Daily capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1903-1919, April 15, 1916, Page SIX, Image 6

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    SIX
THE DAILY CAPITAL ,T0T RNAL, SALEM. OREGON. SATURDAY, APRIL 15. 191rt.
FOR SALrl
Wnller. -Kx'lpiit milk
cow, 1125
Airl7
NEW TODAY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING EATE1
Bate per word New Today
Each insertion, per word 1
One week (6 insertion!), per word
One month (28 insertion!), per word 17
All ails must be ordered for stated
length of time, no sd to count leu than
10 words.
The Capital Journal will not be re
aponiible for more than one insertion
for errori in Classified Advertise
meats. Bead your advertisement thi
first day it appears and notify us Im
mediately If it contains an error.
Minimum chirge, 13c.
PHONE 937 For Wood sal.
ti
HARKV Windowcleaner.
Thoue 768.
May3
WANTKD Dry
Phone 1125-M.
cows and
strippers.
Apr2J
FKONT APARTMENTS Ground floor
491 N. Cottige. tf
PLOWING WANTF.D
1'hone 2504J2.
Lot or acreage.
Aprl'O
1'OK KKN'T SIGNS For sale at Can
ital Journal office. tf
WANTED Teams to haul wood, steady
work. I'hone I)!1'-'. tf
HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS New and
clean. 170 Court street. Aprlo
NICE IIOL'BKKKKPING KOOMS
Near city hall. Phone 47. tf
II OKSE Buggy and harness for sale,
or trade. 11199 Mission. AprlS
WANTED Pasture for 10 head of cnt
tle. Wm. Fitts, Route 8, Phone H7F.JI
WANTED Wood cutters to cut white
fir wood, $1.00 per cord. Phone 092.
tf
MODERN 5 room cottngo for rent, 1441
Trade St., enquire W. A. Liston. 484
Court. Aprl9
1'URNISIIED house for rent, 7 rooms,
modern, 642 N. High. Inquire at 660
N. High. Mayo
CAPITAL RUO WORKS Rugs mi)
Carpet weaving. 371 North High St.
Salem, Or. AprlS
J'Olt SALE H hTiid Zf Tendered
Hampshire sheep. (I. O. Swales, It.
ti, Box 23. April)
WANTED To buy Mohair. East Sn
lem Tannery, U5I li aiul Oak streets.
Phone 2100-M. tt"
J'OIt SALE $150 piano, cheapest buy
in Oregon if tiken at once. Address
II, care of Journal. Aprl7
WANTED To exchange, 5 year old
mare, weight 1,000 pounds, for piano
or cows. Phone 511.
AprlU
LOST A ladies duster in Englewood,
or on Garden Rond. Ella Livingtou,
Route 7, Phono 2500W4. AprlS
FOB SALK OR TRADE Rooming
house well furnished, good location,
reasonable rent. 491 Court street, tf
WANTED Will pay ensh rrrht for 4 or
0 'teres of good potato land. Must
! be chonp. Address Journal C-G0. MayO
AUTO FOR SALE A Studobaker, well
( equipped, ehcnp for cash, if sold this
i week. See Laflur, Oregon theatre, tf
FOR SALE 4 year old Jersey cow,
fresh. For particulars phono 1 85:!, or
nuurens wnitciey, nil in. Liberty,
AprlS
FOR SALE 1 team of mures, woiglit
2750, wagon, harness, plow, hack, cul
tivator, sepnrutor, 3 heifers. Phone
86F5. Aprl7
BALEM STEAM and Vacuum Carpet
Cleaning Works. Feathers and mat
tresses rrmovatod. Otto V. Zwickcr.
I'hone 1154. Aprl5
W A NTEI) Girl to work for board and
room, family of two. Can go to
school. Address T. L c ue of Cap
ital Journal.
Apr I j
EXPERIENCED WOMAN Will do
washing, ironing, hoiiseclenning, cook
ing or serving by d.iy or hour.
Phone 2504 J 2. AprlS
FOB BALE 3VI half truck Studebakoi
wagon. Will trade for heavier wagon,
eordwood or stuinpago. 2780 Loo.
Phone 1322-J. tf
WHITE ROCKS An egg striiu of ei
hibition quality. 15 eggs by parcel
post for 11.50. Imperial Egg Farm.
Route 3, Snlom. tf
FOR KENT Business block room, size
18x80 feet. 467 State street. In
quire at 403 State. Phono 1009.
Maurice Klinger, tf
FOR SALE Or will trade for what
have you. Small business, ' well es
tablished, good location. Address M.
It., care Journal. AprlS
.WANTKD A man to take the job of
cutting white fir logs into four footl
Wood. Must have a drag saw. For
information, call 01)2.
tf I
. 'K HushS .Shrubs and nil Kinds!
or fruit trees, cheap, to clean out
stock. Jones' nursery, rear of the
armory, l'hono 413, Aprl7
COAT AND SHKKP SllKAKING Hy
up to data power equipment. List
your orders nt Salem Fuel Yards.
I'hone f-20. Densmoro & Fresia. tf
.WANTKD Kesponsible position house
keeping, bond, city or country, or
traveling help by middle-aged bidv.
"H" 1258 S. Commercial street.
Aprl7
FOH SALK Cheap, 40 acres, timber
land, in Hcnton county, 2 miles from
l'hilomnth, or will take good into in
part payment. 340, caro of Journal.
AprlS
WANTKD Hoom and board in private
finiily, by young woman, employed
at utato house. Preferably with eld
erly couple. Address No. 23, caro of
Capital Journal. AprlS
FOR SALK Or trade, livery and trans
fer business in Texas, 8 lots, birn,
shed, 2 houses, horses hearse buses,
transfer, ferries and buggies, also
some good farm laud. Address Tex
as, caro Journal. Aprlo
office
A.rl7
COMI'I.KTK IIOI'SKIIOLI) (iool).H I
For wile. 41.1 North S.'lrd street. I
Apr2l
WAXTKI) Second hand harness anil
collars. Notify or call at 15!) South
H ih street. Apr 1 7
Folf SALK Chill plows, disc, mower,
rake, surrey, buggv, seed potatoes,
i'hone 2H7W. Aprl7
KKLIAHI.K PAHTIKK Would likej
piano for tiie care of it. IHi.'i North'
High. I'hoiie 055. AprlHl
I FOR KKXT rurnislieil ur imfuriiislieil i
5 room strictly niodern imuse. Call1
at .'!!)! Mission'. I'hoiie 17:!7V. tf I
FoK K KXT Furnished complete mod-!
ern li room cottage, corner ' and'
North 17th, F.nglcwood car. Aprl5
I lil'V ACCOFNTS-Hills, notes or
judgments, of any nature anywhere.
W. T. care of Capital Journal. N.I
l I.
!
FOR SALE 100 stands bees, mostly;
gob Mullans in good condition,!
chean. P. O. 202. I luleiiendence. Ore- ;
"on. Api-21
FOR SALE At once, lot ."".Ox 1 7)0, small .
house, some fruit, east front, one'
block paved street. Address I., care
Journal. Aprl.")
WANTIOD Yoiuiff lady wants
work. 20, rare of Join mil.
SEE!) POTATOES Smooth Hurbanks, Although all their work is done be
raised on new ground. A. E. Zimnier-! v."'.lr l""'l ,,"'r'' is K reticent,
man, 2 1-2 miles north of fair grounds; or retiring about the buttons used to
store. jlmlil your apparel together in the rear.
STOCK IIOUS FOR SALE Also sow
and pigs, cow and call', and register
ed mare 7 veals old, and saddle horse.
Phone XIF2. AprlS
FOR SALE Ilem v work horse, I years'
old, would take fresh cow as' parti
payment. Alex Turnbull, Route 4. 1
Phone 65FI3. Apr 1 7 j
FOK SAI.E
20, dandy
condition.
Price $250,
Two passenger Stuclc
little car, in first
Must be sold it
Phone IIS2.
linker j
class i
once.
Aprl.51
CITY MESSKNGKU SERVICE And '
parcel delivery under new manage-j
ment. Give us a trial. Phone 1(122.1
.1. M. Kavanuugh. 261 Court St.:
AprlS '
FOR RENT Store room, 22x70 in ecu!
ter of retail district, plate glass front, '
alley in rear, funnier ill basement,
rent . "10 per month. Apply 337 Court!
St. " Aprl.) I
KOIf SAI.K OK THADK-A beautiful
I acre home, modern, in valley pay
roll town of l.'ilK) population, for Sa
lem property or acre.'ii'e. Address
llox li.")."). Salem. A i,r 1 7 !
I'I'UK IIKKD Klectricallv hatched
Crystal VVIiito Leghorn day old chicks
contracted for in lots of 2 up, also
naicning eggs lor sale liv setting on
hundred, till.") .South t'inoiiiercial St.,
Salem. Aprlo
roit KXCIIANlil'. We have a fine ten
acre homo near Weiser, Idaho, to ex
change for a grocery or hardware
store, or home in or near Salem. The
Sipinro Deal Itealtv Co., Iill2 V. H.
Hank lildg. tf
SAI.KSM AN--Vacancy April J(lt'x
perienced in any lino to sell general
trade in Oregon. Cnexcelled special
ty proposition. Commission contract.
$.'r.l)0 weekly for expenses. Contin
ental Jewelry Co., Continental llldg.,
Cleveland, Ohio.
FIVE ACRES Kxtrn. good soil, close
in and an equnlly good five with fam
. ily orchard nnd 4 room box house, 25
per cent bolow ordinary. Prico $1000
and $13(10 respectively. OwnerH go
ing to Washington. Must bo sold this
week. Boo Wm. Fleming, 341 State
Btroot. AprlS
BIGGEST SALE Kvor you can find:
20 acres, 16 to 17 acres plough lind,
balance good timber and pasturo, no
buildings. On county road. Little
work to irrigate 2 to 3 acres. Good
black gnrden land. Prico $l,!i0(), is
worth 350. 1 need the monoy. 2Vj
miles from Snlom. "20 Acres," care
of .TourniT.
PROPOSALS TOR WOOD
The Oregon State Hoard of Control
will receive sealed bids for furnishiuir
100
cords ot wood, to be delivered at
the Oregon State I'enitentiaiv Hrick
Yard, namely: 20(1 cords round four
foot slab wood e-1 200 cords four-foot
second growth 'fir food. Delivery to
begin May 15, and to be nil delivered
on or lietore June 15. ltids ill b,.
opened at the office of the Oregon
State Hoard of Control on April 27th
at 2 o'clock p. m. The Hoard reserves
the right to reject any or nil bids or
any part of n bid.
It. M. (iOODIM, Secretary.
Oregon Utate Hoard of Control.
Apr. l5-l!t-22-2"
Commercial
Frintin
at
the
Capital-Journal
Office
81 A 82
l-3-iTiri('
I
First In Spring, Last Up Back,
Margaset Mason Tells
of Them
liy MAK(!AI(KT MASOX
(Written for the Tinted Pro
"Alack, alack ! !
I see you're hack,''
The wretched husband cried;
"Again will be on the rack
" 'Twill take profanity and kna. k
To fasten up my bride."
New York, April 1 1. And the flowers
that bloom in the Spring tra la and the
dresses that hook up the back are innk-
ing a simultaneous debut.
i:i :
" """ ""'"""'., '
snaps and buttons are sneaking to the
rl'ar i" consequence the fingers of!
M ..,... I)., , i.... ,J
.... ..M,, ... .., mi in nit- iiuir io nu n ro i
thumbs for the siiiunicr months audi
hear the brunt of niauy a pinch and!
scratch from an obslrenerons hook nr
an obstinate button.
In fact quite a feature is made of a
necessity, and the buttons, though gen
erally small, are of ornate shapes, de
signs and colorings. (Quaint little round
colored nnd white "lass affairs thev
.
(,l"' enameled in bright lined plaids
"r wee lit t le nosegays of flowers, square
a nl hexagon and oval shapes and other
smarr ones covered in me material ot
which the dress is made or in which it
is I rimmed.
Crochet buttons also are popular.
Even if all the brass buttons have
gone to the front it appears there are
still divers and sundry other sorts to
go to the rear.
With the full skirts and tight bodices
and bell sleeves of the moment the
back fastening really fits into the gen
eral hcIioiiic of things must efectively
and, while in some instances frocks may
iiiake a feature of buttoning straight
down the front, you will find the very
newest and smartest w rinkle is to ,1 r I
your buttoning up behind or let George
do it.
You must look to your feet this sum
mer as assiduously as you have in the
Willi Or,
for others surelv will look
there nnd, looking once it is up to you
whether they will care to look again.
The short full skirt, hinting of hoops
and crinoline, are first aids to a gen
erous display of silken hose and slides
of kid and a smartness.
All black stockings will be glimpsed
but rarely but black with white will be
on many a well turned limb and will
occasion innny a well turned head.
itluck anil white stripes running
around for those as can wear 'em and
running up and down for those as can't
are very much in the running and
range from pin stripes to inch wide
bauds.
White hose embroidered in black up
the instep or the sides of the ankle ale
good and all delicate tints of flesh,
grey, maize and baby blue will be
populn r.
The white kid shoe, both high and
low, is in its heyday and low plain
pumps and slippers of softest peral grey
kid, besige ami all delicate pastel
tints to go with the fluffy summer
silks and organdies are to be featured
on all the best feet.
lllack patent kid and black satin
slippers will be greatly in demand nlso,
with light colored hosiery because of
the pronounced Spanish flavor of our
present dressing.
Take nine inches off a skirt and then
add two cute (not cube) feet and the
answer to this sartorial sum is SOME
gii'l.
HENRY I
WALTHALL
The ''Strango Case of Mary Page" to
be shown at the Oregon Monday duly
FIDO AND TOWSER AND
SHEP AS SENTRIES AT
NIOHT IN VILLA HUNT
( Hv Coiled Press. )
Field ' Headquarters, V. S.
Forces, Smith of Dubbin, Mex
ico, April 15. Fido und Towser
anil Shep and about 20 other
"dogs of war," of doubtful
lineage and nondescript appear
ance, nre yelping mid punting
ulong after Villa with their re
spective companies and regi
ments. They are boon com
panions of the troopers and help
on sentry duty nt night. Their
slogan is: "(Jet Villa and the
lackrabbits. Dead or Alive."
They "get" many of the .Incks,
and get 'em dead, every day.
f ONA Y n "- V
MAYO V, I
u Sunday
fj Beautiful Souvenirs to be Oiven
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Mary Mi
-MARY MILKS MINTEItNjXi 4
tm LOVELY MARY" -
EXTRA ATTRACTION SUNDAY
Charles Chaplin
IN
Shanghaied
THE FUNNIEST COMEDY HE EVER MADE
Be sure you get your votes for the Mary Page Gown
to be given away free at Meyers' Store, May 10th.
EaaaaaaaaaaaaissnasaaasaaaaaanaaanaaasaaaisaaaaaassaaaaaanaEaaasjsaa
Railroad Brotherhoods
Present Their Side of It
A statement husl been frequency
made by the railroads that the present
demands of the railway train service
employes are not really for an eight
hour day, but are iutendeut to secure
increased wages.
This is not true, is the employes com
posing the four brotherhoods want
shorter hours. They want their work
ing day to be ns near eight hours as it
can bo made.
To any reasonable person it will be
apparent that it will be useless to se
cure nil eight-hour day unless there is
some penalty uttiched for overtime. In
all the trades where the eight-hour dayi
obtains, there is an extru charge for.
overtime; otherwise, there would be no
eight hour day, tiie work would go on,
at the same rate per hour jtisj as long,
as the employer cared to work the nien.i
It has been amply demonstrated that;
eight hours' hard work is enough fori
any man and any hours he works more i
than eight, simply draw on Mb re !
serve energy and vitality, shortening I
his life and his available working!
years. It has also been proven thit n
man working eight hours is more effi
cient, does better work, and is in every
way a oeu.r cui.e.i man u. in..,. ,.! ,
ri. ..T: i i : ... i,.0
. 1
, asking the r.ilroa.l con.panies tor an'
eight hour day, also ask tor time-a id-.
rate is merely a "pelia.ty " upon the I
railways ai.,1 is considered ail ettect-
ive method tor preventing overtime.
"Overtime" is commonly called "blood;
the eln doves. We trust that tho.iiublic .
will consider the t u t that it is the be some inconsiderable increase, ' but
"overtime" and exposure that is now j nothing tike whit the officials claim,
"wearing out' the employes and and in the light of past experience the
prompts many cm doyers to set their em ployes easily can predict troni what
employes' age limit at 21 to IC. In ,,ee the railways will quickly recoup
other vocations a man can work at themselves; additional duties for
leas, :t years-note the difference i,lpveS is always a fertile field for re-1
railway work. 1 onsulered in this way ; trenchment. Hut it the eniploves win:
l,rti,oi,W 0,,VwV1:oitCr .V' ,'0r l-?"- -j11
.lust ice, ask tor twice their present rate tind them an improved class of work-
of pay. but the employes are not seek-!0rs and citizens, and along with this, i
iiig the "enormous increase," but de-;,e public will also secure an improved
sire better living conditions. ! railway service and prompt freight
The physical and mental strain on : mvement.
train service eu ployes, eompi Med to j The railroads are circulating printed
work long hours, is beyond coinprelien-, statements snowing naines of triin aer.
bv tiie average mind.
irtunlly
all tiie accident and old line insurance
eomp inies classify railroading as extra
Hazardous, many ot tliem refusing to in-:
sure railway employes on account of theja example of what the average train:
great risk of loss, and where these cm-. service mail is getting. Invariably the'
ployes ire injured, there is a definite ,,, whose names appear upon the lists:
limit set en the amount of the risk, andj ls examples of large salaries being paid:
an extra t hinge is made to the insured.: to rnjwv tr: i ii emloyes are men en- j
In reality, the railway employe re-iKK0,i in fast passenger runs and are'
ceives a less hourly rate of compeiisa-: exceptional eases. Thev should not he!
tion than almost any otner trade. A
hod carrier receives $1.50 for eiht
hours or about 50 cents n hour. The
highest paid train conductor receives
55 cents an hour. If the hod-carrier
worked ns many hours as the railway
conductor he would draw a larger sal
ary and could then be named by the!
railw iys as the "aristocrat of the la
bor world. ' '
It' Lie railways complain that "time
and a-linlf " means in some instances an
increase, let them avoid the increase by
avoiding the overtime, for that is the
desire and purpose of the employes.
The railw ys claim there was an in
crease in wages to the men of between
;IO and 42 per cent from l!'0:i to 1014.
This is partly true, but the price of
living and the additional work required
of the employes has more thnu oftvt
it. Also, the said wage increase came
mostly to the employes having regulur
assignments and estiblished hours for
service, but the very great majority of
the employes, wiu work in the irregular
OREGON
i
The Flower of
TOVE
A play especially written for Miss Minter
the daintiest little
Miss of them all
" -
.. . , , . , ,, , . ,
freight service ; and are allowed to woi k
lice ciu i. sen. .... in . iieigni Miipiucins
come
10 iiaii.i, uui wno lose uie tiiiv s
work it the business does not come !
these "irregular freight service" em-j
ployes gained, almost nolhing, but were;
crowded back to an hourly compeiisa- j
tion. insteul of mileage basis, by ex-
cessively long trains; or, in other words, i
the railways, to recover the 1903 to
1014 wnge increase, gave each of their!
handle instead of one. iinil this not. nnlv
deprived other i tews of a train uud;
their day's work, but kept the " double j
train" dr.iggiug along the railway mi-1
til it has, in many places, become thei
practice of the railways to work the em- j
ploye the Id hours and merely allow I
tiiem the eight hours' lest, anywhere,
and then continue on with his "freight
drag" ns it is called by both officials
and employes.
So the net result of this is if illy a
decrease in the earnings of the great
majority of employes, since they nre
forced from fast miles at so much per
mile, to slow, long hours at the same
rate per hour and handle two, and oft-
trains
where
before thev
ua, ciien one, inci many otner unties
one, Hid
many
other duties
Vi ' i
...... ..me- ....."J..-S u.a .. iu-
.e full It. hours work at all ...ne. .
Irom t heir employes, and it seems that
,i for this practice must be the pros-1
e,.t movement. The rulways dec -tore
that employes arc demanding a . 1 00,-1
000,000 increase, .but admit that upon
will be but little chanL.e. ' There n av
vice eniploves who are being paid large
wages, and they are doing this to leadi
the public to believe that, because a
i,.w men are eannns' la rue si anes. it is
used as examples of what the avenge:
train service employe gets, because inj
the present demand for an eight-hour,
day the passenger service is not ex-!
eluded. j
Tiie public who do not always under-
stand railway conditions in. I railway i
workers
hear onlv the railway side of.
the story. In the railway talk of mov-;
ing terminals there is but little to heed.i
Tiie railways can expedite their freight;
service ami continue with their present
terminals if they re illy wish to do '
so. In some few cases there may be a!
couple of hours overtime. (
When an engineer has drawn a check,
for 2(i;l and a conductor a check for1
$247 for a month's work, the railway i
mav c ill attention to this, but netrlec'i
to sa v that these men worked 15 hours j
and 25 minute every dav in the month
and secured most of their sleep in a box'
car "caboose" out along the line. Later!
when these men lay off to recuperate,
their big checks must of eifurse, dwindle j
and soon hese men are broken down
Away on these two
es Mimter
the Screen in
IMA
a Esaaasssaaad3sasnasaa!3s:aaas5ss3ai
n
M EXTRA ATTRACTION
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The Strange Case
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of Mary Page
Edna Mayo and Henry B. Walthall.
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Owing to a misunderstanding with the booking of
fice, we will only be able to show Marv Pare on
El Monday only. Don't miss
EJ
tnd are clumped on the "scrap head"
with tiie other old machinery, unci may
be taken in by some kindly relative or
perhaps find room in some distant
"home" maintained by the employes'
organization. Thus they conclude their
clays these soldiers of the great trans
portation irmy, these men who have
I safely transported countless numbers
"f passengers nnd endless trains of
, l r,,i(,lt. Though the engines and cars
, .,.ome h, , vet linger .,,1
ger,
. f loin,,, tl.n t,-iii,u I, ,,.. m
even longer.
and though the iours of service become
more intensely fierce, the railway em
ploye still meausres up to his work.
In the great riilwny yards the switch
man whose tired feet strike the engine
"footboard" or the cinders all day, or
night, or the man in the "cab" who
! Ilt"s
ii nd throws the levers back and
forth all day or night, working among
countless and conflicting signals and
endless danger and in every condition
of weither these are the true soldiers
of industry. These men should not
need to ask for better conditions. Bet
ter conditions should have been given
them years ago. Twelve hours, or more,
is their present day or night, when
eight hours should be their limit.
The fostering by some railways of
various unfair conditions, and their
usual opposition to all suggestions to
wards improvement and their complaint
about unfair regulations his provoked
jrMitive of our public " men. ' In n
from
peech before the New York Traffic
(.hl) Kpl.ruary 21, ex President Taft
reproved the railways for their mis
,u,,.,s tu,ir position to the laws
,. the ,am ,, tt"roform. He accused
,, of ,orr tj ,, .., , , .
utfKW1lnMe ., t;,lM1 W.A t,lpln
0j-a iK,ssible irovernment ownershin The
! " public win give " hU ctlia
f,!!!"k" .f ""!lf.orirra,,,un.-. ..
,.,,n"tl ,,,,,, thoir shle ""'-j lower thtiii the usual furtliiii,Mlc offc.-t
pN,si(i,,.lt Wilson has said tint the 6ivM l'r,,,ti' ,lraP ver pale pink
workm hlvo riRht to 9av ,,,.; w,at I georgette crape. This material is also
1.,11i,inl, ,),., ...m .,i. " Ti,-' , ,,',, I . , , . .
for ,lu' 1,ol,l"',1 tu,li''' I'i'h
,,,,. ' :,f(.'rt -.1J..i1i n empire girdle of spring flower
tm'ou naaonabla I
i .... rii.i,,,,, m ,i.,J ,';.
That Klamath Falls ninn who lost are mnnid wlh ' "
lis . eontnininir tmi n,. ,, t - '
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Easter Week Festivals
Call for This Frock
96 'S MAIDEN
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date for Representa
tive. Republican
Primaries, May 19.
W. Al Jones
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