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Show CACHE AMERICAN, LOGAN, UTAH DEMOCRATS ARE DETERMINED TO PUSH ROOSEVELT TAX PLAN TO PASSAGE. EDWARD By . W. PICKARD Western Newspaper Union. DEMOCRATIC congressmen briskly determined to push through the President' soak the rich" tax bill at this session. Opposing with equal them determination were a number of the hardest fighting Republicans who insist that consideration of taxation be postponed until next winter and hat meantime the (piestion be studied carefully In connection with tiie budget for the next fiscal year. These Republicans are urgently calling for an early adjournment of congress. Senator Hastings of Delaware has Introduced a resolution setting August 10 as the day for quitting and was trying to have It brought up for consideration before passage of the tax measure. Senator Vandenberg of Michigan, often mentioned as a Presidential possibility, also demanded postponement of the tax until January, and he legislation gave out a statement denouncing the administration's plan as a "sterile political gesture" which would raise "only a little extra pocket we change" and declared that chatter of taxes In millions to offset known deficits In billions." The pending tax bill, hs It Is besaid Senator Vaning developed, will not produce appredenberg, ciable revenue for Uncle Sam. It will not pay the President's deficit even for the period while the bill la under consideration. As a contribution to the public credit, It Is as grim a hoax as was ever perpetrated on the country. As a distributor of wealth' It Is a mere vagrant flirtation with this left wing idea." Nevertheless, it appeared probable that the tax measure would be enacted before adjournment, for the administration leaders hnd promised this to Senator La Follette and other liberals," and besides that, they have no desire to pass a taxa tlon bill In a Presidential election year. As produced by the house ways and means committee after great travail the measu-- e embodies an S7 per cent confiscation of large fortunes and Increased levies on the rich which would produce perhaps $250, (XK), 000 of additional annual revenue. teachers and students are to get financial help from the Works Progress administration according to plans being perfected by Dr. L. It. Alderman. The two chief points In Ills program are: Establishment of summer schools for 1,200 teachers who were among those who taught reading and writing to 500.000 Illiterates last year. Twenty-fivsummer schools will be. conducted, the sessions lusting six weeks, and the teachers attending them will be paid from $15 to $13 a week out of the works relief funds. These teachers will be taught to teach adults in the fall. Alderman said he already bad sent out field agents to aid In setting up courses at New York university, Ohio State university, Purdue university. Olivet college (Michigan), University of Wisconsin, University of Chicago and University of California. The other training schools have not been selected. EEDY A e I LONG the line of providing help for white collar workers, HarL. Hopkins appointed four techassistants to direct the employment of painters, musicians, writers and actors. They are: Nikolai Sokoloff for music, Hallie Flanagan for the theater, Ilolger Cahill for painters and sculptors, and Henry G. Alseberg for writers. With $300,000,000 available for the estimated 750,000 white collar people on relief, scores of surveys, censuses, traffic studies, and similar projects have been provided for those with no particular skill. Some scholars will get Jobs from the $20,000,000 worth of white collar projects already approved for New York city, but other projects have awaited appointment of the four directors. Hopkins also announced that camps for unemployed women. Initiated last year, would be revived this summer, with a suggested term of from six weeks to two months. State relief administrations will be In charge. Educational programs will be offered, but all but three of the camp gtafT must come from relief rolls themselves. ry nical of the AAA amend-ment- s designed to strengthen the powers of Secretary of Agriculture Wallace decided to let the basic act go up to the Supreme court, so the administration bill was passed by the senate with only 15 adverse pvPPONENTS votes. Both Republican and conservative Democratic foes of the AAA are confident that the Supreme court will hold the basic set was In the cigar box In a newspaper? and an early test Is WHAT assured by a senate amendment That Is what Senator Hugo Black, chairman of the senate lobby compermitting suits to recover processing taxes that have not been mittee, wanted to know. Before the passed on to producers or consumers. One of the major purposes of committee for the amendments was to close the questioning was courts, but the senate rejected this John W. Parpen scheme by a vote of 41 to 23. As ter of Dallas, presa result, the Hoosack Mills case, in ident of the Texas which the Boston Circuit Courts of Power and Light Appeals held the AAA unconstitucompany. He adtional, will not be thrown out and mitted freely that the highest tribunal will have a he and other utilchance to pass upon It. ity men had hotel d conferences, Black O ENA TOR GLASS scored perhaps and a trip Senator LJ the greatest victory In his long down Chesapeake bay with con gressmen during the fight over the public career when the senate, without a record vote, passed Ills draft Wheeler Raj burn bill, and that he of the 1035 bankhimself had centered his elTorts on Texas congressmen. lint of the ing act, rejecting the central bunk mysterious box he could or would features urged by tell nothing. Black probed and S. Gov. Marriner probed, and finally "Do you still say that In the Eccles of the fed eral reserve board morning (of the day before the vote on the utilities bill dentil sentence) and favored by the administration. The you didn't give a congressman a box wrapped up In a newspaper? doughty Virginian, I who was once secCarpenter replied quietly: dont th Ink I did, unless it was a few retary of the treasury, had fought cigars. Senate and house conferees met desperately against to consider the utility control bill, the Eccles scheme and his was no but there were small signs that they umph was decisive. demand for a roll call on the final could get together, and one session vote, for the fate met by the ended abruptly In a real row. Two proposers of various amendments administration lobbyists. Benjamin showed tills procedure would be Cohen and Dozier A. De Vane, were futile. Senator La Follette sought brought Into tiie executive session to strike out a provision permitting by Senators Wheeler and Barkley commercial banks to underwrite se- and though Representative George curities and his proposal was beat- Huddleston protested, their continen, 39 to 22. Senator Gerald Nye of ued presence was Insisted upon. North Dakota, another radical Re- Whereupon the fiery Alabama conpublican, offered the central bank gressman and his fellows from the plan of Rev. Charles E. Coughlin, house walked out and broke up the radio priest, which would set up i meeting. Cohen Is generally given government owned nnd wholly dom- credit for writing the measure and inated system. It was voted down, Wheeler has said he knows all about It. 59 to 10. Other amendments were offered 1 and debated rather listlessly, for AfOST people believe that the record, and then were withcertej action by Communists drawn. Even Senator Duncan U. anywhere Is directed from Moscow. Fletcher of Florida, chairman of There Is good reason for the belief In the case of the riotous attack on the banking and currency committee, who bad sided rather with the German Lloyd liner Bremen as she lay at her dock In New York. Eccles, declined to push his amendments designed to cripple Glass The reds, numbering about 2,000, forced their way on board the vesplan. The senate bill was Bent to con- sel, tore the German Nazi flag from ference, for the house passed the the bow and tossed It Into the Hudmeasure drawn up on the advice of son river, after which they fought a lively battle with the police and Eccles and Tugwell. the crew. The government In Washington forestalled any diplomatic who throughout SILVER, GRAY of his life was active In protest from Berlin, expressing rethe Interests of agriculture, died gret for the Incident through Assistant Secretary of State Wilbur quite suddenly at Ills home In J. Carr. A New York organization W. Va., at the age of federayears. Among the offices he calling Itself the tion was said to be planning furthheld at various times were president of the United Stntes Grain er demonstrations against German Market corporation of Chicago; boats entering the port President William Green of the Fruit president of the Inwood enGrowers' corporation ; American Federation of Labor president Berkeley Fruit Growers; tered the situation by calling on the federal government to take action head of the Easters Credit association; director United Growers of against the Hitler government to America, head of the Federated stop the brutal. Inhuman treatment" of the laboring class. Growers Credit association; member of the National Bureau of Economic Research, member of the THAT row over the of the Virgin Islands was so commission appointed by Iresldent Tuft to- study tariff relations to unpleasant that President Roosethe wool Industry, member of the velt felt Impelled to settle It himfarm bureau federation visiting Eu- self. So tie remo ed rope In 11)24, and a member of the from office the two commission Wvestlgating national chief haulers. Gov. Paul M. Pearson unemployment. nnd Judge T. Webber Wilson, had IMMEDIATE convocation of the other Jobs found council to deal and nomwith the Itnlo Ethiopian questlou for them, was demanded by Haile Selassie, inated as Pearson's successor Lawrence emperor of Ethiwho W. Cramer, On his beopia. half the demand was serving ns was telegraphed to lieutenant governor of St. Croix Island. the league secretariat at Geneva Confirmation of the latter appointment was not Immediate. The senby Tacla Hnwarl-at- , ate committee investigating the IsEthiopian minslow In making up ister to France and land affairs was Its mind about Cramer, and from to the delegate Thomas came the news that the league. He Insist- St foes of the Pearson administration ed that the council proceed to the there, together with a delegation examination of the from SL Croix, were protesting vigsesituation under ar- orously against tiie President's ticle XV of the league covenant, lection of a new governor. The Emancipator, opposition paEthiopia Invoking this article because of the threat to her Inde- per, said editorially: The Islanders would about as pendence from Italy. British dispatches said Iritne soon have Pearson, for unuder Cramer no change of policy can be exMinister Stanley Baldwin and leadPoor and unknown as the of were his cabinet members pected. ing believed to favor full league ac- humble people of the Virgin Islands extion, If other nations agree, as a may be, they are entitled to an last resort to avert the threatened ample of honor and courage from conflict Diplomatic quarters in Lon- the President of the American Redon heard that the British governpublic. ment probably would alter its polThe disposal of Pearson and Wilicy and permit export of arms to son also aroused criticism In WashEthiopia. The emperors new min- ington. The former has been atister there, V. C. Martin, had a con- tacked steadily by Pat Harrison of ference at the foreign office and Mississippi and other Democratic came out smiling happily, but say- senators, but Secretary of the Interior Ickes had defended him ing nothing. Previously Mr. Martin had admit- warmly, so he was given a Job ted that Ethiopia was short not under Ickes, being made assistant director of housing In the PWA at only of arms but also of money. $S,000 a year, a place not preACCORDING to the Dally Herald viously filled. the British admiralIn order to provide a Job for ty Intends to build an entire new Judge Wilson, a former congressbattle fleet, to be finished by 1942 man from Mississippi and a protege and to cost $750,000,000. This of Senator Harrison, a woman was newspaper asserted that the forced oft the federal parole board. admiralty has developed a secret Attorney General Cummings reseven-yea- r plan, calling for the quested and obtained the resignaconstruction of 12 new capital ships tion of Dr. Amy T. Stannard, a and 33 new cruisers. In addition, psychiatrist who has been In the there would be C3 new flotilla lead- government service 12 years with a er destroyers, 21 new submarines civil service status and had been a member of the parole board since and three new aircraft carriers. 1930. Wilson was sworn in as her This Is said to be the hush-husplan" of the admiralty which Sir successor. Since Wilsons qualififirst lord of cations for the place appeared to Bolton the admiralty, had declined to make be chiefly political, observers In rubllc but which had already been Washington noted sadly that the communicated to the United States, parole board was getting back Into France, Italy, Germany and Japan. political hands. eon-1V- sixty-- Anti-Na- five h Eyres-Monsel- THEY ARE WISE WoSl-i44UfiH Bachelors usually saw wood and say nothing to all the criticism of celibacy. BOYS! GIRLS! TOPICS INTERPRETED NATIONAL Ethiopian Army Pri Captain red by National Geographic Society, IVNU Service. .ijwilmtton, b (J a familiar name In ETHIOPIA, these days, long and Imposing history. Tiie kings of this ancient empire are traced from Grl of 4178 B. C. to Haile Selassie the First of A. D. 1035 with time out, naturally, from tiie dale of the Deluge until the fall of the Tower of Babel. According to tradition tiie queen of Shelia was an Ethiopian. She may possibly have lived In what we now call Ethiopia, nnd certainly she Included it In her extended domain. Modern Ethiopia includes more than 350,000 square miles of the rich and productive northeastern African plateau. It Is mainly a mountainous region, much broken Arid, by deep valleys. country surrounds It on every side. It does not touch the sea, although some Ethiopian feudal chieftains like to grasp a marine telescope as they pose for a formal photograph. In the population there are, perhaps, 5,000,000 Christians of the true Ethiopian (Ilnmltic Semitic) type. They are the Inheritors of an ancient civilization under whose feudal form of government are estimated to he 7.000.000 Moslems and pagans. The latter are mainly negroes. The country Is surrounded by African colonial possessions of Great Britain, France and Italy. As the Ethiopia of Solomons time. It probably Included all of these adjacent territories, with an Egyptian frontier, and that part of southwestern Arabia known today as the Yemen and Ilndliramaut There Is In Ethiopia a very evident mixture of Asia and Africa. Some of the blood came from ancient Palestine, some from Arabia, and some from the shores of (lie Caspian. Authorities do not agree ns to the elements in this African molting pot of races. But the Ethiopian claims with pride a strong relation to the Semites. semi-dese- Getting Into Ethiopia. The front door entrance nnd port to Ethiopia is Djibouti, French Somaliland. The French are responsible for Dj.hnntl. It is the base of their 500 mile railway from the coast directly Inland to Addis Ababa, tiie Ethiopian capital. This railway Is Ethiopia's only modern connection with the outside world. Djibouti is, therefore, very important to Ethiopia. It Is headquarters for an Ethiopian consul who gives intending visitors their visas. There are two kinds of trains now on the efficient hut expensive little Franco Ethiopian railway. On Sunday and Wednesday mornings n train leaves Djibouti to arrive three days later In Addis Ababa. Each Tuesday evening departs the through express," which does the 5(H) miles In 30 hours. Passengers can sleep on this "fast" train, not In pulltnans, but In adjustable On the three-daseats. trains sleeping is done at little wnsside hotels the two nights en route. The first day of this railway journey ends usually at six In the afternoon. at Diredawa, the first town of Importance after the train enters Ethiopia. It Is on the fringe of a plateau 4,000 feet above sea level amf a 200 mile climb from the An Interesting side trip coast. from Diredawa Is the old Mohammedan walled town of Ilarar, four hours away by rough motor trip or a whole day by mttlehack. Camels, horses, or mules are availahle as a means of transportation, but the mule Is considered the most appropriate for one of actual or apparent high station In life. The second night of the three-datrain journey is passed on the hanks of the Awash river, one of the peculiar streams of the world. At this point It Is a swiftly flowing river In a deep canyon. Rising on the Ethiopian plateau. It turns northeastward toward the Red sea, but loses Itself In the Danaldl lowlands short of Its natural destination. Awash consists mainly of a small railway yard, a brick building housing a hotel under management, a scattering of native shacks, and many Fond and accommodations cats. are simple and the most essential thing Is a good mosquito net. Addis Ababa, the Capital. The train gets under way ngaln the next morning at dawn and roils through lovely grass and forest lands, where gallop many herds of y one-stor- y quasi-Helleni- c In Full Dress Uniform. gazelles and antelope. Occasionally one sees tiie dark blur of a rhino breakfasting on the far side of the Awash river canyon. About four o'clock in tiie afternoon of this third day the sprawling city of Addis Ahuha Is sighted In a forest of blue gutn trees, across a rolling, grassy plain. A ride of 20 minutes on mule or horseback, or five minutes by motor, takes the arriving traveler to the main part of the city. Addis Ababa has good streets and no "across the railway tracks quar, ter. It lias also legations, consulates, hotels, many American motorcars, airplanes of sort, and some presentable business buildings. On one of the two principle elevations of the city is the market place. Here once stood the great tree which served for generations as a gibbet. The other main elevation Is crowned by the group of buildings which make up the Imperial palace. The most Imposing edifice on this designated Ilill of the Gobbi" Is the Audience Hall of the Conquering Lion of the Tribe of Judah, constructed of stone nnd given Its high sounding title by order of the late Emperor Menelik. Menelik claimed his title by virtue of his descent from that first Menelik who was born to Sheba after her visit to Solomon. Ethiopia claims to be the oldest Christian sovereign state. The teachings of Christ were introduced about A. D. 330 by two shipwrecked I'hocnician youths. Resources of the Country. After the professions of priest nnd soldier, agriculture Is the principal occupation In Ethiopia. The country Is very fertile, though methods of cultivation are still primitive. Many fine beef cattle are produced, nnd the people are great meat eaters. They have what might be called a ceremonial custom of eating a bit of raw beef as a sort of hors doeuvre. In addition to the ordinary kinds of stock, Ethiopian fanners in parts of the country raise civet cats foi commercial purposes. From these animals ttiey obtain a liquid musk marketable to French and American perfumers at $2 an ounce. The chase Is also a commercialized industry In Ethiopia, and naturally ivory heads the list of its products. Many an Ethiopian leopard Invol to untarily contributes his sk, American feminine fashion. As many ns 100 0 0 of these spotted skins have gone to American furriers In a single year. Also monkey furs are an item of profitable trade. Where Fine Coffee Is Grown. The Ilarar district, town nnd province. Is the center of production of cultivated coffee in Ethiopia. The bean produced Is of excellent quality nnd ranks next only to Mocha in world markets. It Is eal'ed "long berry Mm ha" nnd is sold to a discriminating clientele in tiie United States. Although the Ilarar plantations are descended from seed introduced from the .Mocha district in Arabia, Ethiopia is the home of coffee. The tree was found originally by Arab travelers In the Ethiopian province of Kafa, from which It took its name. Seed was taken from Kafa to Arabia, and thence came back to Hnrar. According to the Arabs, the cultivation of coffee also spread to other parts of the world from the Yemen. In southwestern Arihla. In Kafa and adjoining parts of southwestern Ethiopia may be seen today vast and virgin forests of coffee of the Indigenous variety. It necessarily grows without cultivation or cure nnd thousands of tons of the harries fall to tiie ground In waste each year. The outer fringes of some of these forests are worked hy natives In sections not too far from export trading centers, where the market value of coffee Is known. Egypt buys murh of this coffee, shipped via Khartoum. In place of former Importations of the Brazilian product Linns are numerous In the nirnr district. They are the fine fellows so alluring to tl hlggame hunter. Probably other kinds can chew one tip Just as thoroughly. bite the Harar fellow Is parWhen an respected. ticularly Ethiopian kills a lion, he has the rl"ht to demand a special audience from the emperor during which to declaim and act i ut the feat. Afterwards he Is privileged to wear the mane and skin as part of his warrior dress. black-mane- d BLDG. PRESS RoosePresident Washington. velt has settled a controversy by the simple expedi-Settl- e ent of transfer- Contrcversy ring two men from responsible positions In the Virgin Islands to jobs In Washington. He has taken Paul M. Pearson from the post of civil governor of the Virgin islands and has made him assistant director of housing In the Interior department and has transferred Federal Director Judge T. Webber Wilson from his post in the islands to the federal parole board here in Washington. Each man has accepted his new appointment and in so far as a current controversy Is concerned, the book is closed. It will be recalled that Governor Pearson and Judge Wilson long have been at loggerheads over Virgin Island affairs. The battle was bitter. It came to a head when Paul Yates, executive assistant to tiie governor and a former Washington correspondent, resigned his job and catne back here with a bag full of charges against his former chief. The Yates allegations ranged all the way from .minor charges of poor judgment to gross accusations. He succeeded In getting a senate committee Investigation and It was at that time that the Pearson-Wilsofeud flared so openly that administration officials here were dragged In and the whole scope of differences aired. As a matter of fact there Is every reason to believe that Governor Pearson was far from a successful executive In the Islands. He frequently aroused the Ire of natives and, according to testimony adduced by the senate Investigation, had very little to show for the sums of money he expended Id attempting to give the Virgin Islands a new lease on life. All of tiie information tends to establish that the Islands continue to be an effectual poorbouse" just as President Hoover described them on the occasion of a visit during his term as Chief Executive. But Governor Pearson had his supporters In the administration. Chief among these was Secretary Ickes whose department Is responsible for administration of the Islands. Just why Mr. Ickes has been so enthusiastic about Governor Pearsons regime Is not fully disclosed in any evidence here except that the Interior secretary has certain Ideas about social reform that some unkind critics refer to as pure socialism which Governor Pearson lmd been attempting to Impose upon Governor the island Inhabitants. Pearson has expended vast sums of PWA funds in the islands in his efforts to carry out tiie Ickes program of reformation. It seems, however, that the schemes were not as practical ns they might have been nnd so trouble started In a rather extensive fashion. The resident stayed outside of the row until in the course of the senate Inquiry Senator T dings, a Maryland Democrat and usually an ant! Roosevelt Democrat, received a letter from Mr. Ickes. Mr. Ickes accused the Investigating chairman with having whitewashed a witness whose testimony was all anil anti Pearson. The senator flared up in a big way at that letter. His reply Is likely to become a classic In official correspondence. He did not mince his words. After voicing his general conception of tiie attitude exhibited hy Mr. Ickes and accusing him of attempting to In the Investigation. Senator Tydings informed the interior secretary that he may ns well attempt to run tiie Department of the Interior and let the senators run He used just about the senate. those words. That was the signal for Mr. Roosevelt to take a hand. It was easy to see that a few outbursts of that kind and Mr. Ickes might have found himself In a splendid position to resign from the cabineL So the President got the feudists into his office, singly of course, and when those conferences were over the senate investigation Into the Virgin Island situation was suspended for two weeks. The transfer of Governor Pearson and Judge Wilson resulted. n WASHINGTON. D.C. hnd Its start In the Virgin islands, but it has progressed bejond that point and is a domestic battle now. It is safe to say that for IS years, which is tiie time the islands have been under United States rule, there lias been a dire need for a plan of government suited to those peo- ple. Each year congress has been appropriating thousands of dollars for tiie Island government and each litjenr there has been miserably to tle in the way of improvement show for these funds. Almost as frequently as congress has appropriated money it has made changes in tiie administration methods in use there. There has never been a long term program laid out and there has been nothing whatsoever done showing the sympathy of intellectual people as a we claim to be for those downtrodden masses that populate the Virgin Islands. All of this, It seems to me. shows the woeful need for careful conIt sideration of that situation. seems to me equally apparent that as long as congress keeps meddling In and as long as politicians from the mainland are sent there purely on a political basis we will continue to have a pack of trouble bundled up iu those Virgin Islands. If congress continues past August 15, and It parent Long Session run to Severe Strain i in session Is now ap- that It may September wi" lave In session been 225 days, some two weeks longer than the average of the long sessions of congress. Prior to adoption of the lame duck amendment which did away with sessions of unequal length, tiie shorter sessions of congres averaged about 170 day)!. The longer terms were around 215 days before final adjournment was taken. Thus, the current session stands in a fair way to be among the list of hardy sessions. All of which Is by way of saying that the current session of congress has worn down Its members both physically and mentally to an extent quite unusual. I was talking a few days ago with a veteran senator, a man who has served almost 25 years in the upper house of congress. He is known as a physically strong Individual and usually lasts very well through the work that piles up before senators and representatives. I Inquired of him concerning the general health of congress and his reply was: I regret to say we are just a bunch of debilitated old men, Incapable of doing the job that is expected of us and everyone Is hoping against hope that we can live through this work and this heat. As a result of that conversation the thought came to me that hero was an answer to the oft repeated declaration that members of congress failed to earn their salaries of $10,000 a year. I have observed congressional proceedings almost a score of years and It Is my mature conviction that few times In that period has congress failed to earn its salt. antl-Icke- s There is another reason why congressional sessions should not run so long and should When Solons not be carried on Are Tired in tllP Intense heat of a WashOne condition ington summer. nearly always has obtained near the close of a long session. As the days drag by, persons with axes to grind and individual interests to serve have a way of digging up questionable bills that theretofore had been side tracked and assumed to be dead. With resistance low, the average senator or representative Is unable to fight off legislation which he knows to be bad with the same spirit that accompanied his activities earlier In the session. This condition opens the way for a revival of lobbies. They are back In Washington in numbers now despite the disclosures being made by the two congressional committees that are Investigating the lobbies that operated to defeat, temporarily at least, the legislation killing utility holding companies. One would have assumed justly with the InvesOne might properly Inquire why tigations under way after the utility all of this agitation has occurred legislation was passed that lobbyabout the Virgin ists and representatives Why the Islands. They are would have been frightened away hundreds of from Washington. Such was not the Agitation? many miles from Washcase. They are here In such numington. They lie In the Caribbean bers that some observers believe sea, considerably out of the usual Mr. Roosevelt has made a mistake In demanding that congress stay pathway of ships; they are populated by about 22,(HH) individuals, until It has enacted the 93 per cent of whom are negroes, tax bill and the legislation and may generally be described as a which will prohibit lawsuits against backward place. the government for damages reThey may have some military and sulting from abrogation of the naval value. That has never been promise in government bonds to pay fully demonstrated. But the fact re- them in gold. Mr. Roosevelt Is Inmains they are possessions of the sisting on these laws. He will get United States and If our governthem. But In the opinion of many ment Is to be their protector, It Is authorities he stands a fair chance also of getting some other legislaresponsible for a sane administration of their affairs. tion which he may not wanL Western Newspaper Union The Washington fight may have Rend the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes. Adv. Gold Not in First Place For all the fame of Colorado gold mines, the state's coni production up to 1933 totaled a higher value than the gold. iiiiVUTW to a cun of flour BAKING POWDER Same price today as Ci years ego 25 ounces lor 25c Manufactured by Baking Powder Specialists who maka nothing but Baking Powder. 1 en i -- KILL BLACK WIDOW deadly Black Widow spiders bite is decidedly dangerous to people. G The Kill All Spiders. ..Watch for them in garages, corners of porches, etc. The minute you see them spray THOROUGHLY with It also kills FLIES, MOSQUITOES and other insects. 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