Newspaper Page Text
6A
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flCh:n'h\s Edward Russell Declares World l,:lhm'i
Will Win Its Fight—Must and Will Have|
What It Desires.
By CHAS. EV. RUSSELL. }
Famous Author and Leading Writer on Civic Righteousness.
" The greatest of all the signs of the,
~ times is the sign that is receiving
~ the least attention.
Run over a few basic facts and see
* ¥ this is not so.
: Modern clvilization rests upon la
bor. Labor is the length and breadth
and height and depth es it, and on
labor it lives and has its being,
Whatever labor makes up its mind
§t wants, whatever it miteg for,
- whatever it continues to demand, that
it will have to have. It is the King-
Pin of the whole social machine.
> This tremendous fact it had never
understood until the war. It ig be
~ ginning to understand that fact now.
THREE DEMANDS.
Observe then: Three things the la.
bor of all the civilised world is de
: ding. On some other points in the
bor programs put forth in the vari
! nations there are differances. On
: ise three ppints organized labor in
_ @very country is unanumous:
: A shorter workday. A larger share
in the product and in the control of
: ustry. Better education for the
n of workers,
these the first twoiseem to strike
: e sensitive or primitive minds as
- sheer revolution. They are but soft
y compared with the possibilities
the third,
Because if that thir® demand shall
e carried out it wiff in the end
! al the great war in importance to
human race, and malke our famous ‘
e conference that we follow with
t;mch zeal look like the treaty of
t.
At the present time, the children
of the mass of the workers, who are
rt of the great majority of the na
and under. democracy must have
‘the whole future in their hands, are
not being educated at all lln:& of
hem are be nc%d more or less
=—and chiefly Ly few.of them
are being e ed. ¢ ;
_ Even of thgse that are alloyved to
a litfle schoofing and gather
some rudimentsury arumbs of knowl
- Automobile
Accidents
WKETB ‘ER+due to-care
lessness, inexperi
ence or unavvidable—an.
tomobile uccidents oceur
almost daity. Is YOUR
Automobile or Truck fully
covered by insurance? The
protection far exceeds the
cost. Ask us about our
LIABILITY, FIRE,
THEFT AND PROPER
TY DAMAGE policies TO
DAY.
”
“Sure Insurance
C. A. Rauschenberg, Jr.
Member Atlanta Insurance
Exchange.
1218.20- Atlanta National: Bank
Building.
Phone Main 173,
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f Note thisdiagram rlctnre of a-corn. Note its conical
shape. The cause of the corn is rteuure. And pres
sure makes it hurt. The point of the corn is fmhed
’ into the nerves, Appl"v a Blue-) plaster instantly
removes the pressure. ote the zflum?\)hflu
picture below. The ring gives barcfoot comfort in the
tightest shoe.
But that h-mr‘. One should not continue a
The bit of B&B wax in the center of the ring does
that (marked B in illustration below). In two da
usually, the whole corn disappears. It stops the pcg:
then ends the corn. And it wraps the corn so the action
is undisturbed.
Then the action of the B&B wax is centered on tge
| corn. Held there by the rubber coated ndhulvct:{c( )
which wraps comfortably around the toe calthy
tissue is not affected.
These are the reasons why millions of people have
adopted the Blue-jay mcthotl Keeping corns is folly
when this casy way can end them. Treating them in
cruder ways is inexcusable,
For your own sake, convince yourself by applying
Blue-jay to one corn.
| /\
)y —¢\
% Blue =] ah}; Stops Pain Instantly
k Ends Corns Completely
The Scientific Comn Ender 25c—At Druggists
BAUER & BLACK, Chicago, New York, Toronte
Makess of Sterile Surgical Drcssings and Allied Products )
o edge, the number in our own country‘
falls far short of our hazy and beau-
I tifol dreams about It
! Here is a truly amazing thing.
| Consider it
| WAR HMAS CHANGED TIME.
' What was it that before the war we
lus«-d to. say with such a charming
l(-mm-lnwncy about our educational
{ system?
| “The American public school is the
! best in the world. The American
worker is the most intelligent in the
world. All is well with us and in
finitely better than with the effete na
tions we have outstripped.”
That was about the tune, I think;.
grand, glorious and satisfying. An%
lalong came the war with its ugly an
relentless figures and knocked to bits
lall our fond imaginings about Amer
! jean education. For here was the
| stunning fact thrust into our faces
‘! that an average of oge person 1n flV.
}in this country can not read nor
| write.
! Ope in five-~the assertion seem
to many minds unimaginable. Twenty
| per eent of illiteraey in the country
“wn had believed to be the most intel
ner cent of iliteracy in the country
''we had believed to be the most intel
| ligent on eavth! There must be some
i error here. Such figures would put ues)
I down among the old, slow, backward
| looking nations Mke Spain and Buyl-
IR.lrlfl. Siam and Mexico. It would
take us absolutely out of that fair
first rank where we believe ourselves
to belong if Mot to lead, |
For against our 20 per cent of i~
literacy see Denmark with 0.2; Switz.
erland with 03, New Zealand, 0.3;
England and Wales, 1.8; Scotland,
1.6; New South Wales at te other
end of the earth, 2; South Australia,
1.5, Algeria, 13. The whole German |
JHmpire had ip 1913 only 0,02, Cubal
ranked almost as high as the United]
States,
It demands that all labor of chil
dren under 16 years of age shall be
prohibited, that children between the
years of 16 and 18 shall not labor
more than 20 hours a week and
shall have at least as many hours at|
school, and that the full power of the
nation shall be exerted to protect the
health and welfare of every child in}
its immature years,
WHAT LABOR 1S DEMANDING.
1t on% child In the United States,
is to reckive school training to it
eightennth year, if all labor by chil
dren under the age of 16 years is
to be abolished, and if colleges and
universities are to be thrown open
generally to the children of the work
ers, you will see in another genera
tion more extraordinary evolutions,
here than are promised from the
peace conference,
Aryl this is what labor everywhere
t demanding. What it demands it
ill have to have. ls not this a fore
cast of tremendous changes?
So far as labor in the United States
‘4B cancerned, it has yet anether de
mamd that is Nkely to have a more
immediate effect upon visible condi
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S Dim GGtS Wi Sl
'HEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1919,
Petition to the Secretary of War and Secretary of the Navy to Send Seldiers, Sailors and Marines Home
. With Six Months’ Pay.
SIGN THIS PETITION, GET YOUR FRIENDS TO SIGN IT, AND FORWARD IT TO THE2 ATLANTA GEORGIAN,
To the Honorable Newton D, Balker, Secretary of War. s
To the Honorable Josephus Daniels, Seerctary of the Navy. §
The undersigned respectfully urge you to return to their homes, as.soon as possible, the soldiers, sailors and marines who have accomplished
go brilfantly every object America had in the war.
We urge, also, that you obtain the necessary authority to pay these men their wages for six months, or for some sufficient period after their
discharge until they can obtain useful and remunerative employment, .
We urge this as an act of simple justice by a great nation to its heroes.
(Bigned) \
' *
" Paste a Sheet of Paper on This for Additional Signatures,
tions in this country of ours. It de:
mands that all immigration to the
United States shall be for a time
prohibited by law, J
1t is convinced the end of the wm-f
will- start a vast flood of FEuropean
tmmigration, and it believes that|
labor in this country is in no condi- |
tion to stand that kind of inundation, |
In this. itals alleged by its enemies |
to be merely selfish, and all goog
people are invited to look with horror
upon its eourse, ,
EVERY MAN FOR HIMSELF,
Even If the chargeg were true, 1
don't know that it would cut much
ice. The essence of the existing sys
tem 18 e%ery man for himself. Labor
trying to shut out immigration that
wages may be Kept up is no more
selfish than the employers that want
imgnigration that wages may be bett
en down
It is easy for gentlemen of pleasing
and assured incomes to condemn the
hogrible selfishpees that causes labor
to want to keap its jobs and its wages
but the case ls different when the
rent goes up 756 per cent at a clip,
butter is 80-cents a pound, and there
is nothing between you and want for
the whole household but the single
plank of a wage that gets no larger.
However, in this case, the charge of
selfishness isn't altogether true, any
way you mfi.lnuk at it. There i¥
somothing e here besides merely
w*e levels,
he American worlker has for him
aelf and his family a certain stagpdard
of lving. It would be fatal to the
American nation and the American
mission to have that standard low
ared.
We have just been looking at some
startling figures of illiteracy. Illit
eracy is a product of bad industrial
conditions, let those condmonl!
f‘mw worse, as they must "under a
ood of immigration, and your illit
eracy figures, that are so bad now
thq}') shock the nation, would short=
ly become appalling.
There is also another point.
The war showed the patriotism of
organized labog in Amevica to be in
tense, intelligent and high proof. From
first to last it newer slackened in its
loyalty; its unswerving devotion to
}lug made victory possible. '
e had very few strikes in this
conntry while the conflict was on.
Sometimes, as in the case of the min
ers, the provocation to strike was
strong and the conditions of injustice
weare almost intolerable, the workers
stuck them out to the end.
But the war also revealed to us
the presence in America of a large
element of hostiles or unrrlendly
aliens,
The favorite old theory of ours that |
we assimilate and Americanize for
elgners that come to us in great num-‘
bers was overwhelmed early in the
fray. We learned that too often we
don’'t even begin to assimilate them,
that they remain as thoroughly for
elgn as if they bad never left their
native land.
We learned of whole colonies of
such penpl} that after twenty or thire
ty years of residence here knew not
one word of the Ametican language,
knew and cared nothing about the
American institutions and ideas,
~ They had their own newspapers and
their own schools in their own tongue,
'They maintained their alien manners,
customs and thinkings. In a time of
supreme peril,to the nation they sym
pathized with the nation's enemies,
~ MANY OF FOREIGN BIRTH,
~ Unbelievable as this seemed, there
wore some reasons to think that the
case was even worse than had been
represented-—that the illiteracy in the
United States was even greater than
20 per cent,
The examination of 1,652,256 sal
diers in twenty-eight camps revealed
886,196 illiterates or 24.9 per cent.
l On this basis the army of the Unit
od States on November 11, 1919, 4.~
080,000 men, econtained more than
700,000 that could not read or write.
.~ At*one of the camp# the percent
age was 41, at another 37, at another
:{ at another 31. The lowest per
ieonun was at Camp Lewis, Pacific
Northwest, 13, Camp Custer, which
represented the MMIZI. West, was 18,
and Camp Devens, in prideful and
aesthetic Massachusetts, was 22, i
- It is quite true that many of the il
literates in the army were of foreign
birth, and many others were negroes
from the South, but what took the
breath of every thoughtful person was
the rate of illiteracy indicated among
white Americans, ‘
Making every allowance also for
soldiers that for one reason and an
other felgned illiteracy and ullo:‘w
for podfio errors by the recording
officers, the fact from which no one
could escape was that ignorance had
galned appallingly upon education,
The census for 1910 showed only 7.7
per cent.
No one had expected such dewlon—
ment; no one had thought it possible.
Previous reports had not disclosed it;
the leaders in education had sald
nothing about it. Yet there was the
fact that the United States of Amer
fea after more than a hundred years
of the public nchoc& at least one per
son in five was {lliterate.
About the same time the education
al burean of the Department of Com
merce came in with a docment that
not only confirmed the 25 per t
estimate, but showed plainly Whaf it
f# to which we owe the most of this
condition, i
INCREASE IN LIVING COST,
It found that one child in four “of
those at work"” could not sign its own
name, and that of 18,546 children to
whom it issued work certificates un
der the child labor act, 5,294 could not
read plain writing.
Children at work--there is one
great root of the trouble,
The struggle for life, always grow
ing flercer and flercer under the
steadily Increasing price lists, had
reached a point where the children of
} mrny workers must go to work them.
selves ingtead of going to school.
’ The cost of Ilvlm had increased
faster than wages, and all the truancy
laws, compulsory education laws and
child labor laws were more or less
fragile before such a necessity,
What we have begun, then, to bujld
f 8 two classes, the well-to-do to be
highly educated and the workers not
to be educated at all, and there is no
ingenuity ."'t enough to devise a
way by which democracy ean survive
such conditions,
STARTLING SHOWING,
We have already started In the
frankest way to recognize the crea
tion of some such division. Every
year the eduzated are becoming wore
and more of a separate caste, 9
In the war fust over we had some,
ntan”gg showings of the advance ot‘
this great change, We even had a
deliberate attempt to limit all com
missions In the army to graduates of.
universities, so that advancement in
service should be denied to all except
the Brahming of our new soclal
structure, . “
Democraocy means democracy in ed- |
ucation ag much as in anything else.
1f there is no democracy in oduca-‘
tion, shere is no other democracy that
can last. ‘
The ufintent danger of an indus
trial civiization such as we have been‘
developing ip‘the last century is that
workers ghall become mere automas
tons, cogs in a vast machine, without
Joy, energy or ambition; and the mr-l
est way to bring them into that state.
is to deprive them of education, in,
which work we seem to have ad
vanced as far as 20 per cent. |
The deadly peril of this kind of
thing, even to the fortunate and edu-,
cated, ought to be apparent from the,
record of Russia. . |
PERILS OF IGNORANCE, |
In Petrograd and Moscow today
the most educated persons still left
alive are engaged in cleaning latrines
and emptying cesspodls unfll the
rifles of the Red Guards. I Should
think one glance at their story would
he enough for anybody that hesitates.
to believe that the perils of a general
ignorance are deadly.
““The same tendency to drive children
into work and keep them from the
schryc:’ehas begen plainly seen in other
coun g as much as in.the United
States. It is the sure result of rising
prices and spreading industrialism.
In one of the countries affected the
steady protesting of labor has been
already heeded,
Great Britain has been compelled
by British organized laber to adopt
such sweeping educational reforms as
Have not been known anywhere elge
in the world, In a few years these
reforms will have made such radical
changes in the intellectual condition
of the masses of its people that the
country will enter upou a new and
unprecedented era of development.
Ot ey countries, under the same
nrodding, will have to follow the same
course, for labor, master of the social
field, will not be satisfied with any
thing else.
PROGRAM OF LABOR,
On this subject the rcurt.notkm
program of the Ameriean ‘ederation
of Lt: contains these suggestive
sente 2
“Wducation must not be for a few,
but for all our people.
“It is essential that our system of
public education should offer the wage
earners’ children the opportunity for
the fullest possible development, To
attain this end State colleges and
universities should he developed.
“The industrial education which is
being fostered and developed should
have ofr its purpose not so much
training for efficiency in industry as
training for life in an industrial so
ciety.
“The danger that certain commer
eial and industrial interests may dom
inate the character of education must
be averted by insisting that the
workers shall have equal nprfi:lu
tion on all boards of educat or
committees having oentrol over vo
cational studies and training."
NATION'S LIFE THREATENED,
Of course, this not true of all
such peoples, nor :m. bulk of them,
but it was true enough to make a
threat against the nation's life no
nation could afford to overlook.
Moreover, we came upon the aston
ishing fact that sometimes the second
generation, though native to this soil, ‘
grew up as alien as the first. We
learned of thousands of cases of men, |
of the draft age that, born in this
country, could not speak a word of
its language and had no knowledge
of its Government,
We saw also extraordinary manifes
tations of a spirit among men of alien
bhirth to hamstring the country that
had given them protection and eiti
zenship.
‘We saw elections in which colonies
of unassimilated aliens voted lqlldlx
for candidates that in the war ha
spught the country's defeat.
We saw communities in which men
even of the third generation clung
together as a clan to vote on the
basis of an alien ancestry and not as
citizens of the republie. . |
We saw in the West a man of alien
birth that denouncéd the war win
with alien votes a seat in Couug |
It is wot only to keep wages from |
being hnt::‘d down that ornnind‘
labor is a g Congress to shut the
gates, and it fs not only on that
ground that intelligent Americans
sught to listen carefully to its plea. l
A dill to shut out immigration for
the next four years will be intro
duced in Congress. Organized labor
is solidly behind the measure, Organ
ized labor is not now In a position to
be ignored when it stands solidly ho-{
hind anything, |
MEMBERSHIP GROWS, |
In the last three years the member
ship of the American Federation of
Labor has increased nearly 6. per
cent. In 16 it was 2.0(5.7! Today
it is about 3,600,000, By nuary 1.
next it is likely to be close to 4,000,-
000, Here is the record for the last
eleven years:
Year, Membership,
P covsssisisvibs i LN
000 .ooiosinnnsssisasssssßillß 1
SRRY . iasoabbasssiassets s R RES
SHEE . sisihsesisesssiss RIS
SRR . sococabinassh e oo iU
BRA concisirininsmes unse s OURSTH
PREE . cooioihons binnnahs s ity
010 (it nenidisen TTRER
OAY o iiannnndis vannne vas DR LGNS
1018 (cccunqoscansdosoesriiphits
1919 ....................'.3.500,000
- Twelve y“n ago President Gom
pers, of the federation, was repeatedly
denied a hearing by commitiees of
Congress, even on subjects most vital
to labor's welfare.
In the session of 1907 he succeded
by dogged persistance in wresting
three minutes from the hostile com
mittee on labor., He was at that time
under santence of imprisonment for
upholdhfi what he deemed to be an
inalienable right of free labor and
free men,
Today he is president of the inter
national labor commission created
by the peace conference, and when he
spoaks for the organized labor of
America, Congress and thé country
pay respectful heed.
Behdld the shudowgof the jcoming
‘hange
Full Page Adsin
American to Tell
City's Advantages
. Sodond
Beginning next Sunday there
will start in the American a series
of twenty-six full page advertise
. ments of unusual educational
Realizing that what Atlanta needs
is more business, more manufac
turing enterprises, more industrial
establishments of every kind-—and
the consequent payrolls and in
creased population, in Sunday
American has gotten a number of
the manufacturers, merchants and
p:ofessional men of the city on a
series of educational advertise
ments-—which are to be run con
tinuously for twenty-six weens—
will apepar in next Sunday’'s
American, Each advertisement will
present some phase of the wonder
ful opportunity Atlanta holdg for
the newcomer--the man in search
of a location, no mater what por
tion of the field of endeavor he may
occupy. WHach is attractively illus
trated and drives home the point of
the argument in convincing pic
ture as well as in compelling de
scription,
The advertisements take up the
case of Mr. Hunting A. Towne, in
search of proper loeation for his
business, IFrom week to week the
gentleman is escorted to points of
interest—financial and otherwise—
and given the facts concerning the
opportunities offere@ by Atlanta—
developed and undeveloped.
Mr. Hunting A. Towne finds
many things of picrest—no doubt
most of them wid be new to per
sons long resident in this city. It
is because of (his characteristic
that the s<vertisements will be
particulecly attractive, not only to
‘ the prospective resident of Atlanta,
~ but also to the “old-timers.”
_ TRUSSES
L Ly e
Opposite Candier Building,
o
¢ the Joggery
PR LN LR
APPLIANCES T
FITTED BY EXPER
(M 55 Write fer information,
JARRELL'S TRUSS STORE
141 ARCADE Building, Atlanta.
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less wrinkle removers, of which theré
are many. ‘
If they only knew it, the most ef
fective remedy imaginable is 4 simple,
harmiess face wash which can be made
up at home in less than a minute. They
have only to get an ounce of powdered
saxolite and half pint of witch hazel
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ply this daily for a while as a refresh
ing lotion. The effect is almost magie
cal. Even after the first treatment a
marked improvement is noticed and the
face has & smug, firm feeling that is
most pleasing.—Advertisement.
“Correct Development
—Means—
Better Pictures”
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AAN R e I
Show Will Be Give
At Souther Field to
Aid Fund for Flyers
Cards are out for a whale of a
circus at Souther Field, Americus,
where the airmen train for their
brililant stunts and for the steady
flying ' that ig to form a more and
more important part in both mili
tary and civil life.
The circus is to be held Satur
day, July 12. It .is purpirml to
make it the biggest and beSt circus
ever put on in the state, and part
ly over it. The show ground will
be Seuther Field itself, and as
many per:ons will be accommodat
ed as can find standing rom in that
ample space, A nominal charge
will be made, to go into a fund for
athletie and recreational equipment
for the enlisted men at the Field.
The show will include a baseball
game, vaudeville acts, athletie
feots, and+—of course—alir stuntg by
some of the most accomplished fly
ers in the world. This part of the
exhibition, will have a manifest ad
vantage over the usual type of cir
cus, ih that everybody can see
everything all the time. It takes a
perfectly inhuman freak to get be
tween you and the sky without ac-
No, 2V4x3\, picture, $2.93.
No, 2&, 474-41,"1 plcture, $3.73.
-.a‘ Mail, 15c Extra—
rompt Finishing.
DOCKSTADER OPTICAL GO,
‘ 56 N. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga,
Housewife Becomes
‘ New Woman
“All of our best doctors had given
me up. I was unable to leave my
bed for 16 weeks and was vellow as a
pumpkin, besides the terrible stom
ach pains I suffered. Our druggist
advised my husband to try Mayr's
Wonderful Remedy and it has saved
my life. 1 am a new woman now.”
It i 8 a simple, harmless prepara
tion that removes the cgtarrhal mu
cus from the intestinal tract and al
lays the inflammation which causes
practically all stomach, liver and in
testinal ailments, including appendi
citis, One dose will convince or
money refunded, Jacobs' Pharmacy
and druggists everywhere.—Adv.
2:30 P. M.
In South Edgewood Addition Will Be Sold at
Regardless of Price, Let the Owner Make or Lose.
Mark this: Real Estate will never sell as cheap in Atlanta as it is selling
today. No doubt these lots will double in value in a little while. Just at
this time—with money plentiful-+the country riding a most wonderful
wave of prosperity in all of its history and real estate on the eve of the
greatest boom ever known, this property should appeal to every man
who ever expects to own a home or cares to make a safe and profitable
investment.
The increase in Real Estate values in the past three years exceeds the
output of all the gold and silver mines in the country. It is greater than
the capital and surplus of all banks. More than 85 per cent of the sue
cessful men have laid the foundations of their success by Real Eesate in
vestments. y
Music Will Be Furnished by Our Own Concert Band. A Free Bag of
Gold and Silver Will Be Distributed Among Those Attending This Sale,
Take East Lake, Kirkwood or South Decatur ear to Whitefoord avenue
or Clifton and walk one block to the property.
LADIES ARE ESPECIALLY INVITED
For further information call or see Bob Richardson, Sales Manager, at the
Hotel Scoville, . {
Sale Conducted by
UNITED REALTY AND AUCTION CO.
Of Gainesville, Georgia, Sale Promoteljs and Auctioneers, M
tually sitting on 'your head, which,
of course, will not 'be permitted at
Souther Field.
Han& bills advertising the circus
will be dropped from airplanes on
all Geongla towns it is possibié to
reach im that way, and additional
details will appcur in the pub’}.‘u
prints as \the fertile minds of the
promoters and the good right arm
of the publicity agent turn out
new matter to lure the prospective
visitor from his lair into the realm
of hangars @nd planes and dash
and daring.
e —
. -
Shortage in Pennies Is
Caused by Thrifty Boy
(By Internationnl News Serviee.)
BELIEVUE, IOWA, June 14.—For some
time tixe banks at Preston, near here, fac
ed a shartage of pennies, and they had to
secure a supply from other mnnefvcenlers;
| » a e) = : @%
‘ —g . s
|#B% | Let us furnish your kitchen and s .0
| bathreom with these enamel iron é
LA fixtures of guaranteed quality— 106
comp_let.e S R Ty ks ke
| BEl.Cl'lEll Heating anl
Plumbing .
I 24 8. Pryor St, Main 226(
. e P. /,
o " j fJ i i 23 ‘514"53
ii‘?{ l‘\ r. Q" s ; l‘
USRS/ SPOTB ) N
1) ;»*if P L by
gy L /o
VI L Q . :
‘ | ’/!" \. 1 # R |
I J e \l {1 R
| ?”’ \J ‘ i
i (g
" ! z
Liguid Granite, the famous floor :
varnigh, makes smooth, permanent,
beautiful and wear-resisting floors. Ask your deass,
mhhocundl’dnt Special ®
No one seemed to know where théy all
went. % .
Finally, the mystery was solved, H i
Hohlenhof(, the ymmz‘lq&of H !
lenhoff, of Pr«-stmlli, l}y‘rou ‘Hs'h dto A
bank and deposited them 6 had _
them sinee January, through the openfic&
of his father's mnilk wagons., They weigh
ed an even 33 pounds.
REMOVAL NOTICE—Come, see us
in our new and larger ‘store home"
at No. 91 Nerth Pryor 8t (adjbin
ing Samuel & Walker's well-known
art store.)
JAS. A. STEELE & CO.
JEWELERS—EXPERT WATCH AND
CLOCK REPAIRING. RELIABLE
WORK. !
Bargains in Dlahnl):ydl. ‘Watches, Jejv
elry. |
New Location, 93 N. Pryor 8, |