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About East Oregonian : E.O. (Pendleton, OR) 1888-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 28, 1901)
We must make room For our elegant new line of sprint; goods which will soon begin to arrive. Then fore 25 per cent discount, on Jackets. Collarettes. Capes. Skirts, Wrappers. Rest frede of Ottfing flannel II yards for Jti.oo. I'rices on many other articles cut in equal ami greater proportions. See us for Bargains. A chance for a golil watch with every dollar piirch.i THE MAGNET CASH STORE Clements it Wilson. Court and Cottonwood ilemagofltr am of. the, common pttpl roferenee to, or praise of his ihru MONDAY. JANl'AKY M, ltfOl. DAILY. WEEKLY AX1 SEMMYEKKLT mr TH Oregoucaii Psblihlnii MNDLHTON. Compu;, OREGON. HAIL !CBf BICTiON M1M OHUffy:. . y Mil Dm nt: a : muu, by null Bif.-mptrmk.bTtinMi . Tri.t liMmpiua jjjii BH iBi wiuLi Bmim Dm Vi a H' 0. lomj fti raoetA. Tni iMlpHvn Ilt iUC-M mu.LT tVMCIIPTloo RATI Dm tovT um re. Da. p 1 ib. Tntl 'rfMw tN -P 1 1 I t 13 ADVUtllls . RATI (Lt4 A lumitmrMt ' OM IMk.M lM. la Mki-Kttllr Mf HdU . . . . IMIiirll. MkM,ta dl'lT Ml HMlh T. iaAe. .i le. ilk l...jr sod Wf4fc.lv pi or.iLi U't Owe. iu . ... Wtii . if 1 1 ptt ffcoi.t.i Ufffl IkmlKMi. I 1 v. Ml m h cr 111 pint 0i thriatl.ia U.. 1 1 ad w.efc 1 r.fwt Iruh w AMSaB 1 SJ UMIin.MIM.il wmiTr! I'l" UH UIH UHlll. I VlHiil, HI In II pit . . . . 1111 1MM tnJl. in 1 uMdll IIIU. frl Nll-i Ml IMfc Ml HMVMh .... ft kwfcl eeeaaaeu mImiiiiihii la fcu-liii'i fhlrol Dl. . till Imil III. Ml IBt! . i X . MCA fcUDMJCl IH t.e .toll JM.U It is now said that enator M H- le it about to drop oat of the senatorial race and Ki-Senator Mitchell la aliout to dro in. It would appear tliat wIumi once a man get tin- senatorial itch it hang on to him with more tenacity than the seven year variety. How ever, Mitchell is an improvemeir McBride. but an Kaatern Oregon man wofllil i' a ureat improvement over Mitchell, and the office lieloriir- to Kastern Oregon. Now tbat ictoria is dead there is but one actually mime iUeen Wilheimina of Holland. Of serenty four ruler on the earth twenty. two are presidents, fifteen an- king and six are emperors. In one hundred years here will be still more president and a great daal iess inclinati i t nk Uon those in high place as more than ordinary human beings with similar characteristics to those who pJl them ! lie re. The text-book commission is now romplate, (iovernor (ieer havintr ap points) Charles A. Johns, of Maker City. In the place of Judge S. A. LMa ell, of Pendleton, who declined to serve on the commission for reasons which be considers good and sufficient. Mr. Johns is a lawyer, and a very good one, a man of conviction, of soma force, and if he will applv himself to the duties of the trust be has it in him to make himself a very efficient mem ber oi the coniinission. A plan receutly prooseil hy the supervisors of Oneida county. .Sew York, has attracted much attention in that state and is worth noting even at this distance In its essential ele ments it is simply a proposal of es operation between the itate and the counties in the matter of good roade. The state ia to appropriate .'00,0UO and the counties are to appropriate an equal amount for the general schenn of improving the chief highways of the state. If all the counties do not vote their share of the amount desired, then the plan is that those doing so shall have the aid of the state to an amount equal to their local expenditures, and to be enabled to gi forward with r j1 improvement without wailing lor the leas progressive counties. National irrigation has bten dis cussed in congfes- a great deal oi Jutl and membem of congress seem averi-e to comsnitling the government to it. Tbey.appear to tniiik it If not BtOBS Held for governmen' enterprise and governiusni mouey. (.'ongressmen, howevtr, are quick to spend 1100, oou, 000 a year on a standing army 77, 000,000 a year on a uavy and H'O.uOO, 000 a year on pensions, all ol which have a tendency to burden BfSslSMSfl and workers, but are slow to -pent! one cent for aowelhiiifc,' that pn to inensase production, create happy tioaiee and put people in the way of doing for themselves. Congress is such a gang of parasite and taxeaters that they favor anything that is destruc tive, because it pertains to tiieir envi ronment, while opposing anything that is productive of good to those who are nt of their class and kind. The fact is, congress is narrow between the eyes and is growing narrower all the time tlo money he can make out of it must in the nature oi things soon descend to the level of the thief. The hones'. MB in the one who works to do his work well, regar.llef" whether there is u cent or a million in it. Such u man is seldom urtedy and can alwny- distin guish In Uivii hi' iiiimh and nther people'' Hut it is dithrnlt for the whaf-i'-in-it lellows to do so. The life of the queen ot Knglaml wt. in-iirnl without her knowledge by any number of person for their own benefit. It is reported that as much ha fl'.ooO.OOO to IVOOUOOO will be paid hy English insurance companies tn person- who hold policies mi the life of the queen. Such policies would not he written bv i nsapanies in the United State, u the law here pro vides th.it tke beneficiary must he u person dependeni QpOfl Of peSMl iarly inferejte I in the lira of the insured. SUPREME COURT DECISIONS. I'rof. Mryce has called the supreme court of the 1'nited State "the living voice of the constitution. " While we are waiting for its authoritative word on the Potto Kican cases a retrospect of obm of its most important oeeisions the landmarks of American constitu tional law has timely interest, s s The greenback cases: We come now tn the great legal-tender decisions. A suit brought in li-4 to compel the pay ment in coin of a note made in lHib, two vears before the legal -tender or greenback act was passed, went to the supreme court, and in isriH that trihu nal, through a majority of its mem bers, declared that the law of February H I ', the greenback act. was un constitutional M far ns it made the greenback legal tender for debts con tracted prior t" it passage. Al. Un democratic members of the court, to gether with Chief Justice Chase, eon i urred in this decision. The three re publican justice dissented. In 1870, one democratic nitice having retired in the interval and two republicans Strong and Mradley having been ap pointed, the matter came before the court again, ami the earlier decision wac reversed and late 188-1 in Jultiard vs. (ireenman. the court even went further and decided that congress had power to make its note legal tender without limit in time of peace or war. s a Income tax decision : Last but not least memorable in the list of great luestion on which the supreme court ha- see-sawed in its decisions is that of the income tax. In lrttiri bv unani mous decision, the court declared the levying of an income tax uiion corpor ations to be valid, and in IHSii iu Springer vs. the United States it again unanimously voted that an income tax essentially like the one enacted by congress in IfM was constitutional. But on May ID, IWo. by u vote of five justices tu four the income tax was declared to he unconstitutional. And the faet is historic though not clearlv accounted for that onlv a few davs ni l n- t:.-- deci'ioh announced one of the live justices .Justice Hhiras was of tt e contrarv opinion. The court, therefor,.-, t.ind' on this question as having twice unanimously decided that an income tax is constitutional and once by a hare maioritv of one that it is unconstitutional, and the majority one changed h: mind within a week of -tasting his vote. The question will probably come up again. Mr. Justice liar:. ii. dissenting iroin the oniuioii judgment of May. 189'), used these memorable words: "I hope it may not prove the first step towurd the sub mergence of the liberties of tin- people in a lord Id despotism of wealth." The court's sweeping powers: These are out celebrated specimen cases showing tiie sweeping powers exercised hy our highest tribunal. It is the most powerful court in the world. In interpreting the constitution it has overruled alike acts of congress, the legislatures and the supreme courts of sovereign states, and in doing so, as the foregoing instances show, it has often reversed itself and sometimes reversed its reversals. How it will in terpret the constitution as applied to the right and power- of the United States in acquiring, holding and gov erning tiie new islands taken over from Spain is obviously not less uncer tain than how lung the deciiion, whut ever it may tie, will -uml. BRYAN'S PAPER, "THE COMMONER." Needy, the Cuban postal thief, pre tends to be anxious to reach Havana where tie will be tried lor his offenses against the law, written and un written, lie also pretends tbat he is innocent but he makes no pretensions to return the government funds which have been traced to his possession and for the safekeeping of which he waa responsible. He was one of a gang of fallows that was in politics for what there is in it, and this uluue stamps him aa a rascal of the lirst water. A who accepts any trust simply lor The following introductory article appears on the ti rat page of "the lirst issue of W. J. Bryan's paper "The Commoner:" Webster defines a commoner as "one ol the common eop!e." The naine has been selected for this paper be- can.- the Commoner will endeavor to aid the common people in the protee liofl of their rights, the advanceim-nt of their interests ami the realisation of their aspirations. It is not neceaaary to apologue tor the use of a term which distinguishes the great bodv of the population from the comparatively few, who, for one rosson or another, withdraw themselves froui sympathetic connection with their fellows. Among the (ireeks "Hoi polloi" waa uses! to e'escribe the mam , while among the Momaus tin word "plebs" was employed fur the same purpose. These appellations, like "the common people, have been assumed with pride by those to whom they were applied, while they have I wen used as terms of reproach by those who counted themselves among the aristocratic classes. Within recent years there has been a growing ten dency in some q Barters to denounce aa One editor in a late issue paper takes exception to the and says : "This expression is an ill-chosen one and should have no lodgment in the vorabnlarv of an American patriot and statesman. If we sought its origin, few would look for it fii that specious demagogy which has evolved the pro fessional' politician, ar raved country against towi., the farmer and his sons and daughter against the business and professional men and their sons and (laughters, capital against laUir, and built Op against neighbors the im pregnable barrier of prejudice and hate. " This quotation is reproduced became it fairly raprasontl the views of tnoes who criticise the expression. It his, however, an eminently respectable origin. In the same chapter in which Christ condensed man's duty to bis fellows into the commandment : Thou pint It lore thv neighbor a thyself; in the same chapter in which lie de nounced those who devour widows' houses and for a pretense make long pravers in this same chapter it is said of Him: The common people heard Hun gladly. No higher compliment was ever paid to anv class. The term, the common people, is properly used to describe the large ma jority of the people those who earn their living ami give to society a fair return for the benefits bestowed by OS lot those who in their dally lives recognise the ties which hind togeth r the mass of the people who have a common lot and a common hope. Some times they are called "the middle OiaaSSJa" baanuse pauper and crimi nal are excluded on the one hand, while en the other hand some exclude themselves because of wealth or posi tion or pride of birth The common people form the industrious. intelligent and patriotic element of mtr popula tion they produce the nation's wealth in time of peace and tight the nation's battle in time of war. They are self- ! reliant and indeiiendent ; they ask of government nothing but justice and will not bo satisfied with less. They are not seeking to get their hands into other people's pockets, hut ate content if they can keep other people's hands out of their pockets. The common people do not constitute an exclusive societi tliev are not of the four hundred : any one can become a EMM bar li be is willing to contribute bv brain or muscle to the nation's strength and greatness. Only those are barred and they are burred by their own choice who imagine themsleves made oi u superior kind of clay and who denv tke equalitv of all before the law. A rich man who ha honestly acquired hi wealth and is not afraid to intrust it care to laws made by his fellows, can count himself among the common eople, while a oor man is not really one of them ii be fawns lie fore u plutocrat and has no higher am bition than to U a courtier or a syrophaat. The Commoner will be satisfied if, hy fidelity to the common eople. it proves its right to the name which lias been chosen CANCER Sufferers from this herhble malady nearly always inherit it not necessarily from the paronts, but may be from some remote ancestor, for Cancer often runs through several generations. This deadly poison may lay dormant in the blood foi Sars, or until you reach middle life, then e first little sore or ulcer makes its ap- K ranee or a swollen gland in the tat, or some other part of the body, gives the first warning. To cure Cancer thoroughly and perms nently all the poisonous virus must bt dun mated from the blood every vestagt jf it driven out. This 6. S. S. does, and a the only medicine that can reach deep teatcd, obstinate blood troubles like this. When all the poison baa been forced out of the system the Cancer heals, and the disease never returns. Cancer beginsof ten in a,small way, as the following letter from Mrs. Shirer shows : A snull pimple came on my Jtw About an inch below ttir caronlae ift4de of my face. Itgavc mcnop-unor mcoavru riser auiI 1 should have forgottra Abost It had ft act begun to iacUme and Ueh ; it would bleed a little, then scad over, but vrauld sot heal. This conuous 1 for some time, when my jaw began to swell, bei-oming very painful. The Cancer be gan to cat and ipread, until it was as large aaa hill dollar.when I heard of k S b and determin ed to give it a lair trial, and it nil lemarkable what a wo idetful effect It bad from the verv beginning : the sore began t heal aud after takings few battles duapoeared entirely. This waa two ycare ago ; thete arc ill no signs of the Caucer, And my general lieailh itmuca xooa. Jlx: k huikxs. u run. sto is the irreatest of all blood purifiers, and the only one guaranteed purelv vegetable. Scuo! tor our free book on ! Cancer, containing valuable and interest- j inf tniormation aooui cues uuclk, aim write our physicians about your case. We make no charge for medical advice TMI SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. OX rjHt" J?- bo signs of the fas ill jont i auetgood. M a sss PAPA'S SHIRT was not make to write upon, although its surface looks as spotless, white and of the same artistic finish aa the best cardboard when it is laundered at the Domestic. If yon wuut your linen of exquisite color and gloss finish, and sent homejiii the best condition, you will always get the I test result from THE DOMESTIC LAUNDRY J. F. Robinson, Prep. Telephone 60 TRANSF BR TR UC K IN ( i y S T OR A GE Indian Robes AND Fine Blankets Are made by tksj The Pendleton Woolen Mills CRESCENT BICYCLES) 1901 MODELS ChlitilWI ( perfect) Light Roadsters Adults' Chwill Models Ho s' and Girls' Models 6o $50 f3 and Jt35 a5 Pendleton. Oregon. For couch covers, lnrnisliiiiL's for a "den," cozy the Pendleton Woolen Mills Indian Robes are just the thine, Writ the Mills. corners. Btl Consignment of Wheels now on the R0 H 1 ik." WHEELS Chainless, ttecond hand $30.00 New Crascsnt, $35 wheel last vent. .825.00 New Crescent, $25 wheel Inst year. . $20.00 Crescent, second hand, good ordet . . $1500 Crescent, second hand, good order. $17.50 Nov. Sterling, 2b in frame, $40 wheel $22.50 THE CRESCENT AGENCY. East Oregnnlan Building, Pendtoton, Or on una 1 time loc I .Mime III . 1 time Me ! he each extra Invrtl.'ii CLASSIFIED ADS. COUN f BEVKN WORDS To Tilt LINK 0M llBe, 111 miiri', r'' week, nt Hi, rnteot 18c per llu. mie un- or mme, .r neiinh, ni the rninof toe n.-r line Hotel Pendleton THRU 1 INM I Unit' 'JOr I 1 1 m'-... . . .lftQ I ttrm-H Mn :U - M Ih rfhltlhillitl tii'ttittm. Under New nMMgornent A Strictly Plrst-Class ExcflllSDt ColslDe. Every Modern Convenience Give Us 1 Trial. Rates $2.00 a day Special Rates by Week or montli Hint LINES 1 MM IV Dtjaiss sta tlarss sac 1st saab ,ii"i insertion KIVK f.tVlfSl 1 lime ift I limes ttt .11 linen Mh SX eneh 1 - 1 ., Iiifiertlnn I 1 1, I'tltM,. 1 1 I'A'OUlu SIX UXB I tlim- " 1 tlini.. lllliev -ia:ti,a: lasMK MALI: HELP WANTED. w as 1 i.i iii.; iahi.i; mas to i:i:r reient sii i-tnt-iiihsii Itotiss on salary. Qsm 1.., nioti tninjht isrt. Aililn-m I". I). Mux Bo, 1'iirtlatiil. Orsgnti. ATlilRNBYS. ACI'KIt A rai.bS', attornkyb at Lak Oflli e in SatrtB(l Its ni, IIUll'llliK iTkan a i.owki.i., ATTUUNKV8 at lw K.Mirn II AsaiK-latlon Bloek. Feuillt- ton. oieifoti. t76.HAILKV' LAWYKR. OKFIOs! IN nhld Huililinx. l eii.h. i.in HrrRmi BTTLI.MAN A IMKtti'K VTTOltNKYfl uiIiih. K.Kiips ho II. .' nmt 1:1 NMOolnllnn btoci tlm, Him k. over R 11 ('loptoii'.oag,1106' "US1I AMI PIANO TUNlsc" I'TtOr". 4MHIKUT llAl.l.n,"Tl0Lix7r loiH sml Issdor ol ths nss) oiwrts nrchsstrs Tsaohsrof violin, Ti.ila iic 2? maadollu, mnmr. plans, pip nrn haralS'' connlsrpolut, arrspisatsiit uid ..teb,,52i' J oioe culture (llAiiAR m.thml). itudTTSl lor eoml. and srsnil opara Plan,, tunJosfS! ropalrltlB promptl dona orehntri iS fuhllshsit lor partis., bslk ami 2J -sr... ssplv tor ..'.ShflTS: T HK ITt-KKAl.lo AT Tt'KN Lsh liarc la Ai'orlatlon Bloek AHCH1TBCTS AND BUILDEBi. T. K. iioWAKl), AHCHITEl 1 ANIisr rlntaadmt, aukkas compists and raiiiw, ) I at 1 1 for liii Mil i ii ttm it ii.. -i Uonm IT. in,., mural... , I Kar and till Hard Rooms. Headquarters tor Traveling Thr Rest Motel In Eastern Oregon. Van Dran Bros.. Props. Successors to J. E. Moore MVVV.aVVVVaVSSSVSSS'ASSVkSSV'vNvv , N. BKBKBLEY. Al iORHY AT l,AV utile, In Asanolatiun Bias k R. 1). BOYD, ATTOBNKY at I. AW. m ec-jtt I' A. MAN CONTKAI Till'. m in i hiiliuatea lurniiliril on all klndiij i.ia.unrT. - niein wslks, Mom-wall, m o? Usn sasj I" Isll .11 tin- Ui: or.-oniau otter HANKS AND BH0KBHS. TW Lots- 5 m 10, Block 81, Five Mocks fom Main $U at a !ow figurCc inquire of . Ci JACKSON. East Dregonian OJTice. I J AM KK A. KKI'.. l.AW nKr'IOK IN JtTDP I BllllillUR. PHYSICIANS. ; ok. w. t.. t.;,K (ii kkt; in .m od I oulldlus;. Oflli e BSMaR 1" tn BJ a ui. ; I to , p. m. TUpho:ic I K. W. V1NCKN I . It. OKI'KT. It K A U at flist Hatleaal atsak, OEMs sews sStaM A. Eta I 1 t' I p. tl. i HUT NATIONAL Hank ok l'KNDLl M t'ApltAl. . IrSDMCU I (sacral hauiiinx huiineu btsAsst and UliAJTRptali iramler mlil on ohh-aso Ts mnelSSO, N.i York ami principal ijinu la lraft Drawn on China Jiua i.-iil Mnkc-n roUectlnun on ruonabi i' no- : . v ,nki n piwld u ' E3 . vim-prsslUvtii. ( H Wade, cAihiir He ' : Aaiiatair. oAihlcr. PUM. 'All ! II it HKNDKItMON. OfVlOK over Peuilletnu I-a . lnu- Malik. Ti lephone II, r, i, leiii e telephone i H. H. OAKKH:i,l'. M. I)., MOMK I'ATH ll Phvmelaii anil Hiirieou. Olllee ill llldi! Huildiur leleplionc: ORIee. bin k ; rail- asasa, bmss wC UB.D.J, M l .M l. ROOM I?! AB800IA- lion hloek 'K-leplione Hi: roulsnuv te'le plioue hlai k 111 OSTKOPATHli I'll VM IAN.- Hits. Kryi a Ke), - nanc, one hliK'k eal of Hon tun ston If 1 1. PBNDUCTON 8AVINUB HANK Peuilletnii Ou-i.ou OrKsniieil Marcli 1. lkS) ia,IU!. M'.tu Iulursst Rllownl on tlmailr poilta. KschAiiKc bought and aohl on all prli eipal point! Special attention siren tooollw. tiona. W I, Kiirnlili, prasldsnt: J. N. Tail vii . oreahlsnt ; 1 J Morrli, cashier. KIR81 NATIONAL HANK OK ATHENA. imgon Uanltal, i. iurplu ami prone ti MS Internal on tlm- dcpoalti. Uaali to hiiclKti iiini iIoi.iomii exelianii oolloctlosi proinpily alti-iu'ed to Henry ( Adami pm fdsnl, T. J, Kirk, vlrvprsahient, I. L Bar nun. eaanior; .Mr. 1 1 Harncti eailner. W. B. 1'KKIt Y. l'HVSKTAN AND St'R Kcou. I'klali. OrcKon DR. LYNN K. BLAKB8LKK, OHBONIU ataastretH 'lieAe ami illeae. oi women. P, EMail cur. Water and Main Hu. Poinlln- oil. Or. DBNTISTS. K. A. VAI'UHAN. ORNTIStT In Judd Huildlus. OFFICE I A. L. 11KAT1K, 0. 1). b. OKKIOK OVKB -.iM.no Bank (, a adinlulitered. Till. KARMBR'S HANK OF WKHTON. Wofiuu, Oregon - l(oo a general banklai huiiuusa Kiehniiire iMiuifhi and Mild Col .mi. luiiuiiitly ntlc'inled to Attain In aunt eM elUiii condition, and no reported upon hi InveAtitfAlioii eoninnttiM- oi rvuponiibleeltluai OStaSfs, K Jnmeaon, president; Uso. W. I'rocibstul, vlee prosidsnt; C. M. Pierce caihlir : ' K. Klllgorc, Awliunt uaahlcr; dlrefton U. A llartmau. II. W Johui. T. J. Price, 0. P i tirRW. J. K. KUigiire, Hobert Jameaou. B, W A. Ii. BTBPUXNB A co DO KAWiNd i and contracting ol all kludi. nooil sawed I on abort notice Losve ontera with A D Smith IsbOo or with nu Orsdall k How NEW LUMBER YARD. PP Kate Under New ftanagument. J. W BANCKOI T, Mrop. tlM, and Sl.'ai per day. Meals Ue, IsaslSl Kataa by the month Heat Hotel In the city lor Ksmllls toal. train Kn e aam.le najmi Klectrle llglna and Stasis beat. i In prooi building Cor. Court and Johnson Sts. PENDLETON. OREGON We are now ready fur baslAMI 'n-.tr WsabilUttOO & Columbia River freight ili'lot with u iren.T.i! jt(iirtnienl uf luinher airsel irmn inir own bhw mill, anil t-ttti ftinush unytliiuK lirnlimt lv Cnnntrc ,,r.:. , in Cat Ion Is rill i paxl iliruot from uiir mill in enriuad hits nt l correct iirne i uve it. u eiill Jf you want the news of the world written and pictured, the finest art and the best literature, then you must i cad COLLIER'S WEEKLY, America's Foremost Illustrated Journal Hall Caine's latest and greatest novel. "The Eternal City," begins soon, Send for free copy of the opening chapters. Address COLLIEH'S WbfcKLY, 335 WfcST THIRTEENTH STREET. NEW YORK CITY A.G.Shaw&Co. W. J. SEWELL. Wgr telephone 72. ALLEN BROS., Wood and Posts. Delivc-isd 1'rouipliy. Ftln Llglil Kli aud NaiUasrssk I'oao, Wnoil nice nim dry. tlllicu renrol .ScivingH Hank. PBRDLKTOR, - . oKKCioN, KENTUCKY M liENTUCKY WHISKEY Van Orsdal. & Koss JHE EAST OREGONIAN. g Paper of tbs People. ii, aruual l naulni,,,. AEvsrUslns saium. Bold by luUN eUlIMll' I The Louvre Saloon PENDLETOJI . . . OKEOON. ..French Restaurant.. TUB PLAUS It) EAT. Where you osa (St something HOOD. Qua UaFontalae, - - Proprietor. Pendleton Planing Mill and Lumber Yard Can sell clieapcr than any linn in the county because th'ty buy in large 'juantititis. If you need liuiilicr or any kind or mill work call ami get their prices. R. FORSTER, - Proprietor. Equal to any in the world. PILSNER BOTTLED BEER. BBlWMTt own iurnaNii- . Highly rocouimanded to lam tru" Kvory bottle fully guavitiiteeti. Schultz Brewing Co. We We have Lamp to Burn SB liWi sutl thoy ar good oii g will leave it to you won-.' afcoir-iJfts-- ing a specialty- PUM. Electric Supply houst Maple Bros., VtoP Phone's Main 74 nd Ked '? '