Evening Star Newspaper, August 10, 1922, Page 6

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- THE EVENING STAR, With Sunday Morning Edition. T WASHINGTON,D.C. THURSDAY. ...August 10, 1982 THEODORE W. NOYES. ..Editor i'he Evening Star Newspaper Company Business Office. 11¢h 8t. and Pennsylvania Ave. New York Office: 150 Nassau 8t Chicago OMce: First Natioual Dank Building. Europran Office: 3 Regent St., London. England. The Evening Star. with the Sunday moraing edition, is delivered by carriers within the city at 80 cents per month: daily only, 43 cents per mooth; Sunday only. 20 cents per month. uo?- ders may be sent by mail x telepho: 8000. Collection is made by carriers end of each month. Rate by Mail—Payable in Advance. Maryland and Virginia. Dajly and Sunday..1yr., $8 Daily only yri.$ Sunday on second. So the second has been be- stowed upon him. Now the argument in favor of a second nomination for Gov. Cox Is of precisely the same character. His friends assert that he did all that was possible with his first nomination and in the improved circumstances that will exist in 1924 could win with a second. If Mr. Donshey is elected the Cox boom should profit. The boomers will insist more strenuously than ever that their favorite is entitled to an- other chance, and should have it; that gratitude as well as good politics in- the | dicates the national democratic leader for 1924. 1f Mr. Donahey is defeated the Cox boom, in some measure, will suffer. The anti-Cox people outside Ohio will point to the defeat as suggesting that the democratic party would do well to consider new men for the newer corner, and at Cork ifself. The re- pubiicans sought to block the landing at Cork by sinking barges and btidges, but were unable to keep the Free State troops out of the city. Thus the republicans are virtually encircled in an area with a radius, of not more than twenty-five miles. If Cork is captured disorganization of the in- surgents is certain to follow and the HE activities of the lightning rod agents were formerly a topic that was commented upon by humorists throughout campaign then will probably become |the country, and these jibes for sev- a mere man hunt in the hills. The | eral years caused a decided set- government at Dublin has offered to|back in the purchasing of these ar- receive without penalties all who yie and pledge themselves not to partici- pate in' further insurrection. It is re- eld [ ticles of protection against a bolt from the blue. Recent reports, how- ever, indicate that the severe thunder- storms that have occurred all over ported that De Valera plans to make | pe country this summer have caused his peace with the Free State govern-| many suburbanites to equip their ment. He has contrived to evade | residences, barns and other buildings capture and is believed now to be in| with these metalllc and in many in- Cork, though he has been reported at | stances highly ornamental rods. various points in southern Ireland. He had hoped to gain financial support trom. this country, but that has failed. * ok kX E of the latest means used to rebuke automobilists who fail to i times. All Other States. In urging the election of Mr. Dona- Daily and Sunday. Trally only When Boland, who died the other day | uge their dimmers when approaching jfrom wounds received in a skirmish, | was employed the other night Ly a reached Ircland on his return from | Washington driver who purchased Sunday only. Coal Outlook Brightens. conference of miners and mine owners at Cleveland agre upon a wage scale to which a sub- stantial number of operators in the central competitive district will ad- here and their men will return to work, it is a safe prediction that not many days will elapse until ail mines are in iin. The Tlincis and other ope ¢ who have refused to participate in the Cleveland con- If the joint pe in ference will not long remain idle when their competitors begin to ship coal. They will either have to look after the interests of their stomers or their custom will look elsewhere for coal. While nether the anthracite miners nor operators are represented at Cleveland. it is the general under- standing that if an agreement is reached there for ending the bitumi- nous strike the anthracite conference will be reconvened at once and efforts to negotiate a wage scale resumed. The Hlinois operators have made a play for public support by proposing arbitration to President Lewis of the United Mine Workers, knowing in nce that the 1 would be ed. The believes, of e. that all such N should be s ion, but just now it in the resumy duction, and the pror nois operatc was not int pful to that end. now is te t the mi work in order that a famine may be averted. it will be the duty of the mine of the minel wners and the leader: wniem, in co-operation with the gov. ernment, to take up-the problem of adjustment machinery and work out some ¢ by which strikes may be | averted in the future. No plan ac ceptable to both sides could be worked out during the bitterness of a strike, nor does the situation admit of the delay which necessarily would be in- If the operators were sincere in their desire for arbitration the time for proposing it was months ago. If full production of coal is resumed at once the situation still will be full of difficulties. The shortage, especial- Iy of anthracite, is so great that it cannot possibly be made up before winter and there will have to be care- fully controlled distribution and pos- sibly rationing. The relative shortage of bituminous ccal is not so great, but with the railroads crippled by the shopmen’s strike it is going to be difficult to transport ccal as fast as it will be mined, and priority orders probably will have to remain in effect throughout the winter. Tt is not a comfortable or a pleasant ituation in which the country finds tself, but immediate resumption of mining will prevent actual suffering, and if the nearness of the approach to disaster will result in some perma- of the coal-production benefits will more than for present inconvenience. v nent solation problem futu compensat Die-Hards in Missouri. die-hards Missouri at anti-Reed men are proposin; among of 1 inde- demo Some pendent candidate for senator—a dem- ocrat who rejects the result of the primary and is Mr. Reed's def ¢ The movement is based upon assertion that many republicans voted for r. Reed in the pr than enough to bring ah nary—more t his nomi- ! the nomi- nation—and . therefor nation is not binding®on de It n is true, why an inde €? Why should als who feel themselves from supporting Mr. Reed Support the republican candidat There w a for one reason of another disapproved ‘re mar campaizn under Mr. Wilson's wi But these men did not put a ticket of “their in the ficld. To make spre of Gov. Co: defeat the for Mr. Harding a own wajority to enormous proportions. There must have been a large number of them in Missouri. for the state | gvVe Mr. Harding a hundred and twenty thousand plurality o Breckinridge Long is not advo- cating a boit from Mr. Reed. but, while echoing the charge of repub- of Jidsin support Thé primary. a contest. his competitor in ———— Lenin retains Trotsky as an official associate, even while declining to for- mulate his policies strictly on the lines suggested by the Bronx editor's books. The Donahey Candidacy. Gov. Cox is interested, and will probably show his interest, in the Donahey candidacy. In 1920 Mr. Donahey was the demo- cratic candidate for Governor of Ohio and met the defeat decreed to all dem- ocrats in the state that year. This year his friends insisted that he was entitled to a second nomina- Dts the result of the | {and destroyed in the course | them and no one to c hey, therefore, Gov. Cox will be con- tributing to his own intcrests and strengthening his case for 1924. He will be an interesting figure on the Ohio stump in the present campaign. A Farm Home for Animals. A movement that has just been started here to establish a farm home for stray and decrepit animals de- serves the support of all who like and respect the dumb creatures with which man is el associated. The purpose is to acquire @ tract of land not far frem this city, where hor: dogs and cats can be sent for treat- ment or for comfortable maintenance. 1t will afford an opportunity for the owners of dom pets to board them out for the vacation period or during other absences from the city It will give a chance to put an old and once valuable horse in the green fields of rest and peace during the nder of life. animais that are takea up by the poundmaster are put to death in a short time, if owners do not claim them if they are not sought by others. Through this project, fostered by the Humane Education Soclety, animals taken up on the streets may be kept indefinitely in ci to restore them to health if the; alling. to insure them security and to el or afford opportunity for those who s pets to have their wi supplied. Many valuable animals ave captured fa ye to keep for them. Sometimes pets that are accidentally whose owners would be glad offered, because there is no plac astray, to redeem if opportunity wel are thus executed. It is estimated that about $23.000 is needed to buy and equip the tract that is now contemplated a site for this humane establishment. Sure from among the animal-loving people of the District this money will be forthcoming. Already a start has been made and subscriptions are in hand. The Humane Education Society is composed of sincere and earnest peopie who love animals, and under their auspices a home of this kind, which may be made a model with proper funding, may become a valua- ble feature of the District's practical charitie ——r——————— Labor in Ohio. Again it has been shown that the is non-deliverable; that it is not carried in the vest pocket of any labor leader playing politics; that it wears its own hat and does its own thinking. Although proscribed certain labor leaders, Senator Pomerene was renominated. The rank and file of labor vote by iwage earners in Ohio affiliating with the democratic party insisted on doing thelr own thinking Tuesday. Did they not think right? Mr. Pomerene has been in the thick of the most recent ! | | i 1 i i i {iea of Gov. Cox and his candi in | 1920. Some of them thought ke was a wet in disguise. Others. believing him to be a wet, condemned him for | openly declaving himsel i | .'9.': rs condemned him for a Wilsonism outright and making h { voted | wd helped swell his i | | 1 | i | lchosen to play politics. insist on play- iing politics. ing { own expense and discomfiture. political and legislative history-mak ing. He is familiar with all the fssues now agitating the country. 1f the next scpator from Ohio is to be could he be improved is a democr: upon? Although pr bed by the same lahor leaders, Representative Fess was nominated for the Senate by the re- publicans. The rank and file of the wage earners affiliating with the re- publican party insisted en doing their own thinking. Did they not think righ member of the House M. had a part in all the me history-making on Capl tol Hill. He is in line with his pa; He has the confidence of the national adminiswation. Tf the scnator from Ohio chosen in November is to be a n. could Mr. be im- Fess republi proved upo) The rank and file ‘ners shoald continue of the wage to do their M0Crats Who | gwn thinking. There is a good deal to think about and a good deal de- pends on decisions at the polls. Amer- expects every man to do his thinking. If certain labor leaders, not let them do so at their —_——————— Europe continues to hold confer- ences on the theory that they may at least be relied on not to do any harm. l The German mark is now securing recognition as a widely circulated work of current fiction. ! Construetive programs are more difficult to arrive at than destructive impulses. The Irish Campaign. The campaign in Ireland is moving now to an earlier climax than seemed likely a week or 80 ago, when the Free State forces were engaged in the occasional capture of towns in Tip- perary, Kilkenny and Waterford. Hav- ing established a line from Limerick to Waterford city, and thus virtually assuring the concentration of the ir- regular, or republican, forces in Mun- ster, the Free State government made a surprise move, landing troops at Tralee, on the west coast of Kerry, and, pushing inland toward Limerick city, gained possession of a number of strongholds. The county of Lim- erfck was soon cleared of republican troops, who were driven down into Cork county. Then the operation was funds could not be expected from this country. In any case. however, the | e wus hopeless. The pity is that | it was not so recognized weeks ago, to spare many lives and much destruc- tion of property. Rededicate the Lincoln Shaft! A correspondent. whose letter i printed in another part of The Star today, suggests that when the statue of Lincoln, removed from its original site in front of the city hall, is, in obedience to an act of Congress, re- stored to its approximate position, it should be dedicated anew, with appro- | priate ceremonies. This is a happy ithought and should be taken into consideration at once by organizations that may be concerned in this restora- tion. Possibly there some still living who participated in the raising of the fund from which the statue was originally secured. They should take part in any dedicatory exercises. {There are undoubtedly some living now who witnessed the dedication more than fifty vears ago. Indeed the writer of the letter in The Star is one of these. It will be appropriate thus to LE ate this shaft. though altered | to conform to the changed conditions. are i hy simple exercises. The dedication of the Lincoln Memorial in Potomac Park would not. of course, be in any dupl There need be n program. just a plain, sin ng of the o ion. not to celebrate the restoration of the shaft, but to afford an opportunity to those who knew Lincoln, fortunately now living. to attest by their presence, and pos ¢ by their voices. to the place he holds in the hearts of the Ame I people. P ——— | French statesmen are inclined to doubt whether the war will be entirely | {over until Germany has paid her in debtedness. —_———————— Mayor Hylan of New York con- insisting that he is giving the public what it wants. —_———————— Instead of talking of a reign of ter -, Russia now complains of the world's financial timidity. H —————————— | capital and labor are at least agreed lin not wanting much to do with rad lism. e —— The tariff has not vet been able to as busin problems. ————————— The consuming public is always' re lied on for a complete surrender be. fore the strike starts. . —_— r————— Strikes have made the lot of the commuter karder than ever this sum- | me i ————————————— A corner in the stock market {sure to leave somebody with a ¢ | tion of imaginary assets on hand. | is There is danger_ of tempting a can- didate to exhaust his oratorical en- {ergies on the primaries. i SHOOTING STARS. BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. The Minute. The clock ticked out a minute light Upon a summer day. 1 =aid, “The moment is so bright, Why won't you stop and play It answered, * 'Twould disgrace me i quite. 1 must be on my way— i 1 i 1 i “For 1 must turn, as I take flight, New buds to blossoms gay. And help the cool and restful night To supersede the day. Although my work seems only slight, T must be on my way. |“I lead yvouth on toward ambitions bright. | I touch man's hair with gray— | An atom to make up the might By which Time holds his sway— We small things Keep the great aright— 1 must be on my way. | No Fish Stories for Him. ' “Why don’'t you take a rest and go fishing?” { “I never go fishing,” replied Sena- tor Sorghum. *“A man in my position has trouble enough in keeping up his | reputation for strict veracity without j(‘opardizing it in pastime.” Jud Tunkins says & woman can sing a baby to sleep, but & man is merely liable to sing it awake. Musings of a Motor Cop. Hortense Magee said! “T'll be good And scorn earth’s provocations, For heaven has, I've understood, No ‘parking regulations. Girls Will Be Boys. “What did the young man say when you told him you would be e sister to him?" “He declined with thanks. He said he already had two_sisters who bor- rowed his goif clothes. “De most prominence don’t allus self as a means of simplifying | d gaged in tariff-making. !the United States he reported that|himself a large hand flashlight, and his method of using it was as fol- lows: When the approaching car did not lower its lights when he did, he thrust his arm out the window and threw a light on the side of ‘the ve- hicle he was driving, thus emphasiz- Ing the fact that the other driyer had not complied with the rules of the road and also pointing out the position of his front wheels and fender. According to his statement, this action on his part resulted in many of the careless drivers taking the hint and‘lowering the voltage of their lamps. M time when light-saving the realm * ok ok X ORE one young male than and female person will welcome the nt the pr order h of the “jazz" passed into things that were. While complaints were numerous during the first day of the order, nearly every day or so somebody who writes little stories for the papers receives a communication requesting that they print something about the absurdity of the condition that ob- tains today. A letter on my desk reads as follow: “Is it not possible for the papers of.the city to get to- gether and have President rescind this order We not only lose an day- without del hour of sleep every morning. but we are also Iusu::lly compelled to go home in the rain. Itslooks very much to me as if the daylight-saving law not only keeps us from doing the shopping we need to do. but it somehow brings u we are closi ks for the day.” NE of the latest stories that has been héard around the Metro- All Facts Influencing Tariff Sched- ules Are Needed. That the public is entitled to know all of the motives influencing sena- tors who are framing the tariff bill s the opinion of the majority of the of political affiliations, sharply censure'Senator Gooding for his charge that opposition to the chedules, and especially the schedule, is due to the large advertisers in individual new papers. Many of the papers see wool in {why the jereating an | With actual | Frelinghuysen amendment ctual tariff commission it wer should he adopte: The Baltimore Sun would “make all of the biack sheep come into the open.” Insisting that “there are more i senator from ldaho. Nothing can now %]mm( this tariff bill white. It i the outstanding political of the day, and no explant- The country would welcome e OPPOTLUNIty to ieet in the open all of the members of (e Tariff lation for the Advancement of Sp clal Interests at the Expense of -the { General 1i | o JRdosing tnis sentiment. the Springtield News in: that “if tarift i are being boosted at the ex- Ipense of the consumer and taxpayer, and senators themselves o be E are the benific it_is high time the spotiight was being thrown on the 1 t. No senator has a right to s office for personal gain. He s chosen for the common good of the citizenship of his own and the St of the states which make up this countr A thorough survey {ought to disclose facts in the Charges that have been made. |, The New VYork Evening World, i however, insists that “nobody is left tout of the pre jthat is jconsumer. The are included. ne ators are included. i porters. department stores and all other witnesses who can testify as to_the interests and individuals who will reap fortunes if the pending tariff bill is passed by Congress. From the standpoint of a wool senator from Do ed inquiry-—nobody, cept_the ultimate biack sfieep’ senutors per-owning sen- as well as im- the sheep ranches of the west, the publ n't anybody. Mr. Public and his wife can be left out of considera- The public isn't anybody when sheep are gathering their tion. the black | wool. = ! "In’ the opinion of the Syracuse i Herald, Senator Gooding is an aspir- ant for “the peculiar kind of sena- torial laurels” hitherto monopolized by Senators “Tom™” Watson and La Follette. The Herald insists that 'we cannot persuade ourselves that any man so ignorant of elementary economic iprinciples as to contend that this country, with a productive capacity far exceeding itS consumptive ca- pacity, would profit by the absolute ! exclusion of foreign trade is fit for service in the Senate of the United States.” Likewise the Kansas City Star is convinced that “if the semator wants to investigate interest in the tariff he should apply himself to those in- terests that profit from it,” while the Chicago Tribune suggests that “an effective tariff commission, such as Senator Frelinghuysen advocates, would releve wool-raising senators from the necessity bf furnishing the information upon which Congress de- termines the duties which will detes mine the price of American clothing. Replying directly to the Gooding charge of Influenced newspapers, the Springfield Union points out that “even were it true that the tariff opinfons of these republican news- papers which have incurred the en- mity of Senator Gooding are in- fluenced by their mercantile adver- tising, they are not officially en- The republi- can newspapers that are thus put in the traitorous class are ordinarily defenders of protection. They are not criticizing the principle, but alleged abuses of it that are more likely to hurt than help its cause.” The Brooklyn Eagle argues that “after all, the issue between the newspapers and _the wool-growing members of the Senate is one upon which the people of the United States must ultimately pass. Republican mewspapers, no less than democratic newspapers, have made charges against republican senators which have- yet to be denied or disproved. They are not to be denied or dis- proved by lurid rhetoric or by a back- fire of counter charges such as Mr. Gooding would kindle. His resolu- is an adventure in stupidity Harding | downpour of rain just about the time | EDITORIAL DIGEST Most of them | influence of | this latest incident a strong reason black sheep in this business than the | an_ give it an air of respect- | tion; that in the circumstances he did | repeated and Free State troops were very well with the first, and in the {landed simultaneously at Bantry, on present improved circumstances could } the southwestern edge of Cork county; be depended upon ‘to win with thejat Youghal, at the extreme eastern pay de best,” said Uncle Eben. “De|tioh man dat climbs de tg)~raph pole gits less salary dan de mas at stays on de ground en’ bosses de jwb. A which /has few parallels in the record~ of a Congress notable for its foolish and reckless deflance of public senti- ment. The charge that the wool senators g ‘ THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. ¢, THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1922. | Here and There in Washington BY “THE MAJOR” politan Club during the last.month concerns a former Washingtonian | who, during his lifetime, was an ardent, If not successful, follower of | the race horse game.. This Individual | had been pronounced insane by a| committee of allenists, who stated that while he was of unsound mind| yet he was not of a violent type and | that it would be quite safe to give him light work to do in and around the hospital grounds. Upon his ar-| rival at the institution he was ques-} tioned by the superintendent as to just what his former occupation had : been, and he replied he had at times been a painter of landscapes and the better class of scenery used in some of the large theaters. In order to give him a class of work that per- haps would keep his mind tranquil and bring back recollections of other days he was given a bucket of water in lieu of paint and a very large brush, and for several months he was busily engaged in painting the fence | around the institution. | While engaged one day in painting | the outside of the fence surrounding the asylum he was accosted by al former friend who had been his com- | panion upon numerous occasions at | the different race tracks in and! around Washington. After the usual salutations had been exchanged and reminiscences of former days in- dulged In the visitor, lowering his voice, said: “If you want to get on | a real red hot one in tomorrow's race i just listen to me,” and proceeded to! give the “eranged one the name of the horse. The lunatic paid no at- tention to tme other's utterances, whereupon the tipster repeated h remarks. Without dropping his brush or missing a single stroke the inmate of the institution yelled over the top of the fence, “Hey, Mr. Superin- tendent, send out anoth-t brush.” * X * OMMISSIONER 52838 F. OYVS TER, despite the far: wat he an extremely busy individual while conducting # part of the affairs of the District, manages to find time to | pay some attention to his own per-| sonal busin and the way he man- | ages to do this is by jumping in his automobile during the early morning period and proceeding down the Av nue, where he gives orders as to b the day’s business shall be conducte | After having completed several hours | work he hops into the machine again jand devotes the rest of a real work- to the handling of the « municipality He sav works | i | |ing avy {of thi light. | shift. double | will Lenefit turbing.” | | in the opirion of the New York Trib- {une. wh that “the | senator at | conspicuous 1 of is “zravely d wool | in cent per pound duty is high. Their activity has |en public suspicion of f Ser | Commierc; |investizat [ will prog |of the rolber tarif, about 90 per ¢ | Breat non interest. There . mothing to do but to insist upon ti Jeffersonian rule that whe the private interests of a jvolved he is to with Spoiling the Ocean, Too. Lord Byron might never have writ- {ten of the oce “Man marks the earth with ruin—his control siops with the shore.” hud he iy For ocean bath, Jsey coast ceawl w o der sput the salt water coated with the refuse of the s which ply up and down : across the mighty expanse | We “man’s hideous billboards def: have 1y, become ge" on scape, his eroded farms, desolation through the decaying fences and unpair b sested is and and ugly raiwoad yar fields that have become ¢ it will be a s to know the seas empt. their fre: s is to be polluted that their wild waves are to be paint- ed with dirty gr ston | g i ¥ &r xington | The Unchangeable Villain, No villain really looks the part cording to popul in America unless he wears « mustache. A | iblond adornme the upper lip will not do. No one can be a with a_smooth f. trimmings have p e Thn;u:h t ¥ much gone of fashion in this country, me 5 ences remain obdura tache, no villain; the revocable. An explanation of the stance 18 offered by a Ch sity professor, who sugge persistent belief th, sute blacknes: that the | t a dash of hir-| above a man’s mouth denotes wickedness. goes hack 1o . | cestral folk tales in no-thern Euron The blond races from which Engiish- &peaking peoples sprang lived in con- stant fear of black-bearded men from | southern Europe. They came through . the years to associate villainy with dark hair. constant fear came down the menerations in the form of folk lore and legends of black-whiskered marauders -on nightly errands of mischief. So, if the professor has it right, the ; villain of the movie, being the blood | descendant of the villains of early | ancestral days, must run true to form when it comes to facial adornment Screen beauties in type, | _habits to the | o is duHumed to eness. st f wear a black mustache or be 4 movie nobody.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. | and through this but eternal unchanges the vi “Nero fiddled while Rome burned" is _one of the things that “every schoolboy knows.” Like zalmost everything else that people know, it is at last to have its turn at being upset, proved false and spurned in be- half of New Knowledge. i In & New York newspaper we find this possible explanation of ancient injustice: *As for that story of Nero playlnF ‘while Rome burned, did it not possibly result from the unfortunate translation of Suetonius by the Eng- lish divine, Thomas Newton, in 1581, who renders the sentence ‘De incen- dendo Romae continenter dicebat’ as the of ‘He harped Rome. " 7 Experts in Latin and music may be able to clear up the difficulty under which we labor. We take the Latin on faith, and the English divine of the sixteenth century is good enoug™ for us. But we are mixed on the harp and the fiddle. All that we are sure of is that some one is trying to give Nero a square deal, and we are always In favor of square dealing, so that we wish the movement the best o' iuck. Nero never did anything to us.—Wor- cester Evening Gazette.' on burning The advantsge in being a second husband is that the widow has learned to cook by practicing on the ‘stomach.—Memph!; first hw News-Scimitar. r l l l ITA OCERY €O, N (Ing) A Store Near Your Home Two (2) New To Be Opened Saturday, August 12th 1511 U St. N.-W. and 3404 18th St. N.E. 1f you live in either of these neighborhoods make a note of the above and take advantage of same by securing SANITARY QUALITY MERCHANDISE a little nearer your home. . Another Big Reducticn POTATOES POTATOES POTATOES 5 s for §9¢ Price Per Sack, $1.85 Rogers Evaporated Milk, Tall Can, 3¢ Make Better Jams and Jellies With CERTO0—DBot., 33c; Doz., $3.950 (Sure Jell) Requires Only One Minute’s Boiling—Never Fails BUTTER| EGGS Sanitary Brand 1-Lb. Carton, 43¢ Ice Cream Salt Cheese, Fancy Wisconsin, Ib., 27¢ Lard, per Ib., bulk, 14¢; pkg., 15¢ Beans, Choice Michigan, Ib., 12¢ Rice, Blue Rose, perlb...... 7c Snowdrift Siesseains 1-Ib. Tins, 20¢ Sanitary Brand—Fresh 1 Dozen » con 35¢ We Are Still Selling Large Quantities of 10-Lb. Bag Wagner’s Pork and Beans, 322! Wagner’s Spaghetti Sanitary Peanut Butter Campfire Marshmallows, pk., 15¢ Hipolite M*grome™. .. .Jar, 23c ' This Week’s Specials Burntham & Morrill’'s S paghet Pillshury Wheat Cereal % 15¢ Salmon & 22V5¢ Red Alaska Welch Grape Juice Sanitary Corn Flakes Argo or Snowland Pint Bottle Per Pkg. 15¢ Small No.2 cn 10c 13-Oz. Jae 19c > Per Can 10¢ 25¢ bc o ’

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