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Show TEE BEN, PRICE, UTAH EVERT FRIDAY. PAGE rOUS toned Ever? Friday By Sub Co. (lac.) raH-itia- d the public to cripple or kill the systems, which first developed the country and are absolutely essential to the welfare of any eommnnity. PuMluh-IB- S K. W. Crochatt. Mgr. $1.0 tha Yaar. Offic FltoM No. 9a KMiideocC) No. 133M2 Supposing that twenty million famMail Mat Entered aa Saeoad-Claa- a ilies at Prira. Poetofflce at during the first month of this 1114. 4. tor, June Utah, Under tha Ait of March S, 17. New Year would purchase household articles made of copfier, weighing an ADYUtTIlilNU ILtTUL average of say ton pounds. The Dliplay Matter Par Inch per Month, would be small and a life$1.40; Single laaue, 4uc. Special Z4 Par Cent Additional. time of service sssured by the article. Two hundred million pounds of copper Lagala Ten Centa tha Lina Each Count Sis Worda to the Lina. would lie used and the way oieued for Summon. $11.40; Water Applica- the reemployment of proliably filty tion, $l.ut; Pinal Proof, $10.00. thousand men in the Western copper Reader Ten Ceuta the Lina Each mines, not to mention the employment Line. to tha Worda Six ion. Count would result in manufacturing which Centa tha Kirteen Blackface Type Lina . BUY COPPER AND HELP START UP COKE OVENS. Subscription, In-Be- FAT EWES AND FLESHY FEEDING LAMBS rt Insertion plant. The prospective homebuilder Obitnaria. Card of Thank, Reaolu-tlon- should demand eoper and brass fixs Etc at Half Local Heading tures instead of the inferior Notice Hates. Count Six Word to now sold him at a high priee Una and which are rusted or worn out with For Sale. For 'Kent, Found. Lout, Etc., a year or two of use. What looks Two Cent per Word Each laaue. worse than the streaks of rust from No Charge Accounts. tin water gutters or iron hinges as the Address All Communication to rust washes down over the paint ? EvSUN PUBLISHING CO, Price. Utah. ery metal has its uses, but for ier-- f or niance where hard water or weather 1 wul mounting without Ttie Sunt conditions must lie met, nothing equals I stood up and cried In the rangregn-$L- the products made from eopiier. When Job, the ropper mines of Utah, Nevada and Montana are working there is a deTIME TO GET THE CART BEHIND mand and a big one for the product THE JACKASS. of the nine hundred or more coke ovens of Carbon county. a, sulisti-tuutc- SC-2- H. Too mauy Militic.iuns Lave worked Land in glove with detruetionita to make . industrial enterprise difficult nd impossible. Taxation should cease to lie oppressive and all state $nd federal departments' should become instead of parasitie. If they have any excuse fur existence at nil make those who pet siiecial service from a government function pay for that service, and not everyone in the state for something that is of no earthly use to them. In addition, the various function exercised by the slate in regulating business end industries and humau aelivilies, like banking commissions, corporation commissions, tax commissions, labor eyinmisMuiis ad infinitum, should lieeuine constructive, and it khould be their Ixiast that in their various fields of officialism they netuully do things of practical value for the musses of the aople and the limsfierity of the eoiumon wealth. Why should not tax commissions help reduce taxes instead of holding conventions of taxation exerts to invent new ways of getting more revenue out of the iieopleT Why.should not a corporation or hluesky commission make it a boast that it has encouraged the creation of new corporations? Why continue making it difficult and for anyone to organize any new business enterprise f Why continue killing them with demands for Considering the price they charge, it looks like Cariwn county bootleggers ought to throw in a lunch. BTEADY MARCH OF MARKET IS ENCOURAGING. Fur some weeks past the stock market Las keen advancing. While there have been recessions from time to time the general trend has been upward. Meanwhile all money rates are going downward. That indicator which showed the way at the aliening of the period has for artne months taken a reverse course. These are ordinarily reliable signs of the times. The stock market has not boomed, but its steady march is encouraging to (Continued from page 2.) been aroused, however, some persons thiuking that the operation might be a useful adjunct to the monkey gland ration. Bay windows, it was minted out, could be removed, thus completing the renovation. Beauty socialists were also asked their advice as to whether such an idea might be used to help the fashions in womens shajies, introducing real fat instead of oe bustles, or having the fat removed instead of prohibiting malted milks and potatoes. A skeptic has, however, given these revolutionary ideas a setback, lie observed that the name of the German village mentioned means in English sneaking fat. Yesterdays Market. KANSAS CITY, Mo, Jan 5. Cattle receipt 4000 head. She stock is steady to strong with most rows $3.75 to $4.25; bulk heifers, $430 to $6.00; top steers, $8.00; most canners, $2.25 to $2.50; bulk cutters, $3.00 to $3.50; good heavy butchers, $4.00 to $4.25; top vealers, $0.00; practical limit was $8.50; medium to good stockers, $5.25 to $6.25. Ilog Receipts, 3000 head. Open to shippers, ten to twenty centa higher; closed to packers mostly, fifteen to eenta higher; spots more; twenty-fiv- e bulk, 140 to 180 pounders, $7.25 to $7.40; bulk of sales, $6.75 to $7.35; rents hightacking sows, twenty-fiv- e er; bulk, $5.50 to $5.75; stock pigs, steady to ten rents higher. Sheep Receipts, 4000 head. Killcents ing classes strong. to twenty-fiv- e higher; five loads fed western lambs, $11.25. Decline Art Shown. CHICAGO, Dec. 31. The annual statement of Ihe Cudahy Tacking company issued today shows a decline of from eight to ten routs a pound in the Chicago wholesale price of the those who watch its movements. The princial meat product during the fismerchant who is content to sit drows- cal year closing Octolier 29, 1921. The ing and toasting his toes by the firea eonqiany lost $1,5(19,563.06 on the of usedtohe is going to find it diffi- year's business, the surplus fund decult to keep going from now on, clining from $5,12212.07 to $3,552,-750.0- 1. eonqietitinn ia again awakening The decline in prices resulted and it lakes salesmanship to sell now in a decrease in the years gross busito the same teople who were saying ness of $115,127,000. E. A. Cudahy, wrap it up a couple of yean ago president, says the market stabilized without asking the priee. If the awing during the last half of the year, howof the icmlulum from abnormal lssiin ever, and that the outlook fur 1922 is times to the opposite direction catch- excellent. es any business man napping now President Considering. and if he doesnt wake up and start unloading his shelves he rertainly OMAHA, Neb., Dec. 31. President can have no one to blame but himself. Harding is giving the request of the The warning is clear enough. Omaha city commission that he intervene in the wckinghouse strike his Your good looking Priee girl who serious consideration, according to a ean rook need never worry about the received by Mayor Dahlman telegram future. from George B. Christian, Jr., the ae nnn-taxab- le nt I president's secretary, today. Christians message reads: The president has asked ms to acknowledge receipt of your letter of December 24th aa well aa its inclosure, which he has noted with the greatest rare. He desires me to assure you that this matter is having hia serious consideration. Prosperity Coining. , , . CHICAGO, Dee. 31. Cattlemen of the eountry stand on the threshhold of an era of great irosierity and the man who haa rattle will soon be in a strong stragetie xisition, according to S. B. Stafford, president of the Chicago live stock exchange, who issued his annual statement today. As an indication of approaching good times, he stated that rows suitable for breeding purposes have increased in value in the Western States from ten to twenty dollars s head in the last sixty days. WITH THE LIVE STOCKMEN OF THIS SECTION OF UTAH Recent heavy snows have compelled Idaho sheepmen to feed their herds. Hay in many localities of the Gem State is selling at four dollars the ton in the slack. This weeks storm, which was general throughout Southeastern Utah, has brought an abundance of moisture to Grand and to San Juan counties. At Moab intermittent snow and rain fell for three days, and at La Sal snow was to the depth of eighteen inches. The same is reported from Mouti cello. The range has been vastly benefited by the storm, but travel on the highway north and south of Moab bu been severely interfered with by the heavy condition of the roads. John H. Seely ft Sons of Mt. Pleas- ant have presented to the animal husbandry department of the Iniversit; of Idaho a calf to be grown out unfinished as a steer and to be exhibited at the live stock show next year. It is from the firms show and was sired by its main herd buIL Shipping certificates for twenty-fouhead of purebred dairy eattle, from Wisconsin to Charlton Seegmil-le- r of Sevier county as consignee, have passed through the offiee of the state board of agriculture. It ia understood this shipment is to be distributed several farmers there. socia-tioEastern Utah Stockgrowera organized just last week down at Green River, announces through its secretary that five hundred dollars in gold will be paid fur any informatics leading to the arrest and conviction of anyone stealing, killing or misbranding cattle, horses or sheep belonging to its en n, members. The three major problems of finance, marketing and tariff, as affecting the sheep industry of the nation in the present times of economic readjustment, will form principal themes for the consideration of the National Woolgruwers association when its membership gathers at Salt Lake City h January 9th to 11th for their annual convention. fifty-sevent- Information from Washington, D. C. states that the war dcwrtuients six auction wool sales this year have of 25,000,000 pounds of the wool left on the government's hands at the close of the war at prices ranging from 11.8 cents in September to 18.5 in November. Leading mills and brokers of the country were among the purchasers. The age of the wool runs up to five years, and part has had to be scoured to keep it from the moths. Application for permits for grazing on the Wasatch National forests must lie filed by January 15th, Supervisor Dana Parkinson announces. All permit holders, except those for five years, will be required to file for renewal. Application blanks may be obtained at the forestry office on the second floor of the postoffice building at Salt Lake City. During the past year there was a total of 12,150 head of hones and cattle, and 63,000 head of sheep grazing on the forest ranges, representing six hundred permittees. Evan L. Davis, who became d while herding sheep on the western desert May 24, 1921, is unable to have the industrial commission consider his rase because he was engaged in agricultural labor, it is held by the commission In a decision last Friday. The commission refused to assume jurisdiction of the case, and it is quite probable that it will be taken up to the supreme court to decide whether live stock is included in the exemption provided by the Utah workmens compensation act for agricultural labor. Appointment of David A. Smith as fhainnan of the live stock committee of the Salt Lake Commercial club, which has charge of arrangements for the intermnnntain live stock show to be held in Salt Lake City next April, ia announced by President F. C. Schramm. Smith succeeds J. P. Casey, who has just gone to Los Angeles, Cala., to engage in the insurance business. Casey has been a member of the committee for the past two years, and took s prominent part in the clubs activities toward promoting the live stock industry. dis-ims- ed snow-blin- GOING INTO PRICES Saif Lake City agents of the federal department of justice are in receipt of instructions from Washington, D. , to make an investigation of the spread in priee between the wholesaler and the ultimate consumer on food, clothing and fuel sold at the state capital and other parts of Utah. The reports will be sent to the department of justice. Attorney General Daugherty announced recently that a nationwide investigation of the prices of necessities would be made. Instruction! received in Utah are believed to be a part of that program. C-- AUDIT NEARS END Audit of the books of the state road CAKE commission, which has lieen on for several months, has been practically eon eluded up to December 31, 1920, the time for which the audit was originally intended. However, in order that it may rover the period down to date, arrangements have been made with a Zion auditing concern, which is making the special audit, to continue the work so that it will include 1921. This will necessitate another months work, so that the report will not be ready unIs known by the flour that is used in til about February 1st. making it Thera is all the difference in the world in floor. Most of it will Ed Sheya of Price has established make broad or cake that can be eaten, himself in the general mercantile bus- but ours makes bread and cake which it is a delight to eat The Successful cook now nses Tip Top and Turkey Red flour. Try it and leant the rea- 1922 The Randulpha are former resident! of Price and the Townsends of CastL Gate. returnLas MrKune Mrs. Robert Mr. and Mrs. Orson EL Guymon, ed from a visit with relatives at Ogtwo Christmas newlyweds, are visiting den. local relatives and friends before takFred Christensen of Clear Creek at Price, where ing up their residence Co-Oover folks with his spent tha holidays p he is employed in the store and at Fairview. also is counselor in the hishopric. A IL S. Cordle of Price ia back home family reception was given in their after putting in the holidays over at honor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Mt. Pleasant. L. Anderson at Huntington Tuesday Mrs. Monte Young of Price visit- afternoon. Castle Dale Progress, Slat. ed with Mrs. Ernest Wilson over at Duchesne last week. B. A. Moffitt of Helper had business at the county seat yesterday. He HIAWATHA, Dee. 3L The Christwas at the Savoy. entertainment given by the school mas Miss Leda Fowles of Fairview visevening of last week was a Saturday. Scofield at relatives ited friends and success. A large, electricalthorough during the holidays. ly lighted tree was s special feature of Mr. and Mrs. William Littlejohn the decorations. The program was unof Castle Gate visited np at Salt Lake der the direction of Mrs. Harry Meu-se- l, Mrs. Myrtle Gather, Miss Eth City last Friday and Saturday. Mrs. John Mock and Miss Susan Henderson and Fred Schumacher. MuJohnson of Priee sieiit the holidays sic was furnished by the school orcheswith relatives and friends at MantL tra. Mrs. O. M. Wells returned Saturday Misses Lucy and llessie Lovell, Carbon county teachers, spent the hol- of last week from an extended visit with relatives in Illinois. idays at Mt. Pleasant with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Crogan left on Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Faddis have Minn., and will returned to Latuda after spending the Monday for Rochester, weeks. two be for gone countholiays with relatives in Emery Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Eldred are visyin Sunnyaide for ten days. iting Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Harvey from Mrs. B. J. Mays and sister, Mrs. Sunnyaide were among the numerous Katie Stoddard, are visiting relatives guests at the Savoy the first of the in Provo. week. Mrs. Clyde Vaught entertained her Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Creppa of Hi- sewing elub Wednesday afternoon. awatha were registered at the Savoy Miss Doris Steckleman, Wallace Avyesterday. Also N. J. May of the same ery and Glen Jones, who are attending town. high school in Irice, are spending the Mrs. Vern Avery ia back home at holidays with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Gruber are reCastle Gate after some days at a Salt Lake City hospital undergoing treat- ceiving congratulations upon the arrival of a daughter, born at their home ment. Mrs. Albert Robbins has returned Christmas Day. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Walker left on to Duchesne from Latuda with the intention of making the former place her Friday of last week to sieiid Christmas holidays with relatives in Denver, home. Colo. Mrs. Nora! Warren of Price visMiss Olive Wilcox ia spending the ited with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. with relatives in Salt Lake holidays G. V. Billings, at Duchesne this week City. and last. Mr. and Mrs. Rose Cox of Storrs are Max Fowler left Price the first of guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. the week for Butt, Mont., by way of Frank Larsen for the holidays. Caliente, Nev. He will be absent two Miss Sibyl Spalding is visiting relaor three wekks. tives in Salt Lake City. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Davia of ColMr. and Mrs. Hyrum Wilcox of this ton were among the out of town visitors in Priee this week. They register- city announce the marriage of their ed at the Tavern. daughter, Mrs. Minnie Harrison, forC. II. Murphy of Sunnyaide merly of Salt Lake City but now livwas the guest of her parents, Mrs. and ing at Castle Gate, to James Westfield Mrs. H. C. Topping, at Salt Lake City of Sunnyaide. The marriage took place December 24th at Fariningtup. The during the holidays. will make their home at Sunny-tid- e. couple E. II. Greenhalgh of Ferron and Salt Lake Tribune, 1st.' Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Leonard of Huntington were among the Emery eounty Mr. and Mrs. Parley Hansen enterfolks at the Savoy at Price this week. tained at a beautifully appointed dinMr. and Mrs. George V- - Brandon ner evening for Mr. and are back home at Castle Dale from Mrs. Wednesday Nels Brothersen of Price, Mrs. F. Salt Lake City, where the latter re- Noble and Mrs. Kenneth Pack from cently underwent hospital treatment. Woods Cross, Mrs. Hans Brothersen, W. M. Wilson, representing the Sr., Miss Fredreka Chipman, Mr. and Portland Cement association, was at Mrs. John J. Gunderson, Floyd Broth-erae- n, the Savoy at Price Wednesday and Ralh Men and Othello Hansen. Mt. Pleasant Pyramid, 31st. yesterday, lie was here in the interest of good roads. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. MaeKnight enSam Scalzo, manager of the Black Hawk Mercantile company, was a tertained at their home Wednesday guest of the Savoy Wednesday. Busi- evening, giving a banquet to the emness, he says, is a little quiet at and ployes of the Smoot Lumber company. O. A. Spear, president of the parent around Hiawatha. Dr. R. E. Dowd from Kenilworth concern at Provo and owner of the lowas in Price Wednesday last profes- cal establishment, was the honor guest. sionally. That camp haa averaged, he Mr. and Mrs. C. W. De Witt of Hiasays, two days a week this last month. watha announce the marriage of their Halftime is promised or three days daughter, Miss Margaret Melissa, to in the very near future. Clinton William Crepps. The cereipal owner and mony was here at Price yesterday. The general manager of the Smoot Lumber young couple will soon reside in Salt company at Provo and at Price, was Lake City. in the eity the first of the week going over hia business affairs here. He II. C. Smith, county clerk, issued s made the Tavern his horns: marriage last Saturday to Leo Down-ar- d and Mins Ida Warren, both of well Thomas W. ODonnell, the Vernal attorney, was in Price Tuesday and known families in Price. The young Wednesday en route to Zion, where he couple were married by Justice Ham- -, has a big lawsuit coming on. Himself mond before leaving the courthouse. and a number of witnesses from the Basin eountry registered at the TavMr. and Mrs. M. W. Miller were Saern. voy guests the first of the week. lie Carl R. Marcusen of the Price later returned to the Carter well in $nimercial and Savings bank waa at the San Rafael while Mrs. Miller went Pro vo last Wednesday and yesterday on to Salt Lake City for an extended in attendance npon a meeting of the visit with relatives and friends. executive committee of the Utah State Carnegie library et Price waa burgBankers association. He returned last larized Saturday night, but nothing of evening. William M. Anderson, secretary value has been missed. Certain local of the Vernal Commercial club, spent talent is suspected by those who have a couple of days last week waiting reasons for thinking. for the Dodge stage to bring friends Tony Gustine of Castle Gate was of hia in from Price, but he waited in this week committed to the state menvain and went back home disgusted. tal at Provo. hospital 3 Myton Free Press, 1st. Miss Dorothy Treloar left early in Legislatures in the states of New the week for a visit with the family of England and New Y'ork, New Jersey, her brother, Joseph Treloar, Jr., at Pennsylvania and Maryland are workRains. She was amimianied on the ing ou a plan of a uniform opera tori trip by her little nephew, who haa vis- motor license. ited at the Treloar home in this eity That good printing. The Sun. for several weeks. Eureka Reporter, 31st. Mr. and Mrs. S. Bert Bunnel of Priee, Mr. and Mrs. Royal Christensen of Standardville, Mrs. Sarah Bowen of Huntington and Misa Ella A say and June Lowry of the Agricultural College of Utah at Logan are among those spending the holidays or s part of them with home folks and friends. Castle Dale Progress, 31st. Hvte Loveless was registered at the Tavern this week at Price. lie The safest way is to let us put it ia tells The Sun that the Old Emery, to withstand the hardships condition now is working in the San Rafael, hun of cold weather. It costs iron less in down with its bore twenty-thre- e dred and fifty feet with a slight show- the end. We repair all nukes of cars ing of oil and gas. The liaekers of the and solicit your business. PURELY PERSONAL SELL BELTER AND SOME HIGHER mm-buyi- redtape reports and official tspeworm-iain- f Why should not n state labor commission boast of having done something fo give some poor man or woman Job, instead of making it harder all the time for anyone to start an industry and to maintain a payroll? Why NOTHING FOR AN AMERICAN TO should not all the boards and commisBRAG ABOUT. sions which live off the efforts of industry be made to justify tbeir existThe Bun reads in the news reports ence bv showing assistance to indus- how five big New York dailies are ustry? They are killing the goose that ing German newsprint j is per because lays the golden egg of officialism by they ran buy it at fifty dollars a ton driving capital away from investment aa against a domes! ie priee of around in industries and forcing the idle bil- eighty at present. German papermill selions into investing in workers are getting weekly wage with curities instead of establishing new a gold equivalent of $5.84, which ia manufacturing establishments. Pater- hut little more than the average daily nalism has gone so far aa to pauperize iay of the American paennill worker. not only the fifteen million persons American manufacturers state now said to be in the public employ, that under taper cost of present but to make them believe that they are the German price is fifteenproduction dollars a the government, end the rest of the ton less than manufacturing expenses ninety million American muts, called here and many mills cannot break private citizens by mere courtesy, had even at eighty dollars a ton or four-eeought to lie grateful that they are perWe cannot have the highlive by the grace of an offi- est pajier. the shortest hours and at mitted wages, cial oligarchy. The cart must Be got the same time the lowest commodity liehind the animal that draga the in- trices in this nation. It is nothing dustrial cart or the same will happen fo brag about for an American pubthat did to an Italian fruit peddler on lisher to buy foreign newsjiaper unthe rocks at Scuttle, Wash, not so long der conditions unless he at existing ago. lie had loaded up with assorted the same time haa the nerve to adfruits and vegetables for his days vocate that American mills manufacpeddling and was trying to lead the ture on the same rost basis as foreign donkey off the docks with his tower- pries. ing load. The dnnk was obstreperous I and balked and backed until eart, load About all that was left undone in and jackass went off into Puget Sound the interest of the railroad company and disappeared. Watching the bub- by the outgoing council was the gift bles come up the son of Italy looked of the posts and wire to the Denver down whore hia earthly hopes Ifkd dis- and Rio Grande Western for completeappeared to rise no more, and said : ly fencing the city. The Tenth street 1 hoie yon gotta vour goddam satordinance is nothing more or less than an outrage against numerous taxpayisfy. ers and residents south of the tracks. If Utah drivers of automobiles kept one hundredth part as rlose a lookout Ultimately the taxpayer and the confor trains as engineers do for the for- sumer must iay in increased cost of mer the record of accidents would lie service or products for all the legisgreatly diminished. lated handicaps and siiecial tax bur? dens that are heaiied on industry and BOME METHOD OF EQUAL TAXA- business in the political effort to subTION MUST COME. stitute siiecial taxation as a means of direct tax load the public Commercial motor vehicles should be hiding the liear. must planed on a basis of equality with common carriers in the matter of tazea Price billboards, operating under u and be charged a fair sum for uplicense from the city, advise nominal keep and use of public highways. This the folks hereabouts to send away for outline ia suggested : their wants. How do loral merchants First Charge for urc of the publicly like it? The three newspapers in Carbuilt highways. bon county advocate patronizing home Second Charge for the upkeep of institutions. highways on the amount of deterioraThe Sun's awful glad that we have tion resulting from oiieration of comnot in all Carlton county a man who mercial automobiles. Third Tax on gross earnings, in- (toiled some kid's Christmas by denyvested capital or proiierty, similar to ing that there's a Santa Claus. that paid by the railroads. Most of us wouldn't need any New Fourth Regulation by public utili- Year's resolutions if wed handled the ty or railroad commissions the same as old ones more gently. other common carriers and the fixing of a general policy as to the advisabilIt has about gotten so in Zion that ity of permitting motor transportation need street ears that can detour they lines to arallel railroads, thus divid- the automobiles. lioth to traffic the detriment of ing the railroads and the automobile lines We object to the contention that and also the public through the disshould begin at home. It charity develcouragement of future railway should not lie viewed in that light. opment. It ia nnfair to allow bus and truck-lin- e Give some eople half a chance and operating on roads paid for by they will invariably want the whole. FRIDAY, JANUARY 6, SOCIETY Winter Is Hard On Your Car iness down at Wellington with one of the most complete stocks ever taken into that town, llis goods are all new recently put forty thousand from first hands at smt cash proposition into it to continue operadollars and son. prices, enabling him to meet rompetl tions. tioiv at Price or anywhere else, he Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Loftis of Price county or Eastern left Co. states, in (arlion South of D. ft R. G. W., With yesterday afternoon on an extendUtah, lie is catering especially to the South Ninth Street ed trip to California for the benefit of the Goff Welding Co. cash a stockmens is It requirements. Pries, Utah. the latters health. While absent they PRICE, UTAH and earry proposition with Sheya. will visit with Mr. and Mrs. Benton On the principle of the heavy artilBe thankful for the good things you Your girl with unbuckled galoshes Randolph at Novato, Mr. and Mrs. C. lery recoil rhambor is a new automo- may be in style, but she looks more W. Townsend at Santa Clara and with have enjoyed the past year. You are bile shock abaorlier that works in oiL like she is in need of a maid. sisters of the former in Los Angeles. I fortunate that others did not get them. Price Commission B.O.BUROE 1 |