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a: ee SLIDING SCALE MAY “STABILIZE PRICES, 22 SIMMONS DECLARES Plan Would Give Same Result as High Tariff, Commit. tee Member Says Washington, July 29.— (AP) — Senator Simmons, North Carolina, ranking minority member of the senate finance committee, has de- ~ clared that he believes the purpose of the proposed sliding scale tariff for sugar will be to stabilize, on be- half of the sugar interests, the price of sugar in this country “at a fig- re approximately the eas vould result from the high tariff rates demanded by those interests.” Senator Smoot, Utah, chairman of the finance committee, has an- nounced he would propose the sliding scale as a substitute for the tariff on sugar carried in the house bill. In his statement Simmons de- elared he had no definite informa- tion on the sliding scale which Sen- ator Smoot has in mind but said he was opposed to such a plan. UTILITIES COMPANY MAY GUT BIG MELON Chicago, July 29.— (AP) — Plans for a sweeping recapitalization of the Middle West Utilities company, one of the largest holding concerns in the public utilities field, were an- nounced last night by the directors. The company is an Insull organiza- tion. The plan involves a $63,000,00€ “melon” for stockholders in the form of stock purchasing right’, and a stock split-up. The recapitalization plan will be submitted to the stockholders at a meeting in September, when their permission will be sought for re- vision of the charter in accordance with the new scheme. NORTH DAKOTA HERO DEAD LIE IN FRANCE Greatest Number of World War Martyrs Buried in Meuse- Argonne Cemetery By far the greatest number North Dakota soldiers who died while serving with National Army units and whose bodies are still resting in cemeteries overseas are buried in the Meuse-Argonne American ceme- tery at Romagne-sous-Montfaucon, Meuse. These National Army division range from the 77th division of New York to the 91st division of the Pa- cific northwest states. Men of these outfits and several other units not otherwise attached constitute the re- mainder of the more than 300 North Dakota men listed for the proposed Mothers’ Pilgrimage by J. B. Wine- man, Grand Forks, chairman of the Red Cross, from information obtained through Congressman O. B. Burtness. The following are buried in the Meuse-Argonne cemetery: George Anderson, William E. Smith, Martin Christianson, Arthur B. Stewart, Ole O. Grislivold, Lars Jaugen, John J. Hoffman, Roland W. Jones, Manley Marriott, Gilbert O. Myrvik, Josep! A. Nowatzki, Harry” E. Lahman, James O. Hanson, William F. Leisner, Charles K. Nielson, Roy E. Bessey, Walter Guetschow, Henry L. Olson, Clyde E. Wortman, Ingwald Peder- son, Eugene V. Evans, Theodore B. AZonneson, Maurice Verschelde, Jacob Dorgeloos, John 0. Fenne, Dolce L. Belgredo, Jacob T. Slaatte, Mike Sulz, Carl Solvsberg, John Fregien, Jacob Rau, Charles E. Kern, Clifford Lane, Jacob el, Delbert V. Van Allen, illiam C. Blair, Sverre Eide, Arthur Conner, Lyle B. Rich, Einar E. Or- bom, Orville T. Haughtelin and - Michael J. McElvain. In Other Cemeteries Buried in the St. Mihiel American cemetery at Thiaucourt, Meurthe-et- Moselee are Henry Biffart, James J. Roberts, gg J. Leif, Alfred T. Runnestrand, Olaf Fiske, Gust A. Oberg, Oliver Nyhus, George Ardal- la, Antoni Kaminski, John Tozzi, John A. Carlson, Arthur TT. Solle, Martin O. Rudd, Dovie W. Carter, Melvin Ostby, William R. Kelley, Charles E. Johnson, Sabra R. Hardy, and Gilbert C. Grafton. Buried in the Aisne-Marne Amer- ican cemetery at Belleau, Aisne are Edward Metzgar, Elmer Peterson, Edwin Sjerdah! and Edward Keller; in the Suresnes Americar. cemetery near Paris, George O. Barnick, Jo- =seph Perreault, Alf M. Hovind, and Harry R. Thompson; in the Oise- isne American cemetery, John Nel- ‘son, John Rybus, George Lunde and Louis C.Jensen; in - yon Amie dcan cemetery at Bon; isne, lo rin Bourke; in the Flanders Field American cemetery: at Wearegham, Belgium, Rinehold D. Schaefer, dore Togstad and Albert ™. Vander- wall, and in the Brookwood American ‘cemetery at Brookwood, near Lon- don, England, William ‘f, Henry. Veterans Give Picnic To Captain Spann Who Is Leaving for South THE BISMARCK TRIRUNFE TH MONDAY. JULY 2y, 1yzy rtists of ‘Our Boarding House’ and ‘Out Our Way’ With Famous Characters Gene Ahern, artist of “Our Boarding House, in this paper for many ycars, ee see story of good news—which will in-|become an artist. There are still terest every reader of this newspaper. | bunkhouses and cook sheds out there For years to come you are going to With his sketches on them. continue getting real enjoyment out | of two of the world's most famous! Enlistment in the U. 8. cavalry comics, “Out Our Way” and “Our came next, and after that Jim Boarding House.” | Planned to join the Canadian North- J. R. Williams, the artist who draws | west Mounted. He met THE girl about | “Out Our Way,” and Gene Ahern, the | this time, however, and was married | artist who draws “Our Boarding | House.” have just signed new lonj term contracts with NEA Service, Inc., the newspaper feature service. which |instead. This necessitated settling | ;down, and he became a machinist. | In the meantime Williams discov- | |ered he could make spare money do- | at the left, and J. R. Williams, of “Out Our Way,” at the right. You will be glad to know that their nationally known characters, also shown, will continue to appear oe ® New Long-Term Contracts Insure Continuance of Two Famous Comics in Tribune for Many Years to Come This is a good news story—and a | bered that some day he was going to| sketches on the long rolls of brown | paper in which the shop's meat was wrapped. |, One day a man connected with a large fashion house came into the | market for pork chops. Gene snipped them off and wrapped them up, using, by chance, a sheet of the paper he had previously covered with sketches. ~ The customer eyed the package, “Who drew these?” he asked. “Oh, I did—just for the fun of it,” said Gene. Whereupon the customer suggested that it would be more fun te draw Serves this paper and gives it exclusive ing animated cartoons for a movie | such pictures for money—and Ahern other daily features. | and he decided to send some of his; of | Tights in this city to these comics and | Company. This helped develop his art, | rcadily agreed that it would. The conversation continued, and tray machine shop life in a true-to- comic work to NEA Service. At once | Gene told of his studies at art school standing combination in the comic field. “Their comics are the most widely published in the country. The Teader-following of Major Hoople in “Our Boarding House” and Williams’ celebrated characters in “Out Our Way” is conservatively estimated in excess Of 40,000,000 people. or morc than one-third the population of the country. The Bismarck Tribune strives to give readers only the very best comics, and is pleased to be able to assure you that when this newspaper comes to! your homes every day your old f vorites, “Out Our Way”*and “Our House,” are coming with it. Both Williams and Ahern have worked hard to achieve success. Williams introduced something new in comics, Three sets of characters appear in his cartoons in order to portray hu- man interest situations in the home, and life in the shops, and the cowboy west. This has assured him an ex- tremely wide reader appeal. Williams born in Nova Scotia. As a lad he gave every indication of & desire to run away and go to sea, but his parents moved to Ohio when he was a young boy. The family soon decided Jim was to be an artist, and enrolled him in the art department of Mount Union college at Alliance, O. Jim stuck it out for a year. The wanderlust cropped out again, and he got a job as a fireman on a railroad. His next move was to the west, where he became a cowboy. This was when he was 17, and for several years Williams punched cattle in New Mexico. All this time he still remem- his talent, although not yet fully de- | veloped, was realized. “Out Our Way” was born. It made an instant hit! | Newspaper readers soon came to! | recognize Williams as the artist who| |could reach right into the home with | his human interest—who could miake | | his youngsters live—who could | |tray machine show life in a true-to- life manner, and who could make the old west live again. | — | Today Jim creates his ideas and| | puts them down in black and white | jin his “home studio.” |. That ts to say that in the new| ; Williams home, of beautiful English j design, overlooking Lake Eric, in! fashionable Beach Cliff, just outside jof Cleveland, ©., there is one room} where the “Bull of the Woods," | “Curly” of Cowboy fame, and Jim's | kid characters find their way from a| {topnotch artist's mind to the great: white open spaces of sheets of draw- | jing Paper. Jim's greatest hobbies are tinkering around with his or his wife's. car, | making beautiful models of ancient Spanish galleons, and hobnobbing | through hill and valley with his two | | youngsters, Bob and Helen. He has |admitted that some of his best. kid | hunches have come from his own kids. Gene Ahern’s path to the height of Popularity in the comic world started | —strange as it may seem—in a meat | market. | True, he had been to art school be- | fore this, but it was his job as butch- jer’s helper that gave real opportunity i the first chance to knock. | Gene spent is and of his fondness for sketching. The stranger expressed interest, and wound up by offering Gene a job in his fashion house art department. In his new job, he admits, he hardly set the world on fire, but he learned a lot about drawing, and that was what counted. A couple of years later Ahern went to tne NEA Service, Inc., and applied for a job in the art department. He got it. Ahern tried several comics before deciding on the one that was to bring fame—“Our Boarding House.” This comic was a new departure in the field of comic art. It set forth, in breezy, wise-cracking style, the happenings in a typical city boarding house, The development of the famous Major Hoople came as the finishing touch. Originally Major Hoople was simply the landlady’s husband—a grandiose, harmless old chap, given to long words and complete idloness, But he began to grow in popularity and soon became the leading charac- ter. Today he might be called one of the “famous Americans"—a likable old braggart, moving serene and care- free in a world of his own devising, a world of bombast and pomposity, world in which the hard faets of or: dinary existence are never permitted to cut through the vencer of bluff and nonsense in which an old campaigner has managed to encase himself. It is through this outstanding char- acter and the use of his clever orig- inal “chatter” and humorous wise- cracks that Ahern has risen to his time making well-deserved success. Search Is Renewed for Traces of KENTUCKY PROPERTY Race of Parrots Columbus Found IN °49 LOSING VALUE | tributed late in June, these Cuban macaws as proof that Columbus had discovered a western route to India. | Pietro Martire d’Anghiera, Italian humanist at the court of Castile, long ® doubter of Columbus’ claims, was convinced by the parrots. “These parrots brought from there,” ne wee, how thet Sines by Propinquity or nature, islands are | & part of India. They nourish popin- | Jays, of which some are green, some low, and some like those of India | with yellow rings about their necks as | Pliny describes them. “Of course they brought 40 with them, of most lively and delectable having their feathers inter- mingled with green, yellow and pur- ple, which variety delights the sense not a little.” ‘The best available records show no Cuban macaws have been seen for | half @ century. 3 j ally protects mulberry trees against frost. Army planes are used to spread this screen, which is especially valu- able for the silk-producing sections of central Japan. DEADLY SIGNS Dusseldorf, a have been erected at danger points of | Rhine bearing the information ; that so-and-zo-many swimmers have | been drowned there. Each new fatality means the altering of the sign at the pene at ne sccldent, ani the author. | ities hope thus to reduce the number of drownings. a DISTRIBUTING NEW LAWS Bound volumes of the session laws & fice of the se here and of 1939 have been received at the of- | whiskey secretary of state | are now.being distributed to.the pub- Ite, copies ». were. dis- Old Papers Give Detailed Ac- count of Articles for S Price Large Today With abolition of slavery, prohibi- tion of intoxicating liquors, improved methods of production, and civiliza- tion's higher demands, property owned by a Kentuckian in 1849 would have little, if any, legal sale vaule today. Prohibition has made some of the “Forty-Niner’s” property quite expen- sive, but most of the items today|aiai would have little value except as sou- venirs, Following is a notice of sale printed in the Sturgis, Ky., News and re- pee in the Caldwell County es, Princeton, Ky., recently: SALE “Having sold my farm and leaving for ‘Oregon Territory’ team, will offer on March 1, 1869, of my personal property to-wit: “all xcept ti Sg~ £28 wood model 800 to 1,000 three-foot clap 1,500 ten foot fence rails; 1, if it Fee “OLD MAN RIVER’ 1S ‘UNDER CONTROL, SAY "HIGH ARMY OFFICERS Only Flood of Catastrophic Pro- portions Will Be Able to Break Controls { | Washington, July 29.— (?) — High army engineer officers expect this year's work to rid the lower Mississip- pt valley of the menace of disastrous floods unless the water unexpectedly reaches such tremendously high levels as in 1927. Construction of levecs and flood- ways along the Mississippi and its { principal tributarics has progressed, engineers say, until they can with- ‘stand any rise in the waters except \a flood of catastrophic nature. | About $54,000,000 has been expend- jed out of the $325,000,000 appropriat- ed under the 1928 flood control act, Major General Edgar Jadwin, chicf of army engineers, said today in outlin- ing the progress of the work. During ithe first year of work. $24,000.000 was. spent while $30,000, has been utilized this summer. | A program calling for expenditure | of $30,000,000 to $35,000,000 is planned for next year. > i \{ Additional Sports j 'Diegel Retains Canadian Title Champion's Score of 274 for 72 Holes Is 3 Better Than Armour's Kanawaki, July 29.—(?—Leo Die- jeel. Pro at the Agua Caliente club, Mexico, won the Canadian open golf championship for the fourth time | Saturday, finishing the 72 hole grind | with a score of 274. Diegel. who was the defending champion, scored five birdies on his final round, four on the second nine, to keep the championship. Diegel finished with a briliant round of 66 to nose out Tommy Ar- mour, Detroit, by 3 strokes. Armour tallied a 69 on his fourth and iast round for a 72 hole score of 277. Macdonald Smith and Joe Kirk- wood tied for third place with scores of 284. Bill Mehlhorn was fifth with 286. Jim Barnes scored 287. Horton Smith with a last minute 67 com- piled a score of 288 and sfueczed into the money with Bill Burke, Al Wa- trous, Gene Sarazen and Emmet. French with 289. Five New Records Are Set by Women Cheago, July 29.—\\—Five world records were tossed into the discard and one was equaled at Soldier ficld Saturday as the Illinois Women's Ath- letic club won the national women’s A. A. U. track and field championship with 31 points. Betty Robinson of the A. I. C., America’s only winner in the 1928 Olympic games, provided the scnsa- tional performances of the meet, set- ting new world records in the 50 and 10Q yard dashes. The slim, smiling Chicago girl clipped one-fifth of a second from her own 50 yard dash mark, sprinting the distance in 305 4-5. In the longer dash she broke the accepted mark of 11 2-5 seconds held jointly by herself and Helen Filkey Warren, a clubmate, in the semifinals heat, by one-fifth of a sec- ond, and equaled the performance in the final. Rena McDonald, a member of the 1928 Olympic team, accounted for two first places for the Boston swimming association and set one world mark. She won the 8 pound shot put with 8 toss of 42 feet 4 1-2 inches to break the record of 40 feet 4 1-4 inches set in 1926 by Lillian Copeland of Pasa- dena, Calif. She also won the discus with a throw of 113 fect, 4 inches. The opening event of the meet, the 60 meter hurdles, produced a new world record when Helen Filkey War- ren of Chicago. returning to competi- tion for the first time since a year ago, won the event in 12 3-5 seconds, bettering the old mark of 12 4-5 sec- onds made by Miss Von Bredow of Germany in 1927. The record for the baseball throw was the last to go, Gloria Russell, representing the Northern California A. C. of Eureka, Calif, winning with a throw of 258 feet 1 inch. The old record was held by Vivian Hardwick of Pasadena, Calif. NEAL RIDES 'EM A 16-year- old boy, Paul Neal, ap- prentice jockey, recently had four winners in a day at Washington Park, near Chicago. Since then he has been botting ‘em in so regularly that many followers have started playing everything he rides. JAI ALAI LEAGUE Teams in New York City, Cleve- land, Pittsburgh, Cincinnati and Chi- cago are planning to organize a jal- Hpac. CASSIDY’S BOYS Fe | | | Horne and a Few Bargains It isn’t necessary to walk a mile for a camel, because Isaak S. Horne, above, the big elephant and hippopotamus man from California, will deliver one j right to your door. Or, if you are not interested in camels, how about a | nice little baboon for Cousin Nellie or a cute little baby rhinoceros for grandma? ‘! eee If There Should Be Another Flood Horne Could Pinch-Hit for Mr. Noah | New York, July 29.—In case there's | rhino, you must be prepared to pay— another flood, Isaak 8. Horne should | Md PAY, | gorilla you be given Noah's job, for he probably | can get one for around $6000. How- knows more about shipping animals} ever, you know he does not like this than any other man—each month and | country, and usually dies quickly for sometimes twice a month, he receives | spite. an arkful. | Horne says that most of the zoos | conferences. : | of the world, public and private, are Horne is, in fact, the big elephant | supplied by about five dealers, all! representing families who have been in the business for generations. Horne is the only American among the big five, the majority being German. Horne's great-great-grandfather was an animal dealer. The animal business was never bet- ter, and there has never been such a market for animals since the days of the ark. And, with the increased demand for hippos and rhinos, is the perversity common to nature, animals are hard- and hippopotamus man from Califor- | nia, with agents in many foreign countries, sending in rare and curious | animals with which he supplics Amer- ican zoos. | Each shipment costs thousands of dollars, and represents great hazard. | His latest cargo brought in beside the | usual clephants and antelopes, 30 crates of monkeys, 15 giant baboons, | | 26 crates of lizards, and the cutest | j little aard you ever laid cyes on. The aard isa nice beast to have around, but you have to remember his diet, for he doesn't take every- thing—not by any mcans. He will eat | nothing but fresh blood and eggs, and | his idea of a swell dessert is corn | meal porridge. Certain monkeys, on the other hand. are indifferent to all forms of food | but tropical fruits, neatly served, and they must be fed one at a time. Mass mastication offends them. Thus it is | well to know something of an animal's | daily life before making a purchase. “If I could only get an_ okapi,” Horne sighed, then explained that an okapi is the most expensive animal in | the world today—and the one that will bring the highest market price. | “It is not so beautiful,” he said, “but so rare! Only one zoo in the! world has one—at Amsterdam. Fancy | how envious that makes the rest of them feel. I would pay $25,000—or | more for one this minute—and I could | e all the big zoos bidding. \ “The okapi is a species of ‘African antelope that is found only on the gold coast—that section known as| the White Man's grave. So far as I) know, only one was ever brought out, | though .many lives have been lost | seeking them.” ! Wanna Buy an Elephant? This is a very good time to buy} an elephant, for they are very rea-| sonable. Three thousand dollars will | get you a very nice one, while $4000 | will insure you top quality. Or, if/| you prefer you can have a hippopota- | mus instead for the same money. If you just want a plain, serviceable, everyday black rhinoceros, you can| pick him up very reasonably for about | $400, but if you are going into the/ fancy breeds, say the African white | one or the very exclusive Indian, Child Health Meets Planned for Adams (Tribune Special Service) j Hettinger, N. D., July 29.—A series | of five pre-school conferences will be held in Adams county beginning to- morrow to assist parents to determine the health status of their children and to advise of defects in the children that may be corrected. The schools will be held between 10 in the morn- ing and five in the afternoon. To date, conferences have been scheduled for the following places in the county: July 30, Darling Springs Consolidated school; July 31, South Fork Consolidated school; Aug. 1, Haynes; Aug. 2, Bucyrus; Aug. 3, at the courthouse in Hettinger. Dr. Maysill M. Williams and Miss Irene M. Donovan, R. N. Division of Child Hygiene, department of public health, Bismarck, N. D., assisted by the local physicians will conduct the All children under school age wilt | be weighed, measured and examined and the defects pointed out to tha) mother in order that she may cooper- ate with her family physician in cor- recting the defects. NOTICE Bids for operating @ school bus in the Frances School District will be opened at the home of the clerk Fri- day evening, August 16th, at o'clock, Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. y order of the clerk. WALTER DIETZMAN, 7/29; 8/5-12 Menoken, N. Dak. NOTICE eight | y er and harder to get. Taking # load red out of Africa involves a lot of tape. “You can go to Africa with a gun and kill all the animals you want to, but taking them out alive involves tickets, permits and sheaves of cor- Tespondence between various depart- | ments of state,” Horne said. “They | realize, of course, that there is no profit in letting animals out alive, but that hunting expeditions spend any- where from $15,000 up ‘n te coun- try.” Horne's last shipment, a compara- tively small one, valued around $100,- 000, cost him $3500 to crate. The freight was $2000 and the duty $1250. Before they were unpacked, he had sold three elephants and three leop- ards. In New York, he meets buyers from various zoos. Animals that are | not sold immediately are shipped to Kaneas City where they are cared for indefinitely. Our Zoos O. K. Horne says the zoos of this coun- try are now as fine as those of Eur- ope. Philadelphia has the finest ani- mals, and the Bronx Zoo, in New York, the National Zoological Gardens at Washington, and the St. Louis Zoo aré about even, but Chicago will have the finest in the world when its new $8,000,000 zoo is completed. Besides his commercial interést, Horne is a great lover of animals. He can go into any zoo in the country and find old pets that he has placed there, and he ts delighted when they remember him as they usually do. When not in New York, unloading his animals, or in Kansas City in- specting them, or in Europe or Africa looking over the foreign market, Horne lives in Los Angeles. Johnny Butler Figures In Trade to Cardinals Minneapolis, ‘July 29.—(AP)— Mike Kelley, manager of the Min- neapolis club, announced today he has traded Johnny Butler to the St. Louis Cardinals in exchange fer Joe Delker, a young infielder, the deal being effective immediately. Butler will leave tonight for St. Louis while Delker will report to the Millers Tuesday. NOTICE TO CONSTRUCT SIDEWALKS To Each of the Owners and Occupants of the Respective Premises Herein- after Described: Whereas, The City Commission of the City of Bismarck deem it neces- sary to construct a sidewalk in front of, or along, each of the followin scribed premises as herein set forth, to-wit: : Cross walks from main sidewalks urbing along the East and South sof Lat 2 of Block 5 in Northern to construct such Ls ea ron’ of or along, as above set forth, the eran hereinbefore described, iihchoseat at ane 18 “Meio 4 AD) 2 and Th athlet rae: with ordi- nances now in force if own expense, within after the date of thie notice: and if you fail to ao conktruct the same, puch Bid ike will be conettne by the contractor eshployed by City for that Rurposs. and Gees Bids for hauling coal for No. 1. in’ Frances District will, opened at the home of the clerk Fri- day evening, August 16th, at eight o'clock. Board reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Ry order of the clerk. . WALTER 174g LAN, . 7/295 8/5-18 Menoken, N. Dak. ‘ be | Bide red b; nce, york “on suck walk, to make fication Engineer for and grade of Yelk anh for s pareue te Comtrecs 1 N. D.. July 29, Dated, Diamarek, sf “Pia Bie, cl 5 City of Bis Ne D. Cit 3/435 8/8 . ? DUCHESS ANASTASIA CLAIMS HEIRSHIP 10 ROMANORF MILLIONS Woman Insists She Is Only Sure viving Member of Executed Czar’s Family New York, July 29.—(#)—A pre: liminary step in an effort t6 obtain the fortune of the executed Cezar Nicholas II, of Russia, was taken to- day by Mme. Tscahadowsky, who calls herself the Grand Duchess Anas- jtasia and insists she is his only sur- viving child. The Romanoff fortune is reputed to amount to more than $100,000,.000 scattered among various countries. FREEDOM CONFRONTS FORMER TREASURER Minneapolis, July 29.—()—Freedom, after seven years’ incarceration, con- fronted Henry Hanke today. Hanke. former treasurer of Henne- pin county, now a convict, will be re- leased Saturday from Stillwater pris- on, the state parole board has an- nounced. Convicted of having embézgled $258,000 worth of public funds in 1922, Hanke has won a reduction from his 10-year sentence by his conduct as @ model prisoner, the parole board and prison officials disclosed. He confessed the embezzlement. | | Aug. 16, 1922, Chamber Is Proposed To Represent Co-ops Baton Rouge, La., July 29.—(AP) —Organization of a national cham- ber to represent agricultural coop- eratives in Washington, D. C., was recommended to the American in- stitute of cooperation in session heré by C. 0. Moser, of Di Texas, president of the Ameri cotton growers’ exchange and chairman of the institute. In opening the fifth summer sion of the institute, attended by members of the federal farm board and Secretary Hyde of the depert- ment of agriculture, Mr. Moser sug- gested the new organization known as the “national chamber of agricultural cooperatives” to deal with congress and the federal de- partments. It would be comparable to the national chamber of cem- - meree or the American federation of labor, he said. MRS. R. H. FAIRFIELD DIES Minneapolis, July 29.—(/P}—Mrs. R. H. Fairfield, 56, prominent in wom- en's organizations in several stetes, died here following nearly two years’ illness. You will find that yoy actually use less flour when you use