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it ii AN aha cs nil ST NAM ENS A ARONA tic Io Nartid | Many workers walked out : @Many business houses PAGE 4 BERMAN REDS ARE CAPTURED, lundreds Rounded Up But | Strikes Spread BERLIN ‘ da of communists inded up by German police hr nt wh hun were being in the valley, strike fs appar m had mned in Ing carried out very adva and terference. Mihile police were Mnists in Bochum h strikes were ca les in the south Hey to close down c ented workers om fr with their ¢ wohidt district y un overwhe to return pe ares. ge mar part of th mu aching an loyers The labor majority in the Co. to work in the Bhrpedale neighborhood, while the employed in three big metal nits at Barmen, on the edge of Occupied area, also quit The German police, partly ized in the Ruhr for the purpose Stamping out the communist me, are working in military y ying squadrons of t armed Surround whole blocks of dew in which commu © be d hiding and then search is conducted In Dortmund 500 “reds” led. Practically every one of Was armed and many of the raided turned out to be veri: ible arsenals, with cellars packed h munitions. reor sts dvor were ar nd restau its, which havo being haunts of d by the police, the “red: their windows Buttered up and their doors locked chains and padiocks. Hoerde, ov communists were, mn in a series of raids. Several im were seized among them Women have not been con- ous in the rioting to date, a) were observed in the crowd enthusiastically in the fight- Largest Still "The largest moonshine distillery it has yet been taken by Sheriff Hiatt Starwich and his deputies was hidden in the woods back of ile, Sunday. It had ty of 200 gallons. Monster still was ork with three burners under | ind it was capable of turning out J gallons of moonshine a day. ie party found 600 empty $00 gallons of mash, 200 gal- of finished moonshine and green tents. tly had been in operation for two years, Starwich said. arrests were made at the the still was discovered. LUPTURE EXPERT HERE y, Famous in This Specialty, Called to Seattle. aH. Seeley, of Chicago and Phila- the noted truss expert, will ly .be at the Washington and will remain in Seattle :|bassadors, senators, congressmen of | sale atic Shield will not only re! bof rupture perfectly, but con- ucts the nope in 10 days on the nis result effected the day—the repair continues f throughout the night dur- fle all strain is removed. & vast advancement over all jethods—exemplitying in- ediately ap: oF position, no matter ft mation. Large or difficult 1 ruptures (following solict| ‘his in- the only award in pain, producing re- ee itaut surgery, injection: treatments or prescription ing: All casex sho | against the use of open: , cations necessitating surgical Mr. Pit from the Un’ ‘Washington, D C., for in- He will be glad to demon- without charge, or fit t! d Business demands pre- i fe at any other place in * S—Every statement ¢ hius been verifl H, Seeley. Office, 117 N, Dearborn st, Advertisement. Mother and Dad Ready for Commencement (“Jane tells me your kid brother Braduating at the university this ~ That's lovely! I haven't seen m for a long time, but 1 had no that he was old enough to fin- college. Oh, Dick is young. proud of him. He {s the of the family. And the best f it is he has already been offered wonderful position for a kid. and dad are bursting with We're all hey should. He always seemed ‘be a@ bright lad, but I haven't mn him much lately, Didn't know fhe was coming on till Jano raving about him, the other you'll all go to the Not so sure about myself. try to manage it. Mother and course, are going. Mother “been planning what she'll wear gay event for a long time, nd has a lot of new things. Dad, what's wrong with you? urely don’t mean to say you | doubt about going to your i's graduation exercises,” ell, the truth of the matter b Til find some way to go, but I d to buy some new clothes the event, but I don't feel that afford it.” t your salary! be crazy! member, I'm buying that it, and my insurance came the first of this month.” me tell you something. 5 have some lovely new sum- elothes in, You should know place, any way. By making n lent down, you would be per- d to welect something and wear making monthly payment: are at 1015 Second ave., be- m Madison and Spring, in the 0 building, just sd the Pig'n 1 —Advertisemen' ‘el Woran, you amy «| those reputation | “/ reputable characters. set on a} sugar | The distillery ap-; WARN FRANCE OF REPRISALS 77scape Socialists Promise Counter Attack on Monarchists PARIS ‘ ists of F re launch +Exxtre reorultty to counter attacks wepaper Le ction of this publication sald complicity of Pre the action of chamber of depu der Pain oe, becaus ties permits Itself to wasted promises halts uni immediate. We © Kore reprisals. | s manifesto r by alist chist-fascistt who were and Fol a in narchist hot of KOV spread roy cent on t | maui fore lowing bitt tempt mor FeO BOC le shampooed ink wallow ¢ i episode us the amber, f Daudet, m s mobbed. ‘The v nounced a W had been a that involved were being watched the chamber voted confidence in the ability of the rnment to defend the republic. Since then nothing haa been done, however, and the socialists profess to fear that tho royalists, who de to bring the Due D'Or leans from Belgium and make him King Philip the E are known causes of the outbreak. leade this ment pl was that ¢ fe ist rvered. and | When took with Whitfield fled, he him Marte Price shown here, The girl now i HISTORIES in custody. The other phot STARTS ON PAGE 1 is that of Whitfield with mu | |tache shaved of jot Nathan Hale is largely ignored| AWLEVELAND, June 4 jand that Ethan allen, Paul Revere uk? “Master Withd cr: ienaerert and Betsy Ross are not mentioned) which is John Leonard Whitfie in several of the books. The “slight:/wanted here for the murder of jing” of the battles of New Orleans, | policeman? Saratoga and Ticonderogw is con] xrunted criminals | demned. and reel life, avoid New York school children, declares | rheir conduct is |niirseheietd, under the cxirting sys |tem of teaching history. learn that:/ Prey do the unusua, 1, The revolution was merely a| caught. civil war. | But Whitfield, spark p’ That John Hancock, Patrick/ man de luxe, alleged thief and ki Henry and Samuel Adams were dis | reversed the criminal code- | And escaped, hurling derision at %. That Alexander Hamilton call-|the nation-wide dragnet mt to ap- jed the people “a great beast.” Iprehend him, 4. That Thomas Jefferson deserved} Eleven days the ‘halter. | left the body 5. That warm in ite territorial grab. | 6. That the North MORE ABOUT Fool In story books |teric maneuvers to after he is alleged to of his v¥ rough, # | have Mexican war was | iying | grave the Hiand, Whitfield was trapped in Madi |Union” thru England's |son, Wis. And then once 7. That the war with Spain was ling on his amazing, intu! won because England prevented Ger-|of “doing the obvious,” many and other Europeon countries |away. A will-o'-the-wisp from taking sides againct us. | feld. Hirschfield points to a number of| Thruout his entire flight influences which, he says, are para-/_ nation hunted with orders to mount in creating a pro-British sen-|*shoot to kill," Whitfield did the jtfment in the United States “thru jobvious, Whether he outthought the a revision” of the school histories. police, whether it was biind luck, Among these are the Cecil Rhodes |or whether he was a rank blunderer, scholarships, Sons of St. ree | must remain for the reader to Sulgrave institute, Pilgrim society, | fathom. Church Peace union, National Secur- | ‘ ity league, English-speaking union,} On May 11, ete. |Griffin, with a fellow otficer, ar International master minds, de-jrested Whitfield on suspicion of clares the commissioner, have gain-/having stolen spark plugs. jed dominance over American am-| Police say he operated cn a whole scale, They contend he ob- all parties whose advocacy of the|tained the spark plugs thru con- world court, league of nations and /nivance of persona under four-power treaty is all 4 part of/trol, and that he was able to sell the plot. Hirschfield attacked Frank ‘them back to the manufacturers A. Vanderlip’s plan for the conduct |from whom he had stolen them at of foreign affairs thru a council of|a price cheaper than they could af- foreign nations as a part of the |ford to make them themeclves. The same conspiracy. ramifications of his operations, they ye! further aillegé, extended thruout the Says Pro-British white Whitfield wanted to Passages Are Out! to hia wife oft allowed |this. They had searched him. After EW YORK, June 4—Pro-British |FO!Ne with him to the second floor, passages have already been taken |the policeman permitted bim to en- out of the New York school histo.|ter ® bedroom alone. While there, ries, Dr. Bryan J. Riley said today,|he slipped a pistol in his pocket, in answering the charges of Com.| Whitfield and Griffin started for missioner David 8. Hirschfield that |the police station in the former's pupils here were being taught that|#hiny, blue Jordan roadster. In the the revolutionary war was a mis- traffic the other officer, following in & second machine, was lost sight of. take, ie Whitfield, say police, reached to his American school histories are | socket. He pulled tho pistol, Sune nplemdh speaidant ep tin se | eee himself to liberty ond Griffin tional Educational association, de. |'® at |clared today, in answer to charges brought by David §. Hirschfield, in| New York, that pro-British tenden. cles are injected into school text | books. the “saved support more, ac tve faculty he slipped is Whit. o- Patrolman Dennis | | he * He drove to a lonely, abandoned road, near Chagrin Fas, just out- side of the city. There, police charge, he stripped the body of t4 levery stitch of clothing. He built al eins ere reba sdvieator® | three fires and tried to burn the tell- |books, there ts no danger of the|*#le uniform, children being instructed unfairly or | 1% ® story book, he would have incorrectly,” Owen said. buried the clothing in the grave pre- prada pared for the nude body. Brass doesn’t burn so easily, and Griffin's {numerals ‘14, indicating the police | precinct, were found, together with brass buttons, and the remnants of a club, Even while the flames of the three fires were half-heartedly eat- ing away the evidence of his crime, Whitfield prepared a grave, the in- dictment against him continues. But in a detective story, he would have dug deep, and sricothed the ‘earth so that none could see, Whit- field’s grave was shallow, crude, ob- vious. Here slant: Whitfield had been maintaining a 16-year-old girl, Merle Price, fa an apartment in Cleveland. Sherlock Holmes would tejl you that, under the circumstances, Whit- field should have fled alone. But he didn't. He went back to Cleve- land for the girl. Went back in his glaring, blue roadster, aud got her. Then he drove serenely along in the late afternoon traffic thru the heart of the city. He stopped at a bank to cash a check, He leisure ly traversed main arteries teeming with autos and wagons, and then headed for Chi on the ‘Toledo highway, bound for the very part of the country where both the girl's mother and his own relatives lived, ‘The astonishing feature of the light” was that Whitfield «topped quently along the route to sell Farm Loan Board Member Resigns | WASHINGTON, June 4.—Judge Chas. BH. Lodbell, Great Bend, Kan., today resigned as chairman of the federal farm loan board. President Harding announced the appointment of Louis J. Pettyjohn, Dodge City, Kan., as his successor. The changes will take place June 20. Broker Believed to Be Murder Victim KANSAS CITY, June 4,—Police in- vestigated today what they belleved was the murder of Guy A. Moore, 49, wealthy broker, and forrger presl- dent of the Kansas City board of trade, Moore's mutilated body was found on the tracks near the Chicago, Mil- waukee & St. Paul bridge, just out- side the city, His pockets had been turned inside out. Bruises on the piisht side of the head, Coroner C. 0, Smith sald, were caused before Moore was struck by a train and his body mutilated. The broker had apparently been dead for several hours when a freight train crew yesterday discoy- ered his mangled form the tracks, The suicide theory was given credence by polive, but business as. | noclates who talked with Moore al fr few hours before his death, said he|spark plugs to farmers, In this was in the best of spirite, He had| way he financed the flight. suffered no financial ;everses,| But no one recognized the couple, friends and relatives sald No one recognized the car, despite C, W. Lawless, the dead man's|the fact the license number hadn't business partnor, sald it was his be-|been changed, nor had the color lef that Moore had been robbed and|of the body, He merely repainted attacked and then thrown on the|the wire wheels from red to white, tracks, In Chicago, Whitfield and Marie enters another unnatural on otf a lonely road near Cleve | while | his con-| } y goodbye and! THE They they moved on, ark p A been a » sell ap he } murder Madison went At the « tiny jthem fre A | State Journal }to phone p Sefland and Detective Jesse Smith responded, at pistol’s point, }rested Whitfield. And now for the third time, hunted man did the obvious, A man, with a price on his head, naturally would try to get away. But in books, and In real life, too, the criminal with a pistol prodding his back, resigns himself to his fate and the atory ends. But not Whitfield. When he jreached the door, he saw a street car com And just ft wns nearly abreast he shoved the offi cers aside, and ran In front of the car, which served an a shield for the fusttilade of bullets that were loosed. Then he ran, atemingly in every direction: | reported miles car. Only Was caught. What Lx Whitfield? Another Arsene Lupin? Or just a lucky fool? and rent outside Ole ar the as awny, the girl, in a Marie atolen Price, 'ALVENSLEBEN | ON WAY HERE] Alvo yon Alvensleben, and doll salesman, was f be on his way to Se from Spokane in an company with Russel St. Paul banker. Alvensieben was in Spokane Sun- day, according to word received here. His plane, come from St, Paul, is piloted [N Mamer, a Spokane aviator, | The trio flew from St, Paul, | stopping over Mon Minot, N. D.; Hayre, Mont,, and Columbia Idaho. | The trip is believed to be the first flight from the Middle West to the Coast in a standard plane, Hallstorms and heavy gales along the route delayed the birdmen. The Might was begun last Tuesday. | Witnesses Arrive adventurer! heduled to tle Monday airplane, in H. by LAKE CITY, Fla, June 4.—More than 60 state witnesses arrived here today prepared to testify against Walter Higginbotham, former “whip- ping boss,” whose trial for the al- leged beating to death of Martin Tabert in a convict camp was ached- uled to be resumed in Columbia county cireult court. Five hours later he waa| Phinner; | in which he has} commercial | for Flogging Trial| Suspect Baffles Police MILITIA GUARDS BOOZE SEIZED Death Pursuit, COLLEGE READ Oklahoma President Takes Job Despite Protests WATER orge C. W rotests and bi student worted to th 1 guard orders of Ge orted the ducation: Wilson was ¢ own by five nation id to be unde Walton, abor leader for th A red flag which fluttered from the ampus flagpole below which the wllege flag ped at half mast was removed by the guard-escort on ff farmer D0mt rrival J. B. ¥ “4 the key succensor retiring president of the institution to who demanded them! “law and authority this show of mill krid, dec ulled for hance his n the name of I deeply resent authority,” E play is un lared. ha dh and © you will report my statement ernor ot Abolition of the department Jancient languages will be the reform in education to be introd in the college, Wilson Indi when he took charge today “I am going to work toward the| elimination of the ‘ Greek and Latsn,” Wilson + Thore is little demand here for it," Wilson » 4 college for students to learn f ng and associated profer unguages may be obtaine tate schools,” sh-buckling the of od Inc 4 at oth HERE’S MORE ABOUT ROBBERIES STARTS ON PAGE 1 it and had taken it out into the ry where they broke it open, « & $1,000 bond on the Puget t & Power Co. peveral Hare in cash and a large yunt in checks, ‘They denied hay afo from the Happy Second ave. 8, Mon- }ing stolen the r cafe, 231 | ed the j two men at the Ansonia hotel after |the confeaston and discovered $315 in hid about the place, they ROBBERS TAKE | ANOTHER SAFE Thieves ended a hectic Sunday night during which two men were held up and robbed, another severely | | beaten over the head with a revolver and knocked unconscious, by boldly entering the Happy Hour restaurant and soft drink parlor at 221 Second avo, &, early Monday morning, steal ing a 350 pound safe containing be- tween $500 and $600 In cash, besides numerous papers and articles of Jew- elry. Crawling over. a transom, the} thieves entered the bar and wheeled) rooms of the the safe from ita hiding place thru a} back door where It was evidently ed {nan auto and carried away. the theft was discovered at § by Luigi Crosio, manager. BURGLAR SURPRISED WHILE AT WORK Surprising a burglar at work steal ing marterials from a half built houne | at Second ave. N. and McGraw at.,/ , Phalti Fair, 2607 Bec- | ond ave. N thug fiercely | until he was knocked senseless with the butt of a revolver. Fair's wife and child were witnesses to the} struggle. | A lone bandit at the point of a} gun forced R. H. Price of Portland, 1Ore., into an alley near Boldt cafe jon ‘Third ave., late Sunday night, and} robbed him of $27, Price reported} later. Andres Peterson, 3704 $8th ave. 8.,| | was returning home at a Inte hour} |when two bandits in a large auto} stepped from his doorway and drew | | revolvers with which they threatened him. After robbing Peterson of $2.50, the thugs leaped into the car and | drove off. An hour later, Patrolman E. Val- let arrested John J. Faris, 17, in the ‘Terminal garage, where he was at- |tempting to buy gasoline for a car answering the description of the ban- dit auto, Several revolver cartridges were found on the floor of the car. Faris gavo several conflicting statements as to his movements dur- ing the night, it is alloged, but im- plicatéd Earl Gordon, 17, who was arrested later at rd ave, 8. W., by Patrolmen A. W. Van Stone and W. H. West. Both were lodged in the city Jail for Investigation, | Milwaukee Home Is Wrecked by Bomb MILWAUKER, Juno 4.—A bomb exploded in the home of Walter Kiek- hefer early today, practically demol- ishing the house, and shattered win- dows ina score of residences in Shorewood, fashionable Milwaukee residential district, Police investiga tion failed to reveal a motive. No one Wag injured. — “The Purple Mask,” the romantic melodrama in which Leo Ditrichstein is appearing at the Metropolitan, 1m a “thriller” of the old-fashioned type, and keeps the spectator sitting on the edge of his chair thruout the performance, Ditrichstein, appearing in the role of “The Purple Mask,” @ mysterious secret agent in the consulship of Napoleon, ts the same fascinating, charming and debonair figure who haw endeared himuelf to American audiences for a score of years, Tho play centers around the ex- ploits of a French chevalier, one of a group of royalists plotting against the usurper, Napoleon, In a battle of wits with Brinquet, the Little Cor- poral's most Ingenious agent of po- Hee, the chevalter ix a dozen timos entrapped in a seemingly unescapa. blo net, but every time he wins his “The Purple Mask’? Is Thriller of Old Type Spectator Kept on Edge of His Chair During the Entire Play freedom by a daring and astounding trick, “The Purple Mask" moves with terrific rapidity. Surprise is piled on surprive, Hyery curtain falls upon a thrilling climax. Ditrichstein is surrounded by a highly competent group of players. Pogsy Allenby makes an attractive heroine, and Lee Millar does some aplendid work as Brisquet. Several of the minor roles are little master. pleces of character acting, “The Purplo Mask" is first-rate en- tertainment, It is one of the moat thrilling melodramas that has been presented here in recent years, The play will remain at the Metro- politan for only four days, the Inst | porte | transcontinental non-stop fliers, car- | tate | Ho was recovering Monday }in use today: performance in Seattle being schod- uled for Wednoxday evening, A spo. olal matiness will be given Wednes- day afternoon, MONDAY, a = BY GANADIANS 17, Americans Leave Craft and Cargo and Swim Ashore (¢] ON RI waters IN WHATEV FAILED TO DC BEST—TO R MUM POTENTI ONWARD ACHIEVEME SO MUCH RE eral re TOMORROW Is T owned t attle, and All four boa toria by ther , and 4 authoritie SHRINE MEET IS UNDER WAY Parades and Pageants Start in Washington HAVE THEM FROM JUNE Accounts received to $5,000. Husba have the limit of WASHINGTON, disappolntin June 4 small numbe t in town, Shrine weel “wand | Vhree tices When Swept Out to Sea) REDONDO BEACH, Cal, Three bather nder way here today with a | n of parades, pageant ts and oth ts Beh to keep the elty vntil Friday Too enthusiasts Juled mood in carnival June 4 rt and| ” were drowned here boosting were held responsible for] gsinday when they were caught tn} the failure of thousands of expected » the c > to Shriners and their families to ar-|* “P de which swept them out rive. They were frightened away They were Ernest Goodpas- by the reports of oun crowds | ture, 32, and his brother Victor, 40,| here and probably of sufficient |of Huntington Park, and Wilbur xccommodation: was evident| Lyons, 29, of Inglewood. The bodies| when Louls temple sent word| were not recovered. | ® would remain he the trip a hospital ing treme te mem me, would cost to They said was no room | | using money help build they understood there here, anyway Maternity Act Test Cases Dismissed, Merchants and hotelkeepers were} WASHINGTON, June 4 keenly ppointed over failure of | suits brought from Massa the 300,000 expected to arrive. Only |test the validity about 20,000 came in on special | Towner trains and in automo! |minwed by the supreme court tods Today's program began with a pil-|0n the grounds of nonjurisdiction grimage to Mount Vernon Im.| As a result of this action, the law perlal Potentate James 8. McCand.| passed by the last congress and) jenn and his divan. McCandless put led ax a boon to American wom. | a wreath on the tomb of Washing-|4nhood, is allowed to stand, altho ton |its constitutional merits have not Bhortly after noon the transconti.| been decided. The two husetts to of the Sheppard. maternity act were dis-| JACH MAR TARDED. r if If you want to Succeed, Save. PHE LAST DAY YOL CAN LEAVE SAVING IST. MUTUAL SAVINGS i) & LOAN ASSOCIATION NN 615 Second Avenue | dow wa JUNE a a Compounded Semi-Annvally is the least we have ever paid SAVINGS YOU HAVE POSSIBLE YOUR MAXI POWER, THE OF HUMAN BEEN JUST JEGREE ) YOUR AL CH HAS HERE AND EARN DIVIDENDS in amounts from $1 nd and wife may each 000. r rt a) |Falls Four Stories to Pavement, Dies NEW YORK, June —Crashing four stories to the pavement, the body of Miss Lucille Bingle, 23, landed between two small children at play Sunday on Central Park West. Neither of the children was injured. Miss Bingie, the daughter of Edward J. Bingle, president of the Unexcelled Manufacturing Co, either fell or Jumped from the win- of her father’s apartment and instantly killed. Expedition stan to Meet Amundsen COPENHAGEN, June 4.—The Nor- wegian government expedition which | goes to greet Roald Amundsen, if he lcompletes his flight across the pole, r to find his body if the flight is a ilure, left Horton Saturday for Ad- vent ‘Two aviators with planes are included in the party, which ex. pects to meet Amundsen in the Spitz. enbergen region. nental auto caravan which left Can Francisco May 1 waa due, and at 2 p. m. the members of this caravan were to take part with President Harding and Secretary of War! Weeks in dedicating the “zero mile- stone,” marking the starting point of the Lincoln highway, Exhibition of the United States airplane carrier Langley, air circus stunts by famous armed flyers, in- cluding Kelly and MacReady, the Declares Tanlac Ended Indigestion and Fully Restored Lost Weight and Strength — “It Meant and Happiness to Me,” She States nival events of various sorts were to fill theday. Tonight the poten-| and divan of Almas temple of this city, will welcome the imperial potentate and his divan at a ban- quet Auto Fichaust ns Overcomes Worker Gas from the exhaust of his auto| overcame B. 8. Mills, College Inn| hotel, Sunday afternoon as he was| working on the car in a garage. | City, Mills was rescued and revived bya | cisco. pulmotor operated by city firemen.| “For a long time before I took Tanlac I was in a terribly run- | down, weakened condition. and some Threo different kinds of time are 3 it was just all I could do to true solar time, mean/drag myself around, to say nothing of attempting the housework. My “The Tanlac treatment has meant health and happiness to me and it um more than glad to give it my highest indorsement, for I think it] |is really wonderful,” declared Mrs. |Jennie Eisenberg, highly esteemed jreaident of 145 Miriam St. Daly Calif, a suburb of San Fran solar time and sidereal time. Daly City Lady Gives Convincing Evidence appetite was almost down to noth- thing, and even the little I did manage to eat disagreed with ma and I never relished a bite for months. I kept falling off until was far under weight, and my troubles became so bad they were just about all I could Lear, “One of my neighbors udvised me to try the Tanlac treatment, as she had taken it with very good results, so I started on ft right away. Al- most from the very first dose I began to get better, and today I en- joy splendid health and bave gained back all my lost weight. My appe- tite is splendid and I always feel so strong and well that the housework is just a pleasant task. Tanlac is simply grand.” Tanlac is for sale Ly all good druggists. Accept ‘no substitute. Over 37 million bottles sold. Tanlac Vegetable Pills ure nature's own remedy for constipation. For sale everywhere.—Advertisement. Baking Powder— that’s the thing in successful baking It determines failure or suc- cess in baking, more than any otheringredient. If you do not always have satisfactory bakings, change to Calumet forjust etre: It is pure: con! onl: such aeiete abe been officially approved by U. S. Food Authorities, Within the Calumet factor- ies — the largest and most sanitary onearth—hundreds Sr eS ae See in white are busily en; in that is the Pitta peice at is used by mi fone Human hands never touch it. Its sale is 2% times as muchas that of any other brand. Pure the making—pure in the A pound can of Calumet con- ta full 16 ounces. Some ng powes hipA gore inI2 regis tead 6 ounce cans. Be ithe i pound when you want rise SZ fe BEST BY TEST CALUMET The Economy BAKING PO THE WO. WDER ‘S_ GREATEST BAKING POWDER