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THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN. THURSDAY MORNING. JUNE 2G. 1919 PAGE THREl-3 GENERAL BUSINESS HIII3lfl . TWELFTH DISTRICT Al'hoiiKh l.t! k of rain in Washing tnn, Oregon and Idaho is causing some slightly anxiety as to arain production, gen- ! month. sral huxinera and agricultural condi- I ' from. S' l"T ctntL t0 pal cities during May aggregated. $?. i 577,54"). an increase of 25.4 per tent I over May, 191?. ' Exports from Pacific roast ports ! during April aggregated J56.19S.0OO. an increase of 16.7 per cent over April. IMS, but a decrease of 19 per cent from the figures for .March of thin year. The principal item of export was rail way material bound for Russia. Im ports consisted mostly of vegetable oils. Business failures within the district were only half the number recorded for May. 19 IS. but total liabilities were 13 per cent greater and assets 61 per cent less. Interest rates are firm but lower than the preceding The rate in industrial centers ' ; f,.-.m 1;. tnr cent R nar nrt onrl m agricultural centers I per cent is the prevailing rate. federal reserve district, composed of I Runic deposits on fay 12, 1913, Arizona, Washington, Oregon, Califoi- ! showaU an increase over those of May , , , , ., , i i l'J. ISIS, and March 4, 1319, everywhere ma. Idaho, I tali, Nevada. Alaska and withjn the iatrict ' ave' , '0g(U.n Hawaai. I L' tah, and Tacoma. Washington, where Tins announcement is contained in , there was a decrease of 1.S12 per cent a Miiietm made public today by .lie . over the report of May 10. 1918. and a I attorny general that there is open fe.lei- ,1 reserve bank of San Krancisco. fa'.limr off of 9.40:: m'r cent over the competition in their business, mav b ri,in harvest ha - begun in Cali-1 report of March I'M. Ocden fell i followed by proceedings charging the md according to estimates . 0ff 1.9::3 ner cent from its March 4 re- ! manufacturers with violating the as ph CEMENT TRUST TOPEKA. June 25. The prelimlnarr proceedings in a scheduled sweeping investigation of changes that road ma- i terial men ate in a combine to control j prices and regulate production ami ' output of materials for the purpose of j making excessive profits, nave been ! started here by Richard J. Hopkros. attorney general. Cement manufac turers in Kansas are appearing before Mr. Hopkins to explain that they are not operating their business in viola tion of the Kansas statutes to prevent "discrimination or unfair trade.'' This preliminary proceeding, if. t'h cement men are unable to convince the T! I'.rma made June !elrc;tl of i v. heat crop biKCWt t'int port 1 by Hie I'liifrl States I rop emmiaieH, tins year s j jiay 10, 191$. in i m.i l siaie win ie me ! 190 i 'or Wa -hihTon. Oregon, and Idaho the crcaJcM wheat crop in history is; leciiirted. with an estimated 59 per! l ent to'al it-ereaM' over the 191S n op I for the four s.ates. j Kai ly barley and winter wheat hu-' i 1 le, t well hut late sown crops are in : ooor condition and some have been cut ! lor hay. Dry winds riming the first! week in June shrivelled some when? j and barley in the Sacramento valley,; but no general damage was done. ; The California, lemon crop is thej largest in the state's history, being : imiitctl at 1.00i,iio boxes, or nearly: I .;.. jn excess of the bumper crop of Iv.'i years ago. The navel orange: rop within the state is estimated at: .;oo tKMi boxes as compared with 4.--ee.iiiiii boxes last season. I'eeiduous frui's throughout the ; i id ai" doing well, save for the: 'recon prunes which have been drop-: I'ing heavily. Walnuts and grapes are making favorable progi ess. I Arizona, is cutting her second crop i '' alfalfa along wit li southern Xevann ! and California. 1'tah. northern Neva - j Idaho and Oregon are cutting their' list c-nji. llains during tlie first week in June have greatly benefited : be ranges. I.ivestoi k generally is: oproving in condition and feed mi " ; !v summer ranges (ominues good. j I'nemployment us a problem hut-'. ' a ppoa red. the report continues, and sa,iplv and lieniiind w ithin the district j a;e now approximately equal. During! il:c last month the number of unem ployed in 1'tah has item reduced from . mhi i0 l.lida. and in California from 7. "on to .Vino. There is a shortage of labor in the lumber camps and some o the shipyards and a shortage is an-in-ipatet' in the ort hards, berry fields Mi'l ia. merits. Wholesale ami retail collections art -""'I. lajiorts from -i wholesalers in six of the biggest cities shO'.vlns that ,'hiy sales for this year were '.VIA per cent in excess of those for May. 1918. and ri',,5 per cent '-reaier in April of his year than last. I. timber is in great dcmiind. and n ilis are opening up to full capacity. lluiMitig permits issued in 19 princi- HEADS CO-OPERATIVE HOUSEKEEPING CLUB f4 JV y k - - ft 4m Tt is be lieved probtble. however, that If to day's session is unsatisfactory to the state Mr. Hopkins will resort to the inquisitorial powers of his office to pry into the inner secrets of the al leged combine. That is the same remedy Kansas applied to lick "booxe" joints. Cement Man Denies Discrimination V. H. Patterson, president and gen eral manager of the Frcdonia Port land Cement company, was the first manufacturer to appear in today's In vestigation. He denied there was any discrimination in his business and also denied that he charged "Iola factory price." plus freight from Iola to I-e-donla for cement at his plant. '. further questioning, however, he ad mitted that he sold only slightly under "Iola plus freight rate price." Recently when Wyandotte count attempted to purchase cement, deaU If Phi II 111 ? I Msfr.iM.mre I I HI Mil ( Unusual Economy Equal to Butter for cocking Better than OHve Oil for salads, at half the price of either. Better, more Wholesome and Economical than lard or compounds. Use cne-fourth to one-third less Mazola for shortening than butter or lard. In frying, use Mazola over and over again to the last drop it never absorbs odors or flavors. FREE Wonderful Cook Boot . Write today for it. CORN PRODUCTS REFINING CO. r.O.Boxl61 NcwYttk . j j juw fflHli in! hi li wmsssomsmm Mrs. Jamea Risrf" Mrs. James KifrfcS of Quiney, HI., !s president of a unique club which the women in her neighborhood started for the purpose of making their work easier. The name of the club is the Co-operative House keeping Club of Quincy. Rejrular meetings are held by the club every week at the homes of the various members. Each member arranges to have some special work for the club to do for her when it is her turn. Sometimes they do the hostess's can ning, or her ironing, her mending nd such things. Mrs. Biggs claims the dub is a great ruccess, but that such a club must have a membership f no more than fifteen. ers and representatives of a large acteristics. -Mr. Drinkwater, manufacturing company admitted I frankly the "freight rate" plan of fix ! In? prices In disi riots. Mr. Hopkins has the full information concernins -statements made in AVyandotte county hefore cement men became wary of talUing. v From Mr. Patterson the attorney jreneral also unearthed a fixed charge on. every barrel of cement sold to the public in addition to a "local dealer's commission." That chaise is for three mills a barrel. Mr. Patterson said, to the "Xorcrosa Audit and Statistical Company of Kansas City." Reports to Audit Company Mr. Patterson said he made detailfi reports to the audit company of his handling men were more salient char- whether for a moral or a political object we cannot know, has selected the earn estness and the tenacity and sup pressed the humor and the qualru ness. Mr. Rea, who acts Lincoln and who is made up like the late Lord Peel after an all night sitting, does nothing but scold and harangue. All Americans tell yarns, the most weari some. habit we know: but of a nation of yarn tellers Lincoln was the most indefatigable. On all occasions, atort et a travers he told stories and cracked jokes, some of them clownish, others coarse. He was as great a bore in this way as Charles II, and when a man is a king or a president his vic tims are obliged to listen to "the oft sales and also'in connection therewith jrepeated tale." received reports from the "American Such was the Impression Lincoln Association" about all cement business . made on his contemporaries; but this throughout the United States. is not what the mjfthmakers wish to u appears tnat everything about the , preserve; they want Old Abe "to point Suck Is Life ing about the young lady next door, and said: "She hardly says word; so quiet. I can't understand why so many men propose to her." Tom had his chance at a "comeback." "I can," he hissed, ma kin? a bee-line for the stairs. . "Pansy," Mrs. Tom inquired, "who (As Seen by O. B. Joyful) Often we have wondered if the cele brated comic characters were as funny in real life as they are in the. paper. So Ave found out. They are.. First, we tackled old Everett True. ( 1 cement business that adds cost to the consumer is fixed and certain and that everything that would explain just what purpose an audit company serves, that apparently does not au dit, but keeps a check on distribution and prices through reports, is. one of those things that comes under the general statement "that is the way we run our business." So far that mys terious process by which cement man ufacturers arrive at the same price lm their products, although one ships se -eral hundred miles and the other none, has not been explained. It developed this morning that th5 cement manufacturers are relying on the federal government to put a stop to Ihe Kansas investigation into the al leged "cement combine." A. VT. Shul this, president of the Western iatcs Portland Cement company, in a letter to Mr. Hopkins, declined to appear at Topeka, and stated that United States, inspectors have given us a "clear bill of health," Others repeat the same statement to the attorney general. o ENGLISH MYTH MAKERS AND PRESIDENT LINCOLN a moral, mot to adorn a tale. Ac cordingly there is not a trace of hu mor or fun in Mr. Drinkwatei's presentation, except the joke about Grant's brand of whisky, which he could hardly escape, but which in Mr. Rea's mouth is no laughing matter at least the audience didn't take it. We regard this as a great defect in Mr. Drink,water's play, and an inartis tic one. For surely Lincoln's earnest ness and resolution would have been emphasized by sallies of fun and hu mor. Cromwell, by the way, has suf fered much in the same way at the hands of the mythmakers.. Carlyle has done something to destroy the myth; but nothing is so hard; and be tween the Puritans and the Tories the sour, gloomy fanatic and tyrant has hidden the humorist and the playfui country gentleman. We fear a simil!-- fate is about to befall Abraham Lin coln. At all events, Mr. Drinkwater j has done his best to begin the decep tion.' A play about America, whether written by an American or an Eng lishman, has always this difficulty for English actors. What language is to be used? We do not profess to be an expert in dialects and accents; but we should have taken Lincoln's speech, as rendered by Mr. Rea. for that 01 . Belfast buttorman: we do not think it is at all like the dialect of Illinois. The absurdity is heightened by the fact that Secretary Seward and the members of the Cabinet speak just like English civil servants and mem bers of Parliament. The only safe plan is, we think, for everybody to speak English, and leave the American ac-' cent to the imagination, especially in a purely moral conception, such as Mr. j Drinkwater's. o circus where his "acts" justified the br Titer's announcement of the "most wonderful, curious and remarkable" spectacle. From the trusses, braces and tubing of erstwhile airplanes Filer has built instruments for an orchestra. From the braces he made a set of chimes whici he suspended from the struts of an old plane. A xylophone was con structed from tne aero tubing; this hangs from the stays of a disabled "spad." Another instrument is fash ioned of aluminum tubes which Filer strokes with resin smeared gloves. T!u "music" he plays on this instrumew requires more endurance than speed oh the part of the operator. Sergeant Filer's musical "act" wan too good to limit to one place, so h" was detailed to the entertainment dov partment of the Y. M. C. A. Hear1 conducting his aviation orchestra tit: Le Mans for the doughboys who ac counting the days until they got back home. .": MUSIC FROM ..IRPLANE PARTS (From the New Tork Evening Sun) PARIS The oldest piece of salvag ing in connection with the demobilizing oc the aviation section at Romcratin was accomplished by Sergeant Ernest Filer of Chicago. Filer was an aviation mechanic. Re fore the war he was connected with a FEDERAL AND GOODYEAR TIRES HARRY CRESSWELL Washington St. Garage . 80S West Washington St. Estimates Furnished on Ford Auto REPAIRING Phone 4490 , We Have Everything for the Ford We met him at a concert. "Everett," we asked, "why does that Tian shut his eyes when he sings?" "I'.ecause he can't bear to see us suf fer," and Everett would have said more nly .Mrs- True said fur him to hush up. iif hushed. Funny how Everett can ite lion's head off and yet is afraid o talk hack to his wife. Freckles met his dad the other eve ning and suddenly remembered he had forg.it some thing. "Pop," he said, "would you punish me for something I hadn't done?" "Of course I wouldn't" his fa ther replied. "I'm glad," smi'ed Freckles, "'cause I didn't mow the lawn as you told me to." Tom Duff was picking up his belong ings, scattered all over the house. Cer- was the best man at the wedding you attended last evening?" (Mrs. Duff had to get breakfast be cause Pansy was all tired out from the wedding celebration she had partici pa..d in as matron of honor.) "Ah dun know Missus Duff, some thinks as how it wyz Rastus, but the cops interfered before it wuz d'eided." ... Olivia was rehearsing a play her club is to put on some time soon. I alnh his wi (London Saturday Review) The play by Mr. Drinkwater at the Hammerstein theater is interesting, not because it is well written and con veys some shrewd satire on quite re cent events, but because it show's how the historical myth is generated. Abraham Lincoln was murdered fifty-three years ago; and already the process of selecting certain traits of character and neglecting others in or der to pass on the image which the myth makers wish to preserve has be gun. This selection of aspects, some times for a moral, sometimes for a political purpose, is as old as history itself and began with the Roman em perors and Plutarch and has ended for the present with Napoleon Bona parte. Mr. Drinkwater has started upon Abraham Lincoln; and in a few years myth makers, possibly Ameri can, will set to work on Benjamin Disraeli. Lincoln was. undoubtedly, a man of moral earnestness and stern tenacity of purpose. But, acording to unani mous contemporary evidence, his hu mor, his quaintness and his sagacity in All Rich in Oval Label Quality IN summer time sandwich time Armour's Oval Label Spreads make the preparation of apppetizing lunch eons the work of minutes. 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