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PAGE TWO IST DENIES WIFE IS RESPONSIBLE FI IIS GUNSHOTWOUNDS State’s Attorney Opens Probe To Fix Blame In Mystery Shooting Os Wealthy Contractor FREEPORT. N. Y., June 28.—The mysterious shooting of Oscar A. Hirsh, wealthy electrical contractor, on the lawn of the home of Reine Davies, former movie actress, late Saturday night, today took another turn when Mrs. Hazel Hirsh, released on bail after having been accused of shooting her husband, took him home from the Mineola hospital to nurse him back to health. Both Mr. and Mrs. Hirsh denied she had pulled the trigger in a scuf fle after their departure from a party given by Miss Devies. but nei ther said who fired the shot—whether Mr. Hirsh or a third party. Mrs. Hirsh declared that, far from -firing the shot, she was doing “every ijjfefng possible to prevent it.” Hirsh, who is well-known in the town’s theatrical colony, defended his wife. “You don’t think I'd be fool enough to come back to a wife who had shot me, do you?” he was quoted by his attorney. “If she were the kind of woman who should shoot, would she be the kind I could shield? “It is silly for anyone to think that I would do anything to harm my husband," Mrs. Hhirsh said. "Our relations have been too close. My husband knows I was not responsible jn any way for his being shot, and knows I did everything possible to avoid his being shot by trying to save him.” , Assistant District Attorney Elvin N. Edwards, who has charge of the -investigation, stated that, so far, his inquiries had shown no traces of anything but a quiet Saturday night •party on the Davies lawn before the shooting. He said, however, that there were several details which must be cleared up before the real story of the shooting could be determined. One, he said, concerned the finding -of two revolvers. Hirsh, the prose cutor said, admitted owning both. One is a .32 caliber, and the other a .25 caliber. One shot had been Tired from each gun. I The other bothersome point, Mr. Edwards said, concerned Mrs. Hirsh. She appeared at a hearing before a police judge w r ith one eye injured. While it did not appear to be a reg ular “black eye,” it was cut and dis colored. So far, no attempt lias been made to explain it. Mr. Edwards asserted. SIGN FOR°TITLE GO JCEW YORK. June 26—Johnny ■Dundee, junior lightweight champion, arid Jack Sharkey today signed for a ■World’s title 15-round bout at Ebbets field in Brooklyn on the night of July 6. Both agreed to weigh in at >3O pounds at 2 p. m., the day of the fight. /SckyN llstrikeJ TCASTt Cigarette It’s toasted. This one extra process gives a rare and delightful quality ——impossible to duplicate. 9 Guaranteed by TkiS Time to Re-tire? BUY the Fisk Cord Tire because it is big, because it has strength and toughness with its unusual resiliency and because its safe deep-cut button tread is long enduring. These are all big mileage qualities. Increased capacity now means quick, complete filling of dealer orders; but the demand for Fisk Cords is growing so tremendously, it is wise to order them a few days in advance of actual need. IS There’s a Fisk Tire of extra value in every size, | for car, truck or speed wagon Attempt to Ascend Everest Is Failure (Continued from Page 1) pea ns with the exception of the Bury party have ever approached nearer than 60 miles to its base and few travelers have even seen its upper elopes. The attempts which have been made to ascend some of Mount Ever est’s sister peaks of the Himalayas have usually been made through Ne pal because access to them through Tibet was not then open. The ap proach to Mount Everest through Tibet is said to be more accessible and presents greater prospects of suc cess than from the Nepal side. Given Tibetan Sanction Sir Francis Y'ounghusband an nounced that the Tibetan government had granted its permission to at temut the ascent of the mountain by the Tibetan route, t was Sir Francis who, as colonel commanding a British mission to the forbidden city of Lhasa in 1903-04, opened Tibet to civilization. The trigonometrical altitude of Mount Everest is 29,002 feet; its probable height ia 29,141 feet. The next known highest of the Himalayan peaks are Kinchinjunga, 28,225 feet, and K-2, or Bride peak, whose alti tude is 28,191 feet. The Duke of the Abruzzi, who reached the top of Mount St. Elias in Alaska (18,024 feet) and who at one time held the record of farthest north in Arctic exploration, tried to climb K-2 or Bride peak in 1909, but failed because from whatever point of the compas he advanced he could find no way up to attain the summit. At 24,600 feet he and his companions were in good physical condition, al though progress was slow and labor ious. A thick mist warned them that to go on “would have been madness. This achievement of the Italian ex plorer, however, is the world’s record for mountain climbing. Bride peak is in the Karakoram Himalayas. Be sides it and its two higher sister peaks there are in the Himalayas no less than 75 peaks above 24,000 feet, 48 above 25,000 feet, .16 above 26,000 feet, and five above 2(.000 feet. Some of the notable mountain climbing feats of history and the year in which the peaks of the various mountains were attained, follow: 1774, the Titlis, the first true snow mountain; 1786, Mount Blancs sum mit reached for the first time; 1811, the Jungfrau; 1812, the Finsteraar horn; 1813. the Zermatt Breithorn; 182. Pike’s peak; 1854, the Matter horn; 1855, the Monte Rosa; 1 865 > Matterhorn; 1879, Chimborazo; 1 8 “3. the Cordillera; 1888, the Selkirks; 1897, Aconcagua; IS9B, the Bolivian Andes; 1899, Sikkim in the Hima layas; 1909, Mount Ruwenzorl. There have been no pre-eminent achieve ments by explorers since the last named date. Homsteaders And Cattlemen Use Same Spring Following a hearing of the dispute between cattlemen and homesteaders in the district formerly the Dixie na tional forest in Mohave county over the water rights to two springs, a plan was worked out by C. C. Lewis, deputy state water commissioner, who conducted the hearing, whereby both sides in the controversy will be permitted to use the waters of these springs. An order to this effect will b® issued in a few days by W. S. Norviel, state water commissioner. The plan as proposed by Mr. Lewis and accepted by the contestants gives the homesteaders the surplus waters of the Big Spring for their domestic use and at the same time gives the cattlemen all the water they need for their cattle. A float valve is to be installed in the troughs at the spring to regulate the water supply. The Big Spring has a continual flow of 40 gallons a minute and the homesteaders will pipe the water 12 miles. Storage tanks are to be built to store the surplus water in the win ter. The waters of Cold spring, the other spring involved, is to be given to the cattlemen. There were five cattlemen and 17 families of home steaders involved in the dispute. Wife of Illinois Governor Dies Os Apoplexy Stroke KANKAKEE, 111., June 26. Mrs. Len Small, wife of Governor Small of Illinois, died this morning. Mrs. Small was stricken with apo plexy Saturday night during the ex citement incident to the celebration by friends and fellow-townsmen of the governor’s acquittal that after noon at Waukegan, 111. With her at the time of her death was the governor and their three children, Leslie and Budd Small and Mrs. A. E. Inglesh, all of Kankakee. THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, PHOENIX, TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 27, 1922. WORKING FORCE ON ME TRUE HAS OEEN INCREASED An additional grading crew in charge of A1 Lillard has been placed on the Apache Trail by the state highway department. The addition of this crew makes a total of three crews now employed in repairing the trail. To date approximately eight miles of the trail has been repaired and is in first class condition. The crew under Lillard will use caterpillars and giant graders and will handle the earth work from the camp at Goldfield toward Phoenix. Surfacing of the remaining portion of the Florence road to the Apache Trail Is to be completed next week and the surfacing outfit with the gas oline shovel w ill be moved to the vi cinity of Irion’s ranch to complete the surfacing of the Superior-Miami highway. Additional forces may be placed on the Apache Trail in August, Thomas Maddock, state engineer, said yes terday, in order that the trail will be finished before the winter months. The paving of a stretch one-half mile long in the west part of Flag staff will be started this week by Warren Brothers, to whom the con tract was let. This stretch is a por tion of the Old Trails highway. The grading crew which has been work ing in the vicinity of Wickenburg, will be moved to the Allentown por tion of the Holbrook-Lupton high way. Work will be started on the highway from Wickenburg to Morris town ns soon as federal and county funds for the job are available. Fourteen F. W. D. and G. M. C. army trucks were reveived yesterday by the state highway department from Fort Bliss. These trucks are part of the war material being dis tributed to the states by the war department. o ■ Favorites Win In Intercollegiate Net Singles Play PHILADELPHIA, June 26.—Fa vorites came through as expected in the singles of the annual intercollegi ate tennis tournament which began today on the turf courts of the Merl on Cricket club. Philip Neer, of Leland Stanford university, last year’s title winner, advanced to the fourth round by vir tue of a default in the second round by Alfred Hulme of Havefford and a 6-2, 6-4 victory in the third round over Lloyd Gregory of the University of Texas. Other stars who advanced to the fourth round were James Wavis and Richard Hinckley, Leland Stanford; W’ray Brown, Washington unlvers* ity; John Howard, Princeton; L. E. Williams. Yale; W. E. Howe. Jr., Dartmouth; Morris Duane. Harvard and Charles Granger, University of Texas. The three members of the Uni versity of Chicago team were elim inated in the second round. Play in the doubles championship starts tomorrow. Creator of Frisco ‘Eden’ Is Honored By Municipality SAN FRANCISCO, June 26—San Francisco recently changed its civil service law so that John McLaren, famed landscape expert and creator of the city’s “Eden,” the beautiful Golden Gate park, would not have to retire when he became 70 years of age. In addition, his employers, the board of supervisors, voted him a seventieth birthday present of a 50 per cent increase in salary. Since 1887. soon after McLaren came here from Scotland, he has been park superintendent, and has converted what once was a dreary stretch of sand dunes into an allur ing wilderness, noted throughout the world for its size and beauty. For years he and his wife have lived in a cozy lodge deep in a park reqess. Until changed, the law said that McLaren would have to go on the pension list and give up his lodge when he became 70. The supervisors changed the law to read that em ployes receiving over SSOO a month are exempt from retirement pro visions and. to put McLaren within the law. increased his salary from S6OO to $725. McLaren handled the big task of landscaping the grounds of the Panama Pacific exposition here in 1915 and in odd moments of recent years he wrote a book, “Gardening in California,” which has become a standard textbook. When McLaren first came to the park there were no lakes, few roads, few trees and scores of acres of sand dunes. He had 20 men on the payroll and thought if he could have 100 everything would be well. Now there are some 300. McLaren knows every tree, shrub and flower in the big park by all its names. Practically every growing thing in the big reservation was placed where it is by his personal di rection. He located the bridges, waterfalls, miniuture canyons, lakes and boulevards. He made the park what it is and San Francisco is eatis field. Now, at 70 years, McLaren is plan ning a new addition to the big park, giving him more acres to plant. We Leave All to You All you have to do is to call at our office and see for yourself the class of work we do, and the prices we ask, and you will easily understand why our practice is so large and why we have so many boosters. Come in today and let us give you an esti mate on your dental requirements. COMPLETE DENTAL DIAGNOSIS FREE!! GAS ADMINISTERED Dr. John J. Sitkin U Dr. Frank L. Sitkin MONIMON BLOG. OPPOSITE PHOENIX NAT’L BANK WASHINGTON AND FIRST AVENUE PHONE 6006 Pima Cotton Ass*n Closes First Year (Continued from Page 1) history of the co-operative marketing movement in cotton throughout the country and in Arizona, and modestly gave most of the credit for the ex istence of the Arizona Fimacotton Growers’ association to R. F. Garnett, Dr. j. c. Norton and others of the group of devoted men who marked shoulder to shoulder with him in the early history of the movement. He then made a report to the mem bership as trustee and member of the executive committee of the American Cotton Growers’ exchange for this association, telling of the remarkable spread of the co-operative marketing movement through the cotton states, and of the work of the national ex change in correlating the activities and salee of the various state organi zations, and in providing general service that it would not be econom ical for each state to undertake and thus duplicate much work and ex pense. "The greatest difficulty in any as sociation is to secure proper per sonnel,” said Mr. Stevens, "and this is true of the American Cotton Grow ers’ exchange as well as of the state associations. The big trouble is to get men who are capable of filling the Jobs, and at the same time are thoroughly ‘sold’ on the co-operative idea itself and understand and be lieve. in it so thoroughly that they will devote every ounce of their energy and ability to making the movement a success. May Expect Opposition "There is no question,” he con tinued, "but that the movement will encounter the most determined oppo sition from those whose business may be injured, or who think it may be injured, by the success of the whole movement. They will endeavor to persuade the members not to conform to their contracts, and to persuade the rest of the public that the move ment means their injury and ie de signed only to benefit the farmer. "So the board of trustees of the ex change is only setting up the many departments as fast as they can Se cure men who can carry on the work. In this connection I am glad to say that it was the unanimous action of the board at their recent meeting in Memphis in asking Arisona to give up a man whom they believe can carry on the necessary publicity work for the movement on a national scale, and within the past two hours a tele gram has arrived from Moser asking our secretary, Charles M. Morgan, to report to Dallas within two weeks to take up this work." The speaker then reviewed the work of the association in securing better and lower priced ginning, bet ter prices for cotton seed, and its many other accomplishments. Mr. Stevens was given an ovation when introduced and hearty applause when he finished. P, G. Spileburg Speak* P. O. Spilsbury, president of the Arizona Industrial congress. W'&s then introduced and spoke on the subject of "Co-operation Between Business and Agricultural Interests for the General Good.” "I am a mining engineer,” said Mr. Spilsbury, ."but I venture to say that l know more about co-operative marketing than the average farmer. For we have had co-operative mar keting in the mining croups for years and it has always worked to the benefit of every group that has tried it. We do not call it co-operative marketing, but that Is what it is, and without this system the mining in terest* would be in the same helpless position in which the individual farmer finds himself without proper organization. “One of the finest examples of co operation that I have seen,” the speaker ccontinued, "is in the work of the Arizona Industrial Congress, which is composed of representatives of all the major business and agri cultural groups in an endeavor to build up a greater Arizona. "Recently we received an order for half a million dollars’ worth of Ari zona agricultural products, and we found, after careful survey of all possible sources of reliable supply, that we could not supply more than $50,000 worth. The stuff is here, you produce it, but there was no way to secure it in large quantities, property graded and packed, at the proper time. "So we felt that the only way to get the results desired was to help the farmers to organize for market ing, and that is what we have been doing through the farm bureau in various parts of the state. “This is not charity, it is good business?. The big business men of the state realize that it is necessary for the farmer to be prosperous if business in general is to be prosper ous. The farmer must make a profit, he must have a bank account, his land must be stabilized in value, if he is to be able to pay his taxes, and if tne big business institutions of the state are not to have their taxes raised. It is a plain business organization to secure co-operation between all in terests, for the benefit of all of us." Hie speech was greeted with pro longed applause. Must Improve Baling The treasurer for the past season, B. J. Showers, was then called upon to discuss the subject ofGField Glas sification and Bale Certification. Mr. Showers is a graduate of the college of agriculture of California, and is recognized as well posted on matters of cotton culture. He showed clearly that it is neces sary to get valley cotton into better shape as to package, to take means of insuring uniformity of staple in Wanted-Indian Relics of all kinds VAUGHN & O’CONNELL 13 N. Central Ave. the individual bale, and outlined the methods recommended by the best plant breeding experts to secure these results. The attorney for the association, for the farm bureau, and for the three new associations recently or ganized on the same plan as the cot ton association, Fred J. Elliott, was the next speaker, taking for his sub ject "The Co-operative Marketing Movement in Arizona,’ ’and covering it briefly. Mr. Elliott could spare but a few minutes because of the press Os work in getting the new aseociations, the Arizona Dairy Pro ducers, Arizona. Grain Growers and Roosevelt Hay Growers, worked out In the many details necessary to suc cessful operation. “There is no question,” he saief "but that the principle Is right. This hag been proven many times, and has been proven right here by the success of the Arizona Pimacotton Growers. The Sapiro plan of co operative marketing Is spreading over the country like a conflagration, and it is having a remarkable record of uniform success. “The movement is destined to bring about one of the greatest economic changes for the better that has ever happened to the country, and by benefiting the farmer to benefit all 1 a use (t 11 Tells of Publicity Need The last talk was made by Charles M. Morgan, secretary for the past year of the Arizona Pimacotton Growers, whose subject was "The Relation of Publicity to Co-operative Marketing.” Mr. Morgan demonstrated the im perative need of both membership contact publicity, for the purpose of selling the co-operative marketing idea to the farmers themselves,- and keeping them sold during its opera tion, and of publicity on a national scale for the purpose of educating the "other half” of the public to me benefits to the entire economic struc ture of the movement. Publicity, either by means of pub licity mediums or by personal contact, is necessary to sell the idea to the farmer in the first place, and to keep him sold. It Is a peculiar kink of human nature that it is necessary, after a man has been secured as a member of a co-operative, to keep on constantly telling him of the bene fits he is deriving, for wo are all prone to fail to recognize the bene fits we are deriving from any agency unless we are told about it. "It is just as Accessary that the rest of the public be informed of the benefits to them of the co-operative marketing movement, in order to minimize opposition and to sooner bring to the greatest success this great economio movement. "Farmer* and their families make up half of the consuming public, and the other half is made up of all the rest of the folks, engaged in every conceivable occupation. “Without proper educational policy, published in the mediums that reach all sorts of people in the ‘other half,’ they are-likely to conceive the idea, or be sold the idea by interested persons, that the farmers, through co operatives, are trying to boost prices, to the detriment of the rest of the folks, and thereby increase the cost of living. “As a matter of fact, the object of co-operative marketing is to bring back to the producer a larger per centage of the dollar paid by the con sumer than the producer has been getting under the old dumping sys tem. The cost of production plus a reasonable profit is all the farmer Is seeking, and all he believes himself to be entitled to." The meeting of members then ad journed, and the new board of di rectors held their first meeting. The hour being late, and the members of the board desiring to take plenty of time to consider the personnel of the offices for the following years, the meeting was adjourned until next Saturday afternoon, when the election of officers will be held. Our Floral Depart- JfifSlWr J?; ' % U #ZII Trial Will Convince You. Phone 6389 ARIZONA SEED & FLORAL CO. I A Better Day j| Than Yesterday j Each day should be a better day than yesterday —better health, better work, j|| better play. Whether it is a better day or not depends largely on what kind of tj a breakfast you eat. Start the day right Shredded | I Wheat S \ With Strawberries m i Being made in biscuit form it is so easy to l prepare a delicious, wholesome meal with (Ml [ft Shredded Wheat and berries or other fruits. jp The porous shreds of the Biscuit take up the m i fruit acids, presenting them to the palate in all j I the richness of their natural flavor. A boon j, j l to busy housewives. h>| . When you ask for Shredded Wheat be sure you ?■ \ get the original Shredded Wheat you have always ■, j eaten, made at Oakland, Calif.—always clean, \ always pure, always the same high quality. Two 'All . Biscuits with milk or cream, or with berries or j ; - j I Show Unfair Working Os Passenger Rates (Continued from Page 1) cific in Ariona, 189,209 for the Santa Fe* system and 213.311 for the Santa Fe in Arizona. The same exhibit showed the Burlington trains aver aged 6.78 cars, the Northern Pacific, 6.95 cars, the Rock Island 6.5 cars and the Southern Pacific in Arizona 9.49 cars. I Spend Less in Arizona Another exhibit showed that the Burlington road derived $2.70 a mile, the Northern Pacific. $2.54; the Rock Island, $2.84; and the Southern Pa cific in Arizona, $4.88 a mile; while the operating expenses of these roads per mile were as follow: Burlington, $2.02; the Northern Pacific, $2.42; the Rock Island, $2.19; and the Southern Pacific in Arizona, $2.56. In other words, Mr. Betts ex plained, the above exhibit shows that from every dollar taken in by these roads, the Burlington spent 74.8 cents for operation; the Northern Pacific, 95.2 cents; the Rock Island, 83 cents; and the Southern Pacific in Arizona, 52.4 cents. Another exhibit offered showed the earning of the roads in Arizona dur ing a five-vear period ending Dec. 31. 1920 to be for the Southern Pa cific. 7.1 per cent of its book value; the Santa Fe, 8.4 per cent; the E. P. * S. w„ 6.8 per cent; the Arizona Eastern, 6.1 per cent; and the Grand Canyon, 3.8 per cent. Taking allied lines of these roads in states where the 3.6 cents fare is effective, the table showed that the Louisiana & Texas road made 2.96 per cent of its book value: the G- H. & S. A., 1.64 per cent; the Texas & New Orleans, .81 per cent and the Gulf, Colorado and Santa Fe, .08 per cent; the Houston, East & West Texas. 3.7 per cent: with the Panhandle & San ta Fe road. 7.46 per cent. Make More Her* This exhibit, Mr. Betts explained, showed that only one of the Arizona roads made less than the 6 per cent the government permits W’bile the roads without the states and allied with these roads only one made more than the 6 per cent. The same ex hibit showed that In Arizona the Southern Pacific carried 88 passen gers per train mile, the Santa Fe, 75 passengers, and the other lines 53 to 78 passengers. This same exhibit showed the earnings of the eastern roads on their book value to be as follows; The Chicago & Alton, .46 per cent; Norfolk & Western, 5.78 per cent; Monon Route, .84 per cent; Chicago & Northwestern, 3.59 per cent; Wa bash 1.34 per cent; Rock Island, .22 per cent; Central of Georgia. 4.15 per cent; Pere Marquette, 1.44 per cent: and the Denver & Rio Grande, 1.17 per cent, all of which are oper ating under a base fare rate of 3.6 per cent. Another exhibit showed that the Southern Pacific in Arizona carried 88 passengers per train mile, as com pared to SO In California. 59 in Ore gon and 95 in Utah, and that the Santa Fe carried 84 per train mile in Arizona as compared to 78 in California Mr. Betts showed in an other exhibit that the passenger fare revenue collected in Arizona during a three year period ending Dec. 31, 1920 averaged each year as follows for the roads: Southern Pacific, $3,- 841,676, and the Santa Fe. $4,796,163. What They Earned He also showed in another exhibit that the Southern Pacific in Arizo na earned 10.9 per cent of its as sessed valuation for taxation: the Santa Fe, 9.6 per cent; the Grand Canyon, 7.7 per cent: the E. P. & S. W„ 8.1 per cent and the Arizona Eastern. 9.3 per cent. The carriers, Mr. Betts stated, have long contended that the removal of snow, ice and sand from their tracks cost them a great deal and as evi dence of this Mr. Bette offered an exhibit showing that it cost the Bos ton & Maine road $1,480.74 a mile each yeaj- to remove snow, ice and sand; the Pennsylvania system, $1,379.20 a mile; the New York Cen tral, $1,218.97'; the Illinois Central, $230.44; the Union Pacific, $3.49.84; the Oregon Short Line. $296.46: the Great Northern, $448.86; the Santa Fe system, $18.49; the Santa Fe in Arizona, $11.21; the Southern Pacific system, $11.73 and the Southern Pa cific in Arizona. 27 cents a mile. Another exhibit showed that the railroads maintain an all year round trin tourist rate to but one point in Arizona, that to the Grand Canyon notwithstading the fact that South ern Arizona is noted as a, winter re sort, and that the difference in fares from eastern points to California and from eastern points to Arizona were very slight. This exhibit also showed that passengers buying round trip tickets from Arizona points to east ern points were not riven the reverse routing privileges which passengers in California were permitted. In other words. Mr. Betts explained, a passenger buying a round trip ticket from Phoenix to Chicago could not go on one road and return via an other line not allied with the orig inal line without paying an extra fare of $8.58. In refutation of the contention of the railroads that it cost them more in Arizona for fuel, Mr. Betts of fered an exhibit showing that it cost the Southern Pacific $7.20 a ton for its fuel over the entire system as compared to a cost $7.10 a ton for the road in Arizona, and that it took 87 pounds of fuel per locomotive mile on the Southern Pacific for its en tire system as compared to 74 pounds of fuel in Arizona. Phillies Climb Out Os Celler by Again Beating Beaneaters PHILADELPHIA, June 26.—Phila delphia climbed out of last place to day by taking Its fifth straight vic tory from Boston, 9 to 5. R. H. E. Boston 100 101 200—5 10 1 Philadelphia ..134 001 OOx—9 15 2 Batteries: Miller, Watson, Braxton and Gowdy, Gibson; Ring and Hen line. o COTTON REGION BULLETIN NEW ORLEANS, La., June 26. — Unseasonable weather last 48 hours except mostly seasonable weather in extreme eastern districts; maxima 100 degrees or slightly higher in sev eral localities in western portion of belt. Light to heavy scattered show ers reported Sunday and Monday in w estern Florida and Arkansas Valley and in a few localities elsewhere. PaynTakit Stores FIRST AGAIN To announce a lower price on Star Flour Star, Flour <PI 48 lbs ...... wLmiO Star Flour, QA n 24 lbs SWC Swandown Flour, {£o *| Q 48 lbs * v««lO Swandown Flour, {PI AQ 24 lbs Moses’ Best Flour, {PO QA 48 lbs Kansas Corn Meal, 10 lbs Fancy Pink Beans, CJ7 pTA 100 lbs vI.UU Fancy Pink Beans, 7Qr* 10 lbs • Head Rice, fJTL 100 lbs vU.IU Head Rice, 10 lbs ° 11 Libby’s Solid Pack Tomatoes, CM PTA per case, 24 cans ■ Standard Tomatoes, CJO JK per case, 24 cans... , M , 4 Standard Tomatoes, 1 Cp Selected Sweet Wrinkled Peas, "I Qp Per Case, CM AA 24 cans . «F±.UU Standard Sweet Corn, 11 A per can X AC Sugar, Pure Cane, CJQ A A 100 lbs * Prunes, Large, Size, Box Lots, 18C per lb • • •••»' Solid Packed Apples, G7c gallon cans Solid Packed Peaches, 57c gallon cans .>j.. Hillsdale Sliced Pineapple, 1 Op No. 2 can .j Maricopa or Lily Milk, 10C per can SIX STORES NO. I—GRAND CENTRAL MARKET No. 2—PORAGE POT PAY’N TAKIT FOURTH AVENUE AND WASHINGTON No. 3—BON TON PAY’N TAKIT 23 EAST ADAMS No. 4—ARIZONA PAY’N TAKIT THIRID STREET AND WASHINGTON No. S—SUGAR LOAF PAY’N TAKIT 131 NORTH FIRST AVEtyUE No. 6—CHANDLER PAY’N TAKIT CHANDLER. ARIZONA POWER MAGNATE DIES SAN FRANCISCO, June 26.—Sam uel Napthaly, vice president of the Great Western Power company and well-known in Pacific engineering circles, died here today after an ill ness of three months. He wag 47 years old. 57 Something to live up to Heinz Vinegars have purity greater than any food law demands. Living up to the rep utation of the “57” — to the quality guaran teed by the Heinz la bel—to the Heinz ideals of care and cleanliness —these are what de termine the goodness of Heinz Vinegars. HEINZ PURE VINEGARS