TTIE MORNING OREGON! AN. MONDAY, ATRIL 29, 1913. BAY STATE CONTEST IS HEARING CLOSE PERKINS DEFENDS FRIENDSHIP FORT.R. i NEW YORK CAPITALIST. INTERESTED IN HARVESTER TRUST, WHO DEFENDS HIS SUPPORT OF ROOSEVELT. LAUNDRY. LOR Most Strenuous Campaign in .Years Expected to Bring 450,000 Voters Out. Harvester Director Condemns Publication of Correspond ence of 1909. SELFISH MOTIVE DENIED Contribution to Other Campaigns Itrvlcwed Statement Saj Mor gan Is Not Secretly I-ur-nihinc iund. NKW YORK. April I. Georce W. Perkins, the New York capitalist. In m Utter torlcht to representative Mc Klnley. President Taft's campaign manager, rails upon the President to make public the correspondence changed within the last IS montlia be tween the White House a'nd the offi cials of the International Harvester Company, of which Mr. Terklna la a llrertor. He condemn the publication f Harvester correspondence of 190 and charrrs that it done for the purpose of strengthening President Taft'a cause In the forthcoming; Mas sachusetts primaries Mr. Perkins defends his course In supporting Colonel Roosevelt for the Presidential nomination and denies that J. P. Morran is secretly behind him In the fight for Rooserelt. at1a Not AetaatlaK Motive. Mr. Perkins letter in part aaya: "You and your asaoclates have re peatedly tried to place me before my fellow citlsena In the light of being a man actuated only by sordid, improper motives In what I say and do. In every possible way attempta have been made to convince the people that I am against your candidate and for Mr. Roosevel:. because of my connection with the Steel Corporation and the Harvest! company. -Cannot you that It Is Impossi ble for me to be opposing Mr. Taft recause of the. films: of the steel suit or the threatened suit against the Har vester company? For. If I were act uated by the base motlvea that you Impugn to me. I would be with you heart and soul. In your efforts to re nominate Mr. Taft: for what more could a sordid, selfish corporation man want thn to have hla corporation dis solved, on paper. In such a way as to bring; Increased profits to inside ";k hotders and Increased cost to outside consumers, aa In the case of the Stand ard Oil and tobacco companies? Casaaalaa faatrlbatlosi Dlsrsmaed. "You have persistently connected my name w'h the Harvester company in particulir In giving oot information to the effect that I was contributing; mon y to the Roosevelt cause and have done thla In such a way as to try to convey the Impression that it was a very Improper and wicked th'ng to be going; on and that the Roosevelt om mlttee ought to be ashamed to have me or my monev connected with Its C-The latest attempts In this direction have been to call attention to the con tribution t made to the New York cam paign prior to the recent so-called pri mary and also the publication of the Harvester correspondence. There Is a peculiar business about all these at tacks on me In view of the following;: "First. Otto T. Bannard Is recognised throughout the country as Mr. Taft's warm personal friend and staunch supporter. He also Is president of a large trust company in the very center of the Wall street district. In 10 he ran for Mayor of this city on the Re publican ticket. I supported him and personally contributed more money to his campaign than I did to the recent primary fight here In New York. Taft !Brted. T. S-cond. when Mr. Stlmson. now a memtxr of Mr. Taft's Cabinet, recently ran fur Governor of this slate. I sup ported him with all my might and main. I personally contributed exactly the same amount to his campaign that I contributed to the recent so-called prhnary In this city. Tnlrd. when Mr. Taft ran for Presi dent If 190. I supported him In every way that I could. During the Tsft tampaign of 1908 Senator Crane called on me and telephoned me repeatedly about the financial progress of that tampalgn. being particularly solicitous as to what could be done for the Stata of Massachusetts. "Wacn the Taft campaign was over the treasurer found that he had some bris he could not pay. amounting to about 13.000. "Ha told me he was unable to raise this money from anyone. It was evi dent that the friends and relatives of the newly elected President took no In terest in paying left-over bills after Mr. Taft hvd been elected. I was asked to lend the committee 115.000. which I did. taking the note of George R. Sheldon, treasurer, which as yet has not been '? ... . V . !' AeMleocvaee Dealed. "All the above activities on my part covered a period when I svas not only connected with the Steel Corporation and the International Harvester Com pany, as I am now. but when I also was a mem or r ui m. - -gan at Cot. a director In the National City Bank, and other prominent Wall atreet financial Institutions from which I have since retired: and if. according to your view of things. It la a heinous crime for a great political cause to ac cept from me now. It must have been" more heinous to accept It in the above named three instances. The rumor Is even being circulated that Mr. Morgan and others are secretly behlnd me in the present fight, and. In some roundabout way. are furnishing the money that is being used. Thla Is a downright falsehood. There Is not a scintilla of truth In It. -The recent publication of the har vester correspondence waa clearly done, first, to make a scurrilous attack upon Mr. Roosevelt: second, to connect me. through the harvester company, with the Roosevelt campaign: third, to affect ' the Massachusetts primaries. -In spite of the tact that the Senate, several daya before, had called for the correspondence from 1S04 down to date, your candidate deliberately caused to be given out only one years corre spondence." The letter challenges the Administra tion to publish all its correspondence with the harvester company during the last IS months. Justin McCarthy's Funeral Held. IONPON. April 2. The body of Justin McCarthy, the novelist and his torian and for many years, member or Parliament, who died at Folkestone. Wednesday, was burWl In "'P'' Cemetery Saturday. The P''"'" the grave was a long one. The Amer ican Ambassador. Mr. Beld. sent a floral piece. o GEORGE W. CLARK FORGES LEAD Wilson Men Content as Second Choice in Colorado. CONVENTIONS HELD TODAY Speaker's Friend Count on All 12 Delegate Eve of State Meet ing Find Both Factions With Plans Well . Prawn. rOIlK.MiO rRlNG!. Colo., April in. That Colorado's 12 delegates to the remocratic National convention. In Baltimore would be Instructed for Champ Clark for the Presidential nom ination was the statement tonight of party leaders on the eve of the state convention to be held here tomorrow. The convention will name eight dele gates at large and Immediately after ward. It was said, two additional dele- ... ' -.... .f lha Cnnarresstonal district conventions will be similarly Instructed. supporiers i Wilson, at a meeting tonight, planned to have nlm named as second choice. Figures compiled by party leaders show that out of 1048 delegates to ths state convention. Champ Clark has 50 Instruct-d for him absolutely and Gov ernor Wilson has six. The unlnstructeO number S21. One delegation of 12 will be contested. PEACE, TOPIC OF DEBATE Students of O. A. C. In Oratorical Rattle on Subject. ORKUOX AGniCCLTURAl, COL LEGE. Corcallls, April 18. (Special.) On Mondav evening. May S. occurs the preliminary oratorical contest to choose three students who will com pete for the gold medal offered by the Cosmopolitan Club of the O. A. C. for the best oration on some phase of the movement to effect International peace. Ten manuscripts have been consid ered as worthy of the special recogni tion which entitles their authors to ap pear In the preliminary contest. The authors and their subects follow: F. a. Brown, of Crystal. "Evils of War and a Remedy"; H. M. Cames. North Pow der, -The Peace of Nations"; A. R. Chase. Corvallls. "America avnd the World's Peace": Reld Cochran. Corval lls "The Fallacy of Armed Peace": Miss Ulla Dobell. CorvaJUs, "The Peace Movement": ' Iouts Gambee, Portland, "'Universal Peace": E. W. Heckart. Cor vallls, "The Ultimate Word": J. R. Mag ness. Amity. "War and Peace": W. E. Morris. Corvallls. 'The Price of Peace": L. A. Prescott, Corvallls. "Peace or War." The three speakers ranking highest In this preliminary contest will deliver their orations at convocation. May 15. at which time the winner of the medal will be determined by Judges on dellv- PARIS BANDITS KILLED (Continued From First PT. plosion followed. This operation was repeated -twice. Then came a terrific report, and a column of smoke and debris shot skyward. All the while the bandits were fir ing, but no one was hit. As the front wall collapsed with-a crash the police and Republican Guards rushed up. On the ground floor they found Dubois dead. They mounted a narrow stair way and observed a man streaming with blood, his left arm In a sling, crouched behind a mattress. Blood was pouring from wounds In his head and chest. "Curse you!. Curse you I" he cried as he pulled the trigger of an empty revolver. He reached for poi son In his belt, but before he could take It he was overpowered, carried down and placed In an automobile. People Cry for Reveaare. It was then that the crowd was changed Into a violent mob howling tor the death of the bandit. Soldiers protected him with the butts of their carbines, but many blows fell on Bonnot . before the automobile started pff. Uterallv crushing down a score of persons In clearing a path war, and speeded to Paris. Bonnot was unconscious and died on his way to the hospital. The doctors i PEnKIXS. found II wounds. There were two bullets In his hand and two in his ab domen. Dubois had three wounds. He wore a be.lt containing poison, but it was thought Improbable ho had time to swallow the poison. On Bonnot was found a statement, consisting for the most part of an anarchistic confession of faith, and concluding with the words, believed to have been feverishly scribbled at th last moment: "I die. Jules Bonnot." Bon oot Heavily Armed. He was armed with four revolvers and a carbine. It is estimated that 200.000 persons visited the scene, during the day. They saw only the ruins of the garage. The medical examination showed that Bonnots left arm had been shat tered by a bullet. It was an old wound, however, and he undoubtedly shot himself accidentally when he murdered Jouin. This explains why his arm'wRS in a sling. Gamier. Bon not's co-chief. Is still at large, but the police sny they are on his track and expect to capture him. The Paris newspapers give promin ence to the fact that the garage retreat of the bandits from which they con ducted the series of automobile crimes, was owned by Alfred Fromen tln. known as "the millionaire anar chist." Fromcntln was a friend of Francisco Ferrer, founder of the mod ern school in Hpain. whom he fre quently visited at Barcelona. In 1909, after the execution of Ferrer, he pub lished a pnmphlet entitled, "The Truth 6n the Work of Ferrer." Aaarrhlata Have Villa Colony. Fromentln founded at Choisy-Le-Roi several small villas which he called the "Red Nest." They were occupied al most exclusively by persons of anarch istic belief. Fromentln's friends Insist that he Is the enemy of violence and that If his property was the headquarters of the bandits it must have been without his knowledge. Bonnot was about 10 years old. He formerly served In the engineer corps of the army. He was an expert chauf feur, the real brains of the band, and always was at the steering wheel of the car when the bandits were operat ing, x. About 30 members of the band now have been arrested or are out of the way. Evidence In the possession of the police shows they have pursued their career by a marvelous system, having agents in all parts of Europe. DELAY ANGERS ITALY ALTIIOH1TIFS TOLD TO WAIT IX CHARI.TOX CASK. Americans Criticised for Iarity of Courts Italian Methods Held .Much Iletter. ROME. April 2S. (Special.) The Ministry of Orace and Justice has on several occasions solicited Information from the United States Government as to Porter Charlton, who killed his wife and packed her body In a trunk which he threw Into Lake Como, two years ago. The last reply received was that Charlton would be handed over to the Italian authoritlea for trial within at least another year. He was being kept under medical supervision by the American authorities. This reply Is unfavorably commented upon here. The Italians say the Amer icans should not criticise delays In Italy under the law, since such dllatorlness In the administration of Juatlc'e appar ently prevail In that country. The Judicial Investigation which must be concluded before the trial of Charlton will take at least a year, so It Is not likely that he will be brought to trial before 1914, or four years after the crime was committed. It Is believed here that if the young man had been extradited promptly he would have been set free much sooner than this, either by being acquitted by Jury or being released after having served a short sentence. RECALL RUPTURE EXPERT See ley, the. Noted Trus Expert, Again at the Multnomah Hotel. F. H. Reeley. of Chicago and Phila delphia, will again be at the Mult noma'.i Hdtel Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday only, positively no longer. He says: "The Spermatio Shield Truss will not only retain any case of rupture per fectly, affording Immediate and com plete relief, but closes the openings in ten days, producing results without surgery or harmful Injections. All charttv cases without any charge, or any Interested will bo shown the truss or fitted if desired" POSSIBILITIES ARE VARIED While Wilson Might Win Preference Vote. He Cannot Get Delcgates-at-Large Taft Manager Predicts 3 4 Votes. BOSTON'. April 28. The answer of Massachusetts to the campaigns of five Presidential candidates La Follette. Roosevelt, Taft, Clark and Wilson, will be made at the primaries Tuesday. Owing to the complicated ballot and the abrence of group voting it Is ex. pectel that no definite result will be known until the next day and it may be a tl-y or two before the actual Iden tity of the 36 delegates to the National convention is known. As tne campaign has been one of the most rtrenuous in yeara It Is expected that 400,000 voters will go to the polls. Issue May Be fractal. The presence of both President Taft and Colonel Roosevelt in the state dur-inn- vi j l (i u f ii ir tiniirs nf the campaign and comments from political writers outside of the state have been taken as indicating that Massachusetts may make or mar the political fortunes of the President and the Colonel. I. o nAMaihilitV Of A. nl P rf STPCi Taft delegation of eight delegates at large, with a state preieren--e iui Roosevelt. It would also be possible to choose a majority of district dele gates for Roosevelt throughout the state with a total preference vote in the state for Taft. Tea Democrats for Foaa. On the Democratic ticket there are 15 ca'iuldates for delegates at large, ten of whom are pledged to Governor Foss and one to Governor Wilson, while four are without pledges. At least three of the Democratic candidates for delegates at large who are pledged for Foss seem certain of election, and It Is notable that a'though Governor Wilson might win the Presidential preference he could not obtain one delegate at large. It is generally expected that a ma jority of the Massachusetts delegation to the Baltimore convention will be on record as favoring Foss. although he says t e Is not a candidate. Rival Claims Vary Widely. Claims of the political managers vary greatly. General Edgar R. Champlain. of the Taft forces, predicted today that the President would secure at least 34 out of 3 delegates. City Councillor Hale, the Roosevelt manager, claims victory in the Second, Third, Fourth, Sixth. Seventh. Ninth. Tenth. Eleventh and Fourteenth Congressional Districts, and a fighting chance for the eight delegates at large. Governor Wilson has been the only Democratic candidate to speak In Mas sachusetts. Ex-Congressman McNary. who Is In charge of his campaign, said today that the outlook is encouraging. Congressman Curley said today ho believes a great majority of the Demo crats will tavor Clark. Albany May Get Xew Opera-Honse. ALBA NT, Or.. March 17. (Special.) That Albany may have a new opera house in the near future is indicated by the purchase yesterday of one of the most valuable building sites in this city by Al Sternberg. a local merchant, and George E. Rolfe. pro prietor of the Empire Photoplay. The property was purchased from J. K. Weatherford and is located on the northwest corner of block 2 at Lyon and First' streets. The property has a frontage of 12 feet on First street and 86 feet on Lyon street, and Is In the center of the business section and considered to be one of the most val uable locations here. The considera tion Is private but Is said to be ap proximately 20.000. It Is reported that the purchasers will erect a modern and up-to-date opera house on the property this year. Chchalis Ilolel Work on Now. , CHEIIAL1S, Wash.. March 31. (Spe cial.) IL A. Kaufman, the new land lord of the Hotel Bt. Helens, has an nounced that he will begin at once the work of making extensive improve ments in the hotel. Upwards of J5000 will be spent and all rooms not now i .4 .1.1 will have hot and cold BU jnwi.ii... " ... water lavatories added. Extensive -i ..in k. mndA In the office and t 1 1 M 1 1 ' a n ... " a general renovation will make the place more popular man ever. Clatsop Registration Grows. ASTORIA. Or., April 28. (Special.) mw. --..1 ..lalratlnn In (PlflLtsOn Coun- ty for the recent primary elections was 2437 and the total numoer ui uii 1S27. Two years ago the registrations prior to the primary election numbered 2191 and the total vote cast at the pri maries was 1343, showing an increase of nearly BOO this year. Cliehalis to Get Fine Laundry. CHEHALI6, Wash, March 31. (Spe- 0laj.) c. E. Sonnemann, of the City Laundry, will at once begin erection of a $5000 concrete steam laundry plant at the corner of Chehalis avenue and Main streets. S. C. Krlckson has the contract and the plant will be one of the most modern in Southwest Wash ington. Th British sovernment paid rewards mountlns to I47.T2.1 for the dctructlon In ldla of 91.104 snakes and 18.22 wild anl- The Least Expensive Way CLEVER salesmanship may sell your product to the jobbers. Brisk missionary work will place, it on the dealers' shelves; then the only way you can have anything to do with moving it from the dealers' shelves is to advertise it to the public. Dealers, for the most part, follow the channels of least resistance. Advertised brands are in demand. ThankAlbder cJd?erttjnf Counsel 40IWiIcoxW 1 SOCKS AND SHIRTS . MENDED WITHOUT CHARGE PALACE LAUNDRY "FAMOUS 1 OK SUPERIOR WORK." EAST TENTH andEVERETT PHONES, B2113; Eastl030 o VESSEL IS ADRIFT Norwegian Steamer Loses Rudder and Is in Distress. SEA IS HEAVY; GALE RISING J. H. Chancellor, Bound: for Eureka, Will Go to. Assistance Off Hum boldt Coast Amateurs Cause Wireless Confusion. SAN FRANCISCO, April 28. The Government wireless station at Terba Buena Island picked up a message to night from the Norwegian steamer Admiral (remainder undecipherable) that she had dropped ner rudder 25 miles north of Humboldt and was un manageable. Later, wireless messages give the name of the ship as the Admlralen. bound for Alaska from Sandefjord, Norway, her port of register. The Admlralen is a small Iron ves sel, built in 1869, and registering 1517 tons gross. The steamer J. H. Chan cellor, bound from this port for Eu reka, is in wireless touch with the Admlralen and will go to her assist ance. The Chancellor reports a heavy sea and a rising gale. Yerba Buena wireless station re ports that the stranger's sending ap paratus apparently is very weak, and that so much confusion is caused by amateur wireless Interference that he cannot read what is in the air. A stiff southeast wind is blowing outside the gate. TAFT ANSWERS COLONEL (Continued From First Page.) letter of September 1 to the President until after my Administration had be gun and the time when the question of the prosecution came up in 1909 or 1910 and I never saw or read the let ter until two months ago. Dates of Letters Given. "This correspondence shows that the subject matter of the prosecution of the International Harvester Company came before President Roosevelt on August 22, 1907, which Is the date of his letter to Attorney-General Bona parte, that Mr. Herbert Knox Smith's letter discussing the question and advising- against suit waa dated Septem ber 21, 1907, and that Mr. Smith's let ter was forwarded by direction of President Roosevelt under date of September 24 to the Attorney-General with direction to the Attorney-General to bring the letter to the President that week to talk over the matter. The official records show that Pres ident Roosevelt left 'Washington in June. 1907. for Oyster Bay, and re turned to Washington on September 2t; that on September 29 he left Washing ton for a trip down the Mississippi, returning to Washington on October 23. 1907; and that .he remained in Washington from that time on. Taft Absent from Capital. "The official records of the War De partment show that I left Washington in June of the same year and went to Murray Bay, Canada, that I remained there until August, when I visited Oys ter Bay on August 13 and then went to Washington on the 14th and left ?honeain3$05 THK LACK of knowledge of modern methods in first-class Jfn drles keeps many women from patronizing these establish TT1 n X.9 There was a time when the management dared not invite Inspec tion Thank-s to Twentieth Century methods, the PALACE LALN DRY urges the public to visit its institution. The LAST WORD IN PERFECTION is evident in every appli ance In the PALACE LAUNDRY. It is to this we owe our marvel ous success in building up a laundry second to none tn America in the production of PERFECTION In every class of work. REASON WHY WE I'SK o MtNGLE. This is the reason why goods are kept in perfect condition. We use the ASHRR SYSTEM of flat-work ironing. There is positively NO WEAR there being no fric tion. This machine is the production of master minds after long years of thought and experiment. The finest fabrics are kept in perfect condition, with their patterns true as new. This is only possible with the ASHER machine. It PRESSES, while the mangle CRUSHES and injures the clothes. Tn keeping with this machine, all our other appliances are the BEST KNOWN TO SCIENCE. INNOVATION SHOES AND SOCKS ARE AFFINITIES. Since introducing the darning of socks FREE to our patrons, we found it necessary to keep two experienced women constantly at the special machine for this work. That the public appreciates this work is thus evi denced. Actuated by this apprerlatlon. We have added aaolber service which we reel confident the public will eqanlly welcome. It i a MIOK ItKPIBING DEPARTMBXT. Our FBBK collection and deliver- at shoes will spare the Inconvenience and nnnoyanee of carry Ins: them to the cobbler and bark. Just band your worm shoes to our drivers, with or without your laundry parcel, lour shoes will be repaired and returned promptly at a nominal cost. GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED TO ANY PART -. OF THE CITY. TELEPHONE OR CALL A DRIVER. Washington on August 18 for a West ern trip through Oklahoma. Missouri, the Tellowstone Park, Oregon and Washington, reaching Seattle Septem ber 8 and sailing from Seattle for the Philippines on September 13. I did not return to the United States until the 30th of December, 1907. "I have a letter from Herbert Knox Smith, Commissioner of the Bureau of Corporations, written at my request. In which he uses the following language: "'On November 7, 1907, which date I fix from my personal diary, I tele phoned Mr. Perkins at the President's order that the President took the view that the bureau's investigation should come before the suit." Presence at Meetlnc Impossible. "This indicates with certainty the time when the matter was decided and shows that if the matter did come be fore the Cabinet at all it must have been after September 24 and on or be fnM Mnvumhcr 7 1907. a period when I was out of the country and could 1 not have been present and certainly could not have made a motion or sug gestion in the Cabinet that no suit be prosecuted until after the investiga tion. Mr. Roosevelt asks why suit has not been brought against the Harves ter trust by this Administration. "A report made to me by the Attorney-General shows that shortly after the decls'on by the Supreme Court in the Standard Oil and tobacco cases the Attorney-General was about to begin suit against the International Harves ter Company when its representatives requested an opportunity, in apparent good faith, to submit a reasonable plan of reorganization or dissolution which would meet every Just cause of complaint. Wrlth my approval, the Attorney-General delayed bringing suit, pending the consideration of this prop osition and during negotiations which ensued, looking to the accomplishment of such result. Suit Ordered. After Delay. "These negotiations were delayed, first, by reason of the time required to make an examination of the books of the Harvester company, and, second, because of delay In completing the re port of the examiners due to the fact that they were obliged to suspend work on it in order to complete their work In steel trust Investigation. "These negotiations continued until A Portland Tailor Who Merits His . Position as Leader. n ft i FINE FARM FOR SALE Walking distance from station on Oregon Electric, near Salem. 20 Acres Under Cultivation Six-room house and barn, two acres of hearing orchard, spring and creek water, half acre in small fruits. Ferry Earnings for Owner With this farm goes privilege of ferry across Willamette River. Ferry earnings now average between $40 and $50 per month. Ferry and equipment included in sale of farm. Will trade for city property. For information write "Farm Department," 235 Stark St., Portland, Oregon, ot call Main 5076 or A 3774. SHOES REPAIRED DRIVERS CALL AND DELIVER J. H. J. April 24, 1912. when, as I have before mentioned, they came to a conclusion and it was determined that no agree ment could be reached which the Gov ernment could accept, and on that date the Attorney-General was directed to bring suit." SIFTON TO BE DEVELOPED Company Will Build Bungalows on Five-Acre Tracts. VANCOUVER. Wash.. March 3. (Spe cial.) By building bungalows costing about $900 on five-acre tracts along the trolley line, the Clark County De velopment Company, subsidiary to the v. ashington-Oregon Corporation, is to attempt to develop that section of the county around Sifton, about seven miles from Vancouver. It is planned to install electric de vices so that the persons living on the places may have electricity do the hard work by machinery. The houses will have electric lights and telephones, so Sifton will be a suburb of Vancouver, as tho trolley line gives 40 - minute service to Vancouver and Portland. LAKEVIEW WANTS SEWERS City Council Begins Campaign to Build $40,000 System This Year. LAKEVIEW, Or.. Feb. 25. (Special.) With the appointment of G. W. Rice, chief engineer of the Lakeview Irriga tion & Power Company, to draw the plans and estimate the cost, the City Council has begun a campaign for a sewer system to be constructed this year. It is believed that the system will cost about $40,000. The natural drainage of the city will save thous ands of dollars of expense on the work. It is stated that the city will issue time bonds to meet the cost of the im provement, the securities to carry a reasonable rate of interest. City Attorney AV. Lair Thompson has nearly completed the draft of a new city charter which is necessary before the bonds can be issued. Reports have reached Ixmdon of tho dis covery of kerosene In Tunis. CORRECT CLOTHES FOR MEN!!! The Indian designated his prestige by a string of beads, a better blanket or a head--gear of feathers. The man of today must know the last-minute fashion tendency. You may be sure of the style, tailoring, fit, ma terial, color and service of any suit or garment made by In the Rotbchild Braiding on Washington, Near Fourth Street. B