Evening Star Newspaper, June 26, 1922, Page 6

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6 THE EVENING STAR. With Sunday Morning Edition. WASHINGTON, D. C. June 26, 1522} THEODORE W. NOYES. . . . Editor The Evening Star Newspaper Company | Business Office, 11th St. and Pennsylvania Ave. New York Office: 130 u St. Chicago Oifice: First-National Hank Bullding. Buropean Office: 3 Regent 8t., Londoo, Engla: The Evening Star, with the Sunday morning rdition, is delfyered by carriers within the city at 60 cents per mouth; daily only. 47 cents mer month: Sundas only, 20 cents per month. OF- ders may be sent by mall, or telephone Main 8000 Collection is” made by earriers it the end of esch month. \ Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Sunday only. All Other States. $10.00; 1 mo.. 85¢ { /00: 1 mo., 60c { $3.00; 1 mo., 35¢ ! The Herrin Verdict. rdless of the viewpoint of partisanship from which it is con-} the verdict of the coroner Herrin, Il on the mine| of last week must stand as, one of the most flagrant violations of | in this country. a non-union mine. Its owners had undertaken, with the as- sent of the union leaders of the region, to strip the surface dirt. Completing that operation they proceeded to mine coal with steam shovels. They had a perfect right in law to do this. Threats were made that the work would be | stopped. Knowing that the striking | nminers were armed the company es- tahlished med guards around the property. The strikers formed a mob and advanced with the avowed inten- tion of stopping the work. They stopped it by shooting down the suards and the workmen. For this, by a jury of obviously partisan citizens of the town, they are now held guilt- less of any degree of criminality, and the responsibility for their act is put upon the “provocations” of the mine owners and the nen employed by them. Nu thought is given by the coroner’s jury to the killing of prisoners, men taken and led away to be shot down or tied with weights and thrown into the river to be drowned. The only specific accusation is leveled at the dead su- perintendent of the mine, directly charged with killing one of the at- tackers. Had the jury stopped with its blan- ket declaration of deaths “by gunshot wounds at the hands of parties to this | jury unknown,” it would have at least concealed its partisanship in a con- fession of inability to identify of- fend But by picking out Me- Dowell, the dead superintendent, for the sole direct accusation it showed that it could identify individuals If it wished, but that it did not care or dare 1o go further and find others who might, without doubt, have been as readily made known. The effect of this verdict will be to intensify the feeling that prevails now ¢ throughout the country that the tragedy at Herrin is a direct conse quence of tue strike, and that r sponsibility for it rests upon those| who called that strike. Upon the same | principle that underlies the verdict, | that the operation of the mine was the inciting cause of the crime, upon the calling of the strike is to be laid the blame for all acts of violence result- ing. | If the Herrin verdict means nny-! thing, it means that in the eyes of the unions and the public that is subject | and partisan to union influence it is| unlawful to work a mine when a strike | is on. To grant this is to recognize | the strike as paramount to law, which | will never be granted in this country. Sea-Carrying Requirements. i Leét us not deceive ourselves about tiais sea-carrying business. It is seri- cus business, and is conducted on busi- ness principies. Those now engaged in it understand it. They are veterans and are firmly and profitably estab- | lished. ¥ ] They are not to be expected to wel- come a competitor with open arms. Especially a competitor with such re- sources as we possess. Rather are they to be expected to tighten their hold on affairs, and give us a run for our money. f It is 2 matter of common sense and necessity, therefore, that in entering the field we do so with full apprecia- tion of the requirements. To succeed we shall need all the resources we possess. We must recognize and em- ploy the proved and accepted rules of the game. There is no short cut to] success. We must take the route and | 20 the pace prescribed. and exhibit staying power of the first quality. Our competitors did not achieve their suc- cess in a day, N Why, if we obey these rules, should we not succeed? We have past suc- cesses to our credit. We were once a formidable and prosperous sea-carrier. We dropped out on the lure to develop ourselves on land. We have done that, and now the sea calls again. There is ne mistaking what the wild waves are | saying the whole day long:; and we | should respond with pleasure and alacrity. { “ultimately i minorit! spired from the same sources that piotted the killing of Erzberger. It was timed plainly with reference to the expected demonstrations of today, the anniversary of the signing of/the treaty of Versailles. By some blunder which can be compared to the blunder Yot the invasion of Belgium without Rathenau was slain ahead of schedule, slain in a way to give notice virtually of the plans of the reacticnaries and%with the effect of immediately aligning all the anti- monarchical forces for resistance. A reign of terror is not created by a single crime. Had Rathenau's mur- der occurred in the course of a gen- eral disturbance, however, with pe: haps the slaughter of other member of the republican government, headway might have been made to- ward the restoration of the monarch Assassination in such circumstances would possibly have advanced- the cause. But assassinations alone, with no possible justification, plain murder of an individual, was the worst of mistakes. In consequence of the slaying of Rathenau the anti-monarchical ele- ments in Germany are fully aroused to the danger and are preparing against a reaction. The socialists have declared a general strike for tomor- row as a demonstration of the solidar- ity of the workingmen. The political provocation, leaders of the republic have taken warning, and are to arrest known monarch make any moves whatever toward an uprising. The reaction; s are shrinking from sight, and find themselves disarmed by the criminal folly of those who slew the foreign minister. Bad psychology again saves the situation. The German demo have evidently learned a lesson from the war, whereas the monarchists, the er’'s men, the junke the reac naries in general, are still obsessed with the idea that they alone minds. Labor in Politics. No great seriousness is likely to be attached by the general public to the program of the American Federation of Labor to enter politics, capture th republican and democratic parti our governmen when it is fashionable for organized ernment, and labor has as good a right as any to try. Labor will not succeed, of course, but we all remerm- ber the little boy who tried to shoot the moon. When they laughed at him he retorted that he might not hit it, but that he would ‘“come a blamed ht nearer” than those who did not try Just what labor intends to do with the govennment when it gets controi does not appear: If its object is more money for less work, that can be ac- complished without difficulty. It Russia that it is a harder job to carry home a day's ‘wage than it is to earn it. But if the object is more of the necessities and comforts of life for I work, that is a horse of another color. No way has yet been devised by which commodities can be legisiated into existen®e. Goods carr be had only if they are produced, and more good will be produced only when more work s done 1t the labor leaders can draft laws which will increase the productivity of labor and thus increase the volum of goods for fair distribution they do not need to capture the republican and democratic parties in order 1o get their legislation enacted. It will be enacted by unanimous ent. it what the labor leaders aim at®is that their organized minority get a larger share of present produc- tion at the expense of the unorganized majority they are likely to find that getting “ultimate control of- the ma chinery of our government” is a mat- con sha { ter of considerable difficulty. But, as aforesaid, under present con- ditions organized labor is not to be blamed for trying. Other organized mincrities have sct the example’ of secking control of the government for selfish purposes, and in some stances they have succeeded to a measurable extent. Where labor is out of luck is in getting so late a start. The unorganized public, which has overwhelming strength at the polls, has grown so weary of these ac- tivities by organized minorities that it is waiting for a good chance to use its bludgeon on one of them. If it is on the head of organized labor that the bludgeon falls that will be labor's misfortune. et An investigation of the atrocities near Herrin is demanded by public sentiment. It should be given a place ahead of a number of investigations that are still pending. in- —_——— The operators are at least compelled to admit that in some sections of the country ccal mining is not a well or- ganized and orderly business. The bathing season has opened, and the flapper street costume ceases to attract attention. Gen. Wood to Remain. This is from Manila: . The leave of absence of Governor General Leonard Wood as provost of the University of Pennsylvania has been extended until January, accord- ing to cables received today at the According to some authorities an | election in Ireland is only the begin- ning of the real argument. —_—t——————— - Bad Psychology in Germany. Frequently during the war German 1 doubtedly aided the cause of the al- lies. From the start Berlin “guessed wrong” as to the reaction upon the minds of other peoples from Gemmnl acts and words. So regularly did this occur that it came to be accepted that for all their power of organization and genius for preparation the German statesmen and commanders were un- skilled in estimating human motives and sentiments. The murder of Dr. Walter Rathe- nau, German foreign minister, is an additional illustration of this - trait. That crime was evidently part of the reactionary propaganda which aims at the restoration of the monarchy in Germany: 11 e governor's office from the governing Iboard of the universit; Both Gen. Wood and “the university have acted in'this matter in the spirit of patriotism, and doubtless’ if circum- stances should so advise both will give further evidence of that same spirit. Which {s to say that if Gen. Wood remain longer, nnd\ka( the university will again extend his leave. ‘We shall be in the Philippines for some years. That is clear from the President’s deliverance to the viditing Filipinos. And while we remain the affairs of the islands should be well administered. This is not to suggest that Gen. ‘Wood will or should abandon his pres- ent plans for entering the educational field and take 'up a long residence in the Philippines, but only that as long as may be necessary \to put affairs there in the proper shape, Le will be pre-eminently-the man for the job, some| s and | control the machinery of | These are the days | s to seek control of the gov-| been accomplished so thoroughly in}’, But { been busy with a‘'project for estab- lishing an independent government should give their attention now to the assured continued American rule, and thus make smoother the path of the Amerjcan officials on duty in the is- lands for the carrying on of American purposer for Filipino benéfits. | XKeep Your Park Home Clean! Good people who go pienicking in the public parks around Washington, please pause to thimk of this proposi- tion: The park is your park. It is just ke your home, like your front yard, or the rooms of -your house. It is for your pleasure and your comfort, and your refreshment and recreation. Tt is designed to please your eye by its colors-and its sweeping spaces, its shade and all its charms. It is kept clean by ifs attendants for vou and vour families, just as the housewife keeps your home clean and well swept and serubbed and neat. Now. why should you go into the park for a picnic and leave it littered with trash, with boxes and papers and bottles and fragments of food and other debris? You do not do these things at home. You do not leave the dining table standing from meal to meal with dirty dishes and broken victuals and soiled napkins. You do not strew r front yard with boxes and paper and garbage. If any guest came into you® house and threw things around on the floor or on the grass of the yard after eating you would be ludignant, and he would not be welcomed again to your home. Why not carry into the parks the same thoughtfulnegs that you mani- fest at home for nedtness and order tand health? It is your park. Keep it clean, not b any, threat of st and punisi ent for leaving lit- ter behind you when you depart, but because it is your park, your outdoor home, and you should be proud of it and not disrespectful, like the untidy guest who may offend you on your own premis —_——— If the American press were more {inclined to the sensational, scarcely a { day would pass without headlines call- ing attention in picturesque terms of horror to European riots and homi- cid ause of | —————————— The American press, recognizing a sassinations in Europe with deep re- gret, but without umnecessary re- proach. ——————— Japan is evidently doing her best to set an example that will persuade the rest of the world to take disarmament suggestions with the strictest serious- ness. 5 ———————— The report comes that Ambassador Harvey has entertained King George s an enterfainer is invariably a Harvey Great jurists complain of the ma ner in which newspapers discuss mat- ters of public concern. Eminent law- yers are frequently complained of for i the same thing _——— While the eign governments are undoubtedly {good, it must he admitted that they iare not invariably well policed. —_———— } The former kaiser would not be { sreatly blamed if he were to abandon i politics for i the more placid walks of literature, —_———— The Railway Labor Board has more trouble in maintaining its referee prestige than Judge Landis or Mr. Will Hays. Conan Doyle says prohibition 15 a good thing for any country. There are spirits and spirits. i —_—————— SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. " The Message. 1The honeysuckle wafts. a perfume sweet And fills the senses with a joy com- plete. Its message breathes of blossoming i and skies And glistening rain and purple mists that rise, ‘Where birds sing gayly and the river’s flow Is turned to silver in the moonbeam’s glow. And in the twilight hours of lazy bliss, I say, more strange than radio is this! { Admittance Free. ““You can't spend money now to get into office.” “I'm glad -of it,” replied Senator Sorghum. “There is a something in every man's nature that makes it a peculiar satisfaction to be a “dead- head.” Jud Tunkins says there's no econ- omy in sitting up all night to argue about daylight-saving. The Angel Flivver. | Be good, little flivver, and maybe, some day, When you leave this terrestrial scene, 5 With wings you'll be fitted in realms far away And float as a flying machine. . Ground for Suspicion. “Would you marry a man for money?” “No,” replied Miss Cayerne; "but I should regard the lack of it as and therefore happiness.” “Dar’s only one time,” said Uncle Eben, “when dar’s a sho’ nuff excyse to keep kickin’, an’ dat’s when yo in swimmin’.” ——ee—— ‘What is one man’'s costly meat may be another man’s low-priced steer.— El Paso Herald. The more Doyle tells about the next world ' the better we like this one.— Atlanta Constitution. > A *“promising young man” is all right so long as he doesn’t make it to her in writing.—Nashiville ‘Tenngs- seéan. 4 THE EVENING ST | Corps of turbulent situation, chronicles the as- | intentions of several for- | er and limit himselt to} re s ground for suspicion that he wasn't a | political and military leaders displayed | should find it impossible to clear his|good business man, a psychological ineptitude that -un-|table by January 1 he will consent to | hesitate to depend on him for a home's , {\WASHINGTON, D. C., High in Efficiency and Morale HE school year of 1921-1922, which has just come to a close, has been an important period for the Washington High School Cadet organization. Through the sy: tematic assistance rendered by the War Department and the devoted services of Liedt. Col. Wallace M. Craigie, U. 8. 47 professor of military science and tactics, the character of the cadets' instruction has been improved and the scope of the training has been in- creased. In material matters the improverents of the cadet instruction have been marked, according to Stephen E. Kramer, assistant superintendent of schools, who has direct supervision over the cadet corps. The corps is now completely equipped with modern rifles and accouterments, which are better suited to the needs of the cadets than weres the old and cumbersome Krag- Jorgensen guns. A fully equipped band of sixty-one pleces has been organized. This band functions in two divisions and school military authorities feel that in a short: time two full-sized regi- mental bands will be formed. The outstanding improvement of the year in the cadet corps has been the undertaking of a svstematic effoft to bring over some of the enthusiasm and interest whicl. has for years centered in the company organization into thé zeal for unit superfority In the battalion and the regiment. For the first time formal competition was arranged be- tween the battalions of the brigade. * k k% While the new features enumerated have been introduced, the steady forward movement of all the cadet work has been maintained, with the same fine ldeals which have distin- guished this honorable corps for more than two score vears. ’ Each year school military authorities plan to build better in the sense of the newer undertakings and finer equip- ment, but their intention always is to preserve the best of the old—which is the spirit of the corpg and the obliga- tion to carry on the fine traditions of the past. * ok ok ok One of the several important inno- vations Introduced in the cadet corps during the year was the regimental cadet court, composed of the higher ranking cadet officers, before which tribunal all cases of infraetions of the rules and regulations of the cadet corps are brought. ,In the past cadets who viblated the rules received no punishment unless their conduct also was a violation of school rules. Discipline in the cadet corps was malintained by the creation of the esprit de corps, and was meas- ured by the ability of the captains to awaken within the hearts of men the determination to do right for Ford's Presidential Boom May Not Be All Humor. Automobile terms such as “crank.” \f-starter,” “flivver" and “gas,” that ‘e more than one meaning in the American language, figure largely in {the zeneral run of editorial comment jon the “Ford for President” talk. At cratic) that “those who regard it as a joke had better revise their esti- Imates” Not that many of them would welcome a serious effort to put Henry Ford in the White House, but they point to fluid elements in the present political situation the course of which may concelvably make this latest Ford joke” a solemn matt by 1924, The hoom was started, the Roanoke World News (democratic) report by “some misguided Michigan folks 0 profess to see some connection between quantity preduction of fliv vers and the duties of the Presi- |dent of the United States” Include mong _these “migguided” ones, the andusky (Ohio)’ Register (repub- lican) relates furthe vere a clergy- man, a judge, a publis “‘there were represented.” the Register de- Quces, “the pulpit, the press, the bench and commerce, and if that does not constitute a national movement right at the start, where was there ever any movement of an all-em- bracing ~character?” So. “thus be- !sieged.” as the Norfolk Virginian iPilot (independent democratic) puts lit, “the Caliph of Flivverdom, after the wont of other public men simi- larly placed, has made it known that if the people want him for President he will run—not otherwise. “How Mr. Ford is to find out whether or not ‘the people’ want him until they have had a chance to vote for him he does not explain,” notes the Indignapolis Star (independent republican); and lacking that cri- ferion, the Minneapolis Tribune (re- publican) says, “the call of the coun- try is not an easy thing to identify. 'Mr. Bryan, for instance, “has ident! fied several of them to his own satis- faction, but in each case it turned out that what he heard was something quite different. Just the same, “the movement to make Henry Ford a candidate f President is more than mere rumor, the Utica Observer-Dispatch (demo- cratic) asserts, and “is likely to be a considerable one before the time comes for making nominations to that office two years from this sum- mer.” Because of “the consisterft Vic- tories scored by the progressive can- didates in the primaries in Indiana, Pennsylvania_and Iowa,” shys the Ann Arbor (Mich.) Times-News (in- dependent), “there has begn some wonder among political leaders of both parties regarding a possible split in the republican ranks at the next presidential election,” and ‘“in the event of such a division” the Times-News belleves that “Henry Ford, running on the democratic ticket, would stand a good chance of { election.” That “he would have a real chance to win the democratic nomination “if he went after it with the help of { skillful political managers” is_the firm belief of the Lincoln (Neb.) State ourna) -(Independent republican), for | “that party is now leaderless” and “greater miracles have occurred in Amorican politics than the nomina- Thus their | EDITORIAL DIGEST ithe same time many papers from lcvery section of the country agree | with the Chieago Journal (demo- her and a prom- | the sake of the company's records: While this method was quite success- ful, it was found that in nearly every company were one or more men who had no_interest in_the cadet corps nor in the welfare of thelr companies. Inasmuch as one or two such cadets within & company can, by their mi conduct, utterly ruin’ discipline and s0 retard the progress of the com- pany as to practically destroy . its chances of winning a place in the annual competitive drill—the great- est of all High Sehool events4-Col. Craigie was confronted With a Drob. lem of devising a method which would insure a_higher standing of discipline and, at the same time, elim- inate the possibility of injustice. His solution of the problem was the es- tablishment of the courts-martial Eystem. * ¥ kX Each court-martial is composed of from ten to fifteen cadet officers, a judge advocate (prosecuting attor- ney) and a defense counsel. The court hears all evidence, both pro and con, and in a closed session de- termines its findings and recommen- dations by secret ballot. No officer who 1s the accuser or who is a mem- ber of the same company as the ac- cused Is eligible to be a member of the court at the time of the trial. Each accused has the right to tes- tify in his own behalf or to make any statement he desires before the court. A record of the trial is prepared and includes a summary of the evi- dence considered and the findings and recommendations of the court. The record is presented to the military committee of the school at which the trial is held for recommendations, after which it is sent to the princi pal for approval In case the re ommendations of the court include dishonorable discharge from th - det corpt, the principal of the school Incorporate his recommendation in an indorsement to the record of trial and forwards the same to the as- sistant superintendent of schools for approval and final action. * ¥ % X It has been found that in the ex- perlences of the past year that mem- bers of the courts-martial have real- ized -their responsibility in judging the conduct of their fellow students and have been just in thefr decisions. The results obtained from the court- martlal system have been very grat- ifying to the military instructors. Those in charge of the cadet corps belleve that the past year has been a banner one, both as to morale, ef- ficiency and organization. The ca- dets seemed to have clearly sensed the important relation of this train- ing, military and personal, to citi- zenship, which augurs well for their value as future citizen: Jand women. Would it he wise to | place such a man in the President's chair?” Answering that point., how- ever, the Chicago Journal (demo- cratic) observes that “his employes are his champions and friends almost to a man” and “the general public is likely to fecl that a man who can win the friendship and loyalty of his helpers to such a degree is a pretiy andard (republican) re- “He believes that the more s of it the better for every- y,” and with him as a contender for the presidency “it would be the Bryan sixteen-to-one thing over again, only Mr. Ford's ideas currency are If anyvthing possible than Mr. Bryan's The Gay Chameleon. Marvelous and manifold are the in- terest of the Department of Agri- culture. The latest notice contains some helpful hints about chameleons, Many inquiries, says the department (amd Secretary Wallace orable man), have been re d concerning the care, food and habits of this famous animal, and to meet this na- tion-wide demand for chamelennalia the bureau of biological survey compiled the necessary Is your chameleon thirsty? Do not give him a dish of water. He won't know how to use it. Instead, get him a Chinese sacred lily and place it in a small shallow bowl. Spray this with water and watch him lap the droplets on the leaves. Is he hungry? Turn him loose in the pantry. He is the siorn enem of Don Marquis' friend, Archy the cockroach. In fact, the department apparently favors conserving all these animals. A supply of them, it says, will prove a valuable source of food for chameleons. One other caution. If you place one on a Scotch plaid don't expect it to “bust.”” The Scotchman who lamented the death of his chameleon when he placed it on his kilties was evidently spoofing. For further information write to the department—New York Tribune. Censoring Nature-Fakers. Cadet Raymond White, the young viator who emerged from the Flor- ida Everglades after the fall of his plane with a picturesque tale of ad- venture, has incurred the wrath of a great newspaper. His assertion that he escaped a panther by climbing a fifty-foot tree is bluntly set down as a plece of nature faking. Has any- body ever known a fifty-foot tree to stop a panther? His newspaper ckitic is 8o incensed at the audacity of what it considers a new Munchau- sen tale that it appeals to “lead- ing zoological authorities and others” to explain the mysterious conduct of a panther apparently unable or un- willing to climb a tree. While we are waiting for the verdict of the authorities, Cadet White comes out with another in- stallment of his interesting serial. Famished and nearly exhausted, he says, “I was desperate and caught one of the huge grasshoppers I saw in the swamps. I only ate his legs and couldn’t stand them. But pretty soon ther grasshopper and ate If ancient prophets in the desert made locusts a_habitual diet,” there is no reason why Cadet White’s grasshopper should be doubt- ed. Perhaps some grasshoppers are good man to trust | Asain, “Mr. Ford has strange ideas’ about mon the New Bedfore has | MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1992. ~ h School Cadets tion of Henry Ford by the democratic party two years from now would be. He has achieved the “greatest busi- ness success of our times,” the Lin- coln paper continues, “and what is more extraordinary, has done it with- out forfeiting public confidence. Ada to this confidence the fact that he is one of tha best known men in the world, and you have the foundation for a political career of no small pos- sibilities.” Believing with the writers quoted more edible than others. Byt the censorious newspaper men- tioned above, not content with ‘at- tacking the aviator, trains its guns on members of its own profession. Regarding the panther story as a palpable fake, it grieves to see the tale published in its own columns. It “hurts the credibility of news. papers.” American newspapers have become pre-eminent because they print the news instead of merely handing out @9 that a formidable move to run Ford for President is not unthinkable, many other editors seriously discus: what they beliqve to be his qualifi- cations and fitness—or, in most cases, his, to them, lack of fitness. It is “only natural,” the Des Moines Capi- tal (republican) thinks, that he should be mentioned for the presi- dency, but his “best friends will cer- tainly not discover in his make-up one good qualification fitting him for the presidency—not one,” _while “there are thousands who would think the country quite unsafe in his hands” ‘He is “no statesman,” the Asheville Times (independent) de- clares “utterly ignorant of the fundamentals of politics. Further, the Aberdeen (S.D.) World objects on industrial and economic grounds, for, it says, Ford “heads al- ready one of the great industries of the country. If his Muscle Shoals offer is Mfll’(*. he will head another d will. be: a' business officially inspired or editorially pred} gested or otherwlse censored reports, on the Enropean plan of giving the public only what the authorities think it ought to know. Moreover, both the American press and the American reading public have a suf- ficient sense of humor to recognize a “fish story” without a solemn label giving due warning, that ‘“this is a nature fake.” And must Cadet White necessarily be a faker? Per- haps the panther was in mo mood to exert himself, or maybe he had also been eating grasshoppers..Some editors are altogether too solemn.— Milwaukee Sentinel. Germany seems to think that the victor -nations dun her wrong.—Vir- glnian-Pilot. i ~ If we may belleve Lasker, a ocean is an impossibility.—Asheville Times, iy 1isten ) ¢ (D @ France, Italy, Spain, Japan, German Republic and Brazil. P and G White Naphtha or This would supply one cake of soap to every inhabitant of British Isles, 5 o= 24¢ Sultana Tuna Fish, Vs. Sultana Tuna Fish, 1s. Heinz India Relish, jar Pure Peanut Butter, 8-0z jar STAR SOAP “King Oscar” Sardines, can.......17c Encore Olive Oil, pint. . PRI+ Encore Olive Oil, quart. 2 .92¢ A&P Catsup, 8-oz bottle cere..lde Shredded Wheat, pkg. . Post Toasties, pkg. “Argo” Starch, pkg.... “Pacific” Hand Soap, can “ Crisco, No. 1 can... 22c Jell-O, package . ... 1lc Grandmother’s Jelly Powder, pkg..9¢ BROOMS 3c| & GOOD CLEAN SWEEPERS CED TEA—made from Grandmother’s Orange Pekoe Tea—is one of the most delicious, thirst-appeasing, cooling drinks of the Summer season. Pour“boiling !lot water over the tea (about teaspoonful for a glass) and let stand to get the “essence.” 'P(.r‘ur a small quantity of “essence” in each glass. 'Add ice and cold water—d drink that’s “fit for the gods. 12-1b.Bag. ... .63c 24Y/>-1b. Bag, $1.25 Chocolate Fingers, Ib........... Graham Crackers, Ib. - . Vanilla Wafers, pkg.......-.....5¢ CRACKER SPECIALS Orange Pekoe Supreme A&P Sole Distributors CED BOKAR—another marvelous concoction to bring down the temperature. You note we don't say Iced Coffee. We just say “Bokar"—for “Bokar” stands for “Coffee Supreme.” “Bokar,” a little cream, ice and cold water—a couple of straws—and you can cast defiance at the hottest sun the Summer season can produce. Try it. It's a treat. ELL’S DELICIOUS BACON BUTTERMILK PINT, 5c QUART, 10c For Good Health to be sure of Good Bread by just CORBY'S MOTHERS BREAD e For sale at all A & P Stores—fresh from the Corby ovens 2= ATLANTIC & PACIFIC = A STORE IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

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