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3000 ARE KILLED, INSURGENTS CLAIN C,500 Loyalists Wounded Also, Say Reports on Brunete Battle. By the Associated Press. IRUN, Spain, July 10.—An official Insurgent communique asserted today that 3,000 government militiamen were killed and 6,000 wounded in an insurgent counter-attack in the Bru- nete sector, about 15 miles west of Madrid. The government army “suffered a great disaster,” the communique said of yesterday's combat. Madrid's western salient was said to be in collapse, with the army in full retreat from Brunete after 000 men were thrown into battle. A gov- ernment force of 20,000 staged a fa less attack in the Usera sector, on the southwestern fringe of Madrid, the insurgents reported. Madrid Claims Gains. MADRID, July 10 (#).—General- fssimo Jose Miaja today claimed new gains for his government army fight- ing west from Madrid to break the grip of insurgent besiegers, who have been almost at the city's gates for eight months. A government communique asserted Miaja's troops, transformed from a defensive to an offensive war ma- chine, plunged fu T into insurgent territory after capturing Quijorna, 18 miles west of the capital An two other directions the govern- ment claimed victories for its central fighting forces. One column pushed south from Escorial, & position northwest of Ma- drid, while another column shoved the insurgent lines south of the capital. Air Fleet ;lrv;l Madrid. BURGOS, Spam, July 10 (#).— Generalissimo Francisco Franco's air armada roared across Spain today from this and other insurgent bases in a terrific effort to smash Madrid's western salient One hundred bombing planes— mighty tri-motored craft carrying tons of explosives—and 150 machine-gun- ning pursuit ships were active in the operations which centered on the Madrid front. The scale of the insurgent aenal‘ drive bore out reports reaching here | that the Madrid salient—a tank-pro- tected army estimated at 30.000 men— was being exposed to a terrific blas ing from the sky. Paris (Continued From First Page.) nations found too troublesome to han- dle, was placed gingerly in Britain's lap today. Britain, again in her familiar role of guardian and conciliator, began the task of trying to think up a plan which would best serve the future of the problem child. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden and the Earl of Plymouth, chairman of the Non-Intervention Committee, went into consultation with experts of the foreign office, seeking reconciliation of Anglo-French and Italo-German de- sires with regard to Spain. France May Open Frontier. France intimated that unless a formula is reached she might throw open, her Spanish frontier to passage of arms and men “beginning next week.” France favors the Spanish gov- | ernment cause and such action would aid the Madrid-Valencia regime. Italy and Germany have turned| down the Anglo-French scheme to extend a patrol of British and French war craft to cover all of Spain’s coast | and fill a gap left when the Berlin and Rome governments withdrew their | patrol ships last month. | On the other hand, Britain and | France both have opposed the Italo- | German counter-proposal that the naval cordon against shipments of | men and arms be abandoned and belligerent rights granted to both | sides in the Spanish conflict. | Italy and Germany favor the cause | of Insurgent Generalissimo Francisco | Franco. Deadlock Little Affected. The French stand, expressed by Am- bassador Charles Corbin at yesterday's | non-intervention negotiations, did lit- tle to break the deadlock, Marees van Swinderen, the Nether- lands’ Minister, suggested that Britain take up where the full committee | left off. No one in Whitehall seemed particu- larly optimistic today that Britain | would succeed in producing an ac-| ceptable plan to bolster the neutrality | system, although some hope was felt in the fact that Germany and Italy— despite the criticisms they have made of British policy on Spain—were Bmong the first to support Van Swin- deren’s suggestion. DEMOCRATS FROWN ON FISH'S CHARGES Bay They See No Need of Naming Committee to Look at Mrs. Roosevet’s Tax Returns. By the Associated Press. Democratic members said today they saw no need for a congressional tax investigating committee to follow up a suggestion by Representative Fish, Republican, of New York that it | study income tax returns of Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt and Secretary Morgenthau. Republicans on the committee would not say whether they would insist that the returns be examined. Chairman Doughton declared Fish had put on a “political performance” and made “a lot of hullaballoo about nothing.” ‘The New Yorker told the commit- tee yesterday that Mrs, Roosevelt had used a revenue law loophole in con- nection with a radio contract pro- viding $1 compensation for her and payment of $3,000 to a Philadelphia charitable organization for each pro- gram. Mrs. Roosevelt said recently she had paid tax on all income she re- ceived. Fish said Morgenthau used “fam- ly trusts,” before he became a cab- inet officer, in order to exchange property with his wife. The Treas- ury head volunteered to submit his tax returns to the committee. They Liked It. ‘The English taste for port wine was first acquired by English soldiers fighting Napoleon’s army in Portu- #al under the Duke of Wellington. a | 617 | field training. Militia Coast The entire outfit went overland by motor truck train left by steamer last night. He has just recovered from an operation at Walter Reed Hospital. THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., SATURDAY, JULY 10, 19 3 T *% A—3 Loading the trucks of the 260th Coast Artillery of the District National Guard, which has just been raised to full regimental status, prior to departure early today for Fort Story, Va., near Virginia Beach, where the Militiamen for the next two weeks will undertake their annual Col. Artillery Off for Camp Walter W. Burns, commander, Weather (Continued From First Page.) shington has experienced this At midnight the temperature degrees, and it never fell be- | low 78 degrees. By noon the mercury | had climbed to 92. Girl, 13, Drowns, l fatality attributed to the| heat wave was the dea!h‘ vesterday of Mary Louise Kline, 13, | of 3714 K street, | who diowned in the Potomac River when she stepped off a sand bar into deep water and lost her water wings. The ch 1149 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Logan Kline, was seek- ing relief from the scorchingsun in the river near her home with her sister, Pa- tricia. 9, and a playmate, Mary Helen | Garner, 8. Policeman R. L. Ault, who was cruising nearby, sped to the scene in a harbor precinct patrol boat when he heard the screams of the surviving girls and recovered Mary's | body in 15 minutes. Resuscitation | First 1 Mary Kline. | | efforts proved futile. Excessive humidity added to the suffering as the temperature regis- tered 94.6 degrees at 4:40 p.m. Dis- trict employes were released from work an hour early at 3:30 p.m. because of the heat. Darkness found the temperature still high in the 80's and thousands de- | serted stifling apartments and room- ing houses to seek relief in parks, the 82 at Midnight. At midnight, the temperature regis- tered 82 degrees. It dropped to 78 at | 3 am. and clung there for three hours | before starting its upward climb again. At 7 am. the Weather Bureau ther- mometer recorded 80 degrees. Eleven persons were treated for heat prostration at local hospitals yesterday | and ambulance physicians said they | administered first aid to at least a| core of others.whose names were not obtained. Among those treated yesterday were William McQueen, 26, of 46 Florida avenue; Mrs. Sally Whittenberg, 34, of N street; Traffic Policeman | Charles Goodman, 30; Mike Walsh, 35, of 922 M street; Milton Gills, 18, of the 600 block of Ninth street northeast; Ray Schools, 47, of the 1200 black of Fifth street; Jessie Jones, 52, of the 2500 block of K street; George Mitchell, 39, of the 200 block of Sec- ond-and-a-half street southwest; Mrs. Ann Kelly, 36, of 1703 D street north- | east; Katherine Walgren, 54, of 1408 Maryland avenue northeast, and Joe Harris, colored,- 39, of Chattanooga, Tenn, HEAT KILLS 114 OVER NATION. Phillipsburg, Kans., Has Highest Temperature of 102—No Relief. CHICAGO, July 10 (#).—Heat waves billowed with unabated vigor over most of the Nation again today as the season’s most protracted hot spell showed no signs of ending an assault that has already taken at least 114 lives and caused hundreds of pros- trations. “Generally fair and continued warm” was the Weather Bureau's un- welcome forecast for virtually all of the heat-stricken States east of the Rockies. Local showers afforded temporary relief to some sections but tempera- tures soon resumed their climb. A thunder and hail storm gave Detroit residents a chance to catch their breath late yesterday. Rain over a wide area of Texas broke the heat siege there for a time. Warmer weather was in store for the corn belt, where temperatures in the upper nineties have prevailed for five days. The highest temperature east of the Rockies yesterday was 102 at Phillipsburg, Kans. Readings of 101 degrees were recorded at Grand Island, Nebr., and Pierre, S. Dak. 96 in New York City. Record-breaking heat gripped New York City for the third consecutive day, when thermometers registered 96 yesterday. The stifling weather was blamed for eight deaths in the metro- politan area. Philadelphia sweltered in 98-degree weather, its hottest of the year. New- ark recorded the same temperature. Albany reported 96, Raleigh 96 and Pittsburgh 92, despite cloudy skies. High humidity added to the discom- fort of Chicago residents. Thousands of W. P. A. workers in New York City were sent home because of the heat. Some mills in Massa- chusetts closed. Shorter hours were ordered for some conservation workers in Minnesota. The exodus of heat-harassed thou- L Named Slaver SISTER ACCUSED I\" MUR- DER OF MAN. MRS. MARIE PORTER. ANTHONY R. GIANCOLA. Chief of Detectives John J. Carroll of St. Louis said yes- terday Giancola had named Mrs. Porter as the slayer of her brother, William Kappen, on his wedding day, last Sat- urday. Carroll quoted Gian- cola as saying Mrs. Porter was beneficiary of Kappen’s insur- ance. Giancola and the wom- an both were under arrest. —Copyright, A. P. Wirephotos. sands to the beaches caused a sharp increase in the number of drownings. Lightning caused other deaths. Deaths in 16 States. Sixteen States listed deaths from heat prostration. New York and Michigan each reported 18, not in- cluding drownings. : Massachusetts, 14; Pennsylvania, 13; Connecticut, 12; Illinois, 10; New Jersey, 8; Rhode Island, 4; Nebraska, Minnesota and Maine, 3 each; Ohio and Jowa, 2 each; West Virginia, ‘Wisconsin and Indiana, 1 each. Maximum temperatures yesterday included: Detroit, La Crosse, Wis.; Des Moines, Rapid City, S. Dak., and Sioux City, Jowa, 94; Kansas City, Moorhead, Minn.; Minneapolis and Wichita, Kans,, 96; Boise, Idaho; Havre, Mont.; Milwaukee and St. Louis, 92. Netiles, Neul&l By Rain W aters, Stay Out of Bay Swimmers Escape Slip- pery Work of Stern Stingers. Bs the Associated Press. BALTIMORE, July 10.—The State Conservation Commission viewed the Chesapeake Bay sea nettle situation with wnarked optimism today. The large amount of rain which has fallen in Maryland this Summer probably has made upper sections of the bay uninhabitable for sea nettles, officials said. ‘The sea nettle, they explained, likes his salt water salty—and the thou- sands of gallons of rainwater rivers are pouring into the bay hourly from the Baltimore area have rendered the upper bay scarcely more than brack- ish. The nettles, anathema to bathers, therefore have centered their slippery work out where the ocean meets the bay, the Conservation Commission be- lieves. The toll in others | Airport | development of (Continued From First Page.) Capital has suffered the lack of an | A-1 airport because everybody's busi- | ness seems to be nobody's business. “Washington Airport can be put in | A-1 condition by filling up the lagoon, | purchasing Arlington Experimental | Farm acreage, eliminating the Mili- | tary road as well as the large hangar | and other small buildings, pnrmxllmgl hard-surfaced runways in any direc- tion of ample width and length to accommodate the largest of our pres- ent-day planes | “It 1s important that Washington have an airport in close proximity to the Nation's Capital, which the Wash- ington Airport is, to be used fur air | transport operations only. In addition | there should be an alternate field of ample size where shops, flying schools ial".d private flying can be t n care of further from the heart of the city and on higher land in order to also | serve air transport operators when weather is impossible at the city ter- | minal." Baltimore Waging Compaign. Taking advantage of the local air- port controversy, the Baltimore Asso- ciation of Commerce has begun a campaign to divert air transport oper- ations from Washington to Baltimore, it was reported today. The associa- tion, it was learned, is secking to have the new Baltimore municipal airport designated as the main line stop for airlines operating alohg the coast and as a terminal for transcontinental service, leaving Washington as a sec- ondary or subsidiary stop. | It was pointed out that because of Washington's failure to provide ter- minal facilities, Baltimore already has been selected as one of the bases for the trans-Atlantic service of Pan- American Airways, now in the trial flight basis and that it is logical that the domestic system of airlines should be tied in with the international service. The Baltimore Airport has been used several times as a terminal when airline operations were forced out of Washington by flooding of Washington Airport. | Solomon, in defending his airport against charges of the pilots that it is | unsafe because of its narrow width | and surrounding obstructions, said | that the airport bas handled with | safety up to 530 landings and take- offs per day. This, he said, probably | is a greater number than any com- mercial field ever has handled. No Accident Record Presented. “This perfect safety record,” Solo- mon said, “has been maintained day in and day out for a period of years. Even with the most skilled personnel, if the airport had very serious short- comings, accidents would happen. However, nothing has happened. In my opinion, Washington Airport has performed a very useful public service with a splendid record. Pilots and other personnel have, of course, con- tributed to this safety record. “If the Military road were closed and the lagoon filled, other improve- ments could be made that would in- crease the facilities of the airport. The perfect safety record cannot be improved upon. “We expect to continue to operate as we have in tRe past. Neither the pilots nor the operators nor the Bu- reau of Air Commerce has complained to us in any way as to the facilities offered at Washington Airport.” EMERGENCY OPERATION IS PERFORMED ON SCOUT Knoxville, Tenn., Boy Recovering at Naval Hospital—Was Leaving When Stricken. James C. Fry, 17-year-old senior Boy Scout patrol leader of Knoxville, Tenn., was recovering in Naval Hos- pital today after an emergency opera- tion for acute appendicitis performed last night shortly after he had been stricken as he was about to entrain for home at Union Station. Just as the youth was preparing to board the train, he collapsed, and Arton L. Duggan, Scout executive, tel- ephoned Dr. W. L. Smith, jamboree health officer. Dr. Smith sent his son, Dr. R. H. Smith, to Union Station in an ambulance, and young Fry was hurried to the hospital. Officials at the hospital were unable at first to reach the boy’s parents in Knoxville by long-distance telephone in order to get their permission for an immediate operation. Ald of Knoxville police and radio stations was enlisted, and within a few minutes the boy's father called back with the necessary authorization. James was reported “doing nicely” today. Girl's Slayer Sobs Over Bible. LOS ANGELES, July 10 (#).—An attack of religous frenzy in which he sobbed over an open Bible led county jail guards today to guard against a suicide attempt by Albert Dyer, ac- cused slayer of three Inglewood girls. ROOSEVELT HALS | POLICE BOYS' CLUB Calls Maj. Brown to Praise Work and-Discuss Han- dling of Crowds. President Roosevelt yesterday sum- moned Maj. Ernest W. Brown, super- intendent of police, to the White House to commend him for estab- lishing the Metropolitan Police Boys’ Club and to discuss informally police handling of crowds in Washington. Maj. Brown said the President dis- played a broad knowledge of the Boys' Club program and said he was interested in a boys' camp in the mountains of New York. The President said he was well pleased with the manner with which police have handled mass movements in Washington and asked if any Scouts attending the jamboree had caused any difficulty, according to Maj. Brown. The police chief said he told the President the Scouts had been unusually well behaved, and the President said he had been delighted | by the display of youthful enthusiasm when he visited the jamboree grounds. The President was interested to | learn that boys in the police club raise produce at their Summer camp and said he believed all such camps should be partially self-supporting, | Maj. Brown stated. He pointed out | to the President, Maj. Brown said, that when Camp Ernest W. Brown first was established, it cost 45 cents daily to feed the boys, but since the | youngsters’ farm has begun to pro- ., the cost has been cut to 35 President told him, accord- ing to Maj. Brown, that public of- ficials need have no fear over the youths who attend camps such as he has established. Maj. Brown said he enthusiastically | commended the President for the work being done in C. C. C. camps to insure the development of unem- ployed youth into useful citizens. The President displayed a deep | knowledge, Maj. Brown said, of diets necessary for growing youngsters and was well pleased to learn that boys at Camp Brown have averaged gains of five pounds a week. 7(;()if(’l; (Continued From First Page.) tery to them, his close friends, as he | was to every one el | George Clark, his personal friend, | golf companion and attorney, inti- | mated an appeal would be made to | Gov. Frank F. Merriam to refuse to | | sign extradition papers ‘ “Montague has proven to us that he Is a fine man and a fine sports- man,” Clark said. “He has led a| clean, straightforward life out here.” Once again stories of the enigmatic | Montague bloomed forth, some almost unbelievable. Most of them have their locale at the famous Lakeside Golf Club, favored spot of the movie folk. Hailed by Golfdom’s Great. George Von Elm, “rmer national amateur champion. * . repeatedly pro- claimed Montague cthe “best golfer in the world,” with a tremendous drive and uncanny putting abilit i The time Montague routed Bing Crosby was typical—and true. They set out to play 18 holes, Crosby using regular clubs, Montague a base ball bat, a shovel and a rake. Crosby was on in 3. Montague batted the ball into the trap with one swing, shoveled it within a few feet of the pin and holed out in 3, using the ranke handle like a pool cue | Playing at Del Monte, Calif., Mon- | tague reputedly reached the last green iwo easy putts ahead for a course rec- ord. He picked up, disdaining setting a record. His friends tell of his strength; how he yanked the pants off Jack Oakie in one playful yank in the grill room; stuffed bulky George Bancroft into a locker or lifted bulkier Oliver (Babe) Hardy on to a piano with one hand, the last done by “trick lifting.” | At Molone, N. Y., Sergt. R. F Walters of the State police declared that Moore's known ability as a golfer | provided the “tip-off.” He said that | stories from California about a mys- terious golfer known as “John Mon- tague.” who was averse to publicity, led Essex County authorities to make inquiries that led to the arrest. Associated With Stars. Montague has freqented Hollywood and Southern California since the lat- | ter part of 1930, the year in which he is alleged to have participated in the robbery. At the Lakeside Country Club he associated with many film stars, in- | cluding Crosby, Hardy, Bancroft,| Oakie and Richard Arlen. Many a story came from the club house tell- | ing of his remarkable skill. Once he bet $2,000 he could throw | & peanut over a six-story building.| He won. The peanut shell, it turned | out later, was filled with lead. He also | has bet—and won—as much as $1,000 on a single hole of golf. Hollywood knows Montague as the man who can place an approach shot within 10 feet of the pin from any distance up to 200 yards. It knows him as the man who once bet he would knock a ball three-quarters of a mile in five shots, and won easily. At Palm Springs Montague lowered the course record four times on four successive days, his lowest score be- ing 61. There are many in the film colony who will vow that Montague is able to stay awake five days and five nights without sleep. No one, however, watched him do it. A copy of the indictment neming ! Moore, or Montague, forwarded here, | showed that on the night of August | ATTENTION: Service Stations and Garages - PROTECTOL ANTI-FREEZE Denatured Ethyl Alcohol in Drums. Guaranteed 188 Proof. Union Carbide Product. Large Warehouse Stock. Specially Priced for July Only. 3 6c GALLON IN 54-GALLON DRUMS Thos. J. Crowell 102 New York Ave. N.E. Telephones: NOrth 1101-6387 ‘Tough Luck’ Holds as D.C. Man Returns Lost Treasury Rumors of Finding of “Several Million Dol- lars” Exploded. BY PHILIP H. LOVE. Willlam T. Ford's “tough luck,” vhich began when his back was broken in an automobile accident about five years ago, ran true to form yesterday. Ford, an unemployed electrician, was driving down Ninth street on his way from one “odd job” to another. “I was just making a left turn into I street,” he said, “when I noticed an old man dragging a big canvas bag across the sidewalk. Thinking I could | help him, I stopped. “The old fellow explained that the bag had fallen off a Treasury truck that had gone past a few moments before. , On the bag were the words, ‘Treasury to Penn. “The old man didn't seem to know what to do with the bag, so I gave him my name and address and the license number of my car and told him I'd take it to police headquarters.” Rumors of Lost Riches. At headquarters somebody jumped to the conclusion that the bag con- tained Government bonds. Within a few minutes—while the police were still waiting for Federal officials to send somebody to open the bag—it was reported that the bonds were worth “several million dollars.” “Now, get this straight.” Ford said after it was all over. “When I took that bag to headquarters I had no thought of receiving any kind of reward. If there was a reward, the old man was entitled to a larger share of it than I “Of course, T could have used a reward. After all, I was laid up for a long time as a result of that ac- cident five years ago—in a plaster cast for a year, and two years more! in a brace. Sued for $25,000. “And then I sued the party re- sponsible for $25.000 and won a judg- ment for $12.750—and wasn't able to coilect a dime! “Soon as I was strong enough, I Pouch' | WILLIAM T. FORD. —Star Staff Photo. o HARVESTS TOFILL U.S.BINSFORECAST Largest Wheat Crop in Six Years Is Predicted by Government. By the Ascociated Press. Government experts predict this year's harvest will fill the country's grain bins. They forecast the largest wheat crop in six years, 882,000,000 bushels, and the largest corn crop since 1932, 2,571.851,000 bushels. “The production of the principal crops will be much greater than in recent drought years, 1933, 1934 and 1936," the Federal Crop Reporting Board announced terday, *“and about equal to the average produce tion during the 1928-32 period." Unless usual weather conditions up= set the Government estimates, tha Crop Board said, farmers will produce enough this year to meet prospective needs, got a job as an electrician at the | | Navy Yard. My back troubled me, | | however, and I had to spend a couple | of months in Walter Reed Hospital. | “Then, on June 30, I was laid off.| I had to do something to take care of { my wife and three children. so I went on relief, at the same time trying | to pick up an odd job here and there—or a steady job, if possible— | | as an electrician.” Left Bag With Police. | And it was right in the mid this situation that the mysterious plopped. Ford, who lives at | Channing street nortneast, left it with | the Traffic Division and continued about his business—all but convinced, | after hearing the talk at headquarters, that he had retrieved something of | vast value to the Government. Later, however, a post office repre- sentative arrived at headquarters, un- locked the bag and found that it contained—old mail bags. “If the bag had contained anything of value,” he explained, “it would have been in | |an armored truck—and it couldn't| have bounced out.” 1930, four masked men entered the road house, bound and gagged patrons and employes, including Kin Hanna, operator, and his father-in- law, Matt Cobb, 67, took $700 and fled in an automobile. In the getaway the automobile over- turned and one of the four men was killed. Two others were caught, con- victed and arc now serving prison terms of 16 years each. “I've spent thousands of dollars trying to make good in the picture business or in writing,” Montague said. “I was just about the place where I intended to go back East and clear the whole thing up. I'm glad this happened. I'm glad it's over.” He was booked in the Beverly Hills Jjail on suspicion of robbery and on the Essex County, N. Y., warrant. For many months Montague made his home with Hardy. At intervals he would leave town, the officers said, presumably going into the desert, | where he was reputed to own a gold | temple legal adviser, is suing for re- or silver mine. Standing 5 feet 10 inches, he weighed 220 pounds. This tale Montague told himself: “I was playing in a foursome at | the Fox Hills Country Club. At the| tenth tee 1 said to the others: ‘See those birds on that telephone wire? Watch me pick off the one farthest to the right.” “I teed up an old ball, took a brassie and hit a full drive. It struck the bird in the neck, snapping its head off—170 yards away.” | He could drive a golf ball 50 yards farther than the longest ball Bobby Jones ever drove His best recorded golf score was 61, at Palm Springs, where he lowered | | the course record four times on suc- | | cessive days | He is claimed to have bet and won | | as much as $1,000 a hole in golf | matches. S NEW TEMPLE TROUBLE LOS ANGELES, July 10 (#.—| There's trouble again at Angelus| | Temple. | This time Jacob Moidel, ousted | instatement. His suit sets forth that | Pastor Aimee McPherson dismissed | him last September even though he | was under contract. He asks back | salary. Factors of Need Considered. In figuring needs, the experts added. they considered population growth, in= creasing industrial requirements, ex- ports, the small amount of live stock now on farms and short feed supplies now ava The wheat estimate was about 250,- 000,000 bushels above last year's pro= duction and y 20,000,000 bushels above the average for 1928-32. This need the board said, to in- crease short feed live stock un e Crop Board esti- mated wheat production at 648,597,000 bushels. This compared h 663,641,000 bushels forecast today. Spring wheat production was esti- mated at 218.646.000 bushels, come pared with 107.448,000 bushels last year and the recent five-year average of 241,312,000 bushels. Allows for Rust Damage. The board said it had made allow- ance for possible damage by rust, the plant disease which recently caused speculative wheat prices to soar. Rust was said to have caused varying damage in the Winter wheat area from Eastern Kansas and Nebraska eastward to Ohio. It was termed “a threatening factor” in the Spring of the Dakotas, Nebraska and Western Minnesota. imated corn crop of 257 would be more than hels larger than the production of last larger the Raisi in England. CROWELL OIL BURNER 275-gal tank installed, for July only, $229.00. We have the Burner made, we service it. Our engineers survey your home. We serve you the proper fuel oil. We protect you and our name. Complete heating service. Thos. J. Crowell, estb. 1915. 102 N. Y. Ave. NE. North 1101-6387. ® JUST USE THE PERFECT “CLOTHES LINE'—CLEVELAND 7800 e Tolman is "Tops' Wash " for Suits ou'll Appreciate the Difference... 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