Democratic Press, Volume 2, Number 72, Decatur, Adams County, 27 February 1896 — Page 2
PLEA OF HYPOCRITES. SPECtOUS LYING OF PROTEC. HONISTS Th. » ■X»et Hitfh Tariff 'or Private Gain, and Mover Valnatarily tn* rr.'amr Was** "oil In luvtry bhnw. Ver* Marked Increased Activity, Do They Want liiuli Wagesf Manufacturers who alwuyn hire the rh<•: I.;lmr prelend that protection Makra labor dear. For nearly four years uti.'r each pr<*sidt*nttal election the !t< publican manufacturer* use every means In tbelr power to redoce the waa:«* of their employes, or to prevent an advance through a combination <>f th l ' worker*. That the employer* as a out* an- opj .wd to increasing wages tn siowii by the strikes against wage t*4 notion*. or for higher pay. which nn tally disturb the Industrial world. The American workingmen know that their efforts to Is-tter their condition through Increased wages are in all |M s strongly nsisi.sl by the men to whom they sell their labor, and exi>cet cone<-Mlons to their deinamis only When their employer* are unable to get cheaper workers to till their places. While the manufacturers carry on their busin> ** on the principle that they Should pay the lowest possible wages, they have an entirely different story tell when they are trying to elect a President who will represent their b'lti.h interests. All at once they for’get that they Lave been cutting down Iwnge* or refusing to increase them mad appeal to the country to vote for |DM'ir candidate because they want to mr.y higher wagia. The same men who In private lose no opportunity to hire ■he cheapest workers. In public pose ms the champions of well |>aid labor. ■Thus the National Association of ManuJburturers, compost'd of men who never tise wages unless compelled to do by trades-unions, through a threat•msj or actual strike, recently adopted resolutions declaring that Congress should give them more protection ■gainst foreign competition, so that they could increase the pay of their employes! What they really meant was that they wanted bigger profits. The Wig her-wages pretense was simply the . Da it with which they hoped to catch rotes of gullible workingmen. « Protection does and can do nothing to increase the prices paid for labor. Wages are fixed by the competition of all workers seeking employment. There Is no tariff on imported lalor and manwfacturere can hire the newly arrived iD'migrant as freely as the native-born citizen. The McKinley tariff did not prevent a general wage reduction in 3893. when at least a million workers bad their pay cut down, nor the thou- | Isands of instances in 1890, 1891. and JUB2. when even sueh professional friends of labor as Andrew Carnegie and George M. Pullman reduced the .wages of their employes. Instead of Teising wages, high protection decreased them. Intelligent workingmen will not be Hre—ived by the hypocrisy of the men ■who have grown rich through high,tariff laws. They know that if the (Republican manufacturers were sincere many of them could now well afford to pay higher wages. They also know that the same men who promise that if the McKinley traiff is restored wages will advance, will lose *n opportunity to employ cheaper la-D>-r or cut down their employes’ wages. For these reasons the humbug election (cry. “Protection and Better Wages," will not make Republican votes in the coming campaign.
What Was Done with the Wool? The New York Press thinks it has . found an argument against the Wilson tariff in the statement of imports of wool for the last two years. The ofIcial returns show that in 1894 we Im- , ported 115,736,320 pounds of wool, and In 1893, 245.259.217 pounds. The Press considers this increase a great calam- t hy. and weeps over the alleged loss to American wool growers and woolen manufacturers. It claims that under . tree wool our woolen mills have shut down or run on short time, and deales that any one has been benefitted by the Increased imports of wool. It the Press is correct in saying that the woolen industry is doing less business than in 1894, when wool was heavily taxed, there must be a lot of stupid wool merchants in this country. For If two hundred aud fortyeight million pounds of foreign wool has been brought here merely to be ston'd in warehouses, somebody must have lost a great deal of money. But the Press is wrong, as usual. The weekly wool market reports show that the immense quantities of wool have practically all been bought for consumption by the woolen mnnufaetuers, and that there is no more than the average stocks on hand. So that the mills which the Press falsely says were idle daring the past year, were really busily engaged in converting much more wool Into cloth and other finished products Chan In I*.*4. Protectionists have to swallow some pretty big yams from their tariff orSans. But they surely cannot be expected to believe that an industry whi h thus Inert a-e- 1 the amount of raw material used in one year, is in a <wor«e condition because of snch incn «• Tr . ’ end- ! and forty-eight ■iiiie.il i. c.t.d* of woo! cannot get Itpdf Mutiufa<-;uri"d without giving employment to labor. And the thousands of skilled woolen operatives who have had their w c In-reaaed during the past y. ar ar.- dis-idedly of the opinion tha* more wo >1 means more work, and ft at t. -ire v. >rk means prosperity for Poth empl- yers and employed. • The Gi n’ I'o- omcthln® Party. * “Wh t.- •■■•:! re is anything to be 4 . f< r 1 ■ y." “aid Major McK ■:.-y to Um <:• publican* on
Wednesday night test. "It Is to th# Republican party we must look to have It done." A* a theory, this is altogether lovely. As a fact. Hje-aker lived has told th# Republican House that It | mustn’t d« anythin.’ this session.—FLU’ 1 adelphis Record. Dinvley Itlll Tasso. The Republican |mi|*ts which are j clamoring for the passage «»f the Dingy I ley bill, and demanding wls.it they call ; a free trade policy should be replaced ! by high protection, are careful not K i tell their rentier* wlmt the result of a 15 per cent. Incnw*' of duths would , bp. Then* are doubtless many persons who Is'lleve that the Wilson law ; reduced duties so low that with a tri- ! ding addition of 15 per cent, it wonk . Im* only a mod rate revenue tariff. liej publicans who never read Democrntlr | or Independent papers might naturally , suppose that wc are now living under ' free trade, and that the Din .!< y bill h • what it pretends to be. a measure for ‘ incriasing custom revenues. A brief statement of the present duties on some j important articles, ami their comparison with the duties which would be 1mI ;*»*<<! by the bill passed by the Repub- : ilcan House, will show bow utterly misj taken is such a itelief. Prominent among the industries ' which are claimed to be suffering from ! the Democratic low tariff is that of making window glass. Yet the duty on most size# of imported glass is now ■ from 71 to 89 per cent. Under that duty the imiKirts of foreign glass ba* 1 greatly fallen off, showing that the d<> mestic producer can supply the mar- | ket without further protection. An in- , crease of 15 per cent, in duties would ■ wise the price of glass to American ' consumers at least to the amount of the duty, and probably more, for taxes ' of 81 to lU2 per cent would totally j prohibit foreign competition and ena- ' ble the glass trust to entirely control prices. Do the people who buy glass want to enrich a powerful trust by giv- ' Ing them a ckwe monopoly. Iron and steel t«eams, girders and all other forms of building material are protected by duties of 50 per cent Thia tax is practically prohibitory, and a combination of steel manufacturers charges extortionate prices for the immense quantities of their product* which are used every year. With 15 per cent, more protection the combination would increase price® accordingly. ! Is it a wise policy which would make bouses, factories and stores coat more to their builders': Are the interest* of a few steel makers of more importance than those of the millions who would be compelled to pay higher rent* on account of dear building materials? On cotton and woolen knitted goods, such as are used by every household , in the country, there are now imposed j duties of 50 per cent. This means that many poor people have to buy les* of these goods than they would if the price was not made high enough through heavy custom taxes, and are, therefore, poorly clothed and protected against the cold. Do the fairminded American voters want the cost of these necessities of the masses increased by a 57 j>er cent, tariff duty? These are examples of the way in which Republican legislation is design- i ed to help a few protected interests at the expense o the whole country. Do the people really want higher duties and dearer ods? If not, their only re ’-edy 1* io Mipport the Democratic ’ and work for still lower price* i and taxes.
A Whopper. The Atlanta Constitution, which ia ever on the lookout for anything that commands a protective tariff finds consolation in a long letter from a well known Republican correspondent in which it is contended that the prosper- i ity of the South <l. pends upon a high tariff. In this letter the following assertion is made: "Labor in the South at the looms approaches in cheapness that of Japan.” The Constitution ought to know that this is a great big falsehood, a libel on the South. It should have exposed its fallacy, but because the statement is made the basis of a plea for protection | the Constitution adopts it and purs it forth. As a matter of fact the average wages of "labor at the looms” in the South are at least five times as great as the average of labor at the looms in Japan. : But if the wages were the same in both countries how would protection ! increase the wages of the cotton sac- ; tory operative in the South? Wages are. on an average, better under tbe Wilson low tariff than they were under ; the McKinley high tariff, and there are . more employes in our industries. Wages are not incr< ased by protective I tariffs. There is free trade in labor all ! the while and no manufacturer pays for it more than the market rule. The Constitution is not much when it comes to argument, but even it might produce a better plesi for a protective tariff than it presents in Townsend's letter this morning. and if we remember correctly, not long ago tlie Constitution pretended to be frightened at the prospect that we were about to be ruined by the competition of Japan besause lalx>r was so much cheaper there. Now it lugs in a fellow to tell us that the wages "at ’.he loom" are about ' the same in both countries. What, then, do we want protection against? Does the Constitution believe that tba I Japanese are so superior to our people in ::t ' : ry and ingenuity that at the same wages our labor cannot compete with theirs? The fellow who argues for protection weaves a tangled web from the moment he begins his game of deception.—Atlanta Journal. The last toll gate in Montgomery County. Pennsylvania, has been abolished. but there are still several in Philadelphia. People are happy when yesterday teems twice as far away as to murr»w.
iHE SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA. I-k ? m vw iftsaj ky ,f 1 f'-T* Sty P ! JAMXB H. JORDAN. JAMES M CABE. THOMAS B■ ”^ ARI> L. J. HACKNEY. 1121 _ 1? K
CANAL FOR INDIANA. Congees* Aakcd to Appropriate Money for It* Survey. The Legidtture of Indians by • nemoi rial ha* a»k#d Congress Lw an appropriation to enable the Secretary of War to jray i the expenne* of a romn>i»»ion to make a survey for a *hip canal from the south JL.W * * - I ' ■ A ** zi 'x. I ■ / waa » " map or yoarjrwE-TF.ay ivdiaxa. shore of Lake Michigan to the Wabash river near Logansport, which is the nearest point and about seventy miles distant in an air line. Dewi* Cass ordered a survey wh»-n he wa* Secretary of War under Pro- dent Jackin, and in 1831 Mr. Stansberry, a United Stat 's engineer, made a r<«rirt. which still *;*:;<!.■• as evidence of its feasibility. It is claimed that this canal would shorten the waterway from Lake Michigan to the Gulf of Mexico nearly 400 miles in comparison with that of the great Illinois canal, and that it is a work of »u- h Importance and magnitude that it ought to be undertaken by CouffT' e*. Mr. Stansberry, in IKJI. estimated the distance to be 157 miles, the number of locks thirty-seven, and the cost f3.IXl.Stn. He followed the vailey of the St. - ;-h t-> the ra! ey of 'he T.pjweanoe. and thence to it* junction with the Wabash river. Another route starting from Michigan Citv by wav <.f Trail creek to th» T -ar. -c valley a a* f.• to be 118 miles in length and forty-f-nr kr-k* necessary and the estimated cost wao 53.4-I*l.-479. A third route was from Michigan City by the Little Calumet, and then down Crooked creek to the Kankakee. A fourth was by Wolf lake, from the Grand Calumet river, and another. 14s miles long, was from St. Joseph into the valley of the Kankakee and thence byway of Monon creek and Tippecanoe river. The cost of this was estimated to be 53.945,791. IN HONOR OF INDIANA.
The Bronze Tablet* for Chicksmanga Monuments Are Inspected. Chief Ordnance Inspector Thompwm. [ I'. S. A., repreaenting the War Depart- j ment at Chicago, inspected the memorial' bronze tablets to be used in connection : with bronze seals of the State of Indiana | -'A ' r. - * , ARTILI.ERT TABLET. on the stone monuments marking the positions of the Indiana troops in the battie of Chickamauga, erected in Chicka- i manga National Military Park by the State of Indiana. The troops of Indiana and Illinois form-I •d a lasgc proportion of the total number engaged in that bloodiest of all modern ! battles, and these monuments are a trib- j ute to the gallant men made the -- wWW? IXFASTRT TABLET. ground holy by dying there. No single I struggle on any battlefield of the war. nor I on any battlefield of modern times, surpasses it in all there is of patriotic devotion and self-sacrifice. There are thirty-nine of these memorial tablets, one for each regiment of infantry. I mounted infantry, cavalry and battery that took part is the engagement, together ; with n tablet bearing tbs seal of the State. CAVALRY TABLET. Each tablet bears in relief a representation of the ana of service commemorated by the tablet, and in raised letters a brief description of the movements of the regi-
' meat in the battle, and the looses in killed, wounded and missing. The tabb-t# ar* I placed up-'P the stone monuments, erected on the spots where each particular re«» ment was engaged during the fight. DEATH FREES A SECRET. The Cherished Ambition of William 11. Enclish of Indiana. The death of W.liiam H. English releases to the public a surprising vanity he had secretly cherished with a zeal not exceeded, possibly, by that behind hi* ambition for prividential honors. Year* prior to hi* death he imparted by direct inference to a friend in Chicago that he •‘hopes! 3 statue of the other end of the Hancock and English presidential ticket would be allowed one of the four groat fame points" set apart for statue* of nio* illustrious American statesmen around the soldiers' and sailor*' monument that Indiana dedicated at Indianapolis before the World's Fair. Death alone was to grant release to this secret, and even then it was to be mentioned guardedly, if at ail. A* early a* 1884 he quietly let the remarkable contract for making *’-X V-v j •Il fi\ •• _ -
two bronze statues of himself, of the hero: - height of eight feet and four inches, at a coat of $1,309 each, with a specifics- < tion permitting him others at tbe same price. It was the idea of Mr. English t< present ->ne of the two statues to the I town of English, Ind., only when, however, it had succeeded in getting the honor , of county seatship away from a certain ’ rival town. A hot and prolonged fight I resulted from the village of English trying to win the heroic trophy offered by its godfather. The matter went from court to court until now it is lodged before the Supreme bench and the man who offered ‘ the disturbing prize is d»ad. The statue , remains uncalled for. while the second one : has just tx-en finished. As for the font ' "great fame points," one is now occupied by a magnificent representation of GeorgRogers Clark, of continental army fame. ! and after whom Clark street in Chicago was named. For another, Chicago foua dries are now casting a figure of Gen. William Henry Harrison. The occupantof the remaining two places of honor are well-informed report says, fully decideupon. However, the death Mr. English just at this time may effect the realization of his aspiring dream. In any event, one of the statute probably will go bo adorn the English Hotel property at Indianapolis, and now that his death has occurred, the other statue will, it is though* probable go to the family burial lot. while a third will be ordered by the family for tbe towr of English should it win in the county sea litigation. Mr. G. A. Sala shared the opinion of Sir Walter Scott, who said that be did not care a curse about wbat be bad written. In regard to this there is a characteristic story told of him. He had supplied an editor with an article, and the editor asked him whether he would object to a few alterations being made in 1L Mr. Sala wrote in reply: "I have fulfilled my contract In delivering to you the required weight of raw meat. How you cook it. whether you roast it, or boil it or hash It, or mince it, I neither care nor want to know"— Ixindou Truth
FACING FREE SILVER. THE DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION, JUNE 24. TO BE A TEST. Lffovls In Committee »o Boat p*’"” *’•’* Meet Failure Matthews Enacted to Declare foe the White MetalVoorhcre and Tnrpie Urge It, Antc-Cooventlon Talk. IndtanapoU* corrmposdem* The IMnwrartc State Central Committee Thursday determined to hold the Stat* nominating convention June 24. Chairman Holt was instructed to issue the formal call for that date. The basis of representation in rhe convention was nx«-l at one delegate tor every 130 votes cast for Matthew* in 1892. or fractional part of 150 over seventy-five. Chairman Clark, of the Indian* Silver 'lwague. preceded the member* of the committee to the city and worked earnest’ly against a postponement, saying the free silver wing of the party would call a State convention if the holding <>f the regular convention wu» postponed till after the national l>e<nocratie convention, as that element wa* determined to give expreseion tv its views in advance of the meeting of the national body. There are a number of gentiwuen on toe State committee who are in favor of the gold standard. but they voted against postponing on the ground that it would be cowardly to change the date, and if the free silver sentiment had to l»* met and a contest arise it was better for th# party that the question be dispom*l of before the national convention meets. U bn a vote was taken on the matter 'of postponement the unanimous voice of the committee was in favor of adhering to the date originally fixed by the committee. A resolution was adopted indorsing the tctk>n of Gov. Matthews in refusing to tall a special session of the legislature and insisting that he adhere to his pur (►i»e. Matthew*’ Expected Utterance. There have been intimations from the friend* of Gov. Matthews that he will shortly give public utterance to his views on the currency question, and it is not denied that he will express himself unequivocally in favor ot free silver. It i* known that he ha* had a number of consultations with Senator* Voorhees and Turjde during thrir visit* to Indianapolis. and that he ba* also communicated with them by letter and has freely indorsed their support in the Senate of the free coinage measure. There has never been a time since hi* friends began to work for him for the presidential nomination that he ha* felt that he could go before the convention srithout his position being fully understood. and his friends n*>w »ay that the declaration will be made within a few weeks at furthest and certainly before the national convention meet*. They do not deny that he is in favor of free coinage, but just how far he will go in his proposed utterance is not certainly known, but those who are supposed to be in hi* confidence say that he will not mince hi* words when he feels called upon to speak. It has been proposed in some quarter* dtat he be asked to preside over the Btate convention and that in hi* speech to that body be outiine hi* sentiments. The free silver men feel that this would insure a free silver platform for the Indiana Democracy. and they hare urged this course. Senators Voorhees and Turpie. both of whom want their records indorsed by the State convention, are understood to favor thi* plan, but others of the Governor’s friend* think it would be too late then to ntil.a- Matthews’ utterance* in the South and West, and they are anxious that he should speak before the convention meet*. Th:«e who urge thi* course say that the free silver sentiment is dominant in the South and West, where Democratic vote* must come from to elect the next I’r<«ident, and that the Governor has the o|r portunity to stand l-efore the country as an honest and courageous politician and at the samo time enhance his chance* for the Domination by meeting the subject squarely and letting the country know on what platform he would be willing to accept the Densocratie nomination. The effect of such a declaration upon the single standard men is uncertain. Many are his friends and are working earnestly in his behalf. They realize that the party mjrht win in this State on such an issue and they would not jeopardize State interests by getting up a factional fight against the Governor simply on account of difference-* regarding national finances. These friends, however, do not think that he will strengthen himself by such a declaration, though they admit that the uncertainty regarding his position militates against his nomination quite as much as if he gave utterance to his views. A friend of the Governor said that there is another and a potent reason why he felb called upon to make public his view*. He said the Governor would not eccept even a notional nomination on a platform that pledged the party to the r.ngie oandard theory and he believes! that he ought to make his position known, and not have his friend* place him before the convention in any manner that could be miscornWrued. He also felt that it wa* due to Senators Vooriieea and Turpie. whose eourre in the Senate he has commended. that «t should be know n from hi* public utterances that he indorses tins* fully.
Minor State Mattern. rtieiix Blutrocker, a Terre Haute shoemaker, was run over and killed by the limited express oa the Vandalia road. He formerly lived in Chicago. The now M. E. Church at Williamsport, built entirely of stone, has been dedicated. The edifice is said to be the first atone structure built by the Northwest Indians conference. Thr tobacco factory in Kockport owned by A. C. Tompkins & Co. burned. The building contained 700.000 pounds of tobacco. Loss. $50,000: insurance. S3O, 000. • At Gr.xnsuurg, Mrz. Maggie Kuhn, chart 1 w.:h murder.ng her husband and tried with a hung jury a year ago. was dismlased because the case had not been tried for three terma of court since thv first trial. James Br.dgawaters and Charles Smith, two well-to-do farmers residing south of Brazil, fought over rome stock. Mrs. Smith, seeing that her husland was getting the worst of tiie altercation, interfered and Bridgewaters struck her a heavy blow on the head with an ax. inflicting a wound that threatens to prove fatal. Bridgewatera was arrested.
Sifted from the ltt„ M Ry th* kidney*. Impurin,. _ |y |W 1..*-uvli, -f .*nf>!»'ra snly <»u*e. ib.-w l»| ~ , "‘'“N m polaati lb* »y«tetu. bat »M (»u*ratloa »ml <l»*«ru. u„n „• .3* «• <*> Ib.ni.elre* I’rerent p.r .-u . .p" ' ,r m» b.t*«, <lr<.|..y, *• .rei ; ‘ which *ff<H*l lhe klili .i. jI, « u ‘“‘•St HortStlaW’a Ht»n>*rh ni' i. r,. .k ’n! •vstoswss mnUrini i » Ilgure H Out. If you could get I cent forth. be day’s work from your n-w emDlore, land h*v« that amount dou> lad ev ' d»v ill < eute lor the *e<ond dav, 4 f 2 the third, etc., you would be rereUi*. •s.Uo»,«r> per day at the and of th, first mon h. St. Louis Hepu 41*. TUE MODI It* I WALID Ha* taste* msd.cinn'lv, In keeping . •Bmt luxuries. A remedy mu-' . "... I* •eceptable in f*im. purely w eompo-ltion, truly beMfi<-i<u msUret.3 Mtnely tree Iron, every <, . t onal!. tty. If really ill h* e n-u t. » ... *. eonttipsted he use. th.- g< utls laml r u,5 five Syrup ot !1*«. ’**• Hhc Wanted to Know. Agnes Do they carry cat tie on th» ocean line, ma? Mamma -No, indeed. Thi*isone< the finest afloat. Agnes - Well, the peerage 1* peer* and why len t the steerage It* eteer*?—Exchange, Drain.*. Cannot r.« Cura* bytosal ewlicUon*. as theyvaanst rruhtr. I.ipsro*n "t tlv r*r It rr. Umk j! tn cure deaine**. snd tijat u U omuii-T t.sfil rcUlKhe’ I*r.l'.l«<-s .. Irtxnt* Tubs. M lien tiu. t’Jbs * uitsn'M rw jraba ruaiMme," nd -r iwperfattAa* be i<M Jdww It l« euUreti ««d. DuKtraa ra Mtok and unire- tbs n ~»■ natlja .4; a itj, Set .id S’* J’’ •■* to iwraS cMHIR. beArtbg toil to cMtrirrU t uFe ,,, Al ei tyn ate ..,»! rabh ■ neomig Kit an k, umed ronditiw 2 »t-M»«ll»e Vr rij gK. One Hur rr! ri«U*r» for w we W B*yW> catarrh; ttal n*. r»x tie cured by H«il» Catarsn Cure. Circular, tree F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toletto.ft t3F*Sold by DruggM*. Me. The children of the poor in Japaa are nearly always labeled in ease they should stray from their homes whllM their mothers are engaged on domestic duties. buiooth Roadway. Quick Time. Perfect Passenger Service. Uniformed tram porters for the convealence ot first and second elas* patrons. Sleeping Cars between Chicago, hnffxfo, New York, and Boston. Unexcelled baling Car Service, No chance of can for ■ and New York City ria the Nickel PUl* Road. Choose the right way, however rough; it will certainly prove easier than the wrong way. If you have a worrying Cough or any Lung or TTiroat trouble, uw at once Br. D. Jayne’s Expectorant, and don't parley with what may prove to be a dangerous condition. Our future well-being has no'hinj Io uo with our being sincere, unlaw we are aho right To keep the pore* is essetiti*! t* h<a!th. Glenn’s Sulphur Soap dov* thia "HilT* Hair aud Whisker Dye," Bi*ck or Brown. 51>c. A 1 ttle tian never looks so big to ths world an when he is *tauding on a bag of money.
March April. May are most emphatically <?• •■souths for taking a good bleed purifier, l ecause the system is now most in r.e«d of such a medicine, and because it pose quietly respoads to m-< -1 ral In winter Impurities do not paan out of ®a iody freely, but accumulate in the blondApril The best medicine t# purify, enrich syj vitaLze the blood, a d thus g:ve strenguf and build up the system, is Deed's Sers*pan:la. Thons nls take it as their Spring Medicine, and more are t kin.? it to -4*B than ever before. If you are tired, “out« May sorta,” nervous, have bad taste ta toe m«rn? Ing, aching or dizzy head, soar stomiu* feel all run down, a course of Hosd s Saryj parilla will put your who e body M order and make you stront and neotatoi It is the ideal Spring Mt-dicme and nerve tonic, because Hoods Sarsaparilla Is ths One True Binod further A« I’ropawid oaly ty C- . Hood Si •».. Hood’s A penny —or two all extra profit That’s the merchant’s reason whourgesan inferior binding for a costly skirt. It’s not is) as good as ’ ■ . -*** Bias Velveteen Skirt Binding. Look for S. H. & M. on the label and take no other. If your dealer will not supply yo u will. S«»d !cr samples, showing labs.s Y«tci-' h * S- 4 **' °°" k°‘ "
