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B—6 CENTRAL CENTER | T0 OPEN IUESI]AY} Schedule of Recreational Fa- cilities Now Gives City Three Large Resorts. Beginning Tuesday. the Central High‘: School Community Center will open, | making three of the largest centers in the city now available to the public for a varied schedule of Summer recrea- tional events. East Washington Center, located at Eastern High Echool, opened last Monday, and the Francis Junlor High School Center opened also last week. The activities at the Central Center Tuesday will be under the direction of Mrs. Edith H. Hunter. community sec- retary there. On that day the swim- ming pool and tennis courts will be pened to the public for the months of uly and August under the direction of . J. Ray, assisted by Xugene Murphy #nd Arthur C. Boyd, athletic directors. No fees will be chargea on the opening day. The hours will be from 1 to 4 p.m. and 7:30 pm. to 10:30 p.m. Pool Schedule. Beginning Wednesday and every week day thereafter, except Mondays and Saturdays, the pool will be open on the same schedule, but a fee of 10 cents for children and 25 cents for adults will be charged. Towels will not be fur- nished. The tennis courts will be open from 5 pm. until dark every week day except Saturday, when they will be available at 1 oclock. A 10-cent charge will be asked. Other features at Central Center in- clude track practice, model aircraft and model yacht building. The rooms at the center are available for club meetings. Has Day Nursery. At the Eastern High Center M. J. Kelly is director for July and August From Monday through Fridays of each week the athletic facilities will be avallable at 5 o'clock until dark and on Saturdays until 1 o'clock Mrs. Gabrielle Pelham is in charge at Francis Junior Center. Sessions are ©open from 3 to 7 o'clock in the after- noons. An additional reature is & day nursery for children of pre-school Lnged. A week] rogram will pe given, assiste by tnewflgxk Creek Civic Association, Women's Community Club and other organizations, beginning ‘Wednesday in Potomac Parkway. R DENIES ACCUSATION IN CALDWELL CASE Prosecutor Declares Indictment Was Not Influenced by “Sinister Force.” B the Associated Press. e NASHVILLE, Tenn., July 4.—Dis Attorney General Richard M. Atkinson arguing for a conviction in the trial of Rogers Caldwell, former investment banker, charged with fraudulent breach of trust, today denied the indictment was brought about by an “unseen and sinister force.” Rascoe Bond, of defense counsel, eharged yesterday the indictment arose from politics in the form of an “unseen 2nd sinister force which State’s attor- neys have neither the will nor the combat.” w;eo;dwhur said he had reference to the same political influences that were responsible for the articles of impeach- ment recently proposed against Gov. Henry H. Horton but rejected by the Legisiature. One of the articles charged the governor and Caldwell conspired to use State money for private gain “There is no ‘unseen and sinister force’ behind this indictment,” Atkin- son shouted. “No force short of heaven itself will ever influence me to sign an indict- ment against my fellowman unless I feel that there is evidence of guilt. - “I was impelled only by a spirit of Justice in signing this indictment.” Caldwell is being tried on a charge which grew out of a trust agreement between Hardeman County, Tenn., and Caldwell's gigantic investment house, Caldwell & Company, now collapsed. BUCHANAN AND BEDFORD ROADWORK COMPLETE Beven-Mile Stretch Through Nat- ural Bridge Forest Ends Third of Connection. Special Dispatch to The Star. LYNCHBURG, Va. July 4—A new forest roadway has been completed by | forces of Natural Bridge National For- est, a stretch of 7.2 miles leading from Buchanan toward Bedford. The re- ‘maining distance of 14 miles to Bedford will be completed by State highway forces. A connecting road, 4.2 miles long, | from Powells Gap to the north has also been completed in the forests and sur- veys are being completed for a® road between Terrapin Hill and Snowden to connect the proposed State route 13 with United States route 60 at Snowden. *This road is a part of a 16-mile stretch, affording a new outlet for southwestern Ambherst County. HOTEL MAN BURIED Marshall H. Buckingham Succumbs at Ridgeville. Bpecial Dispatch to The Ster. MOUNT AIRY, Md., July 4 —Services for Marshall H. Buckingham, who died at his home, at the Ridegville Ho- tel, were conducted by the Rev. B. I Barnes, pastor of Ridgeville Methodist Protestant Church. Following services at the late residence, interment was made in Loudon Park Cemetery, Bal- timore. Mr. Buckingham moved to Ridgeville March 1, and since that time has op- erated the Ridgeville Hotel, which he purchased prior to leaving the Sixteen- Mile House at Mayfield. He had been in failing health for several years and his death Monday, while sudden, was not expected. mBegiedes his widow, Mrs. Melissa Buck- ingham, Mr. Buckingham is survived by four sisters and two brothers: Mrs. Edith Zink, Mrs. Emma Braum and Mrs. Bessie Norman, Baltimor Mary Finchem, West Friendshi) Buckingham and Howard Buckingham, Baltimore. CHILD HURT IN CRASH @pecial Dispatch to The Star. CUMBERLAND, Md,, July 4—Doro- thy Elizabeth Ruby, six years d, daughter of Roger and Lizzie Ruby, ‘Baltimore, underwent an emergency operation at Allegany Hospital tonight for an injury received east of Hagers- town this morning. The Ruby car up- set and rammed a pole, due to slippery road. Mr. and Mrs. Ruby were injured, but not seriously. Two younger chil- dren escaped. The family was en route here to visit relatives. Willlam K. Newman, 18, son of Sam- el J. Newman, is at Allegany Hospital in a serious condition from a severed artery caused by the car in which he ‘was riding being sideswiped on the Bed- ford road. Rolyrt Lannon, 16, son of Harry Lan- non, was run over by an automobile end is at Allegany Hospital. THE HOME GARDENER THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ©, JULY 5 1931—PART ONE Practical and Seasonal Hints for the Amateur for Beautifying Surroundings of the Home. BLUEBERRY GROWING Of all the fruits, unless it may be the cranberry, none is more highly specialized in its growing requirements than the blueberry. Hence it is that many of those gardeners who have purchased blueberry plants for their gardens have failed to attain success. There are several kinds, or rather types, of blueberries, some of which grow best on upland soils, others in swamps and still others in soils of moderate mois- ture, such as characterize the usual garden. Blueberries are reputed to re- | quire an acid soil, but whether this is absolutely true there seems some doubt. It may b that the blueberry tolerates acid conditions rather than that it ab- solutely requires such an environment. However, until this question receives greater study, it is safe to state that the blueberry thrives best in acid soils and lack of acidity is a prime reason why many blueberry plants have failed when brought into gardens. Aluminum sulphate is suggested by Department of | Agriculture workers as a medium for increasing soil acidity. { Pruning seems to be an essential | need of the blueberry plant. There is an admirable discussion of pruning of the bush types of hlueberries in a re- | cent circular issued by the New Jersey Experiment Station at New Bruns- wick. Copies may be very likely se- cured from this station simply for the asking. In certain parts of the coun- | try pruning is accomplished by the simple expedient of burning every three years. Low growing blueberries have much of their top system underground in the form of running stems so that burning does not act the top or even half the top. Burning is more rapid than cutting and appar- ently more effective, since one strong | stem results from burning instead of three or four weak ones from cutting. Strange as it appears, burning seems to stimulate the blueberry to renewed activity. With most other plants that one may bring to mind, burning would | be disastrous. On the roots of the blueberry and other plants of the heath family there grows a symbiotic plant known as my- | corhiza. Apparently the two are de- | pendent on one another and beneficial to one another. Apparently when con- ditions favor the growth of the bl berry they also favor the development of its companion plant. Detailed studies upon the relationship between the two plants will undoubtedly aid in | developing blueberry growing to fits maximum extent. l FRUIT THINNING | Although thinning of fruit is essen- tially an operation for the commercial | grower, there is little question but that | the home fruit grower would also profit | by so handling his trees. The major purpose of thinning is to obtain larger fruit, but, incidentally, thinning bene- fits the tree by reducing the task of producing & crop and often saves dis- astrous results in the breaking down of limbs under the weight of an overload. Peaches, plums, apples and pears will all benefit by thinning if overloaded. ‘With bush fruits, such as the raspberry and currant, fruit thinning is prac- ticed by pruninng the plants rather se- verely in early Spring. Some years ago one of the Canadian Agricultural Experiment Stations ob- served that fruit thinning of plum trees materially increased their resist- ance to Winter injury, thus showing very definitely that overbearing is weakening to the tree. TFurther evi- dence was presented by the Michigan Agricultural Experiment Station, where measurements of the growth of thin- ned and unthinned plums showed very clearly that overbearing greatly checked growth. In thinning, it is well to wait until after the main June drop so that too | much of the fruit may not be removed. Rather obviously one should remove the smaller fruits and by all means the | imperfect ones. In the case of apples, | one well developed fruit per spur is| enough, with a spacing of five or six | inches between fruits. A tree is ca- | pable of carrying about so many fruits | to satisfactory maturity and up to a certain point the total crop as meas- ured in bushels will not be reduced by thinning, the larger size offsetting the loss due to numbers. After all is| said and done, who would not choose | a package of large well colored fruits| in preference to an even larger quan- | ity of smaller, less select specimens. I THE CATALPAS | At least two types of catalpa are found growing in this locality, namely, the tree form, now in full bloom, and the round-headed dwarf type, ofien known as the umbrella tree, used in| ornamental plantings. Frankly neither type of catalpa really has any place in | the small home grounds. The stiff for- mality of the umbrella tree is generally | out of place in the dooryard and finds a place only on large estates or in parks, and then only where a formal | design is being followed. Strange to state, ‘the soft. coarse-grained wood of the catalpa is very durable in the ground and has much value as fence- post material, but as plant material for the home garden the catalpa offers but little outside of its flowers. In fact, the long seed pods which follow the flowers are decidedly a nuisance as they fall to the lawn. BEES AND FRUIT I The following release should prove of interest to suburban fruit growers: “The use of ‘package’ bees for or- chard pollination is a recent develop- ment of much interest to beekeepers and orchardists,” the United States De- | partment of Agriculture reports. “For many years orchardists de- pended upon the natural supply of bees and other insects for pollination, but modern farming and orchard prac- tices have reduced the supply and it has been =almost necessary to import bees during the pollination period. “Orchardists need not be skilled bee- keepers nor keep a supply of bees. They may rent colonies of bees from a beekeeper. who will look after them, or buy ‘package’ bees. ‘Package’ bees are bees placed in small boxes by bee- keepers and sold to orchardists. All the orchardist has to do is to set the package in the orchard, pull the cork, from the box and let the bees go. When the pollinating season is over, he may dispose of the bees as he sees fit. One strong package of bees an acre is rec- ommended. ‘Package’ bees are pro- duced mainly in the Gulf States and| .|in Californie, whence they are shipped long distances by express or mail. | “On the whole, the practice of rent- ing colonies of bees has been found a better one for the orchardist than for the owner of the bees, because the bees may be poisoned by sprays or dusts which have been put on trecs. The cash rental often is not sufficient to cover this loss and the bees do not| ucually gather enough honey to make | it profitable.” SPRAY MATERIALS It is rather difficult for the gardener who may be endeavoring to protect his plants from insects to realize that sprays which effectively control one insect may be utterly of no value in checking others. This difference is due simply to the fact that insects eat in different ways. Plant lice, thrips and certal s r insects eat by thrusting their snouts into_the soft tis- sues and wing sap. Rather obvi- ously it is fpossible to kill these in- sects by ous sprays applied to the surface of the stems or leaves. In BY J. W. WELLINGTON. Illustrating the effect of the length salvia plants. The two pairs of plants day and still others have little preferen Agricultural Experiment Station.) food and water, but one pair has gone to growth and the other to flower. flowering pair had its daylight period shortened. The salvia, as gardeners know, blooms best as the days begin to shorten. Other plants of daylight on growth and flowering of are the same age, have had the sE‘r‘g! e favored by a long | (Photo by courtesy of New Jersey | ce. fact, the control of sucking insects is | rather difficult because of the fact that | few materials are powerful enough to kill the insects without also injuring | the plants. So-called plant poisons such as nicotine, pyrethrum and derris have given the best control of these | sucking insects. So effective are these plant insecticides that only a very| small portion is required in water to| make powerful insecticide. At the same | time these plant poisons are much safer | to use than arsenicals as concerns danger to people and animals. With the plant poisons mentioned there is no problem of removing the insecticide :,::L‘:ls“ is involved with arsenic ma- | On the other hand, leaf-chewing in- sects will not readily yield to the same | type of poison that controls sucking in- sects. Leaf-eating insects are generall more mobile and fly from the poison to other plants. Arsenic poisons sprayed on the foliage make the surest remedy | for leaf-eating pests. However, arseni- cals may injure the plant and its fruit Take, for example, the bean plant which has been found to be highly sus. ceptible to certain arsenates, such as lead and much less so to magnesium arsenate. In using arsenate of lead by | itself, it is always advisable to add at| least ‘an equal quantity of hydrated lime | to neutralize the free arsenic. If used | in Bordeaux mixture, there is enough lime present to prevent burnings. When in doubt as to the best spray material | to use for any crop, the home gardener | may well call on his State experiment station or the Department of Agricul- ture for recommendations. A few years ago beans were the easiest crop to grow, so easy in fact that there arose the popular expressions “any one can grow beans” or “as easy As grow- ing beans.” ‘This situation no longer holds true wherever the Mexican bean beetle has reached. In fact, unless the pest is controlled there are simply no| beans. No more ravenous pest ever appeared in the vegetable garden,since a day or two after its appearance the bean vines will be pretty well stripped of leaves and rendered useless. The Mexican beetle may be recognized by the characteristic appearance of the| young or larvea which one entomologist has rather aptly described as that of miniature dragons. The manner of eat ing also is unique, that of eating the soft tissue of the leaves and leaving the midrib or veins. The control is relatively difficult be- cause of the rapid eating of the beetles and their great numbers. Then again the bean plant is injured by cer- tain spray materials, such as arsenate of lead, which are commonly used as insecticides. Magnesium arsenate has been found to be an effective beetle poison and certain trade compounds of | pyrethrum also are useful. The latter | have an advantage in that they are not | poisonous to persons and animals. Pyrethrum materials are rather costly.| but for the small home garden are worth- | while because of their non-toxicity | Because of the rapid action of the Mexican beetle, it is well to have the spray material on hand and not wait| | until much of the damage is done. | GARDEN NOTE! Peonles often cause considerable worry to home gardeners because of | their failure to bloom. Various ex-| planations have been offered for this| failure, but none has really answered the question. One suggestion that is often | made is that the roots were planted too deep but some better treatment | than resetting shallowly must be de- vised as this is not successful. | The secret of success with outdoor| pansies seems to be to sow seed early enough to get large, strong plants before the omset of Winter. Plants may very | well reach blossoming age in late Autumn. Apparently a large amount of stored food helps the plant over ‘Winter. Hollyhock leaves now show rust very badly, too late to do much of anything this year. Consistent spraying with | boreaux mixture would have greatly checked this disease. The raspberry and blackberry offer| the singular botanical makeup of & blennial top and a perennial root. | whereas most plants of perennial nature have a perennial or annual top. With both raspberries and blackberries, the sooner the old canes are removed after fruiting the better, since they are of no_further benefit to the plants. Onions are often troubled with a fiy pest which lays its eggs on the base of the plants and the young larvae entering the root and causing the leaves to collapse. Corrosive sublimate solu- tion, one part of the chemical to 1,000 of water, poured along the row is an effective remedy. Heavy pruning of young fruit trees is not at all desirable; in fact a mistake in all ways. Just a day or two ago a home gardener showed the writer a young apple tree which was 12 years old and had never blossomed. Observa- tion showed the tree to have been pruned severely every year. The foliage Wwas green and luxuriant enough to sat- isfy any orchadist but, because of the heavy pruning and resulting strong growth, the tree was having ‘no op- portunity to lay by starches and sugars and other substances associated with flower bud formation. A year or two of no pruning would undoubtedly bring this tree into fruiting. ‘The common white daisy of the fields is a despised weed, yet claims relation- ship to the gorgeous Autumn chrysan- themums of the garden: in fact, bears the same generic name. About the best way to eradicate this daisy from lb!uxge flc'llga is to! mow off the blooms ore they mature, thus preventing| seeding. The field daisy is a blennhf| forming only a rosette of leaves the first year and blooming the second. If the wealth of experience accumu- lated by practical gardeners could be crystallized into pamphlet form and thus made available to every one, what a help it would be. Even the best text books fail to answer all the questions. The trouble in assembling knowledge into one brief text is that there are so many variations to each Guestion that one answer does not suffice. The char- acter of the soll, the drainage, the ex- posure to the sun and mang cther fac- tors disturb each problem.' Take, for instance, the control of the rose chafer, which eats the blossoms of the rose and | | | winners at the Spring exhibition, held \ITALIANS MAY related plants. On sandy solls, this in- sect is a serious pest, on heavy clay soils, it is scarcely a pest at all becau: the young cannot thrive in clay. According to Miss Lulu C. Richard- s0n, secretary-treasurer, the Montgom- ery Suburban Garden Club will meet in regular session at the Somerset School July 10 at 8 pm. Several of the members have been invited to make 5-minute talks on timely garden sub- jects. Prizes are to be presented to June 6 and 7. Mrs. J. H. Gormley, publicity chair- man of the Community Garden Club of Rockville, reports that a regular meeting of this club was held June 26 at the home of Mrs. Ford E. Young of Alta Vi The hostess was assisted bv her daughter, Miss Dorothy Young, and by Mrs. Walter Young. The spa- cious lawn was the meeting place. With regret the club accepted the resignation of its president, Mrs. George Hane. made necessary by recent ilness, and selected Mrs. B. T. Elmore, first vice president. to fill out the unexpired term Mrs. J. H. Gormley was chosen as first vice president for the balance of the | year. Following elections, the meeting | was given over to a question box discus- | slon, in which rose pruning received | major consideration. Wren houses were exhibited and the customary flower show was staged. The judges were Mrs. | Gormley, chairman, and Mrs. E. L. Bullard, Mrs. George Ninas, Mrs. W. Quaintance and Mrs. Willlam Wile: Among flowers exhibited were delpi fums, popples and lilies, arranged singly and in decorative baskets and | vases. Quality was excellent, partly be- cause of favorable weather and partly because of the limitations put on the quality of blooms brought by each mem- ber. The club adjourned to meet with Mrs. Agnes Magee July 10. A note from Mrs. Grace Hodges. | secretary, states that the June meeting the home of Mrs. Stella Hawkins, 1921 Thirty-seventh street, with a large | proportion of the members present. | Several new members were voted inw | the club, giving concrete evidence of its | thriving condition. At the meeting | there was arranged a Vvisit to the gar- | | dens of Mrs. Weckerley in Chevy Chase, | ,and to those of Bishop Freeman of the | | Washington Cathedral. The next meet- ing of the Burleith Club will be held July 16 at the home of Mrs. G. W. Moser on S street. | NEW HAMPSH.IRE RACING | BET INJUNCTION ISSUED Rockingham Park Track Wagers Halted by Court Order. By the Associated Press EXETER, N. H, July 4—A tem- porary injunction to halt betting at the Rockingham Park race track at Salem, N. H., was granted by Chief Justice| Willlam H. Sawyer of the New Hamp- | shire Superior Court yesterday. The | petition was filed by the county solictar upon the .order of the attorney general. The track opened two days ago after a lapse of many years in horse racing| in this vicinity.” Betting was conducted during the first two days under a sys- tem similar to the pari-mutuel. The petition was filed upon in for- mation gathered by five sheriffs of Rockingham County who said they| went to the track and each invested | $2. Four of them claimed they re- | ceived nothing in return while the fifth won $15. FIRE SIGNAL SUMMONS AID IN KNIFE ATTACK| ‘Wounded Colored Visitor in Chi- cago Assures Firemen It Is Not False Alarm. By the Associated Press CHICAGO, July 4.—The situation seemed to Jesse James, a Negro, to call for alarm. Hence James, who sald he arrived here a few days ag> from Highwood, N. C., pulled a fire alarm box signal ln% x;‘mud. sirens screaming the appara arrived at the scene, blsl l.her‘epwu ":; fire. James was sitting on a curb, nursing many knife wounds. “Did you turn in a false alarm?” asked Battalion Chief Jerry Falvey. “'Yes, sir,” replied James, “I turned in the alarm, but it wasn't a false one. I was walking along the street when a big man with a knife jumped out at me. There were others with him, all with knives. They all slashed me.” James was taken to a hospital. CHANGE PROGRAM FOR STIMSON By the Associated Press. ‘TURIN, Italy, July &—The the Duke of Aosta today may dr::\:l‘; flf some slight changes in the official pro- gre;:urrc;' rrege"n'um;i of the American of e, Henry L. Stimso; wn;hulkved ey e duke was a cousin of Kis - tor Emanuel and his death has nrirgfn the royal court into mourning. Flags throughout Italy were at half- :;s:"hmduy as the result of the duke's FARM AND GARDE! CITIZEN SOLDIERS ENTER CAMP TODAY 800 From District to Go to “Training in Third Corps Area of Army. More than 800 business and profes- sional men, including many from the District of Columbia, will pack up their troubles in their old kit bags and leave today for Army posts in the 3d Corps area. There they will don uniforms and for two weeks, under the direction of Regular Army officers, will receive training in the art of warfare. ‘The largest number will go to Car- lisle Barracks, Pa., where 365 Medical | Reservists will be assembled. These are chiefly members of the 304th, 305th, 324th, 343d and 364th Medical Regi- ments, the 362d Medical Squadron, the Corps Area Service Command and the 18th Medical Regiment, the latter from the 1st Corps Area. Additional posts with attendance at each are | Fort Howard, Md.—Twenty-three of- ficers, 394th Infantry. i ks Fort Hoyle, Md.—Sixty-six officers, 310th, 311th and 370th Fleld Artillery. Fort George G. Meade, Md.—Eighty- three officers, 80th Signal Company, 62d Signal Train, 322d Signal Battalion, 395th Infantry, 307th and 310th Tank Regiments, 79th, 80th and 99th Tank Companies. Fort, Washington, Md.—Twenty-three = Va—Eighteen officers, officers, 396th Infant; Fort M. Fort Eustis, Va.—Thirty officers, 393d Infantry. Fort Humphreys, Va.—One hundred and forty-four officers, 304th, 305th and 324th Engineers, 402d Engineer Squad- ron. Holabird Quartermaster Depot—Fifty officers, chiefly from Quartermaster Trains of the 1st Corps Area Langley Fleld, Va—Twenty-four of- ficers, 304th Observation and 405th Pursult Squadrons. Scholarships Offered. Twenty-two scholarships in technical and educational institutions are being offered this year to students of the seven C. M. T. C. camps in this area. The scholarships range in value from $50 to $300 for a course or in tuition leess' for tf(\e academic year. ven of the scohlarships are limited to Signal Corps candidates at Fort George G. Meade. One of these is of- fered by the Radio Corporation of America and three each by the Mary- land Radio Institute of Baltimore and Phone DIstrict 5215 LL OVER TO —the better to serve you ge Loomis Radio College of Washing- n. Coast Artillery candidates at Fort Monroe will compete for two scholar- ships, one each from the University of Pittsburgh and the Washington and Lee University of Lexington, Va. Basic and Infantry candidates from Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia attending camp at Fort Eustis, Va., will compete for four, two offered by Wil- liam and Mary College of Williamsburg, Va.. and one each by Hampden-Sydne: Coliege of Hapden-Sydney, Va., and th Danville Military Institute of Danville, Va. Other Scholarships. Basic and Infantry students at Fort Meade are offered four scholarships, one each from Western Maryland Col- lege, Westminster: Temple School of Washington, Charlotte Hall School, Charlotte Hall, Md. and Hampden- Sydney College of Virginia. Field Artillery candidates at Fort Hoyle, Md., are offered one scholarship each in Pranklin and Marshall College. Lancaster, Pa., and the University of Pennsylvania. Infantry candidates a Fort Howard are offered one each in Bucknell University at Lewisburg, Pa and the International Correspondence School of Scranton, Pa. Cavalry can didates at Fort Myer, Va.. will compete for one scohlarship in George Wash- ington University of Washington, D. C Infantry candidates at Fort Washington will compete for one scholarship offered by Carnegie Institute of Pittsburgh. m“m s An Exceptional Soap Value! Big 9-Inch Bars WN” Castile Soap 20-Oz. Bars Special . . Floating the ev sa! . 19c Pure white floating Castile Soap at a ri- diculously low price ! These bars are 9 inches long and weigh twenty ounces a lot of soap for your money. An excellent toilet soap for the bath, for baby and for shampooing the hair. More SAVINGS Check These Low Prices . . . 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In clipping the silken cord which officially opened the bridge, named after | him, Collier, a New York capitalist and South Florida developer, reiterated his | faith in Florida. | "He sald the low point of the business | depression. which the rest of the coun- |try has been experiencing, has passed in_Florida. | “Money talks.” he sald, “and the money I have invested In the State tells you what I think of the State | b i Argentenians say that the introduc- tion of American bathing suits into | thelr country has popularized svimming | there rin- alr of enter- . o A N S R Are you satisfied to grow grayer Up-to-date women are AW - ought of deception. 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