VOlV 01 - LXVIII ... X°' 22,740.
THE ATLANTIC FLEET AS IT SALUTED THE PRESIDENT UPON ENTERING HAMPTON ROADS MONDAY MORNING.
The Connecticut leading the hattleshlps, was firing its guns as the photograph was taken. Rnln was falling at the time. Following the flagship In the order named are the Kansas, the Minnesota, the Vermont, the Georgia and the Nebraska.
The C_nnoct;rut leading th* 'hnttJesbips, was firing its puns cs rlio photocraph -n-.Ts taken. Rain wns falling at the time. Following the flagship In the order narafa are me Kansas, me bbmhi i"« teimu
"" [Copyright by the Pictorial News Company.]
STREET HAS BAD DA
WORST SETBACK SINCE
THE PANIC OF 1907.
Bad Outlook for Steel and Copper
and Heavy Foreign Selling
Depressed General List.
The stock market yesterday suffered a break
which surpassed In severity that of any occa
sion since the panic days of October, 1907, and
closed at about the bottom, with the feeling
MgMy nervous and semi-panicky.
At the outset the decline reflected principally
the chaotic condition in the steel industry and
the unfavorable outlook for copper, the quoted
price of which is day by day being lowered;
and the weakest issues in the early trading were
United States Steel common and Amalgamated
Copper, both of which opened more than a
point under Saturday's last figures. London was
a heavy seller of the Pt<f-1 stocks and various
international railroad issues, and the selling for
foreign account had a depressing effect on the
general list.
In the second hour there was a moderate rally,
but around noon the market assumed a state of
nervous expectancy, in view of the probable
handing down of a decision by the Supreme
Court of the United States in the railroad "com
modities clause** case, and a little later an an
nouncement was sent out that the decision had
been handed down and that it was adverse to
the railroads, affirming the constitutionality of
the clause. The report was speedily contradict
ed, but an onslaught had begun on the "coal
stocks." with Reading the chief point of attack,
and the market crumbled rapidly.
Later there were one or two partial rallies.
on covering of shorts, but In the last half hour
the selling became more Insistent than at any
previous time In the day, and the close showed
many net declines of from 2 to 5 points, the
largest loss being in Reading. 10*4 points.
Total sales were nearly 1.540.000 shares, the
largest since the height of the bull market last
fall; and on the. Consolidated Stock Exchange
the transactions were the heaviest ever re
corded.
In the bond department of the Stock Exchange
the pales were also very heavy, aggregating
$7,400,000 par value, the principal activity being
In United States sinking fund bonds. Union
Pacific convertible 4s, and Wabash refund : 4s,
which lost 2*4 points.
On the break In the stock market many in
sufficiently margined accounts were wiped out,
as always occurs on such a day as yesterday,
and much selling was done by the pools In vari
ous issues, which found It necessary to lighten
their loads. In many stocks support appeared
to have been entirely withdrawn, the downward
general trend being so strong as to make the
idea of successfully opposing it futile. Gloom
Fettled over the Street, and predictions of
"worse to come" were many, but the collapse of
prices was so violent that a rally may soon be
expected.
United States Steel common, which a week
ago yesterday sold at 53. closed yesterday at
41%, a net loss for the day of 4% points, and the
preferred, which last Tuesday was selling at
114. closed at 107. 2% points lower than on Sat
urday. The sales of the common reached enor
mous proportions, aggregating about 875.00Q
chares, of which a considerable part represented
■ liquidation. Amalgamated Copper lost 4% points
on the day. and American Smelting and Refin
ing 4 points, while. Republic Iron and Steel pre
ferred, on sales very large for that issue, closed
Sfc points down.
' It the railroad list the losses were correspond
gfely severe. Of the six roads named as de
fendants In the action on which the Supreme
Court's decision was expected yesterday, Penn
sylvania suffered a net decline of 2% points,
Heading 10^. Delaware & Hudson G\i, Central I
of New Jersey, on extremely small sales, 10 j
points, and L<ehlgh Valley, traded in on the j
. Philadelphia Exchange, 2 points. There were j
co transactions in Delaware, Lackawanna & ',
Western. I \ j
Southern Pacific was relatively firm, probably •
bK-huse of the Impending convertible bond issue, .
j losing only 214 points, but Union Pacific de- j
! clined 3* points. Baltimore & Ohio 4%. St. Paul ,
8%. Illinois Central 4%. New York Central 4%. j
its weakness being perhaps due in part to the I
court decision in the sugar rebate "case, and in '•
the Hill group Great Northern declined 4^ '
points and northern Pacific 3 points. The j
Gcsl£ Ktocka fared not leas badly. Denver & .
. Hip Grande common losing 4% points and the ]
preferred 3%, Missouri Pacific and Texas & Pa- j
etflc 3 each, Wabash 2% and Wabash preferred
C points. Chesapeake & Ohio, the new Hawley
read, in which a strong pool is said to be in- •
ttrested, lost 4M. points, Kansas City Southern. I
Louisville & Nashville and Atchison each 2*£ j
and Erie 2%. Brooklyn Rapid Transit, after j
. having been advanced nearly a point above Sat- |
urday's dose, ended the day at a net loss of 2
' points, while Third Avenue lost 4 points and
1 Interborough-Metropolltan preferred 3.
m* TO CALIFORNIA AND PACIFIC COAST
, via \V>et Hiiore it. R.. S. r <3 vui It V. Central, Feb. 28
«• April 23. .*Phen« --1U Madison.— Advt.
Tzz^ttisrsz* xew-york, Wednesday, February 2±. 1909— fourteen pages.
OIL PANEL QUASHED
TOO MANY FARMERS OX IT,
SAYS JUDGE.
Chicago Court Wants Business Men.
on Jury in Standard Retrial —
Case Delayed.
Chicago, Feb. 23— The retrial of the Standard
Oil Company of Indiana was unexpectedly de
layed to-day, when Judge Anderson quashod the
panel of 190 veniremen because- of what he con
sidered the singularly large proportion of farm
er* thereon.
It was a so-called "farmers' " jury which
brought in the verdict making Judge Landis's
fine of ?2n,240.0(V> in the original case possible,
and John S. Miller, of the defence, was prompt
in calling th" Courfs attention to the fact that
the pane! present for the new trial contained
only three Chicagoans, although 60 per rent of
the population within the Jurisdiction of the
court lives in Cook County.
"It looks like design, or If not design, it looks
like a strange coincidence." commented Judga
Anderson, whereupon T. C. McMillan and R. C
Jones, the jury commissioners, insisted with
vigor that the latter was the case, that the panel
had been drawn exactly as In other cases. This
the rourt admitted later to be a fact.
District Attorney Sims and his special as
sistant, James H. Wllkerson. quoted authorities
to show that all a defendant can legally claim is
a fair, honest and intelligent jury to try his
case. Mr. Wilkerson declared that the jury did
not need to represent every portion of a judicial
district- I"e said there was no statute to compel
the jury commission to take geography or occu
pation into consideration.
"I don't want to start In with this hearing
feeling that there is something unfair," an
swered the Court. "We ought to start fair and
keep fair. I think this panel ought to be set
aside. I will instruct the jury commission to
put In 150 names of men, a good proportion of
whom shall be good business men from Chicago
arid Cook County. It so happens that this case
Is tried in a district composed of an enormous
commercial city and several rural counties. The
country may have purer air. a higher moral
standard and greater intelligence than the city,
but that Is an open question. However. I am
not going outside the issue when I gay that if
th«» jury were composed partly of business men
who would realize a great industrial and com
mercial phase of the case, a more satisfactory
and just verdict may be reached
On motion of Mr. Miller Judge Anderson said
he would hear arguments of counsel to-morrow
as to whether shipments or settlements of
freight charges constitute the offence. The gov
ernment will contend that each shipment of oil
on which an alleged rebate was paid forms a
separate violation of the law. Under this con
struction of the law It would be possible to fine
the defendant, if found guilty, a maximum of
$10,000,000. There were, it is charged, thirty-six
settlements of freight charges on these ship
ments. Accepting: the latter view, a maximum
fine of $720,000 is possible.
The jury commission was ordered to produce
the new panel on Thursday.
RAILS AT CUT RATES.
Independent Manufacturers Confer
in Pittsburg.
[By Telegraph to The Tribune. J
Pittsburg. Feb. 23.— The Pittsburg & Lake Erie
Railroad closed a deal with the Carnegie Steel
Company late this afternoen for 9,000 tons of 100
pound steel rail*. It is reported in Pittsburg that
the price was shaded, possibly to $25 a ton, but
this cannot be verified.
There were several conferences here to-day be
tween th« ■ independent steel interests. President
Wallace Rowe of the Pittsburg Steel Company
came from the South by request and took part in
the conferences. What was done has not been
made public, but it was said that the Pittsburg
Steel Company, the Bethlehem Steel Company, the
Jones A Laughlin interests and the Lackawanna
have held meetings for the purpose of combining
against the Steel Corporation.
Several committee* of workmen called on em
ployers to-day to aek something about wage re
ductions, but they got no satisfaction.
GARY OFFERS STEEL STOCK AS BAIL.
Flushing Magistrate Refuses This and Four
Automobiles Are Substituted.
Ex-Judge Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board
of tie Called State* Steel Corporation, offered a
block of Steel stock yesterday as bail for his
chauffeur. Curt Schmidt, held in the Flushing police
court yesterday for speeding.
Mr. Gary's automobile was stopped in Hillside
avenue, HolHs. on Sunday evening, and Mr. Gary
put up $100 in cash- for Schmidt's appearance. He
give his own name as Owen J. Garety, of So. 1
Went 70th street. Manhattan. Yesterday he asked
Magistrate Connolly to continue the cash baiL
When this was refused, he made known his Identity
end Rave his address as the Waldorf-Astoria.
The magistrate refused to accept the block of
«:t«v»l stock m security, and ex-Judge Gary sub
stituted four autorrobilcs valued at $3"),000.
I\. HOURS QUICKEST TO FLORIDA EAST
COAST points. 2:10 P. M.. via Perm, and Atlantic
Coo.t Lto.-8.-B. 1218 B way— Advt.
, . •- • .
-A NAVY WIDOW."
"Waiting for her ship to come in." in front of the Hotel Chamber!* at Old Point Comfort.
[Copyright by the Pictorial Nawa Co.l . ,
BIDDLE-O'BRIEN BOUT.
Xot Viewed as a Great Exhibition
in Philadelphia.
[By THetraph to Thf Tribune. 1
Philadelphia. Feb. 23.— Anthony J Drexel Bid
d!e. the millionaire athlete, and "Philadelphia
Jack' 1 O'Brien, the middleweight pugilist, in a
six-round bout were the features to-night -f ;i
novel entertainment for Philadelphia's w
at the Philadelphia Athletic Club. Desp '•■ .1
pouring rain the club was crowded with maie
and female representatives of local society, who
keenly enjoyed boxing bouts between a nun her
of professional pugilists, a water polo gam",
swimming, wrestling and kindred sports. The
chief attraction, however, was the Fi Idle-
O'Brien bout, for which both had been training.
The two boxers got the "glad hand" when
they climbed into the ring, but their sosoeqaent
exhibition was anything but satisfying to fol
lowers of the boxing game. There was «Ore
scampering around than boxing, and th nigh
they went five rounds to what might hav.- been
called a draw the rounds hardly lasted ■ min
ute ea<-h. and the bell cut them short when they
attempted a brotherly mix-up.
O'Brien apparently never tried. to hind f-ti h!3
opponent, and beyond a couple of taps on the
nose was content to block all of Riddle's l'-ads.
The latter worked hard to get to Jack, but
the professional was far too clever, and had he
been so disposed might have walloi*-d hi* op
ponent before the latter's friends.
TORNADO KILLS 13.
Score Injured When Entire Tozcn
Is Demolished.
Marked Tree, Ark.. Feb. 23.— Thirteen persons
were killed, more than a score w^re injured and
every building except two in Fisher. Ark., was
wrecked to-day by a tornado. Wire communi
cation with the devastated area is pmstrutt-.1.
and Information was received by messeng.-r.
22 LAWYERS IN $300 WILL CONTEST
Nephew Attacks Act of Papal Marquis Percy
de la Roche "On Principle."
FMladelphla. Feb.' 23.— Twenty-two lawyers, rep
repent.ing the various interests Involved, appeared
to-day before Charles Irwin. Register of Wil!s of
this city, in a will contest involving an annuity of
$300. The question Involved is whether a codicil
in the will of Marquis Perry de la Roche, n. for
mer Philadelphia^, who was a housenold chamber
lain to Pope Leo XIII. -giving his nephew. Clauds
de la. Roche, of Philadelphia, an annuity of 1300.
should stand. On his deathbed Marquis de la
Roche revoked the codicil and the nephew !>»k.-i:i
the contest on the ground of undue Influence
The nephew has announced that he instituted the
contest "on principle." Several more hearings will
be held .before a decision is reached. The- estate
is valued at HOO.OOO and was given almost entirely
to Philadelphia institutions:
HAAN'S RESTAURANT. PARK ROW B'LDG.
For ladies downtown. la»"atoeon. Dinner. Slussc
— Advt
PATTEN BUMPS WHEAT.
New Record for May Delivery—
Heavy Buyer of July.
\ P.v T»!»*raph to Th» Tribune.]
Chicago. Feb. 23.— New and sensational feat
ures developed in the Chicago wheat trade to
day. Anything important in that market. it
seems, must be conected with Patten in some
way The bull trader was an Important consid
eration during the morning as he branched out
and became a heavy buyer of July wheat. ,
The excitement was greater than before in tha.
May wheat, which had an advance to $1 16 on
first trades, broke to $1 15% under heavy selling
by a couple of large brokerage firms, and then
gained strength, as it has after every such
Flump at late, going higher* than before to
$1 16%. Patten, selling at that figure, prevented
the quotation of $1 17 going out. There was a
natural reaction later of %c.
CRETIC STUCK OX LEDGE.
Liner Pulled Off After 1,000 Pas
sengers Had Had Scare.
Boston, Feb. 24.— After floundering in the mud
off Fort Warren on George's Island, in the outer
harbor, the White Star steamer Oretie, Inward
bound, with nearly one thousand passengers
from Mediterranean ports on board, brought up
on Centurion Ledge, half a mile east of the
fort. at 11:90 o'clock last night, and was appar
ently in a dangerous position, hut tugs pulled
her into deep .water two hours later and towed
her to Quarantine. The steamer was not badly
damaged.
CANADA MAY LOSE LAND.
Boundary Treaty Seems to (rive
1,000 Square Miles to United States.
Ottawa. Feb. 28. — Some alarm was created in
the Canadian Parliament to-day t>V a member
calling attention to the fact that if the copy of
the recent boundary tMaty with the I'niU-d
States furnished to the Canadian Parliament is
correct. Hunter Island, in the PtdgCOn River
district, containing about a thousand square
mfles. has been lost to Canada, find is now the
property of the T'nited States. In the Ashbur
ton treaty the island was conveyed to Canada
through the statement that the boundary line
shall not intersect the island. The copy of the
recent Washington treaty leaves out the word
"not."
Dr. King, Canada's representative on the
boundary commission, said to-night that the
Ashburt >n line had been followed The original
of the treaty will have to be consulted before
this point is settled.
ONLY COMPLETE FLORIDA TRAIN
carrying both club car and • SEA
BOAHI- FLORIDA LTD. Quickest train to St.
AußU^tino. witli through cars to Palm Beach, Mi
ami. Knight a Key. Inci. 1183 B'way.— Advt.
HEBKICKSEESMR.TAFT
NO PLACE IN CABINET
FOR EX-GOVERNOR.
President-elect Guest of Brother for
Rest of Week— To Pick Secretary
of Treasury While Here.
Presldf-nt-elect William Howard Taft BsM
last night at the home of his brother. Henry W.
Tafr, N ■ 36 West 4Mh street, that he expected
before !i riving the city on Saturday to choose a
Secretary of the Treasury.
"All I can say about it to-night is that H
good guess I will fill the place while here."
said Judge Taft.
"Will you say that you have already picked
the man and are merely waiting for him to ac
cept the office?" was asked.
"No," said Mr. Tnft, "I have not decif!
the man."
Mr. Taft arrived in this city shortly after
noon yesterday and went direct to the home of
his brother, where he will remain until Satur
day morning. Mrs. Taft remained in Philadel
phia. In the President-elect's party was John
L. Cadwalader, a law partner of Henry W. Taft;
Chief Flynn of the Secret Service and five de
tectives and Mr. Taft's two secretaries.
At the Pennsylvania ferry entrance in Jersey
City the two automobiles carrying the party
were held up until a long line of milk, cement,
beer, coal and baggage wagons filled the ferry
boat. leaving just room for the two cars on the
end of the boat. Mr. Taft remained in the au
tomobile all the way across to 23d street.
At the -3d street ferry terminal many recog
nized the President-elect, and a hearty cheer
was given. Mr. Taft. accompanied by one of
his secretaries, was seated in one of the puto
mobOea A Secret Service detective was In the
seat with the chauffeur. The other detectives
got into the second machine, and the party was
driven through 2.'id street to Fifth avenue, and
thence to the home of Henry W. Taft. Mr. Cad
walader went to his office in Wall street.
On Friday night Mr. Taft will attend the
Union League Club dinner for Senator-elect
Root Between now and then he will confer
with those with whom he has -made appoint
ments and write two or three magazine articles.
A-= noted elsewhere. Mr. Taft addressed last
night at Carnegie Hall a Hampton Institute
meeting. Before going to the meeting he dined
with William Jay Schieffelin. Mr. SchiefTelin la
much interested in educational work among the
negroes of the South.
Th" guests at the dinner were Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence H. Mackay. ex-Judge Henry F. How
lnnd. Or and Mrs. Lewis A. Coffin. Mrs. Shepard.
Mr. and Mrs* Duncan. Dr. Lewis F. Frisseil,
Magistrate Frederic Kernochan. Mrs* William
H Schleffelin, mother of the host; Mr. and Mrs.
fiarknen and Air and Mrs. Theodore M. Taft i
Among Mr. Taft's callers yesterday afternoon
vi-ere William L. Ward, the New York member
of the Republican National Committee; Peter
Jay. banker; Booker T. Washington. ex-Gov
ernor Myron T. Herrick. of Ohio, and T. St.
John Gaffney. Mr. Herrick's presence at the
house prompted tii<» inference that he was to
b« the new Secretary of the Treasury. Mr
disposed Of that assumption by authorizing the
following statement:
At the invitation of the President-elect. Gov
ernor Herri, k called on Mr. Taft to-day. Mr.
Tift authorized the statement that the mention
ft Mr Herrlck for the portfolio of the Treasury,
as if he had been a candidate, did him gre H t
injustice, because Mr. Herrick wrote Mr. Taft
as e'irly as December last to say. that his busi
ness engagements were such as to prevent his
ince Of a place in the Cabinet.
Mr Herrick said that he had nothing to add to
this statement The elimination or" Mr Herrick,
at his own request, would seem to put Franklin
MacVeagh, of Chicago, in the lead for the plac*.
Mr. Taft at first expected to have S-
KtiAx call on him here, but a later decision is
that the Senator will remain in Washington.
captain Lantry. of the East ">lst street station,
under orders from Chief Inspector Schmitt
berger. sent two uniformed policemen to stand
guard in front Of the home of Henry W. Taft
during the stay of the President-el<-t.
MACVEAGH MA T GET POST.
Seems Likely To Be Taft's Choice
for Treasury Portfolio.
[Fr">m Th" Trthuno Bun>au. ]
Washington. Feh. 23.— It was learned here to-day
that thp President-elect hnd three Chicago burl
ness men under consideration for Secremry of the
Treasury, and the Indications are to-night that
Franklin MacVeagh. of Chicago, will r>^ his choice.
Mr. MacVeagh Is the head of the large mercantile
houfe of Franklin MacVeagh & Co., wholesale
pneers and manufacturers of canned and pre
served fruits, etc. He Is a brother of Wayne
MacVeagh. who was Ambassador to Italy from
1533 to 1897, and later chief counsel for the United
States rn the Venezuelan arbitration. Mr. Mar
Veagh has been a Democrat, but it Is understood
has never supported Mr. Bryan. He was a can
didate for Senator in 1894, being nominated by the
Democrats, but was defeat* d.
Should Mr. MacVeagh determine not to accept
the appointment Mr. Taft will probably. It Is said
here, choose one of the other Chicagoans under
consideratiou.
PRICE THREE CENTS.
EDUCATE THE NEGROES
ONLY SOLUTION OF PROB
LEM, SAYS MR. TAFT. v
President-elect, While 'Admitting^
Existence of Race Prejudice, Ridi
cules Idea of Expatriation.
President-elect Taft spoke last night in Car-»
negie Hall at a public meeting in the i interest of!
negn industrial education in the South as rep-«,
resented by Hampton Institute. In spite of tha,
weather the large hall was filled with an audi- 1
ence representative of the best citizenship of|
New York. It was the annual meeting held*
under the auspices of the Armstrong Associa- 1
tion, which in alternate years appeals for fund*
for Hampton and Tuskegee Institutes. .
Th- President-elect was exceedingly happy In»
j his presentation of the negro problem. He was4
in good voice and spirits, and several times
laughed merrily, once at a joke on himself told;
by Booker T. Washington, the negro educator.
Declaring he h? 1 no sympathy with those who
held that the black and white races could not
live together. Mr. Taft said that the negroes
were here, and the problem would have to bo
and could be solved.
Admitting that rac. prejudice existed, Mr.
Tait said the best way to work out this part of {
the problem was to make it to the advantage of '
both races not to have any such feeling hom
per them in living side by side. He did not be
lieve, he said, in too many crutches for men
who were trying to walk, but thought that If
the negro was taught how to use his arai3 and
legs an.l brain he would take advantage of th«
opportunity offered to him and work out his own
problem.
It was difficult. Mr. Taft said, to speak la
parliamentary language of the advocacy of tho
doctrine that we ought to keep the negro in ig
norance. He said that such institution* as
Hampton and Tuskegee were helping to solva
the problem of the negro.
Mr. Taft said he believed in competition in
labor, an! for that reason thought it would ba'
to the advantage of the negro if more emigrated
to the South.
TELLS STORY ON PRESIDENT-ELECT. *
Mr. Washington, who spoke first, told of an
alleged experience of Mr. Taft on a Southern
plantation recently. The owner told the "Auntie""'
who did the cooking that she must feel highly
honored to prepare a meal for Mr. Taft^
"Auntie" replied that she never heard of tha
••g~'rr.Hn." "But." said the host of the President-^
elect, "you must certainly have heard of his
great service to the country, of his wonderful
knowledge of international affairs and of his
' ability as a public servant" This did not seen*
to impress "Auntie" in the least, but she said.
I finally. "He certainly does look like a man wbs
| has been used to his three meals a day."
; One of the most Interesting features of th«
; evening was the drawing up of a curtain, re
'[ vealing on the back of the stage twenty-seven
pupils of Hampton, engaged in the trade and
arts taught there. They were doing everything
from cabinet making and laying a brick vail
to steam fitting, Including building a wagon,
blacksmithy. chair caning, sign painting and
printing. This surprise brought rounds of
cheers from the audience.
In introducing the President-elect Bishop
, Greer said that no man had studied the problems
of race and class adjustment, of which th«
negro question was one more than had the Pres
ident. The audience rose to greet Mr. Taft wlta
cheers.
MR TAFT'S SPEECH.
The President-elect said:
We have ten millions of negroes in the United
States, and of that ten millions. I suppose nina
millions live in th.- Southern states. Now. If
you read the Congressional Record — I remember
one -distinguished Senator wanted to compel th«
public to read it — but there is a great deal that
is very useful and learned in it — there is a great
deal you can sympathize with in it. a great deal
of much truth and a great deal of humor. That
is. it awakens your humor, sometimes in sym
pathy and sometimes at it.
Now. if you study the Congressional Record
you will see thai there are some statesmen that
say that it Is impossible for the negro and the
whit;* races to live together. That the solution
Is beyond the. hope of human effort. Well, the
ten millions are here, and what are you going to
do about it?
There are some who propose that we should
move them bodily owl of the country; they do
not say where, they do not say how. and they
do not say when, but out of the country they are
to go. And when there is an attempt to move
five hundred of them out of the state in which
it .is said their relations to the whites are most
inharmonious, you have a riot the minute you
propose to move them, on th* part of and by the
very. men with whom they cannot live.
It seems to me that that is th« reductio ad
absurdum with reference to a suggestion that
expatriation is a solution of this question. The
solemn, scientific statement of a man that the
r.ir»-; cannot live together, even though it ap
pear in the Congressional Record, ought not to
occupy our minds for a moment, because they
are living toother, and they have lived to
gether for over a hundred years. Now. the
question is whether we or they, or all of as
together, can make that living together better
for both races. . It is a problem that is set be
fore us. and it does not help us to say that you
i : ■ :—: — - — ~-t ■
. Genuine crystal pebble eyeglasses, the cool kind
that never mist, at Spencer's, now 31 Maiden Laos.
— Ativt.