OCR Text |
Show THE LEW SUN. LEW. UTAH i News Review of Current Events the World Over Congress Approving the President's Rehabilitation Program Step by Step Oliver Wendell Holmes Resigns From the Supreme Court. s By EDWARD W. PICKARD f Senator E. Smith D. ONLY eight senators out of 81 voting opposed the passage In the senate of the administration's bill creating a reconstruction finance corporation that will extend $2,000,000,-000 $2,000,000,-000 credit to banks, insurance companies, com-panies, railroads, mortgage loan companies, com-panies, farm credit and other associations. associa-tions. A similar measure was rushed rapidly through the house, and before the close of the week President Hoover had the satisfaction sat-isfaction of signing the act embodying his most ambitious ambi-tious plan for the financial rehabilitation rehabil-itation of the country. . Debate of the measure In the senate sen-ate was chiefly over proposed amendments, many of which were offered and few were chosen. The most Important amendment adopted was proposed by Senator Ellison D. .Smith of South Carolina. It added a new section to the bill authorizing authoriz-ing an appropriation of $50,000,000 for uso by the secretary of agriculture agricul-ture to extend loans to small farmers. farm-ers. It stipulated further that the $45,000,000 now remaining In the drought relief fund should be an plied to such loans. Dnring the discussion there were frequent and fierce attacks on the banking Interests, especially those (t the "International variety which are being accused of questionable methods and ethics in the flotation of foreign securities In the United States, The eight men who refused to rote for the bill were all from the western states. They were Norrls of Nebraska, Drookhart of Iowa, and Dlalne of Wisconsin, all "pro-gres.'dve,, "pro-gres.'dve,, Republicans, and Bratten of New Mexico, Rulow of South Dakota, Connally of Texas, McGIll of Kansas, and Thomas of Oklahoma, Okla-homa, all Democrats. PKOCEEDINQ with the economic econom-ic program, the senate put through the bill increasing the resources re-sources of the federal land banks by $12.1,000,000. Meanwhile subcommittees sub-committees began hearings on the $150,000,000 home loan discount bill and the $750,000,000 depositors relief re-lief bill. The senate finance committee continued the taking of testimony relating to the deals of our International Interna-tional bankers In foreign securities, and it was often most interesting. For Instance, it was brought out that Secretary of State Stlmson and Francis White, assistant secretary, sec-retary, took an active part In ironing iron-ing out an alleged misunderstanding misunderstand-ing between the Colombian government govern-ment and a syndicate headed by the National City company, which early in 1031 temporarily withheld a payment of $4,000,000 on a $20,-000,000 $20,-000,000 credit arrangement Also, Oliver C. Townsend, formerly commercial com-mercial attache in Peru, said he was severely reprimanded for making mak-ing a pessimistic report on the financial status of Pern when that country was trying to float a large loan In the United States. The State department defends Its actions ac-tions In the Instances In question. N EARLY ninety-one years old and growing feeble physically, Oliver Wendell Holmes voluntarily brought to an end his service of 30 years as associ ate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States. The venerable and beloved Jurist Bent bis resignation to Tresldent Hoover, trho reluctantly accepted ac-cepted It, writing: "I know of no American Amer-ican retiring from public service with such a sense of affection af-fection and devotion devo-tion of the whole people." Only the day before Mr. Justice Holmes bad rendered a decision de-cision with characteristic ptthy phrasing, Ant his voice wavered and be bad to be helped from the bench and into his automobile. So be penned his letter of resignation, closing: "The time has come, and I bow to the Inevitable." There were many suggestion for a guccessor to Justice Holmes, among them being: Newton D. Baker, Ba-ker, Wilson's secretary of war; Curtis D. WUbur, Coolldge secretary secre-tary of the navy; William Dewitt Mitchell, Hoover's attorney general; gener-al; John W. Davlsj 1024 Democratic Presidential candidate; William S. Kenyon, judge Eighth district United Unit-ed States Circuit court; Robert Von Moschztsker, former chief Justice Jus-tice of the Supreme court of Pennsylvania; Penn-sylvania; Benjamin Nathan Car-dor, Car-dor, chief Judge Court of Appeals. New York, and Learned Hand, Justice 0. W. Holmes Judge Second district. United States Circuit court Middle westerners put forward also the name of James H. Wllkerson of Chicago, who about the same time was elevated by the President from the district court to the federal Circuit Court of Appeals. WHEN Gen. Charles G. Dawes Informed the press that ' be would retire from the ambassadorship ambassador-ship to Great Britain after the disarmament dis-armament conference gets under way, be created a great flurry among the minor politicians, some of whom assumed that he was putting put-ting himself in line for the Republican Repub-lican Presidential nomination If the opponents of Mr. Hoover could prevail. pre-vail. But the general put an end to such speculation in Just such a statement as might be expected from him. In it he said: "I cherish for President Hoover the highest admiration ad-miration and deepest affection. Any Intimation to the effect that In any possible way or under any possible contingency he will not have my loyal and entire support is an insult in-sult to me. "I find both parties and all the people standing behind a legislative program of reconstruction, which is a common-sense program. It Is based upon an old-fashioned Idea that our government should always raise the money to pay Its expendi tures and not borrow it "As for President Hoover, whatever what-ever may be temporary political reactionsand re-actionsand they are unimportant in such times he has made a record rec-ord In Presidential Initiative add constructive accomplishment unparalleled un-paralleled In the economic history of this nation or of any other. He has done this without faltering and without discouragement" '4 V M Col. Theodore Roosevelt RETIREMENT of Dwlght F. Davis from the position of governor general of the Philippine Islands had been long expected, for Mrs. Davis Is in ill health and cannot live In the tropics. President Hoover promptly Bent to the senate the name of Theodore Theo-dore Roosevelt, governor gov-ernor of Porto UIco, as the successor to Mr. Davis, and the selection,, also no surprise, was generally gen-erally commended. Colonel Roosevelt son of the former President, Is forty- four years old and has made an excellent ex-cellent record as governor of Porto Rico, where he has been since 1029. Ho was assistant secretary of the navy from 1021 to 1024. In the lat ter year being the Republican can-. didate for governor of New lork, but was defeated. Ills war service Included participation in practically all the offensive operations of the A. E. F. Roosevelt's successor in Porto Rico is likely to be James R. Bev erly, attorney general and second ranking officer In the island government. govern-ment. SPEAKING of resignations, It may be recorded right here that James A. Farrell resigned the presidency presi-dency of the United States Steel corporation cor-poration effective April 18. He has held the position since 1911 and would be retired automatically in February, 19o3, but says be believes "the time has now arrived for my successor to be appointed In order to establish the management upon a more permanent foundation composed com-posed of younger men." Mr. Farrell Far-rell will remain on the board of directors. THOSE Democrats who oppose the nomination of Franklin D. Roosevelt for the Presidency felt they bad gained a point when the national committee sold the na-tolnal na-tolnal convention to Chicago. "Sold" is the right word, for the prize was frankly awarded to the city that would guarantee the most money for the convention's expenses. The Cblcagoans offered $200,000 outright out-right The opening date Is June 27. RETURNING to the doings of congress: The house ways and means committee began its hearings hear-ings preliminary to drafting a bill for Increase of taxes. Secretary Mellon of the treasury and Undersecretary Under-secretary Mills were called to explain ex-plain their department program, which Is designed to raise a billion bil-lion dollars In -revenue by boosting boost-ing Income rates all along thVlIne and by levying taxes on many things the ordinary citizen enjoys-:-autoraobiles, amusements, radio as well as such conveniences as bank checks and telephone and telegraph tele-graph messages. The Judiciary committee of the house has before It the resolution of Representative Wright Patman of Texas for Impeachment of Secretary Sec-retary Mellon. The Texan set forth bis charges of "high crimes and misdemeanors" mis-demeanors" based on Mr. Mellon'i alleged connection with business In violation of law. The secretary was represented by Alexander W. Gregg, former solicitor of the internal inter-nal revenue bureau. nATTIE W. CARAWAY Arkansas, widow of Sena tor T. II. Caraway, is now a senator sena-tor In her own right having been elected to that high post by the people peo-ple of her state. She is the first woman ever elected to the senate. Her victory at the polls was a foregone fore-gone conclusion as soon as the Democrats Dem-ocrats nominated her. There were two "Independent" candidates, but they didn't get many votes. Mrs. Caraway made no campaign. SECRETARY of State Stlmson Is at peace with Japan again and the Incident of the assault on Consul Con-sul C. B. Chamberlain by Japanese soldiers in Mukden is considered closed with the punishment punish-ment of those who actually participated participat-ed in the attack. Tokyo offered also to discipline Major General Nlnamlya, commander of the military police, and his subordinate officers, of-ficers, held responsible respon-sible for the actions of the military police. po-lice. Punishment of a major general In rare, and the ;'s - - ! . -I ; v S J 'A C. B. Chamberlain such cases is secretary accepted the other punishments as sufliclent and asked remission of the punishment punish-ment of the general and his subordinates. sub-ordinates. The neutral commission of Investigation Inves-tigation fathered by the League of Nations will leave Europe at the end of January for - Manchuria, where it will be Joined by Gen. Frank R, McCoy, the American member. ATTORNEY General William D. Mitchell began a searching investigation in-vestigation into the enforcement of criminal laws In Hawaii, with especial es-pecial reference to the recent killing kill-ing of a native Hawaiian who had been accused of attacking the wife of a naval officer. Crime conditions in Honolulu are wretched, according accord-ing to a report of the house naval committee, and some congressmen think it may be necessary to change the organic law of the territory to make the Islands safe for white women. ' " Meanwhile the naval officer concerned, con-cerned, Lieut. Thomas H. Massle; his mother-in-law, Mrs. Granville Fortescue, and two enlisted men are under charges of having murdered Joseph Kahahawai, one of the men alleged to have attacked Mrs. Massle. Mas-sle. The lieutenant Indicated that he would be satisfied with a trial in. the local court, and though there was opposition to this in navy circles In Washington, Secretary Adams decided that all the defendants defend-ants should be turned over to the territorial authorities. Gov. Lawrence Judd called a special spe-cial session of the territorial legislature legis-lature to consider Honolulu's crime situation. t 4 F. LEADERS of the dry forces of the United States, aroused but by no means dismayed by the activities ac-tivities of the wets, held a big five-day five-day conference In Washington to Inaugurate In-augurate what they declare will be a year of "the most intense activity since the adoption of the Eighteenth amendment." These bis guns of the Anti-Saloon Anti-Saloon league and a large number of their adherents made and listened to red hot speeches and laid plans for the 1932 national campaign. They formulated unified action on the proposed resubmission of the dry amendment to the states, which the league opposes, and arranged for public meetings everywhere and the wide circulation of literature. Most prominent among the speakers speak-ers and planners in the convention were F. Scott McBrlde, general superintendent su-perintendent of the league; Bishop Iff. Nv Ainsworth of Birmingham, Ala.; Gov. William II. Murray of Oklahoma, Senator Morris Sheppard of Texas, Patrick Callahan of Louisville Louis-ville and Ernest U. Cherrlngton, general secretary of the World League Against Alcoholism. Scott McBrlde POLITICAL scheming resulted In the upset of the French cabinet and conditions in Paris were described de-scribed as chaotic Iremler Laval banded to President Doumer the resignations of all the ministers except ex-cept himself, and tried bard to gei the support of the radicals, offering the post of foreign minister to Edouard Herrlot. That gentleman declined, stating that his party could not participate In the government govern-ment until after the spring elections, elec-tions, and so Laval was left no course but resignation. Laval then formed another cabinet from which Brland was omitted. It was assumed as-sumed that there would be no change in France's foreign policy at the reparations and disarmament conferences. (. lJl n'Mtu Nwppr Ciloa.) iiMljyi!?!! " I, - I " " 'mJ"'v " ' - I 11 . - t i ' , -2 , i?'' f "-' r - Annual Cattle Show of Buenos Aires. fno-tnntlnff. . Paris-like shoo MOST VITAL POINT IS PROPER MATING Careful Selection of Male Big Proposition. (Prepared by the National Geographic Hm.tuttf Washington. D. C (WNU Service) THE world's largest market is planned for a five-block tract In Buenos Aires, Argentina. The market will have access to all railroads entering the city and also direct communication, by tunnel, with the city's port No city in the United States Is so important to us as Buenos Aires Is to Argentina. It handles four-fifths of all Argentina's trade, and houses 20 per cent of all the nation's 10,-000,000 10,-000,000 Inhabitants. All its 2,000,- 000 people are either Europeans or of European descent. This is true of only one other Latin-American city Montevideo. Three times as big as Spain's largest city, modern Buenos Aires as expanded and rebuilt In the last SO years Is conspicuous in all the world for its magic growth. The whole 25,000-mile railway system of Argentina has its focus here the finest railroads In South America. No great motor highways radiate from the city, because the vast pampas afford no road-making materials. But by rail and river Buenos Aires handles more than half as much freight as the port of New lork, and the net tonnage of ships calling each year Is equal to all that passes through the Panama Pana-ma canal Not trade alone makes It great Its socinl, artistic and political attractions at-tractions rank It among the world's most dazzling capitals. To it flock the rich, the Influential, the intelligentsia intel-ligentsia of all Argentina. "Our country as a whole would develop faster," said one prominent banker, "if more of our best brains would stay in the provinces." Stock Farms Are Enormous. let, although so many land owners own-ers live in the city, the swift, prodigious pro-digious growth of herds and farming farm-ing on the vast campos Is an economic eco-nomic phenomena In this comparatively compara-tively new country. In Europe the Argentine visitor Is noted among hotels, resorts and shop keepers for the freedom with which he spends money. These immense incomes in-comes are mostly from the soil. One Estancla in Santa Fe province prov-ince runs 50,000 cattle, and boasts of prize bulls costing $10,000 each and upwards. There are 25,000 hogs. 1,200 horses, a creamery making mak-ing 4.000 pounds of butter daily for export to England; a private telephone tele-phone system, a rambling chalet set in an artificial forest of Imported trees, swimming pools, tennis courts a princely estate that would make even a Texas cattle king dumb with astonishment Similar ranches lie near Buenos Aires; others are far away, on tho pampas. Their number, num-ber, size, and money-making organization or-ganization amazes the tourist with school-book memories of woodcuts 6howlng a hard-riding gaucho swinging a three-balled lasso over his head and chasing a longhorn steer or an ostrich. Nature is kind to Buenos Aires. Up the Parana are the majestic falls of lgunzu. and Guayra, solemn sol-emn and stupendous, ranking with Niagara and Victoria in Africa. Up the Andes and under the shadow shad-ow of Aconcagua highest moun-tain moun-tain in the Western world runs a cogwheel railway that lifts you In a few hours from green plains to Alpine heights, and snowdrifts 20 feet deep, where Argentine soldiers train on skis. Winter hotels are here now a new St Morltt And there is ancient Cordoba, historic Tucnman, the famous baths of Rosario. And as melons and oranges rush to our East from California and Florida, so Argentina's fruits flow into Buenos Aires. It Uvea welL Whole tralnloads of fresh grapes come from the famed vineyards of Mendoza and many reach our own markets. American Investments Heavy. Mutual trade has brought huge American Investments to Buenos Aires, notably n packing houses, public utilities and banks. Two Yankee concerns alone control more than 100 light and. power units tn Argentina. Here, too, you see the new policy 0f great. American cor-porations cor-porations applied, by which now their Argentine employees are encouraged en-couraged to become stockholders. Touth. vitality, sheer enjoyment or living, they are the attributes 01 Buenos Aires. Shiny new motor cars; fascinating, Paris-like shop windows; arc lights glaring on well-dressed well-dressed midnight crowds in brilliant bril-liant Calle Florida; cafes, casinos, high-priced restaurants and hotels, all packed with chattering, laughing laugh-ing people. Endless places of amusement Including the great Grecian Colon theater; and, on billboards, bill-boards, many name3 familiar to Broadwpy; TItta Scuipa, Chaliapin,' Spinelli, Mistinguette. "Pelliculas Parlantes," they call the "talkies." And. still It grows. Here lands the immigrant stream. Bearded men in boots, carrying bundles; wondering won-dering boys and girls, chattering in strange Slav or Latin tongues; bewildered be-wildered mothers, their heads wrapped In shawls, hard-handed women bent from work, carrying babies and still more bundles you see them all come slowly down gangplanks from European ships to stand a bit on the busy wharf and stare at Buenos Aires. Argentina needs these. She has one-third as much land as the United Unit-ed States ; but only as many people as live In and about New York city. Or about one and one-third per square mile, as against 490 in the British Isles. Italians, English, Spanish, French, Germans, Swiss, American, all mingle. So cosmopolitan Is the city that its great papers La Nacion, and La Prensa must serve news from everywhere. Their clfcula tlon Is enormous; their advertising huge. The quality, completeness and accuracy of what they print challenges the thought of every visiting Journalist Their absorb ing Sunday rotogravures, their fea ture articles on sport, travel, International Inter-national affairs, science, literature and art many by world famous writers astonish the newcomer, at first Then he reflects; this is a great world city. It thinks like any other; and acts as Paris does, or Berlin, or New York. Modern but Exotic. Italian workmen with power drills tear up good pavements. New buildings rise higher and higher. Air students stunt at Palomar field, and Yankee free-lance flyers come peddling new planes. A man in luuv feauiiu uress, as ODSOietQ now as nlrl tlmp xvma n'Acr - . . , " tiu T COl boy gear, coils a live snake about hid nnilr nnJ U 1 u.o uct.k uuu iiuwks patent medicines. medi-cines. A comniiintsr tr iv. i.w im raninie a crowd, nnd nniino anA Mm v v VtU U11U amiably away. Children ride tame, tlnmnn 1 1. - i . uinua in me paras.. & weazened little man struggles through traffic with a huge basket of coconuts, and offers them to a world which seems 10 spurn coconuts. Around the great Diagonal of the financial center grim, towering banks suggest Wall Street Subways, Sub-ways, long suburban trains, screaming scream-ing newsboys, 50,000 football fans lammed hpfnro n i ivuurauer on Avenida de Mayo you see this a fcieuieM in aoutn America. Its fog suggests San Francisco. io uui v&iunse is uue Chicago. The vast nlains hpmiwi ,itH less leagues of corn, wheat and .iue, conjure up Kansas, or the nilnols nralrlpo Anri ,.,! uiuieai tai, with good harness, they compete .. irua. ion see a team draw asiue. 10 iei a luxurious motor lorry pass hauling 'glistening race horses out to the track of the Tlajuana-hke Tlajuana-hke Jockey club. An unusual organization or-ganization this t Ita A , " uunuiuwn club-house, gorgeous as a senate chamber, dominates all others. A member may ask you to hunt t-.iuSca U a great estancla on the oamnas. Fnp man. i. - - uiieresune hours a train hauls you past queer ..s tuiui-rius snaped like tanks uiiua; mgn-wheeled pampa wagons: endless ri,w. i ha s. baggy breeches, short boots, flying ponchos, riding with short v . t,UH,sr saddles covered with sheep's wooL Leagues of wire fence stretch fa-as fa-as the eye "can see, and artiflcl J groves of Imported trees dot thl pampas. You stop at a lonely prairie stahon-for all the world like Kansas Kan-sas west of Dodge Qty-where j-otj are to bunt Partridge are plentiful; plenti-ful; so are ostriches. Biding back to Buenos Aires you " '! Uke ridiD- ,n days, from Vab0Se 0t cattIe 5 from Texas np to Kansas City. Everybody talks herds, horses, rod & : brandln Kai Cprrect mating of poultry for greatest profits during the coming year is a difficult problem and one that is usually conducted as a "hlt-or-miss" proposition. N. W. Williams, poultrymao In charge of North Carolina state college col-lege flocks, says mating poultry is a hard Job for the experienced poul-tryman, poul-tryman, and that the Inexperienced man generally gives It no consideration consid-eration t all. However, It is one of the most important Jobs to be undertaken at the beginning of the new poultry year. First, the grower must know what he wants. If he wants egg production, produc-tion, he must mate birds that have been producing- eggs. If he wants show birds, he must use those that have the standard conformations. To mate birds for egg production, the poultryman ought to understand what body factors indicate high egg production, says Williams. Select those of standard weight that are vigorous, broad, deep and with large body capacity. Such birds will lay more eggs and the chicks will be stronger than those from birds which do not have such desirable characteristics. If the hens Jack some of these good qualities but are good layers, use a male bird which will correct the deficiency In tbe chicks. No bird should be used in the breeding pens which has a ten dency to be weak constitutionally. Immature Pulleta Show Poor Laying Qualities Pullet culling proved its value tn a Wyoming country poultry farm demonstration conducted by the county agricultural extension association, asso-ciation, D. C. Henderson, poultry extension specialist of the Pennsylvania Pennsyl-vania State college, said. From a flock of 800 white leg horn pullets a year ago 133 were separated from the others because they were immature. A careful rec ord of the production of the two groups was then kept for five months. In November the cull birds had 6.6 per cent egg production while the properly developed pullets laid at the rate of 46 per cent In December the percentages were 22 and 51 respectively, In January 24 and 41, In February 34 and 47, and in March 46.5 and 68. Averages for five months are 26.6 and 50 per cent, showing the well-developed pullets nearly doubled the production of im mature birds. Brooding Baby Chicks A laying house Is used for brood ing baby chicks on the John Schiaff farm, Macomb county, Michigan. Last fall Mr. Schiaff started with 1,000 laying hens In two Michigan shed type houses. By March 1 the flock had been culled to 600, all were put Into one house and the other house, 80 feet long and 20 feet wide, was 'cleaned, disinfected thoroughly and used for brooding 2,800 chicks. The chicks were kept two weeks in battery brooders, then were put into the laying house. Six electric brooders were hung from the ceiling ceil-ing of the laying house, Capper's Farmer. Keen li.sL 7" water maln,,tl:ii was fashioned C1 logs, about Z.Kl The inside ofth ?. apparently to w ,? ,( P from thewS Tim TTiT?i The TriiirTrr- The women nf Jr formed a secret socieh-": nomen float ho, keep secrets." m "But this society to,, prora. tt. t. .... '.ml l " ' " lu ien tnea."- ! .now f fifing W t BH ,e8ti.n isn't very o "but I Beets for Hens' Beets and other garden vegetables are valuable additions to the ration ra-tion of hens and may be fed without with-out weighing them out Beets, carrots car-rots and cabbages are all good succulent suc-culent foods, apples may also be given in moderation, sweet ones being be-ing best These vegetables are usually usu-ally fed at noon, giving the flock what it will clean up in an hoar or two. Hens accustomed to them, however, will not eat too much If they are before the flock through the day. Shell for Layers In some B. C. tests, it has been shown that oyster shell Is superior to either clam shell or limestone for feeding as shell forming materials to laying hens. The B. Q department depart-ment of agriculture advises the use of clam shell which Is cheaper and a local product The bulk of the oyster shell used In R a is from the United States. The conclusion would be drawn from tests that the kind of shell used has a'marked Influence on egg production. Nor West Farmer. Backyard Poultry Keeping Backyard poultry keeping has several sev-eral advantages which make it worth attention at a time when every family is being urged to produce pro-duce as much of its own food as possible, says the United States Department De-partment of Agriculture. Backyard poultry keeping provides recreation and occupation for adults and children, chil-dren, provides eggs that are strictly fresh, furnishes an occasional chicken chick-en dinner, and It Is an outlet for kitchen and garden waste as well as a sourte of garden fertilizer; finn in Mannw manufacturespocketbooksi tnat It nn mm . "M man 11 can Bl. , aiso nave mor ..v. . we can fill-Albany Rem, None MytWou The names of the Threef, Norse mythology are wi ' Verthandl (Present) uja-'j ture). They are ataular i Greek Fates-Clotho, la;& airopos, k," w!d 016 Loayton. fine Wml" It of L tkree of Lies If Ueykne- St too i ;s'd have ki cnance lere CP"S I raw that 1 Icother cbai & what bi I shot I jis bio crun h the fell Prolific Geyitf The rate of flow from ow ful is about 12,000 gallons p uon. 'ine pressure at the or; the geyser is about 75 w the beginning of the discfe: Old nd Popular Sou The song "Home, Sweet E was first sung in 1S13 to sical melodrama, "Clari, tit of Milan." Shortlived Glory The peculiar glory of Atlas eniireiy wunin a single etc the Fifth before Christ Camel' Great Valu An Arabian camel can er load of 500 to 1,000 pounds three days without drinking, Named for Purport Fuller's earth gained its mk cause of its original use In U woolen cloth. I For the Houie Pluti Cold tea Is a good fertiltaf house plants. ! pistol In h re i comp sij so T . n't peooe. i not that trembly. ' 1 1 bit too: toi the fel I the way ey would 1 ft! dropped I' ; Jjny, I fi ;H you ( pair t i char. I I saw o fcing, a V, ccoll tel $blj fire f ( ed and s! jand sever !;k oTercc llfthe m: I" said thi pi stayin; 4 not sts Wnt Him Redr Halt Many a wife is perfectly fi) f stick up her nose and wear tl sive finery to advertise tm cess her husband is, who r. tnrn hPr little fineei over to make him one.-Cincinnatl M hum. : . I ., --rJ E r & - . . "TsTl IfXlllilllfdl Hj to Darken . i'lpolil mi forth dotft ge 3j ton to cota Ion t W would fi sblnj tli r get til. fjiie me In were im thi rtyss and too' H Wt fsses,B knot 7. at's Hair Elafc -I Lo Don'tdyehair-Sdenceto Uw a quiet simple way Ia, restore its ongind fj, aseasUyasbrus hair healthy. I to Tafel rlMoweasy lulUwFdeligbtvoa. Exception-" - WiUie-ra, where i'ound? .. rftesis; fonti IsiJei IJon Pa-In the bobw - somegars. - : CSV. "dears head - Stops cold spr -: - - Sprinkle ye-. f-vtrs t-rfor .'4U nna t -to. i St'S r! I ki A McKESSON PRODUCT y- . - j |