Evening Star Newspaper, April 9, 1935, Page 3

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RED CROSS HEARS PLEA OF RICHBERG Organization Akin to N. R. A. and A. A. A., Recovery Director States. An appeal for those with “the ideal- {sm and the public spirit” to support the Red Cross, to support also the Government's great recovery agencies, N.R. A and A. A. A, was voiced be- fore the annual convention of the American Red Cross last night by Donald R. Richberg, executive director of the National Emergency Council. Speaking before more than 1,800 delegates assembled in Memorial Con- tinental Hall, the New Deal advocate asked for appreciation of the idealism which is seeking to “bring the mod- erating influence of peaceful co-op- eration into fields of economic war- fare.” “This is a pmmml idealism,” Rich- berg continued, “because neither this Nation nor any other nation can long endure the disintegrating forces of modern industrialism unless it is disciplined and controlled by obliga- tions of publfe service.” Addresses Heard Today. The convention this morning heard addresses by Dr. Thomas W. Gosling of Washington, national director of the Junior Red Cross, on “The Junior | Red Cross Looks to the Future,” and | by James T. Nicholson, manager of the Chicago chapter of the Red Cross, on “War Service and Social Values.” g The convention dinner will be held at the Mayflower Hotel tonight, with addresses by Jesse H. Jones, chairman of the Reconstruction Finance Corp.. Senator Byrnes of South Carolina and Becretary of Agriculture Wallace. In his address last night Richberg asked for “an understanding of the need of angels of mercy and healers of the sick on the battlefields of trade and industry, where, as after armed conflicts, the wounded thirst and starve and writhe in agony.” Compulsion Is Denied. In his plea for understanding of N. R. A. Richberg denied the doctrine | of compulsion, for: “Those who sull‘ cherish the ancient delusion that| virtue can be compelled will seek again and again, and always in vain, | to establish by an unaccepted law | obligations that will not be fulfilled.” The New Deal spokesman admitted | that “many of those who in recent months heiped to raise the banner of the Blue Eagle, now feel that we would have moved more rapidly to-| ward a clearer understanding of a | high purpose had we chosen, not an symbol of force, but a symbol of peaceful co-operation to signify ad- | herence to a code of fair competition.” After referring to dissentions which have arisen under codes promoted by business groups, Richberg said with regard to the farmer: “Les us turn from this sorrowful | scene to observe for a few moments | the free and independent farmer, rescued from years of increasing mis- ery—rescued somewhat in the manner of one tessed from the second story window of a house on fire into a blanket held inexpertly by his well- meaning neighbors. Surprise, pain, pleasure and humiliation are strangely | blended in the experience.” Economic Connection Seen. With regard to Red Cross relief to economic sufferers, Richberg said: “Economic devastations that leave mil- | lions of victims in their wake have not been generally comprehended within the healing powers of the Red Cross. It may or may not be wise to combine the relief of those overcome by force of arms or natural violence with aid to the helpless victims of in- dustrial warfare and economic dis- order. Yet where could we seek to| find a gentler spirit or a keener desire | to aid victims of economic disorder | than among those who gather undar‘ the symbol of Christian charity?” | Another speaker last night was James L. Fieser, vice chairman n(' the Red Cross, in charge of domestic | operations, who pointed out that al- most 4,000,000 men and women joined the Red Cross at the last roll call| and that another push will put the | membership beyond the maximum of | the past decade. | “This year, above all others,” Mr.f Fieser said, “we must take stock to| see whether our program requires ad- | justment to new responsibilities in unmet fields and whether our chap- ter or national erganization requires adjustment.” B. J. Benzel of Oklahoma City, chairman of the convention, presided | at last night's meeting. Music was | furnished by the United States Army Band 7,000,000 Robins Counted. England has 7,000,000 robins, ac- cording to a recent census. I WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE * POR. ANY debts contracted by any one other m-n myself. JOHI R BRADBUR t.._Lyon Vi i el m‘u i inoxville, LOAD Indjanapolis Louissille. Yorl Buffalo. Cincinnati, TS TRANGFER (& STORACE GO 1313 U __Phone _North 3341 WANT PART LOAD TO AND LOAD FROM direction of Chicago, about :0th: -lso load toward Detroit. 10th: one-half price. OWNER-DRIVER. North (553, 1 WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY Qepts But tnose made 2 T N AR LR DUPONT IRON WORKS. National 3766 NU ‘TING OF SHAREHOLDERS Washington Permanent Building Associ- -u-n will be held at the office. No. 620 3 at _3:30 p. d fllr:ctors ?ROMANN Secretary. WAN’T HAUL_FULL_OR PART_LOAD or from New York. Richmond. Boston. Pultbuuh and all way points: special rates NATIONAL DELIVERY N.. INC.. SS] N Y n'e Natl._1460. Local movin AUCTION SALE—FURNITURE OF IV!RY aw.. D.m._for Sléction” of - omcers Polls open from 10 a.m. HERM. 2 B ANN H. Bl dining suites. dressers. t - oheds, linens dishes, NITED STATES STORAG! 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Metropolitan 4861. » | ceiving _smaller President Returns in a Happyr'Mood President Roosevelt was in' a happy mood when he returned to Jacksonville yesterday from a 12-day fishing Dave Sholtz of Florida after he disembarked from the cruise off the Florida coast. Farragut. He is shown here with Gov, THE EVENING Copyright, A. P. Wirephoto. STAR, WASHINGTON, SENATE SHELVES | MEAT SHORTAGE AND HIGH PRICES LAID TO A. A. A, (Continued From First Page.) drought rather than of the corn-hog program.” The A. A. A. tells its own story of the pork situation: “Hog slaughter under Federal in-| spection in January totaled about 3.000,000 head. This was 27 per cent smaller than the December slaughter | | and 43 per cent smaller than in Jan- uary last year. “It was the smallest inspected | slaughter for any January since 1911. Slaughter during the remainder of the | vear is expected to continue below the | average of recent years. “Average weights of hogs slaughtered | | are also running low.” Low Costs No Longer. Salt pork, ham and bacon were once | staple meats for families of low in-| come, but no longer. “Hog prices during the first week in March were the highest since October, 1930, and if the processing tax is added to the market price the cost of hogs | to packers is now the highest price since 1929. Current prices are ap- proximately double those of a year ago. The reduction in slaughter sup- plies has amounted to between 30 and 40 per cent,” the latest issue of the bi- | weekly Consumers’ Guide states. Beef today is at a premium. Four 1a0nths ago a pound of round steak was 27.5 cents cents and is going upward. Beef is| becoming scarcer daily for two rea- sons—consumption of slaughtered beef and lack of feed. Three farm crops selling above pre- war parity prices are corn, oats and barley. Hay is almost at parity. “The number of cattle on feed this Winter was the smallest in n. ny years,” said the A. A. A. Both beef and dairy cattle are | turned out to graze. Result—reduced reduced butter, | beef, reduced milk, and higher prices for all three. Supply Almost Gone. The economic despair brought to farmers by the drought led them to dump most of their better beeves on the market at one time last Fall. The price temporarily fell, but the year's supply of well-cared beef cattle was practically gone. “Supplies of beef cattle dropped off rather sharply in February. Receipts at seven leading markets in February were 490,000 head. This is 17 per cent smaller than in February, 1934,” the A. A. A discloses. ‘The acute feed problem, farmers’ nightmare caused in great extent by the reduction program planned as the farmers’ path to prosperity, will affect beef prices for years to come. Number of calves dropped this Spring will be less than in many years, officials state, and the price of veal is rocketing with the cost of beef. Lambs Plentiful. Lambs, excluded from any A. A. A. reduction program or licensing agrée- ment, have continued for a long period to sell with little deviation from a general level. Supply of lamb today is almost as great as it was a year ago. But if lamb becomes the only available meat by Midsummer, as seems probable, the supply will be speedily reduced. Here are some other official revela- tions on general food availability: “Market supplies of both poultry and eggs have been slight. This has re- sulted from the fact that farm flocks of poultry are smaller than a year ago and also that these flocks are re- rations because of higher feed costs. “Onion and cabbage supplies are expected to be rather low, “Potatoes are plentiful. “Lettuce, spinach and carrot pros- pects good for large crop.” Dealers’ Supply Cut. In a canvass of local wholesale and retail meat dealers they declared they F | were able to get only about half the meat stocks to supply the demand. Seven wholesale meat companies were unanimous in their reports that the meat supply, both pork and beef, is getting scarcer every week and that prices are continually on the upswing. These wholesalers said that although the receipts of meats were off 50 per cent there was very little change in the financial returns, since price ad- vances have taken care of the leuened volume. One meat dealer (the Birmingham Meat Supply Co.) said that at the present mate very few people would be able to eat meat within a short £ |time, but that if the supply kept falling off there would be little or no meat left for consumption by Mid- summer anyway. Several of the butchers explained they had received only half of what they had ordered from the whole- salers for the Saturday trade. Four of the wholesale meat dealers ‘the | declared “If prices keep on going up we dre not going to need the meats, because people will not be able to buy them, and if the supply keeps falling off, we might as well go out of business, because we won't have any stock to sell.” — Crops Battle Winter. CRISFIELD, Md., April 9 (#).—Early | crops are giving lingering Winter a battle on Maryland’s agricultural East- ern Shore. . Peas are above ground and potatoes are planted. Indications are the string bean and strawberry crops will be good. L] Today it tops 35| A documentary American history, assembled for one day only, was placed on exhibition this | morning in the Department of State and viewed by groups of invited guests. This display, arranged for the Amer- | ican Histor Association and beau- tifully installed under the supervision | with their ratifications by the various | of Mrs. Natalia Summers, archivist of | States, the department, began with the treaty | Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation of alliance with France and the treaty | elicited special interest. of peace which concluded the War of | of the name of the Emperor and | the Revolution and embraced almost President every important treaty since that time. properly settled, for he signed him- The signatures of the great of the self “Santa Anna." | earth, some faded and others as fresh | as when written a century since, were of commanding interest, while the great seals of a bygone day, each in its embossed box of precious metal and bearing silken cords of national colors, were a picturesque feature. The signatures included those of George Washington, Queen Victoria, Abraham Lincoln, George III of Great Britain, Louis XVI of France, Queen Regent Cristina Maria of Spain, Alexandria III of Russia, John Jay, Santa Anna, Napoleon Bonaparte, | Oriental kings and emperors, marks or picture-signatures of long-forgotten | Indian chieflams of tribes now ex- History Lives in Signatures State Papers Signed by Great of Earth Shown Here. cross-section of tinct, | and many others. To those fortunate enough to view the exhibit these great personages of a by-gone era seemed to live again. The first 10 amendments to the Constitution of the United States, the so-called “bill of rights” wgether were also on view. Abraham ‘The spelling of Mexico seems now One could view the treaties that | concluded every foreign war in which | this country has been engaged. The document ceding Alaska was included, | as were the ratification of the twenty- first amendment. Somae of the Orien- tal chirography, illumination and or- | namentation was beautiful to the u!-' most degree. The first ‘Thanksgiving | proclamation, signed by George Wash- ington and dated 1795 was a note- | worthy exhibit. | The display so painstakingly as- sembled is to be dissembled this after- noon and the priceless parchments |°Y will return to the vaults wherein they repose. SUBPOENA OF BANK RECORDS PLANNED IN LYDDANE CASE (Continued From First Page.) the evidence, Pugh told newspaper | men: “I'm not afraid of him. We are | coming to blows yet over this case. I'm prosecuting this case and I'll intimidate me.” Prescott is leader of the Democratic organization for Montgomery County which elected Pugh State’s ntwmcy last November. Prescott told newspaper men that it was customary of the State's at- sel to examine statements made against their client. He said this was true during his recent reign in the State’s attorney’s office and also during that of Robert B. Peter, jr., who is assoclated with him in the case. “I have requested these concessions repeatedly,” Prescott declared. “How can a defense be prepared when we do not know with what we are charged? The other defense attorneys and my- self will make a formal writen request for the concession.” Prescott was in Annapolis today and could not be reached for a state- Pugh after the Senator left his office. Precott denied the claim made by ing which was originally set for yes- terday and then was postponed until April 20. Prescott said that Pugh had called him last Friday and asked if he had any objection to the postpone- ment. He added that he had no ob- jection to the postponement, but had not asked for it. — CITY NEWS IN BRIEF. TODAY. Buffet supper, Jesters Club, Hamil- ton Hotel, 7 p.m. Dinner dance, Junior Red Cross, Mayflower Hotel, 8 p.m, Instruction in advanced contract bridge, aurpices of the Massachusetts Soclety of Washington, Roosevelt High School, £:15 p.m. Lecture and dance, Sons of Confed- :nu Veterans, 1322 Vermont avenue, pm. Meeting, Columbia Heights Business |Men’s Association, 3308 Fourteenth street, 8:30 p.m. TOMORROW. Luncheon, Delta Tau Delta Alumni Association, National Press Club, 12:30 p.m. Concert, Women’s Overseas Service Lelgue, Mayflower Hotel, 8:30 p.m. Luncheon, Lions Club, Mayflower Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Annusl meeting and election of di- rectors, Jewish Foster Home, 3213 Q street, 8 p.m. Meeting, Geological Soclety of ‘Washington, Cosmos Club, 8 p.m. Banquet, National Sojourners, La Fayette Hotel, 6 p.m. Luncheon, Rotary Club, Willard Hotel, 12:30 p.m. Luncheon, Soroptimist Club, Willard Hotel, 1 pm. Meeting, Washington Philatelic So- ciety, Carlton Hotel, 8 p.m. Supper dance, South Carolins State Society, Shoreham Hotel. !Ae'.uu by Manly P. Hall, “Cele- the Fu brated Prophecies canecnlu ture of the United States,” Masonic Temple, 801 Thirteenth street, 8:15 pm. » knock his block off if he tries to| torney's office to permit defense coun- | ment regarding the outburst made by . Pugh that the defense had asked for | a continuance of a preliminary hear- | REGISTRAR AT TRINITY IS FATALLY STRICKEN Sister Margaret, Native of Bos- ton, Dies Suddenly at College Here. Sister Margaret of the Trinity, since 1927 registrar of Trinity College here, died suddenly at the college last night. Born in Boston, Sister Margaret | | was the daughter of the late John | and Margaret Sweeney. She was educated at Boston Latin School for | Girls and at Trinity College. Two | brothers, D. Willlam Sweeney of| Litchfield, Ariz, and Charles H.| Sweeney of Watertown, Mass., survive. | Funeral arrangements will be an- | nounced later. “MEDEA” TO BE STAGED The modernized version of “Medea” will be presented by New College of Columbia University in conjunction with Wilson Teachers College April 29, at the Roosevelt High School Auditorfum. The company has just begun an engagement in New York, and on April 21 will start a tour of Eastern and Southern colleges. Marriage Licenses. Warren M. Etchison. 17, and Prances L. 16, both of 1341 15th st.; and Helen M. both of Ellerson. Var Rev. o rayin it .. and Virgini wma'l“h’l Fessenden st.: "fl bnlh of Danllle Vl Rev. H. H. M. Albtugh, 3. and Pannie 8, George Sliverstong,’ O Db more: Rev. David C. . . and Elizabeth C. Eari of Blchmnnd Judge V. Leger. 25, Glen Echo. Md.. and Bonrer, 21 !nrlnrfleld W. . M, Perki Tk and Almn Blackburn, Lot Rev. Harry John E. “Dl'ln 48 1:th st. and Pen: Yan Biimingham. 43. Ry n M. Hennig 0K F'st “and. Shir- 9, 3021 i T1e 8 art, 21 002 5 4 Harf 5th s Aan Mildred % Srimmel, 20,212 Virnom Robert Branch. 30, oth of Baliimore: et Beoree Bilver: whltlocl. 20, and Margaret - M'c'Do m of Rehmon'd "Re‘v l'l.:“l ug! Raymond Mllllr 30,08 Hazel Edwards. 'wport News, Va.: Rev. Deaths | Reported. Den! Bussiere. 85. Nationsl Homeopathie al. McDermot, 68, Walter Reed Gen- Hosoital rt P, Hart. 87, 1212 30th Arth.n' L. Willard, 65. 2101 canneetleul Notman Henry, 60, Gallinger Hog ital. William 8. Moye, 57, Wes! rrace. Roga Maunheimer. B 14 Massachuseits ry L Monshan. 56, 1432 V st. BO a8 Y liter Keea éneral Hos- ital. Jobn L. Mulligan, 52. Walter Reed General ne l.-. Pflagsharyt, 2, Children’s Hos- Inl -n lwood g‘-vln‘ Gallinger Hospital. ln‘lnt oo icr-Horsial J rduzn. :!2. Pr’)lvll:gn“u munlm {1 S AT o BT Lurl C-ny IB. G mg&érflg{pfi‘l&l- TIME TO HAVE YOUR SPRING HAT CLEANED REBLOCKED BACHRACH T RN A. By the Associated Press. | trunks, his suitcase and last, but not | Bruno, D. C., TUESDAY, FOOD-DRUGS BILL Copeland Prefers Setback on Calendar to Return to Committee. After a week of consideration in the Senate, the Copeland food and drug bill was laid aside and put back on the calendar of waiting business lafe yesterday, when opponents of whe measure in its present form won & victory on the first controversial | amendment. | Senator Copeland, Democrat, of New | York, preferred this course to a counter proposal which had been made to send the bill back to com- mittee for further study. His temper ragged from a week of debate on the measure, Copeland fairly pleaded for more time to meet opposition to the bill through penonnl conferences. With immediate action on the bill averted, the New Yorker, who has struggled two years for a complete re- writing of the 30-year-old pure food laws, declared it was his intention to | “sit tight” and let public reaction have | its effect on the Senate. He felt, t00, | it might be influenced by President | Roosevelt's recently expressed desire | for moderization of the act. By a vote of 44 to 20 the Senate | attached amendments proposed by Senator Bailey, Democrat, of North | Carolina curbing the authority given the Secretary of Agriculture in the bill to make Nation-wide seizures of a product found misbranded or misad- vertised. The amendments would give the Secretary authority to seize only a sample of the disputed product, leaving muitiple seizures subject to .pprovll of Federal courts. . HAUPTMANN CLAIMS HE PAID TOO MUCH INCOME TAX IN ’32 {Conlisuos Weow Tias Paee. ) the income from fur to said partner.” Describing Fisch's departure for Germany, the petition said: “Isador Fisch, on the eve of his de- parture from New York City for Ger- many in December, 1933, being obviously convinced after almost two years of partnership dealings with the petitioner, Bruno, that he was honest, reliable and loyal * * * came to the petitioner, Bruno's residence on East 222nd street, the Bronx, New York | | City. and left everything with him, These belongings consisted of his two | least, that diabolical shoe box. “Unfortunately for the petitioner, he made no examination of the contenis, either at the time nor | later, except that he was informed y Fisch that the trunks contained some 400 Hudson seal skins. Concealed Money. “But, unwittingly to the later, the tubercular furrier had freakishly | | concealed some $14.600 of Lindbergh | ransom money in gold notes in the shoe box which Fisch, with his im- plicit trust in his partner, entrusted to him. “The equally freakish, but acci- dental, discovery by the petitioner, Bruno, of the contents, behooved him to take steps as he considered most | necessary to make the moneys safe | and secure in keeping with the trust | imposed in him by Fisch and the | petitioner Bruno, in his great excite- ment and dilemma, ingeniously con- | cealed the gold notes in his garage. “Unfortunate for the petitioner, Bruno. this very concealment led to his apprehension and all the world | Malaya in January were the g‘l’(lml‘ knows the rest of the story.” | Ford Ford : Ford V-8 Victoria. Ford V-8 Victoria Ford V-8 D. L. Tudor Ford V-8 Std. Coupe.. Ford V-8 D. L. Tudor.. Ford V-8 D. L. Fordor. -8 Std. Coupe..$459 354 V-8 Std. Tudor .. V-8 Std. Coupe.. Ford V-8 D. L. Fordor. Ford D. L. Fordor Ford APRIL 9, 1935. Slaying Figures YOUTHFUL KILLER DE- CLARED INSANE. Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. Gay Williams (below), 20-year- old youth, who beat to death 7- year-old Kathryn Cline (above) with a jagged stone in a barn near Drumright, Okla., was adjudged in- sane yesterday a few hours after the victim's body was found by neighbors and police. Williams told police he killed her so she could g0 to her mother who is dead. He was immediately taken to the Norman State Hospital. Admitted Slayer Of Girl Rushed to Asylum for Insane Less Than Day Needed| to Dispose of Okla- homa Slaying. By the Assoclated Press. DRUMRIGHT, Okla., April 9—The case of Gay Williams, 20, was closed today, less than 24 hours after he stoned a neighbor’'s daughter to death. | Before funeral arrangements were | completed for 7-year-old Kathryn Cline, whom Williams bluntly con- | fessed he killed at her own request, the undersized, pinch-faced youth was hustled to Sapulpa, called insane by the county judge, and moved on to the Central State Hospital at Nor- man. The child’s battered body was round in & barn yesterday and the boy said the child asked him to kill her “be- cause she wanted to go to her dead mother.” N Auto Registrations Soar. Automotive registrations in British | in any month since 1929. JOHN H. DILLON Navy Department Says: “I've always believed that you must look farther than low price for value. I bought a Gold Star Car because I want- ed quality first, and knew that Hill & Tibbitts is the kind of a firm that backs up its claims,” Today’s Special! 1934 FORD V-8 TUDOR SEDAN Glossy black finish like new. Every detail carefully checled. Road test proved it far above average. 1114 Vermont Ave. N.-W. 1423 L St. N.W. Builders of 5949 Ga. Ave. N.W. Automotive 1820 14th St. N.W. Confidence WSWAINMEASURE PASSED BY HOUSE Eliminated From Bill, However. (Continued Prom First seems highly important that profit be limited if not eliminated in war. “Nevertheless, this worthy undertak- | ing must not be allowed to assume any form that will hamper, cripple or destroy the more vital thing of pro- ducing the necessary war materials when they are needed. The preser- vation of the country must come first. “The six basic elements in the in- | dustrial mobilization plans prepared by the War and Navy Departments are Government regulation of indus- | try, price fixing, priorities, licensing, commandeering and excess profits | taxes. War Department Attitude. “It is noted that these same six essentials form the basis of the bill proposed by your committee. The War Department believes that all are necessary and that if properly ad- | ministered they will accomplish the purpose intended. “While the War Department is not | prepared to express a fixed opinion as to whether or not the rates pro- posed in the bill are unduly restric- tive, the provision for a maximum annual profit of 3 per cent appears open to question as not constitut- ing a fair return.” Explaining his own bill, Flynn de- clared the income taxes it applies would have brought approximately $12,000,000,000 during the war years of 1917 and 1918 instead of the $5,290,000,000 he said was brought to the Federal Government by taxes of all kinds during the same period. \ The measure provides for taking 50 | per cent of all industrial profits of | less than 6 per cent and 100 per cent of all profits above 6 per cent. “It has been said” Flynn began, ! “that while the industrial executive has a strong feeling of patriotism in his bosom, he also has a strong love of profits. That is their own estimate of themselves.” He added that his bill depended upon the motive of patriotism to in- duce ample production of war mate- rials “but this allowance of profit is put in to satisfy the unwilling ex- ecutive with an appetite for profit.” In addition to the $12,000,000,000 he said the Government could expect additional revenue from liquor and tobacco taxes and from other sources. He said the cost of the war to this country was about $8,500,000,000 dur- ing 1917 and 1918. His bill is more drastic than the | McSwain bill and the outcome of the rivalry between the two is awaited with interest. The last edition of The page, is ;rinud at 6 pm., city at 5 at 70c per month. This is a special service the very latest and complete news of the NOW 1 EAT FRIED PORK Upset Stomach Goes in Jiffy with Bell-Ans Conscription of ManpowenBEu.ANS-‘ FOR INDIGESTION Turn your old trinkets, jew- elry and watches into MONEY at A.Kahn Jne Arthur J. Sundlun, Pres. 43 YEARS at 935 F STREET Marketed by “Washington’s First Fuel 0Oil Distributor” 30-inch size. Folds very easily. Specially priced for one day Night Final Delivery Star, known as the Night Final, and carrying a row of Red Stars down the front and delivered throughout the per month or, together with The Sunday Star, that many people desire for day. Call National 5000 and say that you want the “Night Final” delivered regularly to your home, and delivery will start immediately. VITAMIN referred a most Beginni tinuing VITAMIN "D" SRR e Each Quart of our Special ‘D'MILK to contain not less than 400 (usr) VITAMIN'D UNITS frequently to as “Bottled Sunshine” is important element in the daily diet of all growing children. ng with the baby and con- on down through the years to the oldest adult it provides those ingredients which are so essential in the building of good strong healthy bodies—preventing entirely the possibility of that dreaded disease so prevalent among under-nourished children ‘knownas rickets (caused by lack of proper bone formation). By a process petfected in the University it is now possible laboratories of the Columbia for your children to get this important vitamin in the usual quantity required . . . embodied in their daily milk supply. OUR VITAMIN *D* MILK IS PROPERLY PASTEURIZED—RICH—PURE—WHOLESOME— adelicious drink which will be enjoyed by the whole family in addition to its particular HEALTH GIVING QUALITIES. 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