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... In Memoriam ..

Bro. W. T. Gallagher, L. U. 1018, Richmond, Va.

Bro. S. Valway, L. U. 73, New Rochelle, N. Y.
Bro. Frank Simmons, L. U. 460, Hammond,
Ind.

Bro. H. O. Ryan, L. U. 1304, Jeanette, Pa,
Bro. Fay Tucker, L. U. 977, Lodi, Cal.
Bro. A. Lindholm, L. U. 401, Hot Springs,
Ark.

Bro. Gunnar Peterson, L. U. 679, Brooklyn,
N. Y.

Bro. Fred Owens, L. U. 69, Utica, N. Y. Bro. G. H. Lowe, L. U. 79, Denver, Colo. Bro. G. O. Brown, L. U. 246, Des Moines, Ia. Bro. James Reynolds, L. U. 368, Washington, D. C.

Bro. Michael Winn, L. U. 411, Harrisburg, Pa.

Bro. Chester Good, L. U. 476, Youngstown, O.

Bro. Jos. McClellan, L. U. 508, Sharon, Pa. Bro. Owen Muldoon, L. U. 12, Troy, N. Y. Bro. John Murphy, L. U. 19, San Francisco, Cal.

Bro. Edw. R. Kent, L. U. 50, Cincinnati, O. Bro. A. W. Phoenix, L. U. 109, Omaha, Neb. Bro. Al Winwegen, L. U. 115, St. Louis, Mo. Bro. S. A. Branham, L. U. 147, Chicago, Ill. Bro. Wm. J. Voss, L. U. 191, Chicago, Ill. Bro. F. A. Sundquist, L. U. 195, Providence, R. I.

Bro. Otis Young, L. U. 214, Sioux City, Ia. Bro. Edw. O'Briene, L. U. 216, Milford, Mass. Bro. Wm. J. Butler, L. U. 247, Salem, Mass. Bro. James Simpson, L. U. 327, Charleroi, Pa.

Bro. Daniel A. Galbraith, L. U. 480, Plainfield, N. J.

Bro. Frank Titus, L. U. 501, Beacon, N. Y. Bro. Frederick Barnum, L. U. 522, Danbury, Conn.

Bro. Anthony Chelune, L. U. 528, New York, N. Y.

Bro. Walter E. Scheller, L. U. 698, Mt. Olive, Ill.

Bro. J. A. Fulton, L. U. 765, Cleveland, O. Bro. H. L. Bronstrup, L. U. 765, Cleveland, O. Bro. B. Miller, L. U. 949, San Pedro, Cal. Bro. Sidney L. Culver, L. U. 949, San Pedro, Cal.

Bro. F. B. Peterman, L. U. 1034, Eureka, Cal.

Bro. W. W. Baker, L. U. 1006, Yakima, Wash.

Bro. Nelson West, L. U. 720, Butte, Mont. Bro. Wm. Duell, L. U. 681, Rochester, Minn. Bro. Sidney Dakin, L. U. 910, London, Ont.,

Can.

Bro. Scott Mitchell, L. U. 478, McAlester, Okla.

Bro. Grover Hager, L. U. 9, Kansas City, Mo. Bro. P. A. Dahlstrom, L. U. 10, Portland, Ore.

Bro. Ed A. J. Linforth, L. U. 19, San Fran cisco, Cal.

Bro. Jos. F. Murray, L. U. 19, San Francisco, Cal.

Bro. Louis Lemkowitz, L. U. 25, Brooklyn,
N. Y.

Bro. James Damos, L. U. 37, Detroit, Mich.
Bro. Chas. Ruwe, L. U. 50, Cincinnati, O.
Bro. Percy Allen, L. U. 69, Utica, N. Y.
Bro. Edw. Martin, L. U. 77, Salt Lake City,
Utah.

Bro. Claude Trumbull, L. U. 110, Bradford,
Pa.

Bro. Paul Eskos, L. U. 147, Chicago, Ill.
Bro. E. Quirk, L. U. 159, San Francisco, Cal.
Bro. Abraham Kleinzoller, L. U. 230, New
York, N. Y.

Bro. John E. Lind, L. U. 377, Ironwood, Mich.
Bro. A. Lindholm, L. U. 401, Hot Springs,
Ark.

Bro. Chas. E. McLean, L. U. 465, Ottawa, Ill. Bro. Jacob F. Snell, L. U. 480, Plainfield, N. J.

Bro. Bruno Berndt, L. U. 569, Kansas City, Mo.

Bro. Harry Lindeweber, L. U. 587, Philadelphia, Pa.

Bro. Jack Sipes, L. U. 659, Bryan, Tex.
Bro. Herman Wehlitz, L. U. 781, Milwaukee,
Wis.

Bro. August Burger, L. U. 848, New York,
N. Y.

URGES EDUCATION
(Continued from page 71)

men who join an organization for these purposes leave when their aims have been accomplished or when they fail of accomplishment. By their nature these aims fluctuate, and the membership does likewise. To bring stability to membership is to enroll membership not on standards which fluctuate but on those which endure. Education is a constant standard; it is continuous and parallels human life. To offer workers educational opportunities as one of the privileges of membership, is to present an appeal which need not diminish but grow with cultivation. The mind of man grows upon the things it feeds on. Workers' Education, touching a fundamental problem of organization, promises stability and permanence of membership.

Sharing the

Monopoly of Quality

T

M. Dingelt Butterf

A PRESENTATION OF MCDOUGALL-BUTLER AIMS

By James Wallen

HE shaggy buffalo once had a monopoly of the sage brush empire. The Indian failed to vanquish him because the bison was great in numbers.

Along came a superior mind. The white man laid the golden spikes of the Union Pacific and the reign of the lordly buffalo was over.

The shaggy buffalo today forms the trade-mark of McDougall-Butler, but this time he is on the side of quality. For McDougall-Butler look not to size but to a place in that select group who have a monopoly of quality. Every paint, varnish and enamel manufactured by McDougall Butler is intended to be nothing more or less than perfection in its class, choice in the full meaning of the word, superior in a superlative sense.

You will understand these claims better and see less audacity in them, if you will ask to be placed on the McDou gall Butler mailing list, or better still, have a member of the McDougallButler staff call on you.

McDougall-Butler Co. Inc.

Makers of

PAINT AND VARNISH PRODUCTS

Buffalo, N. Y.

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FINANCIAL STATEMENT, DECEMBER, 1923

RECEIPTS

The financial statement is closed regularly on the last day of each month. Financial will please have their reports at headquarters on or before the 30th day of each month.

Secretaries

Each mem

The following shows all moneys received from November 30, 1923, to December 31, 1923. ber should check this statement and note if remittances made are properly credited. All remittances received from December 31, 1923, to January 31, 1924 will appear in next report.

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