Harrisburg Pa Fire Drills Marti Anniversary of Great HARRISBURG SSsfilf TELEGRAPH LXXXIII— No. 71 SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WAR IN BRITISH CABINET RESIGNS Action of CoL John Seely Further Complicates Troubles in Ireland m. CHURCHILL JS ATTACKED Documents Disclose Officially That Government Would Not Use Troops in Ireland . j I By Associate! Press I atodon. March 115.—Colonel John Reely to-day re-signed l\l" portfolio as I .Secretary of State for war in the British cabinet. Tile House of Commons buued with . excitement and was crowded to its tit- ; most cai»ac - it> "lieu I.ord Charles! Bcresford opened the attack on the ] (overnment by demanding Information j is to the naval movements in connee lion with the situation in Ulster. | "Was the buttle squadron ordered j to steam at full speed from Spanish, waters to tile Irish coast and ordered 1 to embark Held guns?" he was asked. | Squadron Ordered Amid ministerial cheers and derisive laughter from the Unionists, Winston Spencer Churchill, first lord of the Ad- t mlralty, admitted that the battle, iquadron bad been ordered to Earn- ! lash "so to be in proximity to the coast j of Ireland in case of serious disturb- j Mice arising. When it was clear that the military precautionary movements ; had been carried odt without opposi-! Hon it was decided that this move-j ment of the fleet could be delayed un-1 til the eastern leave period of the i prews was over." The statement of the first lord was; immediately followed by a cyclone of: Questions. A Unionist member asked If -Mr. Churchill expected that "this i precautionary movement of troops' would lead to fighting." In a 'moment' the first lord flared I up. "T repudiate the hellish suggestion. ; h< shouted. When the consequent uproar had i ribsided the speaker reprimanded Mr.; Churchill saying thai such an expre£~ ; »lon should not have been used. The first lord regretfully withdrew itj and the storm passed off as quickly as] it had arisen. Will Not L'se Army Documents made public to-day dis close officially the fact that the British government gave officers In Ireland a ! written guarantee that they would not j [Continued on Page 7.] Ladies' Auxiliary Makes Plans For Fair Next Week Special The Teletrafh. Wormleysburg, Pa., March 25. i Members of the Ladies' Auxiliary of ihe Wormlevshurtt Fire Company'met j nt the home of Mrs. Herbert R. Boose I last evening and made further plans | lor the bazar which will be held in i the town hall on Thursday, Friday j and Saturday evenings of next week, i Arrangements were made to serve sup per each evening. Chairmen for varl- ! mis committees were appointed as foi- ! lows: Candy. Miss Bella Bennett; fish i pond, Miss Vada Baker: Japanese tea, I 'Miss Edna Eekert; ice cream, Mrs. J.! T'red Hummel; bread, cakes, pies, Mrs] ! ,T. J. Hemrner; fanevwork, Mrs. C. Ver- I non Kister; country store, Miss Flor- 1 enee Bruce. Eleven new members I were taken in last evening. DEMOCRATS VOTINt. Little Rook. Ark., March 25.—Ar kansas Democrats In primary elections to-day voted for candidates for the United States Senate, the National House of Representatives and several State officers. Nomination is equiva lent to election. (r Late News Bulletins FIGHTING AT TORREON •Tuarez, .March 25.—"Fighting Is In progress this morning in the out skirts of Tori-con." This was the text of a message i'rom the South, given out officially here to-day. NEW MANDAMUS PROBABLE It is probable tliat to-day or to-morrow the State will bring a new mandamus proceeding on beliulf of Highway Commissioner Bigelow to require Auditor General Powell and State Treasurer Young to pay out the money receive*! from uutomobile licensee for requisitions made by the highway department for cash for roatl improvement*. THREE DIE WHEN POWDER LETS LOOSE Allen town. Pa.. March 25.—Three men were killed and much of the plant of the Pennsylvania-Trojan Powder Company, five miles north of this city, was wrecked by an explosion at 11.20 this rorenoon. The acci dent happened in the four drier houses, one of concrete and the others or pheet iron, each twenty by sixty feet. The dead arc George Barber, Palmer Silfels. and Alexander Stettler. Sllfeis' bodv was thrown province of Shen-SL They killed 230 of the Inhabitants and wound ed and captured many hundreds more. Philadelphia, March 25.—False reports that 7-year-old Warren Me- Carrick, who disappeared thirteen days ago had been found caused a large crowd to congregate In front of the boy's home here to-day. The police to-day began a house to house canvass in the neighborhood of the MeCarriek home. Monte Carlo, March 25.—Harry Maule Crookshank. formerly Brit ish controller of the public debt In Egypt, died here to-day. ated 65. Monessen, Pa., March 25. J. a well-to-do Italian, was assas sinated as he left his home here to-day. Police declare the crime to be a blackhand outrage. Marseilles, France, March 25.—Frederic Mistral, tile celebrated nro ▼CTcal poet, died here to-day in his eighty-fourth year. In 1801 Mistral divided the Nobel Prize for literature with Fohegaray, the irreat Span ish dramatist. He was a friend of Colonel Theodore ltooscvelt to whom he dedicated a poem in 1901. Jjondon, March 25.—Colonel John Seelcy to-day resigned his port folio jw of State for War in the British Cabinet. £ ew Y. orl f —Chesapeake-Ohio, 58%; Ijehigh Valley, 14H % ■ Northern Pacific, 114 >4; Southern Pacific, 95%; Union Pacific. 159: Chll en go-Mil.-St. Paul. 100% ;P. K. 11. 110%; Heading, 105%; New York ltral, 90 H; Canadian Pacific, 207%; Amal. Copper, 70%; U. S. Steel ■■■' » TO MAKE THIS CITY MIMCITE TAX MODERN WOODMEN'S! UNFAIR AS TAX ON NATIONAL QUARTERS?! HARD SHELL GRABS Move on Foot as Result of "Cuss- j ! ed Greed of Farmers in Hog Belt" ENLISTCHAMBER OF COMMERCE! j . | : Harrisburg Lodge Members Say j East Is Determined to Bring Offices Here ! Will Harrisburg soon have another j jhuge building: housing the executive! i offices and the big printing plant of i the Modern Woodmen of America? I Will the present mafmoth quarters! J occupied by this order, one of the! | largest in America, now at Rock j j Island, 111., be moved to the capital i • of Pennsylvania ? I These two questions are being ask ! led in Woodmen circles throughout the j j United State 6, and especially the East, j as the result of a plan now under waj. j ! In the developments that are to ensue, j say officials of the order, will be' I evolved one of the bitterest wars ever i j waged within the ranks of any frater -1 J tin 1 organization of this country. ; The reasons leading up the wish! of the East to remove the buildings | I of the order from the Illinois city to | I Harrisburg are, according to members' I of the order, largely due to what, the 1 j Easterners characterize as the "cussed j I greed of the farmers of the hog belt." | Far be it from thein to sjlr up any- I thing that will grow to «uch really! j bitter proportions as to split the order, j [Continued on Page 3.] CHEAPER CAS FOR i ! CITY IS POSSIBLE. OFFICIALS ASSERT If Supply From Steelton Ovens Is' Utilized Price May Come Down j Cheaper gas for Harrisburg and ! Steelton is a near future possibility In ! the event of the Harrisburg Gas Com- j | pany's getting a large part of its gas j I supply from the coke ovens of the' I Semet-Solvay Company at Steelton. All is in readiness to lay pipes eon- j ! necting pipes between the pipe lines jn South Cameron street and the j ! Semet-Solvay ovens. The one big ob- j stacle at present is a question of j | whether the Semet-Solvay people have a legal right to furnish gas for con- j j sumption in this city . This question is now up to the State ' Public Service Commissioners and it is; ! understood will be taken up very. [shortly. In the opinion of one official; lof the Harrisburg Gas Company less j {than two months will elapse after per-, j mission is granted until the connecting! links in the pipe lines will be laid. | According to the company officials I ' almost enough gas is now going to, i waste at the coke ovens to supply the | entire Harrisburg area and gas could I be furnished to the consumer at re ! duced rates if this wasted supply was ■ utilized. If permission of the Public I j Service Commission is granted pipes [will have to be laid through private | property to avoid digging up the State j road. ' TEMPER AN CE DEFEATED By Associated Press Richmond, Ind., March 25.—Tem perance workers were defeated in the local option election here yesterday by a majority of 1,339 vots. Five years ayo Richmond voted wet by a major ity of 1,869. HARRISBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY EVENING, MARCH 25, 1914. Scranton Attorney Makes Apt Similie in Course of Argument Before Judge Kunkel ATTORNEYS IN BIG BATTLE Law Which Means $20,000 to Dauphin and Millions to the State Under Fie •"The Legislature might Just as w»U have placed a State tax on hard-shell crabs and exempted soft-shell crabs as to tax anthracite coal and not bitu minous," said Major Kverett Warren, of Scranton, in the Dauphin county court to-day in the suit to test the constitutionality of the anthracite coal tax. "The taxes in this State must be uniform and the Legislature did not keep to the classification which it should have followed. By the same simile it might as well have taxed red-headed men only because it can tax men." ■ "How about taxing bachelors?" in terjected Deputy Attorney General W. M. Hargest. "Oh. I'm not as progressive as all that." replied Major Warren. "Well, the Legislature makes one tax for male dogs and one tax for female dogs. It can differentiate there." remarked H. C. Reynolds, of Scranton, v representing the Board of Trade of that city. The battle over the test of the act, which is just now in its preliminary stage, and which means 520.000 or [Continued on Page 7. J PAGE'S CELEBRATED LONDON SPEECH IS GIVEN TO SENATE Ambassador's Address Is Sent to Legislators by Secretary Bryan By Associated Press M ashingion, March 26.—Ambassa- j dor Walter H. Page's celebrated Lon don speecl\ In which he was accredited with having interpreted the Monroe i Doctrine as meaning the United States i pteferred that no European govern ments should gain more land in the new w orld and as having made cor- I tain references to the repeal of the i Panama tolls exemption, was for- I warded to the Senate to-day by Sec-j retary Bryan in response to Senator! <-hamberlnjn'.x resolution calling fori an explanation. Mr. Page's speech, some twenty-five ! hundred words in length, was fur nished to the Senate in full. The por-1 tion relating to the Panama canal was ! as follows: "I will not say that we constructed j [Coutinuod on Page 7.J Henry Phipps, Director of U. S. Steel Corporation Announces Resignation By Associated Press New York, March 25.—Henry Phipps, ! identified with the United States Steel Corporation since its organization, to day announced his resignation from the directorate and the finance com mittee of the corporation. James A. Farrell, president of the corporation, succeeds him on the finance commit- | tee. It was said that Mr. Phipps j wished to devote his time to private : enterprises and philanthropic work. | It is understood that the name of | Henry Phipps, Jr., will be presented to | succeed his father on the board. Friedman's Answer Received by Sells i Special to The Telegraph Washington, D. C., March 26.—Cato i Sells, Indian Commissioner, yesterday : received the answer of Moses Frled j man, the suspended superintendent of I the Carlisle Indian School, to serious I charges made against him more than la month ago. ! Mr. Sells said it would require about 'I | a week to arrive at a decision. Accord ing to those who have seen Fried- I man's answer, it is not at all satisfac ' tory in essential details. No proper explanation, it is asserted, has been made of his expenditures of the funds of the Athletic Association. Mrs. Morse's Ants Not Allowed in This Country j By Associated Press i .New Tork, March 25.—The hill of 'Amber Meadow ants which Mrs. Charles W. Morse, wife of the former banker, brought with her last week lon her return from Paris, will not be allowed to enter this country. They are injurious insects, it is held and upon instructions from the Depart ment of Agriculture in Washington, the acting collector from the port, A. C. Stuart, has prohibited the attempt ed importation. In a polite communl | cation Mrs. Morse was asked to-day .by the acting collector for her con sent to the delivery of the box contain | ing the Insects to the Bureau of Ento i mology in Washington for destruction." Government entomologists have pro ! nounced the amber ants damaging to j meadows, lawns, and in some in stances field crops, the communication states, and as such they come under I an act of Congress prohibiting the im- I portation of lnvects injurious to vege -1 Lation. Pull Primary Children Through Windows in Lemoyne School Fire | HIGH SCHOOL BOYS AND GIRLS WHO HELPED IN RESCUE WORK J ss ■. v'.r- . ■ , ■ ■ - ■ - IsHBHHBk i -NEVER A CHANCE IS i BACTERIA FAMILY 10 I HAVE WITH OUR BREAD ! I Consider Rale Providing For Seal-' ing of Fvery Loaf in Bakeries i [ The Messrs. Bacteria of every kind and family and their wives and eliil- I dren, too, won't have the ghost of a show with Harrlsburg's bread supply I it' one of the proposed new food in jspection regulations Is adopted to- I night by the bureau of health and sanitation. I The rule provides that every loaf ot'j jbread must be sealed before leaving] bakery or factory, in a paper cover ing that will be impervious to the 111] | effects that might follow handling with { dirty hands, etc. j The requirements relative to the 'sealing of bread and the rigid in spection of restaurants with reference jto dishes, individual cups and glasses, I towels and so on, and the thousand i land one other sanitary safeguards I could only have been carried out ef | fectlvely by the passage of the food I Inspection ordinance. Two Inspectors | are provided for by the ordinance and j these officials will have their hands! j full. The appointees will be* incorpo- j iContinued on Page 9] Detectives Believe River Will Give Up Body of Missing Boy; Hy Associated Press Philadelphia, March 25. —That the! body of 7-year-old Warren McCarrick, j who disappeared from his home here ] on March 12, eventually will be found! jin either the Delaware or Schuylkill j : rivers was the belief expressed to-day , j by the majority of the detectives who j i have been working on the case since j it was first reported. Although the police dragged grap-1 | pling irons along the bottom of the i Schuylkill yesterday without success, ) the detectives are unaltered in the ' I opinion that the child's body is repos- j ! ing somewhere on the muddy bottom ' I of that stream, which lies only about j I half a dozen blocks from his home. | They point to the appearance on the ! surface of the Delaware last Sunday, of the body of Anna O'Donnell, who | had fallen into the river seven weeks before, as evidence that grappling is not always successful in recovering: bodies The police had grappled for : hours in the vicinity of the wharf' j from which she fell without result. ' Fort Says T.R. Will Again Run For President Special to The Telegraph Washington, ]j. (j.. March 25.—Kx- Governor Fort, of New Jersey, who be , came a Progressive after the Repub lican convention in 11)12, declared here to-day that it was most probable that I Colonel Roosevelt would be the Re i publican nominee for President in |1916. | "I do not believe the Colonel will i be the candidate for Governor of New York either of the Republican or Pro gressive party." continued Governor Fort. Preparations Made For Fight on Tolls Repeal By Associated Press Washington, D. C..March 25.—Final preparations for the actual opening of the fight for the repeal of the tolls exemption provision of the Panama Canal act were taken to-day by lead ers of the contending factions in the House. According to agreement the issue will be formally presented at noon to-morrow, and under a special rule, voted by the rules committee for submission to the House to-day, de bate would be limited to fifteen hours. 1 NEW YORK OBSERVES | THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF BIG FACTORY FIRE! ! Fire Drills Conducted in All of the j Big Factories Through out City By Associated Press New York. March 25.—A city-wide ( demonstration, extending from Brook- j lyn to the Bronx, and unique In that it commemorates not a triumph but a ; disaster, was held to-day on the vrl- j ennlal anniversary of .the great Trl j angle waist factory tire, in which 14? I lives were lost. The ringing of pongs | | In hundreds of factories brought forth i orderly streams of employes until the j streets in some districts took on a holi day aspect. This colossal tire drill, j which included most of the factories j and a great many of the schools In i the city, was planned by Fire Commis- \ sloner Robert Adainson, working in I conjunction with several safety organ- i izatlons. In a truer sense, it was not a | commemoration of the Triangle fire, j but a celebration of the progress In j ! Are prevention since that time. Fast Time Recorded Commissioner Adamson, who invited ] I Mayor Mitchel to review some of the | larger lire drills with him, visited a I large tobacco factory in Brooklyn j which employs 3,500 workers, r Here j I the drill ran oft with machine-like i I perfection, two and one-half minutes j sufficing to bring out the total number j i of employes with the safes locked and j | the roll called. "I hope," said Commissioner Adam- | | son, "that no one will take this as a j I token that New York thinks she has . i solved the problem of fire prevention, j "VV< have only been seriously at it for a I little over a year and there are Innu- 1 ' merable obstacles that remain to be I I overcome. Some of the conditions ! j that made the Triangle fire possible i have been remedied, but not all." I —; . ! Declares Spinster Will Outlive Wedded Woman !' By Associated Press I New York, March 25. The spinster!, I lives longer than the married woman, , and the woman who holds an endow ! ment insurance policy lives longer than ' ■ the woman who takes out a straight ' life policy. These facts, substantiated : by statistics gathered last year by ex- < : perts In the employment of forty-three , •insurance companies, were brought out, last night hy Arthur Hunter, an actu- ' |ary. In an address at the monthly meet-i 1 ilng of the Life Underwriters' Assocl-j j atlon of New York. Mr. Hunter also said the business I I woman lives longer than the married 1 man but he did not attempt to explain : why, except to declare that figures (proved his statement to be a fact. Nor 1 'did lie explain why the unmarried i ! woman survives the matron. He did , I tell, however, why the woman who , i takes out an endowment policy lives] i longer than the woman who has to die to win. !' i "The endowment woman just gets up! !h*r spirit and determines to live until) ■ the policy matures," he said. "The oth 'or woman sighs and says: 'Oh, what's , the use?'" Ex-Burgess R. W. Jacobs, of Huntingdon, Is Dead Special to The Telegraph .Huntingdon, Pa., March 25.—Ex- Chief Burgess It. W. Jacobs, of Hunt ingdon, who retired after a four-year term in that office in January, died here yesterday of uraemic poisoning. He was 4 7 years old. Mr. Jacobs was one of the best known business men of Central Penn sylvania, being president of Broad Top Coal and Mineral Company, presi dent of Possum Holly Coal and Coke Company, director of Klshacoqullla Valley Railroad Company, organizer of the Huntingdon, Lewistown a d Juniata Valley Traction Company and founder of the towns of Mt. Vernon and Jacob and Jacob's addition to Huntingdon, all In this county. 12 PAGES DIVIDENDS REDUCED OKI "PENNSY LIS" | WEST OF PITTSBURGH Increase in Expenditures For 1913 Is Responsible For Directors' Action By Associated Press ( Philadelphia, March 25.—The direc- I tors of the Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chi cago and St. Louis Railway Company, | the Pennsylvania lines west of Pltts | burgh, to-day reduced the dividend i n the common stock from five per cent, j a year to thre per cent, and on the j i preferred stock from live per cent, to j I four. j In connection with the announce- j ment President Rea, of the Pennsylva | ilia Railroad, made the following statements ] "The directors of the Pittsburgh, j Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis Rail . way 'Company, at their meeting to | day, considered and approved the an | nual report for 1913, the results of | which have already appeared in the ! annual report of the Pennsylvania ! Railroad Company. This report 'showed an increase of $4,600,000 In! operating and maintenance expenses, ! which includes the extraordinary out- | I lays for replacements and repairing I I tracks, bridges and other facilities de- j stroyed or damaged by the serious ' ! floods of March, 1913, so that, after | j fiaying its fixed charges and appropri- | atlons to sinking and other reserve I I funds, there remained only $630,064 i |as applicable for dividends. The com ■ pany, however, paid its regular Ave per cent, dividends on the preferred I and common stock, aggregating ?3,- j | 232,542, but In order to meet the same ! ; had to utilize In large part its surplus ! | Income from previous years. i Best to Reduce Dividend ! In view of the decline in the grass ; and net revenues of the company In 1 the latter part of 1913 and so far In I the present year, and as there are still , large expenditures to be made In the I current year for the flood damage of 11913, the directors deemed it prudent 'to reduce the dividend and therefore declared one per cent, on the prefer red and three-fourths of one per cent | on the common stock for this first' quarter of the fiscal year, or at the rate of four per cent, per annum for the preferred and three per cent, for the common, as against live per cent declared on each class of stock In re ,cent years. The directors of the Pennsylvania I Company, which operates the North west system of the Pennsylvania llne<3 west of Pittsburgh, also met to-day, but transacted only routine business! according to the company's announce ment. At the yearly organization meeting of the directors of the Pennsvlvanla Railroad Company, President Rea and all the other officers were re-elected. HAWAII IN XEEU OF WATER Special to The Telegraph I Honolulu. March 25.—After two ex tremely dry years Honolulu in par ticular and the whole group of Ha waiian islands in general are threat ened with the most severe water fam ine the territory has ever known. Un less heavy rains fall soon—and the records of years, do not Indicate them at this season —loss to planters and much domestic Inconvenience are cer- i tain. POI-ICE BILL DEFEATED Special to The Telegraph Albany, N. Y., March 25.—The New York police bill was defeated In the! nssembly to-day by a vote of 94 to 49. The bill was designed to Increase the ' power of the New York city police commissioner. The measure was In troduced at the request of Mayor Mltchel after he had asked Colonel George "W. Ooethals, builder of the Panama Canal, to accept tlio police j oommiasionershlp. * POSTSCRIPT. Fire Drills Enable Other Pu pils to Reach Street in Safety GIRLS HELP BOYS IN RESCUE WORK Backet Brigade Had Blaze Under Control Before Ar rival of Firemen Pupils of the Lomoyne Higli School were heroes tills morning when a fire occurred beneath the primary room, getting the little boys and girle out by pulling them through the windows. Fire drills followed by pupils in other rooms enabled every boy and girl to escape without injury. A girl going to the basement at 11:80 first noticed flames above the furnace. Running to Miss Esther. Smith, her teacher, she told of the lire In the basement. Mlsa Smith called Prof. W. C. Bowman, the prin cipal and he called the boys and girls from the High School, instructing them to work in groups, j In the meantime the primary room j over which the fire started was filled | with smoke. One group of boys went wun smoke, one group or boys went Into the room, tore open the windows and lifted the younger pupils through to the boys and girls on the outside, who pulled the children to the ground In safety. Prof. Bowman lost no time in sounding a fire drill and the pupils marched out when the signal was given, not knowing what was wrong until they reached the street. An alarm was sent in and the members of the Lemoyne Fire Com pany responded promptly, but the high school boys formed a bucket bri gade and when the firemen arrived the flames Were under control. The fire started from an overheated pipe directly over the furnace In the basement. The (tames had gained con siderable headway when discovered. The joists were badly burned and the floor of the primary room was burneq through In spots. 1 THE WEATHER For llnrrlaburg anil vlclnltyi Cloudj weather, probably followed by ruin late to-nlg;ht or on Thura dayt warmer to-night, with low ! est tempernture about 4B desnreea. For Kastern I'ennaylvnnlat Cloudy anil warmer to-night, probably followed by rain In 'the early morning or on Thursday! Increas ing Noutherly winds. Hlver Much warmer weather la Indicated for the Suaquehanna Valley with probably rain within the next thlrty-slx honra. While the enow has mostly melted la the territory drained by the Juniata, Wert llrnneh and Ijower North Branch, much remains in the Upper North Hranch. In the BlnKhamton river dlatrlct the depth of the snow averaged twelve laches oa Monday. This snow water, especially If rata falls, will probably atart a rlae In the Upper North Branch, btrt aa the warm spell promlaes to be of short duration nothing more than moderately high stage* are like ly to result, unless the rainfall should be heavy, which seems Improbable. The Juniata and West Ilranch will probably rise to-night nnd Thursday. The main river will fall slowly to-night and probably remain about ata tloaary Thursday. General Conditions Pressure la high In Atlantic eoast districts. It Is Is low la the West. It Is warmer eaat of the Mlasls stppl river and colder la the Northwest. Temperature i 8 a. m., M| 2 f. nt., M, Sun: Hlses, UiOl a. m.| sets, Ai22 p. m. Mooni New moon, January M, IKM n. m. Hlver Ktagei 4.8 feet abore low water mark. Yesterday's Weather Highest temperature, (10. l/owest temperature, 20. Mean temperature, 40, Normal temper*tau*e, 41. The Easier Way Is the Cooperative Way There is no royal road to busi ness success—but some ways are easier than others. Co-operative advertising be tween merchants and manufac turers In the newspapers that . directly reach Ihe buying public is the modern "Easier nay." When the tnanufacturer of n nationally distributed article puts his plna for business In the newspapers of this town ho Is making customers for your storp as well as for himself, Mr. Dealer. The more business he can send to the store, the better off he is. Conversely, every time the merchant treats a prospective customer pleasantly, shows the advertised article, and explains its merits, he Is helping the manufacturer as well as himself. It's a fair game of push and pull. When manuiacrurer and mer chant work together through the columns of the local newspapers they are moving to auccess along the "Kasler Way." If any manufacturer who is In terested In co-operative dealer work will address ihe Bureau of Advertising, American News paper Publishers Association, World Building, New York. !t will bo glad to answer questions. Booklet on request.