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4 THE KOCK ISLAND AHGTJS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 1910. THE ARGUS. Published Dally and Weekly at 113 Second avenue. Rock Island. HL tEn tered at the postofflce as second-class Batter.) BY THE J. W. POTTER CO. TKRMR Dally. 10 cents per week. tWeekly, $1 per year In advance. All communication of argumentative lharacter. political or religious, must nave real name attached for publica tion. No such articles will be printed ever fictitious signature, Correspondence solicited from every township in Rock Island county. tractl as Thursday, August 11, 1910. ANNOUNCEMENT. I hereby announce myself as a can didate for the democratic nomination for minority representative in the Thirty-third senatorial district, and ask the support of all democrats who deem me worthy. J. S. SLOAN. Chicago, the New York Tribune declares, is actually urging its claims to the National Brewers' congress on the ground that its torn up streets will "promote the hop industry." One result of the tennis cabinet meeting at Oyster Bay yesterday will, it is believed, be the launching of Loeb's boom for governor of the Em pire Btata. And Teddy is out of pol itics. - Senator Aldrich, it is said, plans to stump the west in a campaign of defense of he tariff measure, in which he "collaborated with Cannon and Payne. Speed the Rhode Islander on his journey. There is no conspicuous personal leadership in Illinois in the cause of political reform as there is in Iowa, Kansas, Wisconsin and some other Etates. Illinois is sadly lacking in great men in these "piping times" of .demand for them. A man milliner just returned from Europe announces that women's hats are going to be smaller. uis leads The Providence Journal to remark that it hopes the mattress stuffing which women put unir the hats-j will soon become a drug in the mar ket. Answering the Quincy Whig's in quiry, why a legislature including in its membership over 60 lawyers, pass es so many unconstitutional laws, the New York Tribune suggests that the lawyers couldn't make a living if it were not for unconstitutional laws. The Tribune evidently doesn't think much of lawyers as legislators. The announcement by a (Serman authority that more than 1.100,000 tons of new shipping are building in Great Britain, against only 35,000 tons in Germany, appears to add con firmation to the opinion which was expressed by an often quoted writer many "years ago to the effect that Britannia rules the waves. Preaching vs. Editing. Conneaut News-Herald: Editing a newspaper in some respects is a good dtal like preaching the gospel truth must be presented in the form of gen eralities or some fellow will ge hit .and howl. Few persons like truth, eren in homeopathic doses, if it hits them. But, while preachers and edit ors are criticised for what they do" say, no one thinks of giving them credit for what they do not say. Yet what they keep for themselves constitutes the major portion of what they know about people. Very many people harbor the heller that newspapers are eaaer to nublish derogatory things. It's a mistake. There isn't a newspaper that could not spring a sensation in the commun ity at any time by merely telling what It knows. There is not a newspaper that does not keep under the lock of secrecy scores of derogatory things which never meet the public eye or rf ach the public ear. Deciding what not to print is the most troublesome rart of newspaper work. ' How many good stories are sup pressed of innocent relatives and for (he public good nobody outside a news paper office has any idea of. In some instances he who files into a passion because a newspaper prints something about him which he consid ered uncomplimentary has every rea son to feel profoundly grateful to the newspaper for publishing so little of what he knows about him. ' And oft times the loudest bluffer is the most vunerable to attack. A big noise is often a device employed to 'cover trepi dation. ' Newspapers put up with more bluff ing than any other agency would en dure. It Is not because they lack courage; It is because they are unwill ing to use their power to destroy or rain unless the interests of society lmparatively demand it. It might be well for some people to reflect upon these truths and in silent giatitude accept mild admonition, lest worse befall them. Death of a Veteran Journalist. Col. Harvey W. Scott, editor of the Tortland Oregonian, and a member of the board of directors of the Assoclat Press, died after an operation Sun day night in the Johns Hopkins hospi tal at Baltimore. Col. Scott was 72 y( ars old. He was one of the best known news paper men in the country, and cer tainly one of the ablest. The editorials in the Portland Oregonian were gen erally marked by unusual fullness of it formation and directness and clear ness of sttyle. on the subject treated fcy Mr. Scott. The editorials attracted attention and were widely quoted throughout the United States. Mr. Scott was In continuous editorial work rr.any years and he was a man whose services to his party were surpassed by no other man on the Pacific coast. He wa3 born in Tazewell county, Illinois. He went to the Pacific coast when he was only a boy and there jo:ned a military company and fought Indians along Puget Sound. He saved his earnings, attended school, and after a while went to work on the Oregonian. which was then a small paper in a comparatively small town. Later be became the principal owner of that newspaper, which was en larged, improved and made one of the n est able newspapers in the country and the most influential of any In the northwest. Mr. Scott was always a republican. He commanded the respect not only o his own party, but of men of all parties, notwithstanding he was a good deal of a partisan and sometimes showed the partisan spirit in a manner that was rather provoking to his politi cal opponents. But he was honest and honorable, and such a man Is sure to win. confidence, even though he some times allows hl3 zeal to get the better of his judgment. As Mr. Watterson Sees It. The republican Insurgents who "make the tariff the center-piece around which they rally and call the braves to battle, remind an old stager" Henry Watterson othp Iulsville .Courier-Journal ''of the man who first discovered that water runs down h'll. As little as the boy learning his multiplication table conceives the complications of the higher mathe matics do they conceive the mystifica tions of the tariff. They are today where the pathfinders of tariff reform were forty years ago." Mr. Watterson can find nothing in politics "more anomolous than tl.e attitude of the farmer vote in the northwest toward the nro- otive system since the end of the sectional war. The high duties of 1S61 were war duties, to be repealed when the exigencies of war had passed. The war over live republican leaders set out to reform the tariff. "They had freed the nigger and they were going to free the trade." The innuenee of the Cobden club was felt so strongly here that Allison and Gar field became members of it. But the problem from that to 1880 was reconstruction, and privilege worked under cover, while national attention was on the south, to screw" up the tariff schedules. And the farmers of the northwest intent upon securing the fruits of victory, "voted '.s they shot," the while strengthening the hands rnd feathering the nests of the greedy and . fattening Plunder bund. So it went from year to year,- until millionaires were made and their money pouring into the campaign fund silenced the conscience of the paity and the free trade south keeping the northwest convinced that It was right In opposing what the south favored. Then came the Wil son tariff, undoing the work of thirty years of education, and frittering away the fruits of victory. "Now," to quote Mr. Watterson "comes the queer situation in Iowa and Kansas. For the first time through their own leaders, that through Dolliver and Cummins, Bris tcw and Murdock and Poindexter, the farmers of the great northwest, and the far-away Pacific are beginning to realize something of what 'has been done to them. But those leaders touch the real question so gingerly tliat they do not much threaten the protective system. If the protection ists were wise, they would adjust themselves to the new conditions and accept the proposed reform, under re pstlican auspices. Thieves, however, are never wise. The rubber barons, swollen with pelf and pride, intrenched in their privileges legally to levy tribute, sure of their footing at Wash ington, support Aldrich and Cannon rnd repudiate Dolliver and Cummins, Bristow, Poindexter and Murdock. L;ke the old slave aristocrats of . the south, they yield nothinig. They know their advantages and propose to stand pat upon it. "That advantage Is the vastness of tlie protective system, the mystifica tion of the schedules and classifica tions, the impossible complications of he tariff. "This tariff is a feudal castle, girt by massive walls and moats wide and deep outside, constructed within upon a system of corridors and crossways, dt fended by rifle-pits and masked bat teries, so that in case the outer works be carried the besieging force will find itself when it has passed the ex ternal barriers entombed In a laby rinth and at the mercy of the be sieged. "It was thus that the Cleveland ad ministration, induced to cross the drawbridge and to come Inside the wells in other words to recognize thn schedules, and classifications, to tackle the masked batteries and rifle- pits, to assist the mystifications and complications of the robber castle, instead of blowing it up with dyna mite was cruelly slaughtered. Just as the new school of reformers will be slaughtered unless they pursue a dif ferent method of warfare. All the revenue we need to get through the crstom-houses may be derived, from a simple scale of revenue duties not to exceed twenty-five of thirty items, rralnly of foreign production, for Im port. Under such a system every voter will distinctly know on what he pays taxes and precisely how he Is taxed. The robber barons could not hide behind their schedules and classi fications to pick consumers off as from rifle-pits and masked batteries, the poor devils Ignorant where the shots come from and by whom ' they - are fired. In other words, such a measure would force the robbers out Into the oxen.. - ' "Current events in Iowa and Kan sas are somewhat opening the eyes of the republicans. Slowly, but surely, they will come to see their . danger The party Is militant and its leaden, are crafty. They will adopt new sr hemes of deception and evasion, hoping yet awhile longer to hold to tue protective system,, their mo3t vc'uable asset, the farmer of the northwest, like the darned fool he is, paying for the dance. Even Dolliver and Cummins and the rest profess still to be in favor of protection.'' J- The Theatre Stars In "Jim the Penman." Wil liara A Brady's revival . of what has ai-ays been the best of all detective vs. thief plays, "Jim the Penman," will be the opening attraction of. the new season in the Grand opera house, Chi cago, beginning On Sunday night, Aug. H. Mr. Brady, acting for the $1,000, 000 corporation of William A. Brady, limited, effected this revival on May 9 last in the Shubcrts' Lyric theater, New York city, where the fine old rlay ran for four weeks, right into the sum mer, to audiences that tested the. ca pacity of what is one of the largest theaters in that city. It is said that the gross receipts for the four weeks were $S9,76S. Many years have passed since "Jim the Penman" was. last acted in Chicago a first-class style; but in the Grand !t will be played by the all-star cast that gave It, in New York under the Urjdy-Shubert management in the spring. At the head of the array of ac;ors will be Wilton Lackaye, John Mason, Theodore Roberts, Arthur For-r-Et Amelia Gardner, Maude Granger, Lo'.Mse Bcaudet and Charlotte 'Ives; while the minor roles .will be filled by p!ayers of high reputation and great pcpularlty. "Jim the Penman" was written by the late Sir Charles I Young, an Eng lish baronet of literary bent, and was or:g!nally acted In Ixmdon in 1S86. It was first acted in New York city the following year, and was such a hit that not fewer than four companies were sent on tour in the play. While the duplication of companie's to play suc cesses all over the country is a com non managerial practice nowadays, it was a sensational understanding twen ty lour years ago; but the play was an immense hit wherever seen. Never, however, was it acted by a cast so good as will give it in . the Grand. The Grand opera house has been re decorated in the summer, although the matchless color-scheme of green and pcid that was applied in 1907 remains, grt.wing more beautiful with the pass !D years, and making of the Grand th? most artistic and beautiful playhouse in all the United States. Popular Wednesday matinees will be g:en during the run of "Jim the Pen man, which will be the only real dra matic attraction In Chicago for some time to come, as the city's theaters are mainly occupied with musical plays, chief of which is the 'mammoth "Midnight Sens," in the Lyric, while there Is a capital farce on view in "Baby Mine," in the Princess. SoJim the Penman" will be alone in its field. Aug. 1 1 in American History 1SU7 IJuiHTt I'uiton s hoat. the Cler mont, steamed up to Albany. Knl ton first bee:; me known in the mnritlme world ns the inventof of military torpedoes and submarine war craft. . The Clermont... which was to establish steam navigation, was built in New York, but her en gine wns of English construction. The success of the Clermont was followed by a multiplication of steamboats, nnd numerous claim ' ants for the honors awarded Ful ton as the father of steam navi gation were heard from. 18GS Tbaddeus Stevens, statesman, died in Washington; born 171)2. 1S0S American attack on San Juan. Porto Rico, repulsed. 1908 Ira D. Sankey. singing evangel ist, died: born 1840. Be sure and take a bottle of Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diar rhoea Remedy with you when start ing on your trip this summer. It cannot be obtained on board tne trains or steamers. Changes of wa ter and climate often cause sudden attacks of diarrhoea and it Is best to be prepared. Sold by all druggists. AftiSUtB nun rata V- ST. 105IJ W3S10-J FM3 , . 1904 Ml'-.: Iw "j- -" ""Ci -" V . 'i Irs-,' .".jc.,t.jS-V- 'Malces! Lightest, Whitest Finest Cakest (ft AAKES Delicious Angel Food J I VI and other cakes for Weddings, i Entertainments and 'all; Social J-VoanA ' Wsriri ky fl Sett Tncsert si Cwtanr. Edi Parkas Coetelos Floor for 1 12 Cake ami 12 Cake Recipea Bold K the Beet Grorr Eei jwIkiiw. A Mass of Evidence Pouring in. See Papers Aug. 16 ft fjjWaMani'tii i mum 1 1 ii itm 2 fyjjali&y EMINENT PRELATE AT BOSTON wOSTON. Mass. Among the many I p ance on the convention of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union ox mJ America, the chief figure Is Archbishop Diomed Falconio, the papal ! legate. He is vigorous, energetic, progress and welfare of the union. The Argus Daily, Short Story On the Edge of a Precipice. By Margaret Barr. Copyrighted, 1910, by Associated Literary Press. No one couid"understand why it was t that Helen Aver, the wife of an ex celient man and the mother of a lovely boy six years old, fell under the In fluence of Schuyler Quigley. with noth ing except swagger and cheek to rec ommend him. When Quigley first be gan to pay attention to Mrs. Ayer her husband did hot appear to notice it. The truth is he saw that his wife was drifting away froci him and he dared not oppose her, fearing that by his very opposition he might bring about a catastrophe. If be permitted the mutter to work itself out perhaps the wife and mother would in time tire of her new fancy and realize the danger to herself, her husband and her son. But Quigley was so aggressive, so persistent, that Helen never got away from a certain dominating force there was about him long enough to recover herself. Finally Ayer decided to take action. Since they all belonged to the same set he had frequent opportunity to meet the man who was undermin ing his home. Their first meeting was at the house of a mutual friend, where a number of men were accustomed to play poker. Ayer's object was to be gin a series of attempts to force a quarrel upon Quigley. concealing the true cause. The better to cover his motive at th? poier party he met Quig!ey cordially. But during the game he suddenly arose from the table, declaring that be would not play with a cheat, making it plain that Quig ley was the man referred to. i' Quigley, who was perfectly Innocent of the charge, retorted. High words followed, and Ayer struck him. Quig ley was prevented from returning the blow by the others, who protested against the men fighting under the host's roof about a matter of cheat Ingat cards, thereby bringing a scan dal upon the house and the party. Thif left Quigley not only Tinder a disgraceful charge, but as having re ceived a blow from Ayer that he had not returned. Under the regime of half a century or more ago, be would have been obliged to challenge Ayer or be cut by his friends. Living in the twentieth century, he was not obliged to do anything. He t the matter drop. lie rt!d not call at Ayer's house any more, but he met Mrs. Ayer when she went out on the street and at the houses of mutu.il friends. AH h said to her about bis trouble with her husband was that Ayer had ac cused him of cheating at cards and that every member of the party pres-$ ent had exonorated him of the charge. And so it was that Bussell Ayer by rtrylng to get rid of the man who was really his wife's worst enemy, and at the same time protect her good name, only made himself appear to her a very nil just and ignoble person. She thought that she was taking care of her reputation by never being with Quigley, except when others were present. But she found it dimcult to live with one'man as his wife and have a love affair though jlevold of criminality with another. : Ayer followed up bis first attack on Quigley by telling a number of Qnigley's friends that be Ayeri had struck him and Quigley bad not bad the manliness to resent the blqw. The situation was not pleasing to any one of the three persons involved. Qeigley represented to Mrs. Ayers that prelates ana laymen here la attend eloquent and deeply Interested in the he was refraining from resenting her husband's insults on her account and begged her to vindicate him by secur ing a divorce and marrying him. She was distressed, feeling that this was due Quigley. but dreading to take a step that.would seperate her from ber husbaud'aud ber child. One day Ayer met Quigley on the street. Eaclr" was walking with a friend. As they passed Ayer said loud enough for Qnlgley and his com panion to hear: ' There goes a coward I am trying to mi'fce fight." This was too much for Quigley. who turned and said, -Well, we'll have it tlUt iOW."' "Very well." replied Ayer. "draw." Taking a revolver from his pocket he raised it, cooking it at the same time. But since Quigley was unarmed there was no fight. "You can't escape me with a bloody nose," said Ayer. lIfs life or death between us." And he walked on. Quigley began to feel that he could no Jonger brook these insults. Some of Ills friends were telling him that Ayer was determined in the matter and it might better be settled sootier than later. They advised him to challenge Ayer nnd liave It over with. All sup posed that the origin of the matter wss rt the card table. Indeed, few if any knew mat rryer was -trying- ro force his enemy to withdraw bis in fluence from Mrs. Ayer. Quigley flus tered for awhile, but took no action. But finally noticing n difference in the cordiality with which his friends greet ed him he gave in and sent Ayer a challenge. Ayer accepted, naming revolvers at ten paces, every chamber to be emptied before the firing ceased. This staggered Quigley. for it meant death probably to both of the parties He sent n message to Ayer asking what he could do to avert the issue. Ayer replied in a sealed note telling him that he must neither speak nor write to Mrs. Ayer again. Quigley re plied that Mrs. Ayer had applied for a divorce and had consented to marry him as soon as it was obtained. ToJ this Ayer replied that on his part the affair would be dropped. But he did not do this till he had looked iuto the court records and found that his wife had the day before applied for a eep aration. When Ayer went home that evening he found his wife gone. His little boy asked him what was the matter with mamma. She had cried and kissed him all the morning, then bad gone out and hadn't come back. Wouldn't papa go and bring her back? But day after day. week after week month after month, passed and mamma did not return. She was residing in a city where divorce is made easy. The child 'was obliged to content himself with his nurse during the day, but whenever his father was not at his office he supplied so far as possible the place of the mother. Quigley still lived in the city, but there was not as much swagger In .him as formerly. Somehow no one seemed to think he had come out of his affair with Ayer with credit.and friends were dropping off. AV'hiie It was kuown to the Ayers' intimate friends that Helen was suing for a divorce, it was not known that sbawas doins so la order to uum Quigley. liivorces usually make it ap pear that, great wrongs are committed by one or both parties. We are horri fled at tales of cruelty, desertion, all kinds of inhumanities. While reading of them we would Kuppose that after such suffering neither party will. ever again consent to wear the chains of wedlock. But once the bond is broken up pops a man or a woman hitherto unknown tin the proceedings, and the decree is scarcely, granted before the wedding bells are ringing. Helen Aver had secured her divorce, bad returned, and It was supposed by her. friends, except an Intimate few. that she would remain after the charges against Ayer her lawyer had drawn up for her an unmarried wom an. While this was the supposition, a marriage license was being taken ont permitting Helen Ayer and Schuyler Quigley to wed. They were to be pri vately married at 5 o'clock In the even ing and take a 7 o'clock train for their wedding trip. During the afternoon the bride to be was seized with an irresistible desire to see ber boy once more before taking the Irretrievable step. She knew Sat her husband was. usually at bis office at the time and she would not meet him.' Throwing caution to the winds, she called a carriage, alighted near her former home, entered and ran up stairs to find her son. She came upon a melancholy sight. Her boy was lying on a bed, pale and wan, while his fatter was bending over him. "Oh. why didn't you tell me? Why didn't you send for me?' she walled. And without waiting for a reply she bent down, passionately encircled the child with her arms and bugged blm to her breast. Then, flinging ber bat and coat aside, she knelt beside the bed. "Oh. mamma! cried the child. "How glad I am that you have come back!" Then, raising his arms, he placed them about her shoulders. "And you're never, never going away again, are you?" And the woman for whom a groom was waiting said: "Never, so help me heaven!" Russell Ayer was walking away when bis wife seized his band and held him. She attempted to speak to vhim, but not finding words turned again to the boy. Then Russell knelt beside ber and. resting his band on her waist, the two turned the ebbing life back Into their child by their unit ed presence. An hour later Schuyler Quigley. as he was about to enter a carriage to take him to a church where he was to meet his bride, was startled by a mes sage. Tearing off the cover with mis givings and impatience, be read: I cannot go. 1 will never see you aca&. One of those singular and .unac countable infatuations under which a woman will leave home, husband and chUdren. wrecking them, and most of all herself, had come to a sudden end. as it were, on the brink of the preci pice over which she was about to plunge. Her husband could manage the man who was enticing her, but he could not manage her. "What neither of these men could do was accom plished by a sick child. After the boy came out of danger Rnssell Ayer told his wife of his at tempts to save her. He gave the rea son for his accusing Quigley of cheat ing at cards, the blow, the subsequent Insults, the forcing his enemy lnW an unwilling challenge. Then when he bad finished by telling her that he ha I dropped the matter on learning of her intended separation she shuddered. "My God! How could I have done it?" " Any Woman Can Have a Soft, Velvety Complexion. If you are troubled with black heads, large pores, pimples, freckles or muddy complexion, get from your druggist a two-ounce package of am arol, add two teaspoonfuls of glycer ine to a pint of hot water", and the entire contents of the package of amarol, shake well for a minute or so, then let stand for a few hours, and it's ready for user Use this lotion freely after wash ing and drying the face, hands nd arms, rubbing until dry. You will find this, simple otion much better than paints, powders nnd cosmetics, as it will not clog up the pores of the skin, but leaves them free to take In the pure air that ii necessary to health and a good com plexion. Any druggist will sell you the amarol In the original two-ounce package, and I adse every woman who wants a soft, velvety, healthy complexion to try this simple amarol solution. Where is the Money You Worked so Hard To Get? Spent, wasted and gone or sav N ed and now working for you? Your friends by saving are get ting interest on their money have good homes paid for and money to Invest and increase their incomes .day by day ryou can do the same start a sav ings account with this strong bank if you want ready money for useful purposes. 4 Interest Paid on Deposits. . Rock Island Savings Bank V u j Q Philosophy d $ r HVfCAJf M.'SMITM A PERT PARAGRAPHS. I QOSSIP is the circulating medium with which the talkative portion of the community gets paid for its bard work. Often a mischief maker Is merely 4 born boss In a subordinate position. Remaining young seems to b about the only thing that youth is Incapable of doing If he works at It long enough.. There are women who can shed tears ss easily and as pathetically as coun-. sel for the defense. j Ever notice that you nsrer meat anjrJ body on the road to ruin? When the labels that they pasta on themselves peel off It la bard to tall; what some people are. j When comfort speaks to them mostr, men can understand her no matter; what language she uses. j Women are often foolish, but at thai they-dont hold any edge over the men Moral courage Is a good thing, but don't mistake a tough pachyderm for.' It .. D A Happy Loss. Los yonr rroueb; you'll never miss tt,' Thourh at first It may sam qumt To be Just a trifle decent To the people who are near. But with very little pratlce, Sawlnc wood from day to day, Tou can make yourself attractive) With a grin nailed on to stay. There Is little satisfaction. Nor Is life the more complete. If you bite the heads from people Whom In daily rounds you meet. When that little trick you try. They can never sue for damage If you smile and pass them by. Tou may think It lends distinction . ' If you Jog along the way With a grouch on exhibition Every moment of the day. But when friends who see you coming Make excuse to turn away Tou will find the load Is hardly , Worth the freight you have to pay. t Be the little ray of sunshine To the people that you meet Let them feel when you are coming . That it brightens up the street. It's the only way to travel; Every smile will be a boost. And you'll find It worth the trouble When the chicks come home to roost. Not 8auey. "lie seems to care more for bis dog than be does for bis children." "Is that so?" "Yes." "1 wonder why?" "Maybe it is because the dog never sasses back." Naturally. I3e seem a breezy sort." "Yes. he can't help it." "Can't?" i "No." "Why? "Because be is always putting on airs." Generally. ' "TVbat Is a diamoud ring the sign of?" "Sign of T' "Yes." "Sign that some silly snpbead Is liv ing on prunes and potatoes." j The Summer Girl. "Let us be engaged, Genevieve." "All right. Percy." "You darling. Now, 1 don't believe in long engagements." "Neither da I. so we wl!l 't ours last fifteen minutes." Query. "The ben la sitting on the porch" "I wonder It she will uatcb out a back stoop." n Realized His Limitations. "There are Ms of things man can't explain." "You bet 1 found that out" "When di.l It dawn ou you?" "When I tried to pass a civil service examination." Close Miss. ' "He was reared In the lap of lux ury. And now Le hasn't a cent-"" "No. or a trade or profession." "Evidently lost by a lap." Went the Length. "'lie makes an occasional slip In bis grannnar." "Slip, did you say?" "Yes." "lie shoots the chutes." A Substitute. "13 he pretty bright?" "lie don't know enough to come In out of the rain." I notice be knows eougb to steal an umbrella." - Awakening. The burclar thought he might be wrong But couldn't eee tt quite. They turned a searchllRht In his faoa. And then he saw the light. A Mass of . Evidence Pouring in. See Papers 'Aug. 16 TftAri A ?uirc At) T Twa-irr J