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Image provided by: Arizona State Library, Archives and Public Records; Phoenix, AZ
Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TEN" THE ARIZONA REPUBLICAN, FRIDAY MORNING, ' JUNE 27, 1919 FRIDAY and SATURDAY We liave been telling you about our Fountain Lunch and our new Delicatessen. Those of you who have patronized these departments, know the good things we serve and sell. "We want to tell you that we are adding a Pastry Department which will be all Home Cooked in our own kitchen. This department will be in charge of Mrs. Van" Winkle, who will bake all of our pastry. Those of you who have lunched at our fountain know what delicious pies we serve. Did we hear you say that "Its too hot to cook?" or that "I don't feel like eat ing?" Well, just drop into the Bayless Grocery and we assure you that you will get hungry. Special In Our Delicatessen Pimento Luncheon Loaf Pie, pound t:lJV Pure .Granulated Sugar A A Ten Pounds. D.UU Our Home-made Dread v Three large loaves &0s Horne-made Buns f Per Dozen -0" FLOUR Star or Datsv Flour C? 1 C A 24-Pound Sack P-LM Star or Daisv Hour 0 QA 4PoundSack &.3U Economy Bacon Squares -Per Pound OUKy M. J. B. Coffee K(W Per Pound..,. uyj Bulk Crackers 1 7p . Per Pound ' . . . . A 1 Just received a new shipment of nadsell's Famous Mesquite Honey Nothing better. 2 Pound Tins, 65c 5 Pound Tins, $1.25 10-Pound Tins, $2.35 EI ave a few more of those good brooms 70 C at FRUIT AND VEGETABLE DEPARTMENT SPECIALS Nice J uicy Watermelons Q Per Poimd (Every one Guaranteed) N ice Large Cantaloupes 2 5 C Five for 1 Fancy Ripe Tomatoes 25 C Six Pounds for - BAYLESS GROCERY First Street and Washington Phones: 3591 and 3545 P. s On and after July first, no order under $5.00 will be delivered. DELIVERY AT COUMTY JAIL IS FRUSTRATED STEEL SIS 11 Attempting to break jail within a few hours of the time set for their commit ment to the state penitentiary at Flor ence, Hazen Weil, found guilty of the theft of Dr. R. W. Craig'B Marmon car, Leslie McGoldrick, automobile thief, brought here from the state prison as a witness in the Weil case, and Pete Thompson, alleged automobile thief, early yesterday morning were caught in the act' of sawing the bars of the southeast end cell of the county jail. The plan of the prisoners was frus trated through the cleverness of John Isaacs, night jailer, who noted that unusual conditions prevailed in the ceils. In place of the customary two in a cell when the jailer locked up for the nigrht, there were four in the cor ner cell. The jailer reported the mat ter at once and Sheriff Montgomery and Deputies Oscar Price, Evan Wil son. Jim Troutman and Ernest Smith made a search o everyone of the 40 men behind the bars. Six hack saws were discovered in the 'rear cell and the bars had been almost cut through. It is believed that the job would have been completed in another hour. The quick action of Isaac is believed to tiave prevented a wholesale escape. The officers have no knowledge as to how the saws reached the prisoners, but they - are believed to have been passed in to Weil who, with the other two men implicated in the attempted getaway, was placed! m the juvenile cell. They will be taken to Florence today by Deputy Sheriff Harry Met ten. Other prisoners who will leave in his charge are Ival McCann, sentenced for life, who was to have left yester day, but was held for an additional day for certain necessary papers. Jose Gonzales, Lorenzo Feliz and Tom Mar-berry. ly satisfied with the situation and de clare they will never again return to the old regime. The domestics have shown a serious determination to uplift their vocation and make it one in which any self respecting working woman may take honest pride. Their organization has become in a way a school of domestic science and already has made for greater efficiency in household service. The Housekeepers' association has for some time enjoyed official recog nition by the Confederated Women's Clubs of Canada and recently was ad mitted to membership of the Federal Workers' Cnioo of Calgary. o 1 1 1 IS JOL'iNEYlNGS claims to have traveled HIS "Whoopler extensively." "Yes. Ever since I have known him he has been going from bad to worse." Use The Republican Classified Pages for results read for profit T REAPED BY SHERIFF A garden containing sturdy plants of marihuana in sufficient Quantities to make half the population of the city of Phoenix crazy drunk was aiscoverea bv Sheriff John G. Montgomery yesteri day at Loma Alta, two miles west of Peoria. " ' Believing marihuana responsible for a number of the recent robberies and burglaries, Sheriff Montgomery decided to make an investigation with the re sult that the officers wrecked a garden of a Mexican resident of the valley who declared that the plant was there when he bought the place. Whether or not he will be prosecuted could not be learned, but the owner of the garden is said to have told the officers that the marihuana grew as a weed in his gar den and that he had not indulged in it nor sold it to his friends. Marihuana, according to the sheriff, has been used to a great extent in Phoenix recently. In preparation, the leaves are dried and mixed with tobac co, and the smoke is said to produce the same effect as strong alcoholic beverages. GETTING READY (Birmingham Age-Herald) "Mrs. Dubwaite is too hasty, I fear. "How's that?" "Having heard the news from Wash ington, she immediately sallied forth t buy some voting togs.' Phone your classified ada to Th' Republican. We will collect later. Phone 4331. I L! RECEIVER OF TEXAS IE BOYTELLSTHE JUDGE HE WILL IKE GOOD Showing his trust in Ernest Baldwin, Judge Stanford yesterday permitted ! he lad to travel to the Fort Grant In dustrial school without guard. Baldwin is one of the boys who mean to make the most of his opportunities at the Fort Grant institution, according ins to his statements yesterday. He declared that he was glad of the chance to make good and that he meant to study hard while away. The boy is said to be a clever mechanic and will turn his attention to this work, he says. Not to understand a treasure's worth till time has stolen away the slighted good, is cause for half the poverty we feel, and makes the world the wilder ness it is. Cowper. Guy Alsap, to whom Harvey Hon assigned 700,000 shares of Texas Globe Oil and Gas company stock as trustee, was named as receiver of the company yesterday by Judge Stanford. Wiley E. Jones, attorney general, asked that a receiver be appointed and the company dissolved, claiming that the company sold stock without a per mit from the corporation commission. He alleged that the transfer of stock by Hon to Alsap was "merely beating around the bush and evading the law," claiming that Hon was the company and the company was interested in the stock which Alsap sold. After taking of testimony the court stated that a receiver would be ap pointed, and George Purdy Bullard for the defendant gave notice of appeal and asked that a supersedeas bond be fixed. Later in the day the court set the amount of bond at $1,000 an named Mr. Alsap as receiver. The testimony developed that all of the 1,500,000 shares of stock, with the exception of 100,000 shares, had been issued to Hon, the promoter. After opening a local office be assigned 700,- 000 shares to Mr. Alsap as trustee and his personal stock was sold by Alsap and the money turned into the com pany's treasury. Hon and others tes tified that this was not unusual as it went toward making Hon's own stock more valuable. Among others who testified to this effect was Ceiora M. Stoddard, one of the stockholders, who declared that the practice was not at all uncommon and that he had followed the custom in a number of mining companies in which be had interests. It all goes to increase the value of one's own holdings, declared Stoddard. A number of stockholders of the company declared themselves satisfied with the conduct of the business. CALGARY SERVANTS RULE THEIR ROOST FOR IT IirthS Sunday P aper Greatest Sale Ever Held in Phoenix WAIT FOR IT! Arizona Fourth and .Washington Supply Co. (From the Boston Transcript) Special Correspondence sent out by the Organization Committee Ameri can Chamber of Commerce in Canada.! Calgary is not jealous of Paris. It has a little treaty of its own. The Cal gary Treaty marks an era as distinctly as the Treaty of Pan, and the House keepers' association, composed of cooks and housemaids, may yet go down in history alongside the League of Nations- It was purely a dictated peace which the servant girls of Calgary Imposed upon the housewives. The housewives had no more to say in It than the Hons have had in the peace terms dictated by the Allies. It solves the immemor ial servant girl problem according to the servant girl's own ideas and ideals, and In effect makes the cooks and maids ralers of the home under a man datory of the Housekeepers' associa tion. Fourteen Points in Terms Like the Treaty of Paris, the Treaty of Calgary is founded theoretically on fourteen points instinct with Wilsonian altruism. When a domestic accepts a situation she signs a contract embody In these fourteen points, as follows: L I promise good behavior and my best services to my employer. 2. The rate of my wage shall be.... per month. 3. Ten hours shall constitute a day's work- 4. If more hours are required they shall be regarded ss overtime and paid for at the rate of fifteen cents an hour. 5. I shall have every1 Sunday even ing free after :30 o'clock. 6. My employer shall speak of me as her "housekeeper," and shall always address me as Miss or Mrs. So and So. 7. I shall have the privflege of en tering or departing by the front door. 8- X shall have the use of a suitable room one evening; a week in which o entertain my friends until 10 o'clock. 9. I shall make it a rule to be In my employer's house at 11 o'clock every evening. 10. I shall be given proper board. 11. Comfortable and sanitary lodg ings shall be provided for me. 12. This engagement of service may be terminated at any time by either Darty Riving two weeks' notice. 13- In case of the violation of any of these terms, either party may termi nate the engagement immediately. 14. All complaints from either em ployees or employers shall be laid be fore an arbitration board, composed of members of the Housekeepers associ ation, who will seek to adjust the diffi culties wuh justice. Housewives Are Satisfied All the cooks and housemaids in Cal gary are now working under this agreement. The housewives are huge- jj Immur -r " i rrii riri ir mi hm i jADI : mmm tmw . jlj You can't think of "delicious" M 8 y- - jf ing of Coca-Cola. w - You can't drink Coca-Cola W 1 M without being delighted and ml i 1H refreshed. IIWJ yA Deinend the genuine by full Dime jljf !l B CiUitif nicknames encourage lubititution. Hell 9 w M ' The Coca-Cola Co. " $Ui I ATLANTA, GA. . Mi jl rmWIUjiJW mV IIWLiJatSr"? ! MaWFPqjPMsasalasa.asaElasaasMasaMaM B rJ&fil&fHMn, ihittt . I I 1 Contract Let to Drill From I One to Eight II Wells J Note:, The Texas Eagle Oil Company is Capitalized t $300,00000 par value of stock $10.00 fully paid and non-assessable. This company is operating under a trust agreement, and agrees that each and avery share purchased covers its portion of all the present holdings of the company, and also of the net proceeds of said holdings, as Guaranteed by Trust Agreement. Here Is .The Latest News On Eagle 3i Billie-Burk has let a drilling contract on its 10-acre tract in Block 21, subdi vision 822 of the W. Curtis tract, Burkburnett oil field. Stock is now' $1 par, but present de velopments warrant a raise and the price will be raised very soon. Just think of the possibilities of our 10 acres. We want oil and we are con fident we are GOING TO GET OIL. Order NOW if you want to share in our profits. Burk Oil ompany 105 Main St. El Paso, Texas W. E. Arnold, Trustee, Vice-Pres. Border National Bank c Read It Then Buy All You Can Afford Consider the holdings and the 10 wells contracted for TELEGRAM Pilcher & Company, 902 Mills Building, El Paso, Texas. "Burkley well offsetting us in Block 72 reported in 3500 barrels; Royal Duke and Union near us in Duke Field are in con tract let for well in tins field expected to be commenced in ten davs." TEXS EAGLE OIL CO. If ever an oil company offered the in vestor a chance to make money on Ms in vestment, it is the Texas Eagle. We know of no other company which has undertaken such a gigantic drilling program, whose holdings were any better. The above tele gram brings wonderful news to those who have invested in Texas Eagle, as well as to those who now contemplate an investment in this company. We Are Swamped We believe that we can say without fear of suc cessful contradiction that the greatest avalanche of orders swept into this office on Monday. Since oil stocks have been offered the public, during the past few months. With the above news coming in, we are confident what few shares we have left will be absorbed in Arizona and California this week. There's a Reason For every dollar the investor is putting into this company, there is more than a dollar in tangible as sets to back up his investment. If that is the case now tryand figure out what your Texas Eagle will be worth a few years from now. But you know what it is worth right now this minute. Because Texas Eagle has been honorably organizedwithotrt wat ered stock without inflated valuations without rake-offs to anybody. It could quit right now and pay every stockholder a handsome profit on his investment. $15.00 Per Share - If you are going to buy Texas Eagle, buy it now the time grows shorter and but a few shares left. Wire in your order at our expense at $15.00 per share. We will try and protect you if we can at this price. Pilcher & Company Stock and bond brokers 902 Ms Bldg., El Paso References: First National Bank Union Bank & Trust Co TELEGRAM PILCHER A. CO. 902 Mill Bldg. El Paso, Tax. Reserve . shares of Texas Eagle stock at $15.00 rem it- I tance in mail. t.ieV