Agnew of Agnew, Cal., raised about twenty tons last year, which they sold to one concern. The farmers, it should be said, get their seed chiefly from the factory, and the factory tries to get the most suitable for the region in which It operates. Now, .as I to , the profits in growing beets. A good average yield is sixteen tons to the acre or 32,000 pounds. At 16% per cent of sugar you have 5280 pounds of sugar to the; acre. "We pay $5 per ton for beets, extract ing 230 pounds of . sugar," - said Mr. Palmer. "This costs j us ¦ $2 18 per 100 pounds in the beet. The superior seed will give us a beet of not only higher tonnage per acre but of a higher sugar content, so that the farmer and the fac tory will both get the benefit. When we get a beet of 400 pounds extraction to the ton the sugar in. the beet will be costing us $125 per 100 as against $2 18, but we will be making more money." .;" Mr. Palmer.'by the way, is the father of the single seed'and \ the single beet Idea. He says he has been talking such a possibility to beet growers and sugar makers for years, : but , they, only Bcout ed the - idea. When , he, 'in a communi cation to Secretary Wilson, suggested it he met with ready sympathy. '^Ot course it can ¦ be 'done," .was the reply. When ; it; is done, . says- Mr. Palmer, : it will ', relieve the' growing of beets of . its most disagreeable, feature and : reduce the expense 25 per cent; .The ; future of the industry is roost promising—threat ened .only by.Ja Hampering with* j the tariff."^ ;, '¦;--' ¦': I'"'' •- ' ; ' A well-constructed brick house will outlast one built of granite. TACOMA, April 26. — The Oriental liner Tremont arrived in port to-day. She brought an unusually large pas senger list, including a number who have been in the military or educa tional departments at Manila; also a number of pasengers from Yokoha ma and Kobe. There were eighty na tives of different tribes of the Philip pines going to the St. Louis Exposi tion ."-"W-v . . Filipinos for the World's Fair. Before buying new or old typewriter write for full particulars about the new writing-in-sight L. C. Smith typewrit er L. >.nd M. -Al'xancler. Cnst Ag^nt?. 110 Montgomery street. fivf, ¦- About New Typewriter. Important Auction To-Day At 1345 McAllister street. The parlor suite cost $500, one mahogany bedstead cost $500, the sideboard cost $500 and many other things in the outfit are pro portionately valuable. E. Curtis con ducts the sale. ~...7 .,..,.>< • Cars Wrecked, at a Tunnel. SAN LUIS OBISPO, April 26. — Twol cars of a Southern Pacific extraV freight train, eastbound, ¦£ were? wrecked, early this morning on the! Cuesta grade at tunnel 1. The wreck " was cleared about 10 o'clock in the forenoon, after having delayed all traffic for nearly twelve hours. Announcement is made by the Cali fornia Promotion Committee that the State dinner to be given by the com mittee at the Palace Hotel, April 30. will begin at 6:30 p. m. sharp and that it will end by midnight. It Is also reported by the committee that 400 leading men from all parts of the State will be present, the most complete representation of those en paged in development work in this State that has ever been brought to gether on any occasion. The speeches will be short, under a time limit, and the occasion will be enlivened thereby. Guests That Accept Invitations Repre sent Every Portion of the State of California. PROMOTION COMMITTEE DINNER BEGINS EARLY "Success or failure In the growing of sugar beets," said ! , Mr. Tracy, "lies in the selection of, seed. \The seed is the whole; thing. .. Sugar is made in the field and npt in the factory. ¦ The seed costs f rohv 9 cents to J 15 Vents a s pound, and about fifteen, pounds plant an acre. If ' the faVmer buys. poor seed he saves from 90; cents to $1 an acre, with a possible difference | in product .of from 6 to 7 tons in weight and a correspond ing' difference In; sugar, content and purity [counting for from $25 to' $28 in money. The" best -seed raised comes from ; the neighborhood of , the Hartz Mountains. ¦ Therejare several growers in this country; the' seed of the Morrison farm at Falrfleld," Wash.; 1 being the best." Considerable] seed ¦ is . raised near : Lei hi;"Utah, which, is thought to be the best. for the arid land and the irrigated sections^of "the^West.' 'H.* C; r ahd; J/ b. CARE IN SELECTION. The department is carrying on lines of work looking to betterment of the beet and the benefit of the industry.- The first is the securing of the best seed and distributing it after it Is test ed. It is not going into this on a com mercial scale, of course, but in an ef fort to extend cultivation. The second work is the testing of seed. Seed is bought in large -quantity and placed with other seed In tracts of from two to ten acres In the vicinity of every factory In the country. . The third work Is the. testing by. comparison of ail. the different varieties of seed .used in the factories of the United States, the tests In all cases being by experts and In the most scientific manner.. But there is another and very Im portant development in the cultivation of the sugar beet, and which the de partment, Is working up. It is the pro duction of a single seed in the ball. The beet seed ball contains from one to nine see.ds, and each seed produces a beet.^ The roots are therefore grouped and to keep them "trimmed requires a great deal of labor of a kind the Amer ican farmer does not like— that is slow work with the' hands, stooping over each hill. If the beet. could be grown singly It. could be. planted In' rows and culitvated with machinery.** To produce a seed, that would grow, a single beet and a beet that; would reproduce Its seed is the effort being made. The method adopted is simply that of se lection—finding the single seed, in' the first place; and breeding to It, selecting out the product and repeating the pro cess. :^i : " -• able In a few years tw produce a seed that will average 26 per cent of sugar in the factory beet. When this is ac complished, says Secretary Palmer of the association, Congress may take off the tariff as against the Philippines, or any other country for that matter, as American factories can with this com pete even against the unclad, and un housed labor of the South Sea islands. A few seed beets have developed 25 per cent, and one beet has been found with 28 per cent. With this to start from, it Is a much easier matter to breed up a whole crop to this stand ard than to advance a point beyond it. The work of reaching 16 per cent fac tory beets from 6 per cent seeds will be appreciated from this fact. The fac tory beet, it should be said, develops about 3 per cent less sugar than the seed beet analyses. TESTING THE SEED. SECRETART,OF AMERICAN BEET SUGAR ASSOCIATVWJ' 1 AND •: A: .¦^TYPICAL. FIELD SCENE.-'. - • : as .jtoastmaster. ¦ Covers were laid for 400- persons. The .-menu cards' "were elaborate souvenirs, containing a pic ture of the late General M. G. Vallejo, views of Mare Island and Vallejo; the cruiser Charleston In the drydock and the cruiser Olympia. The regular toasts and those who made responses were as follows: "Our Order," Hon. H. R. McNoble; "Our Country," Hon. James Lu Gallagher; "California," Hon. M. T. Dooling; "The Navy," Rear Admiral B. H. McCalla; "The Pioneers," Hon. C. E. McLaugh lin; "The Press,'; Hon. John F. Davis; "The Flag," Commander C. T. B. Moore; remarks, Hon. Charles Bel shaw; "City of Vallejo," Mayor James Roney; "California Landmarks," Hon. J. R. Knowland; "The Ladies," Hon. W. A. Gett; reminlscenses, Hon. J. E. Mc- Dougald. The Mare Island station orchestra rendered music during the* banquet. This makes the fourth human body that has been found between Middle Creek and Red BlunT since the Decem ber night when four young men were drowned in the Sacramento River., near the mouth of Middle Creek, white returning to Keswick from Redding. The circumstances in each case were such that the corpse could not* b«- Identified. -V ¦" -, : - . .•; Iv • . ; REDDING, April 25— The body of an unknown man was found last night in a slough about a mile below Red ding. Identification was impossible. A rifle was found In the sand twenty feet from the body. Coroner Bassett thinks it Is a case of either murder or suicide. r' — Body of an Unknown Man Found in a 'Slough Near Redding, in Shasta County. 3IYSTER Y OF A DEATH PUZZLES Tlli; When the Dlngley tariff law went into effect In 1897 there were just; six factories making sugar from .beets. This year there are flfty-slx— all do ing big and profitable business where a supply of beets can be obtained. The farmer must produce the* raw. material before: the factory can do business and the'flrit work of : the; manufacturer^ 1« "In Pittsburg there were a number of men who did not know what to do with their surplus money — money which they had made out of the man ufacture of plate glass. A man went there from Michigan and laid before them a prospectus touching, the manu facture of beet sugar and he did it so effectively that they are about build ing in the State of Michigan an enor mous plant with a capital of a billion dollars, a plant superior to anything of the kind in the world. for the manu facture of sugar from beets." Senator Dolliver made this state ment recently in a speeoh, as he said, addressed to the ear of the young men of the United States, in which he un dertook to shogv among other, things that opportunity waited upon brains and enterprise in this country at this moment as It .has never done, before. The beet sugar reference was but\a point among many, but taken in con nection with other things it serves to direct attention to : what Mr. Palmer says'is an opportunity,- especially open in the West. tjC? This is what Truman G. Palmer, secretary of the American Beet Sugar Association said to me. . MICHIGAN'S GREAT PLANT. The State of California leads all the States of the Union in the pro duction of beet sugar. The available area for growing sugar beets success fully is greater on the Pacific Coast than elsewhere, extending from North ern Washington to Southern Califor nia, the. line being drawn from ; about Los Alemetos northeastward across the map to New York, leaving out all the more Southern and Gulf States. "The sugar beet offers great possi bilities to the Western farmer. It is a most profitable crop; a most inter esting study; no other crop can com pare with it for turning the arid lands of the West Into money-making acres. The sugar beet, or its product, can pay freight across the . continent. Corn, wheat, alfalfa — no other crop can do it-" , CALIFORNIA BEET SUGAR. CALL BUREAU, HOTEL BARTON, WASHINGTON, April 26.— In the ag ricultural appropriation bill, which is a part of the accomplished legislation of this session of Congress, there is a little item of $10,000 out of which, ac cording to an association of American manufacturers assembled a few days ago in Washington, the members of which represent an investment of many millions, an immense benefit is to grow. The $10,000 is to pay for experiments in "breeding up" the seed of the sugar beet. At the present time the sugar beet is the most highly bred root in the world, but the process of breeding has only fairly begun and is to be con tinued right along under the supervi sion of the Government and for the benefit of whomsoever will. That there are 6ugar beets — certain sugar, beets— whose lineage — mother, grandmother, great-grandmother and bo on — can be traced back through twenty genera tions may be interesting news to the layman. Sugar beet people know of the long and patient travail by which the industry finds itself where it is. The 510,000 appropriated by Congress is to be expended in experiments to be conducted c-n a certain farm located a few miles from Spokane, Wash., owned by E. H. Morrison, j The reason of this selection is that Mr. Morrison has been conducting experiments In his own way so intelligently and success fully as to have attracted the attention and enlisted the sympathy of the Agri cultural Department of the Govern ment. Mr. Morrison's seed beets are Eaid to have the highest percentage of sugar contents yet reported of any American grower. To reach conclu sions quickly and inexpensively. Secre tary Wilson dispatches his man to work with Mr. Morrison on Mr. Morrison's farm. BY S. W. WALL. But it. is the work* of the Govern ment — the Agricultural Department that I set out to speak*' of. The mak ing of sugar from beets was begun In Europe over a century ago. The first factory was set up in Curieru, Silesia, in 1801. At that time the beet con tained from 5 to 6 per cent of sugar. Since then the content of. the mothe,r beet has been bred up to 16 per cent. The' process of breeding is by a careful course of selec tion and fertilization, the beets containing the highest percentage being devoted to the growing of seed year by year. The beet ia first selected from the \ formation of its leaf, then the shape' of the root and finally as to the chemical content Growers and manufacturers in Germany,^ which is now the center of the industry, have kept a record; for forty 'years of their progress in this way and can show photographs of lines of mother beets for twenty generations covering that time. The oldest factory in the United States, although there were others built earlier, is located at Alvarado, Cal., the property of the Alameda Su gar Company. For a long time seed was imported from. Germany and to day the growers of . this country de pend- largely on the- imported seed. Should this supply be cut off' it would greatly cripple the industry here.; This fact led the Agricultural Department to interest itself in the' matter and Secretary Wilson dispatched John E. W.' Tracy,, need expert,. upon a mission of Inquiry and study, from which he has just returned with a great deal of valuable information. Dr. H. W.^Wy lie, chief of , the bureau of chemistry, and Dr. C. O. Townserid of the bureau of seed and plant introduction, have been analyzing . j and experimenting with beets for several years.. '.._¦. The results of ' this work ¦¦ warranted. Secretary .! Wilson to, say I to the Ameri can association and to me in an inter-, view a few days ago- that he would be BEGINNING OF INDUSTRY. These figures, of course, are more picturesque * than practical, but they serve to illustrate an opportunity or two. Now, this is the way Mr. Palmer fig ures out the opportunity/ or one of the opportunities: The consumption of sugar in the United States per annum is 2,500,000 tons. *The production of this country, including. her islands, ¦ is 1,000.000;. importation, -1,500,000. On the basis of the product of the mills we have, there could be built and operated in this country 341 other factories be fore the home consumption could be supplied at home. The army of men who would be employed In the factories would be supplemented by the army of farmers raising the beets— this among the other benefits — and all are contingent, as Mr. Dolliver said in this same quoted speech, upon leaving the tariff alone. . And then there are the railroads— to quote Mr. Palmer again. "The freight receipts, of Rocky Ford, Colo., in 1899," he said, "were $96,000. In that year the Oxnards built a beet sugar factory there, and by 1902 the town had doubled in population and the railroad freight receipts of the place footed up $590,000. By this same ratio your . 341 factories that might and should be built in this coun try would add to the business of the railroads $170,000,000 in freight. The beet suerar factory Is a building three or four stories high. If we place them end to end — what we have — there would be a continuous .industry -eight miles In length. If .we could add the number to supply the home demand alone, there would be a noble line extending fifty-six miles across country." GREAT OPPORTUNITY. to educate the farmer to a profitable crop. Failure In this regard has caused difficulty in this very State of Mich igan to be invaded by the Pittsburg glass men. Michigan, by the way, has twenty-two of the fifty-six factories in the United States, though its prod uct is third. California, with but seven factories, leads the list in the matter of product, followed by Colorado with her nine factories. Utah, with seven fac tories, comes next. New York has two factories, with one each in Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin. The product of these factories the past year totaled 241,000 tons. The steel magnate and his party of friends will leave for Southern Cali fornia to-day. It was their plan to visit the Yosemite Valley, but the trip was abandoned owing to Schwab's deep concern in the condition of his valet, who lies in a critical condition at a city sanitarium. As soon as the millionaire was informed that his faithful servant was not expected to live he caused a telegram to be sent to the unfortunate man's wife in the East and special ar rangements were made to have her cfoss the continent with the least pos sible delays. She will arrive to-day and with the assurance that his servant will receive the best of care in his last hours Schwab will proceed on his W # estern Journey. He expects to visit Mexico before returning to the East and in anticipation of this trip the mil lionaire sent for two mining men of Chihuahua, who are now at the Occi dental, arranging to pilot his party into the southern republic. . Senator Smith is a banker of New ark and Is the largest stockholder in the biggest manufactory of enameled leather in the world. Public improve ments have deeply interested him for many years and he is a keen observer wiierever he travels. He has spent sev eral hours looking over San Francisco and is highly pleased with conditions here and the undoubted future of the city as a commercial center. There Is nothing sijriUficant in my presence here, I am simply paying a visit to all X>cints where the concern of which I am the receiver is interested, with the view cf Cutting information for my report. It i» merely a coincidence that Mr. Schwab and mystlf reached this city about the same ttrae. As to the i>lan for the reorganization of the ehipbuildlnj? corporation, all I can pay js that it Is progressing very satisfac torily, but there are yet mar.y details to be carried out. Our plan for rforpanlzation as submitted by me to the various stockholder* has met with the approval of all except the holders of eJboux. $l(«i.O«x> m-onh of stock, and the majority of these are in England and have etlll to be heard from. The legal for raalilieE of foreclosure will soon be under taken and then the completion of our plans will be hurried through. Former United States Senator James Smith Jr. of Newark, N. J., receiver for the shipbuilding trust, has been a guest at the St. Francis Hotel for two days, conferring with Charles M. Schwab and looking into the affairs of the trust's interests in this city. Yesterday, in company with Million aire Schwab, Dr. Ward and Henry T. Scott, the former Senator visited the Union Iron Works and made a thor ough inspection of the entire plant, making numerous inquiries of Henry T. Scott as to the operations in the shipyard and as to the outlook for local business. He expects to remain in San Francisco for several days, dur ing which he will receive from the Union Iron Works data" and reports concerning its affairs. These he pro pot>es to incorporate in his forthcoming report. Discussing his visit to San Francisco yesterday Senator Smith taid: The banquet at the Pavilion to-night was a brilliant affair. P. B. Lynch, past president of Vallejo Parlor, acted F. H. Dam of Pacific Parlor of San Francisco introduced a resolution that 15 cents be added to the per capita tax to defray the expenses of reorganizing and rehabilitating defunct and delin quent parlors. The resolution went to the finance committee. Fred H. Jung Introduced a resolution which he supported' in a vigorous speech that some future session of the Grand Par lor be held in Yosemite Valley. Three hours were devoted to a resolution sub mitted by the committee on appeals and grievances providing that a mem ber appealing to the grand president to settle a grievance must first have the approval of his own parlor. The object was to lighten the work of the grand president, but the resolution was rejected. Among the telegrams read was on«» from the Governor of California, It was worded as follows: To the Otflcers and Members of the Grand Parlor: I had hoped to greet you In person, but much to my regret, public duties have prevented. California's sons and daughters have much to be thankful for and proud of and California in turn may well be proud of them. The Grand Parlor has in Us keeping much . of , California's welfare. That our or der will exercise, its great Influence for good past experience has amply demonstrated. Through me the State extends hearty con gratulations and best wishes, to which, as a loyal Native Son, I add mine. t . ¦: ¦¦¦'- GEORGE C. PARDEE. In the afternoon a resolution was passed declaring it was the sense of the meeting that the next Grand Par lor choose Sacramento as the city wherein to hold the 1905 celebration of Admission day. BUSINESS OF SESSION. The morning session of the Grand Parlor was brief. A telegram was read from Stella Finkeldey, grand president qt the Native Daughters, extending fraternal greetings to Native Sons in their twenty-seventh annual session. Monterey, which was the only aspirant for the honor, was selected as the meet ing place of the next Grand .Parlor. Marysville announced that It will be a. candidate for the 1906 Grand Parlor. Owing to the threatening condition of the weather, the visit to Mare Isl and navy yard which had been pro grammed for this afternoon was post poned until to-morrow afternoon. How ever, the grand officers accepted a spe cial Invitation from Rear, Admiral B. H. McCalla, commanding the Mare Isl and navy yard, to lunch with him. Accompanied by G. G. Halliday, past president of Vallejo Parlor, the grand officers went over at noon to the com mandant's residence, where they were graciously received by Miss McCalla. This lady was assisted in entertaining the guests at lunch by her sister and Mrs. Kindleberger and Miss Waggener. Mayor James Roney and other guests from Vallejo were present, and the offi cers of the. station showed the visitors every attention. After lunch the grand officers viewed some,' of the* interesting points of the navy yard. MONTEREY IS SELECTED. VALLEJO, April 26.— A beautiful aft ernoon followed a night and morning that brought numerous heavy show ers, which injured- street decorations, but did not the spirits of visit ing Native Sons. The contests ! for the secretaryship and . treasurer-ship of the Grand Parlor are still paramount. However, the gentlemen who desire to be grand trustees now number, twenty and . their claims for recognition are urgent. It is -likely that the number of grand " trustees will be Increased from seven to eleven and that will give a fraction over half of the aspir ants a chance. f ' Among distinguished members of the order here are Senator J. R. Knowland of Alameda, Judge Fletcher Cutler of Humboldt, Senator Tom Flint Jr. of San Francisco, Dr. Charles Decker, of San Francisco, former Congressman Caminetti of Amador, former Congress man Coombs of Napa, District Attor neys Fowler and Horr of Madera and Merced, Judge F. H. Dunne and Lewis F. Byington of San Francisco, former Mayor Catts of Stockton, former Judge Fletcher of Del Norte, Abe Ruef of San Francisco, Senator Belshaw of An tioch, Senator Nelson and Under Sher iff Hynes of San Francisco, Judge Mc- Sorley of Mokelumne, -Judge Rust of Jackson and Frank A. Mattison of Santa Cruz. Special Dispatch to The Call. Steel 3Iagnatc and Party Will Depart To-Day for • Southern Part of State Interesting Addresses Are Made at the Banquet in the Navy Yard City THEY VISIT SHIPYARD MESSAGE OF G0VERN0E Statistics Demonstrate That the Product Is One of the Most Profitable Known to Agriculturists, and an Expert Will beSent to; a Washington Farm to Experiment on High Breeding of Seeds of the Vegetable Native Sons in Convention at Yallejo Decide to Meet Next Year at the Seaside James Smith. Receiver for tiie Shipbuilding Trust, Has Been Here Two Days MEETS SCHWAB IN THIS CITY GOVERNMENT WILL AID PROPAGATION OF THE AMERICAN SUGAR BEET GRAND PARL0R FOR MONTEREY *THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL," WEDNESDAY; APRIL ; 27/ 10U4. 4 JNO. J. FULTON CO. ADVERTISEMENTS. Had Bright's Disease and Thought the End Was Near When His Son in Spokane Heard of Fulton's Compound and Started Him on It, With the Following Results. Medical works acknowledge the incur- ability of chronic Brisrht's Disease and Diabetes. And they WERE beyond hu- man aid up to the discovery of the Ful- ton Compounds. But about 87 per cent now tecover. It is a matter of life and death. Don't delay. Send for litera- ture and list of agents to the.Jno. J. Fulton Co., 409 Washington St. San Francisco. Local agents in all Eastern cities of 10,000 and over. I NO. J. FULTON CO.— IJEAH. SHIS: I v ha\> been afflicted with Kidney trouble lor years, partially due to heredity and j>ar- tlally to overwork. I npglected medical treat- ment until rcy ca«e had trot to be <;ulte se- rious. I could not eleep at night — sat up in my chair BOtae of the time In order to sleep, &s I was in euefc f»!n when lyln« flown that Icould ncl lie long In one position— Jtflcturated rttur to flve times a nlsht. Finally had\al«ht cweau end consulted a physician, who told me it was Urirht's Diwaae. I treated for months, but there was no permanent rood. Finally my heart was seemingly becoming paralyzed I thought the end vu near. My son tn Fpokane heard Hiasfc£fr*Jj fl *^^^bK tfe m._» m W I. ¦ ** w reaSgr* fXffuffPw, T TriW^'^HHBBIWHIMirrr^i * I^B H ¦ If ft I 0 0 * A lssft BHHHw^^&BPWWswBHhrffTWBWl*BW bsssssWF— *^*^**H %. I 9 S c Jv ,, , , ny Lvdd " 2 This sale starts Wednesday, April 27th, and ends 2 2 Saturday, April 30th. : v| %-. g Remember, Tailor-Made Skirt Patterns given 2 • away Free of any cost to you. Our* limit is g I 1 000 Skirt Patterns j S! These goods cost from #2.00 to $4.00 per yard. • 2 You get enough for a skirt free of charge. Come S • early. Select the best. . ; "- 2' I "' . ¦ I I j Scotch Plaid Tailors I I 1009 MARKET STREET. | I 2 OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK. © ; eo©oo<&o©©o0©oaooo eoeoe eoeeeooaeeoeo oaeeooo ••* BET WHAT I BVsS^-^Sv You ASK i I GENUINE I U The most wonderful record In all hlstory-merlt mada It. Advertlalno has 1 H Berved to make CASCARETS known, but the Greatest advertisement ever I H Printed could dQ no more than aet a person to try CASCARETS once. Then i N comes the. test, and. If CASCARETS did not prove their merit there would I a not be a sale of over A MILLION BOXZ3 A MONTH. This success has been H H made by the kind words of our friends. No one who tries CASCARETS | EH fails to be pleased and talk nicely about them. CASCARETS are easiest to fl | buy, to carry, to take, to fflve-THE PERFECT HOME MEDICINE. They are I I a perfect cure for Constipation, Appendicitis.' Biliousness, Sour Stomach. 1 1 S ck Headache. Bad Breath. Bad Blood. Pimples. Piles. Worms and all bowel I j diseases. Genuine tablet stamped C C C. NEVER SOLO IN BULK. AH HI | druorcjists. l Oc. 25c. 5Oc. Sample and booklet free. B 1 -_/_ Address STERLING REMEDY CO, Chicago or New York. | wi HM qfassssfar^RrtTlt»l# jtP^^plW / Wjt&«>M-i^sflsss^sssss^-^BB^— J BjB^. _jCSssW_ -^sf ftssssssi. J £^ MBm S3 I CATHARTIC ,.^ r ||g|ij||^n I ASyMUAL SALE -TEN MILLION BOXES I II y Greatest in the World „ I - " » Jb ¦¦.-¦¦ ;'".*¦' '.*' * ' • - ." . i *** |!! "^W^Pij«^i^i^i^isssBBs«is^ J