Evening Star Newspaper, April 10, 1932, Page 11

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., APRIL 10, 1932—PART ONE. REHEARING DENIED 1 DOOMED YOUTHS| Colored Boys Accused by White Girls Scheduled to Die May 13. By the Assooiated Press. MONTGOMERY, Ala, April Seten eolored youths under death sen- tences for attacking two white girls near Scottsboro were denied rehearings by the Alsbama Supreme Court today and their hopes of escaping execution were narrowed down to two possible avenues—intervention by Gov. Miller or an appeal to the United States Su- preme Gourt. May 13 has been designated as the date for their electrocution. That day | was set by the Supreme Court last March 25 in affirming the sentences, and it was unaltered by today's decision. Application for réhearings was made by George Chamlee of Chattanooga, de- fense attorney, the day the sentences | were affirmed. At the time he announced an appeal probably would be taken to the United States Supreme Court in event the petition was not granted. | No intimation has come from Gov. Miller that he considers intervening. The youths weze convicted largely on the evidence of the girls, who testified they were attacked aboard a freight train while hoboing their way home after a vain search for work in Chat- tanooga. They said a number of white boys accompanied them, but were thrown off the train by the colored youths. + The youths under death sentence are | Ozie Powell, 17, and Charlle Weems, 21, of Atlanta; Andy Wright, 17, and Heywood Patterson, 17, of Chattanooga ; Olem Montgomery, 17, Monroe, Ga., ant Willie Robertson, 17, and Clarence Nor= ris, 18, Columbus, Ga. ——— JEFFERSON SOGIETY WILL MARK BIRTHDAY Group to Place Wreath on Statue at Capitol on Wednesday Morning. The Society for a National Capital Memorial to Thomas Jefferson will ob- serve the birthday anniversary of the Virginia statesman and former Presi- dent on Wednesday morning. The feature of the ceremony will be the placing of a wreath at 11 am. on Jeflerson's statue at the Capitol by Col. Francis Scott Key-Smith, great- g’nndson of the author of “The Star gled Banner.” Col. Key-Smith is vice president of the memorial society and will officiate in the absence of its president, Senator Harry B. Hawes of Missouri. Mrs. Mabel Jennings Fry will have charge of the ceremony. This commemoration of Jefferson’s birthdey is intended by the officers of the society to mark the of efforts to induce to rec-qnize, by a suitable memorial in the C pital, Jeflerson’s share in creating the = nited States and in enlarging its area. i:cept for a few small statues, a street nd a school which bear his name, th~' say Jefferson is almost tunhonored in /ash- ington my a monument. WOMEN TO OPEN LAW ENFORGEMENT PARLEY Convention - Will Bé Conducted Simultenéously With Prohibi- tion Pair. The Constitutional Convention, com- prising women representing 12,600,000 members of the Woman's National Com- mittee for Law Efiforcement, will be held in the Washington Auditorium be- ginning next Sunday simultaneously with the ing the Prohibition ::xxlr wceb; 1d all zM;eek. it was oun: yesterday . Henry W. Peabody, chaifman the committee. Thmm for the convention and fair bégin with brief dedicatory ceremonties in the main auditorium, fol- lowed by a private viewing of the ex- hibits in the faff by delegates and | e Paul Re “Paul vere” program, featuring prominent speake: and emphasizing the “alarm” sounded by Revere for | Americans to awake to the danger to liberty, will miark Mond#ty's program. Tuesday morpi Mrs, Peabody will preside at & “Valley Forge” breakfast, Washingthin canceps o ns. oeoreS on’s concept of alty and obedience of law g thmd dl night's program. e CONCERT WILL MARK BICENTENNIAL FETE; Public 8chool Pupils to Present Program on May 28 and 30. feature that A concert tn commemoration of the 200th anniversary of the birth of George Washington will form the trien- nial Spring music festival of the Dis- trict Public Schools, to be presented on the evenings of April 28 and 30 in the Central High School Auditorium. A feature of the concert will be the presentation of a cantata, entitled | “Washington,” composed by Ira B. Wil- son. Dr. Edwin N. C. Barnes, director of music ih the local vallr schools, will direct the singing of 1,000 sixth-grade | children, who will take part in the cantata Rehearsals have been going forward for the past six weeks and will begin on daily schedule Monday. WILL ADDRESS JEWELERS r D. Rothchild and Gus Nei- | meyer on Tri-State Program. Myer D. Rothchild, jewelry tax au- thority, and Gus Neimeyér, president of the Jewelers' Securify Alliance of New York, will be the principal speak- ers at the eighteenth anmual conven- tion of the Tri-state Jewelers' Associa- | tion, to open at the Mayflower Hotel May 1 Approximately 500 jewelers from the District, Maryland, Delaware | end Virginla are expected to attend | the three-day meeting { Arthur J. Sundlun, president of the sssociation, heads the Washington jew- elers making plans for the convention. C. V. IMLAY WILL SPEAK Charles V. Imlay, vice president of the National Conference of ission- ers on Uniform State Laws, will speak on State line complications and thejr cure tomorrow night at the Torch Club. The meeting, to Club at 6:30 o'clock, will follow a meet- ing of the directors of the club, sched- uled for 6 o'clock. M. C. Merrill and John T. Vance will lead the discussion on Mr. Imiay's talk. Cosmopolitan Club to Dine. Plans for the “Iadies’ night" eclebra- tion to be held by the Cosmopolitan Club at the Shoreham at 7:30 p.m. nest Saturday have been completed, Lewis A. Payne, ehflrml;d of l:u ‘\;;auu-némeret in charge, announ yesterday. Stal with a dinper, the program will inc] Ll held at the Cosmos | di Patent Office to Have Public Reception Left right: Secretary of Commerce Robert P. Lamont. Patent C Ewing, pr:’:ld:—n of the American Patent Law Association, who will speak at the moming session of the celebration ol! | the opening of new quarters of the Patent Office tomorrow. AMOUS inventors, accompanied by | for chemical research; Dr. E. R. Weid- ] but this principle was not at all in| industrial and public leaders and | lein, metallurgical research engineer: attorneys from all sections of the country, will gather here tomor- row to pay tribute to the new building that now houses the United States Patent Office and to the first itent commissioner and pioneer fellow ventor, George Washington ‘The program calls for a celebration of the official opening of the north wing of the $17,500,000 new office building the Commerce Department, occupied by the Patent Office. It is arranged and will be carried out by a nationil com- mitteé representing scientific aniza- tions, patent law assoclations and ehambers of commerce in nearly all of the 48 States. A mes of New York City is ¢thairman of the committee, and How- ard 8. Smith of Dayton, Ohio, is see- retary. Other members are William M. Corse of this city, George I. Haight of Chicago, Henry Howson of Philadelphia, E. W. McCollough and H. E. Stauffer of this city and Henry Van Arsdale of New York City. ‘The morning session will take place i the Commerce Department’s main auditorium. Secretary of Commerce Lamont, Patent Commissioner Thomas E. Robertson and Thomas Ewing, presi- dent of the American Patent Law Asso- clation and former patent commissioner, will speak. ‘Theé afternoon session will include the opening of the Patent Office for public inspection, with Commissioner Robert- son and members of his staff acting as hosts. A reception will be held for officials and delegates to the celebration. Will Decorate Memorials. Afterward wreaths will be placed on meémorials in various parts of Wash- ington in honor of famous inventors and national figures who have aided in- ventive progress. Lincoln, Washington, Jefferson and Franklin, all of whom have inventions credited to them, will be so honored, and the memorials to John Ericsson, near the Lincoln Me- morial; Joseph Henry, near the Na- | tional Museum, and muel B. Morse | will also be decorated. ‘The final and evening session will | consist of a banquet at the Mayflower Hotel. the speakers will be Charles F. Kettering, director of re- search for the General Motors Corpo- ration, and inventor of ignition sys- tems and lighting devices; Dr. Frank B. Hewett, president of the Bell Tele- phone Laboratories, and Wallace R. Lane of Chicago, internationally known | authority on patent law. It is the second event of its kind in American history. The only simi- lar event was the Inventors’ and Manu- facturers’ Congress of 1891, which celebrated the beginning of the sec- ond century of American inventive progress. | The removal of the Patent Office from its old quarters at Ninth and | P streets was started on January 1 last, and was completed only a short time ago, marking the final evacua- tion of a building first occupied 90 s dgo. Efforts to obtain adequate ousing have been going on for many years and the success of these efforts according to members of the National Committee, is an event of vital im-| portance to inventors, manufacturers and the general public. | The new home of the Patent Office | is designed for efficient operation. The public search room and sclentific M- | brary in the new buildi: are con- sidered the finest of their kind in| the world. The office is sometimes referred to as the largest 10-cent store in the world selling one product. Each working day 22,000 copies of patents are sold at 10 cents each. Application for patents run about 80,000 a year and amerided_applications amount to more than 200,000 annually. This agency 1is almost entirely self-sup- porting. Among the inventors who have signified " their intentions of attending the celebration are Orville Wright, co- inventor of the airplane; Prof. Michael 1. Pupin, ploneer in electro-magnetism, particularly in connection with long- distence telephony; Prof. Elthu Thom- son, inventer of electric welding and numerous other developments in light- ing and power; Dr. L. H. Baekeland, inventor of Bakelite, of photograhpic papers and innovations in organic chemistry and electric insulation. Dr. Willilam R. Whitney, director of the research laboratories of the Gen- eral Electric Company; Dr. Charles L. Reese, consultant for E. I. du Pont de Nemours; Dr. William D. Coolidge, in- ventor of ductile tungsten and X-Ray developments; L. W. Wallace of the American Engineering Council. Lee Pin Inventor. Dr. W. 8. Lee, inventor of the Lee pin and a pioneer in high tension hydroelectric power development; Prof. A. D. Little, inventor of processes for chrome tanning, electrolytic manufac- ture of chlorates, artificial silk, gas and petroleum; Prof. Wilder D. Bancroft of Cornell, prominent in the chemical world; Dr. Howgrd McClanahan of the Franklin Institd®e. John Hayes Hammond, ir., inventor of torpedoes, projectiles and radio con- trol systems, originator of more than 400 peace and wartime patents here and abroad; Carleton Eills, inventor and chemist in petroleum products, gasoline manufacture, ofls, waxes, resins and other compounds, Samuel M. Kintner of the Westing- house Electric and Manufacturing Company; Dr. Ambrose .Swas ventor of the Swasey range tion finder and a manufacturi chine tolls ang world-known astrc ical instruments, such as U scope at Washington; Dr. rup, developer of Instrumen methods for producing measuring high temperatures; Prank J Sprague, ploneer in rallway electri: tion and elevafor eonstruciion Others who have acceple are Felix Hebert, chaln Patent Committee, and Sirovich, chatrman, House Patent Com- William J. Grabam, presiding ,"Court of Customs and Patent Appeals; Oscar E. Bland, Clarles 8. Hatfleld, Plxl;u Garrelt, Irvine L. Len- root, associate judges, and Arthur B Shelton, elerk J the court. Dr. George K. Burgess, director Bureau of Standards; Dr. Scott Turner, tor Bureau of Mines; Gen. C. cK. Saltaman, chalrman Federal Radio Commission; Gen. B. D. Foulols, 2““ of Air Corp of Army; Admiral flliam Adger Moffe', chief of Burean of Aetonputies; Dr. George W. Lewis, director National Advisory Council on Aeronautics; Dr. L. 8. Rowe, director general Pan-American Union. F. Tru- bee Davison, -Assistant Becreiary of War for Aviation, and David 8. Ingalls, Assistant Setretary of Navy for Avia- tion. Tinlus Olsen of Philadelphia, David Ross of Purdue University, J. K. Lilly, mng:l'u'c'mnu chemist; Dr. Harrison E. Howe, organiser of groups am William P. MacCracken of the National Advi Oommittee for Aeronautics Dr. Alvin Macauley of the Packard | Motor Co., James T. Newton, former patent commissioner; Mr. Melvin H. Coulston of Washington, F. I. Allen of New York, Silas H. Strawn and Wallace R. Lane. Established in 1790. The Patent Qffice was es Philadelphia by George W v April 10, 1790. Under the original statute cases were decided by a board consisting of Secretary of State Thomas | Jefferson, Secretary of War Gen. Kno and the Attorney General Edmund Randelph and letters of patent were signed by President Washington. Cleri- cal work was done by one clerk under | the Secretary of State. The first patent was granted July 31, 1790, to Samuel Hopkins on a method- making “pot and pearl ashes.” ’ | | | bl ‘Twelve years later the seat of Gov- ernment had been transferred to Wash- ington and the Jefferson administration directed organization of a Patent Bureau with Dr. Willlam Thornton in charge. His salary was $1,400 a year. He was allowed one clerk at $500 a vear, a mec-sengsr at §72 a year, and a horse | for the messenger's convenience. It's first quarters were in “Crockers' two-story house,” on Eighth street, b tween E and F streets. Later hea quarters were moved to the “Blodgett’s Hotel” on E street between Seventh and Eighth streets. After 6,170 patents had been granted up to 1829, President An- drew Jackson ordered an inquiry in the office’s affairs. It was charged the office was behind in its wo Similar charges prevail today. The first inquiry resulted in one additional clerk Seven years later. however. under an investigation started by Senator John Ruggles of Maine, sweeping changes were made in the system of patent law and practice that were without prece- dent in all history. The requirement that preliminary examinations be made threw the burden cof determining pat- entability upon the Patent Office and provided for the first time in any coun- try an adequate means of protecting the rights of inventors by giving letters patent a prima facle standing of va- | lidity. | ‘These changes were accompanied by authorization for an increased Patent | Office force and the constructicn of the building at Ninth and F streets. In this same year fire completely destroyed the Patent Office and all its models and records. Upon ccmpletion of the new | building the office was added to the | Department of Interior. The effects of wise legislation of 1836, according to historlans, were beginning to become apparent then in the wealth of invéentive skill that was flowering uncer its protection. About 1,000 pat- ents were being granted yearly and America was rapldly outdistancing her contemporary nations in the scientific and méthanical arts. Acts Are Codified. By 1870, revisions, amendments and consolidations of patent law had bé. come cumbersome. Scme 23 acts dnd | parts of acts had been superimposed upon the basic law of 1790 and the re- forms of 1836. These laws were, there- fore, codified. The problem of person-{ nel for the office came to the front but nothing in particular was done about it. By this time it had become traditional that increases in the force always | lagged far behind the requirements. The number of patents granted each year | had grown to 13,000. | econd disastrous fire occurred in destroying the model halls in two wings and 100,000 models. By 1898 the growth of the Patent Of- | fice had reached a point that the build- | ing began showing slgns of being over- crowded. Many reforms were planned but few were carried out. It was not that reasonable provision a for catching up with the work by increasing the personnel, and it was not until the first four months this year that modern quarters were ovided Among the suggested reforms that are being discussed at present are: Crea- tion of a Supreme Court to replace the District Court; limitations of the time during which the substance of a patent | application remains secret; speeding of Patent Office machinery to cut down the average of about five months’ delay application can come to the examiners; increase pay ystem for Patent Office ow numbering 1.440, to pre- | 1eavy turnover in trained men to fake up the more lucrative law; aid for ification division, which is far in its work and consequently and complicates the work of the irman Dykes and other members mmittee in outlining the Amer- lean patent system said the United States produces about two-thirds of the | s patentable inventions. This pronounced leadership, he sald, is due | far less to aceldent or chance than to the amazing plece of legislation which | is not widely appreciated except in the t professions pointed out that the average | n takes for granted that an fh- | tor is entitled to his own invention, J% IO 14 INDIVIDUAL PIECES VERED HOT Al g A $1.00 Drive to 13 14th St. NW Call North 6617, ommissioner Thomas E. Robertson and Thomas | | cost to recover. | out that some fereign systems require | tems also require a yearly tax, which sPECIAL All Ladios' Drosses, $1.00 Ties, 6 for 50¢ | | Men's Suits Overcoats, T8¢ ea. Hats Cleaned and Bloocked, 506 up Don’t Forget Our Lauhdry Service INVENTORS TO PAY TRIBUTE TO NEW HOME AND TO FIRST COMMISSIONER general acceptance in 1836 and it is not | applied today in sevéral countries. Some systems are mainly mere registrations. Anybody else may register the same idea and & heavy burden of court costs reflects upon the inventor, The committee explained that years of research and_ costs of developing devices may be lost under some sys- tems because the imitator has too good a chance to win out in court, and with- out a lawsuit he can undersell the in- ventor, because he has no development It was also potnted manufacture within a specified time, so that commercial interests can some- times wait for an inventor to go broke snd then gobble his idea. Some sys- may increase disastrously. Failure to pay means cancellation of the patent. Some systems put the patent fees so high that they are prohibitive to the man of small means. The best of the foreign systems are modeled largely on our own, but the United States had a tremendous timé advantage before other countries realised theé necessary fundamentals of a sound patent law. Three Fundamentals. The committee sald these funda- mentals, as proven by this country's own system, are three. The preliminary examination which gives patents a standing in court, reasonable fees with- in the reach of the average wage earner and the principle that a patent com- pletes the inventor's responsibility to the Government. Patents in this coun- try are valid for 17 years, and the in- ventor may throw it away, sell it, or forget it. He pays no taxes, does not have to manufacture, and has no fur- ther rules to comply with. Commenting further, the committee said: “There is sometimes a great deal of commotion about patent ‘reform’ and injustice to inventors in our system. The system is not perfect and it un- doubtedly has minor defects which can be corrected from time to time to meet changing conditions. But the funda- mentals of our system are sound. Fur- thermore, there is no existent system which is as effective and beneficial to the country at large, as witness our record of 1,800,000 patents to date, with a wide majority of the outstanding de- velopments of the age. “Many of these patents originated with foreign-born individuals or people of foreign paremtage. The entire Na- tion came, not so long ago, from for- | eijgn and aboriginal stock. There is nothing occult in the American at- mosphere that makes inventors of the same people who invented much less in a foreign country. American leader- ship is direetly traceable to our system of patent law, and, though this law may feed adjustnient to new developments now and then, the fundamentals are sound.” Patent examiners sald the most out- standing 10 inventions during recent years afe the electric furnace, steam turbine, internal combustion motor, moving pictures, airplanes, wireless, vacuum tube, induction motor, linotype and electric welding. A secondary list includes television, flotation recovery from low-grade ores, the cyanide | process for recovery of gold, synthetic menthanol (wood alcohol), synthetic ammonia, artificial silk, artificial | lacquers, hydrogenation of ofls, gaso- line cracking, invention of special metal alloys, mechanical refrigeration, air | conditioning and automatic machinery in general TORN BILL SENT MELLON Chewed by Dog, Says Owner Call- ing for New 85. A badly torn $5 bill came in the/ mail to Andrew W. Mellon some time after the former Secretary of the Treasury had left for London to become Ambassador to Great Britain. The money had been chewed by a dog, ac- cording to an accompanying letter, asking a new $5 bill D. D. Shepard of Mr. Mellon's per- sonal staff, who is handling his mail here now, resorted to the proper kind of name for the money, in sending it to the Treasury for consideration. “Please place this ‘doggone’ bill in the right channels.” he wrote. And| now the Treasury Department is| “chewing” the question of what to do| about the $5 bill, under regulations on | mutilated currency. WATCH REPAIRING BY EXPERTS The repair of your watch does not complete the trans- action between us, but estab- lishes our obligation to fulfill our guarantee of service. All Parts Used in Our Repalr Department Are Genuine Material a2l G SLNW. DIA.OHD!SI“C‘ 1868, ROSE SALE Saturday and Sunday Only Expertly grown. old field-grown, muitifiora seediing roots. Dug while you wait from our own nursery grounds. Nowhere can you buy stronger plants, $1 to $1.50 Grades 30 leading varieties of Monthly Blooming and Climbers. 65c ea.; 9 for $5 Japanese Barberry $:year-old, 18 inches, 10 in bundle .......co.000.. 8100 2-year-old, 15 inches, 10 in bundle ...80c No charges—free delivery. Phont orders accepted. YATTSVILLE NURSERY, 28 Ookwood Rd. -G | Selected 3-year | | | i UTILIIES'‘EVASIVE TAGTICS' ASSAILED Report Charging Bad Faith to Promoters Goes so Far Some Repudiate It. By the Associated Press. NEW YORK, April 9.—Public utility regulation was pictured as having been weakened by the e “sive tactics of speculative promoters a report made public today by the Po. :y Committee of a round-table conference of experts. So vigorous was the language of the report t it precipitated a flutter of repudiations from some of the con- ferees, who convened yesterday to dis- cuss a “liberal” policy of public utility regulation. Prof. William Z. Ripley of Harvard University disclaimed any responsibility for ¢ report because it was “too SWe ¢ and indiscriminate in charg- ing bad faith and corruption to opera- tors.” Amendment Inserted. Members of State and Federal regu- latory bodies inserted an amendment in | the report acquitting them of any part in it. The report, which was not adopted but merely “received,” said in part: “Regulation, as now generally ad- ministered, has falled to protect invest- ors in public utility securities against the loss of billions of dollars resulting | from unsound methods of valuation and financing. It has failed to secure for the small consumer rate reductions eor- responding to the decline in prices and wages or the technical trend toward increased domestic use. It has failed also to safeguard the credit of the com- panies placed under its supervision and control. “Effective regulation of public utili- ties has been progresslvely weakened as a result of the definite policy of evasion imposed upon the industry pro- moters who contrdl public utilities in the interest of speculative profits de- rived from manipulation of their securi- tles.” Washingtonians Dissent. The amendment disclaiming re: - spon: sibility was offered by Milo R. Maltbie, chaifman of the New York State Public Service Commission, and concurred in | by David E. Lilienthal of the Wisconsin | Commission and his chief economist, E. W. Morehouse; Frank R. McNinch of the Federal Power Commission, Fred- erick P. Gruenberg of the Pennsylvania Commission, Gen. Mason R. Patrick and William A. Roberts of the District of Columbia Utilitles Commission. ‘The report was written by Frank P. ‘Walsh, chairman of the New York State power authority and head of the Policy Committee ENGINEERS TO BANQUET G. W. U. Group Will Attend Din- ner Tonight. Undergraduates and alumni of the| Engineering School of George Washing- ton University attended the fourth an- nual engineers’ banquet last night at the Mayflower Hotel. Toastmaster of the occasion will be James H. Platt, and Gen. Amos A. Pries, U. 8. A, retired, will be principal spsak- er. Honor guests will include Dean Laphan of the Engineering School, | President Claude Heck Marvin, A. A. MecDaniel, president of the Washington Society of Engineers; Col. C. H. Birdsey, chairman of the American Soclety of Civil Engineers; Irvin Fullmer of the American Society of Mechanical En- gineers and representatives of other im. portant engineering lons. Banish TWO DRY AGENTS HELD IN SLAYING Kill Grocer, Wound His Wife, Who Thought They Were Hold-up Men. By the Associated Press. DALLAS, Tex.,, April 9.—Two Federal | prohibition agents were charged with murder t6day for the slaying of Marion MecGlothlin, 50, proprietor of a gasoline station and grocery. They are N. D. Heaton and L. C. Smith, Willam McCraw, State district attore it the charges. belief they were hold-up men. The of- | ficers were arresting Lester Cox and his wife, Ruby, In McGlothlin’s piace. ‘Thinl a robbery was occurring, Mra. McGlothlin seited a pistol and painted | it at one of the agents. He shot the weapon from her hand, the bullet tear- ing off several of her fingers. | McGlothlin obtained a shotgun. The other agent opened fire. McGlothlin fell with three bullet wounds in his body. Myrs. Cox said one of the agents “told Mrs. McQGlothlin to stop her noise or | he would shoot her again.” | District Attorney McCraw said he | would demand high bail bond. | Smith, one of the agents, was con- victed of manslaughter in 1921, and received a two-year suspended sentence. | 'PRESIDENT WILL GET FIRST ‘BUDDY POPPY’ | Veteran's Daughter Coming From Michigan Especially to Present It. The first “Buddy Pop in the 1932 sale by the Veterans of Foreign Wars will be recelved by President Hoover tomorrow at noon. The President will get his poppy from 4-year-old Betty Joan Christian, whose father served overseas during the World War. She is making the trip from the Veterans of Foreign Wars National Home for Widows and Orphans in | Michigan especially to give the flower | to_the Chief Execative. Each year since the Nation-wide uddy Poppy” sale was begun in 1932 the President has extended his official | indorsement of the drive by accepting the first poppy. This year, as in the past, President Hoover has followed the custom established by former Ptesidents of further recognizing the objectives of the sale with & personal letter addressed | to the commander in chief of the or- | ganization. Proceéds of the sale go to assistance of veterans. It is estimated that at | least 1,600,000 are in serious néed #t | present. regularly every evening day morning at a cost of oe?lu daily .:adt 5 cents Sunday. you are '-Inb. of this Household Drudgery Rubbing and Scrubbing can be CUT IN HALF with this NEW and highly efficient cleanser! Use PASTE FRENCH for dishes, woodwork...an: ything that needs regylar cleaning. Mix it with warm water and the dirt flies. DOES NOT ROUGHEN THE HANDS. Try it for spring housecleaning. If your grocer or paint store does not sell PASTE FENCH, buy from us direct. 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