Weekly Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1900-1924, February 16, 1904, Page 2, Image 2

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    TTT7T.Y OHHG01I ETATHC1IA1X, TUESDAY, FESSUAIIY 18, ISO.
' I
I
TZ V.IEL'LY CnEGC'i STATES'IAfi
Published every Taas&ay and Friday by ths
BTATE5MA3T PUBLISHING COMPXJTT '
B. J. HtafPRTOK. Manager.
T. T. GBE&, Editor. ;
BUBSCKIPTIOJf KATES. .
One year n kStbihw.. $IM
f ik taootna, in adTanca.. ........ .......... .60
1 hree month, in ad Tinea .25
Onyer, on Uan..........-......,.,-. L2S
Th Statesman baa been established lbr nearly
fifty-two year, and It baaaome aabecribera who
k iceired It nearly tnat loan, and aaany
who htr read it for a feneration, gome oi
these object to ha ring the paper discontinued
at tbe time of expiration of their auhaciipUona.
for the benefit of tbeae.and for other reasons
re bare nonci uled toitoontinue cubrcripliona
. only when n.Ufti to do an. a peraona paying
when ubaeribng;, or paring, in advance, will
baretbo oenefUof the dollar rate. BntUthey
do not pay fr six montha, tbe rate will be IL23
a year. Hereafter we will aend tbe paper to ail
rceponalble persona who ordc It, tboujrh tbey
may not aend tbe money, with tbe onaerstand
tag thattney are to pay $L25 a year, in cace they
let the rabcriptlon . acooont ran over sis
moo Ui a. In order that there may be no mlron
demanding, we will keep thla notice atacdlns
at tbia place in the paper. 1 - . -
CIRCULATION (SWORN) OVER 4000
mm
. A SUNNY DAY IN GEOBGIA.
Sunny days in winter birds are on ,
the wing.
An' a feller looks an' listens for a
rnockin'bird to sing; ,
Shiverin'. believers, wipe your
weepia' eyes!
Soon you'll sco the bluebird, an'
" ; soon the saji'll rise!
Sunny days in winter frost is on
the go.;
Larks are sorter fixm" for the fur-
rows that they know : "
Boon you'll leave the rattle an ' riot
' o' the town; -
Rait your hook for fishin', and see
the cork go down!
" '"
.': nr.
Sunny days, believers. We'll be
., happy then, '
Mockin 'birds a-singin' Jill the
whole world says - 'Amen! "
Let it come, an' welcome meauow,
field art' stream,
An' in a world o' blossoms we'll
dream Life's sweetest dream!
Frank L. Stanton in Atlanta .
Constitution. "
Jefferson is replete with instances where
he-advised national i action far' more
" revolutionary : in its every aspect
than the: recognition of Panama, and
that father of democracy fairly ach
ed' for an opportunity to "swipe"
Cnba outright. ; - - j .
In fact, the leading Democrats of the
United. States have! .concluded; to, sot
only' acquiesce in, Roosevelt's action in
the Panama matter but to actually en
dorse it. This outbreak of the Louis
ville paper is only one degree more sane
than Bryan's determination to re-adopt
the Kansas City platform ' in its en
tirety.
JUDGE EAKIN'S EXAMPLE.
On this page the Statesman repro
duces, a paragraph from the East Ore
gonian which is of the right stuff.
Much of the time of our courts is taken
up with matter that has no business
there under any circumstances. The
Pendleton paper is exactly correct in it
suggestion. The laws of Oregon and of
the city of Portland prohibit gambling
as plainly as they do .murder. Kut here
is a ease where a man has been guilty
of gambling and in the'proeess of his
nnlawftal bugia'ss alltg8i that-he y
robbed. He has. the audacity to take
his ease into court and ask the state,
whose; laws he was breaking, to fores
the refunding of ' the money he lost
while thus engaged! ,4 ';.' "- -f'-- I'
If a highwayman should undertake to
rob a man and should in turn receive
terrible beating, .to follow the example
of this gambler, he should have his in
tended vctira fined for assault and bat
tery! j Why notl .
Since the morning stars sang' together
there has been' no greater farce enacted
than the way the authorities, high and
low, in Portland, have dealt with gamb
ling in that city. Tbe gamblers con
tinued to be lined but. cannot be found!
Through some means their fines can be
regularly collected but they cannot be
arrested. And with this policy adopted
as a permanent one, and the publie so
notified by the authorities, some people
wonder what measures can be invented
to put a stop to the inereasing number
of " juvenile offenders." The estab
lished poliey promulgated and followed;
in Portland, "because the city must!
have.money," will produce the "gave-1
uile offenders" fast enough. By all
means let us have separate jails fori
themj also, separate courts. We openly
establish and defend a policy of law
breaking, by. the officers of tbe city,
which admittedly creates juvenile of
fenders, so a spirit of humanitarianism
should prompt us to see that after we
have given them a proper start in the
wrong direction, they should not be
"contaminated" by being tried in the
same court with older and hardened
criminals. -
We should not cease to be humanitar
ian. If we provide the "juvenile of
fenders", with a nice, separate plaee
for incarceration and for their subse
quent trials, it will lareelv act as an
U 1 i 1 1 . .
offset for the seeming reprehensible! ana "T7 was reacneu ty one oi
poiiey. of 'winking at the school thatSthose factions when, on the occasion
of the celebration of the anniversary
of Lincoln's birthday, on Friday night,
their leading members refused to at
tend and take part because the gentle
man selected to respond to tbe toast
"President Booscvelt" belonged to
the other faction! This was the very
essence of childish petulancy and ma
chine proscraptiveness gone o seed.
This petulant exhibition of a two by
four conception of public party spite
THE REPUBLICAN FACTIONAL
FIGHT IN OREGON. ,
The differences which divide the Be-
publican party in Oregon into two fac
tions date back who can ! tell when
tbey began! Although the time of
;heir beginning 1 would be difficult to
precisely locate,; it would be an easy
task compared with an effort to de
cide when they will cease. The attack
opon Mr. Mitchell by the Oregonian
twenty years ago had apparently been
forgotten when, in 1891,; that gentle
man was re-elected to tbe United States
Senate without any Republican opposi
tion anvwhere. but 'when he espoused
the cause of free silver afterwards the
fight was renewed and has raged and
been waged with varying intensity ever
since.
Without attempting to excuse either
faction in the past for excesses in party
management, it is pertinent to say that
at no time has the factional feeling
been so rampant as it is in Multnomah
county today, and largely on account
of the unprecedented intolerance-of
the faction that has eontrol of the
party in that county and the city ot
Portland.
The very acme of party blindness
produces them. Great scheme, this.
THE. GHOST OF IMPERIALISM.
Somewhat contrary to its usual good
sense, the Louisville Courier Journal
discovers a tendency towards monarch
ical customs in the fact that when Gen
eral Taft, the new Secretary of War, ar
rived in Washington from the Phili-
I pines, lie was met at the depot by a
Bad Cough
I had a 'bad cough for six
weeks and could find no relief un
til I tried Ayer's Cherry Pectoral.
One-fourth of a bottle cured me."
L. Hawn, Newington, Ont.
Neglected colds always
Itad :o something serious.
They run into chronic
bronchitis, pneumonia,
asthma, or consumption,
; Don't wait, but take
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
just as soon as your cough
oegins. A few doses will
cure you then.
Commit yoor doctor. Ifbesara takoit.
then rio aa he r. If he telln you not V
take It, then don't take it. Ho knows.
Ayer's Pills cure any tendency
to biliousness or constipation, and
thus hasten recovery. Purely vege
table. Gently laxative. .
J. C. AVER CO.. Inrell, Maaa.
troop of cavalry and escorted to hisjJind dwarfed littleness, recalls the fact
quarters. In the course of a long edi-j.that that faction is undertaking to
tonal this fact is commented upon in a j read every - man out of the party in
most senoiiH vein, critically examined Multnomah county who does not in ad-
froin various points of view, and the'vanee pledge himself to support Mr.
conclusion is reached that "step by J Mitchell for re-election. As a means
step with the silent sanction of the! to this end the position if , assumed
people, in small matters the tenant of that noman in, Oregon -.can. honestly
the White House has proceeded in his. claim to be a supporter of President
accretion of power culminating in his j Roosevelt unless he will at the same
Panama absolutism until. none can fix! time proclaim bimscLf to be a. Mitchell
a limit to his possible assumption of , man, also.
imperial prerogative."
The first thought that suggests itself
alter reading thi indictment of the
President is that, after all, there seems
no real barrier between Watterson and
Bryan. When a troop of cavalry escort
ing the prospective head of the War
Dejirtmejit? to his quarters can produce
such an extreme case of impending im
perialism in embryo as this, Bryan's
most wild-eyed vagaries, so often elo
quently described and ridiculed by the
Kentucky Colonel, assume a type both
commonplace and harmless. Their de
lusive tendencies are on practically the
same plane, the principal difference ap
parently being that Bryan's distorted
vision takes in a wider range of spectral
hobgoblins.
A troop of. cavalry escorting Secre
tary Taft along the streets of Washing
ton is no more significant than a com
pany of militia parading the streets of
rorthfnd on the Fourth of July. Not
a single privilege of any American citi
zen was in the least degree even threat
ened by it, then' or in the remotest fu
ture, and as to Panama, the history of
If any Kejtublican undertakes to
have an opinion on the Senatorship
which has not been formed for him by
the "managers." in Portland his as
sertion that he is a supporter of Roose
velt is not to be accepted for a mom
ent. The two go together. It is im
possible for a man wno doesn't favor
Mitchell to, favor Roosevelt, and if he
says he does, he is necessarily a liar.
The ' "managers" in Portland boldly
hold that a man who opposes Mitchell's
re-election is not to be believed if he
says he is in favor of Roosevelt. Nin$
ty-nine per cent of the Republicans of
Oregon are in favor of the nomination
of the President. t This is known by
everybody. Therefore, the "manag
ers" have dropped into the fine prop
osition of shouting that there is great
danger of somebody opposing the Pres
ident, and that it is the special and
exclusive prerogative of the "manag
ers" to see that no Republican who
doesn't ride in their wagon shall have
any recognition or attention if they
can, help it. . .
So, it came to pass when the Lincoln
banquet was arranged by vhe; Young
Men's v Republican -Club-of Portland,
an organization which has been kept
free from the . factional differences in
Multnomah1 'county, a gentleman who is
not a Mitchell man was selected to re
spond to the.: toast "President Roose
velt." And this was too much for the
managers, ' . so the word was. passed
around that none of the faithful were
to attend the banquet,- Why shouldj
they f Were they to be expected to
be present where an anti-Mitlfell man
was to say a good word for Roosevelt f
Doesn't every man know that such a
man 'cannot -be sincerely in favor of
Roosevelt, and that he is a deceiver f
Doesn't the publie understand that the
right to speak a good word for the
President belongs exclusively to the
men who cannot open their mouths
without first ; committing them
selves to a certain Senatorial candi
date? -; .
These "managers ',' have gone so far
as to refuse to join 'any Roosevelt club
unless it is also a Mitchell club. The
alternative is not Roosevelt but Mit
chell, if Mitchell cannot be had, then
they refuse to take Roosevelt. Ergo,'
if. they cannet, have - Mitchell then
they wil havenobodyv
And this is the kernel of entire sit
uation in Portland. ' Now, the question
is, how much .- of this kiad c.f intoler
ant proscription .will the Republicans
of Oregon endure , and how much long
er will they endure itf Such dwarfed
conceptions of publie duty would ' be
censurable if belonging to the other
faction or any other faction. It is not
so much the triumph of any faction
that the Republicans of the state want
as the utter elimination of Ml factions
and any clique which finds itself in
control of a party organization arwl
shows as little consideration for the
minority members as is being done at
this time in Multnomah county, should
be routed from, its position oy the bet
ter judgment of those who arc not un
der the helpless domination - f machine
politics.
The Statesman is not and will not ,
be the organ or mouthpiece of any fae-l
tion in the Republican party. It fir3t
lesires to see all this old quarrel srnothi"
ered. Its seat -is in Multnomah coun
ty but it ramifies all over and through
the state, and if the proscriptive tac
tics now being employed by those who
.-PIS
From"
tHo .
Office
..... - i
Window'
. e c
Eilyertott's Staying Qualities.
F The Silverton Appeal mentions that
Ai Coolidge picked from a tree in his
orchard on the first of February, some
apples that had hung there all winter,
that they! were in a good state of pres
ervation, and that -the tree is over forty
years old. This is no new thing in Or
egon, as in some orchards every spring
apples can be found still hanging where
they grew and practically in good con
dition for use. But this particular in
stance of the- Silverton apples has- a
special interest to the editor of the
Statesman, since that tree was grafted
and planted by his father where it now
stands in the years before the Civil
War. In the years of his earliest school
days, when the school . house stood near
the banks of Silver creek above the site
of the present grist mill,' those trees
were plant eU on tbe fiat immediately
across tbe stream from the town, and
though men have come and gone and
nations have risen, changed their names
and destinies, those Kamboi and Spit
enbergs and Newton Pippins have si
lently performed their annual duties
while Silver ereek has ceaselessly con
tinued its rythmic murmuring as' it
flowed swiftly onward to the sea.
And there are others in Silverton who
have changed very little -during forty
years. There is no town in the state
the personnel of whose population has
changed as little as this beautiful and
prosperous mountain hamlet. Situated
in the .midst of a fertile country the
pioneers who founded it have been sat
isfied to make it their permanent home'
during all . these- succeeding years. . Ai
Coolidge who first settled at the village
of "Milford" two miles above on
Silver creek, soon ."discovered that he
had located in the wrong place, for a
permanent town, moved his ''store
house" to the-present site of Silver
ton on wheels and it was yet rolling
when the writer of this article first saw
it in the spring of 1853. This pioneer j
bunding is yet standing in the midst
"Editorial StdeHghtf .n4 ObrvtUlonjor Various People
f and Tttl!sy Picked,Vp and Scribled Down at Odd Times.
1 " - - ; ,
thing. G. W. Doland, to whom the writ
er west to school in 1S59, ts yeVeiti
xen of Silverton, and though Jie tried
the bunch grass country t or 'a' few
years, never forgot the attractions of
Silverton and for years has again been
a denizen and practicing attorney of
the famous old-time town. . ; '
All these men are, stili there ;n5
business, but there are -others ' who
were in at the initiation ef Silverton
fifty years ago,l and'twhorVftth the; pio
neers named, together with many later
additions, have made it and are making
it one of the best towns in Oregon.
The people of Silverton are hospitable
and progressive, but, be it; said, to their
credit, they are stayers and so is the
apple tree which held its fruit until the
picker came, even if it did have to
wait until February, but it no doubt
imbibed its tenacious trait from the
soil, for there have . never been any
quitters in Silverton. i-
O
A New Iowa Idea. :
A dispatch front Des Moines, Iowa,
announces that Representative Shiell
has introduced in the Legislature of
that state a bill providing for the; reg
ulation of marriages. Under the pro
visions of this proposed law a commis
sion to be officially known as the Bureau
of Marriage Reform Instruction is to be
created and the Governor shall appoint
a director for; tbe bureau, whose duty
it will be to promulgate a set of rules
for the government of all. marriages in
Iowa. 1 - '
In" a general way it is provided that
these rules shall professionally inform
the young people of Iowa (and : older
ones if they need the information) wat
habits of life must, be necessary jjo
have been followed by the intent) ed
victims of Cupid's darts before any per
mission to enter the'wedded state will
1 e granted. AH the rules of sanitation
must have been observed, no cigarette
smoking must have been indulged, and,
since the object of the law is to prevent
the further accumulation of unhealtuv
claim to be the "managers" of the
party in that county, are permitted to
control it Sj action generally, the result
will certainly -be disastrous. The peo
ple are still free--to act and upon suf
ficient provocation will not hesitate to
do so.
-
The, Statesman enter a plea for more
toleration, for lees assumption of dic
tatorial powers and more freedom to
act 'without- autocratic domination.
The, boss who goes around and- gives
his orders in politics is about the
smallest specimes of swelled-up human
ity that can be conceived, and when he
appears -arrayed, in purple and fine lin
en, prepared to cive his orders to the
common people, he should be floored
by the very quickest possible process.
Just at this particular time the bean
ties pf Matehine Politice in rll its per-jBiuoaTinj-
ui Udes oq ut;o ja.vioy
county colored in all the hues of that
war paint which the braves do. delight
to wear.
ALLEGED ABUSES AT THE PENI
, TENTIABY.
The Statesman prints this morning a
statement by the attorney for the
ease recently instituted to restrain the
Superintendent and Warden of the
Penitentiary from doing certain thing's
that are alleged to be without warrant
of law. About Vlhe various matters
complained of .the Statesman knows
nothing whatever, but desires to say
that there is the same necessity 'for the '
Superintendent to reside at the Peni
tentiary and he should have the same
tained before a license to marry an is
sue.
Of course," when this neW Iowa idea
is clothed with all the. paraphernalia of
a'leiral existence, no virl will lw 1!ri.
of the town, -'now in the back yatd ofjble to marriage unless she -rm -'-furnish
anil, t hrf ftr iini1a?KirsiFalsv tiUilrnn tt
!-' . 4i, Ai.i :ii irence that cannot very well' be nvoid
vide that a certain weight height and bt that it is a necessary one. i he r-
symmetry of form must have -been- at- .?." ef this profound revel.it i.n in.pli
senting a properly verified certificate
front a ihysicin showing that all the
retirements of the director of the Ju.
reau of Marriage Reform have been sat- ;
isfactorily-observed. ,
It Is to be. hoped lthat this bill will
become a lawj for . its requirements
have been favorably discussed by physi
ological students and humanitarians for
generations but no practical test has
ever been made along the lines aup
geated by it. " And Iowa is a gm.d BtaTe
to first put the matter to a serious test.
It is one of the great states of the
Union and never does things bv halve-,
as is to be observed by the reuirement
that tbese new rule shall bo applied
with equal rigidness to both halves of
the marriage contract.
-This BfJ reform is in the interest of
the prevention of race suicide, too.
Iowa, as usual, is looking to the future
and with its predominance nlreailv en
joyed in the administration of nation.d
affairs, there is no way of computing,
the height of influence she may reach-"
when the children resulting from Mt
marriages, now being arrang;d for tins
future come to their own in the tlie-.
charge of great : public duties. Ohio
will not1 be in it for a moment.
Of course, if the matter of diet shall'
be a part of the prescrileil reform rcu
ulation, saurj kraut will; be given tlm
place Of honor at the head of the state''
menu. . This is the newest "Iowa-hlcx
and its development will be watchoi
with absorbing interest throughout thtj
entire country. .
. !- O O '''-"
An Kastern exchange suggests , thni
President Roosevelt "will not be jfrni-l
of the milk white horses presented to
hint by the Sultan of Moroe'cb. II is onlr
fear just now is. of dark horses.'' .Hut
there are no dark horses in this countrv
that the strenuous broncho buster will
not easily subdue when the time crimes.
In fact, he has a cinch on them alrea I v.
' o o :" " "
The Theosophints have recently ii
coverel that death is not nh- an omir-
I
the more pretentious and raolern strue
tures, but rejoicing in the satisfaction
of being "the oldest inhabitant" of
the town, architecturally speaking.
Ooolrjdge is yet there, and though
upwards" of 80 years of age is actively
engageil in business and sensibly enjoy
ing the, fortune he has ' accumulated
through;' conservative management "and
fair dealing. John Wolfard has been
keeping store in Silverton as long as
any lody on this coast can remember,
Tom. Plackerby was there- when Jo
Meek came to the country, Matt Brown
and' Alonzo, his brother, were there
when, men who arp now old were little
boys, ISarhart Wolfard Was always in
Silvertonj and Trenton Ilibbard went
there at so early a date that he has
Herv-ed n mnvor and councilman nn loner
T tht. hit hfpamp flshnnlml'nf himmlf ant
voluntarily retirel. The fact is, how
ever, that, for obvious reasons,-Trenton
could Hot serve a short term at anv-
a eertineate that sne has never worn
corsets, has turned with scorn from the
contemplation of high heeled shoes and
not only does not paint her eyebrows or
chocks, but actually loaths the sight
of chewing gum. Indeed, it is quite
likely that as a contribution - to the
healthful playfulness of future earthly
cherubs, a sprinting test may-1k pro
vided, say of a hundred yards similar
to the one exacted of the successful as
pirants to a position in the fire depart
ment in Portland, a failure t get over
a hundred yard course in a given time
being fatal to all matrimonial aspira
tions.
The proiwsed law provides that everv
physician in the state must be prepared
to give young ieple a. course of in
struction as to what thev should ami
shor Id not do to fit ther'swdve's'Tor fu
ture papas and mamm.-K, and no person
applying for a marriage license shall in
any case be entitled to it unless pre-
ne. matters woatlerinllv and '.tends K
allay a disposition, to reKi-1 :c:iint ex
isting conditions.; -.By the way, a Tin-..- ;
S4phist is" one who gjves you a theory'-"
of God, or of the works oi Gd; v ) m 1 1
has not reiason, but ''h an inspir.it ion
of his own, for a basis. ' t tlo- in
vestigation go on.
';.'. . o o
It now transpires that the hx 'abiri
in which Roosevelt .flipped tlapj;tcKs':ind' j
from wKose .howpital.de door he Vina i
fleeing jiikrabbits ami skulliing;coot-, j
in his earlier (strenuous cow liy d:iy,
still stands iniMedora, North il I;iI.1 i,
and its owner,; a man named I'eitl, ii;n
offered to take it 1o uie St. I."ii l':iir
for purposes of exhibition. If- thi. nf-j
fer shuiild b" accepted the nUuiagcrs.
shouM 1tignate one dayr to be c:ij!. .
Roosevelt -day," upon which o.-i-;im. n
the I'resident should Ik persuaded to I .-f !
present .in-front of his cabin nrrayed i'1;
full dress cowlmv iaraihcrnalia and a si
tride a tiucting brouchw. It w on I I bej
in the middle of the Presidential c im-J
pagin. Would please Roosevelt H'fi
doubt would add ti his popular vl"
and enormously kwcII the :it"e receipt v
There is, no ch'irge for-tJiin (suggestion.!
right to tlraw for the support of him
self and family from "the commissary
of the institution as have the Superin
tendents of the other state institutions.
i
The Superintendent1 of every other
state institution resides within the
building where his duties are and is
supported at the expense of the state,
and there has never been any complaint
about it. In some cases the law plain
ly requires it, but whether this, is so
in all Cases, the writer is not aware.
The point to it is, however, that if the
law does not directly warrant the
Superintendent of the Penitentiary in
supplying his table from the state's
commissary, it should do so, since there
is no possible ground for defending a
discrimination of this sort between the
different superintendents in the- state's
service.
Whether the officers named in the
complaint' have transcended their au
thority in these or any other instances,
we do not know, and are. matters to be
decided by the judicial Investigation,
but whatever custom -prevail at' the
other institutions without Objection
and whatever privileges are extended
to their oflicers should his., granted
without question to the oflicers of the
.Penitentiary;; If there are abuses of
Jrticm, however, they should not be per
mitted in any case. '
From precisely what source a certain
faction of the Republican party in
Multnomah county gets its diviiie and
entities which no doubt grew into thex
belief' thajt they" alone-were entitled t
recognition in "the pomologicaj c:ii -
logue. J - 'j ' '..;
exclusive right to support Roosevelt is j
mot altogether clear. There is an. old
fable to the effect that; three distinct
entities of refuse from a manure pile
1 The new order from headquarters
that all telephone girls .shall dress in
a full, suit of black- guarantees' :t
lovely addition to the ranks of those
other people .who have been mourners
for' years the unfortunate' opes wll
have lxen compelled to listen, 'helplcsf.-
, fy, to the .forlorn anl .'threadbare t;ii
that "the line is busvj" I'uiiiKlimeiit
was-certain to come sooner or biter.
Chairman ; J. . W. Culver,
of t ll'1
found themselves swimming round and j Marion; county Republican central coin
round in an eddy in a Stream, passing mi it tee,' has decided to issue a-i cull for
v intervals: tnreenneiy matured ap
ples, which they would greet at each
meeting with the shout, "II ow We
Apples Swim." Apparently a wicked
factional fight was raging between the
the meeting of the .committee: 'for-Saturday,
February L'7. Ho has not as yet
announced his : appoint merits .of mem
bers of! the committee to fill the- vacan
cies wiueh exist niereon, to the .numlf r
three genuine apples and the aforesaid of ten , throughout the county.
SI. . I. " ' ' - : i ' .
Grand Display Of OO-CartS 1 Grand Display of Children's Iron I
t ! ; ' " ' ' 3EB3GE ; and Other Cribs
II-.." v., :,. . -,r- . .,iT : ' I
I
STOP I MOW T.TT1h1TT I I
Our line of 1901 GO-CARTS fron-fa-flour ready for your Inspection: NeSaSexcihsive designs, improved gearing in1 fact everything that s to nnko J
t penect up toaate buggy' As tbe savinir ?ors kWR WW uv.uw with mni? hnnTiu
' " -J,;f
Remcmljer: that we have JEVWOOD 'CAHi'zrr sd
r-f-rr,vtf5.'.y . v . . , "yvllr -:'unili& u O Mhe ArtiUiary Gears ? IF KOT SEE THE1 HEYWonn i imp