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Show r THE LEHI SUN, LEHI, UTAH DeUor$ "Forgiven' in Spirit of Lord' Prayer Suiting their action to the words tof the Lord's Prayer, "and forylve us our debts as we forgive our debtors," the congregation of St Taut' Evangelical Evan-gelical Lutheran church of Toledo, Ohio, has "forgiven" more than 2V 000 In unpaid pledges of Its communicants. communi-cants. The church has 2,400 active mera-tors, mera-tors, and Is described as the largest l'rotwtant church in Toledo, and the largest In the American Lutheran body. Its ac tion Is prompted by the spirit of the day. explains the pastor, llev. s: C. Mlchelf elder. "We be lieve." he says, "that many of our neonle having made pledges In good faith, but unable to pay them, are burdened by the debt they owe the church. We believe that the church which would leach others to pray the Lord's Prayer should be the first to 'ordve.' " The resolution passed by the ves-tnr ves-tnr reads : "In appreciation of God's blessing In preserving our church In the peril ous times of depression, and In keeping keep-ing with the President's recovery tihin. we hereby cancel all obllga tlons of our church due before Jan uary 1, 1933." Literary Digest BroncKal Troubles Need Creomalsion Persia! ent coughs and colds bad to iiou trouble. You can iop them now with Creomukioo, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. CreomuLtion it a new medical discovery with two-fold o lion; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs creosote is recognized recog-nized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent per-sistent coughs snd colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, In addition to creosote, other healing elements ele-ments which soothe snd heal the infected membranes snd stop the irritation and inflammation, in-flammation, while the creosote goes oa to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, and attacks the seat of the trouble, ' Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis, snd is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Your own druggist is authorized to refund your money on the pot if your cough or cold is not relieved re-lieved by Creomuliuon. (adv.) T PAKKER'3 IIAIR BALSAM i -J, 3 tmparu vomr na ad tuixlHalr LOKLS t ON SHAMPOO - IW ft tuw in toniMKtkmwtth pNrkr'(HiirBaiMm.rfiikitha br soft and KuSy. to writ by mail otatdrnn Cutia, tiiaou Cbtsmkai Work. i'ateixB, H.X. 1 Jh m ft May Warn of Som Disorcferecf IGdrwy or EIsdJr Condition Uj irrelirib'cj and t tit 4 ncrvouJ, deptersed feeUns may warn of tome disordered kidney or bladder func boa Donl dctav. Trv Doan's Pi!k Successful 50 yean Used the wor U over. At a! dnr33t$b. Doan's PILLS TTTTTI "Kangaroo Court In most prisons the prisoners themselves form a court, and elect a Judge from their number. Each new prisoner admitted to the prison Is tried and this practice of the trial of the new prisoners by the Id la popularly called a "kangaroo court." Of course, thla is all rtxs egiilzed as a joke and Is not taken seriously. Diet for Smallest Birds The diet of the smallest Inmates of the Berlin aoo, kollbrt birds from Dratil, about the site of a man's thumb, taxed the Ingenuity f the management until a small test tube was fitted with s long epout permitting the birds to dip their long bills Into honey. Wilsoa Took Oath ea Sunday In 1917. March 4 fell on Sunday and the formal Inauguration ceremonies cere-monies were postponed until the C-th. But President Wilson took the oath of eSlce on Sunday. In the Capitol. In the presence of only a lew people. Philippines Arc Rrpreaeated The Philippine islands are represented repre-sented In congress by two resident commissioners, elected by ths Philippine Phil-ippine legislature. They havt tha privllepej of the floor of the hone of representatives, ' but bate no Tote. f ' .,,'"",, ROADSIDE MARKETING By T. J. Delohery FRUIT JUICES, JELLIES, JAMS, IN DEMAND ALL of the small fruit, vegetable vege-table and dalrv crcducta which William It Brlnton raised on his 35-acre farm near Parkersburg, Pa, waa hauled to town and offered of-fered to wholesalers. What he didn't sell was taken back borne and Mrs. Brlnton put It up In cans and glass Jura. Now Brluton only takes to market what product are not good enough for his wife to can; and Mrs. Brlnton Brln-ton buys many things from neighboring neigh-boring farmers In order to supply the demand from hundreds of people peo-ple who come to their roadside market mar-ket and from customers living la other states who order by malL The experience of this farm woman wom-an has been duplicated by scores of others who sell canned meats, fruit Juices, jams, jellies and preserves direct di-rect to consumers, or who place them tn local stores on a commission commis-sion basis to be sold In competition with high-class factory-made products. prod-ucts. Dixie Farms, near Mattewan, Mich., comprising 85 acres, was In danger of being foreclosed until the owner, Mrs. Iona Ester, happened to offer a batch of homemade grape juice and jelly to passing motorists. It was In sheer desperation that Mrs. Ester placed the fruit Juice and jelly on a table In front of her home, In less than an hour It was gone. "It looked like we bad found a way to make money," aald jovial Mrs. Ester, "but I wasn't any hand at Jelly making. But I talked It over with mother and we rummaged the attic and old trunks until we found a cook book which contained recipes for jams and Jellies, some of which were one hundred years old. I guess. "The house was an uproar that night. Every available pot, pan and kettle was going. We worked all night making jellies and grape juice, and when dawn broke, I thought we bad made enough stuff to last a year. But we had hardly gotten In bed when Mr. E, D. Young, a friend, who was taking care of the sales. roused ns with the news that we needed more stock we had sold out the second time. "Dead tired, we went at It again. And every day after that, until the tourist season closed, we were going go-ing at top speed. That winter, when we talked over our success and the possibilities of the future, we felt convinced that we had the makings of a business which would be profit able. "We guessed It right Business was better the next year and It has kept on growing." W. S. Farnsworth, for 40 years one of the prominent fruit growers in Ohio, was unable to find a satis factory market for his apples, and X'?tti"- 't s 3 r3 1 . :?xin,$ Inviting the Thirsty. other fruits until be changed hla method of selling. When market-lug market-lug was put In the hands of his son-in-law, Mr. Young, he Immediately advertised In local and surrounding town newspapers. Then he contacted retailers who, seeing the publicity, the quality fruit and the possibility of sales, put Farnsworth apples on display. Sales boomed, then dropped. Young, with characteristic enterprise, altered al-tered the package, using a colored basket and covering the apples with netting to keep out the Insects and dirt More advertising. The package, which Is known as "Farnsworth Family Pack," was featured In window win-dow displays and again the demand picked up. Clear cider, too, was brought to the retailers, Bottled and labeled it moved Into consuming consum-ing channels rapidly, even where cider sales had theretofore been sluggish. When the newspaper advertising showed Its worth. Young thought It might help the demand for Farnsworth Farns-worth fruit products If he had a market building on the farm and Invited people out to visit the plac. Accordingly, space was bought In the motor club ms purine, the ad consisting of an Invitation to visit the home of "Farnsworth's Family Pack," and a map showing how the orchard could be reached by motor. Visitors wert treated to samples of fruit cider and apple butter and shown the market houses, where rowt of baskets of apples, Jugs and bottles of cider and Jars of golden pp;e butter all properly labeled sad arranged ttt as to make a most attractive d'splay, wer. Naturally, gales followed, but Is so cae were prices below tiue In the retail stores. 0 IIU. Watin NwcfMr Vvlom. News Review Events the LaGuardia Elected Mayor Being "Destroyed" Again Prohibition Voted Out of the Constitution, By EDWARD FIORELLO H. LA GUARDIA, dynamic dy-namic and radical Republican, is the mayor-elect of New York, and Tammany has been "smashed" once more for how long no one knows. The fusion candidate easily defeated Joseph V. McKee, recovery nominee, and Mayor John P. O'Brien, Tammany Democrat, who ran In that order. Because Be-cause McKee bad the open and vigorous vigor-ous backlog of Postmaster James Farley, who la both i F. H. LaGuardla national and New lork state Dem-cratlc Dem-cratlc chairman, the Republicans claimed that the result was a great victory for their party and a slap at the Roosevelt administration. The truth Is that it was rather a slap at Farley and machine politics In general as well as representing a revolt against the Tammany regime. Tammany Hall Is furious and an Internecine war has broken out in the organization. Boss John F. Curry, Cur-ry, It was expected, would be asked to relinquish his leadership, and he anticipated this with a demand that Farley be replaced a state chairman, chair-man, accusing him of disrupting the Democratic party In the city. His attack was directed, also, against Edward J. Flynn, secretary of state and Bronx Democratic boss, and In-ferentlally In-ferentlally against Alfred E. Smith, who had declined to speak for O'Brien. ' Municipal elections were held In many other cities, and some of them were almost as Interesting as that in the metropolis. The Republicans and Demecrats broke about even, and one city, Bridgeport, Conn., elected a Socialist mayor. Democrats made striking gains In upstate New York. Buffalo elected a Democratic mayor for the first time Bince 1914; Rochester went Democratic for the first time In 30 years ; Poughkeepsle, nearest city to the home of President Roosevelt, named a Democrat for the first time In four years; Cortland went Democratic Demo-cratic for the first time since Its Incorporation In-corporation 83 years ago; Lockport also went Democratic for the first time In 16 years. In Jamestown, a thlrty-fonr-year-old newspaper reporter, re-porter, Leon F. Roberts, unseated Samuel A. Carlson, who has been mayor 24 years. Pittsburgh, Pa., upset the Mellon Republican machine, electing William Wil-liam McNalr, a youthful newcomer In politics who was backed by the Roosevelt Democrats. Frank Coua-ens. Coua-ens. Republican, son of Senator James Cousens, won the mayoralty of Detroit The Republicans also won In Cleveland, electing former Gov. Harry L. Davis. In Btston a Democrat, Frederick W. Mansfield. was chosen mayor. THIRTY - SEVEN states one more than necessary having voted for prohibition repeal, the Eighteenth amendment Is knocked out of the Constitution. The dry regime comes to an end on December Decem-ber 5, when the thirty-sixth state convention, that of Maine, meets to ratify the action of the voters. The latest states to go on record for repeal re-peal were Ohio, Pennsylvania, Utah and Kentucky. On the same day North and South Carolina rejected the repeal amendment, being the first commonwealths to go dry. This result was ascribed to the fact that the prohibitionists made a lively campaign, while the repeallsts were Inactive. The vote of Utah waa somewhat of a surprise, for the Mormon church had urged all Its members to vote for retention of the Eighteenth amendment Obvi ously, many of them disregarded this monition. iXTEVER again will we call off ' this strike until our demands are met by the federal government" declared Milo Reno, president of the National Farmers' - Holiday assocla- tf ! tlon. Whereupon ?. s the "embatted farmers" of the Middle West re- t sumed their picket- tng with renewed vigor, determined f to prevent the ntov- Ing of rroduc to the markets of the and his followers Gm- n- Peek were enraged tcaus President Roosevelt, on the advice of Geortre N. Peek, head of the agricultural adjustment administration, and Secretary Sec-retary Wallace, had rejected the price fixing plan offered by Governors Gover-nors Herring, Olson, Lander, SchmedeiuHO and P.erry. And th-e governors were nn less Irate when they left the White House. They declared thelf attempt to brins about coir.pl i regimentation of of Current World Over of New York, Tammany W. PICKARD agriculture was a complete failure and that they were disappointed and disgusted. Tbey freely predicted predic-ted "a great deal of disturbance" unless market prices go up on this year's crops, and the farm strikers saw to It that this prediction was Justified. Mr. Roosevelt In a written opinion opin-ion based on Mr. Peek's advice. said that the governor's plan amounted substantially "to the licensing li-censing of every plowed field, and the marketing by a ticket punch system of all grain and live stock; and he then went on to denounce severely such a scheme of regimentation. regimen-tation. The effect of the adoption of the plan, he said, "even if successful suc-cessful In the MIdweBt might be that the very states the governors are trying to help might be left holding the bag while other states expanded production. "These questions are wholly aside from grave problems of legality legal-ity under existing law and questions as to raising the necessary funds." The governors were called upon, Instead, to give full co-operation to the program of benefits and curtailed cur-tailed production already under way. REFUSAL of the Greek Court of Appeals to permit the extradition extradi-tion of Samuel Insull Is held by the United States government to be "ut terly untenable and a clear violation of the American-Hel-enlc treaty of extradition ex-tradition signed at Athens on May 6, 1931." Therefore, by direction of the State department Lincoln MacVeagh, American minister to Greece, delivered deliv-ered to Foreign Minister Maxlmos In Athens a strong Lincoln MacVeagh note denouncing the treaty. Thedocu-ment Thedocu-ment expressed the "astonishment" of the government In Washington at the news that the Greek authorities authori-ties had again .declined to honor the request for Insull's extradition, and continued that this made It apparent ap-parent that the treaty Is now entirely en-tirely useless. The Greek government could get out of the embarrasing situation, if It so desired, by inviting Insull to leave the country within a stipulated stipulat-ed time. By law the minister of the interior may deport any person "if undesirable for social or public reasons." rea-sons." However, Insull's lawyers told the fugitive the government could not remove him without casting cast-ing a slur on the Greek judiciary. Then, too, the Venlzellsts, oppo nents of the present regime, would attack It and probably overthrow It If Insull were deported. OENRY FORD has started to lay off his men to bring their working hours under the 35-hour code maximum, according to his an nounced plan. His plants had been operating op-erating on 40-hour 40-hour basis. The recovery officials were astonished by this move, and Gen eral Johnsnn trior? J-5 to avert It by offering of-fering to "consider an exception" In Ford's case, without with-out avail. Observers watched Lu... A - j Henry Ford this renewal of the prolonged NRA-Ford NRA-Ford controversy with keen Interest Inter-est They gald the Ford statement that the layoff was solely to meet NRA requirements was another Indication In-dication that the manufacturer Intends In-tends ts comply with the letter of the law while at variance with the spirit of the program. The real showdown will come later, lat-er, It was predicted, over the collective col-lective bargaining provisions of the code. The striking tool and die makers of the Detroit area were returning to work In large numbers under agreements with employers that were negotiated by the regional labor la-bor board. The terms were not made public. The strike started In Flint and was marked by violence and sabotage. yRK Dow for 4.000,000 persons on the relief mil throuch the Immediate expenditure of $WO.ooo.ooo of public works money t contemplated In a new program announced by President Koosevelt Through a new "civil w,,riis administration" under Federal Fed-eral Relief Administrator Harry L. Hopkins, the President announced, the government will provide the financial backlne for new federal state nd local projects or 1 -non-competstire- nature. Mr. Hopkins asked governors. msTor and other oKcials to make their snuuestlon for projects at Mice, At his headquarters It was explained that the projects might Include levees, the landscaping and beautifying of highways, destruction destruc-tion of breeding grounds for germ-carrying germ-carrying Insects, sanitation project and similar "useful" works. ""inifUOO'S wonderful exposition. A Century of Progress, has come to an end, but It will De reopened re-opened on June 1, 1934. bigger and better than ever. This welcome news was announced by President Rufus CL Dawes, who said the managers man-agers were acting in harmony with the requests of President Roosevelt Roose-velt and of many Individuals and organizations. The fair next year will have more exhibitors and concessionaires, con-cessionaires, and the lighting and decorative scheme will be revamped. re-vamped. All the comfort facilities will be free, and stricter control will be kept over shows and concessions. con-cessions. IN A new effort to relieve the hog farmers of the corn belt the government gov-ernment announced the prospective expenditure of another $50,000,000 In the open market purchase of pork products for distribution to needy families. The program will supplement the $350,000,000 corn-hog production control campaign recently Inaugurated. Inaugu-rated. In all some 300,000,000 pounds of pork products are to be purchased, the administration stated. The poundage of finished products will represent approximately 3,000,000 live hogs, It was said, and together with reductions expected under the corn-hog program and those actually effected in the previous emergency hog buying campaigns will bring the total reductions In hog marketings market-ings for regular commercial disposal dis-posal during the current year to about 10,000,000 head. THE Philippines legislature has given the women of the Islands the right to vote, this being the first Instance of the extension of the franchise to women In an Oriental Ori-ental country. The measure was recommended by Gov. Gen. Frank Murphy. WHEN GEN. ITALO BALBO was preparing to lead his epochal mass flight of Italian planes from Rome to Chicago friends warned him that its success would mean his own relegation rele-gation to obscurity, obscur-ity, because of Mussolini's Mus-solini's determination determina-tion to keep others out of the limelight This has now come to pass. Balbo, who was air minister, has resigned and has been made governor gov-ernor of Libya, the Gen. Balbo colony on the north coast of Africa. There has been mystery almost ever since Balbo returned from his triumphal flight concerning his standing with Mussolini. He was received as a hero at Rome and made air marshal. Then he dropped out of the news completely and It was rumored he was In disfavor. The duce has reorganized his cabinet cab-inet according to a plan formed long ago. He has himself assumed as-sumed the portfolio of the navy and aviation, in addition to the five offices he already held. O EVOLT flared again In Cuba, part of the army and the ABC secret organization undertaking to oust President Ramon Grau San Martin. Military planes attacked the presidential palace with machine ma-chine gun Are and troops in the various va-rious barracks In Havana revolted. The fighting In the capital was bloody and lasted for many hours. Loyal troops under CoL Fulgenclo Batista, chief of staff, recaptured some of the strong points from the rebels, and the colonel negotiated a brief armistice. The rebellion started Immediately Immediate-ly after President Grau announced that he would not consider the de man da of the oposltion faction that he resign. .,AXIM LTTVINOV, Soviet en AV1 voy, enjoyed several days o pleasant and profitable convers; lion in Washington with Presiden Roosevelt Secretary of State Hul and other officials. It was expect ed that the President would an nounce very soon that ambassa dors were to be exchanged betweet the United States and Russia, fo: the negotiations were proceedinf smoothly. Some of the question to be settled may be taken up afte recognition of the Soviet republb MADIU SHAH GHAZL king o A Afghanistan, was assassinate by a traitor, according to a forma announcement and was succeeded on the throne by his son, Moham med Zahir Shah. Nadir Shah wa fifty-three years old. and becamf king In 1JC9 when be drove from the throne the bandit leader. Bacho Saehao, who had ousted King Amacullah. rniANCELLOR DOLLFUSS Is an out of patience with the Intrigues In-trigues of Austrian offlclals and government employees who are In sympathy with the Nazi movement and has decided to get rid of those person immediately. Ue has a "federal commissar for personnel reform" whose duty is to discover the offenders and eliminate them bv -if if! v., 1 Intermountain Hews Briefly told for Busy Readers TURKEY CROP LIGHT THOUSANDS SIGN PACT CHINESE WIFE CALLED PLAN LIVESTOCK SnOW BINGHAM COUNTY WINS JEROME, IDA. The beet harvest har-vest this season has been the largest In the history of the district SHOSHONE, IDA. Present indications indi-cations are that a turkey crop only about half of normal compared with the last several years will be pro duced here. Hopes are expressed that better prices will be received this year than was the case for the year of 1932. LOGAN, UT. A total of 6523 wheat growers In Utah Lave signed applications for contracts to reduce their wheat acreage for 1934 and 1935, according to the manager of the agricultural adjustment admin istration for Utah. GRANG E VTLLE. IDA. A ro mantic figure here since hordes of gold hungry miners stampeded to this district more than half a century cen-tury ago, Tolly Bemls, the Chinese wife of a white man, died at a hospital hos-pital here recently. Mrs. Bemls was 81 years old and bad lived In Idaho for about 65 years. OGDEN, TJT. An appropriation of $12,500 toward the cost of stag ing the 1934 Ogden livestock show has been voted by the Weber county commission. ' BLACKFOOT, ID A. Bingham county, Idaho, was 24th in the United States In production of potatoes, po-tatoes, on the basis of the 1930 census, cen-sus, and Bonneville county was 25th, according to a report of the census bureau at Washington, D. C No other Idaho county was in the leading 60 counties of the nation in potato production. BOISE, IDA. Trouble and expense ex-pense of gathering serum to combat Infantile paralysis will not be repeated re-peated this year, L. J. Peterson, the state bacteriologist reports. He explains ex-plains that studies of the treatment of the disease disclosed the inoculations inocu-lations did no good. OGDEN, UT. The assistant regional re-gional forester reports that the grazing season on the forests in the fourth region has closed. The season sea-son was extended from 15 days to a month because grazing conditions were not good on ranges outside of national forest areas. Livestock is reported In good condition on the upper ranges. OGDEN, UT. Approximately one and one-quarter million dollars will be the first payment to sugar beet growers in the Amalgamated Sugar company territory for October deliveries. de-liveries. CASTLE DALE, UT.The bonded bond-ed indebtedness of Emery county has decreased from $30,000 in 1930 to $24,000 at the present time. IDAHO FALLS, IDA. A preliminary prelimi-nary check of the wheat production control committee for Bonneville county has announced that there is Bhown to be 1,047,000 bushels of wieat of an average production of 1,120,000 bushels had signed under the wheat bonus plan. Approximately Approximate-ly 605 of nearly 1100 farmers In the county have signed under the production pro-duction control plan., SALT LAKE CITY,. UT. Utah-Idaho Utah-Idaho poultry interests have launched launch-ed a vigorous attack against the national na-tional proposal to levy a compensating compensat-ing tax on eggs, poultry, mutton, beef and other products which compete com-pete with pork. It is said that the very existence of the poultry industry indus-try is threatened by the measure. IDAHO FALLS, IDA. The early part of November saw national potato po-tato shipments around 500 cars per day, with Idaho providing approximately approxi-mately 20 per cent of the total amount The relatively high percentage percent-age of Idaho potatoes reaching the terminal markets Is thought to be excessive by some operators, while others state that the 100 car per day rate is not too high in consideration consid-eration of the production this season. sea-son. SALT LAKE CITT, UT. Salt Lake City has a total of 33.900 children chil-dren between the school ages of 6 and 18 years, it was announced by a recent school census taken by the board of education. EPHRAIM. UT. The pheasant season in Sanpete county was the most successful ever staged, according accord-ing to reports from local hunters. The game birds were reported to be more plentiful than usual. BEAVER, UT. A Beaver county re-employment office has been established es-tablished here. All unemployed men desiring work will register at this office, and the work will be divided according to the size of the famllT. PROVO, UT.-Produce shipments or ctan comity in 1933 have totaled total-ed 198 cars, compared with 2.D car lur si year, according to the agrt cultural agent EOISE, IDA. Ma lor erora in Idaho will bring $17,000,000 more tats year than last year, accordins 10 a crop survey recently made. The crop Talues reported are: hoes. 5250.000: lambs, $1,375,000; wool, 51.773.730; potatoes, $ i.512.500 ; eat $4&i,SC0; trplea. $Mir00; taw, $2,01G,000; hay, $3,044,000. Gr forPo8eHoroJ "There is no doubt tt,., , vantageous to ba VZ epoon In the mouth -.u1! NlnetaIls.ntpeilT1,J comfortable star pleM t in the iDhJf fit as it often Is. Sril ous, I think, is It l.,0TM nice sense of tact In n ment, because itiln,l.H the intuitive ab!Utyto2fff ....u u me rMit tK- right time, and neva t' wrong tmng. No one, 1 tst ! value of tact than thosT, have It not; those of Ut' .mug, iw u.c eumarrassiw of ourselves, but of other J. 51 have tact; but, on the L those who succeed lo beii must often be bored, f able burden of nonnlnnt. u . less boredom. To be . 1 lack tact are often, u U sum, emDarrasseo, and, porarily seems worse, often d uui us we so orien tactlessli ourselves from betas fc,-,nM of compensation would ieeat3 somewnat 10 our advantage, be, too, that there are thm. so superlorlly tactful that til uvum ueing Dorea. These 1 princes of human society, y ter tne world Is and whoc away, more blessed thud began with and contlnni.J silver spoons. Indianapolli a The Scotch-Iriih ne bcotcn-irlsh irs chief otuicu uescenr, inongh thej to this country from Engla 1611 King James I began eo! Ulster, a barren and nectatf of Ireland, with neonle faim land and the northern part of land. They began mlmt America about the year la at tne outbreak of the Ben ary war about one-sixth of tJ ulatlon of the colonies was Irish. A Natural Affinity There is a natural affinity happiness and gratitude, fi person is happy the mind Is ful Instinctively, and this t finds Its reflection in a hapr; tenance. Such an erpressioti a glow through the heart 0! who see it It Is a friend: the happy persons gives mi if happy look it gets In response Chineis Started "Here'i Hi To the Chinese the world 01 debt for several of the beer 4 ing niceties of today. Certa his customs have persisted in those isolated places wb4 savage has advanced little social amenities. Hegavettef the merry-go-round drinking the filled horn and the "H you" or toasting style of tot Exchange. f Relict of Mound-Buildej Relics of the work of the - builders in the Stone age tered over an immense tractoij try from the Great Lakes i Gulf of Mexico, and from me les to the Atlantic, and are lent in the Mississippi valle? kansas and the basin of tie 1 POLTTECHMC COUEGEflfjJfjl Offers eompleW in Element Radio Engrmer,B; . Also special shorty Airplane V !ne and Skop. A ad Badto Service j POLTTECHltiC JDHIOl j rt two yeart te J CommercetJourtiansjs . A. u ""i": 'leister iJ Doctor Tc!i How To Less Feel. 100,1 V0 T"- -Am happy t. t months 00 J I IV. let JS.6 ffel it. I .M mr doctor "d.yo Lt J Gillespie, Far"-1 au t .mi " |