought to know about Europe and war since he and old Clemenceau won the big war, tells Universal Service this present war is “off." France having learned that "even her most ardent friends In Europe war." that peace * -• '.. fc J ' ,r *' ■ V ’ ’ B ■loylng sanctions ■ " ■sara ■ring ■e it ■ter" ■ the ■tied Kbit ■lowv r * ■are ■ on ■ for ■ill." ■not ■ght if the attacker, with a couple of thousand airplanes, dropping explosive bombs and poison gas. should surrflse the enemy. “Defense" would have no 2-to-l advantage over that sort of| attack. Uoyds, the great English Insurance concern, at first refused to Insure against war at any price. Now LTaydg will Insure, otherwise “bet." nine and a half to one against war within six months. Wall Street wanted that news and of course cheered up A mother of Fort Worth. Texas,’rS feted her body to Chicago's Cook County hospital for dissection after natural death. If the hospital would provide a free operation for her son. The hospital declined the body, performed the free operation. Now twenty, all women but one, offer to sell their bodies, “delivered after death." The governor of Campeche In Mexico. after keeping all churches in his state closed for more than a year and a half, now permits all to reopen. A fight against religion often starts violently, to wind ep feebly. • Kia* Features Syndlcata, WNUSarrtoa. Populated Spot Tristan da Cunna is located in the South Atlantic ocean, 1,400 miles from Capetown on the east and 2,500 mile* from Buenos Aires on the west The Island of St Helena, 1.300 miles to the north, is the nearest Inhabited land. A possession of Great Britain, the Island often baa been caned the loneliest peculated spot on earth. Tfc» SkywrajMMr ■ . Any w tan office or apartment

News Review of Current Events the World Over Eastern States Devastated by Great Floods —Germany Condemned by League Council—President Asks Billion and Half for Relief. By EDWARD W. PICKARD C Weigsrn Nawapwper Union.

Q TATES of the Central East ami New O England suffered severely from the almost unprecedented floods. Scores of Ilves were lost and the vast property damage cannot yet be estimated. At least 150,000 persons were made homeless. Conditions were’ worst In western Pennsylvania. The Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, uniting at Pittsburgh to form the Ohio, poured raging torrents down over the great Industrial city, driving the people from their homes and places of business. The famous “Golden Triangle” between the rivers was completely inundated; transportation and communication systems were suspended and power plants were put out of commission so the city was plunged In darkness. The plight of the suburbs was equally bad. Farther east, Johnstown was entirely flooded and the terror-sitrlcken Inhabitants fled from their homes, but the great Quemabonlng dam was holding and the danger of a repetition of the disaster of 1889 seemed to be passing. Dozens of,cities and towns along the Susquehanna and its tributaries were under water, and in New York the Mohawk, Hudson, Schuylkill and Delaware rivers were out of their banks and rapidly rising. The Potomac, too, became a raging flood and in Washington an army of men was working feverishly to save the buildings and monuments In the flatlands. Ten thousand persons were rendered homeless In the New England states and about a score lost their lives. The emergency there was greatest In the valley of the Connecticut river. Many cities were cut off from rail transportation and also were without light and power. American Red Cross rose to the emergency, as always, mobilizing its forces to relieve the suffering. Admiral Cary T. Grayson, Its national head. Issued an appeal for a fund of $3,000,000. President Roosevelt also called for this amount in a proclamation. Secretary of War Dern was appointed emergency flood relief head by the President and Immediately ordered the generals commanding six corps areas of the army to extend full aid for prevention Os loss of life and destruction of property. Work Relief Administrator Harry Hopkins gave blanket authority to aU WPA officiate to employ their workers In any way necessary in rescue work and in strengthening levees. The United States Coast Guard sent many power launches, provisioned and manned, from the Chicago area to help tn the relief work at various points. To prevent robbery and vandalism National Guardsmen were on the Job at Pittsburgh and other places. Air lines to the East bad a great Increase of business because of the disorganization of railway traffic, and all spare planes were pressed Into the service. GERMANY was forced to denounce the Locarno pact because the Franco-Russian mutual assists nee treaty was directed only against the reich and ranged 275,000,- <*•" people against It. I That Is what Joachim I son Ribbentrop. HltI ler's adviser on for- ■ NJ* elßn affalrs ' the council of the league of Nations when it I met in London to pass I on the complaint of France and Belgium I that Germany had violated both the Locarno . V<M * and the Versailles Ribbentrop * r( , aty by Ing the Rhineland. Nevertheless, the council by unanimous vote condemned Germany as a violator of both treaties. How she shall be punished, if at all. remained* to be determined. France and all hß| allies wanted the Imposition of lions; Italy could not be brougbO favor that, being herself such penalties; Great Britain, to preserve the peace, sought middle way out of the dilemma. Representatives of Britain. France, Belgium and Italy devised a plan which provides for a conference of world nations to draft economic, disarmament, and security plans. This plan also provides that Germany, in the meantime, would agree not to fortify the Rhineland and, pending a new agreement with Germany, Britain would guarantee France’s security. The French especially liked this because It amounted to a military defensive alliance with Britain, but they did not believe It would be accepted by Germany. tea Ribbentrop, accompanied by aa Imposing lot of experts and secretaries, was sent by Hitler at the request of the council. The relchsfuehrer bad consented to be represented after British Foreign Secretary Eden assured him he would do bis best to persuade France and Belgium to consider Hitter's new security plans after Germany had been formally condemned for its action in the Rhineland. In his address before the council Von Ribbentrop emphatically asserted that France by approaching soviet Russia in concluding "what really was a military alliance," did not respect the Locarno treaty. And the SovtetCzechoslovaktan agreement also, be declared, constituted a further danger to the reich. France's proposal to submit the France-Russian treaty to The Hague court was said by a spokesman for the German delegation to be futile and useless. He also said the plan suggested by the English, to police the Rhineland sone with an International A third provision, for drawing up a astern of mutual guaranties among the Locarno powers, to operate in case

of an attack, the spokesman said, was "unnecessary because Germany has no Intention cf crossing her frontiers.” None of the Germans, however, even intimated that Hitler would withdraw any of his troops from the Rhineland. At a former session of the league council Captain Eden declared that the danger of hostilities arising from the Rhineland crisis might be excluded. He pleaded that this occasion must be seized not only to establish the justice of the French complaints but also to make a new settlement of differences between the French and Germans. “I have already stated before the council," said Eden, “that In the view of the British government a patent and incontestable breach of the Versailles treaty relating to the demilitarised zone has been committed. “It is, therefore, in the opinion of hte majesty's government, right for the council to conte to a similar conclusion and to convey this finding to the other signatory powers.” Eden, however, declared that “the duty of the league is not limited to taking action to safeguard the peace of the world. It Is essential that the specter of war should be exorcised for the future at the same time that peace Is maintained now." Hitler was continuing hte speechmaking tour in Germany. At Koenlgsberg be said: “For once a single man comes forth in Europe behind whom stands a whole nation. He extends hte hand to other nations. Whoever dares reject this, my hand, behind which 69,000,000 people are united, must bear responsibility in the eyes of history. I have been the herald of the German people for more than three years. lam now the herald for peace in Europe.” SECRETARY OF AGRICULTURE WALLACE announced the establishment of five regions for administration of the soli conservation and i domestic allotment act, OS substitute for the inIvalid1 valid AAA. H. R. Tolley, administrator of the new plan, said the department already has begun a field serv- ‘ Ice to administer the - -'' program In various states. As under the ■r AAA, the leading part within the states is to ■ " be played by the farmH. R. Tolley er8 * and community committees. * - Mr. Wallace also directed discontinuance of the four commodity divisions whose work of liquidating AAA production control programs will be taken over by the regional directors. The order leaves Intact other administrative units of the AAA, such as the division of marketing and marketing agreements, division of program planning, and the .division of the consumers' counsel. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT packed up hte fishing tackle and started South for hte annual angling cruise, this time on the new Presidential boat, the Potomac. He made a brief stop at Winter Park, Fla., where he received an honorary degree from Rollins college. Hte plan was then to board the Potomac and spend about two weeks on his old fishing grounds off the Florida coast Mr. Roosevelt had Invited as hte fishing companions hte eldest son, James; an uncle, Frederick A. Delano, and three mates of hte fishing cruise of last tall, Capt Wilson Brown, United States navy, and Cot Edwin M. Watson, United States army, his military aides, and Capt Ross T. Mclntire, United States navy, White House physician. a > hn ■ an w i t h d i e r n Union company In the Hearst case but first made public what purported to be a copy of a telegram from the publisher to one of hte editorial writers in which McSwain was called “a Communist in spirit and a traitor in effect" McSwain promptly read this in the bouse and then vigorously and eloquently defended himself and denounced Hearst The publisher retorted with an open letter to hte editorial writer in which be said: r “McSwain Is a politician of the lower order, and hte extreme radical pacificism is a danger to the peace and protection of the nation, and to the safety of the men, women and children who constitute the American people." ONE and one-half billion dollars will be needed to carry the Works Progress administration through the coming fiscal year, according to President Roosevelt’s figuring. Therefore be asked congress to appropriate that sum. He thought it would be sufficient to care for the destitute unemployed, together with $1,000,000,000 in unexpended previous appropriations and the SBOO.OUU.OOO carried In the budget for the civilian conservation corps and various public works. Limitation of federal relief expenditures to this figure, however, is de--1 pendent upon re-employment of substantial numbers of the Idle by private industry, the President said. As the President’s message was pret seated, Speaker Joseph W. Byres rei vested that Mr. Rooeevelt had advised bis leaders that any increase in the . appropriation over hte estimates must

- . . • SYRACUSE JOURNAL

RUSH D. HOLT, the young Democratic senator from West Virginia, gave notice that he would continue to hammer at the Works Progress administration until a senate investigation was Ordered. He demanded an inquiry into all relief activities under charge of Administrator Harry L. Hopkins, and other agencies affecting relief, the RFC, CWA, and FERA. In reply to some of the charges made, Mr. Hopkins Issued this bulletin: “No employee of WPA is required to make any contribution to any political party. No WPA employee’s job will be in jeopardy because of failure to make such contribution. “No employee of the WPA shall at any time solicit contributions for any political party, and evidence of such solicitation will be cause for Immediate discharge. The question whether or not to contribute to any political party Is a matter entirely for the voluntary decision of employees. “No person will be employed or discharged on the ground of his support or nonsupport of any candidate.” SINCE the recent elections in Spain the riots staged by the leftists have been growing more vicious dally, and after disorders at Logrono in which I a number of persons were killed the Spanish army was aroused to vigorous protest Premier Manuel Azana was told by the officers that unless his new left government adopted measures to stop the widespread violence the army would take the maintenance of order Into Manuel Azana own hands. Gen. Carlos Masquelet minister of war, was said to be In sympathy with the army’s demand. Azana held a heated conference with Francisco Largo Caballero, president of the Socialist party and is said to have told him that he believed revolutionary Socialists were responsible for most of the disorders, demanding that the violence cease immediately. Largo insisted that the Socialists be permitted to demonstrate, but finally gave in to the premier and Issued orders to all Socialists to behave themselves. Despite strict censorship imposed by the governor of Logrono it was learned that incendiaries there set fire to six convents and churches, •-> four Tightest centers and a tightest newspaper, and then attacked the army barracks, attempting to seize artillery. THE Treasury reported that Income tax collections for the first 16 days March amounted to $281,758,032, or a gain* of 46.4 per cent over the $192,429,413 In the corresponding period of last year. Practically all collection districts registered an Increase. Since the first of the year, the Treasury said, $361,428,990 has been collected on the Income tax, an Increase of 45.6 per cent over the $248,060,132 gathered In for the same period of 1935. rpLETTHERIOS VENIZELOS, prob- £-» ably the greatest of latter-day Greek statesmen, died In Paris, where he was In self-imposed exite, fqHowing an attack of grippe. He was seventytwo years old. Venlzelos, former premier of Greece, fled from the island of Crete last March after a revolt he headed collapsed. He was tried and sentenced to death, but King George after hte recall offered him amnesty. Venlzelos, however, refused to return, declaring “Greece will never see me again.” He was an ardent republican and denounced the restoration of the monarchy. SECRETARY OF LABOR PERKINS was accused of harboring hundreds of deportable criminal and radical aliens in the United States by Senator Robert R. Reynolds of North Carolina when he Introduced a resolution calling upon the Labor department to furnish Information allegedly withheld from congress. Senator Reynolds’ resolution said that request had been made of Labor department officiate for Information concerning “in excess of 2.600 aliens tn the United States known to and allowed by the Department of Labor to remain In the United States, although subject to deportation.” The request, the resolution stated, was refused. PROCEEDING With its great rearmament program, the British government has named Sir Thomas Inskip attorney general since 1932. to be the co-ordinator ——— of the entire scheme, ■f** giving him a newly ■ created cabinet post 1 This selection by Prime I*ll. Minister Baldwin was h surprise. It bad been thought the place > J might go to Wins- MMHG’S ton Churchill, Neville ■K|l Chamberlain, A.'red Duff Cooper or Sir Samuel Hoare. Sir Thomas la known . ’ as an “antl-jingotet,” is sixty years old and always Is ealm and unruffled In the house of commons or at the bar. It will be hie duty as defense co-ordinating minister to sy»chronize activities of the army, navy, and air services, Compromise brought to u «sd the two weeks' strike of building 1 service workers in New York and thousands of elevator operators and other employees returned to their Jobs in [ some 2,400 apartment bouses and business structures. The settlement provided for Immediate re-employment of all strikers and arbitration of wages and hours, and It was bailed as a I -great victory" by James J. Barnbrick, head of the local union and leader tn the strike. Arbitration of minimum wages and maximum hours under supervision of Ferffinand A. Silcox, chief of the United States forestry service. Wages i and hours are to be fixed at the end of each of the next three years on the baste of prevailing economic condl- ■ tiona. I * In signing a three year contract > with the realty advisory board, rep- : resenting the employers, union fead- - era abandoned their demand for a closed or nreferential shop.

Digest jah National Topics Interpreted By WILLIAM BRUCKART national press 3lcg o c n?HilI

Washington. — Overshadowing all else In the national capital at this M , writing is the cqptroNeed Carb versy that is boiling on Inquiriee and surging around the head of Alabama’s Democratic Senator Black, who is the chairman of the senate’s lobby Investigating committee. As an offshoot of this controversy, the federal communications commission is In water much too hot for bathing and It begins to appear that when the steam blows off the communications commission is likely to be a thoroughly discredited federal agency because of the part it played in Senator Black’s unprecedented seizure of private telegrams from the Western Union and Postal Telegraph companies. Speaking generally, it has been seldom that a United States senator has ever attempted to assert the authority that Senator Black has used and it is equally unprecedented that a federal agency has gone to the extremes that characterized the action of the communications commission in connection with the seizure of the messages. But some good may come from the police court prosecution tactics employed by Senator -Black and some good may come from the accusations leveled at the communications commission because that body helped Senator Black carry out his plans. The country-wide Indignation that has arisen from Senator Black’s usurpation of power has brought to the front a question that needs public attention and needs it badly. I refer, in this connection, to the steadily expanding efforts of congressional Investigators, especially senatorial Investigators, to take over, as their own, powers that always have been regarded as reserved exclusively to the courts. The consensus among Washington observers certainly is that the legislative inquiries have developed to a point where the most humble requirements of Justice have been and are being completely ignored. Whether they are so intended, these inquiries, and this includes Investigations conducted by committees not only of congress but of state legislators and even city councils, are approaching the point where they are almost tyrannical. It goes without saying, then, that the time* has arrived for citizens to assert themselves. These inquiries will not proceed when the elected legislators, state or national, learn that the people do not approve of such highhanded tactics. • • • In order to have an understanding of the latest of these escapades, it is necessary to review Black'e briefly what has hapAcfiuifies pened In the case of the senate lobby investigating committee. Almost a year ago the committee sought the aid of the federal communications commission which had the color of authority In law for Investigating the business of the telegraph companies. Senator Black issued a broad subpoena, directing the telegraph companies to make available any and all messages hte committee desired. Communications commission agents then went Into the telegraph company files, read everything they could find and made copies of ail of the messages which those agents, under guidance of Black investigators, thought would be helpful to the Black committee in exposing operations of private individuals. The purpose of this, as outlined by Senator Black, was to locate clues to the machinations of business Interests who were seeking passage or defeat for legislation pending In congress. The Alabama senator wanted to “show up” lobbyists; He contended and has maintained consistently that “these malefactors of great wealth” could not accomplish any Influence in congress unless It were done secretly and “in the dark.” In other words. Senator Black persuaded members of the communications commission to help him in hte fishing expedition. He persuaded that organization that it should become a party* to an unprecedented effort designed as a dragnet, a movement to smear anybody and everybody who had used telegraphic service. . The Black plan was carried out in secret. Senders and receivers of messages which those agents copied knew nothing about it The operation was just as much “in the dark" as any of the lobbying about which Senator Black complained, even more so. It was only by accident that the facts became known but when they did become known, the Ud was promptly blown off. The end is not yet nor is it even In sight One federal judge has issued a restraining order against such tactics and a half dozen other applications for similar orders are pending. Undoubtedly. the questions, whatever the rulings may be, will find their way eventually to the Supreme court of the United States. The senate itself is looking into the situation. It has, by resolution, asked the federal communications commission to make a report stating the facta and by what authority it acted. So there is much hubbub about the whole thing and if one may Judge from the line of conversation generally heard around Washington, Senator Black is on the hot spot, and the spot thus far has shown no indications of entering a cooling stage. Senate Investigations long have been considered by many people as a modus operand! that creak Charge with unfairness. UnVnfaimeM biased observers frequently have criticized them because of the methods employed. It seems absolutely necessary that the senate should have power to ■ ■ ■ ■ • - • ■ ' ; . ' •: -

proper questions and to force answers. If it is going to enact legislation to correct evils. It must be equipped with such powers. But the point is that in seeking such information, the senate has consistently permitted its committees to act in a fashion that can be described by no other word than outrageous! I have watched them over a period of nearly twenty years and seldom, if ever, has there been an important Investigation that did not degenerate sooner or later into a condition that savored of police court practices. Respectable citizens have been subpoened, have gone before the committees willing to tell their complete story, anxious to co-operate and have found themselves treated as outlaws and criminals. This situation has become so prevalent in senate investigations that when any citizen is subpoened to appear before a senate investigation these days, his neighbors and friends begin to ask each other what crookedness is involved. In other words, the psychology of the senate investigation, as it has developed through the last fifteen or twenty years, has become one that reverses the constitutional right of an individual that he is innocent until he is proved guilty. For several years, there has been a bill pending in congress designed to prevent, or at least reduce, lynchings. The theory back of it te that many times innocent persons have been lynched and that every one has a right to a trial by jury in a properly constituted court Over across the Atlantic ocean, dictators have operated and have employed the “blood purge," the summary death sentence or the execution without granting the accused the right of defense. Undoubtedly some persons guilty of murder or rape have been lynched; undoubtedly the “blood purge” by the Nazi rulers destroyed some bad characters and undoubtedly the summary executions by the Soviet or the Fascists of Italy have provided death for Individuals who were festering sores to humanity, but there can be no doubt that in the case of the lynchings or in the case of the “blood purge” or the summary executions, many innocent persons have had their lives snuffed out. So it is with senate Investigations. Undoubtedly they have uncovered some dirty crooked dealings. Undoubtedly they have brought to public attention activities and conditions that ought to have been exposed. Yet, the fact remains that nearly all of our people are decent people, law abiding and selfrespecting. And when senate investigations go beyond proper limits they approach, if they do not wholly become, tryanny. • • • In defense of Senator Black’s action in the lobby Investigation, 1* think it can fairly be said Not Wholly that he te not wholly to Blame to blame ls he has gone further than any other tn the program of inquiry and prosecution upon which he has launched. Little by little, bit by bit, the senate has arrogated to itself authority hitherto not used by It Little by little, it has encroached upon what many believe to be the jurisdiction of the courts and In a like manner it has taken unto itself powers hitherto supposed to have been exclusively reserved to the executive department of government It would seem, then, that if other senate committees had established the precedent Senator Black could properly use the same methods. The trouble In hte case is that he did not stop at limits previously set, discreditable as those limits were, but went beyond them. To repeat, there te every Indication that some good will come out of this circumstance. Important men and brilliant lawyers and great organizations like the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, the National Association of Manufacturers and the American Liberty league have taken note of the steadily expanding power claimed by the senate. This means that the questions involved will get into the courts. It is to be hoped that they will be presented to the courts in such a manner that the questions may be finally and lastingly answered, that the powers of the legislators may be delimited and that a definite expression may come from the judiciary that wlffedetermine whether members of the houfee* and the senate can serve at once as legislators, judges and prosecutors. e Western Newspaper Union. Ghee, Common Diet in Indin Ghee is clarified butter used tn India. The best te prepared from butter of the milk off cows, the less esteemed from that of buffaloes. The butter 1s melted over a slow fire and set aside to cool; the thick, opaque, whitish and more fluid portion, or ghee, representing the greater bulk of the butter, te then removed. The less liquid residue, mixed with ground-nut oil, te sold as an inferior kind of ghee. In India ghee te one of the commonest articles of diet, and Indeed enters Into the composition of everything eaten by the Brahmans. It te also extensively used in Indian religious ceremonies, being offered aa a sacrifice to Idols, which are at times bathed In IL Benefit of Clergy Originally, benefit of clergy was the privilege of exemption from trial by a secular court enjoyed by the clergy If arrested for felony. In time It included all who could read and write, since they were capable of entering into holy orders. It waa abolished by George IV. Kipling called one of hte stories, “Without Benefit of Clergy," meaning without the religious rites qt matrimony. * . A , ;

THURSDAY, MARCH 26. 1936.

e QuertiQN_ To preveit diced fruits dropping to the bottom of a gelatin mold, chill fruits and add when gelatin mixture has partly congealed. • • • Discolored linoleums may be cleaned with alcohol. After cleaning allow them to dry thoroughly, then apply lacquer. • • • Always keep salads on ice until it is time to serve them. They lose their flavor when exposed to heat Orange Juice mixed with confectioner's sugar and a little grated orange rind makes a very soft and delicious cake frosting. • • • Some stucco walls may be washed with soap and water, but a coat of stucco sprayed over the whole surface 1s much more satisfactory than washing. • • * Dough that has been kept in the refrigerator for several hours after it is molded should stand in a warm room for about twenty minutes before putting it into the oven. C Aaaoct&ted Newspaper*.—WNU Servlca. Do You Ever Wonder ‘Whether the“ Pain” Remedy You Use is SAFE? ■ « Ask Your Doctor and Find Out Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations npHE person to ask whether the preparation you or your family are taking for the relief of headaches is SAFE to use regularly is your family doctor. Ask him particularly about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN. He will tell you that before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin most “pain” remedies were advised against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often,- for the heart. Which is food for thought if you seek quick, sa/e relief. Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin among the fastest methods yet discovered Jor the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neuritis and neuralgia. And the experience of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularlj*. In your own interest remember this. You can get Genuine Bayer Aspirin at any drug store — simply by asking for it by its full name,' BAYER ASPIRIH. Make it a point to do this — and See that you gef what you want. Bayer Aspirin BALD! He uses Glover’s Mange Medicine followed by Glover's Mediated Soap for the stop worrying about it. Start -J Qr hOTeyont Barbet give you A FAMOUS DOCTOR A S » young man th« **iat« Dr. R. V. Pierce practiced medicine in Pennsylvania YR «■ is P l r s criP tion * lnct MLy’Si.rW with such great demand —JK ***** movc( '- to BusYOI|&9F f*lo. N- Y., and put up in ready-to-use form ' his well-known tonic. Golden Medical Discovery, which will eliminate poisons from the intestines, increase tha appetite, and tone up the digestive system. Buy Tabs. 50c, liquid SI.OO k $1.35.

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