J " lThe fasnaiai,4kde0 . MERCHANT OF MENAGfe - - - v W Fouor Stray UJ No Feer Shaft Atee" From Firs Statesman. Alarce tl. IU1 : CHARLES A SPRAGUB, Editor and Publisher ;t - , raMisbed cruy fmrnr fwlim ffle XIS St Commcretai, Salem. Oregeal Telephone X-Z44L. Entered at the posto fries al Sakaa, Oresaa. aa teeeed class natter aader set ef CMXTcaa Carta 1. 1S71 v- Alternate on Reapportionment The sticker on legislative reapportionment is to get the legislature to act. Ours hasn't since 1911. As was argued in the constitutional con vention of members will not vote to put themselves (or their iellow members out of of fice. Various plans have been: -proposed to re quire action for reapportionment, udi as giving authority to the state board of control, to the secretary of state, and even to giving injunctive power to the supreme court. The most that was accomplished in the last legislature was to au thorize an interim committee to study and re port 'on the subject. ' The Eugene Register-Guard has picked up a new Texas plan for curing legislature's default. The gist of it is as follows: 1. Reapportionment is still a function of the - legislature, BUT - - , . 2. If the legislature fails to act. the dutierare delegated to a legislative re-districting board. 3. Members of this board are the lieutenant governor, speaker of the House, attorney gener al, the comptroller of public accounts and com missioner of the general land office. 4. Within 90 days after final adjournment of the legislature (if it has failed to reapportion), this board must meet and any three will consti-' tute a quorum. " ; 5. Any reapportionment adopted by the board has the force of law and does not require the governor's signature. C. The Supreme Court of Texas has the power t issue a writ of mandamus to compel action by the board if it tries to dodge. , This doesn't prescribe any loraula, but it does set up machinery for action. Reapportionment is primarily a legislative function and Texas has included two legislative officials on its board. In considering reapportionment . Oregon's ' interim committee should study the Texas plan, also those of other states, looking toward successive reapportionments by others than the legislature If the latter fails or refuses to function. In the face of that alternate legislators would get busy themselves. 4 " Tax Stimulus to Plant Construction The tax canopy extended by the 1950 law has induced many corporations to launch new con struction. Worst of the big steel companies ara in the swim with new plants, ajid on down the line to smaller concerns. First you get a. certifi cate of necessity from the government authority dealing with defense plants, and that permits accelerated amortization of facilities. Thus some axe able to write off the investment in five years. The tax advantage is attractive, but is not without its gamble. Thus a corporation which invests $1,000,000 with permission to amortize it all in five years can deduct $200,000 a year from Its income before being subject to corporation tax or excess profits tax. This might help the corporation escape the heavy excess profits tax. The catch however is that when the plant is fully depreciated no more can be deducted for this purpose. Thus in the sixth year the cor poration gets no charge-off for the investment. If by that time the excess profits tax has been cancelled or the corporation rate reduced then th company is ahead of the game. But suppose the rates are higher, then the corporation gets tuck. - ' - In the end the cost of the investment is charg ed against income, whether in five years or 20 tr 50 years. TVie acceleration of amortization does help the corporation in its financing if it is borrowing the money for the job. The lender will make better terms if he sees the money coming back in five years than if repayments are strung out over 29 years.! ; There is no doubt that the effect of this spe cial provision in the law has encouraged indus trial expansion and that some of it is very val uable in the business of rearming steel for ex ample; It is too early to say whether corpora tions have gained much tax-wise or not. In six years some may wish they hadn't asked for the certificates of necessity, f Britain's and Iran's! Dilemma Iran can confiscate the property of the Anglo Iranian Oil company, but it cannot force. the British employes to work at the great refinery at Abadan or in the adjacent oilfields. If they will not, then the Iran government would be up against it for competent technicians. It is doubt ful if Americans would move: in to take their places. The result may be the shutting down, temporarily at least, of the world's largest re finery. That would hurt the west as well as Iran. It would stop the flow of royalties which has kept the government afloat, and would stop the flow of fuel which powers British and European industry and shipping. Not a pleasant prospect . either way. - i The Iranians are flushed with their newly as serted power, and few cool heads may be found among them. The truculence of the Iranian offi cials in refusing to compromise with the repre sentatives of the oil company ..makes it difficult for bur Ambassador Grady to work out an agreement. -, Russia is hardly an immediate menace, unless military action is resorted to? because the oil fields are far from its borders; But the presence of Russia doubtless serves to estop Britain from resort to force. Maybe the cure is to turn the shutoff valves and let the operation go dark for a time. Wringing of hands over the British and Iranian dilemma will do little good; so about all we can do in this country is to let nature take its course. j 'I Selling YZeiglit" TaliesStock Prices tower fen JpF NEW YORK1 June 22 PJ-The weight " of selling was lust too heavy for the stock market to bear today, and prices sank. , , , OUs, rubbers, motors, steels, rails and chemicals all were lower, and Old Frontiers Beckon Marriner Eccles is one of the last of the brig ade brought to Washington in the early period of the new deal. A member of the famous Eccles family of Utah, he went to Washington in 1934 as assistant to the secretary ; of the treasury, ' but soon was shifted to the federal reserve board where he became chairman of the board in 1936. In 194 S President Truman dropped him as chair man but asked him to remain on the board. In his book published this week, "Beckoning Fron tiers" Eccles attributes his demotion to the op position of the Giannini banking interests in California, because the federal reserve board had initiated proceedings to break up the Trans america domination of west coast banking.' . In the war and postwar period Eccles and the board labored to the utmost to counter the for ces of inflation. They had. succeeding rows with the treasury department which finally went to the White house, and even the purported agree- . ment there was later challenged by Eccles. ,. Therefore the letter from President Truman acknowledging the resignation of Eccles is cou ched in cooly formal language. And -Eccles now. sees the old frontiers of Utah beckoning his re- ' turn, as once he saw opportunity for public service in Washington in the stirring days of the new deal ferment. t .In his letter to newspapers Rep. Harris Ells worth pooh-poohs the stories about the China lobby. Ellsworth is the one who couldn't find a farm lobby in Washington a few years ago. Yugoslavian Leaders Tough, Nationalistic Not Bad Friends to Have in a. Tight Spot 1 6 By Joseph AImp BELGRADE, June 22 What manner of men are the leaders of the new Yugoslavia? It is Important to know, since -this little Balkan city, now heavy scented by the blossoming lime trees and almost gay in the brilliant summer weath- ' r. is the capi- tal of one of the vital strategic bastions of the free world. And v ft is- necessary I to Inquire be-J group ' of men who grimly hold this Yugoslav btion under perpetual threat of Soviet aggression as so wildly unlike any political leaders any where else in the world. Luckily the grea transforma tion of Yugoslav policy both in ternal and external, has, among other things, removed the tor ta offer a rough sort of portrait of one of these men, sketched, so to speak during a series of long and intimate conversations dur ing these last days. This Yugoslav leader, then, is a massive, youngish man with an air ot restrained violence. And the first hint that strikes you, when you talk to him about himself, is the incredible amount of violent experience he has-; crammed into so relatively short a life. To be specific, he got his re Eftious training as stern as any " Jesuits's from the communist party while still a boy. He then plunged into five years of un relenting partisan war, losing a much-loved wife and being heavily wounded himself. Vic- tory was hardly celebrated be fore the ruthless purges began, to dear away the remnants of the Yugoslavia of the- past. Th-re followed the break with thv. Kremlin, for him a deep motional crisis involving n j foundations of his faith. And now he squarely faces the men ace of another, still more terri ble war. i As a result, his .personality seems to have been eroded down to its bedrock. He is not inhuman; he loves his new young wife; he adores his children; he likes sports and is vain of being a good athlete still. Nor is he lacking, in ai rough, mordant humor, which! he uses like an axe. Of one i statesman-stuffed shirt, he remarked, for Instance, that "he had made his success by courage; whenever be saw a corpse, he dared to steal its shoes or at least its shoe laces." And of Stalin, whom he knows a little, he remarked that "es pionage is one of his pastimes; Stalin plans kidnappings by the M.G.B. to amuse himself, the way Roosevelt! used to play with .stamps" i - 1 Yet this man's more human side IS dominated, as the char acter of his jokes suggests, by his political preoccupation. He is far from being : a one-track mind. Indeed, he is a student of history, and this reporter has found few men with whom it is more interesting to talk about the history of; recent years. I (He maintained for example, that the Politburo genuinely meant to carry out both the fifty-fifty division of Yugosla via arranged by Churchill and Stalin, and the now-forgotten provision of the Yalta pact guar anteeing Soviet support for Chiang Kai-shek. In proof he offered startling new evidence that Stalin had. attempted to force Marshal Tito to bring King Peter back to this country and to drive Mao Tse-tung into a highly unfavorable coalition with the Chinese Nationalists. And be quite logically explained this . Soviet policy as - having originated in fear of the West's wartime strength, and as having been quickly abandoned be cause of America's disastrous postwar demofrvj yTalion : s , - - " - i r : i But even history, which he has helped to make, means far less to this man than his country's' problems, its position in the world and its future course. - To all these questions, he once thought he knew the answers. In the harsh time after the war, he raised no finger to save even old friends, because he truly be lieved in the pattern being im posed on Yugoslavia. But when the designers of that pattern, the monsters of the Kremlin, sought to enslave Yugoslavia, ht began to wonder whether the pattern itself ; was right. Nowhe is groping for a dif ferent pattern, easier, more free and more humane, which will be better for his people. No one can tell where that queer grop ing will lead.: In a country that is still essentially a police state ruled by a single party, no one should be over-optimistic sbout the end result. . Yet one can at least be i certain of one thing about this man and of the others like him.; Nothing will stop him from fighting for his country's independence and integrity. .- He expects, on the whole, to have to do so. He has no illu sions about what the struggle will be like, for he also ex pects the Kremlin to try to destroy his people, as the Baltic peoples and the Volga Germans have been destroyed already. He has thought about the matter a great deal he will tell you, for instance j that "the Western Europeans were ruined when they let the Germans occupy them without firing a shot; what the losses are does not matter, you must resist-all-out from the first" And of his own view of f the future, he says without a trace of grandilo quence, We shall fight to the last man,; and alone if need be." Whatever else they may be, such men are not bad friends to have in a tight spot. CoprrirM. 131. - - 1w Tor,r Ttibuay hej ; ; Deputy State Treasurer Fred H. Pauhis is in New York this week looking into the Case Of the Unwanted Bonds namely Oregon's veterans bonus bonds-The treasurer's office here says fvm ramus ww urop uuo ine v,uy can oi new , . . 1 zone, cniei eastern oona Duyer, ana wiu ais cuss this state's bonus issues, "among other business for the office." Neither Paulus nor A the treasurer's office knows what Paulus can do about the situation except to plead that Ore- , gon bonds are very stable or something like that. - ' i 1 . ! Reports that the vets bonus issue totll . ; probably attract no bidders is causing lots i of quips at the capitol buildina. People are dways sliding' up to Hub Saalfeld, bonus supervisor, and asking him if he wants to buy some black market bonds or ' some hot certificates ... Saalfeld says that once he was out fishing in a lonely spot and just as hi is teasing a trout somebody slips up behind him and yells how about the bo nus. , ; j ' ' j " Saalfeld went to Des Moines recently to study the Iowa state veterans bonus program. As he met Ed Kallemyn, Iowa bonus head, Hub politely noted that he was there to study the Iowa setup because he had heard it was pretty efficient. Kallemyn,' relates Saalfeld, immediately grabbed the phone and called all the Des Moines papers and wire services. Next day news stories quoted Hub as saying: "Iowa has a reputation for operating one of the most efficient bonus setups and has the lowest cost per claim of any state.' I: ' This is the. season So if civilian defense committeemen Vant to give that air raid warning whistle a sound different from other city noises, how about a loud defiant razzberry? In the event of an air raid this would not only; bring the citizens to their feet but would sort of serve as Salem's answer to the enemy. A map of Willamette university campus, drawn in 1893 by W. J. Culver came to light the other day in a batch of old Mar ion county clerk's courthouse; files. The j map shows the i main campus buildings as Waller hall,' the gymnasium and the wom an's college. What is now the east end of the campus (where the law school isj was then occupied by a nuirsery company and its grounds. Sweetland field was an oat field! then. A path, used by the public, wound across the campus to the 12th street SP depot. And a small building labeled; mysteriously as "BradshawV is shown perched on the northwest corner of the campus at State and Winter streets. ! j j Oil Reserve Pool Planned For Shortage ' By J. M. Keberts, Jr. AP Foreign News Aaahrst ' ' A British warning to Iran that continued insistence on driving the Anglo-Iranian oil company from the coun try, may ' cause the closing of the Abadan re finery has been accompanied by hurried moves . in the world oil : , industry to - V meet possible f s serious regional I I shortages. American, oil o m n m nies olanned a pool of supplies, tank ers and' refinery facilities, and prepared to juggl trade routes by mutual agreement. The most immediate concern was the needs of the British fleet and air forces. Any tieup in that . quarter would., be serious at i time when, as the state depart ment said. Russia was attempt ing to exploit Iranian national ism and j"tn a communist re gime. The long-term matter of sup ply was not considered serious. Increased production in Iraq, Arabia, Venezuela and the Unit ed States- could come fairly quickly, and vastly increased re fining facilities are due to go into production soon anyway. But loss of the Abadan refinery might cause local shortages, espe cially- in India, Pakistan and Britain, for a time. And the loss of the Iranian oil business would be a serious blow to Britain's economy, which also is important to the United States. A stoppage in Iran also would have political repercussions else where in the Middle East. The second largest refinery in the area is at Haiia, where the British also are involved in dif ficulties. It was designed to han dle the produce of a pipeline to Iraq. But Iraq closed down the line when Israel took Haifa, GRIN AND BEAR IT by Lichty ,: Ms f PORTLAND. ' June 22 - f API . WTtk (bid) to arrive market, basis N. 1 bulk, delivered coast: Soft while U5j soft whit (excluding rex SJtS; wbit -club 2.2S. Bard red winter: Ordinary 121: ' is ' per cent SJS; 11 per cent 241; 12 per cent 2.31 Hard white heart: 11 par east Uli 12 per cent 2 Ji - Today's car receipts: Wheat 181: bat ley IT: com 2; mU St mill feed SJ . Day Trading there was a lone list of Issues tabUshing new lows for the year. no one uung caused the de pression of prices, and at no time was there a build-up of selling pressure to anywhere near the acute point. Chrysler was a prime tarert and closed off 1 at 67K. the (seventh most active issue. It moved down from the start of trading. - Directors - met late yesterday and adjourned , without mentioning - anything about the third quarter dividend. . Rubber shares also were a weak spot. The Associated Press 'average of 60 stocks lost 80 cents and stood at $91.40 with the industrial com ponent down $1.30, rails SO cents and utilities 10 cents. . : i ; The volume of business came to 140,000 shares, the biggest market of the week although well under the daily average for the year of little under 1,700.000 shares. Corn Shows Strength in '8 CHICAGO, June 22 HJPr- Old crop corn contracts showed Quite a bit of strength in an otherwise irregular market on the board of trade today. -It was the final ses sion of the week as the board will be closed tomorrow and on all Saturdays until October.) Tho strength in July ' and Sep tember corn was tied in with a firm demand for the cash grain. Prices for good quality corn ad vanced 1 to 2 cents in the spot market. In contrast, new crop corn iutures lost a httie ground. Wheat closed Afc lower ta XL higher, corn Vfc lower to-1 lower to IT higher, oats unchanged to y lower, rye (old style Mi lower to .1 cent higher, soybeans li lower to higher and lard up- changed to IS cents a hundred pounds lower, July wheat also was quite firm, although losing more than a cent of its early gains before the final More rains in Kansas also helned ue wuiy wneai delivery. MKS. SCHUBEL ON BOA1D HALLS FERRY Mrs. Harvey Schubel was elected to th Halle rerry schoolboard this week. A ugnt vote was reported. -, , Perennial rye develops a large root system wmcn enables the piant to use moisture efficiently, in addition, perennial rye, after it has been harvested, grows green sprouts which can later be har vested as nay lor cattle. Portland Produce PORTLAND. June t-(AP)-Butterfati TenaUve. subject to immediate, changes ' Premium raality. maximum b Jitot per ceni acioicy eaverea in Portland, I-77c lb.; first quality. T2-73c; sec ond quality. 71-He. Valley routes and country points 2c less. . Butter Wbolesal LoJk. bull? cubes ta wholesalers: Grade AA. S& aoorc 70e lb.; A. S2 score. 68c: B. aa score. Stea C 89 score, &sc Above prices strictly nominal. . Cheese Sellout arice to Portland wholesalers: Oregon sinctos. sSe-eafta Ox; Oregoa S-lp. laal. 4a-50e. . t KSS tta wtkoJesalexsM Candled ergs coolainjni bo loss, cases itvin-t tan. Portland. A large. 6Q,i-lftc; A aasd- lum. aivr-euc; a gTaae. M-M!c Liro chickeos (No. 1 aaality. f.o.b. pUats): Broilers. 1U-3& lbs- 30c: fr. ers. SV-J lb 31 -02c; 3-4 lbs, Jlc: roasters. lbs. and over. 3Q-31c: hfht hens. aU weights. SS-29c: heaTT bene. aU weights. 30-Jlc; eld roostera, all wvlchts. 1S-17C " ' Kabbits Averaia to rrowers: L)m 30c; old does. 13-16c, few hirher; Zresh dressed fryers to retailers. HS5c; some rresa cressee saests (waetesmlers so retailers; doBars ar cwt): Beef:' Steers, cood-choic. SOS.7oa Iba, SM.0e-oTj0u; commercial. Si3.Se 50.00; utility. $44.60-15.00: cows, com mercial. $4.6e-S0.00; utinty. S44.sO-4s.aa, canaers-cutters. Ht 5ft-45,a. k Beef cuts (choice steeni: Hind Quar ters. S61JO-62.00; rounds. t37.eO-M.0Ot full loins, trimmed. trt Oa MjOOt tri aagles. 4IJ tOJOi foreouarters. SSla. 52.00. i Veal: Good -choice. S60.D StMt tmm. merelal. $MJ-S1JM. i calves: uood -choice. tsaO-ao dot - commercial. S53.00-S4iX. . rora cuts: lolns. No. U SvU Vt iMU-oiMQ-. , atKMiiders. if lbs. SJ1.UO-41JW; . sparer! be. . S4SXRM7 JMt f resb bams. SSSM-HM. i Lames: Good-choice. $M,g-B.aa. Wool: WUlamatta nllr, mull. inaU , ' . Mohair! SL1S Bv e ll-mmth eravth f.0.0. country sbfppiBC point. i vooatry-auued loeata: s Mutton: Peat, ca-aa iba- xs-ao avt rounh heavy bucks, ewes. 24-Sftc. veai: too ouaiity. -57c; good beav les. 4XSOc; otbera.4S-47e. , i Beef: Good cows. 4V4ae Aai nnmrnrm. cutters. 40-43,&c T t Mors: urbt blockers. 3S-X3 lb.; sows light. 2S-2SC. Xambs: Top grade, tt-S7c Ut lowag grades. 4-4Sc. i Onions: Western Ore. yellows.' med ium No. 1. SU0-S.00; Sft-lb. sacks Mo. 1. 3-inch mhL. $3-25-50. some . to $3.73: Calif, whit wax. S4 7S-S.0O la lbs. Potatoes: Ore. russets. No. IA. S3.TS : as ib si .00-15: uano niocu. No. 1A, $3.73-4.15; Cailf. long whites. No. 1A. $3.75-4.00; No. X SS.75-SS. i , Hay: D. S. No. S green alfalfa,' do- 1 livered car and truck lots, f.o Port land, mostly $33 ton; Willamette valley grain and clover bay nominally $29 a ton. baled at farm. .' i IN THZ CIRCUIT COURT OT THZ STATB OF OREGON FOR THX COUNTY OF MARION Probate Department t No. 14J7S In the Matter of the Estate i of - Henrv Palmer. DvnuH MOTICB Or REAUNO OBJECTIONS TO FINAL ACCOUNT NOTTCK is herebv riven that HTTTRV DeLOSS PALMER as th dul ap- pwnwo, Rimnneq ana actmg Sizacutor of the esUt of Henry Palmer, de ceased, has duly rendered and pre sented for settlement and filed In the Circuit Court Of toe Countv at Marion. Stato of Oregon. Probata Department, a Final Account of bis administration oi said estate, and mat Saturday, the 21st day of July, 1351. at the hour of ten o clock in the forenoon of said day. at tb courtroom of said Court la the Marion County Court Houae is the City of Salem. County of Marion. State of Oregon, have been duly fixed and appointed by said Court as the time and place for the bearing of obiecUona to said Final Account and the settle ment thereof. DATED at Salem. Marion Countv. Oregon, this 22d day of June. 1951. HENBT DeLOSS PALMER. Executor of the Estate of Henrv Palmer, deceased. Data of first publics tio In: June S3. 1931. Date of last wiblcation: Julv 21. 195L LAWRENCE N. BROWN Attorney for Executor 212 Masonic Building Salem. Oregon. J. 23. 90. 3y T. 14. 21 NOTICE OF INTENTION TO tMPEOVR Beach Avenue frees SUvertoa Boa To Porttaad Road Notice herebv flwn . tKt- th. Common Council of the City of Salem. Oregon, deems it necessary and exped- cni ana ncreoy declares its purposa and intention to Improve Beach Ave nue from the West lino of : Silvertom Road to the East Una of Portland Road, ia the Otv of Salem. Marion Cauntr Oregoa. at the expense of the abutting and adjacent property. - by bringing said portion of said street to the estab lished grade, constructing cement con crete curbs, and paving said portion of said street with a 2-incb aspaam concrete pavement 30 feet in width, in accordance with the plans and spec ifications therefor which were, adopted "7 w mnn vMocu June u. isoi. which are now on file in the office of the city recorder and which by this reference thereto are made a part hereof. The Common Council . beieby declares its purpose and intention to mako the above described ' tmprove Btent by and through the Street im provement department. , i Written remonstrance ' 'against i the above proposed improvement may bo tiled with the city recorder at any time within ten days after; the final publication of this notice by the owners of the property affected. i j By Order of the Common Council Juno 11. IftSl. . , ALFRED MUNDT, City Recorder Date of fust publication , hereof it June is. 51. - Date of final publication Juno J. 1951. J. 11 IT. 18. IS, 30. 21. 22. . 24, 25. IS. - ! i Nonet ro cKKorroRS -Notice is hereby given that the un dersigned, by order of the ' Circuit Court of the State of Oregoa for Mar ion County, duly made and entered on May 22. 1951. was appointed executrix of too estate of A. A. Schramm, de ceased, and that aha has duly qualified as such executrix. ' t All persons having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same, duly verified aa required by law. to her at the office of L U Crawford, attorney for estate. Room 310. Livesley Bid A. Salem. Oregon, within six months of too date of this notice. ; ' Dated this and day of June. 15!. LUCILLE K. SCHRAMM. Executrix. E. 4w CRAWFORD 5 f Attorney for Estato " .- ' 1 . 310 Livesley Bldg. ? Salem. Oregon J. S-t-S-23-M r-: i rsi i .r.t Then Erypt . took the bait, and has been refusing passage through Suez for British tank' ers from tthe Bed sea. The increasing importance of this route for Britain if Iranian oil is lost will heighten that con flict with g7pt and Iraq. - There is even widespread fear in the industry that the Iranian matter will set off nationaliza tion demands throughout the en tire Middle-Eastern oil area. Certainly the British are in trou ble wherever they operate. Under the pressures of their postwar have been far slower than the Americans in Arabia to rnodern latiorxg with the local govern ments. ; . Ramco, the American combine in Arabia, seems to be getting along pretty welL Better English "What de yta mean yea inteai U disprove him en every point. Senator? ... yoarre Kstmiag ta a trinaufjHaa et year speecst 1. What Is wrong with this sentence? "We wish we had of been to that show, too." 2. What is th correct pronun ciation of "attitude"! ., 3. Which one of these words is misspelled? Satelite, satiety, V saturnine, sagacious. ' . 4. What does the word "equi vocate' mean? S. What to a word beginning with asp that means "haughtily ' contcmptaotrs'? . ANSWERS 1. Say, "We wish, we had West at that show, too." 2. Pronounce th a h In am. not as in rada. S. Satellite. 4. To use words of doubtful aigraficance; particular ly with the idea of misleading; to nrevaricatft. "The mymmr of the witness saggested that he was equivocating." ft. Supercil- M FACTORY EXPECT AT i r , V . J ; iinca lluuc. To DtaoasSret tb tZVt , ;. r r?r Tun i Tw4c fwtef avaWaTaTwbwp pwa9aeMfc , TXAM A KAM a) By special arrangements with. trf m.nnf.lufff T?11 have at Shavesnaster expert ia oer store for this denuostnuk)cu See him demonstrate Shave master oa all types of beards. See for yowrself how seat aad dean it shave. If jom ova a ShavemastrT, brine; if ia foe free ctSm aad sharpesun- bateewsJaaaeaer CatefeestcW ' " 'v ' ' 1 - Let a iacsary trained t. Sft hmms yone Savo. alaood roey'slo '. . '- . i i gM t CSKSSSSAt fX UEa tSSSSt