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BOYS’ SCHOOL IS | CLEAN; FOOD BA Star Man at Chehalis Finds Diet Insufficient, Distasteful Various charges of mismanagement have been recently made against A. ©. Jones, superintendent of the State Industrial Training School for Boys, at Chehalis. These charges, tho unofficial, were so general and persistent—coming from boys who had left home, from vestigate, The charges, mainly, are: resigned employes, Juvenile court of: | * ficlals and others—that this newspaper sent a reporter to Chehalis to in-| | partially read That boy inmates are improperly fed. That the merit system, by which inmates are graded for parole, by shot | The to pieces, That the boys live in a condition of filth, *-r 8 By Hal Armstrong CHEHALIS, July! 9,.—et me say at the outset that “ condition of filth” does not_exist, and that Supt. Jones bis! Some of the 250 boy inmates that I saw at the school, in age from 8 to 18 years, are, to be sure, ragged, | but their uniforms—overalls and jumpers-—made and laun- dered by themselves, are clean. Thelr quarters—the big dining oom where they eat, their dormito- ries where they sleep and thelr squad rooms where they wash and bathe— are kept by the boys as neat and glean as It is possible to keep them So much, then, for the charge that the boys live in a condition of filth. to Superintendent Jones’ ideals, | at £3 to ron this ins‘itution as a prison, but as a place boys will like to come, = @ school that will fit & good position when here to take up their if aE : That is as it should be. the boys at the training are not bad boys, They have sent there because they got into of the sort that every normal Kets into, Usually, the normal parents to correct him. These at the training school either have no parents and are boys of the or are the victims of the dl- court, whose parents are sep- and have too much to look after their sons, with these ideals and 250 yg them to, how is the Le FED take it, will like to live in ere he is improperly fed, W canace get enough of the _ sort of food he likes to eat. hen, there is truth in the of improper feeding, Superin- tendent Jones’ ideals are not being lived up to. And if they are not, it 4s nobody's fault but Superintendent | or Gov. Hart's, for Gov. Hart appointed him and gave him full charge to do as he likes. ' There is no reason on earth why should not get the best of i They have their own dairy their own swinery, their own i 1 these they should and do de- ities of fresh vegetables, . bugter, exes, fresh meats, jams and jellies and fi? tt need plenty of such ef &F but they do all the heavy farm work, they make their own ‘without altering the buildings them. | eelves, me thru the bulidings. jroom just as they were saying the |Lord’s prayer over thelr supper tables. | “We have the adlent aystem Mh the dining room,” Jones explained. “The boys ate not allowed to converse {during meals. It would be too nolsy Hie they did ‘The prayer over, an officer gave a }their viands, ‘The single dish’ that was in demand was a plate, one on each table, of peanut butte | boys seemed to be making an entire meal of bread spread with peanut } butter, and milk. cheese, and potatoes, and a couple jot black cookies for each. Most of the boys took the maca didn't. I saw quite a number pick pup the potato dish —~ heaped bigh jwith yellow, greagy-looking potatoes —and quite a number put it down jagain with a wry, disgusted face. I will be quite frank, I couldn't have eaten anything I saw on any of the tables. Perhaps, had 1 been s hungry boy, who had worked hard in the fleld or the | shop all day, and had ‘beeome accustomed to that sort of stuff, I might have eaten enough to ‘have kept me alive, But, as I stood there watching those 250 lads in action—mighty slow action for hungry chapg<I made up my mind that the éha: of improp- er feeding was well fou a. It almost turned my oma CITY LOSES IN SUPREME COURT Hotel Men Upheld in Build- ing Suit That no proprietor*can be com: pelied by city officials to make changs in his bufiding unless an or: dinance is first enacted, specifically | ings. shoes and repair them; repair and| Changes In the elevator in his hotel make furniture, work in the machine | The upper court held that the butld- shop, heating plant and do other manual labor. CAN’T WORK HARD WITHOUT SUBSTANTIAL FOOD structure, was not deemed hazard ous. Nobody, man or boy, but especially Artillery Quota _ ‘@ boy, who must build up his body daily as well as sustain it, cin work hard without lots of good, tasty, sub- Stantial food. My first “hunch” that possibly there was something in the charge of | improper feeding I got at Olympia. It was at the governor's conference With republican newspaper “editors and publishers. It was the boast of Gov. Hart and his cabinet that a saving of 7 to 11 cents a day is being made on every one of the state's 6,500 inmates. This saving is made by “dieting.” At the Chehalis training school, the last biennium, it cost from 27 te 31 cents per day to maintain each boy. Supt. Jones told me he not computed the cost per day boy since he took charge. But some- | one, evidently, has, for the figures | Were given out at the governor's con. ference. If the cost has been reduced 7 | gp cents, they must be maintaining the Orn END training school boys for 20 to 24 r cents per day per doy. Bearing in| 1e ™.; veal st mind that most of the food is ra on the ground, contrast these fig. ures with the navy allowance for feeding its bluejackets. The avy al lowance is 72 cents per day per man. CHANGE OF RATIONS MADE SEVERAL WEEKS AGO 2 found these following facts at the training school in regard to the: charge of improper feeding was le weveral weeks ago. Thi » sort of a change of rations Seattle men who want to accom. pany the 146th field artillery, Nation } al Guard, on its annual enc the ranks of the organization. U NFIL LED TONNAG jot 3 lby the United States Steel corpora tion in unfilled tonnage on June 3 last. | The report showed the unfilled ton nage on June 30 was 7 82,487 o i » May 31, 5 a, 3 for 20¢; Hitt a butter, Ship News Tides in Seattle yun bow Tide an “Hiree Nigh Tide |] a:56 a om eee Kecond High ‘Tide | MILLS PARTIALLY I Acdording to reports attle headquarters of the IL and Lumbermen, | ¥ tor |W, re report | Unit moderate but noticeable increase of lumber inquiry for fall trade, eee THE SEATTLE | Reactionary Trend in New York Stocks HW YORK, July %—A reactionary r of trading dat M4, up a po k Stock Exchange in the first be m, after having op in ‘of % at the « wan quick merican Loc 40, off 13% Chandler Pagttic up. Mi Am Onin prices included d Staten Steel, 74%, w 4% u Sugar, 64 rig SILVER STATE SAILS . Was to mall from Se a) was to carry a ¢ | longen and in tain Edward P, Bartlett ts in com MARINE SCHOOL tes chipping In marine engi neering at the University of Wash ington was to be limited to it has accepted 20 students and has a highly promising Professor E. of the clans, | cours opened Tuesday, . Altho the United § card's free seh We arrived in the boys’ dining | jdown spattered over the steering whee its occupants, . Wreeked and partially eub- merged, has been found on the shore of Salt Spring island, | boat Ja the property of Jim Mel an Indian, who is known to have left Mayne island with his wife a big cloned off lhe command and the boys reached for | . The | off 2% Milk came second. Several of the! G. N, SERKS RATE CUT commission has beén asked Cor per. miasion to put immediate rate reduc tions, into effect was the statement) Purnishet by L. 1. Manning & Ca Costigan, general rogi and cheese. Some ate it. Others | agent of the Great Northern rallway, | Seattle headquactera, There was elbow macaron! and| Friday of H First Air-Bicycle ; Wins Paris Prize BY WEBB MILER PARIS, July 9.—The airdicycle bas arrived. Gabriel Pulain today won the 10. 000-franc prize: offered for the first flight to be made int an airplane pro- with @ o¢ oat nota eign exchany kn opened gower, the heaviest Mexican oils and i by this dia GRAIN PRICES | DROP AGAIN CHICAGO, Joly Grain prices sagged during the non Chicago Board largely because of reports receipts of new wheat the hot weathér wave over the grain belt also aided in dropping of the market. Provisions were lower July wheat, off te at 1.21%, |¢ closed off 3c. September wheat |; ned off We at $1.21, and closed, ie July corn opened up Me at 62¢ nd lowt Lie at the clone pte ott the at 60" ber corn a July op ned at 1% tt epee opened up 26, at (0%q and rr Cash Wheat 1 red, $i 3 red, #1 Chicago Car Lots (Saturday's Quotations) tel Mullding 103 et TIMATED TO: i corn, 130 cars; oats, Chicago Board of Trade ty Lh Manniog & Ca, Butler Hotei Maliding Wheat Open Meh Ee July 121% SEEK OL For the first time in history an «pt airplane has been flown with no mo-! yi) tive force other than that supplied sept by a pair of legs. Nights—or got. 2.17! rather, hops. The longest waa about| Lara— He managed to get about J+! three feet off the ground in making tists who watched him compared his performance with the first attempts at awation, when| the ground, with leaps into the alr. Pulain'’s vehicle looks Ike a bleycle with planes and a projelier. the money he hag to make a flight of more than 10 yards. While the créwd looked on he pedalled furtous-| @ 5. yy along the field, and finally flew clear of the ground. Will Fix New Wage Scale for Oil Men AN FRANCISCO, July 9—R. requiring such alterations, is the gist of an opinion handed down by the supreme court Friday in the case of E. A, Coffin, proprietor oM™be Knick- they work hard. They-not|¢rbocker hotel, against James b 7 ior and launder their own) Blackwell, superintendent of build | Hoge Receipt artjved tn San| sheep—tie« Francisco Friday to serve on the mo. fring lambs, $9.60@10.75; owes, 93.508 diation commission to negotiate a new wage stale and working agree ment between the 22.000 oll workers Coffin refused to make certain| of California and the employing ol! ISSUE OF “THE BI MONTHLY BULLETIN of the West ern Washington experiment station im off the press and in process of, It contains seven arti- cles of practical value to berry grow- ers and farmers. alitinnsinentinnd aie July 9.—Mrs, Ad- for several years a cisco and Oakland . Was granted a divorcee Fri (cute) Durant, lionaire sportsman and automobile CRITICISM OF HARDING FAILS ‘Effort to Hit Educational Appointment Voted BDéwn ing was constructed under the 1907 ordinances, and, altho not a modern distribution. Nearly Complete OAKLAND, Cal. rin San Fr rmopment | at Camp Lewis, beginning next Sat- urday, will have to hurry to enlist in| time. Only 63 vacancies remain in day from Ro C NEW YORK, July 9-—A decrease | 4,619 tons was reported today Ss 30, and 10,978,817 on June DES MOINES the |tal production was 787,000,000 bush closing minutes of the National Ed- ucation association convention here! he winter wheat production was to lestimated at 574,000,000 bushels, as put the teachers on record as criti Harding's appoint, United| Six and nine-tenths per cent of | education /last year's wheat crop, or about 54 Public Market | | Stall 42, boiling beef, 100 Tb.; pot ronat, ib. Btall 60, pork | cising President commissioner As the resolutions committee was! July 1 as compared with | siler nt on that sub rect, Tigert was, presumably, the inauguration of the “diet. | Several of the old employes, in derawbeerien structors and officers, handed in PIKE PLACK their resignations because they were @issatisfied with the food, A crew of engineers was sent to the school fo do some surveying. They were seated at the offic mess, which is considerably better | 3 than the boys’ mess, and in another | White soap, building. They couldn't eat. They) left the table, went downtown fate at the St. Helens hotel, charging | their board to the state. When word of this reached Olym- pia, some kind of an order was sen to the training school, and the ra- tions changed again—for the better One old officer told me: “The foot ig better now. I wouldn't have stayed “much longer, I won't work where don’t get enough to eat, 1 don’ know how the boys are faring, be cause I don't eat in their quarters, but they seem to be a little bette: satisfied. I don't encourage them to complain about conditions.” I timed my visit to the institution fo that 1 would reach there at meal *%!™ time, Superintendent Jones escorted 46, bent t | patent flour, $1.9 | 450; 6 bars Bob White som | CORNER Stall 102, fresh peanut butter, %-M. can Golden West coffee i a}. T) hams, tall 1h, fig {tha Ste 206 pt. Stall 102, ter, 3 Ibe, 190 ppointment which would } |ommended appointment to high ed those | production o} the |per cent at this time 1 teachers to b those who have the cano ‘yy | tion was voted down. unanimously elected, tnt , | Wheat was estimated at 8 , Winter w . and Los| The total eorn production was giv: | Let 1 62, | ie, & © bars Koyai| 5, Hunter, Oakls » 8) Angeles; Webb Blanton, solutions adopted recommended 8 inevery class room rural | schools a’ good as urban; ments to high educational offices by | laymen boards of educe ment of the coftes, 29¢ tb.; Crescent baking Stirling-Power bill and against submergence | department of education; all Jers to join the N. t Stall 109, best cane sugar, 4 tha, 260, 8 ng mille, 9 felly or jam, 10¢, 12-02, mayonnaise ‘dressing. ioe %.; potato Last week was Milk Week in New + but we hear it wasn’t much of @ success, /1t lacked the punch. 14 cream cheese, 200 T.; fresh ground peanut but- te pt : 1 Le Lae ety cee “ 2% 0% so% 40% un eT) eee ae ee . oe on aT a7 Pork— July 7 tone ; ints 11,00 11.26 | ss wt iets 1008 Seago | Live Stock atk of 359.78; 99.4009.00 $ steady Hoe 9. Hoge row sttte—-Neceipt. 800 Inset, $050@8.00; butcher ers Live Stock DENVER, July 9—Cattle—Recetpts, 400, Market strong 9 leows and heifer and feeders, 46 pte, 3.000. dy.) seas eee Foreign Exchange NEW YORK, July 9.—Demand aterting | wae off 3 conte at $2 at the foreign Scchones,coveing (olan Towera the close, demand sterling solid at $3.67%, the welt since January 10. Clore: Sterling. 93.47%; france, $0.0788%; marks, }90.0131%; lire, $0.0467, kronen, $0.1640. \N. Y. Sugar and Coffee} NEW YORK, July 9.—Sugar, firm, | Raw, $4; granuinted, $6.20 5,50. Coftee—-No. 7 Kio, spot, 64 @6%e Ib; No. 4 Banton, 9% OF %e The PREDICT LARGE | “| GROP OF WHEAT Cut Early Guess, but Look for 809,000,000 ‘Bushels tal wheat" production for 1921 was department of agriculture today, The forecast a month ago was for $30,009/000 bushels, For 1920 the to- els. compared with an estimation of 678, 000,000 a month ago. |425,000 bushels, was held on farms | (E6Gs G0 TO 35 CENTS A DOZEN, Rise Will Be General by, Moxican Petr Aaphalt wan below 48 shortly after went along with the general decline | fell to +. Hails were steady, United > moven being up iy at 74 hing au # Included Amerien bringing the price Off %; United Staton Rubber, 44% le dairy bowie that level on egg Raldwin, 7 the houses whe r, 49, up %; Southern Pac houses will attribute reasing production, fact that the ing at this time of the which is due hens are moult ar fluctuations on the NK, July 9.—The Sun's financial 4 ese quotations re 0 of the day was the all are of green corn arrived on the street and wag quick y snatched up at $6 a crate of w paso Wapato, from which place Seattle MARRIAGE LICENSES |; ‘ame and Residence Age directed against Not much real ste . prices regained ome cases showed fair net gains, N. Y, Stock Exchange regular shipments 3% cents & pound for Garnets and 2% forsthe Whites 20-cent decrease on the price of | ted a brisk demand for Wholesale Dealers Wash. green, per T. FSET ES re on 1.60 | Lindbolm, Oscar Pinter, Mae Eliza | Nott, Edwin Bylyester, Iiwaco P| Myra M., Seattle .......Legal by! T. 8. Griffith of Spokane, jf | record of 841.39 pounds of fat, pi . Spb! her seventh in the United States Legal |@tmount of production for the Rockland Beauty, Pilot's Model, 7. ,Waikiki's Meysie 72 pounds fat, owned by. . Graves of Spokane, and | Koffee Rosaire, 739.82 pounds owned by R. I. Tanner, Sumas) appear in the list of medal w This remarkable showing of duction places the Pacifie No jin the foremost position for its producing cattle, . ' — te Cont, Berd, 14 vy rows jWheat. yy wet 09 | Southern cid ane : 7 mtandard crate Royal Aanes, ®.. | Re mans, John, Seattle. 0 "g Quctations) | Wilson, Katherine, Seattle BH, Mauning & Co Matidt | Angeles, John D., Seattle Foreign Securities (Saterday » Parnished by 1’ Manning &@ Ca Batler Hotel Building Russian 544s, Sob Seattic apiece DAIRY PRODUCTS Wisconsin cream bric Belgian Mares Railroad Securi (Saturday's Quotations) nh. Manning & Ca Butler Hotel Ballding Parnished by 1 Prices Paid Wholesale Deters Dressed, pert. WASHINGTON, July 9—The to-|} forecast at $09,000,000 bushels by the | p, REJECT PAVING BIDS Roard of public works Friday 4-4's, clty delivery . GRAIN AND “FEED City Wholesale Pet 2,000 paving project for 15th ave SATURDAY, ‘COWS OF COA BREAK RECORDS Northwest Best Producer @ Jerseys | Vital Statistics BIRTHS ay, ©, B., 23% 36th N,, boy edell, Brown, 100th wt. boy n, Nein, 110 Fairview, boy rh Frank, 2492 Wetme pson, Andrew, M Klin, Samue girl. | Norden, Carl, 211 Warren ave. boy. Pee tempo |Taguchl, Yeitaro, 706 Maynard ave wirl Vay, John, 292 Gurnand, G An wt, boy boy. Th mpeon, Stuart, 6446 44th & W. bo Erickson, Godfrey, 6602 56th 8. W.| ‘girl Cook, L. P., 1033 Beach drive, girl Langaen, or, 663% Sixth ave. Ww | Prins a Wright ave., boy McDonald, Wallace, 742 Lakeview nd; Heuben, 208 15th N., t Lomax, A Le, $129 Yukon ave. girl r, Hugh Brown, Seattle. Lee Master, Elia, Carey, Loretta atte Turnbull, John. atte Honauck, Ethel Charlotte, attle 4 Storrchll, George U. Bremer 5 ys n eevee Legal| attle ; - Legal Mark wdite, Orr, Perey An Lee Henry, Portland ° Rone a, Portland. Leg clunta, Joe, Seattle useppa, Agostino Marie, OM oe Smith, Adelia, Tacoma’ .. Lonn, Dave sirming- Harvey Bi, Seattle . Dean, Ethel, Seattle Pankkunen, Matt, Seattle «.. konen, Ida, Seattle .. rley, A. M. Geesen, Marie, & Caughlin, Tim, jury, Bertha B Olson, Carl, Seattle Jensen, ttie® $ Seattle ...Leg Kuske, Wililam F. ttle . h, Seatth ein, Louis L., Seattle Bowen, Zelda E., Seattle Barnum, Harry, Seattle Collins, Doria, Seattle Wesley E, Waynoka, owell, Tiernice, Beattie °* m ©. Zenith Willian Beattie Peck, Henry Lewis, Albany, Or. eDonal Serr H., Bellevue .. Ee«ert, - Bruner, Clara 3, Beattle . Guilla, Seattle beon, Samucl, Seattle . Seeley, Sherman Vancouver, B. Shuttleworth. w . Arthur J. F Buckner, Marjorie Jane, Port An- weles |... Rateliff, Hilda A T., |Steveson, Westley. Frances, Se- Huxsit “Btsie, Beattie’: Livgenbrink, Francia G Bremerton ‘ Lee bea McKenzie, John, Bremerton .... Samuelson, Helen, Seattle ....-- Hill, Harper, Senttle ... Hullun, Hewter, Auburn Davis, D. O., Seattle .. Adama, Elsie L, Seattle Eldred, Charles G., Seattle La Belle, Eugenia, Seattle Dandy, George Herbert. Keypor Gudgeon, Elizabeth, Seattle ... Wilson, Samuel W. Vancouver, BC. Syridukis, Epam, Seattle .. Moulla, Olga, Seagtle . Snathers, J. Russ@l, Everett Sowa, Martha L., Everett ... Sposoft, Nleota, Seattle Mihailoff, Avdokal, 5 Cooper, Nick, Seatt! 5 Apostolu, Alexandra, Seattle .. | Trafton, Clarence H., Seattle Cleary, Mabel E. Seattle ... Kennedy, Barton H., Tacoma Sullivan, Lucille P, Tacoma . Grant, Frederick R., Colby Gaskill, Lilian Mari a, Colby . Clark, William from Margaret, Cook, Erma from Will Anderson, Peter from Beatrice. pield, Edna B, from Harry W. HIbert, Howard, $16 ¥, Thomas, girl | 2316 Warren ave. am, 6613 lith N. W. wa, Lawrence, Clear Lake,| y awards for 1920 issued an Jerney € the United stati Jain under the rulew Of the 10 highest qualified for m: of the elub, vokiyn ave. Or Hood farm of Low . in third place. TH represented by ughters, Valentine's eattle Legal Legal | Glow's Chi ¢ gold and one sil credit. by reason of sup ane, Jessie M attle Lagal fifth with o7 h and of thes Coast Jerseys. Ni presented %n the @ on silver and one b eight gold and o e third with seven bronze; Mansacht fourth with five gold and one sil pond with 1 Legal Legal F., Seattle ...Legal |Quartermasters i in| New Chapter Hi Washington state chapter of Soclety of Quartermaster was organized Friday night, constitution and by-laws of clety were adopted, ‘at a me the Henry building. Col, Jo Kay presided, Legal Bishop, Margaret Bh, Seattle. .Legal te weConett Francis, 57, Ho Hara. Masa, 40, 410 Mali Setzer, Blanch: DIVORCES GRANTED Sullivan, Lillian J. from Robert W. JULY 9, 1921. compiled report ttle club, the year, ix w | made by Pacific Coast cows with age production of $87.21 poun Five of these were from gon and one from Washington, lint of breeders is J. M. Dickson, lowed by G. G n breeder, the Dickson herd with five; ft the Hewitt bull, with four. Poppy St. Mal with two meda! winners, is tied with an Eastern es of Ashburn, alsoa one of four in fou gold me f ral won more than , seven ranks first with on fifth with five territory embracing ec Coast si the registered Ji Nylund, Hjima Lovisa, Seattle. Legal | for the year, won 42% per o 21) ail medals awarded. the list of Was jolden Loutse’s <2 ° orf lumber rates to the big 2 the East, several of the great continental lines have re: agreement for decreased rates Northwest products, according vices received here by L. R. Ci asistant freight traffic n the Northern Pacific railway, Eastern headquarters, Gifford, Arthur Edward from DEATHS Boucher, Few jy 65, Ries lth Inwood, Geor Berman, Sari Aqgonee, Howard, 40, 4533 Stallard, infant, 1723 ae s&s. ¥. Anderson, ———, 49, mens, Frank, Midw: 3, ‘204 Holden Fitth $9, New 37, 3009 B Uni Vatne, John, 37,217 KE. Republi Magnuson, Agusto, 58, Min: Pederson, Lara, 64, Berkele: Myers, Francis, 1 month, 3838" Thomas, Andrew, 57, 150 Mathilda, 67, 1726 150 de, 50, 230 10th ave] AND RECEIVE Whole yellow, of the present condition of the Boat —l hi on July 1 last year. | © spring wheat production was | estimated at 2 compared with an estimate 000,000 “bushels a month « 9,000,000 bushels last year. geography | The condition of wheat was given jas 78.2 per cent, compared with 82.5 st year, The yndition of winter wheat was given 2 per cent now and 79.7 per cent at this time last year, and {spring wheat 80.8 per cent now and 88 per cent last year, | A month ago the condition of all per cent, t and as 77 t at 77.9 per at at 93.4 per cent spring w €n 48 3,123,000,000 bushels, compared with 3,232,000,000 last year. The condition of corn was esti- pd at 91.6 per cent and the acre- m ont grea r than in 1 Seattle Clearings + $4,480,105 | Balances ..... .. | Spokane | Clearings .... . Balances ... 9,834.00 ‘716, 990.00 | 4 | Clearings 613,192.00 =SAVE rm peyy pes TACOMA - SPEED~'CQmFoRT Je DATLY, 9, 11 0. m., 50c for One Ticket 80c for Two Tickets VICTORIA .B.C PORTANGELES ~ Strait POINTS, SAN JUAN ISLAND POINTS BELLINGHAM - ANACORTES professionally ®@¢ at 108,901,000 acres, or 4.1 per | BgeeeM lS TM INTe del) icertel ky AND MILL PoRtTS HOON CANAL POINTS 9:00 a. m. iy Wedne: Largest Piniibens of Pulp Timber Made PORTLAND, Alaskan-American Paper corporation - oo BANK CLEARINGS | NEAH BAY & WaY PORTS . M. Tuesday “anal Timber unit in Alaska, 799,080.54 | | | sale of pulp timber vet ws closed, accorang w Ames, assistant district forest- er in charge of timber sales, PUGET. SOUND NAVIGA OLMAN DOCk Balances . . 64,383.00 timber includes 100,000,000 euble feet of spruce, hemlock and cedar, Days of July, New Deposits POPOd cyenwees For thirty-two ye depressio: we have née Established 82 Years Savings Account On or Before MONDAY, JULY 11 IX MONTHS’ DIVIDENDS ON { JANUARY 1, 1922 NEW SAVINGS ACCOUNTS OPENED DURING THE FIRST FIVE BANKING DAYS OF: JULY JULY 1920 and 1921 First Banking Day.... 5 Second Banking Day . Third Banking. Day . Fourth Banking Day . Fifth’ Banking Day ... Total First 5 Days + side, «0s a 332 Gain iy 1921 over 1920 in New Accounts opened in First Five Banking: Days of July, 96. New Deposits Received during eived during Days of July, 1920 ....... Gain in 1921 over 1920 in New Deposits during above shaesas soeees $ 62,586 panics and financial semi-annual dividend to our depositors and during all that time we have paid A WITHDRAWALS PROMPTLY, e Bes. WASHINGTON MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK 1101 SECOND AVE Resources (June 30, 1921) $14,168,148.32 THRIFPTOGRAM — In the Ranks of Labor, & Dollar in @ Mutual Savings Bank is a Steady Worker, «TRUS' ‘through or missed a Peters David Whiteomb Eugene B,, Favre, BE. G. Ames William A. M. F, Backus Rollin Sanford John T, Condon James Shannon F. B. Finley William Thaanum Raymond R, Frazier C. EB. Ivar Janson Fr. W. West 59 23 90 84 ve Banking * Banking cesses 364,001 JE Spokane L, O, Janeck, Yakima Ore., with seven” 766.