Ames Tribune from Ames, Iowa • Page 2
- Publication:
- Ames Tribunei
- Location:
- Ames, Iowa
- Issue Date:
- Page:
- 2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)
I I I I I a THURSDAY, FEBRUAET 2, 1433. "'BUY BETTER IN AMES" AMES DAILY TIMES, AMES. IOWA, PAGE FOUR Ames Daily Tribune- Times Publiaheo TRIBUNE PUBLISHING cu. By the 317 Stract. Lowe J.
L. Powers, President Manager Entered matter at the Postattice coder the act July 16. 1914 Paper of Story County and the City SUBSCRIPTION RATES .18 City. carries weekly 6.00 carrier or of year Ames. months 2.00 Story County.
County outside of Ames. 3.50 6 months 2.50 low. outalde Story County. County. 4.00 of lowa, outside of Story year arontb .50 Iowa, outside Story Coonty.
6.00 Outaide of Lowa, year All subscriptions wast be paid to advance. and will be discontinued at expiration unless renewed Devins- National advertising New Moines. ation. DESTRUCTIVE CRITICISM Of the institutions and men condemned by a comof the Women's Auxiliary of the American mittee including religious and pacifist bodies, many Legion, considered admirable. Others are less are generally American who knows of widely esteemed.
Every work will have his own estimate of them and their according to his temperament and mental them, alant, as is natural and proper. need be found with these women for not No fault of the persons concerned. But. liking and approving when they publicly voice blanket condemnation of whose only common quality 1 is persons and groups and class them all as destructive liberal-mindedness, the critics lay themselves open to and unpatriotic, criticism. and government were born of free thot.
Our nation themselves differed widely in their outThe fathers them were radical, some merely liblook. Some of sanely conservative, some reactionary. eral. some pooled their thinking and created: a free govThey free people. The Constitution itself ernment for a careful to guarantee free speech and opinion.
was going to change all that now? Are we not. The critics are unduly frightened. reassured by reading the history of They may be and noting the perils it has been able their country in its devotion to freedom, it to survive because. usually let people speak their minds. has such critics may learn that it is not From history which destroys free governments, but liberal thot of liberal thot.
That is what blew the suppression tup Russia. we are all in a bad fix, and need, above all Todar to work together. Can't we now, for a little white. stop eriticising each other? SHARING ART TREASURES has lorz been customary for European and American art galleries to let some of their treasures travcling. appearing at loan exhibitions in foreign go countries.
The English have declined to share their collection- in this way. Anyone who wanted to see the old master; hanging in London galleries had to go there to do so. Now it is announced that Sir Philip Sassoon. new chairman of the British national gallery, will introduce a Gifferen: policy. It will require an act of parliament to accomplish his purpose, but that is likely to be achiered before When it is made pocsibic.
many British masterpieces will be legally sent as temporary loans to galleries in many differ. ent lands. This change of attitude may not seem of tremendous importance to the average American. ver it has significance and value. The great art of the world ought to be Literature and musie cannot be confined within national boundarice.
Painting and sculpture should not be. EINSTEIN'S PEACE PLAN war TOW raging will scarcely end in victory for anyone; probably in defeat for all. Consequently educated men should exert all their influence to prevent the conditions of peace becoming the source of suture wars." It was Albert Einstein, the scientist, mathematician and earnest pacifist, who said that in the first year of the World war. He has never been thot of as '2 prophei, yet he foretold the outcome of the war and its aftermath only too well. The conditions of peace have appeared increasingly unsatisfactory with the passing of time.
They seen to have become the source of threatened war, at least. as Europe's troubles increase and its rivalries grow. Einstein offers a few suggestions for ending war and making peace certain. They involve abolishing armies and military service. ending intense nationalicm, teaching young people the truth about war and scrapping any part of our educational watem which glorifies military heroes.
Such ideas may be generally accepted many years hence. Right now, too few of us are ready for 80 complete a swing to pacifism. Yet: it would be a great day for this uncomfortable world if the economic and financial burdens of its militarism could be lifted at once. THE DEBT NETWORK The business men of the United States, as represented by nearly 2,000 chambers of commerce, have voted by more than 20 to one approving further postponement of foreign war debis to this country and modification of those debts. The business men are apparently ahead of the politicians on this question, and possibly a little ahead of the general public, but there can be no doubt that sentiment for rational revision is gaining rapidly.
The members of the national chamber recommend, conditions of revision downward, guarantees that as our goods will have access to the debtor countries fair competitive terms, and that the debtors will on reduce their armament. The value of scaling down costly fighting power in tariffs, armies and navies is self-evident now. The nations, caught in: a great network of debt and taxes, must work together to throw it off. The way to stop war is to put it on a cash-andcarry bagis. Newspaper Comment State Bank Not the Solution Davenport Times: The proposal, of Lieut.
Gov. Kraschel for the formation of a state bank, designed the investment of Iowa's wealth and with for ferred rates on loans to Iowans, may bring a popular from those who continue to remain blind response the defects of the present banking system, but to reform is not to be achieved thru the setting up or the continuance of 48 individual state banking operating in competition with national systems banks. Money Well Spent Estherrille News: One appropriation of the general assembly did not prove to be extravagance. That was provision for a legislative committee to reduction of governmental expenditures. Restudy gardless of what may be said of individual measures by the committee it must be conceded that sponsored it did succeed in making Iowans twice as tax conscious as they ever were before.
Fairest Most Economical Tax Atlantic News-Telegraph: We are strong for the income tax proposal. Not only is it the fairest gross way to levy such a tax, but it would be the most economical. An army of taxeaters to collect it would not be necessary for the obvious reason that it would be simple to compute and the ordinary man could figure his own. Wise Action Algona Advance: Governor Herring's proclamation against mortgage foreclosures is without legal standing. Yet even mortgagees must feel that under the circumstances it was the wise thing to do.
We are going thru a period of psychological stress and storm which justifies some measure of temporary resort to extra legal authority. Speaking of Marshalltown Times-Republican: has a bill before this passengers to walk on facing traffic. So far the got around to prevention who knows when? Freak Bills Arch McFarlane legislature compelling foot the left side of highways legislative powers haven't of sties on the eyelids, but A More Important Matter Cedar Rapids Gazette: The McGregor farmer who lost 40 cents a head on calves shipped to Chicago will have to console himself as best he can while the legislature handles the more important case of the J. who are losing $2.50 a head on couples shipped to out-of-state marriage markets. Knoxville Express: Governor Herring's proclamation, calling upon holders of mortgages on real estate or personal property to refrain from foreclosure, marks the beginning of a new era.
What would have been thot of such a proclamation 10 years ago? That Long-Delayed Elopement OH, YES! SHE ALWAYS COMES WITH ME AN HITLER Scanning the News By T. 0. Those good people of Ames who have been afraid the world was going to end suddenly about Februany 15 can now rest more easily. Then, they may begin to receive state I. 0.
instead of Uncle Sam's cash for their salaries but Ames banks have announced that they expect to accept the warrants and take care of their customers in the ordinary course of business. So that's that. The state highway commission's offices here are still open and doing business, though with a curtail. staff, and continue. nor Herring and the members of the state executive council and the legislature have no idea of shutting the place down, In fact, if the legislature follows the suggestion of Former Governor Max Gardner of North Carolina, it will put the entire state road system under the direct administration of the commission and that should mean a considerably larger force here at the central office though effecting economies elsewhere.
Iowa State college is sull doing business in the usual way and will continue to do 80. There will be a nominal reduction in expenditure in keeping with the times but nothing drastic. There will be no new but until business along conditions withwe can get out more classrooms and more laboratories for a time. The students will keep on coming, perhaps not quite 80 many as we would like to see and they may not have as much money to spend as we might wish, but the school will go On very much as usual and there will be a remarkable improvement as soon as things pick up. Thousands of boys and girls are staying home from college this year because their parents can't send them.
The proceeds of eight-cent corn and two-cent hogs, don't go far toward paying college education and there are not enough jobs in Ames or other college towns so that all who wish to do so can earn their way. But those young. sters still intend to get a college education and many of them will come to Iowa State college eventually if not now. When the break comes, they will pour in upon us together with the thousands who would come in normal times and we shall have to have a larger teaching staff and perhaps more buildings to take care of them. There will be a heavy demand for city real estate from farmers who will be coming here with their families, just did before when corn was selling for 90 cents or $1.00 per bushel.
The veterinary division ing to be moved to Iowa City though the engineering college at the state university may be moved to Ames. There are undoubtedly possibie changes turning in. Governor Herring's mind and perhaps 'be has already made suggestions to the state board of education, There are some changes needed but there is nothing to worry, about. Iowa State college and Ames will not suffer. There are better days ahead.
This old state of Iowa still has the same soil and the same sturdy farm folk. It is sick, terribly sick, but it isn't going to die. We're badly bent but we're not broke. We not have much money but we hare the most fertile soil in the nation and we're going to keep it. We have courage and we're not going to lose that either.
There is darkness now but the dawn is coming. I don't know when but I imagine something will happen by mid-May at least, as soon as congress has had time get the proper price-raising machinery into operation. that, it should not be long before things start moving. am inclined to believe that the speed of recovery, once it starts, will surprise us. I am not nearly so worried about the last six months of 1933 as I am about the last six months of 1935 or 1936.
The measures contemplated the Roosevelt administration should give agriculture temporary relief at least and the new purchasing power of the farmer, coupled with the replacement demand that will arise thruout the nation as soon labor gets back to work making things for the farmer, should carry us along in reasonably good shape for two or three years. Then will come the day I fearand I fear it because I am afraid that those who have suffered most in this depression, the farmers laborers, will accept a little porary relicf as the real thing. lapse back into a state of semicoma and permit the reactionary forces to regain control. God help us if they do: Their principles plied again in this decade would throw us back into another depression, beside which this one would be prosperity indeed. But that possibility is 1W0 three years ahead.
Our immediate task now is the last six 1933 and there is truly reasou hopefulness. Ames should not be frightened. We may have 10 take state 1. but we shall be able 10 thom. We should remember there are 13.000.000 people in United States today who would happy to take most any sort state certificate of value if could only get 3 few hours work.
I There are about 30.000,000 people living or farms who cannot sell products of all their labor year for enough 10 pay their They would probably be witting tale a tow I. 0. U. also, especial 1y if they were based on only or 19 por rom loser prices In 1919 At 1:: for paratively, during this depression. Our banks have stood firmly against the tide and they are now prepared to extend their services.
We have had a steady inflow of outside money which has maintained business here far above the average of other cities in lowa. We bave been squeezed but not crushed. State 1. 0. U.s! Bring them on.
Ames is ready and glad to take them. We'll use them. We'll carry on. We have the courage to see the thing thru, People's Forum Mr. Murray, Iowa's: new secretary of agriculture reduced the personnel in his department by 50 souls; Mrs.
Miller, Iowa's new secretary of state cut hers down 11. What are these 61 going to do? We applauded Mr. Gardner, exgovernor of North Carolina, when he told how Le abolished 52 departments of his government and when Mr. Herring, Iowa's new governor, said that he intended to follow the leadership of this egotist, we cheered. Can the unemployment disaster be remedied by cutting out departments here and offices there, by eliminating duplication and by consolidating departments? The former governor of North Carolina said, "out took over the roads and cut many departments and offices.
We had 63 purchasing agents in the state. I have been trying for years to get these into one. This Fear 'I abolished these 63 departments and set up one. This new agent has saved $100,000 for every month of the year." Is it better to squeeze 63 departments into one making a saving for the state in dollars per month, and throwing on to charity the workers in 62 departments? How many "dishonest dollars" per month are 62 souls worth? Jobn Langdon Davies says, "One hundred years from now the people who inhabit the eartil Rill look back to the inhabitants of the year 1932 and wonder what queer folk they were with 10,000,000 unemiployed in the United States, unemployed in England, 000,000 in the United States working 48 hours per week, and 2,000,000 in England working 48 hours per week, never thinking that it might be possible to employ the entire 24,000,000 for 24 hours per week to dot the same amount of work. in Let us start right here, our home town, to cure the depression.
Instead of cutting out a laborer here, or a teacher there, hire au extra one. It may be necessary to cut salaries but that is much more to be preferred than discharging workers. When an extra teacher is each school of the United States the unemployment situation will be relieved to that extent. Each laborer hired additionally will relieve the unemployment situation by that increment. Indus try will be speeded up, machinery will be improved to throw still more people, out of work, but let us not discharge them.
Reduce the hours, even hire extra workers, reducing hours as we go. Arrange salaries on the basis of an honest dollar. Soon will we have prosperity back again. Let us not tolerate half-thinking politicians who are not willing to sacrifice parts of their salaries and are not willing to hire extras. Mr.
Gardner of North Carolina said they have just as good service now with 70 per cent as many workers as they had with 100 per cent. He advised Governor Herring to adopt this same plan in Iowa. The governor says go. ing to follow this North Carolina governor's leadership for four rears and perhaps for six (cheers). Woe to the Jowans if he can and does.
Let us instead, hire an extra teacher for each ten in Iowa this year. Cut salaries 20 per cent (this will still. save 10 per cent) or still if but make teachmore, salaries payable in terms ot farm prices index as put out' by Iowa State college in the monthly bulletin Agricultural Economic Facts. When farm prices are low as at present pay fewer dollars but let us not discharge workers even where there is duplication. When the index numbers of prices rise and it will if this plan is also carried out in other fields, hire extra workers, professors, officers, teachers.
but reduce the pay somewhat. (not much, but enough to cause added financial buden by taking extra help). Reduce hours also convenient in order to justify the cuts in salary (still pay in terms index numbers.) When the index number rises again and it will rise higher and higher, employ extra help, reduce hours and if desirable cut salaries a little. Agriculture and industry will soon normal (but what we think of as normal will be a very dwarfed normal as viewed later on.) Hours per day be further duced. More lelsure will be availall.
Salarles will rise. Utopla, will be seen in the proaching future. Good times ap- be here again and better times be coming day by day. Every able body will of comparative leisure. Everyone can and will do what she or he likes best to do.
Work (as now ered) will not be a blessing. Everywill be an aristocrat and one ago of slavery will be here. Only for the slaves shall be machines. Culture shall be ours and shall be glad that in 1933 we not cut out from public schools 0. the extra curricular activities uSe mean so much in training for that capacities which bring untold the nes of appreciation for lelsure be hours.
Then our race. not of required to toll AS the "man they the plow" was required to do not being slaves to machinery turn out men and women of culture the as did Athens when she had a this lure class. There will be no human claves; everyone will be an aristoto crat. Shall we have this or shall five on to the loathsome bitter than which loom Ahend darkly nearer every thine "lay off" ft. single individunt.
Perimp: the el SPOTLIGHT 1933 CORLEY NEA BEGIN MERE TODAY SHEILA SHAINE. dancer, discharged from a new play MARION RANDOLPH. the her. Shell. starches tor work and Anally stcares a dart STAN- 'show DICK LEY, rich a socially her give up this seh and him but refusca.
Her idea of marriage is home tittle town far from Broadway. The ON their and Shella becomes friendly with JAPPY, a chorus. girl. Uttle, midwestern elty Sheila meets Jerry Wymam, works In a factory. She does net kaew that Jerry's father owns the tors.
young man her to super after the performance. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVII shut the door of the dressing room behind her. "So help me, Sheila," she exclaimed, "I believe you're in Cold cream jar -suspended in midair, Sheila stopped short 1n her preparations before the mirror. Towel pinned firmly around her head. eyes critically her reflection, she spoke carefully.
"In love? Why, my dear Jappy!" Jappy tossed aside her coat, ripped off -her bat and, sinking into a chair, began to unfasten her strap pumps. She was late by recognized standards but, being Jappy, she would probably reach the wings a good four minutes ahead of Shella. "That's what I said--in love! I've spoken to you twice and you haven't answered. And, speaking of. love, who was the Romeo you were with last night? And the night before? And today at lunch?" Sheila rose from the dressing table, fastening her headdress, slipped off her kimona and drew her costume over her head.
"You'll be late," she warned the other girl. "I'll make it. Just saw McKee getting in." "McKee doesn't open the show." "I'll be on time." Jappy faced the mirror, spreading cold cream expertly, rapidly. A dusting of powder, rouge, blue lines about the eyes. his name, Sheila? You're beginning to worry me?" In the mirror, without seeming to do so, she eyed her friend sharply.
"Too bad we're leaving tonight," Jappy went on. "I'm not going to leave. I'm staying over. I'll make the jump Monday morning. There's train." "Oh!" The monosyllable was expressive.
Sheila usually liked to spend Sunday in the town where the show played on Monday resting, shampooing, going over ber wardrobe, doing her mending. To remain behind for Sunday. dreary day among strangere, meant just one thing. Sheila must be very much in love. Carolina and the governor of Iowa will reduce their salaries 50 per cent.
and hire assistant governors, instead of cutting down. Perhaps Murray and Miller, instead of reducing jobs, will reduce salaries and base them upon index numbers. Perhaps those superintendents, so widely heralded because of the savings they have made by cutting personnel thru alternating classes, adding burdens upon -faculty teachers retained, securing, new members who to teach many subjects and manage outside activities as well, will reduce their jobs to half time at half pay and hire assistants to work the other half. Perhaps, perhaps but not until greed vanishes and each has love for his fellow men. I am the superintendent of ad Iowa consolidated school in which 10 teachers are employed.
I have already received a 20 per cent cut but will accept voluntarily an additional 20 per cent cut (or still even more) if the board of education will hire an extra teacher arrange our contracts on basis which rests upon the index number of farm prices. I will even reduce my job to half time and half pay if each teacher and administrator in many school systems will do the same and if the board of education will hire extra teachers for each vacancy created and make our contracts In term of price indexes. E. R. STEPHENSON, Supt.
of Gilbert. School. MOVIES The "mixer" on a Hollywood movie stage has plenty to mix, Fredric March has discovered. March. winner of the award of the academy of motion picture arts and sciences for the i best performance of the year.
got (to talking things over with Martin M. Paggi, "mixer" whose re(cording of the musle and dialog of Maurice Chevalier's "One Hour With You" helped the Paramount. studios win the academy's for the best sound recording, of the year. It. occurred the filming of "Tonight Is Ours." new comedy by Noel Coward.
author of "Private Lives," directed by Stuart Walkcr. in which March is starred with ('laudetto Colbert, and which comes to the Capitol Thursday night and transfers the Now Amo3 Friday and Saturday. Paggi "mised" the round. picture Six elements, Pazel explained. have 10 be lu "mix: 13 be?" Jappy asked finally.
41 can at least wish you luck." SHEILA told her bis name was Jerry Wyman. Just a nice boy who worked in a factory. He bad shown her the little houses where employes lived. Little houses with tiny lawns and gardens, ironing boards that went back into the wall, showers, electric refrigerators, every convenience. "Did you discuss rents?" Jappy wanted to know.
"Doris Haynes married that automobile salesman we met in Carrsville," Shella said irrelevantly. "And Grace Gordon married a cotton millionaire. But you notice she's back on Broadway." "The stag. was all Grace cared about," Sheila protested. "Fire minutes!" droned the call boy and for four of them conversation was suspended.
In the furry of excitement Jappy's shoes could not be found until she located them in the cretonne pocket of the dressing chair. As Sheila waited in the wings she thought happily of Jerry. Yes, she was in love with him. She was sure of it. She remained in Spencer until Monday.
Jappy bade her goodby with warnings not to take the country lad too seriously. She was joking but with that sort of raillery which veils deeper meanings. picnic for Sunday. They would Sheila and Jerry bad planned a start a little late for picnics but early, Jerry said, for stage people. Jerry had to attend church with the family.
Sunday dinner was a family rite, too, but be said be could that. this once," Sheila. escape, He bad not told her much about his family. She guessed, in spite of the insignificant car be drove. that his family was important.
She guessed that there were other cars but that this one was Jerry's to do with as he pleased. SHEILA ordered lunch for two packed at the hoteL The bead waiter raised his eyebrows as she ordered and promised to see that everything was as it should be. would hare surprised Shella to know. that the head waiter Was aware who was to accompany her on that picnic, just as be and half the hotel stat were aware what kept Shella in Spencer over the week-end. By 1 o'clock she and Jerry bad parked the roadster and were seated by a brook far from town.
Oh, yes, Sheila was in love with Jerry. She liked the way he mored as be deftly laid out the lunch and brolled the steak which he had added to the feast. Sheila understood that his acquaintance with woodland picnics exceeded her own. He laughed when she tried to balance her plate on her lap, brought her water in a paper cup Ito serve as a finger bowl, dried ling" sound for proper recording: 1. The resonance of the player's voice; 2.
The "frequency" of the sound waves caused by the voice; 3. The distance between the microphone and the player; 4. The mood of the scene and of each separate player; 5. The volume of the voice; 6: The size and shape of the setting, and the type of materials used to construct it as well as the position of the microphone in relation to the walls of the set. LOST FAMILY HEIRLOOM IRON MOUNTAIN, (U.P.) When three-year-old Kathleen Schenk lost one of her hand-knit mittens she spoiled a family heirloom which her mother bad hoped would last 100 years.
The mittens were knit in 1867 and used by three generations. They were washed and stored carefully after each child had outgrown them. desert plants will be exhibited. The affair will be in the noted Witte Memorial Museum, Brackenridge Park. ESCAPED DEATH IN CRASH SHELBYVILLE, Ind.
Sheppel escaped with only a cut hand when a locomotive demolished his automobile. He had stopped his car at the tracks and was waitfor the train to pass when Car) ing Bogeman, in another automobile, his machine onto the tracks in front of the engine. Your Income Tax PERSONAL EXEMPTIONS In addition to the personal emption of $1.000 for single per sons and $2,500 for married perliving together and for heads of families. a taxpayer is entitled to a credit of $400 for cach dependent. by income tax law and reg.
utations. as a or person incapabl under of self. 1S age support because mentally or rally defective. The term "mentally or physically defective" not only cripples and those tally defective but persons in ill health and the aged In order to be entitled to the $400 credit, the taxpayer must furnish tho dependent his or her chief support. The credit.
Is based upon actual financini dependency and not legal dependency. For mere father children re. ample. coir: half or more of their suppor from a trait fund or other separate her hands on his huge handker. chief and then abruptly swung himself beside ber.
A8 abruptly he kissed her. "Do you love me?" he whispered. Two bees were circling about the remains of the cake and Sheila fastened her eyes on the abandoned improvised table. "You know I "Sure?" His teasing blue eyes held hers now. "I'm sure--but what will your family say?" "What can they say, darling?" Even as he kissed her again Sheila felt a little coldness about heart.
He bad evaded the question. All that week he had evaded any reference to bis family. She did not know anything at all about them. To be sure his manner, his clothes were irreproachable but that told little. She recalled some of the leading men she bad known in the theater.
Occasionally one saw a humble father, an overworked little mother, with confusion and pride blending in their faces as they watched their handsome son. Sheila was an aristocrat in her own sphere but it did not matter to her from what stratum in 50- clety Jerry came. She loved him and that was enough. had said, "What can they say, darling?" Later he said, "They don't need to know." She was inexpressably hurt at that. Jerry had implied that his family would look down on ber because she earned her living on the stage.
It was pot that he had said those words. Had he put it bluntly it might 1 have been easier to bear. "But." she faltered, "they'll have to know some time, won't they?" "Please, Sheila- why should we bother about my family? Let's just think about us." There be was evading questions again. It did seem as if he would want to tell her about himself just as she had told him about berself. "You've never mentioned bcau," he pointed out once when che was talking of rehearsals, Ma Lowell's rooming house, ber father and mether, her early life.
"I're a beau." What Sheila wanted to say was, "I've never been in love before," but sbe did not say it. Somehow it did not seem quite the admission to make. At dusk brought her back the hotel. This disappointed ber. He bad originally planned that they should dine together some where and ride through the moonlight, arriving back in town much later.
"I'd like to but I'm tied up at home," was his apology. "But I'll see you again?" Sheila spoke timidly. For answer tilted her head back, holding his finger tip to ber chin, gazed mischievously into her eyes and kissed her. "Surest thing you know. 1'11 phone you about, noon." He did phone about noon.
Sheila's train left at 1:20. She packed, called a cab and went to the station alone. (To Be Continued) New Era source is not entitled to the credit. Neither relationship nor residence are factors in the allowance of the $400 credit for a dependent. The tax-payer and the dependent may be residents of different cities.
If husband and wife both. contribute to the support of a dependent, $400 credit be taken by the one contributing the chief support, and may not be divided between them. A single person who supports in his home an aged mother is entitled not only to. the $400 credit for a dependent but also to the peresonal exemption of $2,500 as the head of a family. A widower SUDporting under similar, circumstances a dependent under 18 of age also is entitled to the the head of a family, plus the $400 years personal a exemption of $2,500 as credit for a dependent.
Under the revenue act of 1932 both the personal exemption and the credit for dependents are reto be prorated where the quired status of the taxpayer changes during the year. You Can Have A Lovely Skin wonderful MELLO-GLO New, face powder stays on longer, tiny lines and wrinkles, hides large pores. Banishes prevents shine. none of that drawn ugly "pasty" look. Cannot irritate the most delicate skin because new French process makes it the purpowder known.
You est face will love the delightful fragrance. Try MELLO-GLO today. 50c and The Tilden Store $1.00 Advertisement. 1 WOMAN LOST 10 LBS. IN A WEEK Mrs.
Betty Lucdeke of Dayton writes: ANI using Kruschen to reduce weight-1 lost 10 pounds in one week and cannot say too much to recommend it." To take off fat easily, SAFELY and HARMLESSLY take one halt teaspoonful of Kruschen in 8 glass of hot, water in the morning before breakfast--it is the safe way to lose unsightly fat and one bottle that lasty weeks costa but 8 trifle. Get' it. at any drugstore in America. 10 this frat. bottle Tails to convince you this is tho safest way 10 lose fat money back.
But and get Kruschen Salts imitations are numerous and Von anfeguard your Advertisement,.
Get access to Newspapers.com
- The largest online newspaper archive
- 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
- Millions of additional pages added every month
About Ames Tribune Archive
- Pages Available:
- 116,931
- Years Available:
- 1928-1975