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PAGE TEN. _ 5 GOVERNORS TO ADJOURN ANNUAL MEETING AFTER SESSION TODAY Elimination of Grade Crossing Acci- dents Discussed as Means of Reducing Death Toll, A new good Maxwell, of greater power and power pliablity, higher |, speed, more flexibility and even,a greater operating economy, is. an- nounced from Detroit by the Mex- well Motor Sales corporation. , Experiments and tests reveal that outstanding features of the new models will be a gasoline average of 25 miles to the gallon, speed of 58 miles an hour and acceleration from 5 to 26. miles in eight. seconds. The new cars, ‘comprising six JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Nov. 18.—(By The Associated Fy . ; models, dre now on disp'ay in the Press.) —The conference of governors meeting here in SiX-| thowrooms of the local company, . teenth annual session, entered its concluding day’s discus-| where special showing to the public will be held all this week. Long rumored, because of the tre- mendous success of the Chrysler Six, the new. Maxwell represents in a four-clyinder car the ideas of the same engineering and manufactur- ing group that designed and 1s pro- ducing the Chrysler. J. E. Fields, vice president in charge of sales of the Maxwell or- ganization, in a statement issued in conjunction with the announcement, ae sions today with Governor Branch of Indiana and Governor Cox of Massachusetts leading with papers on prevention of grade crossing automobile accidents and safeguarding the After the morning session the gov- ernors were to be the guests of the chamber of commerce at a luncheon, and later’ were to Doard-a steam: ship for a trip up the St. Johns river for Sanford and a tour of the southern sectfon of the state, thence Che ECONOMY AND EFFICIENCY. ARE |2UTLER TO POINTS OF THE NEW MAXWELL FOR DISCUSSION Finance Ministers of Allies to Meet in Decemb PARIE, Nov. 18.—(By The Asso- ciated Press)—The impression is growing tn French official circles that the inter-allied debts will come up for discussion when the allied fi- nance ministers meet with James A. Logan, Jr., American observer witlt the reparation commission, for divi- sion of German reparations pay- ment, probably early in December. Leading financiers and politicians are advising the government not to delay longer the taking of steps to come to a final understanding with Great Britain and the United States regarding the war debts. Leading bankers argue that now the budget has been balanced, with a surplus in sight if the recelpts continue on the basis of those for October which were at the rate of 36,000,000 francs a year, the only thing that weighs on France is the uncertainty concerning the war debts. ‘Their view is that it is useless to make the effort permanently to sta- bilize French money until that ques. tion is settled, ~_—- FAKE SEEN IN ‘KNOCKOUT’ OF FRED FULTON LOS..ANCELES, Cal., Noy, 12-— Fred Fulton, heavyweight prize fighter, ‘“‘who took the count” -after 35..secorfis in the ring last night at Culver City, near nere, with T Fuente, Mexican heavyweight, arrested today and rushed to the district attorney’s office for exam- ination. LOS ANGELES, Cal.,*Nov. 18.— Fred Fulton, Minnesota plasterer- fighter, Tony Fuente, Mexican Keavywelght, Fred Winsor, man- ager for Funete, and Jack. Reddy, manager for Fulton, were summon- ed to the district attorney's office today for questioning {n_ donnec- tion with the pugilistic affair at, Culver City, near here, last: night when Funete got a decision over Fulton on what was called a ‘knock- out.” “Virtually all the sporting editors of=the “Los Angeles paper have branded the alleged knockout a fake, while mt. the. ringside last night sterms of cushions, thrown by irate spectators almost smothered _prin- clpals, managers and seconds as they. milled about, th canvas follow- ing the end of the bout. American legion post number 46 at Culver City, ownd¢r of the arena there, announced that every pos- sib’e effort would be made to in- vestigate the affair. The distinction of being the only practicing woman lawyer in the Maritime Provinces belongs to Miss Muriel -Corkery of St. John, N. B. Is Your Child — "Thin and Weak? Sugar-Coated Cod Liver Oil ~ Tablets Put on Flesh and Build Them Up In just a few days—quicker than you evef dreamt of—these wonderful flesh making tablets called McCoy's God Liver Ol) Tablets will start to help any weak, thin, under-nourished little one. After sickness and where rickets arg (suspected they are especially ‘valuable. No need to give them any more nasty Cod Liver Oll—these tab- lets ate made to take the place of that-good-but evil smelling sotmach upaetting “medicine and they surely do it. They do put on flesh. , Ask Kimball Drug, Casper Phar. macy and’ Midwest \Pharmacy, or any druggist for McCoy's Cod Liver Of Tablets—as easy to take as candy and not at all expensive—60 tablets 60 cents. ‘Get McCoy's, the original and genuine Cod Liver Ol Tablet.”—Adv- erry at telat ea Mee onc astaar ns eae TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY ee FOR RENT—Furnished apartment, _nice living . bedroom, kitchen- + would be killed and more than 8,000 In opening the discussion today, Governor Branch declared it had been estimated that 800 persons injured in cccidents of this char- acter during 1924. ‘The situation in Indiana had greatly disturbed him, and finally action was taken when ten lives were snuffed out at one blow. A conference was called in October at which 132 representatives of varlous interested organizations took part in discussions of measures designed to “prevent and save.” | Governor Branch sald he would make specific recommendations to the next session of the legislature asking it to enact a law regulating grade crossing traf- fic. He said the resolutions adopt- ed by the safety conference in Octo- ber would be the basis for his sug- gestion, ——_—_—_ : STORM DEATH TOLL CLIMBING (Continued frome page one) soils in tatters and thelr anchors cut. There was one death in Boston from exposure. HARVESTING MEETS DISASTER. ALBANY, N, Y., Nov. 18.—The wave of winter weather which swept over New Yori state Sunday night, wrought havoc with both harvested and unharvested crops, according to reports. Farmers reported genera!ly that produce customarily left in the fields are stored outdoors _ until Thanksgiving day, had been ruined. BODY OF MAN FOUND BURIED IN SNOW. COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov. 18.—One death from the cold .weather ‘which swept the Ohio “valley sterday bringing with it the first snow of the season, was reported. here today. The body of an unidentified man was found buried in the snow on the banks of the Olentangy river. Apparently he had frozen to death. ta ade DISTRICT COURT JURY DISMISSED SUBJECT 10 © CALL OF THE JUDGE District court in Natrona county came to a seeming end for the pres- ent term this morning when Judge R.,R. Rosé dismissed the jury sub- ject to call. A’ call is not antici- pated by either -jurymen, or court attaches, as Judge Rose is expected to go to Lander this week to open court. The procedure preceding the ad- journment this morning was a plea of guilty to a gambling charge en- tered by counsel for “Spot’’ Woods. Sentence in the case was deferred owing to the absence of Woods. ——— Wise. folks’ Christmas shopping lists are composed just as soon as the Shop-o- scope is exposed. NEWS BRIEFS| CHERBOURG, France, Noy. 18. —American Ambassador Herrick ar- ved today after a vacation in the United States. He said he had no intention of abandoning his post at Paris, NEW YORK, Nov ments of gold from gating $16,000,000 of which about $3,500,000 arrived last week, expected by the Bankers 1) company, the purpose it is under. 18.—Ship abroad aggre stood being for account of war| damages. None of the gold, it is said, has come. from Germany. A-Sure Way To End Constipation A well-known specialist recently said that constipation is a congested condition which affects not only the | too. Ordinary » and do not touch this organic condition. But it has been known for years that a remarkable oll, compounded tn Hol land, goes dirett to the congested liver and kidneys, tones ther and quickly restores normal —without the use of weakening rsh drugs. So it not merely cleans and purifies, but sets thot system right in, Don't time with mere tempor Ask for Red Mill Ha ‘Oll,.in tasteless capsules. Ci 0c. . Sold and_ guaranteed by the Kimball Drug Co. and the Midwest Pharmacy.—Adv é across the Everglades to Palm | says: Beach and Miami. The party will] “With a full sense of the serious- disband at Miam{ Saturday. ners of the statement — carefully weighing the meaning of every word —Maxwell-Chrysler engineers, with- out reservation, thoroughly believe that they can promise in this new Maxwell a performance surpassing in every essential any other four- cylinder car in the world. “To make that sweeping assur- ance more definite and specific, they promise in speed, power, pliability of power, in swift response, in ab- rence of vibration, and even more particularly in riding steadiness and comfort, results no four-cylinder car has yet been able to attain, “These engineers have been actu- ated by the conviction that in addj- tion to ‘its inherent and natural econémies the four-cylinder prin- ciple possessed possibilities of power and rpeed capable of being trans- lated into ease and steadiness never fully developed. They sat out to overcome what have all too roadily been accepted as limitations in the four-cylinder engine and to convert these limitations into positive ad- vantages.” Bodies of all models, the chassis, represent sweeping improvements, both in appearance and in general construction. They are lower, with lower running KNIFE WIELOER LANDS IN THE CITY BASTILE; VICTIM WILL RECOVER Gordon Rice, long known to the Police as the pivot of sundry un- savory episodes of Casper’s under- world, carved his way into jail again last night, with George Whitten serving as the unwilling intermed- lary. Whitten today was recovering from a series of painful but not. ser- ious slashes, and Rice was in cus- tody under $100 bond awaiting the verdict of Police Justice J. A. Mur- ray tonight. The affray occurred shortly be- fore midnight at 208 West A street. Whitten is said to have intervened with unwarranted chivalry in a quarrel between Rice and a woman. Only the interference of bystanders saved him from serious injury. Rice was arrested a few minutes after- ward by Officers Hageman and Fer- ris at 130 South Ash street. He of- fered no resistance. as well as Missing Coon Is Found Captive In Nearby Hen Coop CHEYENNE, Wyo., Nov. 18.— A: pet racoon owned by Bobby Rob- ertson, which disappeared «a week previously, was found Monday in a neighbor's chicken coop, with the chain by which it had been tethered at the. Robertson. home jammed so securely in a crack that the animal was helpless. It was almost dead from hunger and thirst and is be- Meved to have been captive in the chicken coop since the day of its escape. Council Meet Is Postponed For the third consecutive Mon- day, the city council found its reg- ularly scheduled meeting coming in- to conflict with other events and was forced to postpone its session, When a quorum failed to appear last night, the meeting was deferred and probably will be held Wednesday evening, Mayor Loy indicated, INGROWN NAIL Turns Right Out Itself A few. drops of “Outgro” in the crevice of the ingrowing nail re- duces inflammation and pain and so toughens the tender, sensitive kin underneath the toe nail, that can not penetrate the flesh, and the nail turns naturally outward almost over night, “Outgro” is a harmless antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. How- ever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing direc tions.— Advertisements boards. Balloon tires are standard | lam M. Butler announced he would on all models. The rickeled radiator | not resign the chairmanship of the is higher and wider. There is a new | Republican national committee when he takes his seat next month as a shields are on all closed mode:s. The | senator from Massachusetts. —— $13,485 Spent instrument board. One-piece wind- visors ‘on all enclorcd .cars are shrouded and integral with the roof, | thus eliminating the irritating -vi- ration always encountered at higher speeds with the ordinary type visor on every priced motor car. Duco is standard finish, except |‘ for the sport touring, which retains the same gray-green paint shade as heretofore used. Open cars and the coupe are finished in genuine Span- ish leather upholstery, and special leather can also be had in the club sedan. Appearance of the ‘closed cars, particular‘y, is enhanced by, new body improvements, with the standard sedan an outstanding illus- tration. Coupled with the announcement comes the information that prices remain the same as hefore, with one. exception despite the noticeable ap- pearance, performance and economy improvements. Only the sedan price is changed, there belng a slight™in- crease In view of new body and more and finer eculpment. Prices range from $895 for the roadster to $1,345 for the sedan, f. 0. b., Detroit. —— ae Youth Ousted For Marriage Is Reinstated SPOKANE, Wash., Nov. 18.— Denton McBean, 18, recently sus- pended from the Lewis and Clark high school here because he was married, was ordered reinstated yesterday by the county superin- tendent of schools after the case was referred to him by. the super- jor court. > pe BNE OT “Give and let give—liber- ally, yet economically,” the Shop-o-scope rule, | LATE SPORTS ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., Nov. 18. —By ‘The Associated Press}—The Amateur Athletic Union at its clos- ing session today elected Murray Hulbert of New York as’president to succeed William C. Prout, of Bos- ton, selected Pitsburgh as the 1925 convention city and approved .two sprinting records, one by Louis Clarke and the other by Charley Paddock, after a spirited contro- versy. Mellon’s Car Is Badly Smashed In Speed Drive WASHINGTON, Nov. 15,—Police, making a drive to end traffic deaths here, added to their exhibits of evi- dence today a cabinet officers auto- mobile, which in a dash down Con- necticut. avenue,. sent two mento horpitals, demolished a truck load of. building material which got in its path and left a wake of broken auto- mobile parts and crushed curbing. The car, a roadster, was listed as belonging to Secretary Me'lon, but he was not in it. Arthur E. Six- smith, secretary to Mr. Mellon, was @ passenger and Sixsmith’s chauf- feur, a negro, was: held by the po- lice. Eye witnesses declared a crowd furrounded the car when it finally me to a halt and that cries of “lynch him" were shouted at the driver. D2 NOT close your eyes and .think that health, free mo- tion and strength are gone from you forever! It is not so. You can get rid of your rheumatism by building up your blood power. It is a fact that ~rheumatism means lood poverty.” It is a fact with “the increase of cells in your blood, impurities are destroyed. ‘It is a fact that 8.8.8. will help Nature build these red-blood-cells! 5.8.5. is one of the most powerful blood | cleansers in existence. Its . re- sults in thousands of rheumatic cases have been nothing short of amazing! The medicinal ingre- dients of S.S.S. are purely vego- tabl This is very important to remember! What can be more inspiring, more wonderful than to see the shackles of pain re- Jeased from your struggling body, swellings, lingering pains, stiffness .of joints» and muscles Le eee your stomach made strong; your face Ke with the old sweetheart how your blood enriched and your cheeks more plump as they used to be. You can do it! Take S.S.S., the great. destroyer of rheumatic impurities, S. 8. 8, fs sold at all good drug stores in two alses.. ‘The larger ynomical. size is more eco! Casper Daflp-Eribune __ : TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1924 Senator Walsh reported that his per- | Delaware, reported the receipt: of. no sonal expenses toward his re-clection | contributions and the expenditure of were $800. $1,321 in his succersful campaign T. Co’eman DuPont, Republican, | for election to the senate. thy Whitney B8traight, B. H. Sulll- yan, Bernard H. Barush and E. J. Keliy were Usted as having each contributed $1,000. Géorge' J. Sayer contributed $1,500 and). the’ Demo- cratic ‘national committee $2,000, William Jennings Bryan, gave $25. HOLD JOB 18.— Wil- ‘WASHINGTON, Nev. Quite a sensation has been created in certain social circles over the n ting effects of a wonderful rejuvena' ra nay 6 one has told others, who in turn have told many more, and now the new met! i" fair to supersed all the patent “wrinkle removers massage and other things used for the purpose. i in Re-election Senator Walsh This is the procedure: A spoonful of powdered tarkroot is mixed with —Sena-|@ spoonful of lemon juice, and’ this is 18 Sena-| Spread over the face. An, amazing transformation takes place, as the In less than 15 niin- WASHINGTON, Nov. tor ish, Democrat of Montana, prosecutor inthe senate ofl inves- tigation reported to the secretary of the renate that $13,485 had been con- tributed to the Democratic state cen-| contour is noticeably improved and tral committee of Montana, ‘pri-|the face looks years younger. . The marily for the purpese of promoting | most.skillful magaging could not pro- my election.” duce such a- wholesome effect as re- In the list of contributors to the | mains after, the mixture has been state committee, Edward N. Hurley, | Washed off. Tarkroot 18 of course Senator Swanson of Virginia, Doro: | {5q, AX original package from the druggist contains sufficient to bring have completely vanished! isi. 7 .Y ens F a the cost per treatment under 3 cents. ERE and THERE Photographs for Xmas. Specia! prices all this week. Credell Studiq, lownstairs, 131 8. Center. Phone Pa Try the Vanity Box for your next marcel. 159 8. Beech. Phone 2265, A: H. Cobb Warehouse Co. TRANSFER STORAGE c ING 136 West B. Phone 2203 NN Y Oregon Woman Flays the Sponsor of Federal Child Labor Bill. “Babbling brooks are not al- ways purling streams of water, says Dr. Mary Clancy Foye, of Oregon, “and there are any num- ber of women and men, too, who can teach Ola Faithful geyser how to spout, instruct the north wind in blowing, and Niagara how to roar and all to no set purpose apart from raising Cain generally, sometimes for hire. The perfervid workers for more Washington bureaus, fat jobs and centralized _ government of everything down tq dust-pans and scrub-buckets have been declaring “that our very natonal ‘life ‘itself depends on the passage -of the pending measure.” “T have kept quiet while I looked up State laws and dug out. facts," says the woman ‘doctor, “and I am | now. convinced that the‘ most intense and intensive campaign of mistepresentation ever conducted in this country Is this _pne.in.behalf_of this co-called Child Labor Amendment. Why can't people tell the truth? These radicals, and other pests parad- ing arouad, lying and arousing passions, and all so. they’ may either run the country or sell it out,-are misrepresenting things.” “Mrs. Millie RR, Trumbull has moved the compassionate Oregon-- jans ‘to tears as she ured the plight of ‘the little children» in Texas.” “The truth is, Texas has for more than elght years: prohibited —and enforced—employment in factories of any child under © 15. Georgia prohibits factory employ- ent of children under 14, ex- eepting by permits for orphans, or children of widowed mothers, and only 42 permits have been taken out this year.” “Our American public should be warned against ‘these hired talkers for bureaucracy. Our states are competent to handlo thelr own problems. Ideals are all right when they are not the merely greedy {deas of some.who hope to garner heay- fly at the public cost.” More Children Over 18 Employed In East Than in the South, An- editor. in. the. Christian Science. Monitor wonders why people who desire to _pfotect childhéod from) mercenary design- ers can obstruct this Amendment. The Monitor says: “Our great New Englarid tndus- try is open to the unfair competi tion of communities in which child labor is not regulated with in- telligence 1 with humanity, “The hostility to the amend ment’ proceeds’ so largely from “the very states in which the lack of any suitable state legislation WHAT CLEAR THINKERS “ @CHILD LABOR GREEN LANTERN abaret EVANSVILLE “Where Joy Is Unconfined” GO@D ROAD—NO DETOURS ARE SAYING ABOUT THE AMENDMENT” * on the subject makes: possible un- fair competition with thé New England mills. “Fall River, today suffering from widespread unemployment, has a special interest in the adop- tion of this amendment, with the consequent assurance that-the -la- bor of children in one section shall not be used to throw out of employment adult labor in the cotton mills of Massachusetts.” Henry L. Shattuck. To the above ‘Mr. Henry L. Shattuck of Boston, well-known through the country makes reply. He says, “You do the opponents of the measure gross. injustic: because, as I see it, they are sim- ply believers in the preservation of local self-government. . This the proposed. amendment would do more to destroy, than any other - proposal yet made for changing | America’s frame of government. Under the. amendment, if adopted, .Congress~ would be em- | powered not only to ‘prohibit, but also to limit and regulate, the Ia- bor—whether paid. or. unpaid, whether in-the home, on the farm, or in the factory,- whether —part- time or‘ full-time, and- whether beneficial’ or harmful—of ‘all per- sons under. elghteen years of age. Congress would. be given the supreme ‘power over the Hyves of one-third of the» Nation's pop- ulation. % This. power~.too, . would. not™ be confined to, mere ‘prohibition of labor, for: there is. also the power to “limit and regulate,” and that carrieg with ft the power to su- pervise the education, the recre- ation, the home conditions of all these persons. Congress could say, “You shall not labor unless you have passed certain menth! and physical tests, unless you al- low the program laid down by the bureau having charge of en- forcement for tho. spending of your leisure time, and unless your home conditions comply with the rules and regulations of the bureau.” New England Mills. As to the Now England mills Mr. .BShattuck says, The plea which you make that the adop- tion“ of“ the “amendnient will help the textile industries . of Magsa- chusetts is utterly without found- ation. There are more children under sixteen employed in the textile mills of Massachusetts and of the other New England states than in any group of Southern states. For this state. ment T have no less an authority than Raymond ’G. Fuller, author ef “Child Labor and the Consti- tution,” and now the paid advo- cate of the amendment. The fact is that the number. of children under fourteen employed in- textile mills, either north or south {fs almost nil and that the number between fourteen and six. teen so employed 1s comparatively small, but is greater in the North than in the South. WA AAA ; the roots The So-Called Child. In spite of public belief this ‘amendment does not mention the world child. It is absurd to spealc of eighteen year old men and women as being children. It is well-known today that most of our defendants in the criminal courts are under nineteen years of age, that is they are big enough and old enough and smart crimes of the country and yet they are not big enough to work. This amendment in fact - would throw scores of thousands of young people into idleness which in turn would largely swell the erlme record in the country, of those under nineteen years of age. It is well-known, too, that most of the worl winners (in ath- letic sports are also under nine- teen years of age—but these youngsters are too childish and too tender to go to work! The truth {is the passage of this amendment will tear-up by the frame work of our government; it will destroy the home; it will idleness and with spies; bring to actual sands and thousands of self- supporting families—in a word it would We an American revolu- tion equalling in dire results any revglution the world has ever known.—The Piedmont, Green- ville, S.C. —_—s___ “The Pernicious Influence of the; Family,” “As we dig into, this subject of federal regulation of child ‘labor, as proposed in the amendment to the federal constitution which is sure to come before every state legislature within a year, we are more and more> amazed’ that the congress of the United States should have been so gullible; that the leading political _ parties should have been so blind; that the American Federation of La- bor with its avowed ‘opposition to everything communistic, should have been so ‘dense as not .to see the clever hand of Russian bol- shevism back of it all. “We printed enough on this page last week regarding the au- ‘thor of the proposed amendment to arouse every _red-blooded American. Here is something more—from the wife of Zinoviev, ‘president of the Young Commun- jst's Internationale, whose Amer- Jean section first. proposed and is backing the so-called child labor amendment. “*We must nationalize the chil- dren, We must remove the chil- dren from the perniciowg influ. ence of the family. W ister..the. children, <r—let us speak plainly—we must nation- alize them, Thus they will from the very start remain under the beneficial influence of communist Kindergartens and schools. Here they grow up to be real com- munists, To compel the mother it will Pauperism thou- Hart Schaffner & Marx clothes are a real business asset They give a man a feeling of success as well as a look of suc- cess. Why not make sure of both by deciding on Hart Schaffner & Marx suits and overcoats. You take no risks —you get clothes of known make—and quality of recog- nized style leadership. $35 to $50 Extra Special—2-Pant Suits $34.50 and Up MEDNICK Bros. Casper’s,Leading Store for Men fill the land with _ to surrender her child to! us, to the soviet state, that is the pras tical task before us.’ “We have a large picture of average American mothers marching ub to the polls in gre numbers’ and voting for any monstrous proposition as t Russian woman -proposes, if they know the truth? “If there is one solid, substan: tal foundation upon which’ this nation is builded it is the Ameri can home. The idea that con: &ress or any other governmental department or bureau fs more competent to look after all the boys and girls of this country than their own parents is repus: nant to every sense of justice and decency. For the proposal to prohibit, children under “18 years of age belng employed at any kind of work whatsoever carries with it the very “intent for the federal government, to direct the educa: tion and activities of these chil- dren from the moment they are able to toddio until they have practically reachefl their - matur ity. And all this in the namo of humanity—for the alleged pro: tection of the child life of the na tion! The fool killer deserves a permanent job at Washington.” —Farm and Dairy, Salem, Ohio, August 29, 1924, oe “What Do You Think?” “A nurse in the home of opp” of those’ Chicago youths fo murdered the Franks boy say4 that until, he was fourteen yeart old he did. not even lace his own shoes. He» Was pampered and petted and mad? to think thut his mission «in life was to havé other people do things. for him. He is credited with being a brit Mant student in college, but 4 moral idiot. “Wo cite the foregoing state ment of the nurse to call atten tion to the fact that the greatest danger. confronting the young people of this-country today ‘4 idleness _and-spending money v!- earned. And yet there is a wide Spread belief in the wisdom ot amending the Constitution of the United States after a manner to permit any state to legislate ‘10 work’ for any person inside !t# borders under eighteen years of age. Congress has granted thé states permission to make tia constitutional amendment. ‘. “On the other hand, the coun: try is cursed by criminalf who never worked when they were young. The habit of idle: ness and irresponsibility fixed !" youth has cursed them in matur- ity. ‘We think they ‘would have been blessed by toll. What co you think?’—New. York Commer: clal. In 1900, we had 3 Bureaus, Annual Cost, $820,000. In 1923, we had 33 Bureaus, Annual Cost, $550,000 000. FARMERS’ STATES RIGHTS LEAGUE, Incorporated adv,