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A—10 #» Braths. SURCK, CRAMER A, Suddenls. o on Pri- tobe: m. At A home Rockville, Md. CRAMER beloved husband of ~Addie M:P'ullnd Puneral service Monday. t-"Mary's Catholic Church here reauem mass wili am. - Interment Rock- ville Union etery. BURRISS. REUBEN SYLVESTER. On Prl-v fay. October = Lo:id. at Rockyille. Md, REUBEN SYLVESTER BURR E 73 years. Remains resting i e "Eo- Ionial funeral home of Wm. Reuben Pumphrey. Rockville. Md. M uneral serv- ices at the Free Meihodist Church. Es Rockville, Sunday, October E Unierment Rockville' Utiion SIE M. On_ Pridav. Ov:- ELSIE M. BYWATERS of e n.w. beloved wife of L. ol at 1 Tietment" Cedar HUI Cemeters: E. On Fridsy. October Chicago. Tl.. ,years, beloved mother oM Robin. Mrs. Charles Rosen- Tenht"Mrs, Warry Krakow. Mrs. Leonard Ashbach, George. Benjamin and Harry Cohen. ~ Funeral from lb! chapel of Bernard Danzansky. 3501 14th st. n.w. e October Bt 11 &, In- terment Adas Israel Cemetery. CAPT. CLARENCE C. H. D] is life on Priday. October 2 ot ek o Jate Mourit Alo Howpital, Capt. CLARENCE C. H. DAVIS. beloved 'husband of ~Mattie ~A. Davi AR devoted stepson of B0, Wilkiny and the son of the late Mary E. Wilkins. Notice of funeral hereafter. - On Tuesday. September OLIVER Leloved husband of Mrs. Etla Dlxon ‘devoted son of Mrs. Mary Dixon, He also leaves 10 mourn their loss one sister. Mrs. Gertrude Howard: a_broth- er. George Minor: stepdaushter. Kethein Wills; one uncle. Willle Minor: _two aunts. Mrs. Louise Small and Mrs. Anna Coleman, "and other relatives ~and friends. ' Remains temporarily resting at the Morris A. Carter funeral home. 2nd . until 6 p.m. Saturday. ipihefealter at the above ad: Funeral Monday. October 5. at 13 o'clock. from the Friendship Baptist Church. Ist and H sts. s.w. Interment Arlington National Cemetery. GANN, EDWARD EVERETT. On Priday QOctober 2. 1936, at_his résidence. 3508 Macomb “st. n.w. ERETT GANN. "beloved hiisband ‘of Dolly Curtls Gann.’ Notice of funeral later. GLEW. HENRY GEORGE. Suddenlr on ber 5. HENRY n T Glew and Ramsvll of Ot- A. Glew of Des B Glew of Dallas D Glew of at Tathier “of Mr thinwn. CTowar Ben Moines, Tows: Dr. P Censer.” Towa. and Washington. D. C. aing Test the §. H. Hines Co al hom T4th st now. Notice of funeral la JENIFER. JAMES H. Departed this lite on Thursdav, October 1. 193 am. at his residence. road. Anacostia. D, C e JAMES H. IFER. son of John Jenifer and the late | Molly Jenifer. husband of Fannie Jen- | ifer. stepfatner of Allen Nichols. ~He leaves o mourn their loss one sister, Georgianna Davis: four _ brothers. Thomas. Joseph. Mason and Daniel Jen- ifer. and a host of fri from his late residence. road. Sunday. October 4.®at 10 a Interment St. Charles County, Md. Rel atives and friends invited. KING, W her '3, t his residence. 56 st. n'w. WILLIAM H. KING. husband' of the late Anna L Kine md brother of Mary C. Kini resting af the above residence, of funeral later, EL. On Briday. October o tamt JEN- La Thelr Joss & devoted daughier: Mrs. Hilda Jeflerson: loving mother. Mrs. Lula Lord: loving sister, Mrs. Myrtly Wilson and ‘a host of ‘other relatives and friends. "Notice of funeral later. LUCAS, ELIZABETH (BETTY). On Thurs- | dav.’ October 1. 1936. at 209 Virginia avel se., at 9 am. ELIZABETH LUCAS. 8he s 'survived by three sons, Fred. William and Cyprian Lucas. and a host of other relatives and friends. Remains may be viewed at Frazier's (uneral home. 9 R T ave n.w. after 5 p.m. Satur- | 2" Fineral Monday. Octo- from the above men- establishment: _thence to Vincent De Paul's Catholic Church South Capitol and M sts. where mass will be offered at 9 am. for the renose of his soul. Interment Mount Olivet Cemeters. 4 MARGERUM, FRANKLIN R. On Priday. October 2 1936, at Washington Eani tarjum. Takoma Park, Md.. FRAN] R.. beloved husband ' of the Re o ab 3 tobe: 21 2 pm." Relatives and friends invited. Interment at Burtonsville, Md Suddenly. on Thurs: 926, at Pittsburgh. MAY. beloved husband Amelia May (nee Waterholder) and fa- ther of Gustave W. May. Remains Tesiing at the home of his sister. Mrs. George Reckert. 3130 Dumbarton ave Rill;qmhere the tuneral will be held on Monday at 9:30 am.: thence to Holy Trinity Church, Georgetown. mass will be offered at 10 a.m. ment Mount Olivet Cemetery. tives and friends invited. LLY. EDITH R. On Priday, Octo- er . 1030, au her residence. 3100 N ED] the_beloved wife of Eiorse T Meculiy. e o atse Gue Yived by five sons and two daughiers. Funeral W, where Inte Rela 4 Southeast funeral home. T 50" am, for the re- Pose of her soul. Relatives and friends invited. Interment St. Alovsius Church Cemetery. Leonardtown. Md. 4 PHILLIPS, GILBERT THOMAS. On Wed- nesday, September 30. 1936. at Homeo- pathic_Hospital. GILBERT THOMAS PHILLIPS of 5723 13th st. n.w.. loved husband of Pauline A. Philiips And father of Gilbert T. Phillips. ir.; M. and Jaaqulin_ P. Phillips. Remains Testing at S. H. Hines Co. funeral home. 2901 14th st. n.w. Funeral services at ce Lutheran Church. 16th anc Var- num, ‘sts. n.w. on Monday. October 5 0. Tt et Chtnwood Cem: 4 r«wrlow MIRAND. day. ober Eonn, OMIRANDA . wife of the late Theodore L Pomeroy. mother of Mrs. James A. Vaughan and Crosby N. Boyd. _ Funeral services at her late home, 76 Maple ave.. Greenwich, Conn., on Sunday. October 4. at 3 p.m. Serv- jees also will be held ¢t the home of her brother. Theodore oves of 1730 Rew Hampshize ave.. Washington. D. S on Mondav. October 5. at 11 a.m - terment Rock Creek Cemeters. w.:n ingion "RANDALL. NINA._ Ot Saturdar. oumm 2t Garfield Hospital NIN, RANDALL, “beisved wife ol George W. Randall. Remains resting at the W. W. Chambers Co. funeral home. Chapin st. n.w. Notice of funeral later. ROLLINS. M. REBECCA. On Priday. Oc- tober 3. 1936. at her residence. 14 5th e M “REBECCA ROLLING. heloved wife of Thomas E. Rollins. She is also survived by three ilsters and two broth- | ers. Funeral Services at the w. Chambers Co Tuneral home. 517 1194 on Monday. October 6. at 2 p.m Retailves "and iriends: sre incited. “In: ierment Fort Lincoln Cemetery. 4 SCHOTT. LOUIS M. On Thursday. Octo- 958 s M residence, 32 Eonn“ave. LoUs M SCHOTT: beioveq husband of Fannie Schott and devoted | father of Mrs. Barnett Kadin. Funeral from the chavel of Berrard Danzansky. 14t 5 nday. October inferment Washington Hiehrew Cemeiery. lx GEORGE. _On OYES. On 't Grenwien. Priday. October 2. the beloved hus- Six. Funeral serv- W. Chambers Co. funeral hnme 1400 ('h:run st. n.w. on Monday, LoD At a.m. Relatives and | Intérmeni - Arlineton Natlonal Cemeters. . AUGUST ERNEST. Saturday. October 3. 1036, dence. 150 Trinidad ave. e ERNEST G. beloved _ father of Willlam: Sitie Mis. Atnes Sciioerr of Baltimore. Md.: Mrs. Caroline McDuffe of Detroit. Mich. and Mrs. Florence Lofgren. Remains resting at the W. W. Chambers Co. Southeast funeral home. £17 11th st. s.e. Notice of funeral later, FUNERAL_DIRECTORS, ]ou h F Birch’s Sons ghone we West G004 3034 "“‘"” hed 1841 3034 M St. N.W. V. L. SPEARE (0. Neither the successor to nor connected with the nrhzl al W. R Speare establishment. NAtlona 283 St. N.W. J. William Lee’s Sons Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Crematorium 4th and Mass. Ave. N.E. Lincoln 5200 " Frank Geier’s Sons Co. 13Seventh 8t N.% NAtional 2473 1 Ln«em Chapel _‘Tel One of the Largest Undertakers in the Werld 1400 Chapin St. N.W. Col. 0432 517 11th St. S.E. Atlantic 6700 Suddenly. on at his resi- AUGUST Nance‘ &t | Robert | 1400 | Braths. PENCER. HELEN H. Departed this life b~ csuurdly October 3. at_12:30 Am. at ¥ Pbg,v d aaf:.n of Clayton Robtnson ‘and_sister 'of_Staniey Robingon and wife of Thomas en- . Notice o! lunenl later. SUTTON, AAR: 1036, at me ‘resident of the late Mary Eliza Sutton. survived by four sons and one daugh- Remains resting at the above ad- Sunday, r t OFtohere Jaterment will be made at 3 p.m. 4 K GEORGE CONDOS. On Th 'I'ALA! F!Or 1. 1036, at Olrfleld Hos- G DOS EORGE CON g'e'lflm nephew of Nick, -r.xn nm:n‘ Services at. the W. Co. T nome. 1400 cn.mn nan Mon tober 5. 3 hence io St. Sophia's Ghurch &t and L sts. n.w.. ‘where services ‘Wit ‘be. held p.m. Relatives and friends are favitea” Pinterment Ariington National Cemetery. 4 On Thursday. October Dm, st her Tesidence. 'SON. mony Cemetery. . SARAH ANN. On Friday. Oc- mm AL Der yesidence, V25 8 st. be- Inved wido- n( the lll! ‘William Watkins of Montgomery, Ala. and devoted mother of Luly W be Mond Scott Jackson. Dr. Willla of Los Ansies. Gertrude L. Watkins, Alice W._ Garrott of Los Eherler D, Watkins of Los Ane Teral’ Sundav. October 4, at 10 from her late residence. ' Interment af Montgomery. Ala. Friends invited. 4 In Memortam. JACKSON. LEWIS A. 1In sad but loving remembrance of my dear hushand. LEWIS A. JACKSON. who_departed this Tife one sear aso _today. “Thursday. Oc- tober 3, 1935, Only God knows my loneliness And how long has been this vear, How 1 try to hide the sadness And t0 check the lonely tears. I have had my year of sorrow, I am suffering an awful loss. But for the sake of Jesus ar the cross. WIFE. ELOISE JACK- MULHALL. CAPT. JAMES E. Jn loving memory_of our devoted fat Capt JAMES E. MULHALL. who ‘Geparied this t = Gl HIS CHILDREN. EDNARD E. GANN, Gann Believed Victim | of Heart Attack. | Edward Everett Gann, husband of | Dolly Curtis Gann, died yesterday \ afternoon in his home at3508 Macomb | street, where his famous brother-in- | law, former Vice President Curtis, died | last February. He would have been | 56 October 12. Mrs. Gann was in Evansville, Ind., on a speaking tour in behalf of Gov. | AIf M. Landon. She will return to JWashingwn today, funeral arrange- | ments awaiting her decision. Tin| Mr. Gann went to bed ill Wednes- ‘dm but did not call a doctor, be- | lieving he had only a mild attack of ! indigestion. He returned to his law office in the Union Trust Building | Thursday. Feeling ill again yester- | day, he remained in bed. | About 2:15 p.m. Antonia Erlebacher, | a maid, heard a noise in Mr. Gann's "room and summoned the chauffeur, who found his employer dying. | M Gann'’s body was taken to the Morgue, and Coroner A. Magruder MacDonald issued a certificate stating | death was caused by heart attack. Dr. MacDonald said he understood Mr. Gann caught cold in Wednesday's rain while pausing to watch a world t 'senn scoreboard. Almost eight months ago former | Vice President Curtis died in another { room of his brother-in-law’s house | under much the same circumstances. | Mrs. Gann was downtown shopping | and Mr. Gann was at his office. Death ‘clme suddenly from a heart attack after he had been found unconscious | by Miss Erlebacher. Silent in Famous Feud. During the famous feud between | Mrs. Gann and Alice Roosevelt | Longworth over social precedence, Mr. | Gann remained silent. His wife was | official hostess for the Vice President, but he was represented as never wanting or expecting social position. | The late Vice President and his | modest brother-in-law were the ! closest of companions. Mrs. Gann, in a book published in | 1933, described her courtship's be- | ginning in 1911, by an “ofce-holding Democrat,” and then marriage four | years later. | Mr. Gann was born in Monticello, Ky., the son of a country doctor. After taking his L.L. B. from the | Jefferson School of Law, Louisville, ‘Ky., in 1908, he practiced in Louis- | ville. He was appointed as an Inter- | state Commerce Commission attorney | and examiner in 1910 and four years \lnber was named special assistant to | Attorney General Gregory. He served i;;zthe Department of Justice until 1. War Service Offered. Shortly after the United States en- | tered the World War Mr. Gann was | offered a major's commission in the Quartermaster Corps. He went to his chief, the Attorney General, and an- | nounced he was leaving. The At- torney General declined to release him, saying he was more valuable in his department post. At the time of his death Mr. Gann was Eastern counsel for the N. Y. C. & St. L. Railroad and counsel for the le- gations of El Salvador and the Do- minican Republic and the Midconti- nent Oil Association. He was & mem- ber of the Metropolitan Club. Besides tire widow, the only sur- vivors are a brother, John Gann of Ensley, Ala., and a sister, Mrs. H. L. Doddridge of Birmingham. HEIMWEHR CHIEFS OUST MAJ. EMIL FEY Former Vienna Commander Criti- cized for Actions at Time of Dollfuss Assassination. BY the Associated Press. VIENNA, October 3.—Leaders of the privately financed Heimwehr army last night expelled Maj. Emil Fey, for- mer Vienna commander, and issued & communique forbidding Heimwehr men to have anything to do with him. A sharp statement criticized Fey's COMLEY %5 Artidlte Floral Designs by S¥peria’ { Night Phone. Clarenaon 261-J-1____ i GEO. C. SHAFFER EXPRESSIVE FLORAL TRIBUTES A’ ,’J%IREATI PRICES. PHONE NAT 0]06 “and Sundays Cor. 14th & Eye actions at the time Chancellor Engle- bert Dollfuss was assassinated June 25. 1934. “In 1930 Fey went his own way,” the communique said, “and his activ- ities have not been explained at the ballhausplatz (dmweum) when Dollfuss was murdered * * .* Fey's bitter rival for control of the B 56, DIES SUDDENLY Husband of Dolly Curtis! | the unity of the organization,” all| | members would be subject to expui-| THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Champion Farmerette MISS GERTTE TER MAATEN, American-born Dutch girl, recent winner of the farmerette con- test at the Los Angeles County Fair at Pomona. The girl cham- pion won her title from 12 girls of all nationalities who competed in the contest of pitching hay, husking corn and churning milk. —Wlde World Photo. Heimwehr has long been Prince Ermtl It was reported at Vienna Heim- Von Starhcmberg, who like Fey was| wehr headquarters that 50 per cent once Vice Chancellor of Austria. of the membership resigned during Starhemberg, who called the meet- | the day while Starhemberg was re- ing of Heimwehr leaders which ejected | 8arded as trying to get into supreme Fey, notified his Vienna subordinates | authority during the increasing pre- that since Fey “attempted to destmv‘dmmm of cabinet changes. Argentina now has etght motion ple- ! ture producing companies. sion if they 30 much as spoke to Fey. SALES TALKS WITH RETAJLERS WHO CARRY MAGAZINE - ADVERTISED PRODUCTS === y/) v 11 Does ‘Local Dealer’ mean DO A. C. CHAPIN RITES 2 PM. TOMORRO Former Representatwe to Be Given Funeral in New York Chapel. Funeral services for former Repre- senitative Alfred Clark Chapin of New York, who died yesterday of heart disease at Montreal, will be held at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the chapel of ‘Woodlawn Cemetery outside New York City. Mr. Chapin, who was 88, was the father of Mrs. Hamilton Pish, jr., wife of Representative Fish of New York. At the time of his death he was returning %ith Mrs. Chapin to their home in New York City from Murray Bay, where they had spent the Summer. Mr. Chapin had been ailing since September 9. when he was stricken with a heart attack. Born in South Hadley, Mass., on March 8, 1848, Mr. Chapin was grad- uated from Williams College in 1869 and from the Harvard University Law School in 1871. He began law prac- tice in New York the following year. For many years prominent in poli- tics in New York, he was a member of the State Assembly, 1882-83; was State controller, 1884-87, and was Mayor Brooklyn from 1888 to 1891. Mr. Chapin was elected as a Dem- ocrat to the Fifty-second Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the death of David A. Boody. He served from No- vember 3, 1891, to November 16, 1892, when he resigned. From 1892 to 1897 he was railroad commissioner of New York State. He continued to practice law until 1923, when he retired. He is survived by his widow, Mrs. Charlotte Storrs Chapin; his daughter and four grandchildren, all children of Mrs. Fish. They are Alfred Chapin Rogers and Miss Susan Rogers, both | children by a former marriage; Eliza- beth Pish and Hamilton Fish, 3d. Leaps to “Cure” Headache. CHICAGO (® —Pisheli out of the | Chicago River by a couple of bridge tenders, Theodore Lavelle, 45, gave this explanation for his leap: “Since 1908 I've been an elevator operator. Recently my employers forced me to wear a uniform and the cap hurt my head, so I figured I'd be; { better off dead.” SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1936. FLYER'S BODY LEAVES Naval Reserve Aviator to Be Buried in West. P‘!NBAOO!A. Fla., October 3 (#).— ol Claire Dell Schaffer, 22- val Reserve cadet, who was ‘ujed m'ldly night when the plsne he was piloting on the last flight of his training course crashed at Corry Pield here, was placed on a train bound for Los Angeles, Calif.,, his home, last night. Schaifer, s former foot ball star at Loyola (Calif.) had beenstationed here 14 months. His plane, a one-seater, went into & spin at a height of 700 feet during a night formation flight. HYMAN W. WITCOVER SERVICES ARE TODAY Dr. U. G. B. Pierce Officiating at Funeral for Former Official of Masonic Council. Funeral services for Hyman W. ‘Witcover, 65, former secretary general of the Supreme Council of Scottish Rite Masons of the Southern Juris- diction, with headquarters here, were being held at 2:30 pm. today in Hines' funeral home, 2901 Fourteenth street. Rev. Dr. U. G. B. Pierce, pastor of All Souls’ Unitarian Church, was the officiating clergyman. Burial | was to be private, in the family plot in Fort Lincoln Cemetery. Mr. Witcover died Thursday night at the home of his brother, David Wit- cover, at Darlington, S. C., where he had lived since retiring in 1934 | due to failing health. He was an architect and formerly followed his profession in Savannah, Ga. A Thirty-third Degree Mason, the Supreme Council of Scottish Rite | Masons for Georgia since 1911. At the time of his death he was inspector general in Georgia of the Grand Cross of the Court of Honor, Scottish Rite Masons. DINNER-DANCE TO—NIGHT Raleigh Haberdasher Employes to Mark Silver Anniversary. A dinner and dance tonight at the National Press Club for employes and executives of Raleigh Haberdasher will celebrate the store’s silver an- niversary. Clarence W. Grosner, owner and | | president, will address the group. YOU? HE ad that reads “Go to your local dealer now” should ring the bell on your cash register. If it doesn’t, no matter how many sales it makes for the manufacturer, it’s a dead issue, as far as you’re concerned The way to determine in advance whether magazine advertising will bring sales to your store is to sure it covers enough of the families who shop in your neighborhood ... who look upon you as their local dealer. The products listed here are backed by that all-important ingredient, neigh- borhood sales power. These manufacturers are supporting your store by using THIS WEEK, the magazine that covers your customers and your neighborhood just as thor- oughly as this newspaper does. For THIS WEEK is an integral part of this newspaper, and of 20 other great metropolitan papers. Consider what this means to your store . . . Consider how many copies v make nently. UNITED NEWSPAPERS MAGAZINE CORPORATION leffllulflhfiu-lkv- CHICAGO: mleWAm DETROIT, Geaaral Motors Building SAN FRANCISCO: 100 Bush Street Wm-“lflq <Y 3 Witcover had been a member of | of this paper go into the homes of your customers . . . How it has proven to retailers who advertise in it, that the whole family reads it, shops through it, responds to it promptly .. . Now add to this the power of a first class magazine. Rich color print- ing to catch the eye and rouse buying wants . . . Top-notch magazine enter- tainment, to get reader interest and long life for each ad . .. And 4,500,000 circulation, to cover 21 of the manu- facturer’s leading markets, while at the same time, doing a real local sales job for you. Because it combines the qualmes of both magazine and newspaper, THIS WEEK rings up sales and profits for both the manufacturer and you. It’sone advertising tool whose users deserve your fullest support and cooperation. Push the products in your line that are listed here. Display them promi- Feature them in your own advertising. You'll find it well worth while. 30 SCOUTS HUNT ROCHESTER CHILD Beat Through Woods and Swamps for Boy Missing Since Last Sunday. By the Assoctated Press. ROCHESTER, N. Y. October 3—| More than 300 khaki-clad Boy Scouts | beat through woods, fields and swamp- land and patrolled highways today searching for 9-year-old Charles Bren- nan, missing since last Sunday morning. At least 10 Scouts from every troop in the city, in charge of Wallace Christiansen, Scout field commissioner, Jjoined the hunt. Police Capt. William McLaughlin, two detectives and a patrolman began the search yesterday. The hunt centered in the section west of the Genesee River, where the boy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Brennan, has been reported seen. The Salvation Army's portable kitchen was to furnish coffee for the searchers. The missing boy's father told police | ‘hh son ran away once last Spring, but returned before midnight. \} The youngster vanished Sunday. He came home from Sunday school without his umbrella and was sent| back for it. He did not return home. | Police Capt. McLaughlin said the | best clue was furnished by a woman | | who said a boy came to her home\ Thursday night and asked for food. She told police she thought the re- | quest a prank by a neighborhood boy and sent him away. Despite a disposition that fre- quently caused his parents consider- able worry, the boy was a great read- er, well up in his classes in the fourth grade at school and occasional ardent | collector of everything from stamps | to bottle tops. } Commodity prices in Great Bnuin‘ have risen 20 per cent in a year. (edar Hill Washinglonds most Beandfful ’ Cmeterg | PRODUCTS MADRID GOVERNMENT DEFENDED AT GENEVA Spanish Delegate Declares It Is Legitimate Because It.Has Support of People. By the Associated Press. GENEVA, October 3 (A).—A fery defense of the legiiimacy of the Madrid government was delivered before the League of Nations Assembly today by Cl':lm Ossorio-Gallardo, Spanish dele- gate. The Socielist administration exists, he said, “because it has been instituted with the enthusiastic support of almost the entire Spanish people.” On its side, asserted the delegate, are ranged “all the forces of democracy.” The Madrid government is legiti~ mate, he declared, because it meets the test of “having no officials imposed by military force, by revolution, /by money or by any other underhanded means.” Ossorio-Gallardo warned countries contesting his government’s legitimacy they may some day regret their action because “revolt might break out in any of them.” “Then,” he asked, “would they per~ mit us to decide which of the contend= ing powers was the legitimate govérne ment? Would they permit us to place | revolutionaries on the same plane as themselves?” —_— Map Borders Highway. Rochester, England, has set up a | huge map in a frame beside the high- way to indicate places of interest in the district. Is One of the Largest Undertakers in the World With 3 Funeral Homes 7 Chapels—14 Parlors 40 Assistants, 25 Cars, d Ambul ere: his business, The Greater Clmnbm Co. I GRee: 517 11th St. S.E. Call ATlantic 8700 THE MAKERS OF THESE ARE GIVING YOU BOTH MAGAZINE POWER THE NEIGHBORHOOD SALES PUNCH OF THIS NEWSPAPER - ALLCOCK’S MANICARE ALKA-SELTZER ARMSTRONG QUAKER RUGS BATTLE CREEK FOODS BAUME BENGUE BELL-ANS W. J. BLACK BOOKS RDEN'S CONDENSED MILK YER FACE POWDER CALUMET BAKING POWDER CAMPANA’S ITALIAN BALM CAMAY SOAP CARTER LIVER PILLS CASH’'S NAMES CHEVROLET CARS CONTINENTAL CANS CRISCO DEL MO! DIOXOGE! DODGE CARS E PINEAPPLE JUICE CREAM DOUBLEDAY DORAN BOOKS DR. EDWARDS’ EYE-GENE FRIGIDAIRE DRI-BRITE WAX OLIVE TABLETS FLORIDA GRAPE FRUIT E. FREDERICS PRODUCTS GANTNER-MATTERN SWIM SUITS GENERAL TIRES GLOVER'S SHAMPOO HEINZ PRODUCTS HILLS BROS. GINGERBREAD MIX HINZE AMBROSIA IVORY SOAP LIPTON’S TEA MAYBELLINE MURINE NONSPI NUJOL OXYDOL HUBINGER STARCH HYGEIA NURSING BOTTLES I0DENT TOOTHPASTE JELLO ICE CREAM POWDER & MIX JOHNSON & JOHNSON CORNPLASTERS JOHNSON'S WAX JOHNSTON’S CANDIES KREML HAIR TONIC LAND O’ LAKES BUTTER LUXOR FACE POWDER McKEE REFRIGERATORS METROPOLITAN LIFE INSURANCE NORMA PENCILS PACKER'S SHAMPOO PALMOLIVE SOAP PARKER PENS PERTUSSIN PULVEX QUAKER OATS SANI-FLUSH SHINOLA PEPSODENT PRODUCTS PETERSON OINTMENT P & G WHITE NAPHTHA RITZ CRACKERS ROYAL TYPEWRITERS SANEA COFFEE SAVAGE LIPSTICK SCHLITZ BEER SCHUTTER-JOHNSON CANDY SEMINOLE TISSUE SHEAFFER PENS SHREDDED WHEAT SIR WALTER RALEIGH TOBACCO SQUIBB TOOTH POWDER STALEY STARCH STIRIZOL TATTOO LIPSTICK AND MASCARA TUMS VIGORO WOODBURY SOAP MAGA POWER /. NS v 4