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About Athens banner-herald. (Athens, Ga.) 1933-current | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1934)
DR. JOS. S. STEWART, NOTED EDUCATOR, DIES; FUNERAL TUES. (Continued From Page One) lanta, and little Selma Stewart (now dead). He began his educational career in 1883, fresh from the halls of Emory college, where he had just graduated having been chosen as principal of Cherokee Institute, Cave Springs, Ga. For six years he directed the affairs of that insti tution most successfully. The two succeeding years were devoted to the presidency of Howard Semi nary, in Marietta, Ga. ) Here it was that he began his real constructive work as an edu cator. The pressing need for a aystem of public schols in that progressive little city became ap parent and Prof. Stewart was called upon to organize such a system. He was chosen as super intendent of that system and ser ved in that capacity from 1891 to 1897. From that position he was called in 1897 to the presidency of the North Georgia Agricultural college, at Dahlonega, Ga., WwWhere he served for six years. During! those years his efficiency as a col-i lege educator was fully demon strated and under his guidance the institution was brought up to al much higher plane of usefulness. In 1903, under the ('lmncellorshipl of Dr. Walter B. Hill, he was brought to the University of Georgia. Chancellor Hill thought the University should manifest more interest in the high sthools of the state and selected Professor Stewart to carry to them the lat est message of educational devel agpment. In two years he had dem onstrated the wisdom of Chancel jor Hill's selection and in 1905 he was named as professor of Sec ondary Education in the Univer sity of Georgia, which position he filled with signal ability up to the time of his death. . His Enduring Monument The enduring monument to Jos-l eph 8. Stewart is the high school system. of Georgia. To him, more than to any other man, it owes its splendid development. His energy and his ability for thirty vears have been given unceasingly to that work. The fruits of his labors will be seen in the bettered educa tional facilities of hundreds ofl schools and in the improved lives of hundreds @f thousands of high | school pupils throughout those years. “Back in those days the educa tional problems of the South aroused a keen interest on the part of the General Education Board, and the work commenced by Prof. Stewart attracted the uttention of that organization and its approval. Active help was ex tended the University for the fur ther development of this work and later on similar professorships were established in other Southern states. In 1904 theve were only seven four-year high schools in Georgia; today there are 419. In 1804 the four-year high schools graduated but 94 pupils; last year there were 14,808 graduates. In 1904 there was scarcely a decent high school library in the state; today each high school has a library, and many of them have most excellent libraries. In 1904 there was prac tically no equipment in high schools, especially « laboratory equipment; today ~ the equipment as a rule fairly meets the de~ mands of the hour. In 1904 the high schools had inadequately trained teachers in most instances, and an insufficient number of teachers; today the high school faculties compare favorably with the best. Not only have the high schools of Georgia been develop ed to the highest standard of efli cieney in preparing pupils for college entrance, but also those children, constituting the large majority, who cannot go to col lege, have received a much better education than they otherwise could have received. . To be sure all these things have not come to pass through the abil ity or the efforts of any one man, but throughout the years it was the guiding hand, the insistent urge, the careful inspection, and the correct advice and far-seeing vigion of this man that counted %‘t in this vast development. : Various Educational Achievements _Prof. Stewart was called upon by Governor Joseph M. Terrell to ‘plan the curricula _for the eleven district agricultural schools of the state of Georgia. This work was done with great efficiency, those schools were successfully organ jzed, some of them being abolished Jast year in the consolidation of branches of the University system, one of them passing to the status of a four-yvear college, and several of them becoming Junior colleges. _ The Boys' Corn club organiza tions in connection with colleges throughout the country were origi nated as a statewide movement by Professor Stewart in 1905 ~ through a series of contests plan ned by him for the high schools of the state and conducted with splendid success. Later. on this plan was amplified by the United States government and various in stitutions of learning. An eminent service rendered the state by this distinguished ed ucator was his work in connec= tion with the adoption of the con stitutional amendment by the peo ple of Georgia, allowing counties the privilege of levying a tax for the support of high schools. ’ Dr. Stewart had all his life di ‘rected much of his energies ¢ " ¢the organization of educational . forces in Georgia and throughout _ the South. He was the prime - mover in the organization of the ~ Georgia Accredited High School ~ System in 1904; the organized the . @eorgia Hizh School association tivities, literary and athletic, in _ 1907; organized the Southern ~ Commission of Accredited Schools f’% . and was chaisman of that _ commiission for five years: pro posed the organization and selped _organize the Southern Coliege Commission. He organized and “was the first president of the Nat-. _jonal High School inspectors’ as _sociation, and was first inspector. ‘of vocational work in Ceorgia un- Southern = Association of Colleges in 1921, a member of the reviewing commission of the National Edu. cation assoeciation committee on re-organization of secondary edu cation for 1914 and 1924; was president of the Georgia Education assoclation 1905-1906, of the Sou thern Committee on = Accredited 'Hixh Schools 1912-1915, * and of the National Association of High School Inspectors in 1915, | He was the author of numm'uu.-:i pamphlets and articles on educa [tion, and founded the High School | lQuarterly years ago, of which he| had been the editor since its be- | ginning, developing it into one ufi the best educational journals in the South. He also edited the] University Items, a sheet dr-vnmd; to the dissemination of interesting | educational news among the | schools of the state. f Arranged Curriculum i For many wears Dr. Stewart] | had been the efficient director of| the University of Georgia Summer school. To these summeér sessions he brought as members of the fac iuu,\' distinguighed teachers fromi all over the South and other sec tions of the country, arranged a curriculum that embraced largely the subjects of vital interest to lGeorgm teachers, enabling them tol | meet the certification requirements | 'of the State Department of Edu-! cation, provided excellent grand ‘opem for those who could not‘ otherwise have had such an Op-f portunity presented to them, ar ranged splendid musical training applicable to the needs of the public - schools, gradually raised the curriculum of the University degree standard, enabling many students to shorten the.time and lesson the expense necesgsary .to graduation, and as a result he witnessed the attendance upon the Summer school reach upward | to record numbers. The last work he did in his office last Friday was in connection with the ar rangements for the coming Sum mer quarter session of the Uui-[ versity. - ¥ ‘ Perhaps closer to his heart in an educational way than anything else were the annual high' school contests in debating, oratory, mu sic and athletics. These annual events in Athens at the Univer sity of Georgia, productive of gen erous rivalry and of splendid re sults, participated in by hundreds of girls and boys from all over Georgia, were to him, in his late vears especially, occasions of great interest and enthusiasm. Dr. Stewart was a member of the Methodist ehurch throughout hig life. In his younger years he was suerintendent of the Metho dist Sunday school in Marietta, Ga.,, and during his thirty years of’ residence in Athens was a member of the First Methodist church. He was a loving Husband and devoted father, beloved by every member of his family, and enjoyed a vast circle of friends who mourn his passing.- . The funeral of Dr. Stewart wml be conducted Tuesday morning at 11:00 o'clock in the chapel of the University of Georgia, by Dr. Les tor Rumble, pastor of the First Methodist church, assisted by Dr. William H. Wrighton, associate professor of Philosophy, University of Georgia. 7he active pallbearers will be the néphews of Dr. Stewart, Dr. Stewart Roberts of Atlanta, Dr. ‘Will Roberts of Atlanta, Mr. Stew art Bird of Atlanta, Mr. Charles Roberts of Macon, Mr. Warren Roberts of Macon, Mr. Angus Bird of Charleston, 8. C., and Mr, Tho mas Ross of Macon, and two friends, Mr. T. J. Dempsey of . = R . &S ‘ e - 3 2 S ;“3 o , e ’ e B A CERTIFIED INTERVIEW WITH MISS DOLENA MacDONALD—~NURSE—~OF BOSTON, MASS. - L : 3 ..‘,:: \\':.\':hgi:f'»,:‘ B 3 % . . : E: oy Ll ¥ P e b g ; % & L N e " BPIEE oy e L i S 8 e} L SRR 8= D R R 'A':"E-‘::?::--EN-Q X s 3 g‘v 8% S Ae R SRPR RN e R B R g SHER ow- & g > L R RR R Urnnaie R W R : B S 5 TR RS S P eR SR B eoy o A i ] ) 800 e B T @ RBTR e B ’ o e & L 1 ’ I S . oaT @ B R e A o ol MR Vil s Y BUSR \“~i\ SR ? Outh ase ’t S e o %P S s A i it Wz% :o i ; i SR RR R . e e Y 3 Swotiiocas @ £ g RS S SRS S eSO NEE R ST dy a ullc ra R w B RERE eey AT Re O g RS R S SRR, SR ” R 3 RRR R B R B eot S A %\ BS R S gOt Hy d SR s R SRR or SRS DR Seelanies i 4 3 3 QR B 0 S B A IRC SRR RT AR SR SRR T R bot ] d a Safe ty-Steel Body LR e e e e . 3 8 an R g 5 S MRI eL e e Boa a 8 JATURE for a nurse Lo L W L .2. SN SR R T 8 SEC OND N/ fety first. S 0 when " - B i‘;w;m >%u L e C g B NR A R LN R g . alel) : > g B S RS R RR T T e . 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The'y stop the car qulckly—,: inquire about all the safety features.” Brakes For they ar 5 duick\)" and my car swerve sideways when stopping.” and never need adjustment because that's entirely automatic. : s i ver MO B T s i eLT T g T N o e e o B : : S stox\&ddmg B b RTR .:::::-.:::v;-f*ziz'"-r":-::»::ee:f:?:f*f'f'-‘-firf%-e:%:i:i::*:";’i\-’vi':3‘1? »‘E t o side-s¥ : - by S R Y SRR R e B R : o “.l{hO\lt SiC gense to\d her asa(d.‘t’h . h‘:{m S 3 _:::-_-j @ § ".;,Z::' o 5’ ( ik \\ H ,;:15:5‘5&::. o im»— SR i And con‘xmo(; steel reinforced W 1 i§ ‘Y;Qs‘;g::a; 4 Tete.ib *g g“ S *WQ § per | f Y nes RSN Bogh S R . g PR L, R Stec\ Bod) er types. BRSO ? ’:Xg R o R ;S R R 3 \\\);&f:_ Soamem. o g sel, 18 safer than oth hat Plym- &:%\ T % t’:ffi SRR \..\‘W\ 3W,se ‘B e s Rne SR - . —— Donald found tha geld R o\”*“*“‘ifi“iifl‘%&fi%%\gxn DS e v T L i s Miss Macl he lowest-price BETe HEEERN NG E. - Sai L e : Bk L ”'%’*3 EW | outh alones 1® ;,tue;es.a safety features. R *‘w ’}»\\%’*\ L e . e T A o R ; bot e 00l R g S R LR e = ‘ . % offered her o 10 P o SEE dn MRS opna e SEarE P g 3 . . 0 SRR R R I et R o B " i ;p sAFETY when vou A 8 8 g. S e E s ¥ : . ' JINK ADOVE & bout comiort, B e B T BN : = i -3 R THLE T And a "heel R BRI RS T R R SN P, RR R o g & T e buy your ReXt P 7 dividual Wheel -} S . S SR e St S s oul .mouth S S > englne SRS Q&z{.‘:} B s SO SREEE 53:"5:5::_;‘-,‘? l"m ‘SR R NS 2 100. ¥ Y . Power R R Ro S e T RS S R b 3 c W ; Springing plus Fese oother, more [& g ST SR R e . TR S op 3 ive you & S PR RS e LT R ee e R e e mountings €ll4 7 @M o Bl s L e e ; RR S I s e Tide. e 3 S s iR S XA : 5 :9"'B‘2’46\&"“(&)"‘ R o SRR &R N Ct)mfort&bk , Soto or Chry sler b S LR i o : AN ? . ¥ PO R ey T T Dodge, De S ote the h BT g : : P L e dealer will BACH O convenience: - e g BA SO AN RR A ; . th at ) X R B RRS v R R o 5 T Plymou R 4. “'Brakes aren’t the only thing. Plymouth New 513 5. ABOVE —the De Luxe Plymouth Coupe. Plym- SRR t‘r's TH | is 2 joy to drive. And it amazes me the way outh prices in at $495 f.o.b. factory, Detroit, AR R those new springs ‘walk’ over b = : - übje hange without noti R 3 "alk over bumps. Michigan, and are s ct to change without notice. 3 8 EST E" ' "BEST ENGINEERED . : AND UP R e $ F. O. B. FACTORY LQW“P'“CED Tt DETROIT . 3 | WIRT’S ATTACKS ON | ROOSEVELT ADVISORS | TO BE INVESTICATED | (Continued From Zage One) |he equipped for ‘safe” day ana | night flying and the pilots trained iin the use of the equipment; al ilows payment of expenses incurred [by men used im the mail service; 51)<-»'nllm the replacement and re | pair of planes lost or damaged in { mail service and directs the post im:u:u-r general to tell congress on the first day of its next session ‘huw much it cost to ahve the army rcarry the mail, - Now that the outomobile strike jlhrvut has been dissipated by pre ‘sidential action, the Wagner labor [buard bill became more the focus of controversy Monday with the - manufacturing world denouncing it as ‘‘unsound.” On many tongues, as the senats and house propéer dealt with othex matters, was the question whay ef fect will terms of the Roosevelt automobile settlement have on the Wagner Bill? Hugh 8., Johnson, tecause of overtime work in the automobile dispute necessitated a real rest, could not appear for his testimony to a scnate commitiee on the Wag ner bill. This gave James A. Emery, of the national manufacturers' as sociation, an earlier chance, and he declared the proposal “would cast all labor relaton n one mould, granting a labor monopoly to those who employ it¥ There was such an impasse in wage negotiations by Joseph B Eastman between the labor and management spokesmen, mean while that the dispute appeated likely to be referred to the federal meditation board for more detailed discussions. DOG IN POUND A Dbrown police dog, picked up near the High school grounds, was impounded this morning, the first to be s 0 treated this year. The owner may get him By ecallihg at the pound and paying tax and vaccination fees. The dog is full grown. ek b R A Atlanta, and, Mr. W, L. Downs of Statesboro. ' The honorary pallbearers will be | Chancellor Philip ~Weltner, the | members of the Board of Regents of the Univeysity” System of Geor gia, the faculty of the University of Georgia, members of Eta chap ter of the Chi Phi fraternity, State Superintendent of Education M. D. Colling, members of the State Board of Education and the eight members of the Accrediting Com mission of the Georgia ~ High School association, = Prof. T. J. Dempsey, Jjr., secretary of the State Department of Education: Prof. W. D, Hooper, of the Ulfi-| versity of Georgia; Dean Paul \V.‘ i‘Chapman. of the College of Agri “culture; Dr. Peyton Jacobs, pres ident of the Georgia Southwestern college; Mr. H. H. Caldwell, reg istrar of Georgia School of Tech nology; Mr. J. G. Stipe, registrar of Emory university; Prof. Mark Smith, vice-president of the High School association, Thomaston, Ga., ‘and Prof. D. H. Standard, secre tary of the High School associa tion, Cordele. The remains of Dr. Stewart will be carried to Oxford, Ga. for in terment Tuesday afternoan. Theie in the quietude of- the little town in which he.first saw the light of day his mocb frame will be lov ingly laid’to rest. THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA | N > o e < ——— A — g —r 4 . y ’: s Y 2 A & 5L 2 R Y T, f”‘%z%'s gLy TR %3 o & e 4 e B ¥ o AR A 4LS % ? 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R L s ')#; ¥ ‘ s %:‘;fiifi* Ty i g ; wrs W 7 bl e ,?x& ; 7 % G s ks r:,-r:-?f#&"’ AR S T on | RB B ey v R ; ”fi;rk«&‘é‘%fifii »:;::-;4..: b U it s B R S R 4 .. iRW; G % : v R oo : No wonder, for this alpaca, or South American Camel, has just been caught in the act of Tistening in. on the conversation between Dr. Abel Rodriguez Larrain; Peruvian Consul at Chicago and €. ¥. Gelb, vice president of Society Brand Clothes, Inc. This animai plays an important part in the commercial life of these men as it is the hair of the alpaca that-forms a valuable export for Peru and an fmportant ingredient in the construction of a leading topcoat ma terial, - ! X e . ~ /Chicago—lln commenting: on "tho sturdy ‘alpaca, the animal ‘that icontributes its halr for the com fort and -peauty of men’s coats, Dr. AU R. Larrain, Consul of the ‘Republic of Peru, told of the gugged life this creature leads in Arequipa, high in the Peruvidn Andes. While the coastal region Is hot, the high plateaux in the PAINTING EXHIBIT TO OPEN TUESDAY (vontinued From Page One) like the originals, in practically ev 3ry respect except size, and in many cases, e€ven corresponding there. In many of them, the brush strokes of the artist can be noted, and even the finest variations of color-tone has been captured. ! The 1560 paintings being exhibit ad represent the finest works of art of history, including paintings by Raphael, da Vinci, Reubens, on down to such modern artists as Renoir and Matisse. Many familiar works are in cluded in the collection, such as “The Gleaners,” “The Last Sup per,” and “The Blue Boy.” REV. BICKNELL DIES ATLANTA—(#)—The Rev. Jesse Richards Bicknell, 86, Episcopal minister and one of the oldest members of the Beta Theta Pi fra ternity, died at the residence of his niece Sunday. For 11 years bhe had been as sistant rector of the Church of she Incarnatton in West End, a suburb of Atlanta. interior where the alpaca or South American Camel, as it is called by many pcople, makes iis habitat, are bleak and cold. Na- ture has therefore provided pro tection from the elements with an abundance of fine silky hair. This is the product that forms a valus able.export for Peru and is used principally §a the construclipn of the hudder sloth., y Oconee Group Has } i 35 Members Now; | . Organized With 101 The _\’oung People's circ’le ofi Oconee Street Methodist church -is | one of the largest and most a'(‘tivoF organizations in the church. It vv:xsl organized in November, 1931, by Mrs. H. G. Callahan, and is now under the direction of Mrs. R. E. Breedlove and Mrs. C. S. Denny.l ’ V_Vf'nen the circle was organizod,‘ ten members were all that attend- | ed the meetings. Now the club has thirty-five active members, and at the last meeting a motion wa} made to divide the circle into two groups. The motion will be decided upon at the next meeting, which will be held at the home of Mrs. R. E. Breedlove. A Hst of the charter members of the circle follows: Mrg. H, G. ;(‘Z".'svtllaha.n, Miss Mary James, Miss Leila James, Mrs. C. S. Denny, Mrs. T. H. Jackson, Mrs. R. E. Breedlove, Mrs. George James, Miss Emily Bridges, Mrs. Leroy James, and Miss Elise Hérring. 'OVER 40,000 POUNDS 'OF GLASS POURED FOR . “EYE” IN TELESCOPE (Continued From Page One) erevices by drilling after the mir rop is annealed. One workman was injured slight ly Sunday when he slipped and struck his head on a huge ladle. | Within the next 24 hours the mirror will be transferred from its igloc-like house - to* ‘an annealing tank. There it will cool gradually during the next ten months. It| then will be shipped to. the Carne- | oie institute of technology' in Cal ifornia to be ground to produce & conelave reflecting surface. Finally there will be the task of affixing a mirror surface. These last stages will require three years. Completed, the telescope will rep resent an investment 0f=56,000,000 furnished by the international ed ucation hoard. The job of making the mirror cost approximately - $1,000,000. A large share of the grant was spent trying to make an expansion proof glags of ‘aquartz; That failed. The Corning company, after tedious re gearch and experimentation, turn ed out a special glass with expan sjion of less than one fourth that of window- glass. . & The pouring of the glass, an.all day task, was witnessed by almost 10,600 persons,” many of whom mo tored here from distant points. In cluded were almost 100 . scientists and engineers of renown. . .4 © Three tiers of galleries .restrain ed the crowd from approaching. the roaring furnace -and . mold. ,’l'he] spectators were admitted in. groups of 100 and were permitted to see the transfer of one ladle of - glass from furnace to mold. The molten mass was moved in huge ladles which were suspended from over: head tracks and were propelled by workmen pushing on 20 foot han dles attached to the ladles. One hundred ladlefuls were dip ped out of the tank furnace and poured into the mold. - Each ladle carried 750 pounds of composition but enly 400 pounds emptied. The liquid cooled so quickly in its short 40 foot jomrney that 350 pounds of | each load adhered to the dipper. | The occasion marked a- holiday | for corning. Long queues of ticket holders stretched away from the egates to the plant while groups. not possessing tickéts, gathered {along the fences unable to obtain [even a peek it the performagce. { —_— - iSTRIKES SUDDENLY, LEAVING SCENE OF TURMOIL IN WAKE ! (Continued From Page One) i \ | "x'iously injured, with a chunk of wooed driven into her body. Auto | mobiles were turned over and | smashed all over the meighbor | hood””, | A mile from the five block area ‘taward the lake fifteen additional houses were reported blown down ':m«l a string of empty box cars ‘\\'m’o blown off of the tracks. | Mrs. Céssie Blanchard, who lived !m'a!' the lake, said she saved het { nine children by rushing them out =§uf the house intp a field. All, she "isaid, lay flat on the groupd and {held on to weeds. ; She said she saw the storm com |ing with a freight car flying ‘throu;:h the air and she and her children ran for their lives. ! PEACE IN, INDUSTRY. REACHED AT PARLEY; BOTH SIDES CONTENT (Continued From Page One) defined’ as paid-up members in good standing “or anyone legally obligated sto pay up.” This agreement was accepted by both sides with expressions of sat isfaction. : The solution of the automobile deadlock lifted from the adminis tration one of its greatest indus trial worries. Had the strike oc curred, officials | feared, there would have been no stopping in dustrial discord from spreading to other fields in enough volume to nullify much of what has been done toward recovery. SEES BETTER SEASON DETROlT.—(#)—Employers and workers in Michigan's automobile factories drew \t‘qgether under a presidential peace. pact today and looked ahead to what promised to be the best season since 1931. “Business as usual” was the or der at the factories in Detroit, Flint, Pontiac and Lansing, where only a few days ago workers were filing through the gates at the end of a day’s work without knowing whether they would return in the morning. The center of interest shifted Monday, from Washington to De troit where an NRA board is to be set up to pass on questions of representation, discharge and , dis crimination. SWEEPING INQUIRY IN LYNCHBURG FIRE IS LAUNCHED TODAY (Continued From Page One) sibllity that too many men were crowded in the dormitories, The bureau was orriginally designed to care for 80 transients, but 190 were SR TSVRTS ST RIS TR T e ae I A LAC E e TODAY AND TUESDAY | _ A | ectier! Vel o I - YOU’LL BE CRAZY ABOUT HIM "+« but you'd never be crazy enough to MARRY him! ‘ > ,v l';'d make your life chicken d ’ :":"’: / " one day, feathers the next .. . Ay v:' o opera tickets at night, pawn Wy E tickets in the morning! He'd Ly gamble your wedding ring on : 5 s "%, queens over deuces—but he 2y f . wouldn’t stop loving you on a : _;9‘A:?"g'iv;j‘___:f; : e bet! The lovable rogue of every A ? e woman’s dreams— the most / ? :fibl; Sy . \ «: ) i EDW. G. ROBINSON | DARK HBAZARD | ! With GENEVIEVE TOBIN and GLENDA FARRELL Added—News Events and Comedy “HERE COMES FLOSSIE” B *d STRAND - - Today Only l KISSING AND CLOUTING AGAIN! | g S S | NN g s | | ad%s 0P A T O 90l gjg P | et AN TR B BT oMU ND vieToß Re ! ’ (S LOWE*® MCI.AGI.E"N” -l BN NO MORE WOMEN || | B -+ SALLY BLANE » MINNA GOMBELL S EXTRA—I-Reel Novelty “RIP VAN WINKLE Also Richard Talmadge in “Pirate Treasure: 4 ' | "TUESDAY — AMERICAN LEGION DAY , | First Time on the Screen | Special Government World War Films l Withheld Until Now! : ““The Big Drive Every Scene Actually Takefi on the Battlcficlds While the Battle Was Raging. - 'ALL PROCEEDS OF THIS PICTURE GO 70 8 THE AMERICAN LEGION MONDAY, MARCH 26, 1934 MAN WHO PROMIsEy TO MAKE CHINA Ricy GETS CHARITY Gy, (Continued From rage One) would g 6 tg & charity groye The undertaker said Canagiy, whose name was “Withhelq, adkeg for the privilege of Daying Jyligy: funeral expenses, ! “Thig Canadian is giving Jyjj a ‘funeral little better thanp & pays per’s,” the undertaker sajdq. Julian’s body lay Monday upon 3 slab in a large darkenegd room with a cement floor, About it lay othe bodies of men of different pages. Chinese, Indian, Burmese and Malayan. 6 Nobody appeared to care thay in the public morgue lay the body of the man who but recently saiq p, would bring China Drosperity through the development ,f her o resources in a new concern he yyy organizing. in it when it caught firc Safurgsy morning. : . ~ Asked about the lack of fire e capes on the building, Johnstop, said, that a city efficial had toyq the advisory committee that ope would not be necessary on a ty story building. The building is tw, stories high from the front ap three stories from the rear, | TRUCK LOAD of FRESH Tomatoes, Beans, Cabbage, ctc. At Truck Load Prices. Fresh, Fancy Valencia Oranges. MAY'S