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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1925)
OREGON INDUSEM'L PRO DUG QUALITY O.DUCT PR a. - - ... ... '""""Vs " "S jr v-. i -This cot !a used by Associated Industries, of Oregon Dates of Slogans (la Tvdce-a-Week Statesman I Following Day) (With a few possible changes) Loganberries, October 2 Prui.es, October 9 Dairying. October Flax, October 23 - j" Filberts, October 30 Walnut, November C Strawberries, November IS Apples, November 20 Raspberries, November 27 '"' Mint, December 4 Great Cows, Etc., December 11 Blackberries, December 18 Cherries, December 25 Pears. January 1, 1925 Gooseberries, January 8 Corn, January 15 Celery, January 22 Spinach, Etc., January 29 Onions. Etc., February Potatoes, Etc., February 12 -Bees, February 19 Poultry and Pet Stock, Feb. 26 City Beautiful, etc., March 5. Beans, Etc., March 12 Paved Highways, March 19 -Head Lettuce, -March 26 Silos: EtcVApril 2 ':;-. Legumes,. April 9 Asparagus, i5tc, ; April -16 Crapes, Etc. April '23 Drug Garden. April 30 "OBEGOiJ GUST EVETJTUALLY THE DRUG GfiRDEfJ 0 'In Oregon, More Than Anywhere Etee in the EWorld, 'Is Found That Happy Combination of Soil and Climatic Conditions Which Is Productive of iBest results in Driig uuiiivciiiuii Editor Statesman: ' Oregon must eventually become the drug garden of the world. In Oregon, more" than anywhere else In the world, is found that happy combination of soil and climatic conditions which is productive of ; best results in drug cultivation. It must not be supposed that all drugs can be; grown profitably in Oregon.; Obviously such plants as the opium poppy, which flour ishes only under a warmer sun than ours, will never be produced here to any ' extent But there are a great many other drug plants whose natural home is in the Pacific northwest, or which might be profitably introduced. I Cultivation Is Necessary At one time there was no ne cessity of drug-r cultivation. Tne woods contained millions of cas eara trees, whose; bark was used in medicine. But the bark collect ors have now reached the point where they a"re having more dif ficulty in keepingthe market sup- plied with this commodity. Like wise the users of mint at one time depended on wild mint for their 6U. but today most of the mint is obtained from mint farms. Many other wild drug plants have been almost "exterminated, making cul . tlvatirm necessary. - ?j',HyiiieAtP"B Notions Thefe, is on false impression which should "be speedlly correct ed. ' Pseudosclentists,- writing in Bwspapers - or - magazines, hare disseminated -the idea that- drug plants are quickly grown, requir ing no particular care or cultiva tion, but yielding bountiful har vests and rich financial returns with little expenditure , of- time and money. Nothing could be fur ther from the truth. f Many drug plants can be grown oly in a cer tain type of soil, so any attempt to grow them in a soil to which they are not adapted would result only in loss of time and money. Some drugs, as digitalis, grow so bountifully in the wild state that , their cultivation Is not profitable. Some other drug plants, as golden - seal, yield no crop" until the third yearatter planting, although they riu8t .be- carefully tended during these three years. j Harvesting Is Important The harvesting and drying oi drugs is quite a problem In Itself. Gathering a crop a week too early, era "week too late, may destroy its value entirely. Likewise, im proper drying may cause mould ing, or may result In the loss or destruction of the valuable oils or resins in the drug plants. Each drug plant offers a problem, re quiring special study. . No rule of thumb may " be given which will apply to all. T!w Marketing,. Too The marketing-of the product must also be considered. ,Tbj9 drug manufacturer is not Interest ed in. buying in small amounts, and is always willing to give a better price on large shipments. This of course would necessitate large scale production or coopera tive marketing. ' jThe solution of the above prob lems will require time.f A great courtesy of the in Dliljl State sman ' Sugar-Beets, Sorghum, Etr May 7 j i Water; Powers, May 14 Irrigation j May 21 f ! Mining. May 28 ! : Land. Irrigation. Eic. June 4 Floriculture. June 11 Hops j Cabbage. EiC.lJune 18 Wholesaling and Jobbing, June 25 t Cucumbers, Etc, Jul 'F! Hogs! July 9 Goats July Iff. Schdbls, Etc., July 23 Sheepi, July 30 1 j National Advertising. August 6 Seeds, Etc, August 13 , Livestock August 20 j 1 Grain': and Grain Products, Au gust 27 "I ... HP Manufacturing. September 3. Automotive Industries, Septem ber 10 I Woodworking Etc., Sept. 17 Pape, Mills, Etc., Sept. 24. :- ir. -;j - ;. . I (Back dcpfej of the Thursday editions jf The Daily Oregon Statesman are .n hand. They are for sale ac 16 cents each, mailed to any address; Current copies 5c) ' 11 : i I i THE MHO F i many drugs are being grown' with a handsome profit in England and in certain parts of the United States. I In Oregoni the mint in dustry isj now on a firm footing, and ; there Is no. reason why the growing of other drug plants I in the Willamette valley should not prove profitable. U .Must Proceed Carefully Th federal government, through the department of agriculture, has conducted extensive investigations on this subject, and has published the Jesuits iniseveral government bulletins The application of these results to our own j conditions! is yet to be worked $ut, and, until i ': I i j - 1 . r laisjjis qone. it is; not aavisaoie for anyone to invest too heavily in drug (cultivation, i "1 The school of pharmacy at the Oregon ' Agricultural ; college I in Corvallis has not up to the pres ent iimelbeen provided with facili ties;! to aid lQ tnis jwork, but with tne newj Duiimng ana tn improv ed equipment which it will have next year it. is expected that it will before long be able to advise the!) farmers of Oregon on the profitable''": cultivation of drug plants, g F. A.'.GILFILLAN. Coryallis, Ore., April 29, 1924 - i : , ; - - - (The reader will note tbatjthe above letter is a year old. "But it holds; good now; excepting that the Oregon Agricultural' college is In better condition to give; as sistance than it was a year ago. PrOf. dilfinan is assistant pro fessor of pharmacy at the Oregon Agricultural college. He Is fcigh authority in this field. His state ment taat the development ofj the dnlg garden Industry here jwill necessitate "large scale produc tion or cooperative marketing" thj thing to which the Slogan editor has been calling attention fort several years. Our district must find men with large means, or f we f must find leadership in reftincr cooperative growing and marketing. That the , natural conditions are here in near per- fection' there is Juo doubt---the soils and the showers and shine, f Capital or; leadership bring about conditions that sun wU bring Very iarge annual returns of I mohey from far places; may giVe ariother most lucrative use of our laiids that" lie fallow or are less prpf itably employed. One! man tfjj the fright type; Jwlth the hjeces safy vision, can organise "thje In dustry land pilot it to great things. Where! is th manT ,. Or rather, wlio 1 the man? .Who knjqws? He may be very near. -Ed.) I Poor Showing in Athletics I Traced to Playing Golf .. jk I -, -rr ! ; LONDON', April 18 England's deterioration iii I athletics, as measured by international con tests. Is due to paying too niach attention " to golf J In the opinion of Leo Matse, editor of the! Na tional Review, f f The. best real t estate buys are alwayi advertised in The States man first. - i , .. "OREGON QUALITY" products are establishing themselves in world markets ; they make our pay rolls they build our cities; they attract new capital and new people; they provide a market for the products of our farms. Oregon farms produce a wider variety of profitable crops or "Oregon Quality" food than any. other spot on earth. BIGGEST CRUDE DRUG ISDl'L J.FRV OF There Is a Boom in Mint Growing in the Salem District Now, and Peppermint Oil Is Quoted at Abnormal Prices Time Will Come When Cascara Bark Will Have to Be Culti vated and This Is the Place Flourish Salem has .the right to the claim of being the crude drug center of Oregon partly on ac count of the fact that the largest crude drug buyer in this state is in this city, in the person of Dan'l J. Fry, wholesale and retail drug gist, with headquarters at his Sa lem store, 280 North Commercial street. He. buys cascara bark, Oregon grape root, Oregon balsam fir, oil of peppermint, blue poppy seed, and all other crude drugs that are offered. , . . ; The country is about out of its supply of cascara barkj and the price has been' ruling high, s Mr. Fry paid 12 cents a pound for the peel of 1924; for the dry bark delivered. The prices ji for 1925 have not yet? been fixed, but they will likely rule lower than last year, owing to a considerable car ry over in various hands. Mr. Fry has a warehouse at Salem and one at Tillamook, and he has agents all the way along the whole of the Oregon coast, from Clat sop county to the California line in -Curry county, and over that line in California. Most "of the peel is from the mountains In the coast region, but some of it "comes from the Cascades. ' f A Booming Mint ' Oil of peppermint is abnormally high now. At this time last year it was $4 a pound, which was considered good.'- That was $1.35' a pound -higher. than the year be fore. . But it is around $12 now, based on New York quotations, and has been slightly higher late ly. The s peak of the war price was $9 a pound. The reason for the abnormal prices now is the fact that a great deal of pepper mint oil was destroyed in the THE LIST OF THE T (The United States Department of Agriculture publishes a number of bulletins on drug plants in this county. Notably among them ar No." 107, on American Root Drugs? No. 188 on Weeds Used in Medi cine; No. 26 on American Medi cinal Flowers, Fruits and Seeds, and No. 139 on American Medicin al Barks. ; Space will permit only the naming of things thus listed but It is full of interest to the people of this section, suggesting maqy. items that may prove profit able to follow up. Following are the lists: ) .' , Roots Male-fern, couch grass, wild turnip, skunk cabbage, sweet flag, chamaelirlum or helonias, Ameri can hellebore, aletrls, bethroot, wild yam, blue flag, lady's slipper, crawley . root, Canada snakeroot, serpentaria, yellow dock, poke weed, soapwort, goldenseal, gold thread. , black cohosh, Oregon grape, blue eohosh. twinleaf, May apple, Canada monseed, bloodroot. hydrangea, Indian physic, wild Indigo, crane's bill, seneca snake root, stlllingia, wild sarsaparilla, ginseng watereryngo, American Angelica, yellow, jasmine or jess amine, pinkroot, American Colom bo, black Indian hemp, ; "pleurisy root, comfrey, stbneroot," Culver's root, dandelion, queen-of-the-mea-dow, elecampane,' echinacea, bur dock. " ' X. ' 'Weeds ' Burdock, dandelion, dock (yel low) dock (broad leafed) dock (yellow rooted water), ; couch grasi pokeweed, foxglove, mullein, lobelia, tansy, gum plant, scaly grlndelia, catnip, hotehound, blessed thistle, yarrow, Canada fleabane, Jim son weed, purple thorn apple, American wormseed, black mustard, white mustard. ,"! Flowers, Fruits and Seeds Juniper, saw palmetto, worm seed, pokeweed, black mustard, white mustard, raspberries, prick ly ash, smooth sumac, American linden, poison' hemlock; ' Jimson weed, mullein, elder. , MH IHDBEGI THE CAPITAL CITY Where It Is Native and Will . I warehouses in Japan by the earth quake and fire. Japan produces a good deal of peppermint oil. We have been enjoying 4, mint boom in the Salem district for some years, and it is more pro nounced than ever this year. .' It is how in t the. nature 'of a bonanza crop; though these ' abnormal prices wiil not likely last very long. The oil of peppermint which we produce here -Is Wgh in men thol content; ifi? PJghesti pro duced in ;the TR.tedatesi It Is also the purcl oil pJuuced in; the United States. TV .'-.,.'; i There is boundtohs a steady increase in our a2?ealB?f"pt.'t-per-mint, in the Saljrn district. jWe will ere long hav'a xniliiori dollar annual crop, the v&y things are going., .'VVC -"I -v T. And vrp win have jt peppermint oil refinery in Salent, in order to get all the benefits of the industry- i Mr.) Fry believes we I should have a refinery now. j ; Mr. Fry is also a believed in the eventual j growth- into ' immense proportions of our drug (garden industry.; Cascara will eventual ly run out, as a forest production; there is! no suitable substitute, and it will have to be cultivated. Here is the place to raise ii, along with hundreds of 'other crude drug trees and shrubs and plants and flowerg and seeds and roots. ;i V Growling Very, Fast j, ; - : The- whoTt;sal6 drug branch of the business of Mr. Fry is grow ing very - fast. There are pow 18 people employed in this part of the business; six men on the road, two of them in the city, of Port land. Chemicals - are. bought tn car lots" and in every , way the businessl is conducted on vigorous and progressive lines. DRUG f IMS' CULT VAT US , i. Barks ; White pine, . 'tamarack, j aspen, white willow, bayberry, butternut, lronwood, sweet birch, .tag-elder white oik, slippery elm, magnolia tulip-poplar, sassafras, spicebush, witch hazel, blackberry, American mountain ash, wi!d cherry prickly ash, wafer ash, black alder, wahoo false bittersweet, horse chestnut, caacara sagrada, cottonwood 'bark, dogwood, moosewood, white! ash, fringe tree, bittersweet, bhttoh- bush, cramp bark tree, and black haw. ' Tell your eastern friends about the. progressive spirit of the City of Salem. .We want more "people' here, not only to 6hare1the cijy with us. but to help us build it. WE BUY 1 Cascara Bark Oregon Grape Root Oregon; Balsam Fir T T T j Write for cur v . i prices before you sell. Dah'l J. Fry- .Wholesale Druggist . r.2S0,North Commercial Sti, Salem, Oregon DRUG PUNTS UNDER AS LISTED BY There Is a Bulletin, Issued By the United States Depart ment of Agriculture," Which Gives Directions. Concern ing the Growing, Harvesting 'and "Treatment -of 4he Plants Needed in the Crude Drug Trade, Which May Be Grown and Supplied By Our Farmers (The United States Department of Agriculture recently revised its Farmers', Bulletin 663, which was issued several years ago, entitled "Drug Plants Under Cultiva tion.") r - "Interest In the possibility of deriving profit from the growing of drug plants Ts increasing year ly' says this bulletin. It men tions the fact that annually large sums of money are expended for crude drugs Imported from for eign countries, where they are produced under conditions of soil and climate resembling, those of many localities in the United States; and increased. attention. is being directed to the home supply. " "At ."the close of the year 1919 (after the, war there existed a general and widespread shortage in botanical crude drugs, " and prices in consequence had reached unusually high levels, : says this bulletin. (The prices tore still generally high.) ' ; " Following is a list of drug plants, made up in this bulletin "to give information concerning their culture which may be"help f ul to persons who are considering the .production otdrug plants on a commercial scale." (Lack of space forbids anything but a bare mention of the plants.) Following is the list: Aletrls, star-grass, or true uni corn .roott; aconite; althaea, TOr dele Garrison Hew FhaM ot REVELATIONS OF A WIFE Copyright . by Newspaper Femtnre . Service :. CHAPTER 445, WHAT MADGE DID TO BANISH " KATIE'S FEAR AiOUT .:!.: . JIM. . : . Katie's eyes went back to Jim's photograph again, and her voice took on an cajoling tender tone, as If her husband himself were opposite 1 t'BT her. - A little shiver ran down my back. If this sort of thing kept up I feared for the girl's reason. - Ah Jeem Jeem," she crooned. "You tink I no car anyting, ttnk I like dot oder man's shoost'be cause I no tell .youivot I gOs ee heem for. . But Jeem he keel you, keel eferybody eef I tell. He sooch devil. Oh, I hope he dead, Jeem, I hope he deadl But I so 'f raid he no die." ; , ; She turned her tortured eyes MY MARRIAGE PROBLEMS CULT1TII OUR UNCLE S marshmallow; angelica; anise; arnica; belladonna, or deadly nightshade; blue flag; boneset; burdock; calamus, or sweet flag; calendula, or pot marigold; Ger man camomile; Roman or English camomile; camphor tree; canna bis, or Indian hemp; caraway; cascara sagradain cultivation the trees are pruned annually, and thus a crop of bark haryested each year, instead of killing the whole tree, as is done in the wild state, which Is making it neces sary to make plantings, which is now being done in British Colum bia, and will no doubt be done in Oregon" for there is. nothing,; "just as good.") Castor beans, catnip; conium, or poison hemlock;, cori ander; dandelion; digitalis, or foxglove; dill; echinacea; ejecam paine; fenel; gentian; 'ginseng; goldenseal; henbane; horehound; insect powder flowers; larkspur; lavender; licorice lobelia; lov age; melissa, balm or lemon balm; orris; parsley;- pennyroyal i pep permint; pinkroot; pokeweed; saf f lower; American saffron, or false saffron; saffron, or true saffron; sage; seneca snakeroot; serpen taria, or Virginia snakeroot; spearmint; stramonium; James town weed, or limson weed; tan sy; thyme; Valeria; vetiver, or cuscus grass; wintergreen; Amer ican wormwood, or Jerusalem oak, wormwood. to me again. ' f "You know, Mees'is Graham, who dot oder mans, dot Joe is?". she demanded. .- j "I think I do, Katie," I answer ed quietly. J "You hear anytings about him? Yon tink he die?". "I haven't heard anything late ly,' I returned, with a vivid real ization of the fact that save for ,Harry Tnderwood'a. startling knowledge of Katherine's where abouts there had . come no word from my little friend who was nursing the wounded Joe! under such dangerous conditions. "But he never will trouble you again." r-She shook her head mournfully with a repetition of the fatalistic comment I had heard her make once before. j "He never stop devilment, til', he all dead like snake." Secretly I agreed with her, but I knew better than to let any hint ot my conviction -escape "me. "That's nonsense!" I said sharp ly, but, Katie shook vher head, "You see, sometime," Bhe said dully, then, with a sudden change of manner she seized my -hands and held them in a tight gxip. "Oh, my Meesis Graham, I so tired vaiting!" she said, j "JEfery night I sit me here looking at hees picture, und call him soft, 'Jeem coom home, -forgive -your- Katie, she vant - you -i so. Plees coom home.' Eet seem sometime al most as eef -I hear heem spik to me, kind and loflng like he used to do. ynd vunce I see heem." Katie Is Overwrought. 1 . , i - ' Her voice lowered to a whisper, and I tried in vain to shake off the uncanny feeling. which crept over me, tried to emphasize in stead the touch of gotesque path os which is rarely absent from anything Katie does or says. But thre rwassj dignity of grief about the girl which forbade anything! save respect ot tne emotion wnich wa.v swaying-her. 1 " . "I see heem shoost as plain as I see , yon now," , she repeated. "Eet vos today. He vos sitting on upside-down boat und, he have hee's head in heeTs hands, tlnklng, Unking. Und ven I call so glad. Jeem, Jeem he lift op hee's head qvick like nnd look around, und den he drop eet down again. Und den I no see heem no more." "You mean you woke up, Ka tie," I said praetitfally, "You must have been dreaming. But I thlaXlt 1ft. a dreain tha.t will jome true. Jim vrili ; come back soon. I am sure of it." Maybe-soi Maybe not!'" she replied. "Long time I tink he coom sure, but now I so tired." Her voice trailed away hope lessly, and for. a minute neither of as spoke: I welcomed the low Imperative knock upon the door which I recognized as Lillian's, but Katie's overwrought nerves exploded in a shriek at the sound. ML -This cut is ustfd by courtesy of the Associated Industries, ot Oregon. THIS WEEK'S SLOGAN DID YOU KNOW that Salem crude drug supplies for Oregon; that every, farm in this district ought to have a drug garden; that we are already leading in peppermint production of first quality; that cascara sagrada has to be cultivated or it will run out, and the world must have more and: more of it; that the Dean of the School of Pharmacy, Oregon Agricultural College, has repeatedly said that drugs can be grown at one-tenth the expense and with twice the yield that they can be pro duced in Michigan and Minnesota, and Prof. F. A. Gilfillin of that department says Oregon must eventually become the drug garden of the world, here for the development of a great drug garden industry which ought to be done quickly? ' : A LOT OF CRUDE DRUG PLAfJTS, GRDtV WILD IN THE SiHM DISTRICT , : s : . t - ' 1 s i t Nearly All the Rest Can Be Grown in Our Gardens Here Oregon Crude Drugs Helped Win the War for Demo cracy We Have Enough Foxgloves to Make the Dig? talis to Supply the Whole World The organization of the crude ; i drug industry in Oregon en an i ambitious business basis, cooperat ively or otherwise, would ' bring out a lot of wealth that is now going to waste in our woods and weeds and wilderness places. These resources have already been and are now being utilized to a slight degree. ! j Oregon crude drugs helped win the World war. , First, her school children' gath ered vast quantities of foxglove, from which to make digitalis. This was mostly in the coast counties, where the plant grows i wild on vast acres and Oregon I3 one of the four states where it is native, the others being California, Wash ington and West Virginia. Chil dren earned as much as $p la day in the Toledo district. The Labish Meadows district north of Salem has a great deal of the wild fox glove, and it is easily raised in gardens. ' : Second came the great quanti ties of spagnum moss, found in our salt bogs, which our people shipped to France during the war, for surgical dressings. Some- very familiar contribu tions from the Salem district to the crude drug trade are the fol lowing: Yerba Buena, a vijtal in gredient of liniment; licorice, a fern like plant growing n the moss on trees; flag, a blue flower; dandelion, a garden pest but an effective liver "flopover;" Oregon grape, cascara (or chittem.ji these two having been shipped put in car lots for years; peppermint, plantain, burdock, tansy, wild cherry, wild blackberry, and even "Be quietf" I commanded very sternly. "It's Mrs. Underwood." Lillian spoke nonchalantly to thegirl o"ver my shoulder. "What's the matter, Katie? Don't you know my knock yet? Go to bed, girl, you're aU of a tremble. I'll bring you up a glass of hot milkpretty soonifTyoure" good. Madge, would you mind coming downstairs with me? I've some letters I must get off by the first mail, and I must have your advice on them." '. ". .W I "Jeem! Jeem!" - 1 ' i t" . "Surely," I said, with answer ing nonchalance, though ' I was certain that the letters were only a pretence for summoning me. "I'll come back in a little while, Katie." I turned to my little maid. ."And I want to find you In bed." . She "stared at both of tiai oddly. "All right. I go," she said at last, submissively, and closing her door, we walked down the corri dor in silence. It was not until we were half way down the stairs that Lillian put her lips to my ear. . ; - j "There's somebody, prowling around the house," she whisper ed, "and I want your help in find ing out what's up. There's no use telling: your " father. You know what men are. He'd be: out of the house with Tom Chester after him, both of- them good targets, if the -stranger means mischief. I've put out the lights in all the rooms downstairs, and I want you to watch from a window i on one side of the house, and i I'll ; take the other side until we see what's doing." We crept to our respective sta tions in silence, and waited breathlessly for several moments. Then, outside my window, over looking the kitchen dOoryard, there drifted the dim Outline of a man's figure, and then there came a low knock at the kitchen door. J3atJ3eore Lillian and I could . is. -1 S : is the principal market of the and that the possibilities are the despised poison oak Is listed as a purchaseable-rug by a mail order house. These, of course, are all wildings, while, with little care in every garden In the Salem district there can be produced the. following, medicinal herbs: Rhub arb, tansy, horehound, catnip, ginseng, poppy (opium.) sage, anis, caraway, pennyroyal, chic kory rosemary, -hyssop, worm wood, rue, flax and hops. iDyes, Perfumes and Chemicals j But Oregon's contribution to the drug trade does not end, even with this list, for the gum from the fir trees is being utilized, and from the cedars; healing mud Is coming from some of its southern springs, while there are mineral waters galore.. rTo the dye maker it has given dogwood, and to be perfumers, orris root which U none other than the iris of bur gardens,, while we have been told by leading authorities that our roses have the requisite sweetness for the valuable attar of roses. I But while every phase ot the drug industry was affected by the war shortage, photography suffer ed a blow that has brought still another of Oregon's resources to the front. This time It is the pe culiar, warty growth on oak trees, known as galls, occasioned by the sting: of an insect and rich la ta nin. some 15,000 ounces per week being used by a leading manufac turer of photographic supplies, and called pyro. China had previ ously been the source of supply and "is still the most important one, but with picture making ad vanced to such proportions, Ore gon's oak forests promise unex- pected revenues. make our way: to -ewrir other through, the darkness, there was a wild cry of "Jeem! ' Jeem!" from the kitchen stairway, and Katie,-, with., candle held at so dangerous an angle that I trembl ed, flew to the door and opened it, and was seized In her husband's arms while the candle provident ially extinguished, rolled on tae floor. . - , . . j (To be continued) Electricity Tended Still Is Discovered by Officers" SEATTLE, April 28. Electric ally operated and Incased in brick, a 100 gallon moonshine still was seized by King ! county Sheriff Starwich and four deputies on' a ranch near Sunnydale. south of here, today. Thirty gallons of liquor were confiscated and 5$ barrels of mash destroyed. Au thorities charged the still was used to manufacture moonshine for a Seattle ring. , The morning newspaper is the market place of the entire world. An advertisement in it will bring you larger returns. SKILLED SERVICE 1 r : IS APPRECIATED Auto - Top Shop of F. W, Bliss a Mecca for Autos Needing Attention : There are enough automobiles In the United States so that if some day six people were loaded into every . car the entire popula- (CcaUa&ei on pass 9) ' . . V 1