THE SUNDAY OREGOXIA, PORTLAND. DECEMBER 8, 1912. INCREASED GUT OF TIMBER IS ADVISED ETJSSIAN ROYALTY WHO RENOUNCES CLAIM TO THRONE FOR SAKE OF DOMESTIC BLISS. ale UneqMalled Secretary Wilson Says Forest Reserves Produce Far More Than Is Being Used. As fcitill u - In the City of Portland, for high-grade, dependable merchandise, com pare prices and quality with others. We back our goods by our high standard of fair dealing with the public, and furthermore, guarantee to make good every assertion in this ad. .Out stock is now most com pletemake your selection. A Timely Sale for the Gift Giver Hart Schaffner & Marx SUPPLY GROWS STEADILY Cascade Forest, In Oregon, Cited as Kxaniple, Adds 200,000,000 IVet a Vear bj- Growth. With Ixcal Need for 1,000,000. OKKGOXIAN XKWS BUREAU. Wash ington. Dor. 7. Theoretically, the For-e-t Service believes in practical conser vation, in the use of the National for ests for the benefit of the present as well as future (fenerations. Practically, the Forest Service is so holding most of the mature timber of the forest re serves that it is rotting because those desirous of buying- are not able to cut it umler the terms and conditions that would make lumbering possible. This is evident from that section of the annual report of the Secretary of Agriculture that deals with the work of the Forest Service. This particular chapter Is a series of contradictions, or conflicts of fact with theory.. Mara Timber Ripe' for Ai. The National forests contain about one-fifth of the standing: timber of the country." says the report of Secretary Wilson." but furnish only about one eightieth of the annual cut. , They produce by growth more than ten times the amount of timber which is now being; taken from them each year. While the forests of the country as a whole are being; greatly overcut. so that our timber capital is diminishing; vearlv and rapidly, the national for ests are rising reservoirs of supply. "A large part of the present stand of National forest timber is ripe for the ax. so that the sooner it is cut the greater will be the production of new timber by growth and the less the waste through decay. All these facts voint to the conclusion that the cut from the forests should be Increased by every possible means. ' "This conclusion however, cannot be accepted unqualifiedly. Leaving entire ly out of account the need for imposing conditions which will secure the pro duction of the best new timber crop, it is necessary to regulate cutting with a view to the protection of the best interests of the public in the long run. Lumber is one of the things the price of which enters into the cost of living and more largely, perhaps, than is generally realized. -That cost should be kept down; but the cost of living tomorrow must not be lost sight of in dealing with the problem of the cost today." Surplus I'neveuly Distributed. The Secretary then proceeds to show " that while the annual growth of timber in the forest reserves is estimated to be 6.000,000.000 feet, the total cut amounts In round numbers to only 440.000,000 feet, of which two-thirds is sold and one-third given away under free use permits. This unused surplus, he says is in excess of local neels and could supply the general market, but he finds it is not an- evenly dis tributed surplus. For example, all the timber In the Deer Lodge Forest in Montana is reserved to supply the near by mines at Butte. The Cascade Na tional Forest in Oregon adds through growth 200,000.000 feet a year to the available supply, while local needs call for only about 1,000 000 feet a year. It is from these forests, he says, that the general market can draw, but It is apparent that it does not draw to any extent upon them. It is explained that when National forest timber is sold "It is the duty of the Government to protect the public against monopoly. From the beginning the Forest Service methods of selling ttmber have been devised with a view to preventing timber monopoly by pur chasers. A fair operating profit to the purchaser is permitted, but no more. Through stumpage appraisal a mini mum price is fixed, below which the timber will not be sold. This price Is based on a close estimate of the cost of manufacture and the market price of the product. The sale Is then adver tised and competition is sought. Monopoly Guarded Against. "If it appears that monopoly control might take place through business af filiations of apparently competing operators, a certified statement of the relations of the applicant or bidder to other purchasers, or a certified state ment of the membership of firms or lists of stockholders in corporations may be required. Bids from lumber companies which have large holdings of their own may be rejected In order to give preference to companies not so supplied, and companies which are operating under one sale may be re fused another sale until the first is completed." Further along the Secretary says: "Immense bodies of mature timber, which should be harvested to prevent deterioration and to make room for new growth, are unmarketable for lack of means of transportation. Usually rail road development is the recourse for lambering them. Naturally no one will undertake to build from 30 to 100 miles of railroad into the mountains without assurance of tonnage for a consider able term of years. To meet this situ ation a large sales policy has been worked out. It includes provision for periodic readjustments of stumpage prices, based on the - changes which take place in lumber prices In the markets where the timber Is sold. Large Salem Aid Development. "The result of such sales is to secure lailroad development, opening the way to general economic development in en tirely new fields; to make available for early use timber, much of which would otherwise rot in the woods, and to tap additional supplies of timber which can be sold to other purchasers once the means of getting it to market has been created. In making such sales It is necessary that' the transportation facilities developed shall be public. This is always made a part of the contract." The Forest Service, says the Secre tary, never allows the cut of National forest timber to exceed the sustained annual yield, nor are sales for the ireneral market allowed on forests where the local demand will utilise all the timber that the forest can steadily produce. "It will doubtless be said." continues the report. "that the Government by withdrawing the National forests from private acquisition has" reduced the amount of timber on the market and so increased the cost of lumber, and that by making purchasers pay the full value of what they buy it has levied on the necessities of the public. Far from being withdrawn from the market, the timber of the National for i sts is being pushed upon the market. Ten times the quantity sold last year would have been sold if purchasers ould have been found. Available Amouat Increased. "By withdrawing the forests from private acquisition the Government has increased the amount of timber on the market, for it prevented the absorp tion of their finest stands by spec- Iff l s . V: W2f V V,"".. sf X GRAND DIKES MICHEL ALEXANDROV1TCH. uiators. who now hold for the rise enormous quantities of the best timber of the West. By making purchasers pay the full value of what tney Duy the Government has simply done jus tice to all instead of permitting a fa vored few to profit at the expense of the many. JESUS HISTORIC FIGURE? Arguments Submitted on Claim of oavlor's Xon-existenco. PORTLAND, Dec. S. (To the Edi tor.) The Oregonian's articles on the historicity of Jesus have proven very interesting, but I venture to say not quite convincing. In my opinion, you underestimate the standing of scholar ship that Is coming to regard Jesus as a myth and by that term I mean a non-existing historical personality. There may have been some man born at Nazareth or Bethlehem who was re ligiously active at a certain period of his life at a time approximately iden tical with the chronology accepted by orthodox Christians. This man may even have claimed to be sent by God. There may have been more than one man who made such claims. All that those as sert who do not accept the historicity 3f Jesus is that no such person has come down to us in sufficiently clear outline to be called a historical char acter. You say a great religious move ment such as Christianity has been and is must have a personality behind It to give it an original impulse. This argument is much less effective today than it was 25 years ago, for the world has learned something in the way of social and religious psychology in that time. The personality argument was put forward by Renan, who at tempted to give an account of that per sonality in his "Life of Jesus." I be lieve Mithraism and Essenlsm explain more In the way of "original impulse" than any one personality ever could. There is such an admixture of myth and acknowledged allegory connected with the gospel narrative of Jesus that the character Itself as a historical real ity upon closer investigation and analy sis fades into nothingness. That is the trend of Biblical criticism of today. In this connection it is not too much to say that Professor W. B. Smith's Ecce Deus is an epoch-making work. Hereafter the defenders of the historl city of Jesus will find themselves re ceding from one position after an other, just as the higher critics have forced the strictly orthodox scholars to yield one point after another'. As for your argument that the doc trine of the "kingdom" necessarily proves the existence of a personal ex pounder of such a cult, I think there is so much mysticism connected with that doctrine that any Interpretation today must necessarily reflect nothing but the Interpreter's own spiritual varia tions. No one knows what the content of the "kingdom" doctrine is; it is matter that is left to the individual's private judgment and idiosyncrasies. Hence, it lies outside the pale of logic and the- laws of evidence. It has been so variously interpreted that I have heard even a Socialist, who is an agnostic declare that "kingdom of God" to be a kind of etherealized ca.-operative com monwealth! Besides, does not Bud dhism preach a "kingdom of Heaven?" No doubt, if a little investigation and much speculation were brought to bear by students of comparative religion, a literature might grow up showing that the "kingdom" doctrine of Jesus, some what modified, grew, out of a similar Buddhistic doctripe. You bring up the value of Paul's tes tlmony as a proof of Jesus' existence. Of course, you are aware that the hlgner critics concede that some of the Pauline epistles are spurious. The more radical students of the New Testament say they are all spurious. But leaving that question aside, at best all that can be said of Paul in this connection is that he had persons tell him that they had seen Jesus. The value of such ac counts is nil when we remember that Paul would be inclined to credulity after his "religious experience near Damascus. We must also not forget that Paul wrote, not for posterity, but in the belief that the destruction of the world was only a few years off. A man in such a state of mind would not be likely to regard with a critical mind reports even if coming from persons who would hardly pass today as com petent observers. In the ancient world, especially in the region where the Gos pel story Is supposed to have been en acted, unnatural and prodigious hap penings were regarded as not uncom mon, and as you know, literature of that time is full of the accounts of miracles and signs and portents, much of it written, by persons who claimed to be eye-witnesses, and by others who no doubt derived their accounts from those who gave themselves out as eye witnesses. You compare Paul's ac count with Thucydides" accounts of Greek history. I do not think critical historians today set any too much store by the unconfirmed reports of Thucydi- des. Even Macaulay. in his essay on "History" (Edinburgh Review, May, 1S28) points out the fact that Thucydl- des was given to Invention and says that it is "altogether incongruous, and violates, not only the accuracy of his tory, but the decencies of fiction." All these matters are handled In such a masterful manner In "Ecce Deus" that I almost feel like apologizing for tak ing up your time that might be so much more profitably speni by reading tro- fessor Smith's book. By the way, the Tacitus passage is there also given a very illuminating discussion that is highly significant. DAY io Kusen n alu. Nashville street railways are replacing horse-drawn emergency repair wagons by motor trucks. NEWS TO BE CURBED Stanford Would First Judge What's Fit to Print. COLLEGE CENSOR IS NAMED Hereafter It Is Decreed; If Under graduate Correspondent Sends Out Story Disliked, Such , One Will Be Expelled. STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Cal., Dec 7.ri-No more news from this institution unless it shall first have passed through nets and filters of the official censor. Such is the decision promulgated to day by the undergraduate body, known as the Associated Students, which, when it ' sits jointly with the faculty, is known as the University Conference. Oddly enough, the censor's appoint ment comes as the result of an effi cient piece of censorship, the truth of which only transpired today. Shortly after the annual big game between Stanford and California, a freshman, the son of a Californlan known throughout the state, was expelled be cause he had filed to a newspaper for which he was acting as correspondent the story of a somewhat riotous jinks in which several San Bernardino stu dents were said to have shared. Kxpulsion la Kept Quiet. The publication was held to be In violation of the undergraduate code of ethics. The student was expelled and news of the expulsion, together with the reasons prompting it, was sup pressed. Hereafter when an undergraduate correspondent has doubts about the truth or the policy of a newB Item he will submit his "copy" to the censor. If he is directed not to file the item, and does so against orders, his expul sion will be recommended by the stu dent body and presumably acted on by the faculty. Honor will be relied on to control the correspondents. Previous Attempts Made. The present attempt to censor Stan ford news is not the first. For years the university has striven to see that the newspapers printed only what the authorities thought was good for them, and during a period when there was much public interest in a series of changes in the faculty, one newspaper quartered a staff correspondent, who happened also to be a Stanford gradu ate, in Palo Alto and kept him there for weeks. . WAHKIACCS REDS WILL TESTI FY AT. WASHIXGTOJf, D. C. Bis Pow-Wow to Be Held and Con troversy Over Itig-hts About Mount Adams May Be Settled. WAHKIACUS, Wash., Dec T. (Spe cial.) A Wahkiacus Indian who has returned from a visit to the Skookum apple orchards, located five miles from the river from this point, reports tnat the old chief was summoned by the Government. He, with Joe Stahl and Charley Parker, Klickitat River In dians, departed the first of the week for Washington, D. C, where they ex pect "to give testimony next week be fore the Congressional committee on Indian affairs. Last Spring Chief Skookum Wahla- hee and Indian friends voluntarily vfslt- ed President Taft and told of some of the unpleasant things appearing to interfere with the red man in his yearly rambles about the mountains in the vicinity of Mount Adams. During the Summer a special agent from the de partment came out. surveyed the grounds and Interviewed the old cniei with other prominent Indians. The out come is now at hand, when some hun dreds of representative Indians will next week hold a big powwow in Wash ington. The controversy uppermost at hand Is the selling of so-called hunting grounds held by the Indians. The uneducated or traditional In dians of which Chief Wahlahee be longs, want to retain all lands that carry a sentimental tradition of belt s the undisputed field of forefathers. The educated chief of the Yaklmas be lieves these lands should be soil and put to better uses than is derived from the nomadic Indian who, to the neglect sf. his crops, .drops back to a wild state a few weeks in each year. Then again It is contended reKlnd.ng of the old fires in sacred placos mats the trend of educational influences. The contention seems to have resolved to - a solution that the educated ana modern Indians probably will formulate the best plans for the future of their people. Suits and Overcoat GREATLY REDUCED EVERY PRICE GENUINE $20.00 Suits and Overcoats $14.95 $25.00 Suits and Overcoats $18.75 $30.00 Suits and Overcoats $22.50 $35.00 Suits and Overcoats $26.25 $40.00 Suits and Overcoats $29.95 Blue and Black Suits and Overcoats 20 Per Cent Off Men's Dependable Furnishings Reduced MAKE $6.00 G. & M. Union Suits.. $4.50 $3 G. & M. Underwear, garment. $2.25 $1.50 Cooper's, Winsted Under wear, garment v. ...... .$1.05 $1.50 Athletic Neck Underwear, garment $1.05 $8.50 Jumbo Knit Ruf f necks. .. .$6.95 $15.00 Lounging Robes $11.25 $12.50 Lounging Robes.... $9.35 $10.00 Lounging Robes $7.50 $10.00 Bath Robes.. $7.50 $8.50 Bath Robes... $6.35 $6.00 Bath Robes $4.50 $5.00 Bath Robes $3.75 Going Out of Boys' Clothing and Furnishing Goods Business Remarkable Reductions on Everything that Boys Wear $12.50 All-Wool Suits $10.00 All-Wool Suits $ 8.50 All-Wool Suits $ 7.50 All-Wool Suits Sam'l Rosenblatt Co. CLAPP HAS REMEDY Interstate Campaign Contribu tions Held Wrong. BILL OFFERED IN SENATE Minnesota Senator Says He Is Aim ing at Vice of Collecting in Large Centers for Distri bution at Distance. WASHINGTON. Dec. 7. Senator Ciapp. chairman of the committee investigat ing- campaign funds. Introduced a bill today to prohibit the sending of cam paign funds from one state to another to aid campaigns of .candidates - for President. Vice-President, Representa tives or Senators. The measure does not represent the concerted action of the investigating committee, but was presented by Chair man Clapp as his suggestion of the remedy for excessive use of money for campaign purposes. In a statement to the Senate, he declared such a law would prevent the "dumping" of great sums of money into outlying states by wealthy communities like New York. Bill Goea to S lib-Committee. 'This bill is aimed to meet the vice of gathering funds in large centers and then sending them to distant states to influence the election of President or Vice-President, members of Congress or Senators." said Mr. Clapp. At his request the bill was "referred directly to the investigating sub-com mittee without the usual formality of consideration by one of the standing committees of the Senate. Senator Clapp said that he hoped the measure would form the basis for a bill to be passed by the Senate in this session. Traveling Allowaace Permitted. The campaign fund bill would per mit National political committees to gather funds from any state to pay the expenses of traveling and special trains for candidates or speakers and to pay for the distribution or litera ture and the placing of advertisements. Any collection of money in one state and Its distribution in another, how ever, by a "person, firm, corporation, association or committee," would be punishable by a prison sentence of from six months to one year. PRICE PUT ON "ILLNESS" University Faculty's Ruling Destined to Improve Students' Health-. UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eugene, Dec. 7. (Special.) Illness Is destined to loan much of its popularity among students at the University of Oregon, as the result of the action of the fac ulty taken at Thursday's meeting and announced today. Hereafter, according to the new ruling. If students wish to cut" classes they will do so at the ex pense of good college credits; One-sixteenth or one semester nour will be deducted for each absence, no matter what the cause. At this rate, a YOUR GIFT SELECTION FROM THIS LIST $1.50 Shirts, plain and pleated. ..$1. IS $1.50 French Flannel bhirts, col lar to match $1.15 50c Silk Neckwear. '. 35 $3.00 Superior Union Suits. .:. .$2.2a $1.50 Kid Gloves '. . ... 95 50c Derby Ribbed Underwear, the Garment 40 LOUNGING ROBES, HOUSE COATS AND BATH $4.00 Bath Robes .....$3.00 $10.00 House Coats $7.50 $9.00 House $7.50 House $6.50 House $6.00 House $5.50 House $5.00 House and Overcoats at $8.34. and Overcoats at $6.67 and Overcoats at $5.67 and Overcoats at $4.98 student who follows the practice of "laying- o'ff" to any great extent will be likely to fall below the requirement of 120 hours for graduation, even if he has passed -all his courses. Another penalty is placed on the chronic absentee in the form of a rul ing that any student who does not at tend at least So per 'cent of the recita tions in any subject shall be barred from taking the examinations in that subject. "Excuses for absences on the ground of sickness may- be granted at the discretion of the dean," so reads the. notice, "providing that the instruct or shall -first have certified that the work lost by absence has been satis factorily made up." The latter clause is regarded by the students as being almost prohibitive, so far as any chance for evasion of the law Is concerned. Dr. Hartman Speaks About Catarrh of the Lungs Quite a stir in m e d leal circles was produced by Dr. Hartman's last article in which he refers to the remark able cure of Mrs. Eberlein, of Pittsburg. The Impression pre vails that Dr. Hartman claims to be able to cure Incurable diseases. A re port of these statements reached the d o c t o r's ears. As soon as he S. B. HARTMAN, M. D. - Columbus, Ohio. heard what peo pie were saying he was very quick and emphatic in his denial of any intent on his part to create such an ImpresBion. . No, said the Doctor, I do not claim to have any magical cures. I do not claim to have a cure for anything. Judging from the number of letters I receive, however, concerning Airs. Eberlein's case, from people who have similar complaints, I should judge that catarrh of the lungs is very prevalent. The number of people afflicted are in creasing. In spite of the strenuous ef forts of health boards catarrh prevails more and more every year. No, I do not claim to have a mir aculous cure. I only recite some of the things the people tell me who take Pe-ru-na. The case of Mrs.. n,beriein. for instance. She was apparently dying of catarrh of the lungs. Her physician had told her so. Many peo ple who had seen others die under similar condition thought her to be dying. She commenced taking Pe-ru-na and recovered. Now, I do not undertake to explain her recovery. I certainly do not un dertake to say that Pe-ru-na will cure anybody in the last stages of catarrh of the lungs. I make no such claim. But I do undertake to say this. As long as there is life there Is hope. The doc tors are liable to be mistaken. They often condemn people to die when they do not die. They say, "Mrs. So-and-So cannot live twenty-four hours," and then Mrs. So-and-So gets well. They say, "Mr. So-and-So has not a ghost of show of living, but Mr. to-and-Bo gets well. ' Now, what Is it that cures such cases? Every doctor knows that it is the vitality of the patient. The last grain of . vitality left to make one more struggle, and the disease was over come. Now, it may happen that Pe-ru-na is taken at the critical moment in the . ROBES REDUCED Coats $15.75 Coats ,,...$5.60 Coats ..$4.85 Coats $4.50 Coats..... $4.10 Coats.. C.$3.75 Copyright $ 6.50 All-WTool Suits and Overcoats at $4.34 $ 6.00 All-Wool Suits and Overcoats at $3.98 $ 5.50 All-Wool Suits and Overcoats at $3.67" $ 5.00 All-Wool Suits and Overcoats at $3.34 The new' regulations will not apply to past absences, but will go into ef fect next Monday. The announcement of the faculty's action has aroused a storm of resentment on the campus, but it is conceded that the general health of the students, as measured by their attendance at classes, will show a marked improvement. AT NAU'S PHARMACY. One-fourth off on all holiday goods and sundries, handbags, Deltch ladies' bags, perfumes, cutlery, manicure goods, umbrellas and dressing cases. Corner Sixth and Alder streets. Good Coal: Edlefsen, Rlwy. Exch. 6. patient's struggle against disease. The patient may have been losing ground day after day. At last the fight seems hopeless; death inevitable. Some one suggests Pe-ru-na. The patient takes it without any hope. The medicine ac tually does infuse new life into the circulation. They feel its genial in fluence as soon as it is swallowed. This constitutes the turning point in their disease. The little assistance which Pe-ru-na gives Nature at this important point turns the tide of af fairs in favor of the patient. Not that Pe-ru-na cures incurable diseases. No, not at all. But Pe-ru-na does lend a little much-needed assist ance at a time when a feather weight on one side or the other of the balance turns the scales in favor of or against the patient. Scores and scores of times Pe-ru-na has come in at these critical moments and saved patients from im minent death. At least It seems so. I have bushels of letters reciting such things. Pe-ru-na is a diffusive stimulant. It stimulates the circulation. It causes a warm glow of health to pervade the mucous - membranes of the body. The mucous membranes of the stomach, alimentary canal, kidneys, bladder, lungs, all the mucous membranes are apparently revivified, rejuvenated, re- endowed with the glow of health. That is what Pe-ru-na will do. And this often saves life. There can be no doubt of it. Whether the case be one of catarrh of the lungs or any other chronic prostrating illness, the right stimulant at the right time, in the right doses, does the work. Explain it as you may, such things are happening every day. I prefer not to use the word cure. I do not like the sound of it I do not like the idea that people gener- Ily attach to the word. But that Pe-ru-na helps Nature, and helps Nature sometimes when she is sadly in need of help, that I know to be the truth. That I do not hesitate to pro claim. That is exactly what occurred in the case of Mrs. Eberlein, the ac count of which has caused so much comment. -.- If I or any of my immediate rela tives had catarrh of the lungs, Pe-ru-na would be given a thorough trial, I assure you. That being the case, I can conscientiously advise any one else to do the same. Pe-ru-na, Man-a-lin and La-cu-pia manufactured by the Pe-ru-na Com pany, Columbus, Ohio. Sold at ail drug stores. SPECIAL NOTICE: Many nersons inquire for The Old-time Peruna. They want the Peruna that their Fathers and Mothers used to take. The old Peruna is now called Katarno. If vour drug gist or dealer does not keep It for sale write the Katarno Company, Columbus, Ohio, and they will tell you all about it. Hi 1 Hart Schaffner & Marx SHOP EARLY It's More Convenient Northwest Corner Third and Morrison Xbe Successful Kuropeaa Digestion Tonic Prepared by Saiz de Carlos, a Physician, Surgeon and Pharma ceutist of acknowledged standing in Europe. Slomalix, already favorably known to, and recommended by, the medical profession, is introduced to the public as the best and safest treatment for relieving pain, aiding digestion, stim ulating appetite and toning the entire cystem. No alteration in the patient's usual diet need be made, except in extreme cases. Stomallx is (rrndual snd benign in ltsre ulta. restoring the patient to robust health. It is invaluable to brain workers ; it increase the capacity for effort, corrects ailments of children, and benefits both young and old. Jbr tale by all druvgitti. E. FOUGERA & CO., Inc. Agents 0. S. 0 Beekmsn Street. New York Your Child's Health Your First Thought If you have children, naturally your first thoughts are for their health. You certainly want them to develop strong, healthy constitutions. The most cara ful attention must be given when chil dren show the first symptoms of the many common ailments. Perhaps they ie weakly and thin, or grow too fast, thus sacrificing strength. These and other apparently minor ailments may ba the forerunner to a weak constitution for life. Such children need Jayne's Tonlo Vermifuge, which Is essentially a chil dren's tonic. First of all. It will proper ly care for the child's stomach. It will also improve the appetite, and will add strength to the other organs of tho body. In cases of thin or impure blood. It Increases the number of red cor puscles enabling the enriched blood to keen the body healthy and strong. Among the most common ailments that children develop is that of a dis ordered stomach, leading to aa Im paired digestion. In many cases this trouble is due to parasites in the In testinal tract. To correct such trouble, Jayne's Tonic Vermifuge is unsurpassed. For more than eighty years millions of children have been restored to health through the use of this tonic. Insist upon Jayne's; accept no other. Sold by druggists everywhere. Dr. D. Jayne & Son. Philadelphia. Pa The Elusive Sixty-Five A startling mathemati cal puzzle of absorbing 1 n t e r e s t to all ages. This fascinating puzzle complete in 20 pieces, mailed post-paid for 25 cents. Just the thing for Winter evenings Send coin today at my risk. J. S. L Lit It', 404 Yeoa Blda-., Portland, Or. Ink