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PAGE 8 CHICAGO SAFE IN ITS WATER WARJUMPH Little Chance of Change in Congress, Says Ohio Member. BY KENNETH WATSOIf WASHINGTON, Nov. 28. The possibility of Congress enacting legislation to upset Cihicago’s vic tory over Great Lakes States in the long water diversion fight are meager, according to Representative Theodore E. Burton of Ohio. Report was made to the Supreme Court Wednesday by former Secre tary of State Charles Evans Hughes, holding that the War Department permit under which Chicago is di verting water from Lake Michigan is valid. Congress Holds Key Although admitting that Great Lakes States established beyond question that the diversion has caused substantial damage to their navigation and commercial inter ests, Hughes said there is no basis to the complainants’ claims that the War Department and Congress have no power to issue the permit. Hughes, who acted as special mas ter in the various suits brought against Chicago, held that Congress has power to regulate the diversion. “I do not feel like expressing a definite opinion upon the report un til I have had an opportunity to study it carefully, but at first thought I am disappointed greatly by the conclusions,” Representative Burton said today. Sees Little Chance Burton said that undoubtedly bills will be introduced in Congress this session to reduce the amount of water now allowed Chicago, but be lieves they have little chance for passage. If such proves to be the case the only hope of Great Lakes States for improved navigation is to wait until Dec. 31, 1929, when the present per mit compels Chicago to reduce the amount of diversion by 1,250 cubic feet a second. Even this reduction probably will have no great beneficial effect. Evi dence introduced in hearings before Hughes showed that the lake levels have been reduced about six inches. MECHANIC FOUND DEAD Rail Worker Is Heart Attack Victim at Roundhouse.. Owen Jester, 02, of 944 Ketchum St., Baltimore & Ohio Railroad me chanic died Sunday night of a heart attack in the Morefield B. & o. roundhouse, New York St. and Bel mont Ave. He had been employed there since 1911. Sunday he forked from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. The body was found a tlO p. m. by another employee. Mr. Jester was born in Hamilton County and came to Indianapolis thirty-five years ago. Surviving him are his widow, Mrs. Mary Jester; three brothers, Edward, Aurora, Mo.; Beecher, Noblesville, Ind., and Jacob, Indianapolis; three sons, Ralph, Beecher and Arthur; and two daughters, Irene and Juan ita. Burial will be in Crown Hill Cemetery. Other arrangements wait arrival of Mr. Jester’s brothers. LIGHTS GIVEN AVIATORS Atlanta Flying Field Installs Giant Beacon Bu United Press ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 28.—A giant beacon light to guide aviators to Chandler field, Atlanta’s airport, is being installed. The lamp will be placed on a revolving tower fifty feet high and revolve every ten seconds, sending a ray of light of 2,000,000 candle power into the southern night. Boundary lamps will be used in conjunction with the beacon. AMUSEMENTS Every Day In Every Way Our Crowds are Getting Bigger and Bigger DON & MAZIE DIXON Colonial Theatre —NOW— “The Road To Happiness” A 4-Act Comedy Drama Full of Fun Also Feature Vaudeville and Music 1 Show Eflfch Nlte, 8:15. * Shows Sat. Kite. 7 and 0. Mat. San. and Wed. Bargain Mat., Wed., 10c-25c. Beserved Seats. Phone 81. 6944. 10c-' 50c A Thrill a Minute mli\s i Every One Is Going RAHMEN BEY The Town’s Sensation! Miracle Man Extraordinary VAUGHN CORNISH Others And the Photoplay ‘Surrender’ With Mary Phllbln 600 Seats 16c at All Times Mats. 26c, 36c ( Except San. Bve. 40c, 00c Continuous 1 to 11 SyGMLG&nON —.\jy DR.WILL DURANT THE old race passed by marriage with other stocks; and their ancient streets and temples know now only the - feet of Moslem and Englishmen, of weary travelers who come from thousands of miles away to find that the Pyramids are heaps of stones. Perhaps greatness could grow again in that fair climate if the distant East should flower once more, and the turn of the tide make Egypt the halfway house of a hem isphere’s commerce. But of the morrow, as Lorenzo sang, there is no certainty; and of today the only certainty is desola tion. On every side gigantic ruins, memorials of a savage and titanic energy; and all about them the en gulfing sands blown about forever by the hot winds, and resolved to cover everything in the end. Psammeticus I. effected a tempo rary “restoration,” rich in decadent literature and art, and Amasis 11. staved off destruction for half a cen tury by his genius in organization and diplomacy; but the tide of his tory was against them, and when the Persians crossed Suez in 525 B. C. it marked the death of ancient Egypt. - For two centuries the proud na tion that had held its head so high for three thousand years was vassal of an Oriental empire; and when change came it was only a change of masters; in 330 B. C. from Persia to Greece, in 30 B. C. from Greece to Rome. The last picture, symbolizing the death of an entire civilization, shows Cleopatra, lover of luxuries and vendor of her charms, putting the serpent to her breast as Anthony dies and Augustus, too tired for temptations, stations his conquering legions along the Nile. Today there is a place called Egypt, but the Egyptian people do not dwell there. Long since they have been scattered over the earth and merged beyond identity in mar- * a m TF the chief function of war is to X teach the people geography, the Weltgeist has lavished war too flu ently in .these years upon familiar Europe, and has insufficiently illu minated that strange region of the map which is constituted today by Asia Minor, Arabia and Persia. Lawrence and Allenby have made Arabia fashionable; but most of the “Near East” remains a phrase, a filmy realm of sheiks and massacres, belonging to fiction rather than to terrestrial reality. Once that obscure area was the heart of the world and the home of powerful empires: now it is an al most abandoned desert, rich in rocks and sand, kept alive only by wild courage and the remembrance of ancient glory. But look at the map again, for here genius passed once and we must follow it, even if only in super ficial flight. Cross from Egypt into Asia at Suez; to the right the Peninsula of Sinai lies, where the Pharaohs turned copper into gold, and Moses in the legend coined a mortality out of stone. To the left the blue Mediterran ean; and as one follows that golden shore northward, treading the path of the Jews through the wilderness, Canaan appears; and to the east of it the land of Judah and the sea called Dead. Still farther north, along the coast, Tyre and Sidon, where the Phoenicians once sheltered the trade of the world, thrive yet with har bors filled and markets humming; and again, fifty miles to the east, AMUSEMENTS TONITK BAL. IVK. Mats., Wed., Sat. ENGLISH’S fAm KI.VI patois Fi " V Th r Tn I RECORD Mi 1 . W " 8 K breaking H m : -m Pk b 9J 9 comcoy mmmmm Prices —Nlte, 50c to 61.65; Mats., 50c to *l.lO. Seats Selling iicyt u/mr gala opening HtAI Wtth Mo(j 8;15 p M The MESSRS. SHIJBERT Present The Greatest of All Operettas ' ujjjL* Male ■ Chorus of 60 Better Than “The Student Prince” Seat Sale I Eve., 51)c to *3.30. Sat. Thurs. Stall Mat., 50c to *2.75. Pop D’ANOREA & WALTERS —WITH— KAY BALLINGER’S Serenading Misses A Music, Song and Dance Revue LUBIN, LARRY & ANDRE CHAS. HORN & CO.I DREIS & COLLIN'S AMAZON & NILE 1 GARY & BALDY OF WINTER” With Chastine, The Great and Zora and Salo MUTUAL Burlesque Theater “FOLLIES OF PLEASURE” with OPAL TAYLOR “TANZARA” the Dancing Girl Jerusalem and Israel, and bright, undying Damascus, too old* to re member its youth and too young to remember its age. Turn to the coast once more, and where Beirut now feels the lash of a democratic Imperialism as ruth less as any king’s follow the trail of a hundred armies over the hills of Lebanon, and see the almost ob literated inscriptions which con querors from Rameses 11, to Allenby have left upon the rocks that look down over Dog River and the sea; here is Syrna. Go now to th® northeast, and sud denly, after leagues and leagues of arid land, a river sparkles in the sun, making everything near it fruitful and green; it is the Euph rates, river of kings. Pass still farther to the east, across tthe Mesopotamian desert from the hills; this is the Tigris, on whose shores were Assur and Nine veh first and last of Assyria’s cap itals. Now travel south with Tigris till it rubs elbows with the Euphrates; here is ancient Akkad, and later Babylon, and —last of those great empires—Chaldea. Finally, where the Euphrates rushes into the Persian Gulf, ghost ly ruim reveal the home of the first of these lost kingdoms of the an cient Near East—Sumeria. Across the gulf is Persia; and everywhere to the south the lonely and inhospitable desert. a a a THE prologue is Sumeria. Far back in 3850 B. C. we find an Indo-European people established there in stable tillage of the soil, using oxen and the wheel, and dig ging canals to bring the Euphrates to their farms. At Nippur they built a capital and a lofty tower; the height of the tower led to the legend of Babel; and its “zigguarat”—a roadway built around it to the top—cooperated with zoning laws to suggest the “set back” style of recent architecture in America. Their method of writing on soft clay with reeds, and then baking the clay to give permanence to their records, passed down to the Baby lonians as cuneiform—“wedge-form” writing called so from the triangular mark made by the corner of the reed. Their use of sixty as a unit in numbering passed down into Europe’s division of the circle into 360 degrees and of the hour into sixty minutes. The picture they give us is a landscape of peace. The action begins with the mighty Sargon, a Semitic warrior who came out of Akkad toward 2750 B. C. and made himself master of Sumeria by superior killing. - The Akkadians came with him, helped him to conquer Cyprus, grew rich with its copper (which took its name from the island) and con tributed to contemporary mythology _ MOTION PICTURES Wdiana RONALD COLMAN VI IMA BANK.Y *lie Magic Flame A ROMANCE OF CLOWN & KING Poblix Presents •FLORIDA* CMteßavisßad j \ FLORIDA k IN BEAUTIES /J Nfc. 20 STARS str Circle the show place otMndiaria Connie’* Comedy Cocktail CONSTANCE TALMABGE "'Breakfast at Sunrise” Kisses a U mode —Spicy romance French dressing— 00-la-la ns On our stage RUSSELL and MARCONI Merry Moments of Music c*j Overture ••A Melange of Modern Music” ED RESENER, Conducting •** Vitaphone Presentations GEORGE JESSELin “A Theatrical Booking Office” FOUR ARISTOCRATS Novelty—News (IpMt*)? ESTHER RALSTON IN “THE SPOTLIGHT” WITH NEIL HAMILTON ••* • , Harry Langdon Comedy, Fox News, Sammy Leonard, Ray Wln lngs, Emil Seidel’s Apollo Merrymakers RAMON NOVARRO MARCELINE DAY 'The Road to Romance^ BOBBY ~Vf,RXON vJMKDY CONNIE AND HIS BAND JIMMIE HATTON, Soloist THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES those legends of the creation and the flood which passed down from them through the Babylonians to the Jews. For 1,500 years the Empire of Sumeria and Akkad dominated the Arabian peninsula; now in our memory it receives a paragraph. Apparently they became peaceful in their turn, lost the arts of war, and fell prey to another horde of Semitic warriors, the Amorites, in 2200 B. C. In their capital at Babylon the new conquerors ruled and consumed taxes royally. Twenty-one centuries before Christ the great King Ham murabi ascended the throne, waged war for thirty years till he had sub jected every city within reach, and then composed a code of laws to promote justice and peace. To this day a shaft of stone sur vives, 4,000 years old, on which the king had his code engraved; and over the laws a persuasive picture shows Hammurabi receiving the code from the hands of the sun-god. Kings will always find work for idle gods to do. Perhaps it was a forgivable hoax since these laws are not only the oldest, but among the wisest (for their time and peace), in human record. Like our own barbaric code, Ham murabi’s legislation was based upon the principle of punishment; crime was something for which society must take revenge. Further, the revenge was to be as much as possible like the crime; an eye was to be taken for an eye, a tooth for a tooth, a life for a life; if a house fell and killed the son of the householder, the guilty build er must suffer the execution of his son, and the innocent lad must pay for his father’s negligence. But as against these savage penalties the Now on A Savings £±% Indiana National Bank GUARANTEE TIRE & RUBBER CO. Everything for the Car for Lees STOP That Cold at the Start _ lse Gs^ All Druggists Sell It Generous Size 50c Large Size SI.OO SHANK New Fireproof Storage 1430-33 N. Illinois St. MAIn 3028 Best facilities for otorlng and crating household goods in the city. Everything new and up-to-date. We will be glad to send our man to your home and give you an esti mate on cost of storage, crating and shipments to any part of the United States. Shank Storage Cos. The Original m Payments as Low as $1 a Week THE UNION TIRE €O. Geo. Medlam, Pres. MA In 6273 Cor. S. HI. and Georgia St. Open Till 8:00 p. m. Getting Skinnier Every Day Hollows in Cheeks, Neck and Chest Growing Deeper Every Week Someone Ought to Tell Him How To Gain Pounds of Solid Flesh And Look Like a Real Man. Tens of thousands of thin, run down men—yes, and women tpo— are getting discouraged—are giving up all hope of ever being able to take on flesh and look healthy and strong. All such people can stop worrying and start to smile and enjoy life right now, for McCoy’s Tablets, which any druggist will tell you all about, Is putting flesh on hosts of skinny folks every day. One woman, tired, weak and dis couraged, put on 15 pounds in five weeks and now feels fine. McCoy takes all the risk—Read this ironclad guarantee. If after taking 4 sixty-cent boxes of McCoy’s Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any thin, underweight man or woman doesn’t gain at least 5 pounds and feel completely satisfied with the marked improvement in health— your druggist is authorized to return the purchase price. The name McCoy’s Cod Live Oil Tablets has been shortened—just ask for McCoy’s Tablets at Hook’s Dependable Drug Stores, or any drug store in America.—Advertise ment. _ code made enlightened efforts to curb violence and greed, and to pro tect the weak from the conscience less strong. The widow, the orphan, and the poor were guarded in their simple rights, and woman was made free to enter school and engage in in dustry and trade. Thirty years ago .French arche ologists excavated a Babylonian schoolhouse dating from 2100 B. O. The clay tablets on which the boys and girls of that ancient class room had written their lessons were still lying on the floor where they had been left in some tragic over turn four millennia before. On one of the tablets a flitting soul had written a pious precept of his masters:—"He who shall excel in tablet writing shall shine like the sun.” Then apparently the world had fallen in. a a • A THOUSAND years passed. Far in the north, at Assur, another tribe of Semitic nomads had de veloped a powerful military state. For centuries they spent their en ergies in fighting off the Hittites, a non-Semitic people who dwelt along the southern shores of the Black Sea. From these enemies they learned the art of forging the iron of those shores into strong weapons for war, and, armed, they made themselves masters of the Mesopotamian world. These Assyrians were apparently the first to use the horse, and one need hardly add that they turned the magnificent animal chiefly to the purposes of war. About 1100 B. C. they swept down upon Babylon and subjected it to their tax gatherers, and in 732 they captured Damascus, where the Arameans were developing a lang uage destined to supplant all other dialects among the Semites of Asia, and to become at last the speech of Jesus. By 700 B. C. the ferocious armies of Assyria had conquered Israel and OUTFITTERS TO TDK FDOUt FAMILY Chain atom Bvflni K nab lam Ui to 801 l tor Least GLOBE STORES Main store —**0 W. WaatL St. Star# No. t—lM W.4tMh. B*. 3RDamDutfits|| R *’i nnriitmnrd Fuini+un 1 I Lewis Furniture Cos ■■■ United Tid.de-In Stofe TERMS 844 South Nericlidn St —— ■ CLOTHES CLEANED WITH AT ‘J'gona^ Belmont 4600 Belmont 4601 2216 WEBT MICHIGAN AVOID UGLY PiPLES A pimply face will not embarrass you much longer If you get a package of Pr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin should begin to clear after you have taken the tablets a few nights. Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver with Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, the successful substitute for calomel; there's no sickness or pain after taking them. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that which calomel docs, and just as effec tively,- but their action is gentle and_ safe Instead of severe and irritating. No one who takes Olive Tablets Is ever cursed with a “dark brown taste,” a bad breath, a dull, listless, “no good” feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad disposition or pimply face. Olive Tablets are a purely vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; know them by their olive color. Dr. Edwards spent years among pa tients afflicted with liver and bowel complaints and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. Take night ly for a week. See how much better you feel and look. 15c, 30e, (50c. —Ad- vertisement. You Feel a Cold Coming On gs Laxative Bromg I \Quinine! iableis Jfjr Grip, Influenza and many Pneumonias begin as a common cold. Price 30c. The box bears this signature J&cvm jfteritMMce f<SS9 (i'-pHE Scripps - Howard A newspapers are to be complimented and com mended for furnishing to the reading public, especi ally that small part which thinks, this wonderful op portunity to read and study something worth while.”—* Theophilus J. Moll, attorney. were exacting tribute even from mighty Egypt. (Copyright, 1927. by Will Durant.) / To Be Continued. T. B. WORK IS PRAISED Marion County Death Rate Cut In Half Since 1914. Control over the menace of tuber culosis in Marion County gradually is being acquired by the Marion County Tuberculosis Association and kindred organizations, said Michael E. Foley, association direc tor, addressing the first annual thanksgiving meeting at Sunnyside sanatorium Sunday. He declared the county associ ation has assisted in reducing the tuberculosis death rate from 224 per 100,000 population in 1914 to 106 per 100,000 in 1926. He made a strong appeal for the purchase of Red Cross Christmas seals from which anti-tuberculosis work in the county will be financed in 1929. Lawyers Will Meet Rll Times Sprpinl RUSHVILLE, Ind., Nov. 28.—The Sixth District Bar Association will hold a meeting here Thursday eve ning. Dinner will be served at 6:30 James Van Arsdol, Anderson, presi dent of the Indiana Bar Association, will speak. LEON Tailored to Measure Men’s Suits and O’Coats Salesroom and Shop 254 MASSACHUSETTS AT*. First Mortgage Loans No Inspection Fee The Meyer-Kiser Bank 128 Kn*t Washington St. Ford BRiskiN Radiators OLDEST " ' RADIATOR SHOP Buy From IN MIDDLE WIST Radiator MMMWv Expert* Better Quality—Prices No Higher Ford c‘:r Z $8.95 Other makes and models— New and Used—Repairing Overheating Radiators boiled out, on or off the car. Briskin Radiator Service 623 N. Illinois. Riley 2448. We Buy Your Old Itndlator HAAG’S CUT-PRICE DRUCS MAIL ORDERS FILLED—ADD POSTAGE CANDY (Always Fi esh) Lombard’s Chocolate- JQ_ covered Cherries Park & Tilford *1.50 flj 1 IQ La Surprise *1.50 Bulte d’Or (gold *1.25 Home-made Qfi/ Sweets UOC PATENT MEDICINE *I.OO rinkham's OJ * Compound ~ o*tC *I.OO Miles Os. Nervine ...... *1.25 Coco Q4~ *1.50 Father Qfij John’s .....JOC 75c C4 r John’s wit s io ° r.i c Adlerlka o*tC *I.OO 74 Cardul I*lC *1.15 Swamp , 04 Root o**C Radiator Alcohol 60c Gallon Pure Glycerin $2.98 Gallon Thermo Glycerin $2.64 Gallon CIGARS San Felice Bankable Crane’s Imported Lincoln Highway Lie, 6 for 25c Box of 50, $1.98 La Fendrich La Palina Dutch Master ( El Producto All 10c Cigars, 5 for 40c Box of 50, $3.85 11. S. MAY DELAY NEW WINGS Official Wants Funds Held Up for Year. Bit Timet Buecial WASHINGTON, Nov. 28.—New Federal buildings promised all sec tions of the country a year and a half ago by Congress may be de layed still another year. Last spring'a measure appropri ating $19,000,000 to begin construc tion work was passed by the House but failed in the Senate filibuster. The House Appropriations Com- intends to report the bill again as soon as Congress convenes, and attempt to secure its immediate passage, so that money may be available after next July. If this is done, another appropri ation bill then will be formulated by the committee, and passed later in the session, containing funds for the second year’s building program in the fiscal year 1929. However, Budget Director Lord is objecting to this plan. He is urg ing that, since the appropriation bill failed last spring, the whole pro gram should be delayed a year and MONEY TO LOAN —ON— MORTGAGES STATE LIFE Insurance Cos. 1*36 STATE LIFE BLDO. Your Guide to Smarter Style and Genuine Lower Prices! Traugott’s |Q 0 PAY PLAN On yino, f Instead of a Lump rfHiiir “10- wise, dignified e c o n o m I cal wflv to buy clothing—Just Fay As You Get Paid. Always look your best—See Traugott tomorrow! Easy as Can Be—Your Pocket Money rays the IMUI WEST WASHINGTONSTUEKt/ CASH? Do You Fee! Mean and Grouchy? Bad taste in your mouth, coated tongue, no appetite, and a general out of sorts feeling. Get right over night for 19c, with O’Neill’s Vegetable Rem edy (V R Tablets). COUGH SYRUPS 90c King’s New JQ Discovery 49C %nex 49C %em 49C Coc Foley’s Honey and 49c 35c Chamberlain’s OQ Cough £<7C 60c Bull's Cough AQ~ Syrup 43C ALARM CLOCKS *l-50 QO„ Ambassador for DOC for $ 1.24 $2.00 Sleep *1 7* Meter for p 1 • f 4 for $1.98 Plenty of Big Bens and Little Bens. Full line of Ingersoll Watches at cut prices. COLD REMEDIES 25c Hill’s Cascara in Quinine 1/ C 25c Zerbst’s in Capsules 1 “ C 80c Grove’s Bromo nn Quinine ...'. uoC 25c Week’s Cold xa Tablets 1 /C 25c Lane’s Cold in Tablets 30c Humphries’ No. 77 ~LLC 25c Hall’s One Night 25c DeWitt's in. Cold Tablets ... „...13C 25c | q Laxaplrin X7C BARBASOL COMBINATION 35c SHAVING CREAM <se SKIN FRESHENER Both for 59c the $19,000,000 bill be amended to call for construction work in 1929. Among other items the disputed bill contains appropriations for a Baltimore postoffice, Denver custom house, Ft. Worth postoffice, Oak land (Cal.) postofflee, San Francisco marine hospital, Santa Fe court house and Federal buildings in the following New York towns: Albany, Amsterdam, Binghamton, Dunkirk. Elmira, Newburgh, Niagara Falls* Plattsburg Watertown and White Plains. Home-made Remedy Stops Cough Quickly Finest cough medicine yea aver wed. Family supply eaaAly made. Saves about $2. You might be surprised to know that the best thing you can use for a sever® cough, is a remedy which is easily pre fared at home in just a few moments. t’s cheap, but for prompt results it beats auything else you ever tried. Usually stops the ordinary cough or chest cold in 24 hours. Tastes pleas ant—children like it, and it is pure and good. Pour 2% ounces of Pinex in a pint bottle; then fill-it up with plain granu lated sugar syrup. Or use clarified honey, instead of sugar syrup. Thus you make a full pint—a family sup ply—but costing no more than a small bottle of ready-made cough syrup. And as a cough medicine, there is really nothing better to be had at any price. It goes right to the spot and gives quick, lasting relief. It promptly heals the inflamed membranes that lino the throat and air passages, stops the annoying throat tickle, loosens tho phlegm, mid soon your cough stops entirely. Splendid, too, for bronchitis, hoarseness and.bronchial asthma. Pinex is a highly concentrated com pound of Norway pine extract and palatable guaiacol, famous for healing the membranes. To avoid •disappointment ask your druggist for “2V£ ounces of Pinex 1 * with directions. Guaranteed to a give absolute satisfaction or j&e, money promptly refunded. The JSjjtfiL. Pinex Cos., Ft. Wayne, Jnd. mmsSß, J IT for CoughS-JU THXTOBTFs LISTERBNE plVZßijgl I ySTERINt jl i s^l The safe anti septic for sore throat, after shaving, per sonal hygiene and prevention of infection. $1.00... 74c PLAYING CARDS 50c Bicycle A O Cards ~. ‘i O C 50c JO - Tinochle “IJC 75c CO Congress ...vJt *s* 49C 35c Broadway OQ _ Cards 3C 60c Bridge Aft- Whist 50c Poker TQ. Chips JvC 7 °Rook 59c 75 pu 59c 50c Melba Skin Cleanser Given Away with each 75c box of Melba Lov’me Face Powder purchased. CIGARETTES Chesterfields Camels Lucky Strike Clowns Old Gold 13c, 2 for 25c Carton 200, $1.20 Omar Fatima Spuds 17c, 3 for 50c Carton 200, $1.60 .NOV. 28, 1927