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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1921)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, 'SALEM, OREGON" - 1 Issued Dally Except Monday by TIIK 8T ATKSMAX I'UHUKHI.NU COMPANY 216 8. (ktnimercl&l St., Salem. Oregon (Portland Office, ez7 Hoard of Trade Building. Fhone Automatic MKMISKIt OK TIIK ASSOCIATE!) PRESS The Associated Press ia exclusively entitled to the use for repub lication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. It. J. Hendricks. . . . . . .. .Manager Stephen A. Stone. .Managing Editor Ralph Glover Cashier Frank Jaskoski Manager Job Dept. you can , help the slogan editor, do so. today. It is Important. It means minions annually for our district The way to kill the Xon Prti- fan League Bolshevism Is to nip t In the bud. You will be doinjr yourselves and your children and children's children a mighty fa- or In helping.to keep the 1U me thing from getting a start. OUB ENTHUSIASM. DAILY STATESMAN, served by carrier In Salem and suburbs. 15 cents a week, 45 cents a month. OAILT STATESMAN, by: mail. In advance, $8 a year, 13 for six months, $1.0 for three months,! SO cents a month, in Marion ' and Polk counties; ouUide of thew counties, $7 a year, $3.50 for six months, $1.75 for three months, CO cents a month. When not paid in advance, SO cents a year additional. THE PACIFIC HOMESTEAD, the great western weekly farm paper, will be sent a year to anyone paying a year la advance to the 'Dally Statesman. SUNDAY STATESMAN, $1.60 a year: 75 cents for six months; 40 cents for three months; 25 cents for t months; IB cents foi one month. i WEEKLY STATESMAN, Issued in two six-page sections. Tuesdays and Fridays. $1 a year tit not paid In advance, $1.25); 69 j cents for six months; 25 cents for three months. . Professor Einstein is reportel as saying that he was amazed that the people of the United States should become so wildly enthusi astic about his theory of relatlv- and while a field marshal has the ity, which they knew nothing J same political rank as a provin- about and could not possibly un-lcial governor, yet he does not re- derstand. Some European cynics i c-elve the high salary, the public have taken occasion to sneer Rt ! regard nor the external marks TELEPHONES: t Business Office, 23. Circulation Department, SSI . - -.Job Department, 683 Society Sdltor. 10 Entered at the Postofflce In Salem, Oregon, as second class matter. CIRCUMLOCUTION AND PROCRASTINATION This telephone hearing drag3 on and on and on, piling Pel ion on Osaa of testimony that is inconsequential and has no bearing on the question whether the charges are too high . ( And there is circumlocution and procrastination till the whole thine becomes a dreary bore When the members of the Public Service Commission, with a few well informed men, ought to be able to sit at a ta ble and come to the proper conclusions after a session of a fpw hours. , 'i ' !'. I:-,'- ' ' The House Wavs and Means Committee worked for months, and gathered together great piles of printed and written matter, and had hearings galore, and finally put a new tariff bill into a great book with a big indx to the book and the House of Representatives finally passed the bill, and a - . n 1 1? a . A J now the Senate is going tnrougn tne same Kina oi procrasu Tiatinc nroceedinfirs and the same sort of circumlocution When some of the men who administer the. tariff law could have gotten together and, in a few weeks, prepared a better law; and one with fewer flaws to be discovered in its administration. , - r ' " T r: The United States should have a revised Dickens to bring before the people of this country the curses of the circumlo cution offices m the nation and in the state. There is too much red tape, y There is too much beating the devil around the bush. There is too much false motion.. : V W ': ; There is too much expense in endless arid tireless inves- tieations: too much talk and too little action. "". 1 Very little of the testimony in the telephone Tate case fives' any information' that is Valuable in helping the mem bers ot the Commission ta arrive at proper conclusions-r-rend if that is not what it is intended to do. what is it fori ' There should never have .been any necessity for a re- hp.irlnir- The decision' shouTdiliave been right in the first 1 place, and 'capable of being1 defended by the' facts and the figures. :r, -; ' V .T-. Congress is getting" numberless suggestions on, how to reduce taxes, but mighty fewson where to find new sources of wealth nd income to tax; 6 i , i. j"The bootlegger" declajes the chief federal Prohibition Commissioner, "is, in the last analysis, a law breaker." He might add, in the first analysis, and in every other analysis. - -A--., .- - . 3 ; i . ' ;: . -. -,. 'The Salem paper-mill will develop 1000, or more horse power with the North Mill creek project.' That will make for 1 ereat economy. But that will not be enough. The time is t . " . e. . e . a -e coming when the cheaply developed water powers ot tne &an- A ' ; ...tit .. nrln nifnlloVil. iv Qqlam ' Liam region wm ue mauu a ouauic m wxtKu ;, ing no decorations exeeut for the length of serriee; in ererr way less regarded than military men of low rank." Then be turns to his native land and is pleaded to find that "China, on tne contrary, has al ways regarded military leaders as inferiors and has honored theia ar less than she has her schol ars, her poets and her civil func tionaries. A popular proverb says: xn t use good iron to make a sword; don't waste a good man to make a soldier.' " He delights to record that for twelvo centuries the great Chin ese academy has never admitted a general nor a Buddhist priest; times: as many insects as Connecti cut- j People come to this coast from jail parts cf the world and jring their favorita insects rith them. Why don't we emulate th example of the Nutmeg state and take a census of our bugs? With a progressive entomologist t SI 0.009 a year and a, thou sand hardy bugologists at $10 a day per each, we would be able to take a census of our bugs in time for the next election. If Con necticut is able to gloat over the work of her state entomologist in rounding up C781 brands of bugs, think of what our beloved Oregon -ould enjoy if the full measure if her insectivorous vere realized. vup n vrcm AY MORNINGS AUGUST 171921' FREE fcopefuL There has been an im portant improvement in the credit situation during the pasttaonth, and this with what had priU it makes a notable change forXthe better within a short period. The administration's plans To. Mfetp business, especially the carriers and it3 progress with disaruijHiieiit plans, are long-range factors that DromLe much tor iiae uriure. METHODISTS lit Spokane Man Gives Life, Girl Rescued THE HESTORATIOX us for this "ignorant enthusiasm" and to see in it our -noted pench ant for bluff, for superficial pro fundity and many other unadrai rable attributes. . But this attitude is uncharitable and unfair. It is just this vast capacity for enthusiasm, this readiness to give everybody a hearing, this refusal to be bored by something outside our compre hension, this stimulating interest in possible attainment, this cor dial inspiration to the great striv- ers which makes of us such vital and encouraging friends. If we 'list sat back on our ignorance and pooh-poohed everything we don't understand, if we ignored Treat new theories and left h iiscovers to go unrecorded and unsung, if we assumed that borad attitude towards anything that we :ould not immediately grasp and exploit, there would be no buoy ant progress and' fewer scientists and investigators would feel en couraged.to undertake their lonp and weary researches. Enthusiasm, even '.'ignorant en thusiasm," is a precious asset: it may not be the fuel, but it is cer tainly the . lubricant that helpe to make the engine run at its best. Enthusiasm, interest, curiosity- these are the attributes of youth and vitality and when Prof. Einstein and his confreres make great discoveries they can count upon not being ignored, not being belittled and shelved. Just because their theories are a bit over our heads. We should not or respect given the latter! Strangely enough, be does not see that it the destinies pi tne mpire have in the last issue to be intrusted to the field marshal, the soldier ought to have the com plete confidence and respect oi high and low. Moreover, as ob servant critics of Chinese life have remarked, the saintly type, th religious mac who believes that the final issues of life are with the Almighty and that He re veals Himself through prayer, has been present in China, among de vout Buddhists as well as ChrU- :ians. When Field Marshal Foch was not fighting be was praying. Instead, then, of recommending that worn out abstraction, educa tion, as the first and best means of reviving an unhealthy condition Of national life. President Hsu should rather inquire how his country can develop the religious warrior type, the man who id ready and able to defend his na tive land and remain at the same time a servant of God and a friend of humanity. The type that deserves little respect and confid ence today is the German uni versity highbrow, who scoffs at any expression of regret for Ger man misdeeds and remains as conceited as before the war. An other is the Chinese "scholar poet, or civil functionary," to quote the president's list who is v confirmed word-monger and grafter and has been selling China's heritage to the militarists of Japan for a me3s of pottage. Joan of Arc is also Mcomin back. The beautiful, equestrian statue of the Maid of Orleans that ;tbod before the majestic cathed ral of Rheims is to be returned to its pedestal. She was taken down ,to be spared the sacrilege jf German bombardment and the iiour has now come for her return. The restoration of Rheims should be as complete as possible. SEASIDE, Ore.. Aug. 15. Vernon C. Fawcett, a grain mer chant of Spokaue. Wash., was drowned in the surf here today ,lr.1pth as the result of his efforts to sireagin , ...,.,, had been swept into deep water. The girl was saved by her own efforts and with the aid of other lathers, but Fawcett was swept away by the undertow. vHis body had not been recovered ronight. Meeting is Scheduled For Amity With Taber- nacle in City Park ' a t itv Ore.. Aug. 16.- (Spe cial to The Statesman ) The Ore gon conference of the Free Metho dist church will hold its camp meeting and conference in the city park here beginning Thurs day evening, August 18 and con tinuing until August 28. People from all over the state will be in attendance. Services wilt be held in the forenoon, aft- ernoon ana evening) .' arid special meetings for children, young people and missionary meetings win oe new. aibwuB iu noted speakers will be Rev. AV.T. Klatibach and Kst - u of Portland, and Evangelist B. W. Huckabee of Texas.! who has been engaged as the special help la ministerial work. : He comes from Washington. D. C. where he Just closed a very successful (meeting. Missionary workj ia charge ot Rev. M. CCUrk. 4 returned mis sionary froniTndia; women's for eign missions, Mrs. M. CU Coffee; young people's work, Mrs. Klati bach and Mrs. Hlgabee; children's work, E. L. Silva; ring memeting, Rer. H. E. Kreider- and Donald MacPhee of Portland will conduct the singing. A biii tabernacle has been erected in the park whero the meeting will be held.' . v Guatemala will jdo away with Its rubber colnagev The currency was entirely too elastic i i BITS FOR BREAKFAST ; ; 1 tmi 'umt 4 bejchlded for our enthusiasm; but I China cannot even defend the rather should we be blessed for it. I home of her immortal Confucius The tasks of the scientists would I from the; intruder! 'Surely 'It is be larder, longer and more thank-1 ostrich-like infatuation to declare. less without that blessed enthusi-j as President Hsu does, that '"the asm which helps to hasten their Orient today is tar better off than attainments and later to apply J the rest of he world," and' that thepu '.,-(,..' I it Is high time "to apply the train ing and habits ot Asia to alleviate Pleasant harves weather. "W There is an end to all things And there will be an end to the hearings in the telephone rate case. S S But the Irish question, is evi dently an exception. Some readers will be surprised tomorrow, over tie showing inaue for the importance of the seed industry in the Salem district. In the Salem slogan pages: S ,"b - They are talking of privations on account of unemployment in Portland next winter. There should be no unemployment in Oregon. Organized efforts to see to it that there is none would make plans for charity work on a large scale unnecessary. There is plenty of work' for everyone in Oregon; if only every one will make up his mind to this fact. S Following is an encouragrn excerpt from the current weekly letter of Henry Clews, the Wall Street authority: "Trade news has a better color and the prospects for autumn business in many lines nave continued to be increasing v u I Ws4 when vou see it and will save ii iuu aic a ii j - o .. money by buying at this sale; but if you are a cake-eater and like to show off by paying fancy prices, we want to frankly tell you that this sale is no place for you. $7.50 Ladies Sweaters -$1.98 $3.00 to $G.OO Corduroy Pants-.52.68 4 lb. U. S. Army Blanket $3.19 $1.00"4-in-hand Neckties......l9c ... ..... . . 1 . ....... - 75c Leather Hop Pickers' Glove3.,..35c All Leather Gloves at V price or less, ri G m 1 1 For those who think it too not to short days, this store is open even-"ings. 373-377 Court St. Remember the Place KELLY CONSUMERS TRADING HOUSE Just a Whisper off Commercial St. f of The Kelly Salei System ' Selling Out Fojr the conve nience of the working people this store - Is open evenings. i Opposite Miller's .. . ... I A, - i Head off the Non Partisan League as you would a plague of locusts or the most virulent kind of smallpox. i IV -S! Tresident Harding is making a practice of taking week-ends off. He is Justified in doing anything that'jwlll get him out of Wash ington Ithese dog days. ; - Why! do so few parents nowa days sing either to or with their children? Have the phonograph, the automobile and the movie or jazz, with Its exotic cadences; driven ithe sweet old airs and thje habit, , of family: singing from the American hornet More Important than the songs and , the singing Is the habit instilled in early life of finding pleasure in simply fam ily association within the. walls of home Itself. v " THE CIIlXESn PRESIDENT OX v THE WORLD SITUATION the evils of Europe." Without. national Independence and the aevoted soldier to establish the sanctity of our hearths and our homes, industry - becomes the mere Industry of slaves, 'and this WORKING WONDERS New ' York plans the establish ment of a House of Poets. Ore gon should do something of the kind. The waste paper basket of almost any editor could locate the sweet singers with which the Bea ver State abounds. - ' : -i ," Seed growing in the Salem dis trict is a most Important indus try, and ought to be many times greater than it is, as will be sr.own in the slogan pages tomorrow. It tloialOanliy THE BANK'S BUSINESS TT is the special province of the bank -4o teach thriftto make savings as much a habit with people as cleaning one's teeth, or rising in the morning. So many tragedies are caused by waste ful, inefficient spending of money, that the officers of the United States Na tional deem it a! civic duty to preach thrift in season and out. It might be expected, at the present Juncture, when China is by no means prospering under her new form of government and J fs tbe danger with China today. seems to be on the brink ot a dis astrous civil war between the north and the south, that a lead ing Chinese statesman and writer would preach another gospel than the old Confucian doctrine of worldly prudence, It is time for a Jeremiah to speak. out and tell fad truths to his fellow country men. If the late great war has taught the world anything it was this: that the destinies of coun tries in the last Issue are in the hands of the devout and patriot! soldier, men of the type of Ferdi nand Foch, Douglas- Haig and John Pershing; and to lower their standing in the old Chinese pa cifist manner,' as mere types of butchers is to weaken the main spring of national life. As the poet, historian .and novelist, John Uuchan, rightly declares, writing in his vernacular: "The warld's fecht;" certainly it is a mys tery, not to be solved in terms of thrift, economy and submis sion; It's queer that the Almichty's plan Sud set oot man to fecht w man For the same luve their "native And wife and weans. It's queer, but threep the best ye can, The truith remains. And yet the president of China, Hsu Shih-Chang. in a recent toI- ume, keeps up the old and out worn attitude t self-complacency that has been such a bane to the Chinese empire of the past; and harps on the evils of militarism. which are only too patent to the world ot today. He continues to look upon western civilization with disdain: where "the highest officials ot the government, its men of letters. Its inventors, its engineers go about modestly ia the same garb as their fellow-men. receiving no special honor, wear- o lira it And TWENTY-SEVEN OTHER BIG PRIZES, Totaling $510.00 Cash SALEM OREGON The other day an automobile was driven through the streets of Dayton, Ohio, by unseen hands. It was an empty car and yet it threaded the traffic and respond ed to the police regulations at the corners with fidelity. One might fancy that the ghost of a Fulton was at the wheel. The machine. In fact, was under radio control from a car 100 feet or more in the. rear. The' phantom itself was not equipped with wireless, so that the dominion of the pilot seems the more remarkable. Pos sibly the day may come when our street traffic can be operated and controlled by wireless and the men and women in the driver's seat will be as puppets. At that, it would be an improvement on what we have. What is wanted is a car that can be wound up like a watch and then run by thought transfetrrence. We may get it yet. FIJI URE DATES Artt It ta St. ITuitM Enrr!ict emp BiMHinf t Qainaby Prk. Aaenst 17, WednMdiy Op ftrnia wfinc at Cl"itrril cln. .Aaenrt 1 R, -. Thursday Wbwonghl pie feta mfc fAirmkandii- Angnst, St, Wntn(ii J!nt pieaie t 8l.m and MeMiaaTilla Botariaaa at September v 2S f Ortolw 1 Orefon Htate Fair. " Srntmnher SS. Wednesday Stat X1 dim' aid rommicaion t epn bids on SS.OOO.OOO bonds. - Novmnbr 2 1. 22 and 3 Harioa cosa T1E seoet Sei?e This mm MYSTERY 'Tlie Clues rm Nt real chip nhcaeelchalora ooerlhoallcoea n0hclaer0n0ear nrn0realch ihcl nnrealaer0ehh0 ?????????????? Low in tears loeownltnlai 0ltn intw0l0w l i ntn iw0ltar owtearaetiww loainnteai TE ???????????? Had low rice HAD 0 I0ERR0W HAR I AAHRWI 0 HDLVVRC I0DAL HADWOU IRC A HHLWIRWR0AW ??????????? A kings help KAIGAKHGESA A ISGNAEHNHA KNLEHGKINSE KKNG I ISGENS AAGNSHLKHKA ????????;??? TIIK SMUGGLERS. Ruling of the court that th Canada temperance act does not prevent the exportation ot liquor to the United States has made the work of smugglers still easier. They only have the United States authorities to dodge and the bor der ia a long and tangled one. Likewise there are, some popular brands of whiskey made in Can- ana and the distillers are all said to be working overtime , to keep up with their American orders. AID that great Moi Prodaonv Cesar B. O DeMiller, to his hated ril. Men Jpre dacer tid Warkfield Griffin, "f Iiti i i nfmgvA four ot the treateat aCovins; ictare Stars in America tir my next bi( ai.inf Pietura Play' Of roursa this mads Oriffin anfry because ha likrs -to be tbe Creates! of all the areot Kovie Prodaeera and e tried his heat to persuade Distiller ts tell Sii tha aaaes of the treat Movie Strs Jnl t tantalise him, Caar B. PsHilWr- fae Jsvtd TVarkfield Otiifia fcer secret eodea C'yreaeatisf the names of tha four Uovte biri "a had enlaced cad told him that if he vd brains enoach to fc.jsee.er the aamea from taeae secret ecdes ho desenred ta Vaosr them. It vaa -o mnvh of a puxsle for Griffin, so it ia said he called ia Scotland Yard and offered them a thoaaand dollar if lacy tTonld dis cover the ramea for h'm from the four aerret codaa that Deililler had rv him. Thia raa aa eaaf iom tor the treat 8eotlaad Yard detective ' oree, aad ta laaa thaa aa Wvr thee , had the four aaoea. They cava . tha names to Griffin aad also (ts him their aja taw for working eat their does. - TTgftTt IS TEZ VAT THEY VXD IT. "It's easy," said Chief f Detective O'Flyna. "I have worked en I (aur aoaaa which yon see beneath each oaa of tha tear codts, " "Add ap theae fear nai aad year totals gWo yon the fear does to the four aaanea. "You go about it this way. Each secret eeds has tea letters to it. kah letter rep re sents a Bomber. The first letter of the code rep res eats 1, tha second letter represents S, the third letter represents S. aad so on. . The tenth letter ia each code repreaeaU the cipher instesd of 10. - "Each sun, aa you tea, Instead of Bombers ia mads aa of letters, hot it eoataiaa only the letters that are contained ia the coda abero itv ' "Now change tha letters ef each na late their equivalent nambera, accord tag to tha code above, potting thenm down line by line from left to right exactly as the letters : for inataaca, the first letter ot the first ansa ia K. ii as yoa will see ia tha first latter m it. eeo avsvi taas aaaa, aad taereiore rop- This Great Contest Is AbsoIutelyPREE of Expense. Send In Your Answers To-day! repeats anmber 1. H, taa seooad letter ra tte first lino ef tha first asm la ha eighth letter in the code above it, thereere U res reaeata a amber . 8. ; .J . " v"Aftsr yon hava ehaatxi very ttar at tha asm into s a am bar, add tha awn Inns esaetly ae yon woald any other asm' at tig area, and the total that yoa ret gives yaa ywarelaag to tha Barnes af Ue ale via Star. "Then work eat year does thia way: '.' . "Beginning at the left-head side: of the total of year sum chaago each firs re af the total hack ta its letter as repreaoatod ta tha secret cods above the earn; fey iaetaaee. I aa Ull yoa that tha first a amber of tha total of the first sum is 7. The letter O u the seventh letter ia the code above the first snm, therefore the first letter reareeaatod ev roor total io letter C haw change every anna her of yoar total ta tha same way ad a will have tha anna af Ue Uovke Star reZro aeated by that earn." " - j ." Thia ta not aa easy prehlee, Vat tMUieneo aad persovoraaca may find yen the aasoa ad the groat Movie Stars. Far tha boat aaswera sah-uted wa wUl ar tha latlaasi rtJai COUNTING THE BUGS. i After several years of intelli gent and industrious application the state entomologist cf Con necticut is able to announce that there are 6781 different kinds of insects in that little state not In cluding a couple ot speed bugs at Yale. Connecticut is a small state and is probably as poorly equipped with bugs as any in the union. . Yet it has nearly '700ft variant species to say nothing of some of the financial big-bugs ot llartfard and the humbugs of Bridgeport. Probably in a rich and massive state like California or Oregon we would have- three Thia crest content in balne 4 t The Statesmen Pnblishiag Co.. Sales. Oro- , oaa of tha bargeat aad best knows pob ahing honaea ta Qrecoa. Thia ia year guarantee that tha ' prises wfll be awarded with absolute fairness aad tqosreness to yea aad every other eoatestant. 'raakly, h is intended to iatrodaco The Pacific Haaaaetesd. reoi's ereatea Farm atagaame. aad The Wortaweat Pooltry Journal, the leading poal try magasine of the Pacific Kertbweat. Tea suay enter aad win the boat ( prises whether Joa ore a snbscriber ta either ot these pub eationa or not and moreover yoa will neither be asksd aor expected to take theae nkegasiaea or spend a single penny af your to compete. Hero ia Ue idea The Pacific Homestead hi Ue oldent sad best farm magasine poa liahed in Ue Pacific KorUweat, ntaaod weok .h a very largo anaber af readers. The Northwest Poultry Journal In also very widely read and haa Uo largeat eirsnshaoiaa of Bay marasine in ha class published ia Ue Pacific North west. Batt,oer motto is one of aar magasiaes ia every home. Wa waa more readers to become aces sis ted with. Uose wen pioiKnosi. mere! ore, warn wo aesaowiecra year entry to the contest aad yea knew year standing for Ue prises, we Sksil aead yoa uncut cost a copy of oar very latest iaaaea. Then in ardor to enalifr yoor entry to bo seat oa for Uo Judging aad graao prises, yoa wiU be - aaaa si u eti carry iag ea Uia hie ia- troductioa plan y show tag ywer awples lust fear frteads or neihbirs, who wiU ap preciate theae really werU while aaarasiaaa aad want these to earnc to Ueaa rogalarly twe readers to Tha Pacific Ht-assisad aad two readers ta Tha Korthwect Poultry Jaar aaL or any othor aamhiaatianyaoi lOt, to make oar. Yoa wDl easily folGTl thia aietnU condition in a few mlnosoa of year eparo tuT and we will even eoad oopsas ta eskoat en1 au Irieads if yoa wish. how to naro Yorm toLTmoxaC "' Use only one side af tha paper that caa Uias names of Uo Movie Stars, sod pat ylTT aamo aad address (statiag Mr, Idrs. er itilT) ia the upper right-haad comer. II jimWlk to wrho anything bwt year wTZfw aeparato sheet of paper,. woo a? Throe iadepeadeat indgea. haviag no eaa uTtriaT.7 Wfc,U tae Priaee, aad the aaswera gaiaiac 2iO peiata wiil take the Tint Pris 1 ai get SS points for every UVW roetly. 40 poiau will U apardedioTgWat aMtaasa. style, spellmg. puaetuatioa, oterta haadwritia aad 100 poiatT for fulfil hng the eoaditioaa-of tha eoatoat Cea- .winb..d-s.ru". pVi ed. Addraaa tmi . i ; ... 7 tm. Thw HrOOt Unvia Ilueiamf Ctniiimiln..t.r.L! . . s?"- ' twstt. uijoici j, outtciiiisiji ruuiisung uo caicm or. WIN" These Prizes ! 1st 2nd 3rd 4 th. 5th 6 th t. ST th. 10th, I lth. 12th, 1SU, lth. 16U. iau, 17U. m e s a 9S.o cssk 6.00 Cask S3.00 Cash is.oveuh IS.CO Cash SS.oe Cash $5.00 Cash $.00 Cash $S.0O Cash fs.oo cssh $4.00 Cask (200.00 Cui 100.00 feash tOJOO bash v 23.00 bath .15.00 bash 10.00 bash ltth, fs.ee cash ltU, $5.0f Cask SOU, $S.0 Cash Slat, ts.04 Cask S2ad. $5.0$ Cask tSrd, S O Cash 1U. SS.Of Cask SStk, $5.0$ Cask SOU. SS.M Cask S7U, $5.00 Cask tStb, S3 Cask PHIZES GUAEJLNTEED 4 t ty Taachars' IasUUU. X