7
SALEM EXPECTS
A LIVELY TIME
passengers rushed on deck, half clad, and
were disgusted to learn that a rat. hav
ing crawled into the cylinder, had caused
the halt. Such an accident on a man-of-war
in time of action might be fearfully
paid for, and an active cat is its only
preventive.
SEATTLEATHLETES ft
c
3
STORE CLOSES ON SATURDAYS AT SIX O'CLOCK
TAKETHREE EVENTS
SATURDAY SPECIALS
SERVING TWO MASTERS
THE MORNING OREGONIAN. SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1908.
To Indorse or Not to Indorse
Legislative Candidates Is
Stumbling Block'.
FEW FOR STATEMENT NO. 1
Marlon Political Leaders Believe It
Bad Politic to Arouse IH-Fecllng
and May Abandon the Plan ol
the Central Committee.
6ALBM. Or.; March 13. (Special.) A
lively contest ia expected In the Repub
llran county convention tomorrow over
the- question whether a Iejrislative ticket
shall be Indorsed. A few days aco the
plan of Indorsing; a ticket of candidates
opposed to Statement No. 1 had been
abandoned, but today It was revived and
an effort will be made to carry It out.
The effort will be opposed, not only by
Statement No. 1 men, but also by some
who are opposed to Statement No. 1.
The question presented will not be upon
Statement No. 1, but upon the Indorse
ment of candidates under any conditions.
It is conceded by all that the opponents
of Statement No. 1 will be in full control
of the convention. In fact. It is asserted
by men active In politics, that out of the
is delegates less than ten are advocates
of Statement No. 1.
Concessions to Country Precincts.
The county central committee ordered
the convention held for the purpose of
Indorsing five legislative candidates who
are unalterably opposed to Statement No.
1. The convention will have the power
to carry out the Instruction if It desires,
but there are many who believe It would
be poor policy to do so. Because of this
feeling;, the plan waa abandoned, but It
has bafin taken up again on account of
the announcement that there will be five
Statement No. 1 candidates in the pri
maries in April.
So far as can be learned, there Is no
"programme" for the convention. As it
baa been repotted that the country peo
ple are dissatisfied with the convention
Idea, it Is proposed that a delegate from
the country be made chairman. It is
also the Intention of the city delegates
to concede three of the Ave candidates
to the country precincts, one to come
from Sllverton, one from Jefferson and
one from the farming region near Salem.
The other two will be from the city. P.
A. Turner, of Salem; L. T. Reynolds, of
hemawa, and J. H. Settlemier. of Wood
burn, are the only men whose names have
been mentioned as candidates.
Effect on June Election.
The convention will meet at the city
hall at 10 A. M. and after effecting a tem
porary organization, -will probably ad
journ until afternoon. There is a great
Interest In the meeting, not so much on
account of what the convention may do,
but because of the effect Its action may
have upon the primary election in April
or til general election in June. Predic
tions have been frequent that the holding
of a convention for indorsing candidates
. will prove a political mistake.
HATUUMAX MAY DEFY ORDER
Agents Ijikely to Continue to Do Bus
iness tn Puget Sound.
TACOMA, Wash., March 13. (Special.)
Tte this afternoon It was reported that
Harrlman would defy the Interstate Com
merce Commission and that his agents
In the Hill territory had been ordered to
continue soliciting passenger business as
usual. Alec 3. Uavtn. director and as
nintant general auditor of the Oregon
ffhort Line, and T. B. Dunn, traveling
auditor for the Southern Pacific, have
been in Tacoma three days giving the
affairs of the local Harrlman ofllce a
thorough checking which railroad men
maintain is final.
Mr. Gavin said fnnlght. "I cannot make
any statements yet as to what will be
the outcome of this passenger contro
versy. We expect to hear from Portland
tomorrow as to what action will be
taken, and I will be In a position to
make a statement concerning future busi
ness at that time."
Saloonman Faces Charges.
FENDI-STON. Or.. March 13. (Special.)
Information was Hied in the Circuit
Court today charging Abb Ogg with sell
ing liquor on Sunday. He is the saloon
.proprietor who was recently fined 5100
for permitting gambling In his place of
business. It is probable that his license
will now be revoked. The liquor is sup
posed to have been sold last Sunday and
was used to Intoxicate a man in order
that he might be the more" easily robbed.
Banquet to Lieutenant Canficld.
ASTORIA, Or., March 13. (Special.)
A banquet was given at Fort Stevens
this evening by the officers stationed at
the forts adjacent to the mouth of the
river, to lieutenant Cannrld. who will be
married on next Monday to Mrs. Bishop,
formerly the wife of Captain Bishop,
who was recently stationed at Fort
Stevens, but is now at Fort Houston,
Tex.
Bit. hop Paddock at Pendleton.
FENDIjKTON. Or. March 13. Pnecial.)
Bishop R. I Paddock, of the Kastern
Oregon Kpiseopa! diocese, late of New
York, arrived this morning from I.i
Grande and will be tn Pendleton a week
or more. The bishop says he will spend
the next few months tn traveling over
his large district and has no Idea as yet
where he will make his permanent head
quarters. Vrtcle Sam'e Feline Soldiers.
Exchange.
It Is not generally known that the
Vnlted States Government spends several
thousands of dollars annually for the
maintenance of cats, but the accounts of
the United States depot commissaries
prove It. In every storehouse there are
from one to five of the animals., and
their rations are provided as carefully
and as regularly as those of any of the
Soldiers.
They are not fed on scraps, nor are
their Individual tastes disregarded, as are
those of the enlisted men. but they are
allotted so many pounds of "choice beef
or any other delicacy their palate may
desire. Of course, they may have as
much game as they wish, and the store
houses seldom fall to furnish an unlim
ited supply of rats and mice- That the
cats save many times their cost of sup
port la well known, aa such supplies ma
crackers, cheese, bacon, flour nd meal
are much sought after by the rodents.
All men-of-war carry cats. Their use
fulness Is never more apparent than on
shtpboard. The writer ra crossing from
Antwerp to New York on the steamship
Southwark. when he was awakened by
the sudden stopping of the ship, an oc
currence which, happening In mid-ocean,
generally means something serious. The
Editor's Tribulations in Running a
Country Weekly.
Toronto SaturdaJ Night.
The following narration of an erstwhile
country editor is worth considering at
the present time, when the issue of local
option is being fought out in so many
sections of the province. He had lived
in Toronto for a number of years and
had taken a great deal more Interest In
the affairs of the public than the public
took in him. He conceived the idea of
going out to the country where he might
become a real influence. He saw visions
of himself moulding thbught In his sec
tion. In Imagination he saw Invitations
to take the stump coming from candi
dates in all parts of Canada. He saw
himself slipping down to Ottawa to sug
gest to the administration the proper
course to pursue In regard to certain
public questions. Such were the things
PAI-OrSE T.AD WHO 18 WITH AD
MIRAL EVANS AT MAGUA
IJ5NA BAY.
K i t
I . -a.-
It-' 'T-':'i
A yf, -
!r U ''--iV
i bi 1 1 ni run - i3 afcnfciriTi--rir Inritfr-
' RaJph Harrold Averill of GarArid,
Wwh.
GARFIELD. Wash.. March 13.
(Special.) Ralph Harrold Averill,
son cf C. K. Averill. of this city,
is with Admiral Evans" flt at Mag.
dalena Bay. The young man en
listed three years ago, and before
entering the navy waa with the West
ern Union Telepraph Comjany at
Spokane, and was also for some,
time with the Oregon Railway &
Navigation Company as telegraph
operator at Burk, Idaho. The young
man was an expert operator and was
paid while In the employ of the rail
road company higher wages for his
services than any operator in the
company's employ on the entire sys
tem. He has had chances to enter the
wireless service for the Government,
but Is afraid he will be stationed
on shore If ho engaged in that work.
Being doslrous of seeing foreign lands
and to have a "scrap" with Japan
if conditions are favorable, he has
remained on board ehip. (
Young Averill has the friendship
of State Railway Commissioner Law
rence. Senator Plies and President
Roosevelt. lie has papers in his
possession from President Roosevelt
which he prizes very highly. The
young man grew to manhood In the
Palause country.
this city man was going to make the de
sirable vocation of country editor yield
to him.
The paper he purchased he bought
cheap, and the vendor explained to him
the reason why. A few years or so
previously there had been a local option
fight in his district, and since he de
rived more revenue from the opponents
than the advocates of the measure, he
supported the views of the former. The
temperance people won their fight and
proceeded to take vengeance on the pa
per in such a practical manner that he
was obliged to sell out. His ambitious
customer had some reputation as a tern
perance man and was of the opinion any
way that so able a man as he could have
no difficulty in pulling the property out
of the hole. He made the paper brighter
and snappier than the good people had
been - accustomed to. He was tactful
enough to 'Jolly' everybody more or less,
and became quite popular.
All seemed to be going well until the
fatal old question of local option came
to the fore again. It was decided that
another vote should be taken. A deputa
tion of prominent temperance men, in
cluding the pastors of two or three cvan?
gelical churches, waited on the editor
and asked him which side he was going
to take. He replied that while he was
a temperance man, his chief advertiser
was the A-l Mineral Springs Company,
Limited, which paid him the sum of 0
per month. The company m question
was in reality the local hotel proprietor.
He would therefore have to be judicious.
but he mould do the best he could In the
cause of righteousness. The deputation
went away with storn eyes and .puckered
noses that boded ill for the editor.
Next day the hotel proprietor dropped
in and aked the worried thought-moulder
what stand he was going to take. The
editor told of the interview of the day
before and said he guessed he would
have to remain neutral and discuss the
Question on academic grounds. The hotel
proprietor went away mentioning the
place of future punishment quietly ana
intensely as h went out. The weeks be
fore the election were troublous ones for
the editor, who kept on writing editorials
to the effect thart there were many sides
to the question.
In the end both camps took reprisals
when their contracts expired, and the
erstwhile thought-moulder Is back in To
ronto, convinced that the lot of the rural
editor is not a happy one.
Friday, Thirteenth, Proves a
Hoodoo for Wearers of
' the Winged "M."
VENABLE DEFEATS FRANK
Cauterizing a Leopard's Tail.
Paris Cable to the Now York Herald.
A novel surgical operation has just been
performed on a leopard, Paul, at Pexon's
menagerie by Professor Dramard, of the
Military Veterinary College. The animal
recently while eating his dinner also bit
his tail, gangrene set in. and it became
necessary to amputate a portion of the
tail to save his life. The leopard was
lassoed, thrown on its back, a piece of
soft w ood was given It to gnaw, and while"
the animal was held by ten men the vet
erinary preceded with the ablation of a
portion of the tall and cauterized the
wound. The animal roared considerably,
but the operation was declared successful.
Northwestern People in New York
NEW YORK. March 13. (Specials-
People from the Northwest registered at
New York hotels today as louows:
From Spokane e. G. Campion, at the
Bristol.
From Seattle F. Btcher, at the Albe
marle; V. J. Heney, at the Holland: Mrs.
R. B. Gillies, at the Westminster: C. H.
Cobb and wife, at the Fifth Avenue.
fepeclc Outclasses Dranga and Kelly
Outpoints West Smith Only Tic
tor Among the Visitors Over
1000 Attend the Smoker,
SEATTLE, Wash.. March 13. (Special.)
-''Friday, the 13th" proved a Jonah day
for the athletes who represented the
Multnomah Athletic Club, of Portland,
against the Seattle Athletic Club boxers
and wrestlers at the smoker held last
night at the S. A. C. gym. Three out
of the four inter-club events were won
by Seattle men, Smith, of Portland, betas
the only visitor to finish in front.
Wrestler Venable defeated Edgar
Frank in the main wrestling bout- Speck
outclassed Dranga in the wlndup boxing
event and Kelly defeated West after a
fast mixup. The smoker was attended
by nearly 1000 persons and was the best
held in Seattle this year.
Speck, of the Seattle Athletic Club,
sent the big crowd into fits of delight by
the way in which he used his Dempsey
left and punished Dranga, of Multno
mah. Dranga is a game, rugged young
ster with a hard rap in either mitt, but
he was unable to connect. Speck fol
lowed the instructions of Lonnle Austin
to the letter and waa invariably the first
to connect In the clashes.
Venable Tumbles Frank.
at any stage and at the conclusion of
the three rounds was hardly ruffled.
Dranga, on the other hand, had pumped
into a multitude of straight lefts that
caused his head to rock. He was greatly
weakened and lacked accuracy when the
bout ended.
Venable proved that he is easily the
best wrestler of his weight In the North-
Tl.. aA raknt ncralnst thA former
champion without any training except
what he had Deen aDie it swuiw
self. There was no professional tutor to
w v. i ,la vtftnrv ia all his
tuui dim, .- -
own. The bout was closely contested
and pleased tne crow a.
Venable won the first fall In 4 minutes
and 30 seconds. He took the second drop
in 12 minutes and 10 seconds, coin weic
flying falls, but Venable could have
turned the second one Into a pin iau nua
the bout continued.
Kelly Too Fast for West.
Kellv slmnlv outboxed West, pt Port
land. Kelly was too fast and led from
the first. West kept well covered ana
seemed content to ' wait and try for a
knockout In a single punch. He uncorKea
several vicious ones, but Kelly was too
fast and the Portlander was unable to
connect. Had West followed his usual
tactics and bored in from the gong, he
might have been able to trim the local
lad, but at the long-range Doxing game
the visitor had no chance to register.
Kincaid lost to Smith after three bouts.
The local lad was defeated in the first
encounter, but annexed the second fall.
In the deciding turn his shoulders were
pinned to the mat after' 11 minutes of
hard work. Ktncald and Smith wrestled
for 20 minutes without going to the mat,
but as both were trying hard, the crowd
was pleased.
Tonight's smoker marked the close of
the season in the Northwest, so far as
interclub tournaments are concerned.
COUIiOX DEFEATS M'GOVERX
"Young Terry" Outclassed Alto
gether by Clever Opponent.
LOS ANGELES, March 13. Johnny
Coulon, of Chicago, cleanly outclassed
"Young Terry" McGovern, of Los An
geles, In their ten-round contest before
the Pacific Ahletic Club in this city to
night. Coulon, by his clever defense and his
hardiness, kept his opponent continually
on the defense and scored three knock
downs, once putting McGovern halfway
through the ropes. Coulon showed
strength and gameness never before in
troduced by a 105-pound fighter in this
city. Several times McGovern was within
a few seconds of the knockout, but was
saved by the gong. The crowd was en
thusiastic in approval of Coulon's clever
defense. He followed McGovern unceas
ingly and managed to duck or step away
from his opponent's swing and upper
cuts. .
THE DAY'S HORSE RACES
At Los Angeles.
LOS ANGELES, March 13. Santa Anita
results:
Six Furlonirs Halaca won. Aristotle sec
ond. Lancashire Lad third. Time. 1:14 2-5.
Four Furlongs Pops won, Frank Clancy
serond, I.ucky Mate third. Time. :4S 3-5.
Mile Amppdo won. Ed Ball second. Daz
lir third. Time. t:40S-S.
Mile Toupe won. Smlrker second. Chief
Desmond third. Time. 1:39 3-5.
Mile and Three Sixteenths am Bernard
won. Canique second, Kiprap third. Time,
2:0'J 2-5.
Six Furlong's Be May won, Koroailany
second, Jimalong third. Time, 1:01 4-5.
At San Francisco.
SAN FRANCISCO. March 13. Results
at Emeryville:
Mile rti1 Sixteenth Brnnfclenf won. Shin
Weak Little Boys
may become fine stron j men.
Some of the stron j men of to
day were sickly boys years
ago. Many of them received
Scott's Emulsion
at their mother's knee. This
had a power in it that changed
them from weak, delicate
boys into strong, robust boys.
It has the tame power to-day.
Boys and girls who are pale
and weaX get food and energy
out of SCOTTS EMULSION.
It makes children grow, t t i
AH Dnoibt SOc and $1.00.
Today's list of bargain items will prove doubly attractive to thrifty Saturday shoppers the following spe
cials, with the exception of one, being subject to delivery at our earliest convenience. No mail, telephone
or C. O. D. orders accepted for these specials.
300 Carpet Samples
Values Up to $3.00, Special
Today 50c, 75c and $1.00 Ea.
The Carpet Department announces for to
day's sale another lot of manufacturer's
Carpet Samples li-yard lengths of
Tapestry Brussels, Body Brussels, Velvets, Axminsters and "Wiltons all
neatly bound or fringed and in such variety of patterns and colorings as
will enable a selection to be made to h a rmonize with any floor-covering.
SPECIALS TODAY IN DRAPERY DEPARTMENT
100 pairs White Nottingham Lace Curtains special, per pair 40J
48-inch Curtain Swiss in plain -white and ecru also in stripe patterns of blue, pink
and yellow 65c quality for, yard - - 35?
36-inch Silkoline in figured effects 15c quality for, yard J
SHIRTWAIST BOXES
SPECIAL $2.35
These boxes are 30 inches long and 14 inches deep
strongly made and fitted with castors inside lined
padded tops covered in art cretonne, burlap,
tapestry, velour, repp, etc. One only to each purchaser
-today at the above special.
rX
1 -Vr-rY ti- iW it -i - - - J
150 GRANITE
TEA KETTLES
SPEC. TODAY
AT 50c EACH
Another very attractive special
offered today in the Basement De
partment eight-quart size Tea
Kettle in gray graniteware with
heavy handle granite cover with
metal knob. One only to each
customer. No deliveries Avill be
made on this special.
Garden Trowels
Special in the Basement Dept.
Steel Trowels for. ....... 5
Malleable Trowels for...lOd
raCOMPLETE'HOUSE-FURniSHEM
s3
1AM IttJU li
wirtMjjl
Feather Pillows
Special in the Bedding Dept.
Regular $3.25 values 21 in. by
27 in. stripe ticking today
at, pair $1.75
Alviso aecond. "WTiIdden third. Time,
1:47 1-5.
Futurity Ccurse Bannock Bob won, Zoe
Young- second. Humor third. Time. 1:12.
Three and One-Half Furlongs. Selling
On Parole won. Carrie Thatcher second,
Rosamo third. Time. :41 3-5.
Six Furlongs St. Avon won, "Wap second.
Crystal Wave third. Time. 1:14.
Mile and Hundred Yards Taunt won.
Jack Adams second. Fury third. Time.
1:47.
8tx and One-Half Furlonga Fantastic
won, St. Elm wood second. Rather Royal
third. Time- 1:11)4-5.
wrestling contest with Frank Gotch in
Chicago April L
THE BEVERIDGE BRAND
At Xcw Orleans.
NEW ORELEAKS, March 13. Crescent
City results:
Three and One-Half Furlongs I.lttle
Mose won, Columbus second. Gloriole third.
Time. -.42.
Five and One-Half Furlongs Prowler
won. Canada second. Pedrone third. Time,
1:00 2-5.
Kive and One-Half Furlonps Momentum
won. Big-Ben second. Vohoome third. Time,
1:07 3-5.
One Mile Polly Prim won. Kercheval
second. Lady Esther third. Time, 1:40 1-5.
Mile and a Sixteenth Ban Rlda won.
Firmament second. Czar third. Time.
1:48 1-5.
Seven Furlongs Hannibal Bey Iron.
Robin Hood second. Miss Strome third.
Time. 1:2S.
One Mile and Seventy Yards-Flaxman
won. Viperine second. Creel third. Time,
l:48-5.
Britt to Meet Macfarland.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 13. Arti
cles between "Jimmy" Brltt and
"Packy Macfarland, of Chicago, for a
20-round fight were signed tonight.
The contest will take place on the
evening of April 21, before James Cof
froth's club.
Hoppe Defeats Schaefer.
CINCINNATI, March 13. Willie
Hoppe defeated Jake Schaefer here to
night in 18.1 balkline billiards, by a
score of 400 to 185. Hoppe's high run
was 110 and Schaefer's 40.
Hackenschmidt Ready for Goteh.
NEW YORK, March 13. George Hack
enschmidt arrived here from Europe to
day on the steamer Lusitania. He comes
here 'prepared for the championship
Indians Senator's Sweetness "lilke
a Pound of Candy."
Joel Chandler Harris in Uncle Remus"
Magazine.
"An' whar will we find anything hap
pier than to call to mind, for one blissful
moment I hope I've got it right, but it's
been so long sence I quoted anything
warm from the poets that I alnt right
certain an' shore whar will we git any
bigger gob of happiness than can be found
in that restless bunch of sweetness,
Albert Beverldge?" asked Billy Sanders.
"His very name Is as satlsfyin' to me as
a cold bottle of beer right out'n a pro
hibition locker, an' when I dwell on
Albert In my thoughts, I feel like I had
swallowed a pound of candy which is a
sufficient plenty for me any time. The
last I heern of Albert, he was deep in
a dispute wT Bryan about the genteel an'
providential natur' of the trusts. This
dispute began Brimmer before last, an' I
reckon it'a a-gwine "on yit. The last I
seen on it, Bryan was talkin' about one
thing an' Albert about another, but the
dispute was Jest as hot. Bryan kin
scoop up language like a steam shovel
scoops up dirt, an' the' only advantage
that Albert has got ia that he kin scoop
it uo like two steam shovels.
"Whether writln" or speakin', all Albert
has to do Is to turn on the phonograph,
an' you'll hear a speech or read a piece
long enough to stretch across the bosim
of the ragin' Pacific: an' he'll keep It up
ontell the police remind him that people
that aint natchel orators have got lor to
eat an' sleep. Albert is both young an'
smart; I reckon he must 'a' went through
ont of our public school systems whar
they keep grammars an' dictionaries, an
they're still fresh In his mind. He knows
a heap of things that the most on us
have done gone an' clean forgot; but I
never shall forjit his article that run
through seven issues of the Congressional
Record. Its entitlement was, 'A Brief
View of the Earth When She Was Nine
teen Years of Age.' It was chockfull of
good advice to young men, telling them
that it aint wuth while to do nothln' bad
ontell they git old enough for to vote an'
go to Congress. That article Is one of the
few things I've ever cried over; In fact,
I cried ontell the cook axed me ef I
was tryin' for to take a bath in a rockin'
cheer wl' all my cloze on.
"Now, it looks like to me that a man
as full of fluency as Albert ought to be
mighty close to the Presidency. We
ought, to give our baby boy a man's
chance, an' the only way T know how to
do it is to git the'r respected an' respect
able names before the Republican conJ
vention when the delegates aint too obe
to slobbr." ,
Sawdust ia turned Into transportable fuei
by the simple device of being heated under;
hlffh-pressure steam until the resinous in
gredients become sticky, when it is pressed
Into bricks. One man with a two-horsepower
machine can turn out 10,000 bricks m
gay.
Saturday Night
Special Sale
Of Cross-Stripe and Novelty
Ruffled Curtainn, on sale be
tween 6 and 9 P. M. tonight.
Cross-Stripe Madras Curtains,
in red, blue, green, pink or yel
low stripes.
Novelty Baffled Curtains, in
white, ecru and Arabian nets,
Battenberg and lace edge and
insertion.
Six different patterns to se
lect from, regular val. to $4.00
Price Per Pair
$1.75
Not more than two pairs to a
customer. No telephone or C.
O. D. orders filled.
EASTERN
OUTFITTING COMPANY
The Store Where Your Credit Is'Good
COR. WASHINGTON AND TENTH STS.
Scalp Specialists
Use and Recommend
EWBRO'S HERPICIDE
"I am sending you my photograph to show what Newbro's
Herpicide has tlone for me.
'tSince I first tried Herpicide upon my hair I have used it
exclusively in giving scalp treatments to others, and I would
not think of trving to get along without it."
(Signed) MRS. ANNA CONNER.
2807 Archer Ave., Chicago, 111.
Hundreds of lady scalp specialists and hair dressers use and recommend Newbro's Herpicide, instead
of products of their own manufacture upon which a much larger profit could be made. They claim that
Herpicide makes friends for them and gives much better satisfaction. Some hair dressers use Herpicide
for obstinate cases only, but why not use the best first T
Herpicide is a delightful dressing that can be used when there is no disease of the hair or scalp, and
as an actual remedy for dandruff, itching scalp and falling hair it stands in a class singularly its own.
Many ladies object to a gummy and sticky hair dressing, or one that is full of sedimentary chemicals
intended to dye the hair. The marked preference for a clean and dainty preparation, particularly one
that overcomes excessive oiliness and leaves the-hair light and fluffy, is reflected in the enormous sale of
Newbro's Herpicide. Discriminating ladies become enthusiastic over its refreshing quality and exquisite
fragrance. It stops itching of the scalp almost instantly.
Two sizes, 50c and $1.00, at Drugstores. Send 10c in stamps to The Herpicide Co., Dept. N., Detroit,
Michigan, for a sample. Guaranteed under the Food and Drugs Act, June 30, 1906. Serial No. 915.
Some druggists boast of their ability to eell substitutes to mild-mannered customers. Get Herpicide.
TOE SALE AT ALL DRUGSTORES. Applications at prominent barbershops.
.V.--- --.
3 ? ""y ', vir" "
Mrs. Anna Conner