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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NETWSs TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1011.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
(AMD NEWS)
r. L SEELY. Publisher.
COWIN CAMP. Managing Editor.
Publie^ed Every Afternoon
(Except Sunda^l
Ry THE GEORGIAN COMPANY
At ?0 E. Alabama St.. Atlanta, Ga.
Three Months *,..*• 1 -**
C-e Month , «2
Cy Carrier. Per Week...,
r nfe-ert ax eecnrd-claw
•'-•«frtfrir*,at Atlanta, ca., uttfc^r the •*'
< March t. 1979
» R Palmer. Foreign jjjgj
mtatlve Address, cara The G«orfl»»»-
•lanta. O*. .
If yon have any trouble arttlrdt Thf
lenrsrian and Sewn. fel*nl.i»ne the eir«
rufatlnn department and »* prompt*^
remedied Roth phones IOOC . >
^ — * *
kiihrerlher* desiring T»i« CliT^SK
“d NV.t. .dl-rnnfln-T.-d mint notify this
the rf* te df -.jrr'MMon, ejMljnp
I’ will b* continued nt-the rfcutur,.
rlption rate untit'notlee to »top
reived ■ ' ; 5 ,
tn nMertrieV i-haSse «f afiflr
*fv# to* old ■as-wcit'sii' fue»miw
It l« desirable, rhst alt oomrrlufitri.ttj^'
it fend-d far tnihtiratlor In Th. oenraj*"
and New* ■ ha ItmUed -to c W.v5f%
f* length tt i. Irhnlrstlve that .-tti«»„™
....nneprft..^ - «••• -
■nleae stamps are eent for the purpose -
enn or obfecffornhl* advev.....
either does It print whisky or liquor ed»
, ALONE WITH MY* CONSCIENCE.
I sat alone with, my conscience,
In a place where time had ceased,
And we talked of my former living ,
In the land where the^tAft Increased;
And I felt that I should-have- to-answer
, • The Question It put to me.
And to face the answer and qUaatlon
| Thru all eternity. #
The gboate of forootten actions
• Came floating before mv sght,
And things that I thought were dead
things
Were alive with a terrible might,
And the vision of ail my past life
Waa an awful thing to fact,'
A lone with rrty conscience sitting
In that aolmenly silent place.
hd I thourht of a far-away morning.
Of a sorrow that waa to be. mint
i a land that then waa tha future,
But now la the present time;
And I thought of my former thinking,
Of the Judgment day to be;
Put sitting alone with my conscience
' Seamed Judgment enough for me.
And t wondered If there waa a future
To this land beyond the grave,
But no one gave me an answer,
And no one.eame to save.
hen I felt that the future Wat present,
And the present would never go by,
For It was but the thought of my past
life
Growing Into eternity. •
Then I woke from my timely dreaming
. And the vision pasted away,
And I know that the faV-dff warning'
Was a warning of yesterday
And 1 pray that I may not forget It,
In the land before the grave,
That I may not cry In the future.
And no one come to save.
And ao I have learned the lesson
Which I ought to have known before
And which, tho I learned It draamlng
I hope to forget no more.
So I sit atone with my conscience
In tho place Where the years Increase.
And I try to remember the future
In the land where time will cease.
And I know of the future Judgment,
How dreadful so e'er It be,
That to sit alone with my conscience
Will be Judgment enough for me. '
—Anonjiipioua.
Pope Brown for Governor.
In thin campaign there is but
one issue—
THE STATE-WIDE PROHIBI
TION LAW.
And there is one candidate and
only one who favors retaining
that law.
Then, in the name of all that’s
common sense and good con-
•vienco, how -can prohibitionists
vote for anybody except—
POPE BROWN?
%
mat
The Southern Bell Telephone
Company and the Corn Show:
- Among the contributors to the
success of the Corn show notv
staged at the Auditorium-Ar
mory the Southern Bell Tele
phone‘Company must be accord
ed a high place.
A week before tho opening of
the show, usings it? lines, it called
up. lOO.jOflp persons in Georgia,
Alabama slid--South* Carolina, in-
forrmxi r them, oL tho dates of the
exhibition^ of its attractive fea
tures, and of the good it is to ac
complish for _ihc South, and urged
them to attend.
~One day was set apart for the
Work, and-at‘the same time ac
counts',of : the; advantages of the
great harvest display were being
pbufed^oifo th'c ears of the peo
ple! of > throe states. It was an
invaluable piece’ ‘of, publicity
work contributed ..to the eauso of
Southern adyanckioe'nt'.,' ■
Both the ’company ahd Mri 4J.-
R./A. Hobson, of Atla^,t7ts jpeijr
oral commercial : agent,'' under
whose special ’• direction ; tha 100,-
000 messflgeb'ware'delivered,'ore
■dge 1 \'tbe\ ‘.congratulations and 1
commendation of the entire scc-
tioh; ( y:-t -v.: v" :: v. : ••
Among other things,’ the rads-
aages «»iid: j;“ j rhe ahewJwjPl qn-
courage diversified farming and
Fortify the state agaiflst the rav
ages of the boll weevil.”
\ message ’ that was indeed
worthy of the wide dissemina
tion given it!
Let every Georgian and every
Southerner who attends .the
show have it reinseribed upon
.the tablets of .his memory.
YOU MA Y SA Y WHAT YOU LIKE—
Active Opposition of the Law-
Defying interests Strongest
Testimony to His Worth.
The following I, front The Sacra
mento (Cal.) Union:
The active opposition ot all the latv-
drfylnz Interests In New Jersey and
New York to Woodrow Wilson le the
Strongest possible testimony to his real
worth. With the corrupt elements ot
bis own state exerting every effort to
humiliate him and with Tammany
Crowing to the count, y that he has
been defeated* where lost fall he was
successful, the progressive Democratic
governor Is undoubtedly more , avail
able than ever before as a presidential
Candidate.- In the face of such opposi
tion there ought to be no doubt of his
devotion to the welfare of the common
people. .
• /is far as wo have been able to In
form ourselvoa regarding their 'expects
lions, tho friends closest to tho Now
~ersoy governor do not count on Now
i a convict’s Fading Sight; an
Opportunity for an Oculist to
Remedy the Law’s Neglect.
In a convict camp near At
lanta there is a white man serv
ing a life sentence. He is grad
ually going blind. The attention
of an oculist would probably
save his sight.
The state provides medical
•ire for its convicts who are
ick, but not the services of an
xpert for those who are -losing
their eight.
The law’s neglect furnishes
the opportunity for generosity
on the part of some specialist.
It can be arranged that the con
vict be brought to the city.- The
noblesse oblige of the > profession
bos never yet let the lack of a
fee stand in the way of its rfe-
ponse to the appeal of human
More Law Enforcement, ; -
More Settlers. >
“The best advertisement of
the value of Virginia lands, to
the prospective buyer who in
tends to ipake his home where
he buys his land, was tho trial,
conviction and execution of
Henry Beattie.” >
So declares The Louisville
Courier-Journal, and proceeds to
disclose the not at first blush
apparent connection between the
death of Beattie and a boom of
Virginia farming lands.
“Wo reprinted,” it says, “from
magazine several months ago
an article upon Canada,, in which
an American farmer wap. quoted
ns saying that it was not better
land, , but-hotter Jaw that attract
ed farmers from across the line.
‘If a man commits murder in
Canadn.’ asserted, die .farmer, ‘he
is tried and hanged,-and that’s
all there is about it. And it
makes no difference who ho is.’ ”
The, constitution may follow
the flag, but settlers do not fol
low cither -Federal or state con
stitutions unless tho rights of
life, liberty and the pursuit of
happiness contained therein are
made real; by unswerving execu
tion of tho laws.
“There is no more solid in
ducement to the prospective set
tler,” continues Tho Courier-
Journal, “thnn thnt peace is es
tablished and life and property
made safe by rigid enforcement
of law.”
In fact, no. man is likely to
invest his money or make his
home in n state or country where
he believes neither his property
nor himself will be kept from
harm, no matter how powerful or
influential the wrongdoer may
be.
Vfo spend much in promoting
commercial congresses, chambers
of commerce, nnd in being repre
sented at fairs nnd land shows
at home nnd abrond, that our
stnto nnd its resources may be
advertised to the world. These
constitute a most highly com
mendable activity. It must be
encouraged and given more sup
port.
But then let us remember that
the quiet citizen who does not
shirk jury service, who on all
occasions gives Wr vote and his
voice to the.cause of law enforce
ment, is doing more than, all
other agencies combined to ad
vertise his state favorably and
promote its material progress.
Let more citizens join his
ranks. • : - t.
ed to be having trouble. These are two
products that won't bear being cornered
too Ion*. - *-
(or the nomination. They know
:hat, despite the rebuke administered
n the metropolis and some of tho op
iate counties November 7,. Tammany
■mains In control of the Empire 'Do-
ocracy. nnd In all likelihood will mako
j> the delegation to the national con-
entlon. So they are working Rnd fig
uring with New York eliminated. They
♦re laying their ease before the Demo
crats of the nation, confident that a
Vicious organization In one state will
not be able to dictate who shall lead
the party In the next campaign.
And (f the sentiment that flnds ex
pression In the press of the country la
the sentiment of the people, they have
figured -wisely. ;,
There seems to be almost a univer
sal demand from the Democratic ranks
for tho nomination of Governor Wilson.
The South Is solid for him; the Mis
sissippi ’ valley states, with the excep
tion of Missouri, sre clamoring formula
elevation tn leadership, and even Mis
souri will undoubtedly be for him after
a Vote for Champ Clark or Joseph W.
Folk; tho Eastern and lake states, save
Judson Harmon's Ohio, agree that he
stands first In tho llpt q,f possibilities,
and only mdely out of all the great
West does there come any objection to
his candidacy, on occasional Impotent
protSst soon drowned by the advocacy
of his advancement to the presidency.
The sentiment for Governor Wilson
It really .net a boom, because it has
none of the Inciting Influences of a
boom behind It. It grows apace* ap
parently without effort. In the charac.
ter and public record of the executive
who worked wonders In corrupt New
Jenny there Is something to Inspire a
confidence that Is contagious; some
thing of Intrinsic worth that seems to
qualify the man for the heaviest re
sponsibilities of public service.
Army-Navy Orders
A nd Movements of Vessels
Wsshinaton. Dec 5—Tho followln*
Orders have been Issued: ‘
Colonel J. A. Ramey, Twentieth ir.
fantry, retired from nctivo service an
nounccd. ' on -
Klrst Lieutenant A. T. Dalton. T«.«
tieth Infantry, recruiting ofllcer. to Hot
Springs army and navy general hospi
tal for treatment. 1
Second Lieutenant J. J. Ross, Phtl|„
pinee corps, honorably discharged
r- Irat Lieutenant K G. Turne? trails
ferred from Sixth to Thirteenth cava n
First Lieutenant 8. Koeh. traX.'-e,
fioni i hirteenth to Sixth cavalrv
First Lieutenant B. O. Davis car
ry, unassfgned. Is assigned to Ninth
cavalry and will Join that regiment J
Navy Orders.
Rear Admiral A. B, Wlllltts, appoint
ed director of navy yards, navy depart
ment. Washington, D. C
Commander R. \\-. K|| n , tro ,
William Cramp & Sons plant, Decem
ber I.., to duty as commandant nav„i
station. Guantanamo, and addtti„
duty command Newark.
Commander W. Ball, from Cuantan.
amo. tn home and wait orders. 1
Lieutenant‘0. Fowler, from the Tank
ton to home. 13
Lieutenant F. D. Burnham, front n!S
yard to the Asiatic station ■
station!' nan * C R ' K<>ar t0 the Aslal
Ensign c M, Lynch, retired, piai o
on retired list from November 8
En»l*n,H, G. Cooper, from tlip fion
Francltco to the ParJfle station i
,r Enatpn Q. B. Radford, from th-
Malne to the Asiatic station.
Note.—Rear Admiral G. F. f. Willie 1
Secem'ber If ‘ N '° r,h
Movements of Naval Vessels
Monaghan at Chariest
“AnS?>HE WAV' Be X LlTTUE
ABOUT LOOKiHO AFTER THE. CHIigjREN,- l~g.UT SHE MAKES A fTkeTsPEECH'. ■,
The Businessuo
HoeFutkenrpn
“Judge Gary defende big business.
And if government suits are any In-
Ing the big steel business for some tlmt
to come.
William Jennings Bryan sends a
suffering. It will not do SO now. I menage to congress by way of an ed-
Who n.;il Itortsl In The Commoner. Bryan just
Who will volunteer! can not help thinking of himself In
Bv reason of the service so to *> ra * sort of presidential rqie.
be rendered lifelong night will be
prevented from closing over s
i illow being and, the urgency of
l ie state’s remedying this defect
in its care of prisoners : will be
en specific illustration.
rnvt
&mm
WE
is:max
■>rjr
TPRDB KffPK RtpiJTBBBP
“You are making a eerious mistake to market that stuff under your
own name,” said the Business Doctor to tho young manufacturer. There
Is little doubt In my mind, from what I can geo In your books, that this
article of yours Is going to become a
necessity In eyery family. The Inevi
table result will be that as soon ns
you have proved It a good thing, tljero
will arise competition and ’ imitation.
Any article which makes n sficcoss Irt
the commercial world may expect the
usual 'horde of commercial pi fates to
attack It, : ''
“Now, you aro putting this package
otil. advertising It and building a repu
tation for - If, but entirely under your
own name, which la whore the. blunder
comes In. You ore •under the mistaken
Impression, held by go many manu
facturers* thht your name on.tho pack
age Is your protection., This Is not
true. A proper name ran not be copy
righted or trademarked, if Jortes makes
laundry blue, which becomes popular
and widely asked for In all the comer
grocery stores of the country, any other
man by tho name of Jones may also
mako laundry blue and call It Jones'
' laundry blue, and yon have no redress
In any court.
"The moat celebrated cape of. this kind on record Is tlmt or a well-
known andwldely advertised brand of cocoa, .whfch had built an Immense
reputation all over the world, oiily. to have another m*n. Qf the. same name
begin the manufacture of a simitar article, and reap a large amount of tho
benefit of the originator’s, advertising. • . ;. -i
"A prominent silverware manufacturer has had exactly tho same ex
perience and Instances of the kind c mid be multiplied: ad nabsclim, but
these few Instances Sre enough to explain the danger. *
"Thu United States government, in Its patent office at. Washington, has
’ made a|l due arrangements to protect the manufacturer, however, by Its
trademark and e^iyright laws. Any article of manufacture may have Its
brapds copyrighted, and may select, at small expense, a distinctive' trade
mark toi protect those goods. J. : •
"Trademarks which aro descriptive In their character are not admitted
Take your cusc, for example. Your blue Is used entirely In laundry work,
but you could not copyright the two words, 'laundry blue.' ns there are
many other people making It. but. you might call .lL .'Cilnjax' blue and copy
right that word 'Climax,' and no other mah, under penalty of heavy dam
ages, could manufacture or offer for sale any bluing under the name Climax,
«Uho ho might call It Jones' laundry blue, ir he wanted to, Iprovlded his
name waa Jones, ' ■ v . . 'V' 1 ■ .. . ]
“Less than tiO will buy a.manufacturer <0 the protection J(e needs In
the patent office, and any reputable patent attorney C-ui attend to It for him.
and there Is no more short-sighted thing on earth than for B manufacturer
■ of any sort, no matter how small, to fall to aval! himself of this Ihsur-
ance." ~ ’ '** “I
The fire burden on tho United States represents the neat little sum. of
$600,000,000! Two hundred and fifty million of this represents the national ash
heap, composed of property which goes up In smoke every year. Three
hundred an,d fifty million represents the money paid out In fire Insurance
each year. If to this one ndds the cost of all. the, fire departments nnd the
loss of business during the Interruption between a fire and rebuilding, and
the destruction of records and books Impossible to repltce, the sum will be at
■least doubled. The Insurance companies pay back to tho people only $150,-
000,000, and when one considers the loss of life and-general waste, tt Is ap
palling Yet the cigarette fiend still stalks abroad, dropping his burning
stumps; the cigar , fiend tosses aside bis burning matches,, end the pipe
smoker lays aside his pipe, full of unextlngulshed fire!
DAILY HEALTH CHAT
BY AN A fXANTA PHYSICIAN
GERM CARRIERS
UNCLE WALT ^ PHILOSOPHER
Arrived—nionagl
Caesar at Sewall Point; YOrktownT
Llberte; Yankton at Hampton R«a.l*
Peoria at Glbara, Cuba. '
fialled—Accomuc from new ,arl
New York; for Boston; South Carnfin.i
and Michigan from Hanfpton Roadc fn,
York; Cheater ram
Gibraltar for Boston; San Franri.cn
from Norfolk for Newport.
-HH-l-H-H-l-H 111 H 'H' II l -i-Ho.
■{■ Growth and Progress i
of the New South '$
f. *T n h rs.&ssr, 30 ^c , ofr r " d, “ I
Southwestern General Os,>q om .
T ■,-"h .t
Y S'IgMik, ln crcased capitalization bv
-j- $6,000,000 to consolidate several oth’.
er companies, provide for general
T 1 f °P«™«lon and con-
plant " ° f large by-product gas
R efi nltl K Company, Pitts-
( l ,V r *;. Pa '- announced plana for Fort a.
Worth, Texas, refinery recentlv,de- X
elded on; plant will cost 1400.000 and S
! ,av 2 one 1 f 1 dn , ,ly capacity of 5,000 |
to 6,000 barrels of oil; bulllof. of
• •steel and concrete construction;
•• “™Pany s branch oil pipe line froni
Sa tlllo to l ort Worth, about 125
•-miles, will coat about $1,000,*
In timet now vanished, when ray frau desired to fry some
basic slatrT she put .it ip n. pan, hut now sho puts it in a;papftt'.
hag'. The hatisfrnu tells*'rae, with a whoop,
THE MARCH the new style cooking is no jajlce, and she
proceeds to make sorpe soup ana boils it m
OF PROGRESS n paper poke. Such’changes all around I
see; from anciqpt ways our country swerves;
this blamed old world’s too swift for me, I can’t ,keep eases
on its curves. The world lias got too swift for me, I make
acknowledgment with grief; I’m only waiting here to see the
ice box used for roasting beef; I only wait, on trembling legs,
to see the bushes bearing cheese, to see thc.hehs lay scrambled
eggs,- and roasted turkeys in the trees. And when King Death
in somber tones • shall summon- this back number rube, they ’H-
shoot me -to the place pf.bones b.f waos of a pneumatic tube.
• , WALT MASON,
Copyright, 1911. by George Matthew Adame.
NO WHITE HAIR OVER NIGHT
A German Scientist Denial Sudden Change. In the Color of the Hair.
From Tho New York Evening Ron).
A cherished popular belief Is that of
the sudden blanching of the hair from
fright, worry, «r other aevero mental
atraln. It playa-lta part In the drtlmn
nnd In action, while history reconls its
famous'Instances. Who has not heard
that Marlr Antoinette's hair turned white
during the’nlcbt before-her execution,
nr that the deeda and ' terrora 'of St.
Bartholomew's night blanched the hair
of Henry tho Fourth? Most of us won-
derod how the change eoutd come about
tradition *
confined neglects
furnish his guest’s
, iglect. . __
dressing table with the hair dye —
which the latter had been accuatomed at
home, and that nature aaaertod itself be
fore release or execution. Truly the Icon-
oblast respects nothlhg—not even the gray
halra of royalty.
'-'■■■ civw.vvv capital SIOCK, v
• • purchased four acres as site for a A
• • Plant; will erect fireproof buildings of A
- • brick and conorote and Install ma-
• ■ chlncry for manufacturing adding
• • machines.
• • Lexington Hydraulic and Manufae-
• • turlng Company, Lexington, Ky„ ar-
■' HERA (Of $2,000,000 bond issue,
, • $ROO.OOO to be Issued now and $200.-
■ • 000 to, be expended for water works
■ • betterments.
•• Ashland Leath>f Co., Aahland.
• • Ky„ will erect -fireproof buildings ot
• • reinforced concrete and brick eost-
• • Ing $100,000, install electrical driven
• • machinery, etc., for dally capacity of
• • 400 aole leather hides,
• • Sl»al Hemp and Development Com-
■ • pany, Jacksonville, Fla., will erect •>
plant costing 120,000 to manufacture A
rope and twlno from slaal hemp.
Southern States Bag Company.
Jacksonville, Ha,, was incorporated
with $100,000 capital stock.
Clark Coal and Brick Company.
• • Bethany, IV. Va., was chartered with
$250,009 cnnltal stock by Pennsyl
vania and West Virginia capitalists.
Asheville Talcum Company. Aahe-
• • vllle. N. C\, was incorporated with
• • $50,000 capital stock to develop talc
property and manufacture talcum
powder.
• ■ Georgia Supply and Machine Com-
• • pany. Rome, Oa„ waa organized with
• • 500,000 capital stock lo acquire exlst-
--. Ing company and will build larger
• foundry.
• Rapid City Land Company, Nash
ville. Tcnn., plans to build brick and
tile plant of 20,000 to 50,000 capacity
at Dickson, -Tenn.
; National Paper Company, Atlanta.
Ga., will ere, i Mnnt bn Ming of con
crete. containing 100,000 square feet
of floor apace; cost $75,000.
Alexander M. Tpultt,' Brooksvllle.
• i Fla., Is organizing a confpany with •
A $250,000 capital stock to eatabllsh •
• • mills with capacity of 20,000 gallons -
as rapidly
so umversi
enon that few ha-
relates, and jet
.. In thte '
the hard
doubt It. And now Btlefla. a hard-head
ed German scientist, boldly tays that It,
at all. Thll refractory German J
ves that such a thing couldn't
happen, and then,, not satisfied,
leclares that It never did happen. With
equal disregard of folk-lore, history, and
medical* literature, he points the finger
of doubt, and challenges, many long-de-
ceased .historians and physicians to arlso
and prove their stories. --
He claims that when the hair tuma
white under.’ordinary conditions. It does
so In ojte, of. two-ways,. Either tha pig
mented /hairs fall oat and ore replaced by
replaces -the darker- ou(er segment,
the growing of:a new eren of hair In
a slngla ml
of even tin
Ktieda must — ,, —
auch miraculous-transformation,
‘ nktican MadOcaJ ..... ,
,rs at length* taking up
Congressman Lindbergh, of Minne
sota, declares - the Aldrich currency
plan to be the greatest nffmatrosity
ever placed before the American peo
ple, True maybe, but It can hanlly
Probahly 25 per rent of persona who re.
cover from typhoid fever are -“typhoid
carriers” for months or years after they
leave the sick room. ..
By “typhoid carrier*' we ms^n per.
sons who carry . typhoid germs within
their bodies and constantly throw them
off along with secretions and excre
tion*. Much persons, of course, are grave
menaces to the community. ’ i
Particularly cooks, dairymen endlaw
person* who handle foodstuffs are likely
to spread disease and deem if they
carriers. Thera 4# now
beseceud as-a monstrosity to «« h'**> m*N?w° y5tF™ wt^n c#iebr*tedln
tariff system that Aldrich succeeded In ro edlral circle* as “Typhol.l Man /' X-
saddUng on the country. - less than It cases of typhoid fever have
been traced lUreoily.to this carrier. These
eases have developed along -her trail In
a remark,d ie manner, having occurred In
several clUee and In. three states. AU
manner of futile efforts have been put
forth to free this, unfortunate woman
from the germs which she distributes so
liberally. In Germany there la recorded
for over
While vaccination against typhoid fever
successful an to practically
disease from l£i United
djses not *Pt
, convalescent
g to ho a tyi
of the most
Tn*eh_l, „ ..
trol as to establish an acceptable scien
tific demonstration, rot example, he
doubts that story of .Marie Antoinette's
sudden loea.oMialr pigment, atatlng that
although the queen certainly was gray at
the time of her execution, yst this was
no novelty, for she wan also gray nine
months before, at the time the king met
his sudden end at the hands of the revo
lutionists.
As for the rest of the reputed cases,
many are nothing better than, okl-wlves
tales, while others are examples of cre
dulity suh-t 1 tilted for healthy skepticism
and careful Im-ostlgatloh. The explana-
lion offered for several Instance* Is sim
ply that the keeper of the jail or dungeon
notorious germ carriers have not had
the disease themselves at all.
So the problem' of getm carriers ts an
extremely knotty one for the men of med
icine! Some hospitals go so far as to
prohibit the release of any lyphnffl
Inasmuch, however, as a raosoie. teat in-
voire * enormous labor on the part of the
laboratorjr worker, this policy Is hardly
But no well Informed family should per.
mtt any person -recently recovered from
typhoid fever or diphtheria to handle
tnelr food, whether In U
butcher, dairyman or coos
BaMng-Powde
Absolutely Pun
To have pure and wholesome
food* be sure that your baking
powder is made from cream
of tartar and not from alum.
The Label will guide you
Royal is the only baking
powder made from Royal
Grape Cream of Tartar
Ho Alum Mo Lime JPhosphaloo
Hni
• •