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Show '4 THE tiii: HERALD-REPUBLICA- i.t i. icn blush seem a bieger job than Mr. Bryan's assignment to remain at home and "prevent increased appropriations for the army and navy,' but it inisn't. The former strument of Providence has really picked it something soft as compared with the labor of love to which the latter has set himself. But the Nebraska statesman is better fitted for destructive work than his senior partner, and the distribution of responsibility is therefore just. It is rather a pity, however, that they should be separated, though the exigencies of the moment appear to render it necessary. Don Quixote, as everybody knows, required the faithful Sancho Panza always at bis elbow fur, without him. this justly famous movement for the extermination of windmills could have accomplished N 12. llrpnkllraa (Est. Feb. tli Th. Herald itt Laki. IST ( Est. Jun Thm Inf r-- self-appoint- MAIN STREET. rnb1!hr! bro The HerId-Hepuhllca- n unoih. inr ivice I. Thomnji, president: Jnklr j. treasurer; Adolph Publishing A. rrtilint;C. hdw-art- Anderson, riarr. II. II. CallUtrr, i.evernl Mtaiffr. Arthur J. Ilrorn. Editor. eastki:.n Ki:XTATIVI-:saiv;:rtisinj iiHrru:- - Con. Lrnxn F.runswlck Lids:.. WooJmr; York City. III. Advertising Chicago, OumbU in ter.Bblt. Mo. Kana fur. Amrit-.iUag. Detroit. Mlr.. ro.sT r.F.rnr.HnKTATirns, pacific i:. J. r.Mtfll Co., 742 Market fir-- !. ran-- t c . Kan n I-- Ao-tat"- I TIIH AUDIT v. s. A LA BREAKFAST FOOD Information roTirerntr.fr circulation wilt b- - fui'plU.l tliro't:li lh 2.11 Hallway Hxchang? Hutldln. Chr. .. daily nwraper In I.ukr.fptihllcan Cltv. I'tah hltOnly DAILY AND St'.NDAV, delivered bv In Salt l.akg carrier 5llinrl.lV one week, 15 ..nit- - f'ttv. Cent" HAILY AM) sr.NDAV by mall One . cents; on- - year. Ji.oo. jnnjn. Hl'Nlur bjr mall (in advance) On l:.Ort, jrer.KMlVHKKI.r br mailon (In advance! -- Six month. ;s rents; year, 3 t.irt. Subscriber wishing adlrvi of Japr as changed must give former as well address. All pupers arf continued until exorder Is received to d!snt!nue. plicit All Arrciraci mint ! paid lit every Knter.,1 at th posfofflee at Salt k rcatter. City a econd-cla- s TIIH Is not for any unsolicited raanu-vrrir- 't Teponsibl which li not marked with th name and plainly of the nder and accompaniedaddress tamrs for by .return. prnl J-- IIERALD-rtFPrifLICA- t Q t V"l- - N llt'ffllMIOI .. . ONLY A BEGINNING turn out the lights in the Tower of Jewels, and AN' FRAXOISCO may close the gates to the visible evidences of the energy and the resource fulness f a great city, hut the influence will not stop with Saturday, December 4. The Golden Gate city endured too much, sacrificed too much, demon-f-trate- d too ranch resolution and emir-np- e in the face of possible defeat, to )ermit the exposition's close to mark the end aIo of the exposition's influence. Xo.vlierft did the outbreak of Europe's war seem to spell so much of calamity as at San Francisco. Her great fair had been projected, her citizens had given liberally of their means to insure its success, space, had been reserved and prepared for all the nations, and reasonable hopes had been builded upon tho possibility, almost certainty, of liberal patronage from the Old World. World's fairs have been notoriously dependent upon local patronage for expenses, but it lias been upon the thmnsr from other nations that the profits were Iriiided. Not a few interested observers of the characteristic virility with which San Francisco had projected the exposition and secured the approval of the nation supposed when the war n that the project hnd been blighted. No city and no country had hitherto been nble alone to support an worthy the name o: internone had pine forward and national, witli plan until assurances of support had been received from all the world. Europe's catastrophe seemed to spell San Francisco's misfortune until the indomitable spirit that built San Franct-c- o anew after her supreme tragedy spoke again. Tf Th" result everybody know?. the Panama-Pacifi- c has ejwdtion l not t' en the rrr- -t the world has rcr seen, it has at leat equalled every previous attempt. There hn Thth extraordinary patronage from the moment the grr.it gates were pened until their final close. The exhibit have ranked with those presented elsewhere and the entertainment afforded the of visitors bas well sustained the Golden Gate city's reputation as the playground of the Fnited States. Every visitor has departed with the pleasant consciousness that the time and money expended were well worth the effort. can well afford to apSalt the courage and the virile enplaud which San Francisco prowith ergy ceeded with the exeat fair in the face of obstacles which once seemed in superable. Salt profit from the exposition i probably only second to that of San Francisco. Thousands upon thousands of visitor en route to the coast have entered Salt Lake's crates awash with mistaken preconvictions and unspeakable prejudices araint this state and its capital city and have been converted upon departure into loyal boosters by what they . F3v. For the opportunity to convert the-- o enemies into friends, these unfriendly critics into enthusiastic advocate-:, these mistaken antagonists into fervid champion', we owe the e citizens of San Francisco. Put for them, we should never have had thee visitors, and but for them much that is known of Utah and its people throughout the length and breadth of the land would have remained unknown. be-tra- rx-Mtin- ,.ie..-.;fu- mil-Ion- wide-awak- WINDMILLS IN DANGER the EVERYBODY Ford & has Bryan made an intelligent division of its labors. Each partner has been eminently fair with the other. Mr. Ford's task of "petting the boys out of the trenches by Christmas and keeping them out' might at first must concede ! N'KAVS reports from GermanyCounfo state whether Privy cillor Professor llabcrlandt pot the Tron Cros or the hook, but his contribution to the interesting gastronomic possibilities of lumber entitled him to something. Even the man who makes a better mouse-tra- p than his beats so world the that competitors a path to his door, and the useful citizen who makes two blades of grass irrow where one grew before, are overshadowed by this distinguished German pavant who recently addressed the Agrarian Club of Berlin oa "The Digestibilit v and Nourishing Properties of. Wood." Reflecting that necessity is the mother of invention, Professor addition of lumber to the domestic cuisino supports the persistent rumors that Germany is short of provender. The professor found that feeding dogs on a daily diet of birch wood and oak was productive of the best results and a irrofessional confrere, Professor Zunz. made practical application of the discovery by remarking that "German forests contain enormous treasures of food materiU, the cheapest and most easily obtained varieties such as will yet put to .shame the wieked hopes of our enemies to force us into submission through starvation." Whether the censor bungled when he permitted this interesting report to reach the world, or had a diabolical purpose in it. one cannot even guess, lint the incident should not be without value to the Quadruple Entente. With Emperor William stripping the copper roofs from the imperial castles to make war munitions, and the Aus-triaexhuming the copper caskets of their ancestors for the same purpose, England and France and Russia may well wonder what these resourceful Teutons will do next. Germany's enemies might keep up their courage thousrh the Kaiser shoots the roofs of his castles at them, but the impossibility that the dancer of starvation conld daunt a people who find lumber au irratin a sustaining dish might well give Great Britain pnue. Ha-berland- t's ns HENRY AND JASON not being treated fairly JASON isinevitable be- comparison tween hi venture and Henry Ford's. His simplicity was tho result of circumstance. He could not have surrounded himself with all the indispensable aids to a successful enterprise even had he chosen to do so. The long no day when he set forth upon the quest so like that of his modern prototype was chiefly notable for what it lacked. Tho original Argonaut didn't have even half a chance. He couldn't take with him "fifty-fou- r reporters for and magazines" because newspapers newspapers and magazines were unknown and, strange to say, so were reporters. And as for "moving picture men.' three of whom neeompany Mr. Ford on his modest journey, their paraphernalia had not been invented. Poor Jason had to struggle along as best he could with the crude implements ready to his hand. As between the results obtained by Jason and those expected for his latter day rival for a similar place in the records of time, there is ample room for speculation. Pursuit of the Golden Fleece is not unknown even nowadays although few equip themselves so elaborately as has Mr. Ford. WILLIAM, THE GRATEFUL THERE nation could be expected to do, and William is not sufficiently the fool to be ignorant of it. LOSING AN ILLUSION ed little. libC1P.CCLA-TION.- I'.iREAi: need be no apprehension what Germany may do con- cerning the dismissal of Captains Boy-E- d and Von Papeu. The Kaiser is fairly well occupied with the Quadruple Entente and, even if he were not, he lias no cause for anger against tho United States. Ingratitude is not one of William's besetting ins. William can see through a ladder as far a anybody and it must be clear to him that thee two attaches of his Imperial Embassy in the United States have outlived their usefulness. The sort of employment he gave them is successful only when surreptitious. For sixteen months they have been acquitting themselves ably and practically in advancing the interests of the Fatherland by sub rosa actions that areno longer possible because the perpetrators are known. Captains Boy-E- d and Von are successful Papen merely agents who have exhausted their usefulness in a given sphere and must now be moved to another. Germany will do nothing warlike. Were William's mind not so intensely devoted to more important matters, wo suspect he would be more likelv to send President Wilson and his Secretary of State a substantial token of his appreciation. They have endured a great deal more from these agents of Potsdam than any self-respecti- ng SALT LAKE CITY, UTAII, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1915 IIEKALD-REPUBLICA- N, weeks, from yesterday Mr. will cease to be "the man of the White House." lonely The first gentleman of the land is about to give us a new first lady of the land. She that was Miss Boiling and then Mrs. Gait will become Mrs. TWO GENEALOGY Within Delivery 30 .Miles. fff Utah Discovered In Leipsig. m In Die periStaatsbuegerin. suffrage odical published in Leipsig. Peter von foremost in the ranks of (.ebhardt. tierman genealogists, pays tribute to the researches in his line of a Utah woman. Mrs. Susa Young Gates of Salt Wilson. Lake, whose booklet, "Lessons in GenThe President's marriage and en- ealogy," appeared in 1912. The followtranslation was made Arnold H. gagement, anil the details of the in- ing Schulthess of this city: by teresting occurrences that preceded both, demonstrate that never before The Woman Id the Service of Gene alofcy. was a President of the United States By Peter von Gebhardf (Leipsig). so outrageously maligned by the conA booklet entitled "Lessons temporary press. Stories have been in Genealogy." by Susa Young Gates, Utah. U. S. A., 1912. scattered broadcast about him that Salt Lakein City. of the detail of treating d would have driven a much the Mormons of America, genealogy has led me write these lines. Not that I wish individual than the Presi- to to encourage anyone to follow the dent pretends to he to direct action footsteps of the Americans theirin genis far different from ours so of some sort. Newspaper articles, ealogy as It relates to their purpose and far fairly dripping with tears and reek their method, and furthermore, ours the advantage of having a past a ing with pathos, have been published has But the fact that names such history. to create the impression that the PresIlelene Kate Frlckewirth-Axt- . Gerda Ldeckmann, Helene ident dragged himself about encased Motherby, Dobbelstein. enjoy the esteem of their in gloom, crushed with the responsi- male coworkers in genealogical circles as publicists, collectors and also bilities of his exalted office and con- as shows the of into the necessity looking of the women of stantly on the verge of tears. How genealogical activity Lake, and of examining what utterly untrue these were the recently Salt be done by our own people in might admitted facts abundantly disclose. this regard. The first point will be discussed more The President was not, we are now than It deserves. What briefly can be ascertained by credibly informed, a lonely figure. the Mormons arereally who does not know, referThose hours when the imaginative cor- anyone, to the encyclopedia. Let by it suffice ring assume us had would have to say. that the multiplication of the respondents "as the sands of the seashore" he was lurking somewhere, brooding race is a of the Latter- religious over the cursed fate that made him day Saints, as obligation the Mormons style themare in a flourthe chief executive of one hundred selves. The Mormons and the genealogy of condition, millions of persons, were really spent, ishing the Mormons, like all political, ecowe learn, in a much more congenial nomical nnd scientific activities, is conworTc, sidered in its relation to occupatioin. ' Instead of concealing and therefore as a solemntemple The duty. Historical and Genealogical Society of himself like a luckless misanthrope he Utah centralizes genealogical work, wasi really conducting himself as a publishes Its proceedings In a quarterly-reviewand by means of holding regman by holding Mrs. classes or courses, lor Gait's hand and telling her how won- ular technical Instruction in provides this line cf In all branches of their activity derfully that new hat set off her pe- work. as In public life in that region also culiar style of beauty. across the great pond, the women play To them is left in There "may be those who will be- aan Important part. measure the welfare of their largo he the President the happiness grudge children. Therefore do not be surprised are has sought and found, but we are not to hear that genealogical courseswomin conducted women, that by part Presithem. numbered among Being en form the of the audiences, wrote the excellent pamdent of the United States is a lonely that a womanmajority entitled "Lessons in Genealogy." job at the best and if Mr. Wilson will phlet which Is equal if not superior to Devri-ent- 's meet ). feel better with somebody to "Family Research" ("Familien-forschung""From him at the door as he. t nidges home Nature and the(In the collection Spirit World.") with his dinner pail at night, why Chance for German Women. should he not be permitted to get her? We may satisfy ourselves as to these and ask ourselves if the German Unfortunately we Americans as a peo- acts woman may not also take an active It ple are prone to pick up an ordinary part in practical genealogical work. us a well known fact that among man of the earth earthy, set him in an Is the woman is the guardian of exalted position and then expect him also, It as honor and virtue. And I consider a of doubt the that ana more beyond question tuan linne to be something she also possesses the necessary qualiwill It human. fications and has the necessary time to something less than to genealogical work, even in not do the country any harm to learn devote war. It is not my purpose to time of blood that their President is flesh and review exhaustively "Lessons in Genin this brief space, but we like the others of us and that he re- ealogy" find room for, a few nevertheless may and it wo'uld be sponds as we do to purely human emo- important suggestions, very desirable Indeed if they found a tions. response. The work of the woman who Is active in the field of genealogical research must necessarily be limitedma-to the gathering of the most available 1353 WALRUS IS A is not by profession a terial, if she a or historian. She must physician CATCH NEW RECORD j take from the family register and docany uments everything which may give relinformation about forefathers and and record that which presents The steamer Corwln, Capt. J. R. atives, the lifetime of her chilItself during Healy, from Nome, Alaska, brought dren and grandchildren, omitting in the is vague first place everything which 133 walrus, by far the biggest catch and second in the and uncertain, place to on record, aeccordlng Captain Healy sine studio. The putbut plurimo ira, chief hunter. Annevlkftlie and Oscar ting in shape and publication of the The Corwln left Seattle May 1 with records must necessarily be left to who have been technically passengers and freight, reaching Nome those for this work, or better still, trained to reach May 21. being the first boat or to the societies institutions which the far north last spring. Using Nome have been organized for that purpose. ns her base, the Corwln made two trips Not that a woman would not be comfloes. On the first trip petent to perform such work, but the among the ice 841 walrus were killed and 622 on the experienced genealogist will always be the one who. because' of his special second. In .my qualifications, is able to separate the "I never saw so many walrus life." paid Captain Healy. "On a single important from the unimportant, andv of ice wo saw more cf them than bring about such aas desirable uniform-ltcake xv will produce the in the work could count, though we estimated were packed to most satisfactory results. Among these them at They Institutions which arc particularly well like giant sardines." gether native equipped for the assembling, working The boat tarried twenty-fiv- e Winchester rifles out and preservation of the genealogihunters, armed withcaliber. of the heaviest They ap- cal material, is the "Zentralstelle fur Personenund floes In a gasoline Deutsche the ice steamer proached stood by. launch while th (Headquarters for GerA walrus must be hit In the head. man Individual and Family History), a association having its office tough that The hide on the body is so number or registered In Leipzig. For publicity purposes the any bullet. A summer it will stopwere In best results may be had bv means of killed this old bulls Geschlechterbushes. the "Deutschen whose hides were found Handbuch hurgerlicher lead bullets and heads of native harGenealoglsches Dipoons, probably imbedded there for F.imille.i." ("German Genealogical for handbook deeades. genealogical rectory, of the commonwealth), edited If not Instantly killed the walrus families sinks in the sea. bv Dr. .Tur. Bernhard Koerner. member flops off the Ice and beasts. They blink of the Royal Prussian Heraldic Bureau, stupid They are at the approaching hunters the twenty-nint- h edition of which book tranquilly do not move until the rifles begin will soon be published by C. A. Starke and to crack. Then the puppies bnrk. the in Gorlltz. cows bellow and the bulls utter Owe Work to II In People. roars, such as one coughing, retching be borne in mind, must It n always might imagine a giant wouiu utter the most beautiful famthat kicked in the stomach. They flop and however, value If it be altumble into the water, churning the ily tree Is without in a dusty corner re-of sea Into a foam and making a great lowed to remain desk. The family recommotion. A big bull walrus weighs the writing of his searcher owes the toresults four tons. the family in a work also says that walrus hunt- search sense Captain Healy his branch, his people would not attract keen larger ing is tame, and A walrus, he says, will which enjoys a strong and well desportsmen. of course, served Interest, even thougn It falls hardlv ever fight. Sometimes, the attention accidents happen; a walrtis may orflop far short of receiving in the smash merits it and it which It, boat the against and sociological results of genemav drive the tusks through the planks and rip them open. Hut alogical research. of the bottom never very far away and the steamer Is you can swim to it If you don't freeze to death on the way. killed the walrus, the steamcomes alongside the ice and the carer Having TYPHOID FEVER casses are hoisted aboard and stripped of tusks, hides, whiskers338and blubber. CONTROLLED barrels of The Corwin brought 31 cents per worth gallon, oil, walrus or $o)70, and four tons of ivory tusks, worth, as Ivory is worth Three years ago the field men of the about 50$4000 of cents per pound. 35 to survey, as well as.some geological In China for the office force, took advantage of the The whiskers are used and the Corwin brought offer of the war department to supply toothpicks, of S50. practo make a valuation were official antityphoid serum, and enough 1352. tically the force of men was entire The hides, of which Inthere London to be Inoculated. Since that time, as far as will go to tanneries valises and there has been no serious made finally Into trunks, The hides ought reported, case of typhoid fever among those inother leather things. among to fetch $38,700. That makes a total oculated. Two cases of typhoid the topographic engineers Indicate the of $4S.270 for the season. of this inoculation. Next to elephant and rhinoceros hide, great effectiveness Is the toughest leather. In both these cases the men simply walrus hide or three felt "off feed" for toa couple Tho allies use it to polish big guns just davs go on the sick and refused out of the foundry. in fact, typhoid would not have The Alaska waters offer the finest list: in either case except been walrus for world In hunting, suspected the field one them somebody sugin of in no this tanneries are that but there exhausgested the possibility, and an country equipped to treat the hides. tive hospital examination, blood test,a etc.. showed that the engineer had (1AVK HIM A JOI.T. case of An ostentatious member of a Iscertain theoretically of which, results the practical tvphold. well father whose council countv failed to incapacitate him for driver, however, known as a retired omnibus so that he did not even go to bod duty, a seal was one day displaying large St. for one day. he usually wears, representing and while sevGeorge and the dragon, were expressing their USED TO COMPLIMENTS. eral bystanders admiration of It its owner remarked In "I suppose vou have something pretsolemn tones: ty in ties, miss?" Vw one of my ancestors Is aw "Oh, yes," said the girl, killed the dragon box from the shelf, "here's a supposed to have taking aw don't you know?" some pretty blue silk ones for $2; Just "Dear me," inquired one of his heartoo sweet for anything." ers who knew something about him, "I think you are a little dear," he "did he run over It?" London Answers. said, with a pleasant smile. she ."Vou are very complimentary," now hi: was stiuck. When he thought blushing. replied, he "As a matter of fact," said the law- how he'd been misunderstood, to be sar- blushed and stammered: trying yer for the defendant, d to death "Oh, I beg pardon, miss! I didn't castic, "you werewhether mean to say you were a dear, I" it was a moand don't know "Never mind! there are plenty of tor ear or resembling a momen who think so. Good day, hit you.' tor car thatsomething young one. all right," the sir." "It resembledanswer. "I was forcibly When he turned away her blushes made plaintiff were gone, and his face looked as if he slruck bv tlie resemblance!" 43-pa- ge milder-mannere- full-blood- Honest Good at Ilonewt prices. Free Auto Truck fit mmmmwmmm(p7&9 MAIN ST. MOST GENEROUS JUST NORTH 'ZX.M.L CREDIT SERVICE HEXT AX UNFURNISHED FLAT OR SMALL HOME AND THE DIFFERENCE IN RENT WILL FURNISH IT. HAVE COMFORT AND SUNSHINE; LEARN TO LIVE AMD LAUGH. YOIT CAN ....... iK Have a Cozily Furnished Home of Your Own. Start With This Complete Outfit OUTFIT THAT WE ARE OFFERING AT A VERY LET I S, SHOW YOU THIS ATTRACTIVE THREE-ROOFURNITURE LOW I'HK K. EACH ROOM IS COMPLETELY FURNISHED WITH WELL-MADAND RUGS. TERMS, S13.C0 CASH; BALANCE f2.50 A WEEK OR SJIO.OO A MONTH. M UP-TO-DA- TE E, THIS $124.00 DINING ROOM CS OUTFIT NOW FOR ONLY Or Save Money on the Individual Pieces. $7.50 CASH BALANCE BY WEEK OR MONTH TO SUIT. ' t V . ?wi "VX g--- -L ed - Familien-gesehlchte- old-fashion- Handsome Extension Table Dining Extends to full 6 feet For $40.00 Buffets Ii solid quartered oak, with heavy beveled plate mirror. Rich brown fumed finish. $25.00 in pure mission Solid oak. Rich design. fumed finish. brown comes This Solid Oak Chairs Dining Well' built rich fumed comfortable leathfinish: er seat. Much better chair than cut shows. For $4.00 Sturdy $35 "Stickley" China Closet Of solid oak rich fumed finish. y mmm if LARGE, COMFORTABLE TAPESTRY ROCKER. S3 1.00.-Here is one of the very best offered in bargains we -have Rockers. It is large tapestrextremely comfortable, with extra high back and large side May be had in an aswings. sortment of tapestries. Spring seat, covered with loose silk SOLID MAHOGANY ADAM ROCKER. 812.75. Here is an authentic Period piece, either. Chair or Rocker, in genuine solid mahogany, finished dull; cane seat and at a remarkably back, low CI "I O TTEw AdSmmM price covered loose pad to Tapestry fit above OES ZStdGmmlLZ Rocker 91.50 Cash, $1.50 Monthly. S.r.U FOR THIS S40.0O ROCKER. A large, comfortable Rocker, in ' tbe fireside design: upholstered in genuine leather; has'deep seat and Monday high back. 82.50 CnHi, PdE.rfi W W Monthly. 2..V floss cushion. Special price Reeular . $40. S3 1.00 S3.00 Cash. $3.00 Monthly. 'uau. Vi mm Jim'' a ," ed medico-biologic- well-develop- ed rosy-cheek- half-scare- For ed CHRISTMAS FOR DOLLS Extra large GIFT GO-CAR- Child's Writing Desk and Blackboard combined; folds up; tomorrow TS SI. 95 with size throughout, rubfall top, adjustable back. ber tire wheels, and collapsible, for all. the world just like the best makes for children. Your choice of tans, blacks and greens. No Phone Orders or G. O. D.'s. at Blackb oards 29 Reversible, size 18x39 C inches: long-fewant... No Phone Orders or C. O. D.'s. lt No Phone Orders or C. O. D.'s. III al had stood on a lady's train.- - Philadelpria Public Ledger. - I yn .III lltailllffMJtWWMJWlllilljMipiytl '"'W OBLIGING. Rector's wife Yes. Philip has gone up to Boston to learn pharmacy. Mrs. Bunk Gosh, missus, he needn't have gone that far away. He could have come on our iarm and welcome. What makes bread dough. ' 'raise" ? It is the action ol tlje yeast, an alcoholic fermentation, the same a3 in making beer. Every time a little bubble is formed, a tiny drop of alcohol is produced also. The bubbles in bread are produced in exactly the same "way as are the bubbles in TWENTY-FIV- E MEN FACILITIES OF PROVEN WORTH The National Bank of The Republic takes special interest in the welfare 'of its depositors and clients, and affords them facilities that have proven their worth for promptness and efficiency. Checking: accounts are MWmm We employ twenty-fiv- e men whose salarv and future depend upon iiow well they serve and please you in our Loan, Insurance, Abstract, Escrow and Probate Departments. . part, explains why they are so anxious This,-i- n to do both. 4 In baking bread, most of the alcohol is evaporated out of the loaf. The cold storage of beer retains the alcohol, which is only about 3y2 per cent of the total. TRACY LOAMS TRUST COMPANY Beer has very properly been called "liquid bread. A. Fisher Brewing Co. The prize is IN THE BEER. |