Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
7) 4 21 Bankers Hold Lengthy of its slump were considered by President at a White House dinner which Inst ed until 1 a. m. today, With’ railroad effort to agree upon a plan to reviv the nation’s ruptoy. ess situation was gone over during the five-hour session When the bankers sit down in the great state dining room at 8 o'clock last night. ALLIED LOAN IS DISCUSSED on their feet without government &nd Secretary of Commerce Hoover ‘Were present and spoke. the bankers some of the problems he is facing and the difficulty that Stands in the way of their solution ‘of Pasadena, Cal, were among those NO INTEREST Allied Loan Interest Won't » Borah, Idaho, has charged that the “powers that be that control the ad- “adjusted compensation. “tors before their constituents.” ‘and impecunious” nations would be first permitted to pay interest on _ their private obligations and there- (i ‘fore could not be counted on to as- “contemplated by the compensation "measure. Ship News Tides in Sapatie DISCUSSES | FRIDAY JUNE & Virst Low = Viet Low itn 1:89 am. ft. 2:28 mm, | Fire High ‘Tide | First High ride. @22 a om, 8.8 {7 Seeond Low Tide | eosend t w 1:19 p.m, 0.1 ft, | 1168 Second ih Tide | Seeon: S26 pm, IT ft | 910 p, eee U. & shipping board tanker Tippe canoe, Struthers & Dixon managing operators, sailed for San Thursday, where she will load oll for Manila. Conference With Harding at White House . . Freighter West Jester arrtved at PPER Pier § Thursday with light cargo WASHINGTON, June 24—Meas-|¢rom the Orient eee ures to lift American business out) Steamer West Hixton will load tumber at Grays Harbor, Port An gelos and Seattle before sailing for Australia July 1. eee After loading lumber for the Orient t Vancouver, B, C., the City of Spo- ne will return to Tacoma and Se She sails for the Orient Harding and 21 bankers ‘The bankers, it was said, will meet heads shortly in an carriers from bank-jattle, June . CUTTER CHAS! FISH PIRATES Activities of fish trap pirates in the Southeastern and Southwestern Alaska salmon fishery waters have resulted in ordering the coast guard cutter Bothwell North. ‘The Both well leaves Friday for her new sta tion at Ketchikan. eee HUGE SALMON MOVEMENT More than 500,000 cases of North west canned goods, mostly salmon, Almost every angle of the bust bd which began Among the toples discussed were: Prospects of collecting the money Joaned the allies during the war. Methods of putting the railroads help. will have been moved in a six East months’ period by the fleet of the! eg, «(lmao Amp cond Atlantic, Gulf & Pacific Steamship Financing of the cotton growers atretary of the Treasury Mellon|°O™Pany, when the netx two ships of the company sail from this port in early July. eee TWO BIG SHIPS COMING Two big ships, the Clemence C. Morse and the West Torus, are due to arrive here in the next 10 days. They are in the service of the North Atlantic & Western Steamship com- President Harding also outlined to The bankers were called upon to Speak freely and many offered sug gestions which would be of great rg actif 8 3 a tlhany, with the Pactife Steamship M to the government, Secretary) -ompany as local agents. A third eat tater, steamship, the M. C, Brush, is now Charles G. Dawes, Chicago bank er, who became director of the bud get this week, was among the loading at Puget sound porta, eee WILL REDUCE COAST RATES Coastwise freight rates on his ships will be generally reduced about July 1, according to A, F. Haines. vice president and general manager of the Pacific Steamship company. 7 6. e « YOSEMITE IN DRY DOCK Steamship Yosemite, shipping board carrier assigned to Thorndyke- Trenholme Co., is in Todd dry docks, guests. John S. Drum, president of the Mercantile Trust company, Sap Francisco, and Henry M. Robinson attending. day. FOR 10 YEARS TATOOSH ISLAND, June 24.—8 A. M. barometer; cloudy; wind south, 36 miles an hour, Passed in, a one-mast shipping beard steamer, yellow stack, § a m.; str Delag: aru, Sam Be Paid for Some Time : WASHINGTON, June 24.—Senator Arrivals and Departures Arrived “ninistration” have decided that no 7:25 a m.; str Steal Inventor from New _ Interest in the allied loan will be} york, 2 a m June 23—Str City of paid to this country for 10 years,” | Seattle from Southeastern Alaska, 6:40 @uring a discussion of the veterans’ | ™ He also Gatlea ubbed the soldiers’ measure a ‘sham |,,7%*, 248 Suwe Mara for Manta, and a pretense.” eee The bill would put a burden of te £., tween $1,500,000,000 and $5,000,000,- Alas Vessels Petersburg—June 900 on posterity, Bornh declared. He irged that the bill be recommitted another bill be brought out h could be defended by sena Skagway—June cons Alice, southbound, Borah declared that “the foreign|amtth Cove Terminal—Pier A, str Key: stone State. Grand Trunk Pacific Terminal—Str City of Seattle. Pier 2—Str Jefferson, str Alameda, Pier 6—Htr Weet Jester. Pler B--Str Admiral Rodman. U.S Shipping Board Moortngs—str Teonium, str Anna ward Ho, str Ew Rona, str Connectieut Inventor. Alas! Steamship dondo. sist in the carrying of the burden Says Depression in _Japan Has Passed By Kengo Mori, European financial “commissioner for the imperial Japa- Nese government, deciared Thursday that federal ownership of public util- ities could not prevent strikes. Mori, who is in Seattle en route to Japan, after eight years in Europe, said that Japan endured the fi i Decks Watson em Sil and labor criss bafore te other | wm urine Taiway—Daree Cog quently that much ahead on the road} ie cersesen 1921 Record of by Automobiles Yamagita, 211 S., was knocked down Moorings—Str Re- Stacy Street Termtnal—U 8 8 Burnside. East Waterway Dock & Warehouse—str West Ison, str West Ivia. Todd Dry Docks—Str Admiral Mayo, str Yosemite. Ames Yard—Str Roosevelt. Standard Roller Works—Str Patterson, Nettleton Mill Dock—Schr Spokane. Heffernan Doeck—Ste Valdez; U 8S L 8 Switteure. Stream—Ship Chillicothe | Stimeon Mill Dock—Sehr Vancouver, schr KELSO BANK CHARTER KELSO, Wash., June 24.—The| @owlitz Valley bank of Kelso has been issued a charter by the state banking department, it was announe- ed today. The bank is capitalized at $30,000, with $10,000 surplus. by an auto driven by B. L. Brazell, Ritz hotel, Thursday afternoon —st al Third ave. and James st. Eragen Public Market was driving slowly and the Jap ap | mUy did not see the car ap. proach or hear the warning signal ;| He was unhurt and waiked off. PIKE PLACE Stall 17, # Ths beet mugar, # Ths. 5 Borden's milk, 10%. milk, 10%e. Btall 152 2he: pot roast, Sc Ib.; Stall 26, salmon trout, 16¢ ™.; halibut, 2 Ts, Bbc; wmelts, ibe to. Stall 67, N. ¥. Premier full eream cheese, 66 1 OKNER Stall 14, halfbut, 15 T.; %.; Finnan haddie, 20c tb.; salt saimon | belites, All 102, best fresh | 1b., 3 Ts. $1.10; Co- tall ‘cans 200; 2° the Stail 2, lamb chops, ¢ 1; shoulder of ; pot roast, fo M. ECONOMY 4 large cans Borden's al White soap, Stall 40, Map of ‘Italy round chocolate, 2he came sugar, $6.00 per St 1, atraw- Stall 62, Carnation lamb stew, 6 Ihe picnics, 18%e A fool can do more damage In six! in six months, GOLD TOOTH salmon, 200 | 27-38, 15¢ ” boxes herries, 10¢ SA Stall 199, cane »: 9c; fresh’ milk ths. 15e. 8 Tha. She, 10 the, Borden's milk, new potatoes, 6 Winesap Stalin 14-1 bacon, 25¢ Stall 106, Van Camp's pork 100, lc, 260; 6 bulk kitchen Jar caps, Ths. cane wugar, 100; Light $2.00. SOUTH END raspberries. baskets 15¢ 160 TM clean doz Sugar 49-Ib, sack No flour, ® phone peas, Tb: omen, 20: ial 1, bread, each; jelly ro rk pion, 2 for ern munlt, eomplete Stall 49 salad Stali 20, corn and pees, 1 walmor € Stan 42, pi ; sugar cured }erown, Chiquita is tie little “Pom” owned by Miss Vic- toria Dupree of Detroit. nes, 4e Th ; hams, 32¢ I. Pedro | St undergoing a thoro overhauling, Fri- | Weather Bureau Report June 2¢—Str Floridian from Tacoma, | Vessels in Port at Seattle a Ninth | minutes than a wise man can undo The dentist has eured Chi-| quita’s toothache with a gold) Baldwi Other can Suga ; Canad Woolen, 1 The tet not be de ‘NEW later, ure in la Chicago Board of Trade |o"« 2's: P Gay a Quotations) edd by Manot ea PORTLA coipts 60 | @8.50: pig Steep—R Prime lam yeartmas, San Francisco Produce SAN FR Frtran 4 firsts, 300 No. 1 a | first, 176 | | | changed at 40 ie CHICAGO, June 24 2 red, $1.42; No. 2 spring, SLA0@ 140%, | ee Chicago Live Stock CHICAGO, June _24.—Home—Rocetpt, 28,000. Market 16@25e higher, Hulk of sales, $8.260 8.7 $8. 25@8.70 packing. $8@ 4.35 5.80; PIES. | Van. Steet and feeders, $4 Portland Market Status —. made an early low at 62%, only pening prices » off M Pacific, up continued steady thru t 4 % abi r layed long. DECLINES IN GRAIN PIT Ch Orain July corn opened at 63¢, up eo.) 4™ reacted je later, September | Am. hanged at 63%, but) Am 6 close, | Am. Bum July oats off eo at the opening, | Am. Locom 88%c, declined an additional \% later, ptember oats opening un- retained that fig trading. Bees | Can. Hteel Pac. . | Cuva ¢ . Ratd. Ut 4 81.20% $191 123% 186 Nomtnal 17 Nomi ih00 | Pan 10.22 10.10 10.17 10.56 10.47 10,60 | Reading | Repio 1049 1087 10.40 FE Tes 19.9 ° 10.60 Sine falr OF . Cash Wheat rougha, eceipta, 915; butcher stock cutters, $1 2807 calves, $5 @ 10.25. 12,000, and ND, June Market stead Mu Market ateady. i; heavies, $5.26 Market steady. guishers, ANCISCO, June 24.—Butter— | Willys-Overiand THE Market Is Steadier With Fewer Attacks ve the nehan, eee Wheat ..+0. no Sugar avi the! NEW YORK, June M4-Stock market today appeared to have steadied somewhat Th emained a tendency to attack some lines but in gen eral the list was firm. Rubber shares were heavy, United States Rubber opened i off at 52% land then dropped & United States Steel was up % at 71 and Stude j baker gained \ @ . American Sumatra responded to the declaration Jof the regular “Ric ia with an advance of two points to 46% Reading Was unchanged at 624 and New York Central was up % at 66 year's low | up i Awphalt, Amer! 48, up ged; Ainerican States nufACturers tart soon and that the Improvement in conditions will go Car Lots Bh iy _ '® Quotati Hata. LA Yr, a4 1 1 9 Children Set Torch to Store Fireworks Serious damage by fire to a Japa- Nese grocery store, at 14th ave, and Madison st, was Monday, when attaches of the Secur ity garage rushed to the fire extinguishers, after chidiren had ignited fireworks piled high In the store window for mie, Quick action on the part of the garage men, who say they saw the youngsters play their prank, made it unnecessary for the department act. The garage men complained that the fire department would not afterwards refill) erted at noon ene with to ir three extin nag ae Detane Sireta, S30: Ih; "BANK CLEARINGS sla, 27 %e dom; firets, 16% — dirties, 26% don; extra pul Seattle jo%; undersized pullets, 22%¢| | Clearings California flats, fancy, 190 Th; ny For Sale Everywhere The Seattle Star has many thousands more subscribers and readers than any other Seattle newspaper. For that reason it has been necessary for us to establish sales depots in all parts of the city. The downtown newsboys have all editions of The Star for sale at 2 cents a copy. The branch sellers are located in all arts of the town—at every place where it is possible to sell papers, This is for the convenience of people who do not come thru the main part of town on their way from work. Hundreds of suburban stores have found that there was such a great de- mand for The Star that they have add- ed a sales counter for The Star to their stores. These news-stand sales are of great value and convenience to readers. enables them to purchase copies of the paper while they are doing their after- It is also of value to the store owner, because it brings peo- noon shopping. ple into his store regularly. A whole army of carriers delivers The Star to all parts of the city every night. There is not a block in Seattle that is not covered each evening by one If you want your name on our lists, you should order the paper The price is only 50c a Star Seventh and Union of our carriers. by carrier. month, The Seattle MAIN 600 It eek | STAR YAKIMA GEMS SOLD AT LOSS) Market Is Overstocked With Potatoes and Berries With new Garnet potatoes as low ry re. the jmarket, the Jobbers are taking a lows The bought as 3 ce hea ty & pound, and ceipts continuing rrive on Jon ¢ Yakima Gems. storage Gems, of which many for as high as $35 and $40 being sold at $22 to $25 Fancy Yakima Geme « had on the wholesale m cents a pound, Only th which are scarce, are bri return, It has been estima there are 10 sales of the spuds to only one of the Gems were ton, are a ton. wily be rket for 1% large Gems, CHICAGO, June 24 Favorable |Osts 49) The Seattle strawberry market ts weather reports and general Heht| whe ao eats, 116, |4¥ing because of heavy receipts, trading caused fractional declines on . with practically no demand, The the Chicago Board of Trade here to- people have waited for cheap berry day. Pr Dna were irregular. N. Y. Stock Exchange [prices ang now that the price hax July wheat opened up Yeo at (Thareday's Quotations.) dropped and the nm are so $1.9144, and lost that fraction at the | Parmished by L. B, Manning @ Co, 619; heavy as to glut th they close. September wheat opened up| Ave. seem to expect them much lower, Moc at $1.24%, and dropped its gain| Stock— igh Low Close |It hax been pointed out that house made a mistake in wait Jing so long before canning, as most of the fruit which is now on the market is over-ripe and water noaked. | The top price on the berries Fri which is as low as they will be | day jon the wholesale market, was $1.50 | wives have & crate. Within two weeks regular | be rry shipments will be over and only the stragglers will remain. : | he demand for vegetables was not out of the ordinary and there was no change in prices fromm Thursday | There were no changes noted on |the dairy division of the market, | Friday, VEGETABLES Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers Asparngue—K. Wash, per ... 100 Laeai, per Tb Local ogtdoor Local green, dom bunches Parsley—-Local, don bunches .. 210 pere—Cal,, per Mm +200 26 tb. New Garnet, Cal, * a 6 Cal, white, per Mb 7 | 7 oma, cold storage. don 1.0002.00 “ei Brn 2.0@ Figs Dried, | Gooseberries: | Bngtian, Grape Ure | | mamag-=sGeene, pee. enpis |. Cal strained, per th. apberries —4-cup crate... 400 | Strawberries —tocal + AOL SO Watermelon—imp. Val, ® .. — .03% NUTS Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers Almonds—Por [. . 260 20 ’ Brazier Tb, 25 | Eitherte—Por Tb 200 125 t2—Cal. | Peam - virgints Keystong . | Japanese 10 Pecans—Per Mh. DAIRY PRODUCTS Prices Paid to Shippers Batterfat— rade, Seattle delivery F, ©, B. condensary, ewt..... DAIRY PRODUCTS Wholesale Dealers Local creamery, cubes, ‘Wash. triplets POULTRY Prices Pele by Wholesale Dealers POULTRY Prices eon Wholesalers Gemo—Dreased Turkeys—Dressed Quotatious un Primes .... a Medium heavy +6 ough heavy. 400 450 Mae verte ve 10,00) Cattlo— Rest steers... 00. + 6750 Medium to choice ........+ 4.50@ Rest cows and helfers + 6.25@ 6.75) seeeeeseese 8.600 4.00 oe ‘ 4.00 49, otty delivery .. HAY, GRAIN AND City Wholesale Prices, yellow, 120-% 100-1 FEED Per Ton sacks. 40.00] 42.01 1200 | food, 100-1 Whole, sacks Ground Sprouting, Wheat — Re All-Grain Chi Chick Feed {Chick Mash | Growing Mash, 100-1. sks, No BM 67 M 100-T. sack#, no BOM Feed—100-1b, sacks 80-0, 100-1. sacks. sacks 7 | The woman who can't hold her tongue or her baby has no business | with either. o|after July 10. | great deal about Jack Dempsey. He |ONE OF FINEST For The curb market on Broad St., New York, will be no more ja The Curb Brokers’ asMciation will move into its new building then. 03% | hav e changed hands daily on t. FRID. STAR fort 0 = NEW PHONE i's: HERE’S MORE ABOU in usy” Improvement in servic that there will be fewer signals. Elimination of “listening in® on party lines. Distribution of cost so that the small subscriber—who const tutes 85 per cent of the users— will not be paying for the serv. ice received by the remaining 15 per cent, as under the flat rate system. The telechronometer was perf ed by a Seattle man, Maj, Garrisod Babcock, consulting engineer with the Kilbourne & Clarke Co, Patem are now held by W. Neal V president of the Puget Sound Tel phone Co. of Everett, which control the telephone service in Snohomish! and Skagit counties “We measure electricity and ter, 1 told a Star man, “Wh not telephone conversation? should the small home owner makes 30 calls a month pay the same amount as the busi man who makes 1,500 calls? “Under the flat rate system small user is bearing the burde: the few who get the most service Conversation on the telechroy meter ia measured in telechrones, telechrone is one minute of talk, registers only on originating call when someone calls you your my does not register and you are n charged. “Listening in on party lines Will be practically eliminated,” Winter explained, “because the station meter will register such listening on a busy calling ling A 10-party line will be as ser viceable and popular as a two party line is now. “Unnecessary and frivolous cémversations will be cut out, Upward of 40 per cent of the present calls will not be passed, Brevity will replace long conver- sation.” Winter says that economy 4 thru the elimination of wasteful use of service can be eal italized by having more parties each line and affording greater isfaction from a service stand A patented semi-automatic 35 years thousands of dollars), oP scrvice te in use tn Foe his curb. With this, an incoming call is aut me fo ‘TI whe: a ne || HERE’S MORE ABOUT DEMPSEY || STARTS ON PAGE ONE all that I did. At his dressing rooms I spent a week making a statuette in his fight- ing toga, And at my studio later he 2.0©@2.50| posed for a bust portrait. I did not know a man could have so many friends. My difficulties modeling him at the theatre were nu- merous, Just as I would get the fighter powed, the dressing room door would open and some old friend would pipe his greetings. One day I complained to Jack that his friends were keeping me from proper concentration upon the stat- uette, so he old Teddy Hays, his trainer, to keep everybody out. And, to help @ bit, I locked the door my- self. In the quietude there I learned a told me confidentially a lot of things that would reflect credit to the best | Christian, dack is no pretender, Circam- stances placed him in the fight ing game, and he resolved to reach the top. If that same cir- cumstance, or fate, whatever one would have been the same—he would reach the pinnacle, Jack displayed a clean, good mind. He did not smoke nor drink, and I) did not hear him use profanity. He is a “real guy,” as some one re- marked, Once I remarked that {t would be “some” picture to see him and Car- pentier in the ring, “It will be some fight, too,” he sald, and, to emphasize, “believe me!” SPECIMENS HE'S SEEN Physically, Dempsey is one of the | finest specimens I have ever seen. His measurements, as I took them, | are: Height, 6 feet 1% inches. Weight, 190 pounds. Chest, 42 inches, J 34% inches, inches, ‘alf, 15% inches, Ankle, 9% inches, Foot, 11% inches. Neck, 17 inches. Upper arm, 16 inches. | Lower » 14 inches, |He has proportionate legs. He is | quick, As a fighter, he combines grace | 0 land strength into fine, symmetrical | action, | | Deputies Raid Still | Johnson ranch, | ties Wrist, inches, His reach is greater than his height. His shoulders and arms are |large, his fists like sledge hammers. He has promised, after his fight with Carpentier, to pese for me for @ life size statue which I shall make and call “The Fighter"-and some of his friends have promised to raise money enough to put it in bronze and erect somewhere as a mark of their esteem to the greatest of all ha mee coin 5 Boy Drowns When His Canoe Upsets Unable to swim, Melbourne McCar- rick, 19, Kirkland schoolboy, was drowned when the canoe in which he was paddling with Clyde Nichols, 16, capsized near Lumber | Thursday N the Co. dock, afternoon hols was able to reach shore. Columbia Valley at Kirkland, ©. C, Boatman, a logger employed by the lumber company, heard shouts for help and tried heroiea to reach young MeCarrick, but the boy sank before tman reached him: Boatman then organized a party to drag the lake for his body, which way found In about 50 feet of water and Seize Moonshine Fuiding the house of Pete Repass, two miles west of Falls City on the early Friday, Depu- Frank Brewer and Stewart Campbell obtained a large still, a jously as the other, matically given to the first idle o erator. She does not have to see HERE’S MORE ABOUT light flash, then put in the plu The call comes to her direct thi || STARTS ON PAGE ONE her headgear receiver. An ope is never “asleep” in Everett. “In Seattle an operator hand about 150 calls an hour. Our hot, discussion of this issue ts rag- ing Carl Hagenbeck, who spent more than half a century among wild ani: average 600." Persistent rumors that the mals, once owned a pair of orang: Jutans, called Jacob and Rosa, that of public works plans to enforce installation of the telechronomete | were treated as tho they were mem |bers of his own family. They ate at Seattle and thruout the state his table, eating the same food that denied today by E. V. Kuyke: chairman. But he admitted that he did, and using knives and forks as human beings do. ‘Their table board was investigating the 4: and would reserve deciston untill manners, he says, were perfectly re- fined and proper. future date, TALES ARE HIGHLY BOY, 16, HANGS J aceon | HIMSELF HED Leslie Carwile, 16, = and oe: rnd meals with | school student, Sibeublied Gael suict great pomp and dignity. The New York Zoological park has |"2Peing himself in the b harbored many orang-utans and/his home at 4015 42nd ave, Thy chimpanzees of unusual intelligence, |day afternoon. |famous among them being Dohong.| ‘The body was found by a nefgl Polly and August. bor, Mrs. Grace Erwin, who said ali Few writers of animal fiction have | ia4 a premo: of Ge hors a been as successful as Burroughs in when he failed to to her introducing the dramatic and excit- the street. ing element into their tales. For ex-} Mrs. Erwin t said to have ample, the following is quoted from/|convinced that something had “Tarzan the Terrible”: pened to the boy when, after “She felt the thing touch her|!9& him on the street, he failed throat, her breast, her arm, and |"Pe2x to her as he usually did. there it closed and seemed to be|2Fwin called at the Carwile dragging her towards it. With ajdenee and had Mra, Carwile superhuman effort of wil! she opened | fhe )°vse fOr psp gete her eyes. In the instant she knew |jound hanging from a beam. that she wag dreaming and that |>°¥ jon Geng ouveral how quickly the hallucination of the| Hs mgther, Mrs. John B. Cs dream would fade—it had happened | id her son wanted to be a4 to her many times before. But it|Ch#nic, and is thought to have B mB oks despondent because of his “In the dim Nght that filtered into |PPosition to his ambition. the dark chamber she saw a form beside her, she felt hairy fingers | Sewer Caves In and. upon her and a hairy breast against | which she was being drawn. Jad- | Breaks Worker’s ben-Otho! this was no dream. And| Receiving a broken ankle’ whe then she screamed and tried to fight | aitch in which he was working oa tho thing from her; but her scream| in, D. Camino, laborer, is 1p. city Was answered by a low growl, and! pital Friday, . another hand seized her by the hair!” Camino was working on ‘the 4 of the head. Thursday afternoon, when a laff “The beast now rose upon Its hind! rock fell against his leg. He legs and dragged her from the cave| employed by Jahn & Brace, to the moonlight recess without, and} tractors, 7 at the same instant she saw the fig- Usually the people who make ure of what she took to be a Ho-don rise above the outer edge of the| most imposing show impose on 0 niche. ers in order to make it “The beast that held her crouched | SARS emake tt and the creature that faced it|—that Panatlee knew. The crotiched also, and growled—as hide- Pan-at-lee trem- bled. This was no Ho-don, and tho she feared the Ho-don she feared this thing more, with its catlike crouch and its beastly growls, She was lost things might fight for her, whichever won she was lost.” But was she lost? You will é read the answer in “Tarzan the i BCr Terrible,” which begins in Th | * Star July 2. EA 0: ee : ‘at Se in aly x helio ny \eos , Aas 38s = oe = Shs ae 3 5 ROM the time the hide is bought until the finished shoe is shown to you here in our'store, there are constant savings in |McELWAIN SHO These savings enable us to give you more Style and longer wear for less money.) NEW SHOP NEW SHOES NEW PRICES $3.85 v0 $7.85 inom bottle of moonshine and 100 gallons of mash. Repass is held on $500 bail, HIGHER 1327 Third Ave. Opposite Posto! SANDY GILFTLLAN, Manager