The Evening herald. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1906-1942, October 07, 1937, Page 6, Image 6

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    PAGE SEC THE NEWS AND THE HERALD. KLAMATH FALLS. ()HEWN
THREE GIANTS
FEEL STING OF
WINNERS' BATS
(Continued from Page One)
double and Selkirk singled, scor
ing Hoag. Latzeri singled and
Rutting followed with another
one-base blow, the fourth
straight, scoring Selkirk, where
upon Bill Terry Jerked his lean
southpaw and Harry Gumbert got
tile Yanks out.
NO Forewarning
:Just as yesterday, when they
Pawed seven runs in the sixth
Inning to win the first game of
thy series, the Yankees loosed
their dynamite without warning.
Lciu Gehrig opened with a scratch
single to third and was advanced
to second by Bill Dickey.
Myril Hoag forced Gehrig at
third, but George Selkirk slashed
a two-bagger oft Johnny Mc
Carthy's legs to score two runs
and the panic was on. Gumbert
gave Tony Lauer' an intentional
pass and then was greeted by a
looping double to left by Red
Rutting, bringing in two more
counters.
, Two Runs in Seventh
That ended Gumbert, and Dick
Coffman, curve-ball right-bander.
took over and did a neat job of
retiring the side, aided by a sen
sational run and catch by Lou
Mona to take Prank Crosetti's
deep fly near the bleacher wall
in left center.
In the seventh, the American
leaguera boosted their margin to
8-1 with another two-run splurge.
Joe DiMaggio started it off with
a long single to left field. Gehrig
drew a walk, and Dickey, getting
his second straight hit. singled
to center to s CO r e DiMaggio.
Hoag lifted a long fly to Moe
n and Gehrig scored after the
catch.
-
'Today's crowd brought the to-
tal attendance for the two games
at Yankee stadium to 118.248. A
"gate" of 2229,552 was paid by 1
today's crowd. bringing the two
day "take" to 8463,808 and the
players share for the two games
tO 9236.542.08. The two clubs
now move to the Giants' home
park, the Polo grounds, for the
next three games, if that many
are necessary.
-
'CHICAGO, Oct. 7 (W) - The
White Box pulled up even in Chi
cago's city baseball title series to
day by defeating the Cubs, 8 to 1,1
in the second game, behind Ver
non Kennedy's three-bit pitching.
,Score:
R. H. E.
Cubs 1. 3 2
White Sox 3 9 1
-Davis, Root and Hartnett; Ken
nedy and Sewell. .
PROBE CONDUCTED
INTO ROUND LAKE
tINSHOT DEATH
(Continued from Palm One)
the friends left, Dusenberry
drank what Was left of the bot
tle of liquor over the protests
of his wife, the sheriff was told.
She assertedly threw the bottle
' at her husband, they had a scuf
fle, and she fell down, spraining
her ankle.
:Dusenberry said be helped his
CLEAN FALSE TEETH
GET RID OF STAINS
New Easy WayNo Brushing
ittera-rien. anlasing new discovery, to
nesse blackest stales, tarnish, tartar like
mg& Just put false teeth or bridges Ins
tss.ad
water and a. d Stere.ltiee4
tistpepproved by Good Housekeeping. At
ell druggisen Money back it not delighted.
wife up and told her be was
sorry. They had planned to go
to town together, and he told
her to get ready for the trip
while he tilled the automobile
radiator with water.
After he had been out of the
tent a few minutes he heard a
shot., He went in and saw his
Wife lying on the floor.
Thought She Was Peigninit
At first he thought she was
feigning to frighten him. But
as he approached he saw blood
on the front of her dress. Open
ing the garment, he saw the
bullet wound in her chest at the
left of the breast bone. She was
gasping at that time.
Dusenberry said he picked up
the gun, went outside and fired
five shots into the air to at
tract the attention and help of
woodsmen working nearby.
He then threw the gun on the
floor of the tent-house. He put
his 2-year.old son, Lep Samuel,
In the tent, locked the door and
ran into the woods to get his
father and other woodsmen.
When they returned, the child
was asleep on the floor near the
body of his mother.
Left for Protection
The. elder Dusenberry, the
sheriff was told, picked up the
gun and placed it in the gun
scabbard, hanging on the wall.
Ascertaining that -Mrs. Dusen
berry was dead. the men sent
word to Klamath Falls and sher
iff's officers and state police re
sponded, going immediately to
the logging camp.
The officers were told by the
Dusenberrys that the gun, a
32-10 pistol, had been hanging.
loaded, in the scabbard on the
wall since the night before the
shooting. It belonged to the
elder Dusenberry who, with his
son, had loaded the gun for Mrs.
Dusenberry's protection when the
two men went to Klamath Falls
the night before, leaving her
alone for a time with the child.
"Contact Wound"
In Klamath Falls, Dr. George
H. Adler, coroner, an& others,
investigated the condition of the
body and wound. They said that
they found what appeared to be
powder burns on the girl's hands.
It appeared, they said, that it
was. a "contact woua d" that
brought death.
District Attorney Hardin C.
Blackmer's office was continuing
a study of the case Thursday.
Officials said they did not sus
pect foul play. but that they
wanted to get statements from
all concerned and to throw light
on all circumstances of the case.
The body of Mrs. Dusenberry
is at the Whitlock funeral parlor.
U. S. FLIER ,
SENTENCED TO DIE.
GETS REPRIEVE
(Continued from Page One)
through the Spanish embassy in
Mexico City. ,
He t was to receive 81500 a
month as a flying instructor, it
was said. but he was forced at
pistol point to pilot a warplane
against the insurgents.
When reports that the Cham
paign, Ill., aviator had been
doomed by summary decree reach
ed his beautiful wife, a former
actress who had gone to France
to seek a reunion, she sent her
photograph and a plea for her
husband's life to Franco.'
Through an aide, a cousin also
named Francisco Franco, the in
surgent chieftain assured Mrs.
Dahl liy letter of September 10
that a prisoner exchange would
be made, sparing Dahl's life, "if
the occasion arises."
Franco is expected to decide
within 48 hours whether to free
the prisoners outright or negoti
ate their exchange for fliers held
by Valencia- -
He promised a decision within
two days because of widespread
interest in the case abroad. All
possibility that Dahl will be shot
is eliminated by the reprieve.
NEW
FOR FALL!
HASNHDA9BDES
TO MATCH!
60
BLUE and BLACK
1, GABARDINE
at $6.75
"
,,,rovw, ', BAGS TO MATCH
at $3.50
Day and Night Ilosiery
Beautiful, Iridescent Colors That Take
a Different Shade at Night $115
Black Heel sold Stripe
Hosiery
t- New Colors $1.35
FouLGEs
, BEAUTIFUL SHOES
525 Main
CELEBRATION
TO DEDICATE
NEIN 11101,11AI
ASHLAND, Oct. 7 (Special)
Plans are being rapidly completed
for a gala Oregon-California cele
bration on October 20, in hoer
vance of the formal opening of the
new Siskiyou highway route from
Ashland to within two miles of
Siskiyou summit.
The new 19-mile stretch of
modern highway will be dedicated
with appropriate ceremonies.
which will be attended by Gover
nor Charles H. Martin, members
of the Oregon state highway com
mission and various community
leaders who were influential in
gaining approval for the project,
in addition to dignitaries from
California.
Thousands of persons are ..)x
pected to be on hand for the
speech - making and barbecue
which will be held at the intersec
tion of the new and old roads high
in the rugged Siskiyous, where
most of the ceremonial features
will be concentrated. A banquet
at the Lithia hotel in the evening
will be attended by all visiting
notables and local leaders. A
dance at the Chateau on the Pa
cific highway non hot Ashland
will be held later in the evening.
Opening of the new route comes
a little over four years after the
letting of the first contract to Von
der Hellen and Pierson of Med
ford in .September. 1933. Eight
other grading and surfacing con
tracts were granted since that time
at a total outlay of $1,021.350.
Nearly as much more will be ap
propriated for the remaining Si!
miles, which, when completed,
will provide motorists with an en
tirely new super-highway from
Ashland to the California border.
The first 10 miles, which will
be dedicated in the October 20
celebration, is three and one-half
miles shorter than the old high
way, which reaches the same point
at Siskiyou station only after a
circuitous route through the Ste
kiyou foothills.
Built. according to modern en
gineering principles. the new
routs was constructed at the ex
pense of nearly a million and a
half cubic yards of dirt and rock
which was removed during the
grading work, establishing the
project as one of the heaviest jobs
ever undertaken by the Oregon
highway department.
The new road rises rapidly to
wards the Siskiyou summit but in
a comparatively straight line and
at 6. uniform 5.5 per cent grade.
Less than half a dozen "slow
curve" signs were found neces
sary on the first section.
The highway was actually
thrown open to traffic on Septem
ber 17, but highway officials ad
vised that several weeks use.was
necessary to put the surface in
its final, smooth condition. The
first 1.86 miles is paved with con
crete. and the balance is surfaced
with non-skid bituminous macad
am, held by experts to be superior
for mountain driving.
Six different contracing firms
were involved in the project: Vc,n
der Hellen and Pierson, Medford;
Berke Brothers, Portland; Moun
tain States Construction company,
Eugene; Harold Blake, Portland;
McNutt Brothers, Eugene, and E.
C. Hall, Eugene.
JURY COMPLETE
FOR FITCH TRIAL
ALTURAS, Cal., Oct. I (UP)
Byron Lee Fitch, accused of kill
ing Earl C. Smith near Tule lake,
July 21, will be tried by a jury of
11 men and one woman. The jury
was completed Wednesday. Dis
trict Attorney A. Kesner Wylie
said he would seek a first degree
murder conviction and the death
penalty.
William Archer, Modoc county
surveyor, was the first witness
called by the prosecution. He ex
plained maps be had made of tile
scene of the crime.
Roy Dysert, deputy sheriff of
Siskiyou county, told of meeting
Fitch on the way to Tulelake the
day of the murder. He quoted
Fitch as saying "I had to kill a
man." '
A crowded courtroom heard the
testimony.,
President Roosevelt, studyfog
national sentiment on the court
fight, may easily have been think
ing about the Continental Divide
when he set his route over the
Rockies.
NINE NATIONS MAY
HOLD CONFERENCE
ON FAR EAST WAR
(Continued front Page Ono)
power conference, If one were
held.
Policy to Reiman Unchanged
"No matter what deeision such
la conference should take," 'Mittel
quoted a foreign office official.
'whether morel pressure, con
crate or material sanctions against
Japan, the empire's fundamental
policy will remain unchanged.
The Washington condeinuation,
following by a day President
llooseveltli Chicago address in
which he lashed at invader na
tions, was greeted with enthusi
asm in London, Paris and UtIlION't.
but lent warmly welcomed in
Rome,
Occupied with another cloud in
the European situation, London
powers considered "decisive ac
tion" on counter Italian interven
tion in Spain.
Britain, Flamm Relieved
President Roosevelt's pro
nouncement and the state depart
ment action were construed as a
partial shouldering of the far
eastern disturbance. permitting
Britain, with France, to concen
trate on a showdown in the crime
which grow out of the 14-mouthold
Spanish civil war,
Britain gave an unciarified
hint of "decisive" action unless
Premibr Mussolini replied prompt
ly to a seven-day old invitation to
confer with France and England
on withdrawal of foreign 901d101J
from Spain.
While diplomatic machinery
moved swiftly to produce some
form of action in the-Sino-Japanese
controversy, the undeclared
war continued apace.
500 Civilians Killed
The Japanese flagship Rivkin')
sent countless shells whistling
over the international settlement
In an effort to move the Chinese
out, of stubbornly defended posi
tions on the Chapel and North Sta
tion battle fronts.. The eight-inch
shells fell close to the sector
guarded by United States marines.
Chinese lines, executing a coun
ter attack in the early morning
hours, eaperged from their fortifi
cations all along the 25-mile battle
front from the North Station
northwest to Lotion. They rushed
the Japanese with ancient big
swords and bayonets. In retalia
tion,' the Japanese poured artil
lery fire into the Chinese lines.
More than 500 Chinese civil
ians were reported killed by mars
bombing raids of Japanese war
planes in the rich southern prov
ince of Kwangung.
Dum-Dum Sale Charged
The Japanese minister of war,
General Sugiyama, in the first in
terview be has ever granted. at
Tokyo accused world powers of
preaching justice and humanity
for China, and at the saute time
"directly controverting every in
ternational law" by selling dum
dum bullets for use against Jap
anese soldiers. h
Sugiyama declared the outlawed
munitions were going into China
through Hongkong. the British
crown colony on the south coast
of China, and "other routes."
--
WASHINGTON. Oct. 7 (IP)--The
United States government, brand
ing Japan a treaty violator, ranged
Itself solidly alongside the league
of nations today in its effort to
stop hostilities in the far east.
Further American action ap
peared Imminent in consequence
of a formal state departmedt pro
nouncement last night condemn
ing the imperial Japanese gov
ernment for its undeclared war in
China.
This is expected to take the
form of immediate Consent to par
ticipate in a nine-power ..
to consider possible new steps
in the crisis. ,
BERLIN, Oct. 7 ()PlAlthough
official quarters maintained a cau
tious attitude toward develop
ments in the Sino-Japanese war
today, officials pointed out pri
vately that the conflict has placed
Germany in a "rather difficult"
position. - 1
They declared that while Ger
many was united with Japan in
an anti-communist front,. ,there
was no desire to make this synony
mous with an anti-Chinese front.
tnfluencing Reichsfuehrer Hit
ler's policy in the far east is the
fact that Germany's trade with
China is one of the most import
ant items in the constant struggle
to Widen the market for German.
products.
ENCEPHALITIS FATAL
SPOKANE, Oct. 7 (Steep
log sickness which struck him
down at a city commission meet
ing Monday was fatal at 2:40
a. m. today to Arthur W. Burch,
57, mayor of Spokane since 1934.
HANDBAGS!
Smart Accessory Bags in New Fall Colors
.
To Match, or Contrast Your 11"I
Costume.
Styles You'll Like
O ENVELOPE
, 0 .FRAME
POUCH
O 'ZIPPER
FOULGERIS
525 Main
I
Ommon IP
Potatoes
LOS ANOE1.108, Oct. ? (AP
USI)A )Pointoes: 14 California
oars. 4 Idaho, arrived, 57 un
broken, 37 broken cam on track,
6 diverted, enmities light, demand
110w, market about steady; Idaho
manta No. 1, 61.30-32, an
OCCUlknitti car lower: Stockton
Wisconain prides fair quality
$1.10-15; Ordinary quality 66 to
80 coma.
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct, (AP
USDA)Potatoes: Two Oregon
cars arrived; 4 unbroken, 3
broken on track: by boat 4 Cal
'tomtit arrived; supply moder
ate. demand slow, market dull,
California prices unchanged;
Oregon russets No. 1 no sales
reported, market. nominally unchanged.
TOO LATE
TO CLASSIFY
NEW DEAL HEADS
READY TO FIGHT
FOR PROGRAM
(Continued from Page One)
new attack On prime admintstra
tion objectives. atuong Mont erop
control, wage-hour anti child labor,
laws. government reorganization
and creatton of regional. planning
boards. It would begin betweeu
November 8 and November 18.
Senator Thomas, who is slated
to head the senate labor commit
toe, said ho would seek onacttuent
of wage and hour legislation in
the form it passed tho senate dur
ing the last SeMS1011,
The wago-hour bill, which
would give a labor standards
board power to establish minimum
wages of not more than 40 COlitti
an hour, and a maximum wed(
week of not less than 40 hours.
was steered through the senate
by Justice Hugo L. Black, then
chairman of the senate labor com
mittee. The measure was held tip
In the house by the rules com
mittee. Committees at 1Vork
Thomas said he would oppose
modification of the bill to pro
vide for flat standards for all la
dustry. Senate and house agriculture
committees, however. wore at
work on a program that might de
lay submission of new farm legis
lation until well past mid-November.
A senate sub-committee is hold
ing hearings in the west, and an
other group will begin a tour of
the south October 15. These hear
ings, designed to collect data on
which to base the now crap con
trol bill. will not end until No
vember 1.
Crop Control Bill Drafted
Chairman Jones (11...Texas) of
the house agriculture committee
is working on a crop control bill
at his home.
Members of the senate commit
tee expect to use as a nucleus for
their farm bill the Pope-McGill
proposal drafted a tow months
ago by farm organizations and
the agricultural department.
It would combine a crop control
pswyriost th:irmaamns 1 ei. hi vaeerrret bony normal samut arolpfl ugt alt tae crops i Aa 1 AA
)..,
would be stored up for use in lean
years.
Farmers would be given loans
RELINING, Altering, Repairing
for men and womentry Orres
Tailors. 10-7
SPECIAL VALUES--Sukts tailor
ed in our shop. Beautiful wool
ens, latest styles for men and
women. Orres Tailor Shop.
' 10-7
SIZE 42 OVERCOATS. unclaim
ed, for sale cheap. Orres Tall
ors. 10-7
SUITINGS. COATINGS sold by
the yard. Orres Tailors., 10-7
MIDDLE-AGED W 0 M A N, ex
school teacher, wishes care of
children afternoons or evenings
in your own home. References.
, Box 2942, News-Herald. 10-9
FURNISHED APT.--122 Hillside.
Phone 1889. 10-9
on stored ourpluees and would be
given "parity paymente" for par
Heipating in the control program,
-
HYOID PARK, Oet. 't
President Roosevelt seeluded
golf in the quiet of hie ancestral
home today to met from hie trans
continental trip and give thought
to momentous ((Avian and dont-mtie
problems.
Me statement at Chicago that
America "actively engages in the
mouth for peace" was cepocted by
officiate to, be his lant for some
time to come, although tic waitr
on). is conversant with all Mato
department mom'.
"Spt,ake for Itself"
He knew in r.dvance, for ex
ample, of the department's state
ment Of last night formally con
demning Japan its a treaty violat
or and going IA Mee farther than
he did at Chicago when he nr
reigned all aggressor Helium be
fore tho world without calling
names.
But he salve no hint of It in a
lengthy prose conference earlier !it
the day. Neither would he dis
cuss hie Chicago address for pub
'cation. nor amplify it in any
way.
It spoke for Itself, WOG the way
he put it. refusing all requesto
for interpretation.
IMIENNOMMOMMII
5 11 '
Editorials On News
(Continued from Pago Ono)
IIKAIHI1LVitl8 are C0110011014 at
fairly hialt anemic
Ilut there IA always the poor
driver to 4:011e11ter. And the pow
driver, who does tho wrong thing
III On emorgoney, may kill not
only hinmelf but may smash Into
the good driver and kill him also.
If you aro going to tirivo ettfoIy,
the othor follow must aiwnyN
cousidored.
(WM TIMM SKT
Oct. 7 (Ir)
ho Darr' brotherNJack, !toy
and Dr, I. ECWilt to on triol
?I ouilny, Outobor 18, In Mow
circuit court on indictments
charging them with Ihn murder
of ItrIK am floury D. Dontinrdt,
New Way to Hold
s
Fake Teeth in Place
Do false tooth annoy you by
dropping or slipping? Just 'milli.'
g Dlo lenstooth on your
pintos. This now lino powder
holds tooth firm mut romfortubto.
No gummy, misty tusto or fouilug
SWeetetill broath. UL Fustooth
from your druggist. Three shies.
8 Mornini Glass
If you're a good health follower, and cleanse your system
mornings with a gloss or two of hot water, I'm ready for
you with water clear. fresh and as hot as you like it.
I am always, ready for the baby 's bath. And I'm equally
ready with plenty of hot water for looping baby's cloth.
lng fresh and comfy. I loop floors and woodwork clean
and germ.free.,
M)
From the cleansing. stimulating morning bath that revives
sleopyheads to the tepid bath at night which leads to
deep slumber. I keep every member of the family in
the pink"
And when illness comes, I'm indispensable. I'm always
ready for the invalid's drinking water and medicines for
compresses, bathing, cleansing of bed linen. towels. I
never fail.
The Califon& Oregon Power Company
October 7, 1937
MEIEMMMLMMWMM
tillasad )(Mar of their ItIPIIPP, The
'dal ditto IVIDI NO. 1V111,11 they worn
Runtime(' heforn Cirettit Judge
Charles O. ft Intaltall todny.
-----
BLONDES IN loANIllost
Oek 7 u1)luond04
this Nil nye hawk In Ihn fashion
spotlight, Tho tiporr emu belay
trent (tin annuli' fail tinti whimr
coiffure revile ant on by tim
mom and illittein tintrilresners Rs
soeintion. Thu renson, they said,
wits bemuse ;widen sillier In Ma
Keynote la t he color plclara
-,.-
Still Coughin t
No matter how many met c F
ities
you have tided for your cough, ohost
cold, or bronchial irritation, you can
got relief now with Cr(10111111blOIL
Serious tnniblo may bo Mowing and
you cannot afford to tido a ultimo
with any remedy lents potent than
Croomulnion, which gods right to
the Goat of the troublo and aids na
turn to booth and heal Ult) ilittAillOtt
mucous ntembrottes and to loosen
and expel the germ-laden pillegIll
EVOn if other rentedien Iowa failed.
don't bo discouraged. try remind
Mon. Your druggist is authorised to
refund your money If you aro not
thoroug tly natisded with the brim..
fits obtained from the very first
bottlo. Croomulsion Is one wordnot
two. and it has no hyphen In I.
Ask for it plainly. NM Ulla UM nitino
on tho bottio is Orcomuision, and
you'll get Urn genuine product and
the relict you want. (Adv.)
am always "Johnny on the spot". rm
as quick as you' can turn the faucet. I
am never tired or caught napping. I am
the continuous hot water heater. Next
only to the furnace, I am the greatest
modern convenience in the home, ond
unlike the furnace, I serve the year
round. Best of all, my unfailing service
may be had for a few pennies day!
.1 AP ...1,.
. e ,
al(;',; ----i
r,
ilfd 1 11
I '
Ink ..
( 0 -
57142).,
(1.1
i
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iEUE
90 PROOF Hiram Walker & Sons, Peoria, Illinois, Walkers' Ile, Ontario, Glasgow, Scotland.
,10wp 5,zfhqj
AGING WINTER AND SUMMER FOR 2
WHOLE YEARS BRINGS YOU THIS
WHISKEY WITH "NO ROUGH EDGES"
Do you balk at the price of good bourbon?
Then you haven't tried TEN HIGH It's extra
smooth for good reason: Formerly whiskey .
matured far more rapidly in summer than in
winter. But Its always summer in Hiram
Walker's modern weather.controlled rack.
houses and TEN HIGH mellows every minute
of every month for two long years! Buy TEN
HIGHa really ripe whiskey at a
really redo price. IN,
:' 1 . -
'
,, . :-. '7T, ,
AGING WINTER AND SUMMER FOR 2
i
.,
i I WHOLE YEARS BRINGS YOU THIS
t , ,,f;,, ,
1 A
.,', '. IPZio) ', , i - ' WHISKEY WITH "NO ROUGH EDGES"
,
,, Do you balk at the price of good bourbon?
- r4
Then you haven't tried TEN HIGH l It's extra
,
1 4 :.14 ';,,if . smooth for ood reason: Formerl whiske .
4 111 , a Y Y
PI : , " '?.... : . 't 1 ' '4110,; matured far more rapidly in summer than in
' '"14 I ''' A' i I ;,;,,,4:,,,,,fi,,,i, winter. But it's alw m
ays summer in Hiram
-, ,
,,,,,,
: ' 41.1414', t, ; ,,!..1'' A :f , , ,,f ,.;:t;,' . 1,4V Walker's modern weathercontrolled rack.
. ,1.
' ' houses and TEN HIGH mellows every minute ,..
44' , - , . -,:r1, , ",1 4 t of eve m nth f r two Ion ears! Bu TE
t)
4 ' ot ' .,. ' ' ' ' 1 ; , ? ilIGHa really ripe ,A luskey at a
"ir i4:::.,;:t . 6,,:i'' "::
cto J-14".' . .:4 , - . ,, 50. t ,doc, ,,, ', fumy mpg price. , ,
.or'4,"' 'tb.
,... fia 4 ,
s4,.
.4
,, rd, , . ',S
N . A , , N tit, s, 'ad
, ,1 Nob
1.4
4 )1 7. 11411t --1'.,- ,4' 'e
' 413:., . ' , ,...i t 4 , i soc
g ,; ,,, lV 4; ,' ' -
PIM
.4sur
l'.4
I 1 , ,; : ,O $ ',." .; ..1 .; , '.1 (Z., : el' 111!:.'s t) , 1,,i:'
'N ...
1 t 0 , 4'.,' , . , ' V ', ! ,, 4' f i ' t 1 k i
c ,,,, :, :' , l', i, ,01) 7 )4t,, ,J,,;,,' ,
' 4C ! V7' 4(,45, !!
, ,..i ley' ' , k,s1... , ,,,,sz71.4 ,
..,.. kr
, st. ,r,t ' : - '
,
90 PROOF Hiram Welker & Sons, Peoria, 11111101s; WalkervIllo, Ontario, Glasgow, Scotland. ' NI'
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STRAIGHt
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Healthful Bathing , .,-; r, ii
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From the cleansing. stimulating morning bath that revives hJ
sleopyheads to the tepid bath at night which leads to . "...;.r ,,,,,h
deep slumber. I keep every member of the family "in .. ft't
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And when illness comes. I'm indispensable. I'm atways
ready for the invalid's drinking water and medicines for it 10
compresses, bathing, clean linen. towe
sing of bed ls. I 1 At
never fail.
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If you're a good health follower, and cleanse your system V. ,,;1- V ;',4
mornings with a gloss or two of hot water, I'm ready for
you with water clear. fresh and as hot 6 you lila it. , 4-, 7 IR i: ,,,,.--,',41
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I am always, ready for the baby 's bath. And I'm equally - r; 1,t,!,.1,1'; tr4
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ready with plenty of hot water for keeping baby's cloth. : .; ; )
trig fresh and comfy. I loop floors and woodwork 'clean
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and germ4ree. .
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