THE BIORIWS'U ' OKKtiOXIAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1907. SHOWS J FRAUD IS DOE Black Scores John A. Benson Unmercifully in Land ' Case. ) SIGNED UNKNOWN PAPERS Barkeeper Induced to Execute Ap plication, Character of Which He Was In Ignorance and Name Used Without Permission. 9AN FRANCISCO, Aug. lS.-United States Deputy Attorney A. P. Black ar rued before Judge DeHaven this morning in an endeavor to show the Jury that Dr. Perrin and John A. Benson conspired !o defraud the Government In securing valuable timber lands In Tehama County. A map of the county of Tehama, with :olored sections showing the holdings of Perrin and those applied for In lummy applications, was produced and referred to throughout the argument. Mr. Black showed the Jury land cov ered by the application of RIchison, an Dakland bartender, who did not even unow the character of the document which he signed, and later produced a non-mineral affidavit purporting to come from RIchison. but which in reality, he said, was sent by Benson. Pointing dramatically at Benson, Black aid vehemently: "This document shows on its face that that man sitting at the end of the table, there, has been guilty of the blackest of rrimes and would stop at nothing to carry out his nefarious schemes." TRAINING THE EYESIGHT Long Visions of Indians and White Men Contrasted. Popular Science Monthly. Many people believe, because they have read in books, that the sight of the Indians was extraordinarily keen, and that they were able to descry objects at i greater distance than was possible for white men. This la an error, If the assertion is to be taken without qualification. - All savages have eyes trained to see those things that are necessary to their preservation game and enemies. Their sight Is not by nature more acute, than that of the white' man. but In some respects it is better trained. The whites who lived among the Indians and were compelled to defend themselves against their ene mies saw Just as far as their -enemies. It may be affirmed as a general principle that there is nothing a civilized man cannot do better than a savage. The lat ter uses his reason to. aid his Instinct: the former makes his Instinct subservient to his reason. It is well known that sailors are able to discern objects at sea at a greater dis tance than landsmen, but we .have to do here with a faculty that any one can ac quire. The Indians did Just what the whites who lived among them did who subsisted on game and were obliged to be on the constant lookout for enemies. Both had acquired not merely the power to discern objects, but also training In the Interpretation of the signification of those objects that came within visible range. It is probable, for reasons given above, that not only the Indians as well as all tribes living on the same social level, but also the backwoodsmen, retained their sight to a more advanced age than Is now generally the case; but that the eye of the former was naturally more powerful than that of the present gen eration or that of men in general is un supported by trustworthy evidence. There Is no doubt that a child born with nor mal eyes in one of our large cities can see objects Just as far off and define them Just as accurately with proper training as a person who never saw a dozen houses together. It is well known, too. that what are sometimes called the lower senses touch. taste, and smell are often of extraordi. nary acuteness in civilized man as the result of training. If. therefore, any of the senses of our urban population is feebler than that of the dwellers In the rural districts. It is not due to an in herent weakness, but to improper or in judicious use. ARE FARMS TOO LARGE? The Smaller the Acreage the More Thorough the Tillage. Wall Street Journal. The question of the size of the farms is receiving attention in the West where there are many who believe that farms are still too large. These people assert that a well-tilled farm of a smaller num ber of acres is what the country needs, on account of the increased amount of labor which larger acreage requires, the Increased capital required to work It, t and the increased taxes. From the standpoint of the productive use and cost of working capital they are no doubt right. Even though the capital requirements were the same for a smaller as for a larger farm, the concentration of its use upon the land would -be much more ef fective on the smaller acreage than on the larger. The wisdom of this lesson has been learned from the foreigner who knew how to succeed on the smaller acre age In Europe. Here he follows the same general plan and farms a small piece of land Intensively and contentedly. He need not bother about the labor prob lem, for his own family constitutes a la bor supply and the size of that deter mines the number of acres that he can successfully cultivate. Ills success In ac quiring ownership proves that he Is right in probably nine cases out of 10, and that the farmer who tries too much acreage is the man who is mistaken under existing conditions, however correct he may have been In the early stages of our agricul tural history, when land was less expen sive, outlay for buildings, implements and Improvements much smaller In pro portion to gross income, and the working force larger on account of the greater size of the family and the tendency of its members to remain at home to a much later age. All these Influences affect tho size of the farm. Government Ownership Lessons. Washington (D. C.) Post. The government of New Zealand is Snelallctie, and the state owns and op erates all public utilities. The rail . roads were built by the state and are onerated by the state. They cost some $40,000 a mile, which is not extrava gant, and the gross mileage Is 2500 So far from earning a profit on the people's Investment, the operation URY HOW shows a deficit of $1,500,000 annually that the taxpayers have to meet. Ask the first American Populist or Socialist you see and he will asseverate with volceful emphasis that the gov errment of New Zealand Is Ideal, the purest and best In the world, and tho less he knows about ltvthe more dog matic will his language be. Very well. Here is a perfectly honest layout that foteh.es its people in debt $1, 500.000 a year operating railroads 2500 miles in extent. Honesty in thi country Is not so well established; but It Is proposed to saddle on our people an additional indebtedness of 114,000,000,000 in order to acquire some Zr.0,000 miles of Ameri can railroads to be operated by a gov ernment no honester than the law al lows, and certainly not as honest as the government of New Zealand Is reported to be. Suppose these 250,000 miles are operated with the same sagacity and the same Integrity that are brought to bear In New Zealand? The result would be an annual deficit of 1150,000,000, which, added to the interest of $14,000. 000. GOO. would increase the burden of the people by. at least $500,000,000 an UNITED STATES COINS Facts In Relation Thereto That Are of General Interest. Washington, D. C. Letter in the Brook lyn Eagle. Many thousands of dollars in standard silver "cart wheels," halves, and quarters are being shipped to Southern bankers now. They are to be used In paying ne groes working in the cotton fields. The Southern negro Is suspicious of fresh, un folded Treasury notes, and prefers his wages in silver, the cheerful Jingle of which can be heard in his pocket. The government pays the express charges on shipments of silver from the Treasury. When It accumulates in the banks, which it will In due time, the bankers must pay the cost of shipping the bulky wealth to a subtreasury for exchange. There seems to be no end ,to the ways and means employed by Ingenious mer chants and promoters in the effort to use Vnlted States coins as an advertising me dium. The authorities are constantly putting a stop to various devices planned with the Idea of getting free advertising at the expense of the Treasury. A new way of using the government coins to exploit a commercial scheme has Just been brought to the attention,, of Treasurer Treat. In a remittance from a Southern bank were found a number of silver dollars, on one side of which was pasted the printed card or label of a busi ness firm. As the paper on which the notices are printed is cut a little smaller than the coin and stuck on with adhesive glue, the removal of the paper is made with great difficulty. The inventor of the scheme evidently counts on doing an extensive business, as at the bottom of the card Is printed "Copyrighted." This scheme. If permit ted, would make all such pieces simply tokens for advertising purposes. The de partment will not receive money so de faced, but will return it at the sender's expense for cleaning: otherwise the coin would have to.be specially treated by the department for the removal of the paper before It could be reissued. About once in so often It becomes nec essary for the Secretary of the Treasury to issue a general circular of warning for the benefit of coin collectors who have notions that the government Is in , the market for rare coins, and will pay fancy prices for old and scarce specimens. Late ly a report has been circulated In the press that certain tssues or continental currency are as rare as black pearls, and about as valuable. This innocent paragraph has brought a flood of letters to the department, from holders of this currency, who are wUlins to sell out at pearl prices. The depart ment Is sending to such hopeful applicants copies of the following circular: "The various issues of continental cur rency were never redeemable by the United States, as reorganized under the Constitution. By the act of August 4. 1790, it was receivable at the Treasury In subscriptions to a loan at the rate of $100 in continental money for $1 In specie. By the act of March 3, 1797. it was declared that said money should be receivable as above until December 31, 1797, and no longer. "It will be seen at once from the above that such currency has no money value, even if the notes be genuine." "The government never pays any premi um on currency, no matter how old and valuable it may be to collectors." said Treasurer .Treat. "The Treasury will pay the face value of any United States obligation, no matter what the date of Issue may be. But we make no distinc tion between the various issues of coin and currency of the United States, nei ther receiving nor paying a premium In any case. "None of the coins of the United States have been "called In." All statements to the contrary are erroneous, and their ori gin and purport unknown. Application for list of premium coins should be addressed to some of the coin dealers to be found In all large cities. Notes Issued by the so-called Confederate States of America, and by the various State banks, are not redeemable by the United States." Finally Got His Money's Worth. Philadelphia Record. A -Market-street penny amusement palace was the scene of an encounter between a patron and one of the pen-ny-ln-the-slot machines. The man had wandered into the place in search of amusement, and after loading up with pennies he started to go the rounds or the different machines. He listened to popular songs on the phonograph, looked at moving pictures, got weighed, had his fortune told, tried his skill at rifle practice, and then turned his attention to an electric ma chine. He dropped in a cent, then grasped the handles and pulled, but there was no current. He shook the handles and pulled them out and pushed them in repeatedly, but still no shock. Then Just as he had the han dles pullod out to their limit, the elec tric current suddenly found Itself and the patron got the full force of it. The handle refused to be pushed back and the man did some lively Jumping and squirming around until one of the attendants came to his rescue. A Xew Electric Battery. Milwaukee dispatch In N. Y. Herald. President Underwood, of the Erie; President Hughltt. of the Northwest ern, leading officials of the Pullman Company, and other big men In the financial world are among the chief stockholders in a $5,000,000 company which has been organized here to revo lutionize the heating and lighting business of the world. Frank C. Curtis, of Milwaukee, has invented a new battery, with a secret chemical compound, which he says will make it possible to light houses from their individual plants, to Jun autos without great quantities of gasoline and to do many other things. The in vention has been In use on the North western Railway and Pullman cars for the last three months and has proved a thorough success, it is said.. The factory will be established here, and all the stock has been subscribed by the big railroad men who made the experiment possible. Getting Free Board. I Harper's. Hotel Manager Have tne Barkers found fault again today? Hotel Clerk Yes, sir. They complain as much as If they were getting their board free1. WANT NO QUARTER (Continued from First Fase.) these disturbing telegraphers, who . will be called to account if detected." See Victory Ahead. " Victory to the striking telegraphers, say the erstwhile unemployed local key pounders, is spelled in the action of Presi dent Small in issuing an order for a gen eral strike. It means that the operators who remained at their keys until the strike was officially sanctioned will now Join the ranks of the strikers and still further cripple the service. One' of the strikers said yesterday: "This action of President Small is of vital concern to our cause. It gives us a general grievance and Involves every member of the Commercial Telegraphers' Union In the country. With, this official Indorsement of our strike, all we need to insure a successful outcome is to arouse public sympathy in our behalf. This sym pathy we already have, but we are tak ing steps to arouse that sentiment and make it effective. In our preliminary canvass today we received all kinds of assurance of assistance, both moral and financial, and wa feel that we cannot lose." Receive Encouraging Reports. Encouraging reports were received by the strikers yesterday from all operators at Salem, Albany, Eugene, Corvallls, Roseburg, Medford and Ashland. Sec retary Morgan, of the local commercial telegraphers, went to Oregon City yes terday, where he succeeded In communi cating with the operators at other Wil lamette Valley and Southern Oregon points, and he was assured positively that not a single man would come to Portland to replace the strikers, regardless of what wages might be offered them. " At Oregon City the Western Union of fice was found closed, the manager, Charles Springer, having come to this city to accept a position in the company's office here. The fact that Springer had accepted employment as a strikebreaker had evidently become known to union men in the "city by the falls," for Sec retary Morgan found the door to the telegraph office in that city decorated with a placard having the following in scription: "This ofJ3ce has been closed. The op erator, Charles Springer, is 'scabbing' in the AVestern Union office In Portland." Anticipating a long and stubborn con test, the strikers are preparing accord ingly. Funds are being subscribed for de fraying the expenses of .the struggle. With the contribution of $200 by Dan McAllen as a nucleus, several smaller subscriptions were reported by Secretary Morgan yesterday. A number of the strikers themselves, who could afford It, have subscribed $J0 each to the fund, which will be disbursed only for the actual necessities of the campaign and for - the necessary, conveniences of the strikers. ' " Have Secured Headquarters. During the day the strikers who are not doing picket duty are assembled at the headquarters in the Esmond Hotel. Yesterday several rooms were engaged for a month and these wit! be placed at the disposal Of the improvident members of the union. Orders for meals will also be given the strikers on application to the officers of the union. Secretary Morgan and Gus Prag. repre senting the strikers, called at the City Health Department in tho City Hall yes terday afternoon and lodged a complaint against the Western Union Telegraph Company, alleging the maintenance of unsanitary quarters at the main office, Trdrd and Stark streets. The complaint was received, subject to Investigation by one of the deputy health officers, in the same manner as all complaints are treat ed. This move by the strikers Was sug gested by the action of the company, which has Installed cots In the building, where several strikebreakers sleep. Tjn relation to the pending telegraphers' strike, the family of Attorney J. Hen nessy Murphy represents a house di vided against itself. Murphy Is a firm believer In unions and his sympathies are strongly with the strikers. But Mrs. Murphy views the situation differently. She has been' employed for 30 years as operator for the Western Union, and when the strike was called Monday night she remained at her post. She Is still operating a key, having resisted the en treaties of her husband and her former associates, the striking telegraphers, to abandon the position. Through the as sistance of Manager Dumars, Mrs. Mur phy Is zealously guarded from the strikers, whose influence it is feared might cause her to desert the position in whibh she is so badly needed. For the present Mrs. Murphy is being provided with accommodations at the Hotel Port land. Dumars Does Not Complain. "We have no complaint to offer," said Manager Dumars, of the Western Union, last night, "except our apparent inability to get the needed protection for the men we have employed to de liver messages. The policemen are all In sympathy with the strikers and do not give us the necessary protection. Today I appealed to Mayor Lane and was assured that we would in the future receive adequate protection. The striking telegraphers and the former messenger boys are allowed to assemble in large numbers In front of our office to the malicious inter ference of our business. They have even gone so far as to cause some of their agents to apply for employment as messengers. Not knowing Just who they were, we have employed a few only to find that they purposely ap plied for the work for the sole pur pose of gaining possession of messages which they deliberately destroyed In stead of delivering them. But we are acquainted with these methods and have replaced the originals In. such cages with duplicates, copies of which we always have. We now have a com petent and reliable force of messengers and are making a fairly prompt and reliable delivery of all messages." Detectives as Messengers. That the Western Union office is having some of its messages delivered through the services of local detective agencies Is charged by members of the striking Messenger Boys' Protective Union. "We consider this the limit of un fairness," said one of the union mes sengers, yesterday. "The terms we have demanded are only fair and Just and should be conceded by the com pany instead of turning their busi ness over to private detectives. Ther are a number of us who have beec supporting our mothers from our earn ings and are entitled to this work. The company Is paying considerable more to these men for doing the work than it would be paying us if it paid all that we have asked." Among the men delivering messages for the Western Union yesterday was a man not less than 65 years of age. He was not strong physically, and his step was faltering and unsteady, but he was nevertheless the object of much contempt at the hands of mes senger lads assembled on the different street corners. "There goes a scab for you," chor used a number of the boys as the old gentleman tottered down Third street towards the Worcester building. Two or three of the striking message-carriers started in pursuit' of the strike breaker, but had not gone far when they were recalled by some of their associates, who would not permit any Indignity to be done the elderly messenger.- "Let the old man alone," advised one of the number, 'f we are going to pick onto anybody let's tackle some body more nearly our age. Even if he is 'scabbing' there is no doubt but that he needs the money and $3 a day means a good deal to him." Benefit Ball for Strikers. As a further means for adding to their strike fund the Portland telegraphers are making arrangements for a grand ball that will be given at Merrill's hall next Thursday night. A mass meeting for the purpose of arousing public sympathy is being planned for the Exposition Grounds Sunday afternoon, August 25. Although the Portland union of the commercial telegraphers Is not affiliated with the American Federation of Labor, a committee representing the striking operators was welcomed at ia meeting of the Federated Trades Council last night. After a statement had been made by members of the strike committee, the Council unanimously adopted a resolu tion instructing its executive board to aid, advise and in every way assist the teleg raphers. In the meantime the teleg raphers announced that they would take steps to become affiliated with the Oregon branch of the American Federation of Labor. Delegates will be named to the Federated Trades Council which is ex pected to officially Indorse the strike at Its next meeting. WOMEN FILE Of TIMBER FIFTEEN TAKE UP CLAIMS IN SPOKANE LAND OFFICE. 115 Filings Made In All Much Cn surveyed Land Still Remains to Be Filed On. . SPOKANE. Wash., Aug. 16. (Special.)-r-Of the 115 filing at the local Land Office for stone and timber and homesteads on the Priest River reservation, there were 15 women who made filings, all on stone and timber. Among these were women from Butte, Spokane. Boise, Portland and as far East as St. Paul. Stone and tim ber claims had the preference among the settlers, with a total of 90 filings made, while the homesteads were only 25. There still remains a large section or unsurveyed land on which there' are a number of people living. Part of the un surveyed land, however, has suffered a fire, which burned a portion of the tim ber. When the land was withdrawn from settlement many of the squatters who were living on the lands at that time abandoned it. leaving their Improvements. Others still lived there, in the hope that It would again be placed In shape for settlement. When the land Is surveyed and thrown open for filings, these per sons will have the preference. The women who filed on lands Wednes day and Thursday are Anna N. North, Catherine M. Reed, Maria Merz, Jennie Violet Johnson, Julia M. Gage, Mary Gorreth. Martha BJurndahl, Mary Hag gertyA Nellie L. Carroll, Katherine Mac donald. Mary E. Webb, Stella J. Aspend. Elizabeth D. Kulth, Adelia Goodsell and Martha W. Lucey. . Hecla Slay Lose Charter. SEATTLE, Wash., Aug. 1. (Special.) The bark Hecla, damaged on Duncan rock through an alleged error of the tug Hol yoke, may lose her lumber charter to Port Hadlock. She Is- due to sail loaded on Au gust 31, and the Hadlock mill will not consider the fact that the vessel was- plied on the rocks and seriously damaged. Fruitgrowers Send Out Drummer. FREEWATER, Or., Aug. 16. J. N. Stone has gone to Montana In the Interests of the Fruitgrowers' Union of Milton. He expects to be away for two months and will visit all the important places in that state. . Sixty-five Summer Suits with ?5 and $10 cut .off the price will make a home run today. Note that every suit is this season's make all marked in plain figures and you can buy any suit in this lot at $5 and $10 less than the regular marked price LION CiottiingCo jGuKuhnProp 106 ud 188 Third St. Mohawk Boil dins. RUMORS OF FAILURE New York Bank and Western Factory Involved. STOCKS STILL IRREGULAR Wall Street Hopes President and Secretary Taft Will Soon Publicly Say Something Encouraging to Give Greater Stability. NEW YORK, Aug. 16. The course of today's stock market was marked by ex treme Irregularity, with operations on a slightly reduced Bcale and limited in the main to active issues. The lowest prices of the day were touched in the final hours, when per sistent rumors of a threatened failure in banking circles were current. Aside from the encouragement which Wall street saw fit to derive from the forthcoming public speeches of President Roosevelt and Secretary Taft, the day's developments were for the most part ad verse. ' Early in the session reports coupled the name of a, very large Western manu facturing concern with Impending in solvency. Another very disturbing ele ment was the maximum decline of 44 points In the shares of Old Metropolitan Railroad, whose 7 per cent dividends were guaranteed by the so-called holding companies, which control the local trac tion roads. From Pittsburg and Cleveland come confirmatory reports of reaction In the steel and iron trade. The closing was dull. Time money was firmer. Bonds were Irregular. Total sales, par value, were 1,564.000. United States 2s, registered, and 4s, declined on call. Bradstreet's Summary of Trade. NEW YORK, Aug. 16. Bradstreet's tomorrow will say: "Growing crops show further good progress. Fall trade trends to expand at leading Western jobbing centers. Cross-curents are visible In different Industries. Business failures for week ending August 15 number 146." HID CONFEDERATE SEAL Jeff Davis Bodyguard Will Carry Secret to His Grave. Richmond dispatch In New York Tribune. James H. Jones, a negro, who was Jef ferson Davis' bodyguard and valet, ar rived here from Washington, D. C, and was met by a delegation of Confederate veterans. Mr. Davis intrusted the Con federate seal to Jones just before Rich mond was evacuated and . told him to hide it. He did so. General West, of Atlanta, Commander Callahan, of Washington, and Captain McMahon, of Athens, Ga., representing the Confederate veterans, have juet of fered him $15,000 to produce the great seal. Jones replied that, no money could tempt him to betray tho trust reposed In him by Jefferson Davis, and said tht the secret would be, burled with him. Jones went immediately from the train to see Mrs. Hayes, the surviving member of Jefferson Davis' family, and attended the unveiling of the Davis monument, where thousands of veterans shook hands with the old man. A post of honor In the parade was given to him. He holds a place in the United States Senate. After the offer had been made and de clined, the man who has kept1 the secret all these years said: , "It was the general belief for many years that the great seal of the Confed eracy was captured by the Northern Army when it swooped down on this city, and that it was turned over as one of the trophies of war to the War Depart ment In Washington. Such was not the truth, and the fact Is that the Union Army got powerful little of value In Rich mond which belonged to the Confederate Government. When Mr. Davis realized that It was only a short time until Rich mond would fall, he sent me with Mrs. Davis God bless her memory! and the children to Charlotte, N. C. I had about $13,000,000 under my care, and hauled it around In a freight car from one point to another In the South, until Captain Parker, of Newberry, S. C. relieved me of on a bottle it-has been the 1 Kisr mi getting an honest, natural whiskey, scientifically distilled and mellowed by age only while stored in U.S. Bonded Warehouses. In Sunny Brook you. are getting the besttJ01d Kentucky pro ducesjnwhiskeyj,' BLUMAUER & HOCH, EfffiSB DISTRIBUTOR it at a- point near Washington, Ga where it was buried." The Heal Railroad Rio.;. Harper's. A mile down the track . the express comes round the bend. You watch it as it grows rapidly larger, then In a moment It thunders by. The tower trembles and you gasp In smoke. The signal-operator glances at his clock, then leans out and shakes two fingers at the engineer, who nods and pulls his throttle in a bit. He Is two minutes ahead of time. As the express vanishes in a blue haze of steam and dust, a heavy freight comes lumbering down the southbound track, the big black engine shaking and belch ing smoke and cinders. The operator turns and tugs- upon his levers. Out upon the track there is a clanging among the switches, and upon the signal-brldgo the green and yellow semaphores rise and fall. The panting Iocomot've halts. The signal is against him. Far back at the caboose a brakeman drops off. and you can see him running up the track, waving a spot of red. The engineer. In greasy overalls, swings down from his cab and m iwwvWfa' BY 8 'mmm It is not often that a magazine has an opportunity of publishing a story so vividly fascinating as " The Yellow Stigma." It is a story of an essentially 20th-century American boy, who, through a peculiar combination of circumstances, is led to believe that his life is shadowed by the taint of the Orient. How he grows- up to manhood, attends an American university, comes outlnto the world of today, falls in love with a charming Ameri can girl, all the time pursued by this awful dread of the alien strain, his manly self-sacrifice and the final happy ending make a novel of unusual interest Juliet Wilbor Tompkins is always popular with the reading public, and to this issue she contributes one of her most delight ful sketches, " Saving Mortimer." Grace MacGowan Cooke has won for herself a unique place U with her studies of child-life, lishing one of her best in this issue. " The Line of Fate," by Anna A. Rogers, is the humorous story of two literary celebrities who are brought together in a peculiar way. Its climax is especially delightful. Other stories worthy of mention are "A Triumph of Tem perament," by Kate Masterson;- "October Twenty-Sixth," a delightful story of Western life by Lucia Chamberlain, and "The Coming of the Truth," by Roland Franklyn Andrews. There are more than a dozen other good stories, poems and essays. of our;whiskey Bonleo Jn pure,! rflaMjj BWJWi PURE F0 Is sealed with this Green Government has had printed the exact Age, J Streoslh and Quantity of whiskey in the bottle. , By demanding Sunny Brook you will KNOW that you are hurries to the tower. The operator shouts to him that there Is a freight wreck at Upland Crossing, and after the Southshoie Limited has passed he is to proceed on the passenger track. Directing the Saddle Horse. F. M. Ware, in Outing Magazine. Caress must promptly reward perform ance, and the voice be never used the horse does not understand your words, and if you are angry your tones will only further disconcert him while if you are eternally talking to him, you simply ren der him careless and Inattentive. Caress the spot you have just addressed, nor think that he understands a pat on the neck, as reward for something he has Just done with his hind quarters. Go direct to the spot, and where two parts have been addressed, caress them both, as in backing, the hind quarters, and the sides where the legs came, etc. and the same thing in biting do not pat the neck If you asked him to yield his jaw. "Don't reward your daughter for your son's suc cessful geography lesson" that la the idea in a nutshell. V. il7, TTTST OUT f. i ho Veilow Siigni! John Harwood Bacon and we have the pleasure of pub MEANStthat liond in its natural! state, underthe$direct internal - Reve- nue Officers., Siamp" upon which