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Page 17 text:
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ANOftf M) CARNEGIE «KipjAlMllK railroad and Stf industries He behoved tftat it ms the dut» ot a rich nun to dotnbute tin •e»'!h during tin lifetime To that end. he established 2800 libraries and men, cultural hats throughout Serving to unprecedented loot terms as President of the United SUtes FRANKLIN DUANO ROOSEVEl! ms a popuUr feeder « 0 mede ««tensive use of fireside red o chats to etpUin hrs plans and generate enthusiasm to push them throufh Congress A IrUtune pass on for machinery led HENRY FOB) to Detroit where in 1896 he completed ha first motor ve h«lc The ford Kotor Company manufactured the first Modet f in 1909 ROBERT FROST s poetry ns dear understated well metered a«d laid the stories of rural America He was a loaf time winner ot the Pulit er Prut and has been called America s poet laureate One of the most elementary symbols ot the American ny of Me was established when i EDGAR HOOVER and ha federal Bureau of investigation G men set out to clean up the country Hrs career spanned over 40 years A plam. homely woman with tremendous appeal to the masses, who ms always m the thick of things de- scribes ELEANOR ROOSEVELT a»d her l.tetime ot pofa ticking beside her husband durmg ha four terms The crippler poliomyelitis was conquered by OR JONAS SALR m 1953 afler more than 25 years of research Potio was reduced by 96 m less than ten years SAUs re search continues m California at the Salk Institute KARTIN LUTHER RING ms a leader m the cause of enrd rights He had been a pastor before turning to the cause of segregation Ha leadership earned him the Nobel Peace Pure m 1964 He was assassinated by lames Earl Ray m 1968 Lieutenant Colonel JOHN 61ENN started America's tm ets to outer space when he became the first American to orbit the earth He had been an aviator m World War II and a test pilot m peacetime The motion picture industry was revolutmnued m Ameri ca and DAVIO WARN GRIFFITH became Mown as the Father of the film art and ' king of directors for ha part hi ttws revolution His camera techniques were the pioneering steps ot the industry THURGOOO KARS HALL a the first Negro I serve as a notice of the Supreme Court Ha law career was aimed primarily at civd rights cases GERALD R FORO. the first President to achieve the of- fice without an election in 1974 through a series of scandalous events the Niton administration toppled and FORD reached the position through approval by Congress
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Page 18 text:
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A CARD u- mk) ru« U wbiiiiinl ai Un nom rci )n'-i( ptKtt, f 4tl|ullljf Ilf IlirN'IllW’lt COnt Itullf fAdj U V a iN II lltf iwtaClilNi't W»( it N- 4 outb •• ilih Him, 4 An. Urio» » 4 ojy tiv ii c iHfc of tba bebtiylhii OLD ttSTABLIMl.ilEAT, OPPOSITE GIRARD'S BASK. A GOOD inoMfMnl of HATS, it No- Cl hiMilb Jvl uriri, whjcb will lx •old 1 fair price . JJ7 I bvKtltA V'lbikit of «yq«A- ti y »»f fvbico ubi'im, flonhao, ui t iccoiocsnditrO. md ihoulJ (M irticW not |i|rii b D fi«»i«b d. ibtra will lx no obligatio o lh (•«il ftf fh'W who nrtlcf talk il. pbll—tf HATS, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL» {Vo. 41 South Third Street SEAR CONGRESS HALL. JOHN C. DYER offer» for iil«, HA TS or tarry ik«cn(Hio , Of aa• prrNf qnaittir , ib l cheap J C. U. | «rliColarly lUTitrt 'bo lip lliot 01 lb pwbUc I» bn four Jnlltr Mai , which, for lx»u'p duuliiiij aod cb« | o , art ftM itriiiucd by tar id (ho cilj. JOHN c. DYEK mpccfully inform hi fritodi tad the public, I Ml I hr Kjuotxnrd ■ Mora id Li lion of bwl nti, M ib« ib'ii earned place,ohere bo mieoJa uliip conitiatlf on hand a pror. ! awnai of HaTJj, which ho will tell a low a tb tj caa bo porch i ia I be ciiy. oiarch V— ls « UUDiar tk BUTUSSU tk Bill far tk VRIBO alwln PERRY DAVIS'S VEGETABLE PAIN KILLER. Maanfaoturod by PERRY DAVIS A SOW. a i« ■ TBawr rwermawcm, m. t Imagine buying that acre of land you have spotted for $1.25! Or. even at the higher price of $10. Those are the prices offered to our founding fathers to encourage set- tlement of the wilderness areas of this nation. A stage wasn't the most comfortable way to go, hut you could get from city to city for as little as $3 — at the amazing pace of six miles per hour. Compare today s wages with a 12-hour day in the early 1800's. A man earned 50c a day. Of course his dollar bought a little more than today s Butter in 1826 was about 5c lh. in the Midwest, eggs, 3C doz.; corn 6C bu., wheat, 25c bu.. and a cow could he bought for $5. With travel becoming the American tradi- tion, you could choose train, wagon, horseback or the water A canal ride, with bed and hoard included, averaged 3 or 4c per mile. And when you reached your des- tination, you could sit down to a 5. or even 10 course meal for 25C (Ladies 20c, in consideration of appetite.) Farmers in the early 1800 s could own the famous McCormick Reaper for a mere $100 But the Civil War increased prices as the machine became the first item farmers . could buy on time payments for the sum of $1,500 A good suit of clothes then might cost $1.95 and ladies waists (blouses) were marketed for 49c to $3.50 with a whole dress pattern priced at 15c. m taJ «4 clap» i kith tf OS MiN HPHIN'O SEAT ROCKING CHAIRS a.fiaa. TranaparcM od Inii Hli d». Alan, • great a. «•nau.l.y nn hauJ and Uphdlrt.ry VV«rb ( every i ri|»t(,.|i rlcCuUlJ Wib aul»ril, |,«a»rloililf mil -Jta- xb, by J I! iNCOOK Co. S. W ccrDXf of l b I J and Walnwf iirtftft 9 J II. » l‘a grateful fnr p»«i Inauri, ibvv [X, by (aa«t«nt allfDl'an |o baa'Atr , lot l dtttrr ta in, by hrt|nn| ih« .cheat I’l'd' to ibrie lux, la • fill'll (• a | An Af »|i»»l 21 —I» Philadelphia Mu scum, JLHOjLD'E, CHESNIIT STREET, (ABOVE SIXTH.) Cookstoves, quality-satisfaction guaran- teed, could cost you $29.25 at $4 per month and a dandy heating stove could set you back as much as $5.73 and up. The first electric refrigerator cost $900 — which might he enough to make you faint on your 1907 fainting couch that had cost a mere $7.85. Your new baby travelled in the height of fashion in a wicker sleeping coach (stroll- er) for the sum of $12.04. If you had $1,500 in 1903 you could show off in one of the first automobiles. Ah, those were the days. Some of the cur- rent prices are reminiscent of those days, but at frontier prices, which were a whole different story. Hardy pioneers had to pay $2 a pound for sugar, too. And the same for a pound of coffee or pepper. Those items were only 15c per pound back in civ- ilized St. Louis. Flour was marked up 100 times for sale to the frontiersmen and dur- ing the famous Gold Rush, that precious commodity went for $400 a barrel. OF EX Owightml the day, oad U.LVM1XATEU every evening. Shim. » .d ru.it»..,» immrr.»« of u.r Animal -.J Mineral kirgtJ «n»o( ntlaif, fruit all paritet the The »r« »11 b «w- tifally arranged, mm tarnaUl |W mlor 1« tl«d) Ihe ofcjecti » ih TV Koundrr. C. W Peal'. l«viruut ef tec wring tk M«»n per tXc SiorkhoMrr• t i appoint ii n«a!lji tr trwalre . who air rt qaarterly tt ! »« •• • g ienio e l; hence doe«t'o it be nidi with cerlaioty «• tk part of the tlonoe . that the article! placed a the Muteum will Thomas Gibson, Plumber, ii.• |Mii,itc m ge.urat. tkai be carr.rw or» iha ll.if. a„d S».i;i P( i»«Wnx. ia all tra bran- ch . at N.. I M .V-rtU '1 J» «J «IB'I. bee be ha• C' i iai«‘iy • Hand llj.lfam», of aa l- I.w dealiptHH.a. PAin't IliilkPe Titllik Ktt 11 » » bu»«» I .el.if 1» Cadi n ike »»«t ..t tv . Pirurti.»., Water Cmhu, Halt . 'I wl»e. 6 n«a- r Man. . LvtJ and l'..n f'P , ReturU foe tii, ochi.. ai ’ all »»het •ppa aina, ai ih atV'McM nolle , and alao, tfta-rt I. ad of r .nom nn »n lit miwl m- ••toti irraia TIl'iNAd GtRSoN, i m v-t, Ijr. h'..r»i« Ti.ir.1 Vcnitian Rlivul Warehouse, a • t« t« ar rutmT ■» ina» irain . TAIIfc ai.b-cribef »e (HI folly tnf.-rni (he oli- ter» nt Pl.ilsd. 't-I.U «ltd v.
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