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The Los Angeles Times from Los Angeles, California • 7

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Los Angeles, California
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7
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NOVEMBER 22, 1933 PART I. 7 -WEDNESDAY MORNING. Nevada Villages Woman Liads Fight Against Senator Long STRATOSPHERE THRILLS CITED Settle Says lie Had Little CONNALLY AND OVERTON CLASH Uproar Created at Inquiry on Senator's Election "4 Chance to Look Around i Tl ACCORD GAINED ON FILM CODE WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. (Exclusive) Promulgation of.

the motion-picture code within the week was foreseen today when Recovery Administrator Hugh 8. Johnson disclosed the long-delayed agreement will be submitted to President Roosevelt Thursday. With all points at Issue "settled" and several changes reported to have been made, Johnson said the code "is now in the form in which I will recommend it," but stubbornly refused to indicat whether any substantial alterations have occurred since the pact left Deputy Administrator Rosenblatt a month ago. Assure Dry Zone LAS VEGAS (Nev.) Nov. 21.

(fl1) Nevada, rather moist during prohibition, will have at least one dry zone even when liquor comes back freely and legally. A cluster of farming villages In the Moapa and Virgin valleys will continue their traditional aridity in so far as intoxicating beverages are concerned. Combined city and county commissions wrote into new liquor-control ordinances a clause that prohibits the issuance of liquor dispensing licenses in the valleys for all time. Bronchial Troubles Need Creomulsion Persistent coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that la pleasant to take.

Creomulsion Is a new medical discovery with two-fold action; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known drugs, creosote la recognized by high medical authorities as one of the greatest healing agencies for persistent corglis and colds and other forms of throat troubles. Creomulsion contains, in addition to creosote, other healing elements which soothes and heal the Infected membranes and stop the Irritation and Inflammation, while the creosote goes on to the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, and attacks the seat of the trouble. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis, and is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Your own druggist Is authorized to refund your money on the spot if your cough or cold is not relieved by Creomulsion.

4 wvir i DRASTIC REDUCTIONS IN PRICES GLASSES 0 "a C'-? 4 iTk I Complete for Reading or Distance in fine Zylo-Sheil Frame, including thorough Eye Examination Kryptok Invisible Bifocals at drastically low cut prices Have your eyef examined and glamei filled by a PHYSICIAN and OCULIST who understand! your eyes and at lower pricei. mmA'- if, i ii air I rf airti 'rtr, rnlim'n- Bring This Advertisement hH With You! Avoid Embarrassment of FALSE TEETH Dropping or Slipping Don't be embarrassed again by havlnc your false teeth slip or drop when you eat. talk, lauah or sneeze Just aprlnkle a little Paatreth on your plates. This new. extremely fine powder gives a won-dertul sense of comfort and security.

No flimmt. arnrtftv ImIIr. -i 'i viMi i rtfrtifcanfftiirti fcOnliratf kM- "t'-' DR. PAUL KAHN Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Specialist 426 South Spring Sixth Floor, Room 609-10 Delta Bldg. Mi's.

Hilda Phelps Hammond In Action a. p. photo Rising from her seat among the spectators at the Senate hearing in New Orleans into the election of Senator John H. Overton, protege of Senator Huey Long, Mrs. Hammond, chairman of the woman's committee of Louisiana, which is seeking to unseat Overton, is shown here as she hurled charges of "inactivity" and "Insincerity" on the part of the Senate committee.

teeth today at any drur atore. ft if! FOREIGN TRADE BOARD SET UP Roosevelt Picks Committee to Supervise All Phases NEW CAMPAIGN OF N.RA. BEGUN Drive Aims to Reach All Codeless Employers Puhlic Interest in Ascent Amazes Commander Welcome Marshy Land of Landing Place (Continued from First Page) tables of elevation, measures feet. We descended as we had calculated at 5:50 o'clock Monday after-rioon and made a normal, easy landing. I saw before we came down Jhat we were alighting In a boggy country, but a region in all other Respects desirable, whereas a large portion of this section of New Jersey is not.

I After we had landed we tried to feet out, but found ourselves hammered by the bayous that ran through the land around us. The vater was not sq high as it became Subsequently, and we might have succeeded in wading to some farm liouse. But I was afraid we might liecome separated in the dark and 5.ie guarding of our instruments 'tfould have been more difficult. HE SLEEPS WELL So in the end we decided to stay inhere we were until daylight. We Jvrapped ourselves in the balloon fabric and I enjoyed the best night's Jest I have had for weeks.

I We were both of us tired for during the maneuvering of the balloon 5or its rise we had thrown out two Jons of ballast, and in similar work Jfor buoyancy on descent we had discarded great quantities of ballast nd heavy equipment. We did not Criticise the spot in which found outselves when we got out of the gondola. It was certainly a better Janding place and a safer one here 4xi a quiet corner of New Jersey Jhan my Chicago landing place on 'Che railroad tracks last summer had ieen. i we had no way of telling anything about what our sealed instru-inents might show. But we were satisfied that no single detail of what we had planned when the flight was undertaken had gone Jwrong.

LITVINOFF HOPES ton FRIENDLY RIVALRY WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. (JP) the stratosphere height record Set by three soviet balloonists still unbroken, Maxim Litvinoff today telegraphed to Lieutenant Commander T. G. W.

Settle a hope that our countries continue to contest 'tfre height in every sphere of science land technique." JIUNDREDS IN SEARCH ns BALLOONISTS SLEEP BRIDGETON (N. Nov. 21. (JP) America's first stratosphere balloon Jolted to -rest in the marsh land southwest of here, at 5:50 p.m. As hundreds of persons searched the pine woods, cranberry bogs and cultivated farms in Southern New Jersey, Lieutenant Commander Settle and his aide, Maj.

Chester L. Fordney, slept the night Jhrough wrapped up in the deflated fabric of their huge balloon, jiwaiting daybreak. "This morning Ma J. Fordney trudged through the marsh lands, walking until 9:30 a.m., when he Reached the farm house of S. N.

TTohnson, nine miles southwest of Iiere. There, by telephone, he notified the world of the balloonists' safety. 0 Pair Snap at Each Other Regarding Procedure Stamps, Cheers and Howls Enliven Investigation NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 21. (JP) An uproar was created late today before the Senate committee investigating the election of Senator John H.

Overton when Chairman Con-nally. Democrat, of Texas, clashed with Senator Overton over procedure to the accompaniment of stamps, cheers and howls of the hundreds of spectators. Chairman Connally was questioning a witness who said he had switched on election day from ex-Senator Edwin Broussard, the defeated candidate, to Senator Overton, when Senator Overton interrupted to object that Chairman Connally was trying to impeach his own witness and was asking leading questions. Then both Senators, red of face and with angry gestures, snapped at each other across the counsel table. Chairman Connally said the committee is after the facts and is not bound by- court rules of evidence, and Senator Overton shouted that he had, "never gotten a fair and square deal" from the committee.

"LIKE GRAND JURY" "I want to observe," jaid Chairman Connally, rising from the counsel table, "that I am not an expert on testimony. I want to further observe, as I have already observed, that this is not a court trial but is an investigation. This committee does oiot need to recognize anybody or observe any rules. This hearing is much like a case being presented before a grand jury. "We have got to put unwilling witnesses on the stand.

There have been charges of intimidation, influence to change sides, bribery and the like. How are we going to find out the truth unless we put fellows on the stand to And out the best way we can, even if we have to corkscrew it out of them? This committee is trying to find out only one thing, and I speak for Senators Logan and Thomas, and that is the truth from witnesses from both sides. We've got no other purpose except to find out the truth." OVERTON SPEAKS Then Senator Overton arose and impassionately said: "I haven't gone before the press of the country to argue my case. I have intended to make my fight before this committee and if necessary before the United States Senate. I do not agree with Senator Connally that this committee is to sit as a grand jury.

I have been attacked by the public press of the country. They have torn down my character and have assaulted my right and fitness to sit as a member of the United States Senate. "I had hoped to come into this case on its merits but from the very beginning of this Inquisition I haven't got a fair deal." He pounded the table and shook his head furiously as the crowd cheered and whooped. The clash came while Chairman Connally was examining George H. Sauton, who testified he had been down as a Broussard commissioner but that he did not serve because he had left his commission papers in his other suit.

LEADER "GOOFY" At 10:30 a.m., he said, he changed his vote from Broussard to Overton because he had decided that the Broussard leader of his ward was "goofy and was a deadbeat." "When I learned how goofy he was, I figured I may as well go on the side of those who had sense," he said. "Well, now, let's see who's goofy." said Chairman Connally. "Somebody else may be goofy. As I see it, you were so fair in your political conviction that early in the morning you were tacking up Broussard pic tures and a few hours later you were tearing them down and destroying Broussard ballots." Then Senators Overton and Connally clashed and the witness was dismissed without further questioning. During the day many Broussard commissioners who had failed to report for duty gave various reasons why they did not serve.

Other witnesses testified that an Overton commission had dropped twenty or twenty-five Broussard ballots behind the ballot box, that votes were solicited In the polls, and that Broussard official watchers were chased out of the polls. i WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. JP) President Roosevelt has created an executive committee to supervise all government action affecting foreign trade. Announcement of the move came today from Undersecretary Phillips of the State Department, chairman pro tempore of the group which will be known as the "executive commercial policy committee." In the future, every department taking any step affecting imports and exports must consult the new interdepartmental committee.

This includes the negotiation of any commercial treaties. Before final action, the reciprocity discussions now in progress between the United States and Sweden, Portugal, Brazil, Argentina and Colombia, will be referred to the new committee. It was indicated also the final say on the import liquor policy probably will rest with this committee. The committee membership includes Walter J. Cummings, for the Treasury; Assistant Secretary Dickinson and Dr.

Willard Thorp for the Commerce Department; Assistant Secretary Tugwell for the Agriculture Department; Gen. William I. Westervelt for the Agricultural Adjustment Administration; Oscar B. Ryder for the N.R.A.; Commisison-ers Robert L. O'Brien and Thomas Walker Page for the Tariff WASHINGTON, Nov.

21. (P) First orders in NJt.A.'s new campaign to obtain compliance from thousands of employers not reached by code authorities or local N.R.A. boards are to be Issued tomorrow, Hugh S. Johnson said today. Johnson said also -that after the volunteer President's re-employment agreements expire, employers not under codes will be expected to maintain the agreement terms if they want to keep their Blue Eagles.

He did not suggest any administra tion pressure to dissuade the non-coded from taking the eagles down. The expectation now is that hall the industrial groupings of the country, including virtually all the important ones, will be under codei by the end of the year. The new compliance set-up, which is intended to involve much stronger locaj co-operation through establishment of units, probably by counties, to correlate the various separate activities of the Roosevelt recovery program, probably will bi announced piecemeal. It is being worked out, Johnson told questioners, "by a young man named K. Johnston" who is Lieut Kilbourne Johnston, son of the ad ministrator, assigned to him the Army as a legal assistant.

He spells his name with a omitted by Johnson. ii i MkJ Emm Negro Convict Put in Dungeon SAN QUENTIN. Nov. 21. Discovery of a half-filled quart Jar of what authorities said was apricot brandy in the locker of Thomas Story, 35 years of age, Negro prisoner from Los Angeles, sent him to the prison dungeon here today.

TRACY ARREST AGAIN ASKED (Continued from First Page) tention at the border because "this makes the case more serious." The prosecutor said Tracy's departure after promising to remain "may result in efforts through diplomatic channels to obtain his return to face investigation and trial." INQUIRY ORDERED He also said he was ordering an investigation to determine whether officials of the picture company were Involved in aiding the flight of a person who was being held by Mexican authorities. Friends of Tracy said they blame his predicament in part on professional jealousy of other members of the company, who they said could have avoided much of the trouble if they had wanted to. They also declared other actors caused the investigation to be reopened after Tracy was released the first time. Tracy left in his wake a storm of controversy and an apparent disagreement in the police department and between police and judicial authorities. Central police headquarters, unaware until today of Tracy's rearrest last said the actor had been escorted to the train by detectives this morning, while at the Sixth Precinct and at the District Attorney's office it was stated he had broken his word by leaving the country.

It became known later, however, that Tracy left aboard a chartered plane, not by train, with El Paso his announced destination. FILM FIRE HITS PROJECT New misfortunes struck the mo- tinn-nictiiro rnmnanv tonicht When ADVANCED FEATURES OF EVjOST EV30DEHN MOTOR CAR NOTH Nfi RUT A STEEL BODY COULD STAND GREAT RUSH TO BUY BIG MEW LOHGER-WHEELBASE DODGE AT TODAY'S LOW PRICE ONLY $595' THIS TEST 1 fs "a STEEL BODY Englneere rolled a new Dodge Six down a ateep hill. Over and over It went, crashing against rocks and bumps, whirling swiftly to the bottom. Then it drove off under its own power! Only a steel body could have stood thla terrific teatt SILVERMAN, MINING MAN, SUCCUMBS Noted Developer of Gold Fields of est Expires on Trip at Ely, Nev, ELY (Nev.) Nov. 21.

(JP) Samuel I. Silverman of Los Angeles, whose mining operations carried him all over the world, died here today from uremic poisoning following a brief He had been negotiating here for the purchase of gold mining property. He built the first gold reduction plant at Butte, Mont, and built and operated a smelter in Alaska. He was once associated with John swiii urn me. nmimn private telegrams reported a plane HYDRAULIC BRAKES Stop at the slightest touch.

Safer.becauae they etay equalited, don't need frequent adjustments. Most taxicaba have hydraulic brakea for eafcty. carrying three sections oi compieiea film from El Paso to Los Angeles had crashed in the United States. Wallace Beery, Irving Pichel, Joseph Schildkraut and a number of technicians who had planned to leave on tonight's train were forced to cancel their trip so the scenes could be made over again. Most of the scenes were those in which Tracy appeared, company officials were informed.

It was stated that the government will inspect all film shot here I Jf fitter I Hays Hammond in South Africa and ASK yourself this question: "Will my car have the most modern features engineering science can pro-' vide?" Then let the "Show-Down" Plan give you the answer. For of course you want these features and you can have them! Dodge give them to you for just few dollars more than the lowest-priced carsl No other car can offer all these features at the low price of this new Dodge Six. Even many of the higher-priced cars don't have them all. More Than 21 Features! For performance safety comfort and economy Dodge has 21 outstanding features. Steel body.

Hydraulic brakes. Floating Power. Low center of gravity. Squeakproof "Oilite" springs. Gears quiet in every speed.

Airwheel tires. Valve seat inserts that postpone valve grinding thousands of mile. And morel Ask any dealer about the "Show-Down" Plan. It tells all about these features. Gives you facts, not claims.

Lets you compare Dodge against the other cars for yourself. The "Show -Down" Plan has taken the guesswork out of car-buying, for the first time in automobile history. That's why Dodge has increased sales at a faster rate than any other car. Why July and August and September figures show Dodge in first place in its field, outselling every other make of car, except the. three lowest-priced cars.

Buy At Today's Low Price! Prices of most things have been going up. Don't delay! Buy your sew Dodge today's low price. Your present car is worth more today than it will ever be worth again. Right now am, i Ar he developed oil lands of the United Fruit Company in South America. A recent venture was with the American Smelting and Refining Company In Utah.

Silverman, a Shrlner, was a charter member of the American Institute of Mining Engineers, and was one of the organizers of the Rocky Mountain Club In New York. Mrs. Silverman reached his bedside from Los Angeles a few hours before he died. iff' FLOATING POWER -With the engine of the new Dodge Six running, thla rifleman made a perfect acore on a target 100 yards distant. In ordinary cars.

engine vibration would have ruined hie aim but Floating Power engine mountings smother vibration, make the new Dodge smooth at every speed. if TERMS OF FOX DEALSRELATED (Continued from First Page) liam Fox presents" for a similar period. (9.) G.T.E. was to pay $3,000,000 to Fox for assignment of claims for salary, expenses and losses in sale of Loew's stock. (10.) G.T.E.

was to continue paying premiums on $3,500,000 of life Insurance policies held by the Fox corporations. (11.) G.T.E. was to indemnify Fox for all losses suffered as a result of suits brought by the Federal government charging violation of the Clayton antitrust law. (12.) G.T.E. was to purchase 1,600,000 shares of Fox Film (nonvoting) stock for (13.) Fox was to assign to Fox Film and Fox Theaters companies all stock of Fox Theaters Corporation to.

indemnify G.T.E. against claims of Winfleld R. Sheehan and Courtland Smith, officers of the companies. EVENTS REVIEWED Events leading up to negotiation of this contract, which Pecora charges provided for "diluting" investments held by the public, wert sketched by Dodge who related how Fox in the fall of 1929 was financially embarrassed after seeking control of Loew's by the falling due of some $90,000,000 in notes and how the- Halsey Stuart brokerage house, and Electrical Research Products, attempted to aid the motion-picture magnate ir. saving his interests; Dodge testified Clarke was "worried about the situation" because if Fox failed it would probably affect adversely the whole film industry and have a specially bad effect on G.

T. E. because Fox would be unable to carry out his intention to purchase wide films manufactured by G.T.E., and said Clarke proposed that G. T. Ei extend its.

financial aid in view of the fact that the Fox companies had been "profitable and successful" for many years. VOTING TRUST URGED A suggestion that stock, the voting shares, be placed in a voting trust consisting of Halsey Stuart, Electrical Research Products and Fox was "repudiated" by Fox, Dodge said, and "that failure of Fox to live up to the agreement precipitated financial troubles Fox got into." The two companies had lent Fox approximately $27,000,000, Dodge testified. Chase Securities Company, Dodge testified, persistently refused to take the leadership or get into the mess in any way" until, a comprehensive scheme for refinancing was developed. Subsequently Clarke worked 'out with Fox details of the agreement which later ws contained in the contract under which the motion-picture magnate was to sell 50.101 shares of Fox Film and 100,000 shares of Fox Theaters and give G. T.

E. control of these properties. JEAN PICCARD AND JVIFE PLAN FLIGHT WASHINGTON, Nov. 21. (JP) Mrs.

Jean Piccard, sister-in-law of Auguste Piccard, first man to penetrate the stratosphere, said today she and her husband plan to make a similar ascent next summer in. the balloon used by Lieutenant Commander T. G. W. Settle.

Expressing elation over the success of the Settle flight, Mrs. Piccard said the proposed ascent also will be made to study the cosmic ray- ANNIVERSARY OF FIRST BALLOON FLIGHT FETED The 150th anniversary of the first made by human beings was celebrated yesterday at a luncheon hi the University of California Chapter of Alpha Eta Rho, international aviation fraternity, in the Student Union Building, Although the history of the beginnings of aviation is a bit obscure, research conducted by the Aero Educational Research Organization established definitely that the balloon ascension of Marquis d'Ar-landes and Pilatre de Rozier from the garden of the Chateau Mouette In Paris on November 21, 1783, undoubtedly was the first occasion when human begings had successfully been transported through the atmosphere, it was declared at the by Dr. John F. B. Car-ruthers, national historian of the faternity and research assistant to Dr.

Rufus B. von KleinSmid, president of U.S.C. Annual observance of the anniversary was decided on by the fraternity yesterday. Dr." von KleinSmid was inducted into membership. Sylvia Sidney's Father Defends Motive in Suit NEW YORK, Nov.

21. (JPy Victor Kosow, denying he was attempting to "extort money" from his daughter, Sylvia Sidney of the motion pictures, declared today he was actuated only by "the natural feeling of a father toward his daughter" when he sued to regain his legal status. Kosow, who has brought suit to have Miss Sidney's adoption by a Dr. Sigmund Sidney, set aside on the ground it was done without his knowledge or consent, said he also wished to erase any impression that he had shirked his responsibilities as a father. after in Mexico beiore permitting it to leave the country.

PILOT ESCAPES AS FILM PLANE BURNS EL PASO (Tex.) Nov. 21. (Exclusive) J. J. Ingram, American Airways mail pilot of Los Angeles, jumped' to safety today from his airplane, which crashed in flames in an arroyo fifty yards from an El Paso residential section.

The plane was reported to be carrying films of the motion picture "Viva Villa," in which Lee Tracy, American 'actor in disgrace with the Mexican government, was playing. Ingram suffered severe burns on the face and legs before he chould extricate himself from the flaming plane. Tracy is reported en route to a border city by airplane. He had not arrived here, at Brownsville or at San Antonio, however, and airport officials at Brownsville believed he had made an overnight stop at Tampico. MEXICAN STUDENTS JAILED AFTER RIOT DANCINC NICHTLY Except Sunday.

BILTMORE SUPPER ROOM Featuring JAY WHIDDEN and his Brunswick Recording Orchestra ntt PARKING Pacific Mutual drag An mtfnimt milt lafca yonr tmr Gun Fire Quells Riot in Eastern Penitentiary PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21. (JP) A two-hour riot by seventy-five prisoners in the eastern State penitentiary was subdued late today after more than 500 police were rushed to the institution and machine guns and pistols were fired into the prison yard to herd the recalcitrants in a corner, from where they were taken to cell blocks. Much damage was done by the rioters who set fire to two of the prison work shops and smashed several machines. ii44 it will probably make the full down-payment on your sew Dodge Six.

Dodge Brothers Corporation' Diriiion of Chrytltr Motor VvsrS i New tl5-lncb wheelbaa Dodge Coupe, S593 Two-Door Sedan, 630 Brougham, $660 Four-Door Sedan, S67S Convertible Coupe. $695. AI1 Prlcea F. O. a Factory, Detroit, Michigan.

LOW CENTER OF CRAVITY The new Dodge Six haa a double-drop frame that brings close to the ground. Not being top-heavy (like a hansom cab, for Instance) it won't tip over, even when tilted to an abnormal degree. And the Dodge frame la ten time more rigid than ordinary frame construction! MAKES YOU LOSE UNHEALTHY FAT LEXINGTON BOUND SOUTH BREMERTON (Wash.) Nov. 21. (JP) The naval aircraft carrier Lexington left here today for San.

Diego, where she will rejoin other ships of the United States Fleet. Make No Mistake 'Fat Is Dangerous Ask Your Doctor AND UP f. 0. b. factory.

detroit prices subject to Without NOTICE ihIIL MJ 7 www GUADALAJARA (Mex.) 21. (Exclusive) More than 200 students, some of them women, are held without ball in the penitentiary today after their recent arrest in connection with violent rioting at' the university. All are charged with open rebellion against the government, the penalty for which is five years in prison. To take oft fat take one half tea-spoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water in thei morning before breakfast one bottle lasts 4 weeks get it at any drug store in America lea. If this first bottle fails to convince you this the SAFE and HARMLESS way to lost fat your money returned.

Reduces from 154 to 128 "Lrns than 4 weeks ao I started takinc Krnsehea. I welched l.Vt and felt tired ant all' the while. I weith 128. I feel fall of energy 1 ean't seem ta werk fait enough." Mn. B.

H. Hamilton, Carbendale. Pa. North Hollywood, Huston Brother! Ontario, McGready Brothers Oxnard. H.

A. McDoueal Pasadena, Wegge-Pelton Meter Company Pomona, Harry E. Server Redondo Beach. Walter O. Unch Riverside, Robert Lelth, Ltd.

San Bernardino Don L. Hollineswortb, Ine. San Fernando. Hirsrh ft Smith Ran Pedro. Rodeers-Hilton Motora Santa Ana.

L. D. Coffine Co. Santa Barbara. Beard Motor Co.

Santa Maria. Rubel Motor Company Santa Monica. Claude R. Short Santa Paula. Ralph 8teuard Ventura.

Henderson At Westherlj Whittier. C. Joseph Motor Car Wilmlniton. C. Ed Jones.

Ltd Pel ton Motors, 1345 S. Figueroa St. K. C. Andres, 3516 Whittler Blvd.

Faat A. Ziealer, Inc. 4601 S. Vermont Ave? Benanl Motors, 617 North Brosdway at Sunset Karts Motor 82J-827 B. Western Ave.

Ineare Moter 211 So. Sn Pedro Street Lennie Hall. 339 6. La Bres Ave. NEAR BT Albawbra, Jsmen F.

French Anaheim. Chas. H. Mian tWemont. Aut O.

Obernolte A Son Beverly Bills. Bliss A Padea Bishop. Ay res Brothers Carptnteria Rlncon Garage A Machine She Coacheila. Ralph S. Bliss Corona.

Walt Hooker Culver City, C. F. Joacelya El Monte, Andrew J. Crevolln Fullertoo, Lillian E. Yeager Oardena, C.

Fred Kerr Olendale, W. A. StlUwell Mrmet. Patrick Holstrom Hollrwood. Herbert R.

Pulver Hantinaton Park. John A. Wood Inclewoad. Ben Knoth Lancaster. Chester F.

Smith Lempoe. Hobbs Bros. 1 Lanr Beaeb. Arrow Motors, Ltd. Monrevis.

Solon R. Foster Monte Vista, McDermith. Inc. PYORRHEA $2 Per Tooth SurcfMfulljr Treated While losing fat with Kruschen you gain in physical attractiveness you look and I tav ynr If'lN thr Cratlm uH tltrtct thtn. MONEY REFUNDED It tnry tth I fail mw; 20 ytt' turwil PYORRHEA SPECIALIST.

EumintlM REE Xel younger no more gas. BONDED tni Lirenied TunerUtioB oflrr comfort, ttlriy tni ccoo-mr In tH. Sta of lini CUoiBed Ait. DR. BAKER 536 S.

Bdwiy. dF" acidity no more constipa tion. Advertisement. Bonn; 1:30 to I.

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