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About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1914)
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER F.B.Boyd, Publisher v" ' Published Every Friday. . Office, Corner Third and lefferson Streets. Entered hi th ronnilve mi Alhur a, Oregon ! ri ecinaclttHi) jnrii AialH-r. HuliBoription. Rateev ..... One copy, one year.. ., .'.'1.50 When paid in Advance, (otherwise, $2.00) One copy, six months..... .... .... ,75 One copy, three months .50 cATHENA. ORB. i AUGUST 7,, i 1914 ' THE ART OF SELLING. witn lueir nniriT" vitlni! mnarrooi C'lU'U HOUl . ; '! . In Indlu your harhnr mil at your house nnrl tmv j-on every iiiorumgl for $2 u njolilh In Cllinn tlu bnrDenf. carry stools, small tubs, razors and scissors about the streets, stopping on the sidewalks to perform their work. Just as scissors grinder do In America. - New York Sun. ." " ' " ' WHAT IS AMORTIZATION? ! ATS WITH THE CAMERA. Real Salesmanship Is a Light That Can't B Obscured. 1 . - The boss wants lookers, because he knows the looker of today Is the buyer of tomorrow and he wants to make the lookers feel that bis store is "the best place to trade," which Is only an other way of saying that It Is the best place to do one's looking. lie also knows that the looker of today can sometimes be converted Into a buyer before the dny Is over. All he requires to accomplish what he desires is sales manship nmoufr bis salespeople. . Does he Ret it? Not from all of them. If ho did there would be less need for commissions to Inquire labo riously Into tbe relation between shop girls' Wages uud shopgirls' chastity, for real salesmanship will get tbe money wherever it Is practiced and by whomsoever It is practiced. Real sales n:nufhlp is one light that can't be bid den under a bushel. It's a light that can't be obscured. It's a light that will shine above department heads and floorwalkers and reach clear up to "the old man" In his private office, If you keep it burning long enough. What is salesmanship? No one quite knows. But if you will take care of tbe lookers, If you will make all tbe lookers pleasantly remeuoer what you showed them and bow iou showed it to them when they were merely look ing, you will have mastered one very Important branch of retail salesman ship. Collier's Weekly. SPEED OF GAME BIRDS. Th. Hazel Hen Said to Be a Wonder In , a Short Spurt. What Is the fastest Kame bird that flies? Of course, in seeking an answer to tbe question, as a wrltor in tbe Scotsman points out. one must assume equal conditions of atmosphere and cause for Bight, for all crcutures, hu man or other, seek their highest rate of speed under the influence of fear. , A recent writer declare that In a race of, say, 200 yards be would back a bird which, though not found In Brit ain, Is indigenous to most of tbe rest of Europe and Is especially familiar in Scandlnavla-the hazel hen or geli tintte. i .- . ' . Yet, curiously enough, this Is one of Hie forcBt haunting birds which, like Mie American "fool, hou." usually fl) up luto a tree when Unshod and, re ectlng further attempts ut escape. Mieot to be shot sitting. "Hut," says the writer referred to above, "ou the rare "caslons (and that thoy re rare I rendlly admit! when one caucuos a gell notte in the open I hnve never seen any bird fly so fast nor move Its wings v.Hh such oxtrnordlnury rapidity." Next to It nt any rato one must sure. i place tbe teal, which lini a marvei im knack of getting under way quick ly. Some experienced observers would trive the third place to n blueroclc pig-I'Mi-tha wild, not the Uurllngtuitu ve- nay. -, " ; MOODY REBELLED. , Moving Vet of Thanks Was Not In Hia Lin That Night. I wight I. Moody during his first vi it to England attended a lueetiug at v. inch the Eurl of Shaftesbury was i .-iii-man. The duty of proposing a vine of thanks was unsigned to him unit tbe announcement made; our American cousin, the Itev. Mr. tlnnrty of Chicago. lll now move a vniM of thanks to the noble earl who hn presided on this omislon." The whole thing was quite out of Mr, Moody's line. With an utter dis regard of conveutionullty ho bunt upou the audience with the hold announce ment: "Tl speaker has made two mis take. To begin vitb, I'm not the Rev, Mr. Moody at nil. I'm plain Dwlgbt L. Moody, a Sunday chl worker. And then I'm not your American cousin. By tbe grace of Cod I'm your brother, interested with you in our Fa ther's work for bis cblldrru, "And now about this voie of thanks to tuo 'noble earl for being our chair man till evening.' I don't see why we should thank blm any more than be should thank us. When at oue time they offered to thank our Mr. Lincoln for presiding over a meeting In Illinois he-stopped it H sulil he'd tried to do ill duty and they'd tried to do theirs, lie thought it was about an even thing all o round." That opening fairly took tbe breath away from Mr, Moody's bearer. Such a talk could not be gauged by any known standard. Mr. Moody carried his English audience with ulm from that beginning to bl latest labor. OLD WORLD BARBERS. Their Prloe Are Low and Method In Some Case Are Crude, , The barber shop of the United States and Canada are the finest In the world and charge the highest price. Comparatively few cities of Europe nse American chain, and many uf lueie ran their barber shop In con nection With mou's furnishing stores. In most European cities a balr cut and a ahampoo cost 0 cents, and in parts of London a shove cost 4 cent. In torn Italian cities 1 cent la charged for a ahave and 3 cent for a balr cut, tnd in Tnrkey barber take their en tire pay In tips. i. "'. i : Many German barber make wig and, switches while waiting tor cus tomer, ud many French barber do ladle' halrdreasing. Austrian barber are compelled to serve apprentlceshlix ' of four year on pay beginning at 41 cent a week and ending at $1.02 week before they can own tbelr ahops. Syrian barbers sent their customer in straight backed chair before tiny wnll mirrors uud fix queer shaped pans nbont their thmntn Tliwr they rwb on Some British 8inecures. Gladstone wast born nt a time when sinecures sucji tliose held by Horace Wslpole still abounded, and to tbe end of his life be took n lenient view of the persons who profited by tlietn. A. (1 C. Mddell records in his diary on March 12. IS1I2: "Dined with tbe Cob hnms. Mr. Gladstone there. Some one alluded to the diminution of sinecures. Mr . Gladstone snl1 that there was nothing dishonorable In ac cepting a sinecure If It was recognized by the society In which It existed and not considered unusual or unworthy. Une of the last sinecures, where there was absolutely nothing to do, which was not the case with all sinecures, bus the otlice of chief Justice In eyre, north of the Trent. It was held hy Tom Duncoiiilie and was worth 12.000 per annum "London Spectator Origin of Smoking. The origin of the custom of smoking Is veiled in mystery. The Chinese are thought to have had the bablt at a very 'early date, and this Is not sur prising. Judging today from tbe Cblnu- man'M fondness for tbe pipe. When Columbus discovered America he found smoking Indulged In by all tbe tribes of Indians, but the practice had a re ligious association to them. From San to Domingo tobacco was Introducd Into Spain and Portugal In 1569, but It" was then used In tbe shape of snuff. Sir Walter Ifalelgb. however, 1 the first man of note to make smoking a fash ionable bablt An Apology. 1 "This Is no place for lucb a petty squabble." said the police court Judge. "Now, Mulligan, you apologize to Ho gan for calling him a liar and I'll dis miss the case." "All right Mlshter Hogan, 1 apoly gtze for callln' ye-callln' ye what ye are." Ufa." With Credit Only. "Did you occupy yonr last pulpit with credit?" Inquired the church trus tee. "I certainly did," responded the ap plicant. "There was never any cosh connected with lt"-I.adle' Home Journal. OLD TIME PORTRAITS. Doe There Exist Reliabl Painting of the Poet Burn? Was this the face that launched a thou sand ships ' And burnt the topless towers of Ilium f . asks Marlowe, writing of tbe vision of golden Helen. A similar question has been naked In regard to the diverging portraits uf Mary Stuart. Was this the face that turned so many beads some 350 years ago? The queen of Scots was assuredly bewitching. Knox admits It; Knollys asserts It; Ruthven lost his heait to her In Lochleven cat tle; whoever saw her desired ber. Yet not one of Mary' portrnlts represents hoi- us beautiful. Romney has sufil clently explained the fascination of Lndy Flumllton for Nelson; But Mary Stuart's charm remain unexplained by her portrait. And what about Burns? The point I wish to make Is that old portrait paint ers are not to be depended on for strict fidelity to their original. Tha mere fact that they differ so much In their representations of tbe same subject 1 enough to prove it In regard to Burns, tbe question bears a twofold aspect. Not only' do the portrait of the poet disagree with one another, but even that which by Its frequent reproduction has tacitly lieen accept ed as the truest representation cannot have been exactly like blm when It was done. I reiur, of course, to tbe famil iar Nasniyth head and bust, painted In ITS', when Ilurua was currying all be fore him on his first visit to Edin burgh. J. Cuthbert Hadden In Scrib ner's. ' 1 REAL ESTATE LEASES. Origin of th Custom of Making Rent als For 99 or 099 Years. Whence originated the use of tbe odd term In leases, 1)11 or IMP years? In other days lessees and mortgagee In itossoHslon uf real estate for 100 or 1,000 years demised the same at an an nual rental, retaining a reversion for the Inst year of the original term. The object of this proceeding was to be found in tho unwillingness of tbe un der tetinnt to become bound to the per formance of the covenant contained In the original grant and also In the im portance to the lessor of a reversionary Interest, without which, under the old English practice, he could not recover his rent by distraint Sometimes this reversion wa for only three dny or even for only one day, but usually In long terms the last year was retained .Out of this came the opular notion that tbe law pro vided thl distraint, and hence leases were uiude for 00 or 000 years, when there was no reason whatever for any ucb odd period of time. In England there wa In special case a restrnlut on corporations or ecclesiastical person prohibiting th demise of land belonging to them to tbe Impoverishment of tbelr successor tor a turm beyond 100 year and uch leases were accordingly .made for 80 vers.-Harper' Weekly, - Mexico National Pawnshop. One of the most remarkable Institu tions In the City of Mexico la the Mon to de Plcdad, or national pawnshop. The monte la one of tbe oldest build tng In the capital, having been built for tha private residence of Cortes In 1520, and It bus been fortunate enough to escape the hands of restorers. It wa acquired in 1744 by Count de Reg la Tcrreroa. who laid out $300,000 in organizing the Monte As Pledad, with the idea of miring the needy from th usnry of the wdlnury pawnbroker. It urcem I nt tested by lis long history, alid Mexicans today can got one-tnird value on tbelr goods at a rate of Inter est seldom exceeding ft per cent per annum. If any one tall to keep up hit iwjmcuw the deposited goods are old, nuil auy bulauc over the sum advanced 1 haadud to the depositor, The Method of Providing For th Re - payment oi a Loan. Kvery uow and tbeu the plain man who has saved u little money and wauts to Invest it so Unit be will get tt reasonable unci safe return runs against u uest ot teruut which are be wildering and nil but meaningless. I'm afraid be usually passe by without taking tbe trouble to understand them. Take the word "amortization " I bold that It's no shame to any mini nut to know what that word means. And yet to investors the word U highly Important " ' Amortlziitlun' means simply the method or providing for the repayment of a loan if you lend me $10,000. which I promise to repay in ten years, you have u right to be interested in my plans for meeting tbe demand for the $10,000 which you expect to make upou uie teu years hence. So I say to you: "1 am gulng to amortize that $10,000 debt In tbls way: Out of my earning every year I'm going to let aside $900. Eut-b year I will set tbe $900 to work earning something too. At tbe end of ten years the fund will amount to Just enough to discharge my debt" Yon will And that specialists in bonds use the word a great deal. They know belter than anybody else it im portance. They realize that a borrow er of money for a long term of year is very apt to forget to make provision for repayment . Certain lenders of money on long terms Insist upon tbe borrower' tak ing out a life Insurance policy big enough to meet the debt in case of death before tbe debt become due. Generally tbe longer a debt has to run the more important becomes tbe ques tion of "amortization." John M. Oskl son in Chicago News. NAVAJOS FEAR THE DEAD. Henoe They Get Rid of Their Bodies Quickly Possible. One practice of tbe Navajo that pro mote health among tbem. however re pugnant It may be for ua, is their dis position of tbe dead. In the presence of tbe living the Navajo Is without fear, but bis terror of the dead is ab ject and unreasoning. Tbe dead are believed to be possessed of malevolent feelings toward tbe survivors, with un limited powers for working evil upon those who carelessly place themselves within tbe power of the spirits. So when any one dies tbe ouly. anx iety of tbe surviving relatives Is to get rid of tbe body as quickly as possible If tbere are auy white men living In the neighborhood an effort is made to Induce tbem to perform tbe office of undertaker. If not, tbe disposition of the body depends somewhat upon cir cumstances. If tbe hogan tbe mod ern wlgwnm-ls built of wood it Is set on Are aud burned with tbe body in it If of stone the body Is usually taken outside, tbe entrance to tbe hogan closed up with stones or sticks and a hole made In the wall opposite to per mit the evil spirits to depart and to warn passersby that the structure be longs to the dead. It the death occurred In a, rocky country tbe body will likely be taken to some crevice and thrown In it It may be left uncovered to become the prey of wolves and coyotes, or sticks and stones may be cast over it If the rurally lives In a sandy part of the reservation, with no convenient crev ices or chasms near by, tbe body will be laid upon tbe sand, a little earth and some stones thrown upon It and a pile of brush laid over all. Christian Herald. Th Judge Who Didn't Joke. The funny sayings or a Judge who never Joked are found in "Arablni ana," a selection of the dicta of Serin-nut William Arablu. who sat as a Judge at the Old Bailey in London from 1830 to 1839. For instance, hi remark to counsel: "If you can show precisely at what moment the offense was committed uud prove tbut tbe prisoner was not there when he did It he could not pos sibly have done It." And he aagely added as un afterthought. "We cannot divest ourselves of common sense In a court of Justice." Another axiom be delivered himself of baa been fathered on many other occupants of the bench: "If ever there was a case of clearer evidence than this case, this case i that case." Odor of London. Tbe sense of smell which enable an engine driver to avoid a collision or a sailor to steer clear of an Iceberg is the least cultivated of our sense. But with n proiierly equipped nose and a little practice we ought to be able to tell where we are blindfold all over London, for every locality ha Its dis tinct odor. Soho smell different from Southwnrk. Billingsgate differs from Llmebouse, Rntherhltbe ha quite special smell of It own, and Barking I absolutely tinlque.-R. U Stevenson. A Natural Inference. ' "Matrimony," said tbe lady who bad Just secured her third divorce, "Is, aft er all, an uncharted sea." "I take It, then." ber friend replied, "that you have not engaged In your various venture for charting pur pose." Chicago Record-Herald. Horse. It la estimated that th Mr of the average horse In bondage Is twenty five year. Tbe wild horse' age 1 about thirty-eight year. The more w study the more we dis cover our Ignorance. Shelley. Difficult to Snap Fast Moving Objecti t Given point Only an expert and be only artci much practice, can take a photograph of u rapidly moving object at a pre determined point for example, an ex press .train with the cowcatcher Just at a white chalk mark on a tie or a baseball ut tbe Instant tbe bat strikes It The reason for this Is twofold: First tbere is a certain appreciable time be tween the mental decision to do a tiling uud tbe actual doing of it; sec ond, it takes a certain appreciable time for the impulse given by pressing the button or squeezing tbe bulb of a camera to travel to tbe shutter and open it Tbe latter may in a very fine camera be only one-fiftieth of a sec ond, but even the fiftieth of a second Id a train going 100 feet second would mean a difference of two feet C. H. Claudy in an article In the Camera gays that not more than once in four attempts will even an expert catch the precise Instant be is seeking. The average man maps bis camera at the moment the ball Is striking tbe club or racquet and by the time bis shutter bas worked the ball has gone. A tennis ball travels nearly a mile a minute wben struck hard. That is ninety-six feet a second, so in a lag of one-tenth of a second between the pressing of tbe button and the opening of the shutter tbe ball will move near ly ten feet and ordinary cameras work no faster tban this. So one need not wonder if even experts fall. CLOUD FORMATIONS. 1 What W Know About Them 8eems to , Be Mainly Guesswork. Many scientists have told us bow clouds are made. - Most of the text books on physical geography tell all about them, but it Is oil guesswork. Clouds are a mystery. . It is true they are composed of moisture floating in the air, but bow did tbe moisture get there? It is held tbnt particle of moisture are evaporated from tbe earth's sur face by tbe beat of tbe sun. This moisture does not form Into clonds im mediately. Indeed, tbe passage of tbe moisture from the earth to tbe upper air Is quite invisible. It was formerly supposed that tbls moisture was con densed by tbe cold of the upper air Into rain droplets, which formed the clouds. But scientists bold that tbe tiny par ticle must have something to con dense upon. Tbey used to tell us that tbe moisture collected upon dust par ticles to form into rain drops. ' Now they are practically agreed that it is something else, but they don't know what ' Anyway, when these drops get' large enough they accumulate into vapor, forming clouds. Wben tbe droplets get too large and beavy to float in tbe air tbey fall to tbe earth In tbe form of rain, and this Is about all we actu ally know about clouds. War Cry. : ( When 8eals Were Food. Tbe gray seal used to serve Cornish men as an article of diet Stephen Hawker tells bow be and a brother clergyman, having asked a landlady at Boscastle what sbe could give them for dinner, were told "Meat and taties." They tried to get her to particularize the meat but "Meat nice, wholesome meat and taties" was the full extent of her Information. Wben tbe meat was served It' tasted like veal, but was unaccompanied by any vestige of bone that might have enabled tbe diner to infer Its origin. Years afterward Haw ker lighted on tbe nature of the "meat" when he read In an old history of Corn wall that "tbe people of Boscastle do catch divers young soyles, which, doubtful if tbey be fish or flesh, conynge housewives will nevertheless roast and do make thereof savory meat" London Graphic , ; Notice to Creditor. In tbe Cocrtv Ccmt of the Stale of Oregon for Umatilla Connty. In the Matter ot tbe Estate of , Donald N. MoDoosld, Deceased. No'ioe is hereby given to all persons whom it may oonoero that E. A. Dud ley ha been appointed exeontor of tbe last will and testament of Donald N. MoDonald, deoeaaed, and bas qualified as suota. All person having olalms against hi estate are hereby teqnired to present tbem with proper vouobers a required by law to tbe laid IS . A. Dudley at bis home in Athens, Ore gon, or at tbe otlioe of Will M. Peter son, attorney at law, Pendleton. Ore gon, within six month from th date of tbe Hist publloatioa of this notioe. Dated :bis tbs 10th day of July. A. D. 1914. E. A. Dudley, By Will M. Peterson, . Exeontor. ' Atty. for Exeontor. art" No tice to Creditors. In tbe County Coott of th State of Oregon fot Umatilla Connty. - ' In tbe Matter of tbe Estate of i . Lonia LaBrasobe, Deoeaaed. . Notioe is berety given to all person whom it miy oonoero, that W. S. Ferguson ha qualified as administra tor of the estate of Louis LaBrasobe. deceased, and ill person having olalms . against the estate' are required to' present them with prnpei vonobeis a leqoired .by law, to said exeontor at hi otfio in Athena. Ore., or to bis attorney, Homer I. Watta, at hi law otlioe in Athena; Ore., within six month ftom tbe first pub lioation of this notioe. ' Dated this tbe 10th day of Jnly, 1914. Homer L Watts, W. S. Feiguion, Attorney. , Administrator. v OFFICERS :. SHAFFER President, . FERGUSON, Vice-President, . LeUROW, Cashier. . CANNON, Aus't Cashier DIRECTORS tw, r opiiTiflTl? H. KOEPKE, W. S. FERGUSON M. L. WAI K. F. 8. Le uo. T FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ATHENA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS. $100,000.00 We extend to our Depositors every c4ccomrndation " consistent with sound Banking. Professional S. F. Sharp PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON : Special attention given to all ' calls both night and day. dalle promptly answered. Offlo on Third Strret, Atben Oregor DR. A. B. STONE, Physician and Surgeon. , ,, Offloe in Post Building. Phone, 601 DR. J. W. WELCH Dentist . ' Athena, Oregon Office Hour-. 9 . m, to 4:30 p. m. PETERSON & BISHOP Attorneya-at-Law " ' Freewatet, Oregon - Pendleton, 'Oregon ' Homer I. Watts ' ; ,V-"-. Attorney-at-Law .,..!" Athena, Oregon. " , - DR. E. B. OSBORN Veterinary Surgeon b Dentist Graduate McKllllp Vetlnary College Offlcesi Oommer'.cil nolo aud Haks Draj 8 tor . Phoue Main 43e, or 8 TOURTELLOTTE & HUMMEL , Architects' R. W. HATCH, Manager Despain Building, : Pendleton, Oregon. twenty Years of Pleasure. - 8L Michael' church, Macclesfield, England, Is noted for its beauty. In "Tbe Manchester and Glasgow Hoad" Charles (1. Harper tells of a curious epitaph In the churchyard upon one Mary Broomfleld. who died In 1755, aged eighty. It reads as follows: "Tbe chief concern of ber life for the Inst twenty years was to order and provide for ber funeral.- Her great est pleasure was - to think and talk about it She lived many yean on pension of nlnepence a week and yet saved 5, which nt ber request was laid out at ber burlaL" Comfortable Disappointments. Next to having tbe dentist postpone an appointment to tinker with yout teeth what Is the most comfortable dis appointment you ever experienced! Ours is having only $2 to lend to the man who drops in to borrow $10. De troit Free Press. Deduction. "Tell me what you eat, end Twill tell you what you are," boasted an amateur sage. ' "Well. I ate a welsh rabbit and lemon pie last night." "You're a fool." Kansas City Jour nal. . Knew Her Weakness. Mrs. Cross Are you a man or mouse! Mr. C.-The question Is super fluous, my dear. If I were a mouse you'd be on a chair screaming. Phil adelphia ledger , Dry. , "Why du yon associate with all those University profiwsoin!" "My doctor says I must live In dry atmosphere!"- tendon Telegraph.- lliid Puiyps - w Makes the food more delicious end wholesome fi& rtcwti norm NMftffft co., tw ww. C. I RUDE, LIVESTOCK and Genera ; AUCTIONEER Satisfaction Guaranteed Reference First National Bank of Athena I v .'V"'. -. ' Vve Order with F. S. Le Grow, or phone Main 362, Pendleton Ore. Residence, 501 Pine Street. ESTABLISHED 1865 Preston-Shaffer Milling Co. AMERICAN BEAUTY FLOUR Is made in Athena, by- Athena labor, in one oi the very best equipped mills in the Northwest, of the best selected Bluestem wheat grown anywhere.- Patronize home industry. Your grocer sells tbe famous American Beauty Flour for $1.35 Per Sack Merchant Millers & Grain Buyers Athena, Oregon. Waitshurg, Wash. PAINT IT NOW . he onger you wait the greater will be the damages and and consequently, the greater the cost. ; Sun, rain and wind are busv opening up the pores and cracks, and ev ery day's delay adds extra expense.. Tat our work giyes satisfaction, our growing list o permanent and satisfied customers testify. Phone 416. BENNETT'S PAINT STORE We make, use and guarantee "Imperishable" Paint. WWWW www THE r ST. NICHOLS HOTEL i 1 ' i. E. FROOME, pbop. , Only First-class Hotel in the City. , "THE ST. XICHOLS x ! Is in. only on. that osn oeommoaat. ommwelal trav.lenu i ; AT' - 1 Van beteeomeBded tor lie eleu ul ml ventilated room. COS. Mit ABU TMIM, ATSJMHi.Or J kl4JJf OVER OS YEARS ' EXPERIENCE irwn ws mtw v n ua 'MftV Copyrights && AnTCMM tofxtlrtf ft tkotrr) and description na? nlcKiy aKrtam our op'nton freo whether an (iiTentioo U probably patam Coium union ttonaiitrtatlrconQdamtaLHAMiiriDOK on Pateuia aunt free Old asttcr for Mcuruifr ptnta. Patent takan throueb Mjuq h Co. racalra prYiOt IMCeSC, Without COaTY. IB U Scientific Hcricax- A'fesHidaomfttr lltntratod wakrr. TJinraat itv ii!on of any tctanUilo Journal. Tcrma, $3 m S-MVt; f our muntlia, $. dol4bytU nawadaalara. ,rilOCo.w,,bKsw1fcr:i Come In The Water's Fine At North Beach .1 ' ..... Queen of all Northwest Summer Resorts. The O.-W. R. & N. sells round-trip tickets at low fares with liberal privileges, ' Every Day For full particulars ask J. R. Mathers, Agent, O.-W. R. & N., olthena, Oregon. $11 the LujQiiyqfthQ Basth&spmiatfythQ cost NOflAMM0(VryNO BAGGING NOflUMMOGKING sJL NO DRAGGING NO SAGGING NO PITCHING totems See the Z)eJ"Bed Springs st LI MILLER'S FURNITURE STORE.