Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, May 28, 1919, Page 4, Image 4

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    THE BEE: OMAHA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 28. 1919.
BAPTISTS END
CONVENTION AT
MILE HIGH CITY
1 Adopt -. Resolutions Endorsing
, Paris Cevenant'pf league
of Nations ; at Clos- "
V.. .tag-Session, s
! Denver, May 27.--Wit is sairf to
i'e the most ;.r.t table, meeting, of 'the
Northern "2 '?Wt conventi m came to
n e: 4oii!g!;r with an Mspirational
service at the Municipal auditorium.
. Tomorrow the 1,768 delegates and
498 visitors will be guests of the
Denver Motor club on a trip through
he Denver mountain parks.
Among the resolutions adopted by
the convention before adjournment
."oday was one indorsing the Paris
covenant of the league of nations.
The resolution says:
"Resolved, That we express our
Sraiitude to God for the return of
peace; that we recognize in the Paris
covenant for the league- of nations
' great step in the advance 'of,. a
Christian civilization, and that we
urge our people to use their utmost
influence to secure its ratification."
89TiFDiyisioN
TO SING WHILE
PARADING HERE
(Continued from Face One.)
jn active service. It will be a sing
ing welcome."
Choirs Asked to Assist.
very singing organization in the
city, -church choirs especially, is
asked to assist in the plan by en
listing its services with Harry Mur
rison, 435 Securities building.
The arrival of the 89th division in
four separate parts is causing the
mayor's committee an amount of
worry. In border to prevent the
crowd from breaking up after,, the
first contingent' has passed in review
' up Farnam street,., bands will en
tertain the throngs until the second
contingent has been taken off the
train. The siren whistle" will sound
when a contingent is leaving the
Union station on its way to Farnam
street. vr'
Committee Perfects Plans. .
Mayor Smith's committee met last
night in the Chamber of Commence
and made definite plans for-the pa
rade and reception. ', V
As each contingent leaves the
, Union station it will march north
on Tenth street to Farnam and
west on Farnam past the reviewing
'stand in front of the city hall. Gov
ernor McKelvie and staff, the G. A.
R. and several wounded soldiers
wilt be present in the reviewing
'stand.
At Twentieth and Farnam streets,
the parade will turn north to Dodge
street and then .west . to Twenty
second street. The "Fighting . Farm
ers" wH then file into the t lunch
rooms at Central High school,
where a luncheon will be served
them by SO or more canteen work
ers, , t ... ,
Roast beef sandwich, browned po
tatoes, hot coffee and the dish sug
gested by Mayor Smith, strawberry
shortcake, smothered in ice cream
will be served the soldiers. ' The
"eats" wilt be "home cooked."
Following the small banquet, a
general reception will be held on
the high school grounds. The
troops will be separated into com
panies and large placards designate
'the places.
Central High school cadets will
stand at attention along either side
of Dodge street from Twentieth, to
Twenty-second streets, while the
famous division marches between
their ranks. Behind the lines of
cadets, high school girls, chosen by
the sponsors of the regiments, w,ill
toss flowers to the marching heroes.
. The troops will remain here
but three hours, going in the after
noon from Omaha to Lincoln, where
they will be welcomed by the capitol
city. Nebraska's welcome will be
extended them here, however.
Five Alaskans Killed
" by Ptomaine Poisoning
Dawson, Y. T., May 27. Five of
' 13 miners attending a dinner at the
Yukon - Gold Dredging company's
camp on Hunker Creek are dead and
(he others dangerously ill as the re
sult, it is believed, of ptomaine poi
soning.' Ten other men at the din
ner were unaffected. Among the
. dead-is John Grant, brother-in-law
of the discoverer of the Klondike.
Childhood craws sweets.
The pleasant sweetness of
rapeMnts
comes from grain sugar,
: pure and wholesome, de
veloped by the long baking
: of wheat anil malted baitey
Never disturbs digestion
Qiildrenlove GrapeNuts
MRS. BLANCHE VAN AUSDELL was on verge of tears during her trial yesterday in
criminal court, while Mrs. Viva Ijams, the "woman she shot on the night of February 16
for the alleged theft of Mr. Van Ausdell's love, sat stolid and unmoved a few feet from
her. Mrs. Van Ausdell was comforted by her two daughters. The legal battle wavered
between County Attorney Shotwell and Attorney J. R. Lones for the defense, with Dis
trict Judge Redick of the criminal court as referee. A large number of women spent
the day there listening to the tria?.
TRIAL HALTED
BY HYSTERICS
OF DEFENDANT
(Continued from Page One.)
story of the shooting and the trouble
leading up to it. .
Springs Surprise.
County Attorney Shotwell, on
cross-examination, sprang a" sur
prise when he produced the second
of two letters written by Mrs. Van
Ausdell to C. B. Ijams in which she
told him that her husband had "always-
chased 'women" and had brok
en up several homes.
Miss Monrieve Van Ausdell told
of her father's alleged boasts of his
affair with Mrs. Ijams.
"He talked of his sweetheart that
he was keeping company with," she
testified. "One day when I went to
Council Bluffs with him he told me
that if it weren't for us children he
would go with Mrs. Ijams. He said
she was his dream and his soulmate
that she had a nice, cozy parlof and
that she was a lady of culture and
refinement, so different from my
mother.
Talked About Home.
"He talked about her at home. I
heard him tell my mother that he
had a lady who appreciated him and
that mother had better go to work
because he wouldn't give her any
money.
"Once I saw my father and Mrs
Ijams at a theater and I to!4 him
about it afterward and he said I
ought to have let him introduce me
to my. future stepmother."
Monrieve said that during the day
of . the shooting her mother: was
moody, didn't speak a word all
morning, sat on the piano bench and
stared before her, and locked herself
in the bath' room for two hours.
She described a trip made by her
self and her mother to the home of
Mrs. Ijams, 811 South Twenty-second
street ' They got no response to
their knocks on , the front door.
Going to the back door, Monrieve
noticed some empty packing cases.
From one of these she took a tag
tii niiitu was me jiaiiic ju. xjaiiis,
Detroit." -
Letter of October 24.
They wrote , to , this man who
proved to", be the husband of! Mrs.
Ijams. This ' letter, written Octo
ber 24, 1918, Tvas;'as follows: i
"Mr; C. B. Jjams, 1 Dear Sir: I
am writing you in' regard to! your
wife." She is in Omaha and, spend
ing the greater? part of . her : time
with my husband; She has, taken an
apartment, at 811 South Twenty
second street. Now if you are any
kind of a man pr. have Sfly man
hood about you you will come to
Omaha and settle with. him. I can
prove everything I say. Yours
truly, Mrs. Blanche Van- Ausdell." ,
In answer to this, a letter was
Excellent For
Growing
Children
y .I'M. ' t '
received from Mr. Ijams, written in
Detroit October 27.
Mr. Ijams stated in this letter
that his wife had separated herself
from him but that he was still sup
porting her. He said he was sur
prised to hear of her alleged con
duct with Van Audsell but advised
that, if proofs were in Mrs. Van
Audsell's hands, the case go through
the regular process of law rather
than through that of "settling" by
violence. "Two wrongs will not
make, a right," he wrote. "But I
think nothing would cure my wife
of any intent" to do wrbng or of
doing wrong so quickly as some
publicity."
Sent Copies of Letters.
In reply to this, Mrs. Van Aus
dell and her daughter, Monrieve,
wrote on October 29, sending cop
ies of a number of alleged letters
from Mrs. Ijams to Mr. Van Aus
dell which Mrs. Van Ausdell had
found in her home. These were not
dated but were addressed to "Van
dear" and "Boy dear." Mrs. Van
Ausdell wrote, in part, as follows:
"In regard to my husband, I have
lived with him 21 years and he is
no provider. My two daughters
have earned enough lately which
with two rooms I rent have paid our
living expenses.
"My husband has always chased
women, and after breaking up your
home will, soon-tire of your wife
and leave her He has gone through
several cases of that kind here in
Omaha. I know he picked up with
another woman some time ago. He
has had many of these affairs, but
not with decent women. But when
it comes to breaking up a happy
home and pulling- down a decent
woman oh, I am so sick of it all."
Man - .Us Court Room.
Mr. Van Ausdell, the alleged
"home smasher," has avoided the
court room where his wife and
daughters and alleged "other wo
man" are fighting their legal battle.
The state did not call him to. tes
tify and Attorney Lanes for the
defense said he does; not intend to
call him.
The revolver . with which- Mrs.
Van Ausdell shot Mrs. Ijams was
introduced into evidence. It is an
automatic of .22 caliber.'. .The bullet
was also introduced in evidence
when Dr. H. A. Waggoner was tes
tifying. He extracted it.' ,
Gov. Carey Charges
Discrimination in
, Discharging Troops
Cheyenne, Wyo., May 27.-!-Charg-es
of discrimination in favor of
eastern over western soldiers and
of unfairness in the dealings of the
War department with western men
are contained in a letter sent by
Gov. Robert D. Carey of Wyoming
to Secretary of Was Newton D.
Baker and made public here today'
by the governor. -
The letter alleges that western
men in the 77th division -ere com
pelled to parade in New York City
against their will upon the return
o the division from France on May
6 and that New York men in the
division were then singled out and
immediately discharged from the
service, while the western men were
held in camp for two weeks. '
The governor also wrote to Con
gressman Frank W. Mondell, re
publican floor leader of the house,
asking that congress investigate .his
charges. ...
Eleven Portland Babies
1 Die of a Strange Malady
. Portlands Ore., May 27. An epi
demic of .mysterious origin has
broken out in 'the Waverly baby
heme of this citv. it was reoorted
''today, and 11 babies are dead.
Twenty-one are afflicted with the
strange malady, and tonight, ac
cording to the statement of Mrs. D.
C. Burns, president of thelhome, 12
babies were in a most critical con
dition. All those affected are under
3 yeafrs of age.'
' The home is under strict quarantine.-
All Portland specialists in chil
dren's diseases, were called in con
sultation today. The malady first
appeared about two -weeks ago..
Foch Holds Conference
' With1 Premier Clemenceau
Paris, May 27. (Havas) Marshal
Foch, the allied generalissimo, who
has just completed a trip of inspec
tion along the Rhine, had a confer
ence yesterday with Premier Clem-
t i r ..
ttSCLClt
&& Jzec
HARRY HAWKER
PLANE FOUND BY
AMERICAN SHIP
(Continued from rage On.)
Grieves passed through the densely
packed streets on the way to the
Aero club. In the procession were
the mayor and a deputation of the
Royal Aero club. Another delega
tion in the parade was composed of
workers from the Sbpwith works,
where Hawker's machine was con
srVucted. First Official Welcome.
The first official welcome was ac
corded the airmen on the station at
St. Pancras by the mayor of that
borough, but still another was giv
en them inside the Aero club build
ing. Like Mrs. Hawker, Mr. and Mrs.
Grieves proceeded up the line and
met their son and bade him welcome
and congratulated him on his res
cue before he reached London.
In every town through which the
train, carrying the airmen passed,
crowds of people gathered to cheer
them. Wherever the train stopped
official receptions were extended the
heroes.
Asked whether - he would make
another attempt to fly across the
Atlantic, Hawker said tonight:
"I don't know. It depends upon
the Sopwith '.firm."
Will Indict Milk
Producers Under
Anti-Trust Statute
, San Francisco, May 27. Sixteen
indictments against officers and di
rectors of the" Associated Mitk Pro
ducers of San Francisco, voted last
night by, the county grand jury, will
be returned Thursday before the su
perior court here," it Was announced
today by Fred L.' Berry, acting, dis
trict attorney. The indictments
charge violation of the Cartwright
anti-trust act, an indictable mis
demeanor incurring a maximum fine
of $5,000 and one year imprisonment
in the county jail.
'. Berry announced this to be the
completion of the first official step
in a move by the county to lay hare
aft alleged conspiracy frqm which
resulted increased prices of milk.
It is charged , that the, association
fixed a prjee for. milk to producers
at 32 centsai gallon,' and! the sale
price to consumers at 14 cents per
quart.
..CONSTIPATION,
Have. you ever thought of it as a stoppage of
C. sewerage system of the body? You can well
imagine its evil consequences. If you would en
joy good health have bowels move once each
day. When a medicine is required yoti will find
Chamberlain's Tablets are hard to beat. They
only cost a quarter.
FOOTWEAR for
Decoration Day
All the very newest ideas in
footwear are represented
footwear to meet the re
quirements of the most ex
acting.
It will be interesting,
indeed, to see how
unusually fine and
complete our assort
ments are.
AMERICAN NAVY
AVIATOR FIRST
TO CROSS OCEAN
Seaplane NC-4 Completes
Transatlantic' Flight in 26
.Hours, 41 Minutes, Ac
tual Flying Tme.
(fonttnmd from race One.)
the route to guide the flyers and if
necessary give them assistance.
Blazes Way.
Washington, May 27. Blazing
the way of the first air trail from
the western to the eastern hemi
sphere, the- United States navy sea
plane NC-4. under Lt. Com. Albert
Gushing Reed, swept into the har
bor at Lisbon, Portugal, today, the
first airship of any kind to have
crossed the Atlantic ocean under its
own power and through its natural
element.
Taking the air at Ponta del Gada,
Azores, at 6:18 a. m., Washington
time, on the last leg of the trans
atlantic portion of the voyage from
Rockaway beach. Long Island, to
Plymouth, England, the NC-4 cov
ered the 800 miles in 9 hours and 43
minutes, maintaining an average
speed of-better than 80 knots an
hour. The total elapsed flying time
from Newfoundland to Lisbon was
26 hours and 41 minutes.
Great Object Accomplished.
At the first 'opportunity the big
plane 'will continue to Plymouth,
775 nautical miles to the north. Pos
sibly Commander Read can start to
morrow. To the Navy department,
however, it makes little difference
when he completes the journey. The
great object of all the effort lav
ished on the undertaking naviga
tion of a seaplane across the Atlan
tic through the air has been ac
complished. Twentieth century
transportation has reached a new
pinnacle and the United States navy
has led the way.
Naval officials emphasized that
the long delay at the Azores was
due to the weather and to no weak
ness of the machine or its daring
crew, nor to any failure of the care
fully laid plans of the department
to guide the flyers to their destina
tion. The 14 destroyers strung
from Ponta del Gada to Lisbon re
ported with machine-like precision
today as the flight progressed. The.
plane was never off its course and
there was no moment when officials
in Washington did not know to
within a few miles where it was in
the air.
Destroyers Relay Reports.
To maintain adequate communi
cation for this stage of the journey,
the destroyers stuck to their posts
after the flying boat had passed, re
laying back to Ponta del Gada re
ports from ships farther eastward.
The chain was not broken until af
ter the plane was safely moored for
the night near the cruiser Roches
ter, at Lisbon.
For the next few hundred miles
of his epoch-marking journey, Com
mander Read and his crew will be
within sight of the Portuguese or
Spanish coasts in the sweep north
ward. Skirting the coast of Cape
Finnisterre, they will head out
across the Bay of Biscay to sight
Brest, the " most westerly point of
France, thence direct to Plymouth.
The destroyers that will guide them
across the bay were already in posi
tion tonight, provided with the
flares and bombs that have made the
trip safe thus far, except for the
fog that forced the other two ma
chines of the seaplane division, the
NC-1 and NC-3. out of the flight
after they had safely negotiated vir
tually the entire distance from New
foundland to the Azores.
Original Crew.
Commander Read had with him
on the flight to Lisbon the same
crew as left Newfoundland on the
NC-4 May 16. Lt' E. F. Stone, of
the coast guard, and W. K. Hinton
were the pilots, with Ensign R. C.
Rodd as radio operator, and Chief
Machinists E. S. Rhodes as reserve
pilot engineer. The crew was met
at Lisbon by members of the crews
of the NC-1 and NC-3, who had
preceded them on a destroyer.
The chart of the flight shows how
the winds helped her along. At
times Commander Read's ship ap
parently was whirling through the
air at a 90-knot clip; again her
speed fell off to less than 60, only
to pick up again as she reached the
J
zone of influence of other breezes.
Probably the machine overtook and
passed winds that had stirred the
waters about Ponta Del Gada the
day before, preventing an earlier
start.
Word Through Brest
Official word of the arrival of the
plane at Lisbon reached the Navy
department first through a dispatch
from Brest, France, sent by Rear
Admiral Halstead, commander ' of
the American navy forces in
French waters. The message was
received at the Otter Cliffs, Me.,
station and relayed to Washington.
Immediately Secretary Daniels
cabled the congratulations of the de
partment to Commander Read and
sent a cable to President Wilson
telling him that American naval
aviatiars had been the first to cross
the Atlantic.
The message to Commander Read
follows:
"The entire navy congratulates
you and your fellow aviators on
your epochal flight. The ocean has
been spanned through the air and
to the American navy goes the
honor of making the first transat
lantic flight. We are all intensely
proud of your achievement and
thankful that it has been accom
plished without mishap to any one
of the daring aviators who left our
shores on the first air journey to
Europe. To ?11 of them and to you,
all honor is due."
Cablegram to Wilson.
The cablegram to President Wil
son said:
"Know you will be delighted to
learn naval aviators first to cross
Atlantic."
Secretary Daniels said today no
definite plans for further trans
oceanic flights had been made- He
explained that the first trip was the
beginning of a series of experiments
in long-distance flying and that very
probably, after defects in naval air
craft hifrl been corrected, another
squadron of seaplanes would be
headed across the Atlantic. Mr.
Daniels said he had not decided
whether the NC-4 should attempt
to fly back to the United States or
be "knocked down" at Plymouth
and shipped back to America.
Log of Flight.
Following is the brief log of the
flipht as it was told by the guardian
destroyers:
"8:20 a. tn. NC-4 left Ponta Delgada
for Lisbon at 10:18 O. M. T. today, 6:10
a. m. Washington time. Jackson."
"8:58 a. m., NC-4 piissed station ship
No. 1 at 11:13 O. M. T. Jackson."
"9:01 a. m. 8 a. m. weather report:
Flylnsr conditions from Ponta Delgada to
Lisbon very good. Today, fair weather
and moderate fresh southwesterly winds
at flying altitude prevail over the entire
course, with the barometer rising slowly.
Weather clearing and wind nearly west.
Favorahle flying conditions should con
tinue over Wednesday. Jackson."
"9:10 a. m. NC-4 passed station ship
No. 2 at 11:38 G. M. T. Jackson."
"10:10 a. m. NC-4 passed station ahlp
No. 4 at 12:54 O. M. T. Jackson."
"11:01 a. m. NC-4 passed station ship
No. 5 at 13:35 O. M. T. Jackson."
"11:07 a. m. NO 4 passed station ahlp
No. 6 at 14:05 G, M. T. Jackson."
"21:15 p. m. NC-4 passed station ship
No. 7 at 14:40 G. M. T. Jackson."
"12:18 p. m. NC-4 passed station ship
No.i 8 at 15:16 G. M. T. Jackson."
"12:08 p. m. NC-4 passed station ship
No. 9 at 16:18 G. M. T. Jackson."
"2:33 p. m. NC-4 passed station ship
No. 11 at 17:10 O. M. T. Jackson."
"3:37 p. m. NC-4 passed station -ship
No. 12 at 18:05 O. M. T. Jackson.
"4:46 p m. NC-4 passed station ship
No. 14 at 19:16 G. M. T. Jackson,"
"8:09 p. m. NC-4 arrived Lisbon at
20:02 G. M. T. Halstead."
The Advertiser who uses The Bee
Want Ad Column Increases his
business thereby and the persons
who read them profit by the oppor
tunities offered.
Hear it
and you'll want
one for your
We do not sell these matchless instruments.
They sell themselves. For to hear them is
to want them. YOU hear a demonstration
and you'll want the instrument for your
very own.
Want it badly enough and you can have
it, in your own home, by tomorrow, night if
you will. A reasonable first payment;
then easy amounts x monthly while the in
strument is paying for itself in added hap
pinessand pleasure, a thousand times over.
MICKELS
Omaha's Music Center
and ViT ? Lf jC? Douglas
Harney 1973.
When You Think of Things
Think of MICKELS.
PROHIBITION
Y DEPEND ON
OHIO ELECTION
Thirty-Five States Have Rati
fied Amendment and Meas
ure Held Up in Ten;
Thirty-Six Necessary.
San Francisco, May 27 If the
electorate of Ohio refuses to ratify
the national prohibition amendment
at its general election next Novem
ber, the operation of the amendment
will be suspended throughout the
United States at least until the gen
eral Maine election,- in September,
1920, Theodore A. Bell, attorney for
the California Grape Protective as
sociation, announced here today.
"The referendum to place the
measure on the ballot has been
started in 10 states," Mr, Bell said.
"Forty-five states ratified the
amendment through their legisla
tures and three declined to do so.
That means that the measure is held
up in 10 states by the referendum,
leaving but 35 where final ratifica
tion has been effected wlicrpa 3f
are necessary to make it operative.
Ohio to Decide.
"If Ohio, which will be the first
state to vote on the referendum,
ratifies it, the necessary 36 will have
been uainprl Rut if it rloMine. W
amendment will be suspended until
tne next general state election in
Maine, in September, 1920. The
remaining general elections come in
November. 1920." .
The referendum is now pending
in California, Washington, New
Mexico, Colorado, Nebraska, Mis
souri, Ohio, Arkansas, Michigan and
Maine, Bell said.
Daniels Refuses to
Permit Towers to
Fly as Commander
Washington, May 27. Refusal of
Secretary Daniels to permit Flight
Commander John H. Towers to pro
ceed from Ponta Delgada to Lis
bon aboard the naval seaplane NC-4
with Lieutenant Commander Read,
was commended today by members
of the house naval affairs commit
tee before which the secretary was
testifying on the naval appropriation
bill.
The matter was brought up by
Representative Britten, republican, of
Illinois, who said he wanted to com
pliment Mr. Daniels for his decision.
"It was a very delicate question
to decide," Mr. Daniels said. "T held
that Commander Towers was not in
command as an admiral and hence
could not shift his flap-. Read had
done a tremendously fine piece of 1
work and I telt that he should be
entitled to continue in command. I
know him slightly, while I have
taken flights with Towers, but all
things considered, I believed he
should proceed with the same crew
with which he started and , in the
same way."
own
Why not
TODAY?
Musical,
sW.
fliafwfi praised
that all hicdvaradfi
pianos are virtually
equal in quality is the,
error into which many
are led by superficial
Ur
or outward appearance
5pend an hour some
day investigating the
L
auctions.
et as show you hoar its
tension resonator" con
struction makes its
tone beauty matchless
, 'and imperishable
c7Y
J Jien wu
i&ve none other
We alio tell the Kranieh ft Bach'
Vote ft Som Brambach
Bush Lane Kimball and Cable
Nelson.
Cash or terms. Liberty Bonds,
for down payment.
1513 Douglas Street.
The Art and Music Store.
ANNUAL SALE AND
DEMONSTRATION
OF FAMOUS GURNEY
REFRIGERATORS
Factory Representative
M Union Outfitting Co.
SaturdayJAay 31
One of the Finest Gurney
Refrigerators Will Be
Given Away Free
Particulars by
Calling.
This big annual demonstration
and sale, coming right at the ap
proach of hot weather, should
be good news to thousands of
housewjyes. No matter what
style of refrigerator you want,
you will find it among the na
tionally advertised Gurney re
frigerators, sold exclusively by
the Union1 Outfitting company
in Omaha., Come in and let the
Special Representative from the
factory demonstrate these re
frigerators to you.
The big saving in ice bills has
made Gurriey Refrigerators
famous. The most perfect sani
tation possible is provided. Evr
ery part and corner is accessible
and removable for cleaning. Es
pecially interesting is the air:
circulation system which pre
vents the mingling of odors and
tastes and keeps food whole
some and pure in the hottest
weather.
Remember, the Union Outfit--ting
company, just outside of
the High Rent District, consid
ers no transaction complete un-,
til the customer is thoroughly
satisfied, and as always, you
make your own terms.
Simple Way to
End Dandruff
There is one sure way that has
never failed to remove dandruff at
once, and that is to dissolve it, then
you destroy it entirely. To do this,
just get about four ounces of plain,
common liquid arvon from any drug
store (this is all you will need), ap
ply it at night when retiring; use
enough to moisten the scalp and rub
it in gently, with the finger tips.
By morning, most if not all, of
your dandruff will be gone, and
three or four more applications will
completely dissolve and entirely de
stroy every single sign and trace of
it, no matter how much dandruff
you may nave.
You will find all itching and dig
ging of the scalp will stop instantly,
and your hair will be fluffy, lus
trous, glossy, silky and soft, and
look and feel a hundred times bet
ter. Adv.
Saying a Thing
And Then Doing It
is accomplished by us every
day. We say we can move you
satisfactorily. We can. We say,
will move you at a certain
time. We will. We say, phone
us when you are ready to move
and see how quick we're on the
job with experienced men.
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