The Syracuse Journal, Volume 29, Number 30, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 19 November 1936 — Page 6
Ask Me Another £ A General Quiz e Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. 1. In parliamentary tactics, what is meant by a cloture? 2. Into what sea does the Rhine flow? 3. What boy-king of England was murdered in the Tower of London? 4. Who succeeded Rutherford B. Hayes as President of the United States? 5. What is the pommel of a saddle? 6. What do the French mean by a “pension”? 7. What is a warren? 8. What does “A. W. O. L." mean? 9. Who is the first woman elected to the U. S. senate? 10. What is the color of the dye obtained from the cochineal? Answers 1. A proceeding to end debate in order to get a vote. 2. The North sea. I. Edward V. 4. James A. Garfield. 8. A knob at the front. 6. A boarding house or boarding school. 7. An enclosure for game, especially rabbits. 8. Absent without official leave. 9. Mrs. Hattie Caraway, of Arkansas. 10. Scarlet
When You Want to Alkalize Stomach Fast
Try This Amazing Fast Way t-The “Phillips" Way Millions Are Adopting On every side today people are being urged to alkalise their stomach. And thus ease symptoms of “acid indigestion,** nausea and stomach upsets. To gain guidl alkalization, just do this: Take two teaspoons of PHIL* UPS* MILK OF MAGNESIA 30 minutes after eating. OR — take two Phillips* Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Relief comes almost at once—usually in a few minutes. Nausea, “gas" — fullness after eating and “acid indigestion” pains leave. You feel like a new person. Try this way. Get either the liquid "Phillips" or the remarkable, new Phillips* Milk of Magnesia Tablets. Each one equals a teaspoon of the liquid. Only 25/ a box at all drug •tores. AISO M TABUT KMtM.- jMljk Eaebtiaytabtet Phillips* JXSk Interesting Silence There are some silent people who are more interesting than the best talkers. — Earl of Beaconsfield. AT LAST a com BELIEF—TUT ALSO SPEERS RECOVERY BtiMmber the mm! It’. FOLEY’S HONEY A TAHI Oro art of ingredieata um « • • oofttß imtatod throat hninx* to IcMp you from coughing. Another *et roach** th* woaohi*l tube*. |oe**ro h»lp» break up • cough du* to * cold omt *ptab t«w. For cujck rebel s a#k vour i?sfi£ l ssis£r t a>2i's,’: HOW OFTEN CAN YOU KISS? AND MAKE UP? husband* can uruforttand JC why a with should turn from a steeaant companion into a ahro* for cm whole week tn ewry month. Yon can «ay "I’m sorry" and Hm and make up vaster before marriage than after. If you're wise aad if you want to hold your hue. band, yon won't be a throe-quarter wists. For three •eneratioa* one woman has told anotteerJMMr to go "nnUlag through' with Lydia K. Ptakham* Vegetable Compound. It behta, Nature-tanaup tbe kyatam. diuji tti© dijscoTnfort# from the functional which women moat enduro In the threw erdeab of Ufo: 1. Turning from gtrihood to womanhood. X Froparing for motherhood. a. Approaching —middle age.** Don’t be a three-quarter wifo. take LYDIA E. PINKHAMS VEGETABLE COMPOUND and Go "SmUing Through.WNU—A 47—38 ■ I < *-•-*- - - --- *-— — IL - -W-. Bl yy/rHUH moneyi rwcuon OMty M 0 11 Wvm suffer a fMKsaina 11 with diixmeis. bumma. scanty or too It frecrogn* oriitrtioet end getting opal Il ellupMt... me Doan’tPflk. am eweciallv for ©o&rfv II i B I WQf* I* 8▼ •••• ■ w W Vv*»l II XnJH iTTiTr?; wu *AjT°wu II Fj|l | |bj| all
News Review of Current Events the World Over Secretary Roper Plans National Census of Unemployed— Armistice Day Duly Observed —Opening of the Huge San Francisco-Oakland Bridge.
By EDWARD W. PICKARD © Wutera Newsroper Union.
XTOW that the election is over. Secretary of Commerce Roper is laying plans for the complete census of the unemployed in the
United States which has so long been called for. He said he would ask congress to appropriate between 13 and 15 million dollars for this count and that it would require the services of about 25.000 persons who would be given special training for several months. “The census would
** -J ■ * I Sec. Roper
not only take up an enumeration of those classified as unemployed,” said Roper, “but we want to find out which trades or industries the unemployed would fall into. We would ; also like to help the states in clas- ; sifying the unemployed from the unemployable. ‘•There are many economic quesI tions involved. Some families have ; enough income to support them, but one or more members may be out of work. We want to obtain information on this phase.” The secretary intimated that the census machinery might be made permanent so that a close check be kept on persons out of work, as is done in England. | According to the American Fed- • eration of Labor 2,900,000 workers \ have been re - employed since last ’ January. “Employment has been gaining ; steadily since January, without setj back.” the federation said. “Th { s unusual eh i points to the upward trend of business, which was of such force as to offset the usual summer layoffs. “Comparing September this year with September, 1935, we find 2,250,000 more persons employed in American industry, indicating that while a portion of this year’s gains merely restored winter losses, by far the major part represents lasting gain in employment recovery. “This year’s gains (comparing September, 1935 and 1936) have been largest in manufacturing industries where about 675.000 wage and salaried workers were re-em-ployed; about 300,000 more farm laborers are at work, 285,000 more in trade, 200,000 more in building and 100,000 have been added in railroads. Most of the other gains were in service industries." TN A joint report by the federal * bureaus of agricultural and home economics the prediction is made that farm cash income available for spending in 1937 will continue the upward trend shown in 1936. As a basis for this expectancy the bureaus cite increases in net income from »agricultural and nonagricultural sources, lower interest rates and long term financing of debts. Record production of truck crops also was forecast. All sections of the country will share and all important truck crops will be included except celery, onions and spinach, it was stated, with the likelihood that in spite of indicated larger supplies, improvement in consumer buying power would help maintain the higher" prices of 1936, which were about 10 per cent over 1935. QECRETARY of Agriculture Wallace in an interview intimates that for a year there may be no new legislation for crop control
Sec. Wallace
along the lines of the outlawed AAA, for farmers would like to have one really good crop without forced curtailment. But he added: “We will need some legislation eventually unless the weather changes or the world demand for our products greatly improves.”
Wallace was asked whether the lack of a control plan might not result in another surplus, leaving the administration up in the air without any machinery to cope with it. He said he could not estimate a surplus ahead* of time and that he would rather wait to see what would happen. “It may be possible to find a solution that will prove better than the AAA or the soil conservation act,” he said. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT led * the nation in observance pf Armistice day by going to Arlington National cemetery and laying a wreath of chrysanthemums beside the tomb of the Unknown Soldier. The ceremony was quiet and simple. General Pprshing, commander of the American expeditionary forces, and Secretary of the Navy Swanson stood by the President's side and a small detachment of soldiers, sailors and marines was present. General Pershing New Name Is Suggested for Hungary’s Budapest Budapest, the capital of Hungary, is being urged by some of its citizens to change its name to Buda. Several reasons are advanced for the change. In the first place, it is pointed out, Budapest adopted its present name as recently as 1872 and was known before that time as Buda, a simple name of purely Hungarian or Turanian root. The added "pest,” it is maintained, is of old
SYRACUSE JOURNAL
also placed a wreath at the tomb, and all stood bare headed as “taps” was sounded precisely at 11 o’clock eighteen years after the guns ceased firing on the western front in France. Everywhere in the United States and in all the allied countries the anniverasry was suitably observed, and in Poland the day was one of especial rejoicing for it is regarded as the birthday of that re-born nation. An ironical note came from Geneva where the League of Nations announced that 8,200,000 men axe now permanently under arms throughout the world. Os this total 545,000 are attached to world navies. The league calculations show that men under arms throughout the world just before the outbreak of the World war numbered 5,900,000, not counting naval units. The figures released show that since 1931-’32 world armies have increased 1,700,000 men. In Europe total armed forces are now 4,800,000, compared with 3,600,000 in 1931-’32. CAN FRANCISCO’S dream of 30 ° years was realized when the .great bridge across the bay of Oakland was formally opened with elaborate ceremony. This longest vehicular bridge in the world has been under construction since July 19, 1933, at a cost of $77,000,000, the funds being largely supplied by the Reconstruction Finance corporation. It is eight and a quarter miles long and, except for a tunnel passage through Yerba Buena island, is entirely over water. - K '*■ It -is divided roughly into two parts, mechanically speaking. The west side, from San Francisco to Yerba Buena, is of the suspension type. Hie cables are the largest ever spun for a bridge—nearly two feet in diameter. The east crossing, from Yerba Buena to Oakland, is of the cantilever type. As the climax of a four-day celebration, President Roosevelt pushed a button in his White House office lighting two green lamps on the bridge and officially throwing it open for traffic. pOL. JOSEF BECK, foreign minister of Poland, concluded his visit to London and departed with assurances of Great Britain’s friendliness and de-
sire to co-operate with Poland in its contest against Nazi intrigues, especially in relation to the Free City of Danzig. Foreign Minister Eden talked with Colonel Beck for three days and was told by him that Poland would reject the overtures of both Moscow and
Berlin and work for the same neutrality in eastern Europe that Belgium intends to maintain in the west. One feature of Poland’s celebration of its independence day was the bestowal of a baton on Gen. Edward Rydz-Smigley, making him the fourth marshal in the revived nation’s history. He thus succeeds the late Marshal Josef Pilsudsky and is regarded by many as the new military dictator of Poland. President Moscicki presented the baton during an imposing ceremony in the courtyard of Warsaw castle.
TI7HEN Admiral William H. Standley retires on January 1 from the post, of chief of naval operations, it will be filled by Admiral William D. Leahy, now commander of the navy battle force. This selection by the President was announced in Washington. Half a dozen other high officers of the navy will die advanced when the change occurs. It was also announced that Maj. Gen. John H. Russell, commandant of the marine corps, would be succeeded in that post when he retires from active service December 1 by Brig. Gen. Thomas Holcombe. The latter will be elevated to the rank of major general of marines. 1Z ING Victor of Italy had a birth- **■ day, and President Roosevelt, in his cabled message of congratulations, was careful to follow the American policy of not recognizing territory acquired by force, addressing him only as “king” and not as “emperor." However, the Italian conquest of Ethiopia was formally recognized by both Austria and Hungary, following Germany’s example. /CORNELL university at i -naca, N. Y., is to have a new president in the person of Dr. Edmund E. Day, an internationally known social scientist and economist. He will assume office June 30 next on the retirement of Dr. Livingston Farrand. Doctor Day, whp is 53 years old, is a graduate of Dartmouth and has taught there and at Harvard and the University of Michigan. Slavic origin, meaning “stove.” The assertion that Buda is of Hungarian or Turanian ancestry may be wrong, for some experts contend that it is a perversion of the Slav “voda,” or water, into “vuda,” or “Buda.” This uncertainty as to derivation was the bask: argument of a patriotic reformer a century ago, who advocated a change in the city’s name to “Delivar,” Hungarian for “Beautiful City,” or to “Attilavar,” the “City of Attila,” the king of the Huns. -
XI7HILE the Fascist insurgents were smashing their way into Madrid and hurling shells among its chief buildings, the Socialist government of Spain, headed by Premier Fancisco Largo Caballero, fled from the capital and set itself up in Valencia on the Mediterranean coast. The capture of Madrid by the rebels seemed certain and this, it was believed, would be followed by recognition of the Fascist government by several powers, including Portugal and Italy and perhaps Germany. The first nation to accord this recognition was the Central American republic of Salvador. It is not to be assumed that this would end the civil war, immediately or soon. Caballero, it was reported, believed the loyalists could best continue the struggle from the south, and it was claimed they had strong concentrations at Valencia, Cartegena, Alicante and Albacete. Moreover, there were indications that they would soon receive open aid from Russia and perhaps France. Leon Blum, the French premier, told a Socialist meeting that he was ready to scrap the non-intervention pact and help Caballero if Great Britain would join in such action. This caused consternation among the British statesmen. Fighting in the suburbs of Madrid was continuous and bloody. The casualties on both sides were heavy, and the Fascist bombardment by artillery and planes killed and wounded hundreds in the center of the city. The Socialist defenders had been ordered to hold their posts regardless of losses, and they fought bravely and stubbornly.
THROUGH the efforts of Edward F. McGrady, assistant secretary of labor and the department’s chief conciliator, the strike of mari-
time workers thal tied up a large pari of the shipping or the Pacific, Atlantic and Gulf coasts may be settled amicably, Negotiations b e ■ tween the shipowners and the uni or leaders weia-jr**-xameJ in San Francisco, and in Washing to n Secretary Perkins said she was hopeful that a would be reached.
On the Pacific coast the strikers had already consented to ease the plight of stranded passengers and release perishable cargoes. The joint strike committee recommended that their membership return strikebound vessels to hopie ports. This promised relief for 600 stranded passengers and 900 strikers in Honolulu as well as for hundreds of maritime men idle in Atlantic and gulf ports.
K/f AJOR producers of steel, led by the Carnegie-Illinois Steel corporation, largest subsidiary of United States Steel, and the Columbia Steel company, west ccjpst member of the same group, announced wage increases averaging 10 per cent and in some cases running as high as 25 per cent, which will add about $80,000,000 a year to the industry’s payroll. In most instances the increases were to take effect November 16. According to compilations of the American Iron and Steel institute they will affect 526,700 employees throughout the country. Committees acting for employees at more than a dozen plants rejected the offer, demanding higher pay. Negotiations in these cases are therefore continued. Directors of numerous big corporations authorized special dividends to stockholders and wage bonuses to workers that will release many milions of dollars. This is in pursuance of the policy of avoiding so far as possible the stiff levies imposed on undistributed profits under the revenue act of 1936; and also, in most cases, in recognition of improved business.
H* J Im Col. Beck.
SECRETARY of the Navy Claude Swanson, who it is believed may retire from the cabinet, made his annual report to the President showing that the navy had made considerable progress in its program to build up to full treaty strength. At the end of the 1936 fiscal year last June 30, the secretary said, the navy had under construction 79 vessels. Further, the 1937 appropriations act provided for the building of 18 vessels as replacements for over-age ships and tor the beginning of construction in 1937 of two battleships. The secretary emphasized the need tor auxiliary vessels, which service and supply combat vessels, as necessary to the maximum efficiency of the fleet. Present auxiliary vessels are old and unfit and should be repaced with modern craft, he said. Chief of Staff Malin Craig reported to Secretary of War Woodring that the army in the second year of its five-year rebuilding program had gained ground toward its objective—a defense establishment up to the minimum needs of the nation. “Our military establishment is of a type that—conforming strictly to our national policy—is designed for defense and is unsuitable for aggression,” Craig said. “This fact may not be clearly understood by our people. Our establishment is of a character exclusively its own, essentially distinct from the military establishments maintained abroad and now in the course of vast expansion." Bark-Cloth Making Revived American school children in Hawaii are reviving an ancient Polynesian art, the making of tapa or bark-cloth. It has been practically a lost art in Hawaii, having died out since the islands were annexed to the United States 38 years ago. With the popularity of tapa made in Samoa, interest in its revival in Hawaii has been stimulated revival has begun in the ■ ■
-A v ! KS ~ - -... r—,. < H //?7 From That Time Forward We Were His Steady Customers.
By JAMES J. MONTAGUE ( Z Y name Waun,” said I\ /I youth * * * s P e U | V I him. Toppy-aye-you-enn. You sabe?” I sabe,” I said, “seeking to put him at his ease by speaking his native tongue to him. “What for you come? You ketchum vegetubble?” “Me ketchum plenty vegetubble. Heap good vegetubble. You buy?” “You ketchum garden?” “Me no ketchum garden. Bossee man he ketchum garden. Me w*ukkum garden. You likee vegetubble?” His two baskets, with the pole from which they depended when he ... wasuiqjgr waiab rested on behind turn. I walked over, adjusted the pole to its load, and endeavored to lift it. I might with equal success have sought to lift a horse. “No can do,” said Waun, placidly. “No sabee. Me heap sabee. You look.” And this celestial, who could not have weighed more than 90 pounds, stooped down to the baskets, put his shoulder under the pole that connected them, rose with a barely visible effort, and trotted a few steps, the suspended baskets swing ing in rhythm to his easy motion. “Can do,” he said proudly, as the baskets came to rest. From that time forward we were his steady customers. Just after breakfast time Waun and the baskets came bobbing up the hill from a ravine at whose foot Waun’s bosses man had rented a tract of ground upon which vegetubbles thrived like green bay trees. Always after a purchase a few extra tomatoes or a melon were transferred from the baskets to the door step. “Plesant,” Waun would say. “I makum you plesant. You no pay.” By and bv, when we happened to need something for the table that we had forgotten to buy from our morning visitor we fell into the habit of walking down the hill to the garden. “The bossee man” was rarely to be seen, but Waun would always trot in, with a hoe or a spade in his hand, and lead us out over the establishment so that we might pick out what we chose. “Flesh more better,” he would say, as he tied the provender into bundles, wrapped it with a newspaper so that the sun would not w’ilt it, and bestowjd it upon us. Always when we paid him he would hand back five cents. “No blingum house, not so much plice,” he would say. The garden was kept in a fashion that must have bitterly discouraged the insect pests who ravaged our own trees and lawn. No engineer could have laid out straighter rows, or devised a better system of bringing clear water from the brook, and allowing it from time to time to flow through the furrows on either side of the rows. If we had the time, we would accept the always issued invitation to come into the house and “ketchum tea” or to munch a few lichee nuts from a bowl on the white scoured table. Sometimes the proprietor would come forth from his den and nod at us grimly. But he spoke no English. Waun was cook, waiter, distributor, gardener and irrigating engineer. But usually the portal at the rear of the big room was shut, and Waun, following our glances in that direction would allow: “Bossee man heap dlunk,” or "Bossee man he smokum yen hok. Bime-by wake up.” From our frequent back door interviews with our peripatetic green grocer we gathered that tilings with the bossee man were not going so well. The old gentleman had acquired an opium addiction, and unlike many of his fellow countrymen, didn’t know when he had had enough. At last one day we were informed that the proprietor was “heap dead,” which appeared to be the last two words in mortality. “Who ketchum garden now? Waun?” I asked 'when I was told the news. “Me ketchum.” said Waun, giving a little lift to his shoulders. “Old man .got no children. No uncle, no aunt?”
it 1 ’ nr A c | > r. MWI - ■ ; p E. F. McGrady i just agreement
Origin of Damask Not many know* that the word “damask” comes from the ancient city df Damascus, where elaborate designs were woven into silk, making the city famous for such patterns. lee From Polar Regions The ice that drifts down from the polar regions each year would make a layer a foot thick if it were spread evenly over the land surface of the earth.
MONTAGUE Demonstrates Satisfactorily That It Really “Can Happen”
“No him dead. Garden b’long me.” Apparently he was right. The owner of the garden had leased the land to a Chinaman, and as long as there was a Chinaman around to pay the rent, it mattered no whit to him which Chinaman it was. For a little while Waun tried to be gardener, distributor and everything, but he found that when he went away on selling trips that boys would come into the place and take without paying for it what they thought their mothers might need for supper. He bought a large savage dog, but the creature nipped the heel of one pf the intruders, whose plained*to tKe police, and the dog, which had no license, was confiscated by the law. So presently he hired a China boy, then a second and then a third for under his direction the garden had expanded, and he had several more acres under cultivation than the deceased bossee man could have cultivated. In a year there w’ere five boys at work steadily, and so brisk grew business that Waun spent the greater part of his time in supervision, though he now and then tore himself away from the place and made a trip up to see us. Then one day he accompanied a hired basket-bearer to the house, for he had big news. He was going back to China. “Me sellum garden,” he said, proudly. “Me ketchum enough plice to live long time, long, long, long time. Me solly leave you. But go back China, ketchum wife. Maybe you come China some time see me?” We were sorry we could not accept this invitation. But we were glad of his success. He had sold his garden to-a fellow country man for enough money on which to prosper in China for the rest of his days. He was, he said in effect, a made man. At this stage of my existence I was a police reporter on a morning newspaper. A police reporter on the night watch. My investigations into matters and happenings that might be of interest to the readers of my newspaper took me over many lines, all radiating out of the police stations. One night just before 12 o’clock, word came into the station, where I was waiting for something to turn up, that there was some disturbance in a big gambling house down the street. I went forth to learn the facts and disclose them to the read-* ers on the following morning. The disturbance had been quelled when I arrived, and the serenity of the place renewed. But to my astonishment I discovered my friend sitting placidly at a faro table, with a dwindling stack of chips beside him. I knew that the game was crooked, and I felt it my duty to warn Waun. “Are you putting down big bets?" I asked. “Plitty big bet.” . “Well, don’t bet any more. The game is wrong.” "Me takum chance. You no worry!” He made another bet. There was no help for it. Inside of an hour he lost all the money he had earned in ten years of the hardest kind of work over here. And all that he said when, his money gone he pushed back his chair was “Too muchee no good.” He rose and walked out serenely. The next morning he got a job in the garden he once owned. He is working there yet, for all I know. But when I speak to him about the fortune he lost, he merely smiles pleasantly and said: “Can happen!” G Bell Syndicate.—WNU Service. Cisalpine Republic The name Cisalpine republic was given to the short-lived state in northern Italy which Napoleon created in 1797, to include Lombardy, the duchies of Parma and Modena and some parts of Venetia and the papal states. In 1802 it took the name of the Italian republic, choosing Napoleon as president; in 1805 Napoleon transformed it into the kingdom of Italy, with himself as king, a status it held until 1814. The Wall-Eye Pike Wall-eye pike will thrive in most waters but for some unknown reason will not reproduce. They are so-called “loose egg droppers” and do not make nests like the bass or bhiegUl. Because of this habit it is highly probable that the eggs smother in lake bottoms having shifting soils. Knowledge To know others, study thyself, to
Thursday, November 19, 1936
Simple Cross Stitch Towels Quickly Done
Pattern 1302
You’ll enjoy doing these—they go so fast! You’ll enjoy owning them—they’re so effective! The simple cross stitch dishes contrast so well with the dainty flowers. Any bride-to-be would be delighted with a set of these—they’d certainly make an effective Fair donation. Lose no time, for you’ll want to make a number of sets. Pattern 1302 contains a transfer pattern of six motifs' averaging 4% by 8 inches; illustration of all stitches needed; color suggestions; ’ material requirements. Send 15 cents in stamps or coins (coins preferred) for this pattern to The Sewing Circle Needlecraft Dept., 82 Eighth Avenue, New York, N. Y. Write plainly pattern number, your name and address.
GENUINE QUICK-ACTING Bayer Aspirin Va tablet/
Bayer TaMets Dissolve Almost Instantly (Vs la 2 acconda by ate* watcb a ■•aaiaa BAYEH A*irin tablet B—II atarte to disintegrate II and go to work. Drop a Bayer Aspirin tablet in- I R to a glaas of water. By B ! 3 the time it hits the bot- || I tom of the glaas It to 11 f < fl disintegrating. What IIP i. (I happens in thia glass | | *'* I ... happrna la yeas
For Amazingly Quick Relief Get Genuine Bayer Aspirin You can now get Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN for virtually 1/ a tablet at any drug store. Two full dozen now, in a flat pocket tin, Try this new package. Enjoy the real Bayer article now without thought of price I Do this especially if you want quick relief from a bad headache, neuritis or neuralgia pains. Note illustration above, and remember, BAYER ASPIRIN works fast. And ask for it by its full name —- BAYER ASPIRIN —not by the name “aspirin” alone when you buy. Get it next time you want quick relief. 15C F(Mt / A DOZEN J) 2c a tablet UOOtl FOtt THK BAYrH CNOsT* Assurance of Hope Assurance of hope is more than life. It is health, strength, power, vigor, activity, energy, manliness, beauty.—J. C. Ryle.
r r au-veoetabuei CHEwa»”notcriouß” I COKRECTIVE PUT I for her tick head- I A STOP TO AU Z XITHAT! With Nature * Remedy (NR W Tablet*) *he noted a thorough rtewminr of txasonou* waste*— a complete natural action that X ashe hadn’t experienced forage*. Yet ao gentfe and refreshing. Tty NRa yourself. They are ro R| fine for constipation* so use nil . .YW
STOP NIGHT COUGHING AND THROAT TICKLE. Grt a good afohr. A ©t Kmbs>*r Brlmur rocArr tßaMk* BR&IjrRBRR • * • IttbsfOißißß tizYBRRB.
KEMPS BALSAM
MANGE<Z ious skin disease onH calls for prompt use of 7~S CUVETS MMKE / W It relieves itching and fittgEsSORES irritation; kills the mange mites causing Satcoptic Mange; checks spread of the disease; stimulates hair growth on bare pstdtoudestreys ticks and Insist on GLOVER'S. At all druggists. SUNSrS WMM MEMCMES ate safe. yet*, In capsules and liquid form for Roundworms; capsules for Tapeworms and Hookworms. RHE WTERBMYNMICEoti any animal prob ton. Please men tiooanimal’sage.bteed andsan. REE OBE—Write for It today. Address • D 417, Fourtti Nhi Vwk ——— ■■■■«■ READ THE ADS
