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THE EVENING STAR, ‘With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. MONDAY..........May 22, 1022 » THEODORE W. NOYES....... Editor ¥he Evening Star Newspaper Company Business Office, 11th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. " Na‘:n Y(xr?rl\mnen };‘r;‘l Nassau St. eago Office: Towes Bullding, pean Office : 16 Regent St., London, England. The Evening Star, with the Sunday morning #dicion, 1s delivercd by carriers within the eity #t 80 cents per month: daily only. 45 cents per Tonth; Sunday ouly, 20 cents per month. Or- €ers may be scot by mail, or telephone Mafn 5000, Collectfon 15 made by carriers at ead of each moath. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Dally and Sunday..1yr., §8.4 Daily only. 1yr., $6.0 Bunday oniy 1y, 82 All Other States. Daily an y..1y) Daily only.........15T., $1.0 Bunday oniy.....1yr. $3.00:1mo.. 25 = — Lower Freight Rates. If President Harding's negotiations ‘with the executives work out in a volunt: lowering of trans- portation c commodi- ties, a big and necessar tep will have Ddeen taken toward the restoration of full presperity. The proposal that such reductions shall be made with- out waiting for the Interstate Com- merce Commission to order them orig- Inated with the President and Secre- tary Hoover as the result of a broad and impartial survey of the industrial situation, and acceptance of the sug- gestion by the rail v executives is a recognition of the fact that the w&ll-l being of the railroads and the busi- nesses the; so intertwined that one cannot prosper while the other languishes. The business of railroading, like any other bus is best off when it is working at maximum capacity, and itke any other business it cannot work railway serve is 4t maximum capacity when its charges are so high that its customers cannot afford to buy of it. If freight charges are lowered on coal, ore, steel, fJarm products and other heavy, low- priced raw materials the benefits will ! down the line, and the rail- 1 not be the last to profit by them. Wh now idle—both in mills wund under freight cars and locomo- tives—will begin to turn; more people will be earning money with which to buy and the lower prices will stimu- ate buying. The evil of curtailed consumption because of high prices will be on its way to g cure, and the filling up of depleted stocks, both on merchants’ 1 of co when everybody iherefore, happy. In the past, with a few exceptions to the rule, increases and reductions in freight rates have been on a hori- zontal scale, light-weight, highly fin- ished products taking the same per- centage of increase or decrease as bulky and relatively cheap materials. that there should be rate- scrimination between raw ma- 1s and finished products, first ad- vanced by Secretary Hoover in a state- ment before the Interstate Commerce Commission, is a revolution in the theory of ratemaking, but in these post-war days we are acceptinga great many new economic doctrines, and that this one is sound would seem to be evidenced by the fact that the rail- way managers are willing to subscribe to it. hasten the day will be busy, and, —_—— The Primaries. A question of the hour interesting to both part will the primaries leave a stins—such a sting as will pre- vent harmonious action in November? Some of them are being conducted with considerable animation, to use a mild word. That in Missouri for an instance. The fight for and egainst Mr. Reed is fierce to a degree, and is filling the republicans with hope. The one in Indiana and the one in Pennsylvania developed the republic- ans in their best battle form. In both states the candidates contested every ‘nch of the way. But no untoward results are pre- dicted or expected. In Indlana Mr. New promptly saluted his successful competitor for the senatorial nomina- with pistols, thus preventing them from gaining safety. This, if proved, should lead to punishment. Sea collisions are rare, but they oc- cur often enough to suggest that mod- ern ship construction is not yet ade- quate. A ship that will fill and sink in twenty minutes after being rammed by another is but e frail vessel at best. Watertight compartments are apparently of no avail. Collision bulk- heads seemingly do not operate. When the Titanic hit an iceberg and stove in her shell she sank 8o quickly that 1,603 were drowned and only 703 were saved, a loss of more than two-thirds of the ship's company. Yet she was supposed to be fitted with the most efficient devices against disaster. Wireless equipment has seemingly not reduced the collision danger. It will be important to get the full story of the loss of the Egypt, and to see whether the close presence of the steamer Seine was known by radio, or otherwise. If she was known to be in the vicinity there was reason for the utmost precaution on both sides. Ap- parently navigators continue to take chances, and it would seem as though there were some lack of caution in this case. —_—————— High-Pressure Service. Steps have been taken to prepare a specific plan for the installation of & high-pressure system for fighting fires in the downtown district of Washing- ton. The Commissioners are sending to Baltimore for an examination of the high-pressure plant there, and on the basis of information there obtained, and perhaps in other citles, they will probably frame an estimate for sub- mission to Congress next winter. When this plan was first proposed for Washington, about twenty years ago, it was estimated that it would cost $100,000 to set up a high-powered pump at the river's edge and lay a serles of special mains. Five years later the estimate was advanced to $300,000. Now it is believed that the plant could be installed for $600,000, or six times as much as it would have cost at the beginning of this century, when first proposed. Since the high-pressure system was first urged values have greatly in- creased in the downtown section, or business area. Buildings have risen to greater heights. The fire risk has been increased. And meanwhile the ordi- nary water service has been subject- ed to an extraordinary increase of demand. At present the margin of supply is so slight that if a big fire should occur in midsummer in the business area calling for long-con- tinued pumping of fiitered water the supply would be inadeuate for bath the fire and the essential needs of the community. It is wantonly wasteful to use fil- tered water intended only for drinking and ablutions for firefighting in the area of business concentration. Water from the Potomac will extinguish a blaze just as well as filtered water. It can be pumped in unlimited quanti- ties if the mains are laid big enough and applied with force sufficient to reach the highest structures. A high- pressure service affords fuller protec- tion from fire and avoids a wasteful use of water specially prepared for consumption. The Commissioners should press this matter on the attention of Con- gress in the strongest terms of ur- gency. —_———— The 01d Dominion. The Virginia republicans announce a purpose to nominate a candidate for representative in each congressional district this year, and also a candidate for United States senator. It will be no more than a gesture. They have not a chance except in the ninth district. Even in 1920, when the republican wave ‘rolled high elsewhere, the Virginia democrats had sixty thousand the best of the poll. Last year they elected their state ticket by a record majority. Still, the gesture will be worth while. The republican organization, though small and ineffecive, should be kept up. There should be discus- slon at least of current issues through- out the state, and opportunity afford- ed voters, even if it goes unimproved, to plump for republican policles and candidates.’ An experiment was made in the Old Dominion last year which attracted <on, and will “pull” for him in the campalgn for election. In Pennsyl- wvenia Mr. Pinchot received pleasant greetings from his unsuccessful com- petitor, and is counting on support from that quarter. ‘The President's attitude is an- nounced, and is in keeping with his record as a party man. He will sup- port the republican nominees in every state. He is hands off in the pri- marles, but after the standard-bearers have been named he will give them the benefit of his approval. The situation calls for as much har- mony as can be mustered. A battle royal is on. “The tumult and the shouting” will soon be intense. The order to close ranks and go forward s the order of the day, and the cap- talns are demanding obedience of the rank and file. Will they be obeyed? B — Lenin and Trotsky have succeeded in demonstrating that there are at least two jobs in Russia which are in po danger of being affected by gen- eral conditions of unemployment. ——————t——— Political conditions in Ireland are o trifle slow in adjustment, owing to the presence of too many irreconcil- cbles, one way or another. A Sea Disaster. ‘The loss of the steamship Egypt off the coast of Finisterre, with ninety- eight persons missing and 242 saved, 1s the worst disaster of the sea since the close of the great war. It is, in- deed, the worst for a number of years outside of those diréctly connected with the conflict. The Egypt was rammed by a French steamer in a dense fog. The waters off Finisterre are thickly occupled by ships, as that 1s the “lane” of travel along the coast to end from the Mediterranean. The heavy loss of life was due to the ~rapldity with which the steamer sank, the Egypt lasting only twenty minutes much attention. The white republic- ans put the colored republicans on the black list, so to say. Their state con- vention was a white affair. The col- ored contingent of the party was ex- cluded. The result was two republican state tickets—the “lily whites” and the “lily blacks”—and an easy demo- cratic victory over a divided opposi- tion. There may be a hang-over this year of that maneuver. Even so, an appeal should be made in the name of the re- publican party, and its record in na- tional affairs set before the people of the state for their yea or nay. ——————— The success of Beveridge in' Indiana and Pinchot in Pennsylvania suggests that the old republican elephant is again beginning to make a noise like a bull moose. —_—————————— The ideal investigation calls f« neither a muck rake- nor a white- wash brush. ————— Russ-German pact is a lack of finan- cial backing. Bulgaria. e peasantagrarian republic. throughout the whole country.” Conditions a disturbing have been " THE EVENING BTAR, WASHINGTON, have been made to Bulgaria from Mos- cow virtually demanding the expul- sion of the Wrangel forces, and it is declared that recently at Genoa Tchitcherin, the Russian delegate, and Stamboulisky, the Bulgarian premier, reached an agreement that if Wran- gel's troops were expelled Stambouli- sky would have the support of the en- tire Bulgarian communist element. A development of importance is an order issued by the ambassadors’ council that the Bulgarian govern- ment proceed immediately with the disarmament of the Wrangel troops and the dissolution of their. military organization. These troops were ac- cused of plotting with the bourgeoise parties to overturn Stamboulisky. Thus the council of ambassadors| moves In effect to the same end as the |1 alleged Russian influence, but not in the same degree. have Stamboulisky expel the Wran- gelites, whereas the council have him merely disarm them. Tchi- tcherin would promote & communist government at Sofia, whereas, of course, the council has no wish to est instruments ever developed by the United States bureau of standards, the great testing laboratory here of the federal government. Millions and millions of dollars in ships, to say nothing of the lives of people, have been lost on the coast because of mis- calculation during fos. ed by this bureau has resulted In in- creasing the safoty of ships as they Tchitcherin would |-now approach the coast weather. Many people have been led to believe, because it has been called Wfluld'a compass, that it has a magnetic needle which immediately polnts in the directlon of the station from which a_signal {s coming. This is wrong. Tn navigator’ Inventions Evolved During War ’ A Boon to Peace-Time Shipping ANGERS which have beset shipping approaching the coast for years now are lessened by one of the great- The radio compass, or, more proper- v, the radio direction finder, develop- in thick e wireless shack or the bin on a ship is placed that end. A communist government at Sofia, especially if established under the patronage, so to speak, of Moscow, would be a danger element. It would open up Bulgaria for unresisted occu- pation by soviet forces in case of an aggressive Russian move. Therefore, it is to be hoped sincerely that there has boen no such overturn as that which some of the reports indicate. Challenging the 0ld Parties. The socialists are alert, and an- nounce an ambitious program. They will nominate a candidate for Con- gress in every district in the country. This shows two things. The first thing is that they are willing to stand up and be counted. They have been boasting of their strength of late, and how rapidly it has grown in states ‘where a few years ago they had ob- tained only a foothold. The second thing is that they are well provided with funds. Campaign- ing is expensive these days. Both old devices and new devices for attracting and holding public attention for politi- cal projects come high. The old parties find it difficult to raise the wind. Who puts up for the socialists? The socialists assert that both of the old parties have failed. They condemn the democratic party on the score of the mess it bequeathed to the repub- lican party at the close of the second Wilson administration, and they con- demn the republican party for its fail- ure to clean up that mess in the first year of its control of the country. And so the soclalists appeal to the people. “Try us. The old instruments are played out. If reform is to be ac- complished it must be through a new instrument, and ours is the best avail- able.” Famillar names are among those carrying the announcement. Morris Hillquit, Victor Berger, Meyer London and Seymour Stedman are men widely known for their criticism of the old, the present, order in America, and for a new order they would put In its place. They will have opportunity and be expected now to give full particu- lars. i Like simplified spelling, daylight- saving would be easy enough, if it were not for certain long-established habits of the human mind. } Uncle Sam’'s so-called aloofness may be due to the fact that he has never learned the games that European con- ferences insist on playing. i There are statesmen who suspect that Lloyd George is going to get his much-needed vacation whether he de- mands it or not. i TUncle Sam is not so aloof as to be unable to study the European situation § for purposes of intelligent and helpful An element of weakness in the Confusing reports come from Bul- garia respecting conditions. One is to the effect that a revolution has oc- curred and that the king is in flight, the premier, Stamboulisky, setting up On the other hand, it is stated positively from apparently dependable sources that there has been no revolution, the Bul- garian legation at Paris categorically denying the report of an overturn and saying that ‘“‘complete calm remains in Bulgaria, plainly, are by no means stable. The ministry is representative of a liberal majority, with communist inclinations. The presence in Bulgaria of a large num- ber of Wrangel's former followers is investment. i Motion picture stars continue to demonstrate from time to time that wealth does not insure domestic hap- piness. The war cloud so persistently hover- ing over Europe is still regarded as due to shady politics. SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. The Unchanging World. Things do not change as much es] folks ‘Would have us all believe. ‘We're laughing at the same old jokes. The same old sorrows grieve. The same old sunshine lights the May ‘With its reviving gleam. | The world resumes the same old play And dreams the same old dream. Youth smiles to youth, just as of yore. 0Old ege to avarice clings. Men talk of peace, and as before Each year the war threat brings. ‘We modify life’s outward show By change of form and name And yet down in our hearts we know The world is still the same. Notable Changes. “Has the feminine vote made any difference in politics out your way?"” “A great deal,” replied Senator Sor- ghum, “The oratory is not as bril- liant es it used to be, but the heckling is a great deal more artis- th Jud Tunkins says the fact that peo- neglects the graceful fawn and hangs around the hippopotamus. \ Romance of the Fields. Maud Muller used to rake the hay. She was a charming actor. She would not do such work today. She'd buy herself a tractor. Land and Letters. “You can’t come into this building,” said the severe man In the uniform. “You're a book agent.” < “I'm not,” protested the visitor. t “I'm @& literator. If & man who sells houses is a ‘realtor’ & man who sells books has a perfect right to be known ‘as a ‘literator.’ ” ¥ “In dem old times,” sald Uncle Bben, P ) coastal wireless statlons are Jocated. Picking two in the same general vi- cinity with an angle of more than thirty degrees apart, he has the wite- signal. The wireless station, respond- ing. the operator listens in, and grad- ually turns the handle which moves the dial over the compass card until he Noars the reads the bearing and gives it to the operator. Immediately he requests a signal from the other station an down on the hydrographic chart, and draws two long wireless stations shown on the chart until they cross. This gives him a “fix” and where the two lines intersect !s his position. The navigator can begin to take bear- ings miles off the coast, and keep them up until he gets in sight of a a compass card graduated into 360 de- gTees. b through the roof of the shack to a wireless loop, which is a serles of wires strung around a frame, some- thing like the loop aerlals now by many of the radiphone amateurs in their receiving stations. A dial on a lon leads up sed * K oK X Now, when the navigator 1s ap- proaching a coast he examines his chart to asoertain where the blg less operator send In a request for a ignal the strongest. He , ob- taining this bearing, he lays the two es from the two lighthouse. Where he formerly trav- eled in the dark, groping his way through the heavy fogs on sound!ngs, now he can be certain. Every ship should be equipped with these instruments, for they may save their cost many times over by savs ing the ship, the valuable cargo and the invaluable lives. However, the United States government maintains on shore all along the coast of the country radio compass stations. These are for use of those ships which have vet had installed the direction Instead of the navigator fix- ing his position, in this case his bear- Ing is given him from the shore. Whenever a ship is approaching the coast, it locates two stations as be- fore.” But Instead of just asking for a wireless signal, it requests the radio D. a sufficient angle between them. It is necessary to have more than a thirty degree angle for the reason that an angle sharper than this does not give a good “fix. After the navigator ob- | tains the bearings given him from the radio direction finders on the shore he works out the fix on his own chart. However, while the latter practice has been much used, on account of the slowness with which shipown- ers undertook the Installation of direction finders on their ships, many of the American owned ships are now being equipped with the compasses. It has been given numerous tests by the government experts, and has been found to be more accurate than the regular ship compasses, for the rea- son that the ship compasses have been found to vary any number of de- grees when near iron and steel buioys. These have no effect on the radio compass. For the protection of their own property, they are adopting the instruments. * ok K % The responsibility for the safety of the ship should always rest with the navigator, but this is to some extent shifted when the bearings are taken from the shore stations instead of from the ships. With the greater use of these direction finders, ship own- ers have begun to realize that only by thelr installation on their ships can they then hold the navigator to his responsibility, and at a recent meet- ing in New York of a number of ship owners, they agreed that this was the only proper method, and that they should supply their navigators with every possible instrument known to science in order to aid them to bring their ships mafely into port. ‘The use of the radio comp: was one of the developments of the war. It was developed about the time the United States entered the conflict, and the little vessels which went overseas to patrol the so-called sub- marine danger zones were equipped with them. Many a German sub- marine which was sunk or captured during the ceaseless vigil which these little vessels kept in this zone in order | to make the steamer lanes safer fo: the transports carrying American troops to the theater of war can chalk its defeat up directly to this little {nstrument of American pro- duction. * * x % The submarines would venture up at night and send wireless messages to thelr headquarters or among themselves. However, the patrol | ships, traveling in groups, were ever alert, and there was not a minute of the day or night that a wireles: operator did not have the head re- ceivers pressing to his ears. A Ger- man signal would be detected. The operator would get its bearing. An- other operator in another squadron | of the patrol would hear it and also get its bearing. The navigator would get a fix and the location of the| submarine would be accurately de- termined. Then both groups would start out for him, and in many cases within a few hours he was wonder- ing how the Americans had located him. Now that the war is over, the government experts have made known their discovery with a view to aiding in the saving of millions of dollars compass operators to take their sig- nals and give the bearings. This is done with two stations as before, with President’s Stand. Russia hardly can be expected to change her attitude should she par- ticipate In the conference at The Hague, In the opinion of the editors of the country. They believe that the bolshevist _attitude was plainly set forth in the reply which, more than anything else, caused the Genoa con- terence to collapse. And the edito- rial comment is for the most part condemnatory of Russia and congrat- ulatory to President Harding for de- to permit the United States the idea that the bolshevist govern- ment can be made a good one by petting or coddling, and that profita- le trade can flow from strengthen- ing a system that developed a trade desert.” But there are two sides to the question, in the opinion of the New York World, which points out that “neither the Russians nor the can have their cake and eat it, although that is what both sides have been “trying to do.” ‘With the record on both sides made complete for “home consumption,” the Charleston News and Courler feels certain that “peace will prevail in the end over all the conflicts of na. tional interests and nationa! politics,’ because, the Richmond News-Leader points out, “‘the real bargaining is being done in private; therefore, the nego- tlations may go on.” One thing out- standing in the entire Russian posi- tion, the Springfield Union is con- vinced, 1s that “the concession as to the recognition of private property in_the investments of nationals of EDITORIAL DIGEST Result at Genoa Proved Wisdom of a year in ship losses through mis- takes of navigators in approaching & coast In thick weather. of agreement and settlement will al- most inevitably involve.” Russla was entirely right in Insist- Ing that it be represented in any con- ferences at Genoa or anywhere else, in the opinion of the Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette, which points out that “Russia is not China, and is not apt to become anything like China. Soviet diplomacy almost looks good compared with that of some of the ! nations that are outraged because of | sovietism.” Brave M:njm Duty. In these days of war heroes brav- ery medals and Carnegle awards, Bx- press Messenger Steward of the Rock Island Railway should not be over- looked. He was confronted by elght bandits who held up the Golden State limited at Tucson, Ariz. Instead of permitting the robbers to loot his car of the treasures, he gave battle, killed one, wounded another, and put the rest of the hold-up men to rout It was a combination of courage and quickness of thought, always most formidable when put to a test. It is the man who counts, and Messenger Steward has secured a place among brave men, and should be remem- bered. Then, too, there is Engineer John Cotter of the Erle. A baby girl was on the track. He applied the emer- gancy brakes, clambered from cab to cow-catcher, snatched the child from the grinding wheels, and re- stored her to her mother. 'This was not a dare-devil movie stunt, but the 0., MONDAY, MAY 22, 1922. Ofives . performance of & duty as it came in his day's work. The railroad had the right kind of a man in the ex- press car, and the railroad had the other countries amounts to nothing more than a figure of speech when combined with the refusal to yleld the principle of nationalism, For- eign capitalists can invest their money in Russia and they can call it theirs, but it really belongs to Rus- sfa, and the foreign capltallst can be kicked out of the property at any time.” The entire proceedings from start to-finish at Genoa, the Boston Tran- script asserts, erved to mirror the effrontery that has characterized from the beginning the attitude of the soviet delegates. Invited to the conference in the first instance as suppliants, as individuals unfit to sit at the tables of the great, the bol- shevik! have grown increasingly ar- rogant,” and the result was their re- fusal to accept the position of the other nations. But the door having been opened, it will be necessary to carry the negotlations through when they agaln are resumed to a complete conclusion, in the opinion of the Charleston Post, which points out that *“no solution of the European problem can be accomplished which does not take into consideration so- viet Russia as a factor.” The Rus- sians themselves, the St. Paul Dis- patch believes, “hope that in the com- paratively detached atmosphere of the mixed commission those states- men of Europe Who are wavering be- tween their desire to share in the soviet concessions and the principles %o which they have allled themselves will find it easier to capitulate, In addition, “it conciliation and co-oper- ation are to prevail” the Utica Oba| server-Dispatch says, “the powers cannot refuse carefully to consider the stand that the Russians have taken. It s not possible to make a unless it is fair to all in.’ There can be no question, “if th assumption of the soviet {s correct, the Utica Press points out, that “the rest of Europe can have no prosper- il Russia is first made pros- perous.” One reason for this s th PRussia went to Genoa to bargain,” the Chicago Daily News suggests, tning will continue, 80 far as Russia is concerned, until the other powers, or some of them, either make the desired concessions or lose patience.” The motives of the Rus- sians are very easily understood, the Winnipeg Free Press explains, de- claring that “they are playing a straig! me for the sole advantage of Ru The restoration of Eu- Tope, the reinforcing of the founda- tions of European credit and the re- construction of European trade are secondary matters to the soviet dele- tes. All the issues which the con- ‘erence was called into being for the urpose of settling were subordinated g ?f. Russians, p ps, in the ho) that the ot need of. right kind of a man in the engine cab. All honor to both of them!— Boston Post. A Futile Experiment. The young couple from Boston who are going into the Maine woods for six weeks to prove that a man and ‘woman can exist on their own re- sources without any of the alds of civilization will have plenty of ad- venture, some of it no doubt dis. agreeable. Apparently, the difficult problem will be to provide themselves with clothes. Shelter may be readily found, fire is doubtless as easily pro- curable by means of forked sticks rubbed together as it has been since primeval times, and there need be no lack of berries and grains for food pending the development of skill in trapping game and catching fish. . De- vising suitable garments for protec- tion against cold and rain may not be so_easy. ‘What will the experiment prove, and what contribution will it make to human knowledge? As romance based on fact, it will not necessarily be more interesting than a purely Inventional account of such an ad- venture written by an author with a lively imagination in his study. It would be more to the point to show how a young couple can live com- fortably “and: rationally with the re- sources of clvilization on what Mas- sachusetts’ commissions fix as a liv- ing wage.—New Yorw World. The fear is that the millennium may beat normalcy to it.—Asheville Times. About the greenest thing In most gardens just now is the gardener.— ‘Watertown (N. Y.) Stapdard. If one wanted to be impertinent, one might ask who put the con in Conan.—Toledo Blade. Sometimes it looks as if they tax everything except their judgment.— Fort Smith Southwest American. Too many allens come out of the melting pot quite irreparably hard- bojled.—St. Paul Ploneer Press. “Experts To Watch Short Skirts” says a headline. It surely doesn't need an expert to do that.—Spring- fleld News. Since washing dishes makes the hands red, it's a pity you can’t wash dishes with your face—Burlington News. Edgar Allen Poe beat Gladiator at the Jamaica (Long Island) race track, which proves that the pen is still c'g“:r than the sword.—Jackson zen-Patriot. - 2 e TEXAS ONIONS Mixed Tea ...oevveemn e Gunpowder Tea . ....ceo e eee ... . Ib,, 35¢ English Breakfast Tea. . EFFICIENCY AND LOW PRICE No. 1 New Florida GRANDMOTHERS’ ASSORTED 153-o0z. JAR, Large California, New York State Whole Milk OFFEE Suormytrecf EGGS FRESH EGGS Evers s Guranteed doz. 31 ¢ Babbitt’s Soap LARGER THAN EVER =3 CRACKER SPECIALS POTATOES, 51bs.19c FRUIT JAM PEACHES CHEESE O’CLOCK BREAKFAST UNEEDA BISCUITS ks 5¢ Silverbrook Print BUTTER 1b. 43¢ FANCYTUBBUTTERM®.41c b. 23¢ b. 25¢ Selected for Size and Quality. Per dozen * OTHER PRICES OF INTEREST 12-0z. bottle, 27c . . ...small bottle, 15¢ weee.....large canm, 13c Heinz Baked Beans FINE TEAS Supreme The Great A & P Tea Co. 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