HJio Favor Sways Us; No Fear Shall Awe" From First Statesman, March 28, 1851 ' THE STATESMAN PITOLISHING CO. " .. , Chakles A. S PRAGUE - i - Editor-Manager Shxldok F. Sackett - ' ' Managing Editor , Member of the Associated Press Ths Associated Press Is exclusively en U tied to ths w for tkn of ail news dispatches credited te It or not otherwise credited la this papers ; - t-- :- . ADVERTISING f : 1 r Portland Representative I Gordon B. Bell, Security Building, Portland. Ore. f Eastern Advertising Representatives : Bryant. Griffith. Branson. Inc.. Chicago. New Tork. Detroit. Boston. - Entered1 at tAs Ptote at Salm, Oregon, a SecondrCloM 1 Matter. Published, every mmmmg except Monday. Business office SIS S. Cemwrcial Street. i SUBSCRIPTION RATES: Usa Subscription Rates, In Advance, vruhtn Own: Dally and Rnndnv 1 Ma. Id cents: S Mo SL25; Mo. II-".. i year . Bseteri M cent! Ma. or S5.0S for 1 year to advance By Oty Carrier: 4S cents a month; $1.80 a year to advance. Per Copy J cent. On "trains and News Stands 5 cents. More Pay for Coaches THE poor state schools, the university and state college, managed to find money to raise their football coaches a thousand year apiece. The state board announced rather apologetically-that the money would come from the student association funds. But from what we have heard these funds are about nothing minus if the debts of the association are considered. And only a little while ago the board turned down pleas for reducing the $15 fee which all students are forced to now nf oTliwIncr mpmhprshin to be ODtionaL The excuse is advanced by the Register-Guard that jf Oregon schools do not pay the coaches will go elsewhere. Thinking about Spears and Schissler? The R-G is mistaken; these coaches wouldn't go elsewhere; they have done nothing so remarkable as to win promotion yet. They may in time ; we hope they do. , . Oregon poor state that it is can't sustain two big-time football teams. We may as well recognize the fact and con sider we are training ground for young coaches who can make a reputation here and then move up in the field. Now that we have spoken our mind about higher salaries for football coaches, we want to say a word of approval of the action of the board toward increasing the enrollment at the state schools by means of a non-competitive and non-aggressive effort. Now the plants are operating at low efficiency so far as cost goes, because of reduced enrollments. With very nine aaaea costs our nve lnsiuuuons cumu tan.e caie ua uuce thousand more students. And there are that many more young people on the Pacific coast, who could attend these schools with profit to themselves and society. V It was a mistake to make the out-of-state tuition so high, because every , out-of-state student becomes temporarily at least a resident of the state and one who spends money in the state. Formerly many came up from California, attended col lege here, located here, or went elsewhere carrying with them a regard for the state and its people. Their loss is a money loss to the state, and a loss to the institutions who could care for them with profit on the tuition charged.. This is no plea for the old methods of drumming up stu dents to swell enrollments and force greater appropriations ; but for use of creditable means to bring the schools up to en rollment levels where they can work most efficiently and per form the greatest service to society. Pumping Propaganda A MERICA is once more the battleground for rival prop J aganda institutes. An American publicist has opened a propaganda factory for the puppet state of Manchukuo. Pro nazi Germans are flooding the mails with dope in support of il fTi1 . 1 it a je 11 tne muer regime, jews, Dotn American ana ioreign, are dil igently advertising the persecution and wreck of culture by the nazi party. Wednesday night a distinguished gathering of Americans in New York city branded Hitler as a foe of civilization. - Yesterday there came to our desk a copy of a prop aganda sheet "German Outlook", which was published be fore the Wednesday night meeting. Advised of that meeting, it publishes in a double column box on its front page, the following : A CHALLEXGE The hate drunk Venom Society has advertised in certain ' New York papers a soiree of intemperate animus to be held at the Madison Square Garden on March 7th. The grotesque title Of the performance la "The Case of Civilisation Against Hitler j ism'. The parties to the debauchery are the same old gang, as will be seen below. We challenge the right of any of these indi viduals to speak for the groups for whom they represent them- . . selves as "spokesmen". The Ust follows; Roger Baldwin I For Civil Liberties Dr. Lewellys F. Barker For the Physicians Dr.' Arthur J. .Brown Abraham Cahan . Chancellor Harry Woodburn Chase Hon. Bernard S. Deutsch William Green Arthur Garfield Hays ; John Haynes Holmes Gustavus Kir by .... Mayor Florello H. LaGuardia v , Edward J. Leary For the American Legion Professor Raymond Moley For the Liberals Dr. Samuel Margoshes ...An Eye Witness Former Governor Alfred E. Smith -For American Public Opinion Senator Millard E. Tydings of Md. For American Public Opinion Professor Seth Wakeman , For Academic Freedom .Dr. Stephen S. "Wise For the Jews v Michael Williams For the Catholics Samuel Seabury . Counsel for Civilisation " All Americans who fall under the various classifications should protest against the" effrontery of the buffoons who are staging this un-American infamy. -What kind words spoken them. Evidently the Germans XI. 1? fit A. J - - 1 uieir lu-siarrea propaganaa campaign oi xvii-lvu wnicn contributed not a little toward impelling the United States to enter the war. Anyway propaganda is a great game; but the crop of muckers who fall for it seems never short Solution in Sight MAYOR DOUGLAS McKAY "turned on the heat" and Sen. Charley McNary opened the valve at his end ; and as a result PWA did a handspring and tilted the ante a cool million dollars. The exact terms of the loan-grant are not yet available: but the total authorization is $2. 00.000. none of which is available for purchase of existing system, according to a message from Congressman Mott. Whether this means that the government will finance a complete new system or not is a question which awaits fuller information for answer. The city had asked for an increase to $2,200,000 to permit public sale of around a million dollars in bonds for use in purchasing the plant at the company's asking price f of $950,000. If now the government is to supply the whole money for building a new plant including, the city distributing sys tem, then the water company will be left in the lurch. T?k(Vn 3 -.M XI t T it 1 i A W e coouluuIia wiiica me government may lixL7 fix toT the distributing system this fact seems clear that for the first time the city is in position to go ahead with ro2ect vionsly it has been restrained by court tests on the legality of the bonds, by inability to sell bonds, by fail ure to acquire the plant and so get the benefit of the first loan grant of the government. Now if the government does all the financing, all that is necessary is to speed up plans and short en red tape. If the government expects the city to buy out the plan V that can be accomplished in very short time, and per Jharj n more favorable terms than previously offered. Atlanta For the Protestant Churches For the Socialists For the Academic World For American Public Opinion For Labor An Eye Witness .For American Public Opinion For the World of Sport For American Public Opinion about those who disagree with have learned nothing from . i? 4 J 1 IT ake 1 CHAPTEB THIETT'EIGIXT' , And then one afternoon sitting oa Stanley cherry table, beeausa he had com fa last and there was nothing elsa available. Perry de cided to lave week-end party. He smiled at then through half -dosed, lazy blue eye and said casually. Tv cot te run up to Gray Towers for ever the week-end. I'm tuning some new roses pot la aad am old tennis court made into swim- minr-pooL Bow about arrangisr a partyT It eoght to be rather TOee us there bow, the tuBps are oat aad the Id ought to be worth looking at. If other aad dad are still ia Borne. We would have the place to ourselves. What da you say. Stan. Mke to col" "Love to. t never bees up la April but it must be heavenly. "How about the rest of you. n -i.v ni. nMie "If youH get me back Sunday night have ta ware Monday; Dermis poured herself more tea. ? think I eaa arrange It. IH let you know. Nigel was indefinite. Dennis smiled slightly. Nigel would arrange tt It rather pleased him to be non-committal but he needn't have bothered, she thought There waant much Dennis didnt know about Nigel it was too bad but ft was to. Perhaps it was In evitable when two people played the same game with the same rules. "AO right with you, John Hijp- mon" "Bight as rain." Everything was gloriously right with John Harmon, these days. Hayuard had read the first ball of Gloria and pronounced It good. He had offered to run tt as a aerial fa the Review, publishing tt la book form ia the falL The final chapters were coming along steadily and easily and John Harmon was confi dent that the first of June world see the book finished. He had not told Stanley, he had not told any one, but be was secretly exhilarated over the fact that by early summer he would actually have accom plished something, reached a defi nite goal. There had been a time when the best he had hoped for was fall publication and he had re belled at the thought of Stanley's having to spend another summer fa the city. Now it would not be nec essary. That's settled then. WeH motor up Friday afternoon. Think of any one else who would add anything to the occasion t" Perry inquired hopefully. Td like to ask Valerie Blair if you didn't mind. Perry. Stanley spoke suddenly the words follow ing the thought swiftly. "Ton mean that young person who always takes to her heels the minute I arrive? I'm sure she dis likes me. Fve worried about it a tot. Women dont usually run away " That's because legs in repose aave become an asset." "Shut up, Dennis, I was about to say something John Harmon might have found osefuL But about this Valerie person do you think she'd come, Stan?" "She might. If she did you'd love her. Why not ask her?" "Under those circumstances, why aotf Will you do it, or shall I ? "1 think you'd better leave it to me," Stanley decided. Tell her we're aJJ perfectly harmless even Nigel isn't nearly as subtle as he looks. It's the way his hair grows in a peak oa his forehead." Dennis looked at her watch and stood up. "It seems to be sis o'clock the zero hour. The only thing you can possibly do at six o'clock is go home and get ready to go somewhere else. Come on. Nigel." Tm toddlin' toe give you a lift Perry slid off the table, fol lowed them to the door. "Friday afternoon, then. Ill pick you and John Harmon up, Stanley. You'll drive Dennis up, 1 suppose, Nigel t" Ex-Nurseryman Helped Salem To Cain Fame W. W. Walker, pioneer Salem nursery-man and resident of 308 North 24 th street for 43 conse cutive years, died at his home Wednesday noon at the age of 85 years. Born In Tennessee, March 16, 184 9. at an early age he moved to Arkansas where in 1871 he was married to Sarah Tuck. Leaving Arkansas for the west ern frontier they finally settled In Oregon 45 years ago. Many varieties of fruits and flowers which flourish here now were Introduced to this locality by Walker, who after many years as a nurseryman here organized the Donald Nursery company 23 years ago, of which he served as president until his retirement in 1921. His family and friends cherish the fact that he was In strumental in earning for Salem its fame as a beautiful city. He is survived, by his widow, Sarah, four children, Airs. W. H. Clark of Salem, Mrs. H. N. Goode of Donald, Mrs. E. J. Sperry and D. C. Walker of Portland, and seven grandchildren. DISCUSS TRUCK CODE C. Thomas Giffen, president of the Association of Commercial Truck Owners, and other associa tion representatives discussed re quirements of NRA codes for the various branches of the trucking CHAPPED HANDS tT eialcUy relieve Wy etkaV eolUg tUmthoUUmm. his Woman Tf ft agreeable to Dennis." Aa Stanley closed the door after them. Dennis reply floated back lightly. "Driving with you ia always agreeable, Nigel and restful. One feels so safe with you when you "XfB ba fun, wont ft, John Har mon T" Stanley asked; having quite ciosea tea door. -"Perry'a partyT Ton bet. 1 hope Valeria will go." "Thin I hope so too." They looked at each other aad smiled they were vary happy these days. a a a And the tmaring thing was flat Valeria did go. Just why aha did she was aarar Quite aura of her- salt M first ana bad laughed at the idea aad refused flatly. Then, ror ao apparent reason- at an, aha bad frowned a bit and consented. And now ft was Friday after noon and aha was sitting beside Ferry, fiyfnc along aver a white ribbon of a road, that waa carrying them awtruy o the Hudson. Be hind la the rumble seat Stanley and John Harmon ware being beca- uioiiy punished with wind and sun shine and enjoying ft immensely. . "You know, I'm awfully glad you saw your way to coming with us," Perry told Valeria presently. "You've never seemed very friend ly. I waa beginning to think you didn't uke my profile, or my neck' ties, or something." "No, I just objected to you on general principles," ahe assured him gravely. Too much money, too much leisure, too good-looking there must be a catch somewhere." Perry laughed and looked at this girl more closely out of the tail of his eye. She was gazing straight ahead aad all he could see of her face was the tip of her chin, the rather arrogant tilt of her nose and a golden scoop of hair which eluded her close little hat to blow saucily against the curve of one cheek. There was also a flare of golden lashes and a half of a provocative red mouth. Perry thought he was going to enjoy his ride immensely. He was glad it was April, glad he was alive and glad it had occurred to him to arrange this party. He was also glad it had occurred to Stanley to ask Valerie Blair. There Is," he admitted soberly, going back to their conversation. "I have a perfect passion for red socks and I abominate French pas try. Now you know the worst and eaa proceed accordingly. Aside from that, though, I'm not half bad." "In that case," confided Valerie just as seriously, "I shall probably be glad I came." But she most certainly was not prepared for what ahe found. She gasped a little as Perry's ear swung through wide-opened iron gates and up a smooth gravel drive, at the beauty that was Gray Towers at sundown. Set close to the ground. a naming sun turned full upon its gray wans, its clinging ivy. and its mollloned windows, surrounded by wide chimneys, flagstone walks and clipped hedges, it awaited them serenely; while behind it, dosing it quite in, accenting it with a sort of aching beauty, was the amethyst of the Adirondack, piled up against tne pink and gold of an April aky. "It's beautiful," breathed Valerie softly, catching her breath sharply, "ifs like something in an art gal lery or a cathedral or some thing." "I know a bit like a stained glass window," Perry agreed quiet ly. Then added in a slightly dif ferent voice, "We've made good time. IH have a chance to take a look at the new work before di li ner.' John Harmon, coming into their room late the next afternoon from a solitary tramp, found Stanley sit ting in front of a lovely Chippen business at a meeting of approxi mately 60 truck operators at tt.e chamber of commerce Wednesday, Giffen suggested that representa tives of each type of trucking get together and appoint committees to draw up tentative codes for submission to code officials. Other speakers Included C. C. Thomp son, vice-president: Tom Wood, district manager, and Herman Lafky. TO TALK FARM PESTS WHEATLAND, March 8. Ag ricultural pests and their destruc tion will be the subject of a talk by Ray Antrim of Aloha, Wednes day night, March 14, at the Wheatland hall. Roy R. Hewitt of Salem, will also talk on Important topics of the time. The public is invited. CLASS PLANS BENEFIT SILVERTON, March 8. The Sisterhood class of the Methodist church will hold a noon luncheon March 14 and the proceeds from 43 A3 J3 LIQUID, TABLETS, SALVE NOSE DROPS Checks Colds first day. Headaches or Neuralgia in SO minutes. Malaria in 3 days. Fine Laxative and Tonic Most Speedy Remedies Known War on Rats Buy RATSKWILL Kill your rats and mice with RATSKWILL. Ratskwlll will get rid of your rats and mice, yet it ia not a poison ... it is harmless to domestic animals and human beings. Rata cost the American people millions of dollars annually. They also car ry every communicable disease such as Hydrophobia, Equine Influenza and Bubonic Plague.' Dont let the rats exist on your premises . . . use Ratskwill. Price 50c Sold by. Slentz and Mann Feed Mill Woolpert & Xegg, Drugs By ALLENE CORLISS dale dressing-table, radiant from a day fa the open air and a hot bath. She was leaning forward to touch her face, with powder and aha' smiled at aim, from the depths of the old mirror. He came and stood just behind her and looked dowa at her gravely. ' "You're vary lovely, Stanley." "You're very kind, John Har mon." She chose to be mockingly serious. "You know," ha want oa swiftly, ignoring her flippancy, "yon belong in a room like this, ia a bouse Uke this. Ton belong with old mahog any and candlelight and rose gar dens. I wonder e&ould you erer have left them I" Stanley laid her powder-puff down slowly, swung around and met his eyes levelly. ' "What sort of nonsense are you talking now, John Harmon t There's only one place where 1 belong it's in aa eld lovely room and it baa a cherry table and two blue candles and pots filled with primroses. Oh, John Harmon, dont be a snob!" She laughed a little shakily, held up her hands to aim. He took them swiftly, bent aver her. "I'm not, dear, I just want you to be happy. More than anything else in the world, I want you to be that I wish I could give you mora. There are times, Stanley, when I wonder if I will ever be able to. I'd like to think that perhaps some day I might." She reached up, drew his head down quickly. She didn't want to see his face just then she knew only too well what she would sea there; knew he wasnt thinking of old mahogany, or candlelight, or rose gardens knew he was think Ing of Drew. "We've given each other a lot, John Harmon, we've given each other honesty and understanding. We might so easily have missed that and lost so much." "I know. Well always have that, won't we, Stanley! Nothing less?" "Nothing less," she told him with a little catch in her voice and she gave him her lips suddenly. A little later, having finished dressing, she went across the hall to Valerie's room. She found Val erie, still in her wool skirt and sweater, standing at one of the wide-open windows, staring out into a drifting twilight. Time to dress, Val," she told her and was startled at what she saw in Valerie's face when the girl swung around to her abruptly. "I shouldn't have come, Stan." she said in a curiously unaccented little voice. "You shouldn't have asked me. It's going to be the devil going back." "What are you talking about, Val, I don't understand?" Stanley stared at her with puzzled eyes. "No, you wouldn't You're dif ferent you've been different from the very beginning. Things don't matter to you like they do to me, I've known that for a long time. You're made of finer stuff than I am, Stan." She shrugged slightly, turned back to the window. That's perfect rot Val. What ever is the matter with you?" Stan ley spoke sharply. "It's this place, the sheer, perfect beauty of itl It's what I've wanted all my life." She faced Stanley again, her eyes grim in a set little face. "I can't remember when I didn't dream about places like this; and then, just when I had begun to realize it was an a dream, here it is come true. This beautiful room, those lovely curving stairs. Stanley, I d love to walk down those stairs in a stiff taffeta gown, I'd love to pour tea In that dinu old drawing room, I'd love to walk among the roses in the rose garden in the sunshine, Stanley, in the moonlight and Tve got to leave it all. Now perhaps you understand why I wish I hadn't come. I can be hard about beauty," CT Be Continued) CoDTrtvnt. 1932. kv Allow CsrltM Distributed by King Feature Syndicate. lac thla will go toward the class' share in the expense of the new ly added balcony to the Methodist church. Mrs. M. M. McCullough is president of this group. KAFOURVS Quitting Business We are going out of business in Salem and are offering the greatest values at lowest prices ever. Thrifty women will save at this sale. Check These Values! Buy Now and Save! New Organdie Blouses All Colors 98c Suede Jackets for Spring A Few Left $4.95 A Few Expensive DRESSES Left - Prices Cut to Sell at IV95 $10.95 U to Kayser Undies 49c KAFOURVS 155 NORTH Bits r or ByJt. J. Three 4aya front ? Canemak . to capital in 18S7; when . Salem had under 1000 people: " H ?Tf 4 Vj . .; (Continuing from yesterday:) Reverting t the big fire of 18 5: It "started ; fn tha r of Plam ondon's saloon." Tihia- was IB. M. Plamandon, a relative of the Pla mondon prominent in Hudson Bay company affairs north of the Columbia, v v.- '; Ha afterward narfTa partner In the saloon business, and the firm was Plamondon A Stimpson in 1871. Plamondon died, and, G. W. Stimpson carried on alone. He was called "Wash" Stimpson. He conducted tha moat respectable place of the kind In Salem, in the eighties and beyond. If all sa loons had been like that of "Wash" Stimpson, the state and nation would not have gone dry. And "wet" conditions now and hereafter would be less objec tionable than they are or are likely to be under any system present or proposed, with men of the Stimpson character in com plete control and full charge, t Where was "May's Marion hotel," at which O'Meara put up and had such sociable company in the shape of cooties of pioneer breed? He was not Sam May, men tioned later on. That hotel was on one of the four corners south of the historic four so often men tioned in this column, where Fer ry and Commercial streets meet. The May hostelry was either on the southeast, southwest or northwest corner of Commercial and Trade streets. R. P. Boise of Salem has viv id boyhood memories of those three picneer hotels, and espe cially of the arrival of the pio neer stages from the south, down the muddy South Commercial street hill, and further down the declivity into and through South Mill creek and up the equally steep north bank of that stream. Stage travelers then had the choice of the three stopping places, while the nyiddy stages and tired teams were quickly around the present Marion ho tel corner and landed at the pio neer stage station, on the site of the present armory. All Oregon history students know who General M. M. McCar ver was; early pioneer of four states, Iowa, Oregon, California and Washington. He laid out Burlington, Iowa, Linnton, Ore gon, and Tacoma, Wrash. "Old" Tacoma is on the McCarver dona tion land claim. He was with the Applegate 1843 covered wagon train to Oregon. S " Rev. Thos. H. Pearne was one of the big men of early Oregon Methodism. He almost went to the U. S. senate torn Oregon. If he was "an Englishman by trade," he was an American by profession, and choice. The letter in The Statesman of July 18, 1857, by Judge George H. Williams was his declaration of divorce from the democratic party the republican party was a-bomlng, and the Douglas dem ocrats were driving the entering wedge of their split. That letter had great significance. It was one of the straws in the wind of the oncoming Civil war. It indicated the trend that was to sweep Ab raham Lincoln into the presiden cy, with democratic Oregon for him. Hon. Sam Parker was a large figure in these big movements that were gathering force. O'Meara's reference to Parker as of Sublimity is beyond interpre tation by the writer. Was not O'Meara's memory again faulty in this? The Griswold brick, "finest building in Salem" in 1857, was originally two stories, and the en trance to the Statesman office on the second floor was up an out side stairway from State street. Afterward, a third story was added, and it is now the Murphy block, southwest corner of Com mercial and State. On the second All Costume , Jewelry v2 Price House Dresses All Sizes Vat Dyed 89c All Silk Hose New Shades 79c One Lot of Silk and Rayon and Mercerized Hose for Sport and Garden Values to 79c 12 19c No Refund.? No Exchanges LIBERTY ST. Mask area HENDRICKS floor, ia the old days, waa the main theatre ot tha town; the pec odd theater, aa such, to be estab lished in Salem.! r : ' Dr. Belt waa A." M. Belt, father ot tha late Mrs. Judge Geo. II. Burnett; and of other prominent pioneer children. He joined tha California gold rush, and prac ticed medicine in the mines in a tent. The Dr. Belt family home In the seventies was at the north west corner of Cottage and Union streets, and Dr. Belt had a dona tion land claim in the hills; near the old home of Territorial Gov ernor ' Gaines; also close to the present Skyline orchard. V W "Uncle Dan Waldo owned the hills and scolded the preachers." This pioneer of the 1S43 (Apple- LORRAINEand SPRING are here together Lorraine with a full line of lovely new gar ments in that dainty fabric which wears so unbelievably well. Deb O'Ray, a permanently dull, serviceable, pure dye, knitted fabric. PAJAMAS 1 and 2-piece, pastel and high colors GOWNS Lace trim and tailored, full sweep fitted : Lace trim band and pantie legs PANTIES Fitted, and elastic top, applique trim and lace ... GREATER SHIPLEY STORE Shipleys for Shoes Just Telephone 7773 CAPITAL CITY 226 State St. Why the Brown's party was a flop! Everybody agrees that the Browne are nice people cicwy frown ' their men home! The Browns have sensed this feel ing, too, and have come to the conclusion that their furnace ia at fault. They're wrong it' their fuel. When prodded, it roars away like mad, bat is soon smothered by its own ashes. Then Mr. Brown shakes it again, and, m lot of unburned fuel drops down into the ash pit. They paid a good price for this fuel. They would have saved money on Gaaeo Briquet would hare known the comfort and enjoy ment of steady, even heat and would never have had ashes, clinkers or wasted fuel to carry ontl Caseo Briquets are ideal for any furnace that takes solid fuel! Without elaborate control Iiumi'i 1 l ajfcHaaBiaMaaaiMjaiMagJHaMMHgp ALWAYS AVAILABLE . at ; V , . , . . i . ' ... 4... Larmer Transfer & Storage SToHo. sasn gate) j covered, wagon train, for whom the Waldo hills was named,-1' was in line : with1 his preacher; scolding when he complained that' no Christian cemetery would give burial to the bodies of Beale and" -Baker, hanged in 1865; so he took them and, ' all historical writers have recorded -made graves for them on his land near the- present Macleay. No- doubt the Beale body was buried there, and perhaps that of Baker temporarily. But the Bits man believes the body ot Baker found final resting place over the fence near the Rock Creek ceme tery, not far from Needy, Clack amas county. Baker's wife was Kate KiUln. The Killins lived near there. Baker had a son who lived in that neighborhood. Later a road was laid out that brought Baker's grave in the road, and his bones were moved over the fence, into a field. A man living there now helped move the grave. Some day, when his hours are not so full of work, the Bits man will (Turn to Page 11) -f .39 2-25 .98 COMBIES and tailored, brassiere top, -f .29 -f .49 r9 1 69c Bloomers Regulation style 69c 59c Vests Form fitted , SPECIAL Ladies' Shorts Bloomers, Vests By Lorraine 55c 2 for. $1.00 Shipleys for Hosa for TRANSFER CO. Phone 7773 devices, they maintain steady eveq temperature in your home both day and night. When you 'next need fuel, compare the advantages of any other fuel with those of Gasco Briquets 1. A 100 petroleum fuel ideal for furnace, fireplace or stove. (No special equipment needed.) 2. Highest heat content of mny solid fuel. S. No banking or shaking I Hold fire day or nighti 4. No ashes or clinkers to carry out. 5. One ton of Briquets gives as much heat as two cords of first-growth fir; costs less per season than best Utah and Wyoming coal. Ah the dealer in your city for a 100-lb. trial sack at the introductory price of $JJH. $2