University of South Carolina Libraries
Till?. INT!?! 1 inCMPtiD ESTABLISHED 186? Published evory morning except Monday by Th? Anderdon Intelligen cer at'?40 West Whitnor Street, An ucreonV S. C. '.jLffeMl.WEAKLY INTELLIGENCER 51 ' Puuiithed Tuetdayo and Fridays L. M, GLENN..Editor and Manager. _-i lid ter dd aa obcond-class matte? ?P?W 28,: 1914, st th? post ofiloo at Anderson, South Caro'lna, nuder th? Act or March 3, 1879. ..,,7lftfP '-'/tl- , II i -rn AU3?CIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephone... ... ... ... '.. ..331 8US8CMFTI0N BATEA DAILY ?nb"Wfffr.. .IB.ooI Six Months.. ,f .... ., .. .. 2.no ?Tares Mouthe . . .. ..I'M Ono Month ... .. ,..42 .Ons Week.. ...,<...10 HEM!-WEEKLY One Year.. ,v? .? ..I1.W tilx^. Months... .75 '.V-^B intelligencer ls delivered t?y carrier n the city. Lock-at the printed label on your paper'. Tha'dato thereon shows when tbs eubeerlptlon explros. Notice date '. And label carefully, and if notf correct j p'ease notify uo at once. Subscribers'desiring the address of | tbelrvpapvr changed, will plcacr; state ! In their, rointuunlcation both thc >?ld abd new addresses.. . To Inauro prompt delivery? corn flaluto of non-do! ivory In the elly rt Anderson obould he m ad o lo tile Circulation Dopartnient befor* 9 a. m. ' ?.od a copy will be aunt at once. AH checks and. drafta .ahould <ej 4r4wn. to The Anderson, Intelligencer, ADVERTISING Ratea will he turnlnhod on applica tion. . ..../',r h No tr1 advertising discontinued ox cfept on written order . ..The Intelligencer'wiir publish fcrlof ??neral Internat wheo they nra s? compfioled. by the names, and ad dresses of the authors and are not o* a defamatory nature. Anonymous .. communications will iiot be noticed, 'iiojected maruucrlp?* wlX not be <.< turned., ..j,-,/ tri i order to avoid delays on cellini ot ''personal ahBence, lottert- ,0 ?>e Intelligencer Intended for publication should not bo addressed to any tndl viitnal.-cbnnerted with tho pater, but j ?;$f?Swt to* The Intelligencer. DAY, JU?E 15. 1916. i -.,_7r._-;-rr cviA^ty^benate divided against his wj; ?'u?ll ?SM. ;^^m? Colonel has -galt-^ttMt? Rut poi?ik-a quit 'bim .fin?t: . ,iiu??lati fighting ia like Russian ; dabclng. There's ' alw?ya plenty of .?action. ' \C ' j . :'*,.>;;: ? .. ''--;-???^_- . ? \ :Hf)?fMhg: of- vFor$ Jokes-, tho an nuitl lax on a Ford car ip. England is 'now : $90 a year, and going up. .And that's no'joke. What will Carranza do.about the United'-States having its ; consulate burned. r<t Durang-s City and Us flag ;dra,Rg6d through tho streets? Oh-, ho'U probably ask th? United States to ?pologlxe fdr lt. Tho Augusta chronicle ' suggests "T>\?rt; .Something" aa a slogan for that'city: But don't let it be a fire? ; brecho rv ' . . : liitoo?iovidt Saya Ho Ia Out ot Poll .L-.1?^^^adU^ftV-':-'-Put;;?nttt the next kitiVc tc- ncmin&te ? ?: caadldste tor* the '? :pr??ldency>'?' ' ; * PcopUv.aSuat Help lu Liquor Fight, ..tyho Br?;|ae?pT^';by trying to**di|nk . all ;of; ft'up. \r. o e?dh^'d^now' president Is said to have bu^nfleeted bf a dose oi poison poi^o^?ftUy adt?lnistered to his pre-; doctor, Yuan jShi Kai. Aa a r?t public, China ^ioeaa/'t seem, to have gbt, :much'::ton^Vrf.af^8;tban- Mex -~e--. IM*, always takes a series of disaa t.?y^rt\>^ke-up.vOreat Britaiai "sae ; ou?l? ^?be'^rett^^e'-aw i ?. ^ :.. : -ea*fal^iro at OalllpolU her ; u v rl-jf ot, kut^l-Arunrn. her vir " ^^CTitaV.tu:%$mt; ^oHtt-^bai.: tlc. 'm?- finally ^e death' ht Kitchen ?eri^?j^ld bfr kiowa enough to rouiw i The new dlnt?a and.auartera and vh^q^l^v?M,ti^ be plaatered al? : ;'^o!?fnd ?^S^?f^^r^0pU; ,. ; : . itip?^^ij^^i? ;Vv'i3.iac6 Tti??^ofi? ; J; jot ?t?^^?kt(j.w?.i.s^i(ls4: ty?m "oat^e^fe^j i ia 'M t i>.e , ji?er*t?vt?. topeafc the ''o^ita^i ^>f f iSatn i* au^i as fond BB??N ON ELBA Franc? must have proved a dreary place for the Old Ouard after the ban ishment of Napoleon to Elba-not like the old France at all. Thia week the Democrats of the nation are assembled in St. Louis for tho purpose of choos ing a standard bearer. Borne of the familiar old figures are there in the , convention nail and then there are some new ones. But there ls missing from the field of battle a mighty chief- ; tian of the days of yore. His sword is sheathed and bis colors aro forleu, and, like Napoleon standing on Elba and gazing out on the Boas toward tho cuni incut that hud been shaken to its foundations by the tread of IIIB victor ious legions, he goes to 8t. LoL??II to ' look on. Aa ?>.> sits there in silence and views 'thc deliberations of that 1 nominating hody and hears the enun ciating of platform planks-several of which he hewed with his own hands yearB agu from the tall timbers of the tratlloBs forests-what thoughts and 1 memories must rack his brain. For more than a score o? years a prominent figure in every Democratic 1 convention and for a long time a dom- ' bi!'.nt force therein-in fact, tho abso lute dictator on several occasions how he niniit feel now to^-it silently to one side and hear and oee tho tramp of legions to battle, but cannot'spring to his old post at their head. It is a .pathetic: figure that Bryan presents ' at the T)3mocratic convention pow in ; Bcsslon in 8t. Louis. And ons has to ' look no farther than his own words to find the pathos-pf lt. for hero ia what ho said tb a reporter who iri/ter viowed him upon hi? arrival in the con vention city: "I hty'.? come to'tho. conven 1 Vitien as .a. newspaper corre-.'. spondent and do not ex poet to ta'to any official part in the' con vention. ?? Having been defoatod ? for.? delega to. in;.my% own state.J will not accept a seat on tho floor, of tho convention as an al ternate from Nebraska'nor ac- ' cept proxv from any other atarte." . Yes, he is done for; and it ls a pathetic spectacle. But such' are the vlcclsltudos of fortune. The . erstwhile leader of his party, the val iant fighter, tho most potent and the most powerful single factor in Dem ocratic conventions for years la down and out at last. Bryan is resting usn Elba. WH1 however rttUrn.^tb. be mot at it ho landing und embraced by tboso. who bad helped bani a him? ? And if he should return, will it then begt^Hel?n?.-ffi^ag ||p??? , DAW?Bt? EQUAL* SUFFRAGE It must K? great to be in the Cab inet, and of all the portfolios we imugine tho ono.that tho average niau of red "blood would rather occupy Ii that of Secretary ot,the Navy. He - stands a good chance oi getting into the limelight .in al mon t every edition Ot tb? papers.. And then, too. there is something "grand" abo i being at the head of thia great ^department the majestic battle Cruisers heeling it pta,'the' horton, the frowning dread noughts ploughing tb el r way; slowly but-surely'thron Rh. the. leaping waves, ib?e boomingrofjifuhs from tho big ' .fighters when'tho' socret.ary cornea np? on'the scene,''the banda, the gay uni forms, apl the Uko. Oh, lt. must be great no bo' Secretary ot the N?vy^ much more interesting than; being Secertary of tho Interior ot Postmas ter General or something like that! But how much^ "grander,";it must be to find yourself tho idol of thousands of rampant. suffragette? >t the same timo you aro Secretary of the Navy. All of which ia prompted by the. read ing of tl lu pat che:-; Bating forth just how our sagacious Secretary of the Navy, Josephus p?nleis? lnscrlbod his \ name ?n tho atfectlone or .allv "suf tragedom" b,'coming oui flatfooted fo{ caua! suffrage on\aho o<^loAt; of Ula reaching St. Louis wbor? he goes to look rm at tho Democratic conven tion . Hear ye, in the l'olibwingrex cerpt from a dispatch, how ike head ot our navy department takes 'the dajr with the ladle?, av St, Louie: V'.'i . Joy tilted '!he suffrage camps here, tonight bocauw today See T, w-tkry^ot ^vyt )0anlel^ publicly '? ;f ' ipdorscd ibe euugl risita move mo?t.and on oven haud sutfra Klsts declared they beiloved tho v Democratic platform will favor -.: ,t?e{t';caa??. ?? \ ? " " The secretary toad? 'ft'.'iilt?s?.? \ wtiB?m- *3j^^iy,?^t?8t'.-'.-'V i vldu?!. Lat- satrraglstft believe , his word may tave influence With r the : resolutions commttteo when . ' u jt.passes on the proposed eut f? frage 'plan, of tb.e".pWUM?^il I '.: "I belief iMr. Daniel? xaid. ->-? . "that. fernen should hkHt&ffl&d tight?, wtth m?n. itt to;i^. ?? t , . cati halp you ?? an individual, ??'*^%^ - any one >xo>>t, : myself, .. ^w-'. * ever', aadl;?n>4bta de?e^i*.;^.'?^ i S?'W,ec4*tittf0& oo-I can i .^consistently take up m^W&*i v^^orAWu Atiera.-'.-Vaut f ? ;,V;he?rty:. ac$oyd with you and .; i .' w^^'iidiv ' . Ottr ' esteen?d '?hd^fSe^t -jg^e. : iWIp^?*^ tao? . .|d^.-:^<*?w?W/ bobbina; up under th-s ? ^i^p&e^s^t^i^^ , ', ' * * 'V'10 ' * ' S5 imp:; timi's why all tito pictures yon tee of bim ia the paper? ?hov him with a oroad ?mlle wreathing bis face. Dut Josephus 1B right there when it comos to reaping his share of the "boodle." He'o a good ad vertiser-?1.; was in tho newspaper business long enough to know the value of that-but with all that he's holding down the job which President Wilson assigned him, and holding it down with as much credit to himself and to tho nation as was ever the cuso under any of hlB predecessors. AN ANCIENT FAVORITE How many of us could, were we called upon untjxepeetedly, either re cito from memory of find among the musty volumes on our .bookshelves the lines of that favorite of the "old (lcld school" youthful declalmer 'Tho Hoy .stood cn tho Buming Deck." The fltst line is about all mauy of us would be able to recall; and aa For finding lt in a book, how many of us would know in what volume to look. . What forgotten things of .tho unremembered past flock to mind up on the readlnir of the first lino of that famous poem, usually about <ho fina that the average boy. of the "old field Behool" learned, arid universally the favorite, . Together with. "Hohenlinden" lt took first rank In the mind of the leans-pants hickory-shirt . and ono, gallus orator ot forty years ago au the "groatent poems ovor writ!" And they wore great, they were inspiring. Dut lt remained for The State, in Ifs Issue of Wednesday to give us, word for word and line for line, "Thp j Boy Stood on the Burning Dec a. Where <*?d yr j find lt. brother? And for fear that posterity .will grow up without having read thin otlrrk.ng poem Wiat fired the soul of tho boy orator of the, old log Behool, we re print^ lt for their ehllghtment : "The boy stood on tho burning deck Whence all but him had fled, The flames that lit the battle wreck! Shone round bim o'er 'the dead. "Yet beautiful and bright, he atood As born to rule the storm A creature of heroic*blood A proud though childlike form. 'The flamea rolled on-he would not' Wlt?i V '! hts rather's word rhat fattier, faint tn death below, His voice no longer heard." ?--. m i -- yiaNE cr DOPE WEATHER FOBECA8T For 8onth Carolina: j Probably lo cal thundershowers ; Thursday and | Friday'. . "I was put in abe country yesterday I ?iteraron and I think the'crops are] ?lng especially wolli" "stated Mr.' W. II. Osborne yesterday. "I weht put toward Portmaa and tn the Double (Springss Beetloo, traveling altogether about, 36 miles. I ?aw plenty of corn which 1B nearly ready te be laid by and the cotton is coming along nicely,lo to of it having squares. Somo ot the farmers aro complain ing about the cool nights and morn ing, stating, that the cotton needs hot tor weather.' The temp?rature baal Leon rather low for tbe past several j days,' Mr. D. L. Kay, of the Pepst-fJola company yesterday morning caught a Urge blue crane on ; Sbc-and-Tw?nt> crook. He was driving along and lt flew by otase enough ipr bim'.to catch ?ti . it was one of ?ie 'lar?eat ever caught in,'this'?"section! measuring five ?oot'-pino Inches frota, tip to tip of tts wing?.., ?. ' .- ? ;;':V ; V certainly V^tr^^'.^r^jir "tH^.'a^U^ cd Mr. R. B. Barris yesterday who baa Just returned .front LaFayotte, ind., whero ? ho- a'ttondsd' tho National f.,? P?- ?..;^T??lk^V' ?*Tner?' weira about 6po 'delegates la' attendance lAFayotte,^; a p?iin .of about )J5?OM people and 1? tho, ttilrd, riebest town InUb^i?is? ?fcatea per capita. Tbs ??apio treated as royally. ; Oas afc jernoeh two other Soath Carolina delegates and I wore steading .bn tits stree* talking to a < taxi cab driver about taking us out tc one of t?s places ot: .infers*!.--. Whllo we woro talking; a".vs^Usii^ itsppsd. ap* and tolii nsi b> '^u1d':'t^e'''ns"'}'.freSw;'^'r:uH?' bsd a.bijk.ear and when ho hud star ted be banded me ona of bis card?, it '?Fr?ak at/Cary,.". I told nun thai name .was certainly familiar to ?ne stace ono af OM r leading cotton buy'-' era 'in Andorwm had tar, ?ame hame, j?te told me Itotall ;t???fr:.',Csf^-ii?i?:. to come to sea htm and be would sea' that ne had a *?oo\ tba*. ? ! Hs sfcld | ("f ba: ]?l?>'t eoase, He was e^sfciifl bar^f afr^ ?bsrfli ateo .'WxMit-. ??4 ?hlcafco sad saw th? IntercttvSonal ? ? ? - automobile racen. II? in a great ad mirer of George McCounell and hoped to seo him playing hall, hut the Cubs were away. ? ?rjp?j Mr. Walter EL Keese yesterday re ceived au order, ipr-a ciiest of silver which ls to he gwen to Mr. J. E. Swearengen, state superintendent. . of education, as e. wedding gift. The chest cost'$75 and contained 48 piec e's. It is being given by the various county agents of the ?tato. The friends of Mr. J. B. Felton, county superintendent ot education, will regret to learn that he is ill nt bis home on'South Main street. STATE NEWS j Sparta? Hoy Drowned. ' . Spautonburg, June lt.-Nows waa received hore last night that Harry. Taylor, 14-yoar-old son of-Mr,, and Mrs. Harry Taylor, of Spring street, iiad been drowned In tho Linville riv er, near Linville Falls, N. C., where he unc? other boys Went with F'?V. W. H. K. Pendleton on a camping trip laet Monday. The droWnod lad ts a nephew of Charlie Scruggs, of ?he Wright-Scruggs Shoe Cb., and %t was in a telephone message to Mr. Scruggs that the newn of his death wa? first brought to Spartanburg. Young Taylor has been attending the public schools of this city and is well known. Annual Meet W. ll. S. Greenville, June 14.-The first an nual session of the Woman's Mis sionary society of ' the Upper South Carolina conference opened last n'ght at Buncombe St., Methodist church. The number of delegates In attendnnae was estimated nt 160. Thofo were supplemented by Green ville residents and the church was filled with ah audience thai gave viese attention to the review of the work in hoi?e and foreign field;;. Tho principal address of the even-' lng was made by Miss Mabel Head, administrativ secretary of the. for eign department df the woman's council. Overdue Note. Columbia, June-.14.-rThe payment ot an overdue note - ol the - city, amounting to .$3,460 payable to the Seagraote company, .for some fire.'ap paratus, was turned, over to the city attorney and superintendent of the fro department for .disposition. Carolina '(.'hurlers.... , . Columbia, 8. C., June 14-The Washington Realty. company ot Co lumbia wa? commissioned by the secretary of state with a capital pt ?25,000, the .petitionersif^iujB Wash ington Clark, W. A.',i^jri?-dad J/. <G? UVvwnsenij* '..... (il ?>' aif?&?? . -y.--, ??v I'.'.X- comm ?-sion was ,'lBau'?iI to the Sumter Clay company. .'.pfSumter, with n capitol .of $75fQQ0. , the / pe titioners being A. C? fchelps, R. L>. Wright, .T..M. Hall..,t; - ;". Tha Greenville- Poetry association of Greenville was commissioned with a capital of $250, tho.jp/Hitlbner3 be ing P. M. .D?B3ussauJr(e,^"-M. Ma h a li ey, Oscar Maul din.'. A commission wen Issue:! to the Jet don Music company -. of.. Charles? tpn, wHh a capital of ,$5.000 >hb pe titioners being Frederick Jordan and 13. D. Cornoy, : ^ Guard Puer led. ' : Charleston, June i^.-^Local. Na tional Guardsmen are deeply interest ed hi" tue order. Issued by Govarhpt Mane.iag that the millaa', pt thehints nm he every effort, to -'jget: .oh a w.?.r foat'ug at once,' In Viewvbf thu s tr o ns probability ot a call s.tp Mexico , in the. very near future. ';..'-._..'..'yi^.V.^V-? Regarding the brder? local militia officers, ore nuzzled and. o. Inion ai/to the moaning of the orders ,is divided Into more thad two ways'. A ?umbbi of the citizen-soldiers j are taking the orders, at their face "value and '.be-1 Hove that within ten daysr.henc* they wlR bo headed forLthft bord; r. These are, generally np oak In g. those who' would like nothlnp : better than orders to entrain andTnobUIze. ''-''.'''Crdps'.Iu)pT0y'?qig?.'' . Columbia, S. C.,, ?ri? .14.-Gen er? ?suIbC sopo . eroiis showers over moat of the ssc-, lion h?#t- resulted in th^ mo^ favor able groviUxg week generally; since carly. April. . Howevorv^more, rain ls heeded over tho eo-stal plain. Cot ton-chopping has become general, bhd Only comparatively,email areas have had to be replanted; the -nights have continued somewhat cool. Corn, field truck, gardens and ?sutures are greatly : improved, ;.^ind :tobacco, though amati, is vigorous. . Cow peas - urebeing planted'.'.; er.d^peanut seeding . continues ini th? eastern: eounU.es. .Small., fnil^ are ripening '^. coming on tha.ma*ki^?,The sit oroo win bo saWtithis year; -W??f?- are well up with col U ana there rt* but? little'??c^|SijPn.''tit: i? >>a s?xf' ??flated-'- t?^$aH^HIK& -with a capital V. Vacation tog?-everything fe to wear. Soft or straw hat? $2 at?. White flannel trouser? at $3. Traveling bags and suit cases $18. OME M 1NGULAR TORIES KATING PAPER NO NOVELTY ? Germon Spy Feat Had Been Outdone In Many Instance? . : .Uf. . . . . . . .'?,'*-' (From tho . London Observer) ' It bi with a mitigated commisera tion tba: one reads tho story of how Vondcr G ol ti, the German . spy, find ing himself recognized in .Petrograd, "spent two hours eating two parcels ot .incriminating paper .which he dare not burn In the grate;" As a f tilt pf mus ti fica t i on, Von der Golta's by, no mean?, holds the record. : Paper.ls. easily, reduced to pulp ind swallowed,', tho ink acting aa an appetizer, abd the only difficulty 'rf'this case, was the quanti ty?". Le?th- ; Is another' matter,'- but- apart from, j ato?is of hard-pressed explorers, there.! uo authenticated caeca of meals of. the J kind./; One \took place at. ? Convert -larden hostelry famous-in the fash iornibje annals of the. eighteenth cen tury. .A tipsy, gallant, enraptured by tho charms .of a certain , ?uiy,, snatched off,,her shoe and, flinn:; lt wjth -champagne.-drank o. bumper to her health.- ; '"Then/ to carry, tho compliment still farther," so runs tho tale, "he .ordered . the shoe Itself , to bo dressed and. served for ?tipper,: The cock set himself seriously to-work ?mon it. He pulled tho upper, part; which was. of : damask, into fine shrouds, and tossed it up tin a ra gout, minced tito' sole,! cut-- the wooden heel Into very i fine alices,, fried them in butter and placed them round, tile dish for garnish." What moy bo described as ?' poper meal de luxe was tl hat of. the-famous Panny Murray mentioned by. .Horace Walpole: MI. liked her spirit tn ad instance I Heard'ibo t'other night. She Was complaining of want of money. Sir Pichar? Atkins .'immediately gave her. a .20-pound note. She nald:'D your 20 pounds ! What dopa it signify?! clapped St between two pieces of .bread and butter and ate it." LIONS INVADE CITY < [Daring n Aimais -Parana Ben v?rit?s "sad Police sve ?ai^ Oui ' (From the Denver New?.)'.,. Two large mountain 1 long, ti -nialo and female invaded the northwester?! section of this,.'ctly this tnqrhin&. attacked two persons, and greatly alarmed residents ot that section. The animals cr? still at large and a squad ot. police armed w'th rifle? Are seek ing; them/ White standing in per back yard Mr?.; F. J, Carim, at 3.120 Weat 25th avenue wa? horror-stricken when - a Hon leaped th? feace and started to ward her.- r She tied toward the boase, reached: the door a few feet ahead of the lion and clammed shut..; -? ' .. -..,."'. The other porson. attacked wat? JL Hf^i^rd, cf W09l 25th avenwp?*? Meid? street. While plck?U?r*6u?-?i cow ttl? morning ne cncountwsd two, ?Ilonai and fleC Wa?a? -feat the 1 ion? were making * for, the" hills s?ven; &??*\.'aw?>*?'' ': :' . '.'-.'' ' r<Brook?*l?.s(??^ loes this sound I; V m When you get there in our clothes, you're there right. The, mest important item on your list is the suit.' We're ready for you., _^ Of course, you have to have a blue serge, so many occasions demand iL It's hereat $15, $18, $20 and $28. Any of them will make you look accustomed to summer resorts. Palm Beaches, mohairs, cool crashes and silk likes to show, you believe in preparedness of the most efficient kind. ' The prices vary from $5 to $12.50. a young men ??\r; : '' '..\:r:'] BO and $5. $5 and up tti Then you want .to think of footwcC*. We want you to see what we have thought of for you. . ? . Here are Honans at $6.50 and $7. B O E oxfords at $3.50 to $5. Special mention is d??e our P*?m Beach ox fords. You'll need a pair, ? good stylish/ well fitting, good wearing pair.' That's cur kind. $3.50 please. SPOt CASH CLojHJZZ The Store with a Conscience along come a blue jay, .which settled the ownership by picking up the rat andi flying lotos corn crib; : Thq. arin, hands and others who. had watched ? the battle asset? d. .that the blue jays trick ontltled the bird to all tho honor;? that have been heaped upon the species. : Many Applicant3. Columbia, Juno 14.- Moro than 10b applicants kt?tv . license?- t?>(. practice medicine T$???'' "cef?ficatea ' "as7 ' gra duate nuraes appeared before. th? stale board of medical; examiners, at the eta te ? bonne, yesterday. , Tho ex amination , 'wrfll 'continue , -through? Thursday. ' .. X . m S&HL.?^?O^HO?T. '* . ' '". . % : -. ? *u ' GEO^ELW. PERKINS. H?re oro eight member? ?ot ;the two ?onf?r?neo committees nu med by the republican and; progressive con pentlcno at Chlcagb in ^elr effort/to cot ? together" o>v or.o candidato for the f presidency.-' At.the tir?t;;session the -v ???ressive members stood soldily fdr - >' ?/. Theodore Roosevelt,- whom the r?A i^1 ' :V publicans ^opposed.?/?>''< - -, i ? Who^coini* wilb. summerto this earth - | ; " ?hd.ow^ ~ . With luotrous Pt^RL?apr? her. hand-*- i: : . --, May LONG *;,7?K M?pphlJTH command. Ther^b fia? tov??er c?>rfiW?a?trtn ir. th? viuit trdasurc chest H of Beauty than; thafcfrf. ImAvtfif??;?ripnfftl^P^??Irli tti^ tilrth < ^ . stone for June. . >. i ^ k S?i?afctenr Jewelers Now, Eventually ?^? 3*a, I j