Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press (1912), 28 Jan 1915, p. 6

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4 i“ n. Eli: PnlndBfliards MMAIIQ VENCEL MUZIK BARBER SHOP W Central Ave. ' Hi2} Tolepho-c 5“ Hmuibiz WEE RESIDENCE (our! Hm.qukegn [Ah-Yum. Tel534â€"W Surveying and Engineering, Tm- grnphy‘Landlcape und Construc- (ion Work. 20 years in Engineer- ing. Surveying and Construction. Chas. E. Russ ell CIVIL ENGINEER AND County Surveyor 23 N. Sheridu Road Highland Park Drop me a postal card or telephone me and I will call for goods North of Deerfield Road But of C. N. W. R. R. Box No. 664 Highland Pnrk Automobile Tires, Metal. Rubbers A SPECIALTY Tel-phone 632 On Friday night will show the pictures of Highwood Babies on Curtain in con- nectionZwithj a" big pro- gram of Vaudeville and Motion Pictures. By Special arrangement this Theatre will Show THE BARTLETT Theatre - ABANA SPRING WATER Vaudeville Every Night J. Smith FRED SCHAEFER PLUMBING I No. 664 Highland Pnrk Teiephonc H'..m...d Pnrk W-Y-J Your Grocer has Abana Whalesale and Retail Dealer in Iron Rags j Metal / Rubber Bottles Paper,’ etc. LIBERTYVILLE. ILL. Bottled and Sealed at the Spring or will get it for you. Miss Alma Salo Swodidl Me 203 E. Central Hue.) I 12 (ti) Highland ’uk Absolutely Pure Highwood. Ill. Highland Park "At the centennial exhibition It Phlln’ 6019M... the exhibit pf the Bell System “slated o! “to tolephonu capable of mg. 5‘ this Mr Vail?" Mr. \"ail's vmm- camel uvn-r the wire so plpinly that Ihv l’rvsldvut held his rem-Ivar lightly away from his ear. and then Bald: Stateroom of Mr. Vall. Mr. Theodore N. VH1, Ipeaklng from Jekyl Island, Gootxh. laid: \vr-J nm .umn-y my vurvhul umgrutulaâ€" Hons In Mr MPH. And I “an! tu Aunw-y l0 \‘hu my pv-xxmml ‘I‘HKYJ'HLIYI'IHN sir " The President than said to the m- vemor of the telephone, Doctor hell. at, New York: "I «'onsmvr It an honor to N lhlt' to owprwss my admirfltkm fur the manuw Kr'mus and mommv knowlhdxv Hun has mm]. this pnnihle, and my pride (hm Hus \iml rurd should haw (wen <trvtwhr-d m‘russ Arm‘rn'u as a nvw sym- bol nf uur umly and our vnlrrprmr “'11! MN: nm umu-y my vurvhul umgrutulaâ€" Hons In Mr MPH. And I “an! tu Aunw-y Pruidom of the American Tel.- phone and Telegraph company, who talked from Jekyl Inland to San Fran- cisco over the new tranuconflncnul line. hu‘Prprs'lvdiéfitl-\Vilson then talked to Mr. Thomas A. Watson. in San Francisco. with Dr Alexander Graham Bell listen- ing in on the line at New York. Presi- dent Wilson said: "“'r- an- looking forward to your mm- :ng here. I «hunk you will be pleased with what vro- hme dune, I nanny-9 you. \lr. Prank-m. that you will never rem-five .1 “Mcumr Hm! “‘Hl he more n-ordinl and mnru ~‘nf!\Il<I2‘~t“-- " ' "‘lt amwuls w the imagination to “pr'dk urrnss [he continfixl. It In a fine urn-n {or the vxpualtlon that Hm first ”1er it has dunv is In und in write from sra tn mm X vungralulale you nn the finv prospPMs {or a sum-esflul ex- position. I am mmfl-Inhlly hoping to llke part In it. ufler thv udjuurnmvm of con- zre-ss Mm‘ I not svnd my firm-flux. to lhn managomvnl and to all whose work mu mud» n possible and mun made it the ulna! ew-nt H prunmws [n be. and In con- \‘t’);_m,V pvrsnnnl innzruu‘muonn to vuu"" ,u, n___x.l " ’m‘é‘ér'ގӎ"6é11"é£i6é‘back Président Moore's reply: the Pacific ‘vi Hu- mldr-n Guie's grwung. w 3h.» .\unh. Hostun. the birthplace of 'hv lull-phomn talked across the con- Hnml. _ At the Whno House Presidvnt Wil- mn spoke into the mouthpiece of his telephone and his voice was whirled across thirteen States to the shore of SELL, VAIL AND WATSON. CREATORSOF Tush-cows, EXCHANGE GREETINGS ovzn momma cmcufir Prc’:ident Vail’s Engineers Make It Possible For President Wilson to Send His Voice Acres: the ‘ . Continent lnstantly.’ lTlANTIB AND PACIFIC OCENNS l INED BY BEll TElEPNPNE llNE Ml Val] it) hm! .mglflo!‘ New Yvrk. h-Hon of I?“ m» bcxvn-m public official: of Cltlu on Two Gout. Take Par-Ha Cele Congratulate Ono Another on New Bond Estabmhod Between Em and West. £11 dn“ In] < THEODORE N. VAIL, t is a firmll I “2m! to St pl xd “i want u. switch in another tele- phone and talk to you through that." said Dr. Hell, and suiting the action to the word he switched in n'tepilca q! his first telephone instrument. “I am now talking through an exact dupli cate of the first te‘lephona which was made in June. 1875." continued Dr. Beil. “can you bet}- mg!" _ i- . “The telephonamen haveiceminly done wonderful things with your in- vention since that first outdoor test, " said Mr. Watson. ‘We mud! not for get that the circuit we are talking over 15 really 6.800 miles Inns. “‘0! course, the earth cannot. be used for the rem-an now an we used ii then." De] I. can Juu u“: nu:- “I heu perfectly, though; dls- uncuy than with the other. (1 ne,’ " answered Mr Waugn. _ , L ”Yea indeed,"- answered; Wnson. mat line was two miles long. running fmm Heston to Cambridge You were owrjoy ed at the success of the expert iment. " ‘ ' "We are thlklng over 3.!00 miles an easily and clearly as we taJkéd over two miles 33 years ago," and Pn’ol. Bell. .‘ ”0f counr he wu not heard by any mt-ans u ‘70-" u when he med our Itand- nrti transmitter but well enough to be un- tit-rutumi, vu- may be suré. and loud enough to exvite a moat pleasing Bl-nil- mo-nt. This original tyne on tniophnnv talking over one 0! our mo§ern lines. spoke across the continent more diatinct- 1y than it ever did from one roam 'to an- niiwr over the best line of {o mer dl)’l. Thus do" this homely first Vnatrument xix-u testimony to thv- marvelous improve- mvnts made in it: plant by the Evil com- pany during these intenu intervening Ye’fl‘" “Yes. your voice 13 perfectIy dis- tinct." said Bell.‘ “It is as clear as if you warp hero in New York instead of mm: more tlian 3.000 miles away. You romomtwr‘ Mr. Watson,“that eve- ning. 38 yoars ago when We convened through the lolpphone on a real "m; for the first time?" Bell and Wauon Tllk.. "Ahoy! Ahoy! Mr‘ Watson, are you there? Do you hear me?" asked Mr‘ Bell in New York. ‘ Mi. Cut: escorted Dr. Bell to the strange looking transmitter Ind its in- ventor pressed his lips to the mouth- piece. “Yes, Mr. Bell. I hear you perfectly. Do you hear me we!!!" replied Mr. Watson at his end of the flue In San Francisco. mu 1-! nrunnlzud nn-n and organized wires hv has mlko-d to us hvre at New York l'rnm an island eleven hundred miles to the suulh, near the roast of Flortda. l-‘rum Hu-n- he huu 390an through the Irmuh and lurvndth of our km! ‘0 the slulr of (‘uhfurngw Inrlyd‘uur hundred» miles nnzu‘. lhun RHHIHIH‘ the lungeflt dlsmnce ovvr uq-MQ-vod by the vo1ce 0! man. "“‘o are filled with grateful h-elinxa {hat Alexandrr Graham Bell and Thomas A Watson have today galkedhto each oth- n. n A- aLl- _‘_, - V_...VV. ‘v V...” VI”- er over lhls nnw hlalnrll- llnu. Donor Bell was the first to roncelvp of tho true method and apparn‘lu- for lrnmmlnlnx npom'h electrically and Mr. Watson. {ul- lowlnx axnctly thn dlrectlonn given to him by Doclur Ball. constructed with hl- own hand. the first telephone. Bell was the first among men to gall: by the Pleflrlc [l'lehone and Watson Wat the first to 5A.... "There 1: before us In extol re roduc- Hon 0! this elemflc a , in. ephone employed by Roll and “Ion when first they talked to 'mvh other by wire. Through this Instrument Doctor Boll hu aknln talked tn Mr. Watson, but thin time how van '9 the distance lhd how great (hfngrlumph. wnn mumt speed nrrumz rivrru and plain mu} muuululnu‘ mstanH)’ ranching Sun l'r.m--L~rn whrn- In vicar £0le 1! spnke his nwssux? n! conx'rntulaflun to man of m-lzwn nn-HL . "l'nmip [II he pn-nvn! with ha 1n por~ non, Mr. Thundurv N. Van mu neverthe- less tuken part In [hose A-t-rrm‘mlea. in 1 umnm-r that fills Ihe mind with amalcâ€" mum. By using his wondorrul Ben syl- lmh 1-! nrunnlzud nH-n and organized wires hv has mlko-d to us hvre at New York l'rnm an island eleven humlml mu... m hes} WM V. ._â€".°‘, :- mouthpiece over the drum-headâ€"nnd there you have it. There wu further reminder of the telephone'- hnbyhOOd in a. coil of wire connected with the tnnlmitter. Thin was put of the original wire over which Dr. Boil spoke the tint words ever uttered by telephone. in his boarding house at 5 Enter Place. Boston. ? _ ....... n H: uutnfinflr sums of nu .yrt-utmi an ent'irn nrw am. ln\'t-nt~ ing, developing and porn-«1111?. nmklng ”Lpt'm‘vILt-ntx. Kreut and smni in l‘nir- phnlk“ transmitter. lim-. table, switch- hunrd and ew-ry uthvr [liH‘I' 0: upxmrulun and plum rofiutin-d fur tiu- l‘rmmnnsulun or nlwerh. As the lutvst product u! this unrrasinu urmtnized vi'fnrt. tht‘rr has bet-n dwiiralod to the m-rv‘t-v u! the pul-llt rm duy a ltunscunttm-ntai lino 340" mil»: Ionx, joining the Atlantic and the i’ifl'int' untt vzlrryltm the human \‘Uit‘é ingntatnt-ly and distinctly botwm-n San: i-‘rum-lsr.» and .\'vw Turk and Boston and Washington. This tc-lephtme llm- )8 part ni‘ the Bali System or 21.000:th mil»: u! wire t‘nnnmat- In: autumn lulu-phonv stations iovuteci av. erywhere throughout the- i'nltt-ti States and giving to the American people MP- phone “N10“ unparalleled among the na- tluga ul' tln- Parlh " , ._.... mm uusmn and Washington. This h-lephnne Hm- )8 purl n! the Bell System or 21.0001“! mil»: 0! wire mnnwt- In: MILO” lulu-phonv stations hwuted av. erywhere throughout me- I'nm-d States and giving to the American people 1»)?- phone serflcv unparalleled among the na- tions at the- earth." 011 l table in President thl'a once in New York was : replies of‘the‘ first ttflephone transmitter to carry the human vnlnn It bun-) . . _ ...... Wu. H: unlnflnur )‘llrrvulml an enrirn nrw m‘ de‘wluprnx and porn-run. un.[u'n\‘vn,m|lx, great and smnf) phom- transmitter. Mn". “Able, hunrd and ew-ry ulhrr M901- and mum rofiguiu-d fur n»- _ .9...” w an- uull‘l‘. r‘uml an the _lrunmnltued sptach was, it became at once- [hr NH 01 ml! Ihe wdrld, x'nunln g aclmunls u Wall us human [0 9.quan with wonder. Stamina: “uh mem- («0th In ltrumrnu only Ih-ll Company, by pendan- vossunt exprndltureu n! I nu.. [he "I study mud in. "Imam“. mm“. A. mlklng from ulht‘l‘. Fun) “In”. H. 1580‘] We “'Iirld, r “Hrm‘n In fix with mem- 1 Hr” Comm”. Ianclw mu n uw-vâ€"n Mr. Ben Iwitchod back to in. mud 01 ' l PM I m an been me a t r msmry bm-n transmitted from of guvernmmn at \anhlngtun thirty-nix hundred miles tn the‘ the l'avltir. m-vr :th line [ht Prc-nldq-nt Wihwn was r-urrk-d p ...._A..a _,_, 7 "he pigrt or the Part In Celebrltlon and rivrrs Jud fining: room in ‘n of such manlc lungs. to travel to San Francisco through the llr. 0n the wires-ll takEs less than ono‘flfteenth ot a second. Electricity wu‘drlvlng Dr. Bell‘s “alloy" at the rue of 58,000 mlles per second. Sound. unabated, limps along in compurlson. auxin; only 1,160 feet per second. work Take. [Two :Yun. , The work of constructing the tan concluentu llne took two non. but 'he hlstory of the work of making the 'ylel sud wires. net and strung by the Inventor of the Telephone. Who Talked go Thoma. Watson Over tho New Tramcontinontll‘ Lino. DR. ALEXANDER GRAHAM BELL. In New, York it was 4 o'clock when Doctor Bell lent his “alloy" ncroee the continent. and one of me first of the guests go speak af- ter him 'uked the time in San Francisco. Each one looked at his much u the answer came back: “One o'clock." This started a flurry of fig- uring. Thane who know ooun'd waves and the rate they tnvol said that it would an four hours for n men’- voice, unuded, granted the pouibmty MR DOOLITTIE. IN SAN FRANCIS- t‘u speaking; "Glad to hear you, Mr. ,l‘wkwomt and m exchange XFOCUNKI and (ungramlntionn. i reciprocate your ex- prvuiofia of minimum: in the we in! nccompl ins-m of this gn-at w‘rk, Speaking of and looking bavkwurd orvcnr the history of telephone progress. we can both pay. as did one of ancient times. ‘3" of which I law and part 0! which X wu.‘ Bui are- you not going '0 invite me to‘ dinner?" ‘ . MR LOCKWOOD. rppiylntt“ "CoflalnA 13-; i am happy to invite you to dinner: hm don't forget ibpt times and condi- tions are chnnmxd Whan in in we ripened ihe Lovren line. If you wert‘ln 1.9wvll. you would have heard my invita-" iion while I was giving it. And c uid have joinpd me inside of an hour. ut now, and where you Ire. while you will hear with your own ears my invitation thrro hour: bor're I rive II vnu manor mch ihn table until four or five an." inter." Colonel Higglnoon Toll“. v Col. Henry Higgimwn spoke to Mr. Thomas A. Watson in an F‘nnclsco and was followed by fluyor Jute- M. Carley and Mr. Elmer J. Bil-u, Presi- dent of the Boston Chamber 0! Com- merce. . Mr. P. L Spauldlng, President of the New England Telephone sud Tele- graph Company and George ’8. Mc- Parland President of the Packflc Tele- phone nnd Telegraph Compnny ex- changed greetings. "Thai seem! but yesterday. so fresh it II in my mamory. and yet here We are cele- brating the (-ompimion o! the cystem‘ to the Pacific mash 1m crown‘ and culmina- lion. and that has been made mime h}- iho- combination illld exercise of constant effort in engineerinr and invention. and constant profit by (be teaching of experi- wnue." ,, -_ -- .._.... . w... evening, Hr. Dmiitae.T-end you met- ing from the: birthplace of tho telephone. it is worth while to havb given the but pan of our live. to the teieyhone service. to realise that we have reached this no- table day and are privileged to “he part in it. It recall: the earlier dun when by building the Boston and Lowaii line. the Button nnd Providcnco linen. ad the first experimental iim- between Boston and New York; this inn supervised by xuumlf. the first lap: in the march of long distance tele}hone communication were taken. "That seems but gougljdny. so fresh it in lâ€" ..... __..‘"A, , 7mm» than 150,000 men and women. To the organization a: a whole this event will have nlxniflc-nce that connot he oil-nesti- mated. It will exert an influence-mot will not and with day, but on working for better and greater mu :9 through yen-u to come. In some Way. directly or indiâ€" rectly. every efficient nun and woman in the organiution ha.- contributed some» thing to the achievement. 1nd therefore. n a whole, the organisation merit- cou- (rutulatiomfl , Grating From Boston. The following convemtion took place between Thoma D. Lockwood in Boston. and Thoma B. Doolittle in San Francisco: In the- advance of clflllntlo'n. one of the romantic and 1m lrtng neg- In tho progress of the m as . evéluped y our great lnd'alwayu mutually helpful gnnigauon nick embrgcel m It. nnks "Thr- cnmplflion o! the tramcontlnu nu] Ilne Is out only an epoch-marking run! in sclenltfiv dt-Velopment. but alum ”:0 opening door to betwr t-nndnionl. (107w turn-ml and nodal, lhmuxhout the nation. It means the breaking down of old bar- riers. Hy mvSlltatIn lht- vxchanze o! in- formation nnd‘ldvtu- t brlngn't‘he molt re- mote points ‘In the country donor to~ nether than wrre point- thu within a single sum» 3 quarter of I century m. H broadens mutual understanding Quill?- pret'lkatlon) and th_un_1‘1f_h tnomondous y : mm by th Drugs-1:?“ gain“. 3% how an. out n circuit“ :13“. HWa out the km n «W or Waning" ' ‘ “Their work In: both "path. 40-‘ clued Mr. Wat-on. “and 'Iuporb m u- the discipline or the ornnlutlon‘ tint wnt'ches every Inch :0! this Ions ‘ circuit to utozutrd than feeble vii} “muons." * “All honor to the men who have rendered this great achiqvemont poo Iibte." concluded D'r Bell. “They have brought I." the people of the United States within oound of one nn- other: voice: out! united then: into one great brotherhood " automcnt by Mr. Bathe". ln meshing of the new tnnscomi- nemal line. 1!. N. Bethe”. senior wee- president of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, said: ~When the telephone Ind grown Io that It could be token outdoors on Oc- tober 9, 1876, Dr. Bellvhnd culled "'lhoy" 3cm“ two miles of wire. Just n he was’ calling n‘ow not-on three thouun . and It was 'not on!" name- tlme lat‘r {hut “hello" wu used. Mayor Mitchel of New York and ,yor Rolph of San Frmcuco ex- anged greetlnnm MR. LOCKWOOI} thing: "Good vening, Hr. Doom: e. lend van mu. Id 11 : lx- m1 r: h d-dl 00 la! :1. 00 am {9. t , tea He '1'! ‘ a lo: V . ., â€"- â€"r~-v-vâ€"- yaw-Iv. ' Th0 dbmeter of the ham-n cop-' per tire of number 8 B. Wyn. mu - used the Hue-n .165 inch. The m1 ' we! t of one circuit consisting capo , “chm"; b 1.630 tau. ’ '7 ' Thy-o no 180.000 polu In the nu. Hug-w ‘4 'Lengt‘n .of line, 3.400 miles. Route: me sun Francisco to Salt Lake Qity: 770 miles; from San Lake City to Denver, 580 miles; ‘trom Denver to. Omaha, 585 miles; from Omnhn to Chl- c'agof 500 miles. A! Chicago theAIkIe bunches, one branch 50111340 may burgh. 545 miles. and then to New York; 390 mile: from Pittsburgh. The othélj' brunch goes from Chlnago to Bufln'lo. 603 miles, and thenido'n to New‘York, 3501mm. Them}. 1 con- tinuanm of the line from Butt-16 to Baum. 465 miles long. Prom Pm» burgh there 1: n conunuatlbn extendv 1;); tb Baltimore, 250 nnle: uvny on to Wuhlngton. 265 miles. Phflndelphh is reachéd by n branch fronfthe line extending fro ‘ Pittsbuuh to New York. connect g‘ng Ngitgvgn Square. ' DBL-A :n___AA~ me world. It has “made in the L158. A." stamped on its very soul. _, Hare 'are some figurgs in connect“), with-the New Yorkâ€"San F'rmciaco line for the {overs of statlsdcsz. Twe'tpkzphone In the [In has “way: set the pace for the world. It has “made in t stamped on its very soul. Butiproud' as telephone entineers m of what they have accomplished. mex‘vwili tell you that this treas- contipentai line is by ‘no mum? the Inst word in the telephone's de; velopmenx in this country. The newl line is the beckbone of A network of 11.000.000 miles of wire woven round 9.000%: telephone cations of the Ben? yctem. The completion of thisi line: 1 mighty step iorwnrd toward! that idea] of universal service preached ; by besident Vail and his usocintec: hack in the Seventies. As they inteb'l pretéa universal service. it'meent thsti mydne anywhere could speak to my»: one ' ywhere in this country by tax-i T; telephone receiver 0!! the hook. } Thrine .is still in the bonds of thex engineers. There is an amount ot field worli‘to beidnne before it is opened to the .publlc [or commercm; use,"bmj when it is opered it will min am 1'? New! York business man can talk to“ his San Francisco associate withou‘tl leaving his deck. :3 Tue telephone in the United States: has qiways set the pace for the rector? n... and; n L-â€" «'~ cmfieer could not ipoed 159, dy'i'amoa -â€" -.h_A A, t ,,‘-- Y', “,MWA or shrt more engineeruunlu to get g whafi'he ”was after. For helephony‘l‘. mot p’ower 13 the feeble“ thins! 1mg) aole. It la n mere Month. And I the engineer must preserve and hurry : to tblr deetlnntlon pmtleeuy inunu- 3 anomaly the mun-that's)! minute} we?” mhdp In the lit by the voice; withgnll éhelr severe}? than» and hr1 dlrlluull e’l preserved. In spanking! of his endneere' problems, President; Yell-sud: . g "The solution we; found only in the j, cumulative eflect ot lmpmvementnu tree: and small. in telephone. tram-l nutter, llne, cable, uritchbou-d and? eve other piece of appamtun. or plan“ req . In the transmission of speech,“ . V , 4‘ I Nine Mllllon 7mm...“ .1 “Tm H For te , 1 re“ < Whoamdoihn fln'l telephony do year- 5; SBTERST; RE‘ITO infiecordln' to Doctor um unem- W, ‘ catiipa. Mr. Watson, in Bah chioco t talk“! to Doctor Bell in New York ov'cn 3th,. tranmnunoml chi-IL ’ i-m 1;» 3min: in the mm of all flat has lup- pe to'tnmlmnan since, whn the engineers hul moompuabedm nuke It I wron- tho who]. Unimd Bates. Th an thu It was not I question 0! math hog-u powdr. M the telephone n my (or a 3.406 mile talk. Trans- ml rs, swittmbmrds. metallic circuits. h ddnwn copper wire and lowing 00 I all had to be attuned to the trans- cadmium] keynote. There“ a a hint of real nchlmemont ln Whit the engl: are did with the loading coll. W hen e loading 00!] left the hand: or 12: [humor lt wus as large an a keg, and tha‘ tine iron wires Inside it cost a mint to-mnhe. To-dl’y the loading coil is I to“? .lnches in size. and In the New Yotkm Frencleoo line therefore 13.- 009 mile: at that wire whose cost 0! manufacture in comparetlrely low. Blg Problem Solved For those ln the Day Street ofllcee there wu Itrlklnx proof that the pro!» lem of transmitting speech in not eofled by my loud-apathy mne- mttter in the replica of Bell' I Invention thi) lay before them. They reamed no :‘they looked at thet Instrument. um: m «flaw-01m umu. 111mm types .54 mm , mumm- hnye new in need ”1:71; wmuxi ten yea-Jo new! swan: mm to: eonstruwon and re- mean]: snr. shown more than to the present book nine of the 0: plant. Vhst in fine of trend-nursed elven ls even truer ottll thnt Mel ween the terminus of the m obntlnennl line, for it u in this now am the enxtneem ind their res] prob- I?" To nu in the up between Den- end the Coast with- wires and poles” we]. commuvely simple. The tut they confronted was to begin at New “in sud wetting s11 slong' the line. my the mnltltpdfqous improvements .2, THOMAS A. w‘A‘roon. Mllllon Tokphgm‘ i Tel. uh Pom: so: Second St., :14 Wad mi. Special agitation Dog-u (Assistant Sm ‘_ eterinlri‘ «sum.» Ave. E: Hum TM)" Shoe Rd] Tm 715-1. Phone 897~Y-2 'clcphone 909 JOHN C. Miss-10cm Ida-i You'illdmn lgood “63'lo ”Pull“. Every . turday Toni: First Class B Repairing. : guaxameed l prompt atue DR; WKTSO R, TlTllBAUM-I Schoolof Fresh Bn'ttéfi‘s and P t]! ‘ijcen Bay box. of ve' Eveafy guesdAyl; North Grefiay Rodd For [ex gm uh ‘nlfireel 'eatur. 1L ifer Tenn-II UGLAS I"..l ighlufld ARD SC!!! :- Star-r em

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