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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1928)
Medford Mail Tribute Weather Year Ago Maxliimiti 5.1 Minimum 44 Dally Twenty-third Yett Weekly Fifty-aixth Var MEDFORD, ORlXiOy, MONDAY. MAY 7, 1928. No. 4G. The Weather PrrUlnlun rnlr. Maximum jolcrdujr 77 Minimum today 44 Today By Arthur Brisbane Ride With the U. S. A. If Mellon Would Run. Ladies 'and Hairdressers. Don't Imitate Nature. (Mopyrlght, 1927. l.y New Tork Evening Journal. Inc.) Mr. Moody, head of the well known Investors' Service, tells yoit) through Cyrus II. K. Cur tis' paper, that Wall Street hears will wait a long imc for lunch. "Ride with the V. S. A.," says he. We have hud a wild time since 1923. Hut that will seem mild compared with ft00'' times that arc ahead, in the next five vears. 1,1 l ' . The old days, when the 111 - Eiders nut-prices up, -'distrib- 11 r' llted stocks ntllOllg the lambs, then knocked prices down, arc gone. This is a great era. SJlie poor bears don't know what it means for us to be a creditor nation, for the first time, or what it means to have our industries, railroads and natural resources developed to so high a degree. f 1SLT, Mr. Moody, like every ether wise man, would say to I you "DON'T GAMBLE." Some will get rich in the next, five years; some, including gamb lers, will become poor. Com is selling for $1.25 a 1.....1...1 Tf nl,l mum In nue , than 25 Cents, and farmers : burned it because it was cheap ( cr than coal. Vi Atrl.nnf "rtlimliinrr mcill'llM V ' . .. . . I i . nnt nil li.- Hnnli n Wllllt. It Wtttt ja, little while ago, when this writer advised the learned Gar fence Dillon to buy a million bales of it. Beneath the country is a lake of oil and there is plenty of ; (ild in the mountains, i ' Don't sell this country short. We are still producing gold find a wise German economist warns the world it is producing , less than half the gold it needs. That should make American mild dollars gradually worth , more. But if ALL the gold ', vanished the loss would not be great, except tolentists. Wo ; do not cat it and only imagine ! it is money. If iron, water or, especially oxygen, should become scarce, that would be a different story. 4 ,. , There is so much political news that even an outline would be too long, like Wells' outline of history. IViinsylvauia might go to a strong wet, except that the workers easily get all tho beer , they want under pscudo-prohi- bilion. Mimv nf the wise ones in Washington believe that. Mr. ' Mellon will be nominated if the President persistently refuses. Mr. Mellon has passed seventy, but he is able to look after this nation's money affairs and I) would he welt nine to run me ( VjtC i Louse ousincss. .' t. much vouncr than Glad stone, when the latter sat up all right In the House of Commons fighting his home rule battle with flerco cncry. It Is tho MAN, not the Ke, that counts. And the presidency Is not a ditch-digging Job It demands brains, experience, wisdom and will. Mr. Mellon has nil four, highly developed, and could be elected easily. The diffi culty Is that he docs not WANT the Job. the fight will probably be So Smith-Hoover or Smlth-Da'es or Smttn-i ooiiuge in cpb me uv choose" Achilles should stroll out of his tent and say, "All right, since you insist." Gabriel FauxTof DIJon. wins first prlxe as best hair dresser in ' France, most skilful, artistic, rapid and "the best talker to women." 1 Men ask -vhy women confide F eir secrets to the hairdresser. It (Continued on Paf Four) STEIWER LAUNCHES BIG PROBE Norris, Curtis and Borah j Are First Witnesses Be fore Senate Campaign Fund Committee Good Humor Marks Proceed ingsCurtis Says He'll Win. Washington. May i.up Presidential candidates rubbed ' shoulders with one another today. jus the new senuto campaign fund-. c!nml,t1ec,1,1ot "ut lhe sr,I,n"i I offi! bulldlnc to develop facts leom - ernlne the financing of the 1928 political baltleK. One by one, the ' candidates showed up In the committee room, each being made tho target of good-natured Joking remarks bv the members of -ho coinlUce, CMpcclally when tho cnndldalu hap pened to bo a member of thy. sen ate. Chairman Steiwer said tho c'H'.i mlttcc pro)oHvd to niako an "Im partial" investigation. "We will conduct our Inquiry in such a way us to elicit tho truth-, but without aiding any cundiil.itu," he said. Senator Norris asked to be heard first because of a conimll teo meeting. He was sworn and steiwer nskrd him to tell of expenditures of his campaign and tho scops of it. Norris was smoking a pipe. v "I have not been a cundldate," tho Nebraska!! said. "1 have not wanted to be and havo not been In any sense. Against my wish. my name was put on the bullet i Wisconsin and Nebraska, n'.- though 1 could have stopped It. "1 have not spent anything After the primaries in three states, 1 received a letter from n Ne- braaka editor asking, me; to pay $ti for an advertisement. He said he had not been au thorized to run It, but 1 paid It. 1 hope this will not induce others to bill me." Senator Curtis, tho second wit ness, said that after It appeared that president Coolldge would not be a candidate ugain, friends In Kansas urged him to declare, but ho refused to do so until he had satisfied himself thut Coolldge would not agree to being drafted. Organization of his supporters In Kansas was told he would not support solicitation of funds for himself. Ho said he advised them It would bo all right to accept voluntary contributions, providing they were carefully accounted for. The treasurer of tho Curtlss-for president club of Kansas iistod collections as $1.1 15 and cxpomii tures of $7KH.90, ho continued. The New York Cuitls-for-rrcl-dent club reported contributions of :(05U and expendllurea of KS03 The expenditures were for rent of a fourstory building, gas, por - ter and eiUerta.nment of Kan- sas 'officlnls. Of the contributions. $500 was given, he wild, by Matthews Quav Olazer, president of the club, and Klctribiirg, treasurer. Curtis ex plained that John D. Curry had opened headquarters In the Wal dorf Astoria In Now York in his behalf. None of-t1c Olazer-Stcln-burg funds had been used in New York for publicity. Senator Curtis told the commit tee that Instead of making an ac tive bid for delegates in New York, he decided to be satisfied with an unlnstructed delegation. In Oklahoma, where supporters of urtis claim the convention delegation, the Kansas senator said he had been informed $1175 had been collected and $1015.15 expended for publicity, postage, Correspondence and gasoline. A Curtls-for-President club the District of Columbia, th'j sonunittec was told, collected SSim and spent M42.25. CurttH KxpccU lo Win. The senator said he had no na tional campaign mannger. but ha3 been directing his campaign him self. From five friends Curtis testified he had received a - total of 10oo direct and had expended himself $1 664.37. This outlay, he said, was for postage, stationery, campaign buttons and literature, telephone and telegraph. The only additional expense in comen.- j limilUII IUI IHPiri luuxin Kansas City for the republli convention. "I have no large fund or any fund." he said. "I don't believe J In that kind of a campaign" Curtis snld he would have 2000! pictures nitde for h s campaign i but added he had plenty of but- tons. Steiwer asked what promises Curtis had made with' regard to disposition of patronage. "None whatever,"- he answered. "I have made no commitments." Senator MacMaster, republican of South Dakota, asked the wit ness If he had any agreement about swinging his support to any i other candidate, in the event he did not go over. (Continued on Page Eight) SAILS TO AID PERU'S AIR FORCE Lieutenant Ben H. Wyatt, one of the greatest filers In the V. S. navy and holder of the Distinguished Flying Cross, is shown with Mrs. Wyatt, at Los Angeles, as he sailed for Peru to undertake the Job of building up an air force for that nation. Wyatt has been loaned to Peru by the U. S. government for the task. The entire work of form ing, training and conducting Peru's air force falls on the young aviator. NATIONA L TOUR TO START E Airplane Armada fo: Make' Stop in Medford and( Portland Prizes to Be Given Planes Showing Greatest Reliability in Air Voyage.- UN 30TH A bitter primary campaign ap- DKTROIT Mich, May 7 (Spe-' proached the end today. Indiana ULiituii, .inch., .iuy i. i l yolerB wU, vote tomorrow for re- ciall ArranKoments are going tor-1 Inlbiclin an(1 democratic candidates ward here for the holding of three fnr president, United States sen events of major Importance on the i ate, congress, governor, state legis world's aeronautic calendar. They I Iature and county office s Hrcclnct arc the. National air tour, this James (Inrdon HonnoM liilnrnutlnnni nai- loon race, and iho Mitionai niouoi airplnno contest. All are sched uled to Htavt on the sama day, June 30. at the Ford airport. The national air tour this year wm cover a course more than three - times as long as that of the first tour, lour years ago. It will touch 21 cltica in 13 states, over a period of 28 days. The distance is 6000 miles. The first national tour was over a PJOO-mlle course; the sec ond 2G00 miles, and the third 4000 miles. diana and have the support of four- The annual stepping up of the , fifths f the delegates to tho state distance for this reliability contest conVentlon. may be looked upon as a measure Oscar Foelllnger of fort Wayne, o'f the pro.;ress made each year In state campaign manager for the air travel, according to Ray Cooper, j Hoover forces, received a telegram manager of the tour and other alr-lfl.onl Soct'etary Hoover expressing craft events sponsored by the Dc- i ,iii 'i lalliM for the work done for troit hoard of commerce. him In Indiana and declaring: While the itinerary has not been I i.-,.0m all I can learn, your sue definitely fixed, these cities are rKeKS K depend upon a lull repro- included In the tentative list of stnns: ndiananolis. lml.: bt. l-ouls, Mo.; Tulsa, Okla.: Fort Worth, Houston, San Antonio and El Paso, Tex.; Tucson and Phoenix, Aril.; San Diego, Los Angeles, Fresno, 1 San Francisco and Oakland, t'al. In.jfedford and Portland, Ore.; Spo- kanc. Wash.: Missoula and Great FbIIs. Mont.; Minot, N. I).: St. Paul. ' Minn.; Wausau, Wis.; Chicago, 111.; Ilattle Creek, Mich.; and thence back. t6 the starting point. Ford Rlrport, Dearborn, Mich. ' In addition to the Edsel II. Ford trophy to the winner, $12,001 in I cash prizes will be distributed. I They will he divided as follows: First, -.:5t)0; secon, 12000; third, 1150: fourth. J1500; fifth, $1250; I sixth. $1000: seventh $50; eighth, i$550; ninth, $40, and tenth, $300. :;:IB0Y BANDIT SAYSHE Ml BF GOOD N0Wh-"''-"'-v PORTLAND, Ore., May 7. Wi The 13-year-old lad of Klamath Kails who broke Into the Hillsdale postofflce severul months ago as a climax to a career of petty crimes, was'today Antenced to IS months In the industrial school at Ht. An thony school. Iila ho. by Judge Mc Nary. , I. "I'll like It there. Somebody I will take care of me," he said. "After 64 days In the county Jail. I'm not going to be bad any more,' -y ! I LIKE WINNER Favorite Son Doped'to Carry' Indiana Primary Tomor- row By Large Vote Hoover Manager Only Claims Nine Delegations. : 1NDIAXAPOU, lnd.. May 7 (!) kUUj (.OI1V4,nlfoI1 n)K0 wiu' bo hc (UIMIIllLLUUIIIVII (H'U tiunhii"." ( i0l.l(M Principal inlercsl tenters in tho fight between Herbert Hoover, sec retary of commerce, and Senator James W. Watson .for tho prefer ential vote of the stute for the re publican nomination for president. Control of the 33 delegates to the Kansas City convention Is in M. Hurt Thurman. national cam- paten manager for Senator vmwon, in a tinai statement sam mai r.- son wlu cany every district In In- notation at the primary next Tues- dav." Foelliiwor predicted that Hoover would carry In nine districts. , . OF GETS nOHKBPRO. Ore.. May 7. Wi Harry Ha pp. recently Indicted on a charge of possession of liquor, the accusation growing out of an automobile wreck In which Jack Waynick, a local restaurant em ploye, was killed, entered a plea milted that he hud been drinking ! nrlnr to the accident and thut bottle was found In his coat pocket after the wrec eck. A -plea for leni- ade In his behalf b- , enry was ma j cause of the fact that he Is still suffering from Injuries roS)-cd In the accident. Roland Hch wurtz, SON LOOKS OVER HOOVER who has been accused of nv.!un- lotteries: Stewart and O'Neill; tury manslaughter, growing out of Jones, Burke, Vunalstyle and Ruel. an automobile accident In which! - -- . Mary Julia Robertson of this city Orvgon Weather, was killed, filed a demurrer t' Generally fair tonight and Tues the Indictment and the argument I day; continued mild., Uentlo nor wai set for Wednesday morning. ' thci ly winds. . JUSTICE RAND'S REPORT IS DUE LATE ISP J. Pommittee Reconvenes to Thresh Out Charges By Attorney Joseph Against Chief Justice of State Su preme Court Rand's Ex oneration Is Expected. PORTLAND. Ore., May 7. W Reconvening here this nfter noon, a committee of In ivy em ex pected to have a report ready some time late today on charges which Senator George . Joseph made against Chief Justice John L. ' Hand, of the stuto supreme court. The committee ndjuurned Sat urday to 1 p- in. today and wuh expected to bo over the testimony which dealt largely with the liti gation over the estate of 12. Henry Wemme, which was pending In the stale supreme court when charges were made that Judge Hand had given an option on mining prop erty In Huker county to Thomas Mannix, an attorney who was con nqeted with the Wcmmo case. Judgo 11. Wlckey, formerly connected with the alien property custodian's office, u party in the Wemme case, was said to have become Interested In the mining property ileal through Mutuilx. Judge Kami, In u typewritten statement, placed before the com mittee u denial of charges tguinHt him. According to local rumors, tho report will be a complete ex oneration of Justice Hand. 1 NEAR DEATH AS RESULT OF FIGHT IMSNDLHTON, Ore., May 7. (I) Ingram Alexander. 1 H -year-old Indian on the Umatilla reservation,- Is In a local hospital In a critical condition, following In juries Friday morning In what Is alleged to .have been a drunken orgy on the reservation. Ills back I Is broken, spinal cord severed, leg fractured and hc Is suffering from other injuries, with only a slight chance to recover. It is said a car was driven over his body. John Sampson, Iawrence Samp son, Louise Van Pelt, Dorcas Will Hill are being held as alleged members of the parly. John Sampson and Louise VnnPelt are alleged to have been In Iho ear when the accident occurred, and each claims the other drove the car. Tho two are said to have jumped In the car to leave the others when tho accident occurred on tho reservation south, of the Indian agency. Alexander was a student at hte Chemawa Indian school at Salem Inst year. Dorcas J WW Hill and Louise VanPelt are young Indian girls. . . The story came to light today ' Bucharest today to demand a through tho announcement of!c,1""Ke ul government. After a loral police officers who have been Investigating the affair. Baseball Scores Nutlonal. Philadelphia : Chicago :' ; II. 4 ..:.. 7 and H. K. II 3 8 0 Wilson; Ilatterles: Walsh Hush nnd Gonzales. It. New York 5 Cincinnati 1 Ilatterles: Uenton and I Jablonowskl and I'iclnich'. n. Poston 4 : Pittsburg 0 ; Ilatterles: Itohcrtson. e r t . land Taylor; Ml) Jus and Smith. American. H. H. & 11 8 11 K.i 1 Chlrngo .... New York Butteries: , and Crouse , cirabowskl. Thomus. Barnabe ; Shealy, Plpgrua and K. H. E. Detroit 0 5 o ' mei ninny peasants moving toward Philadelphia !"""!!!!!!!."!!l0 13 l'tne capital with hunners which Butteries: Carroll, Smith. Ho1-jWP, unfurled. Others were slt loway and Shea; drove and Coch-'1'"" '"nund camp fins by the "!""' R. If. K. nd - 4 9 0 Boston 2 11 0 Butteries: Miller and L. Sewell: errss, Russell, Garrison and ijPry , ,! j Ht. Louis R. If. K. Ifi 17 1 .261 Washington DRAGS BABE FROM TR 1 DEATH j T , ilt$& Aprs When Harriet Hagaman, of Tulsa, Okla., grows up she will hear the story of how Pdtrolia Queen, her uncle's dog, saved her life by dragging her from the path of a speeding nuto. Harriet, three years old, was plnying on the walk under the watchful eye of tho canine, when she toddled into the street in front of tho car. Tho dog leaped out and draggedjher back. Pctrolia Queen and Harriet are shown above. RURAL ATTACK MRS KNAPP ON ON BUCHAREST F Rumanian Govt. Refuses to Force Bratianu to Resign Peasants Threaten to! Refuse Tax Payments- Army Planes Keep Close; Watch. HUC1IAKI0ST, May 7. () The regency today refused tho demand voiced by 200.000 peasants meet ing at Alba Julia yesterday that the government of Viutlla Hratl- nau resign. Julio Manlil. lender of the peas- mils, who bl-iiugllt the delliiind to Utlcllul'CHl, was Infol'mcd that the i-eKcix-y sow no occasion fur de manding the resignation. In tiie face of u negative reply the peasants' pm-ty. may now adopt passive resistance toward tho present government, Including the nun-payment of taxes In order to i-mbarass It. AI.MA Jl'I.IA. itumanlu. May 7. I ' 1'easants were inim-hliig on Sunday meeting of zou.UUu pens- ants ami luborri-s hud sworn to do levcrything possible to remove the present government and had broken up in confusion, the crowd lingered for two hours while sev eral leaders made fiery speeches. Then two hmg columns started a five-day hike for Bucharest. Ten fighting planes flew over Alba Julia surveying tho ranks of the peasants as they trudged to ward tho capital. It was stated that each peasant ES CRISIS' STEALING CASH 11. K.!W11H participating In the march on 7 3 ; his own Initiative and without the 10 i authorization of Julio Maniu. Hogan; leader of the national peasant party. The march on Pucharest I was regarded as a popular 'inanf H. K. ! Testation, and since the mart hern 0 2 . were unarmed, no hluodfhed was 12 1 'expected. Alanlu ami I. Mirhulakl. another leader. Intended to reach the en pi tnl nhead of the pcasanls by trnv - eling by railroad. They carried the demand of the assembly that tho government headed by Vlntila Bratianu resign and Intended to present It to the regency. The Associated Press corre spondent who rode from Klaus-n- ,tJJ) toward. Buchari'st, utiiinius'. Casualties of the Air Service HI-JATTLi;. May 7. (Pj Kdwln Klnsey, ;', died today us u result of Injuries received when a Seattle flying service airplane In which he was a passenger, fell 300 feet Into the Duwamlsh river, yesterday. WllUum L. Coleman, his companion, and Lon Brennan, the pllo.. Injured In the crash, uro reported recovering. STAND DENIES 1 i i - First Woman Elected in New j York Claims Check Was for Furniture Her Dau ghter Purchased and Sent to Her Little Home. ALBANY, N. Y., May 7. VP) Mrs. Klcmicc 10. H. Knnpp, first woman ever elected to statewide public office in New Voi-k, took tho witness stund today In her own de - fense itKuiust u charge of grand larceny in connection with alleged I misuse of a stato census pay check Mrs. Knnpp said that sho had a house In Hyi-iicusa when she en tered office and when she went out she had "nothing more." Hho add ed thut before sho entered office she also had ubout f-I.GUu In cash. Hho characterized tho census of 1025 as a "gigantic task," and suld she asked several of her relatives to help her accomplish the "vast amount uf work." Uhe detailed! various work she said her relatives hud done on the census. The state hud sought to show that relatives whose names appeared on the cen suspayroll had done little or no work, and sirtue did not even know 1 their names were on the oil. Mrs. Knnpp Identified the en dorsement, 'C. P. Kmipp," on the check which Is the basis of the present Indictment, as In her own handwriting and testified she hud caused a bank druft to bo pur chased with the check. With this, she swore, she paid for furniture purchased at a department store In Hyracue, in accordance with au thority granted by "C. P. Knapp, her stepdaughter, Th Is f u 1 1 1 u re, sho test If led, was to be used to furnish the Albany home fur the family during the census period. As to Its final dis position, nhe jui Id It was smt to "our little home" In Bedford, Mass., with the stepdaughter's approval. Taking up the matter of tho missing records, ordered destroyed i by Mrs. Knapp, which the prosccu j Hon charged Included Important census records, ino witness lean- ffrd she had no place to store thein, so she ordered nil but the box de stroyed without examining the con tents closely. The examination of Mrs, Knapp lusted one hour. (.Irl HuIiiim Columbia. PKNDLKTON, Ore., May 7. (VT) Miss Lucille Hubbard. 20, school teacher In the Olex district near! Arlington., yesterday swam the Co-j lunthlu river, making the round : trip In an hour and ten minutes, ; She started her swim two miles I east of Aarllngton and due to the t rn n tr current lap five miles I the Washington side. The return j swim sttirted n mile east of Roose velt and took 2' minutes. l.lcol. Marvin In O. K. C. WAMIINOTON. May 7. (Pi Army orders Issued today Include the following transfer: Lieutenant (I. W. Marvin, engi neers. Humphreys to Corvallls. Ore., duty with Agricultural col lege, July 7. GHTNG IN T S I N A N Japanese Bring Down Air Plane and Continue At tacks On Chinese Rebels 15 Japanese Reported Killed Japan to Take Control in Force Until All Danger Passed. SHANGHAI, China, May 7. (P) According to a dispatch from Tsi nnn, the Japanese this mornlnii brought down an airplane of tho northern forces which was etvnxed In bombing the foreign settlement there. Casualties were not men tioned. Another war office dispatch sets the number of murdored In the antl Japancse demonstrations at 13 with 28 others missing, of whom two aro believed to have been murderod. looting Is said tor be continuing on a small scale. ' SHANGHAI, May -7. VP; To day's dispatches from Tslnan suld while tho - atmosphere there was tense tho situation w-as quiet. The northerners have been bomli Iiik Tslniin spasmodically and onu of their planes crashed yesterday, killing Its occupants. SHANGHAI, May 7. (JPh-H. J. Tlmperlcy,- an Australian newspa per correspondent In Tslnan at tho time of the Japanese - Chinese clashes, has arrived In Tslntao and wired thatall Americana In Tslnan wore safe In the Japanese area. Hteln's hotel, a foreign hostelry In which Tlmperley stayed, was looted. The -correspondent ' stated tho , situation was growing quiet,- tho nationalists having withdrawn ex cept soma Isolated snipers whlclj the JapuneHcnt'O cleanlng.vou. TOKYO, May 7. (P)The gon-L ' m-fil Htnfr mtrl nllipf hlirh win and ' navy affluials propose that Japan shall hold Shantung provinco and Its railways until present diffi culties over Tslnan aro-iolved.. It was also proposed that tho fight ing factions of the Chinese bo or dered to cease warfare In Shan tung. It was stated thnt sanction of tho cabinet would be sought for .'the sending of all infantry units. including tne uivisionai neuuttuur tcrs of the Nagoyo division to Tslngtuo, Shantung, to administer the railway. Tho sending of live 1 ,utdmonul companies of Infantry to Tientsin also was urged. With the general staff plans un der consideration by the cabinet and a fnvorablo decision expected, tho- navy department decided to send additional ships, to various Chlneso ports, Klght destroyers were ordered from tho fleet base at Kuro to tho Yangtze river, seven miles from the Sasebo fleet base at Swatow and Canton,' and four miles from the naval harbor at Malzuru to Shanghai. General Kazushlge L'gakl, former minister of war, was appointed commander In chief of the whole Shantung expeditionary force which will number 13,000 men. Including the soldiers already there. . Tho Japanese airplane currier Notoro was ordered today to pre pare to leave for Tslngtao, China, where Japanese froces have been concentrating to meet the Shan tung 'disturbances. The Notoro has a capacity of 40 plunes. FAMOUS AMERICAN - IDE NKW ORI.KAN8. May 7. (4'J Dr. C. Kdmund Kells. Interna tionally known dentist nnd tho . first member of his profession to "J e ""', '7: his office hero today. Despond ency over 111 health was attributed as the cause. Dr. Kells had undergone 27 operations and amputations In re cent years to his left arm, which had become Infected through his. 1 experiments with the -ray. His i sight also had become Impaired. Fruit Prices Today : HAM KRANCIMCO. Mny 7. tP) CONTINUES finished tho first! (Federal-Slate Market News Serv ,.'ow nooseve.t'lon lce.-A.-P..KS boxes. California Newtown Pippins, four-tier, $1.75 til.M; 8 4 -tier. $2.26iJ.75: few higher: . poorer, low AN $1. . ; Oregon and Washington Rome Flfuutle. extra fancy. $2.751f3.2fi; fancy. $2.505. 00. Newton Pip pins, extra fancy, $3,250 3.00: fancy. $3.73 it 3.25: Wlnesaps. ex n a fancy, $J.26tf 3.50; fancy, $2.75 0 3.16; Arkansat Blacks, extra fancy, $3.15S.25 fancy, $2,750' 3 00. ! . .