Evening Star Newspaper, July 2, 1937, Page 11

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THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, Court Powers Final Test of Labor Laws Michigan’s Construc- tive Statute Might Be Upset by Defiance. ' BY DAVID LAWRENCE. ICHIGAN has just passed a law governing labor rela- tions, and in some respects it is & helpful and construc- tive measure, though in other respacts it makes labor problems even more complicated as between Federal and State authority The big ques- tion that will be asked, however, © 15 what possible good is any law in Michigan, new or old, when ir- responsible ele- ments may defy court orders and g0 unpunished. As yet there has been no pros- ecution of the in- dividuals who committed con- tempt of court in Flint by refusing to withdraw from General Motors plants where a sit- down strike was being held. Li in Detroit, the order of a cou defied by strikers at the Chry plants It is true that in Michigan there has been no law hitherto permitting even peaceful picketing and that tk act passed fills an omission by defining picketing and prohibiting vio- Jence. Michigan, however, has done nothing to investigate the circum- stances surrounding the failure of the Iocal authorities to enforce the alreads existent laws of the State with respect to trespassing on private property. Nor has there been revealed the extent to which the Governor counseled against law enforcement. Ensnared by Washington. ‘The Michigan Gov or was the victim of persuasion by the Roosevelt administration, and in the end found himself in a jam. Gov. Davey of Ohio, confronted by similar tactics on the part of the Washinzton adminis- tration, allowed himself to be en- snared only for a few days and then came out clearly and forcefully for law and crder in one of the best state- ments written yet on the subject of I ight to work, Undoubted Gov. Mur was in- fluenced by Washington to withhold the use of force to secure obedience to court orders, but the public does not know the nature of the influence used upon the Governor of a soversign State. Something of the pressure em- ploved was disclosed by Gov. Davay of Ohin, who publicly says that the Becretary of Labor demanded that he use troops to keep plants closed Said Gov. Davey in a formal state- ment: “It is no doubt appropriate to quote her (Secretary Perkins') exact lan- guage in part as follows: ‘We must not let the efforts of the Mediation Board faill. We cannot let our labor friends think we have let them down I think you ought to keep those mills closed until & settlement is reached.’” Michigan Case May Be Amazing. Here 18 a case of Federal power exerted upon the Governor of a State with the suggestion that he refuse to furnish protection for property or for the right of workingmen to work. It is an amaging example of Federal intervention, and when all the facts are disclosed as to the parleys over the telephone and in conference be- tween the Federal administration in Washington and the Governor of Michigan, there may be other evidence of how the Federal Government at- 7 David Lawrence. er just did persuade a Governor mot to do his duty in obeying existing laws. The new Michigan statute on labor relations was forced by an outraged opinion in the State. In the first place. the act does what the Wagner act failed to do. It insists that employers As well as emploves stand on the same footing with respect to insistence on elections and with respect to in- vestigation by the Labor Board of charges of unfair practices. The Michigan law enumerates the “powers, duties and responsibilities” of the Board of Industrial Relations and, among other things, says the boar has the power, duty and responsibility “to investigate charges of violations of this act by either employes em- ploves or any organization thereof” and “to conduct such investigations as it shall deem proper for the pro- tection of emploves or emplovers against racketeering. extortion and other unfair practices.” Specifies Lawful Picketing. The provisions against picketing by violence are so well drawn that th unquestionably forbid “sit - dow strikes in the future. The new law 5Aays “Picketing is hereby declared to be lawful in this State, except under the following conditions and circumstances: “(a) Patrolling or attendance by any persons, whether on behalf of a labor organization or otherwise, at or near a place of business or em- ployment affected by a labor dispute, or the residence of any person em- ployed therein or other place where such person may be, in such manner or numbers as to obstruet or other- wise interfere with approach thereto or egress therefrom, or inferfere with the free and unimpeded use of a public highway. “(b) Patrolling or picketing in or about any premises or place of busi- ness involved in a labor dispute by a person who is neither employed therein nor a party to the dispute nor an official of a labor organization that is & party to the dispute.” But when these things occur, what is the remedy? The courts are in- structed to issue injunctions ordering persons to desist from the practices ® ESTABLISHED 1865 e WINDOW BLINDS ~ Should Be Replaced NOW s the time to remove broken and rotted blinds . . . while you are “painting and cleaning up.' Barker blinds in oll sizes are quality blinds that last long. Call the Lumber Number for quick _delivery. Save at present low price levels! GEO. M. BARKER ¢ COMPANY o LUMBER and MILLWORK 649-651 N. Y. Ave. N.W. 1523 7th St. N.W. Nat. 1348, "The Lumber Number” /; | the executive and enforcing authority, | tempted to persuade and in this case | What’s Back of It All - Jefferson Island Produces Court Compromise, Reor- ganization and Farm Bill. BY H. R. BAUKHAGE. HEN a woman correspondent who knew how to put a double meaning in her voice asked the President if they “caught any fish” on Jefferson Island, nobody missed the point. And nobody got tke answer. But if you can believe a political fisherman's story with any loss effort than you can’swallow one of the Izaak Walton variety, here's the catch—or what was left of it when the trading on Capitol Hill was over: 1. A compromise court bill. ° 2. Government reorganization. 3. Farm bill (ever-normal granary, et al.). For the court compromise without a filibuster, there was offered one of the constitutional amendments the oppositionists have asked for. Whether the above is fish, flesh, fowl and not just another good, redolent herring, time will tell.. But the miraculous adventures of the farm bill and the reorganization bill may as well be told now. Why did the administration, after packing the farm (ever-nore mal granary, et al) bill, drop it and then, with apparently no reason, suddenly attempt to bring it back to life? Well, in the first place, the administration, or at least the Scerctary of Agri- culture, dropped it only in the sensc that a juggler drops a ball once in a while just to keep up your interest. Then old Dame Nature took a hand, recorded by a Department of Agriculture release of June 29: “A 4-point drop in the index of prices received by farmers. Decline was attributed to improved crop prospects and partial adjustment of prices to a new crop basis.” To the farmers, of course, the bulletin was old stuff—just confirmation of what they aiready knew by the twinges in their left elbows, * Kk ok x The price situation was a wonderful break because it meant more kindly consideration of any stabilization scheme. But Secretary Wallace didn't depend on that alone—he produced an excellent front and back stage drama It began at a press conference a week ago. At that time, two questions were asked of him: 1. Why he had ceased to support the farm bill> He didn’t admit it had been dropped, but he said that, if it should be, it would be because of apathy on the part of the farmers. i 2. Whether there would be any commodity loans? He said not if he could help it, unless there went with them the type of produc- tion control that would prevent “committing another jarm board.” The farmers knew what that meant. The Farm Board depressed prices when it finally dumped surpluses on the market. ‘The questions which brought out these remarks eame from sources which suggested that the ideas had been cultivated, if not planted, by Mr., Wallace's colleagues. Farm letters started coming in to Congress. Then, Jeflerson Island over, the secretary took to the Hustings. {More letters.) The farm bill has “administration support” again. x k% X As to reorganization, that bill launched with quite as much prepara- tion as the court bill, was completely overshadowed by it. It was given up by some of its closest friends. Cynics, of course, said no reform including loss of patronage could succeed The bill was being labelled as the “one constructive™ step offered by the administration this session. So, Louis Brownlow, chairman of the group of experts who wrote it, got busy again. Almost immediately he also got sick. His doctors, knowing the only way he would get the Test he needed, put an air-cooler in his hotel room and a double guard at his door. Then, quictly, unobtrusively, Charles Edward Merriam. gentle-voiced political scientist of the University of Chicago, took over. All the politics he knows he didn't learn in a book—he’s served as alderman out in Chicago. Apparently with instructions to trade horses if he had to, he has. Senator Robinson has sat right down and talked turkey. The bill which he submitted is undergoing some vital, vote-getting changes. Hearings are to be held. Mean- while, 1t has a good chance. * % x ok Returnin~ members of the National Manu. (turers’ Association. sent to woo Middle West, are smiling pleased smiles. They report that the group invited to meet with them at the Country Life Institute, held at Ames, Iowa. seem to have decided that maybe agriculture and industry have more in common than either has with labor under its present leadership. To assist the farmer in reaching this conclusion was the purpose of the expedition from Forty-second street to the prairies. Business has begun to feel it needs friends and that its rural customers may play a role of more importance than merely as a consumer of light= ning rods and other gadgets. One subject up for discussion at the institute was: “What would happen if John Lewis would become dictator?” (Copy 7, by the North American Newspaper Alliance,, Inc.) DID the farmers of the | complained of. But supposing the | judicial authority of the State of | Michigan does not get the backing of DINNER FOR JOHNSON Dr. J. Hayden Johnson, retired then of \\}I\:L avail is the best statute | from the Board of Education after in the world? s is S 9 Vi ol 1?‘3\11?1—1;2:;_“1 Question | seven successive three-year terms, will (Copyright, 1037.) be honored by his associates at the Musolit Club, 1327 R street, with a testimonial dinner at 9 o'clock tonight. Also to be honored at the dinner is Dr. William V. Thompkins, local re- corder of deeds, in recognition of the administration of that office. Among the invited guests is Col. West A. Hamilton, Dr. Johnson's successor on the board. Coal Hearing Dates Changed. The National Bituminous Cosl Com- | mission announced yesterday a change | in the date for classification hearings from July 8 to July 15. The date for filing proposed standards of classifi- cation by district boards also was changed from July 7 to July 13. & Extra Fancy Spring Baby Lamb Legs lb.21c Shoulder Lamb Roast 14c Ve b, Boneless Round Steak.__lb. Tender Sirloin Steak____lb. Chuck Roast Beef_ Pork Loin Roast_ Best* Table Butter_ Sour Pickles, bulk_ Beef Liver_ _ Fine American Chees Fresh Shoulders __ Sugar-Cured Smoked Hams Very Fancy Fresh Killed Frying or Broiler CHICKENS . 14¢ . 10c . 35¢ Breast Lamb Veal Cutlet Boneless Breast Veal_ 18¢ Shoulder Veal Roast ___ 18¢ Lean Smoked Shoulders__lb. 20c Fat Back or Bean Pork___1b. 16¢ Sliced Bacon v 1b. pkg. 17c Swift's Jewel Shortening lb. 15¢ Fresh Eggs, Nearby____doz. 27¢ SPECIAL—LOOK! Smoked Sausage or Bologna, Ib. . lsc Sliced Luxury Loaf 1b. 19¢ Sandwiches No.1New | POTATOES New Green GE B CABBAGE Bushel Basket 75¢ New Green Spinach 1b. Se Fresh Beets 3 bunches 10c f Fine Medium Size New Potatoes 10 Ibs. 12¢ - head Sc -bunch 5c | New Texas Onions - doz. 15¢ | Fancy Juicy Lemons Open Monday Until 1 P.M. ® FRESH KILLED STEWING AND BAKING FOWL m. 23¢ Red Hard Ripe Tomatoes New Green Kale -3 lbs. 10c Fresh Summer Squash_ 3 Ibs. 10e New Sauerkraut ____3 lbs. New String Beans_ Fancy Juicy Limes Grade “A” Milk Bring Bottle Per Quart 11c Sugar - 5¢ (4 3272 M N.E. MKT. 2153 Pa. St. N.W. 12th & H N.E. Ave. NW. T!{E opinions of the writers on this page are their own, not Such opinions are presented in The Star’s effort to give all sides of questions of interest to its readers, although such opinions may be contradictory among necessarily The Star’s. themselves and directly opposed Soviet Strife Spans Sea to The Star’s. America Has Own Stalin-Trotsky Dispute, Under Camouflaged Banners. BY DOROTHY THOMPSON. EADERS of the Russian news, censored, {ll-informed and frankly inconclusive as it is, can reach only one of three conclusions. Either (1) Dictator Stalin has gone wild in the manner of an Oriental despot in a blood purge of his personal enemies, fearing > a threat to his” personal power from Russian pa- triots who are convinced that progress demands & radical change or (2) Germanand Japanese agents have been spec- tacularly success- ful in undermin- ing the morale throughout all Russia or (3) the men who made the Bolshevist revolution and who have been held up to world admira- tion for 20 years by their apologists here and elsewhere are all scoundrels, traitors, plotters and pure criminals. This column does not pretend to know what the truth is. American, British and other foreign corre- | spondents who have been in Russia for years do not know what it is and frankly say so. Also, we have a relatively small number of people in-| forming us uxon Russia who have any degree of impartiality. Most of our | information comes from people who | may be American citizens, but whose adopted spiritual country is Russia, and who are passionately and par-| tisanly engaged in its ideological | fights. | We have our Trotskyists and our Stalinists arguing it out right in New York. By following the tactics of the articulate and self-appointed spokes- | man for our own labor groups we can get some light on what the fight is about. The “regular” Communists, who take their orders from Moscow, and docilely change their tactics every time the necessities of Russian foreign | policy dictate it, have all become popular frontists, which in American | terms means supporting President Roosevelt and making a common front against all “rightist” parties, who, by definition become Fascists. Create Fascist Foe. The Communists, being directed to unite against fascism have to create | it in order to have an opponent. They | even managed to make Fascists out of Alfred M. Landon and Frank Knox, economic liberals, whose ideas of eco- nomic organization are a great deal farther from Mr. Hitler's than are the ideas of Mr. Browder or, for that | matter, of Mr. Roosevelt. The Trotskyists, on the contrary, do | not believe that Mr. Roosevelt intends to establish socialism, and that, there- fore, it doesn't matter with whom one allies one’s self, provided that one keeps one's objective clearly in mind. | The thing to do is to continue to | organize class discontent and to pre- | vent the Stalinists, who, they claim, are merely stooges of Moscow, from | gaining control of it. According to the | Trotskyists; Russia is just another | Fascist atate, in which Stalin has succeeded Lenin to establish a Hit- lerian dictatorship. They claim that the chief object of the Stalinists is to get workers’ opinion so lined up in this country that we will be prepared | to fight for Russia in the event of a German-Russian war, The transference of a Russian ideo- logical struggle to other shores is ane of the greatest hindrances to an in- telligent realistic labor organization | and policy in political democracies, | and is a vigorous breeder of vigilant- ism. The American worker is being asked to enlist himself in movements | which are alibis for something never | Dorothy Thompson | | | ISN'T_ICED TEA DELICIOUS?, HOW ABOUT ANOTHER BIG COOL GLASS | instance, it opposed collaboration with openly stated, for policies which are made with a continual eye on far- distant events in Russia, Germany and Spain. He is not asked to join “Communists” of either coloration. He is asked to join ‘progressives” or “liberals.” And if he happens to think that neither Trotsky nor Stalin is a liberal or holds the key to policies which will give organized labor its happlest position in the American democracy, he is branded as a “Fascist.” Makes Adjustment. Yet the whole popular-front move- ment is nothing but an adjustment which the Russian Government has made to its own peculiar international situation. Until Hitler came into power the international policy of the Russian Government under Stalin was what is now called Trotskyist. It vigorously opposed the collaboration of American, French or British Com- munists with any ‘“progressive” or “liberal” factions. In Germany, for the middle-of-the-road parties to de- feat Hitler for president, in behalf of Hindenburg. It looked forward then to precisely what Mr. Hitler looks for- ward to now, the ultimate collabora- tion of Russia and Germany, in a mutual exchange of goods and serv- ices, under a common banner. The only difference was that Russia then thought the banner would be the red | flag, and Germany now intends that the banner shall be the swastika. The fear of a German conquest led the Communist International, domi- nated by Russia, radically to reverse itself. Now Russia felt that she needed help from the democratics capitalistic countries. Therefore she joined the League of Nations, made overtures to France, adopted a fake “democratic” constitution and fine structed her yes-men in all countries to urge the popular front. As a result Mr. Browder became a “liberal.” and | began talking in a way which two vears earlier would have caused him 10 be read out of the Communist party. And Trotsky, the exiled international and permanent revolutionary, was | forced by sheer logic to embark on a | totally nihilistic policy of opposition | in the hope of saving. or restarting, | the Bolshevist revolution. Natural Disagreement in i.useia. Now if these changes in the world situation have so disrupted radical | movements even in the United States, | how could they help but lead to the | most serious difficulties inside Russia? | The complete volte-face which Rus- sia has made since Hitler could hardly be accomplished without enormous in- | ternal differences of opinion. About these differences we know almost noth- ing, because differences of opinion about fundamental policy express | themselves behind closed doors in Rus- | sia, in inner party councils. There | must have been immense differences of opinion in the Russian arm; are in the German army’ years the two armies had collaborated | in & most intimate way. We may take | it that those differences have not died down; that the prospect of a posmble‘ victory for Franco in Spain, of the ! possible loss of any British or French support in the event of & war with | Germany confined to Eastern Europe, seriously dismays the Red Army lead- | ers. And under despotisms all differ- ences of opinion which seek transla- tion into action must, of necessity, take the form of conspiracy. (Copyright, 1937.) London Fashion Center. Many Paris couturiers have moved to London, which now is claiming to be the fashion center of the world. Stamps for Rail Opening. ‘To commemorate the opening of a 1,000-mile coastal road, Efypt has | issued four special stamps. | AS A NIGHT- CAP ? HOW HE KEEPS COOL IN TROPIC SJUNGLES— Anthony Fiala, noted as survived some of hottest spots, thanks to his knowledge of how to keep cool. Read his secret—at right. fls’ A SCIENTIFIC FACT= A wyhen 1 hit szhx necessity: beat fatigues s hm'dT ik rink. popular 5 keeps YOU go-called TEA ).\ WISCONSIN U. DEAN Turneaure Honored for His Ex- BEER VO D. C., FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1937 This Changing World Three Large and Serious Cracks Endanger Europe’s Political Structure. BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. HE poor old world is cracking up. It has been lingering for sevaral years. Crises succeeded crises and its doctors—the optimistic and incapable statesmen—found solace in the fact that the patient was getting better just because he was so sick. They administered paliiatives in the form of public utterances and international conferznces. Now even these can help no longer. * X ok % ‘There are three distinct crises which, although occurring in parts far away from each other, are in- terrelated. The most spectacular and im- minent one is happening on the Manchukuo (Japan-Siberian bor- der; the second is due to the Span- ish civil war, and the third is the difficult social and financial tangles facing the Chautemps-Bonnet cab- inet in France. The undertakers are at hand to handle the corpse. Mussolini Hitler, Stalin and the leaders of the Japanese government are all pre- pared to jump in. * * % % Developments on the Manchukuo-Siberian border are for the time being the most important because they might involve in a conflict not only the U. 8. 8. R. and Japan, but all the nations of Europe. The cause for this new crisis would be amusing if it were not so tragic. The dispute between Tokio and Moscow is around three sand banks —pompously described in official communiques as islands. They are not much larger than Lafayette Square and have no population and no vege- tation. As a matter of fact, they can be found only on naval charts, be- cause when the waters of the Amur River are high these “islands” are not visible. * Kk % % Whether it is the Japanese or the Russians who want to make a causus belli out of the possession of these sandbanks is not clear yet. 1t would seem so far that it is the Tokio military clique which wants to create’an incident leading to a war with the Soviet at a time when - it is believed in Berlin and in Tokio that the Soviet army is in a state of confusion owing to executions and political persecutions. * K ox % The Japanese government claims that the incidents here provoked by the Far Eastern Soviet army which has gotten out of hand and wants to embarrass, and possibly bring about the downfall of Stalin by preci tating a war with Japan. In the light of a political terrorism Russia has not experienced since the early days of the revolution, there tay be something in the Tokio explanation. But the probabilities are that Tokin 18 acting as a pacemaker for Germany and has decided on the show-down with the Soviet Union as a prelude to a bigger and better show on the eastern borders of that state. * ® ok x The moment chosen by the dictators to bring about a general reckoning could not have been better chosen. Russia’s mainstay has recently been the French Republic and, indirectly, Great Britain. France has developed in the Jast few weeks a serious case of anemia It looks as if the financial structure were crumbling. The franc is being devaluated—it is allowed to find its own level on the foreign money markets—as the official explanation reads. With this devaluation, the cost of living throughout the country is increasing by leaps and bounds. The new fiscal measures which the new government has now full power to adopt are likely to further increase the expenditure of the house- wife. To obtain new resources for the depleted treasury, the French government intends to tax most es- sentials of life. What the reaction of the “man in the street” will be to these new taxes is a question which worries everybody in Paris, Lon- don and Washington. When the French get angered at supertaxes they go on the street and fight. Chautemps had an unpleasant ex- perience a few years ago, when he escaped infuriated Parisians who insisted on throwing him and his cabinet in the Seine River because they did not like his administration. They might want to do it again, with more success France's weakness, however, does not concern the French alone, It is & matter which worries every statesman in “democratic” Europe and might be one of the principal causes of a future conflagration ‘experim«n(l] and analytical investi- | gations on impact and secondary | Streases in bridges under moving train loads and on the strength of steel | columns. His studies resulted in texts which have been revised with advanc- | ing engineering arts. ' Also announced at the dinner were officers for the coming year. They were: President, S. B. Earle, director of the Engineering Experiment Sta- tion, Clemson College, Clemson, S. C.; vice presidents, Dr. Karl T. Compton, | president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and F. C. Bolton, dean of the School of Engineering of Texas A. & M. College: treasurer, W. O. Wiley, New York City, and secretary Prof. F. L. Bishop, Pittsburgh, Pa ‘The convention voted to hold its forty-sixth annual meeting next vear at Texas A. & M. College, College Sta- tion. Tex., and its 1939 convention at Pennsylvania State College, State Col- lege, Pa. GETS LAMME MEDA periments on Bridge Stress Under Moving Train Loads. By tle Associated Press. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., July 2.—Dean Frederick E. Turneaure of the Univer-, sity of Wisconson College of Engineer- ing last night was awarded the Lamme Medal of the Society for the Promotion of Engineering Education at the or- ganization’s forty-fifth annual dinner. The medal, established under the will of Benjamin Carver Lamme. who died in 1914, is awarded annually to a technical teacher for accomplishment in teaching or advancement of the art of technical training. | Dean Turneaure conducted pioneer ot Dr. Crile, as etors of certain & mechan better than the suprarenal Crile has dissected 800 jungle anima's liz’d human be- to piece out 7 Headline Folk and What They Do Dr. George Crile to Continue War on Anger and Fear. BY LEMUEL F. PARTON. NATOLE FRANCE concluded his “Revolt of the Angels” with the observation that man’s only hope lay in “the conquest of the demons of anger and fear in his own soul.” The quotation may be a bit awry, since the book is not at hand, but it is pertinent to today's news of " the expedition to the Arctic in the interest of demon - slaying— the first its kind, barring Siegfried’s hunte ing trip in tha Jand of the 1c9 queen The above allu« sion suggests no oversimplification of the purposes of Dr. George W, Crile, famous sure geon and bioe chemist, who will head a voyage to the Arctic, starting August 1 Specifically, he fights the demoniac forces of anger and fear which now range the world and which any newspaper reader can recognize on sight, At he hopes to find in the Far Norti w strength his temper his sword, supplee menting knowledge which he pree viously gleared in the African Jungles, Seals and walruses, neither of them particul angry or scared, w | studied by Dr. C not as exa of dignity and complacency, but the ownerg and pro unique energy-releas that seem to work human earbure gland system. Dr ied abo | in the interest o and e sea li have enabled him in certain instances to cure chronic anger and fear. He finds that in this day of newspapers, radio and press agents there are high-voltage stimuli loose everywhere which make high blond pressire the curse of the age. The name “John L. Lewis” will make one en apoplectic, while “Tom Girdler” will induce a similar embolism in another. For aggravated cases of this kind Dr. Crile has a simple “de- nervation” operation. in which he throttles down the too rampant ad- | renal glands. Judging from the past, | he could operate on the opposed prin- | cipals in a labor dispute and have i:nrm falling over each other to sign ' an agreement | A resident of Cleveland. he is the | founder and head of the Cleveland | Clinic, which is carrving through pro- | found studies of the adrenal and thyroid glands and of bndily me- tabolisms generally. His researches in the World War vastly widened and deepened the knowledge of the mech- anized functioning of the endoerine glands. These discoveries led him to describe the human body as an auto- mobile, in which the brain is the bat= tery, the suprarenal gland system the carburetor, the liver the gasoline tank, the muscles the motor and the thyroid gland the gear box. (Copyright, 1937.) New Reading Device. Eyeglasses that enable yvou to read a book on your lap while still appar- ently looking straight ahead are the latest novelty in Germa Windjammer Race Tie. The Finnish barques Pommern and Passot tied in this year's windjam- mer race from Australia to England, each taking 94 days. GOSH, MARY HOW CAN YOU ey s LOOK ‘SO COOL 2 I'M ALMOST DEAD WITH THIS HEAT. | CAN SEE ANOTHER HOT, SLEEPLESS NIGHT AHEAD, YOU'RE ON! ISNT IT SURPRISING HOW COOL YOU STAY AFTER DRINKING ICED TEA! ILL BET WE'LL HAVE A REGULAR COOL~ WEATHER SLEEP TONIGH “The difference bee tween tea and othep so-called cooling drinks is this: Tea does mora than merely quench thirst. Tea actunally lowers the body tem- perature. Its cooling effect is more lasting.” VITALIZING TEA comes from INDIA/CEYLON, and JAVA- SUMATRA. Buy a good brand of Orange Pekee, and look for any of thess names or this map O on package or in advertising. { U CooL

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