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Show THE PAGE TWO News Review of Current Events tlie World Over Strike in San Francisco Area Collapses North Dakota's Hot Political Row Mrs. General McAdoo Divorces the Senator. W. PICKARD By EDWARD br Watra Newspapsr Union. C hai been ONCE more It the generul that ti Dot Landi r t successful of organized 1 weapon labor strike in the In the In United States Industrial disputes. The 81m Francisco unions, dominated for the moment by t radicals, undertook f n uba this wen nun - ,'" ( v f .5 and within two days were forced to ad mit meir ranure. Governor Morrlarn, and Mayor Itosl other Harry Bridges officials, strongly bneked by were determined I'Ubllc opinion. that San Francisco and the sur rounding communities should not be deprived of the necessities of life, that the eml.crjjo on food shipments should be broken and that transportation should not be stopped. Nearly 8,000 members of the Na- tional Guard were mobilized to aid the police, and their efforts were seconded by hastily formed bands of vigilantes which raided the head- quarters and gathering places of The central comthe Communists. mittee lo charge of the strike soon realized the movement was collapsing and the conservative members, regaining control, relaxed the restrictions, made an offer of arbitration under certain conditions, and Anally called off the general strike and ordered the men back to work. General ad- the NKA Johnson, ministrator, acting as spokesman for the federal maritime dispute board there, was on band determined to bring about a peaceful set tlenient The Pacific coast maritime strike, on behalf of which the mass walkout was called, remained a difficult problem, for the longshoremen and maritime workers were Insistent that the main dispute In their case, control of the "hiring halls,' should not be subjected to arbitration. To the average person the whole thing looked unreasonable and un- The longshoremen, like necessary. their tellow workers all along the west coast, hare been on strike for changed working conditions, and were Joined by the marine workers and teamsters. Then Joseph P. Ryan, national president of the longshoremen, signed an agreement that the men would return to work pending arbitration, and a labor disputes Doard was appointed by Presi- dent Roosevelt But IJarry Bridges, an Australian radical who Is head of the local maritime workers, gained control of the situation and absolutely blocked the move for ar bltratloa. persuuding the men to repudiate the Ryan agreement In the unions of the San Francisco metropolitan area It Is said the conservatives outnumber the radicals, but the latter are trained In the tactics of Intimidation and are seeking to wreck the trades onions for the benefit of the cause of Communism Numerous agitators were brought In from other places, and bands ot strange men have been threatening producers of foodstuffs In the neighborhood of the city. Mayor Angelo J. Rossi announced a pledge to run every "Communistic agitator" out of San Francisco. The pledge, announced through an emergency citizens' committee, said : "1 pledge to you that I, as chief executive In San Francisco, to the full extent of my authority, will run out of San Francisco every Communistic agitator, and this Is going to be a continuing policy In San Franc- isco." The mayor also advised the committee, the announcement said, that he would refuse to recognize the right of anyone, including unions, to issue "permits" to merchants to do business. was THERE disquieting strike many parts of the The nnions of Portland, from countrv. Ore., were pushing their plans for a general strike, and their oflicials said nothing could now be done to prevent it The truck drivers of Minneapolis and their helpers voted for a renewal of their strike which in May tied up transportation and . resulted in fatal riots. Representatives of 40 out of 42 locals ot the United Textile Work-er- a In Alabama decided on a statewide strike which will affect 18.000 The date was not anoperatives. nounced. Demands made to the employers include : Thirty hour week with $12 minimum pay, abolition of the "stretch-out- " system, reinstatement of all Jobs abolished under the stretchout system; of all workers discharged for union activity and recognition of the textile workers' union for collective oargalning under provisions of the NKA. of Walter J. Eobler village, Wisconsin, are out on strike and began picketing the plant though it has been closed down since July 4, These workers for whom Kohlcr built and maintained Employee In Koulei an "ideal" Industrial town and who have beer treated with remarkable generosity by the company, demand recognition of their union, a minimum wage of G3 cents so hour and a week. The company has Its own employee' union, a minimum wage of 40 cents an hour, aud a week. r American Bar association's committee on administrative luw has reached conclusions that will not be pleasing to the New Dealers, briefly summarized, these THE are: conclusions The accelerated growth of Indecommissions and federal executive agencies under the New Deal threatens the Judicial branch of the American government with virtual extinction. The stream of rules, orders, decrees and regulations which has poured out of Washington since March 4, 1033, makes the presumption of knowledge of the law Impendent possible. The rights of the Individual are being lost In a labyrinth In which the clear-cu- t constitutional lines have been obliterated by vesting administrative agencies with combined Judicial, legislative and executive powers. VJORTn DAKOTA was In a state ' of political chaos, with two men battling for the governorship (nd control of the state announced President bad created a special committer to formulate a uew federal policy concerning the generation and distribution of electricity and in Washington this govern- - U was looked upon i tt i Industry. Id a letter to Secretary Ickes asking blin 8ec'y Ickes to head the commit tee, Mr. Roosevelt said: "Its duty will be to develop a plan for the closer of the several factors In our electrical power supplyboth public and private whereby national policy In power matters may be unified and electricity be mad more broadly available at ct eaper rates to Industry, to domerlc, and, particularly, to agricultural consumers. "As time goes on, there will be legislation on the subject of holding compunles and for the regulation of electric cur rent In Interstate commerce. This committee should consider what lines unould be followed In shnplug up this legislation. Since a number of the state have commissions having Jurisdiction over Intrastate power mutters. It Is necessary that whutevei plan Is develogied should have regard to the powers of these various state commissions as well as of the states in general. " Besides Mr. Ickes, who Is to act as chairman, the committee will consist of Dr. Elwood Mead, bureau of reclamation; Frank It McNinch, federal power commission ; Mortis U Cooke, of the PWA Mississippi valley committee; MaJ. Gea Edward M Markhntn, chief of army engineers; Robert E. Ileuly, of the federal stock exchange commission ; David K Lllllenthal, Tennessee val ley authority, and T. W. Norcross. assistant chief of the forest service. HALL has a new the person of James "02 J. Doollng, elected at the urgent de mand of Postmaster General Farley. to a ruling of the He took bis seat at the head of the Supreme once great Democratic i "V:-. i court, was no long- and announced that heorganization would uner entitled to hold dertake to do two The first things. the office of govthe ernor because of his Is to restore harmony within disrecent conviction society by eliminating factional putes; the second and perhnps on charges of conharder task Is to change the New to defraud spiracy York point of view toward Tam the federal governOla H Olson ment. The court de many. creed that he must give up his ofseveral hours earthquakes fice to Gov. Ole LI. Olson. Langer FOR all Panama and Costa defied the court, refusing to move Rica but the Panama canal was unout of office, Mimuoned the Na tlonal Guard to support him and hurt. The most serious damage was at David, Panama, not far from the called a special session of the legisCosta RIcan border. There many lature, which he dominates. buildings fell and scores of persons Olson countermanded these orwere Injured. Considerable losses ders, and Adjt Gen. Earle R. Sarles u seemed to side with him, though he were sustained also at Puerto Fruit the United files, company's kept two companies of the National Guard on duty In Bismarck to Pacific side banana headquarters. One American soldier was killed by quell possible disorders. It was from a barracks window. jumping farmreported that thousands of ers were on their way to the capital city determined to support ALL Germany and most of the of the world heard Adolf Langer in whatever action he might demand. It was believed the legis- Hitler Justify his bloody purging of lature would vote wholesale Im- the Nazi party. Involving the vio lent deaths of 77 peachments of state officials, pos persons, and his desibly Including the members of the fiance of his eneSupreme court, who voted to oust mies within and Langer. without the reich. Langer and several The chancellor In were convicted In June. The fedhis speech before a eral government charged that the complaisant reichs-Langer group forced federal emtag employed his ployees to contribute to a political wen Known gitt oi fund. This fund, it was said, was oratory to the limcollected supposedly for a newspait and unless the per. The government contended Ilk, v Berlin correspondthat the money eventually went Chancellor ents are mistaken, Into the campaign chest Langer Hitler he won to his sup soon afterward was the great majority of Germans port foland by an overwhelming vote, who were wavering. lowing this he was sentenced to 18 Hitler not only defended the months In prison. slaughter of the alleged conspirators, but also gave warning that a G. McADOO SENATOR WILLIAM like fate awaits all other "traitors." was too fond of "Every one is to know for all to his suit and travel wife, politics future times," he said, "that If be whose Interests were In sculpture, raises his hand for attack against painting end home life. So the for- the state, certain death will be his r mer Wilson, daughter of lot." the w.r-tlm- e President, went beFur from apologizing for the killfore a Judge In Los Angeles with her ings, he shouted: "I gave orders to 42 minutes within and complaint shoot those who were mainly rehad been granted an Interlocutory sponsible for I gave furdivorce decree, "Mental cruelty" ther orders to treachery. burn out Into the raw was the charge, and Mrs. McAdoo flesh the pest boll of our Internal testified that the senator had been well poisoning and the poisoning of In almost Washingliving entirely I was the suforeign countrlea was and two that ton for it years, court of the land' for 24 preme impossible for her to reside In the hours." National Capital because the climate there was Injurious to her health. KING GEORGE theof Englandtunnel Mersey opened not did McAdoo contest Senator the divorce, and there was a prop- connecting Liverpool and Birkenunderwater high the erty settlement the details of which head, of Its largest kind In the world. More were not made public. The custody way of the two children was vested In than half a mile longer than the both parents. It was revealed that Holland tunnel In New York, the tube under the Mersey river the McAdoos have been separated stretches 11,380 feet from the main since last December. entrance In Birkenhead. In addition to the main tunnel, which accommo In torrential rain of the pAYS dates four vehicles abreast there - mountains of southern Poland are e tributaries connecting resulted in raging floods that the docks which give the whole un poured through the valleys, drown dertaking a length of 15,405 feet ing perhaps as many as three hun dred persons. More than 65,000 of the were without food and shelter. The CONSTITUTIONALITY Is to be property loss was tremendous, all the crops Just harvested being tested In the federal courts. Gaston Therrell of Columbus, Miss., has mined. Many popular resorts crowded by served notice that he will bring the summer vacationists were cut off. suit in the United States district Eighty-threcamps of Boy and court at Meridian, directing it Girl Scouts were evacuated, after against Henry A. Wallace, secretary the youths experienced harrowing of agriculture, and Internal revenue difficulties. Gendarmes saved 500 and extension oflicials In the state Scouts who were forced to climb charged with execution of the act's trees for safety. provisions. inn. f ment and National Guard. William H. TAMMANY In State -- Ar-m- Elc-ano- two-lan- e Building Up Fertility Most Important, According to an Authority. Who and Where Are They? 1,000,000 Jumpers Hitler Keeps His Crip By Baby Lama Is Found You can do things, when you con trol a country absolutely, as Stalin controls Russia, with all money, earned by everybody, spent to carry out government plana That nitler still retains his power in Germany and his grip on the German Imagination Is shown in bis latest relchstag speech. Hailed with frantic acclaim In the streets of Berlin, loudly applauded by the subservient relchstag, with army and people tinder his thumb. It Is difficult to see what can destroy his power short of a collapse In Germany's economic resources. The plot that according to his own statement. Hitler punished with seventy-seven "traitors' " deaths, evidently did not have the people back It Buddhists have discov- ered the reincarnation of their late lamented Dalai Lama. The last Lama, ruling Thibet as spiritual and temporal head from the crimson and white palace of Lhasa, died last December. It then became the business of Buddhist priests to find a baby born at the exact minute of the Lama's death. The baby must have certain marks on his head to prove that he is the reincarnation of the dead man and contains his spirit " The right baby with the right marks has been found in a humble A clever home far from Lhasa. Buddhist priest will rule until the reaches the age of baby Lama eighteen. Meanwhile the baby will be carefully looked after. Unlike the ancient Buddhist he is not expected to sit in the air without any support and deliver a sermon at birth. The wise merchant tells his clerks: "The customer Is always right" James J. Dooling, new leader of Tammany hall, tells those under him, the entire human machinery of the biggest city: "If public opinion is against anything there must be changes, because public opinion Is always right" We have troubles In this country, look at China. Her chief wheat reglous are burning up under a temperature as high as 115 degrees, many are dead, cholera Is killing others. Locusts In many places destroy what Intense heat and drouth have left of the crop. Widespread famine next winter Is Inevitable. Here, we manufacture our troubles. To unfortunate China, providence or nature sends them. but Bertrand Russell says the British, ruling India, "act like Nazis." For the crime of desiring according to Bertrand Russell, Hindus have been deprived of "the elementary liberties that make life tolerable." You wonder when the Hindus possessed any such liberties, except to a limited extent among Hindus of the highest class. Among them "liberty" Included the right to Inflict horrible Injustice on the miserable outcast untouchables, also the right to marry little girls ten years old and younger, and the right to have young widows burned alive with the corpses of their old husbands. The big telephone company In the first six months of 1034 earned $61,999,000, net, after charges and federal taxes, which seems a good deal of money. But It Is only $3.32 a share on the company's 1S.CC2,-27shares of stock. Prospects are Improving for the telephones, however, and a net Income of $01,000,000 for six months Is "something." 5 Mr. John Jacob Astor, Interesting youth of Newport, cutting short his travels, returns to New York unexpectedly and announces that he will take a job and go to work "Just as soon as the hot weathei ends." Arriving In New York's Grand Central terminal, be was met by "forty railroad detectives and six private detectives." This seems a good many detectives for one young gentleman, who, so far as the world knows, has nevet done anything to make detectives necessary. , King Features Syndicate, Ins. WNU Service. Service. The flnt step In growing alfalfa U to bulid up the fertility of soils on which it Is to be planted unless It la already In good condition. When the soil Is acid, one to three tons of lime should be applied to the acre. Soil that has been neglected or which Is In a poor state of fertility should have heavy applications of manure early in the The manure should be spring. mixed Into the soil with a dik harrow. Then a crop of soy beans should be turned under. In the fall the field should be plowed and allowed to lie fallow during,. the winter freezes. . Sow. lespe- .i..-i f..i.... uuui turu u uuuer when it has reached maximum growth, which should not be later than September L The crop should be disked well before turning un- Uer. Then the lime should be disked Into the soli and the field left to stand for two weeks. Next should be an application of COO pounds of fertilizer per acre and another disking, followed by a section harrow and then a cultlpacker. Following the two seasons of preparing the soil, at least 25 pounds of quality alfalfa seed should be sown to the acre by drill or by hand between September 15 and October 15. If the fall seeding does not produce a full stand, another seeding mny he made about March 1 to 15 or sooner If the weather Is favorable. Double Indications give the best results. Racterla culture and soil from fields which have been growing alfalfa are good Inoculants. Farmers whose soil Is In a high state of fertility may start their alfalfa crops this fall without going through two seasons of preparation mentioned above. .rur, Having trained millions of young men and women In aerodynamics, as preparation for flying, the Russian government plans to train one million parachute Jumpers, not ten thousand or a hundred thousand, but one million, by the end ot this year. Russia does things In a big way. Thibetan IJiporl-ana- ut Col-- !. WNU Clarence Dan-oar- , most successful criminal lawyer, says NRA la led by amateurs that do not understand political economy. Who does understand political economy T Mr. Darrow rebukes the President for "falling to call In men versed In statesmanship.' Who are those men In this coun try? Mr. Darrow should name them. of Hurts, Suprtntdat CuloraUa Stat Halloa farm. K. 3. 26, 193 f BEAUTIFYING Enrich Soil for Alfalfa Growing THIS WEEK move probable Thursday, July NEPIII. UTAH BRISBANE as for the nationalization of the power . RRCKETARY PRESIDENTIAL that TIMES-NEWS- THE ROADSIDE stations, markets, and small farms, which often are eyesores along the main highways In America, will be beautified at least along one stretch of countryside. Three Delaware women, Mrs. Plerrw S. duPont, Mrs. Irenee duPont and Mrs. Henry U. Thompson, have offered prizes for the best-kep- t places along the main highway In their state. It Is their purpose to eliminate signboards and to beautify the highway by making the clean-udrive competitive. Literary Digest jiumiBiue HILLS Well all 1 BEVERLY know Is Just what I read In the naoers. or see, or hear. 1 have aU been a ways reader m of the 1 n e a g a s Buauu-i- e p "Time" ever since It started. I try to read a lot of other newsy IS CRAZY WATER maga- EPSOM SALTS zines, and the Saturday Eve- Post 1 ning couldent live without. And all the newspapers I can get my paws on, and a country one or two, for they are the best Informed read-i- n r,r ail Then vou want to read w ' gldes. ;bolh polUlcal Well the other day j met the Managng Editor of "Time". He was !maklng hlg Urst visit to the Pacific or Japans Ocean. A young fellow. lmignty Ce and of course mighty L.ell ,nformed (far as I was able to No, says Dr. W. E. Fitch in broadcast nation-wid- e over N.B.C. network NOT A MAN-MAD- E DRUG Tells why natural mineral water is so often beneficial for "rheumatic" aches and pains liu(ige). The reason 1 happened to jth,Dk oI hlra at thi8 ?ery time. I On a recent Sunday afternoon Wn B.tMne on the Diane reading. broadcast on the National Broadcastand I Just happened to read his ing network the following discussion took place between Mr. Gene Arnold magazine through. You are awful and Dr. V. E. Fitch, internationally apt to catch something In a weekly known authority on natural mineral that you have missed In a daily. waters. Well you shouldent It you read the Gene Arnold: "I receive letters dally properly, but you naturally from people saying they heard that will let a steer calf get through the Crazy Water Crystals are made of chute on you ever once In awhile. but salts Epsom Salts or nothing Some ot these I had overlooked, Glauber's Salts. These people want to some of em I hadent Maby some of know if it's true you can buy some of em might be new to you. I had over these salts for a few cents, and get the same effect as you do with Crazy looked Ed Ballard, of West Baden, Water Crystals." Indiana, who earned his money in Dr. Fitch : "No, it is NOT true." circuses, gave a seven million dollar Gene Arnold: "I'm glad to hear hotel to the Jesuits for a college. you say that because I know your Thats that beautiful big hotel you opinion is worth a great deal. But will And seen be and all have stopped at you explain a little more about it? wasent even a Catholic. I knew a What are the true facts ?" Jesuit was the highest educated of Dr. Fitch : "The facts are that it all religious orders, but I dident has always been hard for a few doubtknow he had to study 15 years to ing Thomases and skeptics to believe Tar Treatment Is Urged complete that old Mother Nature knows how to his college course after prepare and compound natural minfor Sheep Having Grubs high school. My, imagine a four year eral waters in a way that cannot be if he embarrassment mans college Sheep that are suffering from duplicated in a laboratory. In the a with to intelects had tangle course of my studies I have found grubs are not Infested with worms, but the larval form of the sheep gad Jesuit! Then our gang get what they that those same doubts were expressed five In masters years. degree Two Thousand Years Ago, in the fly. The fly deposits eggs about the, call a early days of natural mineral water nostrils of the animals In the warm (Or one extra.) Now what an Igtherapy. The truth is that natural summer weather, and these work norant bird he would be stached up mineral water and natural crystals their way up through the nostrils to against one of those. from such waters are as different Nobody has ever figured out Just the sinus or spaces In the head from synthetic or artificial salts as Here they remain through the win- why we thought everything could be day from night And that's why ter and drop out the next spring, learned in four years. It Just deemed the medical profession has always I guess and we been in favor of the Natural Watpupate In the soil for a few weeks, a good even number ' ' nsed it and then hatch Into flies, to repeat has always insisted that they ers one of the know Did that you are the one product of Nature that the process the following for record the cannpt be imitated successfully by summer. There Is no practical young Duponts held tnSlC People have tried for many, treatment for removing these larvae distance in a gilder, without the aid many years to make tip synthetic congrubs from the nostrils, once they of gasoline or powder, 155 miles coctions to take their place but they are there, but something can be done from Elmira, N. Y., to right near do not have the same effect The to prevent the gad fly from laying New York City? Then he holds the predominating chemical constituent of her eggs on the sheep. This Is ac- American altitude record of 6,500 Crazy Water Crystals is sodium sulcomplished by offering the flock a feet Remember the name Dupont, phate, but it is in its Natural State, darkened place to retreat Into dur- of the Wilmington Duponts. and has a far different physiological effect than the synthetic salts made in ing the hours of bright sunshine on Up in Alberta, Canada there Is a laboratory. When you buy salts for summer days, and by smearing the only six on the jury, and they tried a few cents you get just what you nose with pine tar every three or their Premier of that province for pay for a dose of salts. But when four days. The tar can be applied an affair with his secretary. (These you use Crazy Water Crystals, you with an old glove or by making a foreigner courts do have some of the get undiluted minerals in their natusalt box with a lid In which holes most puritan notions.) The jury conral state, taken from natural mineral about a foot apart and three Inches victed him, but the judge said the water by evaporation with nothing In diameter have been bored. Smear added." was haywire. So now they dont jury the edges of the holes with tar and know which one to try, the judge or That is why Crazy Water Crystals have proven themselves so beneficial put salt In the box. As the sheep the Jury. in the treatment of "rheumatic" aches reach through for the salt they Did you know that Roosevelt had and pains. Thousands of people in all smear the tar on their noses, and a cousin down In Chili, named parts of the United States testify to this has been found effective In re- Delano, that has made the first ail this. pelling the files which lay the eggs. Chili moving picture? Everything If you, or any of your friends, sufWallaces' Farmer. but the lenz was made In Chili. Clevfer from "rheumatic" pains we suger people, these Roosevelts. Did you gest you investigate Crazy Water that some old preacher deCrystals immediately. Ask any of the Soys for Breeding Swine know millions who have used them. Then nounced the Roosevelts because While the feeding of soy beans to get a standard size box it costs only were having their second dithey fattening hogs results in soft pork, vorce in the $1.50 and is ample for at least three family? And another beans may be satisfactorily fed to weeks treatment. Crazy Water Comset down him cleric; "We with, brood sows during gestation. A pany, Mineral Wells, Texas. mineral mixture should always be dident elect the family to be President". supplied with the beans, because Did you know that a Japanese they are deficient In minerals, as Is asaasinated their Prime Minister also corn. Unless the sows are to 20 be sold soon after the pigs are himyears ago, and the Emperor freed sX,sTeW'MIlSBki the other day. And he is a hero. weaned, soy beans may also be fed Water DarJohnston and Clarence Hugh during part of the suckling period, row like to taught a duel over bath are for sale by dealers displaying though at that time they should be room fixtures, water closets to be the red and green Crazy Water mixed with tankage to the extent Crystals sign. Get a box today. of about If the sows are exact Huey Long put through the to be fattened after the pigs are Farmers Bill, where they can have their mortgages have Lincoln and Indian Head Pennies of all weaned, tankage or some protein six wanted. W pay up to 147 each. Send years to pay off the new ap- dates concentrate mixture should be lOo tor buying catalog. ChlcaKO Numls-mat- le Co 111 W. Jarkson Ilivd., Chicago. used as a supplement. Wallaces' praisement, and only one percent interest And Mr. Roosevelt signed it Farmer. That almost all over Europe they celebrated St Vitus Day. The day 20 Protect Honey Bees years ago when TO The production of honey can be a young student Increased by giving careful atten- shot the ArchCollege tion to the location of hives. They duke, the DuchSALT LAKE CITY. UTAH should be located on a south slope ess of Austria, Beautiful 40 acre . campus. . Modern : I. '11' or otherwise protected from the and started the jDuuainRS ana equipment, xiigu In a World Scholarship, Strong Character andWar, prevailing winds. They should be Social development. Physical eduso situated that the sun can shine town called SarCost Tuition, Board .. cation. Low on them enrly In the morning so ajevo. Down the and Room in regulated home-lik- e dormitories.. Government jobs for that the hive will warm up and the street ahead of needy and worthy students. FREE bees will have an advantage by this in the panew pamphlet "An Educational getting the first supply of nectar. rade, another Opportunity" mailed on request. Shade shonld be provided, however, companion had W. REDERD, D. !., II. during the middle of the day thrown a bomb when the sun Is hottest Missouri at him but missed. They were too young to Farmer. hang, but they died ih damp prison dungeons. And he has a brother The Sugarcane Crop thats a Senator In And TWO SIIOT GUNS and The great hazard In growing the young kid that started the whole BOOKS ON SlaOOTI.XCi In this country is an thing was named sugarcane Princip. He Would I ike to purchase at reasonable figearly frost Harvesting a sugar- changed the maps and actions and ure double shot gun, double shot cane crop Is always a race against thoughts of the whole world In some double triggers, and with single trigger. Give f ullinforma-tio- n gun since must varieties time, present as to make, boring, length of barrels, direct way or indirect way, yet we have approximately nine months remember the names of guys that weight, drop and other stock dimensions. s Must be in condition. Would between the last spring frost and did nothing. Not that anybody is also purchase early American books on the first frost of winter. A cross bragging on this lad. But give the Kims, fire arms and shooting. Pollard s "Book of the Pistol" and Sawyer's "Pistols developed In India Is said to ma- kid credit He did "Start Someand Revolvers" particularly desired. state price and whether books and binding ture In six months, which Is approxi- thing". "Princip" is the name. And s are in Address condition. mately the goal of experiments the funny part about it Is we can O.M.tAPIFRRB S Hawthorn. Road. Bronx. i lie. New York here. Juice of the India cross Is oronounce it too. ffl 1931, McNfthl SjtnJicatt. Inc. reported to be high In sugar and g one-thir- Next Year Go Westminster - 1 T T Jf Pr. Jugo-Slavi- WANTED a. high-grad- e first-clas- Plf-as-e first-clas- low In Impurities. WNU W 8034 |