Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 01, 1912, SECOND EDITION, Page PAGE FOUR, Image 4

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    OT.DFORD MATT. TRTRUNT3, MTCDtfOTCD, OREOON, WEDNESDAY. MAY 1, 1012.
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Medford Hail Tribune
AN NpPNDNT NBWHPAFRH
FUBMBHI5D KVKIW AFTI3UNOON
M1CDFOKD PmisfrlNQ CO.
JJOmocrijtlo Tlm. Th Medford
Mall. Tho Mctlforil Tribune, Tho South
rn Orffronlan, Th Aililand Tribune
Offlco Mall Trlbunn IlullJInir.
5-t7Jl
North Fir
itreetj phona,
Main
ion;
noma 75,
OEOnOB riTTNAM, Editor and Manar
Rnterod a Rtcondc1nao matter at
Medford. OrpRon. under thi aot of
March a. 1879.
Official Paner of tho City of Medford.
Official Paper of Jockwon County.
TTBROHZTTZOX SATXC
One year, by mall ,.S.OO
Ono month, by mail .to
Per month, delivered by carrier ia
Medford, Jnchsonvlllo and Cen
tral Point ...,,, .60
flnturday only, by mall, pr year.. S.00
Weekly, per year 1.S0
work cnrtnn.ATioar.
Dally average for eleven month! ant
ing xvovemoer au, isn, u&i.
rail x.ta wira trniua frm
Dlptcba.
The Mall Tribune la on sale at the
Ferry Watts Stand, San Francisco.
Portland Hotel News Stand, Portlaai
Dowman Wewa Co.. Portland. Or.
w. o. wmmey. Seattle, waau.
HGSrOKS. OKEOO.
Metropolis of Southern Oregon and
Northern California, and tha fastest
growing city In Oregon.
Population U. S. census 1110 8S40:
estimated. 191110,000.
Five hundred thousand dollar Gravity
Water 8ystem completed, giving flneav
supply pure mountain water, and 1T.S
miles of streets paved.
Postofflce receipts for year andlng
Wovember 30, 1111, show Increase of 19
per cent
Banner fruit city In Oregon Rogue
niver HpttxenberfT, apples woa awees
takes Trite and tltlanf
"Appls Xtar of th Worts"
at tha National Apple Show. Spokane.
lioi, ana a car or wwtowni woa
nrst Mta In 1910
at Canadian International Appla Bfcow.
Vancouver. IS. C
JOLTS AND JINGLES
By Ad Brawn
1 wish I lived in Talent
For peo'e I hen would say,
"There goes :i man of talent,"
When I passed on my way.
The torpedo boat destroyer Jenkins
has been launched. Wouldn't it ue
fine if this simple name idea could be
extended to the Pullman cars?
' It now ungears that in Texas there
is a town named Jsmnv that wishes
its named changed.
This was inevil-
able.
"If Hoosevelt is elected he will pr
bably coin ninny phrases excoriating
the doings of capital," says La Fol
lette,. "but I doubt much if these
phrases will be efficacious in brinj;
injt down prices." Some talk for .1
small man.
The poll in Boston was a record
urenKur. sort or a bean poll, no
doubt.
Foolish lVople.
Some people read the iapcr
"" t01" ue price of wheat or hops,
Aml have a nervous breakdown
,r-. Every time the market flops.
But I don't care for markets,
Nor floodsj-nor wrecks, nor war;
Tho. only thniK I'm after
Is the baseball score.
i
Imngine people reading
Little poems about the flowers,
When bnseball teams are fighting
All about this land of ours I
Some people sure are foolish
Editorials to explore
When in the self same paper
They could find the score.
BLUE LEDGE LURE
TO GRANTS PASS
A rumor to the effect that Grants
Pass and not Medford would bo tho
city that would possess the connect
lng link between the minerals of the
lllue Ledge camp and the markets of
the coast Is current In tho city.
Since Medford held the mass meet
ing nearly a month ago, boosters of
Grantu Pbsb, seeing that their de
sired territory of tho Applegate val
ley was about to bo wrested from
them by this city, have put forth ev
ery effort to interest railroad men
and bond buyers In making Grants
Pass the key city to tho enormous
wealth of tho Blue Ledge camp.
Two days before the excursion of
Medford business men who visited
the mine, an auto load of engineers
from GrantB Pass, accompanied by a
representative of a bonding firm,
looked over tho mine and the coun
try tributary thereto. Again It is
rumored thut certain Influential cit
izens of the Pass havo stated to
Southern Pacific officials that they
fitund ready to ralso $150,000 If the
road will build from that city. It Is
Btated with absolute certainty that
negotiations have been opened with
Mr. Towno and with tho Hill lines to
ascortatn their stand in regard to tho
chances of Grants Pass.
Owing to tho fact that this city
has begun tho work, the Grants Pass
men havo kopt tho results of their
findings to themselves. Ilowovor,
those- who know tho amount of work
accomplished by tho two cities state
that at tho prcsont timo Grants Pass
is in bettor shape to present figures
to any company that would bo like
ly to.Jnprost themselves lit the
building of tho railroad.
BEOALLINGr
THOSE eminent statesmen, whose principal occupation
is knocking, those "capitalists" whose occupation
is hutching n ten percent
lower taxation would halt
through no Taint or merit of their own have been enabled
by the enterprise of others to sell property at enhanced
values and invest the proceeds in realty for which exorbi
tant rentals are demanded, have signed and sent a petition
to Governor West requesting that the honor men at Ves(
ville be recalled.
Such a petition is a shame and disgrace, and a slap at
the governor's cooperation with the vounty in building
highways and solving the prison problem.
t would be poor business to abolish the camp on ac
count of the heavv preliminarv expense, and on account
of the poor showing made
order to secure full value of the money already expended,
the men should be kept during the summer months.
Governor West has- notified the eountv court that if
it is desired the men will be recalled at once, as there are
calls from other counties for ten times as many honor men
as the state can furnish.
As a demonstration of the soundness of the governor's
policy ol treating prisoners
the pioneer one of its kind,
cess. Jiut three out of titty or more prisoners placed with
out guards or watch, some 350 miles from the penitentiary
in an isolated mountain camp, have broken their word of
honor and attempted to escape. The rest have made good
as model workers, quiet, orderly, peaceable and law abid
ing. If the county court should abolish the camp, it could
not be blamed.' It has been the target for vituperation
and abuse all along the line. Every improvement made,
though clamored for for many years, has been bitterly
found fault with by those it benefited most. If ever a
community proved itself ungrateful for benefits received,
Jackson eountv has to the eountv court.
STUDY THE
nplIR press dispatches recent I v carried the announce-
ment, under Kansas City date, that the "Appeal to
Keason, the socialist paper, had suspended publication.
There was not an iota of truth in the statement, but
neither the United nor the Associated Press ever denied
it. The libel was printed broadcast, presumably to injure
the paper and its cause.
There are many undesirable things about the Appeal,
but along with the class hatred and prejudice it engen
ders arc also presented some plain, unvarnished truths
that secure no circulation elsewhere. The socialist has as
much right to freedom of speech and to attack existing
evils as any other partisan and the war upon the Appeal,
which the federal courts have shamefully aided, is, to say
the least, disgraceful and unfair.
The human caldron is nt'vcr stirred deeply from the
top, but always from the bottom. All the enduring re
forms that have benefited the world originated from be
low. The surface is only bubbles and froth brought up
from the last stirring. Prom the masses beneath come
all the really vital issues and movements of civilization.
And yet we constantly see thn froth of the minute parad
ing as the whole pot.
Lloyd George, who has done more to humanize Great
Britain than any man in a generation, to crack the froth
now become fossilized into easte, says that he has never
had a hand from above extended to aid him, but has been
pushed forward by millions of hands from below. Mis is
the late of every true statesman who benohts humanity.
He must antagonize existing conditions and the ruling
elass.
The insurgent movement of today is nothing but the
derided populism of 20 3'ears ago. La toilette's and
.Roosevelt's radicalism of 1912 was the stock in trade of
Bryan, Weaver and Jerry Simpson in the early '90s. All
that is vital in the politics of today we owe to the populists
of yesterday and in all probability till that will be vital
in the politics of tomorrow can be found in the socialism
of today.
Ever from below come the ideas and issues shaping
human destiny. So watch the man below, his hopes and
his aspirations, for they are the ho)cs and aspirations
of the future study the under dog in civilization's strug
gle, even if you don't sympathize with him.
Why I Want Woman Suffrage
IJy IWKDKItIC C. IIOWK
(Extract from a Hemarka bio Article In "Collier's')
I want woman suffrago for what It
will do for woman, for what it will
do for men, for what It will do for
tho muddle we havo made of pol
itics. I also want woman suffrage for
selfish reasons. I cannot myself bo
happy In a world where there Is so
much poverty, so much hunger, so
much suffering that can so easily be
cured.
For poverty, hunger, suffering are
unnecessary in this land of abund
a n co of ours; as unnecessary as ty
phoid, yellow fever or smallpox that
science has almost exterminated.
These diseases came from unsani
tary legal environment. For pov
erty is made by law or absence of
law,
God never Intonded that a few
men should control all tho anthra
cite coal in America, upon which one
third of tho country depouds for its
light, heat and power, God never
inteiided that tho food, clothes and
necessities of a whole people should
bo' thrown on tho gumbler's tuble
and be made tho croupier's ball of
tho stock speculator and price man-
irumhui,
J. -U.
to
THE HONOR MEN.
egg, who in et torts to secure
till public enterprise, those, who
through inclement weather. In
as unman beings, the camp,
has been an unqualified suc
UNDER DOG.
Monopoly is tho product of law. It
can be cured by law.
I cannoj believe that ono million
people in Now York should live In
one, two, and three room tenements
or that nightly bread Hues Bhould
gather on our streets when thou
sands of acres of vacant land with
in tho city's limits Invite men to
build homes and work upon them.
I do not believe that hunger, homo
lessucHU, worklcssness and prostitu
tion are necessary In this land of
ours, or that any ono of our 00,
000,000 people should go hungry In
a country that can easily feed ten
times that number,
I do not believe that ,10,000 men
should be killed, and ut least C00,
000 more seriously Injured, in mint)
or factory each year; that n fow
nputliH uftor tho Triangle fire, death
traps should still bo Inviting disas
ter lllto. that which brought sorrow
to the homes of 148 families lust
spring,
1 do not believe It Is neceasury for
bread to bo baked In damp apd
dirty cellars. Nor do I hollevo It Is
necessary for women bearing chil
dren to work in tho fetid fuctory,
closo up to tho hour or childbirth,
and inko up their Ubor niptlM it few
dnya utter.
It Is not necessary that men,
women, and children nhould bo
poisoned by adulterated food or foil
ou cold lorni;o meat mid fish at
famine prices with an ocean and tho
whole continual close by tho oily.
Men nindo the hiw which iimko
these condition possible; men made
tho tariff hiws behind which tho
sugar, steel, wool, rotton, lumber,
rubber, and a score of other monop
olies extort famine prices for every
thing wo need; men made the laws
which enabled the natural resources
of tho country, tho rail rondo and
the wntor fronts, to bo merited into
tho hands of a few score men. Men
made tho laws which permit tho ex
press, street railway, ts and electric
lighting eomimnles to extort such
ehargcH nB the Kr''d 'f n political
and busduena nllhmco suggests.
Men do not think of these thing)
as will women.
Many men are too weary to think
of liny other suffering than their
own. Long hours In tho mine and
by the furnace, In the mill and the
sweatshop, leave llttlo room for
thought of social sorrows. Other
men daro not think of them. Some
are paid not to do so. Othem still,
who havo time to think, merely re
peat tho thought)! of their grand
fathers or their employers, of those
who find It profitable that men
should not think of these things.
And they say, and many of us ac
quiesce In what they say. Unit pov
erty U due to the fact that tho other
follow Is pot nx clever as wo are.
Long hnblt has unido men think In
terms of dollars. Long habit has
made women think In terms of hus
bands, children and unborn babes.
Men vote the terms they think In.
Women will vote the terms they
think In. That Is what the women
did In Colorado. They voted In
terms of the home.
1 want a civilization In which one.
half the people will vote In terms of
humanity rather than In terms of
property.
I want to live In a world that Is
free from the law-made privileges
that beget tho poverty from which
we ull Buffer; free from the lerror
of hard time!, of lost Jobs, of pe
riods of sickness and accident nl
mont us fearful as death.
I wnnt to live In a world where
one hundred warships, costing fJOO,
000,000, will not be proudly paraded
before a city loo poor to feed Us
hungry school children: to live In a
world where the opinions of long
dead grandfathers Inscribed In con
stitutions will be of less conse
quence than the mangled arms and
limbs and Inc- destitute women and
children of our factory workers;
where breaker boys will not be per
mitted In coul mines, where It will
bo criminal to place little children
In canneries, chemical vats, glass
mills, or phosphorus factories.
1 wnnt to live In a city where the
dally wages of women and girls will
support life; where the lost Job
means something other than the
street or starvation. I want to live
In a country whore prostitution will
not be the price wo pay for our bar
gain counter economies; In u coun
try where tho doors of the prison
will open outwurd for those who
have become tangled In the machin
ery of the modern Industrial world.
I want to live In a world that
hates these things, hates them so
thoroughly that It will ubollsh them
I want to live in n world that
thinks of Its people rather than of
business, of consumers rather than
producers, of users rather than ma
kers, of tenants rather than owners;
In n world whero life Is more Im
portant than property, and human
labor more valuable than privilege.
As women nro consumers, users,
and tenants, rather than producers,
makers, and owners, I have hopes
for n society In which women have
and use the ballot.
TWITCHING NERVES
llangor Man Wiih Tortured Could
Not Sleep.
It would ho very hard for any ono
to convince Mr. Samuel Ilriich of
Hangor, I'a., thut ho hnd not been
wonderfully benefited by Vlnol. He
says:
"Owing to weakness of too nerves,
which were constantly pnlnlpg mo
and twltdilnir so that I could not
sleep at night, I was weak nud run
down. Hearing that Vlnol was an
excellent tonic and strength creator
I commenced using It and Immedi
ately began to feel .much better. My
nerve trouble left mo and I can now
sleep better than I havo for a long
time.
"I can truthfully Buy that Vlnol
has done all for mo that is claimed
for It."
Tho reason' Vlnol did Mr. Uruch
so much good Ifl because It gave him
new strength and built up his health
In general, Just as It does for all
weak, nervous, rundown people
Just us It will do for you If you nro
that way,
Vlnol Is Bold on our positive guar
antee that it must help you : you
got your money hack,
Medford pharmacy, Medford, Ore.
a
1 wnnt woman suffrnRo liornuiui 1
helluvo women will eon-out many of
thcuo law-iundo wrongs that man
linn mnilo. For women will voto In
turmt of human life rather than In
terms of special privilege,
In an earlier ago woman could
protect hemelf ami her brood by tho
same weapons thut man employed
She had tho same nolo club, In n
later age of doinestle Industry she
worked by I ho sldo of her husband
In the homo or the field.
Woman Is still the iiunidlau of the
brood. Hut she Is usnalled today by
ten thousand lurking foes thut
strike at her man, her home, nt tho
lives of these sho holds .most dear.
Machines more deadly than hnlletfl
tolrrouud he'r; disease moto snu-
gulunry than aijy foreign Invader
assalla her. Slukness may come
with tho butcher and the grocer,
with the fire trap and (he machine
Woman still hears the burdens of
an earlier age. She U still the child
bearer, the home maker. Hut dte
has been robbed of her weapons of
defense. Danger Is no longer In the
open. Assailants nro social, Indus
trial, legal. TJiey are the product
of luwt or the nbseneo of laws
They can only be averted and eor-
reeled at tho ballot box, In legisla
tive halls, and by political, not per
ioual, action,
For modem elvllUatlon Is no
longer Isolated. It Is social. The
dangers that beset us tire Industrial.
They spring from the Interdepen
dence of life. They nro the product
of the division of tabor, tho com
plexity of noclety, uud the competi
tive struggle which leaves man at
tho mercy of most nvnrlcloun mem
ber of the pack.
Society must put an end to thene
conditions If It would live; It must
check the chaos, cruelties, ami hu
man waste thai Induntrlnl life In
volves. It can only do this by law,
by statute law, by laws bHirlng the
seal tif government. Men ma I
believe they will- correct Unite
wrongs. Tney will correct litem
with the ballot. Hut their correction
will bo hastened, It will come more
surely, more wisely, by th coopera
tion of thoxo who suffer most from
the costs of the present system by
the votes of women.
XOTH'H.
Notice Is hereby given that the nu
dorslgnett will apply to the city coun
cil of the City of Medford, Oregon,
at Its next regular meeting on May
7, 11' It:, for a llccuuo to sell spiritu
ous, vinous nud matt liquors at
wholesale and retail, or for a license
to sell the same In quantities of
more than one gallon, ami for a li
cense to soil the same at retail, or
In quantities less than one gallon, at
No. 10 North Front street, In snld
city for a period of ono year.
April 2f., 1!U2.
ANGKLHS WINK CO.,
10 Per A. S. Ash.
LIVED ON
RAW EGGS
Mr. Richard's Experience With Dif
ferent Diets. Peaches and
Buttermilk for Three Years.
Cecllton, Md. Mr. OcQrRe Richards,
ol this place, during the past 12 years,
hns probably tried more different diets
than the average person would ever use
lit a lifetime.
What lie has to say about his experi
ments, must therefore be highly Interest
ing to anyone cullcrlng .from Indigestion
or stomach troubles of any kind.
He says: "For more than 12 yean.
I suffered with stomach troubles, and
paid hundreds of dollars for doctor bills
and medicines. I was also operated on
for plies.
I lived on dried peaches and buttermilk
for nearly three years. The only thing
that would not Rive mc pain was raw crrs.
i was a physical wreck. 1 could not
sleep, and was as near crazy as a man
could well be
I must say that alter taking two 25-ccnl
packages of Thedlord's IJIack-Draught.
it did me more i;ood than all 1 ever spent
for other medicines.
I have been working dally on the farm
ever since, and I nm as hard as iron."
litis purely vegetable remedy has been
In successlul use for more tlinn 70 years.
Try it. But be sure that It's "Thcdford'a."
0KK0000000
o
Fine Engraving
.Phijo ahd .100 Oat'dH
$1.00 (o $:j.oo
Eiitfravintf only
100 Cards $.1.00
Bii'lh Announcement
"Wedding.
'Announcement
'Anything you want
4
Bee us
Medford
Book Store
0000K00C00
503 Cheaper Chan Paint
toVlitUrem! wim hiur. V vmit
youlautnthtin
Williams' 7tyr ,Vfl Ik!"i,u!
CrcoioU
Shinglo
nil uumuifl mmm ui
Ul ImtHpimmu ioiM.
lirilcilly ittUd
ml
(oujtil In cirotvlc im
. T
, .
btaiiia rm,j .,1.
Vo ml llioommli
In 8-()tlmt
Cnt. (rrlJ)
OOtUlioH
lul.tlot.C.n.
t'Jo ir GIIom
o( unlloni ol ihn lUtfl
KtuUfllllMimllKlIm
uitf' l li!l Viit )oo
py it Hiu uaitity l
paint Awn,
Writ Udnf nT4 wilt nud nt (rt,
12 limit).! Ur Mnl tlmwltu
tolart of our ft'ila ittltt
TX"irm nrmr-nnv!!
i.i.f,Jd..v,-.r.
hhhhia-i
'msm
A Tunic. l!trilv ami tt-.-lrnt Tito
bt rerntUf Jtif Kkllity, IJvrr thl IWiwrU
.JttlC4ti lllriptr, lltlljiltotir. mill l)lujtt!ri
el Ih MIlL IMllfit Ui ItlukMl til hf
Tur, MibUi mul gr lu Ilia ttillic nytlciu.
FORDE CAN DO IT
Do you wnnt your lawn put In
flrst oIiihh shnpoT All work
Ktinrnnteed. Lruvo iiddrcnn with
II. II. I'ntlersu, Quaker Kursory,
Nnsh hotel.
Clark & Wright
LAWYERS
WASHINGTON, J. O.
Public Laud Hatters. Final Proof
Ociort Lands, ConleiU and MIiiIiik
Case. Hnrlp.
Draperies
Wo carry n vrjr rninplotn lino
' of itrit!rlci, ItiK ctiriiiltm. ru
turon, otc, nml to a clno.(. of
oplinlfltrrlnc a siwlal nmn to
Itxik nrtur Hit tork exrltiHirflr
nml will ulv an (,-ihuI ncrilrn tin
Is IKjuillil.. to dt In cvnil Ilia
Innc'l rltlpn.
WEEKS X'McGOWAN CO.
"I
Watch Our Addition
Grow
Jnckxnn ud Hutiitult
Medford Realty and
Improvement Company
M. P. A It. Co. Illdtc.
PLUMBING
Steam and Hot Water
Heating
All Work tlimrnntco.
l'jrlcm Itotmoiiuliln,
COPFEEN & PEIOE
9S Howurd Block, JCntranc on ctli It
Fclfo 3031. Koin 340.
A SNAP
Ik
GO ncrcu, nix miles from Medford,
Reed Krudcd road crosnca tho tract,
all frco noil, at $50 por aero. $ 1000
will handlo, cany torm "n hulnnco.
Part In crcclc bottom laud, au'tablo
for alfalfa. Several BprlnRH on tho
plnco, Timber onoucli to pay for tho
tract. No htilldlnss. In tha Griffin
creole district.
W.T.York.Co.
Expert Work
and modoruto churficti havo r.'iluod
for iih a lout; llHt of loyal patroiiH,
All HraiiclicN of OcutlMry
drowns, llrhlKO work, Plates, otc.
Your teeth Bhould ho oxamlnuil by a
thoroughly conuclunllouii doullHt
every fuw monthii, you can thus avoid
much Irouhlo and hirno bills,
Lady Attendant
bR. BARBER
'J'III-1 IIMNTIST
Over DnnlolH for Duds. Paclflo
Phono 208.!, Home Phono UGIMC
- - x ,. - .
WHERE TO GO
TONIGHT
tfWWWWW
IOc THEATRE lOc
Complete change of Program.
Hun., .Mint,, Tues, mill Weil,
lKtrnnrdlniiry Attraction
T. LAWHIINCM 8i:ihi:ut
'lint titan who wrote '"Caney
Jones," iihhImoiI by
.miss i.enuN:
America's favorite ragtime sinner. '
1000 Meet of tho best Photo
plnvs ever displayed In this city.
I'lvu good Interesting subjects.
Hear rilANKIr. Hlng
"Hummer Hays"
KTcnlugs, 10a any sent In tho
house. Hpeclal Children's Mnt
luco every Halurdny nud Hominy
at 2 p. m., admlHsliiu fie autl lUc.
Follow the crowds to tho It.
Wo solicit your pntronnifn,
which will ho received with court
esy. k 1 JHL M
THEATRE
Admitted Viuiileillle tun) .Mi.llun
PhiiirvH
AlwttjN In Hie IhiiiI
Cl.OlttU. tun! STI.I.LA V.TSO,V
Nntelly dnucltw;- mIihsIiik and talk-
litK act. Their act Irt ordinal.
at tiii: i:ii op tiii: tiuii."
A Krliu IraKfdy of tho far north.
"JIM.MIi;'.M mikpoutuniIh"
A real fnn-miikfr
"Till: SOCIAL JSKCIIKT.VIIV"
"AltflllllALD curium AND
tiii: wiiiow" '
HIiltxipllttlUK romedy
AL HATIIKIl
WOOLWOHTHS, Muslclnnn
Atltnlxxlnn IOc, Children ftc
Mtt( luce Dully.
NEW THOUGHT MEETINGS
Aro Held in Mooho Hull i;vory
Thurmlny nt 3 p. in. Everybody
invited.
Medford Roal Estate
& Employment Agency
FOIt HALi:
It oereH Hear creek bottom. Thorn
Ih about 110 ucreii In alfalfa, all
tho tonlii iso with tho place,
HiOD at-rcH 1C iiiIIch out ut a bur
Katn.
70 acres, 10 In pears, 1ml, In al
faira.
Auto, price $ 1R0.
Auto, price $:toi).
r room limine 8 blocks out, prlco
?Ki00.
Lot In WaliiuL Park add., about
120 ft. from .Main.
'1 room hoiiKo autl Inclosed porch,
only $7to.
liC.DOO iiitcd iilioop raueh In Cull.,
$ I por aero,
100 ncreii n nilleu out, $1&0 por
aero,
20 ucren ,l in I Urn out, IS In ponrs.
10 ucren 'i mlli'tt out, S In pears.
120 ncroH 11 ml km out, only K
por aero.
KdPLOVMI.NT
Woman cooc.
Women and I'lrla for nonornl
housework,
Ranch hands,
Olrls for Kouorul homework.
Phono In your ordurn for mon;
no charuoa to tho omployor,
Mrs. manor la always on linml to
take your uiunp autl address,
E. P. A. BITTNEK
ROOMS 0 AND 7, PALM BLOCK
Opposite Nash Hotel
Phono 1111; Home, 11,
A
A
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