10 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Established IS3I " 1 ' PUBLISHED BT THE TEUSbItAPH PRINTING CO. E. J. STACKPOLE President and Editor-in-Chief F. R. OYSTER Secretary GUS M. STEINMETZ Managing Editor Published every evening (except Sun day) at the Tlegraph Building, 21# Federal Square. Both phones. Member American Newspaper Publish ers' Association. Audit Bureau of Circulation and Pennsylvania Associ ated Dallies. Eastern Office. Fifth Avenue Building. New York City, Hasbrook. Story & Brooks. Western Office, Advertising Building, Chicago, 111., Robert E. Ward. Delivered by carriers at six cents a week. Mailed to subscribers at $3.00 a year In advance. Entered at the Post OfTlce In Harris burg, Pa., as second class matter. Sworn dally averuice circulation (or the three luontlm ending Oct. 31. 1918. ★ 21,357 Aver aire for tlie year 1»14—21,858 Average for the year 1018—IfMMM Average for the year 1912—11,Mt Average for the year II) 11—11,3®- Average tor the year The above figures are net. All re turned. unsold and damaged copies de ducted. THURSDAY EVENING, NOV. It Wherefore, if meat maketh my brother to stumble, I will eat no flesh for evermore, that I make not my brother to stumble —I. Cor. 8:13. GEORGE KUNKEL, P. J. IN the consideration of jurists fit for the chair of the late Justice John P. Elkin on the Supreme Bench and worthy to wear the ermine of the higher court. Governor Brumbaugh should not overlook the unusual quali fications of President Judge George Kunkel, of the Dauphin county court. About a year ago Judge Kunkel was a close second in the Supreme Court race before the people and his supe rior ability, wide experience as legis lator and judge, intimate knowledge of the Commonwealth in all its im portant activities and ramifications, and his great good sense were recog nized by lawyer and layman in all parts of the State. Here in Dauphin county his fellow citizens of all parties would regret his elevation to the court of last resort asa distinct loss to the court of this dis trict, but they would nevertheless ac claim his appointment as a recogni tion of merit and obvious fitness. All over the State the Incompatibili ties of the commission form of govern ment are manifesting themselves in differences among the five rulers of the third-class city and lack of confidence among the people. Every change seems to increase the tension and lessen the efficiency so that a general revamping of the Clark act appears to be in evitable. Instead of fostering repre sentative government, the scheme of commission administration is destroy ing the personal touch of the people In the handling of their own business. TARIFF FACTS SUPPRESSED IN a letter to ex-Governor Cox, of Ohio, some time ago. President Wilson stated it as his belief that the authority lodged in the Federal Trade Commission enabled it at any time to take up the investigation of the coast of production at home and abroad, and to collect other data bear ing on the question of tariff rat t>v>vOi^a>ua By the BK-OonunltteenMW While the situation in regard to Republican candidates for senator to succeed Senator George T. Oliver next yoar is seething there is a good bit of quiet work being done by aspirants for nominations for Auditor General and State Treasurer. Friends of Sen ator Charles A. Snyder, of Fottsville, said that he Is sure to be a candidate for the place and that he has already received strong assurances of support from every section, if the Schuylkill man is a candidate it is likely that the nomination for State Treasurer will go west. Representative R. J. Baldwin, Delaware, and Representa tive James F. Woodward, Allegheny, are mentioned for the place. Senator Charles H. Kline, of Pittsburgh, may bo a candidate for either place. A good bit depends upon the way the senatorial situation works out. Speaker Ambler, of the State TTouse of Representatives, in a letter to Mayor Blankenburg yesterday, refused to appoint the special investigating committee authorized by the last Legislature, declaring that the dignity of the Commonwealth would not per mit him to take part in what appeared to be a mere exchange of baseless and general charges, flung back and forth in the heat of a political campaign and its aftermath. The mayor had asked the Speaker to investigate his adminis tration, so as to prove that charges of irregularities brought by State Senator McNichol were without foun dation in fact. When tho mayor heard that the Speaker would not authorize a probe he expressed regret. —Frederic W. Flcitz, former deputy nttorney general, has refused to al low his friends to consider him as a candidate for mayor of Scranton at the next municipal election. He said that It is an office which any man should be proud to fill, but that he can not see his way clear to consider ing it. In addition to Mr. Fleitz the names of Ex-District Attorney W. R. Lewis, Dr. S. P. Longstreet, one of the school directors and Thomas R. Brooks, former city treasurer, are being mentioned. —Friends of Milton W. Shreve, of Erie, former member of the House and former congressman, have been urging him for Water Supply Commis sioner. O. S. Kelsey, of Lock Haven, a former legislator, is another candi date. There are probably fifty others. —Up in Willlamsport there in con siderable disposition being sUdpn by the outgoing administration to make tillage interesting for Jonas Fischer the recently elected mayor. They have hung to him the job of acting ns police magistrate, which an alder man hat always handled. —A general change around in Lebanon city offices is believed to be probable as a result of the recent election. —Between the defensive operations of Mayor Blankenburg and his direc tors and the cross fire of charges and counter charges and some attempts to put the late candidate George D. Por ter in wrong, things are lively in Philadelphia. There is also a pos sibility that most of the election offi cers In the city will be haled into court to explain the manner in which returns were bungled. A school for election officers is suggested. —Oyt In Pittsburgh the clean-up inaugurated by the committee which hat- been probing election frauds bids fair to make some big changes. The inquiry has been going into all wards. - -Congressman Warren Worth Bailey's announcement that he will fight the president has upset the whole reorganization 'Democratic camp. —Governor Brumbaugh's request that the members of the State Work men's Compensation Board meet with Mm to-morrow is taken to mean that the Governor is about ready to take up the question of referee appoint ments and other derails of work which the compensation acts contemplated the governor should co-operate with tbe board. There will be ten referees and some other appointments made beforo the tirst of December. The Governor has been keeping in touch with the work of the State Insurance Board and will now meet with the other board. —Mont Alto has voted in favor of a loan for establishing a water works. It will get a supply front State lands. In some of the coal counties loans were voted for improvements to water systems by big majorities. -—Governor Brumbaugh is disposed to take his time in regard to the supreme court appointment, although his mail contains many letters urging appointments. The endorsement of Judge Willis Martin of Philadelphia, by the committee of lawyers in that city has been received at the Capitol, but the Governor declined to talk about it. About the Capitol It Is be lieved that Judge Martin will be name-t in spHe of activity of friends of other candidates. KEEPING VEUETABI.ES IN WINTER Celery keeps best stored out o( doors. In a cellar it often dries and gets stringy and tough. Dig a pit about three feet deep, lift the celery Into it with the roots on and store the plants closely together. Cover with earth up to the top of the celery, and put leaves on about a foot deep to keep out the moisture. Place boards in a conical mound over the trench and cover with leaves and earth. Leave the ends of the boards so that the pit can be opened to admit air on mild days, as the danger lies In heating. Useful directions for storing other vegetables are given by P. S. Murdock In Farm and Home. Cabbage and brussels sprouts can also be stored in the celery trench. Set the cabbage heads upside down on some leaves. Leeks can be lifted and stored like root crops or simply covered with hay or leaves. The entire French artichoke plant must b« protected from lreezlng, but the common tuberous artichoke should be dug and stored like potatoes. Place boards conicaliv over the plants and cover with leaves or straw. Keep water out at all times. The cellar Is the best place for storing pumpkins, squashes and also potatoes, if you have a cool, dry com partment not exposed to furnace heat. Pumpkins and squashes quickly decay In a damp place. On this account many people store them in a room over the kitchen where there Is enough heat to keep them from freezing . HARD WORK THE PRICK "The price of success," Governor Brumbaugh told the State College stu dents, "Is hard work applied dally. It is conscientious application to your hard tasks which count in the final analysis. The fineßt contribution you can make to State College and to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, which nurtured this college, is to lend your selves to a useful career because of the training State College has given you." (•ILiMORE AND SOITSA [From the New York World.] Bandmaster Sousa took up years ago the trying: task of being a successor In popularity to Patrick Sarsfleld Qilmore. How far he has succeeded "was made manifest on Saturday, when bands, or chestras and great organs from coast to coast poured out his march music tn recognition of 1114 «lst birthday. Schools of music may come and may go, rag time may rest, but all the world will continue to love a stirring number In .twu-four time. _ HAJRBISBURG TELEGRAPH — — : , SEVERAL MILLION DOLLARS LOSS IN BETHLEHEM PUNT FIRE J L humki ■--* -'■ ■ »»«■■«««» f U*RE*FS>£T MACTFJHCL SHOP NA.*H. AEJ-NCE/IM SACRO**. The picture shows the Interior of machine shop No. 4 of the Bethlehem Steel Company at South Bethlehem, Pa., with it h valuable machinery and a number of guns in all stages of manufacture, wlilch was totally destroyed by a tire of unknown origin during the early morning hours of November 10. The loss in big guns destined for the allies and the United States government is estimated at several million dollars. Much valuable machinery was also ruined. TELEGRAPH'S PERISCOPE"] --The submarine has again demon strated what a splendid tool it Is for the assassination of women and chil dren. —Note from Washington: "Dear Austria: Didn't you read our notes tq Germany on submarine warfare? Ntiughty! Naughty! Now don't do It again, please." ~ —The jitney driver don't care how long the Wiikes-Barre strike con tinues. —Villa's gold badge as a general In the Mexican army was captured In a lot of smuggled jewelry in Mexico re cently. Hocked or shipped for safety? • —Ever go for last year's sweater and find the ash man got it last Spring? And yet they wonder why it takes so long to save up the price of an automobile. —There's one thing you've got to give Bryan credit for—he's always able to pick out the unpopular side of any issue and make it more so. EDITORIAL COMMENT ~ These gains and losses of so many yards are apt to muddle the reader so he will not know whether he is read ing the football news or the war re ports.—Pittsburgh Dispatch. The war has become so general that an ordinary battle doesn't cut much figure. The press agents pick out the best one in the lot each day and talk about tliat. —Indianapolis Star. At a Kansas City dinner the other night a toast to President Wilson was drunk in Missouri Hiver water. This seems to be a new version of the con ventional mud-slinging. Boston Transcript. Various theories are offered for the recent advances in the cost of living but our own pet theory is that It is due to the closing of the Panama Canal. You remember how the opening of the Canal reduced the cost of living, don't you? Neither do we.—Columbus Citizen. •♦CAPACITIES FOR INCOIVSISTKIVCY" IFrom the Kansas City Star.l When you strike a piano key a cer tain note sounds. The note has no | choice. When the key is struck it sounds. It can't help it. Onn school of thinkers has insisted almost from the beginning of philosophy that human beings are mere automata like the piano. Under a certain stimulus a man is bound to act in a certain way, just as the piano wire Is. Free will Is a delusion. It always has been rather puzzling to plain citizens how the clever people who profess to believe that they are simply machines can show the excel lent discrimination between right and wrong that they usually dlsplaj', and can admit that there Is such a thing as duty. Machines, of course, cannot do right or wrong. An eminent English writer. Canon' Rashdall, in a recently published little book on "Ethics," makes this wise comment on this very problem: "The capacities for inconsistency in the human mind are almost unlimited." Apply that remark to most of your acquaintances and see how true it Is. r" ■ 1 ■' 1 Our Daily Laugh He seems to be BJ; Jyv a big gun In thU Tep. He's about the only 42 ten- Ij\l 1 1 timeter the town a I { f . I TOUGH LUCK. \\ Mr - Rabbit: I hear Mr. Katt at* T° ur mother-ln- TrSflpg Mr ' wr * w: t# * y* —he heard me i \ a*y she was a I of cheeae," ,nd h * llko» THE MYSTERY SOLVED Br Wlsg Dinger Not more than two short weeks ago. Whene'er I walked about, 'Most every block, it seemed to me. Someone at me would shout. Sometimes from t'other side of street A greeting loud I'd hear, While other times. In gentle tones, 'Twould fall upon my ear. But lately I have noticed tHat As I stroll 'round the town Instead of cheerful greeting, bo, I get a gloomy frown. "Why are not tilings," I asked myself, "Just as they were before?" And then the answer dawned on me— i iileutiou Day Iq o'at ~ ( ( VISITING THE WAR BRIDES Vll.—Cleveland Is Busy By Frederic J. Haskin WITH the lake carriers busier than they have been tor ten years bringing ore from the Superior district, and unable to supply It fast enough for humming mills and fac tories; with between two and three thousand skilled workmen striking for a bigger share of the golden bounty; With the war stocks fairly kicking the lid of the stock exchange, and every one bitten by the. speculation biur, Cleveland Is getting fully her share of the war boom prosperity, and rather more than her share of the excite ment. Peerless Motor Is the most inter esting war stock on the Cleveland ex change. A year ago this corporation was in extremely poor financial health. Its stock was quoted at 15. When the war broke out, L. H. Kltt redge, vice-president of the firm, im mediately saw the opportunity to re coup. He went to Russia at once, and ! was across the water about as soon I as Charles Schwab, with much the I same results on a smaller scale. Peer- | less climbed up to 198 a few days ago, ; and it is a pretty sure thing that It j will go higher. Shareholders have been given an' option on the stock at 225, and several j larger corporations are trying to get | a controlling part of it. A year ago this concern owed a million and a half. To-day this debt, | together with a $325,000 mortgage, is | paid, and the company Is about $3,,-! 250,000 to the gobd. Demand for Auto Trucks The demand for auto trucks to transport supplies and munitions to PREPAREDNESS PER EZEKDEIi! [Philadelphia Public Ledger.] By quoting the prophet Estaklel on preparedness In a friendly letter to Setli Low the President has taken the wind out of Bryan's sails in a way, that' does one good who recalls that a certain urtctuous reliance on the Bible is the peerless orator's chief Chautau quawfcing stock In trade, by which he gives a convincing character to his combination Chadbandlan and Peck snltllan style of platitudes, in order, also, to prove, as the canting phrase ftoec. that "the Lord is on his side." of course, as the Bryanltes may say, even the Devil can cite Scripture; but the President's counter on the argu ments of the nonreslstance folk from Ezeklel xxxlll. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, is capital; if the "watchman warns" and the people heed not then their blood is on their own heads; but,' if the "watch man does not wurn," when he sees the sword about to fall, then he is re sponsible for the woes of the people. The modern analogies are easy, but it never occurred to Ezekicl to pic ture Bryan as a watchman, who not. only will not warn the people, but even tells them that the sword is a myth, and that they can go their ways In peace; a type elsewhere described in the Bible as the "blind leader of the blind" who both fall into the ditch! THE BIG EXPOSITION'S PROFITS With the ninth period of the Expo sition more than half over, officials are certain that Its completion wfll see net earnings of more than $2,000,000. R. 8. Durkee, controller, has submitted his monthly financial report to the di rectors. Jt covers the eighth period, which closed on October 3, and shows an earning of $742,725. The expendi tures for this period were $391,625, placing the net profits at $351,01*9.82 and bringing the total profits up to sl,- 265,704.95. Though the Income and profits for the eighth period were less than those of the sixth and seventh, the directors ex pressed satisfaction at the showing. As the August and September periods were expected to bring the greatest re ceipts, the directors feel no appre hension because of the slight falling off. Controller Durkee's statement says: "Although the Income for the eighth period was $106,399 less than the high water mark set in the seventh period, the operating costs were further re duced and the net profits for the period was $351,099. which Is the best showing of any period, with the exception of the one Immediately preceding. In which the effects of the tremendous Eastern travel were clearly shown. "All Of the debts of the Exposition were paid prior to the opening of this so that It has been possible to ■ilaoe all of the profits In special sink- In* funds drawing Interest. At the present rate of profit, there will be nearly $1,000,000 hi cash on hand at closing day. CUT MARKETING COSTS No food product is marketed so cheaply as the California citrus crop. Because of the businesslike organiza tion of 8,000 growers In the California fruit exchange, they pay only about 414 cents P»r packed box to distribute i and sell their crop to the jobbers of ! United States, Canada and foreign countries, or 1 2-3 per cent, of the de livered value of the fruit. Most fruit 'growers pay 10 per cent, commission for selling, .besides freight and cart- I age. This great difference, says Edwin C. Powell, the editor of Karm and Home, Is made possible only through co-operation rightly managed. The California fruit growers' ex-r change Is the largest and best organiz ed co-operative body In .America. It provides marketing facilities for 62 per i-ent. of thw State's total crop, worth L aomu S3U,UUO.OUU« NOVEMBER 11, 1915. the front is the power behind this phenomenal rise. This concern is pro ducing one hundred cars a week, and is making a net profit of $1,050 on each car. More contracts are_ re ported coming in all the time. A' rush order hajs Just been received for 200 trucks Of a new typo with a four wheel drive. Bach wheel is directly connected with the motor, so that the machine can turn in its own length— a distinct advantage in war. Undoubtedly one great benefit of the war boom to the American auto Industry is that the foreign buyers have taken all the old stock oft the manufacturers hands, and stimulated them to make new designs. France has ordered 350 cars from this firm, and England has let a standing contract for ten cars a week as long as the war lasts, the agree ment to. be cancelled on not less than | six weeks' notice. I When the Anglo-French loan was I negotiated it brought one Cleveland | firm an order for 1,000 cars. Another I concern capitalized at about $100,000,- [ 000, has orders for atyout $25,000,- 000 worth of trucks. Formerly, this I concern built a high-graie pleasure i oar. In order to encoufage It to go ! into the truck business, the allies j bought all the pleasure r'ars it had | on hand for the use of officers. I The prosperity among auto makers i is widespread, extending even to the smallest concerns. Nearly all of the large ones are making trucks for the allied armies, and fills has thrown [Continued on Page 13.] State From Day to Day) "Go to Heller," the tailor, is the , somewhat startling one-line reader that stares the Williamsport public in the face from the daily papers. The advertiser evidently believes that inasmuch as Providence had endow ed him with a name of such possi bilities, he would be foolish not to make capital of it. Henry 8. Brubaker of Lancaster, aged 80, prominent as a botanist, who hud done much work for leading col leges and the State authorities, Is dead. A pair of brass-rimmed spectacles that have been handed down through four generations are the property of Henry A. Meals, of York Springs. They served his great-grandfather until his death at the age of ninety, his grandfather until he was ninety two, and his father until he was eigh ty. Time alone will tell for how many more generations these faithful spectacles will do yeoman servffce. Rubber goods will probably be manufactured in an old pottery plant in New Castle, if the plans of sev eral enterprising young men of that vicinity materialize and their project can be carried out. Surrounded by seven daughters, one son, twenty-one grandchildren and eleven great-grnndchildren, Dan iel Billing, of Lytmville. celebrated his eightieth birthday' recently. All the neighbors were present, says the local paper, and enjoyed two birth day cakes on which were eighty light ed candles. < A widow in Shamokin has survived two husbands, both of whom met death in precisely the same way. Her second husband, John Lenker, was killed yesterday by being caught un der a fall of rock at Buck Ridge Col liery. Lena Baroni, aged 16, of Somerset, was electrocuted while climbing over a rail fence, her feet becoming en tangled in a broken telephone wire. Her ftster was knocked to the ground but not seriously injured. An aged Civil War veteran, who has passed the eighty-seventh mile stone, a shoemaker by trade, has just completed a little home for himself in Beaver Kalis, the entire construc tion work of which he did with his own-hands. "I built it to have me a home when X get old" was the way the interesting old soldier explained his actions. "DA BESTA FRAND" No keeok my dog! Ha! don a dare! ( tor Jus' so queeck you do, You Meester 'Merican, I swear I brack your face for you! Eh? Wat? Well, den, dat's alia rl ••t, But let me Carlo be. Escusa me for gat excite'; Com' look! I smila! See? I want be frand weeth youj eef dat You wanta be my frand, But Carlo ees lies' frand I gat Een all dees blgga land, An' he ees ttrsta 'Merican For com' w'en I am blue An' mak' me feela like man—> I tal eet all to you. —Fron» "Da Besta Frand." ; - A. DAuXi j Atoning (Eljat Pennsylvania farmers are being pes tered by the June bug, although It Is the middle of November, and the ravages are causing many of the grain fields to be damaged. The pest is the larVa of the bug which flies about in early summer and bumps its head against electric lights and is to be found clinging to grape vines, shrub bery and fruit trees. Reports received by Dr. H. A. Surface, the State zoolo gist, are that the larva, which is tile familiar white grub used for late sum mer and fall fishing, has ruined many acres, eating out the roots of the grass and plants. In a number of places the griib has been reported as having devastated lawns and golf links and has also appeared on some baseball fields, apparently preferring cultivated places, alt hough some reports are that it has shown no objection to tearing out grain fields and market gardens. The best advice that is being given is to plough up the ground this fall so that the grubs may be killed by the frost or eat on. The pests, however, are hard to reach, as they burrow into the earth, and ploughing has to be deep. It is estimated that the pest has caused thousands of dollahs' loss and experi ments are being made with chemicals and sprays In half a dozen places to determine the best means to extermi nate it. • • • The stringent State law against per mitting shipment of game for sale in markets is responsible for the very small number of rabbits exposed for sale in the markets in the cities. Ordi narily hundreds of rabbits are avail able for purchase, but this year, owing to the strictness with which the law Is being enforced, the cottontails are hard to get except from farmers who shot them. The market hunter, who was the bane of the sportsman, has been put out of business In quite a few localities and wardens are turning up men who have been in the habit oL' shooting their limit of game in some counties and then moving on to the next. » » • "Don't let anybody charge you high prices for turkeys this year and don't let anybody tell you they are scarce," said a man who has just returned from a hunting trip through Perry county. "I never saw so many turkeys in that vicinity as at present," he continued. "Every farm from Newport to a point well beyond New Germantown has its flock and many of them are very large. The farmers know this and are hold ing the supply in order to keep prices up. Many of "them refuse to sell at this time, hoping for higher prices later, but this very holding back of the supply is going to have the effect of cheaper turkeys at Thanksgiving and Christmas." Now and then the members of tlio Dauphin County Poor Board are called upon to render assistance in divers form and to divers persons. The latest. Job one of the members was called upon to do WBS the administering of an oath to a wayfarer who wanted to "swear off drinking" for another year. He came into the office the other day and asked Poor Director C. L. Boyer whether he knew of anybody who could take such an oath. Mr. Boyor said that the law allowed any of ihe members of the poor board to act as notaries in any matters that pertain to matters affecting the work of the poor board. Thus another habitue "swore off." • • • Dr. P. P. Claxton, the United States Commissioner of Education, who lias been here this week to address fh<* teachers, is an old friend of Governor Brumbaugh and State educational au thorities. Dr. Claxton has spoken hero UDon a number of occasions. WELL KNOVN PEOPLE —Bishop Regis Canevln dedicated the new Catholic church at Ford City. —Frank B. Willis, Governor of Ohio, a well-known man to many tea,chers, may run for re-election. —W. A. Kessler, of Homestead, was host to Western Pennsylvania post masters. —Herbert D. Brenon, of Johnstown, who was on the stage for a time, has fallen heir to a fortune left by an uncle In Dublin. —Captain J. W. Smith, of Mead ville, has returned from an extended trip to southern States. —Major Everett Warren, the Scran ton lawyer, has been making strong speeches on prepare'dness. —A. J. Murrle, of the Carnegie Mu seum. is home from his long trip to Labrador with many specimens. —C. A. Buck, vice-president, of the Bethlehem Steel Company, has re turned from Inspection trips to the Schwab pre mines in Chill. DO YOU KNOW That lfarrlsbtirg engines are being used in Canadian |H>wer plants? HISTORIC HARRISBURG Some noted taverns used to be located along the wharves on Front street. IN HARRISBURG FIFTY j YEARS AGO TO-DAY j [From the Telegraph, Nov. 11, 1865] Funeral of George Ijoy The funeral of George Loy, who was killed yesterday in the yards of the Pennsylvania railroad, will bo held to-morrow morning at 10 o'clock. It will be attended by mem bers of the Friendship Fire Company and Company G, Fifty-fifth Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers. Sixth Regiment leaves The Sixth Regiment of the Hancock Corps received orders to leave here this morning enroute for Washing ton. Governor Names Day of Thanks Thursday, December 7 was chosen as the day for thanksgiving observ ance in this State, to correspond with the date set by President Johnson. »■ i The Newspaper Truman A. De Weese, a well- known business builder, says: ■ "Get a copy of the leading paper of your town of twenty years ago and compare It with to-dny's edition of the same paper. "You may not detect any re markable Improvement In the handling of the editorial or news matter. "The thing that will Impress you most Is the quantity and quality of the advertising. "The paper Is vibrant with In tense merchandising activity. "There is freshness, timeliness and originality In the advertis ing. "The copy has 'news' Interest. "There Is a striking departure from the hackneyed, stereotyped statements of other days. "There Is an absence of ex travagant claims and / Invidious comparisons. "The advertising is a pleas ing mixture of Store news and honest salesmanship." J. . ■■ 1 . 1 '