Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 04, 1913, Page 5, Image 10

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TUB BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, AUGUST 4, lfli3.
6
v
COCK 0' THE WALK WINNER
Takes Saratoga Handicap Without
Being Extended Lahore Second.
ROLLING STONE IS A GOOD THIRD
No Arreata fur Violation at Antl
Trnclt Gambling Lnrra Mark First
Day of Meet, ThnnRh Sleuth
Are Present.
SARATOGA, N. Y.. Aug. 3. Tho
Springs racing season opened Saturday
under Ideal weather and track conditions.
Cock O'The Walk won tho Saratoga,
handicap without being extended. A few
rods before tho finish Lahore attempted
to overtake the leader, but It was futile
effort. Kolllng Stone was fc. good third.
At the start of the feature event Boil
ing Stone made the pace to the back turn,
followed In order by Colonel Holloway
and Cock O'The Walk. There Lahore
rushed up even to Rolling Stone and the
pair led by a length, turning Into the
homo stretch.
Jockey Glass then sent Cock O'The
Walk, to tho front, apparently without
much urging, and the winner galloped
home. O. M. Miller was not a serious
contender, the race being a three-horse
affair after the first mile.
No arrests for violation of the nntl
track gambling lawn marked the first
day of tile race meeting, although a force
of deputies patrolled the track. 8herlff
Orlppen said he had seen no violations
of the law. A large force of private de
tectives employed by the association also
was on duty. Private betters will be
protected, but bookmaklng will be pro
hibited, according to a ruling made by
District Attorney McKelvy.
Strong Program f or
Annual Blue Ribbon
DETROIT, Mich., Aug. 3. With larger
and faster fields left after the final pay
ments, the classics to be raced at the an
nual blue ribbon meeting of the Grand
Circuit on the Detroit track, August U to
15, are likely to have to take now records.
The entire program Is considered strong
and the Matron stake of J10.000 will as
semble the pick of the 3-year-olds, thirty
six being eligible to the trotting division
and fourteen to the pacing. The Mer
chants' and Manufacturers' stake has
twelve this year and the Chamber of
Commerce eleven. In the Board of Com
merce stake for 2:16 pacers, hobbles
barred, there are twelve and in the 2:16
trot eleven. Entries to the two leading
stakes for all aged horses are as follows'
Merchants' and Manufacturers, 2:14 trot,
J10.00O: Bertha Carey, Creosote, Frances
Graham. Judson Girl. Mlndy C, ReusenB,
Santos Maid, Star Winter, Tennro, The
Guide, Unclte Biff and Vlvetta.
Chamber of Commerce; 2:J3 pace, S5.000:
Del Rcy, Edith C, Empire Direct, Frank
Bogash. Jr.; Grattan Royal, Leata J.,
Mack Thistle, Princess Margaret, Stot
brlno Lad and Tom King.
Tentative Frograms
of Sports for 1915
Fair Are Announced
NEW YORK, Aug. 2. Tentative pro
grams for national and International
athletics In connection with, the Panama
Pacific exposition at San Francisco in
1915 were announced by Director of Ath
letics James E. Sullivan today. The
schedule of sports covers a period from
February 20 to December 4, during which
time more than eighty competitions, in
cluding every branch of athletics and
sporting contests will be held.
State and national championships open
to scholastic, collegiate and Amateur
Athletic union athletes will be featured.
Baso ball, foot ball, boxing, wrestling,
rowing, bicycling, tennis, golf, gymnas
" tics, yachting, bowling, . hockey, basket
ball, shooting, swimming, hand ball and
fencing have all been allotted dates In tho
extensive schedule.
According to the present plans almost
every governing athlete and sporting as
sociation will award Its national cnam
plonshlp contest to California clube, to be
held In or near San Francisco. The lead
ing athletes und teams of the British
Isles and Europe will be Invited to com
pete and a number of the events will be
held under the metric and Olympic sys
tem of sports In order to prepare and
familiarize contestants with the condi
tions t hat will prevail at the Berlin
Olympic games in 1916.
All events will be open to the vorld.
No athletic competitions will be sched
uled for women, with the possible ex
ceptton of tennis and golf.
Trap Shooters as
Targets for Darts
of Samson's Crew
Trapshooters in Omaha for the na
tional tournament, citizens of Kennard
and the Ben Franklin club will be the
guests of tho Knights of Ak-Sar-Ben to
morrow night and one of the biggest
feature shows of the season has been
planned.
The men from Kennard will come to
Omaha in automobiles headed by tho
town band under Bill Harrison. A special
reception committee will meet them at
BenBon and take them to the Den.
The trnpshooters will meet at the Pax
ton hotel at 7 o'clock and go to the Den
with the Ben Franklin club members.
Almost the entire membership of the Ben
Franklin club belongs to the Knights of
Ak-Sar-Ben, so it Is expected thaj a ma
jority representation will be on "hand to
see the bU stunts.
There will be 230 trapshooters In the
party, 200 men from Kennard and a few
hundred members of the Ben Franklin
club. Doc Frye, who was a feature actor
with the circus of last year, will reap
pear for the special benefit of the trap
shooters. He will repeat the perform
ance he staged at the Den last summer.
Billy Ostenberg Is gathering together
the forces of Kennard. He promises lo
bring in the entire male population. ,
WISNPR TRIMS CUBS
'0 TO 0
WISHER. Neb., Aug. 3.-(Speclal Tele
gram lWlrner defeated the Council
Bluffs Cubs In a one-sided game by the
score of 10 to 0. The features were the
heavy hitting of the home team and the
flotillng of the Wiener team. Score;
Ml B.
Wiener 42010300 n o
Council Bluff ... 0000000000 4 4
Batterlfs: Wisner, Martin and Thomp
son: Coivjicll Bluffs Karliy. Wallas and
Ahaz. Tliree-l'aJe hits: Casey, E. Kane.
WINN'PRO ROWING CLUB
WINS MOST OF HONORS
PORT DAI.HOPSIE, Ont . Au, J. The
rr.ir. ri,,j, nrlrh w renr
sentcd today at the Canndlan Henley re
gatta tor the first time In five year,
carried off the lion's share of honors.
Its entries were successful In the senior
eights and fours, showing decided su
periority to the Detroit and Toronto
crews, and Its representative In the
senior singles, the only other event In
which they had an entry, took second
place.
SUMMER IDYL OF THE PARKS
Ullinfnl Drcnmw In Sylrnn Shades
Ilntlelr Shattered bjr
the Cops,
In one of his copyrighted poems' of the
yeor T. A. Daly of Philadelphia draws a
picture of scenes and dreams similar to
those rudely shattered by policemen at
Jefferson square. The poem follows:
The scene: A public city square,
with crowded benches here and there.
The time: A drowsy afternoon.
Charged with the heady wine of June.
Chief "Ptors: Voice, Law's voice, su
preme And haish with petty power; and Dream,
A vagrant sprite that stops to play
Round one old head, unkept and gray.
Ah! rest. How far off seenis the street-
ivs neui vim iingies in my lect.
But Lord! how sweet this Is. how sweet!-
Anrl nhf tht thaila um 1. 1 - , - v. .. .
That all the little leaves have made
The little loaves-they're whispering now
"iiliiciiiibi ineyre singing on the
bough!
How clear and sweet the whole tree
sings
Tree? It's a golden bird with wings!
How soft Its back Is. Bweot to He
RnilC In Itm fothar. --.I ft..
Where heaven Is so wide and clear
THE VOICE:
tteyl Set up straight; ye can't sleep
here!
THE DREAM:
" The nurse-maid smiled.
But she looked kind: so did the child.
JVTiat dimpled cheecks; so round, so fair.
Like poaches. Peaches every-
where 1
Walt, little boy, don't climb the trees.
See how the fruit swings In the breeze.
Lie here with me until they fall.
Here where the grass Is thick and tall,
Stretch yourself out and lie at ease.
Dont Bhakel don't shake! don't shake the
trees!
Here they come pelting down like raln-
THE VOICE!
Here, Bo! I warn ye onct again.
THE DREAM I "
t- ! . H' coat blue,
vet heaven has the self-same hue:
How odd! His belt looks tight In
back,
And mine It never was so slack.
Somewhere, somewhere, there's breai'
and meat; '
Somewhere, perhaps, but then the street
4;.iLC0Uld wet m' tace ind hair
J Ith water from that fountain there
How sparkling the ripples break,
n!I!liW5a.t a Plcttsant und they make!
Drip! drip! the mill-wheel turn
so slow,
H.8l?W'. s,0.7'-.AhI there' a flh'
He. s In the net! Now for a dish
That any royal king might wish!
O! peaceful pipe beside the fire
s' "J00"'8 "P nw md rising higher,
snug is the camp, crUp-cool the night,
he embers flare up. warm and bright!
The waves of heat that beat, beat, beat
upon tho weary, wayworn feet
THE VOICE:
ni7oT.eiyu0U "e an' now you're done
a't out o here! Move on! move on!
CHINA'S METHUSELAH LANDS
Six Feet Tnll, Bnlithrnded, nnd-14t
Venrn Old, with LIfr Tablets
to Prove It.
Dr. Chao Choy., a Blx-foot Chinaman,
who stopped wearing a queue long be
fore, tho Chinese republic came out .n
favor of the plgtallless pate, landed from
the Ellis1 Jsf and ferryboat, Ellis Island, at
the Battery in New York. It was not
through choice 'that the long doctor gave
up his queue. Ho said he had been Just
as bald an he Is today, which Is Just as
bald as anybody ever was or can bo,
for the last forty-nine years.
. This inspired the ship news reporters
to ask the doctor If he had lost all
his hair in Infancy. He smiled, display
ing an array of teeth that looked na
tural apd said that his baldness had
come Just after he had celebrated the
one hundredth .anniversary of his birth
It was suggested to the doctor that
he meant Chinese years, but he declared
In fair English that they were tho regular
occidental, Gregorian variety of years'.
Fifty years ago, he said, ho went to
Cuba ho was Just 99 then believing that
the climate, assisted by the "longevity
tablets" that he carries In a bag sus
pended from a string about his neck,
would help him to attain a ripe old age.
Ho began to feel recently as if Cuban
atmosphere was not as good as It had
seemed at first and decided to take up
his residence In Canada,
His recipe for long life Is cheerfulness,
abstinence from alcoholic beverages and
longevity tablets. He said th
other Chinamen with him, all former resl-
aenta or uuba, were also men of con
siderable age, from an occidental point
ot view. The youngest was closo to 70
Tho doctor and his friends were sent
to Ellis Island from the Word liner
Mexico. They were under bond, and
started for Canada by train tho ,next
morning. The Kills Island records know
that the doctor had given his age there
as 149 years. Tho doctors of tho Island
aro inclined to doubt the Chinese doc
tor's word. New York Sun.
Dlagrrnceful Conduct
of liver and bowels, In refusing to act,
Is quickly remedied with Dr. King's
New Life Pills. -Easy, safe, sure. 20c.
For sale by Beaton Drug Co. Advertise
ment. Culls From the Wire
About fifty persons who attended a
Sunday school picnic near Woodstock.
Ga... yesterday are suffering from pto
maine poisoning as the result of eating
rood served at the outing. Physicians fear
several of the patients may die.
One cent postage rather than reduced
Earcel post rates was the plea of Senator
Iryan in a speech yesterday In defense
ot his opposition to Postmaster General
Burlesons orders reducing parcel post
rates In the first and second zones on
August 15.
Tho list of fatalities resulting from tho
motorcycle accident at the Ludlow, Ky.,
lagoon liis-t Wednesday night was In
creased to nine yesterday when another
of the Injured succumbed to his burns.
Two others, a woman and a boy aro
still In a precarious condition and are
not expected to recover.
A Good rnvratmrnt.
W. XX Magi, a well known merchant of
Whltemound. Wis., bought a stock of
Chamberlain's medicine so aa to be able
to supply them to his customers. After
receiving them be was himself taken sick
and says that one small bottle of Cham
berlain's colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy was worth more to him than tho
coit of his entire stock of these modi,
clnes. Tor sale by all druggists. Ad
vertisement. In Woslitnyrton.
"What a distinguished looking stranger!
Why doea the reception committee neglect
him In suoh shabby fashion, lie Isn't a
Ul intuitu is ic. .
"Why no. They'd all like to speak to
him. but are afraid to."
Why?"
"Somebody started the rumor thai he
w iri 1-lt ' fi eland P'aln Dealt-
GHOSTS OF OLD ASTOR HOUSE
Troop of Bygone Notables Who
Were Sheltered There.
WELL-KNOWN NAMES RECALLED
Knd of Finnans Nerr York Hotel Re
vives Memories of DlntlnRnlaliril
Home mill Foreign.
flnrntH.
"If I were shut out of the Astor house
I would never go to New York. again."
So wrote Daniel Webster In August,
1S49, In a letter to Mr. Blatchford. Evl
dently Webster believed, a Dr. Johnson
believed before him, that "Thcro Is noth
ing which has yet been contrived by man,
by which so much happiness Is produced
as by a good tavern or Inn."
And now preparations for the new sub
way Involve the burrowing under a cor
ner of the Astor house, nt the esey
street side, and the famous old tavern Is
closed forever.
Between Webster and Mine Host Stet
son nn Intimate bond of friendship ex
isted. When the former left town for his
last trip to his home In Marthfleld his
parting words to Mr. Stetson were:
"Farewell, old friend. We have known
and loved for .more than thirty years."
New York was a queer placo then. The
hotel proprietor who refuses to accept
any money from a guest how distant It
all seems. There Is nothing ot New York
of the present ttme In this.
Then the town seems to have had an
hour or two for a little tea tablo chat.
"There was something to laugh over, and
sorrow had leisure for a tear."
We hay luncheon lopes now, and sup
per skips and dinner dances and, until
recently, cabarets for tho benefit of tho
milk men. The breakfast dance and a
skating rink upon the hotel root are the
only things that our eating plaora have
left undeveloped. But tho yenr Is young.
Stetson and Webster and their con
temporaries all have gone. The clothes
they wore would frighten us like ghosts
If wo were to look Into thn old clothes
chests of thoso for whom tho hotel was
the transitory home.
A Ilnll of Fame.
Presidents, cabinet chlefe. senators,
congressmen nnd state officials without
number have been entertained in tho As
tor house. Lords, nobles, counts and all
ortf of titled. If not crowned, heads have
repoted under its roof.
And no have Henry Clay, General Win
field Scott, Rufus Choate. Horace Mann,
Zarchary Taylor, Martin Van Buren.
James Buchanan, Franlclln PIccs, Abra
ham Lincoln, General Ornnt, Admiral
Fnrrogut and hundreds of others famous
in tho nation's councils of peoro and war.
Theodore Winthrop and Fltz-Greene
Halleck, who "led the parade, of literary
lions and struck tho keynote of tho
town's chorus," wore familiar figures' In
Its commodious corridors.
Its parlors havo echoed to tho beauti
ful songs and ballads of Dempster, Sol
Smith Russell, the harp of Bochsa, tho
piano ot Gottschalk, tho notes of Parodl,
of Parepo, of Kellogg and hundreds of
others.
It Is a beautiful, old. gray granite land
mark. Tho sorrow of seeing It depart Is
very real.
There probably Is more history and
more tradition Intimately associated with
the weather beaten walls of the Astor
houjse than with any other building. In
New York, and poluly tno United
States, with the exception of Independ
ence and Fanoull halls.
On Memornlilc Occasions. .
The most brilliant assemblies and pub
lic dinners of tho time wero all held
there. Our beloved aldermen gave a din
ner to the Russian fleet, at which tho
hotel's liquors won for themselves on
international warm spot, In a night.
General Fremont and his family lived
at tho Astor house during the mem
orable campaign of 1856.
General Grant, when he stopped nt tho
hotel, received thousands of visitors who
poured llko a torrent through the spa
clc'us parlors of the-hotel.
And Henry Clay, when nominated for
the presidency by his loving friends of
the whig party, stood In tho Astor housu
for four mortal hours nnd waa shaken
by the hands until his arm was nearly
palsied.
Tho brilliant reception that was ac
corded Louis Kossuth has come down
In history, also the farewell speech to
the American public that he delivered
from the hotel steps. Then there was
the notable reception to Dickens, in 1842,
after which the great novelist stayed
at tho Astor for a while.
It was In tho Astor house that Thack
eray met Nathaniel Hawthorne and
Washington Irving, and that tho Grand
Duke Alexis was entertained, also the
prince of Wales, afterward King Edward
VII, and Jenny Llnd, Louisa Pyne, Lydia
Maria Child, Black Hawk, the Indian
chieftain; Sam HoustonTEdwIn Forrest,
Walt Whitman and Edgar Allan Poo.
A Poet of Our UrnndnintherM.
In tho '30s N. P, Willis, the favorite
poet -of our grandmothers, wrote:
'On, on! by St. Paul's and the Astorl
Religion seems very Ill-planned!
For one day we list to the pastor,
For six days we list to the band!
The sermon may dwell on the future,
The organ your pulses may calm
When past! that remembered cachucha
Upsets both the sermon and psalm!
Again he writes of a "Lady with Black
Buttons," whom he met in on omnibus
in front of tho -Astor house. He shows
that In those old days there wan compe
tition In the transportation of the pub-
12 Degrees Coolest Route
to New England
Realize what it adds 4o
your comfort to enttr New England
from the north, via Montreal, the
White Mountains and Lake Cham
plain. That Grand Trunk route aver
ages 12 degrees cooler than anyother
tin.. No hot, dirty manufacturing
cities; no mosquitos; no bar fever.
COMPREHENSIVE, ILLUSTRATED OUIDE-DOOK3 FREE
LOWEST VACATION FARES
Should Hew Enflaod provs too far, deaerlbe your ldt.il. We can provide
It If It 11" fait or north of Chicago. Addrnas
J. P. McDonald, Asst. Gen. Passenger Agent, Grand Trunk Ry. System,
I
HZ West Adams
llc-agaln, how strange It nil teems! Ho
sighs. "Wo may pass, nnd know not
each other's 'nearness now thou In the
Knickerbocker Line, and I, lone, In ,tho
Wavcrly!"
Ho also refers to "Murphy's Line,"
proving that tho town has always been
afflicted, ond to the "Line of Klpp and
Hrown."
Another day ho was carried off his
feet by the' sight of another belle, whom
he addressed In part, as follows:
Tranquil and effortless thou glldest on.
As doth tho swan upon the yteMIng
water,
And with a cheek like alabaster cold I
But as thou didst divide the amorous air
Just opposite tho Astor, and didst lift
That veil ot languid lashes to look In
At Leary's tempting window lady! then
My Iwt sprang In beneath that fringed
veil,
Like t adventurous bird that would
escape'
To sot warm chamber from the outer
coldl
Bow.lng Green was surrounded by fash
onablo residences then, and tho moon
hung over Broadway In an amorous way,
In Hie F1imv.t-, Ilnlmr Hurt," I
Rev. T. Do Witt Talmnge used to take I
his cut of mutton Joint and potatoes at
the Astor house only a few stools away
from General Ben Butler, whose modest
appetite craved blood red beef and a 1
glass of claret. He was the author of
tho remark, "I do not conduct war with
roo water."
Thero was tho man who "looked like
Booth." UtT was Senator John W. Dan
iel of Virginia, of whom his enemies nn
sertcd that much of his public Btock In
trade consisted In his startling resem
blance to the tragedian.
Senator Daniel was one of th survivors
of tho oldtlmo school of orators ot the
"sink or swim, live or die, survive or
perish" style.
There, In tho "flowery, bnlmy days" of
the 40s and Ms. tho rotunda was tho placo
to see how men mixed tobacco and roast
bcif, whisky and oyster soup, cigarette
smoke and lemon pie, nicotine and little
neck clams.
If one wanted to find anybody or every
body one went to the Astor house at noon.
Now York Tribune.
HUGE MOUNTAIN 0? ALUM
Deposit Two Squnre Mlleif nnd Nine
Hundred Vrrt lllffh In New
Mexico.
What Is declared to be "one of tho
most marvelous geological and natural
curiosities In tho whole world" Is a
mountain of alum two square miles In
extent and 100 feet high, near tho Gila
river. In southwest New Mexico. These
superlatives are from 'an article by Daniel
M. Grosh of Philadelphia, In Mcrck'a
Report (Now York, May). Tho Industrial
value of this enormous deposit, writes
Mr. Grosh, can not oven bo approxlmatel
estimated to thoso Industries depending
upon tlia mineral, nnd assures an al
most Inexhaustible source for the pur
pose of reduction. While tho deposit hat
Tlio homo ilrlnk. IJrewod nd
bottled by
FRED KRUG BREWING 00.
Order a case today.
.ConsumerM DlmrllmtorH,
LUXU8 MKIICANTILH CO..
100.11 "No. 10th St, Dougbw 1880.
Through Grand Trunk
trains, over double track, skirting the
St. Lawrence River (Thousand Is
land, "shooting the rapids", boat trip
optional) Chicago to Portland and
Boston. Connecting through daily
sleeping cars Montreal to Old Or
chard Deachand NewLondon, Conn.
St.. Chicago, Illinois
been known for years. Its location and
lack of transportation facilities have do.
layed Its development, but theso have
been overcome, and now permit tho mar
keting of billions of tons of aluminous
eros known variously as alum rock, ol
unite, alumlnlte, ohmogen. gllaltc, eta
The United States geological survey
which recently measured this mountain
of wealth and assayed Its contents re
ports:
"The deposit Is so pure that any grnde
of manufacturing nlum can be produced
cheaply as com arcd with tfmt from othe:
,.r many u9',, " c" l,o mar
keted In Its natural state, nnd so lm-
I. no doubt It will control tho market
of tho world. The constantly Increasing
Reduced Prices for Mazda Lamps
i
To Users of Our Service
Size of Old Prices New Prices fr Old
Lamps Per Lamp Per Lamp I Prices I
25 Watt" $ .35 $ .25 28 Lamps
40 " .35 25 28 Must Be
60 " , -50 -3 30 Returned
100 " .75 .65 - 13
to
150 " 1.20 ;90 25
250 " 1.75 1.45 17 tain
400 i 3.00 2.50 17 These
500 " 3.25 2.50. 23 Prices
The New7 Reduced Lighting Rate and Lower Prices for
Mazda Lamps Makes Electricity the Most Economical Light
Candle Power Comparison Between Old Style Carbon
and Mazda Lamps For Same Current Consumption
With Mazda
Omaha Electric Light &
Horses
I
I
I Many
demand for the metal aluminum also
tends to make this riepoalt of Increasing
value. In connection with tho manu
facture of aluminum, nature has cer
tainly been most prodigal In this region,
Enormous beds of lignite nro nt hnnd to
produco tho power necessary for Its re
duotlon, at a cost ono-fourth to one.
half that of hydroeleotrlc power. No
such combination as this of unlimited
rich and puro raw materlnl. and tht
cheapest power, exists In the whole
world,'.'
She llellvrri In Clrnn Slilrtn.
Rose Pastor Stokes, the settlement
worker, while waiting In a tenement
house one day, overheard two women
conversing on the stairs.
"One made tho remark to the other."
relates Mrs. Stokes, "that hor husband
20 G.'P. For Cost of 8 G. P.
32 i .. 13
50 ! - v 19 -
80 " 44 " " - 32 "
150 . " v , 48 "
250 " 80 "
400 " 128 "
500 " 160 "
FOR 5 ALE
farmers, many
men and many city men need good work
horses. If you have any that you wish to eelL it ia your
duty to yourself to lot thoao prospootivo buyers know;
Tlioy are following tho cloBirifiod ads in The Bee every
day, nnd will get your massage if you will place a small
notioo in this paper. Do it now, and got your profitable
bargain nnder way. The man who hesitates ia likely to
lose in a way that will cause him many hours of b
moaning bis luok." 3et your. &ti in now. i
always wore a clean shirt every Sun
day. "The other replied. 'Well, now, I never
cares about Sundays, but I allays do
sec that e' 'as a clean shirt every Satur
day afternoon, 'cos that's tho time he Is
generally drinking, and when 'o docs take
his coat off to fight I do like to see him
look nl;e ond clean." Chicago Record
Herald. HI llrnrlnnr flood. ,
Little Dave was detected by his father
In the act of stealing from ono ot his
little playmates.
The father, not believing In corporal
punishment concluded to try a moral lec
ture. After pointing out the wrong of such
an act, he said:
"Always bear In mind, my boy, that
these temptations can bo resisted If you
turn a deaf ear to them."
Dave's lips trembtrd as ho replied;
"But falhrr, what can I do? I ain't
got a drnf ear." Llpplncott'a Ma gazlno.
With Carbon
Power Co.
small town
Jtjt ua make a eut like Q! lof
Ton, The drawing wopld edit
$8.C0 and the engraving $3.51.
SEE ENGRAVING DKPAJVTMEXt
Bsa drj. Phone Tjior lfeNt