Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XXXIII.
FAYETTEVILLE, GEORGIA, AUGUST 18, 1922.
NUMBER 5.
OFFICIAL PROGRAM
Meeting Georgia Swine
Growers’ (Association,
Carrollton, Ga., August
30-31.
Wednesday, August 30.
H. B. Ralls, Jr., President, Presiding.
9:00 A. M. Parade.
Club boys and girls; Boy
Scouts; Farm Bureau.
Led by Carrollton Band,
ending at City Hail.
9:30 Opening Session—
Welcome Addresses:
A. K. Snead, Mayor, City
of Carrollton.
Prof. I. S. Ingram, Carroll
County.
Response:
W. H. Peacock, Cochran,
Ga.
10:00 Address:
Governor Thos. W. Hard
wick.
11:00 Address:
Dr. A. M. Soule, Presi
dent State College, Ath
ens: “The Proper Farm
Program.”
12:00 Noon Basket dinner.
2:00 P.*M. Vice President J. S.
Jones, Adel, Ga., Presid-
Jng.
Address:
Dr. Peter F. Bahnsen,
State Veterinarian: “Hog
Diseases.”
3:00 Address:
W. C. Lasseter, Editor of
Progressive Farmer:
“Valueof Fanners’ Or
ganizations.”
4:00 Free Trip over Carroll
county' fpr registered
guests, i.- ' ■ i i
7:30 P. M. Vice President J. E. Hall,
Soperton, Ga., presiding.
Address:
C. A. Cobb, Editor South
ern Ruralist: “The Co-
, operative Marketing of
Farm Products.”
Address:
Paul Tabor, Pasturage
Specialist: “Forage Crops
for Hogs.”
Thursday, August 31st.
9:00 A. M. Business Meeting of the
Georgia Swine Growers’
Association.
10:00 Poultry Sale: Poultry
furnished by local, (pro
ducers.
11:00 Address:
Prof. M. P. Jarnagin, An
imal ^Husbandry, Athens;
Swine Herd Manage
ment.”
12:00 Barbecue for registered
guests. Admission by
card.
1:00 P. M. Address:
W. H. White, Jr., White
Provisiofn Co., Atlanta:
“The Meat Hog Situation
in Georgia."
Sale:
Auction sale pure bred
hogs.
Adjournment.
FORDSONSHOW
TO BE STAGED
IN ATLANTA ON
AUGUST 29TH
Industrial Exhibit Will
Demonstrate the Many
Uses to Which the Trac
tor May Be Put.
2:00
I i
3:00
FAYETTEVILLE
WOMAN’S CLUB
Tie Fayetteville Woman’s Club held
July meeting at the home of Miss
inie Lou Stell. (Mrs. Malone, Miss
itia Mullens and Mrs. L. M. Lester
ertained with Miss Stell.
'he interesting program had as its
ject “Local Government.” Several
.utiful musical selections were en-
ed by all.
leveral important business matters
-e discussed. The club voted to
chase shades ,for the school build-
; also it was decided to give a
eption to our school faculty iihme-
tely after the opening of school,
'he club was,delighted to have the
nes of two new members, Mrs.
,n Millsaps and Miss Ruth Travis,
it the close of the meeting a deli-
is salad course was served by the
he next meeting will be at the
e of Mrs. Seagraves.
Announcement has just been made
by Redwine Brothers, local managers
of the Ford Motor Company, that the
Fordson industrial Tractor Show will
be held in Atlanta from August 29 to
31, inclusive.
The show is to be staged on the
large lot at Ponce de Leon and Penn
sylvania avenues. On this lot will be
erected huge tents to house many of
the exhibits. A large open air amphi
theater will also be laid out in which
industrial equipment too large to be
shown under the tents will be exhibit
ed and demonstrated.
Reports received from other cities
throughout the country where the Ford-
son Industrial Tractor Show has been
held there is a great deal of public in
terest in the .multiplicity of uses to
which the Fordson Tractor — Henry
Ford’s latest invention—is applied in
industrial work. The practical demoin-
strations made have demonstrated the
fallacy of the popular idea -that the
tractor is for use on the farm only,
Parade Opens Show
Elaborate plans are being made for
a large field and very interesting pa
rade to be held on the opening day
and something of unusual public inter
est will occur each day during the
exposition.
Among the exhibits of great public
interest will be seen a vacuum .cotton
picking machine operated with power
from the Fordson Tractor. This ma
chine is so constructed that instead of
tearing the cotton from the boll as
some mechanical devices have done in
the past, the cotton is sucked from the
boll and at ,the same time much of the
seed extracted. With this maclyno one
mih can do the work of'several men.
Another exhibit of great interest is
known as the “line drive.” In this
exhibit the Fordson Tractor is driven
like a horse with a pair of liens. These
lines control it by the manner in which
they are pulled, sending the tractor
forward at varying speeds or turning
it from right to left at will. In prac
tical use y. is possible with this de
vice for one man to do the work of
two.
Used in Logging.
An unique step forward in the loco
motive field will be exhibited at this
exposition. In this exhibit the Ford
son Tractor has been converted into
a locomotive for use in logging and
mining operations and on construction
jobs and in large manufacturing plants.
A special track is to be constructed
to show this locomotive in actual op
eration. The exposition given here will
be the eighteenth of a series of 38
such expositions being given, in the
large trade centers throughout the
United States.
It is reported that the exhibits to
be shown at this exposition are valued
at over one million dollars. They will
come from half the states in the Un
ion and represent the products of over
fifty manufacturers of industrial equip
ment.
Rural Educational Sys
tem to Keep Pace
With That of
Citi
e s
Hon. A. O. Blalock.
Endorsed by Fayette
County Executive
Committee.
At the regular meeting of the Fay
ette County Democratic Executive Com
mittee, Monday morning, July 31, reso
lutions were adopted endorsing Hon. A.
O. Blalock for Commissioner of Agri
culture of Georgia, subject to the Dem
ocratic primary to be held September
13th.
Mr. Blalock ..is now campaigning
through the different counties of the
state, and we commend him to all
Georgians as a most efficient business
man, banker and mercantile man in
his home town, a most progressive and
industrious farmer, former collector of
revenue under the (Wilson administra
tion, former member of the House of
Representatives, three times State Sen
ator.
FAYETTE COUNTY DEMOCRA? IC
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE,
T. R. Gay, Sec.
How Ohio River Got Name.
The Allegheny and Ohio rivers were
regarded by the French as one stream.
The name given by them, La Belle
Riviere (the beautiful river), is a
translation of the Seneca term "Ho-
lie-yu,” changed by the whites, both
English and French, at a Inter date
into Ohio.
Undoubtedly the greatest problem
now facing the American people is the
rural school. Over 12,000,000 children
must depend upon the country school
for their public school education and
over 900 of these get no other educa
tion except in the country school.
Recent investigations show that the
average period for which village pud
country children attend school is 6 1-2
yearsi for the villages and less than 5
years in the country. Surely our corn
ing generations are (entitled to a bet
ter preparation for the increasing prob
lems and responsibilities of modem
life.
There is little in the average one-
ropm country school to arouse the in
terest of the child in school work.
There is little or no equipment for the
teacher to use and the teacher has no
opportunity to do his or her best while
teaching a (large number of subjects
to assorted ages and sizes of children
in a wide range of classes.
There is small wonder, then, that the
consolidated schools have been ®o suc
cessful in the communities where they
have been organized, and there is no
doubt but that this type of school is the
real solution to the rural educational
problem.
Lively Registration for
Opening of School.'
Though it is still over two weeks
until the opening of school, the 4th
of September, the registration is pro
ceeding at a lively rate. Already, in
the first two days after announcement
of the arrangement for registration of
pupils, there have been registered near
ly twenty per cent >of last year’s en
rollment, including several ;who have
paid the fee for last spring.
Let every pupil register as soon as
possible so that arrangement can be
made for seating him and there will be
no delay in getting off, at the begin
ning of the term on the right foot
No pupil should enter after the first
day, though there is ino regulation bar
ring entrance at any time in the year.
The only limitation to this effect is
that pupils will not be accepted for the
first grade after the first twenty days
if the pupil has not been to school
before. This is necessitated iby the
fact that the first grade teacher can-
jnot be expected to make new classes
for late entrants.
It is also true that conditions can
not be made by examination by those
pupils who enter late. (All .who have
conditions should enter the first day
and not miss a day, if they expect to
be allowed to g«( on with the next
grade. Classification will from now on
be very rigid. No pupil who has not
done the work of the preceding grade
will be allowed to enroll in a grade
higher up. This apples especially to
those pupils coming to this school
from other schools.
The folowing is the list of entrants
so far registered:
Mildred'Pritchett, Lynwood Edmond
son, John Murphy, Iris Kerlin, Marion
Seagraves, Frances Adams, Emma Lee
McElwaney, Dorothy Phillips, Joseph
ine .Redwine, Martha Redwine, Frances
Dixon, Mary Emma Alien, Forest Ed
monson, Hillman Edmondson, M. L.
Seagrave, Jr., Billy Adams, K. W. Mc
Elwaney, Dorothy Perry, Eleanor Per
ry, Elizabeth Redwine, Johnnie Pritch
ett, Wilburn Edmondson, Hoke Kelly,
Kathleen Blalock, Berriel Holt, John
Adams, J. B. Edmondson, Jr., Martha
Kelly, Carolyn Gay, Fred Jackson, Al
ma Redwine, Dorothy (Redwine, Sara
Belle Matthews, Irene Dixon, Lorelle
McElwaney, John H. Jackson, Helen
Allen, Nannie Mae Holt, Mae Lewis,
Mildred Stell, John D. Stell, Willie Mc-
Lucas, Annie Mae Dixon, Tommie Ed
mondson, Opal Davis, Lamar Matthews,
Chrystal Stephens, Lillie Mae McElwa
ney, Lucile Allen.
We wish to call especial attention to
the fact that no one for lack of the
ready cash to buy the entrance cards
need fail to enter his children or de
lay one day in registering them. Call
Mr. T. R. Gay and he will make the
arrangements necessary.
The names of those who register will
appear each week until the opening.
The Best in High School
Education Open to the
Boys and Girls of Fay
ette County.
Opportunities that our children have
never before had are now open to the
children of Fayette county. Thanks to
the co-operation of the state and coun
ty, the far-seeing arrangement of state
aid and the increasing interest of the
people and the leaders of the county.
It will not be long until no pupil in
the county will be able to say that he
cannot get a good high school educa
tion. Already there is provision where
by any boy or girl in the county who
is ambitious and who is not unwilling
to put himself .out a bit to get to the
school can have the best there is (with
out cost. The tuition bars have been
removed as far as the high school is
Concerned for all children in the coun
ty. These opportunities should be re
ceived by the people of the county with
a full appreciation of all it means to
them. If it is done there will be such
a rush to the Fayetteville High School
this fall that the authorities will see
the necessity of making provision for
further accommodations.
Let every father of a lively and able
boy or girl determine that he will see
to it that the boy or girl has the chance
to make of himself that he can, that
he will make (life happier and more
prosperous for the future citizens ,of
the county, that Fayette shall, as far
as his children are concerned, shall
be the home .of an enlightened' and
thinking people, thati the leaders of our
state shall look to our county for peo
ple’s guidance in times of stress like
these.
Let eveiy mother determine that the
joys of high service shall abound in
the heart of her son or her daughter,
that civic consciousness, right living,
respect for law and respect for public
education as the chief function of gov
ernment shall be at once the ornaments
of their character (and the bulwarks
of their freedom.
Let evrey boy and girl determine
that he or she will find a way to open
the doors of opportunity and will make
himself fit for a man’s work in the
world, that he will enjoy the full liv
ing that is due every man. The school
is the door. He is false, to himself
if he lets these chances go by.
Industrial Prosperity Is
Promised; Industrial
Idleness Given.
Some million and a half American
workers are at present on strike. They
are losing $50,000,000 a week in wages
and the country is deprived of the
fruits o^their labor, the value, of which
is beyond the possibility of expression
in terms of dollars and cents.
The textile workers, who produce
clothing, the coal miners who supply
fuel, the railway shop men, who main
tain the instrumentalities of transpor
tation, and the trolley men who are
necessary to quick and convenient
transit in two cities — these are the
larger groups of operatives who have
quit their part in the nation's industry
as a protest against the reduction of
their wages.
Without attempting to assess or
place the responsibility for these seri
ous interruptions to productions and
transportation, it is nevertheless fair
to point out that two years ago the
Republican candidates and < their sup
porters promised the American work
ers a golden age of prosperity and a
practical insurance against unemploy
ment and lower wages if they would
only vote the Republican ticket.
There were to be reforms in the gov
ernment, an expert management of
public affairs, a tariff that would up
hold wages for those in industry and
guarantee higher prices for those in
agriculture. Jn this buz and hum of
industry, every one was to be as busy
and blithe as a bee gathering honey
against the coming of winter. And,
of course, this prosperity was to be
of the famous Republican brand, war
ranted tol last a lifetime.
If any of the 3,000,090 unemployed
through inability to find work and the
1,500,000 on strike against lower pay
were lured by these Republican pic
tures of dawning prosperity into voting
for Mr. Harding and his Republican
Congress they must be sadly unde
ceived by this time. If the farmer was
misled by these promises of better
prices for his products, which since
1920 declined billions in value, he must
share the worker’s disappointment and
dissatisfaction.
Not only has the Republican admin
istration failed to bring a new and
greater prosperity; not only has it fail
ed to continue the prosperous condi
tions which prevailed when it came
into power, but has actually turned the
country’s previous prosperity into an
industrial panic.
New Pension Bill
Pased by House
A bill appropriating $1,200,000 to pay
Confederate pensions was passed by
the house of representatives at the fag-
end of the Monday afternoon session,
after the house had called up the bill
in spite of the action of the rules
committee, which had refused to place
it on the calendar.
The bill appropriates $220,000 to sup
ply a deficiency in the pension fund
for what is known as the Old class of
pensioners, and appropriates $975,000
to pay what is known As the new class
of pensioners, who were placed on the
pension roll under the act of 1919.
THE WEEK’S EVENTS
IMPORTANT NEWS OF 8TATE, NA.
TION AND THE WORLD
BRIEFLY TOLD
ROUND ABOUTJHE WORLD
A Condensed Record Of Happening*
Of Interest From All Points
Of The World
Foreign-
Another attempt to get the Turks
and Greeks together for a peace con
ference Is under way, it Is reported
from Constantinople.
Former Premier Briand of France
was recently arrested in Rouen, France,
as a theft suspect.
The funeral of Arthur Griffith, pres
ident of the Irish dail eireann cabinet,
was held at the Dublin pro-cathedral.
Solemn requiem high mass was sung by
Archbishop Byrne. The interment was
at Glasnevin, northern suburb of Dub
lin.
The allied premiers who have been
in London discussing the German rep
arations question have not as yet ar
rived at a decision, but it is under
stood they have tacitly agreed to give
Germany more time to make repara
tion.
Reginald Dunn and Joseph O’Sulli
van, the former a member of the Irish
republican army were changed for the
assassination of Field Marshall Sir
Henry Wilson June 22. Both men sub
mitted quietly to being pinioned.
They were escorted simultaneously
from their cells to the scaffold, where,
as they met they smiled encouragingly
at each other. Both met death un
flinchingly.
Manuel Padres, under secretary of
the treasury, has resigned following
disagreements over policy since finan
cial Secretary de La Hureta’s return
from the banker’s conference in New
York.
Tailor made suits worn with fancy
shirtwaists bid fair to be the most
popular mode for fall and winter.
Practically all of the Paris houses
have reurned to the simple lines of
the comfortable tailor made originated
in America years ago as the “style
most adaptable to the modern woman.”
Japan has replied favorably to the
proposals of the United States regard
ing the future allied interest in the
Chinese Eastern railway. The reply
has been ecbW to Secretary of State
Hughes.
Harold F. McCormick, mnlcl-Enllion-
aire manufacturer of Chicago, and
Madame Ganna Walska, beautiful Po
lish grand opera singer, were married
at Paris.
Former Emperor William has won
his suit brought in a Berlin court to
prohibition the presentation on the
stage or the sale of Emil Ludwig’s
Bismarckian play, “The Dismissal.’’
Congressional leaders at a confer
ence with President Zayas and Major
General E. H. Crowder, President Har
ding’s personal representative, accept
ed in part the American program for
bringing to normal the Cuban govern-
nent’s finances.
Experiments have convinced postot
fice experts that the day of “aerial an
tennae” for wireless receiving has
passed.
Final allotment of $35,604,250 o£ the
funds appropriated by congress for riv
er and harbor improvement work dur
ing the fiscal year of 1923, made by
the chief of army engineers, has been
announced by the war department.
Railroad executives who have been
in Washington negotiating with Presi
dent Harding and railroad labor organ
ization heads for a compromise settle- |
ment of the railroad strike, have left i
Washington convinced that the pres-'
ent strike must be fought out to the '
end. Union labor leaders declare that
mediation and compromise efforts will |
be continued.
The American public will probably i
know before the end of the week
whether the threatening rail strike is ;
to be terminated by amicable means (
or the nation is to go on a semi-military ;
basis in order to assure movement of |
the trains.
In a last minute revision of the tar
iff bill, the senate finance committee
boosted many rates already agreed to :
ANNOUNCEMENTS
MR. A. O. BLALOCK
Announces Himself as a
Candidate for Commis
sioner of Agriculture
Against J. J. Brown, In
cumbent.
BLALOCK SUP
PORTERS OR
GANIZING IN
MANY COUNTIES
Campaign Being Organ
ized in Fayette
County.
Announcement by A. O. Blalock,
by the senate.
Gray Silver, Washington representa- \ prominent farmer, business man and
tive of the American farm bureau fed- ! banker, of Fayetteville, and collector
eration says section fifteen of the Ford ! of internal revenue for the state un
offer for the Muscle Shoals property
states that “the manufacture, sale and
distribution of commercial fertilizers
constitute one of the principal con
siderations of this offer.”
Domestic-
A tablet commemorating the origi
nal "delicious” apple tree, a variety
which in the last twenty-five years
has been planted in nearly all apple
growing sections, has been dedicated
at Winterset, Iowa.
Louis Koemmenich, 55, composer and
former director of'the New York Ora
torio society, was found dead in the
der the Wilson administration, that he
will be a candidate for the office of
commissioner of agriculture, in the
coming state primary, has been re
ceived with much interest in Fayette
county, and a campaign Is now being or
ganized in his behalf.
Mr. Blalock is well known through
out the state, and if the pulse beats
in the heart of his home town and
county mean anything, the congratula
tory letters that are pouring in from
all parts of the state over his an
nouncement speak a volume of the
sentiment® of the people of Georgia.
Campaigns are being organized in
many counties in his behalf and the
outlook seems very encouraging to Mr.
kitchen of his apartment in New York , , , , ,
City with gas flowing from an open j Blalock and hls Wends,
jet in the range.
Washington
The senate has agreed to vote on
the tariff hill August 19. Both Demo
crats and Republicans have, through
their leaders, agreed to this date.
The Planters Bank, Carlton, Ga.;
The Farmers Bank, Crawford, Ga., and
the Bank of Locust Grove, Locust
Grove, Ga. have joined the federal re
serve system.
Stones placed on the rails were the
cause of the wreck on the Boston and
Albany railroad near Worcester, Mass.,
which resulted in one death.
Excursion boats of the near future
will be large dirigibles which, as they
sail among the clouds, will receive
music through radio to which the pas
sengers may dance.
With the races for the gubernatorial
and senatorial nominations on both
the republican and democratic tickets
definitely settled, interest turned to
wards the attitude of Ohio voters on
prohibition as shown by their ballots
in state primary election.
Nearly one-third of all the deaf per
sons in the United States lost their
hearing after suffering from some spe
cific disease, the Census Bureau an
nounced. Scarlet fever accounted for
10.3 per cent of all deaf persons enum
erated in the 1920 census. Meningitis
together with “brain fever” accounted
for 14.0 per cent; typhoid fever, 2.0
per cent; measles, 3.3 per cent; whoop
ing cought, 2.0 per cent, and infantile
paralysis, 0.7 per cent.
A “prohibition navy,” composed of
converted submarine chasers in large
numbers, is prepared to take to the
high seas in search of rum smugglers
ns soon as treaty arrangements can be
concluded with Great Britain, accord
ing to Prohibition Commissioner Roy
A. Haynes.
From the Sixth District
To Succeed Himself,
Subject to the Demo
cratic Primary.
Thanking you in advance for your
interest in my behalf, I am,
Very respectfully, J. W. WISE.
Fayetteville, Ga., June 29, 1922.
To the Voters of the
Sixth Congressional
District:
Viscountess Rhondda, known as Brit- i WISE ANNOUNCES
ain’s busiest and richest woman, is on) _
visit to New York City. Her father j Jr O R CONGRESS
was food controller during the war. *
A swordfish drove it sword through .
a six-inch plan in the hull of the bar- j
kentine ’Monitor, her. master, AS* Han-;
sen. reported on ariving at Seattle.
The attack occurred somewhere in the
south seas.
The international association of fire
chiefs in session at San rFancisco, _ .. .
Calif., are discussing the use of gas 0 , e °®. rs ,°* _ tbe ® lxt ^ Congres-
from airplane in extinguishing fires, j Sl0na istrict:
Railroad executives and heads of the _ .
five big four brotherhoods will meet L 1 he £ eby announce my candidacy for
in New York City in a few days to i democratic nomination for the
make another effort to settle the strike j , ongress, subject to the rules of
of the shop employees. tbe 0 Executive committee
_. ■ of said district governing the primary
The night trair from Memphis to e i ec tion ^
Birmingham on the St. Lcuir and Bir ; j appreciate the support given me
mingham and San Francisco railroaa , heretofor0> and i£ again honore( , by
has been annulled. ;you as your representative, I will en-
Seaboard Air Line passenger train j deavor to serve your interest in legis-
No. 2, northbound, from Jacksonville lative, as wdl as other matters,
to Washington, jumped the track half
a mile from Dixiana, S. C., resulting
in one dead and three injured.
Three negroes, charged with attack
ing Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Keetchen,
camping a few miles south of South
ern Pines, N. C., about ten days ago,
have been placed on trial for their
lives in Moore county superior court.
They are being guarded by soldiers.
The soft coal strike has been virtu
ally broken and the prospects are that
the actual signing of an agreement be
tween the United Mine Workers and
operators, controlling an annual output
of sixty million tons will be signed
just as soon as the document Is pre
pared. The signing of the contract
will end the strike in part.
It is stated in Cleveland that an of
fer to end the anthracite strike by
agreeing to the wage scale in force
when the strike was called has been
received by President Lewis of the
miners from S. D. Warriner, head of
the anthracite operators’ scale commit
tee.
A Santa Fe relief train carrying ap
proximately 125 passengers, many of
whom still were suffering from the ef
fects of the terrific heat of the desert,
arrived at San Bernardino from Nee
dles, N. M., after four days’ delay
when the train service men refused to
proceed any further.
Newspaper reports In Chicago are
that Harold F. McCormick, millionaire
sportsman and art patron, who recently
married Ganna Walska, the opera sing
er in Paris, is reported to have pur
chased a home for his bride in Lak6
Forest, a wealthy Chicago suburban
district.
Three bombs hurled at the Weehaw-
ken local of the Westshore railroad,
as it crossed a culvert near Grantom
Junction, N. J„ shattered the windows
of three coaches and injured ten per
sons, five seriously, officials of the
road report.
Dun’s Review, published in New
York City, reports that much activity
prevails in wholesale trade.
Prolongation of both the coal and
railroad strikes has brought a further
I am a candidate to represent this
district in the 68th Congress. I earn
estly solicit the votes and active sup
port of my friends throughout this dis
trict, and, if elected, I assure you that
I will be active in the suppotr of the
interest of the people.
Respectfully,
J. J. FLYNT.
Announcements.
TO THE VOTERS OF FAYETTE
COUNTY:
J hereby announce my candidacy
for the state senate from the 26th sena
torial district, subject to the rules of
the Democratic executive committee
of said county and district governing
the primary election to be held Sep
tember 13th.
I earnestly solicit the votes and ac
tive support of my friends in the coun
ty, and, if elected, I assure you that
I will do all in my power to advance
the interest of our people.
Thanking you for your interest in
my behalf. I am,
Very respectfully,
M. B. HOLLINGSWORTH.
Equality,
Equality Is the dream of a madman,
or the passion of a fiend. Extreme In
equality, or high comfort and clvllza-
tion in some, coexisting with deep mis
ery and degradation m others, is no
less also a folly and a sin. But an
Inequality where some have all the
enjoyments of civilized life, and more
are without its comforts, where some
have all the treasures of knowledge,
and none Is sunk in ignorance, that Is
tightening of the brakes on the wheels j a social system In harmony with the
of industry, but the undertone of the order of God’s creation in the natural
markets of the country has neverthe' j world.—Dr. Arnold: "The Operative
less remained firm. Classes."