Tbm OZLGQIl STATESMAN. Satan. Oregon. Saturday Morning. July 21. 1M3
"Wo Favor Strays ls; No Fear Shall Xwi"
' From First Statesman, March 28, 1831 ;
- : ! ..: - - :
.THE STATESMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY
- J CHARLES A SPRAGUE, Editor and Publisher 1 1
Member of the Associated Press - i
The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for publication of all;
news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper.'
I -I
? manors icaui
Kussfa and the Chinese Communists
The Medord Mail -Tribune offers, as an ex
planation of why the Chungking government
nd the Chinese communists of Kennan do not
get together,' the assertion that the communists
"take their orders from Moscow and riot from
Chungking.! I J.
We know of no foundation for such a claim.
The apologists for the communists, Edgar Snow
and Agnes Smedley, make no such represents-,
tion. Nor has there been any indication that
Russia was slipping favor or supplies , to the
Chinese "reds." .
. While it is difficult to get at the exact truth,
the impression we have from our reading on
both sides of the communist-Chungking imbro
glio is that the Chinese communists are quite
independent politically and self-sufficient eco
nomically. They are not bolsheviks after the
"old bolshevik" manner in Russia. Private
property rights are still respected; The journal
ists who defend them claim they are more demo
cratic than Chungking, 'j
" Russia itself has done very little to provide
supplies for the Chinese in their war against
Japan. They did furnish some stuff before their
own involvement in Europe, but riot much since.
Whether Russia is now going to fall on one side
or the other is another of the ;secrets of the
Kremlin. The answer may be made at Potsdam
now; perhaps Premier T. V. Soong heard it on
his recent visit in Moscow. Or ft may be that
an answer may be: found in China itself, for a
communist emissary has returned to the capital
for further discussions with the ruling party
there. , ,
Our own government has put its backing be
hind Chiang Kai-shek. We question whether
Stalin will want to offend this country by taking
an opposing attitude.- The enigma, however, is
one whose unfolding may affect vitally the
whole future of East Asia. '
Threat of Lumber Strike
J The AFL lumber and sawmill workers' union
nrnrvMoe trt nclr thm WI.PR nn Tulv 9ft fnr a ctril
vote to back up its demand for wage increases
running! from 20 ce,nt to 37 Vi cents per hour.
If the request is granted, the labor board will
conduct the vote among union members 30 days
afterward. I
This strike threat is giving concern to the lum
ber industry which is now up to its neck
turning out lumber for war, and should give
concern to the war production .board and the
army and navy because of the urgent need for
lumber for military purposes. It-is put down
now a perhaps the most critical material.
We do not see how-the workers could stage
strike now in the face of the known need for
lumber. They are patriotic citizens with sons
and relatives in the service and are as anxious
to have the war with Japan pressed through to
victory as any group. We simply refuse to be
lieve they will put the country; in jeopardy by
actually calling a strike, even though they make
all the steps preliminary thereto.
Likewise we do not see how the government
can permit a strike in the lumber industry now.
The war situation is too critical, j We are mount
ing the final assault on Japan,! and lumber is
essential to support that assault lumber for
barracks, for warehouses. I for docks, fnr rrf
nd boxes. H , . ' ,
Some way must be found to head off a walk- ,
out. The workers in woods and mills who have
made such a good record hitherto must not spoil
that record and endanger early victory by laying
down axe and saw at this juncture in the war.
Editorial Comment
JAPANESE RESISTANCE j
Sydney newspapers looking' in a crystal ball pre
dict "big news" pretty soon. Possibly they are not
quite sure what they saw, for they offer a choice
of two eventualities. One is Japan begging for
peace; the ether is Russia jumping into the war.
The suggestion., that Japan will cave down the -bank
immediately is one to be viewed with caution.
All w know about the Japanese and what they are
likely to do is based on what they have done before.
They have never been quick to surrender; in fact. In
their three previous historic wars they did not quit.
Even in the face of Kublai Khan, the most powerful
monarch f his time, they had nothing but defiance.
In the present war, no matter how badly beaten,
they have not surrendered enough to notice.
' There is another feature, hrnhahl imnnHnt tv.
Japanese have a supreme confidence that they can
mash the enemy. Tbey have been telling us about
it all through this war. They were going to- anni
hilate us at Guadalcanal; In the Philippines they
would drive us into the sea; on Saipan they would
tear ua to nlm: m nkinm tK. j
" j .vviuu US
to powder. . !
This is possibly not so funny as the recital would
indicate. It sounds like whistling in the graveyard
to keep up the national spirits. It can be that the
Japanese bebeve that sooner or later they will deal
ii Amvaiatin ttlnur ...ill j:
- - .- - . win malum age us ana
make us quit. If this has failed to come each time
they have predicted it so far, that only means to
them that the right moment has not arrived.
. Tokyo is now saying the Americans will be
crushed either in the surf or after they have landed.
i nui mm w vm iw uio mai uiey do not think
so. When Kublai Khan demanded their surrender,
they chopped off the heads of his envoys and met
him In the surf and on the beaches. They bad no
great army then; nothing to compare with the
TChan'a in nrranfTattstn rui atriTI
It is also not safe to think an invasion of Japan -will
be easy. The landing and the subjection of the
Islands may be a tougher operation than Normany
and Germany. This time the Japanese have an
estimated 9,000,000 troops on the home islands, with
plenty of arms. With a firm belief that they can
defeat invasion, they are most likely to .fight to the
bitter end," Okinawa aain. on a vastly greater
scaledSan Francisco Chronicle. . .
"In the Groove?
The Baker Democrat-Herald thinks that be
cause of Franklin Roosevelt's breaking the two
term precedent "it .needj not be surprising if
future White House occupants strive for as many
terms as they can win." Not surprising, no; but
surprising if they can succeed. For the Roose
velt fourth-term precedent will jserve to blight
many a hope of continuation ini office. , Roose
velt's death at the beginning of his fourth term
will be cited to show the physical strain of the
presidency; and the j record - to date made by
Harry Truman pretty well explodes the 'findis
pensable man' theory. Moreover, we. hope that
we will have no more wars in ! election jyears,
so the plea of "don' swap horses'f may not be
dragged out to perpetuate a man, in office.
All this is speculative. .;The two-term prece
dent has been broken. We must admit it is quite
conceivable that men may be elected three or
even more times tojj the presidency. - However,
the country has survived the FDR reign, though
with constitutional precedents warped and debt
multiplied ; so we should not assume that a fu
ture ' multiple-term president would spell the
country's doom. " if . .. I ; j.:
The pertinent political -question for republi
cans' and new dealers is ihis man Truman. So
far he has been clicking with the people, with
congress, with politicians and businessmen. New
dealers are left with their jaws hanging (Henry
Wallace in particular) ;' and republicans no
longer are laying bets on 1948. Truman is doing
a good job of carrying out the Dewey platform
(Perkins, Morgenlhu, Biddle, vith Ickes up).
Herbert Brownell, republican national chair
man, predicts a republican congress after tha
1946 election and a republican president irr 1948.
We doubt if he is laying a"nyi bets on j either
score, however. ' :' f- j j
Anyhow politics is "bai?k in the' groove." The.
age of Roosevelt mysticism is passed.
PiatrBVvtai Vf Eias 9Wni 9rmHmt I . .'
OWI Report on Northwest ?
OWI got in bad jwith Kansas and , Nebraska
because it deprecated their industrial develop
ment in the pamphlet it prepared for distribu
tion In Russia. It puts emphasis on power de
velopment out here which is correct; and then
it refers to the mineral resources of the; north
west which it reports have: been "scarcely
touched." ; ' I! !-. H ' ' i
That is pretty much bunk. . We have pretty
well extracted the supplies of rich virgin metals.
The Butte copper mines are high-cost operations
now. The lead-silver mines in .north Idaho are
still producing, but- no new districts arf being
discovered. . j - I j f '
We are always hearing people talk about "un
tapped mineral resource when actually there
never were many such resources in the area to
Ot course there are still stores of minerals to
come out of the earth out here; but the place for
their discovery is more probably in the labora
tory than in the field: discovery of new processes
to use crude minerals. K " t I M '
Interpreting
The War! News
.By KIRKE L. SIMPSON
AatodaUd Pra-War Analyst
ft ; " '
Two developments in China throw into high re
lief a prediction by Premier T. V. Soong that the
Japanese war would end this year or early in 1946.
They are:. . - jj f. ; j r:
The first American air strike from the Pacific at
Japanese airfields in the Shanghai area; and a sig
nificant suggestion from Chungking that a potential
sea supply line for .'Chinese troops now exists in
southern Kwangtung. S i Is
Although fresh from conferences in Moscow with
Generalissimo Stalin. Soong gave no intimation to
the Chungking audience he addressed that any defi
nite decisions affecing Russo-Chinese relations had
been reached to account , for his optimism. It is
certain, nevertheless; that nothing was said at Mos
cow to decrease his expectation of a far earlier end
of the war in Asia than 1 as yet contemplated in
Anglo-American high command circles.
Chinese seizure of a 50-mfle-wlde stretch of the
coast of South China between Tinpak and Yeung
kong, southwest of Canton, caused; the Chungking
command to note that the way was now open in
Kwangtung for a seaborne invasion. To form an
effective junction With main Chinese armies west
of the failing Japanese. Hankow-Canton corridor,
however. South , China ports farther west In the
Gulf of Tonkin would seem necessary. In that con
nection the reported Chinese capture of Mon Cay
in the extreme northeastern tip of French tndo
China could lead to greater results than the clear
ing of the Kwangtung coast east of Tinpak.;
Mon Cay is linked by highway with a stretch of
the Hanoi-Nanning tiuchbw railway all in Chines
hands. It and paralleling roads could serve as a
feeder for arms and equipment fox the whole south
ern wing of Chinese armies itorming persistently
at Japanese 'corridor defenses holding open the
Hankow-Canton cotfhectiohs. j i j j
Japanese loss of (Changsha Would cut all enemy
forces in South China off completely by land as
:they-are now. cut' off by aea. L, I ' ; jh j .
There is much to Indicate that Chinese strategy
in the south is aimed at iiltimate clearance of the
whole Kwangtung and Tonkin gulf coasts of enemy'
forces as the. most promising means of direct sea
communications for an inflow of battle equipment
and supplies on a scale adequate! to Chines needs.
Mon Cay is the only southern port in Chinese hands
as yet with direct ! road or rail connections with
Chungking main armies. : :.'-5 I ' ! r
The port still is completely masked by Hianan
island and the Japanese-held extremity of the Liu
chow penninsula. They are in easy range f Ameri
can air power based in the Philippines, however, to
supplement American 14th air force operations
from China."" V I, , ;' -?V'
Far to the north : in Shantung air strikes in the
Shanghai area by American Okinawa-based bomb
ers must serve to intensify Japanese expectation of
ah allied amphibious advance on that hub ot enemv
occupation ia northern tSina. :
Tho Litorary
GuidopoGt
j By W. Q. Rogers t
SPEAK OF THBS DBVO, adttcd y
Stariinf Narth aad C. B. BoataU
Daklaar, Draa; S3).
A couple of 'newspaper boys
havej raised the devil from his
numerous literary lairs. North
i and Boutell, book editors of the
Newj York Post, have collected
34 Items of fiction, poetry and
drama having to do with Satan,
whom- they find, after consid
erable diabolical research, "in
league with creative mankind
even, anthologists."
John Collier alone - makes
three contributions, one of them
thatj creepy masterpiece "Thus
I Refute Beelzy.'; Baudelaire, '
Goethe, Marlowe, ! Milton and
Dante, as you might expect, arc
represented, but some of ' the :
other names are surprises. The
editors are impartial, showing
Satan both winning and wors
ted. They have preceded each ,
- section Foreign Devils, Faust,
Satan in America, what they
smartly call the "Djinn Bottle"
and ; so on with helpful and
entertaining comments. And as
you I might have guessed, the
jacket design is by Salvador Da-
u; I -
It's all a good job of giving
the devil his due.
1 !;:
IT SHOULDN'T HAPPKN , fcy Dae
Fraeinaa (Hareenrt, Braee, ft).
And it woudn't have, without
Freeman's smart pencil. Pvt. Al
bert! C. Bedlington, Jr., goes -to
Army camp and starts through
the ropes. It's a dog's life, he dis
covers, and logically enough he
turns into a dog.
But being a; dog in a man's
world has its problems, too, as he
finds out in various adventures
on furlough. .Freeman, who evi
dently reads the newspapers, lets
Al joccupy a ' berth and that
brings a senate investigation. In
the end, it all makes a man of
Al and he's off to the wars.
Freeman tells his story in few
words and many pictures; he's
good at writing, grand at draw
ing. Tha doghouse for you if you
don't read it. I i
CH'' :' P00 ClvHian .
'SV.'C'.-CS&SCU ! VdJd. ln MiUlatr j
V
-er
- ;
Kenneth Dixon
By Kenneth L. Dixon
OCCUPIED GERMANY-()-Trying
to operate a civilian
type vehicle in i the army zone
is ; getting as F
compli c a t d
these days as fi
running an in
terstate truck
line back home.
Down in the
seventh army
territory such
vehicle are re
gistered by a
special number
which must be
displayed pro
minently usually painted on
me radiator or hood. Before the
ninth army was dissolved, that
system was abandoned and li
cense plates were issued with
white numbers on a red back
ground.' - ' :
Operating n the Bremen
area, it also Is necessary to get
a windshield i sticker or the
MP's will be Ion your tail re
gardless of whether you have
one of the other two types of
registration. J ,
;- There are several other meth
ods of identification and regis
tration and for most all of them
you must apply through the pro
vost marshal's office or the mili
tary government deoartment.
Then after a i brief delay (also
reminiscent of i civilian days)
your license comes through and
is issued to you. . ,
- The only difference is that you
don't have to pay for it V.
der to reach the roof where the
pole was located. Now they are
operating from a standard flag
pole on the ground and all is
well. j '
With the war over they usu
ally have the division band
playing when they raise the flag
in the morning and bring it
down at night or at least a
bugler. ' r j
"The trick," said Coleman, "is
to begin bringing the flag down
when the band plays the first
note and have it completely
down on the last note."
THINK IT OVKK. MATS, T
, etTTla. 1TSMCJI (Mill; SIJU).
Advice to the sailor on how to
keep out of the brig. and off a
diet; of peas and punk, and what
the j penalties ar If he. ignores
th advice. At least our Navy Is
more humane than some navies
used to be; it doesn't make th
punishment fit th crim go
Sgt Frank. S. Coleman of
Bartlesville, Okla., and PFC.
Otto W. Winklman of Pine
Bluff, Arte, are the 84th divi
sion's official flag raisers whose
Job it is to see that th Stars and
Stripe, float each day over the
command post "
Sometimes they practically
have to be acrobats to do the
job. Back at Bad Pyrmont,
Germany, they had to climb
four flights of stairs and a lad-
dosely that, if you kill a
aboard ship, you ar tied to the
body and thrown into the sea,
as you would hav been once.
GRIN AND BEAR IT
By Lichty
.; i . i - . -
- k?' " ."rvvwk ..... . - -
mm! Jk
i
f .V. jSB
I
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ill
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Meat Scarcity
Not Felt Much
In Honolulu
. HONOLULU, July 20-(i!p)-Nine-ty
thousand customers went home
with smiles on their faces and an
estimated 300,000 pounds of fresh
meat under their arms.
The x90,000 smiles and 300,000
pounds of meat marked the inau
guration yesterday of a new dis
tribution plan under which all
markets sell their limited stock
on the same day.
Previously, explained; Charles
Patty, territorial director of meat
control, the markets . staggered
their meat days and 1 customers
would jump from one to another.
Under the new management,' he
said, every customer gets two to
three pounds, depending on the
six of his family.
Despite the scarcity, Patty said,
Honolulu Is much better off than
the mainland. f
There is no point system of ra
tioning food in Hawaii.;
And fee ear wedding and honeymoon I've planned en Aagnst 15,
cloudless, with fcrUliaat sunshine, eoatlautnr without change foe
- - 1 days. '
Peter Stef f in
Dies Thursday
After Illness
SILVERTON Peter Steffen,
84, prominent farmer in this dis
trict for th past tt years, died at
bis home here Thursday follow
ing an extended Illness. ; '
Staff en. was bom in Bern, Ind4
and cam to Sihrertoq at the age
of 12. He married Rose Leichty,
daughter of a pioneer Howell
Prairie family, nearly 60 years
ago, and sine then - th couple
has mad their home at th farm
on- rout two.;; '.. ': r
Regarded by many in this area
as an excellent farmer, he was
active in his work until shortly
before his death. He was one of
th founders of th Pratum Men
nonit church and ' had been ' ac
tive in church affairs.
Surviving are the .widow, four
children, Lena E. Clark, Dan A
Steffen and Ellen F. Steffen, all
of Silverton, and Oliver E. Stef
fen of Roseburg; nine grandchil
dren, and also several nieces and
nephews who reside at Howell
Prairie. ... - : ' r-
Funeral services will - be held,
at the; Pratum Mennonite church
Monday at 2 p.m. with , Rev. WI1-'
beA Regler officiating. Conclud
ing services will be at the Pratum
cemetery under the direction of
th W.-T. Rigdon company. -
Brin
Of
Arrest
Attendants
WASHINGTON, July 20-()-
A coroners jury today t oraerea
three attendants : held for grand
iury : action in connection with
the death of a sailor mental pa
tient at the - government-operated
St Elizabeth's hospital. -
The sailor. Seaman 2c Clark
J. Leeper 22, formerly of Phoe
nix. : Arir., died Wednesday or, a
ruptured illver, ; Deputy Coroner
Christopher J. Murphy; said, ijee-
per's parents now , live at Kicn
mond, Calif. , I ;
It had been disclosed previous.
ly by. hospital authorities that an
investigation was . under way to
ascertain the circumstances un
der -which Howard J. Crandall,
21. of San Diego, Califs a . dis
charged sailor, had died at the
hospital. ' i V : i "
The, three attendants held for
the grand jury, with! individual
bonds set rat $1500, were:
Fred a Brown, 40; Lloyd L.
Lacey, 50 and Samuel H. SelgeL
38. . 4.. r.-.: - '
Witnesses at th coroner's
hearing said Seaman Leeper had
become 'iipset'. after i being de
nied the privilege of walking
about the hospital grounds be
cause he i made a "nuisance" of
himself, f " i "( :
Four attendants were . required
to plac him in seclusion, James
Carter, a hospital supervisor said,
and furniture in : Leeper's room
was ordered removed, ! along with
his clothing.' j
The sailor subsequently Lwas
found unconscious.- 1
Cecil C Morris, a hospital at
tendant, testified at the coroner's
hearing that he saw Brown and
Lacey strike Leeper, and that he
saw; Seigel kick the seaman once
in the side. . ' j . '!.'.
Morris i testified that in his
opinion 1 the j sailor I was only
"stubborn" and that the blows
were "unprovoked.' ;
Dr. Winfred Overholser, super
intendent of the hospital, said he
wanted a complete investigation
of the entire situation, because
"we won't tolerate mistreatment
of patients ! -
Overholser disclosed that Cran
dall died ; about two ' weeks ago
from peritonitis which developed
from a stomach injury. H said
the ! death was attributed to in
juries received in a struggle June
30 when "he escaped temporarily
from the; hospital grounds. ,
Sick Soldier's
Hanging
Bull Attacks Doctor
MEDFORD, f July v 20-Cff)-Dr.
Kenneth C ' FarleyV government
veterinarian, v was recovering to
day from injuries inflicted By a
bull he was 'testing. The enraged
animal attacked Farley, breaking
four of his ribs and causing head
and chest lacerations. -
By a Thread
FORTj WORTH, July 2H)
Corp. Jim Newman's life hunff bv
a thread; today, his father, O. F.
Newman; said, although the for
mer prisoner of the Japs was able
to eat a breakfast of eea and ba
con, and appeared to be resting
somewhat better than yesterday.
The 25-year-old ' soldier who
was-; brought i home from Bruns
General hospiUl, SanU Fe NM,
at his request slept all last night
after a group of ministers of his
faith Assembly of God prayed
at his bedside. j
At noon today young Newman
refused all food except a glass -of
The father and other members
of th family, all of whom ar
home-for the first time in years,
asked; that th Associated Press
express for them their "humble
thanks for the thousands of let
ters, telegrams and gift that hav
flowed into the little white home
from all over th nation, Canada
ana tiawau. ..! -
Newman is' sufferina from tu
berculosis and the effects of beri
beri, j V ir-1"-.. I--
Haycox Story May B
Filmed in Oregon
MEDFORD. July 20-fJrV-Can-
yon Passage," Ernest Haycox's
tal of -pioneer mining days in
Jacksonvill and th RosTue River
valley,-may be filmed at original
sites of the i story, the Jackson
County Chamber of Commerc
learned today. ;"
Henry Spitz of Walter Want er
Pictures,! Int, Universal City,
Calif., which owns screenplay
rights to the Saturday Evening
Post story, will survey the pioneer
mining community next week."
Governor Snell has assured th
company ot cooperation..
Testing Clinic
Will Operate
At Willamette
Willamette university's depart
ment of education, under the di
rection of Dr. Lawrence A. Riggs,
Is offering a special service this
summer for the benefit of the de
partment of public welfare, the
county health department and oth-
m mihlie agencies interested in
children. Between now and th
close of the summer semester, the
university Class- in Individual in
telligence ' testing will operate a
testing clinic The-program in
cludes the testing of more than
175 children. Following the tesU,
written reports are-prepared on
each child and are placed in the
hands of the appropriate welfare
workers to be used in their con
ferences with the child concerned.
In addition to the services to the
children and" to the- welfare ie
partment, this testing program al
io provides r an opportunity to
demonstrate Binet testing proced
ure for the benefit of teachers and
counsellors of young people ; who
seeks experience in testing and de
sire a greater understanding1 of
the use of tests in counselling.
i nr. Rices, head of the education
department at Willamette, came to
the Willamette faculty from Jonm
Hopkins university where he wai
also clinical advisor for the child
welfare department in Baltimore
Commenting upon this Service
of the education department, Dr
G. Herbert Smith, president of th
university, pointed out that then
were few place on the entire Pa.
cific coast where such a. servica
for children was available.
KOAC Slates
Safety
4H Program
. In observance of National Farm
Safety week July 22-28, radio
station KOAC will broadcast a
program, Monday night from
to 8 o'clock, James Bishop, coun
ty club agent announced Friday,
Participation of club members
in a special 4H farm safety con
test to prevent farm and home
accidents-gives- many opportuni
ties fori service and fine awards
are offered winners, states Bish
op. Club members interested may
obtain contest details from the
county club office in Salem.
; Others regular Monday night 4H
radio programs over KOAC are
as follows: July 30, Polk county,
Russell j T. Daulton, j assistant
county agent, in charge;' August
6, 4H livestock and ' crops tour
program, N. John Hansen, Linn
county "dub agent andv-S. Kirt
Skinner, Yamhill county club
agent, in charge; August 13, H. C.
Seymour, state club leader, speaks
on "What Is Doing in! 4H Club
Work for August, September,
and October;' August! 20, Linn
county, John Hansen in charge;
August ; 27, Benton county, J. A.
Sullivan, dub agent, in charge.
Oabrielson
Chef deGare
Of M et 8l
i Carl Oabrielson was elected
chef d gar of Marion county
voitur 153, Forty and Eight, at
that organization's annual atcotion
meeting Wednesday night at th
Uons .Den. Charles H. Huggins
was named chef de train: Jake
Fuhrer; commissar in Undent:
Louis' Griffith, correspondent i lo
cale; Al Feilen, conducteur; Char
les V. Johnson, garde la port;
Luther J. Jensen, conmii n.
geur; Carl Schneider, lampiste
Dr. 4.1 Q.' Van Winkle, median
locale; Walter Kirk, Dick Meyer
ana Marry Humphreys, cheml
nots local. .
Th newly elected effieer will
be instelled at th next meeting,
which Is to be held SatMw te
in Mt AngeL .J ; : .; . ... j .
Th voitur went on record id.
proving. th. appointment of Voy
ageur Hugh Rosaon asstat di-
recior of veterans' affairs. Ap
proximately 25 members signi
fied their intention nt ,Mm
the Corvallis barbecue July 28.
Fare! Reductions! Due
PORTLAND, July 20-)-Unit-ed
Air Lines has filed proposed
fare reductions between Portland
and major cities In Washington,
irmc manager J. H. Standish
said today. . :-:-.v
Th changes, if
- w - a-ar - wwwsva
b effective Aug. 20. .
arm
adio
i 4H
7:30
UATCIES
d STEVEI
V.
13 im&i
irtly styled ,in ffZWi
best ot taste, i --3 - V
1
1 Smartly
iin Beat nf tmm , s
" I
Th PractiVat r.Hi-
. . . a Watch. j Stardy, Accurate,
-dable '
Tiny, Beantifally
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; : ! TERMS .
GLADLY '
ARRANGED
TMM
23 COURT STREET
:!: i :
A; !