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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (June 24, 1906)
THEOREOOSmDAYJOUgNAIPORTLANDSUNDAYOSMINO,JU?IE21:C3. , BM(6ATIPM IS ' SUCCESSFUL M (MMt VmMFf Governor Chamberlain and State Officials Experimental Farm of Eighty Acres Proves - Cohclvsiycly That Money Spent on Irri gation Scheme in This District Is Profit Convinced During Their. Visit That the Pjroject Will Open Great Inland Empire , f , ! tl " I! inlhe Desert. n r: ably Exi , - .. , ... . ... . r ... . . I . , I II ! I I hi MIIIB I tended " Irritation of Crook county's semt-arid district will prove eucoeesful;-the lend there, under the stimulating Influence of water, will return aa tare harvest as It does in other aectlona. where gen- . era! conditions are similar; the variety of produce will be-equal to-it not ex- coedlng th production from aectlona where nature is more favorable with climatic conditions: the lrrl-atlon eom- panic are performing their. worsTthor-' oughlyand laying the foundation of permanent construction in . their canals ' and fatrale, bealdea more than fulfill ing the requirements, both of their oon- - tracts and the rulea prescribed by the - tate lad berd; tb oountrjr ener01y la prosperous and beginning te realise the future beneflta to be derived from aucceasful reclamation of thedesert wastes of western Crook county, '.. These are the conclusions which Gov. i:y::::' VX1 f 'a- ' ...... "Is, ', - i Central Oregon Canal Near the rnor Chamberlain and State Treasurer Moor of th eute land board and At- t tornfy-Qeneral Crawford and State En ; glneer 'John H. Lewi reached after pending four day last week on an In spection tour of tb segregated tracts now under process of reclamation.. Of the total segregation of tlS.000 acres. . made' by the Deschutes Irrigation Power company; tt.000 acres nave been : reclaimed at a cost of nearly 1700,000. The latter figure, however, represent th coat of construction of on of the . main canal end the completion of It mile of. another, both of which will be , used In the future In Irrigating fully two third of th entire selection made under the Carey act The balance of the land selected will be reclaim.: by other flume and canal still to b con structed. Evidence of Snoee. ,' : ; Evidence of the marked aucces which will follow, th reclamation of , these rid tract of Crook county I found fully demonstrated in th yield of th experimental jfarm. onductednearJ.: xiena last year . unaar me supervuion. of Ellas Nelson, government expert f ronvJhc bureau oJ agriculture, A atrip of raw land, embracing to acres, waa denuded of It growth of tag brush and Juniper and aeeided down , to a multitude of grasses, grain and vegetable, and teats mad.,'on a small . scale ef erope generally grown in the Gossip of the BooK World r""JHE Voice of the Street" By I . Ernest Poole. Few stories '. JL hat havs come to- us this r-v. season are so sweet so ; pure or so blended with strength. In ' terest and pathetic demand as this. It , carries a forceful lesson and the voice of the street whose story It tells, calla . loudly for more than the casual interest demanded by a work of fiction. ! afueky Jim" was one of those little waifs who era found drifting around the great cities,. selling enough papers . , to provide a scant living, sleeping on doorsteps or In boxes and throwing dice with hi companions In misery for th . few pennies that might be found among them. Jim' usual good fortune had given hint his sobriquet and had en : couraged a love for gambling which took a death grip on him and colored his entire outlook on life. To get some thing for nothing and to make money fast without the detail of earning It - became his religion, though like many ef hi prototypes In real life he-held himself aloof and scorned th petty thievery, of th alum. "Lucky Jim " field of action wa in th Italian querUr of New York, and . a chance at dice attached to him "Peg Joe," who wa typical of a class nt Italians who come to America by - the ' thousands . every - year. "Dago - Joe'" one passion .was "Lucky Jim." whom, h worshiped with a canine de- ; votiotv Together the boys nt rayed Into . a concert hall on evening 'and Jim be . gan a new existence. The voices he beard awoke a paaalon and a voice he never knew he had. "The song arose end shook till Jim hlmeelP shook In side. A tremendous Idea leaped up in Jim's mind, a plan for bla whole life ahead! One long bewjlderlng stare." " The music of his country wss also In the Italian' a blood, and. he knew Its; ' commercial, value as wsM, and when he1 discovered the pure" notes nf Jim's - high, sweet soprano as he trilled them out later to Joe's accompaniment it was an easy task to ge employment for them both In th "Rip Van Winkle" ' saloon. Jlm'a pay wa a contingent fee . depending on -the -encores hi song evoked-. This arrangement eymbollae th cure of our nation todax -Th ! proprietor knew he was bartering for human Soul; Ire knew hs was .taking advantage, of helpless necessity, and was .willing t aacriflc to hie gain a God-given talent and yet .he waa a good fllow." always ready to "help a (rlend" In short, standing 1n Jim's lit tle world exactly In th relatlmt of wm plovw to employed of our modern . trust a. To know that the louder, faater. . karder he ma meaoi that aauub jaor arld portion of Oregon and neighboring states. , The extent to which this pmall area of land gave forth Its harvest la better shown In Mr. Nelaon'a "report. Nearly I860 worth of vegetables waa sold off the land during the summer and the total production, Inclusive of hay, potatoes, - parsnips, - cabbages. , onions, carrots, turnips, celery and. sundry other vegetables,- approalma ted - f 4,100, at the current prtoea of products: ruling In the county. - . - , i SoU Xa Productive. .... The farm operation showed that the oil 1 sufficiently productive and the climate, .favorable rnough to place gen eral farming on a firm basis, other things being equal. All root erope and garden vegetable exceeded expectation and the result with sugar beets were more than' gratifying. '. .Potato gave -, ve 1 Headgmtea. Construction Work at fair yield end small grain did as well as could be expected on new land. In this report at tb close of the season Mr. Nelson, In speaking of th potato production, said: V . "Potatoes were planted for the first time on April' 14. These were out of the ground May II and on July t were large enough . for table use. Ten acres in sll were planted, the rate being nine bushels per sere. The planting wa from May II to July 1. They were har rowed - two weeks sfter they i were planted and Irrigated twice and culti vated twice during the eeaaon. The po tatoes have: yielded 108 bushel to th acre, and on manured ground the yield hasibeaI70 bushels psr acre." ' ' . rurrow System Used. . 'The system of Irrigating employed oa the experimental farm, and on which 1 finding general acceptance amcjbg th settlers on the Irrigated tracts. Is known as ths Yakima, or furrow system. Water la distributed over the tract of land by a series of parallel furrows a few feet apart The amount ef water for each furrow is regulated by means of a tube which extends through the bank of th teeL ditch, j Water ia run Into the fur, row and kept there until th space be tween each haa become . sufficiently moist Ths spacing between the furrowa varies with the chsracter of ths soli and ths rapidity with which It sub Irrigates. On the experimental farm the money fed the spirit of the gambler that was Inherent in Jim and he trust ed to' luck to keep his voice. " "Frits.". the .old German violinist In the saloon, knew the voice was worth saving and began to try to teach him to aave himself. For years Jim's life ' wss one tern pestuous struggle. No two passions could be stronger In any life than that of music and gumbllng, end when they went to feed each other ahlpwreck for one waa -inevitable. "No mention la made of Jim's ancestry, but as a great aorrow was the purifying storm which Jim weathered and came through, a man, a lesson-in heredity is. Implied, for Jim's environments, except for old Fits and his dauyiiter, were wholly bad, and debauching. . . ,-.- Among the friends of Jim's early days was one, "The Skinner," of whom the author says: "The Skinner's street from top to bottom waa graft a be wildering ladder, all shaded dowiyfrom respectable stealing to thuggery. And alwaya the nerve that pulled men through. . Ntrv was everywhere." One feels In reading the book that atr. Poole has given his work a far broader sig nificance than mere entertainment for every situation points a lesson and every character drive It horn. Th book ha om fin Illustration by th Italian artist Joseph Stella. A. B. Barnes at Co. Price, 11.10. "In the Shadow" By Henry Rowland. The color queatlbn la one of the burning problem of th nation and on of ready made material for th writer of fiction and o often used that to anyone but Mr. Rowland It would be threadbare and tame, but he ha uaed it to create a peculiar and unique atory, dealing with the characteristic of the negro mind and drawing conclusion from a den tine study of the question. Arlatlde Desaallneav a Ifaytlan. gradu ate of Oxford, and a aoclety favorlt In Kngland, I th aero. "Black a abony. He boast that he ha not a drop of whit blood in him. Say he' what they call in Haytl 'a Congo.' A Urrlfio- loosing cnap, yet fascinating." This fin athletto negro make an intereatlng study, ss his points are ex amined through the- aclentlflo eyes ot Dr. Leyden. First Is to be seen ths outer polish, the surface culture and ap parent charm of , peraonallty, which sharply contrasts with the groping of ths hslf savage and atupld mind ef the man, who deceive others, and even hlm eelf, in th genulnenea of hie wisdom and attainments. The story Is In three parts, with three scene of action. It open In England amid noble surround ing and in ancestral hall: th second part find th hero at home among the native and deep in the- political dis turbances of llaytl; th .third shifts ths story to Carolina and takes on an en tirely new phase and changed condi tions, which make It as a whole not a particularly happy, but cerulnly a strong sad -remarkabl work, In an p4 logu nr. Leyden sums op the situation by eeylng: "Ah, yes; It is herrlbljcpa thetlc To ma the whole race ia pa thetic wherever It haa been brought In contact with ours. The Jilty r It, the Thia Point Coat $10,000 a Mile. W , I wt Viirt . Pilot Butte Canal, Six Miles North pathoa, the Infinite pathos of. th negro! Poor, dased, bewildered. black!dres.ed from the dark shadows of an African forest loaded with ohslns, ' lashed through generations of slavery, and then his shackles are knocked free; he Is endowed at onee with a soul, a voice, a vote; told to be civilised! Can you wonder -that he grows bewildered? Poor, pathetlo race! Let us pray In our hearts that Ood who has. so chastened him may visit with wisdom, ths minds which govern the hand where rest hi destiny." Th whole story differs essentially from anything the author has don before, but he has never, shown himself stronger than in thla XX Apple' ton Co. Price 11.60. "Poems" By Meredith Nicholson. Th admirers -of "Th Main Chance," "Zslda Dameron" and "Th House of a Thou sand Candle" w,lll be pleased to know that the poem of Mr. Nlcholaon have been eolleoted and ere bound together In a very presentable little volume with the liberal tlUe of "Poems." - pne of the most touching, aa well finest, addresses, from a literary stand point, that was made before the In diana State Teachers' association on the day act apart to do honor to James Whltcomb Riley, was made by Meredith Nicholson, his friend and neighbor. That It was unalloyed admiration may be seen from the. admiring verses with which he dedicates this volume of poems to Mr. Riley. This dedicatory poem la one of the longest end very best In the book, which Is speaking well for It for In the entire Volume there le not .one that falls below a high standard of literary merit Like Mr.. Nicholson's pros work, th style Is easy, clear and appealing. While the poems vary In themcgnd con struction there Is running through them all aa Intense love of nature, a reverent admiration for the beautiful and an In spiring and triumphant tone In many, notably "The Wind Patrol,"- Ireland" and one or two others. The literary world le certainly richer thst .Mr. -Nicholson has not confined his work te proee. Bobbs, Merrill A Co. Price 1.. ' - J "The ' Fortune ; Hunter" By David Graham Phillips. Again Mr. Phillips haa given us a realistic glimpse of American life; a phase ef -that life which exlats as surely and actually me the other types hs ha found In wuatern politics, in pollts Washington aoclety or on Wall street. This time It Is the thrifty American ised Germans who have accumulated small fortunes, who have reared respect able daughtera who too often become the prey of cotd. calculating .fortune hunter who tak advantage of the glrlsV cir cumscribed surroundings to bring havoo and ruin upon the family. Such was Carl Feuersteln, th fortune hunter of Mr. Phillip' story. He we one of those oolal -vampires who sxlst through "lit tle accommodation" furnished by un wary acquaintance, until his reputation cut off - th- supply. P H - had - about reached ...thl tag when accident made him acquainted with Hilda ftrauner, the daughter of a delicatessen merchant on Avenue A, who wa also the owner of several , flats which Insured ka Inde 1 I' Sugar Beeta on Irrigated Tract, Near Redmond. spaces were at flrat mad 4! tnchea apart but thl waa found to be a little too great and the dlstanoe waa later re duced to to and 10 Inches. . Vstew of 14. ' ' V" ' The price fixed by the slat land board, which th aattler may pay la In stallments, varle from 110 to 111 per acre, according to-the number of tillable acre lnt each 40-acr aubdlvlalon. In addition to thl there I th ooat of clearing and plowing th land. - Thl work waa oondueted on th experimental farm at a coat of IlltO pr acre, but th land (elected waa of an extreme type hilly, covered with a heavy growth of both juniper and sag brush and studded with rocks. . Th actual cost of making th tract ready for th eed then wss In excess of th average, and there are wide areas of land embraced in the segregation where the. cost of clearing would not amount to more than It per acre. The cost of clearing on the experimental farm was spportloned follow: ' Drubbing sage brush and Juniper. .11.10 Plowing l.to Removal of roots,,...,.,.. 1.00 Leveling 1.60 Hauling of f roclc; , . vr t.0 Total 1.. ; .111.10 agar Beets Orowa, -Outalda of the remarkable showing - W,,lt.,.yriiii,i-tf. nwii.HTj of Headgates. Laterala From Thia Canal Acres of Arid Land. pendent income. Unsophisticated Hilda waa.xtuhnsd by--hla 4ne thaatrteat ma-i ner, flowing lock and striking costume. The lovemaklng became dangeroualy desperate and disaster wss only everted by ths gallant Carl meeting the daughter of denser, the brewer, who waa. .better endowed with this world's goods than even Hilda. The revelation - la- both women came, but not before a vibration had been act In motion that brought a train of serious and embarrassing se quences. The ease with which Innocent girls may be unwittingly drawn' Into such en tanglements I tin of th strong points of tb book. In this eas there wa. no laok of horn training or dlaclptline, and in . the prdlnary course of evente thl man came -into the live of these girl, but It I a problem worth . considering how to rid society of a class of de generates without honor or moral obli gation.' ' . The complications which arose from Feurrsteln's escapade and love affairs are exciting and lively and keep the reader on the anxious bench from begin ning to finish, lest the wrong thing hap pens at the right time or vice versa. Mr. Phillips haa nevarjone better-work In character portrayal and the family ef Brewer. Ganser gives him fine oppor tunity for hie keen wit and wealth of humor. - Even In the moat eerlous altua- tlons there will flash across them oc casionally the moat Irresistibly funny things, snd one can hardly realise they are reeding of heartaches and social problems. , A strong point hi made Jit the collusion of two law firms who suavely attempt to extort money from Oanser, and the ease with which It could be done Is al most startling to the uninitiated. The modern method of .administering Justlc through polio court channels alao gat a bard rub and on not wholly undeserved, aa any one knows who reads the dally paper; but the etory i not wholly mede up of problem. - Paul Braunrs simple pblloeopby when he says to his wife: - "We have had the beat you end I, Arbeit und Llebe und Helm, ia inspiring aa his own life is ths object lesson In work and love and home, and the nobility and simple good ness ef Otte Heilig Inspirss a faith In humanity that wanes under the Influents of Feuersteln. Each story ef Mr. Phil lip makes th reader look with anxious expectancy for th next and wonder what phas of society Is going to feel his surgical knife. "Th Fortune Hunter" I neatly bound and contain some good Illustrations by E. M. Ash. Bobbs. Merrill Co, Price :.:-..,L,.r . "A' Decade of .Clvlo Development" By Profeeaor Cnarle Zueblln. 'Th Clvlo Ranaacenc"-was th titl given som of thee pepere when they ap peared a short time ago In "The Chau tauquan," but they have been extensively revleed and added to before being bound together In book form. In his preface Professor Zueblln says: "Whlls we have long been dlaheartened ry munici pal mlamanagement and civic apathy, ws must b stirred end inspired by the fact, already demonstrated, beyond aMe-J ( T i 8 . - new wl tturtir iiiiiaa Are Conveying Water to 22,000 , ' '' .''.' puts, that the clvlo progress of the last decode le greeter then that ef-ett-ettf previous national existence." .. ' He treats this growth and civic de velopment In nine chapters and headings aw follows: "Ths New Clvlo Spirit" "The . Training f of the Cltlsen." "The Making of a City." "The WAlte City and After," "Metropolitan Boston," "Greater New York." "The Harrlsburg Plan," "Washington Old and New." "The Re turn to Nature." From these subjects it may be seen how broad and compre hensive the work Is, snd th field covered give the plans and beat Ideas of the best clvlo work, of the country. The book Is replete with suggestions and might almost be taken as a text book for workers along civic Improve ment lines.- This, however, does not de- Wkh a frontage of eve? 1700 (eel oa the River.' hH way between die great Bridget which joia'New York and BmoUva, the ArbexkW eaUbluhmeat it one of Ihe snow lights of New York-T la Billion of homes u every sacboa of thai country ArbuckU ARIOSA Coffee it the oaly co fee uted, almost the only drink except water; omequeauy the asms of JXEocU" La been most (amuiat to the people during ths " last 37 years, there being so other bade-marked article as widely distributed o ia such asiranal demand. Float a small beginning the a!at have grown' to exceed the combined sales ef every other packaged cole ia th United States and why' Because Arbuckle hav fives the people the grsstctt coffee value (or thcif money lief the tune, end have sold their ARIOSA Cofee ia sealed packages for th consumers protection, te insure their actually raoahriog what they paid tot, "both m quality and ia weight The sl el AfilOSAthonitmiethe com noa sense sad ppraciatioa of the American people, and ARIOSA hat corUnboted le Ihtir eWvelopmsnt sad pmeperity by gmnf them thek ssoaeyV. worth el eefee thai mctstsid the power tod mbiboo Ib wotk tod placed lhai among the worldl greatest aauoas. ' Thit the same eld ARIOSA end the suae eld arm that isxredaced k 37jran ago. A 4 OrncaVnat :e K aVeMV Va.Tias ' - - ...:-,, v t .-- Xaw.1 ' made on the experimental farm Jn ell line of grasses, cereal and garden pro duota, augar beet of an excellent qual ity were grown. , Tb analyst of two ample taken, on on tb 6th and the other on tb ltd, of the month, wsa aa follows: , - ! - - - t : .Per cnt. Per cent. Solid In Julc -....lT.tO 10.40 Burar in Julo .....lt.0 r.7 - Purity of Juloe, ,,..0.O.:i,a-r-Specifle-gravity of 1 Julo ... 1.07I7I .1-0851 ' Prof. A. L. Knlaely, the chemlat of thd Oregon agricultural experiment atatlan, who made the testa. Bald: - 'The sample eetnJn excellent condition and .... very firm.- The purity and per cent of sugar In the sample are very promising, aa they stand high." And Mr. Nelson had tb following to say In hi report! . 1. "The yield and the quality or the ... S.-.s-'.. All Kind of Grain Flourish in Abundance After the beets here are an that could be desired, and the results obtained are far better than one could reasonably expect on new land. - Eighteen and seven tenths per cent of sugar and purity Sl.l per cent le a good ahowlng for new land. The stand ard ef excellence In sugar bests I II to IS per cent augar and purity. II per tract from the Interest ef the book, aa tie not burdened with statlstloe and holds- the attention, even ef thoee who leave the execution . of ; the - work - to others. . .' . : .' There is no' higher authority on clvlo betterment than professor Zueblln, and as better cities mske better oltlsena no one oan afford to loss what so eminent an authority has to say on the subject University of Chicago Press. Chicago, Illinois. ; In her new novel "Called to the Field" Luoy . M. Thurston, the author of Olrl -f Virginia,1'- tehae wrlttao- a story of Virginia In the civil war, said to be by far her beat work. . Little, Brown Co. wlU publish "Called te th Field" early In the spring. ; V , "Day With "Walt Whitman" By Ed ward Carpenter, Unannounced for early laaue by the Macmtllan company. Mr. Carpenter, who le beat known as the author of "Towards Democracy," cam to th United State in 1S77 and again in lM4r-tid spent much time With W hi t man. The preaent volume contain the fruit of those vlaita. In hi "Recollection of Thirteen President" John 8. Wise has an Inter esting chapter on John Tyler in which he tells how the president one day took Henry A. - Wise, the author's father, driving and Confided to him that he was In love with a beautiful young woman, whereupon Mr., Wise told him the fol lowing story: - - v " f, "An old gentleman In southslde Vir ginia .called his house servant Toney into conference about hie proposed mar riage to a young girl. 'She'a too young for you, Maratar,' wa hi blunt reply. 'Nonsense,' ssld the master Indignantly; The test of sopsriority hat taught the careful mother thit baring ARIOSA Coffee not eery meant money tared but thst ah it actually supplying th beat coffee fog the coffee drinkers of her family. - wJL:. . . 7 j By the original " Mother'" precset patented by thit arm, the pores of the coffee are hermeti cally sealed after roasting with a coating of fresh! eggt and graaulatad sugar which holdt eS "goodness in," and prasorvea for Jou. intact wherever yea may be, the delightful aroma and lavoc due to out skilled blending sad roasting which are act to be compared with crude end primitive methods oa a smaller scale.. Buy a package, take k heme and grind k at you want to we it,1 Thst it the way te get the' best result. Coffs deteriorate "after being ground or exposed to the air, two reason why you should lefute to take loose "scoop' coffee and there are othom of importance. 'Warming ARIOSA slightly make the grinding aty. - If your grocer telle yoa he ha no Arbuckle' ARIOSA, send to at diract For $10 we will end 10 lb, b a wood boa, trsaepertatioa I paid to your fsnght etatioq, Price of coffee fluctuate and cannot' be guaranteed for any period. Theeoffee will be sent, ia the original wrapper bearing the rinaturs ef ArbuckU Bra j Jluch xulsjrMto preaolt. New Book wkh cent." The per cent sugar I much above th average and the purity la unusually high, aa an anajyals of It per cent le exceedingly rare. 1 : . . . . " : . TleU Za VaTOtaMe. : ," "' r The yield here, though not large, ' compares very favorably with, th yield in om district where the beet augar industry Is established. -In Onion coun- ty, Oregon they. expect no . more than - 10 ton per acre. At Sugar City, Colo rado, the average of 140 beet grower 1 11 tons. After th first- year we may rwiunaui wryir yivms in ini locality than that of 10.T tona per acre ( produced this year." .... r " ' f In view of th excellent showing mad on th farm, it I Dot Improbable that a large portion of the segregated district of . Crook county will, as soon as conditions become mor settled, b Water Reachee the Ficlda. devoted te the augar beet Industry. The climate le admirably adapted to thle ag ricultural pursuit and out on the John ston ranch, which embraces 1.080 aoree In the Irrigated district lying 10 miles east of Bend, sugar bests are being" raised so successfully thia year as to assure them a prominent part In the future produetione ef the reclaimed areas. Tm not too old for any girl, Toney. Ttn In my prime.' . - "Tfea, air, responded Toney, 1 knowe you Is In ye' prime. But dat ain't da. question. When ehe Is In her prime whar wlllyo1 prime bar " Louis Becke, ' voyager and novelist Whose latest novel, "The Adventures ef a Supercargo," la Just published, prob sbly knows more about the South Seee than any man living. At 14 years of sge he began hie adventurous life, and hs spent nearly 10 years among the southern Islanda aa a sailor. - . WOODMEN PICNIC IS -ATTENDED BY MEAD (Special Dispsteb te The Joaratl.) Walla Walla, Wash Juna II. The Woodmen plenlo, aeld In . Singleton's grove thia afternoon, wa attended by thousand of Walla Walla people and many from surrounding towns. -Gov rnor Mead eaade-the-prtnclpel address of the afternoon, speaking 10 minutes on the. work of the Woodmen and gen-' erel topics. Ths govsrnor will remain over, until Monday evening,' being down, for an address at the G. A. R, encamp ment Monday afternoon. Monday morn ing the governor will - be called aa a witness In the ease of Edward Spencer, whom the executive ie trying to put in the penitentiary again to complete a lt-year eentence for killing Ella Mundt at Spokane. Bpencer's attorneys will endeavor to force the governor to show up all of the . correspondence - that passed between the executive and Spen cer's friend and relatives and the warden of the penitentiary relative to Spencer'a case.- - - ----- colored picture of 97 present wit! be sent free if yen wrias (of k. . 4,000,000 prsant given ewsy'irj32 month. , - 'it . Addnm out nearest Orec Bo DptH ' ' . . ARBUCKLE BROTHERS, 71 Wsisi sweat. New Yerk Cry. " , 100 Mkaisss Aveeae, Qn, U LaWty Aw. ad Weed St, PlaaVarah, Pa, 421 m Srvsa Swaat, Sc Lsala, Me. IF YOUR GROCER REFUSES TQuSELL ARBUCKLES ARIOSA COFFEE WE WILL SEND -YOU 10 LBS. f' V' ik -')'