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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 11, 1922)
TTfi OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON FRIDAY MORNING. AUGUST 11. 1922 - - - ' ti' trr,. - ' ' TSSSSSSSsaMi wi " - I,,, ,, , m f BL . T . - a . .. . I St 1 Issued Daily Except Monday by THE STATESMAN PCBLISHEVO OTMPAIIY Zlt 8. Commercial St.. 8alem. Oregon (Portland Office, 17 Board of Trad BuUding. Phone Automatic MEMBEB OF TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS . Thr Associated Press Is xclusiTly entitled to the use for publ cation of ail news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited la this paper and also the local news published herein. It. J. Hendricks ................ ......Manager Stephen A. Stone ................... .11 ana ting Editor Ralph Glorer ........................ . .... .Cashier Frank JaskosW ...... . . .... . . . . . . . . .lf anager Job Dept. TELEPHONES: Business Office, 21 .;"'. i , -. , .Circulation Department, itt. Job Department, 581 Society Editor, 10 Catered at the Postofflce in. Salem, Oregon, as second class matter , "NOBODY CAN DENY . THAT WE NEED A FLEET' .... ' ' , , . ' , - , v . t : V A Salem man now in Europe writes home: 1 ' "l ain very glad to see that The Statesman is in favor of American shiDDinir. and wish that I could tell the editor per sonally what our boats have to encounter in the way of com petition from England and the other nations over nere. "Nobody can deny that we need a fleet. "Certainly we don't have to live by itbut we may need it at any time in case ot war.' Without merchant and pas senger ships, we will be so inferior to Japan, who can arm her Deace time vessels." and the great British ships, which can mount enough cannon to annihilate our commerce, that our independence even may; be threatened. , : ; V , "If one-half the people, who sailed to Europe to ; waste their-money would travel on American steamers, we could laugh at the fear of losing our lines. But they won't , Remember, if we lose our heritage on the seas, ve may lose other-things that will prevent us from- becoming once more Jhe' savior of the world. -'-.4f C I ' 11 'wish you would "touch up The tatesman again: with th?se-ideas seen by -one who is here and knows .what may re3ultdfrora the' extinction of our shipping.".1 . The 1 ex-kalser la reported , as having taken up the' study of the weather. He wants to. knew the neat time when to come in out of h wt ' - - " V ys 1 1 Irani Johnson; a "noted" moun tain Jurist in Kentucky, is dead. The.Callf ornia lllram jJohnson is in about the same condition, but doesn't seem to know it. Los Angeles Times. : ' ;:- Senator Pomerene of Ohio, an ardent Democrat, says that the solution of the, industrial strife should be left, for the time being, in the hands of President Hard ing. I He thinks congress and ether agencies should give the chief executlre a chance to solre the situation. In other words, the hands of President Harding should not be tied. For the purpose offsetting pears to can here,. the Salem dis trict extends away up into east ern Oregon, and all orer western Oregon. This is the pear para dise, and the pear market center. 1 The Hall election contest case comes back to Salem, for a more interesting phase of It; and whether more worth whHe ire mains to be seen. '. Cross also furnished! 100,000 lay ettes for Russian babies. ' -".... These continued efforts ere bearing fruit. In nearly eyexy district better, conditions are re ported. H' It is to be hoped that Slay will now remain th recod month for famine relief " not from Any slackening of generous Ameri can' impulse, but from - speedr reduction In Russia's necessity. THE BLEACHING OP FOODS (Sixth article in a series of ar ticles by Paul O. r Sampson," na tionally known food expert.). It has become a common prac tice among some food distribu tors to bleach certain Tarieties of their products. We have become accustomed to bleached flour, raising apricots, peaches and many other foods, so that. it we bee a darker Tariety we Imagine It Is not wholesome. In fact, most dark foods haie an excep tional food ralue. " Iron that is so essential for health Is found in foods that by nature are dark. I ; There are all kinds of estl mates as to what the tonnage of prunes wUl be the present sea son. If you ' include In the S km district all that will , be handled at and from Salem, and IT weather conditions are favor able from now on, and plenty, of pickers can be had, dryer space, tnere win De noi tar irom 70 million pounds of prunes. This includes western Oregon and Clarke county. Wash. .JTHE GAMIXG PRIVILEGE 161 KI!0 n ii Adele Oarrlsosi Hew Pbaee of REVELATIONS OR A WIFE CHAPTER 94 , Gambling on a large scale is being indulged and encouraged in Petrograd, as the authorities gather up 0 per cent of the win nings. The money thus taken is used to pay the expenses incident to the American relief work. Un der the agreement the Russians were required to pay for the help and transportation incident to the needs and welfare of the Ameri cans administering relief. The government said that there was ho other way to provide for this expense save through some . gam bling concessions. So we have the unusual spectacle of a soviet such as spinach, beets, f raisins, I government taking tribute from dried peaches, etc- , ? ( I he gaming tables in order to pro The bleaching of these products I vide chambermaids and barbers ; In the present state of world commerce, there is only one v Ay to make sure of the building up and maintenance of an adequate American fleet iV V V V r , . ' tf Adequate for carrying the surplus products of the United Stated to the taarkets of the world, and for developing great er markets V ' ' ;-.-:-';-V: r'--.--.i' J "And that is by subsidies and preferential considerations such as are offered in the pending bill in Congress. i The wonder iithat it is delated so long. ' The sentiment of ;the peopU !of this country is now all. but unanimous for the'enactment of -the proposed law, and giving the. firm, sup perls, that will guarantee the flying of the Stars And Stripes in the ports of. all the seven seas, borne by vessels having ri tqual chance inthfi commerce of the.world - And backed by the power of Jhe United States govern ment, In vouchsafing' to these same ship3 decent treatment everywhere' on all the ooeans and in every country where men go down to the sea in ships. . : - , , - - I Two things we need' - . ' - . . . f4 'i A'protective tariff and anadequate fleet ' : v I "4 And then the enterprise of the American people, backed by (he drganiiaUon . ppf the Department; 6f C6mmerce hrider Herbert' Hoover arid our diplomatic service under Secretary Hughes,, will do' the rest. - Still the building of new .houses goes - on in " Salem,' in ever in creasing numbers. - And this will continue indefinitely. The ' more new bouses erected the harder it reems to find suitable dwellings for rent. Salem Is growing fast er than ever.; But it is only just getting a good start on what is coming. . '; . i . . -' More 'fruit will go out in the Salem district the coming season than ever before. All of which will call for more manufacturing concerns, ' and more . people to gather the fruit harvests. RELIEF RECORD ' ' - The rwool schedule as. carried in the pending tariff bill as it iett the House has been tampered with in the Senate, and has! been rendered a threat of injustice to the manufacturers of the United States. The members of the House ought not to stand for this. They should not allow these items threat ening injustice to get by the conference committee. We need a protective, tariff. Nothing is needed more. But we need only, such protection as will overcome the advantages for- !frrt nrrvlnera Viava urlflt Watn Uhnv on4 A nrvari it tA mnniw y f VM .WVV Ul UVptWiWIU lily UK J m k-That, and ' nothing jnore. Less than that is wrong. More - than that is foolish and capable of great harm. . " - For the month of May the American- Relief association s made ' a record in supplying food andne cessitlei to the famine-stricken districts in soviet Russia, . 4 During this month 7400 car loads of supplies, including corn and other grain, food packages and medical necessities werA dis patched to famine districts. On an average the. A. R. A.( had 6000 cars moving daily over Russian railroads. In addition oyer 25, 000 tons were moved by water on the Volga. The American Red FUTURE DATES Aarrott IT, Thnnflay lows picnic at fair grounds. - t -" " " - Aarust 2fl, Saturday Eiuf ling Br dbib . k Bailey circun. Seatembar , 1, 2 and Eoand-o at 8tarton. Bcptambar S, S and 4 Lakariaw Rsnnd-tiD. Lakinr. Or. - ' 8ptambcr 9r- Vf ddaF Orefoa Methodiat Cenfcrenea. Salem. September 7. "S- and -t 8tata Elk eenraDtion. ' Seaaide. Septembar 31, SS aad SI Paadietaa September SS t SO iaelnaiT Orafoa Stat fair. - - October 5, 6 and 7 Polk County fair,. Ianas, Movaabar t, Taaadaf Qeaaral alaa- is usually, accomplished by . the use of sulphur. The dried fruit that has not been sulphured will i be very dark, and is delicious and wholesome. f Sulphur when" taken in this form into the system can not' be assimilated. , ' We should forget our past edu cation along the line of what color a food should be. It is not the color of the food that nourishes the body, but whether that color is natural is the thing that counts. We often hear the remark, "What beautiful clear peaches those dried peaches are." when in real ity they are only so by .the bleach ing ' process. -; Natural foods that contain nature's minerals 'will paint the cheeks a health glow from within. Cosmetics applied to the skin deceive neither , God nor man. ' " Forget the idea of snow-white bread or brown bread that is made so with blackstrap or sulphate'd molasses. Eat your foods for their food value re gardless of: color, learning to know them in their natural, state, and you will be greatly. benefited in health. . The same thing ap plies vto bleached rice. Because' a rice is white and . fluffy does not necessarily say it Is whole some. In fact, it is lust the pp- posue ana yiianunes nave peen removed ' In the milling. The brown, muddy looking rice la the natural rice, containing the min eral salts and vitamines so essen tlal in the upkeep of the' body, 1 would rather eat foods in their natural color and have a natural oolor for ray cheeks k than, the bleached pale" foods which - glre the pale ' enemic color to the cheeks. White, brown or pale should mean nothing to us in me choosing of foods, If that color has - been placed there r 1 t for the Americans who are ad ministering relief throughout Russia. It is said that the play frequently runs as high as 3,000,- tf00,O00,O00l paper rubies in a tingle night. It this were gold it would amount to more money than has been minted since the world 'began. THE KISSING HABIT WHY IS DICKY "TALKING SUCH A LOT OF NONSENSE"? Mrs. Lukens kept her word. 1 saw nothing of her. save her re treating back as I sauk upon. one of the beds in Mrs. Lukens's sun parlor. Ma. Grantland promptly took himself off after a low wcrd I to Dicky, which I guessed was an assurance that he would wait out side until he was sure we needed him no longer. Ana Into the room where I lay my mother-!n law came directly, efficient, di dactlc and 'welcome. Now, R'chard," she said brisk- ly. "If you'll just see that all Margaret's baggage ix here and then take yourself off for a few minutes I'll take care of her. And I don't want to hear of your smoking In here or talking. The ga-rs got to get some seep as quickly as possible." Dicky winked at me behind his mother's back. 'I'll try to restrain my usual flow of conversation. Mother," he said as he sauntered toward the door. "But I think you're wrong about sleep. Vhat Madge needs is a l?tte improting eonverai!tn on the League ol Nations or the dry laws or some'u'ng instruct' ive." . A wife complains in .a divorce case that her husband had kissed her but once in six years, and then "he was drunk. Thia ia ... .. wmetmng the courts have not passed on. Does a husband .have to kiss his wife and; if so, when and how often? Does neglect in this matter constitute a basis for action? Some women seem to be suspicious if their husbands do kiss them and angry if they don't Why don't the judges standardise the kiss or else fit a maximum and minimum for domestic con sumption? the bleaching process. meoA sTTTlfOB v. woai K Copyright, 1923, AssocUted Editors The Biggest IJtUe Paper ta the Worid V 5 , 'The Trail of the Iron Horse. . rWell." remarked Dick Morris, 4 the older fellow who has been vls J Itlni John Clark' at our camp "to- mo""0 rn 06 ramping ott to take the iron horse back tjk town. I'll be mighty aorry to go, too.M Z , -Iron horse ?7 repeated Joe Tay lor.' ''--- ----,---..-.-..,... -.i j .-A'Wf he means the old railroad train,", explained Ollie. , ; ; ' 4 "Don't speak so dlsrespectful- 8 fy,"'laughed Dick. "You'd aippre- u i 1 1 It mum tn haTe a train if you'd" worked like I did fc' laying out the trail of the Iron horse."- ' : .- w:, :'-V '-;i- I ''tell us about It, he; asked., i & ( 1 Breakins the TralL ' t "It's sort of hard to tell about. because building a railroad up In the north, where I woraea, in very different from laying one across ai . - : Ka n - aeei prairie. uj - 2 tneefs must so on ahead 'making measurement. nd figuring out route across chasms, ? through rnountalns. - and ' over rushing Streams.' - c''.' . "pnee I was in a party that was T, figuring out s new connecting line - through a. particularly rough piece - bf country, almost a .wtldernes?. the' engineers In put Jjunch had to be good4w.oodsmen as well as en B gineersfor we camped as we - went. "We tolled in at night dead X tired and early next morning were ott agara.wlth our. Instruments t J - Itllf Tolla m. tltnrv. ' 1 "One of lh men was an old.fel- low who had been for, some time with another, road, and he used to tell us about hi early days. Those fellows whet put In the first roads wero.real heroes soldiers of cm lizAtlon: 'XX'' " ' 'v; . ' " -v i , '"They plunged rSht Into un known country and mapped out the course of the railroad. ' BUI - t! ? frTToTf . rrith n 3, toll V 3 fcoT once one of the men got lost from the others. They" were afraid to move on, when he' didn't show, up, for fear ne d never find them. So they kept their camp in the same place for three days, making trips into- the surrounding country; to locate' their pal. ; Then one. day he. wandered back. He was about all -In from hunger and .' loss of. sleep. , He'd gotten muddled and forgotten the direction 01 camp, ana it was jusc luck that he finally found them. But he'd had ' some of hia instru ments with him and he led the other fellows back over some of the country he'd wandered in, and they found a better way for ex tending the trail than one they'd been foliowlnr.? k - ;V ' ,Ls ft bi & - 1- - "People who' gd riding through that country now never think, of the fight it takes to . make - the trail.: They, see now : prosperous farmlands where once the lonely little camps of the roadbuilders seemed to be almoBt swallowed by the wilderness." Dick leaned back thoughtfully against a tree. "Well, it's a great game." he finished. . - ; , We fellows felt it was a great game, too," and to hear us talk you'd think every, one of us was going' to be an 'engineer Hkel that. AL 8T.UBBS Scribe of the PI- rate Seven. l THE SHORT STORY. JR. NAMES OUT OF BOOKS -'Come along, Horatio,',. called Susan, to her dogmas' she swung her sunbonnet .ou one finger. "We've got to gather In Diana and Minerva." - . . ; , '-"""And who. may I ask, are D'ana and . Minerva?!": inquired the Jail nan with glasses, --who: had just coma around the corner of the Dorch. Susan turned very red and twisted the strings of her bon- t "They're the cows, . explained Mrs. Proctor, - Susan's mother. ."She" v. gives everythlng.tnnny names like that. She's the beat tnest yonng-un. Eren 4h chick ens ha? names cut bf books. .The tall, man smiled, and looked inter. ested. He was one of Mrs. Proc tors summer boarders. The other four had , all been there before, and were lured back by the love ly l'ttle lake and the quiet peace of the place. ' He was new. howev er, and Susan felt shy before him. : But her shyness soon wore off when .she found he had rows of books in h1 room that she could read lot. Ihe asking. Vr He. .didnt laugh, either, when ehe spoke of Queep Elizabeth, the white hen, or of Henry the Eighth, the prise pig. At first she had thought h'm sullen' and bitter, but he liked to take long walks with .her and even helped her make up magic etorie about places they passed and -am mals they saw. ' - "some aay," sue said. "I want to be a. wrHer. ; I want to go away to school and study. I've started saving egg money, but It's not much use. I could save for years and still not hare enough." ' T .' i "Maybe somebody might get In- te"re5te4-UrTbtiandrteIpyu'Ect Edited by John II. Millar ' " ' ' f 11 a start?; he suggested. -Lots! people with money " "I'd never take a cent I hadn't earned' she declared proudly. Never." "I think," he said slowly.' i know a way you could earn- Then he started talking about something else. A few weeks later he left, soon er than he had expected. "He'll never come back," grumbled Mrs. Proctor. "You just pestered him to death, tagging around after him. I tried to make you leave n'm alone." Susan was dejected. Horatio could comfort her. Tfien one day came a. letter from the boarder. It was addressed to Su san, but Mrs. Proctor opened it. "Enclosed is a check for ? that school fund,", it read. "You're really earned H. I thought Id lost my grip, and couldn't irritc ajiy more.; You see, that's " my business, i I didnt, even try; But I couldn't - help making a tor out of you. So I did. Now every. thing, is all right again. I'm send ing a copy 01 tne magazine which tells all about Horatio and'Mln erva. and Kins ean." I FIT ONE Cf THtSt LETTtW W FRONT : OF: EACH PICTURE AND YOU WILL HAVE FOUR 4 CEREALS m MOTrttW CUPB0ASD R-M - R-W 'Ami. BITS FOR BREAKFAST . . Glorious rain . . . . , . V After a dry spell of 80 daya: aome say 90. Owing to localltv. 11 rained all around Salem late in May, out Salem was skipped. .Who knows where Salem's citv garoagq aump is located Or bow it looks? It is located out an the extension of North Seven teentlt street, beyond the Garden Road, and a few hundred yards south, of the state fair grounds. It looks like a small mountain. In us .middle portion, where it has oeen built up and aettled down solidly. The edges look like the egged end of all creation Enough tin cans have been dump- ea tnere, and burled there, to build a million tin Liszies. and they ere coming in a stream every day from all the homes and hotels aad restaurants and boardinc nnne of Salem, together with everything else that nobody want? or owns and desires to get out of rht and range of smell. That's the city's garbage djump In warm weather, .it - draws - more flies than there are cooties in Russia. It smells to heaven and Eola. No wonder Mayor Halvor- sen wants the city 4o buy an in cinerator to burn the garbage. The city owns there three acres it land. It is allybelng used, and a whole lot to carry, over into the neighboring fields. . The cen ter of the artificial mountain that has been made Is 15 feet high: perhaps 20 feet. It grows higher all the time. Something will have to be done. Three acres will not hold the garbage, unless a wall is built, and . there will have to be an.elevator to climb the ever growing artificial mountain that Is being made out of the discarded things from Salem. . S If .there is a better way to dis pose of the carbage than to burn it, the members of the city coun cil will. want to know it, one of these days. It is now a menace to the public health. Alexander Graham. Bell was Henry and Sum just 20 days' younger than Thomas A.. Edison and 75 is hardly more than on the threshold of old age; but the inventions of these two men have made even half a cen tury ago "old times." 1 v H S ; Warm weather discussion is go ing on as to who said that the country's greatest need was a, good?5-cent cigar, or words to that effect. Is the obscurity of a ' Thomas R. Marshall quip due to the - fact that he was a - vice president when he uttered it - In Hish Spirits? "It would probabl put ber to sleep vu'eker tban anything elBe." his mother commented dryly,! checking over the 1 aggage which Ma . Grantland haj put inside the doer. "Yn are a crje! and unnatur al parent," Dicky depared trtRi cally. "I shall fly to me own child." "If you dare to go near Richard Second," his mother threatened. He's sleeping like u Uttlo top. I've tsken off his lttle shoes and outs: -J e things acd tut hm into my ber!. His grandfather. -wlt stay with him unt'l I get through with Madge. You stay within call outside, and te!l that colored wo man to heat some m'lk about two cupfuls but not to brP it. Remember that. Can you get that ttraight? v "It ill be an awful strata Dicky retorted, "but I'll exercise my brain power to the limit over It. Two cupfula of milk heated but not boiled. I shall repeat those words like a charm all the way to the kitchen- It I should be assassinated before I return, them v ill be th3 last words on me lips." "Tott her to bring it In five mlnates with" a shaker of salt on the side, and either a'couplevof cracker? or a piecj of dry toast.? his mother went on lmperturbably. She was uhpack'ng my bag swiftly, deftly as she. spoke, lay ing out my night things and toU let articles. She stooped to my shoes as she finished.' '"This is too too much!" Dicky declared dramatically as be went out of the door. "I feel it In my bones that in some way she will make a mistake and serve7 me on the side instead of the salt or the toast," , - My mother-in-law deposited my shoes low and therefore quickly unlaced on the floor before she spoke Madge's Sudden Panic. - "I wonder what's the matter with Richard." . she said , "He's so fill of nonsense ton ght. You don't suppose he could have got ten hold of a drink anywhere."do you? That MaJ grantland I wouldn't trust him across the street.' I prudently repressed a smile at the idea of Ma J. Grantland, of all persons, providing liquor - for Dicky's temptation, but her ques tion made me realise thr.t Dicky really had been, talking a great deal of nonsense. I guessed the reason for 1U He meant to make me forget. If ross'ble, the inci dent of the closed motor car. . I was sure that he paid enough tri bute to my mentality to be assur ed that I had not "swallowed whole"- Maj. itrantland's . ingen ious explanations of his sharp ness with the driver of the closed car and that man's Intoxication. His very precaution made ' the terror I had felt sweep back upon me. Somewhete near me was someth'Kg I could not understand, something vague, menacing. My, mother-in-law looked at me keenly. ' y "You need some drops," she said decisively. "Thank goodness that woman had sense enough to put a pitcher of Jresh water In here." . ' ' :; - She measured the drops, put them into the water and held the glass tomy Hps. v "Tate It all," she said sternly. I swallowed the bitter draught obedientlty and lay back on my pillow with the assurance that in a few seconds the deadly faintness which had assailed me would pass away. -" .-' - ' ' fou certainly , are done up." my. 'mother-in-law commented with . her finjer on my pulse. "Now there's t.ne, thing certain. You're hot go'ng. to st'r from this room for two dvj t least. We'll have' your meals brought, and I'll take all care of Richard Second. Now are you ready to let me help you off with your clothes?" ' r With a sudden throb of panic I though of the fragments of the torn telegram bidden in the bosom of my gown. (To be continued) ' by Coroner R. L. Chapman. The date for the funeral has not yet been announced. Mrs. Heiacy, lor the past several years had lived tn a hovel near the Standard , Oil company tanks although, possess ing quite a savings account in one of tne local banns, - TODAY and Tomorro w VfllEATEfi. 4 :..-. A .. . First Run Feature Insane Dallas Woman Dies at the State Hospital DALLAS, Ore., Aug. 10. (Spe cial to The Statesman.) nCounty Judge Asa B. Robinson received word this morning from Superin tendent R. E. U Sfeiner of the state'Insane asylum at Salem that Mrs. Anna Heisejr, a resident of this city who was' committed to that institution some weeks ago had passed away Wednesday. The body was brought to Dallas today TO THE POLICYHOLDERS 07 " THE PRUDENTIAL INSXTRANCS COMPANY OV AMERICA NOTICE U hw.by fjrm that a mtiac of ta policyholder of THE PRUDENTIAL INSURANCE COMPANY Or AMERICA will b held at the Horaa Offlea of amid Coav Kny la th City of Ncwmrk, Naw Jaraer. ODdar, the fourth day of Deeaatwr. 122. at twelva o'clock aoon, for tba aarpoaa of adaetiatfour pvraoaji to ba voted for by taa policyholder' Trust aa member of tb Board of Dinwtora at tba aaaoal letloa of net arm of ta CampaLT. to I thtb day of January. IMS. Dircetora of to CamoaLT. ta ba bold aa tbo liahtb day of January. 1928. At aach narting erory poticylioldrt of tb corporation who la of tha ag of twrnty oaa year or npward aad who. poKcy haa bmn ta fore for at laaat ana roar last post abaU ba a (i two to east on rot la t 'EDWARD D. DUFFI pvraoa or by proxy ELD, Arties Proa. ' v , r t V fl V A' r Vi i L1A! .' ,r -- ' fi m km ULi J IU lit c & t a ncc atoantic-fi id Tfi . . With ; . " ' : Files' Weich and ; ' Huntley, Gordon . , " f . ; v ' . , f : - t - -.. ... .. - - - ' 1 ' :,". ) The following questions are answered in this 'successful ? production: l -1. i- " Would - marriage be more; successful if husbands . and . wives . have separate cstab lishments? - , v Can there be true marriage without a home and children! t Is social life a menace tn the happiness of the home? , ; Should a wonian abandon her career when she marries? " Coming Sunday : " PAULINE FREDERICK" ' I Directory -; , . FOR ? Not eVen Marion arid Polk Counties ; PICTURE PUZZLE H KING SIGNS LONDON, Aug. 10 (By the As. I nwiated Fres) . The ratified copy of the, Washington treaties It is now -enrnute to WashingtoiU I lor the exchange of. ratil lcatons. IL Will Go to Press Sept; 1st. . . - " '. j-i . ' ..:- z . ... .- Please arrange for any change you may desire jn present listings or advertising as soon as possible - and not later than September Is L : The PACIFIC TELEPHONE ; AND . - TELEGRAPH COMPANY 1 i.